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—- '-.'iXsr

December

30 Cents

W E D N E S D A Y

19, 1 9 9 0

•3rd Ynr, No. 101 — Sanford, Florida

8oec«r elastic kicks off

County
proposes
top boss

LAKE MARY — The Burftr King Girts Soccer
Cluaaic kicks off this afternoon at Lake Mary and
Lyman high k hoots, with six former sU te
champions in the field. Including the schools
th a t won the last four.

‘Take charge’ manager
mulls oft-rejected job

□ FlerMe
Second budget I n s it ordered

Herald staff writer

NEW S DIGEST

TALLAHASSEE — Pending 0270 million In
budget cuts next month. Oov. Bob Martlnes and
the Cabinet ordered the second Creese of the
fiscal year on hiring, travel and purchasing for
state government
• o s P a g e tA

Lounge application approved
LONGWOOD — The Longwood City Com­
mission approved the application for the Plus
Three Lounge to open for business in the TO
and Y Plaza, located at the Intersection of U.S.
Ighway 17-92 and State Road434.
Controversy began to stir when the com­
mission rejected the lounge request this sum ­
mer.
"The city commission rejected their applica­
tion at that time." acting City Administrator
Don Terry said, "but they have reapplied."
Despite protests of various church groups and
residents In the immediate area, the com­
mission approved the application at Monday
night's meeting by a 5-to-3 margin.
"This was the new board that heard the case
this time." Terry said.
Commissioners Gary Hefter and Paul Loveslrand were seated on the commission In
September. They ousted former Mayor Gene
Farach and former Deputy Mayor Jeff Morton,
who had both opposed the Plus Three request.

Prict war cuts gasolina to 97.0
HAGERSTOWN. Ind. — The Persian Oulf
crisis hasn't inflated everyone's gsaoUn* prtess..
Motorists In eastern Indians are swarming to
three service stations In Hagerstown for gasoline
prices as low ss 97.9 cents a gallon, thanks to a
competition between two companies.
The Swlfty Gas &amp; OU Co. Is selling unleaded
regular for 97.9 cents a gallon and so Is one of
the Gas America Services stations.
"We’ve had people coming from 25 and 30
miles away." Swlfty’s manager said.

Mayor Randy Morris, (1), president of lh* CIA,
shakas Dorothy Nipper's hand ss hs presents
her with ■ plaque for tho "B*st Decorated

House." Accompanying Morris are, from left:
Pat Thompson, Ethal Carlson, Kristin Weiss
and Oils 8joblum, who represent the CIA.

Lake Mary lig h ts up as best
decorated hom es are chosen
Herald People Editor
LAKE MARY — Lake Mary homeowners
vying for the Community Improvement Asso­
ciation's holiday title "Best Decorated House"
have hung decorations and strung lights until
the three top winners were announced
yesterday. The top two winners i..’en worked
on displays together.
"It's a new tradition. CIA board members,
their children, spouses and grandchildren
rode around looking for the top three picks,'
CIA President Randy Morris said.
- Although • thieves wished away s • y s r^
display of penguins and clowns, votes unani­
mously favored Jim and Dorothy Nipper a
Main Road home.
"It was a human tragedy somebody stole
some of their stuff. Some of the Judges saw the
display before the theft, and some saw It after.
They still won." Morris said.
Dorothy said the couple spent some time
mourning the loss, but said the tradition of
unusual holiday displays would continue at

the Nippers.
"We’ve done this for many years and we 11
have even more next year. It's great. It’s nice
to have been chosen number one In spite of
our loss. It's not going lo get our spirits
down." she said.
"But spirits got a lift yesterday when
Weldon Road residents Pam Maxwell and
Dusty Brooks drove up to the Nippers home
with the missing clowns In low. Brooks and
Maxwell found the clowns In a field across
from their home. They had admired the
Nipper's display and had observed the sign In
the Nipper yard explaining Ihe theft.
*•- "-Tlwy Wove up and asked If we were
missing some clowns like these." Nipper said.
"We touched them up a little, and they're
right back where they were."
The penguins are still missing, but Dorothy
said she may search for them later today In
the same field where the clowns were found.
Second place w inners. Kenneth and
Charlotte Arthur, are Main Road neighbors of
the Nippers. The two couples collaborated on
□ B ss Decorations. Fags BA

SANFORD-Now the watt begins.
•
Seminole County commissioners have felled In
two previous attempts during the last 13 months
to hire a new county manager despite unanimous
enthusiasm for their choices. Both candidates
backed down after making Initial positive com­
ments about working for the county.
N ow c o m e s R o n
R a b u n , th e " t a k e
charge" city manager of
Clearwater. Fla. Com­
missioners unanimous­
ly agreed Tuesday to
offer Rabun the Job.
which will pay between
$80,000 and »100.000
annually. Rabun was
also the majority favor­
ite of the county's exec­
utive review committee,
comprised of business
leaders, homeowner's
re p re s e n ta tiv e s and
c h a ire d by V oluala
C o u n ty ’s p e rso n n e l
director.
Four of the seven committee members ranked
Rabun at the top of their list. He waa ranked
second behind other candidates by two other panel
members.
And Rabun said Tuesday he saw no obstacles lo
hla acceptance.
";.iostly. they are largely technical Issues
remaining." Rabun said Tuesday afternoon. "I
think the salary will be OK. We ll see In a few days.
But I don't sec anything that could be a
deal-breaker."
Commissioners were hopeful they have selected
a qualified manager —one who will take the Job. •
'T feel real comfortable because of the fact he has
been asked by several different people In several
different ways about Ihe seriousness of his Interest
In the position." said commission chairman Fred
Streetman. "I sat down with him and gained hla
assurance that barring any terms that can't be
reached In the contract, he Is serious about
accepting the Job."
"If this works out the way 1 think It will, this will
□B** Manager, Fags BA

S a n ta u n m a s k e d : h e w o rk s in C h ris tm a s
Camlaa.

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Tempt hit the 60s afcain

Partly cloudy with a
high In the low 80s.
Wind south 10 to 15
mph.

By LAURA L. SULLIVAN
Harold stall writer________________
SANFORD — Every year, the
Sanford Post Office handles about
100 letters that carry no zip code,
often bear no postage, and whose
envelopes show Ihe same address
scrawled by hands Just learning to
write: The North Pole.
Sanford Postmaster Fred Rader
said the Christmas season normally
brings about 100 letters to Santa
Claus to the Sanford branch of Ihe

Post Office, although he said he has
seen few this year.
In Lake Mary, newly appointed
Postmaster Robert Borak said he
has seen no letters to Jt. Nick since
he assumed his post earlier this
month. But. he says, he has In­
stru ctio n s to send any corre­
spondences to Santa to a central
location designated by the Post
Office.
From Sanford and Lake Mary,
letters to Santa arc shipped to a
destination much warmer than the

North Pole. All such letters are sent
to the Post Office in Christmas. R e­
located In cast Orange County.
In Christmas, where the Post
Office Is swamped this Ume of year
with hordes of people who want the
"Christmas" postmark on their
stacks of Christmas cards, the
letters are placed In the box of Jack
James.
.
James. 66. has been playing
Santa for 22 years. He reads and
responds to every letter — footing
the blit for stationery and postage.

He said postage costs him about
•250 a year, plus another $200 for a
batch of6.000 cards.
This year he has received 1.400
letters from across the United States
and from os far away as Estonia.
Most of the letters, however, are
from Sanford. Longwood. Cassel­
berry. Apopka and Orlando, he said.
He answers them all.
Jum es hands over letters In­
dicating critical need to a group of
postal employees who adopt needy
□ See SANTA. Fags BA

Workplace not so merry for employees: report
LITTLE C O M P A N D S
BIG H E A D A C H E S

United Press International________ _
WASHINGTON - Calling the lack
of civil liberties In the workplace a
"national scandal." the American
Civil Liberties Union called for a Bill
of Rights for Employees to protect
workers exercising their constitu­
tional rights.
According to a report prepared by
Lewis Maltby. coordinator of a
special task force to examine
workers' rights, the fundamental
values protected by the Constitu­
tion's Bill of Rights virtually stop at
the factory gate and office lobby.
From the basic right of freedom of
speech to the more sophisticated
right to due process, the ACLU
study found that American workers
enjoy virtually none of the protec­
tions that arc taken for granted in
dally life.
"There is a crisis In the workplace
of a magnitude unseen In many
decades." Maltby said Tuesday.
While the report said that orga­
nized labor and unions provide
some protection for workers. It also
noted that only 16 percent of
American workers now belong to a
union and most existing labor
agreements do not Include adequate
protections.
According to the report:
• An e s ti m a t e d 2 m illio n
employees every year arc required

The follow ing U bl* »how. how poll tllp o o dw l l rated tw o
dozen elsm enU o f th e A m ericas d r a m , n a k e d according to
the percentage who considered them very im p o rtan t
VERY IMPORTANT
ELEMENTS OFTHE DREAM
Having a happy home life
___________
Giving your ch Idren a good education In high school
91.6
Having competent, affordable health cjx£_
90.4
Having a Job that you like
— v
88.7
Having enough savings r
82J
Owning a home
78.7
Sending your children to a good)
72.4
Living well In retirement
Being free of debt
Having enough free time
Having a Job that pays weft
Having children
Getting ahead on your Job
being able to work as maiy yean as youAi
Owning your own business
»
Owning a late-modet car
Owning a vacation home
NZA Graphics
t Msm i
to take written personality tests that
probe their sexual lives, bathroom
habits and family relationships.
* Employers routinely listen In on
the telephone calls of 1 million
employees.
I At least 15 million employees

arc required to submit samples of
their urine to be analyzed, fre­
quently under conditions that
amount to a strip search.
* A large and growing Industry
provides undercover agents to InL See Workplace, Page 5A

J

What email-business
owners cite as their
biggest headache
NfCinl #1iteMfl
federal bureaucracy/
government regulation 3 1 %
employee a/employee
relations

20%

costs/caah flow/
financing

11%

Insurance

~9%~

paperwork

6%

taxes

6%

collections

5%

competition

4%

environmental
conceme/lefiue*

4%
»*»•&gt;
TU Sa

lo o

NEA Graphic*

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U - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida —Wednesday, December 1ft 1MD

NEWS FROM

THE REGION

AND ACRO SS THE STATE

Second budget freeze ordered
Cuban raffugaaa raacuad
KHAKI — A total of 30 Cuban refugees an boats arere ettber
rescued by the Coast Guard or made it to the United States on
their own Tuesday, the year's larges one-day total.
The first group of eight was spotted at about 11:45 a.m.
Tuesday In a 12-foot boat made of wood and fiberglass. There
were six men. one woman and one child aboard. The vessel
was found about 5 miles south of the Seven Mile Bridge.
The second group of 13 refugees was found about 1:30 p.m.
Tuesday. 3 miles east of the bridge.
That 20-root wooden vessel, which had a makeshift sail, was
carrying seven men. two women and four children.
Two more Cuban men arere rescued horn a smalt dinghy
shortly after the second group was found. The taro refugees
were spotted by a motorboat 17 miles southwest of Key West.
The fourth group, three Cuban men. arrived at Key West
about 8:15 p. m. on a 31-foot Ashing vessel and contacted the
Coast Guard to request politics! asylum. The three men were
turned over to Immigration authorities.
So far this year, die Coast Guard has rescued 438 Cubans,
compared with 391 lost year.

Staff watar managamant propoaad
CLEARWATER — Two state lawmakers have proposed
creating a statewide water management authority that would
emphasize conservation and making saltwater drinkable..
Major porta of the plan Include charging fees on water usage,
financially rewarding those who conserve and an Intraatatc
pipeline to can y water Dram one end of Florida to the other,
sold R. Z. "Sandy" Salley. R-Ckarwater,
Formulating a statewide water policy Is long overdue, said
Salley and Jeff Huenlnk. R-St. Petersburg. Too many regional
water districts and state agencies are making decisions about
the critical resource, they said.
Water la expected to be a major issue facing the Legislature
when It convenes for Its two-month session March 8.

Chiles aides say 'turkeys'to be
sliced during $270 million cuts C
United Press Internet took
TALLAHASSEE - Gov. Bob
Martinez and the Cabinet or­
dered Tuesday the second freeze
of the fiscal year on hiring, travel
and purchasing for state
eminent, pending 8270 n
In budget cuts next month.
Martinez and the Cabinet also
Ignored protests by legislative
leaden and voted to let school
districts dip into special-purpose
accounts to w are basic educa­
tion programs from budget cuts.
A d d i t i o n a l l y , a l d e a to
O o v .-e le c t L a w to n C b llea
sig n aled th e Incom ing a d ­
m inistration’s Intent to cut
"turkeys." to ease the pain of
the Impending budget cuts on
vital state sendees.
Chiles budget aide Doug Cook
warned the new governor la still

Judge pleads
no contest to
sex charges

Auditor* pot# Lottary Inquiry
TALLAHASSEE — State auditors are asking Lottery
Secretary Rebecca Paul to Justify spending more than 83.568
to send 13,000 Christmas cards bearing the Lottery's pink
flamingo logo to lottery retailers.
Comptroller Gerald Lewis delayed payment Tuesday of an
invoice from the printer for the card*, which lottery employees
hand-delivered to retailers this month. The Lottery Is the only
department In state government sending greeting cards.
Lewis said the expense was poorly timed, coming as state
government braces for 8270 million In budget cuts, the second
round of cuts this fiscal year. He also asked why the
department's card list Increased from 3,000 cards two years
agoatacost o f8728.
The cards say .“ Holiday Cheer and a lucky new year."

(Q«faldo’ la criminal Inspiration

T JS S f

PALM BAY — A young woman charged with robbing a Palm
Bay bank said she and her boyfriend were Inspired by bank
robbers featured on the "Geraldo" television show.
According to police reports, the woman wrote a note
demanding money, presented It to a teller and left the First
Union National Bank with 82. 200. A witness Identified the
getaway car as the suspect’s mother's.
Kathleen Meka. 19. surrendered to Orange County sheriffs
officials over the weekend and was being held wllthout bond.
The whereabouts of her 25-year-old boyfriend at e unknown.
Meka told Investigators that she and her boyfriend were
watching a Dec. 12 episode of the controversial television
i,&gt;lgram starring Geraldo Rivera. The show that day featured
bank robbers and embezzlers. Her boyfriend remarked how
easy It would be to pull a bank Job.
"She Is a victim." asserted her lawyer. Joel Remland. “She's
19. easily Influenced, and here she Is being coerced by her
boyfriend because of this Irresponsible, sensational, yellow
Journalism."

Florida Joint suit ovtr drug markatlng
TALLAHASSEE - Florida Joined 21 other states Tuesday in
a lawsuit accusing two drug companies of Illegally driving up
the costs of a new treatment for schizophrenia. Attorney
Grneral Bob Butterworth announced.
Civil complaints were filed In U.S. District Court In New York
against Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Corp.. manufacturer of the
drug Clozaril, and Caremark Inc., the drug's U.S. distributor.
Butterworth said.
The civil complaints allege the companies violated state and
federal antitrust laws by linking drug sales to the sale of blood
testing and other services.
The suits seek and end to the marketing arrangement and
triple the amount of damages the states assert the arrangement
caused. Florida Is also seeking 81 million In damages for each
violation of state antitrust law.
From Ufiltod Pros* International Reports

LOTTERY
TALLAHASSEE - Ths dally
number Tussday In th« Florida
Lottery CASH3 game was MS
□Slrelght Play (numbers in exact
order): *230 on a 50-ceni bsl, *300
onSI.
□ Box 3 (numbers In sny order):
*80 lor a 50-cent bet. *100 on *1.
□ Box 0 (numbers In any order):
*40 lor a SOeent bet, *80 on *1.
□Straight Box 3: *330 in order
drawn. *80 Inany order on a *1 bet.
□ Straighl Box 8: *200 In order
drawn, *40II picked In combination
on SI bet.

( u m « i no&gt;
W ednesday, D e ce m b e r 19 1990
V ol. B3, N o . 101

rvMtUwe Daily end Sunday. except
WtwrSjy by The (enters Hereto.
Me- Mt N. French Are., (enters.
fi*. mn.
(ecend Clan PoiUg* Feld at (enterd.
Fter14* tin:
POSTMASTEB. (endaddrouchangav
»• THE SANFORD HEBALD. P.O.
■e* U17. (enterd. FL nm.
(ubvcrlption Salt*
(Celly S Sunday)
Heme Delivery a Mail
1 Montftv .......................... ( I f JO
tMenib* ...................ue.ee
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Florid* Retldenti mint pay t% valet
Mi in *441lien to rate* above.
(ten m uii.

for Jan. 10. two days after Chiles
assumes office.
Florida TaxWalch. a nonlsan government watchdog.
estimated the price tag for
likely to target ongoing pro­ various “turkeys" In the state
grams for budget cuts. Collec­ budget at more than 8300 miltions of the sales and corporate Ifon. ft Is unknown how much or
taxes that comprise the primary that money remains unspent
of such recurring and therefore could be subject to
p ro g ra m s h av e fa lle n off cuts.
Chiles Intends to cut those
drastically because of the lagprojects w herever possible,
Barring meaningful budget spokesman Rob Anderson said.
House Speaker T.K. Wetherell
efonn. Cook said. “We ll be
back here again on a quarterly sold cutting the projects won't
baata” making additional spen­ make the state's general reve­
n u e s any m ore recesslonding cuts.
"Therefore, our highest priori* reslstant.
But ft would help the state
ty la to reduce recurring pro­
through the Immediate crisis,
grams." Cook said.
Marlines and the Cabinet also said Anderson.
froze hiring, travel and purchasLast spring, the Legislature
in advance of the 8262 voted to raise 81.5 billion
Uon tn budget cuts they through a variety of new taxes.
Including higher gasoline levies
ordered In October for the 827
bUlkm budget for the fiscal year and fees for motorists. But most
of that new money has been
ending June 30.
A vote on the new round of offset by the losses to general
cuts, expected to amount to revenues.
about 8270 million, is scheduled
The public schools' share of

TAMPA — A former Tamps
Judge pleaded no contest Tues­
day to charges uf distributing
cocaine to teenage girls In
exchange for sex, after a court
ruled police had legally obtained
a homemade video of the en­
counters.
C irc u it J u d g e M anuel
Mcncndez scheduled sentencing
for cx-Clrcult Court Judge Louis
Tidwell. 52. on 29 felony charges
stemming from the sexual liai­
sons for Jan. 29.

a

the cuts amounts to about 8170
million. Meanwhile, educaton
have complained, millions of
dollars that could help offatt
cuts to school budgets alt* un­
used In special "categorical'’
accounts.
Martinez and th e Cabinet
voted unanimously to let local
school boards shift up to 5
percent of the available categori­
cal money, or about 83 million,
to use as they see fit.
School district officials had
likened the lituatfon to luring
money In the bank, but being
prohibited from spending II on
anything other than houserelated expenses when the fami­
ly car Is what needs fixing.
"W e're Into extraordinary
circumstances and they have
taken extraordinary action."
•aid David Voss, spokesman for
Com m issioner of Education
Betty Castor.
The Legislature has set up
about 50 such categorical ac­
counts since 1973 to finance
special programs Including pre•school ed u catio n .

Mars exploration on tap for NASA
WASHINGTON - NASA Administrator Rich­
ard Truly announced Tuesday he would
Implement two recommendations made by a
White House panel appointed to study the
future of the space agency.
Truly said he would create a new Office or
Exploration and create the position of associate
administrator to overate the office, which will
Initially develop options to return to the moon
and explore Mara.
In addition, Truly said he would create a new
Office of Human Resources to ensure that
NASA has all necessary personnel.
Both moves were recommended by the
12-member Advisory Committee on the Future
of the U.S. Space program, which was formed

in July to study the nation’s space program and
Issued Its final report Dec. 10.
The report makes a range of recommenda­
tions for NASA, which has come under fire due
to a streak of problems, including the defective
Hubble Space Telescope and the grounding of
the space shuttle by fuel leaks.
In a holiday message to employees. Truly
pledged to "move out aggressively across the
board" on all of the panel's recommendations.
Including the recommendation to develop a
new rocket to take over many of the apace
shuttle's duties.
Truly appointed Donald Puddy. director of
flight crew operations at the Johnson Space
Center In Houston, to lead a team to determine
how best to implement the recommendations.

C irc u it J u d g e M anuel
M enendez rejected defense
claim* th a t police Invaded
Tidwell's privacy when they
obtained a search warrant for his
residence where they discovered
the videotape.

‘Extra-absorbent’ diaper won’t
let baby absorb robbers’ bullet

State prosecutors said the tape
showed Tidwell smoking crack
cocaine and engaging In aex
with two girls aged T4 and T5
between 1987-89. Tidwell was
arrested Oct. 18. 1989, and
removed from the bench.
Defense attorney Bob Polll said
Tidwell pleaded no contest In
order to "reserve the right to
appeal and avoid the embar­
rassment of a trial."
Polll said Judge Menendcz's
decision to allow Tidwell to take
the case to an appellate court,
which la an unusual procedure,
was granted
“ because the
reasons for the appeal are not
frivolous.”
The appeal would not affect
the original sentencing. Polll
Insisted there was no physical or
psychological damage to the
victims and that the girls con­
sented to the sexual relations.
"She lied about her age and
accepted money." Polll said.
"The facts of the case are
horrible: He's pleading no con­
test to facta on tlx: Video."
Prosecutors said their case
was not solely based on the
video and Included the testimo­
ny of witnesses against Tidwell.

TAMPA — A M a i n claims an
extra-thick diaper .may -have
saved her 10-month-old baby
from a masked gunman's bullet.
Grace Ford. 20. said two
masked robbers burst Into her
house In RJvenrlew late Sunday
and demanded money. She was
sitting In a front room with her
baby. Brandi, who was In a
playpen.
When Elka. the family's Rot­
tweiler dog. began barking at the
Intruders, one fired three shots
at the animal, according to
sheriffs deputies.
All three shots missed the dog
but one apparently put a hole In
Brandi's diaper.
Ford said th a t when she
picked up the crying Infant, she
found a bullet hole In the diaper.
The bullet could not be found.
“There was about an Inch left
to the diaper that It didn't
pierce." Ford said. "They were
extra thick!1'
“She cried when the shots
were fired, but when 1picked her
up she was fine," Ford said of
her daughter.
Ford said her her 18-year-old

t There was about
an Inch left to tt£»
diaper that it didn’t
p ierce . They were
extra thick. |
- G r a c e F o r d , m o th e r

•later, Cynthia Phillips, a n ­
swered a knock on the door und
the two men pushed It open.
“They yelled. 'Freeze, police.'"
Ford said. That was when they
■hot at Elka.
The robbers pushed Ford, her
sister and daughter from room to
room and took about 85.000 in
Jewelry.
Neighbors heard the shots and
summoned sheriff’s deputies,
but the gunmen escaped tn a car
that had been watting In a
nearby cemetery, according to
Investigators.
The gunmen were described
as Caucasian. 18 to 20 years old,
and of medium height and
weight. One wore a ski mask and
Jogging pants with the letters
"UF” on the side. The other
wore a white s h irt with a
baseball cap.

Few addicted
b a b ies sought
tor treatment
S heer racism, not to
m e n tio n th e color of
money, la thwarting efforts
to track and treat the
escalating numbers of In­
fants bom to drug-addicted
mothers, a leading expert
In p e rin a ta l addiction
warned Tuesday.
Research and Interviews
Indicate many physicians
are reluctant to report or
even look for drug-abuse
among pregnant women
who are white and of a
sim ilar social standing,
said Dr. Ira Chasnoff, pres­
ident of the National Asso­
ciation for Perinatal Addic­
tion Research and Educa­
tion.
"It's not Just the racial
Issues, It's the soda] class
issues." Chasnoff told a
group of health care pro­
fessionals in San Antonio.

T H E W EA TH ER
11SnTi"

rST-

L i;

Today...Partly cloudy with a
high In the lower 80s. Wind
south 10 to I5mph.
Tonight and Thursday-Partly
cloudy with patchy dense early WE0NE8DAY
FRIDAY
SA T U R D A Y
SUNDAY
THURSDAY
morning fog. Low In the mid 60a BtyCMy 7 1 -8 8
M f C M y T M l N ttyC H y 78*87
m y C H y 7 8 -8 7 S urry 74*88
and a high lu the low to mid 80a.
Wind south 10 mph tonight and
southeast 10 to 15 mph Thurs­
I ma a mme a ^ M :
I 1— t R w w ^
day.
E xtended fo recast...P artly
The high tem perature lu
cloudy, lows In the mid 60s and
LAST SOLUMAR TABLE: Min. 6:25 Sanford Tuesday was 82 de­
highs in the low to mid 80s.
a.m.. 6:55 p.m.: MaL 12:10 a.m.. grees and the overnight low was
12:40 p.m. TIPEB t D sy tasa 63 as reported by the University
■sack: highs, ft07 a.m.. 9:20 of Florida Agricultural Research
p.m.; Iowa. 2:28 a.m., 3:16 p.m.: and Education Center. Celery
Raw S m yrna B a se l: highs. Avenue.
9:12 a.m.. 9:25 pim.: lows. 2:31
Recorded rainfall for the
a.m.. 3:21 p.m.: Cscsn Bench: p e rio d , en d in g a t 3 a.m .
highs. 9:27 a.m.. 9:40 p.m.: Wednesday, totalled 0 Inches.
k&gt;wa/t;46 a.m.. 3:36 p.m.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
MIAMI - Florida labour tempereturo*
today was 68 degrees and
and rainfall *17a nv EST
Wednesday's overnight low was
M U
CXy
n n OF
63. as recorded by the National
Apalachicola
n n a
Cretivtew
D n y to u Beach: Waves are • i . Angmstian tnjnptter Inlet Weather Service at the Orlando
u v ODD
Daytona Beach
T o d a y ...W in d s o u th to International Airport.
it u
Fart
1-1V* feel with a slight chop.
Si U t s o
southwest 15 kts diminishing to
Fort Myorf
Other Weather Service data:
Current
is
to
the
north
with
a
f i re e to
Colnetvllto
water temperature of 66 degrees. 10 to 15 kts In the afternoon. □Tuesday's high................83
ii n ooo
Jocktonville
U FI I N
KoyWed
New Sm yrna Bench: Waves arc Seas 2 to 4 ft. Bay and Inland [ Barometric pressor«. 30.08
waters a light. Widely scattered []Relative Humidity....97 pet
U *» 0 (
Miami
1
n » JO
DWln d a ........ ..g notfo 18 m ph
Ff 41 I S
foot and glassy. Current la to the showers north part.
T
o
n
ig
h
t...W
in
d
s
o
u
th
to
□
R ainfall-------------------A l a .
n a m
north, with a water temperature
» 47 •as
southeast 10 to 15 kts. Seas 2 to
naant.....B:32 p.m.
of
66
degrees.
la t i I N
4
ft.
Bay
and
Inland
waters
a
r’n aonrine....7:t3
u u *&lt;
light chop. Widely scattered
showers north part.

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Sanford Marafd, Sanford. Florid* - Wsdnssdsy. Dscambtr 19.1M0 - M

to cro ss star over F lo rid a
(W e Just lucked out
with this asteroid
because Florida is a
lo u sy p la c e for
astronomical view­
ing, being at sea
level and having late
afternoon and even­
ing thundershower*, j

Robbery »usp«ctftibb8d
SANFORD — City police who Tuesday afternoon caught a
suspect In a Dec. 13 robbery. M id they found cocaine tn the
m an’s pocket.
Raymond O’Neal Curry Jr.. 33. S3 William Ctark Court.
Sanford, la charged with armed robbery, aggravated battery
and possession of cocaine. He was arrested near his house.
Police aald that during the robbery the victim was hit In the
race with a bottle and robbed after the suspect allegedly offered
to sell him a television for i30.

Arrest mads In burglary
SANFORD — A second suspect has been charged with armed
burglary and grand theft In connection with the theft of guns
from a burglarised house at 407 Willow Ave.. Sanford, In
September.
Sanford police arrested Jeffery Scot Fruth. 31, ,013
Mellonvllle Ave.. Sanford, at 6:05 p.m. Tuesday after
questioning at the police station. Monday police arrested Pjiul
Strickland. 19. of Sanford, in connection with the same case.

or pair of binoculars, he aald.
"We Just lucked out with this
asteroid because Florida la a
lousy place for astronomical
viewing, being at sea level and
having late afternoon and evenIng thundershowers.’’ he Mid.
Florida could be the best place
In the United States to view the
occultatlon because It has a
better chance of having d ear

Man wound*) In shotgun blast
SANFORD — A 31-year-old Lake Monroe man wounded by a
shotgun blast to the eye, neck and upper torso last night In
Lake Monroe, has been transferred to Shands Hospital In
Gainesville.
A spokesman for Central Florida Regional Hospital In
Sanford Mid today that shortly after he was wounded. Eric
Eugene Menefee. 1360 Dunbar Ave,, Lake Monroe, was
brought to the emergency room there. But. possibly because of
the Injury to his eye. he was almost immediately airlifted to
Oalnesvllle.
Menefee was Involved in a shootout outside his house at
about 6 p.m. Tuesday, which waa port of an on-golng feud.
Seminole County Sheriffs Sgt. Billy Lee aald.
According to a sheriffs report an 18-year-old man and a boy
arrived at Meqefee’s house to continue an argument. As the
two voulhs drove away. Menefee allegedly fired pistol shots at
their car. Shotgun fire was returned from the car and Menefee
was wounded. Lee said. The youths were not wounded.
Deputies have the name of a possible suspect, but no arrest
was reported this morning.

skies this time of year than the
northern states along the view
path. Cooke said.
Florida astronomers usually
travel to other places to watch
eclipses and other astronomical
occurrences, but this time the
professionals will be coming to
Florida, he M id .,
The line of vision for the
343-mile wide asteroid extends
through Wisconsin. Indiana.
Kentucky. Tennessee. Georgia
and Florida. Residents In Lake
City. Gainesville. Orlando and
Miami are In the center of the
view path, he Mid.
Vesta will m ove In front of the
star, called SAO 093338. at
about 7:35 p.m. EST. block out
Its light for a little more than two
minutes and then the star will
reappear from behind Vesta, he
■aid.
It will be visible about onethird or the way up In the
eastern sky. hr said. Amateur
astronomers can play an Im­

portant role In giving scientists
v alu ab le Inform ation about
Vesta and other asteroids. Cooke
said.

"A steroids have remained
largely a mystery to science.’' he
M id . “The only way we can tell
anything about their mire and
shape and precisely nail down
their orbit Is through occultalions like this one."
By u s in g In stru m e n ts to
measure the length of time the
s t a r d is a p p e a r s , a m a te u r
astronomers from many loca­
tions can help profeMlonals
construct the size and shape of
the asteroid, he said.
The last asteroid passing In
front of a star to be visible tn
Florida was the 460-mUe wide
Pallas In 1963. Cooke said.
Pallas and Vesta are among
thousands of asteroids located
between Mara and Jupiter, he
aald.

Mother killed for presents
CHICAGO — An 8-year-old g irl,
returned home from school and
found her mother stabbed to
d e a th u n d e r th e fa m ily 's
Christmas tree by an assailant
who police said stole their pres­
ents to sell for drugs.
P o lic e l a t e r a r r e s t e d a
38-year-old man who was trying
to sell items Identified as those
stolen from the apartment of
Inez Williams. 37. said Police
Cmdr. William Callaghan.

of murder, home int burglary were pend­
ing Tuesday night.
Callaghan aald the girl discov­
ered her mother’s body under
the tree when she relum ed
home from school a t about 3:30
p.m.
Williams, clad In a slip, was
■tabbed numerous times In the
back and neck and had a sock
stuffed In her mouth, he said. A
3 -y e a r-o ld g irl fo r w hom
Williams was babysitting was
wounded and reported in fair

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u u

Cuba losing
It’s U.S.
surrogate
By M M

l

W N IIW W L D

Knlght-Rlddsr Nswspapsft
Czechoslovakia, whose rela­
tions with Cuba have been
deteriorating for more than a
year, announced Tuesday that It
would no longer represent the
Cuban In tere sts Section In
Washington.
The announcement, made in
Prague by the Fbreign Ministry,
said Czechoslovakia would dis­
continue its relationship with
(he Cuban Interests Section by
! March 31 — giving Cubs a little
I more than three months to find
- another country to handle its
i Washington business..
T h e I n t c r e a t a S e c t io n
technically operates as part of
the Czechoslovak Embassy in
Washington, although It works
out of the old Cuban Embassy
building In northwest Washing­
ton and acts autonomously.
Such representation to necessary
because Cuba and (he United
States don't have diplomatic
relations.
In Havana, the U.S. Interests
Section works out of the old U.S.
Embassy, but officially It’s rep­
resented by the Swiss govern­
ment.
The human rights organiza­
tion Freedom House and the
C u b a n A m erican N ational
Foundation have been lobbying
the government of President
Vaclav Havel hard this year to
drop Its representation of Cuba
as a symbolic gesture.
Czechoslovakia selected a
March 31 cutoff so Cuba could
"adopt an appropriate solution
without Jeopardizing Its interests
in the United States." according
to the government statement.
"We still haven’t heard any­
thing from Havana." said a
spokeswoman at the Cuban In­
terests Section, but It Is expected
that Cuba will look for another
country to represent tt.
Officials at the Embassy of
Czechoslovakia in Washington
said they also hadn’t received
any details about the end of the
Interests Section relationship.
Relations between Cuba and
Czechoslovakia have worsened
as C uba’s one-time socialist
comrade has pursued Westernstyle political and economic re­
forms.
Earlier this year. It appeared
that Czechoslovakia was on the
! verge of dropping Us repres c n t a t l o n . but some
Czechoslovak officials said the
United Slates had asked them to
. p re s e rv e th e lin k because
breaking off the relationship
might Jeopardize the U.S. Inter­
ests Section In Havana.

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EDITORIALS

" a p p e a ra n c e of Im p ro p rie ty " r e g a r d in g
tougher federal ethical stan d ard s th a t take
effect Ja n . 1. Under those stan d ard s, a person
going from a governm ent Job to th e private
sector m u st refrain from lobbying h is form er
colleagues for a t least one year.
Because th e RNC la not a governm ent Job. It
could be argued th a t th is proviso d o es not
technically affect Bennett. F rom a political
standpoint, however, he and the R epublican
Party could be hobbled by nagging ethical
conflict-of-interest questions. O r to p a ra ­
phrase one anxious adm inistration staffer: "It
could be a toothache th a t never goes aw ay.
Having already signed a lucrative co n tract
w ith Simon A S chuster to w rite tw o books
during th e next two years, B en n ett, w ho Is
not a wealthy m an. was given th e choice of
returning h is advance paym ent o r rejecting
the RNC.
Clearly it should have never com e to this.
The time to have thoroughly considered
potential ethical and legal problem s w a s back
In November — before B ennett w a s offered
an d accepted the Job — n o t art th in th e la st few
days. Yet. he allegedly w as given assu ran ces
by an aide of White House Chief o f S taff Jo h n
S u n u n u several w eeks ago th a t th e re would
be no problem with his w riting books and
working full-time to rcln v lg o n te th e GOP.
T he c h ie f o f s ta ff la r e s p o n s ib le for
m aintaining an orderly flow o f Inform ation to
th e Oval Office and ensuring th a t recom m en­
dations a re made only after all p ertin en t d ata
an d contingencies have been aaacaaed. T he
Bennett fiasco would suggest th a t S u n u n u
flunked th is test.
Now th e adm lnatratlon an d R epublican
Party confront th e challenge o f finding a
politically aptute an d tenacious lead er for the
national com m ittee w ho will Im prove the
GOP’a o d d s of regrouping a n d reb o u n d in g in
1992. W ith Lee Atw ater sidelined by a brain
tum or an d Bill B ennett out o f th e picture, the
Held has narrow ed considerably.

STONE

On the right to mention bare legs
The election of Mary Robinson ss president of
Ireland detonated no sexist barriers. She’s
following in the footsteps of Indira Gandht. Golds
Metr and the recently deposed (thank God)
Margaret Thatcher. But her liberal views on
abortion, divorce and contraception tn a re­
ligiously conservative country raised eyebrows
higher than the hemline on her dress. A
photograph with her family revealed two
audaciously displayed tegs. During a TV
public-affairs program In Philadelphia, where I
do weekly quixotic battle. I took judicial notice of
Mrs. Robinson’s wen-tapered assets, having
already hailed her political superiority. My
collegial panelist. Cam) Saline (a senior editor at
Philadelphia magazine), took Jocular umbrage.
"W hy mention her legs at all?" she re­
monstrated with me. Hey. I'm with P lata It's
Just a question of "beholding beauty with the
eye of the mind,"
1 shrugged off this passing reunion with
Oedtpal memories (my erudite and lovingly
Christian mother hod a mast gorgeous pair of
legal, but two days later. 1 happened to catch
Lesley Stahl and Charles Kuralt hosting the CBS
late-night news show. "America Tonight."
Stahl's eye-daultng red dress wsa hiked up
above her knees to reveal a stunning pair of legs.
Her audaciousness evoked a Robert Herrick

doggerel (check out the
JhSunUng goes: With rbuskins shortened Io
descry The happy
dawning of her thigh.
R u ralt's legs were
fully covered. But
u n c o v e re d and
g li s t e n in g fo r

And now this an­
n o u n c e m e n t from
Ovid: "Ugly to a field
w ith o u t g r a ta , a
plant without leaves,
or a head without
hair." Don't roU your
eyes at me. That's an
Ovidian judgm ent.
Here com es mine,
fTouow
n l l n ^ra
J hpy
tr m
MnrTil
i w
on a

ll'sjiiata
question of
'beholding
beauty with
the sye ot the
mind.' J

of trouble; I would
Uke to make a ease
for the constitutional — nay, God-given — right
to admire beautiful legs. I realize that everybody
Isn't perfectly endowed. And I don't think a

rim in g m f O T m t o fth e merita of ■ woman *
legs keep* me from making an unbiased
judgment of her Intellectual ability or political
astuteness. Which proves that leg*, like bald
hewde (which are paraded on television atop the
cranium* of Terry Bradshaw, Joe Oaraglola and
Lou Gossett), ain't always relevant anyway.
“ So. why mention them?" some of my
exasperated feminist and womanlst friends will
Inquire. Cua when you've got It - and daunt It
— we have a right to notice Itl Besides. I didn't
design these hlgh-stylc short skins that ride
somewhere around a woman's neck. In my
(amity. I've been blessed with seven of America's
most magnificent women — my mother-, my
three staters, my wife and my two daughters.
Some of them have beautiful legs. The others are
merely beautiful. But all of them are bright,
educated and accomplished.
So the Issue, cherished cherubs. Is not
physical endowment, but the values in our
society thst exalt It. We live In a vldeocracy
where televised good looks are sought. And
here’s the rub: Some person who looks like death
warmed over sits behind a desk deciding that Job
applicants for on-camera positions must look like
Mr.wr Miss America.
ty years ago. I wrote a column. "Why
Men Like Big

Berry's World
AMAZING
INDUCTION

HOLMES!
ELEMENTARY. MY
DEAR WATSON!

oralette#1.
SEISM OGRAPH O F E A M H a U A K E / C I M I Y N NEW M A C R O MO.

Berry's World

Loss and opportunity
The resignation of E ducation Secretary
Lauro Cavazos w as n either u n expected nor.
altogether unwelcome.
D uring th e course of h is low-key ten u re as
th e n atio n 's school chief, C avazos suffered
greatly by em pariaon w ith h is dynam ic
predecessor. William B ennett. T h e contrast
h as becom e even m ore pronounced of late as
Mr. B ush's critics dem and to know w hen he Is
g o in g to h o n o r h la p le d g e to b e th e
"education president."
Cavazos was appointed by R onald Reagan
in 1988 to succeed B ennett a n d th e n held
over In th e post by President B ush. The
soft-spoken former president of T ex as Tech
University sp en t m uch of h is tim e on the Job
defending his lack of passion for educational
reform. In discussing th e m a st recent Na­
tion's Report Card, for exam ple, C avazos had
difficulty explaining why he considered It "a
com pendlm um of disappointm ent."
Although Cavazos periodically called for
parental choice, h is appeals w ere ignored for
the most part. A part from scolding Hispanic
parents for not paying closer atte n tio n to their
children's schooling, he seldom said an y th in g
th at got anyone's attention, let alone roused
the com placent educational establishm ent.
B en n ett n ev er h ad th a t p ro b le m . He
understood that the education secretary 's
prim ary responsibility Is to ex h o rt an d . If
necessary, hector the public schools to do a
better job. Similarly, the school ch ief should
aggressively promote th e P resident’s educa­
tion program.

Berry's World

S E IS M O G R A M C F M H J A

K ttltti

W H EW M t t f i f i M a

ROBERT SHEPARD

Gephardt: ‘I told you so, Bush

What Gephardt said In March was that the
United States should launch a bold policy of
Investment and trade to help bolster the efforts
or Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev to
reform the Soviet economy.
"We should waive trade restrictions such os
Jackson-Vanlk ... relax restrictions on hightech exports, and encourige private Invest­
ment In the Soviet Unton. Wc provide
Export-Import Bank loans and OPIC assistance
to China, why not to the Soviet Union.” he said
in a speech.
The administration said a loud "No" to the
Idea then, but last week Bush declared the
Soviet Union Is facing "tough times." and he
announced an assistance package that will
provide up to i t billion In agriculture export
credits lo ease Moscow's food shortage.
The aid package Is the largest ever offered
any country. Under the program, the United
Stales will guarantee payments up to 61 billion
for Soviet purchases of U.S. farm products.
Bush also proposed that the World Bank and
the International Monetary Fund provide the

J _________

Soviets access to their economic and financial
expertise, and said he has decided to establish
a public-private medical assistance task force
to help Moscow deal with Its "acute, im­
mediate shortages of pharmaceutical and baalc
medical supplies.
"H 1* very much In the national Interest of
the United States to see the Soviet Union
succeed In their efforts to reform politically and
to move to a free market economic system,"
Bush said.
Gephardt thought so too. bock In March.
•'Stability, democracy and a market economy
In the Soviet Union a n In America's strong
self- Interest." he said at the time.
Commenting on Bush's action last week.
Gephardt said. “Nine months ago when 1made
the recommendation which the president has
adopted, the administration's reaction was.
'Why?' This afternoon, they said. 'Why not?'
Today, I aay well done.”
Gephardt said It was not possible for the
administration “to sustain a policy of passivity
toward the reforms being made In the Soviet
U n i o n o r t h e ■-

5 2 S 2 V &amp;
S o v ie t p e o p le .
A m e r ic a c a n n o t
stand on the aidetinea as the Cold War
era ends and the SoViet Union . t r u c k s
to nnd Its future.

Berry's World

l a - p t u n l t .w h o
hRRDlEOWn
presidential
ambitions,
wSS fairly
low-key when
he Issued*
statement

.h 'A f i — a

d id n o t e d i t
Gephardt with any
lor Clanging
foresight. Gephardt's
his position. ^
c o m p la in ts about
administration
-----------------------------policies have ruffled Bush's feathers more than
once and there ta no love lost between the two.
But In the world of Washington politics a good
"I told you so" can sometimes be a satisfying
experience.

)

J
IM

�8®ifofd H#n*d, Sinluul, Floridl •

It, tHO— M

I
■
1A

the best
s've had In
a tofig time.” Sirertman said.
Even a call to acting county
m anager B o b McMillan this
m orning w as answered with
concern. When asked tf Rabun is
Mill a pending county manager,
McMillan's A nt respond was,
"Why? What have you heard?"
He wasn't Joking.
McMillan said Rabun waa
heduled to meet with him thta
m orning to discuss contract
terms.
It has been an uphill effort for
me covnnutMon since nxnier
county manager Ken Hooper
faa forced to resign Oct. 24.
1988.
On April 12. commlasloneni
and the selection panel unani­
mously agreed to hire Greg
Fehrenbacn, a dynamic city
a d m I n t a t r a t o r o f New
Brunswick, N J. Negotiations
followed for newly a week. &gt;But
on April IB, Fchrcnboch notified
county officials he had decided
he had not fully considered the
Implication* of leaving his pres­
ent post. He said he didn’t want
to leave himcity "in the lurch."
Stunned, commissioners re­
g ro u p e d a n d In te rv ie w e d
another batch of candidates
Ju n e 5, and with only slight
reservations, offered the position
to Michael Bryant, a quiet but
strong leader serving as county
manager from Hall County, Oa.
C o m m is s io n e r s w e re e n ­
thusiastic about Bryant, saying
he may bring innovative ideas
about economic development
and new revenues to the county.
Dave Farr, executive director
of the Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce and panel chair­
man. commented then, "I think
we have the best now. Maybe not
better than before, but we won't
get any better In the future."
Initially, Bryant led commis­
sioners to believe he would
accept the Job. But only two days
later, Bryant notified the county
he declined the position because
of family problems. Bryant later
be

Decorations
1A

o

portions of the dimplays. Charlotte Is pleased with
the results.
" W e w o r k e d w ith t h e
neighbors but got a late start
putting up lots of lights. We add
something every year." she said.
Charlotte said being number
two will make her try harder.

"Next year, we’ll get a really
big display and start earlier/*
she Jokingly said.
Third place was awarded to
the Carol and Wayne Hoffman's
Ridge Road home.
The CIA board presented the
Nippers with a yard sign, which
will be used annually far the
"Best Decorated House” award

winner, and with a plaque,
which they will keep.
"Randy and the association
have gotten Lake Mary to light
up more unlvcrkally. We Just
want people to think of Lake
Mary as a nice place to go to see
the Christmas lights, Nipper
said.

Santa arrives early In Arctic Village
Unltsd Press International______
ARCTIC VILLAOE. Alaska Santa Claus and a bond of Air
Force elv es descended on
America's northernmost Indian
s e t t l e m e n t to c e l e b r a t e
Christm as two weeks early,
passing out presents to every
child, giving the village a
washing machine and feasting
on caribou.
Athabascan Indian children In
this remote outpOat 130 miles
north of the Arctic Circle greeted
Santa as he emerged from the
belly of a C-130 Air Force cargo
plane In 23-below-zero weather
at dawn —about noon.
This far above (he Arctic Circle
at this lime of year, the sun
never rises, but offers a few
h o u r s o f n o t- v e r y - b r lg h t
daylight. The sun set Dec. 7 and
rises again Jan. 4. And the
temperature never did get higher
than about 15-below-zero — but
that's the wannest It's been here
In weeks.'
Kids, oblivious to conditions
that are norm al for them ,
couldn’t wait for Santa to make
the frigid mile-long snowmobile
trip to the village for a Christmas
party In the warm school gym.
So many of Arctic Village's
125 adults and children hopped
on their winter vehicles —
s n o w m o b i l e s , or
"snow m achines" as they're
called In Alaska — to greet Santa
at the snow-covered airstrip.

S a n ta o b lig e d th e eag e r
bundled-up children by staying
outside at the plane to talk and
be lolly for a white before
hitching a snowmobile ride to
o n e of th e m o st u n u s u a l
Christmas parties this side of the
North Pole.
The early Christmas celebrat­
ed Monday In Arctic Village la a
24-year tradition Unking a small
Air Force squadron based In
Anchorage with this isolated
settlement nearly 600 miles to
the north In the foothills or the
Brooks Range, the farthest north
village of the most northern
band of Indiana In America, the
Gwlch'ln Athabascan.
The 17th .T actical Airlift
Squadron. 105 men baaed at
Elmendorf Air Force Base, an­
swered a plea for help In 1967
when forest fires drove away
m igrating caribou — Arctic
VUlage's chief source of food.
Every year since then, the
squadron raises money to buy
Christmas presents and a dozen
airmen — with one as Santa i—*
lo. Arctic Village to celebrate
Christmas and feast on caribou
and other native foods.
This year, cook Margaret Tritt
prepared Indian fried bread.
Tried caribou, salted caribou
dumpling, caribou stew, salmon,
whlteflsh. local cranberry salad
and other foods.
A rctic V illa g e rs call
themselves "caribou people"
and Sarah Jam es said 75 per­
cent of their diet Is the caribou

they hunt.
The village has 36 school
children ranging from pre-school
to grade 10. and younger ones
serenaded their visitors with
"Merry Christmas and Happy
New Year" In the Gwlch'ln
language.
The C-130 pilot, Capt. Todd
Woodhouse of Mendham. N.J..
put on a magic show that
genuinely distracted the kids
from the presents waiting to be
handed out.
Staff Sgt. Carl Warrings, con­
cealed In a well-padded Santa
outfit that convinced younger
kids and kept Warring warm,
passed out gifts to every child by
name and said later, "I had a
blast."
Every year the squadron gets a
list of all children under 16 and
1A
what they want for Christmas.
families for Christmas
"I'm so happy." said Cindy
Gilbert. 6, who got the Cabbage service projects. He has received
one such letter this year from a
Patch doll she wanted.
"A watch — great, huh?." said girl who asked far assistance for
her young friend.
Mike Lee, 10.
"Moat of the letters are T
&lt;VI got a W alkm an," said
Aubray Brown. 7. Her sister. want*." Jam es said.
James, retired from the Navy
Shandal. 9. got two New Kids on
and from shuttle research with
the Block cassettes she wanted.
Alisha Gilbert. 5. worried she RCA-GE, spends about five
w o u ld n 't get a n y th in g for hours a day and two dally trips
misbehaving but she got the to the Post Office on the letterwriting project.
Barbie doll she wanted.
The modern-day Santa doesn't
Jerrald John. 4. got the socks,
gloves, long underwear and hat tool around Christmas In a
reindeer-drawn sleigh. Instead,
his mom said he needed.
Annie James, 9. examined her he said, "Santa rides a bike to
electronic keyboard and said. the Post Office — when It's not
raining."
"I’m Just learning."

Santa-

Ilona with the
county, but foiled to come to an
agreement.
County officials have said
Bryant has since expressed In­
terest In the Job. but commis­
sioners said last month they had
no Intereat in anyone who
turned them down before.
Rabun Impressed com m is­
sioners with his experience and
"can-do" altitude. Since 1968.
he haa b een m a n a g e r of
Clearwater, a city of 105.000
lhat to almost completely fully
developed. The city completed
Its comprehensive growth plan
about a year ago which was
accepted by the state which
commissioners said will give
him familiarity of the county's
own growth plan which will be
sent to the stale In April.
"He'll be able to hit the ground
running." said commissioner
Bob Sturm.
Rabun has also weathered a
public firestorm that developed
Into a political controversy over
a tax Increase while he was
county administrator of Manatee
County. Fla. from 1965 to 1966.

Rabun said the 20 percent tax
In e re a a e w as u n a v o id a b le
because It was primarily de­
manded for expenses for the
sheriff and other constitutional
officers.
Despite his efforts to reduce
the Increase. Rabun said the
proposal lead to a political up­
heaval and suggestions of dis­
solving the manager form or
government In lhat county. His
top executives began leaving
and finally, Rabun said he re­
signed, too,
C om m issioners repeatedly
quizzed Rabun on hto ability to
present a budget lhat Included
Increased costs for residents, a
lik e ly s c e n a rio u n d e r th e
county's current 0188 million
deficit situation.
"If I was interested In leas
h e a t , I w o u l d s t a y In
Clearwater," Rabun answered..
"It's easier."
"In my last Job. the com­
mission didn't seem committed
to professionalism." Rabort said
later. “Seminole County, while a
political situation. I don't ace an
overall attack on the county
manager kind of government."

W orkplace
1A

dustry to spy on
employees and report their ac­
tions to management and many
companies have Installed hidden
c a m e r a s to w a t c h t h e i r
employees.
Equally alarming, according to
the report, to a growing tendency
of companies to seek to control
the behavior and actions of
workers when they are not at
work or are at home.
"The first example of this Big
Brother-type expansionism was
urine testing for Illicit drugs," It
"Almost h a lf of American-

e m p lo y e r s r e q u i r e t h e i r
employees to submit to urine
tests, despite the undisputed fact
that urine testing does not
measure Impairment and de­
spite all available evidence In­
dicating that mast people's use
of legal or Illegal drugs on their
own time does not render them
drug dependent or affect their
work," the report said.
"Now. many employers are
refusing to hire people who
acknowledge using tobacco In
their own hom es and even
terminating current employees
who refuse to quit smoking." It
said.

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LOIS A. BUNDLE
Lois A. Brendlc. 42. 1000 E.
First St.. Sanford, died Tuesday
a t S t. L u k e's H ospital In
Maumee. Ohio. Bom Jan. 17.
1948, In Dowaglac, Mich., she
moved to Sanford In 1983 from
Arizona. She worked part-time
In the publication department at
New Tribes Mission and waa a
member of Deltona Alliance
Church.
Survivors Include husband.
D av id J . ; d a u g h te r . J o y
Elizabeth, Sanford: sons. John
F„ Orlando. Thomas D. and
Benjamin J.. Sanford; father,
Walter F. Dahlkc. Dowaglac;
brother, Walter E. Dahlke.
Elkhart. Ind. She waa preceded
In d e a th by h e r m o th e r.
Elizabeth Dahlke on Sepl. 21,
1990.
McLauchlln Clark Funeral
Home, Dowaglac. Mich., In
charge of arrangements.
ETHEL V. CLOUSE
Ethel V. Clouse. 91. 469
T u la n e D rive. A lta m o n te
Springs, died Monday at Florida
Hospital. Apopka. Bom Jan. 20.
1899, in Knoxville, Tcnn.. she
moved lo Altamonte Springs
from Maryland In 1969. She was
a homemaker and a Protestant.
Survivor Includes sister-in-law.
Tressa C. Johnson. Altamonte
Springs.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Hume. Forest City, In charge of
arrangements.

Ram on F lo res, 9 5 . Palm
S p rin g s D riv e, A lta m o n te
Springs, died Monday at Life
Care Center. Altamonte Springs.
Born Sept. 5. 1895. In Rio
Piedras. Puerto Rico, he moved
to A ltam onte S prings from
Miami Beach In 1982. He was a
manager in the steamship In­
dustry and a Catholic.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e w ife.
Eugenia; daughter, Lydia Prlna,
Altamonte Springs; three grandc h i l d r e n : five g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B aldw ln-Falrchlld F uneral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements.
CLIVE "SHORTY" HASTY
Clcve "Shorty” Hasty, 64. 155
Landover Place. Longwood. died
Tuesday at Meridian Nursing
Center. Longwood. Born June 2,
1926. In Sanford, he w a s ‘a
lifelong resident of the area. 11c
was a citru s laborer and a
Protestant. He was an Army
veteran of World War II.
Survivors include brothers.
Donald. Sanford, Jack, Bell,
Wade. Roseville. Ohio; sisters.
Ruth Corson. Pearl Kelly. Evelyn
Keel, all of Sanford. Mary. Waco.
Texas.
Brtoson Funeral Home, San­
ford, In charge of arrangements.

children;
grandchildren.

19 g r e a t - '

GWENDOLYN McCALLUM
Gwendolyn McCallum, 47. 398
Palm Drive. Oviedo, died Nov. 23
at South Seminole Community
Hospital, Longwood. Bom July
6. 1943. In Mount Vernon. N.Y..
she moved lo Oviedo from Pali­
sade. Neb., In 1968. She was a
homemaker.
Survivors Include husband.
Andrew; sons. Brian. Lincoln.
Neb.. Scott, Oviedo; daughter.
Jean Elizabeth. Oviedo.
All Faiths Cremation Service.
Casseloerry, In cliargc of ar­
rangements.
ROBERT ERIC MONETT
Robert Eric Monctt, 32. 2400
Key Ave., Sanford, died Tuesday
at Winter Park Memorial Hospi­
tal. Born June 9. 1958, In
Sanford, he was a lifelong resi­
dent. He was a waller for the
Peabody Holel In Orlando and a
Baptist. Hr was a veteran of the
U.S. Coast Guard.
Survivors Include parents.
Joseph and Betty. Sanford:
brother. David, Sanford; sisters,
Leona Jones. Sanford, Michelle
Gaylord. Lakeland.
Urlsson Flint-ml Home. San­
ford. In charge of arrangements.

Shady Lane. Longwood. died
Monday at Orlando Regional
Medical Center. Bom Nov. 1.
1973. In Orlando, he was a
lifelong resident of the area. He
was a student at Lake Mary High
School and a member of Calvary
Assembly, Winter Park.
Survivors Include mother and
stepfather, Diane and William T.
McGarry, Longwood; father,
R ich ard E. S aul, O rlando:
m aternal grandmother, Joan
Christensen. Winter Springs;
m a te rn a l s tc p g ra n d fa lh c r.
Reynolds J. Christensen. Winter
Springs: paternal grandmother,
Clare Frances McGarry, North
Berwick. Maine; paternal grand­
father. William G. McGarry. Las
Vegas, Nev.; brother, Michael
Paul Renwlck. Longwood; sla­
ters. Jessica Marie McGarry.
Christine Clare McGarry. both of
Longwood.
G arden Chapel Home for
Funerals. Longwood. In charge
of arrangements.

HASTY. CLIVE "»HO«TV“
Funeral tervlcei lor Mr. Clave "Shorty"
He»ty Mill be II a m. Thunder. Dec 30. al
Britton Funeral Hama Chapel with Tony
Black officiating. Infermenl te follow In
Sylvan Lake Cemetery, Paolo Frlendt may
vltll from l l p m WeSwtdey at tha Britton
Chapel
Britton Funeral Home. Sanford, in charge
of arrangement!.

MARGARET REEL
Margaret Reel. 63. Eileen
Drive, Altamonte Springs, died MARTIN. HINRY L f l
HENRY LEE MARTIN SR.
Memorial tervlcei tar Mr Henry Lee
Tuesday al her residence. She
Cl. of Sanford, who died Dec. IL will
Henry Lee Martin Sr., 83, of was born Jan. 26. 1927. In Merlin.
be held I p m T hunder al the Kingdom Hall
Sanford, died Dec. 15 at South Philadelphia. She was a regis­ al Jehovah i. IU I W 3rd S I. Sentard. with
HERMAN DEMBY
Seminole Community Hospital. tered nurse and a Catholic.
ter vice! held by Jehovah'! w ltneuei
Herman Dcmby, 72. 2105 Longwood. Horn Murch 30,
Survivors Include husband. W. MONCTT. BOBIRTEBIC
H arrison St.. Sanford, died 1907. In Clio. Ala., he moved lo Ramon: sons, Ramon K.. Or­
Memorial tarvlcei tar Mr Robert Eric
Tuesday al Oiilrnl Florida Re­ Sanford nine years ago from lando. Steven A.. Altamonte Monell.
el Sanford. w&lt;l bo I p m Thunday.
(tac
30. al Brliton Funeral Heme Chapel He
gional Hospital. Sanford. Horn Akron. Ohio, where he resided Springs: daughters. Diana L..
will
be
cremated.
Aug. 17. 1918. In Dover, Del., he for 66 years. He was a barber Frem ont. Calif.. D onna R.
Brliton Funeral Han*. Sentard. M TUI. It
moved to Sanford 30 years ago and was one of Jehovah's wit­ Grezlikowskl. Oviedo: brother. In charge el tervlcet
from there. He was a retired nesses.
William Schinldl. Pennsylvania:
construction laborer and a Bap­
Survivors Include wife. Louise sister, Mary Ho) Virginia: six
tist.
Salsula Hall-Martin. Sanford: grandchildren.
f
wmm
Survivors Include sister-in-law. daughter. Bernice Scott. Akron:
Baldwtn-Faln-hlld Funeral 1
mm
Hazel McCoy. Mllchclvtlle. Md.: sons. Henry L. J r.. Oviedo. Hume. Altamonte Springs. In |
Hvy.174
devoted friend, Georgia Bell Ronald H.. Akron, and Reginald charge of arrangements.
Kj
P fo
Davis. Sanford
H.. Sanford: sisters, Elizabeth
^ Q on aJ
PRANK
DANIEL
STRYKER
|
McClelland.
Akron,
and
Ruby
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
Latlmorr. Cleveland: 20 grand
Frank Daniel Stryker. 17 107 1
ford. In charge of arrangements

m m

a

413 W. First S t
Ptl. 322-9762
William H. "Bill" Wight C.P.C.U.
Praaldant
S a n in g C e n tra l F lo rid a Sine* 1949

Sanford

We'wgotanewMenu!

II Dinners under V i

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F ried Boneless Chicken B ieu tj

Stuffed Flounder

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M a h i Mahi

D eviled Crab Cakes

Seafood Pasta Broccoli F ried Shrimp
R o ck Shrimp

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Served w ilh fam ous conch chow der, choice o f potato,
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is, 13S0

Reserves help get mail to troops
IfM IM tl
KnlQht Bidder Newspapers

Fed cuts dtecount rate
WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve Board announced II la
cutting Its benchmark diacount Interest rate by 0.5 percentage
points to 6.5 percent effective Wednesday, apparently to
botater the sagging economy.
Other Interest rates are expected to Call aa a result of the
1making it easier to borrow money
biles to homes and businesses.
The discount rate, the rate the Fed charges on loans to
financial institutions. Is considered a symbolic toot of monetary
policy that serves as the central bank's primary Indicator of
credit conditions.
The Fed last changed the diacount rate Feb. 24. 1009, when
it was Increased to 7 percent from 6.5 percent.
As a prelude to the lowering of the discount rate, the Fed
recently acted to lower the Interest rates on Inter-bank loans.
That decision was also seen as the Fed signaling Its approval of
the federal budget agreement.
R a in s

flood K s n t u c k v

LEXINGTON, Ky. —Kentucky runneth over.
Creeks were out of their banka In rural areas Tuesday:
basements were flooding In towns and cities.
Roads everywhere were underwater.
The rain eras expected to stop before sunrise Wednesday, but
some rivers will keep rising.
The South Fork of the Kentucky River, for example, was
expected to rise by more than 15 feet from Tuesday morning to
Wednesday morning. At BoooevlOe. It was expected to crest 4
feet above flood fevefat 7 p.m. Wednesday.
Many parts of the state had received more than 3 Inches of
rain since Monday morning. The forecast called for a chance of
rain again Friday and Saturday.
The National Weather Service Issued a rail of flash flood
warnings across the state Tuesday, but relatively little damage
was reported.
Officials said It could be worse by Wednesday morning.

Seven die In bus crash
PARK CITY. Utah — Seven passengers were killed and 41
other people were Injured when a Chicago-bound Greyhound
bus was broadsided and overturned by a big-rlg truck In a
blizzard near the Wyoming border, officials said.
The accident occurred about 0:30 a.m. Tuesday at Echo
Junction on Interstate BO. near the Wyoming state line about
40 miles east of the resort town of Park City, where a winter
storm was already raging.
Gary Whitney, a Utah Highway Patrol public information
officer, said there were seven confirmed deaths and 16 people
hospitalized. A total of 41 people were treated for Injuries. He
said It appeared all the fatalities were bus passengers.
Greyhound spokesman George Gravley said the Chicagobound bus was carrying 43 passengers when It was hit and
overturned.

High cholesterol may not bo dostlny
WASHINGTON - Children with high levels or cholesterol
may not be destined to grow Into adults with worrisome levels
of the artery- clogging substance, researchers reported
Tuesday.
A study of 2,367 towa school children found about
three-quarters of the girls and about half of the boys who had
high blood cholesterol levels between ages 8 and 18 had
normal cholesterol counts as vounfl adults.
From United Prtaa fntwruttonal Roports

DHAHRAN. Saudi Arabia One Christmas gift had bounced
around so much In its transAtlantic Journey that It arrived
at the U.S. Army's mall sorting
center vibrating and bussing.
The Customs declaration form
glued on the package provided
th e explanation: A batterypowered electric razor was In­
side.
Another box bearing a radio
suffered the same fate, w hen Air
Force Sgt. Brian Johnson. 24. of
Daytona Beach. Fla., cam e
across It In the sorting bln, he
could hear statlc-y music Inside.
Here at the U.S. Army's firststop mall sorting center not for
from the tarmac of the Dhahran
air base, a team of soldiers Is
waging a much more pleasant
war than the one that may face
th e troops arrayed ag ain st
Saddam Hussein.
Som e 168 U.S. s o ld ie rs,
among them members of the
mobilized 351st Postal Reserve
Unit from Tallahassee. Fla., are
moving some 700.000 pounds of
mall a day to sorting substations
around Saudi Arabia.
The soldier-sorters have sent
h u n d r e d s of a l u m i n u m
Christmas trees on Iheir way.
and countless tons of cards
bearing season's greetings In
red. white and green envelopes.
T h e r e h a v e a ls o b een
thousands of pounds of cookies
In tins: a guitar sent only In Its
case with a shipping label
slapped on It: and four car tires
redirected by the U.S. Postal
Service to a soldier who had

Iraq blasts
EC, beefs
up forces

W riting L etters
Do adults write mors or fewer personal
totlors and notes than lOyeereago?,

l | ia s sw &gt; m
U nlfd Prats Intsmst tonal

In an ago i
wirang m 1

■ w i iw u p i t o n a n o s m w pnw m g i m i

m im*

Almost 40 perewit of man and ovar half of the

.........................
dutifully filled out a change-ofaddress form before he packed
off to the Persian Gulf.
"I've personally seen two golf
clubs — sand wedges — and a
couple of fishing poles come
through. 1 don’t know what
they're going to do with those In
the desert," said Johnson, an Air
Force computer operator now on
assignment to the postal corps.
Working out of the back of a
hair-dozen trailers, amid the din
of landing and departing aircraft,
the sorters are coping with a
flo o d o f m a ll. In c lu d in g
hundreds of letters and packages
with Incomplete or Just plain
wrong addresses that are stum­
ping the men and women who
work In the "Locator" division.
Capt. Stan Rlcheson. 36, la the

10

on-the-ground commander. A
reservist called up from work aa
a pharmaceutical salesman In
Tallahassee, he said the mall
peaked about 10 days ago when
more than 700 tons of mostly
Christmas packages and cards
arrived In s single day.
Now. his soldiers — driving
flatbed trucks — meet the mall
at military aircraft and get It
sorted and out to field post
offices In "less than 24 hours.
It's a fairly efficient operation."
he said.
Still, he estimated It takes 12
days for a letter dropped In a
post box anywhere In America to
be delivered to a soldier some­
where In Saudi Arabia.

B ush : N o t a n o th e r V ie tn a m
people tha this la not another
Vietnam."
He said his advisers have
WASHINGTON - President predicted "all kinds of ranges on
Bush, bracing for the possibility how quickly this guy (Iraqi
of military action to force Iraq P resident Saddam Hussein)
from Kuwait, reiterated that any would fold, but none that I know
conflict In the Persian Gulf of are predicting anything like
region will not become another the long drawn out bitter experi­
ence of Vietnam."
Vietnam.
After years of Indirect In­
In opening rem arks to a
newaconference of regional edi­ volvement. the United States
tors Tuesday, Bu*h said he committed combat troops In
favored a "peaceful settlement" 1965 to battle communist forces
to the crisis, but noted the fast In Vietnam. At Its height In
approaching U.N.-mandated 1968. more than 540.000 U.S.
Jan . 15 deadline authorizing s o ld ie rs w ere deployed In
force to remove Iraq from Southeast Asia. Before the (Inal
wlthdrawl of troops In 1973.
Kuwait.
.
,
Bush said that he has "looked more than 58,000 Americans
Into If enough to be totally had died.
Vietnam not only produced
confident to tell the American
UPt Whita Houaa Rsporisr

battlefield casualties, but also
Inflicted deep political and social
wounds at home, creating some
of the moat bitter divisions In
America since the Civil War.
"The agony of Vietnam Is still
with us." Bush sold. "People
remember a protracted war.
They remember a war where
individuals were asked to fight
with one hand tied behind their
back in essence. This will not be.
In my view, that kind of con­
frontation."
The president said that he
believed he has the support of
the American people but it
would erode tf the United Stalest
got into a prolonged war In the
gulf. "I don't want war as an
option. I want peace." Bush said.

Iraq lashed out Wednes­
d a y a t th e 1 2 -n a tlo n
European Community for
refusing to meet with Iraqi
Foreign M inister Tarlq
Axis, and Egyptian
re p o rts said Iraq w as
bolstering Its forces In
Kuwait with troops moved
from the border with Syria.
R eports of th e Iraqi
buildup In Kuwait surfaced,
shortly before Defense Sec­
retary Dick Cheney and
Colin Powell, chairman of
lhe Joint Chiefs of Staff,
were due to arrive In Saudi
Arabia to meet with U.S.
troops and military strate­
gists.
E g y p t's M iddle E ast
News Agency reported
Wednesday that Iraq had
withdrawn large numbers
of Its troops deployed along
Its border with Syria to
bolster Its troops In Kuwait.
In a dispatch from the
S y r i a n c a p i t a l of
Damascus. MENA quoted
sources In Ihe border re­
gion as saying, "armored
Iraqi troops, tanks and
artillery units had been
w ithdraw n to occupied
Kuwait."
Regional observers said
the unconfirmed Iraqi reinf o r c e m e n t of Its
430.000-strong force In
Kuwait and southern Iraq
w as an a p p a re n t sign
Baghdad was preparing for
a U.S.-led attack after the
Jan. 15 deadline set by the
U.N. Security Council for
Iraq's withdraw from the
oil-rich emirate.
Earlier Wednesday. Iraq
Issued a statement con­
dem ning the European
Community for Its refusal
to meet with Aziz before
the Iraqi Foreign Minister
had held talks in Washing­
ton with President Bush.
Plans for the Azix-Bush
talks and a reciprocal meet­
ing In Baghdad between
Secretary of State James
Baker and Iraq! President
Saddam Hussein have been
p u t o n h o ld .

A rrest in Evers probe shows
how M ississippi has changed
KnlghtRlddsr Nswspspsrs
JACKSON. Mias. - The dis­
trict attorney spoke Tuesday of
new evidence that led to the
resurrection of murder charges
against a militant racist for the
1963 assassination of Medgar
Evers, one of the civil rights
era's most Infamous crimes.
But probably more Important
than a few new witnesses has
been the m etam orphosis of
Mississippi from a place crippled
by bitter and sometimes violent
racial divisions to a more toler­
ant society where a new trial
may have a different outcome.
In the hateful atmosphere of
1964 Mississippi, It was consid­
ered shocking that the two
murder trials of Byron De La
Beckwith ended In hung Juries
rather than an outright acquit­
tal.
In those times, many white
M ls s l s s t p p l a n s r e g a r d e d
Beckwith as nearly a hero. While
awaiting trial in a county Jail.
Beckwith was allowed to kt*p
his gun collection In his Jail cell,
along with his color TV. Ross
Barnett, governor at the time,
stopped by the courtroom to

* T h o so

w e r e

strange, terribly de­
structive times in our
community. |
-John Fox III, assistant
shake hands and visit during the
first trial, even as evidence was
linking Beckwith to a murder
that shocked the nation and
p a i n te d M is s is s ip p i a s a
backwater of racial Intolerance.
“Those were strange, terribly
destructive times In our com­
munity," remembered John Fox
III, an assistant prosecutor in the
1964 trials. *Tm glad to say
Mississippi has changed."
Beckwith must now stand trial
In a Mississippi where his style
of open racism , of ran tin g
against blacks. Jews, Hispanics
and Immigrants has lost Its
constituency.
"Mississippi Is different place.
Nobody listens to that stuff
anymore.” said C.C. Bryant, a
longtime civil rights activist and
a close friend of Medgar Evers.
"The white community thinks

his Ideas are all obsolete."
"Maybe now. Medgar will get
Justice," Bryant said.
In 1 9 6 3 . E v e r s w a s
Mississippi's most prominent
civil rights activist, starting io
establish a national reputation.
The 38-year-old state field secre­
tary for the NAACP had been an
agitator for civil rights since
1954 when he hilllely attempted
to enroll in the segregated Uni­
versity of Mississippi law school.
On| Junc 12. 1963. as Evers
emerged from his car In the
driveway of his little frame home
in west Jackson, a single 30.06
rifle slug ripped through his
back. Evers fell dying with a
bundle of "Jim Crow Must Go"
T-shirts in his arms.
In a thicket across Missouri
Street from Evers' home, police
found a 1917 Enfield rifle,
equipped with a scope. Both ride
and scope belonged to Beckwith,
and Ihe FBI matched a fresh
fingerprint on the scope :o the
r ig h t In d ex fin g er o f th e
Greenwood salesman.
In the 1964 trials, prosecutors
Introduced witnesses who placed
Beckwith In Jackson two days
before the murder, asking direc­
tions to Evers' home.

Y ou n g A N C m em b ers w ant change
■rMCKkVMAN
Knlght-Ridder N ew spapers

JOHANNESBURG. South Africa - The gather­
ing of 1.600 leaders of the African National
Congress, which ended Sunday, highlighted two
fundamental Issues that seem likely to dominate
the fullering reform process In South Africa.
The
Is that negotiations between ANC
Deputy President Nelson Mandela and South
African President F.W. de Klerk cannot lead to a
lasting, peaceful settlement without the support of
millions of poor blacks who. the conference
revealed, remain highly skeptical of the whole
process.
The second Is that even though Mandela and de
Klerk use the same kind of language, talking
grandly of non-raclal democracy and future
reconclllallon. their constituents realize full well
that they are actually lighting for entirely different
things.
Mandela forcefully made those points In u
speech to 50.000 ANC supporters gathered at a
Soweto stadium Sunday to welcome ANC Presi­
dent Oliver Tam bo from three decades of exile.
"The government's aim Is to reform apartheid

out of existence while carrying ovrr Into the future
accumulated privileges and advantages of the
while monopoly on power." said Mandela. "The
ANC, on the other hand, seeks to attain the total
eradication of apartheid and overcome as quickly
as possible Its ravages on our people."
De Klerk's National Party, representing a
constituency of generally well-to-do whites and a
business community dominated by wealthy
whites. Is struggling to find a formula to share
power with South Africa's black majority while
surrendering os few white privileges as possible.
Mandela's ANC. representing a much greater
constituency. Is trying to wrest power from South
Africa's while rulers In a way that frees them to
transfer a generous portion of the nation's wealth
to the very people who have so long been unjustly
denied It.
The problem. Mandela said. Is that "there Is no
meeting of minds between us on the real meaning
of democracy.”
ft may well be that this ANC conference — ami
the key Issues that it highlighted —will be seen as
one of the major crossroads In South Africa's
faltering march toward reform and reconciliation.

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PARTY ?
drug uae Is no longer
ling out of control. It’*
_ to eb b "
big news to that frequent
of cocaine la down.’* the
source aald. Frequent uae la
defined aa consuming cocaine
[snore than once a week.
Source* declined to release
epedflc figures in the new Na­
tional Household Survey on
Drug Abuse, but aald they show
a decline In bath frequent co­
caine uae and overall casual
drug uae.
Previous NIDA studies found
that from I960 to 1668. the
n u m ber of frequent cocaine
users climbed from 647,000 to
862.000. and the number of
casual drug users dropped from
23 million to 14.6 million.
B u s h 's national an ti-d ru g
strategy, now completing Its
second year, devotea about
tw o-thirds of Its 610 billion
budget on law enforcement and
Interdiction. The rem aining
funds to go treatment and edu­
cation.
In response to critics, the
administration to expected to
devote more resources to educa­
tion and treatment in its revised
strategy, which will be sub­
mitted to Congress in February.

m

Burning fuel more efficiently Is
the best way to reduce U.S.
dependence on foreign oil. (o
slow global warming and to spur
economic efficiency, Wlrth and
others aald.
In a letter dated Dec. 7 and
unveiled Tuesday, the groups
urged Bush to Imppqvs-energy
efficiency by 3 'percent per year
by the end of the decade;
Increase use of renewable fuels
by 20 percent; Increase fuel
efficiency of new light vehicles
by 60 percent: and cut energy
use In bulldlngsby 25 percent.
The groups also called for
stabilizing electricity demand
within ftve yean; far doubling
federal spending on conservation
and renewable fuels research
within three yean: and keeping
the Arctic National Wildlife Ref*
■uge off limits to all exploration

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WASHINGTON — Energy effi­
ciency and fuel conservation
must be at the heart of any
effecUve U.S. energy strategy. 16
major environmental and public
policy groups stressed Tuesday.

Bush's energy strategy meet­
ing with top aides and Cabinet
officials originally was set for
Tuesday. It was postponed after
a preliminary session last week
erupted In strong criticism of
Energy Secretary Jam es D.
Watkins' conservation proposal*
by White House Chief of Staff
John Sununu. chief economic
adviser Michael J. Boskln ar.d
B udget Director Richard
Darman.
"We are here today to say that
the cornerstone of a long-term,
comprehenalve energy policy
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emphasized Sen. Timothy E.
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A lliance to Save Energy, a
broad-baaed coalition of busi­
ness. consumer, governmental
and environmental groups.

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roups push
* uel policy

The environm entalists o u t­
lined their energy strategy goats
at a press conference here three
day* before President Bush Is
scheduled to begin choosing
options for hto long-promised
plan to boost U.S. energy In­
dependence.

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D e c e m b e r 19, 1 9 9 0

W EDNESDAY

S an ford Herald

INSIDB:

■
Ptopto. PfQ* 3B
■Comtot, Pagt 4B

■Clastlftal, Paq#'

B u r g e r

IN B R IE F

Six state champs
highlight field

aC H O O L H O Q p tl
Orangtwood Chriatlan falls
APOPKA — Jimmy Dorsey capped a nine
point fourth quarter by hitting the wtnnlngshot
with 0 0 3 left to give South Sumter a 68-66
triumph over Orangewood Christian In the
"Finest Four” Classic.
Mike Tadlock led South Sumter with 20 points
followed by Dorsey (17) and Ronald Jones (12).
South Sumter will face U kr.lU flhU ndjshtch
upset Apopka Monday. In the Finals Thursday.
The Rams w il play Apopka In the consolation
game today at 0:30 p.m.
Doing the damage for Orangewood Christian
were Daniel Parke (33 points. 14 of 28 from the
door, si* assists) and Tim SenelT (22 points. 8 of
14 from the door. 10 rebounds).

wy iv N i

Herald Sport* Editor
l a k e MARY — Since girts’ soccer became a
recognised high school
1061.11 stat champions have been crowned (one
each the drat seven years
soccer-playing schools were lumped together In

a -*

kicks off this S f t e m ^ stL ske
hlah schools, there srtll be six former sure
champions In the field. Including the schools that
won the last four.
_
..
Lake Brantley, the defending Class 4A Mate
c h a m p , h a s a first-round bye b u t Fort
Lauderdale’s St. Thomas Aquinas, the d e e d in g

oaAMIWOOOCMainiANtM)
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McCIteteth 0 77 t i e r * • J J J

s a a s s s f f l B K ’4

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14 14 14 M - 44
H IIM M -S
I CSrtaHan 4 (Parka 4).
teute - O ra rff r osM ChrtUlan 17.
South Sumtar 11T SacarStTtete
- OranyawaoS Chrltlten *4. South
South Sumtar If.

Sumter M.

H

c« . : r s y
.:f f u ,d

The victory keeps the Wolves
perfect at 9 0 . Lake Mary falls to
4-2-1.
Deltona Jumped on top of Lake
Mary five minutes Into the match
when Pete Aromando scored on an
assist from Pete Qulnltvan. Frank
Ferrintlno made It 2-0 with hla
unassisted goal In the 30th minute.

8^Today at SCC’s Health and Physical Education
Center. Lyman takes on University at 4 p m-. Btohop
Moore faces Oviedo at 5:30 p.m.. Seminole ph»y» West
p m » d U ke H u , bU lteW Inler Pu k U
8:30 p.m. Seminole and Lake Mary had first-round

A couple of minutes after Landers
robbed the Rama twice wtthln
seconds. Brian Coduto gut Lake
Mary on the beard when he sewed
with six minutes left to play. Eric
Davis getting credit for the assist.

^ T h an k s to second-round bye* Lake Howell and Lake
Brantley advanced directly to the Merntflnals wlth their
wins. The Silver Hawks will play
SemInde-Weat
Orange winner and Lake Brantley will lace will face the

I

ORLANDO — Slnua Phillips stole the ball and
drove for a layup to put Central Florida ahead
for good at 52-51 with 13:40 left in ‘he game
and the Knights went on to beat North
Carollna-Ashevtlle 91-76 Tuesday.
Phillips led Central Florida (5-1) with 19
points. Ken Leeks had 18 points while Denny
H in so n . A nthony H aynes and Tom m y
Tormohlcn added 13.
„L
, . ,
Darryl Sanders scored 25 of his 30 points for
the Bulldogs (3-5) In the first half. Brent Keck
added 10 points and pulled down eight
rebounds. Robert Watson had 10 rebounds for

5K3WSJ&amp; w s s u S s s £ £

Justin Walker created a potential
game-tying opportunity for the
Rams when he played a ball square
to an onrushlng Josh Arnold. But
his shot from In close waa parried
by Landers.

as the Silver Hawks won their fourthgame Ina imw.
University. In IU first year of exlstence.waspoced by
Mike Jefferson and David Santana with 12 and 11
points, respectively.
T r e v ^ o ^ r e d 18 of hi. game-hlgh 27 pointsJin
the first half as the Patriot, ‘^ r o n m i l o f t h e game
early In the second quarter and held off the game
Hornets. Also scoring in double figures for Lake
Brantley was Anthony Washington with 10.
Sheridan Washington and Andrew Buckley scored In
double figure, for Bhhop Moore with 14 and 11.

NT h e i^ lV«t*urt for Central Florida Is their best
start since the 1981-82 season when they
started. 5-0.
_________

1

FSU upstts South Florida
TALLAHASSEE — Douglas Edwards "cored a
career-high 26 points as Florida State defeated
South Florida 80-72 Tuesday night, handing the
Bulls their first loss of the season.
Edwards, a 6-foot-9 sophomore, also led
Florida State (4-2) with nine rebounds and five
Assists*
Michael Polite chipped In with 14
Aubry Boyd 13. and Chuck Graham and Rodney
Dobard scored 10 points each.
Marvin Taylor led South Florida (5-11jWlth^22
points. Gary Alexander added 15 and Radenko
Dobras had 14. including 12 In the second half
for the Bulls.

Sonics soar by Magic

«-»

U n..« « .y

Patriots outlasted Bishop Moore 03-48. bu‘ Lyman was
unable to hold off defending classic champion West
Orange, dropping a 08-50 decision, while Ovterio gave
away a big early lead In succumbing to Winter Park

^Knights go to 5-1

|PRO BASKETBALL

DELTONA — Goalie Randy Lan- ;
ders made several saves on shots
from point-blanks range to preserve
Deltona’s 2-1 win over the Lake
Mary Rama In a boys’ soccer match
played at Deltona Hlfth School.

1990 Cent's! Florida Classic at Seminole Communl y

The e x p a n s i o n timetable calls for minorleague play to begin In 1992 with the player
allocation draft In November
Of the six dnallsts. only Washington, a
longtime member o f the A L before lhe franchise
moved to Minnesota, previously had a majorleague team.

COLLBOK HOOPS

Goalkeeper
helps Wolvee
thwart Rams

J2XS&amp;.
HowHIpoUrtwU.
but Lvman and Oviedo fell in the opening round of the

NEW YORK — The National League Tuesday
named si* dnallsts for Us two expansion
baseball teams In 1993.
The si* cltlca are: Buffalo. N.Y.. Denver.
Miami: Orlamdo. Fla.: St. Pctersburg-Tam ^
Fla.. Washington. The two winning bids will be
announced before Sept. 30.
The new franchises will pay 105 million each
to join the NL. They will not be able toahareln
the league s television revenues for at least two

.

SEATTLE — Derrick McKcy scored eight of
his 33 points In the final four minutes on
Tuesday night, helping the Seattle SuperSonlcs
to a 122-105 victory over the Orlando Magic In u
game delayed by an hour by a six-inch
snowstorm.
c_
A late afternoon snowstorm snarled Seattle
traffic, preventing players and fans from arriv­
ing at the game. The games official a‘‘™ toncc
as 10.400 because of tickets sold, but only 1.568
actually were at the arena.
_ ...
Scdalc Thrcatt added 22 points. Eddie
Johnson 21 and Shawn Kemp 20 for the Sonics
Terry Catledgc led Orlando with 30 points.
Scott Sklles had 24 and Anderson 2 1.

Lake Mary outshot Deltona 12-6.
Including 6-0 In the second hair.
Landers made dx saves while Jason
Reddltt made live, all In the first
half. Kevin Tyll. who replaced
Reddltt at halftime, did not have to
make a save. Each team had four
corner kicks.

rCLTman led West Orange 14-11 alter the first period
anc? scored the first bucket of the second quarter but
then went over three mfoutM r r i t l ^ t a o w ^ h l f o the
Warriors scored 13 unanswered points to take a 24
lead that the Greyhounds were unable to overcome.
i&lt;-i nuick senior guard Quentin Smith scored 18

"We played real well In the
second half.” said Lake Maru Coach
Larry McCorkte. "I’m not excited to
lose a match, but I’m really de­
lighted with out second-half effort.

Karate FteateSyKMy

JIM 0

Thanks to a win over University and a second-round bye,
IS T S liS . (So. 23) « d lb .
H.wKo
are In the semifinals of the Central FlorldaClassic,
the period. After Simon Harper hit a free throw lo tie
the game, the Wldcals went on a 9-0 run to take a 61-52
G Ovl^d^lcxjked* like It waa on Its way to a blowout lead The Lions were uWc to gel as close as three points
victory when It took a 25-9 lead with 1:05 lo g
in the late In llie game but Winter Park hung on.
first quarter. Despite a modest run by the Wildcats, the
Aklva Wilson and Riley McKenzie (21 points each).
Lions still appeared to be In control of thegfom| when Brooks (19) and Foy (14) hit double digits In scoring as
they took a 47-38 lead Into the lockerroom at
the Wildcats Improved lo 5-3 on the season.
But Winter Park, behind Terrence Foy and Williams
Harper led Oviedo with 20 points. Also contributing
were Fonts! Rogers (17) and D a n Hargrave (11).

double figures. AUo In d o u tk . were Doinl. RUko 1141.
Scott M c C a f f r e y (11) a n d Jason Shaw (10).
Charlie Francis and Brian Grayson both had super
games for Lyman with Francis scoring 14 points and

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7, C « fto 11 4 7 37. W oiHngton 4 3 i 10. B rotk 13 7 0. L*14f 3 7 1 1 T0I4 ». 7

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Orango IV Lyman U . routedaut-iw te.T adw teote-ntew .

0 0 4 0.

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Brantley
the winner
the Winter
__________
, Mnrv
plays plays
the winner
of theofWin
Tournament.-fc
host
Lake the
Mary,Class
the 4A
Class Brantley
4A
contest at 8 p.m.
title 1st In 1909. plays Eau Gallic at 6 p.m. while Park-Dcltona
At Lake Mary, the losers of the BWtop
Bishop Moore. Class 3A stale champ In 1989.
Moore-Melboume and West Orotffi-Llncolntttnplays at 2 p.m. against Melbourne, which won tests play at 2 p.m. Thursday w hile U * wfoneT*
the single class state championship In iw w .
of those two game* play at 0 p m
Both games will be at Lake Mary.
the Lake Mary-Eau Oallte and St- Thomas^Y.
Finally. Lyman, the 1985 single-class champ,
Phillips games play at 4 p.m. with the winners
plays at home again* Boone at 0 p.m. In other
first-round games to be played dt Lyman. Lake facIngoffatSp.m.
On Friday, all the action moves to Lsk*
Howell faces Tampa-Berkley Prep at 2 p.m. and
At 10a.m. and noon will be thc ^ lf in a t o o f th®
Winter Park plays Deltona at 4 p.m.
At I *w- Mary. West Orange and Tallahassee- consolation bracket followed ^
Thursday night's 0 and 8 p.m.
*fed
Lincoln play at 8 p.m..
_ .,
’’When we add teams like St. Thomas. Berkley 2 and 4 p.m. The four remaining undefeated
teams play In the semifinals at 0 and 8 p.m.
Prep and Lincoln. It adds a little more variety.
Mid Lake Mary Coach Bill Elsscle. "In every first
Five games are scheduled for SMturdwy- Tlj*
round match, the local team Is playing someone
consolation bracket final Is scheduled for 10a.m.
they don’t have on the regular season. Wc always with the seventh and eighth place game set for
try to do It that way.”
noon. The game to decide fifth and sixth place
Action will continue on Thursday at both sites
will be at 4 p.m. while the thlrdandfourthptacc
with consolation and winners’ bracket contests.
game Is to kick off at 0 p.m. The championship
At Lyman, the losers of the Lake HowellBerkley Prep and Lyman-Boonc games play at 4
C
S
t S
S
f t &lt;or .d u lu . W
;
p.m. while the winners of those two games play
students.
•
at 6 p.m. Defending tournament champion Lake

Heralo sport* writsr
q a iu fo r d _i» was a 50-50 day for Semlnoie County

Orlando a finalist

- .-.i

k ic k s

Patriots, Hawks
advance in Classic

Jam s* S M « . B*tartem I 1-J 7. H a r r i s &gt; M I. Ttetei: n 1 1 »

PRO BAM BALL

K in g

( | ( )a , _ m
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0 00. TabKOd 3004. Harper 74 0 70 Total! 13101103
u u _ j,
W tetar F art
u « i t 17 - 13
no.nl l .*io ooal* - Winter P ark 3 IW1l*on I. M c K a n lte '*•
31
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Fouted out - non* T*thnlc»l» - n o n * R*&lt;ord — 41

Hoatell VI.

Deltona Is one of the top four teams
we ll see all year. They’re for real."
Next up for Lake Mary will be a 2
p.m. game al Bishop Moore on
Saturday.
In Junior varsity action Tuesday.
Lake Mary beat Deltona 3-1.

Tribe tops Mainland
SANFORD — Jennifer Benge
scored goals on a direct kick and a
penally kick lo help Seminole top
Mainland 5-1 In a girls’ soccer
match played Monday afternoon al
Seminole High School's Thomas E.
Whtgham Stadium.
Dawn Burks scored the Tribe's
goal on an assist from Chcll
Hathaway four minutes Into the
game. A Mainland own goal made It
2-0. After Sabrina Rcall tucked In a
rebound to up the lead lo 3-0. Benge
scored her goals to Ice the game.
"It was a whole team effort.' said
Seminole Coach Suzy Reno. "It was
a good finish to the year. It's nice to
end on a winning note."
Now 7-6-0. Seminole won't play
again until Jan. 3. hosting DeLand
In a Sen Inolc Athlellx Conference
match.

Thermocarbon caps championship season
with^blowout
Also contributing were Dinah Allen (two
s U f f r e p o r t * __________________________________

BASKETBALL
7 :3 0 p.m . -

W G N . NBA. Chicago Bulls al

Detroit Pistons. (L)
L 19:30 p.m . ESPN NCAA. Princeton at
Ncvada-La* Vegus. (L)
Complete lla th f e * — • M

SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation Depart­
ment Women's Fall Slowpllch Softball League
c a m e to a c lo se T u e s d a y n ig h t w ith
Thermocarbon. Seko Air Freight and Harcar
picking up victories at Plnehurst Park.
League champion Thermocarbon waa the only
team to actually play. t i e a t l n g J o n M &amp; A m o c U l e s
18-2. Seko und Harcar picked up 7-0 forfeit wins

____ r-*4 - I r III I n if i l l l f l K .1I1 O f l l AUtO
over
Dick Joyce Well MDrilling
and Sanford Auto
Auction, respectively. League runners-up
Electone had already finished Us season.
Contributing to the Thermocarbon 23 hit
attack were Teresa Walburger (home run. two
doubles single, three runs 7cored). Linda Lewis
(triple, two singles, two runs stored). Debbie
Leigh (double, iwo singles, two runs scored).
Sharon Paulk (double, two singles, three runs
scored) and Rulh Tcmpesta (three singles, four
runs scored).

rLai:
r

J ■1

fl

A lM l
C O IIH IU U I
K
a i r l n s / i n It x k U
singles,
.wo runs stored).
DeniseI Levinson
Uwo
singles, run scored). Juckle Suggs and Sue S0.)*3
lone triple each) and Michelle Widener (double.

Providing ihc offense for Jones A Associates
Shelia Haynes llhrcc singles). Linda Curtis (iwo
singles, run scored). Karen Calhoun (two singles .
Peggv Pulliam and Sandy Otto (one double each).
C'aihv Carter (single, run scored) and Judy
j

*

1

�ktf&lt;

M — Sanford Herald, Sen lord, Florida — Wadnaaday, December 19,1990

EJ7|T S &amp; S TA N D IN G S
[rSWra
so w

J

sabkktbaii.

lltol* M

: Lyman n UMrertfty, 4 p m ;
Tn. Ovlato, 5J0 pm ; Bornlnoi*
*» W n l Orangt. T p m ; Lake Harr n
Parti, ■ p m
SOSKETSALL
Btohop Moore ye. Malboiime, 2 p m ;
Fori L K w d a H t l Tnomoa Agrrinw ae. Or.
PtMHpo. 4 p m ; Lake Mary re. lou Settle. •
pm ; Wom Orange n Tettehae*** Lincoln. S
pm.
M Lyman tkph M to e t lake Morrell re.
Tamp*Berkley Prep, 2 p m ; Oeltona va
Winter Pork, 4 p m ; Lyman re. Boone. B p m

U
nieM aM e
nar York
*4--I---#Wa9y

Milwaukee

Chicago
Detroit
Atlanta
Cleveland

W L Pet. OB
If 4 U e —
W 7 .4*4 I
10 11 .454 iw
I U .144 10'J
7 IS . l i t Illy
1 17 . m i s t y
CentrM Dtvtalae
17 7 .T H ­
IS • .457 ny
14 V .400 111

niiJOb s

Sen Antonio
Utah
Houiton
Dallao
Denver
Portland

GoldenState
LAClipper*
Seattle

AmsHr

W L Pet. OB
IS S .710 —
14 0 447 1
I I I I .542 4
7 1 4 J J ] Ity
7 IS .311 *
S 17 .117 II
I I I .MO tlty
Poclflc H aitian
» 1 .V il­
la 7.047 4ty
14 7.447 4«*
U 10.JOS IV*
W 11.425 lit*

111.Ml 11**
IS.MO 14V*

Sacramento

0

Utah tU C hertarietoo
Philadelphia 110. La Clipperi *t
LA Laker* IK. New York *7
Phoenia IU Dallao *1
AAliwaufcoe MO. Detroit III
San AnNnla 00. Houaton *S
Cbtaago t t l Miami M t
Portland in. Oaldon State 04
Sacramento MU AOlrmeaeta *0
Seattle I U *
------

Graves and receiver Rob Car­
penter to lead the Orangemen
to a 27-21 victory.
LIBERTY BOWL: Ohio Stale
(7-3-1) vs. Atr Force (6-5).
Memphis. Tenn.. Thursday.
Dec. 27.8 p.m. EST. ESPN.
Ohio State's Buckeyes Just
missed going to the Rose Bowl
as the Big Ten representative.
Air Force won the Command­
er's Trophy with victories
over the service academies.
Army and Navy. However, the
USAF Is no match for Ohio
State. Give It to the Bucks.
31-20.
ALL-AMERICAN BOWL:
North Carolina State (8-5) vs.
Southern Mississippi (8-3).
Birmingham. Ala.. Friday.
Dec. 28. 7:30 p.m. EST.
ESPN.

Wizard of Odds
S«
ckt
Blockbuster
Bowl will realty
be the “blockbuster'’ of the
early round of bowl games In
college football. It matches
Florida State and Penn State.
Here’s the rundown on the
December bowl games:
ALOHA BOWL: Arlsona
17*4) va. Syracuse 16-4-2),
Honolulu. Tuesday. Dec. 25.
3:30 p.m. EST. ABC TV.
Arizona's Wildcats finished
In the middle of the Pac-10
standings. The highlight of
their season was a 35-26 win
over Southern Cal. Syracuse
p la y e d a m u c h to u g h e r
schedule. Including four howl
teams. So. look far QB Marvin

Alabama If. Va, Military 45
Alabama » . *7. Clark H
Amarl te a W. FlarMa AHaatla 71
C o a tra l F le rld e *1, N C -A tk tv Ill*
FlarMa tt.M . tom b FbrM a 71
LaatoMM 54. m, Arkemaa It. 74
Lawlolane Tedi M. Wt LewHiana H

n

Atlwlaolppl St. I * . Alcorn St. 4S
Southern*, xovtor ( L a t e r
Toman St. 77. Hevterd 42
W ttt Virginia 17, OM Oam Irion 4f
AaMand 130. Hiram 71
Aurora ttt, Reaery t f
Carthage 1*1. N. Central (lll.l I t
Denlaan 74. Blirttten SI
Indiana 17, Kentucky (4
Io * a tl. Chicago St. 70
Michigan St. It, Evanavlllo 70
St. Loutt H . Indiana $1,07
Urbane 97, Ornman 7S
W. Hllnolil4.JacfcM nSt.il
Fram e SI. 14. MlM. Valley SI. 40
Montana 44. Portland OS (OT&gt;
Sen F rone I«co 70. BoltaSt.41
Sente Clero 01. Novado 40

S o u t h e r n M iss ha nde d
Louisville (9-1-1) Its lone de­
feat. 25-13. They also beat
SEC powers Alabama and
Auburn. Dick S h erid an 's
Wolfpack will be Ihe Golden
Eagles' ninth victim: Make It
Southern Mississippi, 24-14.
BLOCKBUSTER BOWL:
Florida State (9-2) vs. Penn
State (9-2). Miami. Friday.
Dec. 28. 8 p .m . EST.
Raycom-TV.
H e r e ar e t w o ev enl ymatched teams with super
coaches. In 25 years at Penn
S t a t e . J o e P a t e r n o Is
229-59-3. His bowl record ts a
gaudy 13-6-1. Bobby Bowden
of FSU has 204 wins In his
career, second only to Paterno
as the biggest winner among
active Division l-A coaches.

iR StiLB T i

10 U ,417 7
t IS -371 I
114.144 0

Indiana
Charlotte

B -B o w l will be explosive

UU Brooklyn at, Rider 41
Now York Ted* 74. StoamttoM It
Slippery Reck tea, Pitt B radfgrdtt
Temple 47. Perm St. 4]

N I T PM. BP ©A
M i l 141)40 (Of
1* 14 7 41 117 111
17 I1 S M IM IJO
I I 17 9 3* 117 100
14 141 IS 144 111
11 14414 I* 114

NY I
Philadelphia
New Jeryey
Waihlng ton
Pittsburgh
NY Itlandort
Stolen
Montreal
Hertford
Buffalo
Quebec

Ado m i H e ll Ion
IB I I 141 115109
It U 3 35 111 113
14 M 4 22 f t 113
11 15 7 2910J 111
• 11622 10B 151

Chicago
51. Louie
Detroit
Mlnrewt*
Toronto

Ptorrto Dvtoion
W L T PH. OF OA
22 11 2 4* 122 91
20 9 4 44 115 90
17 11 4 M 120 124
101941* 101 11*
*251 1* 92 145

Calgary
Lot Angoiot
Vancouver
Edmonton
if innipz^

EewyWMi QSvAaAmw
20 114 44 145 109
1710 1 29 132 10*
14 17 221 107 120
12)4 2 20 90 99
10 10717120119

Philadelphia*! Beaton, r x p m .
LA Cllppen at New J e m y . 7:70 p i
Now York e t MMML 7iM p.m
LA Lafcan at Cleveland. 7:70 p m .
Chicago at Detroit. 7:10 p.m
Wothlngton el Indiana. 7:10p.m.
Denver at Sen Antonio. 1:70 p m.
Mlnnetola at Phoanla. 0:70 p.m.

Quebec 4. Montreal a
Plttiburghf. Winnipeg 1
Detroit LPhlladeNhla I
BuriaiaA H arttardl(O T)

HOCKIV
7 p.m. - SUN, Hockey with Phil Etpotltw.
(L)
7:20 p.m. - SUN, USA v*. Soviet*. IL)

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Quebec *t Montreal . 7:15 p.m.
Toronto at NY Ranger*. 0: IS p.m.
Washington at Chicago. 1:15 p. m.

P195 BORIS

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WHITE SPOKES

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* 9
15ifl

a t O r ls a d o S p c c d W o rld

ORLANDO — Pelc Orr avoided numerous spins
and wrecks to turn his third FASCAR sanctioned
Late Model feature win In a row on Friday nlgln
at Orlando SpccdWorld.
The race was only half a lap old when NASCAR
All-American Challenge Series regular Mike Cope
and race car bodlcs/skl boat manufacturer Bob
Ackerbloom tangled, scattering the field. Both
were able to continue after minor repairs.
Ed Meridl'h grabbed the early lead, but the
caution was out again on lap ilircc after Co|ic and
Pelc Starr crossed putties. Starr getting knocked
nut and Cope's Doston Construction llulck
suffering mure damage.
Still on the point. Mertdlth was being worked
over by Orr when the i *1 llag Hew on lap nine for
a multi ear crush In turn two, the curs of Kenny
Watson, Perry Lovelady. Ricky Martahull, John
Kennedy and Dave McCain- either being elimi­
nated or badly damaged.
Orr out-dragged Mertdlth on Ihe restart and
look over Ihe (op spot. But on lap 13. Cope and
Ackerbloom tangled again. Once (Kick underway,
the race belonged lo Orr as he streaked lo a full
straightaway advantage in the "llorsen Around”
Farms Firebird.
Mertdlth took second while Cope. Ills car
looking like It tuid been In a Demolition Derby,
drove like u mad man to come luck up to third
place al Ihr finish Watson and Kennedy rounded

1MB

1T.BS
I « a 14 .8 t6i 7
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____________ 6 75.18 5 SSJ

CHROME SPOKES
MISCELLANEOUS
«:I0 p.m. - WWNZ AM (740). SporttTalk
0:10 p.m. - WBZSAM (1770). Jo* Dean
call In show
7 p.m. - WBZS AM (1171). Pet Kennedy
cell In thaw
11:00 p.m. - WBZSAm (1170). The Sport*
Final/Sport* Overnight

Pi5680013 IMS
PISi MR13 »1JS
P185/TS01* RN
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P705/75014 IMS

Passett dodges crash in Late Model win
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Driving hi* Ac*
Salvage Yard "Junkyard Dog" Special, John
Paaaett took advantage of a tangle between the
lead duo to blast up to the point at the midway
point and go on to victory In the 25-lap
FASCAR-sanctloned Late Model feature on Satur­
day night at New Smyrna Speedway.
With a good field of Late Models from three
different state* Invading the tricky high-banked,
half-mile oval, veteran John Kennedy of Kan­
napolis, N.C.. stayed out of trouble and managed
a strong runner-up finish over Kenny Watson and
early leader Ronnie Burkett, who stayed up front
until he tangled with Brad Heath on lap 13.
Celebrating his 30th birthday and the acquisi­
tion of a major spi nsor (World Trade Connection
of Germany), Gary Salvatore drove his new
Pontiac Sunblrd open-wheel machine to victory
In the Florida Modified heal and feature.
Rick Johns, undefeated so far this season, won
lhe Sportsman final.
The hotly-disputed 30-lap special for the
Bomber division went to Sanford's John Ripley.
"I figured that if I dominate the Bomber
division, somebody will get tired of seeing me win
all the time and mavte they'll sponsor my
Limited Late Model," saia Ripley, who scored his
third win In a row.
Early leader Barbara Pierce held on to finish
second, followed by Michael Wright. Randy
Johnson and Henry Clark.
JcfT Burkett beat Marc Klnlcy across the finish
line by a fender to win the Limited Late Model
final. But once ucross the stripe, the pair tangled
and Burkett ended up In the wall with a heavily
damaged race car.
For 14 of the 15-tap Mint Stock feature, young
Dwane Cochran, using up a lot of race track, led
the tight five-car lead pack. But with one lap to
go. newcomer Richard Elkins Jr.. In u Toyota,
dove Inside of Cochran and went on to win. It wns
the first time In several years that a Pinto did not
make it to victory lane.
Cochran was second but Ills mother. Mona.
Jumped In the car later and won the Powder Puff
Derby. Dwanc Cochran was followed by Bobby
Sears. 1990 Lakeland Interstate Speedway Track
champion David Sceright and Jerry Symons,

/

CUSTOM
WHEEL SALE

199

dvnn Voi w n i

Toronto 1. NY Islandaral (OT1
Vancouver 1, Calgary 2
Edmanton A Lao Angeteo 1

P O M O M B B k B R H B A II 1

Dr* te l f t . Manhattan a

BASKETBALL
7 : » p.m. — ESPN. College,
Mlttourl. IL)
7:70 p.m. - CN. NBA. Chicago Built at
Detroit Pittant. IL)
7;W p m. - CTV. Collega, UNC Athevllto
at Central Florida
* 70 p.m. — 7t. 54. College. James Medlton
at Brigham Young. IL)
0:10 p.m. - ESPN. College. Princeton at
UNLV. IL)
BOX INO
10 70 p.m. - SUN. Fight Night ai the
Forum. IL)

out the top five.
Veteran Wayne Marshall made a nearly Im­
passible three-car wide move on the white flag Up
to win the wild Limited Late Model feature.
Before the race was underway, outside front
row starter “Tank" Tucker lost control coming
down for the green and smacked the wall, taking
himself out of contention.
On lap 12. fans witnessed a horrifying crash as
four cars tried to enter the first turn side by side.
JefT Moyer ran over a wheel and went airborne,
crashing violently Into Ihe outside retaining wall,
taking Jacob Warren and Scott Bramlett with
him. Although his car was destroyed. Moyer was
only shaken up.
Following Marshall across the stripe were Von
Crews. Mike Todd, Chuck Stanley and Mike
Kubanek.
John Ripley of Sanford took the top spot from
early leader Dwayne Waddell and went on lo
score uimthcr victory In the special 30-lap event
for Ihe Bomber division. Defending champion
Barbara Pierce made a late-rucc charge to claim
second over Waddell. Darren Gould and veteran
George McKlssIck.
Second-generation pilot Raymond Lovelady
was a first-time winner In the Florida Modified
division, holding off determined former Late
Model driver Ron McRcary. who was making his
first sta rt In Herman Knrpt's open-wheel
machine.
Bobby Sears led all the way to win his second
feature of the year In the Mini Stock division
while Rick Johns passed early leader John Potts
to score win No. 3 In Ihe Sport small class.
Lori Loomis drove Rick John's Sportsman
mount to victory in the added Powder Puff Derby
for the Ladles, holding off hard-charging Enduro
driver Debbie Santo.
Fan Participation race winners were Dennis
Blankenship In u Pontiac Trans-Am and John
Duvls In a Ford Pinto.
Retail*
4i New Smyrna Speedway
Saturday, Dec. IS
FASCAR Lai* Metol* feature (75 lagtl — 1 John Patsatl,
Tallahattae; I. John Kennedy, Kennapollt. N C ; 7 Jimmy Dolton,
Weuchul*; 4. Re— I* Burkett, Lengwood ; 5 Ricky Merthell.
i N ature 174 lap*) - I. John Ripley. Stnferd; 7. Barbara
Pierce. Orlando; 7 Michael Wright. Apopka; 4. Ready Jehu ton.
B&lt; 7. Henry Clark, Ottoea
M id Stock* feature (IS lapil — 1 Richard Elkin*. Heine* City, 2.
Owen* Cochran. Oak Hill; J. Rehfcr Sear*. Otleeni 4 David
Saerlgfll. Davenport. S Jerry Symont. New Smyrna Beach
Limited Late M eddt feature (if lap*) — l. Jell Burkett.
Langweedj 2. Marc KMpy. Otteen; 1 Allen Rhode*. Palm Bay; 4.
Chuck Stanley. Orlando. 5 Wayne Marthall. Mi labor
Sperttm ea feature (IS lap*) — I Rick Jdm*. Orlando 7 Leon
Harr Imen. Orlando. 1 Mike Faltettl. Merritt It lend. 4 Jimmy
John*.Orlando; S. Rick Ademy. Flagler Beech
Florid* Modified* feature 111 lap*) - I Cary Salvator*. Dayton*
Beech. 1 Scott Me Dec*. Oeltona. 7 Wally Pdterion. Scotttmoor; 4.
Guy Tnoma*. Jacktonville. 5 Dave Maiotli. Del end
Powder Puff Derby (4 lap*) — I Mon Cochran. Oak HIM, 7 Kerry
Gould. Coco*. 7. Loretta Faltettl. Merrill Itfend. 4. Debbie Santo.
Orlando; 5 Shlrl Anderton. Flagler Beech

41Orlande SpeedWorld
Friday, Dec. t*

FASCAR Loto Medal* feature (75 U ptl - 1 Pel* Orr. Montverd*.
2. Ed Merldith. Sorrento. 2 Mike Cop*. St Pttortburg. 4. Kenny
Walton. Weuch-I*. 5 John Kennedy. Kennapollt. N C
Limited Late Medal* feature IIS Uptl - I Wayne Marthall.
Malabar. 7 Von Crew*. Ocoee. 7 Mike Todd. Orlando. 4 Chuck
Stanley. Orlando. I. MS* Kubanek. Lengweed
Fiend* Meddled* fu tu re (II U ptl — I Raymond Lovelady.
Lakeland. 7 Ron McCeary. Sebastian. 7 Gen* Bartow*. New
Smyrna Beach, 4 Welly Pa Iter con Scottvnoor. I Ray Smith,

Orlando.

Mini Stock* feature (II U ptl — I. Beto r Sear*. Ottoea; I Gen*
Van Airline. Rocktodgr 7 Carl Green. BilNo. 4 Richard Newton.
Or teen, | Kelly Jerrefl. Orlando
Sparftmea toetur* (IS U ptl — I Rwk Juhnr Orlando. I Mika
Branco. Orlando, 1 Jimmy Johns. Orlando. 4 John Pott*.
Chrltlm ai. I Leon Hamman. Orlando
Bomber* feature (70 U ptl — I. John Ripley. Senior*, I Barber*
Pierce. Orlando. 7 Dwayne Weddell. Melbourne 4 Darren Gould.
Cocoa. I GeorgeMcKiwick.Orlando
Powder Putt Derby I* U ptl - I Lori Loom*. Orlando. 7 Debbie
Santo. Or Undo. J Kerry Gould. Cocoa. 4 Carla Owen*. Kittlmme*.
S Megan CalUghy. Pakn Bay
Foe PortfctpatUn Oval Drag* — I Oennl* BUnktnthip. Orlando
Spectator Race* If U ptl — I John Davit. Lakeland

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P e o p le

Try Santa’s favorite dishes

IN B R IE F

Herald correspondent

Lodg« hosted party
South Seminole Masonic Lodge 364 In Casselberry hosted a
Christmas party December 8 for 78 needy children from the
area. The children, aged 3 months to 16 years, received gifts
and stuffed stockings from Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus. The
children were also entertained by clowns and by caroling
performed by Jobs Daughter and DeMolay Youth. Refresh­
ments were provided and served by several appendant bodies.
Including Eastern Star. Amaranth and the DeMolay Parent’s
Club. This Is the fourth consecutive year the lodge has hosted a
party for the special kids.

Library to clot# for holidays
All branches of the Seminole County Public Library System
will dose Monday. December 24 at 5 p.m. and reopen
Wednesday. December 26 at 10 a.m. Libraries wll close at 5
p.m. Monday. December 31 and reopen Wednesday. January 2
at 10a.m.

Woman (Sonata to charity
This holiday season, the Junior Woman's Club of Sanford
will be making donations to 10 area non profit organizations.
The presentation will be December 20. 7:30 p.m. at the
Woman’s Club clubhouse on Oak Avenue In Sanford. These
deserving organizations will be receiving the proceeds from the
10th Annual Kustno Klasslcs fundraiser which was held In
March.
The recipients are :Camp Challenge. Central Florida
Zoological Park. Children’s Wish Foundation. Christian
Sharing Center. Florida Methodist Children’s Home. Safe
House of Seminole. Seminole Children’s Village. Seminole
Work Opportunity Program. Sunshine Connection and Thomas
Whlgham Aids Superchallenge.

Seniors step out
If you are over 50. you are Invited to attend the Over 50
Dance Club dance held every Wednesday. 2:30 • 4:30 p.m. at
the Sanford Civic Center. Live music by the Deltonlans
1’ -piece band. Donation 61.

Blood pressure tests available
Free blood pressure screening Is available to the public. 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month at the
Winter Park YMCA. 1201 N. Lakemont Ave. The screenings arc
sponsored by Winter Park Memorial Hospital's Home Health
Care.

Walksrs run to meetings
The Mid-Florida Mllcr Volkssport Walking Club holds Its
Tgular monthly meetings on the third Wednesday of each
month at 7 p.m. at Winter Park Memorial Hospital's Education
Department Auditorium on the second floor. For more
Information contact Ann Elferi at 894-0506.

COPE to help families cope
COPE support group for families of mental health patients
meets the first and third Wednesday of each month 7-9 p.m. at
Crane's Roost Office of the Seminole Community Mental Health
Center. S-377. Altamonte Springs.
Details, call Cheryl Werley. 831-2411.

Stompers to hold club meeting
The Old Hickory Stompers clogging group holds club
meetings every Wednesday at the Knights of Columbus Hall on
S. Park Avenue. Sanford. For more Information, call 349-9529.

Chemical dependence talks free
Quest Counseling Ccntre/Young Recovery sponsors chemical
dependence lectures free to the public each Wednesday from
7-8:30 p.m. at 711 Ballard St.. Suite 200. Altamonte Springs.
For more Information, call 331-7199.

SANFORD — 'Twas the night
before Christmas In old Sandford
town...when Santa was so busy,
he lost a few pounds.
The elves were all working
back at the North Pole ana
Mama Claus was making shrimp
boata with stuffing and kneading
dough. A large table was
laden with goodies delight, all
set aside for Santa after he
finished his shifts at the stores
tonight.
AlT day long his picture was
taken with little girls and boys
who all wanted the best In dolls,
wagons and toys.
The weary old man made the
way to his condo. Up the stairs
he climbed for a nap In his bed
as visions of sauteed mushrooms
danced In his head. He could see
In his mlnd.the mushroom caps
with melted Swiss cheese flow­
ing on top, just like the Alps
w h e r e he w o u l d m a k e a
Christmas toy stop.
S a n t a would need much
nourishment this night, so
Mama Claus cooked his favorite
delights.
He’ll feed on creamed onions,
all pearly and smooth, mashed
Utters and rutabagers where the
butter will ooze. He'll sprinkle
black pepper so finely concise
and end the meal with drt-’rrt
that la very nice.
When he flys to the North Pole
to pick up his sack, he will have
In hts tuck a hearty hot snack.
Mushroom and cheese subs for
all of his elves and hot cod fish
cakes for himself.
Santa's big night will be Jolly
and bright. He'll end his long
trip in Sanford by morn while
Mama Claus keeps his coffee pot
warm and reads in the paper of
his most wonderful Christmas
caper.
'Twas only last nlte when Ihe
Herald did call to get the full
story once and for all. She told
the writer with such glee. Merry
Christmas...from Santa and me.
CREAMED PEARL ONIONS
1 Jar boiled pearl onions (re­
tain fluid for thickening)
Vi cup Hal.'and Half
Pepper
Butter (dot)
Cornstarch (with enough fluid
to make a thickening agent).
Heat onions in Half and Half, add
butter and pepper, then thicken
with cornstarch and liquid.
NEW ENGLAND CODFISH
C
A
R
E
S
1 lb. box dried and salted
codfish
Homemade mashed potatoles
(about 4 lbs.)
Soak cod In boiling water
which has been removed from
the heat. Drain and repeat the
process about three times to
remove salt. Mix drained cod
with potatoes and three whole

eggs. Must mix well. Form Into
cakes. Dip Into plain flour and
pan fry until golden brown.
Santa's favorite tuck snack. New
Englanders eat this with Boston
baked beans. Goes well with cole
slaw.
SHRIMP BOATS AND STUF­
FING
2 doz. Jumbo shrimp, fresh
3 m ed. e g g p la n ts , s p lit
lengthwise
1 green tomato cut Into 1-Inch
cubes
I med. green pepper cut Into
1-Inch cubes
14 stalk celery, finely diced
tt small onion, minced
I whole egg
Vi loaf white hard and dry
bread or 4 sub rolls
4 Tbsp. poultry seasoning,
may need more
6 slices Provolone cheese
Romano cheese, freshly grated
Salt and pepper to taste
Soak bread In boiling hot
water until soft all the way
through. Drain In colander or
strainer and squeeze gently to
expel water from bread.
Saule celery, onion, green
tomato and pepper and the meat
from the eggplant. When cutting
out the eggplant, leave a 1-Inch
rim all around the skin. When
the veggies are tender, set aside
to cool. Squeeze the water out of
the bread and place In a bowl,
add egg and spices. Mix together
well and add cooled veggies.
Drop fresh shrimp Into a pan
of boiling water and Immediately
remove when they turn pink.
Shuck shrim p Im m ediately.
Don't be concerned about the
black vein as it won’t harm you.
Cut up six shrimp and add to
stuffing mixture. Mix well and
stuff the six halves of eggplant to
overflowing. Stick three shrimp
with tails up Into each stuffed
eggplant and top with freshly
grated Romano cheese and one
slice of provolone. Bake at 300°
for one hour. One per person.
M A 8 H E D T A T E R B AND
RUTABAOAS
4 lo 6 potatoes, pared and
cubed
1 medium rutabaga, pared and
cubed
Sail and pepper to taste*
1 slick butler
Dash poultry seasoning
Start rutabaga In sailed cold
water and boll for 20 minutes,
then add potatoes. Cook an
additional 20 minutes. uraln
and mash together with butter,
salt and pepper and poultry

seasoning. Add Half and Half If
more liquid la needed.
MUBRROOM AND CHEESE
1 lb. whole freah button
mushrooms
12 slices Swiss or provolone
cheese
6 fresh sub rolls split above
center and tt through the roll.
Leave a hinge.
2 cloves fresh garlic, minced
Olive oil
Saute clean mushrooms and
garlic In olive oil. Spoon into sub
rolls and cover with cheese. No
spice necessary.
Fllllag
2 ozs. cottage cheese (Ig. curd
drained)
2 ozs. cream cheese
1egg yolk
2 isp. white sugar (granulated)
Vi tap. cinnamon
1 tap. vanilla extract
Mix all Ingredients together
and set aside.
C tsfsa
Vi cup flour (sifted)

2 tap. light brown sugar
1 Tbsp. softroed butter
1 tsp. allspice
1 Tbs. rum extract or Pep­
permint Schnapps
1 egg white, whipped and
folded Into batter
Vi cup Half and Half or light
cream
Olive oil to grease pan.
.Mix all Ingred ien ts until
smooth and a thin batter. Pour
Into lightly greased hot 6-inch
skillet and brown lightly on one
side. Set on paper towels, brown
side up. Place a heaping teas­
poonful of cheese mixture on
center of each crepe and roll up
loosely. Tuck in ends and brown
lightly. A rrange on serving
platter and dust with powdered
sugar. Serve with a dollop of
sour cream on top. May be
served hot or cold. Very rich and
filling. May be an entree or
dessert. Makes 6 bllntzes.
IM m Kln« Is S lan ia rd Herald correwendan*. Her Ceefc at *he Wee* ceturnn
a n se en e v ery Wednesday. Phone: X l O V .)

Unknown voice from past unsettles man
DEAR ABBYt About six weeks r
ago. I came home from the ofllcc
and my wife told me that a
A D V IC E
woman had phoned saying she
had some Important Information
about my father. The woman
said she lived about 100 miles
A B IG A IL
from here, and she left her
V A N BUREN
telephone number.
Abby. my father died at a
young age. leaving my mother
with small children to raise.
Mother never remarried. Fortu­ found her to be a very gentle,
nately. she wits able to support decent person. Now I am totally
confused about what to do. At
herself and raise us.
My wife persuaded me to this point. I don't want to tell
return the call. The woman (I'll anyone else. (I am thankful she
call her Diane) asked permission didn't contact my mother.)
At the end of our meeting, she
to come to my home the follow­
ing weekend. I refused, ugreclng said. "'Our' father has been dead
Instead to meet her at a local for u long lime. Whom would we
be hurting by knowing each
coffee shop.
Abby. Diane Is an adoptee who other?"
Abby. I am wondering If there
recently located and met her
birth mother. She told me that Is some kind of physical test that
my father was also her father, could either prove or disprove
which makes her my half-sister! these allegations? If this woman
She said her mother had told her Is really my half-sister. Is there
that she and my father had been any way to verify It?
NO NAME OR CITY. PLEASE
lovers for the lust two years of
DEAR NO NAME: Ask your
his life. Shr said her mother
never told her lover (Dad) that physician to recom m end a
she was pregnant, and she genetic testing specialist. Both
(Diane) was given up for adop­ you and Diane would be re­
quired to submit to physical
tion when she was 5 days old!
I told her that I did not take tests. (Blood samples, for exam ­
any stock In secondhand Infor­ ple.)
I agree with Diane. Whom
mation — that I needed concrete
proof In writing. She had none. would you Ik * hurting If you
However, she described my fa­ know the truth about your blood
ther’s physical appearance accu­ relationship? There is nothing to
rately. knew the names of his be ashamed of. And whether you
friends, the branch of service he wish to disclose this new discov­
had been In. and she correctly ery lo other family members
detailed the circumstances of his would be up to you.
accidental death, which oc­
curred some years ago. I asked
DEAR ABBY: I Just read the
Diane what she wanted of me letter from "Puzzled." the man
and my fam ily. She suld' who asked whether he should
"Nothing. I Just want to know give h is d e c e a s e d w if e 's
something about my family, and belongings to his soon-to-be new
perhaps see some photographs wife. He was concerned about
how his three daughlers-tn-law
of my blood relatives."
Abby. I was prepared to meet a would feel about It. (He had
kook or a con artist Instead. I three sons —no daughters. I

&amp;
V

-

I related to that problem,
because a few years ago. I was a
daughter-in-law In Just that situ­
ation. My advice to that man
would be to first speak to his
sons. There may be some pieces
of Jewelry or clothing they had
given to their mother that for
sentimental reusons they would
want their wives or daughters lo
have.
I know from personal experi­
ence that It can be very painful
for sons to sec their father's new
wife wearing things that once
belonged to their deceased
mother.
ANOTHER VIEW

DEAR ABBY: Many years
ago, I wrote lo you ubout a
problem I was having with my
fiance. Whenever he lost his
temper, he would curse. He
never used obscenities; he
would curse taking the name
of the |.nrd In vain, such as.
"Oh. God d —It!"
(Problems? Write to Deer Abby.
For a personal, unpublished
reply, send a self-addressed,
stamped envelope lo Deer Abby,
P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90069. All correspondence
Is confidential.)

A New York Style Salon
...Without The New York Prices
Carol's International Hair Is one or a lew shops catering lo both
und ethnic hair. It's u New York style sulon without the
New York prices. Carol Clync (owner), has been In business for 20
years. She opened her first shop In New York
Curol specializes In cuts, permancnis. leisure curl, wave
nouveau, und hair weaves.
Curol's shop also boasts wonderful flower urrungcmcols. und
stylish earrings und clothing direct from New York. Carol Is hap­
piest when her customers come lo Ihe shop enjoy the atmosphere
and are totally satisfied.
Beih Edwards another stylist ut the shop specializes In hair­
cuts. permanents, coloring, highlighting and frosting. .JoAnii
Washington another of Ihe shop's stylists specializes In hair weav­
ing as well us permanents and haircuts. The shop even oilers u null
booth. Belinda Wertz the lull technician won 1st place at Ihe Orlan­
do null show.
Carol stresses quality at Ih e shop and uses such product* as
Nexus, genuine Wave Nouveau and Leisure Curl. Beau Ik- Peche
polish (guaranteed not lo chip) and only human hair for hair
weaves.
Some specials the shop Is offering are Permanents 818, Wave
Nouveau and Leisure Curls $30, Keluxrr 820. Men's Cuts 8 6.99,
Pedicure and Manicure fur 816, Acrylic Tips (Anil Fungal I 835.
Seniors 55 ♦ perms 818.36, Tues.-Thurs.. hr lasers only B9C with
a 924 eul and blow curl, or Permanent Waves 9BC with a 824 cut
and blow dry. These Specials are good thru Dec. 22nd The Shop's
hours are from 10 a.m -6 p m. Tuc.-Frl. and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sal
Give them a call today at 834-5540 or slop by at 4325 S 17-92
In C a s s e l b e r r y . ____________
»nv
C a u c a s ia n

YOUR T I E L I N E
TO Q U A L I T Y R O L E X
With Mi()(|(‘il -,lr*- mi 1111 .i id

l i . mi

( h - l u u - ' . t i n u - k i - f p i nj

. . - t h m ) ih&gt;

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thirst* iIni ililt*,ii h I •-h -t|.ml t m n •( ii«-t t-», ,m
i j m v . i i h - p i •&gt;»*t l&lt; ■ t I*) t «-• -1 M . i u l t i . i M c i l

'Kcuten fUufietvM.
m r *30 s
Laiaaa;
A ll Ma)M C itd il
Cards

, , _ _

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112 S. Park Ave.

Sanford
3 2 2 -2 3 6 3

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Jolui l . Kader

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A m a i. C tm S o ila l)

___

�.vest

■ B w iil

40 —Sanford Herald, Bamotd, Florida —Wsdnssdty. Dsctmbor 19,1990
F l o w d ik

By CMc Ya*m§

Term board-certified
physicia n explained
D B A S M L O O TTi I am an extremely capable physicians in
avid and grateful follower of practice today. They may have
youra and commend you on failed their boards, for one
your simplicity of explanations. reason or another, or they may
For thoee of us with no medical have chosen (in an earlier era)
background, that Is a phis. Can not to take their boards. Being
you explain the difference be­ certified to not a prerequisite to
tween a board-certified physi­ practice medicine.
cian and one who is not board
Ml
certified?
M Actor —
I * A * READER: Thank you
If Pi
M
for your compliments.
Years ago. a doctor could open
a practice after having com­
8S5—
pleted a year of post-graduate
41 Doooc
(Internship) training that follows
four years of medical school.
However, as metical information
has burgeoned and tod ay 's
doctor must know far more than
did his prcdetei a s. most MDs
choose specialisation. This re­
quires two to eight years of
tost
additional post-graduate training
17 Franck
(residency). At tne conclusion of
this training, if it is approved by
88 Csstslsto
the proper authorities and the
DOWN
doctor completes It In good
standing, the new specialist is
1 Aston cMaf
entitled to ait for exams. If the
I itrM to n
physician passes the exam s
nvvt
3 taker's s«*
(usually written and oral), he (or
she) is certified by the specialty
board, which is made up of more
experienced practitioners in that
specialty. Thus, board certifica­
tion is an accurate Indicator of
‘ whether an MD Is skilled in a
particular specialty. Of course,
these skills have to be honed
during practice; experience is
still the best teacher. Board
certification is. In general, a
valid criterion of competency.
Many b o a r d s require their
members to maintain certifica­
tion by re-taking exerns at peri­
odic Intervals. This certification
has become increasingly Im­
portant: for obtaining admitting
privileges In hospitals, for reim­
bursement (many Insurers pay
higher fees to board-certified
practitioners) and as proor of
expertise.
Not all good doctors are
specialty certified, however —
and certification is not necessari­
ly a guarantee of excellence.
There are many uncertified.

( 0 1 9 9 0 NEWSPAPER EN - ]
TERPRISEASSN.
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For the last 20 years, a search
for Interesting hands from World
Championships has almost in­
evitably brought up the name of
Gabriel Chagas. This year he
and Marcelo Branco won the
World Open Pairs event, by the
largest margin ever. Part of the
reason is the dccepMve bidding
employed by Chagas in today's
deal, leading to a top score. In
the C hagas-B ranco bidding
methods, three diamonds by
Chagas was a long-suit game-try,
and Branco liked his prime cards
In what he thought were both of
his partner's suits well enough
to Jump to game. When West led
the queen of diamonds, declarer
Chagas won dummy's ace and
played A-Q of hearts, then A-K of
clubs. He played a heart to the

•

BUGS B U N N Y

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Opening lead: 9 Q

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today by an associate who has
faulty Judgment but good sales­
manship abilities. If you let this
person help formulate your de­
cisions. you may regret It later.
PISCB8 (Feb. 20-March 20)
Matters which are of significance
to you might not be of equal
importance to ;-our friends to­
day. Try to keep this In mind if
you start feeling Inclinations to
dominate the conversation.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Guard against inclinations today
to overindulge mentally, physi­
cally or financially. If you
participate in something fun.
don't pack all of your good living
Into one experience.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Persons with whom you'll be
involved today will be aware of
your recent accomplishments, so
it won't behoove you to toot your
own horn. The music you play
could consist of too many sour
notes.'
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Enthusiasm and optimism are
altitudes we should all strive to
maintain. However, today be
certain ydur rose colored outlook
is founded upon a feasible
foundation.

by W a rn a r Brothers'

49 Actress—
9L Jobs
47
41 Actor Knt«sr
81
88 Pend du —,
Wto.

(•) 1M0 by Nf A. Inc.

kina In dummy and ruffed a
club. Then he played one more
heart. Meanwhile poor West had
to make four discards. He had
thrown a diamond and two
spades, but what could he now
throw on this heart? Trusting
the bidding, he let go one more
spade. Chagas played ace and a
spade. The King popped up and
declarer had gotten a top board
In the open-pair competition.
Note well that this deceptive
bidding on the part of declarer
was perfectly proper. His partner
obviously trusted the diamond
bid when he bid four hearts. But
Chagas might do well to change
his tactics now that they are
getting so much publicity.
Future defenders will be wary.
( 0 1 9 9 0 . NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

Air*-N
By Berates Rada Osol
YOU* BIRTHDAY
Doc. 3 0 . 1990
Make un effort to try to keep
the channels open In the year
ahead to persons for whom
you’ve done favors in the past.
They're desirous of reciprocat­
ing. but they might need little
reminders.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You're likely to be more
focused on the big picture today
than you will be on Its signifi­
cant details. In order to function
effectively and successfully, you
must be cognizant of both.
Trying to patch up a broken
rom ance? The A stro-G raph
Matchmaker can help you to
understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mail $2 to
Matchmaker. P.O. Box 91428.
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You’d be wise not to try to
keep up with friends today who
are in a position to spend more
than you can. If you find yourself
pressed, you might use funds
that are earmarked for some­
thing else.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb. 19)
You might be unduly influenced
A N N IE

h_ 4i.li i

sx

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Your generous nature could be
easily imposed upon today if
you're unguarded. One who is'a
taker will be uwarc of this and
might try to manipulate you to
his/her advantage.
LEO (July 2!&gt;Aug. 22) Your
position with others might not
be as strung as you lead yourself
to believe today. Be very careful
you don't put more reliance on
allies than they warrant.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Unfortunately, problems with
which you have to contend at
this time will not automatically i
take care of themselves. What
you sweep under the rug today
could create a dust cloud later.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You'll feel more comfortable
today associating with intimate
friends. Why expose yourself to
u large crowd that could bore
you when you could be with a
few pals who udore you?
8CORTIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Usually you're a pretty good
Judge of character, but today you
might be rather gullible and be
taken in by what others pretend
to be Instead of what they
actually are.
b y L eo n ard S ta rr
TOGwiiiLe

�m Km H

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Sanford HtraW, Sanford, Florida — Wadnatday December 19,1990 — M

H o m e m a d e c a n d y is a lw a ys
a w e ll-re c e iv e d h o lid a y g ift

Christm as treats easy to make

The holiday season Is an
exciting time of the year. It la
also hectic and often the. things
we want to do are time con*
l u m l n g . By u s i n g y o u r
microwave for preparing foods
for gift-giving you will save time
and have som ething extra■pedal to give. The ease of
prpep*ration, lime saving*, and
wonderful results will make you
wonder how you ever got along
without your microwave.
Homemade candy is always a
well-received gift. Aa with con­
ventional candy-making, there
are several things to keep In
mind when microwaving can­
dles. A microwave thermometer
la an Invaluable tool. Humidity
affects the results In candymaking. U is beat to avoid
making candy on humid days,
but if you do make candy whim
it Is humid, allow the tempera­
ture to rise a few degrees higher
th a n t h e re c i p e s u g g e s ts .
Microwave Ingredients In a deep
container that will allow for
"bubble-up.” Remember that
foods that are microwaved con­
tinue to cook for a few minutes
after they are removed from the
oven. It is best to wait until the
boiling atop* before stirring In
additional ingredients.
This temperature guide will
help with your candy-making.

Preheat oven to 375 degree*.
IV* cu p s graham cracker
Grease 13-by-9-by-2 inch baking
pan. In large electric mixing crumb*
V*cup melted butter
In many households around bowl, beat butter, shortening
1 tablespoon sugar
th e c o u n t r y , a n t iq u e tin and brown sugar until light and
1 pound cream cheese
Softball
cookie-cutters appear like magic fluffy. Add cinnamon, salt and
2 eggs
Cold W ater Test
harbingers of Christmas sweets. baking soda. Blend in flour,
V*cup sugar
V* cup at a time. Blend In
Forms ball, but flattens when
T u rn in g out an array of about
V* teaspoon grated lemon rind
oats.
(Mixture
will
look
crumbly.
taken out of water
h o m e m a d e tr e a ts su ch a s
1 teaspoon vanilla
T w p n ttw i
marzipan, hand- colored sugar
Set 2 cups of oat mixture aside
1 can whole-berry cranberry
235* — 240*F
cookies, rum balls and other for topping: press remainder sauce
Firm, holds shape until pre­
confections sets a traditional evenly over baking pan. Spread
C om bine graham cracker ssed. 245° —250°F
holiday mood. Young children evenly with cranberry filling: crumbs, melted butter and sugar
Hard ball, holds Its shape, but
will love polishing off the leftover sprinkle with remaining oat mix­ In medium bowl. Mix. Put mix­
is
pliable, 255°- 2 6 5 #F
batter from the pan. Older kids ture. Bake 25 to 27 minutes or ture Into cupcake pans lined
Soft crack, separates Into
can experiement In the kitchen, until topping Is lightly-browned. with cupcake papers.
threads. 270° -2 9 0 * F
perhaps reviving a favorite reci­ Cool on wire rack. Cut into bars,
Mix cream cheese, eggs, sugar,
Hard crack, forms hard, brittle
pe for family and friends.
about 2-by-l\* Inches. This vanilla and lemon rind in large threads. 300” - 3 1 0 ° F
Since It is a time of giving, kitchen-tested recipe makes 32 bowl. Pour over graham cracker
This la a very old favorite that
consider making an extra or bars.
crumb mixture. Bake at 350 Is special for the holidays.
special batch of Items such as
degrees for 15 to 20 minutes. Let CANDIED CITRUS PEEL
T O TFIIB A IB
date bars, mini-cheesecakes or
cool. Top each cupcake with
2C. citrus peels
V*cup margarine or butter
peunut butter fudge. Wrap a few
whole-berry cranberry sauce.
1C. sugar
1 cup oats
in colorful cellophane and tie
Wrap in paper and refrigerate.
Dash of salt
V* cup firmly packed brown This kitchen-tested recipe makes
with a bright ribbon to take as
Vi C. water
hostess gifts or to a church su g a r
40 cheesecakes.
Cut th e peel Into narrow
V*cup unsifted flour
bazaar or school party.
PORCUPINES
strips. Remove most of the white
V*cup finely chopped walnuts
Begin early so you will not fall
1 cup creamy peanut butter
membrane that lies between the
Vfcteaspoon baking soda
Into th e trap of one b u si­
V* cup condensed milk, un­ other skin and the rrult itself.
1
(14-ounce)
can
sweetened
nesswoman. She promised to
diluted
Cover the strips with water.
make her family's favorite cook­ c o n d e n s e d m i l k ( N O T
V* cup unsifted confectioners'
Microwave on 100% power. 10
ies but. harried by the holidays, evaporated milk)
sugar
minutes and drain. Cover with
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
started loo late. The result: She
V* cup finely chopped cocktail fresh water, microwave on 100%
arrived at her mother’s home
1 (8-ounce) package semi- peanuts
power 10 additional minutes.
toting uncooked baiter.
sweet chocolate chips
In a bowl combine creamy Drain peel. Mix the peel with the
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. peanut butter, condensed milk
RUBTDATBBAM
sugar, salt and V* C. water.
3 cups (12 ounces) fresh or In large sau cep an , m elt 6 and confectioners' sugar. Mix Microwave on 100% power
tablespoons margarine: stir in thoroughly until well blended.
frozen cranberries, chopped
12-16 minutes, stirring several
1 package (8 ounces) chopped oats, brown sugar, flour, nuts (Mixture will stiffen.) Divide Into times. Cook and roll each piece
and
baking
soda.
Pat
firmly
onto
pitted dates
24 equal pieces. Roll each piece
bottom of greased 13-by-S inch Into a ball about 1W inches In In granulated sugar. Allow to dry
1Vi cups water
baking pan: bake 10 to 15 diameter. As balls are shaped, on wax paper before storing.
V* cup granulated sugar
minutes, or until slightly golden.
grated rind of 1 lemon
roll In chopped cocktail peanuts.
Bark candy can be made so
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
Meanwhile, in medium sauce­ Chill. This kitchen-tested recipe quickly that you'll make some
V* cup butter or margarine, pan, combine remaining marga­ makes 2-dozen pieces.
(or gifts as well aa having plenty
PEANUT BUTTER PUDGE
softened
rine and sweetened condensed
for your family. Mkac It festive
Wcup vegetable shortening
1 (12-ounce) package peanut by adding red and green candy
milk. Over medium heat, cook
1 cup firmly packed light- and stir until mixture thickens butter flavored chips
canes, which you have broken
brown sugar
I (14-ounce) can sweetened Into small pieces, to white choco­
slightly, about 15 m inutes.
W teaspoon ground cinnamon
Remove from heat: stir in vanil­ c o n d e n s e d m i l k ( N O T late bark.
Vi teaspoon salt
la. Pour over crust: return to evaporated milk)
barkcandt
1 cup chopped peanuts
Vi teaspoon baking soda
oven and bake 10 to 15 minutes
1 lb. confectioners or candy
IV* cups unsifted all-purpose longer, or until golden brown.
In heavy saucepan over low coating
(lour
melt chips with sweetened
Remove from oven: immedi­ heat,
o n d e n s e d m ilk : s tir o c ­
1V* cups quick-cooking oats
ately sprinkle chips on top. Let ccasionally.
Remove from heat;
In larg e sau cep a n , place
1 minute: spread while sllr In peanuts.
c r a n b e rr ie s , d a te s , w ater, stand
Spread evenly
still warm. Cool to room temper­
granulated sugar, lemon rind ature;
Into
wax
paper-lined
9-Inch
Cut Into bars. Store square pun. Chill 2 hours
or
and juice. Bring mixture to a tightly chill.
boll, over high heat, stirring ture. covered at room tempera­ until firm. Turn fudge onto
cutting board; peel off paper and
frequently. Reduce heat: sim­
For gifts, wrap In paper, then cut into squares. Store covered Central Florida
mer. stirring occasionally, until
most of liquid Is evaporated, Christmas wrap and tie with at room tem perature. This Regional Hospital
a b o u t 8 m i n u t e s . Co o l ribbon. This kitchen-tested reci­ kllchcn-lesled recipe makes
November 21 — Tracey and
pe makes 48 bars.
thoroughly.
about 2 pounds of fudge.
Andrew Galccki. Winter Park,
baby boy.
November 22 — Angela and
W E D N E S D A Y 'S
Larry Bell, Altamonte Springs,
baby boy; Bonnie and Max
Storm. Winter Park, baby girl:
») I0 I •
| * 10 | •
•
6 00
f
l . I 4 00 | 8 10
'’ | ill 1C " 0 0 |
30
Maureen and Norvcl Anderson.
nMMe WeMM P* “to* a t , AImw m
•m g
H ig —
jsr
e
llano) g
7nar (to s m o g
aewg
Deltona, baby girl.
(to ttorao)a
0
M te to to )to w AJ MbT-ttomn) t* )V - kmn
knnrM wtok
dam
AmnNji
csew n
SM
December 6 — Catherine G.
o
Orawt ( » *kg*T
C l
Jmtpa
|k H m ,0
and Jeffrey R. Brown, Sanford,
tec te n a a iW io
Mam
MepUltoeart ~S«a n Me*
MM*
a
M
(to Som) Unan~
tm m
o
B
n
baby girl; Pamela and Timmy
S
J
[Um N r m i Ci Mn "Omlmm Q*U fin
IMumf
Brown. Sanford, baby boy;
m
IlMifR)
B S ____________
Kimberly s. and David Kiss.
e e u g CtaMQ a * Cart
• V M W l i •••* (IMA ftrtm p Jmm Simri Oonria toed.
'M t o M (to iarao) g
0
Oviedo, baby girl: Barbara and
M L i,
|
iM k r tl
M M h M S ln t o
m m m trn ,
Mm *
Artist Plenums. Sanford, baby
s s s
0
girl.
»ea*
s in s
U,
Prmm am Ufd
NEA Food Editor*1

V*C. chopped almonds
Mix together butter, sugar,
water, and corn syrup In s 2-qt.
glass batter bowl. Microwave on
100% power 4 minute*, stirring
once. Stir, scraping sides of bowl
to dissolve all sugar. Insert
microwave candy thermometer.
Microwave on 100% power, 8-10
minute* or until mixture reaches
300*F (hard crack stage). SUr
whenever necessary to prevent
boll-over. S tir In slivered
almonds. Pour onto ungreased
metal baking sheet. Sprinkle
with chocolate piece*. Let stand
until chocolate Is softened:
sp re ad evenly over toffee.
Sprinkle with chopped almonds,
pressing them Into the choco­
late. Refrigerate to set chocolate.
Break Into pieces.

n

1 cup of any of the following:
roasted salted nuts, (unblanched
alm onds, peanuts, w alnuts,
pecans), raisins, or broken red
and green hard candy (canes).
If candy coating is in a solid
piece, break into squares. Place
In a single layer In a 2-qt.
casserole. Microwave on 50%
power. 3-5 minutes, until pieces
are soft, stirring after 3 minutes.
Add nuts or candy. Stir until
candy coating is smooth and
completely melted. Spread on
wax paper to V4-lnch thick. Cool
until hard, then break Into
pieces.

\nWy9 W|LUfl fl I
mM
wf

qwtsllons about mlerswav*
c o o f t in g

This is an old favorite made
with modem convenience.
ALMOND BUTTER CRUNCH
1C. butter or margarine
1V4C. sugar
3Tbsp. water
1 Tbsp. corn syrup
1C. slivered almonds
1 C. semi-sweet chocolate
pieces
A A

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Harold, 200 N. French At*.,
Eon ford, 12771 or phono: M3148Q,oxt. 300.)

B Floyd T h M tiM

| HRT.1748*
1. ) CM M LSY DOW NUNOCIt

?;10*95D PQ1)

2. ) NAVY S C A LE

«••■* «
IT

/• a proud mambar of tha “Walcoma
Wagon” Family In Samlnoto County

If You Are:
Moving Into Or
Around The Area
Getting Married
Having A Baby

Let your Welcome Wagon representative
answer your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.
If You Live In One Of These Areas,
Please Call
Sanford — 323*4614
Lake Mary — 321*6660 or 330-3311
Longwood — 331*4016 or *369*9369
Winter Springs — 696*2515
.Altamonte — 869*4340
Casselberry — 699*9255 or 696*2515
Oviedo — 695-3819

i !

0

—*~— i

Out With The Old.,
In With The New You!I

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• No Time Limit
• Grocsry Store Food
| T o O ur b t 5 0 p a tie n ts |
• Madicaby Supervised
| N O HIDDEN C O S T I ^ e
• Loss 3*7 Lbs. Psr Weak
The Program Indudas:
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For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE magazine ol Friday, Dec. 14.

free"

!

This special otter good only el Sanford location!

CALL TODAY

THE WEIGHT LOSS CLINICS
O f C IN T kA l riO tlO A .IN C .

LAKE MARY

SANFORD
2479 S Park Ave
(25lh St &amp; Park)

324-1316

Q

3195 Lake Errrra Dr
Shoppes of
Lake Emma - *183

333-9416
t

�bi W

BW W BBB

I — Sanford’ Herald. Sanlord. Florida — Wednesday. December 19.1990

L«g«l Notices

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THK IIOHTIKNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLECOUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASCNO.S44i1tCA-14P
SANDY COVE CONtXMAINIUM
ASSOCIATION OF SEMINOLE.
INC
Plelntlfl,
«
HE LGAW RASMUSSEN and
JOHN DOE. unknown tenant In
possession n /k /a JAMES
FOUROOZI.

IN TN I CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IIRHTRINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
(SMINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA .
CASE NO. «AJ17ACA-14L
THE RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION, ae
Conservator tor AMERICAN
PIONEER FEDERAL
SAVINGS RANK,
Plolnfttt,
v*.
RICHARD J.TICKAL. General
Partner, and VINCENT A.
CORING. General Partner, a*
General Partisan of VITIC
INVESTMENTS, a Florida
general partnership; and
VINCENT A. CORING and
DIANE M. COR INO. husband
andwtNi ED LEINSTER,ROSEMARYM. COYNE;
RINKER MATERIALS
CORPORATION, a Florida
corporation; SAMUE.W.
ELSE A and ESTHER M.
ELSEA; COMMERCIAL
STATE BANK OF ORLANDO, a
corporation; and THE
DSTATI
UNITED
STATESOF
AMERICA.

tMTME CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE trTN JUDICIAL
CIRCUfT OP FLORIDA.
INANOFOR

NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
itial on th# 73nd Ray of January.
Iftl al 11:00 e.m . al lha Court­
house In SEMINOLE County, al
lha w est Iron! door a l lha
courthouse. Florida, tho un
dtrsigned Clark will otter lor
tala lha following described real
THAT CERTAIN CONDO
MINIUM PARCEL KNOWN AS
UNIT r. SANDY COVE, A
CONDOMINIUM. ACCORDING
TO THE DECLARATION OF
CONDOMINIUM. THEREOF
AS RECORDED IN O R. BOOK
1110 PG 044. PUBLIC RECO R O S O F S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA AND ALL
AMENDMENTS THERETO,
together with all structure*.
Improvement*, nature*, appli­
ance*. and appurtenance* an
*ald land or utad In conjunctlen
The atoretaid tale will he
made puteuonl to a Summary
Final Judgment entered In Civil
No. 1*4011 CA-taP ponding In
the Circuit Court o! tho EIGH­
TEENTH Judicial Circuit In and
lor SEMINOLE County, Florida.
DATED this llth day of De­
cember, IMO.
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Jana E. Jaaewlc
Deputy Clark
Publlih: December if, ja, IMP
DEA 144
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given that I
am engaged In b u tln e ti at
4*5 307 Sun Lake Circle. Lake
Ma*y, FL 31744. Sem inole
County, F lo rid a, under tho
Fklltlou* Name of GOH CON­
SULTING. and that I Intend to
register sold name with the
Clerk ol the Circuit Court, Sem­
inole County. Florida. In ac­
cordance with the Provision* of
the Fictitious Nam* Statute*.
To-Wit: Section MS.Of Florid*
Statute*.
Gregory D. Hackett
Publlih: December S, II. 1*. M.
t»
DEA 41

- 'i *

INTHS CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTBSNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. SB-M7S CAI4B/L
Home Savings of America, F.A.,
Plaintiff,
vt.
Terry W. Carlton and Joan K.
Carlton, hi* wife. Security
Peclllc Financial Service*. Inc.,
a Delaware corporation, ana
Jane/John Doe. tictmeue name*
postettlon.
Defendant*
NOTICE OR
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that pursuant to a Final Judg
mant ot foreclosure doted De­
cember 1, im p , end entered In
Cate Ns » 7«M CAI4E/L ot the
Circuit Court ot the EIGH­
TEENTH Judicial Circuit In and
lor Samlnoie County. Florida
w h tra ln . Homo Saving* &lt;•(
America. F.A., Plaintiff, and
Terry W Carlson end Joan K.
Carlton, hit wilt, and Sacurlty
Pacific Financial Service*. Inc.,
a Delaware corporation ere the
Defendants. I will Mil to the
highest and best bidder for cosh
at the West front door of tho
Seminol* County Courthouse. In
Sanford. Florida at 1I:M o'clock
A M on ttia Hnd day ot Janu
ary. IMI, the following de­
scribed property a* Ml forth In
teid F Inal J udgment. to wit:
Lot tea. OAK FOREST. UNIT
SIX, according to tha Plat
inertol a t recorded In Plat Booa
Jt. Paget 11. la and 77 ot the
Public Records ot Seminole
County, Florida.
Having a street address of:
M l B rooks C o u rt, W inter
Springs. Florida3370*
Together with ell Interest
which Borrower now hat or may
hereafter acquire in or to said
property end In and to: (a) ell
easement* end rights of way
appurtenant thereof: and lb) ell
buildings, structures. Improvt
mentt. futures, and appurte
nances now or hereafter pieced
Ihereon. Including, but net
limited to. ell apparatus end
equipment, whether or not phys­
ically alllaad to the land or any
building, used to provide or
supply air cooling, elr condl
liomng. heat. gas. water, light,
_ power, refrigeration, ventlle
■ lion, laundry, drying, dlshwesh
mg garbage, disposal or other
services, and all wasle vent
s y s te m s , a n te n n a s , pool
equipment, window coverings,
d ra p e s a n d d ra p e ry rods,
carpehng and Moor covering,
awnings, ranges, ovens, water
healers and attached cabinets,
it being intended end agreed
that such Items be conclusively
deemed to be etfUad to end to
be part ol the reel property, end
Ic) ell water end water rights
(whether or nol appurtenant)
and shares ol slock pertaining to
luch water or water rights,
ownership at which attects said
property: end Id) the rents,
income, issues end prgllt* el ell
property
DATED this 10th day ol Da
tember lf»0
CIRCUIT COURT
By Jane E Jasewic
Publish December If. ;e. IWO
DEA 144

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: ROSEMARY M. COYNE.
IF LIVINO. INCLUDING ANY
UNKNOWN SPOUSE O f SAID
OEFENOANT, IF SHE HAS
REMARRIED ANO IF SAID
DEFENDANT IS O t CEASED.
HER UNKNOWN HEIRS. DCV IS E E S . G R A N T E E S ,
ASSIGNEES. CREO ITO RS.
LIENORS. AND TRUSTEES
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
CLAIMING BY. THROUGH.
UNDER OR AGAINST THE
NAM ED D E F E N D A N T .
W HOSE R E S ID E N C E
ADDRESS IS UNKNOWN:
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that on
action to U n d o** o mortgage
In

Ceunty, Florida:
The Beat • acre* ol tho North
Thro* Quarters of the North
H alt ot the Northwest On*
Quarter of tho Southwest One
Querter of Section 34. Township
30 South. Rang* 3* East. Semi­
nole County, Florid*
ho*boon fllod against VINCENT
A. COIII NO and DIANE M.
CORING, hi* wito. and you have
boon named a* a 0* fondant by
virtu* of a lion or ludgmont you
held that may attach to the
prsp i rty. You are required to
serve a copy of your written
If any. to tho First
Complaint on Robert
L. Hording. Esq.. Plaintiff's
South Orang* Avenue, Suit*.
1414. Orlando. Florid* 33401. on
or bolero January 14 Iff 1 and to
Ilia lha original with the Clark of
this Court either before service
on the Flelnlltfs attorney or
Im m e d ia te ly t h e r e a f t e r ;
otherwise, a default will bo
onlorod against you tor the
relief dtmanded tn the Com
plelnt.
DATCO this 10th dey of De­
cember, 1M0.
MARYANNE MORSE
CLBRKOF CIRCUIT Crt-;HT
By: Petrlcle F. Heath
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December 11, If, 34.
1W4 A Jenuery 1 ,1H1
DEAR
MOTICO OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given m et I
am angeged In business et 144 S.
US Hwy 17*1. Longwood. FL
31730. Samlnoie County. Florida,
under the Fictitious Name of
POMONA E N T E R P R IS E S .
INC. D /B /A LONGWOOD
LAKE LAUNDRY, and that I
intend to register said name
with the Clerk ot the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Flori­
da. In accordance with tho
Provisions of th* Fictitious
Norn* Statutes. ToWIt: Section
143.01 Florida Statute* IM7.
POMONA ENTERPRISES.
INC.
Posquala Romano
President
Publish: December S. tl. If. U .
If
OEA34
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FUe Number K-M4-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
CHARLESQ. PAYNE
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The edm lnlstretlen at the
estate el CHARLES Q PAYNE,
d e c e a ie d . F ile N u m b e r
*0 fat CP, I* pending In the
Circuit Court lor Sem inole
C ounty, F lo rid a , P r o b a te
Division, th# address ol which It
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida. 37771. Th*
nomas and addrastas ol the
personal reprasantatlve and tha
par tonal rapratantallva't at
tornty ars let for m below
All Interested persons e re
required to fi t with mis court.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: III all claims
against lha aslate and (1) any
ob|actlon by an In tere sted
person to whom mis notice w et
mailed that challenges the valid
ity ol the will, the quelitlcetkms
ol the personal representative,
venue or jurisdiction of the
court
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJ EC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BEFOREVERBARREO
Publication of mis Notice has
begun on December II. IWO
Personal R e p resen tativ e:
JAMESE REED
IJ/W Lauren Court
Fern Park. Florida 13730
Attorney tor Personal
Representative
L W CARROLL. JR .ESQ.
LAWRENCE W CARROLL.
JR .P A
100E Altamonte Dr . Suita MO
Altamonte Springs. FL 33711
Telephone (401) 3*0 UP*
Publish December tl. If. IMO
0EAI1

C E LE B R IT Y CIPHER
GartwbfftpG*Nh«*tripiogrtm* mmcrMlwJ PromqwotAlton*UpfiifrduV
pm*** p*B4 orvl (*•*•*&lt; EGih totfor «* 1h* &lt;
■MM* fdvAip'•
/ *ju«r« U

* T U J
V
IU

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K G I I K X
N X

OO

N J C Q O X C C . '

IU

blend* few

MX

J O M X V K
I V Q C
—

W O Z

N V C O O E X M .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "T o lev! Ihem solve* kl Ihq
p re se n c e of (rue g re atn ess, m any m an find It 1
only to b e a to n e " — Tom M asson

CLASSIFIED ADS

Scm lnol*

S N M IO M S U P
GENERAL JURtBOfCTKW
DIVISION
AMERICAN NOME FUNDING.
INC. AS CUSTOOIAN OR
TRUSTEE
PLAINTIFF.

322*2611

IVAN D. JARAMILLO:
HIDDEN VILLAGE
CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION. INC; THOMAS
• FULLER; CAROL R.
FULLER; SUN BANK. N A ;
MANTIN MARIETTA CREDIT
UNION; UNITED STATES OF
AME RICA. DE PARTMINT OF
TREASURY
DEFENDANT!!).
NOTICE OF BALE
NOTICE I! HERIRV OIVEN
pursuant to on Order of Final
Judgment of Foreclosure dated
December II. IMB. ordered In
Civil roae No. fAlMS-CA 14-L/P
of th* Circuit Court of th* NTH
Judicial Circuit In and Nr SEM

U T N N fl

IN O LE

C e u n fy , F lo r id a .

wherein AMERICAN
HOME
1IC
FUNDING. INC. A t CUSTOOI­
AN ON TRUSTIB. Plaintiff and
IVAN O. JARAMILLO are d a
(undentIs), I will eetl to the
highest and best bidder tor caah.
AT THE WEST FRONT DOOR
OF THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
COURTHOUIE, SANFORD.
FLORIDA, at 11:N AM. January 34. ttot, the tel lewring de­
scribed gregerty oe sot torth In
said Flnot Judgment, to-srlt:
CONDOMINIUM UNIT 7.
BUILDING 1A. OF HIDOEN
VILLAOE CONDOMINIUMS.
ACCORDING TO THE DEC­
LARATION OF CONDOMINI­
UM RECORDED MARCH 33,
IMS IN OFFICIAL RECORDS
BOOK 1414 PAGES IMI THRU
1717 AND AM ENDEO BY
F IR S T A M EN D M EN T
THERETO RECOROED MAY
14 IfBS IN OFFICIAL ACC­
ORDS ROOK I43L PAGES 1473
THRU MM ANO AMENOCO
BY SECOND AMENOMENT
THERETO EICON DEO MAY
3*. IMS IN OFFICIAL REC­
ORDS ROOK 1441, PAGE Mil
ANO AJHINOFD BY AMEND
ME NT THERETO RECORDED
JUNE 4 IMS IN OFFICIAL
RECORDS BOOK 1444 PAGES
1113 T H R U 1 3 3 1 . AN O
FU R TH ER AMENDED BY
AMENOMENT THERETO RE
CORDED JULY 17. IMS IN
OFFICIAL RECORDS BOOK
1434 PAGES 1444 THRU Mil
AND FURTHER AMENDEO
BY AMENDMENT THERETO
RECORDED FEBRUARY 3.
1M4 IN OFFICIAL RECORDS
BOOK 1707, PAGES 1«S4 THRU
1014 PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORI­
DA. TOGETHER WITH ALL
APPURTENANCES THERETO
ANO AN UNOIVIDCD INTER
EST IN THE COMMON ELE­
MENTS OF SAID CONDOMIN­
IUM AS SET FORTH IN SAIO
DECLARATION.
DATED at SANFORD. Flori­
da, mi* llth day of December.
if
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Jen eE . Jasewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish:
hibttah: December
C
I f .*4 Iff*
OEA-1M
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S MLB
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
that by virtu* of that certain
Writ ot Elocution Issued out of
and under the seal of the Ceunty
Court of Orang* Cou ity, Flori­
da, upon 0 final judgement
rendered in the aforesaid court
on the Itth dey of July A.D. IffO.
In that certain cat* entitled.
Century Graphics 4 Metal*.
Inc., Plelntlll, —vs— Realty
Options of Control Florid*. Inc.
and Dove Chapmen. Defendant,
which aforesaid Writ of Elocu­
tion was delivered to me a*
Shorlll of Somlnol* County,
Florida, and I hove levied upon
th# following described property
owned by David L. Chapman,
sold property being located In
Semlnc'e County, Florida, more
p a r ti c u l a r ly d e s c rib e d os
follows:
O n* I f 1 1 O ld im o b ll*
T o r a n e d o . l D
11G3EZS7YIEEJ130.5 being
stored a t Alfamerto Towing
Services. Altamonte Sprlnji.
Florida.
and the undersigned a* Sheriff
of Semi not* County, Flertda.
will al H:W A.M. on the 17m
day ol December. A.D. IffO,
otter for tala and toll to th*
highest bidder, lor cash In hand,
subject to any and all omitting
liens, a t th* Front (West) Door
at the steps of th* Seminole
County Courthouse in Sanlord.
Florida, the above described
personal property.
That sold sol* I* being mod*
to satisfy the terms o t said Writ
ot Execution.
John E. Polk. Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
Publish: December 3. II. If. 1*.
If
9EAJT
NOTICE OF IH IR IF F 'S S A L I
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
met by virtu* ol that certain
Writ ol Emecutlon Issued out of
and under the seal of the Circuit
Court ol Orang* County. Flori­
da. upon a final judgement
rendsred In tha 4torasmid court
on Ih# ffh dey of November A.O.
IffO. In that certain case *n
lilted, Clarke Finishing Com
pony. Inc.. Plaintiff. —v t—
Douglas A. Otvoy, Defendant,
which aforesaid Writ ol Eaacu
lion we* delivered to me a*
Sheriff ef Semlno.e Ceunty,
Florida, and I have levied upon
th* tot lowing described property
owned by Oougles A Olvey. said
property being located In Sami
not* County, Florida, more per
tlcularly described as follows
All right, title end interest ol
tha defendant In th* following
1300 Suienn* Way, &gt;engwood.
Flo. Ida. 337ft, mere particular
ty described as Lot tl. JEN
NIFER ESTATES, according to
th* plat thereof e* recorded In
Plat Book It. Pages 44 4!. 44.
Public Records ot Seminole
County. Florida
end the undersigned as Sheriff
ol Seminole Ceunty. Florid*,
will *1 It 00 A M on the tm dey
ol January A D Ifft. otter tor
sal* end tell to m* highest
biddsr. tor cash in hand, subject
to any and ell emitting liens, et
the Front (West) Door at the
steps ot the Seminole Ceunty
Ceurthout* in Sanlord. Florida.
Ih* shove described personal
That sold u le is being mad*
to satisfy the terms ol said Writ
ol Estcuiton
John E Polk. Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
Published December It. 1*.
!W0 4 January 1.1. Iftl
DEA 133

\

91—Apartment*/
Nowata Sure

97—A p artm en ts
F e m h lie d / R ent

LAKE MARY • 1
needed I V t hocr
are*. U H /m enth pays *111
A C tgkM P T M w n

SANFORD - 1 bdrm ENictonci
with private both. BN weet
security Include)

7 1 — H e tp W O flH N

O rla n d o • W ln far Park
831*9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT. PRIVATE PARTY RATES
HOURS
14....... . *wb ... »c aIm

" 5 £ £ : :: K i£

M

m os

gar Im m , N i k i * 4 1 1 t o s ad
IU m W h r

•R ANCHORALE R HI RI NO­
SH per hour, w* train!
N oeeperi x a needed
Dealer paeltlen avatlabto.
________t-SIMM-7111

ScheeiM

INC. Realtors,
to Real Eslai*
S IM

lO M IM R M U G H M M E r
II yr. eto Iralnbw camp any.
trilling to (each whet it lakes.
If you qualify. Dress tor sue
cess I C— — —
With assembly background
Cell 173 f4M tor delellt______
MEDICAL

Price* above reflect0 SI-30 cosh discount tor prompt payment Schedul­
ing may Include II f eld Advertiser at the cost el on additional day Cancel
when you get result*- to y only lor dey* four ad run* ot rat* earned.
Us# fuH destfiptto" lor to*last result*. Copy must follow acceptable
typographical term.
DEADLINES
Noon Tho Day Befer* Publication
Sunday - It A.M. Saturday
Mondciv • 11:30 A M . loturdov

A D JU S T M IN T S A N D C R C D I T t: I n M r Rvofrt a l r n
t n r e r Ir b r aA, M e S e w ie p i H e re W w in 9 e re sR w w W e M r
M r f i r s t Nhrt URR a w fy a n d o n ly f g th e a i t a f r t a f DM c * a t
a f M a t MaartMR* P M g b r d w e lt y a a r a d f a r a c c u r a c y t t o
H n t d a y H nut*-

* * M 'S * *
The nursing chelleng* af Ih*
‘fOs It In tong term c e rt! If
you ere leaking to get mere
Involved and m ake a dll
faranc*. you. can lain aur
nursing toam af;
• Greatbenefit* • Flee.hr*
• Tuition reimbursement
P Caring efr
Cat) today 1
X 0E 7N
32M SM u~
__________tM itsrd I

MERftY CHRiStfAT
19 O K m M U

at

FROM

PlOYMENT

323-5176

49—Miscellaneous
airurc nans

a DOBERMAN, tound n e a r
P a rt and ism St-Ha* collar.
__________MMB1T
LOST! BLACK/WHITB. bird
itogm li. Loch Arbor/Old Lk.
M iry Rd./lSIhSt Otto*.
_____ M W M W

Round trip to LAX. toev*
1. Return 1/1/»l,
13/11.
Round trip to Chicago Otter*,
dep. 11/30 return 13/37,333*
w p o sM /m -am o fio r 7pm

M — S— c f l H g H c tg

O rlande Botton. Round trip.
SIMobo. Mutt toll.......344-1140

BECOMEItNOTARY

For Details: 1 R K H c jjc
FNrMo Itotorr &lt;*«actoNow

HOVIO TOTWR LOT

For sol*. 1 bdrm. 3 both,
liv in g ro o m , h lf c h o n
furnished. 113400 Moved and
foundation) IT 17H

27-Nurury A
Child Carp
LK. MARV/Tiotoatan A real
Quality chi (dear*. 1 yr./U p.
Lunch, too pending—-331-M17
SMALL QUALITY NOMR-l i k C
D a y ca re a P r o tc h a o i.
Ope* logs I Me* h , lea rn in g
program I Pie ir* e n d I gm ty
Ik'd. Lic.14443 - ^ 3 1 ) .7 4 3 3

U —Training
A Education
BE APAJMLE6AL
Accredited Member NHSC.
Attorney instructed. Home
Study. Fin. Aid Avail. FREE
CATALOG. I *00444 3313 SCI.
Roco Reton, FI, 3303________
C iv il Service * * M le i

Jobs

S lo ts hr. No ftp - Ernam,
trelning. 4 Into,..........131 3334

Ldqol N o U cg g

M iuRinan
CHRISTMAS TREES FOR SALE
Cut your own. t i t toch
__________ 333 31M__________

55—Business
Opportunities
★ DISTRIBUTOR*
TOYS B NOVELTY
I t 00.COOPots Income
N ln|a Turtles. Batmen. Disney
Simpsons. Muppott 4 more
o Ho rent or overhead
• No personal telling
• Accounts Provided I
P Immediate Income I
• Investment S1S.saat30.000
S lip reeding 4 call newt
1-044333-4)43 *rt. &gt;44

*1—Monty to Lend
*
AUTO LOANS
1 SECURITY NATIONAL
S
I MO 137 0304
IS t t t t I S S t t t S l t

«
S
S
l

ACTION LOANS
Regardless ol crtd illl 3300 to
*30.000 b i l l ........ 4*7
EQUITY Leans. Purchases,
Refinances! 1st, 3nd A ltd
M tgsl Good:bed credit! Fast
approvals! Ouardlae Mtg.
Cerp .Uc. Ml*. Brsktrs
1444341/1 M0-MS-4UI
7 1 -H R tp W fltR d

NOTICE OF CLOSING.
VACATING AND
ABANDONIM A PORTION
OP A STREET
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCE RN:
You will toko notice th at th*
City Commission of Ih* c ity of
Sanford. Florida, on December
to . t t t O . P A S S E D A N D
ADOPTED. Ordinance No. 1040.
to do**, vacate and ab andon
any right ef Ih# City and the
public In and to a portion of
Olivo Avenue Street right ol
way between 7th Street and am
Street, further described a*
foltowr
That portion of unoponod
Olivo Avonu* stroot right-of-way
lying between end (butting Lot
7. (less RY) Block I. T ier 13,
Somlnol* Perk. Plot Book 3.
Pag* 73. and Lot &lt;1 '.tost RY
Block 4 Tier 14 Somlnol# Pork,
Plot Book 3. peg* 73. 01 th*
Public Record* ol Somlnol*
County. Florida
City Commission ol Ih*
City of Sanford. FlorIdo
Janet R. Donaho*
City Clerk
Publish: December 1*. I*f0
DEA-144

# MAIDS* HOW HIRING!
F/T I tto weekends. Pi. vmca
ttows. b i t Molly Mrtd 743-3047

ASSISTANT PLANT MANA6EN

Must have chauffeur license. 3
day week Includes Saturday.
Emcellent benefits. Apply
Stab**, 417 Seidord A*
• AVON * NOW NIRINO
CHRISTMAS SELLING NOWI
111-4313 #r SB 443*
Earn Money I Stull snvstepes et
twin*. Ne cetll Send EASE to:
Golden Dlstrtb.. Rem 17I314C
Carpus Chrtstl. TX 74417 133*

TH W. 3Sth St.
• ••V O L T a a*
TEMPORARY SERVICES
bR«34F3H

G ^ n tu iK o
W# pay your tuition.
• a#
W* otter:
• Tha Finest Training In Tha
"Ofltea" And Tha "Field"
•Opportunities In Residential
Ana Commercial Real
E slat.'
• Tremendous CommIitlon
And Award Plans
PR#
Wed . Dec. Itth. 7 00 PM
Llmltfd Sealing)
7403 Park Dr . Sanford
Contact: Al Chtodl
Century 31/CNadl Realty
b i t New-133-3333

13 - H o l i d a y
C h i ld a r e
j 't Helpers I By hr. o r day.
leave th* kids here! HRS 744).
3700 3 Perk Av* 327 7*27

14—FlorisTs
DRIFTWOOD FLORIST I Men
lion this ad and gel '•% Ottt
WireSvc esc! MOm-Htta

SCOTTISH Terrier Pups. AKC.
Cham p Bloodlines, shots,
warmed. 1 left W» 7*7 4443
XMAS PU FPIE SII C u m in
Shepherd 3 met*. 4 female
AKC Real Cettesll 331 S44f

14—Crafts and
Collectibles
BJ'S RESALE COLLECTIBLES
open every Sunday III Xmas
tor Inside Outside So In I I lf 3
3. SantordAve. 333 7US
ELEOANT IMPOHTSI Gilts
and Home Decor I Perianal
l«pd shopping help 4444114
HOUSEWIFE CRAFTS. Holiday
flits GALORE It b i t Janet
...............Ill 4411
17— S p o rts w e a r
FL SPORT WEAR: &gt;31 1134 Jog
sets, swells, night shirts and
lochs1 Downtown Sanford
MERRY CHRISTMASII

1 5 -Pets

I I — L u x u ry Ite m s

LABRADOR PUPS AKC. 1IU
each Will hold lor Christm as
Call attar 3PM. TO 1431
ROTTWCILER AKC PU PS I
Champ lines, g u a ra n te e d
healthy end happy I 1325 i
wks 13/31W4 &gt;13 1141
ROTTWEILER FUFSt AKC
eec temper/contem P arents
en p re m ise s Ail S h o ts l
1300 330 333 *314

GIT HER MINK FOR XMASI
W hit* m ink locket V snow top
trim
S ite m ed A p p raisa l
*4.000 Sale U OOP------ i n S*34

oW IRELESS REMOTE 4X4
TRUCK with 7 3 Niced b4f
t*ry, I hour charger and stow
charger All other batteries
included Alto has road gear
lor high speed Made by
S tars Comes with custom
carrying cate 1100 S744*41

1444 Lehe Mery f e d l e ntord
WHERE YOU WILL....................
0 SEE: S-P-A-C-t-O-U-S
IB R I BATH APTS. AND
a HIARi NOW TOUCAN
MOVE IN
F M ONLY t) 7 9 ! THEN
# SPEAKi QUICKLY TO
EEBERVB ONE FOR YOU
DURING THIS

C«NM1-D5I4 FONDfTIUH
HEMTHEqUIETII
Single story studio. I A I
Bdrm. Apts. Many e itr a t Ind.
storage space! Quiet, eery
community! Nice landKapIng. O nsite managers who
CAR
IRC 11 Starting e ttltt/m o
COUNT
eIM
n mfOwffO
w ihfwh
t ■««■)-123.1311
n n kf

4A-._Ilk■

Jo b s ! Jo b s !
We have immediate
openings!

SEOillTY OFFICERS
For Lake Mery Eeperiance
or will train. Full A P art lima.
METRO SECURITY......431-37ff
TTPIST 1300 wkly. et home, lor
Into sand SASE. Tropical
Type, Boa 1*3 OH. Tavernier,
FL 33070

• Painters
• Book Binders
. . . • Construction
•Warehouse
• Production

v v irv n M t incmts / m iw fi
14-113.SO p a r h o u r p lu s
benefits. Will train. Needed
now I I -Ttt-IM
73— E m p lo y m e n t
W an fB d

Employees with transportation
needed Immediately

AIDE/CNA • Will take cere of
your loved onesl References,
good nursing skills..... 331-tHf

Apply
1018 S. French Av«., Sanford
5 A.M. SHARP

91— A p a r tm e n ts /
H o u se to S h a re
FEMALE there DtBery home
with sem e All am enities.
STlS/mo plus 1/3 util. R e ft
required. 333 7743/444 3774

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. »NC.

H e m h l iV H i-rtlN C f
0pf.M 0*9

^ M

The

l l n a W

Sanford Heisild
SERVICE SSitttAty
\U

\b.-nl I ' m

Sr , ,

i b u ^ i m C o n tra c te rt l
Lu r k McCABT?
M c C A B T Y pen. can
MARX
tra d e r. Bsmedilnfc Res. b
CammCGCaaStol 331-404
NEW. REMOOEL REPAIR
HOMES. OFFICE*. STORES
AKfypee ceeelre rttg ,. Nes/Cews

C irp m ry
C A R FIN U R All kinds ef hem*
repairs, pointing A ceramic
^ S !2 * n
TNE

DOOR S P E C IA L IS T

! apart carpentry - Will Install
^ e r^ jJ U In ^ a a jH ^

(

\ii

m n

\)

HawArtBSii
A FRALEY
All ypet home repair*. 34
y e a n eiperlencat S e a to n '
taectol Gice eaft t 333 S774
ANY T Y P E N O M E I M ­
PROVEMENT! Free a il. Can
A SAVE. Ken.---------- 331-3311
* * BO'S MAINTENANCE * *
Res-/ b a ta i . # Carpentry
a Plumbing a Painting
e Eiedrteat Call b . 134 l t d
CARPENTRY, MASONARY
painting and tile work. Free
esltmetes- Ltsc O b U 13443a

CSiMMOTMMSERVICES
Puntint Carpentry, Cabinets
i Decks 6Uc d 4 Ins d

CMLUMUi
Fn-ir-nsriK.

-

b e * Newt..................Y31N17
NY DC'S PAINT A M V WALL.
Specialist to marching teafure. Cia to ct V im .— 7447344
■IMOOCLINO
m m . Lk'd. and toeuredl
R e fere
------ n ceys.L IS y ri. e ip .
ill

4747114

Ikm e Rewitr*
RON COLLIERS t a g R I g l
Carpentry, roofing, painting.
"N ato b to e sa u M r Nl-4431
T m T O S sT
LAND rtaerkeg. Isndscaplng,
pruntag. tortlllilng. mulching.
Insad central Rocky. X3B3S44

*■ J

i .is x iI m

p«r montn

.i

n

.

i i

Bwsrnsar_
IR C O toM N A M H aR I

• S4SAverage Use H a m
M l Average u se Aoaf
B D rlw w ayaaPw iD acfca
4 Ee ter tor PrpPatottog
B LkU &gt;i
----FREMURE
Free
•si . I CaN

a

A L ROOFING A M w e Raptor.
«*♦ reel repair aur spec toffy I
■Eepartcarpanfrywark )
LcALLnailli-AW YTtMEI
LEONHARD I
______
fy residential tervic* tor total
Stoto Lk. CCCBOIM Jtt-SHI

secret*r f l T

r II1UUII/TVPIUA
R n H ■

letteri. reports, e tc Sava I
Fae. Quality— 3*4*404 hr* I

« n g [
sad lawn*, lawn mail , w rta
cuffing, patching and pruning.
t r it e - r Shrubs. *HW&gt;43
SEA GREEN Laws Mall, and
Lawtocxptog. Iota) town caret
M u lc h in g , s o d d in g a n d
ctoattuaa, FREE oat. 33I-4IH

M r m iw ;
CRYSTAL CLEAR MASOMY*
G la s s b la c k s p a c la llils .
I n t/C e t fa r r a ild a n lia l
YamadeUrjuWMtlf

Fetasttaaa

ttday P stoMngSpadOT

.

LOTL
trimming*, appl etc. Small A
large truck Cheept S4f lisa

-

Tr** Service ~

• CLN T R IE SERVICE*

I LewisService

COMPLETE Q e a fd y H
Tree Service A

LI ran a* 4 a
FREE
ESTIMATESH
"One Call Te D» if A ir
a
ResML
A
TU T....
Yaur Naighbarhuod Handy Man 1
guaranteed
Besl Prices 11
Baslrtanttoi t Commercial
Call
-------u
a jfs i
CaN ScaM Tadayii 334411S

\

i

sS5^ k!%in

ACCENT1
REMODELING Ml types af
service! crO k4MM,3fy-f«3
CABLINK* NOME OITAIL.

Cleaning Service
JIAtSMIl l HOUSEKEIPING
Mother daughter teem. De­
pendable. relorence*. Rep
tenable rates. 3343*44_______
MILLER'S CLEANING! Hamas
and Of)tee*, alia tot. and a it.
^ a » n )ln g » D 4 a w 3 374S7I*
7j

I . . . . H it,

3 Lines .,..„s45
allow ai

m tif flffiiH ftff m i t t t

MOLLY MAID • 04W th* gift ef
time to yeursalt *r with aur
■Hi carttfkate- Cad 747j**y
DEBARY E i t e r m l n a t i n g :
Xmas GIN b rtitk a to sl t l* aft
I Now costoassrsaaty)-*44*4*3
HOLIDAY CATERING! Give
your tired wile a break! Gilt
Certmcates avail 344*341
HOLIDAY Portrlit CarilHcateil
A lading gini Professional A
e «p b i t Scan
m a ils
SCURAOIFT CERTIFICATES
Freddie's 01w Canter
C lasses......... 331*111......... Air

ATTRACTIVI t B N M APTI
Parch, aft i t parking. Raodi
sa m ew tntot itawwk. Jb i-a n i

SANFORD - I bdrm.. complete
privacy, close to downtownt
SfS per week plus 1300 security
Include* utilities. Cell 333-33**
ATTRACTIVI I BOOM APTI
Quiet, off ft. perking 1110/wk,
Include* utilities. Cell»14*47
FU RNISHED A gtif Nice A
clean, uSlllliet Ind.. walk to
down town H33433&gt;/to*w a w .

FAIT TIME TELEPHONE
/d E R K A l POSITION
Must h aw strong telephone
end typing skills. Computer
tiperience a plus. Apply et:
I3U Silwr Lake Rd, Sanford.
Monday thru Friday between
1:30 AM ends 30 PM

A p p fla n c e * ‘

1 5 - P e ts

99 Aaartnwnt*
UVIWV IfVvIfW / W H I

97—Apartment*
Furnished/Nent

u fiu

12—G ift C e rtific a te s

SANFORDf FansJUatortk HR
A up plus dep and r e f s th
pets. MUMS *rS34HM
SANFORD Large 1 bdrm, |
laundry. C/H/A. t m / m
ltii/wk.NedH*U133&gt;*toJ
SANFORO- Hug*Sbdrm . ctoM
la d a se n ta w n . C a m p te ti
privacy I SMB per week plm
O H security . CaN ttAOW
SANFORD * 1 bdrm.. Oecelten
lacatlan, complete privacy
SOSpar w iih phi* SIM security
Celt, e*e*e*e*e««e**f***«»»+**♦*»*■.3341341
I I N K APT • Partlatty him .
All uflilttn pd. HOO/wk ptm
sac. HpoUt. CeH......., 3 3 4 m

.

6 0 0 0 WORKERS NEEDED!
* DAILY WOB X.. DAILY PAY a
Call Bob.........331 7311 altar 1pm

StAAM Ctd,

O N I BEDROOM, g fllltla i
furnished, dee* to shappl"!
area. Cat! after #R L S347SN
before SFM call 111-10*1

LONeWOOO-LR. Mary a real
Nice, clean. Cabto. a * , hitch
an prtvitapes- ITVwk. JI1-3T4&gt;
A IR P O R T RLVD. A re a •
Fumishad Ream In pelvata
hemal |SS/&lt;eh. .3W B4H.4W I
7*4 W. NR. 3 turn, tm s., priv. ba
w/thewer, m ktp/retrt* BNB
wk.StnglaRmrS 134/40 3311
CLEAN ROOM I t hltclwn B
laundry lecllltto*. Cabto TV.
Starting af l7S/sek..,..,t» M tl
HISTORIC GABLBS NOT ELI
401 Magnolia Av.. Sanlord
Delly. wkly. monthly rentals.
SIS A lto ll.... 331 1144/3314*47
SANFORD w*4k Ip
P a rk Avi Lgi rm „ Iplc.,
porcht 141 wh uiilpd . 3343433
PRIVATE
labia, share kit. S7I per wfc.
plus v* utilities. 3344001 Eves.
ROOM, private both, haute priv
lieges. Cabto, ISWwk glut Vt
utilities. 332 taw. R aw msg
ROOM In private
privileges! NicelenSerdarea
331-eH*«rH47fHM t
SANFORD • Large worn, can
v a n la n l , q u ie t la c a tla n .
l il/w ee k...JB 4 HW/toaee awg
Easy access
t prtoR S7S/wk.
to a s ^ B S fiw
tl Consider
reduced rent tor hautekeep
Ingl Female pr«torr«d331-S477
SLEEPING ROOM. S4S per
i. 701 Rrlardllt SI. San

RIM. (STATE MINTS
CAMUM6HT

CONSTRUCTION AU TRAMS
L ecal/b rlb b ean Te *41/NR
1-447 447-toffTekint Builders Fee
* DELIVERY PERSON*
E arn estra money dill w ring
the new thelephane directory.
Pert/F ulltlm e. b H 3143*13
EASY WORKI cscellsnt Pay I
Assemble products at home.
Call tor Information 304 441
(003 a il 7*40

f
E
!

Legal Notices

f

Legal Notices

BUT T e n

S l a v i c El AN

Freeest. a i i l ( 7
‘•A**« Prices In TowelCOMPLETE Service! Pruning.
Free eel.
ICtfOLSTREI SERVICE
Freeoshmetoil Fair Price*)
Lk...lm ...ttom p Grinding. Teal
^

S&gt;xmdayNaNe

m P w to iitw e N H jr ^

iONN ALLEN U N N A T i l I
Twaram evaictoM u*
Preisuw cteentoe n i -swe
M iTHM rt Stomp I t o ^ i —
Very reassnabl* retest Free

i

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Wednesday, December 19,1990 — TB

- ff i

n -A M H lM H ft

-

~
H tn w f i r t i l l

KIT 'N* C A R L Y L E ® by Larry W rifbt

U iH w n w tfW l/
m

_

___ .
Fum Htad m net. a rt.

1 / 1, faad finer upper. SUMS

a. t
Wkty hrmenasty -t

_eESa

1 /1 a Nf tar Me Menay. *54.05

Hmmeeiia «

1M spaclaee villa. 144AM

LG. 1 M n e., move In
Xmasl t*t rent Sue on i-fl.
s m m c /ta M a m e —
lx . jtM M « a r m
1 term
• p i t . w ith C /H /A tra m
MAE/nsa. ladedes water A
• * •.&lt; * • Rratar-------- M M m
MARINE R'SVILLAM
L ata Ada 1 harm ____
lta rm ...« S E tn a A » .

tS
11*—IK —trill
AAA b w t i N l t t C l U i k Nh * m tcenw iae. m It. te
l a x It. Beys wfM ar w /e

. off *t. prtlng.
w a M ,iia in .M w t
lA M M tB • M m I M m
Raafoa. eppii., mM-MMM.
C/H/A, SMENiwnEi—, m e w

1 1 4 -ftttl I s t t *

211—A n tlq m t/
ColkctlblBE
ORAND OPENING DEC 111 J
R J COUNTRY COBNIBI Mt
Hwy *11, O X k a n . U sed
tw ra ltu re I A n tiq u e s .
bendmadi craft*. OPEN l»4

temleMlngternkehemesle
match with buyers.

2 1 7 - O if * • S i l t

nance M MR. t l yra. Prime
they- 17/fl Nsnfepe I Cent ret*
___ M l - t

LW A

it, | | | 4

B^raR BPFWW^I' MIS PW. r tt U w

seswctl I— .................. H U B
5SMDR DARI surraund this levaty 1 b a m . heme with tamlly

local lane......MP t‘

sent, parch, fenced yard,
yet end

1 1 1 -1

F u m lt ln i/B t iit
BSAR LX. MONROE I T bO rm "
bath, turn., appfl.. M a r util.
rm l tPS/m e. R eetter.SPtaM
RIVERFRONT One berm, cat
fata- Partly turn. Utilities
Inc, oduitsnopett. 12? U79

+ DHLMM
, m ba
eludes w ater. Call Needy

d vsm

Unfurnlthg# / Katrt

LAXI MART. HI
Village*
1 / 1 ell appliances.
tM pets.M M pr.me.
lA H O A lW O O e V illas, 1/1,
• 'p e e l, wesh/dryer, SMS par
ma.,naasas.«&gt;vaM lbr,aM M
SANFORD • Fine Atdpe Club. 1
barm, i baths. All rapt. mci.
waUwr/Sryer. tM rtlaj at MM
RINTARAMA
M7-MSS.***»***•*••«•*»*♦♦*•****»Ns Fee
F tta c J I
IF I C I A L I t a i l m s a lh l
NOATHLAKI V IL L A R I;
N aw 1 / 1 , a p p l i a n c e s .
■trspMCi's pctl) Imiilir Cii i
I Kissimmee 1 l-# n n M Anytime
■ves Owner m -M M IH “

o i a a h o T oT T T T ^

townhoueel 1 barm. Its be.
earaea, clean, M l , . . . 4 I H t a
ORANGE CITY. Naar l i 1/2.
Fully l* u lp . weah/dry. Km c .
sem ei i m see m -sssa

I f RTM1, MRTAU
Hamas m all sties, starring
tram U N per month. In Dellena.N olsetatanantl
Otsbej baaUyMI MM

SAUONLEAKl

Sanford, 1 / 1, Nke yard, CHA.
I l f R osalia O r. t a l i p r.
me./SIMM, i--------Unfurnished 1 bedroom 1 bath
h e m e . Con. H /A , 1 -c a r
garage! M » month. MM se­
curity dap. Can anytime. IRA

1 badrasms its

C/H/A*

hrspimsl

1 2 7 - O H J c r *O T &gt; t»ls

1 / 1, big tsnead yard, near

BRANDNIWOPPICR BUM
MISAN.ISiAMSA.il.
OC-1IONINOI

saseti-aiis_____________ _

c a ll ...............a i - g m
O P F IC 1/IIT A JL I1 units, IMS
sr. ft. as., s«U/me. Can t a
'l..JM tlf7 /a k * .

schools. 107 Bradshaw Dr.
Avail, stt-v Jen. 1 . Leaae MM
per mo. Celt ceNect atterlF M
SMALL 1 bdrm, C/H/A. nke
security.» tm / m m MSS
W ltr r i* Iprtaga ■4 harms, m
be. Nice ere* I AvetlabM aowt
ISM. 1st A last.

1 I MALL HINTAL OFF KBS
Very raOSSnebM. 11X 14. Far
details, can nawIM 54A7S

193— D uplexT rip le x / B etti

141— H m

r m

f s r S a lt

will buy
BRANO NEW HOME I Near
Labe Mary BtvSL 1 bdrm. 1
bath wtlh t a r ape in private
. Clean to scheoti
......JSI.7M

DUPLEX • Lg. 1 bdrm. CaraerT
Insldt utility rm ., C/H/A, no
pets. Mee/me. + dap.-MS-MM
SANFOAD 1 Bedroom, hit.
e p p ll., carport, heeh ups.
Air/Heat.S4M pr. me. Ml MM
1 BOAM.. csntral H/A, Senlsrd

MANAGEMENT A RIALTY
______f w n a W H B t ______
■XCMAMRB
OR^SBLL
year
. .
. .
|
Realty, Il f SSM
F raaL M I
Tarry
■
p a * At
pBel
■ MMTWpiWi ■MV
N l JUMR^NMMftI

deposit. S»«71t or IM f7t7

G

a h d i

n s

Al'\l( I MI MS

RENT TODAY
FOR OU R
M O V E -IN SPECIAL
I i t ■&lt;1 ' 11 -it
J

A p t -,
it

A , i ..it .i ■

;■ i A) H D

1 509 W .’-Itn St

s. i nl oi d

3 2 2 - 2 0 9 0

M T M T M O n ilK A L T O I
f FOR 1ALB BY OWNER?
tIX F IR ID LISTING?
I Can’t went le list yeur home
IF YOU'RE SIBMOSABOUT
SILLING YOUR HOUSE
CALL ME I
METRO REAL ESTATE
Pl-7P7*rO M 8S4
B. ORANGE COUNTY - V I on
AS acres, large barn.....see,000
Rf. MeRcseenbi ReeNer

_____ mma_____
Includes Screened Feel
Special Rate Financing

_______ C e u m rra_______
DELTONA, 1/1, CHA, Non
quell ting. e n emeble. Nice I
gem, f i . m f .sm . its -i i m

SANTA? MOVE-M SKOAL!
4 BR. brick heme ter only
SUM deem, SMVme. Priced
II SM.IM. Far details

ci ec^%

L u x u ry A p t L iving
•Clubhous# with Flrtplac*
•Indoor Racquotball
•Weight Room
• Pool &amp; Jacuzzi
•Washar/Dryar Connections
•Gardan Windows
•Fireplaces
1 B edroom from $450
2 B edroom from $540

LESS THAN U JM DOWN
WITH NEW FINANCING
ROND MONEY, FHA, VA
OR CONVENTIONAL LOANS!

LESS T H M S IIM DOWN
IRCIUM NCUKIM COSTS

VI. Ilv dln- lam rooms, appl..
carport, c ^ i/o ........... ...tal.MO

f0 0 i HOME
POSSIHELUK/PW CHUt
VI, with tamlly, living- dining
rm t. tptc, enclosed perch,
fence yard. Huge let. Iff.NO

ST. JOHN'S MU) LI MONRO!

5 acre estate I 4/1,1500 tq It.,
custom built. SV7.N0

UUIMJUIV
LESS THM S2.U0 00WN
1 / 1. living, dining, fam ily
room s, lencod yard, now
paint, carpal and Ilk. tae.soo

OVfIDO 1.IS ACRES
Custom built 4 bdrm. 1 bath.
IIrep lee*, screened pool end
spa. le e r garage S17M00

M 1T0M

7

STENSTROM

L eu than SUOO down I V ] with
10 ■ 14 sernd porch... 154.500

S3300 DOWNING. CLOSING

INC.

Plnecrtst. 1/7, living, dining,
tamlly rm ., security system,
lanced yard....S47.N0

JUMP ON THIS QUICNI 1/1
near school*, shopping, perk*,
bus. W.eOO cash le 10% Hied
rate mortgage I!...........Uf.too

7/1. tlreplecd. access to Lake
Mills, on 1/1 acre........ S77.SOO

REALTY,

•% Cm34A

CHULU0TA POOL HOME

SPLIT V I, eat In kit., big cov
arad patio, large fenced yard
wall manicured. Now this Is
■RAUTIFUL poolside brick
4/lvy. Formal dining, eel Inklt., family rm.. cabana. On tt
acre. What a deal I ...... SI14.M0

NIWHOMCS...
in t i me
MOOELOPEN 1I-4.....VA/FHA
c a c h om es, i n c s e e o n e e e

ASSUME no gualltyl Maylelr
Maadaw* V I near country
club. Reman tub. Comer lot.
Cemmtmlty peel. Now.. S?f.000

1 bedroom . 7 bath, pool.
Mt.500. Schuren Aeelty
________ 4i7Ml-lH7________

LOOK AT THISI Osteon area
1 /1 . S p a c io u s , 1 p e a ls ,
clubhouse, gall community
R e tire m e n t e p o c la lll
New...............................154,000

Lk. Real Estate Broker
1440 SanfordAv*
3214)755............ . .. 3 2 1 2 2 5 7

A S S U M E no q u a l i f y i n g .
Grove view V I, corner let.
Bet-In.kit., big baths. Retie
Well ter sprinklers.......US.too
SPACIOUS POOLSIDE V I In
Delten* Xtra rm. could be Sth
bdrm. H at lots at lira s See
thleeno today............... see. too

322- 2420

m i W. S a m in o ia Btvd.
Hw y. 17-B2, S a n fo rd

OPEN EVERYSATURDAY
AND SUNDAY) MM
SEMINOLA RLVO. (Behind
n-^ g T r e d i C a u e M e r g ^ ^

14#— B u iin e u
F o r Sale

U4I Fork Or., Sonlerd
441W. Labe bfory Rl„ U . MUry

ALTAMONTE SRI)ACS

BATEMANREALTY

153— A c rta g *L o tE /S ile
OSTEEN. S acres, wooded.
UO.OOO OBNEVA. 1 acres
til.000 Brewghten Beatty
__________ *4»«M4__________

OVER NINE ACRES
N lc a t y w o o d e d t r a c t on
May town R d Tan miles east
o l Osteen. P rice d only 1)4, SO*

with owner

terms.

CALL BART
RIAL ESTATE
^ E A L T O t^ ^ ^ ^ ^ J V -M N

155— C ondom inium !
C o -O p /S a le
PIRE RIDGE OUR
PRICES iTABTINO AT MM#*

TW Q U S,SW F0n

FOR SALE
BY OWNER
1 bdrm. j bath. i.WO tq t t .
large living and dining ere*
with IIreplace Eatre room lor
otllce/hobby/thlrd bedroom
Wood dKk. Urge trees, tennis
end pool privileges 1105.000
Cenn&gt;e«M *r n i i e s e
WISE M IN
STILL SEEK HIM
Larry Herman, RrMer US411I
* * * * * * * * *

1 lead sb ed reem b em es unit*

BONO MONST when avail
able Also, government repot
end bank torec lot ur et
1 B O B M . 1 B A T H
B E A U T IF U L L Y LAND
SCAPED, screened porch
loading to nice sued pool
Privacy is priority I . sac. too
CiS Janet Mem Held
Days, n - UM Eves. n &gt; n /1
AA Carnes, lac.

Q n tu ry .

Business. Land. Building and
Inventory. Term*. SMASH
PAUL4 BETH OSBORNE
VENTURE I PROPERTIES
Ml-4744

1M — W a te rfro n t
P ro p e rty /S o lo

7 Bedroom 7 Bath condom Ini
um i. A ll o p p lla n cn . vertical
blinds throughout, clubhouse,
pool, tennis, security guard
C A L L ...117 M l*
Laedarem a FI. Inc./Breker

1 5 7 -M o b ile
H o m ts / Sale
HO MONEY DONN
l i t ! par month on a I HO 1
bdrm 1 bath double wide
C all I ea, M M M « 7 W
O S T E E N - 2 bdrm I be on
!-&gt; acral Lots ot shade, turn .
C/H /A. very privet* Needs
T LCI S77.500
M l 1111 eves

REDUCED TO SC,100
N ICE 1 Bdrm H i beth. rang*
refrig . new carpet, carport I
B E A U T IF U L new l f t t t Ib d rm t
tvs baths, r e n g t. r e f r l g ,
vaulted celling covered patio.
114.50011
Nice qu&gt;*t retire* park. So
DoBary
444**M « C »M 7W
SAVE SU I N E W IN I H O M E II
W H T P A Y R E T A I L ? 14X7*.

MAM. MATS, SIMM M A N

TARE OVER PAYMENTS
SI47 per month on e I f f l
14X70 Call LeOov

1*4 »M o u t

IM bulldeble tt. on river I
Private easement te property.
Just a ml. tram Sen lord. Lake
Co. sktel Superb location tor a
draam hom a. D ram atically
tl Naw |usl....SII0AH11
(MattMadl 4M-M47

1 1 1 -A fR iia n c ts
/ F u rn itu re

HOLIDAY GIFT 1FECIAL1I
SHEET 1IT1/HEATERS Mf.ft
EM4MS. Maa-Sat.. Ifepws
a BABY BEO/Crlb with 1 met
t r a u pad*. 7 shaets and met
Chlng rutile. M attress new
cond. S4BOBO. 1M-74M
BJ’S RESALE
W* Bey/Setl Farnttara A Cellictlbks. Inctedlng Estates
» n S . SaaSard A re , m r s e e
CRAFTMATIC Queen Bed. New
cond. pd.SMSO; IfSO. OBO
Wed. gown 7/1 pd. ttsoo, UC0
Truck tool box 170.441*115
tD IN IN G BOOM table and
mice, chairs. S*5. OBO
_________ m 4 M __________
a DOUBLE ORB11IB, Twin
bad-m attrau and box spring*.
i i h . TO-srea______________
dOXVBB, gas. Sears Kenmor#
Whit*. Ilka new I Sf5.1H-T7M
# GOLDSTAR VCX wllh re
mole, axcallanl condlllonl
sioe. (toe)
__________ TTS-ltM__________
LARRY'S MART. 115 Sen ford
Ave. New/Usad turn. A appl
Ruy/SaH/Trade..........171-4U7.
PM AFLI DINING Table, w/4
chair*. MO. Call after 4PM
W-MW___________________

ONLY 3 MONTHS NEW!
Entire cantents. &gt; cem plate
ream s I Living room suit*,
bedroom sulk, glass dinette
set/4 chairs, all cantamporary
style. I l . m Mutt see I
Call M i-fan, e tb Nr Tem
a PORTABLE DISHWASHER.
Kenmor* Front loading. Good
condition S7S. 1H-1M4_______
a BATAAN BAR STOOLS. 1
sioe............................... n i4 i* o
• R E F R I O E R A T O R - I f .S
Cu Ft.. Whirlpool, Irotlfre*.
Good cond. SfO. Evenings
1114*11___________________
• SOFA • 7 It., raw rslble tapes
try cushions, gold. Very good
condlllonl SIOO CallHI SW?
a SOFA A LOVE SEAT (met
chlng), E itra nice and clean
SI00.m-*N4
________
PtO F A Contem porary floral
design In shades ot orange
only SJO Ml-7174
_______
PWALL UNIT. 5 FI. X 4 FI.. 1
-ections, adjustable shelves.
U1 D H I tl _______________
P W A SH ER -W H IR L POOL.
Works great! Whit*. Can help
you move. 441711)

1M3— Television /
R adio / SttrB o
WITH YOUR OWN Satelllt*
System , yeu w atch HBO,
Cine man. ESPN. CNN, and
tecs than *11/ me. Call 154-1*71

IMS— Com pultn
PMSMORV Eipension Card
lor IBM AT or Clona Naw In
Boxl Complete with EMS 4 0
Program.*** Call u n t i l

117— Sporting Goods
P BICYCLE - JO in Freawheel
Handbrakes. *JB Call 111 I4IS
SURFBOARDS, wet suits and
accessories, good condition
Ml SCI* Iv mtg

1*1— B ulldtng
M o ttrlo ls
ALL STEEL BUILDINOS el
dealer invoice. 1.000 to 50.000
sq tt Call 40/ 7*11711 collect
• PATH BOOM Cabinet, no
mirror, wooden Irani, like
lekrutlet Cost *1* Will teen
ttceHO m i n i ____________
P l i l t 's WINDOW FR E E H
Woodtn.fram* wllh weight*,
on* Over on*
hung

1050 double
M l 111*

19t— Pft* * Supplies
PANOORA BUNNY
While
female, will hold III X mas!
* » Call Lauanae 1711*01___
COCKER SPANIEL. Pup* and
Mala. &gt;100 Rad butt &amp; whit*
colors 111 4117 w i l l *4)1
P
F
R
E
E
DOIERMAN/ROTTWEILER
MIXI To good horn* 7 mo*
Old female All snots tic e p t
rabies IWekiv* Falls)
________r s*4 i u tsaa
• LHASA AFSO very lovable
Irwndiy mala Wh.ta color
Needs a lovable home AKC
reg l » Accesorlas Included
Call evrnmgs 111 41*4

M rt Cm
BMlTrwd

tfM TROOPER LSM4I Whit* A
R fe y t*tRRR. L o w , le w
.............SUSMtl

FREE

RENAULT RPMrat 'M. 1 dr.,
PC I
mpg. *m /fm cat..
*!

575.5441
OUTS1DR ORLANDO

TRREHPPRYMCNTS
C xcapt tax. tea. mi*, etc
PONTIAC BRAND AM • 1417.
auto. air. 4 door, sleraa. Real­
ly nice, muet so* I
Only S14k.ltper month!
Call Mr, Pome, 5557171
a Sktf DOWN OR IVI f a
*S4 CUTLASS SIERRA 4 DR

Except tan. teg. titte, etc
CHEVY P K R UP • 14
A /C eufeeteraei
Only 1144.7*par month 1
Call Mr. Payne. MS-ltM

TRUMPPRVMUIII

HONDA ACCORD LX. m 4
Goor. Loaded and pr*
lion, teew. Call David
* PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION*
EVERY TUESDAY 7:NFM
DATTONA AUTO AUCTION
Nary. 41 Deytand Redck
________ 444MM*It________

■ icept lax. tag. tme, etc

FORD RAMMR - t4R7. tad
liner, law mlNe. 5
allay
wheel*. GT tire* I
Only 1H4J1 per month 1
Call Mr. Fovno. 5E5ITM

im r m n m

M l Cut tem Stlndsar, m int
tend. SUM. 55H M 5 eNw j

THE IP PAYMENT!
PONTIAC 4SN - 4 dee

TOewFerreus Metals...
..sss-i im
KOKOMO..............
I N E E D F R E E W OOO
PALLETS. *1 la a 4S M. 4
wey't. &lt;7111pkk up..... 551-KM
WOOD F U R N I T U R E
WANTEDl Any CONDITIONI
AHe buying antlquee. Ml -4*11

221-G o o d Things

ilOnlytlTf.M /m el
Call Mr. Peywe, 5755171
'44 CHEVY Nova 507, 7 barrel
carb., 44.ON orl« m lletl Runs
strong. Int. tic . can*. Body
good need* miner work. MM
OBO. After 5PM M447SJ

INS TOYOTA Pkk up.
•peed. eec. condition
PRO After 1 ......... .
71 CHEVY 1/4 Tm P k k up. mud

2 3 3 - A v t* P a rti

WantoM

/i

U-FICK NAVEL ORANOIS.
**/bushel. Hwy. 44 E. Sanford.
I blk. E. ol Bearda 11 Ave. next
toAuldAucllen.M Hfll

222—M usical
M rc h a n d ls a
CONN ORGAN Medium sll*.
good condition, *450 II need
the tpacel Call TM-HAS

ANATERHDNORlDCa

m t-- liM

K ------- * a—- | u
- —a C
m p T TM, TMt *«*«
TIT*#,
MTC

a tf-W # n tid iB M * v

to E R t

3/2 CUSTOM WILT

321- 2720

%

RESTORED DOLLHOUSE
711 Myrtle, historic Sanford
Central H/A..................... Sif.fOO
Tamgtbs Reetfy lac* MM4td

C e ra m ic Ilia , L e v a lo r t,
H rap laco , 1 c a r g a ra g o .
Pooi/Nnnlt avail..........sei.JOO

C M IM Y TIH I

From The Staff
of Regatta Shores

Lovely Loch Arber localtertl }
bdrm. 1 bath, large earner let,
deep emit, living, dining, den.
laundry roam , new re e l.
MUM, assumable. CT 740?

Assumabk no-quality leans In
thesa areas! Choose homas
from Seminole/Oreng*
Volusia/ Lake CountNs I

&lt;T

Ml v \

VISIT SEMINOU PARI
ANOSNHPflEAHRMET

NS I Malle Rd. V I, 1 car
pereg*. ia Msr. W.Ml.SM
AJLR. RlPMV.MMNS

**8BS?SSSiawnir iMR tl*

Quiet, 1/ 1. Muet Seel rant
sire Securitytm-MMSte
STUDIO Apt! ikl/wh. t berm,
ITB/wk. bath In tanventail

[OW LAKE MONROE

eSXCONDRENERATtOMtT*
Your clothing sold tor tem
mission only I Call
774-1474
Country Ctvb tgoare Center
ttn i 4 kU-pertihrd.. lewierd

141— Hemes fer Sale

*ANFoao, Near I * Clean ane

REG ATTA
| 8 rtO R E S |

|F AIRWAY MOTORS
■ H IM M m S |
US 17-45

T ia ip »

w a m o • Large 1 a r 1 barm.
Fram jK N A ftjeer^R ^jJL Me

S t -111 i n

29t—W — rln g A p p r t l

I4M1

1 aWm.. t

1 .it it)

CLASSIFINOf ITS
Save lime! Let US match your
ragueil with our computerlied
list ot vehicle*.

N n n n M N ,!

The Prudential ( £
Plortda Raatty

itad raem itaE *

Gl

MINI OACHSHUND • Black A
Tan, 4 mo* Great Christmas
pr s sail I Parents on premises!
SITS. M M M fgfM B i
RETRIEVER PtlPS-SM
Avaltebl* now tor Christmas!
O N M T ftn

H 7M 7

S229 MOVE IN STUM .

IM -H

tn-Cars

flN M can Nr other litluiysl

la k e Mary m e m
Callhttwaon UAMIPM

a n d ll

I f f - M f M S o p p H it

PIANO FOR SAU
Wanted: Responsible party to
taka on small monthly pay­
ments on piano. Sae locally.
Call Managar at too a il le u

223— M iscB lIanB ow
OASSORTKO RECORDS! All
tor IIP. Call 575-4475_________
BUY.......... SELL........... TRAOI
HUEY'S CEOWN PAWN
__________ 177 47*4__________
PDOO HOUSE. L4rgo shingle
root. Built up. treated wood
floor, Can deliver. MS. *41*755
e l ASAPHONE. Penaeonlc. 7line Inlergrated. telephone
eystern. KX T1I15. Originally
1*0 Selling el 155-40. Call
before |AM or evenings after
*PM. Keep trying. 555-554*
a FIREWOOD. All Oak. 150 per
cord. 7 cords. You pick up.
Cal) now 114*-54*1___________

•AUTO PARTS Dodge,
Chevy Neve 11 SIM. Call
__________ MI-4541
Engine*. Transmissions, k a
d la te rt, etc. Vehicles you
m ake run I Ml 4114
• M IC H IL IN R adial T ire.
Brand Nawl 110/141 HR IN
M etrk. flit Puegeet. MO.
7755417

234— Im p o rt C « n

WE PAY TOP MB for f l
cars/tru d u l WR S IL L guar­
anteed weed parts. AA AUTO
SALVAGE N D*Rary. ME MW

M o p T o T iT ^ S T T t^
practically new I Rune greet I
MMICkRMMW-WM_____
■MOPED Veapp/Pleggia. Law
muaege. Oaad cenNtSen *44
i tf e

14*7 TOYOTA STARLET! 5
spd , ac. ext. g et ml. U.4N
Megtc isuxv.......
I4 S I T R O O P E R LS 4x41
Burgundy A capper Law, lew
mile*.......................... Stl.N fll

QUAD R a e a r t
I
^JraS IM A M
im r

• CASH# FOR YOUR JUNK
CAR OR T R U C R II AMT
CONDtTtOMt CALL M » MB*

ISBI TOYOTA PICNUPI Extra
clean spec [all................. si.*w

Ken 'Rummel

G ittl Uristmn Gift IS u l
MEMBERSHIP, Tlm acuan
Golf and Country Club, by
Individual el discounted p rka
tor Intormellen Call 1
OOLD RECORD Collection.
Approximately 140 Tt RPM
records. Incl. big bands. |a it.
classical, Mewelln, Jolton,
Sousa, He Heir. Andrews Sistors, etc All ter *50. *M -ntl
tUIUKI Omni chord. '•*, cata A
adaptor. tiM . H all-Eagle,
1*04 D. VF, *150. Men's Mike
■port* IM. dey/dato. *150. 5M
Call Govt., nevor llrodl W/box
A paper, *140. Call....... 171510*
TANNINO BED - Brand Nawl
Great Chris)mat gllll Will
hold. *7M0 U4-IH*_________
o W INDOW, Brown tin te d
thermo pen*. New I *40. OBO
__________1741711__________
X MAS tree. 4 II. *40: Gift
baskets end crafts; antique
ventlqu* vanity, 175; single
mattress set. 150.171 j*51
Si GALLON, platllc and steal
drums. Ideal tor tree farming.
Steel OK lor BBQI175-7744

2 3 1 -C a rs
** ** ** ** *** ** ***
&gt;
AUTO LOANS
t
S
t

SECURITY NATIONAL
I *00 1)3 0)44

t
t

** ** ** ** *** ** ***
TARE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN

Eicept tea, leg. HU*, etc
OLDS t l BROUOHAM IfM.
power windows, power seals,
stereo catsell*, tilt wheel,
cruise control. A/C.
Only tl«f sopor month!
Call Mr Payne. 171 7171
I t l t FORMULA FIREBIRDI
Loaded!!! II you’re paying
attenllonl..................... t i n t
Magic Isum...................177*144

84 CHEVY CELEBHITY CL
Two Tors*, Evary Down Option

$4 8

87 MERCURY LYNX S/W GL
Auto., Ak And Mora

$5 4 «

js

H I G H W A Y 17-92, S A N F O R D
m i l e N o u n o l i s u.- M . n y tti vd

t , l h y 1u l l l i i l t r o m .i l l y w f i e r e it' ( f d l r . i l 1 i . i

P h o n e |4C J/) J / 1 /HOU O i i 4 l J / i D.'U i / / i

Heads Will
Roll!
I f Andre doesn't m eet his
quota, we'll have his
hetul on a p la tter!

*2995

* 4 8 ~ .

84 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
Auto.. Air, Slarao, Looks 4 Rung
Good

11

*3795

13Reliant S.W

85OldsCvtlass

*4795

*7995

87Toyotahue!

88 NinonPulsar

*5995

*4150

M S-10 KJtikt

17Owvy Spactnwn

*7195

*4995

87CaravanS.I. 83terdH30Maw

M incer Motors
1809 S. Fronch
(Hwy. 17-92 at 19th St.)
SANFORD

4000 E. Hwy. 4#
25th St. A c ro ss From
Sentord Auto Auction

321-2993

321-1450

I

�t i f f

1 f

• | T

mmi

i •

I — Sanford*Htrild, Sanford. Florida — Wtdnaaday, Dacambar 19.1990

Ugai Notteat

Soviets deny sw eepstakes agreement
survive the lnqu*.y and prove
Unifd Prt«» International______ their contest is legal.
Space Travel Services Corp.
HOUSTON - A company announced Monday the com­
sponsoring a sweepstakes to win pany had a contract to send an
a trip to the Soviet spare station American on a week-long all-exMir maintained the contest was penses-pald Itip to the Soviet
valid Tuesday despite Soviet space station Mir.
The company said It was
reports questioning the agree­
holding a sweepstakes to find
ment.
Prosecutors with the Harris the lucky winner and hopeful
County district attorney's con­ "cosmanauts" could enter the
sumer fraud division late Tues­ contest by spending f 2.99 to call
day said grand Jurors will be a BOOtelephone number.
However, the official Soviet
asked to determine whether the
contest violates Texas lottery news agency Tasa moved a story
Tuesday saying Soviet officials
laws.
T h e f o u n d e r s o f t h e had “ denied" the reports that a
Houston-based Space Travel U.S. citizen might fly on a Soviet
Services Corp. said they will rocket.

Lgqil Wotfetf

Ltqal N ottef

Lfflij W otict

Ltqal NoHcts

NOTICE OF S H E R IF F 'S SALS

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I MTN JUOKIAL
CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA,
I NANOFOB
SIMISOLR COUNTY
CASE ML R UM C S N L /P
aiNBRAL JURISDICTION
OtVISNM
CITICORP MONTOAOB. INC.
FORMERLY CITICORP
HOMEOWNERS SERVICES.
INC
PLAINTIFF,

IN TNB CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N f ItB ffT IfN T N
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT

s a n c s op
FICTITIOUS NAM■

N O TIC I It H E R E B Y O IV IN
S u l by v irtu , at that car-lain
W rit at Kaacvtlan issued aut at
and under M s M at at tha C ircu it
Caurt at l emlnak County. F la r
Ma. u*an a final |u*samant
ranttred in lha a N r .u H caurt
an Ma MS Say at August A D
I f t t In that cartaln caaa an
titled. Tha C ltlra n . a Southern
N a tla n a l B an k a t F la rld a ,
Pla in tiff, —v .- - Raymond L.
Smith ana Charry Smith. M w Sant, which afarataid W rit at
■wcuttan «aa delivered to ma
aa Sharift at tam lnaia County,
Flo rid a. ana I hava la ria t upan
tha tallowing dtocrlbad araparfy
aanaS by Raymond Smith. u M
p rw srty being lacataa In Saminala Caunty. Ftortd x m ar. par•kuterty described aatoilawa:
Ona lta t Cim arron Baat. H ull
id « L B v aa tw u a. bam* .toraa
at Altam anta Tow Inf Sarvka.
Altamanta Spring*. Ftortda
ana tha undartlgnpd a t Sharift
at Sam Incla Caunty. Florida.
• I ll at 11:01 A M . an tha I7th
day at Oacambar. A.O. m o.
attar far M ia and M il la tha
htphatl W d_ir, tar e tth in hand,
subject to any m d a ll aaltllnp
liana, at lha Front (W attl Doer
at lha ttapa at tha Samlnoia
Caunty CauriheuM In Sanford.
Florid a, lha above described

That Mid Mia It bainp mad*
la Mlltfy lha farm , at Mid Writ
•f laacuttan.
John E. Folk. Slrarltt
SamlnolaCaunty. Florid*.
Fubllth: Oacambar 5. I], It, 2*.
ttM
OBA4E

i iia i

Soviet space officials reached
In Moscow Tuesday said they
could confirm negotiations had
been held with an American
company but they were not sure
If a contract had been signed. An
official at the Soviet space
agency Olavkosmoa referred
questions to the Energla en­
terprise.
Vladimir Zenkln. d e p u t y
c o m m e r c i a l m a n a g e r for
Energla. told United Press In­
ternational "there have been
negotiations with the Ameri­
cana." but he did not know if a
contract had been signed. He
said all other questions would
have to be answered by his
supervisor.

IN TMI CIRCUIT COURT
FOB SIMINOLR COUNTY,
FLOS I DA
CIBCUIT CIVIL NO.
tM tn C A U L /F
AMERICA'S MORTGAGE
SERVICING, INC.. F/K/A
FIRST FAMILY MORTGAGE
CORPORATION OF FLORIDA.
Plaintiff,
w
CESARCHALRAUO.ttal,
Datandantt.
NOTICE OF SALB
W iCa It ntffVy I'vifl m f i
i tha Ordar or Final
t t tttb In th l. cauM. In tha
C ircuit C aurt tor Samlnoia
Caunty, Florida. I will Mil lha
proparty tltualad In Samlnoia
Caunty. Ftortdx described ••:
Lot 1. WEKIVA RESERVE
UNIT ONE. accardtnp la tha
plat tharaat aa racordad In Plat
Baak n . papaa u t if. Public
Racarda at Samlnoia County.
Florida.
a t public Mia. to tha hlphatt and
boat k*dd»r, to r cath. at tha
W att Front Door. Samlnoia
County CaurthouM. Santard.
Samlnoia Caunty. Florida, at
ll:MA.M. on January 14 Iftl.
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: JanoE. J omw Ic
Qtoutg Ckrk
Publlth: Oacambar It. M. IttO
DEA 14!
IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
OFTNE IIO N T IIN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOS
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. ta-im C A -H L /F
THE RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION, a*
CanMrvater tor DUVAL
FEDERAL SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION.
Plalntlll

v».

PATRICIA R. BACH. TAMARA
LVNN WILKINS.
ACCREDITED SURETY AND
CASUALTY COMPANY. INC.
FIRST DEPOSIT NATIONAL
BANK. Mid MARREYACLUB
CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION. INC .a
F lor Ida corporation,
Datandantt.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that purtuanl to tha Default
Final Judpmant of Foractoaura
entered In tha above styled
coum In tha Circuit Caurt. In
and tor Samlnoia County. Florl
da. I will Mil al public auction to
tha Itlphott bidder tor cath at
the Seminole County Court
houM. Ml N Park Avenue.
Santard. Florida, at the hour el
lt:M a m., an January 14. IW1.
that cartaln parcal of real prop
arty tltualad In lha Caunty at
Seminole. Stale ot Florida, more
p a r ti c u l a r ly d a tc r ib a d a t
toltowt
Condominium Unit • (. el
MARBEYA CLUB CON DOMIN
IUM. a condominium, according
to lha Declaration of Condom In
lum thereof a t racordad In
Official Record* Rook l if t.
Papa 1074 a t re record td in
Official Record* Book lie*.
Papa 1401. and lha Amendment
the. eta a* racordad In Official
Racarda bosk t m . Papa IM . ol
tha Publk Record* at Seminole
Caunty. Florida, together with
tha u n trt undivided there of tha
common element* and common
•■panto* aa pretenbad in Mid
Declaration of Condominium
CLERKOFCOURT
By: JanaE Jataw k
fWmtw Ci*fk
Fu b llth : Oacambar l*. la. IttO

OEA III

t XM BTt

ROSA M PICHARDO;
WILDWOOD HOMES. INC.
DBFENOANTIS).
NOTICI OP SALE
NOTICI IS HEREBY GIVEN
purtuanl to an Ordar at Pinal
Judpm ant at Foractoaura datad
Oacambar It. IM , antarod in
Civil Com No. W4SJ4CA14-L/P
of Pit Circuit Caurt of lha IITH
Judicial Clrcull In and tar SIM
IN O LE C a u n ty , F l a r l d a .
w haraln CITICORP MORT­
GAGE. INC. F O R M IN L V
CITICORP HOMEOWNERS
SERVICES. INC.. Plaintiff and
ROSA M PICHARDO are d p
tondant(i). I will Mil to tha
hlphatt and bait bidder tor cath.
AT THE WEST FRONT DOOR
OF THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
COURTHOUSE. SANFORD.
FLORIDA, a t tt:SR a m .. Janu­
ary 14. lift, the tallowing da­
tcribad property a t le t forth In
Mid Final Judgment, to-wlt:
L O T I . C L U S T E R N.
WILOWOOD. A PLANNED
UNIT DEVELOPMENT AC­
CORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF. AS RECORDED IN
FLAT BOOK If. PAGES 7. X t
AND 10. OF THE PUBLIC
RICO BD S OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
DATED at SANFORD. Fieri:
da. thlt n th day of Oacambar.
(Mt
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE Caunty. Florida
By: JanaE . Jataw k
Daputy Clerk
Fubllth: Oacambar l f .l t . itto
DEA 140

NOTICI OP
FICTITIOUS NAMI
Nalka It hereby given that I
am engaged In buslnm at nog
Albright Read. Sanford. Flarlda.
W 7I. Samlnoia Caunty, Florida,
under tha tlctiltou* name of
RMOC. and that I Intend to
register Mid name with tha
Clark of tha Circuit Caurt. Sam
Inelo County. Florid*, in accardanca with tha Pravltton* of
tha Flctltiout Name Statutes,
•a-wit: Sad ion MS.W Florida
Statutos.
RAMMANUFACTURING
COMPANY
By: Lart J. E rin ton
lit Pretldtnt
PrAHth: Oacambar S, 11. t*. ie,
IN0
OEA V

IN THE CIBCUIT COUNT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
INANDFOR
SIMINOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NUMBIRi
to**47 CA-ltL/F
HUNTERS PARK
DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATION,
a Flarlda corporation.
Plaintiff.
vt
BARRY S WHITMORE and
ELIZABETHS WHITMORE,
hit wlto. THE UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA.andGENCRAL
MOTORSACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION.
NOTICI OF ACTION TO
FORECLOSE A MORTOAOI
TO: BARR YS. WHITMORE
YOU ARK NOTIFIED that an
action to toractoM a Martpaga
on lha tallowing datcribad prop
arty located In Samlnoia County.
Florida, hot been tiled against
you:
LOT 1 AND EAST 10 FEET
O F LO T I . B L O C K i f .
T O W N S IT E OF N O R T H
CMULUOTA. ACCORDING TO
PLAT BOOK 1. PAGES S4
THROUGH JA PUBLIC NEC
O R O S OF S E M I N O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
You are required to serve a
copy of your written detente*. If
any. to tha action el Petitioners'
a tta rn a y w hose nam a and
a d d r a t t I t E V E L Y N W.
CLONINGER. Clonlngar and
F ilet. F etl Otlica B at 1 1 /.
Ovled*. Florida W iX an or
batora January IX INI. and Ilia
•ho orlqlnal with the Clark of
thlt Court, either before tarvlct
on Patltlonar't attorney, or Im
mediately thereafter; otherwise
a Judgment will b* entered to
lha rallal demanded In tha
Complaint To Farectotura a
Mortgage
WITNESS my hand and the
WITNES
teal of thlt Court on lha /th day
of December. Itto
(COURT SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
As Ctork at said Caurt
By: Ruth King
At Daputy Clark
Fubllth December 11. It. 24.
ItfO A January 2. If*I
OEA W

fku rX J B i

* * 9 0 0

PLONIBA
CIVIL MVtBMN
Ceaa NxfXWXCA-MP
IWvtNaa
KEY FLORIDA BANK. F.1B ..
l/k /b KB Y UVINOS BANK.
F.S.B.,
Plaintiff.
VS
S T IV IN H . SHI BIFF, alal.
NOTICI OP ACTION
TO: KARIN TOWNS!NO
171 Ilh a m rack Wkal
Apartment mo
Tallaheaaeo. Flarlda 17711
YOU ARB HEREBY NOT I
P H D Mai a f
bean Iliad ogainat you and
a re required la aarvo* copy
of yaur wrltton datonaax If i
fa It on DAMIAN M OZARK.
P la ln tlll’* a tta rn a y . w h eat
a d d r a t t la : 14SI M a n a la a
Avenue Waal. Bradtnton. F tort-

Nahca N karaby ahmn m m I
d M bfOMaoa b l M M
Drtva, S a M rd l P L
m m . SamlnaN Caawfy. F lo rid a ,
under M a P lcWR M Ndm a at
NEW A M ANO A S B O C lA T It,
and M ai I brNndNraglabar aald
name wtM M a S acralp r , al

Itapkan Mar chat*
Publlth: Oacambar I. I t 1*. M.
If»
DUE

NOTICI OF ACTION
TO: SHIRIDANG. WILSON.
J R. AND RUTHANN WlLSON
YOU A R I NOTIFIBO Mai a
Patman tar Payment a l Funds
held In lha Registry at lha
Circuit Caunty Court ol Semi­
nole County, Florida In tha
amount el Four Hundred Ninety
Dal lart (I4W.W) has boon Iliad
•gainst you, and you are re­
quired to tarva a copy at yaur
written detent**. || any. to II an
Ronald L. Crabtraa and Franca*
Nanchand Crabtree, a t FallMonar'x whoM ad d rett I* sit
R iv ie ra D riv e , A lta m a n ta
Spring*. Florida U N I an or
batora lha IIM day al January,
tffl. and flla lha original with
tha Clark al thlt Caurt. althar
batora tarvlca an Petitioner, or
Im m e d ia te ly t h a r a a l t a r ;
atharw lM a default will ba
antorad against you lor lha
relief demanded In Ihlt Petition.
DATED on thlt 2th day af
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
A t Clark ol tha Caurt
By: TlnaCaMlIa
ASDEPUTYCLERK
Publlth: Oacambar 11. If, M,
lt*04 January 7. lf*l
i'E A *l
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
INANDFOS
SIMINOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. to-cm-CA-14-E
BARNETT RANK OF
CENTRAL FLORIDA. N.A., a
national banking corporation.
Plaintiff,
vs.
CAROLE LYNN MONSON
(tormarly CAROLE LYNN
ADAMS). OAVIDMERLVN
MONSON.harhutband.and
MICHAEL REESE AOAMS.
AMENDED
NOTICE OF ACTION
T 0 1 MI CHAEL REES E
ADAMS. WHOSE W H ERE­
ABOUTS ANO RESIDENCE IS
U N K N O W N . ANO ALL
PARTIES CLAIMING INTER­
EST. BY. THROUGH. UNDER
OR A G A IN S T M IC H A E L
REESE ADAMS
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
PIED that an action to toractoM
a martpaga an tha following
property In Samlnoia Caunty.
Let 4 WOOOCREST UNIT
TWO. according to lha plat
thereof, a* racordad In Plat
Boat t x Pap* 72. Public Bac­
ard i af Samlnoia Caunty. Fieri
da.
t a t boon IItod agalntl CAROLE
LYNN MONSON. (form erly
CAROLE LVNN AOAMSI.
DAVID MERLYN MONSON.
her husband, and MICHAEL
REESE ADAMS, and yau or*
required to tarva a copy al yaur
wrltton dafanaax It any, la It an
J E R E F. D A N IE L S , a t
TURNBULL. ABNER ANO
DAN‘E LX Attorneys tor Plain
•IN. rhoM addratt It 14/ Wert
Lyman Avenue. Patl Oftke Baa
100. Winter Park. Flarlda 227**.
an ar batora January A Ittl. and
III* fha original with (he Clark al
ihlt Caurt althar batora sarvka
an Plaintiffs attarnay a r Imma
dtatoly. thereafter. atharwlM. a
default will ba antorad agalntl
yeu tor the relief dtmendad In
•ha Complaint ar Petition
WITNESS my hand and tha
•Ml of told Court an Navambar

to. 1***

(SEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
■y Hearn*r Brunner
Daputy Clark
PvMIlth. November 2S 4 De­
cember X 11 tf.I*«0
DEZ 141

INTERESTED PENSONS ARC NOTI PIE D THAT:

Cau rt a r t
•b la c tla w a w ith th is C aurt
W IT H IN THE LATER OP
T N M R MDNTNB AFTER THE
DAT! OP THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICI OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATS OP SERVICE OP A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
to aw da cedant

DEA-111

an Plpintttr* attorney or im m x
dlatoly Maraaftarj atharwlM •
Default will ba antorad against

NOTICI
CataNa: M -IW tP
RONALD L CRABTRIE. AND
FRANCES
NANCHANOCRABTREE.
hit w ilt
Plaintiff
vt
SHERIDAN 0 . WILSON. JR.
AND RUTHANN WILSON,
his wile

s to

iRf Maflrto
af Mto iwhca muto

Fravltiana af N* Fictitious
Name Slatutot. TaWIt: Sactton

Dr

to Ma
pf ANTONIO IM T ffltll
A/K/A ANTHONY MAZZONE.
d o c b tlR B . P l l b N aM bar
fbW RCP. N pawdtog M Mb
O r a d t Court tm SEMINOLE
C b b R tf. F l a r l d a , P ro b a ta
Drvtoton. Ma ad*WMto whkh to
SEMINOLE COUNTY COURTPL ton.
ito Mt
tdM a

If. I

day a t Oacambar. iw x and Die
lha original with Ma Clark e l

the Camplalnt.
MAR YANNI MORSE
Aa Clark a llh a Caurt
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clark
Fubllth: Navambar R t
camber XIX It. t*»
012141

m i
IN M : ESTATE OP
ANTONIO MAZZOMB
A/K/A ANTHONY MAZZONE

•I Ma Flctttieu*
To Wit:
Slatutot m t

NOTKIOP
PICT m o w s NAMR
Nahca It haraby th a n Mat I
am angagad M Na ina to a t gig
FaUawtMp Or.. Pam P ark, pig,.
SambieN Caunty, Ftortdx under
Ma Flcffttoua N ana af POUR
SON'S MOV INO 4 STORAGE
CO., and Prat I InNnd la registe r
Mid name wtM Ma CNrb pf Ma
Clrcull Court, - -

NOTICE OP RESOLUTION
CLOUNR. VACATING AND
ABANDONINR.
RIBMTVOF-WAT.ON
DRAINAM BASEMENT
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY O IV IN
that tha Beard af Caunty CammlttNnar* af Samlnato County,
Florida, at IN Regular Meeting
held an Ma *M day af October,
A D . IHI. In Ma Caunty Cam­
— ■— ■-------- «
—a
HrHiUnJfl
WHrw^
•?
Ma Samlnato Caunty Sarvk a a
Building In Santard. Flarlda.
purtuanl to Pvttitan and M arks
Pdaptod a Natalutt*n"ctoalng.
vacating and
nounclng and dltctolmlng any
and *•' right al Mt Caunty af
Samlnato and Ma publk In and
fa tha fallaw lng d a tc rib a d
That partton af Braatto Drive
‘
atang Ma waal tld a af
Lot IS. Black I . T ract t i .
. « x Ptol M i x
Papa H. PuM k Racarda af
Seminal* County. Flarlda. And
that partlan al J act tan Street
which runt a tony lha narM tlda
•f Lai 14 Black E, Tract tx
Sanlanda Sprtngi, a t ra ra rd ai
M Flat Bath X Pag* W. Publk
Racarda al Samlnato Caunty.
LESS the aattM toallharaaf.
By Ma Baard af Caunty Comm lutonart af Samlnato Caunty,
Flarlda. thlt fM day af October,
AO., i **a.
BOARDOF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
ATTEST: ___
Maryanna MarM.
Clark to Ma Beard
Putolth: Oacambar If, tHB
DEAIM
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE ■IRMTEINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
CASE NO. W Jfll CA1AL
THE RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION.**
Canaarvalar Nr F IONS E R
FEDERAL UVINGS RANK.
Plaintiff,
vt.
LARRY A HE ASHE Y and
LINDA L. HE RSHE Y, hit wlto;
and FIRST UNION
MORTGAGE CORPORATION.
NOTICI OF ACTION
TO: LINDA L. HIRSHEV. IF
LIVINO. INCLUDING ANV
UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF SAID
DEFENDANT. IF SHE HAS
REMARAIIO ANO IF SAID
DEFENDANT IS DECEASED.
HER UNKNOWN HEIRS. DE­
VISEES. GRANTEES.
ASSIGNEES. CREOITORS.
LIENORS. ANO TRUSTEES
ANO ALL OTHER PERSONS
CLAIMING BY. THROUGH.
UNOIR OR AOAINST THE
NAMED D E F E N D A N T .
WHOSE R E S I D E N C E
AOOAISS IS UNKNOWN:
YOU ABE NOTIFIED Mat an
action to toractoM • tnirtgoga
an tha araparfy In Samlnoia
County. Flarlda:
Lot ft. HOWELL ESTATES
SUBDIVISION R E P U T . ac
carding to Ma plat therea t aa
racordad In Plat Saak 14 papas
41 and t t PuMk Racarda of
Samlnato County. Flarlda
h a t bawr (Had agalntl LARRY
A HERSHSV and LIHOA L.
HERSHIY. hit wlto. and yeu
have hatn named aa a Defen­
dant by virtue af a lien or
ludpmont yau held MM may
attach to Ma praparty. Yau are
required to tarve a capy tf yaur
written i s tanas s. If any, to the
Complaint « . Rapart L Hard
tog. E tq . Plaintiff* attorney,
whet* addratt It M l Saulh
O r a n g e Avenue. Sulla 1414 Or
land*. Florida UHL an ar ba
to rt January tl. i h i and Itto
lha anginal wIM Ma Clark *1
•hit Caurt either batora tarvka
an Ma Plaintiff* attorney ar
I m m a d la ta ly t h a r a a l t a r ;
atharwlM. a dafault will ba
antorad against you tar lha
in lha Cam-

to

DATED M t i m toy i t De
CLERK OF CIRCUIT COURT
By Heather Brunner
Deputy Clark
Pubitoh: Oacambar IX If. 14
1HS4 January X IHI
OCAH

Legal Notices

W IT H IN THE LA TER OP
THERE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OP THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICI OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
OATR OP SIRV ICR OP A
COPY OP THIS NOTICI ON
THEM.
All bthar tra d !to rt af Ma
clatma a r
aetata af Me daca H n t muto BN
tutor claims with th lt caurt
W ITHIN T H R E E MONTHS
AFTER THE OATR OF THB
F IR S T PU BLICA TIO N OF
THIS NOTICI.
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJIC
TKMS NOT SO F IL ID WILL
BE FOREVER BARRIO.
Tha Baba af Me first publka­
ftan to this Nahca la December
tlH W .
_
_ __
« v a t ^ m J3 z o n e *,,¥*
Ml MYSTIC WOOO WAY
CASSELBERRY. FL W W
Attarnay N r Panahbt
S S T T l’S w in . i s o .
MHS.HWY17-H
FERN PARK, FL117H
Tilaphana: (W7) 04-1414
P tortda Bar N x: 11411*
Publish: Oacambar IX tf. t*N
OEA-«l
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAM I
Nahca la haraby given Mat I
am angagad In bwalnaaa at 4*1
■achy break Caurt. CatMlbarry, Samlnato Caunt y. Fierida. under M aFIcttttoua Nama af
LEGAL SUPPORT SERVICIL
and Mai I inland la register said
name wtm Ma Ctork to Ma
Ctrcuft Caurt. Samlnato Caunty.
F torIda. in accar dance wtM Ma
Pravlatana at Ma Fictitious
Nama Statutax TaW It: Sactton
M M f Flarlda Statutoa t*S7.
Ilafna M. Tumi In
' X IX 1*. sx
OEA IS
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FHal
IN RE: ESTATE OF
ELIZABETH A SPIRES
N O T K IO P
ADMINISTRATION
Tha adm inistration a t Ma
• s t a l e a l E L IZ A B E T H A.
S P I R E S , d a c a a t a d . F lla
Number W4M-CP. la pending In
Ma Circuit Caurt h r SEMI­
NOLE Caunty, Florida. Probate
Division, tha id d r m at which is
Samlnato Caunty Courthouse,
Santard. Florida 13171. Tha
to Ma
.
sal rapraaantatlva's at
tomay are aat NrM batow.
ALL INTERESTED P E R ­
SONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All persona an wham thlt
ntolca la served wha hava H(aettona Mat chtotonpa Ma valid
tty to tha will. Me gutolhcattons
to Ma pananto rapraaantotlva.
vanua. a r lurlsdktton to Mis
Court are required to hie Mtor
• b la c lla n s w ith Ih lt C ourt
W ITHIN THE LATER OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OP THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OP THIS NOTICI ON
THEM
All creditor* to lha decadent
and other parsons having claims
•toato an wham a capy to Mis
nahca It served within three
men Mo after Ma data to tha first
pubiketton af this ntoke muto
ftto Mtor claim s wIM Mto Caurt
W ITHIN THE LATER OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRT' OAVS AFTER THE
OA TI OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICI ON
THEM.
All other creditors a l tha
d scsdsnt and panant having
claims ar demands against lha
dacadanTs astato muto (Ito their
claim* whh Ml* caurt WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
OATI OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICI.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL B l FOREVER
BARRIO.
Tha data to Ma tin t public*
•ton to Ml* Notka I* Oacambar
i x itta
Farrsnai Representative
JAMES EOWARO
ARRINGTON
&lt;11 Weal Coder
Jack tan. Al 1*141
Attorney tor Personal
Representative
ROBERT K. MdNTOSH.
I Squire.
STCNSTROM. MclNTOSH.
JULIAN. COLBERT.
WHIG*AM 4 SIMMONS. P A
P .O RealUR
laniard. FI 11171 111*
Tatophana: 14*1) H i n i l
Flarlda Bar N x : H U H
Publlth Oacambar tl. tt. I**0
OCA-04

CITY SAVINOS BANK. FA R .
_
PLAINTIFF.

CAM N tt W ttM CA H L/P
ARINE MIDLAND BANK.

JUOITH A. TATAR; RUPERT
ST.L.TRACEY; EILEEN A.
TRACEY; UNKNOWN
TINANT(S)
OEFENOANTIS).

STIPH EN WOJNAR. JR., at

NOTICI IS HEREBY GIVEN
N RR Ordto g| FMM
t» Farm Naurs Stood
_______ It. «H4 amared M
O v« Caw ttx W V ttC A a f Mr
C ircuit C aurt pf th e IETM
JudW toOrcuhM toW Nr SEM­
INOLE C u u n ty , F l a r l d a ,
adtarato CITY UVINOS BANK.
P S A PttMRN and JUOITH
ANN TATAR a re dtowWNh(t).
Iw M w R ttM aM W BtoaadRtto
Wddw Nr aatoi. AT THB WEST
FRONT DOOR OP THE SEMI­
NOLE CO U N TY C O U R T ­
HOUSE. SANFORD. FLORIDA.
rn )):■ Am.. January S4 t f f l.
b t sat larfh h t sold
.L.O. T M
t t RIVER RUN SEC­
TION T H R U . ACCORDING
T O T N I M A R OR PL A T
THIRIOP AS RICOROED IN
PLAT BOOK t l . PAGES SI
THROUGH dd . OP THE
PUBLK RECORDS OP SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY. PLORIOA.
OATIO Pi SANPORD. FNrtd x MN ttM day af i
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OP THE
CIRCUIT COURT
SIMINOLR Caunfy. F torIda
By: JanaE. Jaaawk
Daputy Ctork
Publlth: Oata mbai t f .i x tHO
DEA-I4f
IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
O P T M IW N T IIN T N
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT
II
SCMIHOSl COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE N G i N G R O H M
IN THE M ATTER O F
T H R AO bPTIO N O P:

S.O.H.,
A M b w r Child.
NO TICI OP ACTION
TO: M r. Jamas Laa

SMfMarbNAvtnua
Ortondx Florida H H l
YOU ABE N O TIFIED Mto •
P a t llla n fa r A d a p lla n la
horaahar pandlna wIM ragard to
M a mlnar child. S D .H ., and you
are ragvlrad to sarva a copy a l

upon P a tlllan a r'a a ttarn ay .
NANCY t . PA LM ER . E S ­
QUIRE. Daan. Mm
Igartan.
■ la a d w a rlh . C a p a u a n a 4
B a ia r lh , P .A .. I M N orth
M agnalla Avanua. Orlande.
Ftortdt MMI. an a r batora Ma
W h day to January. INI. and
flla tha anginal wtm Ma Ctork to
tha Circuit Caurt, tam lnaia
County Caurthauaa, Santard.
Ftortdx atthar batora tarvka an
Default will ba
tha Rahhan.
Tkla
I NM etoba
IWflCB Uail
R 'WI ^
M
------------- -------- — ---- (41
ct naacwhvo weeks In lha tantardHartod.
DATIO Mto Mh day i f DdMARYANNI (MORSE
Ctork to Ma Circuit Caurt
By. Sharon Dunn
Dagufy Ctork
Publlth: Dacambar ix I*. IX
I f t t 4 January!. Iftl
OIA-W
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OPTNIIM NTBBNTN
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT
IS AMO p o a
SBMINOLI COUNTY,
STATIOP FLORIDA.
C eatU x iN ttd f CAHBL
F N rld tB arltt.ii
COMMONWEALTH
AAORTGAGI COMPANY OP
AMERICA U P.,
Plaint Itl,
v*.
o o u G L A S j.N is a rrr.il
living, a lu i., toto..
NOTICI OP ACTION
STATE OF FLORIDA
TO: DOUOLAS J. NESBITT,
II l iv i n g , a n d P H Y L L IS
MARSHALL NESBITT, hit
•It* . II living. Including any
unknown spout* at said baton
dants If aiMar has remarrtod
and If aiMar ar hath al said
visa**, grantaa*. a ttig n a e i
creditors. Itontrs end tmstoe*
all ether parson* claiming
by, through, under a r
*
the nam ed Defendants.
I l l Commanwealth Avanua.
brans, Naw Yark IA47X
YOU ABE NOTIFIED Mat an
set ton la toractoaa a mortgage
l amlnalaCawrty. Flarlda:
Canda minium Unit a t . Build­
ing I4A to HIDOIN SPRINGS
CONDOMINIUM, according ft
tha Declaration to Condominium
n ra rd a d an Navambar IX IM4
In Olfktol Racarda Baak \ m
page* MB thru m and amended
by first amandmant thereto re
carded an March 14 IMS in
Official Racardt Baak 1*11.
Page* 411 thru « f of lha Publk
Racarda to Samlnato Caunty.
Ftortdx tops Mar with ail appurdtvlded krtoratl to Ma cammwt
tlam ents to said Condominium
a* sat term to said Declaration,
hat haan filed apaintt yeu and
H ID O IN SPRINGS C O N O a
M IN IU M ASSOCIATION. INC .
• carper at Ian. JOHN DOC a id
JA K E DOE. and a ll other per
sens In possession to sub (act
real preport), wfwaa real nama*
ar* uncertain and yeu a r t r e
Gdred to aarve a capy o f yaur
wrltton difanaax It any. to It w :
JO S E P H M . P A N IE L L O .
ESQ UIRE. P la in tiffs attorney

Ml N. Franklin Street. Suito
1710. Tampa. Florida 22*01
an or batora lha lis t day af
Oacambar. ttM. and flla lha
or Ipinto wIM Ma Ctork aI Mis
Caurt atthar batora tarvlca an
Plaintiff t attorney or Immadl
•toly thare*Her. otherwise a
dstault will bt antorad against
yau tor Ma rtolto dam in dad to
Ma Camptoint ar Fatltton
OATIO an this StM day to
CLERK OF THI
CIRCUIT COURT
•V Heather brimner
Deputy Clark
PvMHh: Nor amber B 4 D r
camber X IX I*. IHt
DCZ-I4S

u u . a t to ..

TO: STEFH1N WOJNAR.
JR .

mu
YOU A R I NOTIFIED Mai tot
&gt;to MartL a ! SB, D R O V E V I E W
V ILL A G E , accardtog toM a Pla t
R w rw fa a retarded M P to l Bath
t t Papa* X s and 4 Pu M k
•Sward* of Samlnato Caunty.

9es N e i h m egeieet yen e t i
y w a w re ^
Ja p w ra ac a p y

h T f O

t B a b -E irx "S h
ttn w y M r P la ln flH . w hata
a d d ra tt is S u ite M B . IS7B
M adruga Avenua. Caral Oabtox
F to rtd x SIM S m m batora
Dawwrbar it . w n . and M a M a
•rtgasto wfM M i Ctork af M N
Caurt

W1TNISS my hand w d M i
I af MN Caurt Mto SIM day to
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Aa Ctork to Rto Caurt
By Patricia F. Hearn
Aa Deputy Clark
Navambar t t 4 O x
X lX It. ttw
DEZ-S41
IN T N I CIRCU IT COURT, ~
IN ANO FOR
SEM IN O LE CO UNTY.
PLO R IO A

CASEN ttW aW f CJLSd-E
IN T H I MATTER OF THE
AOOPTIONOF
MOCaM brar.
N O T K IO P ACTION
T H I STATE OF FLORIDA TO:
DAVID BLACK
YOU A R I HEREBY NOTI­
FIED Mto a Patman far Adtptian h a t baan Iliad In lha
m a reguired I t tarva a capy to
year Raapanw m
a r A naw ertafha
Patman upan Me
totonwy. CLAYTON D. SIM­
MONS. ESQUIRE. Peal Offka
Baa ISM. Santard. Ptorlda.
H m - i a x and nta Ma ariginal
Raapanw a r Answer In fha
Offka to Ma Ctork to » ) Circuit
Caurt N r SamtaoN Caunfy, FNrtox to Santard. Ftortdx HT71.
an a r batora Oaw m bar list,
A.D. i ta x II yeu toil to d a w . a
Oatoutt Judgment will ba takan
egalntf yau and a Final JudpP a l l t l a n a r . WI L L I A M C.
CARROLL, hit demand tor Ma
idttN w toM O C .
OATIO to Santard. Samlnato
Caunfy. Ftortdx Mto StM day al
Navambar. A.O.I*t4
MARYANN! MORSE
Ctork to Ma Circuit Caurt
By: IharanOunn
Aa Daputy Clark
Publish: Navambar t t 4 Ox
ca m ber XIX I*. Itta
DIZ-J44
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP TNB B I4H T IIN T H
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT
IN kNDPOR
SIMINOLR COUNTY.
PLORIOA
CASE NO. tt-lllf-CA-IXL
THB RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION, w
Canaarvetor N r AME RICAN
PIONEER FEDERAL
SAVINOS BANK.
Plaintiff.
vx
RICHARD J.TICKAL. Gwwral
Partner, and VINCENT A.
CORING. General Partner, w
General Partner*el VITIC
INVESTMENTS, a Florida
panarai partnership; and
VINCENT A. COR INO and
DIANE M. COR INO. husband
and wlto; BO LEINSTER;
ROSEMARY M. COYNE;
RINKERMATBRIALS
CORPORATION, a Florida
corporation; SAMUEL W.
BLSEAandBSTHERM.
ELSE A; COMMERCIAL
STATE BANK OF ORLANOO. a
F tor Ida carparatlon; and TH E
UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA.

Defendants.

NOTICI OF ACTION

TO: VINCENT A. COR IHO. IF
LIVINO. INCLUDING ANY
UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF SAID
DEFENDANT, IF HE HAS
REMARRIED ANO IF SAID
DEFENDANT IS OICEASEO.
HIS UNKNOWN HEIRX OC
VISBES. GRANTEES.
ASSIGNEES. CREOITORS.
LIENORS. ANO TRUSTEES
ANO ALL OTHER PERSONS
CLAIMING BY. THROUGH.
UNOIR OR AGAINST THE
NAMI O DEFENDANT.
WHOSE R E S I D E N C E
AOORESS IS UNKNOWN:
YO U A R E N O TIFIED M at mt
action to toractow a mortgage
an lha pragarty In Samlnato
Caunfy. Ftorfda:

Tha East I acres al lha Norm
Three Q uartan al fha Norm
H all a l tha Northwest Ona
T a r t a r of tha Southwest Ona
T a r ta r al Sactton IX Township
11 South. Rang* I t East. Sami
noto Caunfy. Florida
ha* baan ft tod against VINCENT
A. CORINO and DIANE M.
COR IHO. Ms wlto. and you hava
baan nomad as a Defendant by
virtue at a Iton or judgment yo-&gt;
(raid that may attach to fha
prapar t y. Yau are required to
serve a tapy af yaur wrltton
datansas. II any. to lha F ln l
Amended Complaint an Robert
L. Harding. E sq . P lelntltr*
attorney, whose address Is 100
South Orange Avanua. Sulfa
•414 Orlande. Florida n a n . on
ar batora January 14 Iftl and to
file fha original with ma Ctork af
mis Caurt althar batora sarvka
an fha Plaintiffs offer nor ar
Im m a d la ta ly l h a r a a l t a r ;
otherwise, a default will ba
antorad again*! you tor lha
In ma Cam

DATED this tom day •&lt; Dx
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOF CIRCUIT COURT
By Patrkla F Heath
Deputy Clark
Publish December IX If. l x
l*W 4 January 1. m i

DEA-tt

Ltgti Notices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
DP THE RIGHTEBHTM
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CA SR M L W ttttC A ffL /P
HamaSavtngaalAmarkAP.A..
Plaintiff.
Julian H. McKaruto, single, and
Vivian T. Turner, single, al al..
Defendant*
NOTKIOP
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Rtol purtuanl to a Final Judg
manf af toracktura datad Octo
bar IX I f t t and antorad In Casa
Mx 14MM CAI4 U P ol th*
Circuit Caurt at tha Eightoanm
Judktoi Circuit In and tor Sami
nala County. PMrlda wharaln.
Mama Saving* **Amark*. P.A .
P la in tif f , and Ju lia n H
McKaruto. slngto. and Vivian Y
Tu
M M i. If any. al Julian H
are lha Defendant*. I
Me Karuto,
Kan
M dttr tor caah af lha West front
dw ralM atobby at the Saminot*
Caunty Caurthauaa. In Sanford,
Samlnato Caunfy. Florida at
ll-.tt •'clack AM. on fh# 22nd
day af January, m i . tha follow
tarth bl said Final Judgment, to
wtt:
L a t t t TUSKAWILLA POINT,
accardtog to lha Flat thereof as
racordad to Plat Book 12. Pape*
SI and EX Publk Records of
Samlnato Caunty. Florida.
Having a street address of;
IM Hucbo Merry Lane, Winter
Strings- Flarlda W tt
Tagafhar with all intorasl
which Barrawar naw has or may
harttftor acquire to ar to said
praparty and to and to; (a) all
waam antt and rights of way
appurtenant tharaof; and (bl all
buildtogx structure*, improve
montx fliturax and appurtsnancas naw or hereafter placed
Ihereen, Including, but not
limited to, ell apparah* and
kelly atflaad to fha land or any
building, utad to provide or
supply air cooling, air condl
flan tog. haat. gas. water, light,
power, refrigeration, vantila
flax laundry, dry top. dishwash­
ing. garbage, disposal or other
servlets; and all waste vent
s y s te m s , a n te n n a s , p e e l
equipment, window coverings,
d ra p o s and d ra p e ry reds,
carpeting and Moor covering,
awnings, ranges, ovens, woter
heater* and attached cabinet*.
II MtnQ mTtrVJGO goo
that such Homs ba conclusively
doomed to b t atMsod to and to
ba part of the real property; end
(c) all water and water rights
(whether or net appurtenant)
and shares ol stock pertaining to
ouch wator or water rights,
ownership ol which aftocts said
praparty; and Id) tha rants,
i. Issues and profits ol all
OATED this 7th day of Do
comber, I f t t
Mary anna Marta
Clark al tha Clrcull Caurt
By: Jana E. Jasawlc
Daputy Ctork
Fubllth: December if. 24.1**0
OEA t il
IN TNE CIRCUIT COURT
OP TNB IION TIINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
1IMINOL1 COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. M4177 CAe2(P)
IN RE: Tha Marriage ol:
KATHLEEN A. LICAVOLI.
Petitioner/Wile.
And
RICCO A. LICAVOLI.
Rotpendont/Hutbend
NOTICI OF ACTION
TO: RICCO A. LICAVOLI
address unknown
YOU ARE HERE BY NOTI
F IID that an action tor PETI­
TION FOR DISSOLUTION OF
MARRIAGE has been lllod
agalntl you and you a rt re­
quired to servo a copy ol your
written datansas. II any. to
Kathleen A Lkevoll. SOSOsprey
Lana. Winter Springs. Florida
W t t an or batora December
lis t. I f t t and (lie the original
wim the ctork of mis court
althar batora tarvlct on tha
above person or ImmedlaHly
ttwraaitor; otherwiie a default
will ba entered against you.
Dated: November 24. lt*0
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark of the Court
SEMINOLE COUNTY
Ry Sharon Dunn
Aa Deputy Ctork
Publish: November It I De
camber XIX I*. l**o
DEZ 240
INTMICIRCUIT COURT
OF TNE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF T N I STATE OF F LOR IOX
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CIVIL ACTION
Casa No: to-224* CA 14
OIvttiM: U F
SHEARSON LEHMAN
HUTTON MORTGAGE
CORPORATION, f/k/a
SHEARSON L I HASAN
MORTGAGE CORPORATION
Plainlllf.
—v t—
JOHN W. AMBROSINI. JR .
ELIZABETH A. AMBROSINI.
AMERICAN GENERAL HOME
EQUITY. INC . t/k/a FINANCE
ONE OF FLORIOX INC .
AMOCO OIL COMPANY; THE
RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION, a t Racolver
ter FREEDOM UVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION, a Florida
corporation, es successor
by merger wim
COMBANK/SEMINOLE
COUNTY, d/b/a COMBANK
CARO CENTER; and
WORLDWIOE COLLECTIONS.
INC.

Defendant*

NOTICI OF U L I
Notice It hereby given thal.
pursuant to a Final Judgment of
F oreclosure antorad In tha
abavd styled causa, in lha
C irc u it C aurt e l Samlnoia
County. Florida. I will sell lha
proparty situate In Samlnoia
Caunty. Florida described a t
Let 14. GAROEN LAKE
ESTATES. UNIT TWO. ac
carding to lha plot thereof, at
racordad In Plat Boa* 14 Page
74 ei the Public Records si
Samlnoia County. Florida
•I publk tala, to tha highest and
bast bidder, tor cath. at th*
West Front Door of tha Samlnoia
Caunty Courthouse, at Switord.
Florida at II.to A M on Janu
ary 21. INI
OATED m il loth day el Da
cember. i m
M A R Y A N N E MORSE
Ctork of Circuit Court
By JanaE Jasawic
Deputy Clark
Fv*ll»h December It. 2*. iwo
OEA 141

t
&lt; d l .*

�G IF T SHOP
CAFE

A dvertising Supplement to Senlord Herald - W ednesday. December I t and Herald Advertiser - Thursday. December JO, Itto

�t — Sanford Herald — Wednesday, December 10, 1090 — Herald Advertiser — Thursday, December 20, 1000 — Sanford. Ft.

Advertising Supplement

k ittle

luxuries

SHOE STORE

"Duk&amp;QxiM/

OLD FASHIONED VALUES AT
Many

styles &amp;

i. t

C olon T b

■ p fS S S Jjg j* ^ ^

Choose Ftom

T&gt;

■

KNIGHT’S SHOE STORE

/
"

'■ ?

Mom &amp; D ad will
S ta y Comfortable &amp; C ozy In
These Slippers From D aniel Green
-— ■&gt;
» % ./

i L+
^

M

• OIFT CERTIFICATES • FREE OIFT WRAPPING
In Histor (cel Downtown Sanford
2OS E. First Strsst
322-0204
H R S: M on .-T h u n S
S a t 0-5:30, F ri 9-7
VISA • M C

R B l

THE

A

f S

W hat is it that s e ts o n e p e rso n , o n e team ,
o n e c o m p a n y ap art?

It's the d e sire to be th e b e st. A t F ir s t U n io n
we c o u ld o tie r the s ta n d a rd s e rv ic e s , but w e
p re fe r to add m ore o p t io n s and m o re s e rv ic e
tha n y o u 'll get from any other bank. B e c a u s e w e w a n t to be th e
b e st. T a lk to us. There is a d iffe re n c e in b a n k in g at F ir s t U n ion .

r ^ ^ ^ i w
o /F k n U

a

101 East First S tru t
Sanford, Florida 32771
407 33&lt;&gt;” M
M r m t x r KI)H '

Take a walk down town thin
Christmas, and you'll Ond Knight's
Shoe Store. Knight's Is Sanford's only
family owned and operated family shoe
store.
Formerly Ivey’s Shoe Store, opened
In 1053. Don Knight bought the shoe
store from his former employer. In
1069.
Knight's carries name brand shoes
such as Hushpupples. Naturallzer and
Old Main Trotters for women and
Freeman. Hushpupples and French
Shrlner for men.
For children. Knights oilers
Hushpupples and Child Stride. There
Is a wide select Ion of athletic shoes for

the entire family. Nurses can find pro­
fessional slioes such as Soft Spots.
Nurscmate and Clinic. The cvcrpopular Acme mid Dingo boots are also
available at Knight's.
Knight's suggests Daniel Greene
house slippers for men and women for
Christmas this year. There are also
purses, hose, evening shoes and socks
for stocking stidlers.
For that "hard lo-buy-for" or "hardto-flt" person on your list. Knight's has
gift certificates.
You can ulways charge your gift on
VISA or MasterCard and during the
holiday season. Knight's will gift wrap
your purchase free.

�Advertising Supplement

Sanford Herald — Wednesday, December 19,1990 — Herald Advertiser — Thursday. December 20,1990 — Sanford, FI. — S

Hillhaven Named
North Pole Substation
Last week. Sanford Mayor Bettyc
Smith signed a proclamation naming
Hillhaven Health Care Center, for the
third year ns an official North Pole
Substation. Residents of Hillhaven
huve been specially trained to take
orders for Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus on
their Ho-Ho Hotline.
Children of all ages can cull Hillhaven
December 17th through December
24th at 324-4146. talk to Mr. or Mrs.
Claus and place their orders for
Christmas.

wholesale prices! Avis cars are well equipped, and available
now at these N A D A Trade-in published prices.

1990 GEO METRO LSI

Sheryl Joseph. Activity Director for
Hillhaven. has coordinated the Ho-HoHotline for two years. All orders go
directly to the North Pole for process­
ing In time for Christmas.
Then, after Christmas, on December
26th and 27th the kids can call back to
thank Santa for all their goodies.
The Ho-Ho-Hotllnc Is done as a
public service by Hillhaven Health Care
Center and there Is no charge for the
cull beyond normul operating charges.

*5 5 0 0

A s L ow

2 Dr. Hatchback
PS, PB, AM/FM Stereo
Air. Automatic ft More

1990 PONTIAC GRAND AM

a m

a

A s LO W A s

$ ftn n n

1990 CHEVY LUMINA EURO
P S , PB. PW . P L .
CASSETTE

1990 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

2 DR. 4 DR, P S , P B . A M /FM S T E R E O
AIR. A U T O M A T IC A N D M O R E

1990 CHEVY CAVALIER
2 D R . 4 D R . P S . PB . A M /FM S T E R E O
AIR. A U T O M A T IC A N D M O R E

1990 OLDSMOBILE CIERA

V6, PS . P B . P W . P L . TILT. C R U IS E
AM /FM S T E R E O &amp; M O R E

ps.pB,pw,-nit.Air,

AM/FM Stereo ft More

Aa Low Aa *9500
Aa Low As *6800

*6500
As Low As *9000
Aa Low As

1989 OLDSMOBILE CIERA
V6. P S PB , P L . PW , TILT, C R U IS E .
A M /F M £ T E R E O , A IR &amp; M O R E

As Low As

*7700

W h e n yo u b u y A v i s y o u j u t p i o l e i t l o n » th e l e n id i iid e i o f (h e u it e ip ir e d n u n u l d c l u i v r s
w a n j r t l y c o v f i j j u l» in c lu d e d j l n o a d d it io n a l c o i l O n m o s t cot% y o u j e t p r o t e c t io n tut
50 UUU 60 U00 o r ^5 0 0 0 to ta l v e h i c le o d o m e t e r m ile * A n d o p t io n a l c o m p r e h e n s iv e s e r v ic e
p la n s a re a ls o a v a i la b le A s h fo r d e t a ils
T u . Mo and ttgauman la w
f manong
Otto la
morning landaii roq jir*.
mantt. M at Vw m quaMy uwd carl t n from
our Paly nr** loot Uony otrwr muw* m d
m M M I M ■ «tr»cliy* pnea* No a*
c c u m ip ^ y io Ml* pre m ia .* . C n i u t p U
» prior U M

5575 S. Hwy. 17-92
CASSELBERRV
331*3537
UOV FBI 9 9
5AT 9 t - S U N 12 i

s

CAR
SALES
V tla v U L Lto f

|

�H tue -NmM

4—

ao. ino AavtftWof Supplemant

ORIENT IV RESTAURANT, ATIELS CUSTOM
APPAREL TO DERUT IN HEATHROW SHOPS
M lttllKM M

OPENING JANUARY 2!
A Central Floridalegendsince1974, wheni finemeal »
A iu h f n h r fW irad al a n d

American cuisine with new c ittfio n for the'90&amp;

mtag with activity ihtahohdayaraaonaa
ISt Itnal Mage* of construction and
dteoraUon are being completed for **•
dung new *hop* opening tn January.
Located JUM w n t of M on Lake Mary
Boulevard. Heathrow Shape are known
la r^ ectelirtnglw prawned treatment lor
their cuetomen and dattor*.
The Orient IV at Heathrow, a Central
Florida tradition featuring Chinese and
Aawrtren culalne since 1074. win re­
open January a tot Heathrow Shopa Hoal
"Wed," widely known alter IB years as
. _ . pro­
m ises authentic Chinese culalne,
American favorliea, and plenty of new
creations for the 1980's. Adopting the
slogan “a fine meal ta an unforgettable
tapertrnce." Orient IV Oder* a complete
menu and hill her at moderate prices:
luadr for about M . dinners around M.
Take-out orders are available, and Orient
IV will even tend you a menu by fac­
simile; Just send your request by FAX lo
333-41M-Reservations will be available
by phoning 3334384.
Also opening in January will be Atlrla
Fashion Design, an Innovative women *
apparel boutique specialising In the
custom design and creation u. (aahlona
for IIte individual.
Already newly opened for (he holiday
season Is Magnolia Floral Design, a new
shop featuring custom arrangements and
home decorating with (lower*- Magnolia
Design offer* unusual and tropical
greens, flower* and bulbs, and takes
pride In Its collection of plush animals representing endangered epecles. a portion of the proceeds
of which benefit the World Wildlife fund. Worldwide (local delivery services are available, with
telephone orders accepted at 333-9909 or 000-2334387.
An catabttahrd favorite In Heathrow Shops to the Paala Lovers Trattoria, the casual Italian reaturant
that features a vaat variety aTdeUctou* pmla entrees: generous protiona served in deep bowls to assure
perfect taste. This trattoria. Including a foil bar and lounge wllh an excellent selection of Italian
beverages, offer* luncheons from M.33 and dinner* from 16.75... the perfect respite In you busy shop-

t

ATIEL’S
FASHION
n u c iP M
D E / o lV J f I N

OPENING SOON!
A tieb ftsh io n Design W onrnft
apparel salon where fashions are
cietfed exclusively for you!

PASTA UTVERS.
A CASl'AL rUaiAHRUTM AAKT

OPEN NOW!

Enjoy casual
dining-ltalian style. Lunch from $4.25;
Dinner from $6.75

m

* n d

Making sure
gou look your

JintWnlof
M. tul»
UUMan
Bouloild

Want to Feel Good?
Im prove q u a lity o f life?
Life Enthusiast Co-Op
Excels Can Help!
• 100% N atural Active Food
• Vegetarian Health
Food Concentrates
• Enzyme Rich
• Animal Free Products
• Non Daily

Just what you need at
affordable prices
Watch for
exciting trends
from Italy!

* * * * * * * * * * * * *

Excela Combines These
Super Foods Concentrated
Dozens O f Times
• Green Bar lay Juice • Dunalialla Carotene
• Green Wheat Juice • Ultra Pure Soya Lecithin
• Hawaiian Spirulina • Enzyme Super Sprouts
• Coenzyme 0 1 0
• Soluble Apple Fiber
• Royal Jelly
* Chlorella

Forf u r th e r
d e ta ils a n d
F re e

Information
Call

331-3669

�30% O ff
A ll Permanent Christmas Items
In Stock
(Does tn* includefreshflomen or live pUres)

Sanford Flowers For The Holidaysl
Family owned ft operated since 1936
Sanford Flowers Is run by brother ft
slater team Tim Donahoe ft Kit Thomp­
son. A pretty boutique located at 209
E. Commercial in downtown Sanford,
has everything to decorate for the
holidays. Staffed with 3 award winning
designers their arrangements will sure­
ly please. Tim ft Kit carry artlilcal ft
live plants, wall decors, candles, ar­

rangements, mugs, stocking stufTers
and many more unique gift Ideas. They
have gift certificates or they will
custom design a bouquet for you.
And now until Dec. 24 you can
receive a 30% discount on all perma­
nent Christmas items In stock. So let
Sanford Flowers be your full service
florist for the holidays. Call 322-1822
or come by.

Sanford Flower Shop
Historic Downtown
209 East Commercial
Sanfoid, Florida 32771
(407)322-1822

"Quality Service Since 1956"
FTD * AFS TELEFLORA CAR1K

A L C W estern Wear
706 N. Hwy. 17-02
Longwood •834-4646

iiirul Ihif/s OnExoticSkins
Ostrich from 1274
Uzard
from 1148
Elephant
«2$S
E li
from t»1
D tar
$153
BuMrog
$M 4
$118

ALC Western Wear has It all • boots,
hats, moccasins, mens and women's
shirts and Jeans, skirts, prarlc slips,
dusters, bells, buckles, bolos. and ac­
cessories. In fact they have so many
men's and women's boots that they've
got shelf alter shelf of boots lined up
against the wall.
Marv and Penny Grimm are the
owners. They say they're unique In
that there one of a few shops where a
lady can outfit herself from head to toe
as well os a man.

Plus
Terrific Selection of Mens &amp; Ladies
Western Clothes. Hats A Accessories
- We'U outfit ya from head to tool

Best Prim h Cetfnl fk M
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 AM • 9 PM
(CLOSE 5 PM CHRISTMAS EVE)
A L C Y o u r 1 S t o p W c stc r n

Shop, Whenc Oid-FAsMoNcd
Sen v ice Is A lw a y s In S iy lc l

FWaWorU
1
ACC WCSTCRN ■
WEAR
■
MvWW
C o u iw r P s r u c
434

1

N

1 B
2

after Christmas and opened two days
later. Even the customers stopped to
help us set up. We couldn't have done
It without them!"
If your looking for name brands. ALC
has them. Some of the brands they
stock ure Tony Lama. Laredo. Dingo,
J. Chisholm. Stetson. Bailey, Roper.
Kockmuunt. Kenny Rogers. Wrangler,
and many more,
Morv and Penny feel their shops (Flea
World and Hwy 17-92) are so suc­
cessful because they love what they do.
It's a warm friendly atmosphere.
They're on a first name basis with their
customer* which they say Is great.
They always have a fresh put of coffee
and during the Christmas seusun you
can stop tn for egg nog and cookies, j
The shop does not run sales, they feel
if you've put tt on sale it was probably
less expensive to begin with. ALC has
something for every ones tastes and
pockrtbook. So call H34-4848 or stop
by at 706 N. Hwy. 17-92 In UmgwcKKl

Marv and Penny opened up nine
years ago at Fleaworld. They were a
small hat shop with $450 worth of mer­
chandise. In 1987 they moved to the
Peddlers market until the market clos­
ed without notice. The Grimms mov­
ed their entire stock to their next shop
at Lake Kathryn Pluza In Casselberry.
Finally In Dec. of 89 the Grimms made
their final move. To their present loca­
tion (706 N. Hwy. 17-92 Long wood).
Penny recalled “we moved the day The coflcc ts always Iresh!

�Advertising Supplement

A Christmas Tradition

Fibber Magees Tradition
Com es To Lake Mary

IIM
■ ■ k

• Dept 56
• Tom Clark
Gnomes
• Collectible
Santas
• Sarah's Attic
• SteifT Bears
• Nativities
• GUtterdomes
• Snowbabies
• Oak A Pine
Furniture
• Gift Certificates

a k

"After Christm as Sale
Begins Sunday December 23
We Ship Anywhere
11247 E. Colonial Dr.
Orlando, FL 32817

^

Kesatry Shtppt

277-7480

MERLE NORMAN FASCINATIONS
COSMETIC STUDIO &amp; FULL SERVICE SALON
During this extremely busy holiday
season our unique salon concept Is a
true time-saver because we offer so
many products &amp; services at one
locution.
We have the complete line of Merle
Norman skin care &amp; cosmetic products,
and we give FREE make-up lessons to
help you choose Just the shades. Merle
Norman offers products for every skin
color &amp; skin type ft leaches you how to
use them.
Our salon has u full range of hair ft
nail services for men. women ft
children. Perms, colors, haircuts ft

styles, manicures, pedicures, nail ex­
tensions ft nail art are Just a few. For
hair care we also have the complete
lines of Nexxus, Paul Mitchell ft Aveda.
9
We are also a Wolff Tanning Bed
Center to help you achclvc a quicker,
easier tan at any time.
Every Monday Is Senior Citizen day
with special pricing on our hair ft nail
services for those of you that arc 55 yrs.
or older. Shampoo &amp; sel $9. wash A
wear perms $29.
Our hours ure M-F from 10-8. Sat.
9-5. Walk-Ins ure ulways welcome.

W INN DIXIE M A R K E T P LA C E
15th ST. &amp; F R E N C H AVE.

323-6505

wmw I M S HANK tT P LA C E

fflERLE nORiTVW

COSMETIC STUDIO &amp; SALON

Udi $T. ft FRENCH AVE.
323-6505

�A dw rt Iilrtg Supplement

Sanford Herald — Wednesday, December 1 9 ,1M0 — Herald Advertiser — Thursday, December 20,1900 — Sanford, FI. — T

!.H I I

flTnm

« '! £ £ •

V\fehstalQualtyNAB^Parts

NAPA AUTO CARE CENTERS / SANFORD AUTO PARTS
A LITTLE HISTORY
Sanford Auto Parts. Inc. 115 West
First Street. Downtown Sanford, was
founded by F.D. Scott In 1945. Sanford
Auto Parts was originally located In the
Welaka Building and was called Orlan­
do Parts &amp; Gear. It was renamed by Mr.
Scott In 1945 to Sanford Auto Parts
when he became a National
Automotive Parts Association (NAPA)
jobber. When the old Princess Theater
across the street came up for sale Mr.
Scott purchased It and moved In. San­
ford Auto Parts has been at 115 West
First Street ever since. Ralph Larson
Joined the business as manager In
August 1971 after 20 years In the
United Stales Air Force. He purchased
the company in July 1973 when Mr.
Scott retired. Sanford Auto Parts has
become known as "your one stop”
store in Downtown Sanford for your
automotive and industrial needs.
COMINO IN 1N1
NAPA AUTO CARE CENTERS
What are "NAPA Aulo Care
Centers"? Independently owned repair
facilities that perform high quality ser­
vice, Install quality parts backed by
NAPA's National Warranty Program.

The motorist wants quality parts and
quality service for his car. So It's only
logical that he comes to a NAPA
Autocare Center for his vehicle
m aintenance and repair. Why?
Because of the NAPA reputation and
the reputation of our traditional
customers. In 1990, these two reputa­
tions once again Join together, forming
the marketing partnership known as
the NAPA Aulo Care Program.
Throughout the country hundreds of
Aulo Care Centers are coming Into be­
ing and serviced by over 8700 NAPA
Auto Part Stores like Sanford Auto
Parts.
The following outstanding indepen­
dent facilities are coming Into the
NAPA Autocare Program in fie San­
ford area.
Batch's Chevroa At Complete
Aato Caro, 2207 W. First Street
McBoherte Aato Ceater, 405 W.
First Street
Saafertf Mobil Service Ceater,
lac., 281S 8. Preach Ave.
Sanford Tire ft Muffler Ceater,
4 2 0 S. Preach Ave.
Tire Clip, 28SS S. Sanford Ave.

What does Santa wear the
other 3 6 4 days of the year?

P a n ts U SA S u rf S h o p H a s
I t A ll F o r C h r is tm a s

LEVIS from Pants USA
off coursol

»AS C ) A iG h

t

i tiv -'

Of

HfcG )• w

IMSNl MSN

W KISIBM

T jm
ps f

15.20%
Off
•AJCKUMC

Reg. 34"

I

mm*.; S U R F
9 -S tA (t S H O P

WK

- ■ i77u rn
• SNOW WASH
•QAEYWASH
•WHTtOUT

PANTS U S A
SEMINOLE CENTRE
SANFORD

321-3101
Hours Mon.-Sat 9 -9. Sun. 12-5

Before you head off to the malls, for
u clay Jammed full of crowds, lines,
parking hassles and frustrations, why
not stop by Pants USA Surf Shop at
Seminole Centre, and jam your
Christmas slocking full of great
clothing values.
It all starts with Jeans: Levi's. Lee's.
O'Neill. Jordachc. Qulksilvrr. Vision.
Gotrha and LA Gear. Bui It doesn't
stop Iherc. Punts USA Surf Shop has
recently expanded their store in order
to slock the widest selection of
clothing, surf, skateboard, accessory
and gift Items.
Vision and Airwalk products,
skateboards, wheels, knee pads and
gloves, helmets, wet suits, spring suits.
Blllatxmg shorts. Ixioglr txiards. Oakley
Razors and Blades and the new 111X3
(high definition optics) Mum bo's.

They also carry Shark watches In
Junior’s and men's sizes, all colors, all
guaranteed to 300 feet, and all on sale.
Pants USA Surf Shop also has Indian
bead belts which would be great fot
stocking student. Also women's and
girls LA Gear and TAC shoes and
Men's Airwalk und Vision.
The holiest gift for Christmas this
year Is Blllubong Jackets and pants
USA Surf Shop has all colors, all sizes.
Come in and meet the friendliest
sales stud In Sanford. Anne, Wilma.
Jeunnle. Donna. Chris. Tyler. Jen.
Tina and Kelly wisit you a happy and
safe holiday.

SHOP

OT-K 1 S Y

�• — Sanford Haratd

- Wadnaaday, Dacambar 19. 1990 -

Harald Advsrllssr - Thursday, Dacambar 20. 1990 -

Take The Guesswork
Oof O f Appliance Buying

Sanford. FI.

QUALITY, SERVICE, PRICE
A t Ed M llcaraky 'a You Get AU Three
I i m i l / I) 11 Ml ()l l I l&lt; O N (&gt;l X1*1*1 I \ V / *&gt;
n m o l i,n o t (

/&gt;

ivvn

Mlleartky’a Appliance Cantra It located at 491 E. Hwy. 17-92

Ask your neighbor — where's the
best place to go for a major appliance
purchase — chances are they'll say Ed
Mllcaraky'a. Not only are you
guaranteed the lowest prices but the
best selection and service after the
sale.
The showroom is unlike any other In
Central Florida. Not only are you able
to see the appliances - some are hook­
ed up live and In Natural Kitchen set­
tings so you can better visualize how
they'll look In your home.
Ed Mllcarsky has been In the ap­
pliance business since 1952 and Is
known locally as Mister Appliance. Feel
free to call him on any appliance pro­
blems or Installation. The appliance
does not need to have been purchased

from his store. Knowledge and a friend­
ly way of dispersing It has been what
has made Ed Mllcarsky's a familiar
name among families In the Central
Florida area.
Ed Is an authorized dealer for
General Electric. Kitchen Aid. JennAir. Sub Zero. Thermador. Dacor as
well as Scottsman and U-Llne Ice
Makers. There Is also a full operating
kitchen. You can see. touch and
operate the appliances.
Ed believes that you should spend
your money wisely — buy belter quali­
ty at a reasonable price.
If you want to take the guesswork out
of appliance buying, make Ed Mllcarsky's Appliance Centre a must stop.
Stop by today, at 461 E. Highway 434
In Longwood or call 830-6800.

fro m
T h e S t i f f mad M a n a g e m e n t o f
Ed M llc m n k y 'e Appllm nem C e n tre

»

Ed Milcarsky's Appliance Centre , Inc
i s . E.
e Hwy.
U u m 434 •
. ILongwood,
onnw nnd. F
FL
461
L
(1 Light W. of Hwy. 17-92)
Mon Fri 8 AM 6 PM
8 3 0 -6 8 0 0
Sat. 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM

�</text>
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                    <text>TU ES D A Y

official

NEWS DIGEST

Sanford manager
silent in resigning
Clastic undwwsy today
SANFORD — Six Seminole County teams will
compete In four fam es at Seminole Community
College « s the 1900 Central Florida Classic gets
underway. This year’s tournament win have a
10 team field and all games will be played at
SCC'a Health and Physical Education Center.

□ Florida
Holiday t r m l Increasing
ORLANDO - American Automobile Associa­
tion estimates 34.8 million Americans - 14
percent o f the population - w ill travel lOOmUes
or more from home during the upcoming
holiday season.
” W e wish him the best o f luck In his future
endeavors."
,
When asked If commissioners sought tne
resignation. Smith answered only. "W e accepted
hls resignation."
,r_
Thomas sold he would support city engineer
Bill Simmons ns Faison's full-time replacement.
Commissioners unanimously appointed Sim­
mons to replace Faison until a new manager la
Hired
During the meeting. Thomas asked Simmons If
he would accept the fulltim e m anagers job.
Simmons responded. "Th at Is certainly unex-

Man cleared ol rape charge
SANFORD — Charges o f sexual battery on a
child have been dropped against Lorenxo Perry.
ai.ofS an ford.
_
Perry was arrested earlier this year by Sanford
police, baaed on statements from a girl under
the age o f 12 who said Perry allegedly had sex
with her. The girl had tested positive for a
sexually transmitted disease, confirming some
type o f sexual contact, records show.
But the State Attorney dropped the charges
Dec. 6. when Chief Public Defender Arthur Haft
determined Perry never had that disease and
had been documented as being truthful In hls
denial o f Involvement In any sexual assault o f
the girl, records show.

Youth dlot aftor crash
LONGWOOD — A Longwood youth died
Monday from Injuries sustained In a Sunday
night accident on Interstate 4 that left two
others In the Intensive care unit at Orlando
Regional Medical Center.
Frank Daniel Stryker. 17. 605 Pheasant Ave..
died at 6:27 p.m. at ORMC. a Florida Highway
Patrol spokesman said. A passenger In Stryker's
car. Beau Beckman. 19. Fort Lauderdale, was
listed In serious condition this morning at
ORMC. a hospital spokesman said. The driver or
a second car. Michael Allan Crowder. 27.
Atlantic Beach. Fla., was listed In critical
condition this morning, the spokesman said.
An Allandale. Fla. man and hls daughter who
were In a third car Involved in the accident were
uninjured, the FHP spokesman said.
From wiro reports

Partly cloudy with a
high In the low 80s.
W ind south 10 to 15
mph.

Partly
Cloudy

Eslinger outlines new sheriff plan
Herald staff writer______________
SANFORD — In announcing hls
admlnstratlve hierarchy. Seminole
C ou n ty s h e r iff design a te MaJ.
Donald Eslinger this morning said
hls plan would save money, al­
though It may appear "top heavy."
" It may look like we're top heavy,
but we have one supervisor over
every 5.2 employees. We have saved
money as a result of this." Eslinger
said today.
Esllnger's plan goes into effect
Jan. 1. Sheriff John Polk, ailing
with a heart condition. Is retiring
Dec. 31. and Gov. Bob Martinez
appointed Eslinger. 33. to complete
the final two years of Polk's sixth
title o f major, and will continue as
and final term as sheriff.
Eslinger will be served by two Jail director with no Increase In pay.
Tw o budgeted adm inistrate posi­
sheriff's office majors. Capt. Roy
Hughey. 43. head o f criminal In­ tions at the Jail have been elimi­
nated. And the posting of a lieute­
vestigations. will be major o f the
newly formed department o f en­ nant as watch commander In the
sheriff's office has been eliminated,
forcement. Retired Maitland Police
with that lieutenant reassigned.
Chief John Erwin. 65. who was
Both of these measures, and the
chief 12 years and an FBI agent 20
years, will be major o f the depart­ elimination o f Salinger's position as
major and elimination of the posi­
ment of admlnstratlon.
tion of undersheriff, add to an
The sheriff's ofllce will have the
following departments: administra­ annual savings o f about $18,000 a
year In salaries. Eslinger said. The
tion. enforcement and corrections.
average pay raise for those pro­
D ivision s w ill Include: patrol,
special enforcement, criminal In­ moted Is about $3,000 a year, he
vestigations. staff services, com­ said.
Ellnger will make about $80,000 a
puter services and admlnstratlve
year as sherlfT. and hls majors will
services.
County Jail Administrator Duane each have salaries o f about $58,000
Rutledge has also been given the a year. Esllnger's salary now as

Roy Hughoy
major Is S53.000 a year.
Eslinger will have five sheriff's
captains. Polk had three. Tw o of
Polk's captains. Jay Leman and
Luke Stallworth, will be retained as
captains o f admlnstratlve services
and staff services.
" I have faith In their ability to
manage what their new assign­
______
ments will entail.” Eslinger said.
"T h e first business was to establish
a management team and provide
new community based services.
"W e've created new divisions and
new services to strengthen opera­
tions und make It more account­
able." Eslinger said.
Lt. Marty LaBruclano will be
captain o f the special enforcement
division. Lt. Randy Pittman will be
□ 8 « t E slin ger. Page 8 A

Largest postage increase expected to
hit businesses, co n su m e r next m onth

■ v JACK L M A H

United Press International

United Press International

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Postal Service
expects approval o f Its largest rate Increases
ever next month, but business mailers say
the effect cuuld mean big changes in
advertising and catalog sales and could
burden consumers with far more than the
5-cent per stamp hike.
The Postal Rate Commission is expected to
make Its recommendation Jan. 4 on the
service's request for Increases that would
boost the cast o f all types o f mall by an
average of 19 percent and raise the cost o f u
first-class stamp from 25 cents to 30 cents.
Historically, the Independent commission’s
recommendations vary little from the rate
Increase requests by the service, which Is
anticipating the new rates could become
effective as early as Feb. 3.
□ S e e Postage. P age 8A

b s c r ib e

t o

t h e

s a n f o r d

; h e r a l d

AT&amp;T begins
proxy fight to
control NCR

fo i

221
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*• 4

L A K E M A R Y - A m erica n
Telephone and Telegraph Co. has
launched a buttle for control of
NCR Corp.'s board of directors,
seeking to remove ibstaclcs to Its
$6.1 billion hostile takeover,
w h ile NCR took Its case to
shareholders with newspaper ads
p roclaim in g: " A T A T — T h e
WRONG Choice."
A T&amp; T Monday filed proxy sollcn a t io n m a te r ia ls w ith th e
Securities and Exchange Com ­
mission In Washington In Its
c a m p a ig n to r e p la c e N C R
directors.
C B ce NCR. Page 5A

�■I A — Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida — Tuesday. December 18, 1080

NEW S

F LO R ID A |
B R IEFS

FROM

THE

R E G IO N

AND

ACROSS TH E

S TA TE

Holiday travel expected to rise

CodfIshed headsd to Florida for trial
PITTSBURGH — Allegheny County authorities have decided
not to try convicted killer Robert "T h e Codfish" Brlcker for a
third time In a 1979 slaying. Instead, allowing him to be
extradited to Florida to stand trial for a Miami slaying.
The district attorney's office dropped the homicide charge
Friday against the 50-year-old Brlcker for the slaying 11 years
ago of 30-year- old Thomas Sacco of Dormont. He was
ambushed outside a downtown Pittsburgh bar.
Authorities say they dropped the charges so Brlcker, already
serving two life terms in Pennsylvania, could be extradited to
Dade County. F la .. to stand trial In the Aug. 23. 1979. death of
Philip Hubbard of Washington. D.C. That trial Is scheduled to
begin In March.
Brlcker first was convicted In Sacco's slaying In 1981. The
Supreme Court reversed the conviction based on prosecutorial
misconduct. A second conviction was overturned In September
when the state Supreme Court said the trial Judge did not
properly Instruct the Jury.

ORLANDO — Travel over the Christmas
and New Year’s holidays w ill be the heaviest
in at least six years. Increasing a fraction
over a year ago. the American Automobile
Association predicted Monday.
Th e m otor federation estimates 34.8
million Americans — 14 percent o f the
population — will travel 10O miles or more
from home during (he upcoming holiday
season. Approximately 34.4 million A m eri­
cans traveled during the 1989 holiday
period.
An expected 25.7 m illion travelers will
take a trip by auto, light truck or recreation

vehicle, compared to 25.5 million lost year.
Another 9.1 million persons wilt travel by
air. bus or train.
The travel projections are based on a
national probability survey o f 1,500 adults
conducted by the U.S. Travel Data Center,
which docs special research for AAA.
The heaviest motor vehicle travel will be
In the Southeast, where 6.1 million Am eri­
cans arc planning a trip, and in the West,
with 5.5 million traveling. Travel by other
regions include: Midwest. 5.1 m illion:
Northeast. 4.8 million: Great Lakes. 4.2
million.
o r t h o s e t a k in g a t r ip o v e r th e
Chrlstmas-lo-Ncw Year's period. 36 percent

will travel to n city and 32 percent plan to
visit a town or rural area. CMher destinations
Include: ocean or beach. 17 percent; moun­
tain area. 8 percent: them e park or
amusement park. 2 percent: lake area. 2
percent: other. 3 percent.
Sixty-four percent of those traveling plan
to stay at least one night with family or
friends und 25 percent will slay at a hotel or
motel. Other overnight slops Include: owned
cabin, condominium or vacation home. 4
percent; rented cabin, condominium or
vacation home. 3 percent: camper, trailer,
recreational vehicle or tent, 3 percent. One
percent of those surveyed hadn't decided
where they would stay overnight.

A IRtla off thn ild n ...

Navy cook shot In police chaao
ORLANDO — A man who was shot to death after leading
deputies on a 20-mlnute chase through east Orange County
has been Identified as an IB-year-old Navy cook.
Thom as Fisher o f Portland. Ore., w a s stationed In
Jacksonville aboard the frigate Sims, police said. He was
Identified Monday.
Fisher ran three red lights, hit several cars and look out
fences and shrubs during a rambling low-speed chase, police
said. The pursuit ended Sunday night In Orlando when Fisher
tried to run over a deputy and was shot In the chest.
Police believe the sailor lied because he had taken the car
from a friend's parents without permission.
Orlando Police Chief Danny Wilson said he will conduct an
Independent Investigation o f the shooting, while the Orange
County SherlfTs Office said It w ill do Its own.
Wilson has asked Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth
for a legal opinion about w hich agency should have
Jurisdiction.

Charges sough! against Williams
MIAMI — A prosecutor in Dade County said she plans to file
attempted first-degree murder charges against Charles Henry
Williams, a suspect In the slayings o f up to 32 women.
State Attorney Rose Marie Antonaccl Pollock.said Williams.
34. will be charged with trying to strangle Beverly GundcrJames In October 1988, the same night Gunder-Jamcs
Introduced Williams to a prostitute who was later killed.

HuraMHMm byKaSyJordan

Williams' attorney Howard Landau said he w ill fight the new
attempted murder charge because the state attbmey's office Is
filing so late.

John Hall, who works at Smith Mattress and Furniture, 802
Sanford Ave., recently stepped outside to lake a break from work
and to lake a little bit off the sides. Oblivious to traffic, he used a
handheld mirror to help him with a routine beard trim.

Prosecutors had dropped an attempted murder charge In
December 1988 against Williams because they said they
couldn't find Gunder-James. who had moved to Oklahoma.
Landau said a prosecutor had promised him that Williams,
who Is serving a 40-year prison sentence for rape, wouldn't be
charged again In the Gunder-James attack.

Panther captive breeding program set
MIAMI — In a few weeks, federal wildlife managers will begin
a controversial captive breeding program designed to save the
Florida panther.
State and federal biologists say the program is needed to
protect the remaining 50 or so panthers from Inbreeding,
disease and other problems.
The captive breeding Is scheduled to begin In January.
The biologists hope to eventually return captive-bred
panthers to the wild, expanding their habitat beyond the Big
Cypress and Everglades parks in south Florida.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Regional Director James
Pulliam approved a plan Monday to catch as many as 10
panthers and place them In zoos for breeding.
The plan drew opposition when It was first announced six
months ago. But Wildlife Service officer Dennis Jordan said
most opponents mistakenly believe that biologists plan to
remove all panthers from the wild.
Jordan said public support for the breeding plan has been
strong.
There are some major obstacles, though. Th e big cats already
suffer the effects of Inbreeding und may not produce well In
captivity. And scientists aren't sure how captive-bred panthers
will adapt to the wild.

From Uniltd Press International Reports

LOTTERY
TALLAHASSEE - The daily
number Monday In (tie Florida
Lottery CASH 3 game was 094.
nStraighl Play (numbers In exact
order; *250 on a 50-cenl bet, *500
on II.
□ Box 3 (numbers In any order):
*80 (or a 50 cent bet, *160 on It.
□ Box 6 (numbers In any order):
*40 lor a 50-cenl bet. *80 on *1.
□ Straight Box 3 *330 in order
drawn,$80inanyorderona*1 bet
□ Straight Box 6: *290 In order
drawn, *40 ll picked In combination
on St bet
The winning numbjrs Monday in
Ihe Florida Lottery Fantasy 5 game
were 19.30.21.33 and 36.

(USPJ 4(1 2M)
Tuesday, December 18. 1990
Vol 83. No tOO
Publiihud Daily and Sunday, except
Saturday by The Sanford Herald.
Inc., )oe M. French Ave.. Sanford,
Fla. 12771.
Second Clan Pottage Paid at Sanford.
Florida 11771
POSTMASTER. Send ad d rm change*
to THE SANFORO HERALD, P.O.
Boa IU7, Sanford. FL J im
Subscription Ratos
(Daily a Sunday)
Homo Delivery a Mall
J Months
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1 Tear

t i t JO

l » 00
m oo

Florida Residents must pay 0\ sales
tax in addition to rates above
Phone (40/1 12110)1

Forest Service blamed for w oodpeckers’ demise
U w lf 4 Press International
TALLAHASSEE - Th e U.S.
F o r e s t S e r v i c e has b e e n
c lc a r c u t tln g north F lo r id a
woodlands populated b y the
e n d a n g e re d red -co c k a d ed
woodpecker It Is supposed to be
protecting, nine conservation
groups charged lust week.
The coalition of national and
local environmental groups said
It notified the agency and Secre­
tary o f Interior Manuel J. Lujan
via a letter mailed Tuesday that
It plans to sue the Forest Service
far violating Ihe Endangered
Species Act.
The group says Information
garnered through the Freedom
o f Information Act shows the
service has mismanaged the
population o f red- cockaded
w o o d p e c k e r s found In Ihe
Apalachicola National Forest.
" W e ca n 't change w h a t's

^We have to halt
the destruction of
this bird’s habitat in
tha national forests, j
-To m Ankartan, Slarra Club
happened in the past, but wc can
p re v e n t It from happ en in g
again." said Tom Ankersen. an
attorney for the Sierra Club
L e g a l D e f e n s e F u n d in
Tallahassee, which Is repre­
senting the coalition. "W c have
to halt the destruction of this
bird's habitat In the national
forests.”
T h e environmental coalition
includes the Sierra Club. The
Wilderness Society, the National
Wildlife Federation, the National
Audubon Society, the Florida
Audubon Society, the Florida

TH E W EATHER
EXTENDED OUTLOOK

LOCAL FORECAST
Today...Partly cloudy. High lit
the lower HOs. Wind south 10 to
15mph.
Tonight...Partly cloudy with a
slight 20 percent rhanre uf
showers. Low In the mid to
upper 60s. Wlndsouth lOtnph.
W ednesday...Partly cloudy.
High In the lower 80s. Wind
south lOm ph.
E x te n d e d fo re c a s t...P a rtly
cloudy Thursday through Sat­
urday with a chance of showers
mainly during (lie day. Lows In
the low to mid (X)s and highs In
the low to mldhCH.

WEDNESDAY
PtyCldy 72-55

FRIDAY
Sunny 74-85

TU E S D A Y :

O

FULL
LAST
Dsc. 2 \ j J Dac. 4

NEW

D«c. 17

FIRST

Dae. 25

BOLUNAR TABLE: Min. 5:35
a.m .. 6:00 p.m.: Maj. 11:50 a.m..
---------- p.m. TIDES: Daytona
Beach: highs. 8:31 a.m.. 8:43
p.m.: lows. 1:53 am .. 2:43 p.m.:
New Smyrna Beach: highs.
8:36 a.m.. 8:4H p.m.; lows. l:5H
a.m .. 2 48 p.m.: Cocoa Beach:
highs. 8:51 a.m.. 9:03 p.m.:
lows. 2:13a.m.. 3:03 p.m.

MIAMI — Florida 14 hour temperatures
andrainfall i l t i m E S T Tuviday
Ht 1Lo Rj i ii
Citv
24 4J 000
Apa'achicola
n
44 000
Crntvfow
Daytona Butch
M 000
For' L ru O rrd rlr
4J 000
u
4J 000
F o r 'M y tf l
t t mm 000
Gainuivllto
n
31 000
Jacktonvlllu
M r Wait
I t ; i 000
Miami
t l 44 000
P t -u c o U
41 000
J4 &gt; «4 l4 Bradvnlon
t t \1 000
Tallahattu*
iJ 000
Tampa
4J 000
n
Vuro B«at h
J* 000
Palm ( H C h
it 41 000

to
to
it
it
to

BEACH CONDITIONS
Daytona Beach: W aves arc
I ' j It-ci with a slight chop
Current is to tin- north w ith a
water lcm|H-nUurc of (Mi degrees
New Smyrna Beach: W aves arc
l
loot and glassy Current Is to the
north, with a water temperature
of lib degrees.

"T h e Forest Service Interim
decision on the Apalachicola will
demonstrate Its commitment to
the w oodp ecker's re c o v e ry ."

5^-

r
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
FtlyCldy 75-55 FtlyCldy 75-57

TIDES

•

FLORIDA TEMPS

--------- 1
THURSDAY
FtlyCldy 73-57

Defenders of the Envlronemnt.
the Florida Wildlife Federation,
the Apalachee Audubon Society
and the Coastal Plains Institute.
The Apalachicola Forest has
the largest population o f redcockaded woodpeckers In the
world, but the woodpecker colo­
nics have been stressed by the
overcutllng. Ihe coalition said.
In the letter, the coalition
asked the Forest Service to
implement an em ergency In­
terim plan that would prevent
clcarcuttlng within % of a mile
of Apalachicola red-cockaded
woodpecker colonies.
The emergency plan would
remain In effect until the Forest
Service completes a long-range
plan for the protection o f the
woodpecker In two to three
years.

BOATING
St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
T o d a y . . . W i n d s o u t h to
southeast lO to 15 kts Increasing
to 15 kts in the afternoon. Seas
building 3 to 5 ft. Hay and Inland
waters a moderate chop exjxiscd
areas. Isolated showers
Tonight...Wind south 15 to 20
kts. Seas 3 lo 5 ft. Hay and
Inland waters a light chop.
W id e ly s c a tte re d sh ow ers
m am lv north ixtrl.
___________

S TA TISTIC S
T h e high lem p era tu re In
Sanford Monday was 79 degrees
and the overnight low was 55 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rain fa ll for the
period, ending at 9 a.m. Tuesday. totalled O inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 66 degrees and
Tuesday's overnight low was
59. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport
Ot her Weather Service data:

Monday's high................SO
Barometric pressure.30.00
Relative Humidity....97 pet
Winda.............South 7 mph
Rainfall
O In.
C Today's sunset.... 5:32 p.m.
Tomorrow's sunrise....7:13

Ankcrscn said.
E n v i r o n m e n t a l i s t s a ls o
challenged the wisdom of the
g o v e rn m e n t's augm entation
program In the Apalachicola
National Forest under which
J u v e n ile fe m a le b ird s are
transplanted to declining popu­
lations In other national forests.
A recent study by Florida
State University ornithologist
Frances C. Jam es Indicated
there Is a shortage o f female
birds now In the Wakulla District
o f Ihe forest. Ankcrscn said.
"W e do not object to the
augmentation program In prin­
ciple. but we believe wc'vc got to
protect this population before
f u r t h e r J e o p a r d i z i n g Its
viability." he said.
The red-cockaded woodpecker
was among the first species
protected under the Endangered
Species Act of 1973. Despite that
federal protection. Its numbers
have continued to dwindle.

RATIONAL TE H F t
Citv S Fvrtcait
Albuquurqu* ly
Anther ague
Atlanta ih
Ba'lim oraih
BlMirtqr in
Birmingham la
Bolton r
Brow niyllltm c
Buttalor
Charfotta me
Chicago cy
Cincinnati r
C lay viand r
O a ila ix
Dvnvar «
Dutroitr
Duluth cy
Evantvlllar
Fargo tn
Hartford r
Honolulu cy
Houiton me
Indlanapoln *
Ja ck io n M iii r
Kam a! City x
L a i V v g a ix
LO! Angola! iy
Lounvlllar
M vm p nur
Mil*auk«ucy
M nnuapoiitcy
Naihvillvih
Hu* Yorkr
Om ahax
Philadufohiar
Phovnia ly
Pittiborgh r
Portland Mu t
ProvKJuncvr
Richmond x
S' Lou.tr
Jan Anlon.o x
SanO.ugoiy
Van Juan x
Vuat'ia in
Vpckanuwi
Waihingfon ih
Wichtfs ty

Hi 1Lo
40 14
04 to
41 i t
41 40
It 32
n 43
47 35
u 4)
42 31
31
»
w 34
40 SI
47 3»
59 30
j &gt; 24
41 31
JO 04
u 44
14 ai
4i n
(J 71
to 3J
11 41
I t 59
4} »
u
31
44 44
43 34
»4 34
It 37
33 09
i ; 49
45 39
Ja n
41 39
14 39
47 40
44 24
so 29
47 44
44 40
u 13
AJ 47
(J 70
49 37
40 31
43 41
43 i i

T

»

oj
02
24
.13
1 30
43
12
03
14
1 73
01
0J
13
40
14

103
1 91
33
01
S3
14
19
14
73

04
37

14

19
01

�Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida — Tuesday, December IB. 1990 — BA

P O L IC E BRIBES

School district adopts calendars
■ g V IC K I D e N I N i n

Herald staff writer

Shot fired into Ho u s e
SANFORD - W llllr James Kin#. 52. 3051 Kin# Road.
Sanford, reported to Seminole County sheriffs deputies on
Sunday that on Saturday afternoon n .22-callbcr gunshot was
fired Into his house.

Burglars sntsr store through roof
SANFORD — Sanford police are Investigating a Saturday
nl#hl burglary to the Winn-Dixie. U.S. Highway 17-92, at Lake
Mary Boulevard. Sanford.
Lt. Mike Rolundo sa‘d today entry was made through the
store's roof. Information on stolen Items was not available.

Burglary, theft charged
SANFORD — Paul Arthur Strickland. 19. 612 Mellonvllle
Avc.. Sanford, was arrested on charges of armed burglary and
grand theft after a traffic stop.
Sanford police questioned Strickland after the traffic stop at
1:10 p.m. Monday at 24th Place.
He Is accused o f being Involved in a burglary and theft o f
guns In September from a house at 407 Willow Avc.. Sanford.
He Is also charged with fleeing to elude police, reckless
driving and driving with a suspended license.

SANFORD - The Seminole
County school district has an­
nounced Its academic year cal­
endar for the 1991-92 and the
1992-93 years.
In an u n p re c e d e n te d occ u r a n c e . th e d i s t r i c t a d ­
ministrators. the PTA and the
teachers* union agreed on single
calendars for each year without
Intervention by the board.
“ It was a blue light special,"
said Nancy Wheeler, Seminole
Education Association executive
director. "It was rare that we
were able to do this.”
Students will attend classes
180 days per year at all schools.
At Lawton Elementary School.

151 Graham Ave.. Oviedo, how ­
ever. the schedule will be dif­
fe r e n t fro m o t h e r d is t r ic t
schools.
Lawton, which will be the
demonstration school for the
district's modified school calen-,
dar. o r year round school pro­
gram. w ill follow Its own unique
sch ed u le which w ill be d e ­
termined by the teachers, ad­
ministration and parents at that
school.
For the other district schools,
however, clasjcs will begin on
Monday. Aug. 26. 1991.
Students will have at least one
day ofT per month during the
course o f the school year.
On Monday Sept. 2 they will
not have classes In celebration o f
Labor Day: Friday. Oct. 18 will
be a statewide In-service day for

Annexed areas added to growth plan
ly J .H M I R I A im iL O

Herald stiff writer

Burglary threata bring arraat
SANFORD — City police charged Charlie Harris. 39. 611
South Park Avc., *6. Sanford, with burglary to an occupied
dwelling after he allegedly kicked open an apartment door at
that address.
Harris allegedly entered, found a butcher knife and
threatened to kill a couple In the apartment. The apartment
manager said Harris also threatened to kill him when he was
going to call police. The arrest was made at Harris' house at
7:02 p.m. Monday.

Jell guard battered
SANFORD — Ma*irlcc Sapp. 19. of Sanford, an Inmate o f the
county Jail, Is accused of punching a Jail guard in the face
Monday night. According to a Seminole County S h eriffs
report, two guards were breaking up a fight Involving three
prisoners when Sapp allegedly struck the officer.
Sapp was charged with battery on a corrections officer at
11:14 p.m. Monday.

teachers, so youngsters will have
the day ofT: Friday. Nov. I Is a
teacher work day at the end o f
the first grading period: Thanks­
giving vacation will be Thursday
and Friday. Nov. 28 and 29: and
w in te r va ca tio n w ill b eg in
M o n d a y . Dec. 23 and run
through Jan. 3.1992.
Monday. Jan. 20. 1992 will be
a day ofT In celebration of Martin
Luther King Day: Tuesday. Jan.
21 will be a student holiday as
teachers have a work day at the
end o f the secon d g ra d in g
period: Monday. Feb. 17 will be a
vacation day In celebration o f
Presidents’ Day: Thursday and
Friday. March 26 and 27. will be
student days off while teachers
wrap up the end of the third
grading period: spring break will
be celebrated the week of April

SANFORD — Seven recently annexed properties
were added to the city comprehensive develop­
ment plan Monday, Including Viola Kastncr’s
proposed Southrldge development northeast of the
proposed Interstate 4 County Road 46A In­
terchange.
City Planner Jay Marder said the parcels do not
change city growth plans, but add the parcels Into
the city’s growth plan. Marder said the c ity 's land
use designations were the same as the county's
designations.
Commissioners tabled a rezonlng of Kastncr’s
85-acre property In September because the
recently-annexed property had not been Included
In the city growth plan as yet. Property cannot be
rezoned until It is In the city growth plan, Marder
said. After the adoption of the growth plan,
com m ission ers unanim ously a p p ro v e d the
Kastner rezonlng.
T h e delay had been caused in part by
negotiations between Kastner and county officials
over dedication of land on her property for the
cxtentlon of Rinehart Road from CR 46A to State

Road 46. T h e road will be required before the
Seminole Tow ns Center can be built.
Plans for the development Include a 275-room
hotel. 10 acres o f commercial and office develop­
ment and 175 apartments.
The Florida Department of Community Affairs
wrote the city Dec. 11 two slate agencies were
concerned about the proposal. Officials wrote the
site is a high ground recharge area for the
drinking water acqulfcr and the Florida Depart­
ment of Environmental Regulation was concerned
about the Intensive use could threaten the
ucqulfcr with contamination.
DC A w rote DER suggested the city take
measures through site planning to assure the
protection o f area drinking water.
DCA officials also wrote the Florida Department
o f Transportation was concerned the potential
traffic to and from the development had not been
adequately studied and suggested no construction
be allowed until studies have been performed.
Marder said the comments were recommenda­
tions and were not requirements. After the
adoption o f the city growth plan In April 1991.
Marder said more information on each proposal
will be required.

13-17: Friday, May 8 will be a
day off for teachers to attend the
Florida Teaching ProfessionNational Education Association
meetings: Monday. May 25 will
be a vacation day In celebration
o f Memorial Day; the school year
will end on Tuesday. June 9.
The 1992-93 school year will
begin on Monday. Aug. 24.
1992: On Monday Sept. 7 they
will not have classes In honor of
Labor Day: Friday. Oct. 16 will
be an In-service day for teachers
across the state so the students
will have the day off: Friday, Oct.
30 Is a teacher work day at the
end o f the first grading period;
Thanksgiving vacation will be
Thursday and Friday. Nov. 26
and 27: and winter vacation will
begin Monday. Dec. 21 and run
through Friday. Jan. 1 (plus the
weekend, o f course). 1993.
Monday. Jan. 18. 1993 will the
celebration of Martin Luther
King D ay and students and
teachers will have a holiday;
Tuesday. Jan. 19 w ill be a
student holiday as teachers have
a work day at the end o f the
second grading period: Monday.
Feb. 15 will be a day off In
celebration of Presidents' Day:
Friday. March 12 will be a make
up day; Friday. March 26 will be
a student day off while teachers
wrap up the end o f the third
grading period: spring break will
begin Monday April 5 and end
on Friday. April 9: Friday. May 7
will be a day olT for teachers to
attend the Florida Teaching
Profession-National Education
Association meetings; Monday.
May 31 will be a holiday in
celebration of Memorial Day: and
the school year w ill end on
Tuesday. JuneS.
The calendars arc subject to
some change, but It Is not likely
that changes will occur.

NEAT-N-T1DY All CLEAN
Licensed, Bonded, Insured

Th e "Let us do your last
minute Christmas Cleaning"
S P EC IA L

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thru Dec. 2 4 t h

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3 2 1 -7 6 9 9
When it s time fo r THE H O UD A YS,

Talent scouts
Girl Scouts from across the
Orange Blossom Council of
Girl Scouts of America sang
together during a recent
Christmas outing at Seminole
Centre in Sanford. Above,
volunteer director Jo Ann
Camp leads the girls in song.
S in g in g al right. Tammy
Beverley (I to r), 0, Dana
Nevergall. 7, both ol Brownie
T r o o p 984, a n d L a u r a
Williams, 9. Brownie Troop
397.
H«f(M Photo by Tommy VLncont

C P R s h o u ld b e p u b lic iz e d m o re h o n e s t ly
By ANOILIA HARRIN

Knlght-Ridder Newspapers_______________

WASHINGTON — During a monthly stall
meeting at University View Child Care
Center. Glenda MacNeil burst Into tears
when she and other teachers were reminded
t h a t t h e y m u s t be t r a i n e d In
cardiopulmonary rescue techniques.
Months earlier. MacNcIl had performed
CPR on a school administrator found
unconscious In ils nlfler atter a heart
attack. The administrator never regained
consciousness, and later at the hospital,
doctors said hr was dead when teachers
found him.
Hut MacNeil said. 'T was upset for weeks
because all 1 could think ol was what if.
What if I didn’ t do It right? What did l do
wrong? Why couldn't I make it work If I had
the training that saves people?"
MacNcU's question reflects the powerful
mystique that has built up around CPR over
the last 30 years: That CPR - by Itself —
can save lives
It can't. CI'H can buy critical lime,
keeping blood and oxygen moving to the
brain to prevent irreversible damage, until
other, more delimtlve treatment arrives. But

less than 1 percent of those whose hearts
have slopped survive with the aid of CPR
alone — a fact medical experts know but
which Is rarely shared with CPR trainees.
Now, a growing number o f those experts
believe a more honest picture o f what CPR
can — and cannot do — ought to be
promoted. A rewrite of American Red Cross
1991 training manuals Is under way to
provide u more realistic assessment of CPR'a
abilities.
Also under way Is a debate within the
Amertcun Heart Association on whether
CPR training — taught to more than 5
million Americans annually — should shift
to a "phone-first’’ program. That program
encourages the public to respond to a
cardiac urrest by calling emergency medical
service first, then starting CI’R
"W e 'v e decided we need to tell people the
real honest truth ... Not to say that CPR is
no good, but simply to explain that It otdy
works In conjunction with other treatment
— and these are the odds," said Lawrence
Newell, senior associate In Red Cross'
development and training
As new technologies emerge, such as
automatic defibrillators that can "restart"
the heart with the aid of computers, medical

experts predict the emphasis will switch
from CPR to this easy-to-use equipment,
expected to becom e commonplace In many
homes and office buildings
The CPR technique, a combination of
mouth-to-mouth breathing and chest com ­
pressions. was introduced 30 years ago to
help victims o f cardiac arrest, drowning,
electrical shock — anyone who does not
have u pulse.
CPR cannot "re sta rt" a heart alter cardiac
arrest. That's because the heart treat Is
triggered by an electrical Impulse, and when
it stops, only another electrical Impulse,
such as defibrillator "slun k paddles." can
restart the heart.
The debate over the "phone tlrst
program reflects the growing awareness In
the past 10 years that early defibrillatlon is
the most important Intervention for cardiac
vlciims.
Currently. American Heart Association
and Red Cross programs say that it you are
alone with a cardiac arrest victim. CPR
should be M arled tlrsi. then emergency
medical service catted

�4 A — Sanford Htrald, Sanford, Florida — Tuaaday. Dacambtf 18, 1900

Sanford Herald
1U9P9 H I M )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 33771
Arm Code 407-322-2611 or 8319093

Ways* D. Omr*.

H i W. Naalt. In td f M

Ultra

i

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
Month*.................................119.50
Month*.................................*39.00
I Year ............................... . . . 978.00

[E D IT O R IA L S

No-fault banking
No-fauft autom obile insurance an d no-fault
divorce law s m ay m ake aensfc, but no-fault
ban kin g does n o t T he Idea that targe banka
m ustn't be allow ed to fall outright, n o n u tte r
how badly they are m anaged, la unauatalnable. And som ehow It m ust b e changedFor one thing. It Is unfair. Sm all ban k a are
allow ed to go under. A n d their depoettora
m ay have to take a loss if their accounts
exceed the 8100.000 guaranteed b y govern­
m ent Insurance. But w h en targe b a n k a get
th eir affaire Into a h o p e le ss m esa, the
governm ent typically finances their takeover
b y healthy banka and fu lly protects deposi­
tors.

ROBERT W AGM AN

Troubled FDIC expands coverage
WASHINGTON - Despite serious questions
about its fiscal Integrity and surrtvabUtty as an
Institution, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo­
ration la formally expanding Its coverage to
questionable foreign deposits.
The FDIC, the government's insurer of banka
and bank accounts, plans to extend free deposit
Insurance coverage to some 8300 billion In
deposits in overseas branches of U.S. banks.
This extension of FDIC coverage la not
authorized - by U.S. law, although It is not
forbidden. The agency says that, since the
coverage is not specifically authorised. It cannot
charge the covered bonks any more in additional
premiums.
The FDIC says that, by announcing extension
of coverage. U is simply making formal an
Informal practice that has existed for years.
The formal extension of coverage to overseas
accounts, according to the FDIC. w ill help major
U.S. banks remain strong In the face of
heightened competition from foreign banks,
which are backed by their governments.
In recent years, foreign-branch deposits have
become mainstays for many top U.S. banka.
According to the FDIC. more than half the
deposits In America's 10 largest bonks have
been generated from foreign and "off-shore"
branches.
The practice of extending coverage only came

to tight when Paul Frttts, the FDIC'i director of
b a n s su pervision ,
wrote to an organiza­
tion of smaller bank*
h avin g no foreign
branch es. He w as
explaining why the
FDIC had paid 837
million to depositors
with accounts In the
N assau . Baham as,
branch o f the re­
cently failed National
Bank o f Washington.
T h e o rg a n iz a tio n
re p re s e n tin g the
fTTis FDIC says
■m a ile r banka
it It simply
wanted to know why
making formal
the 837 million In
an Informal
Nassau deposit* were
practice that
also transferred to
Riggs National Bank
hasexisted
In W ashington as
for years, j
part of the overall
transaction In which
Riggs took over the failed NBW. Frltta wrote, "It
waa believed that negative repercussions would
be felt by money center banks If the Nassau
deposits were not Included In the N BW transac­
tion.'*

JA C K

For another thing, the lenient treatm ent of
b ig banka virtually Invites som e o f them to
get Into trouble. It's easy to take w ild risks
w ith other people's m oney w h en the banker
know s the governm ent w ill m oke all deposi­
tors w hole If Investm ents gp sour. A n d . o f •
course, the depositors also a re freed from the
need to be prudent.

B ut the governm ent cou ld start alerting
depositors that they cannot depend on having
the u n in su re d -p o rtio n o f-th e ir'-a c c o u n ts
protected. A n d It could m ove tow ard a y satcm
o f insurance that requires high-risk b an k s to
p ay larger Insurance p rem iu m s. L ettin g
everybody off the hook la alm p ly Im possible.

Arm and Ham m er, w h o died Dec. 10 In Los
A n geles at the age o f 92. w a s larger than life.
Several hundred m en collectively couldn 't
duplicate his record o f success an d con­
troversy. He ach ieved p rom in en ce a s a
billlon arle industrialist, con sort o f w orld
leaders, art collector and philanthropist. Most
people w ould be fortunate to accom plish in
one endeavor what he did in dozens.
The N ew York-born io n o f R ussian im m i­
grants had a M idas touch. He w as a self-m ade
m illionaire by the tim e he graduated from
m edical school, having m ade a fortune In h is
fa m ily 's sm a ll p h a rm a ce u tica l firm . H e
turned a sm all w ild cat o tl-drllU n g firm .
Occidental Petroleum , Into one o f the w orld’s
m ost p ow erfu l con glom erates. H e m ade
several fortunes in a variety o f fields, from
distilling w hisky to breedin g cattle.
Ham m er w as best know n to m ost Am eri­
cans for his International business acum en
a n d a a s a s e lf-s ty le d a m b a s s a d o r to
num erous countries. H am m er, w h o lived In
the Soviet Union for a decade, becam e
M oscow 's favorite capitalist an d an unofficial
envoy o f U .S. presidents. H e w a s a tireless
crusader for peace betw een East an d W est
urgin g Am erican and Soviet leaders to agree
to lim its on nuclear w eapons.
Not all of the conslderble attention H am m er
com m anded w as favorable. He w a s frequently
criticized as an apologist for the Soviet Union.
He struck a controversial deal w ith M oam m ar
G adhafl to increase the price o f Occidentaldiscovered oil In Libya. He w as also fined
83,000 and placed on probation for m aking
illegal contributions to R ichard N ix o n 's reelection cam paign.
H am m er's most en d u rin g achievem ents,
however, m ay be as a patron of the arts and
charitable causes. His art collection h as been
valued at between 8250 m illion and 8400
million. He organized em ergency aid after the
Soviets' C hem ohyl n u cclar accident and
Arm enian earthquake an d h as contributed
m illions o f dollars to colleges, m useum s,
religious groups and cancer research, In­
cluding $5 m illion for a cancer biology
research center at the S a lk Institute'.
Ham m er w as In a Jet set a ll his ow n . with a
taste for thoroughbred horses, fine w ine and
live-star travel. He w as on a first-nam e basis
with world leaders from V ladim ir Lenin to
Konald Reagan.
Like all legendary figures. A n n an d H am ­
m er also had his flaws. But these Im perfec­
tions pilled before his seem ingly boundless
energy, confidence and achievem ents.

ANDERSON

Financial mines
about to explode

T h e situation Is sim ilar to the tem ptation
that caused so m any sa v in g s an d loan
Institutions to aban don norm al cautions In'
the 1980s. brin ging about a financial calam i­
ty that w ill burden taxpayers for decades.
"T h e deposit Insurance system h as been
distorted an d put at risk o f failure because U
n ow extends coverage to virtually a ll depos­
its ." says Rep Henry G onzalez, chairm an of
the House Banking Com m ittee.
G ranted. It's hard to change policy abruptly
w h en the banking system Is under stress, as
It Is now . If several large b an k s failed at the
sam e tim e.and their larger depositors suffered
heavy losses, confidence in the financial
system m ight start to unravel.

A man of achievements

Translated, say House banking committee
■idea, this means that the central banka of other
countries stand behind their banka — and all
their foreign branches — In esse of failure. If the
FDIC. the main U.S. hank Insurance agency,
provides leas coverage, depositors are likely to
pull their funds from U.S. banks and move them
to foreign competitors.
But this unofficial extension of coverage to
foreign-branch deposits Is not sitting well with
Congress. It la likely that when the 102nd
Congress convenes In January both the House
and Senate banking committees will attempt
quick action.
However, It appears that the two committees
w ill take different approaches. Reportedly.
Senate banking committee chairman Donald
Rlegte, D-Mlch., Is against the FDIC extending
coverage to foreign branch deposits and will
move to outlaw the practice.
But Rep. Henry Gonzalez. D-Texaa, chairman
of Uie House banking committee, la not against
Insuring such deposits as long as the banks pay
for the extended coverage. Gonzalez la leaning
towards passing a new law authorizing the
coverage, but requiring the FDIC to charge the
banka extra for It.
By one estimate the new insurance could bring
In an additional *60 0 million annually in
premium Income to the FDIC.

ELLEN G O O D M AN

B u ild in g a n e w s m o k e s c re e n
BOSTON — Over the years. 1 have developed
a grudging and entirely perverse admiration
for the tobacco industry. The corporate heads,
the lawyers, the lobbyists could teach Outward
Bound a thing or two about survival skills.
Every time the cigarette pushers are cor­
nered Into an hypocrisy, terminally trapped In
an Inconsistency, forced up against a scientific
wail, they get loose. They go ofT whistling, and
Jiggling the extra change In their pockets.
But their current ploy has a can-you-top-thls
quality. This week, the Tobacco Institute
announced in the most sonorous solid-citizen
tones that it Is mounting a campaign to
discourage smoking among children.
With a straight face and a press conference,
the tobacco people said they w ill support a
national legal smoking age o f 18. They will
favor laws requiring supervision for ciga­
rette-vending machines near minors. They will
limit samples and billboard ads near schools.
And they will offer aids to parents to help their
children resist "peer-group pressure" to
smoke.
Smoking Companies Against Smoking? It's
enough to make you suffer headaches and
delusions and other symptoms o f side-stream
smoke.
Every year 500,000 adult Americans die
from smoking. Another 1.5 m illion quit in
some state o f enlightenment or 111 health. The
only source of new customers arc children.
Nearly all adults start when they are minors. If
you get past 20 without getting hooked, you're
virtually home free.
Given these facts, their current campaign
against smoking by children could be (1) a
sudden attack o f public virtue, (2) corporate
suicide or 13| baloney. Circle 3 on your answer
sheet.
The effort to Improve their corporate Image
— to look like that oxym oron, responsible
tobacco companies — is also a savvy attempt
at freezing the smoking status quo.
A national minimum sm oking age or 18? All
but six states have that today. Th e pressure
now Is to enforce that law. T h e further goal is
to rulsc the smoking age to the drinking age —
in most places 21.
"Supervised" vending machines? The real
pressure Is to ban vending machines Indeed.
New York pussed such a law that goes Into
effect In a year.
No billboards near playgrounds and schools?
This pales beside ihc m ovem ent to ban
billboards altogether, especially In minority
communities where neighborhood leaders
have begun lo paint out the ads.
But the most Insidious of these do-good
proposals is thr one that promises help
com bating the "peer-group pressure" to

smoke. Whence cometh this pressure?
As Joe Tye. the head o f Stop Teenage
Addiction lo Tobacco, says: "T h e y make It
sound like peer-group pressure is something
that permeates the
air o f the corridor in
e v e r y Junior high
s c h o o l . " But it 's
created by the very
sa m e to b a c c o in ­
dustry.
Some S3 billon a
year Is spent on ads
and promotions. A
good portion of (hat
money is directed at
the y o u n g , e ith e r
th ro u g h p rod u ct
placements in mov­
When compa­
ie s fr o m " R o g e r
nies offer
R a b b i t * ’ to
compact discs
••Superman.”
with their
through sponsored
smokes, they
events, or through
the less-than-subtle
sren't aiming
creation o f the Camel
at senior
S m o o th c a rto o n
citizens. j|
character.
When the cigarette
companies offer T-shirts. |rtde*ccnt sunglasses
and compact discs with their sm okes, they
aren't aiming at the senior-citizens market.
When they polish Images of the you ng and
beautiful, they aren't trying to hook the
geriatric crowd.

£

Wooing and warning customers a t Ihc same
time is by now routine double-speak for the
Inmates o f the Tobacco Institute. But some­
thing la missing in their virtuous proclamation.
They didn't offer a single reason for their
deep concern. Why shouldn't kids smoke?
"A r e they afraid." as heallh advocate Dr.
Elizabeth Whelan suggests sarcastically, "that
the children will bum their little fin gers?"
In all of its years on the Am erican public
stage, The Tobacco Institute has never ad­
mitted the product is addictive or that tt causes
cancer, heart disease, respiratory Illness. It Is
merely a habit for adults, sort of like lipstick.
Again, the industry is trying to distract us.
This time they are using smoke and minors.
The vaunted campaign is really an effort to
buy time, to push away the moral responsiblity
o f selling to adults os well as children.
"It would be nice.” said a spokesman for
Phillip Morris. " I f somebody gives us some
credit on this." Well, they deserve the credit.
All of it.

WASHINGTON - The White House is in
search o f a financial bomb squad to sniff out
disasters before they blow up In the taxpay­
ers' faces.
Th e big financial scandals o f the 1980s —
the savings and loan bankruptcy and the
Housing and Urban Development debacle —
could have been avoided had there been
t r o u b le - s h o o te r s
watching the num­
bers In ev e .y gov­
ernment agency.
Last month. Presi­
dent Bush signed a
bill authorizing the
hiring o f that squad
or trouble-shooters
led by a "c h ie f finan­
cial o ffic e r " hand­
picked by the presi­
dent. He or she will
operate out of the
O ffic e - o f - M an age­
m ent and Budget, f They will stalk
b a ck ed up by 23
those agen­
assistants in major
cies, watching
federal agencies.
closely for the
T h e y w ill s ta lk
signs of fraud,
th o s e a g e n c ie s ,
waste sad
watching closely for
abuse. J
the signs o f fraud,
waste and abuse.
Here are some cases that need their im ­
mediate attention.
The Resolution Trust Corp.. assigned to sell
about 9300 billion In SAL assets, needs all
the attention that the chief financial officer
can muster. The race to pick up the S A L
assets at bargain prices is an invitation for
fraud and waste. We have learned that the
government Ibrgot to factor In the cost o f
local real-estate taxes that the Resolution
Trust Corp. must pay while it still manages
(he properties.
The Internal Revenue Service has let tax
cheats get away with owing the government
more than 960 billion. The amount o f unpaid
taxes has more than tripled in the past 10
years, and there is no sign o f a turnaround in
that trend.
Th e Pentagon has 930 million in Inventory
that it has no intention o f using. Th e
mismanagement that created the glut is still
In place. For example, the. Pentagon bought
40.000 turtleneck shirts for 95 a shirt and
then decided not to use them. They were sold
at auction to the public for a penny each. The
government already has Inspectors general In
every department, so why can't they do the
job without adding another layer in the form
o f financial Inspectors? The inspectors gener­
al answered that question at a House
Government Operations Committee hearing
arranged by Rep. John Conyers, D-Mlch.. the
author o f the chief financial officer legislation.
Th e inspectors general described chaotic
bookkeeping procedures that are rampant In
the federal government. Health and Human
Services Inspector General Richard Kusserow
told Congress that agencies must file two
separate financial reports — one to fit the
General Accounting Office's standards and
another to please the Treasury Department.
Th ere are seven accounting system s In
Kusserow’s department alone. Interior De­
partment Inspector General James Richards
said that when he came on the job. there were
13 accounting systems In Ihc department
and none of them were approved by the GAO.
Commerce Department Inspector General
Francis DcGeorgr said the Inspectors general
cannot "g o It alone." They desperately need a
senior finance officer In each agency policing
waste and mismanagement. Sources told our
associate Jim Lynch that the likely candidate
for chief financial officer Is Frank Hodsoll.
who 1s now executive director of the Office of
Management and Budget. Some are doubtful
that Hodsoll has the technical skills for the
job. but his reputation is that o f a smooth
negotiator and a well-liked numbers crun­
cher. His boss at OMB. Budget Director
Richard Damian, has been a big proponent of
the creation of a chief financial officer
position. And (Airman welcomes the added
power the position will bring to the OMB.

M n M ra ra H H f

�Florida — Tugoday, Dscsmbsr 18, 1980 — M

Quits*
4C M tlsHm ca avtilabto
Community Coordinated Child Care |4C) for Central Florida.
Inc. Is enrolling cuatomers in Its financial assistance programs.
Anyone needing ssslaianrr with child care arrangements and
whose income does not exceed the 4C guidelines may call 4C in
Seminole County at 638-3020
The 4C gross annual Income limit for a two-family household
Is $10,070: $12,708 for a three-family household; $18,300 for a
family at four, and $17,898 for a family o f five. A 4C counselor
will determine eligibility.

NCR

torney BUI Colbert.
The letter reads. “ Please be
advised that I request the city
commission to accept this as m y
30-day notice c f resignation ef­
fective Jan. 16. 1001. with the
provision o f 135 days severance
to allow an orderly transition to
other employment as well as
being available lo assist the city
as needed r e p rd ln g ongoing
projects and finances.*T
Colbert said he had discussed
the resign ation w ith Falaon
Friday.

Postage1A

The company could not dis­
close the specific content o f the
solicitation pending SEC review,
but a spokesman said, "It will
clearly be a request for them to
call a special meeting and to vote
In a least a majority of new
dlretora and to approve a resolu­
tion director the board to negoti­
ate with us and remove Impedi­
ments to a merger.”
Specifically. AT&amp; T Is seeking
to dismantle NCR's poison pill
anti- takeover defense.
But Dayton. Ohio-based NCR.
in a statement released Monday,
said A T A T ’s threatened proxy
fight does not change NCR’s
position opposing the buyout.
“ Our board met Thursday.
Dec. 13. and alter considering
A T &amp; T 's o ffe r c a re fu lly and
thoroughly, concluded that It is
grossly inadequate and unfair to
ou r shareholders.” Chairman
Charles E. Exley Jr. said.
We believe our shareholders
will support us In our edort to
protect their vital best Interests."
he said.
A T &amp; T needs backing from
holders o f at least 28 percent o f
outstanding NCR stock to force a
special meeting, and analysts
believed they will easily achieve
that goal.
But A T &amp; T 's anticipated a t­
tempt to oust all 13 members o f
the NCR board at the special
meeting will need backing from
owners o f 80 percent of outstand­
ing NCR stock, and analysts said
th e N e w Y o r k -b a s e d c o m ­
munications giant will have an
uphill bottle getting that kind o f
support.
A lte rn a tely . A T &amp; T ’ s p roxy
soliclation mounts a challenge to
four NCR directors up for reelection at the company's annual
meeting April 17. That would
take backing of only a majority o f
outstanding shares.
But It would take AT&amp; T 1Vi
years to gain control that way.
because It would need to defeat
directors standing for re-election
both in 1991 and 1992 to win a
majority.
A T&amp; T'i
T's tender offer, however,
noted the company was willing lo
i

wait as long aa 18 months to
complete a merger.
A T&amp; T also has extended the
expiration date o f Its $00 a share
cash tender offer to Jan. 18 from
Jan. 4. T h e company said no
shares had been tendered by the
close o f business Friday, but
noted tender offer materials were
only dialled during the middle o f
last week.
NCR. m eanw hile, has been
m eeting w ith institutional In­
vestors. urging them to reject the
A T&amp; T bid. Th e first m eeting was
held Friday In New York and
Investment advisers said further
meetings were scheduled this
week.
In addition. NCR placed fullpage ads In the W all Street
Journal and other major news­
papers Monday urging rejection
o f the A T &amp; T offer.
"A T &amp; T : Th e WRONG Choice."
the ads proclaimed, noting the
NCR board o f directors has re­
jected the bid as "grossly Inade­
quate.
"N ow w e'd like to be left alone
so that w e can contin ue to
d e v e lo p a n d d e l i v e r th e
leading-edge products and re­
sponsive support programs you
have com e to expect from us."
the ad said.
"Apparently, the folks at A T&amp; T
can't recognize a busy signal
when they near one." It said.
A T &amp; T has contended NCR Is a
perfect partner for Its computer
business, because both compa­
nies focus on networking and
open computer systems.
But NCR has said past business
combinations In the computer
In d u s t r y , su ch a s S p e r r y Burroughs and G roupe BullZenith. have been ineffectual at
best and that it does not want to
be a dum ping ground for A T&amp; T's
problem child — and the debt
associated with the takeover.

Continued tram Fags 1A
captain ol patrol.
Lt. Al Sanchez will be captain o f
criminal Investigations.
Sgt. Paul Jaynes w ill become a
—
. v*
2SP- V jr r ’ &gt;■

Stasha Angelina Balabanski.
infant. 531 Morce Loop. Winter
Springs, died Saturday at her
residence. Born Jan. 8. 1990. In
Sanford, she was a lifelong
resident o f Seminole County.
S u rvivo rs include m other.
Debt. Winter Springs; grandfa­
th e r. W a lte r . L o n g w o o d ;
maternal grandparents. Dewanc
and J o a n n e F a rrell. W h ite
Cloud. Mich.; greatgrandm other. Vilot Baldrlca.
Kentwood. Mich.
Gaines Funeral Home. Long­
wood. in charge o f arrange­
ments.
J E F F E E Y L . HOGGS JR.
Jeffery L. Hoggs Jr.. 25. 109
Ford Avc.. Altamonte Springs,
died Saturday at Florida Hospi­
tal. Oilando. Born Dec. 16. 1964.
In Easton. Pa., he moved to
Altamonte Springs from there in
1967. He was a laborer and a
Protestant.
Survivors Include wife. Anltu:
daughters. Sophia. Staisha. both
of Altamonte Springs; mother.
Lou m ara. Plscataw ay. N .J.;
brothers. Sean. Winn. Mich .
Louis. Altamonte Springs. An­
thony Morse. Fern Park. Jer­
maine Wllkerson. Orlando; sis­
ters. Denise. Plscataway. Debbie
James. Ocoee. Lisa. Phoenix.
A rlz .; gran d m oth er. Lou ise
Branno. Altamonte Springs.
Marvin C. Zanders Funeral
Home. Apopka. In charge of
arrangements

1A

The new increase comes on
the heels of another In 1988 and
the cumulative effect, according
to some business leaders, is bad
new s for business and co n ­
sumers. and perhaps eventually
for the Postal Service Itself.
"T h e end effect for business
w ill be big businesses will look
more carefully at alternatives,
private sector delivery, and with
the advent o f fax machines and
electronic transfers, many w ill
be able to circumvent the Postal
Service." said Tracey Schreft.
associate director for the U.S.
Chamber o f Commerce small
business center.
"F o r many o f the sm aller
mailers, they may not survive
this rate case." Schreft said. "...
They Just can’ t afford to go to
alternatives. It costs them more
In Increases than they can make
up In profits."
T h e P o s ta l S e r v ic e h a s
estimated the S-cent hike In
first-class postage will cost con­
sumers an average of $10 to $11
per year, but Schreft says the
cost w ill actu a lly be m uch
higher.
"B u sin ess es w ill pass on
higher costs to consumers." she
said. "W e anticipate that the
average Am erican household
will have to spend an average o f
$88 more on postal service,
directly and Indirectly."
Consumers who like getting
mail order catalogs will also
likely see fewer o f them, ac­
c o r d i n g to C h e t D a l s c l l ,
spokesman for the Direct Mar­
keting Association baaed in New
York.
Dal^ell said calalogers face a
30- to 3£ percent increase under
the current rate proposal and
already saw rates for many third
class categories rise by as much

Ileutnant to replace LaBrusclano
In technical services. Sgt. Bill
Morris will be a patrol lieute­
nant. Deputy Mark Smock is
promoted to sergeant In patrol.

.1
Beacon Crem ation S ervice.
Orlando, In charge o f arrange­
ments.

Stanley W. Balabanski, 31,
531 Morce Loop. Winter Springs,
died Saturday at his residence.
Born Sept. 29. 1959. in Longwood. he was a lifelong resident
o f Seminole County. He was a
general manager o f U-Haul Inc..
Orlando, and a member of the
Plnar Pub Softball team.
Survivors include wife, Debt;
son. Nicholas. Orlando; father.
Walter. Longwood: sisters. Gina
Cass. Christine Henson, both o f
Longwood. Josephine Carlson.
Sacramento. Calif.
Gaines Funeral Home. Long­
wood. in charge o f arrange­
ments.

8TASHA ANGELINA
BALABANSKI

D

ss 38 percent In 1988.
Catalog firms w ill be sending
fewer mailings to "p ro spects " or
will turn to abbreviated versions
of thetr catalogi on cheaper,
lighter paper to trim costs, he

Service handling costs.
"W e offer the greatest Incen­
tives for that type o f mail that la
ng to help us d o our Job
ter." Shesty said.
Noting that the Postal Service
receives no tax dollars and must
operate on its ow n revenue.
Shealy defends the rate hike as
merely reflecting Increases in
the coat o f doing business.
Like other businesses, the
Postal Service has been hit hard
by rising costs such as health
insurance and. m ore recently,
h ig h e r g a s p r i c e s fo r It s
extensive fleet.
"E very time! we saw a penny
increase at thet lg u pump the net
e Postal
increase for the
P o sta l:Service is
$3.3 million per y ea r." Shealy

e

"M a ilers will be evaluating
mall costs.” he said, adding
some w ill cut their ad costs for
media advert isments to make up
the rate Increase while others
may "flu sh their postal market­
ing and g o to other m edia."
But Dslxell and other experts
say b ig g e r a d v e r tis e r s and
publishers are increasingly look­
ing to alternative private sector
delivery to circumvent costa o f
third and second class mailings.
" W e do need to develop an
alternative to the Postal Service
But Schreft argues It’s the
to. one. spur on competition to
the Postal Service ana. tiro. Just high c o s t o f p a y in g postal
workers that’s feeding the rate
for survival." he said.
Dalxwell cited a 1988 study
showing that 28 billion o f pieces
o f mall could legally be diverted
from the Postal Service If a
national network o f private de­
livery w as In plare.
Schreft said private delivery
represents an eventual threat to
the post office, but Postal Service
REDWCOD C IT Y , Calif. spokesman Art Shealy says fig­
Wine country mass murderer
ures sh ow Its m a ll load is
Ramon Salcido, w ho butchered
continuing to grow.
seven people Including two o f his
E v e n d u r i n g a t im e o f
children In 1989. has been
explosive growth In the use o f
fasclmlle machines, the Postal sentenced to die In California's
Service delivered 166 billion gas chamber.
" I hope God forgives m e,"
pieces o f mall in fiscal 1990, up
by 5 billion from the year before. S a lc id o said fo llo w in g th e
sentencing Monday. Reading
Shealy said. He added that 94
from a b r ie f s ta te m e n t in
percent o f the mall Is businessSpanish, Salcido also apologized
related.
Shealy said the proposed new for the grief he caused.
An appeal o f his conviction
rate structure offers more op­
and
sentence is automatic. His
tions than ever for business
mailers to get discounts by using execution could be years away
due to his right to s series o f
methods such as pre- sorting,
appeals through state and feder­
bar coding and nine-digit zip
al courts.
co d in g that save the Postal
Visiting Sierra County Judge

spiral.
"L a b or costs at the PostalService represent 83 percent o f
thetr total costs." ssid Schreft.
noting that postal workers make
an average $40,000 per year in
m and other compensations
are currently working under
a "no-layoff" contract that Is
stifling the service's automation
efforts.

a

Additionally, as part o f Its
recent deficit reduction package.
Congress passed the tab for $4.7
billion In coots over the next five
years, primarily employee re­
tirem ent expenses, from the
federal budget ledger to the
Postal Service.
That burden, which Dalzell
called a "stam p tax." was not
calculated Into the current rate
proposal and is likely to hasten
the next round o f rate increases.

Wine country killer
sentenced to death
Reginald Littrell. who presided
o v er the trial, accepted the
recommendation o f the Jury that
urged death for the 29-year-old
forklift operator. Littrell had the
option o f sentencing Salcido to
life In prison without possibility
o f parole.
Spectators in the San Mateo
County courtroom were moved
to tears by the emotional and
sometimes rambling statement
by Salcido’s former father-inla w . R o b e rt R ich ard s, who
pleaded for Salcido's execution.
Richards lost his wife, three
daughers and two granddaugh­
ters on April 14. 1989. a blood
bath that stunned the normally
q u iet S on om a C ou nty w ine
country.

Eslinger— —

STANLEY W. BALABAM8K1

&lt;

1A
$83,718
annual
will be
paid about $8,300 t:
through Jan.
16. then receive an
in additional
in icrcn in cc pcjr.
At the end o f the meeting, the
o n ly com m ent Faison m ade
about the resignation was. “ I’d
lik e to thank the city co m ­
mission for the action they took
on m y behalf earlier.”
Faison's one-sentence resigna­
tion letter to com m issioners
Monday was read by City A t­

Henry Lee Martin Sr.. 83. o f
Sanford, died Dec. 15 at South
Seminole Community Hospital.
L o n g w o o d . Born March 30.
1907. In Clio. Ala., he moved to
Sanford nine years ago from
Akron, Ohio, where he resided
for 66 years. He was a barber
and was one of Jehovah's wit­
nesses.
Survivors include wife. Louise
Satsula Hall-Martin. Sanford;
daughter. Bernice Scott. Akron;
sons. H enry L. Jr.. Oviedo.
Ronald H.. Akron, and Reginald
II.. Sanford; sisters. Elizabeth
McClelland. Akron, and Ruby
Latimore. Cleveland; 20 grundc h i l d r c n ;
19 g r e a t ­
grandchildren.

CECIL ALLEN McCOI
Cecil Allen McCombs. 82. 795
Ph oen ix Lane. O viedo, died
Friday at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Born April 25. 1908. In
Scarbo. W.Va.. he moved to
O rlan do from E d gcw ater in
1985. He was c h ie f county
detective for the district at­
torney's office and a member o f
the Oviedo Methodist Church,
lie was a member of Masonic
Lodge 250 F&amp;AM. life member of
the Mercer County Chiefs Asso­
ciation and the Friendship Lodge
218.
S u r v i v o r s I n c lu d e w ife ,
T h e lm a : d a u g h te r . A r le n e
Sea b u r n . O v i e d o ; one
grandchi l d; two g r e a t ­
grandchildren.

Adelaide McElwce. 78. o f 228
Bradshaw Drive. Sanford, died
Dec. 16 at West Volusia Memori­
al Hospital. DeLand. Bom Aug.
18. 1912. in York. S.C.. she
moved to Sanford in 1983 from
St. Albans Long Island. N.Y. She
w as a h om em aker and a
member o f Allen Chapel A.M.E.
Church. Sanford.
Survivors Include brothers.
Robert W llform and A rth u r
Wllform. both o f York. Rufus
Wllform. Bronx. N.Y.: sisters.
Virginia Williams. Sanford. Mary
Joe Chambers and Gwendolyn
Wilfon.i-Black. both of York.
Wllson-Eichelbcrgcr Mortuary
Inc.. Sanford, in charge o f ar­
rangements.

Dolores Thompson. 57. 648
Holbrook Circle, Lake Mary, died
Monday at South S e m in o le
Com m unity H ospital. L o n g ­
wood. She was bom Sept. 17.
1933. In Manchester. N.Y. She
w as a h om em aker and a
Catholic.
Survivors Include husband.
G e o r g e R .: fa t h e r . F r a n k
Cremeno. Sanford; son. Robert.
Sanford; daughter, Debra Briggs.
L a k e M a ry; s is te r . J u d y
Cremeno. Sanford: three grand­
children.
Colllson Funeral Home. W inter
Garden. In charge of arrange­
ments.

MARTIN. HINXV L IZ
Memorial w rylcn for M/
Martin. U. of Sanford, who died Doc. IS. will
bo haId I p m Thurtday at the Kingdom Holt
of Jehovah*. HOT W Jrd S t. Sanford, with
tarvkat hold by Jehovah* witnetia*

Lt. J oe Patton o f Internal affairs
is promoted to inspector o f stafT
Inspections. Assistant Jail Adm in strator Bob Fischer w ill
become a captain at the Jail.
E s lin g e r sa id c le r k s and
secretaries will be shared, with
an outside administrative aide
hired for Erwin. Polk's aide
Sherry Clark will continue to
serve Eslinger. Ann Bennett will
continue as Hughey's secretary.
Although U appears the focus
Is on m anagem ent. Eslinger
said, the priority la to build up
the patrol division. There are 12
patrol slots budgeted to be filled,
and he said transfers to other
d i v i s i o n s a r e f r o z e n to
strengthen patrol.
Eslinger. who has been with
the sh eriffs department for 12
years said he Is changing the

name o f the department to the
Seminole County SherlfTs Office.
He said he chose Hughey and
E rw in as his c lo s e s t a id es
because o f "their proven ad­
ministrative abilities and man­
agement style." He added that
Hughey, who has been with the
department 21 years, "knows
the workings o f the sheriffs
ofTIce."
In addition to the eight pro­
motions within the department.
Eslinger also will change the
fo llo w in g assignm ents: S gt.
John Hawkins w ill move to
range and water, canine special
enforcement; Sgt. Mike Messer
moves to crimes against proper­

ly-

Sgt. Dale Wagner transfers to
patrol from the school resourc-;
o ffic e r p rogra m . S gt. J oh n

Rankin is moved from patrol to
community services.
Sgt. Ken Starr moves from
patrol to technical services. Lt.
Bob Kunkler moves to violent
crimes from Judicial security. Lt.
Jim Brantley moves from watch
command to Judicial security.
Lt. Jerry Riggins transfers to
community services. Lt. Rocky
Ford m oves from range, water
and traffic to speclcalized patrol.
The former undershcrifTs secre­
tary M illie Logan m oves to
criminal Inveatlfpllons.
The sh eriffs department. In­
cluding the Jail has about 500
employees and operates with a
$24 million annual budget.

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MITCHILL. ORCM“ S*0"
Funoral tor.lco* lor Mr Oran "B ro"
Mikhail. M. ol m i Jano* Ava . Sontord. who
diod Wednetdey. will bohold I p m Saturday
al Now Boltwf Mitticnary Baplttl Church.
Sanford, with Eldor Henry Bradloy official
mg li.formant lo follow In Evtrgroon Como
lory. Sanford Fnonda may pay tholr ro
tpeett al Iho tunoral homo Friday from 12 f
pm
Sunrlta tunoral Homo. *00 Loculi Aro .
Sanford. TJI 1*1 In charge ol arrangement*

Sanford Herald

�t

.

:
^ T J I I At

C -♦-•au

•A - ■Sanford Harald,

i — Tua»d*y, Oacambsr 18.910

Alexandar leaps from education
governor to education secretary
Unlttd P n u international
WASHINGTON — As Tennessee governor.
Lamar Alexander set out on nothing short of a
crusade to reform the state's education system.
As University o f Tennessee president, his
repugnance for racism led university officials to
drop memberships in a country chib that refused
to admit his biack basketball coach.
While Lauro Cavaxos was known as a grandfstherly type who didn't make much of a splash as
education secretary. President Bush's choice of
Alexander to take over the Education Department
; signals a dramatic contrast in style and personal!*
‘ X"It won't be business as usual," says James
Haalam. president of Pilot Oil o f Knoxville. Term.,
and a member of the University of Tennessee
Board of Trustees.
"He could convince you of almost anything."
says Sommle Lynn Puett. who served in Alexsnder's Cabinet and ts now a university vice
president.
"He has an ability to Influence people and get
public support for his concepts and ideas." says
Tennessee's Democratic speaker of the Senate.
John Wilder.
Alexander. SO. was Tennessee's Republican
governor from 1979-1907 and has been president
of the University of Tennessee since January
1968.
Haalam dubbed Alexander Tennessee's “educa­
tion governor." President Bush now. hopes
Alexander's gifts will work to earn Bush the title
"Education President."

He Is an absolutely outstanding spokesman; a
" —
S— •* Ouett
**—
very
convincing ——
speaker,”
Puett said o
of' Alex
ander. "A s a governor and the‘ president of
o&lt; a state
land-grant tnsffiutioa
i he state's largest
urUvcrattj^hehas^a perspective that provides
eafora
Alexander named a national reputation during
his two terms as governor for emphasising
reform — from stressing the 3 R 's to
he developed a lO-point
Better Schools Progrsm that sought to improve
children's achievement in the basics, make
children computer Hterate, and provide teachers
with merit pay.
"H e would aay. 'Not one state pays one penny
more for teaching w e fl.' So he initiated the Career
Ladder Program to give teachers a place to go and
cam up to 07.000 more for a good evaluation."
said Robert MdUrath. who served aa Alexander's
education commissioner f rom 1901-1007.
"W e had 32 departments in state government.
But even those conunisalonera were out promot­
ing education — visiting schools, talking to civic
chibs. He ... was spending 75 percent or hia time
tn education." McEtrath aald.
Haalam said Alexander understands "the nuts
and bolts of education."
"You'll see a lot of innovation. Lam ar Is one of
those people who thinks that you have to have
change, tie's a creature of change, an agent of
change." he said.
But as the nation's top educational leader, there
la only so much Alexander can do. contended
Wilder, whose formal title is lieutenant governor,
but who actually serves tn a legislative function as
Tennessee's speaker of the Senate.

H aaar hom e
M fo rh o lid a y s

Whistleblower tekes fell
smesr
•»

C O L L E O E S T A T IO N .
Texas — Hagsr the camel
will be home for Christmas
a fte r a ll, p lea sin g her
uwuer
the congrega­
tion of Austin's Park Hills
Baptist Church.
Just a few days ago.
Christmas wasn't looking
all that merry for Hagar. a
6 0 0 -p o u n d . 6 -y e a r-o ld
dromedary camel.
A n a c c i d e n t In h e r
pasture broke her lower
Jaw, leaving her tn obvious
ln and unable to eat. aald
r owner, businessman
Don Chapman.

C

E x o tic a n im a l care
i at Texas AAM’s
_ of Veterinary Medi­
cine came to the rescue but
II wasn't easy, said ASM
v e terin a ria n J am es
Herman.
Veterinarians at the uni­
v e r s it y 's V e te rin a ry
Teaching Hospital started
by s u r g i c a lly
l l y p u ttin g
Hagar'am
Jaw ‘badktogethcr.
"Just her site makes any
kind of surgery a little
difficult.' Herman aald.

Knkiht-Rkkter Newspapers

WASHINGTON Army of­
ficers running a secret. 05 billion
W h ite H ouse p ro g ra m ,
nicknamed “ the Doomsday pro­
ject." directed a convicted drug
dealer to discredit a whistle­
blower inside the program, ac­
cording to Pentagon. Justice
Department and congressional
records.
T h e whistle-blow er, Tom
Golden, 44. a longtime Army
Intefltgence officer, has a U7-year
service record of unblemished
integrity. Pentagon officials and
congressional Investigators aay.
Nonetheless, he is dogged still by
allegations from current and
former Doomsday project of­
ficers that he la a security risk —
or a Soviet spy.
The man spreading allegations
about Oolden — according to
docum ents recently obtained
through the freedom of Informa­
tion Act and other sources, and
Interviews with current and
form r governm ent officials,
mas. of whom requested ano­
nymity — was Army Warrant
Officer Robert Rendon.
The Arm y knew In 1963 that
Rendon had been convicted
while In high school of selling
drugs to children. Yet Rendon

obtained one of the govern­
ment's highest security clear­
ances and served from 1963 to
1999 In the Doomsday protect,
which alms to beep the govern,
ment running after a nuclear
• - ::
attack.
Rendon said tn a recent In­
terview that he had taken part .In
"n o vendettas." A classified
1969 House Armed Services
C om m ittee re p o rt fo u n d
otherwise. It concluded (hat
high-ranking Arm y officials used
Rendon to get even with the
D oom sday project w h is tle ­
blower. Tom Oolden.
. After five secret Investigations
of Doomsday project officers by
the Army, the Justice Depart­
ment and Congress, the only
person to Buffer consequences
was Golden. He was fired from
the Doomsday project after not­
ing technical problem s and
questioning some activities o f a
top officer in the program.
Rendon now serves In the
Foreign Counterintelligence Ac­
tivity. one of the Arm y's moat
highly classified counteres­
pionage programs.
The Doomsday project Is an
amalgam of 30 secret military
and Intelligence programs fi­
nanced w ith u n tra c e a b lc
classified funds.

Tw o federal
prisoners take
guard hostage
SAN DIEGO. Calif. Tw o
prisoners took a guard hostage
at the Federal Metropolitan Cor­
rection Center and prison of­
ficials and FBI negotiators were
ta lk in g w ith th e In m a te s ,
authorities said Tuesday.
A second guard was able to
escape the situ ation in the
hlgh-aecurity area o f the 12story building in downtown San
Diego near the waterfront, aald
p r is o n s p o k e s m a n G a v in
O'Connor.
"A t 8:50 p.m. two inmates
took one o f our officers hostage."
O'Connor said.
" A second officer eras able to
escape from the situation. He
sustained some injuries and he
ts now being teatoad a*- by-the
medical people." he said.
The second guard was taken
to a nearby hospital for medical
treatment but his injuries and
condition were not immediately
released.
T h e tw o In m a te s , J o s e
Rodriguez and Ernest O livo
Cruz, were not believed to be
armed with guns, he said.
"But they possibly may have
made some sort o f weapon from
the m etal m aterial In th eir
beds.” O'Connor said.
"W e do know that the hostage
has n o t b een h a r m e d . "
. Rodriguez and Cruz, are both 32
years old and Cuban citizens,
; O'Connor said.
Cruz was serving tw o life
' sentences for murder tn Florida.
: Both had been c h a rg e d in
California with Intent to rob a
• federal agent, he said.
. Rodriguez had pleaded guilty
; to the charge and was awaiting
; sentencing. Cruz was awaiting
trial on the charge, he aald.
"Both the inmates have been
. here periodically since Sept. 23.
, 1989." he said.
Rodriguez and Cruz have been
housed at various other federal
prisons in California as a securi­
ty precaution, he said.
Prison officials did not reveal
whether the inmates had made
any demands.
Hostage negotiators from the
federal Bureau o f Prisons and
the FBI were talking with the
Inm ates and a tte m p tin g to
secure the release o f the guard.
The downtown correctional
center houses approxim ately
950 inmates, most o f whom are
a w a itin g t r ia l o n v a r io u s
charges.

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kHeraM. Sanford, Floods — Tuesday, December 18, 1180 — ?A

A*ia___

Unttod Press International
U.8. officials. rearing Iraq might stage “
partial putkiut of Kuwait in an effort to
•hatter the International coalition opposing
the Invasion, retterated the atance that only
complete withdrawal waa acceptable.
Speaking to different groups o f alllee on
separate conttnenta Monday, President Buah
and Secretary of State James Baker aald the
forces arrayed against Iraq remained strong
and uniflea.
“What we want to do la to impress upon
Iraq the cooaequencea of aggression and far
Iraq to leave every square inch o f Kuwait."
Buah told reporters following a meeting In
W ashington with 28 m em bers of Ihe
“I would think at tome point he (Saddam)
would realise this force being arrayed
against him would be devastating." Buah
aald. ‘“The United Nations sold that he
•hould get out or all available means will he
told NATO foreign minister* In
Monday that Iraq may withdraw
partially from Kuwait around the Jan. 1*
U N. deadline, but aald the alliance should
stand firm against partial aotuUona to the
Persian G ulf crisis.
“Just as I believe he chose to release
hostages fix this purpose, 1 think he may
lake a dramatic step on x around Jan. 1®He could withdraw partially," Baker said.

f W h«t we want to do is to
impress upon Iraq the con*
sequ en ces of aggression
ana for Iraq to leave every
square Inch of Kuwait, j

according to excerpts o f his cfoaed. door
testimony released by U.S. officials.
The NATO foreign ministers Issued a
strongly worded statement reiterating there
can be “no partial solutions" to the gulf
Baker aald he la still willing to go to
Baghdad to meet face-to-face with Saddam,
but he askl the Iraqi president is still intent
an trytng to undercut the “collective wilt of
the international community to use force."
Bush aald Turkish President Turgut Osal
told him Sunday that Saddam was misin­
terpreting the debate on the United States
over U.8. policy in the gulf.
"H e thinks it means our country is
divided and we cannot go forward with the
U.N. resolutions and he Is just as wrong as
he can be." Bush told reporters.
Bush also aald he honed talks In Washing*
ton between himself and Iraqi Foreign
Minister Tarlq Axis and In Baghdad between
Baker and Saddam w ill still take place,

deapiteai
W h ile Baker delivered hla warning.
Baghdad-based Palestinian terrorist Abu!
A b b as threatened to attack U.S. and
W estern Interests w o r ld w id e If the
multinational force confronting Iraq tried to
liberate Kuwait.
'O le official Iraqi news agency INA said
Moham m ad Abbas, better known as Abu
Abhaa, secretary-general o f the Palestinian
Liberation Front, told the Baghdad AlJumhoriya newspaper that American facili­
ties around ihe world had been targeted.
A bbas further aald that If the war would
Mke place, then it would not proceed In the
direction planned for by the U.S. ad­
ministration and that the United States has
no capability o f containing the battle In a
certain area “ INA aald.
A b b a s is w idely believed to be the
m*ttermlnd behind the 1965 kidnapping of
the Mediterranean cruise ship Achtlle Lauro
«n 8 the seaborne attack on Israeli beaches
by Palestinians thla past May.
_ Resident Bush has said he will hold
Soudan, personally responsible for any
irrrortet attacks against Americana.
The last two British diplomats to leave
Kuwait departed from Baghdad on their way
npme, and the Brttiah Foreign Office advised
the families of Its citizens in the gulf to leave
before Jan. 15.
The Iraqi amba ssador to Franne. Abdul
Roslaq El-Hasheml. suggested la Parts that
his country might agree to withdraw.

A C LU looks for whistle-blowers
United Prase International
DHAHRAN, Saudi Arab!
— Abut Abbas, leader of an
extreme Palestinian guer­
rilla organisation , said
Monday that hit squads
were already In place In the
United States and Europe,
ready to strike targets Im­
m ediately if Iraq came
under attack by the Ameri­
can-led forces.
Abbas is believed to have
masterminded the 1085
hijacking of thr Italian
cruise ship Achilla Lauro.
In May, hla group launched
a speedboat attack against
crowded beaches In Israel.
The official Iraqi News
A g e n c y qu oted A bba s
Monday .as saying dozens
o f A m e ric a n facilities
around the world had been
targeted for attack.

WASHINGTON - In case the
Bush administration might try
to mislead Congress on Persian
Gulf policy, the American Civil
Liberties Union says It Is looking
f x government officials to help it
keep policy.makera honest.
In an advertisement In The
Federal Tim es, a newspaper
aimed at federal workers, the
ACLU said Monday that gov­
ernment employees have “the
legal right and a political re­
sponsibility Uj tell Congress If
they know the legislative body Is
being misinformed.
The A C L U does not make any
allegations that the Bush ad­
ministration is engaging In any
d e c e p t i v e or m i s l e a d i n g
practices w ith regard to Con­
gress.
Its cam paign stems from expe­
riences with both the Vietnam

high-ranking administration of­
ficials apparently lied to Con­
gress or deliberately m isled
lawmakers who might oppose
their policies.
“The experience of the IranContra affair and the Vietnam
W ar teaches us that the ad­
ministration is most likely to
deceive Congress — and the
American people — when it Is
pursuing a controversial foreign
and military policy in the face of
c o n g r e s s i o n a l and p u b l i c
cautiousness and opposition,"
said Morton Halperin. director of
the ACLU's Washington office.
T h e a d v e r t i s e m e n t is
headlined: “A call to all persona
to ensure that Congress la kept
fully Informed about what the
administration ti doing In the
Persian Gulf."
Because of past deceptions,
the advertisement said, “ Con­
gress has been significantly
hampered In performing Its nec-

In prepared remarks. Daniel
EUsberg. a former Pentagon of­
ficial who disclosed the so-called
Pentagon Papers to expose ex­
ecutive branch deception during
the Vietnam W ar. said if he had
made the docum ents public
earlier It might have changed
the course of the war.
"Sen . Wayne Morse. D-Ore.,
told me that if 1 had given the
Senate Foreign Relations Com­
mittee the documents in the
Pentagon Papers in 1064 rather
than in 1060. the Tonkin Oulf
Resolution would never would
have passed and the horrors of
the Vietnam W ar might have
been averted," Ellsberg said.
Morse was one of only two
Senators to vote against the
resolution, widely regarded as
tantamount to a declaration of
war.

Saddam loalng battle
to portray hlmaalf
aa champion of lalam
united Press infomoHorit
foreign policy In the past.
CAIRO, Egypt - Saddam
I s l a m i c l e a d e r s In fact
Hussein appears to be losing
perceive hla attempt to use
the battle to portray himself Islam to Justify the invasion of
as a champion o f Islam, de­ one Moslem Arab state by
spite the recent appointment another as a flagrant breach
of a Shiite Moslem defense o f Islamic values.
minister.
In strict Islam ic terms.
After ordering hla tanks Into
Saddam aa a secular leader Is
Kuwait four months ago, the not entitled to call f x a Jihad.
Iraqi leader m ade an appeal
O n ly a n A lim or senior
for support on the basis of
Moslem figure has the author­
Islamic values and concern
ity to do so.
for Islam's two most sacred
And the founders of the
sites, which are situated in
Baath party — which Saddam
Saudi Arabia.
subscribes to — were a Chris­
Reports In so m e A r a b
tian, Michel Aflaq, and a
newspapers said the appeal
secularist, Salahed Din Bitar.
waa going so badly, the Iraqi
That Is not to say that
leader lost week appointed as
Saddam has not tiled In the
defense m in i s t e r S h iite
past to exploit Islam f x hto
Moslem Gen. Saadi Toamma
own political ends. During the
Abbas. This w as apparently
1060-66 Iran-Iraq war. for
done to appease the Shiite
instance. Saddam defended
majority of hla own country
himself against Iranian ac­
as well as neighboring Shiite
cusations of atheism by
theocracy Iran. Iraq Is ruled
making well-publicized visits
by a Sunni Moslem minority.
to Shiite shrines at Nalaf and
Islamic leaders in neighbor­ Kerbola. using more Islamic
ing Arab countries and the
terminology and symbolism
wider Moslem w orld have
in hto speeches and building
failed to respond to the Iraqi
more mosques.
leader's call for a Jihad, or
But Saddam’s own lifestyle
holy war, against Ihe West.
centrists sharply with Islamic
Even Shiite Moslem fun­
tenets, according to Egyptian
damentalists in Iran, which
newspapers.
from 1960 to 1988 warred
The papers say he drinks,
with Iraq, have shown no
enjoys expensive Western
I n c l i n a t i o n to s u p p o r t
suits and cars. and. though
Saddam's cause on religious
married f x 30 years, has a
grounds, though the Iranians
long-term relationship with
have condemned the presence
the former wife of the chair­
of non-Moslem troops in the
man of Iraqi Airways.
gulf region.
In addition, the Baathtot
regime's lack of legitimacy
“The secular and repressive
has pushed Saddam into a
nature of Saddam 's Baathist
regime Is proof that the Iraqi
cult of personality and purges
that have also included
leader is the last person en­
titled to call for a Jihad." said
Moslem clerics. Saddam or­
dered the execution in May
a recent commentary on Cairo
Radio.
10BO of leading Iraqi Shiite
Egyptian and other Arab
cleric Mohammed Baqir Sadr
and members of hto family for
secular Intellectuals point out
that Islamic principles have
alleged Involvement in antinever determined Saddam 's
government activity.

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EXPIRES 12/31/90

�..

■A — Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida — Tueedey. December 18. 1990

Company offers trip into space
■ f MARY SCHLANOINtTIIN

I We know that people want
to go to space themselves,
not just see other people go.
This sweepstakes makes an
opportunity for that.9

U n ite d P re s s International ____________________

HOUSTON — A company that hopes lo
become the space travel agency of the future
will conduct a nationwide sweepstakes for
• The Ultimate Adventure" - a night Into
space aboard a Soviet rocket and a week s
stay In the Mir space station, organizers
said.
Space Travel Services Corp. has con­
tracted with the Soviet space agency Tor a
seat nhoard a Soyuz rocket In lale 1992 or
early 1993. officials said. Th e seat will be
filled by one o f millions of Americans
e.x|H-ctcd to enter their name In the contest
by making a $2.99 telephone call.
"W e know that people want to go to space
themselves, not Just sec other people go."
said David Mayer. Space Travel Services
president.
"T ills sweepstakes makes an
opportunity for that."
The "guest cosmonaut" w ill be selected at
random In December 1991 by an Indepen­
dent Judging organization. The winner may
take the trip or $1.5 million cash. Mayer
said.
If the winner opts for the cash, a backup
astronaut selected from a group of 20 would
heolTcrcd the trip.
"W e 're contracted for a flight." Mayer
said. "O ur goal Is to see the way people
think about space flight change. We want
people to see that space flight Is for
everybody. .Som ebody Is going to go to
space."
Prospective space travelers "need not be a
test pilot or a scientist or a government
official. The butcher, the baker, the candle-

•David Mayer, praaidant
stick maker are all eligible. It could be your
neighbor. It could be y o u ." the company
said.
However, residents of New York. Florida
and Rhode Island are Ineligible because of
restrictive local laws, organizers said.
Space Travel Services w ill pay expenses
for the "guest cosm onaut" and will provide
pre-flight training, which could take as long
as six months and will Include Russian
lessons and physical conditioning. Thr
winner will must pass n Soviet space
physical examination.
Space Travel Services declined lo say how
much they w ill pay the Soviets for the flight,
but said It would be m ore than the $12
million reportedly paid recently to send a
Japanese television reporter Into space with
the Soviets.
The company hopes to recoup Its cosls
and ram a profit through the fees paid by
h o p efu l c o s m o n a u ts w h o e n te r th r
swrepslakcs by calling 1- 900-258-2MIR.
The line Is active nationwide now exccpl In
scattered rural areas. Mayer said.
The line will carry continually updated
space Information, and callers can register
for the sweepstakes at the end o f the
recorded message.

N A S A m aintenance
blasted in report

"Anyone who Is Interested In space may
call the Space Travel Service Information
|lne.” said James Davidson, senior vice
president of the company. "Y ou cun call
that number as many times as you like, and
I wish you would."
The company will keep more than 50
percent of each $2.99 fee. Mayer said.
"W e could make millions o f dollars In
profit." Davidson said. "It could be over $10
million.
"The purpose of the company Is to make
space flight an opportunity for everyone ...
to position the company as the space travel
service of the 21st century so when people
think about space travel they'll think about
us. That's what we hope to do. Initially, as
opposed to gelling rich. Although getting
rich Ison the list."
The company also will profit through
commercial endorsem ents nnd product
promotions.

W ASH IN G TO N N ASA
has railed lo properly main­
tain Its nationwide network of
facilities, leading to serious
deterioration and accidents
like a fire In a mission control
building, a government report
said Monday.
"Many of NASA's facilities
have not been adequately
maintained and are In de­
grad ed con dition . C on se­
quently. many need signifi­
cant repair." the General A c­
counting OfTlcc report said.
"Several serious Incidents
have been caused by the
facilities deterioration." In­
cluding a fire In a mission
control building, a steam line
explosion, water seeping Into
ele ctrica l room s and the
partial collapse of a cooling
tower, the report said.
While critical areas such as
launch pads and the space
shuttle processing facility are
"generally well-maintained."
the eight centers Investigators
visited "all have deterorlatlng
facilities, such as leaking
roofs, peeling paint, and
leaking steam fines." the re­
port said.

"W e're also looking Into having our
astronaut endorse products (by using them
In space)." he said.
The company also can sell advertising
space on the Soyuz rocket Itself, will market
exclusive broadcast rights to the flight and
will even produce spInofT toys, he said.
Space Travel Services sought a contract
with the Soviets because NASA repeatedly
has declined nttempts to commercialize the
American space program, company officials
said.
The contract with the Soviets was negoti­
ated by Houston businessman Art Dula.
president of Space Commerce Corp.

Machines
installed to
fight AIDS

SPECIAL HOLIDAY HOURS:
Su nday 11
oM |
W e e k d a y s A S a tu rd a y 9 M J - 1 0 F I *

United Praia International

m i l l S tores O a ta

CAMBRIDGE. Mass. - In what
Is believed to lx* the first such
ordinance In the nation, the city
o f Cambridge Monday kicked off
an A ID S awareness program
r e q u ir in g c o n d o m v e n d in g
machines at hotels, motels, res­
taurants and bars.
The program began with the
Installation o f a dispenser at the
Green Street Grill m Central
S q u a r e , o n e o f th e f i r s t
establishments to seek com pli­
ance with the new city law.
Sponsors of the ordinance,
w h ich p assed b y the C ity
Council on Nov. 5. said they
believed the city, which is home
lo Harvard University and the
M a ss a c h u s e tts In s titu te o f
Technology, was the first In the
nation to enact such a program.
"W e 're hoping to serve as a
m o d e l fo r the rest o f the
c o u n t r y . " s a id J e n n i f e r
Burgess-Wolfrum o f the City of
Cambridge AIDS Task Force.
The ordinance requires con­
dom vending machines In all
hotels, motels, restaurants, bars,
movie theaters, health facilities
and municipal buildings, except
schools.
E s ta b lis h m e n ts are b e in g
asked to comply with the ordi­
nance as part o f Ihe c ity 's
licensing procedure, and are
given one year to Install the
machines.
But owners who object to the
"controversial" ordinance may
request an exemption in writing.
"S om e people have religious
beliefs that condoms are not
acceptable." Wolfrum explained.
The city 's AIDS Task Force
proposed the onlinanee as part
of a comprehensive public health
initiative to help limit the spread
of AIDS.
"Condom vending machines is
one stra teg y being used to
promate condom accessibility
and A ID S e d u c a tio n on a
city wide tiasls." said Wolfrum.

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United Press Intsrnstlonsl
NEW YO RK - The Dally News
Monday filed a second major
lawsuit against nine striking
unions, repeating their accusa­
tion that strikers have mounted
a " c a m p a ig n o f v i o l e n c e "
against newsstand dealers and
advertisers.
The action. Ilk-d In U.S. Dis­
trict Court In Manhattan, seeks
$50 million In damages and
names Ihe nine unions and the
Allied Printing Trades Council,
the umbrella group that repre­
sents the strikers.
The suit charges Ihe unions
with mounting " a campaign of
v io le n c e and In t im id a t io n
against the News' dealers and
advertisers in an effort to disrupt
the publication and side o f Ihe
newspaper."

* alt Ho —

I

D a i l y N e w s f ile s
s e c o n d la w s u it

r

T h e r e p o r t s p e c ific a lly
noted deterioration In the
52-story V eh icle Assembly
B u ild in g a t the Kennedy
S p a c e C e n te r In Florida,
where shuttles are attached lo
fuel tanks and rocket boost­
ers.
Chunks o f concrete as large
as 8 Inches have fallen from
the roof, forcing NASA lo
Install nets to catch debris to
avoid dam aging shuttles, the
report said.
T h e National Aeronautics
and Space Administration's
$15 billion network o f facili­
ties Includes nine centers, six
a u xilia ry Installations and
th ree deep space network
s ite s around the country
which carry out a variety of
research and development for
the space program.
T h e report blamed part of
the problem on the fact that
m aintenance decisions are
m a d e b y th e In d iv id u a l
directors o f each center, who
often place different priorities.
Th e report recommended
N ASA develop a comprehen­
sive maintenance strategy.
Increase the amount o f money
spent on upkeep and conduct
annual surveys.

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�INSIDE:

lassie

County schools headline
10 team, four day tourney

Ssmlnols Pony registration
FIVE POINTS — Seminole Pony Baseball. Inc.
will hold registration for the 1991 Spring Season
on Saturday. January 5 and Saturday. January

12.

H e ra ld sp o rts w rite r

„

Registration will be held from 10 a.m.-2 p m.
at the Seminole Pony Baseball complex on
Highway 419. Ages 5-16 can be registered for
later team tryouts.
Registration costs are: 535 Shetland (ages
5-6): 955 Pinto (ages 7-8); $60 Mustang (ages
9-10); $65 Bronco (ages 11-12); $75 Pony (ages
13-14) and $75 Colt (ages 15-16). Family
discounts are available.
A copy o f the player’s birth certificate Is
required for proof of age.
For more Information, call Seminole lon y
Baseball at 323-5570 and leave a message
Including phone number.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Silver Hawks asm letters
BETHLEHEM. Pa. — Erik Bird and Ken
Joseph. Lake Howell High School graduates
were two o f 53 players, from 13 states, awarded
letters for participation In varsity football durlt g
the 1990 season at Lehigh University.
Other riorldlans receiving letteis were Mike
Morlarlty from Orlando’s Lake H ig h la n d )! Igh
School and Horace Hamm from Ft. Lauderdale.

JUCO BASKETBALL
S C C drops from poll
Community College. Seminole will open play at 7 p.m. Wednesday.

BRADENTON — Th e Seminole Community
College men’s basketball team dropped out of
the Florida Junior College top 10 basketball pol
after dropping an 88-76 decision to undefeated
St. Petersburg Junior College this past 3atur-

□ See Classic. P t| * 3 B

S e m in o le
c ru is e s to
n in th w in

Kohn keys
H aw ks w in
over Cats

daThc Raiders arc still receiving votes after
being ranked 10th In last week’s poll. SCC
enters the Christmas break with a 9-6 record.
This week's poll, released by the Bradenton
Herald. Is as follows:
(First place votes and record arc In parentnescs)
(11-1)96
1. Pensacola J.C. (7)
(12-2)80
2. Central Florida C.C.
(12-2)71
3. Brevard C.C.
(12-0)69
4. Lake City C.C. (2)
(10-0)62
5. St. Petersburg J.C. ( 1)
(12-3)50
6. Daytona Beach C.C.
(8-4) 48
7. Polk C.C.
(10-3)41
8. Chlpola J.C.
9. South Florida C.C.
I*4
*9 ?) J1
5
10. Edison C.C.
H i m 10
Also receiving votes: Manatcfc C.C. (6-5).
Mlaml-Dade C.C.. South (5-5). S em in ole C.C.
(B-6). Palm Beach C.C. (8-7).

■ y M I L SMITH

DAYTONA BEACH - The Sem i­
note High School girls basketball
team u&gt;od an \8-polnt second
quarter to take a 31-17 halftime lead
and cruised to a 54-43 triumph over
Seabreeze High School Monday
night.
Sophomore Nlkl Washington and
senior Koscla Kennon scored 23 and
12 points, respectively, as the nrth-ranked Fighting Scmlnolcs re­
mained undefeated at 9-0 and will
now take 10 days off before return­
ing Dec. 27 to prepare for the rest of
the season.
..
.
W e've been raggedy lately, salt]
Seminole coach John McNamara.
"And It’s been m y fault because I
haven’ t had the girls m entally
ready. But we expect to come flying
out of the chute when we come back
In January.”
Seminole will return to the court
Tuesday. Jan. 8 to start a string of
three games In three days against
Lyman. Spruce Creek and Oviedo.
Washington had 14 rebounds and
six steals to go with her 23 points
while Kennon came up with a game
high seven assists.
□ B ee G irl*. PR|« 2®

Herald C o rre s p o n d e n t________________

W INTER PARK — Josh Kohn
scored 29 points and handed out
seven assists to lead the L a le
Howell Silver Hawks to a 97-65
annihilation o f the Winter Park
Wildcats Monday evening In boy s
basketball action at Winter Park
High School.
Thomas Demps added 17 points
und 13 rebounds and Joe Smith
scored 17 points to help the Silver
Hawks improve to 4-2.
William Brooks scored 22 points
and pulled down 15 rebounds for
the Wildcats who drop to 4-3.
Lake Howell came out blazing in
the first quarter as Kohn hit four
three-pointers and Smith hit two
three-pointers to stake the Sliver
Hawks to a 32-14 lead at the end o f
the first quarter.
"Everything was going our way In
the first quarter." said Lake Howell
Coach Steve Kohn. “ Scoring 32 first
!1S c« B o y s, P age 2B
___________

COLLEGE HOOPS
Miami wins first
MIAMI - Samarr Logan scored 11 a'ndght
Dints to key a 14-2 second-^lf run and hclped
Miami win Its first game of the season 72 bo
over Dartmoulhon Monday night.
For Miami (1-5) the win was also Its first under
coach Leonard Hamilton.
Logan scored a season-high 18 points to pa
Miami, while Dartmouth (1-4) guard Bill Taylor
surpassed his season’s best with 14 points.

lake how i l l w i
_
,„
Kohn 10 JO 4 1 It. Smith A lt 1 J IT. Otmpt 7 14
1 $ IJ. Thonvw A ll 00 I. Johnvm 14 M l
Thompson I * 1-J S. H4rdw«ll 1-4 » 0 4. DuK«n 11
j J 4. Evan* 27 0 J 4. Engol 0-2 I I I. MWdNton 0 1
0 0 0 . OavliOOO-IO. Tot»l»: 17I41A2JF7.
WINTER PARK (41)
,
.
B r o o k , 1014 2 2 22. Boutord S 11 2 1 12. Fev J 10
] 7 10. MtKonilo 1 11 24 I. RuWn 14 21 4.
Gronado I I 0 0 4. Bamon 1 J 00 1. CorMt, 0 4 I I
t, Jawtll 01 01 0. Jatkwn 01 00 0. Ferguvon 00
BJO. O'Brian 000 00. Tolat,: 14 4 ,12 1441.
Laka Hawaii
** 11 14
H
Mintar Park
t4 14 11 14 — 4$
Thraa point liald goal, - Laka Howall MO
(Kohn 112. Smith 11. Thoma, 02. Thompwn O il,
Wintar Park I I (Fo» 12. McKanila 04. Baiuon
P I , Corla,, O l). Totol Foul, — Laka Howall to.
Wintar Park II. Foulad Out — Nona. Tathnical
Foul, - Wlntar Park. For Babound, - Laka
Howall 41 (Damp, tl). Wlntar Park 40 I Brook,
IS). A ,,!*t, — Laka Howall 12 (Kohn II. Wlntar
Park 4 ICorlau 2). Racord, - Laka Howall 41.
wintor
Wlntar P*rk
Park 4
A j.
1.

F IT wins sixth straight
MELBOURNE Dwight Walton scored a
game-high 23 points and Astlcy Smith added 21
Monday as Florida Tech posted a 92-76 win over
St. Thomas Aquinas.
The victory allowed the Panthers 17-1) to
•itretch Its winning streak to six and Its
unbeaten streak at home to 13. Aquinas fell to
8-4.

FIU breaks losing skein
MIAMI — Brett Lewis tallied a career-high of
21 points to lead Florida International to an
85-82 victory over Samford on Monday night.
Florida International Improved to 2-5. alter
breaking a four-game losing streak, while the
Bulldogs fell to 0-7.

• v a s r !? » &lt; * ..m i.«— »• • • jon«, 0 00 0. NA*klrk 1 0 2 2. Brymt 0 00 0.
WMhlnflton II I 421. Moundor I I n . « * '
00 4. Fw k Ii 0 00 0. K.nnon $22 12 Totil, »
HOW

Niki Washington scored 23 points, grabbed 14/ ^ a ^ i s i m a a ^ o r d to
untilJanuary
January08DOIOre
beforeresuming
resumingy,a
play.
until
7-

* NUnn 1 00 2. Willis 7 00 15. Colll.r 1 I J &gt;•
Fan*n 0 12 2. Gorrlwn .121*. Nol.n 1001
Total, ! ', 4 m
I, .4 .1 12 — 44
tomin.1.
It I 12 II - 41
I n Wm i .
Thri* point li«ld go.'* - * * * " " ■V'SHkJ
Tout tool, - Sommoio tl. S*4br..«. »
out - S**brMlt. Noltn T#thnlc4l» - non.
B»cord« - Somlnol. 40. 10 $.mlnol. AthHtlc
Cont*r»ne4
.
--------

P enalty kick lifts Lake B ra n tle y past G re y h o u n d s
G IRLSSO C C E R

Rattlers lose

*

NEW ORLEANS — Sophomore Ervin Johnson
hud 24 points and 16 rebounds Monday to lead
New Orleans to a 76-41 victory against Florida
A&amp;M.
It was the sixth consecutive victory for the
Privateers (6-2) and the fifth loss In six games
for the Rattlers 12-5).

LONGWOOD — Jose Marrone nailed a penalty
kick with 0:45 left In the game as Lake Brantley
upset Lyman 3-2 In boys soccer action Monday

? !7 * !m ^ — SUN. NCAA. South Florida at Florida
{*17:30 p.m. - ESPN. NCAA. Kentucky at
Indiana. (L)
,
U7:30 p.m. — CV. NCAA. Asheville at UCF. |L)
C om plete lls tln i on P s f $■___________________

.1

.| K »A

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___________________________ l i n nthan
n n uanyone
n n n I ’ V t-I’ve
S e e seen.”
n .”
S J l U said
l Sandldgl
. ButBut
Sandldgc.

From s ta ff rop o d s________ ______________________

C o w » l l o 4 f r o m s i f t w H •*•!&gt;

3 rrr

SANFORD — The 1990 Central
Florida Classic, featuring six Semi­
nole County teams, gets underway
today with four games at Seminole
Community College.
This year's tournament will have
alO team field and all games will be
played at SCC’s Health and Physical
Education Center.
There will be four games starting
at 4 p.m. on Tuesday. Wednesday
and Thursday and three games
startlngnt 5 p.m. on Friday.
T o d a y's schedule has Lyman
taking on defending cham pion
Winter Garden West Orange at 4
p.m.. Lake Howell hosting Orlando
University High School at 5:30 p.m..
Lake Brantley facing Bishop Moore
at 7 p.m. and Oviedo closing out the
day’s action with Winter Park at
8:30 p.m.
_ ,
Seminole and Lake Mary will get
Into action Wednesday with Semi­
nole taking on the Lyman-West
Orange winner at 7 p.m. and the
Ran.s facing the Ovledo-Wlnter Park
winner at 8:30 p.m.
Th e W arriors o f coach John
Boston won last year’s tournament
by defeating Miami South Dade
High School 67-60 In the finals.
Leading the defending champions
hopes of repeating will be super
quick senior guard Quentin Smith.

one o f the top point guars In the
Central Florida area.
Seminole finished third In last
year’s event with an 80-73 triumph
over the Lake Mary Rams. The
Fighting Scmlnolcs. with an almost
entirely new cast, have gotten off to
a slow start this year, but coach
Greg Robinson feels his team Is
playing better o f late and as the
younger players get comfortable
they will start racking up some
wins.
Th e W iggins brothers, senior
Kerry and Junior J.J.. lead the way
for Seminole. Also In the Sanford
lineup are expected to be 6-2 Carlo
White. 6-6 Jeff Hall and 6-3 Shawn
Washington. Robert Redding and
Wesley O’Neal have been playing
very well off the bench.
For Lake Mary the guard landem
of seniors Mike Merthle and Jason
Hamelin have been carrying the
bulk of the scoring load. Merthle
was an all-toumamenl selection last
year and has been running the
Rams offense well at the point this
season. Hamelin Is a deadly outside
shooter who will kill you with the
3polnt shot If left open.
Lake Mary also has good size up
front In 6-6 shotblocker Jon Brown
and 6-3 v o lle y b a ll sta r M att
MacDonald. The other starter Is 6-2
John Roche who does a good Job on
the offensive boards. The first sub-

« fiV

until w e get better mental discipline we re going
to have problems."
The Patriots look a 1-0 lead Into halfllme when
Mike Johnston look a pass off a free kick from
Eric Ryan and kicked the ball into the net with
6:00 minutes left tn the period.
Lyman came back to tie the game with 6.00
gone in the second half when Richie Sleeves beat
three Brantley defenders to score from 15-yard

“ " T w a " ' u very b l« win (or u V «.M I W W
coach Jim Brody. " I t ’s the first time we ve beaten
them in two or three years. I know for two years
we did nothing but tic. It was a typical Lukt
° UThe Greyhounds then took the lead with 24:00
Brantlcy-Lyman gam e."
The win raised the Lake Brantley record o
left when Brian “Fooks netted the goal alter a
43-1 on the season while the Greyhounds feltthrow
to
In from John Bernard.
The Patriots tied the score four minutes latir
52-2. The Patriots arc off until ihc P itta llut
when Bob Hartman beat two Lyman defenders
Tournament next week but Lyman will be back
In action tonight as it travels to Daytona to taki
and nailed a shot off the far |H.st from 15 yards
out to set up Marrone’s heroics.
on Seabreeze starting at 7 p m.
" It ’s a shame my tram didn’t win after the way
Coach Brody had special praise for goalie Josh
we dominated the second half.” said Greyhound
Kaye, who turned away 11 Greyhound shots
coach Ray Sandldgc. "W e outshot them lb 4 l
defender Jeff [Xmgtlll and Hartman, who played
the second half but we keep making mental
a great all-around game.
.................
The Greyhounds outshot Lake Brantley 21-12
mistakes that cost us .”
T h e w in n in g k ic k c a m e a fte r L y m a n
and had three corner kicks to none lor the
mishandled a back pass and goallrmler Marcus
Patriots. Dewberry had four saves In goal tor
Dewberry was forced to foul Marrone.
Lyman.
"I still feel we have as much. If no! more, talent

1- f / J

Hornets blank Wolves
DELTONA — Amy Gcltz scored three first half
goals as Bishop Moore w h itew a sh ed the
homestanding Deltona Wolves 5 0 In girls soccer
action Monday night.
Maureen Kelleher and Stephanie Grlngcr
added the second half goals as the l ornr s
improved to 10-1-2 on the season. Stephanie
Fulmer had three assists while Karen Hutz and
Gcltz added one each.
Cort Valleau recorded her eighth shutout In
goal* for Bishop Moore. As a team the Hornets
have 10 shutouts this season.
For the game Bishop Moore outshot the Wolves
30-5 and had 15 corner kicks lo three for
Deltona.
The Wolves' goaltendcr did a good Job saving
15 s h o t s a s they fell lo 5 4 on the season.
I lie Hornets will be back In action Wednesday
when they travel to Lyman lo take on Melbourne
High School In the opening round ol the Burger
King Tournament.

�i

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Boys

S TA TS &amp; STANDINGS

Kohn scored nine straight
points and Smith added five
points in the quarter ta spur 4.
24*15 ran to finish the quartet
and give the Silver Hawks a
77-51 lead going Into the fourth,
quarter.
"Everybody played real well
for us tonight." said Kohn.
"W hen everybody plays that
well together, we hate a very
tough basketball team."
Lake Hovrell will play again
today In the opening round o&lt;
the Central Florida Classic
against the University High
School Cougsrs at Seminole
Community College starting st
5:30 p.m.

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NEW YORK - Baseball contract* with
everago anm».l valwa* ot U million or mar*.
Figure* were obtained from player and
managemaul tourer* and Include all guaran
trad incoma but not income from potential
Incentive bonutat:
Pltyer. Club
Year*
Aug. Salary
Jou Cantaco. Oak
1441 4$ IA 78.80
Darryl Strawberry. LA
1441 4S 14490,400
Don Mattingly. NY Y
IN I 4S 03.040400
Will Clark. SF
I44G41 S7.7M.08
Kevin Mllchtll. SF
1441*44 *7.7)0.08
• Dave WlnfiakL Cal
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1441
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181 42 AXSB.000
Bob Welch, Oak
181 44 S7.4M.08
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18141 IXJJUJ3
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14841 AXM0,000
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181 *4 1X290.000
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181 44 S7.7M.08
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14844 AX300400
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148 44 AX144447
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lft l 84 M. IJ0.4J7
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1488
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Rickey Hendtrton. Oak
1 4 8 8 AX000.000
Kirby Puckttt. Minn
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1 8 1 8 1X000400
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y inc ludat *0)0.000 buyout of tea] option
l include* SV1.177 buyout Ot I f f ! option
a me ludat U00.000buyout ot Iffa option

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Milwaukee
Detroit
Chicago
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Cleveland
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ox

(N L) - Signed rgtWvor Dev*
Smith *• d Pyoar canbad and Foul A*eonon o aneyoor centred.
1Kramer, pitcher.
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sophomore guard Colby Arrow,
another good outside shooter.
Lake Howell is showing signs
of becoming the county power
with the Influx of four players
from the football team. Thomas
Dcmps. Joe Smith and Ryan
Thomas have moved Into the
s t a rt in g lin e u p and Paul
Thompson gives the Silver
Hawks depth off the bench.
Demps Is a 6-3 rebounding
terror who can Jump with the
best of them. Smith Is a de­
fensive star who can also nail the
3-polnter while Thomas la a
heady player who can shoot and
also get the ball (o the open man.
The leader for Lake Howell
though la Junior guard Josh
Kohn. Kohn Is one of (he best
players In Seminole County with
his long range shooting ability,
his passing ability and his agility
on drive* to the basket. The

BASKETBALL
0 :8 p.m. - WB2SAM 11370). Calltg*.
South Floridaal FHrMaSNN
7 :8 p.m. - WUCF Am (8.4). Calltga.
UNC Athevlia al Cantral Florida
10 p m. - WWN2 AM (7WI. NBA. Orlando
Magic at SaattN Suparlanlct
MISCELLANEOUS
0 :8 p m. - WWNI AM (7WI. SporttTaik
0 :8 pm. - WBZS AM 11171). The Butin***
of Soorti
11:00 prn. - WBZPAm (1130), The Sport*
Final/Sport* Overnight

yTl RF&gt;
E xpress

LAR I LAND IN )
11 &gt;4 7. Smith 1OO t Davit I 001
11 3 * A. Martin 4 00 X McCoy I 0 } 1.
Flore* 3 3-4 i:. Catkin* 3 XW 7. Total*: 17
1I84X
BIS440F MOORE (M&gt;
Gordo 101 A Smith 0 01 A Horen •00 X
Kennedy 100X Crawford SOl) IX C o ilto i
If. MayN 0 3-1X Montoll I H 4, Toceo 100 X
Oer*ottlOO4.Tol*l»: 811-ION.
Labelled
4 11, It 14 - *4
SIWoo Moero
17 1114 14 - 8
Three point INN goal* — OMnop Moore 1
(Coll. To u t). Total NuN - Lakeland IX
■ llhop Moore IS. Fouled out — non*.
Technical* — none. Record* - Lakeland 3 1
Bllhap Moore Ol.

O R L A N D O — The Bishop
Moore Hornets rebounded from
their first loss of the season with
a 58-45 triumph over class 4A
Lakeland High School at the
Golden Dome Monday night.
The Hornets Jumped out to a
17-4 lead after the first period
but the Dreadnaughts fought
back to only trail by 10. 28-18,
at the half.
"The girls bounced back real
well after the loss to St. Cloud."

i — Signed euttl*ldar Kan Grlftry
Sr. N o aneyear contract.

(AN Those 1ST)

ORAMOEWOOO CMS ISTIAN (Ml
HufNrVOI-O IX FrommNg 4 M X GabN 1
S I A Dwyer I M A Hagen 4 A ll IX CoNmon
• M A T oN H: 80-17 40.
L A R I BRANTLEY (31)
UTwootNI33-04.Fonnoy 3 1-S7. F o r t t in
A LMh* 111X Wltan 100 A Sgoncar 1031.
ArliaOOXX Total*: 110- 1011.
OraogooNoO O r NtNa • it u 14 - m
Lobo SroMNr
II 4 1 )• - H
TMoo palm 3NM goal* - Lek* Brantley I
(Scbrooffel). Total tout* — Orangewood
CVtttUn IX Lake Brantley l» FouNd out Orangewood Ctirlitlon. Fromm log. Ltko
Brantley. Font. Technical* — non*. Rocord*
- Orangewood Chrlttlon 7-X Lake Brantley

H o m tts rebound

other starter is Junior guard
Malik Evans who is one o f (he
beat athletes around.
Lake Brantley may be the
most Improved team in the
county having finished second to!
Cocoa Beach In a tournament!
earlier this season and holding a;
72-70 win over Seminole.
Guard Trcvla Certo is scoring!
w ell for the Patriots having!
scored 31 points in the victory!
over Sanford. Another big threat;
for Lake Brantley is guard Craig;
Brock who was one o f (he!
leading scorers for the Patriots!
last season. His utatus may be;
questionable after suffering a'
concussion tn a fail against
Seminole last Friday.
Oviedo may have the youngest
team In the tournament, but also'
one o f (he most talented. Lead­
ing the way has been 6-8 Junior
Simon Harper, who is showing
signs of becoming one of the bes^
big men to play In (he county Iq
several years.

O U R COM M ITM ENT
TO Y O U ;

Jk) you t » wilting
to TRY US?

ro

Tarmataa* 37. V*. Common oolllh 71
Tn. Chattanooga 8 . Marcar 8
MIDWEST
Chodron St. 17. Regt* 71
Clnclnnat1If. SI. Frond*. Fa M
Mo. Kanow City III. Denver 33
Mount Union 4A Mar WIN W
N llllnaistl. IWhoSI.S)
North Fork I IA Fork* 8
Ohio 51 IW. Tannotate St. M
Ohio U. RX Young*town SI. 8
S Dakota St. 41 Viterbo**
S. Indiana IX Hanover m
Saginaw Vat. St. 13. Alma II
Wit Milweuha* ft. Tinraia* Tech 31
SOUTMWfST
Houtlon NX Centenary S3
iFAutllnal.SCl
! I ouNMwo IT
Teio* Eire****. Ark. LI11Ntack77
Toma* Son Antonio MS Nkkoilt SI 8
FAB W IST
Metro SI. 7*. E. Montano 7S
Minn MarrltCX Sonoma SI. 7A OT
Now M**ka 4X Norm Temo*0*
Uloti 4A Webor SI S7
EXHIBITION
Virginia t*. AlhteWt In Action 44

LcxMUy owned and
&lt;H»f9t9dtor8y— n .

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Alo Birmingham 74. GoorgM SI 4*
FNrtO* AAM tl. AuguNo 73
Furman 4X WkUNrop 71
Kermotow 4*. Mobil* tl
Lewi* 71. Kentucky St 8
New Or Non* *7. Alabama S3
NW Lamaion* 71. E CoroHno 47
Tn ClMitonoogo 7A MwfcfN Tam u
Venderbill 47. Moraholl M
MIDWEST
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APOPKA - A crushing 1-2-M
foil court rone press by Orange wood Christian held Lake
Brantley to only one point Us the
th ird quarter aa the Ram s
advanced to the finals of the
"Finest Four" Classic with a
48-31 victory over the Patriots.
The game w as tied at 20-20 at
halftime before the change of
defense took Lake Brantley right
out of the game.
Orangewood will now take on
the winner of tonight’s 8 p.m.
game between host Apopka and
Lake Highland at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday. The Patriots will play
the loser In the consolation game
at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Lts Hulford scored 13 points to
lead the Rams as she hit 6 of 12
shots from the floor. She also
grabbed 14 rebounds, handed
out four assists and came away
with four steals.
Also having good games for
Orangewood were Christa Hogan
(13 points. 4 of 6 from the floor.
8 rebounds, 8 steals. 4 assists)
and Kathrlne Pram m lng (8
points. 4 of 9 from the floor. 6
rebounds. 4 steals. 4 assists).
Christa Schroeffel led Lake
Brantley with nine points.
The Rams Improved to 7-3
with the wtn while the Patriots
Tell to 4-3.

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Nan York
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Nan Jartay
3 IS 311 lit*
Washington
Miami
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IX Lang loach It.
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13. Providence
7-1
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33. Oklahoma St.
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114 »
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18 —
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Other* receiving
No: Maryland M.
Kam a* IA MkhM
St. M. Sutter M.
Kentucky 14. DaF il It. CWirado II.
Southern Cal 8 . FI Ido S3. A Indiana X
Montana A Tawaia Tech A Vanda* It X
Nabraika 7. SI. JeaagtYi’• A Central Michigan
X Jama* M*di*en a Lamar X Southern*!
Mlsaourl SI. X Stephan F. AuaHn X Oaargla
Tech I. Nkhmand I.

I Denton 1 IK FN . IwNnattonot M
n.AaotoN— Onmari u iThama* 7). Fla. International 10 (Lewlt A
Gullbeau* 0). Fouled out — Donlon.
GUI Iboauo. SHeard Total NuN — Samlord
71. Flo. International SI. Technical* Samlord coach McLean.

said Bishop Moore coach Tom
Blert. "They played hard and*
when Lakeland closed to 10 at!
the half they responded by!
scoring the first 10 points of the;
second half."
The Hornets, ranked seventh'
In class 2A. improved to 8-1 with*
the win despite not having!
played a 2A opponent this year.!
They will now take off until the;
Bishop Moore Tournament Dec.'
27-29.
!
Kim Coil a n d Stephanie!
Crawford led the Bishop Moore;
scoring with 19 and 18 points.;
respectively. Also having good'
games were senior Traci Smith!
with 12 assists and 6-5 oopho!
more Amy Dorset! with to;
blocked shots. Dorsett has now;
swatted away 45 shots In seven *
games.
I
Pierce led the Dreadnaughts. |
2-5. with 13 points. Lakeland)
came Into the game having*
suffered three straight overtime
losses.

l l

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FLOaiBA AAM (41)
K. Davit PIS P I 71. William* OO M A
JacktanP4P0A lloN nPSPOA LawtanPl
P I A Dow A4A0v. Oadhoit P I P0A OonMt
P M M A McGoor P0P4 W. Total*: 17-0400
41.
N IW OSLIANS (70)
Dtcharry M M A Edward* P I &gt;4 X Ciorfca

7Zugosa-Rawlings

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MIAMI (71)
ScoH P7 M A Rondat I I 00 7. WylN 7-17
P 8 Ml Logon 7 U M Ml C nldaoN PSM A
Surtat I4 P S A SUNN 1-SPSX WWd l-S M
X Marian S O P S * Saw M M X Kahn A I M
A Total*: 17-4311-1071.
Marnimo - Miami 3X DorlmouNt 3A
I point that* — Dartmouth o (Taylor 4
Blackwell I). Miami 7 (Logon A Morton X
Blllelt 1). Rabound* - Dartmouth IS
laSufllven N), Miami 41 (WylN tl). AatNH
- Dartmouth It I Blockwail S), Miami 17
(Logon i). Footed out - Morton. Total Nut*
- Dartmouth 8 . Miami M. A - MW.

I . UNLVIW ) IM )
A A rta m w lt-l)
1 Syracuao (M )
A Artaata(M )
A UCLA (7-0)
A IndUne(PI)
7. PAN IN N (M )
A Norm Carolina (PI)
». Onto (P I)
8.0**rg*Nwn|it)
II. Loutliana I N N (p i)
II. Oklahoma IP I)
13. Georgia (PI)
1AII. John’* (M )
lACannocftcwf (P I)
M. PlthSurpl (7-1)
13. South Carolina (3 1)
1A Seutharn NlalaUppI (P I)
If. KaalTannaaaaaStaN (7-1)
3A Now Weak* StaN(PI)
3). NotroWl (PI)
a . Pr incofan (7-1)

Other* receiving
Georgia Tech.

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IT M IM n 74 M l i Cantey IS M A
Lomtord 14 M A Blackwell a m P I IX
TaN artPl M A T a y tw A W M Ml Frwtw I I
M A Oeyor IA S I i Opfty I ) M t CaoNIN
P I M A Ca n p S iR S fM A T W W t: W O PM

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•

they were held scoreless for the
first 4 0 0 of the quarter and Lake
noweu ran on 11 atnugnt pomti
to Increase the rnsraon to 43-14.
Brooks led the wildcats comeback attempt that bsw Winter
Paris cut the lead to 53-38 at

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Junior vsrtity at 8:15 p.m. with
varsity to follow.
Mainland at PaLand. Junior
varsity st 5:49 p.m. with varsity
to follow.

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Tussday, December 18, 1890 —

IN B R I E F
S tuo n c#9#brat#d it lunefwon

A light tor resasrah

Lake Mary Woman's Club will hoot Its annual Christmas
Covered Dish Luncheon at the Community Improvement
AaoodaUon building. Wednesday. December 19.
Oeneral meeting begins at 10 a.m. Food and clothing to two
needy flundtea wtO be donated at the meeting. A monetary
donation to Hacienda Olrla Ranch has been made.

Pal Jlmlson, (r), founding
director of tha Alzheimer**
Resource Center, Inc. praaenta
a 825 check to Elizabeth
Welebob, president of the Pilot
Club of Sanford. The donation
made In the name of
i’e husband, who suf­
fers from Alzheimer's. For her
contribution, Jlmlson pieced
the flret lights on the Magnolia
Mall Christmas tree. Proceeds
for the tele of lights will
benenflt Alzheimer's Diseass
and cancar research. Coat for
tha lights Is 82 or threa for 85.
For mors Information about
placing a light or. tha tree,
contact Florence Taylor at
322-6448 or Shirley Patterson
at 321-0818.

Call Suita and Mr*. Claus
Children of all ages can call Mr. and Mrs. Claua from Dec. 17
through Dec. 24. The Thank You Line will operate Dec. 28 and
27. Hours are 3 to 8 p.m. The Ho Ho Hotline Is sponsored by
HUlhaven Health Care. Call 324-4146.

Atfoptapangulfi
SeaWortd of Florida has provided the Volunteer Center of
Centra] Florida with several hundred penguins, the stuffed
varieties. In conjunction with the center's charter membership
drive.
Ranging In size from 6-Inch Sam and Susie to Wendall and
Wanda, standing 32 Inches high, the penguins can be adopted
for contributions of 825 to 8100. Each adoptee will be
presented to a leas fortunate child from the center's list of
participating agencies In Greater Orlando.
Those adopting a penguin before Dec. 24 will qualify as
charter members of the Friends of the Volunteer Center.
For more Information call Gall Pogorzelskl at 896-0945,

tfU Sfl

V FW will host party
The Winter Springs Veterans of Foreign W ars Post 5405 and
Its Ladles Auxiliary will be holding Its annual Children's
Christmas Party, December 23. from 1 to 3 p.m. at the post
home. 420 N. Edgemon Ave. All children are Invited to come
out and enjoy a visit from Santa Claus and entertainment with
a clown and a magician. Refreshments will be served and socks
distributed. Details 327-3151.

Toastmasters m n t
Seminole Community College (SCC) Toastmasters Club
*6581 will meet each Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. In the SCC library
building, room L-205. Meetings that fall on the second Tuesday
o f the month will be held at Village Inn. Dog Track Road and
17-92 In Longwood. Contact Claire at 699-R318 for more
Information

Panic Attack group to maot
Agoraphobla/Panlc Attack Support Group meets each
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at West Lake Hospital. 589 W. State Road
434, Longwood. The support group Is for those who are afraid
to go out o f their house and be active In public.

Ovaraatars to gather
A regular meeting o f Overeaters Anonym ous Is conducted on
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Florida Power and Light. 301 Myrtle
Ave.. Sanford. For more Information, call Carol at 322-0607.

T 0 P 8 chapters to meat about eating
Take Off Pounds Sensibly Chapter FL 79 will meet Tuesday
at 6:15 p.m. at Howell Place. 200 W. Airport Blvd.. Sanford.

Nar-Anon to offer help
Nor-Anon, a self-help group for relatives and friends o f
addicts, will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Orlando General
Hospital. For more Information, call 869-6364.

Qroup targets good health,
Deltona Health Education Club meets the third Tuesday o f
the month at the Center f r . Better Living. 2922 Howland Blvd.,
Suite 4. Deltona, at 7 p.m. Anyone Interested In health and
well-being Is Invited to attend.
This month's speaker Is Thomas Kupko. whose topic is
"Cancer and AIDS Prevention."
For Information, call (904) 532-9290.

Cancar support group moots
Support. Help, and Recovery, a self-help cancer support
group for cancer survivors will meet every Wednesday at 4:30
p.m. at 1621 W. First Street. Sanford.
For more Information, call 323-9374 or 322-7785.

00

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N o b o n e s a b o u t c h iro p ra c tic m e d ic in e
ft I am a student
at a chiropractic c o lle g e In
Portland. Ore. When I told a
friend that my microbiology Ins t r u c t o r has a P h . D . In
microbiology, a master's degree
in public heslth and has worked
In Malaysia as an expert In
tropica) diseases, m y friend said.
"W hy Is someone with such
outstanding credentials teaching
at that quack medical school you
go to!"
Abby. this brought home a
popular misconception many
people have about chiropractors.
We take many o f the same
courses that are taught In medi­
cal school — with less emphasis
on drugs and biochemistry, and
more emphasis on nutrition,
biom ech a n ics, th e n e rv o u s
system and radiology.
I'm learning to recognize dis­
ease and dysfunction, to treat
w h a t's a p p r o p r ia te fo r
chiropractic care and refer what
Is not. I must go to school for
four yean and pass the national
and state boards before I can
practice.
It bothere me to work this
hard, learn so much and de­
dicate my life to patient care,
and know that about half the
population thinks I'm an un­
trained quack with a one-year
degree! Please let people know

CLEARWATER Nick
P fe ifa u f. a C e n tr a l F lo rid a
newsman and m u sician for
many years. Is hospitalized after
collapsing on Saturday while
visiting family In Clearwater.
His wife. Elolse. conflicted
yesterday that Pfeifauf had suf­
fered a heart attack.
"H is cardiologist said It was
definitely a heart attack, but we
won’ t know for a week' how
much damage was done," she
said.
Pfeifauf was rushed to a Safety

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2.) NAVY SEALS
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(Problems? Writ* to Dsar Abby.
Per a personal, unpublished
reply, send a self-addressed,
stamped snvslops to Dear Abby.
P.O. Bos 88440 *
Calif. 90088. All
is confidential.)

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your husband have the right to
spend your Christmases In a
manner that, pleas— you. Otoe
your family and brother notice
Immediately, and don't be meek
or apologetic when you tell them
you've decided to stay home for
Christmas.
Once you make your declara­
tion clear, perhaps your sug­
gesting o f visiting the weekend
after Christmas will receive a
merrier reception.

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married for four years: we have
no children as yet. but w e both
have busy careers. Every year
since our marriage, m y husband
wants us to spend a peaceful
Christmas at home, but each
year so far. we have given In to
m y fam ily's wishes that w e
spend Christmas Day with them.
This Involves our driving 250
miles round trip, since m y fam i­
ly's Christmases are always held
at my brother's home because
he has young children.
Last year. I suggested that the
family get-together be held on
either the weekend .before, or
after. Christmas. My parents and
m y brother promptly vetoed m y
suggestion.
Trying to solve this problem
without making someone angry
makes my holidays miserable.
Can you offer some advice?
D READ dfO CHRISTM AS

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Harbor hospital where he was
stabilized.
He is currently a reporter with
the Sanford Herald. Prior to that,
he worked in broadcasting with
WESH, Channel 2. and In radio.
He has led a popular dance
band, Nick Pfeifauf and the
Slaughters, for over 40 years.
Pfeifauf is currently In Room
208. Critical Care. Mease Hospi­
tal. 3231 McMullen Booth Rd.
Saftety Harbor. FI. 34695.
"A fter 36 years o f marriage.
Just having him alive Is the best
Christmas present I could get."
Elolse said.

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O K AS C AR O LYN! I called Dr.
Charles F. Downing, president of
the American Chiropractic Asso­
ciation. who graciously alllowed
me to fax your letter to him. He
then faxed me the following
letter
D EAR A B S Y l Unfortunately.
Carolyn's experience is not un­
common. There are many people
who remain misinformed about
chiropractors and their legiti­
mate role tn the health-care
system.
World-wide studies by gov­
ernmental com m issions and
Independent researchers have
demonstrated the health and
cost benefits of chiropractic care.
Chiropractic colleges can attract
highly qualified science facility
like Carolyn's microbiology In-

Pfeifauf su ffe rs heart
attack, is h o sp ita lize d

U i TM pt

■

that we are competent, welltrained. and we care.

atructor because the faculty
know the facta and want to help
chiropractic students become
competent, scientifically-trained
doctors of chiropractic.
Recent scientific studies con­
tinue to validate the superiority
of chiropractic over traditional
medicine In the treatment of
certain conditions — most re­
cently. a study published tn the
July 1960 issue of the British
Medical Journal titled "L o w
Back Pain of Mechanical Orl." by Meade. Dyer, Browne,
vnsend and Frank.
The exams administered to
doctors of chiropractic are some
of the most stringent anywhere
aa they relate to human health
and biomechanics. To the degree
they focus on specific aspects of
health — the nervous system
and Its relationship to proper
functions of the body — they un­
known to be the most stringent
compared to other exam ina­
tions.
T o be Inform ed is to be
enlightened^ ThC'Arri'erlcah
Chiropractic Association en­
courages citizens of the world to
discover the truth behind the
effectiveness and affordability of
this health-care alternative as a
mainstream option. Please feel
free to write to the American
Chiropractic Association for
m o r e I n f o r m a t i o n : 1701
Clarendon Blvd.. Arlington. Vs.
22209. Pieaae enclose a selfaddressed. stamped envelope.
D BAR A R R Y i The holiday
season Is approaching and I am
faced with m y annual problem
about Christmas.
My husband I have been

-

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Sanford Verticals
750 Wylty Ave., Sanford

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G ia rd ia p a ra s ite
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muscle). The usual dose is 100
to 400 milligrams a day. in
divided doses. Side effects in­
clude fatigue. Ilghlheadedness.
depression, shortness of breath,
diarrhea, nausea, dry mouth,
slow pulse and rash

D BAR M L O O TT j Recently
you reported that Oerovltal H3. a
Romanian drug that prevents
old age. Is a scam. You are
wrong. Why don't you read the
enclosed piunphlet by Jerome
Godin of the Holistic Health
Happenings Association and get

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tried to cash the club acc. West
ruffed and played acc and a
diamond. That left poor declarer
with only eight tricks. You might
think declarer could succeed by
playing diamonds right away.
No. West would take the second
diamond and lead a spade. East
would win and play the king of
clubs, ruffing out declarer's ace.
and a subsequent club trick
w ould still set the contract.
Instead at trick two declarer
must simply play the nine of
clubs from his hand. Sure. East
w ill win the Jack, but what then?
W ith a heart back, declarer will
take the ace and ruff a heart, and
then play the club acc. West can
ruff, but dummy's 0 -1 ° will be
there to overruff. and South will
duly make his nine tricks.
(0 1 9 9 0 . NEWSPAPER
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A t the highest level of com ­
petition. the mark o f an expert is
the ability to search out the
unusual play that will ensure
success. More often than not.
even the expert w ill overlook
what In retrospect seem s so
obvious. That is what happened
to South playing today's doubled
contract. East-West's methods
were different from what we call
standard. East's opening twoclub bid showed long clubs as
well as moderate high- card
values. W est's tw o-heart re­
sponse was sim ply a natural
competing bid. not requiring
East to bid again. S o South was
not Inclined to sell out. and
bravely bid three diamonds.
That brought an Ill-conceived
double from West. South won
the queen of clubs and was
picturing an overtrtek when he

(0 1 9 0 0 N E W S P A P E R
TERPR1SE ASSN.

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for sending me the material on
Gerovital H3. a compound made
of procaine and benzole acid. I
have carefully read the Informa­
tion and have come to the
conclusion that Gerovital H3 is.
indeed, a scam — In fact, more of
a scam than I originally believed.
This stuff is supposed to reverse
the aging process and prevent
“ neuritis, neuralgia,
arteriosclerosis, Parkinson’s
disease, osteoporosis, enem a,
hair loss, psoriasis, angina and
asthma.” The only diseases this
Junk doesn't cure are cancer and
AIDS.
Do you honestly believe that a
substance having all these sup­
posed benefits wouldn’t be the
greatest invention since the
cookie? EVERY doctor would be
using It. It would be publicized
as a medical wonder. But It Isn’t,
is It?
the side effects of taking four
Lorelco tablets dally along with
three Loprrsaors?
D R A M R E A D E R t Lorelco
(probucoi) is a drug for lowering
serum cholesterol in patients
w &gt;k &gt; do not respond to diet,
weight reduction or control of
diabetes. The usual dose (for
adults only) Is two 250 milligram
tablets twice daily. Side effects of
Lorelco include: abnormalities In
the c a r d io g r a m , d i a r r h e a ,
bloating, indigestion, headache,
dizziness. Insomnia, anemia,
rash, Impotence and blurred
vision. These side effects do not
occur In all patients, however:
most people can take Lorelco
without complications.
Lopressor (metoprolol) is a
beta-blocking medicine used for
hypertension and angina (chest
pain due to cramping of heart

P E TE R
Q O T T .M .D

CHRISTMAS
STOCKING?

CLICK
CLICK

CLICK
CLICK

12-

i&amp;

By Bernice B «de Osol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Dec. 1 9 .1 9 9 0
You could be extrem ely fortu­
nate In (he year ahead in an
arrangement you'll have with an
Individual who Is rather daring
and progressive. He may help
you rejuvenate a discarded In­
terest.
SAQITTAR1UB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Financial trends continue to
look promising, provided you are
willing to produce In order to
receive a hefty remuneration.
Good work spells good pay.
Sagittarius, treat yourself to u
birthday gift. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead by m ailing $1.25 to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
P.O. Box 9142A Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Your leadership qualities
might be put to good use today
when you're called upon to help
sort out a situation another has
messed up. You can do It.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 29-Feb. 19)
You can best assist a person
about whom you'll be concerned

.4-'

overdue pertaining to something
on which you ve worked veryhard could be released at this
u m c . h k d y to come
.p u r..
lo; c u d o U c .„ ,m ,m n o «
TA U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Bold measures might be requlrcd now In order to advance
your present plans. You must
take the Initiative you nidf inS

I
no,
G K M IN I (May 2 1-June 20)
Before Involving yourself in a
Joint venture, lx- certain your
counterpart ran offer as much as
you can. If their is partly, the
endeavor has a good chance for
success.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)

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forccs ovcr whlch
hav* f
influence. What occurs shouS
be to your liking.
*
SC O R PIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22| A
person whose support you need
for a current Involvement can be
swayed to your way of thinking
today If you show film It serves
his practical Interests as well as
your own.

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Sanford HnM , Sanford, Florida — Tussday, December IS, 1W0 — M

IN T H I
MM

Army
_____ Reeerve
re S p ec. Traci
Williams has deployed to the
Middle East with American mili­
tary forces participating In
Operation Desert Shield.
Operation Desert Shield is the
largest deployment of U.S. mili­
tary forces since Vietnam. The
operation Is In response to Iraq’i
invasion of Kuwait and threat to
ti
Saudi Arabia.
••It Is the presence of dedicated
military people like W illiam s
that brings America’s principles
to life and gives them strength
and meaning." President George
Bush sold.
The soldier Is a traffic man­
agement coordinator with the
146th Transportation Detach­
ment In Orlando.
S h e Is th e d a u g h t e r o f
Vemlynne Williams o f 102 Loch
Arbor Court. Sanford.
The specialist ts a 1068 gradu­
ate of Lake Mary High School.

.

America’s principles to
life and gives them strength and
m ean in g," President George
He Is the son of James E. and
June E. Aaklns of 1407 Park
Drive. Casselberry.
The specialist Is a combat
engineer st Port Hoad. Texas.

PwL 1st Ctatt CoMim
Pvt. 1st Class Herert E. Collins
has deployed to the Middle East
with American military forces
participating In Operation Desert
Shield.
Operation Desert Shield Is the
largest deployment of U.S. mili­

Sgt. Qoofpo Bigwlow

tary forces since Vietnam. The
operation Is In response to Iraq's
Invasion o f Kuwait and threat to
Saudi Arabia.
•'ll Is the presence o f dedicated
military people like Collins that
brings Am erica's principles to
life and gives them strength and
m ea n in g ." Presiden t G eorge
Bush said.
He is the son o f John and
Jacqueline Robinson o f 119
Salem C ou rt. A lta m o n te
SrpingsThe soldier is an Infrantryman
at Fort Campbell. Ky.
Collins Is a 1989 graduate of
Lyman High School, Longwood.

Clean sweep
Ernie Cavsliero, Labs Mary
Rotary Club member, takes a
break from clsanlng up trash
along Rinehart Road, Rotary’a
Adopt-A Rosd protect for 1901. ’

W re

George M. Bigelow has been
appointed a sergeant In the U.S.
Air Force.
The new non-commissioned
officer completed training In
management, leadership ,
human relations, and NCO re­
sp o n s ib ilitie s, b e fo r e b e in g
awarded this status.
B i e g e l o w Is a s e c u r i t y
specialist at Scmbaeh Air Base.
Germany.
He Is the son o f George P.
Bigelow of 1170 Second Place.
Longwood.
The sergeant Is a 1968 gradu­
ate o f Lake Mary High School.

m&amp;kj*

Sfll. Wayno Aroabrfght
Sgt. Wayne R. Argabrtght has
graduated from a n o n c o m ­
m issioned o ffic e r lead ersh ip
school.
Th e sergeant studied tech­
niques of leadership, manage­
ment. and supervision.
He is a tactical aircraft main­
tenance specialist at Shaw A ir
Force Base. S.C.
Argabrtght is the son o f Less
and Fran Argabrtght o f Cassel­
berry.

Solid U KT. G
Mem Fashion
YOURCHC

Spec. Janus Atkina

I
‘

Spec. James E. Asklns has
deployed to the Middle East with
American m ilita ry .forces
participating In Operation Desert
Shield.
Operation Desert Shield Is the
largest deployment o f U.S. m ili­
tary forces since Vietnam. Th e
operation Is In response to Iraq's
Invasion of Kuwait and threat to
Saudi Arabia.
“ It is the presence o f dedicated
military people like Asklns that

NEW ARRIVALS

CARAT
WEIGHT
1 Carat
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Flo rid a H o s p ita l
A lta m o n ts S p r in g s
November 27 — Aidelis Rosa
Llssabet. A ltam onte Springs,
baby girl.
November 28 —&gt; Alicia and
Leonard Rivera. Sanford, baby
girl; Nicole and Ronald Walls,
Deltona, baby boy: Alison and
William Plaaa. Casselberry, baby
boy.
November 30 — Anne and
Aubrey Taylor. Longwood, baby
boy.
Decem ber 1 — Jean and
Charles Jones. Deltona, baby
boy: T a m ara and J o s e p h
Holland. Lake Mary, baby girl.
December 3 — Donna and
Michael Scorrano. Winter Park,
baby girl: Bonnie and Michael
Hoffman. Altam onte Springs,
baby girl: Joni and Jorge Men­
doza. Winter Park, baby boy.
December 5 — Victoria and
Michael Gray. Casselberry, baby
girl.

*

November 27 — Stephanie
St ar l ing and Bill F e l t o v i c .
Geneva, baby girl.
November 29 — Mary Carllm
and Darrell' R. Cantrell. Lake
Mary, baby girl.
November 30 — Roxane &amp;
Randy Eastabrooks. Sanford,
baby girl/
December 1 — Jodi A. Putnik.
Sanford, baby boy: Jacky M. and
Kevin R. Palmer. Sanford, baby
girl: Kathy S. and Gary Edward
Vogel. Altamonte Springs, baby
boy.
December 2 — Farzana and
Farooq Khan. Deltona, baby girl.
December 3 — Nancy and Eric
J. Welshapl. Sanford, baby boy.
December 4 — Evelyn and
Anlbal Arraya. Deltona, baby
l*ov.
December 5 — Jeanette and
Elbert D. Maxwell III. Sanford,
baby girl: Debra L. and Wesley
N. Steer. Sanford, baby boy:
Denlce L. Hlllcry and LeRoy
Young. Sanford, baby girl.

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SEM IN O LE C EN TR E • S A N FO R D • 321-3140

• Bawd on appiovad (radii. aOV diva pijraiai, aalalaaua pajaual 119

�-5

&gt;

DM — Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida — Tuaaday, Oacambar 10. 1WU

opening at 1.023 screens. The movie,
which has gotten positive reviews,
drew strongly In a limited opening
during the previous weekend.
Am erican Indian ep ic "D ances
With W olves'' kept up a galloping
pace, collecting 94.5 million at 1.196
screens over the weekend and stay­
ing In fourth place In Ita fourth week
In wide release for Orion. The threehour film, expected to garner several
Oscar nom inations, h a s grossed
938.4 million In Its 38 days o f release.
"M isery." which had been In sec­
ond for tw o weeks, had a lot less
company with a 94 million weekend
at 1,302 screens and cam e in fifth.
The film, starring James Caan as a
writer terrorized by a deranged fan.
has taken In 926.1 million In 17 days.
Orton’s "Merm aids" paddled into
sixth place with an adequate 93.514
million opening weekend at 920
screens. Th e 1960s drama about two
girls and their eccentric mother,
played by Cher, has received mixed
reviews.
Warner Bros.' second weekend or
cop-drama "T h e Rookie." starring
Clint Eastwood and Charlie Sheen,
fell from third to seventh with a 93.
512 million weekend at 1,862 screens
fora 10-day grossof910.9m llllon.
"Three Men and a Little Lady."
Disney’s sequel to Its hit "Th ree Men
and a Baby." came In eighth as It
pulled In 92.7 m illion at 1.286
screens for a 24-day gross of 939.8
million.
Despite the presence o f Robert
Bedford, Universal’s opening o f
"Havana" came In ninth, grossing
Just 92.2 million at 824 screens. The
romance, set In 1958 on the brink o f
Castro's revolution, also stars Swed­
ish actress Lena Olln.

United Press I n f maftonal____________
HOLLYWOOD "H om e Atone"
stayed comtortabty at the top o f the
nation's b o * office fo r the fifth
consecutive weekend, nearing 9100
million In ticket sales since Ita
release.
"Home A lon e." starring Macaulay
Culkin as an 8-year-old boy aeddentally left home while his fam ily leaves
for vacation, grossed • ! 1.8 million at
2.017 screens over the weekend.
With a gross o f 990.3 million In Its
first 31 days for Twentieth Century
Fox. the film should cross the
9100-mlllion benchmark within a
day or two.
The comedy Joined Just half a
dozen other m ovies In the past
decade that have grossed more than
910 million per weekend at the
b ox-office d u r i ng fiv e sep a ra te
weekends: "E .T ..” "Return o f the
Jedl."
"G hostbusters." "B everly
Hills Cop." "B atm an " and " L ook
Who's Talking."
"Home A lon e" will face competi­
tion this weekend from the debuts of
Universal's "Kindergarten C op" and
W arner B r o s .' “ B o n fire o f th e
Vanities.” w h ile P a r a m o u n t ’ s
much-awaited "T h e Godfather Part
III" will open Christmas Day.
Columbia's sequel "L ook Who's
Talking T o o " chatted up a solid 98.1
million debut weekend at 1,576
screens. The fam ily comedy features
the voices o f Bruce W illis as Mlkey
and Roseanne Barr as his new sister.
Fox’s "Edw ard Scissor hands," an
offbeat fa n tasy starrin g Johnny
Depp, cut Its w ay Into third place
with an Im pressive 96.3 m illion

C ritic doesn’t land job

HR

hospital used the Information on
the note to contact Jacobs, but
not for a Job interview.
When Jacobs returned to the
hospital at 8:45 p-m. Saturday,
police arrested him. Wolfgang
said.
Jacobs w as charged with
fourth-degree criminal mischief
and third- degree criminal tres­
pass, both misdemeanors.

ALBANY, N.Y. — A man who
police said broke Into the Albany
Medical Center morgue during
the weekend found he's not cut
out for medical pathology.
Maurice Jacobs. 34. appar­
ently didn't like way the dead
w ere being sewn up at the
morgue and, after breaking In to
take a look for himself, left a
note saying he could do better,
police and hospital officials said.
Police say Jacobs kicked out a
vent In the morgue door around
3 p m . Saturday and remained
in the m orgue for some time
without permission.

At his arraignment Sunday, an
embarrassed Jacobs asked City
Court Judge E. Davis Duncan
not to read the charges. After
reading them. Duncan told
Jacobs he could see why he
wouldn't want them read in
public.

While there he Inspected sev­
eral sewn-up cadavers and was
unimpressed with the autopsy
stitching, said Police Lt. Robert
Wolfgang.

Jacobs finally told the Judge It
was curiosity that led to the
break- in. after first saying he
was lost in the hospital and
wound up In the morgue.

That's when he taped a note to
the wall, criticizing the work of
t h o s e w h o p e r f o r m e d the
autopsies.

Jacobs was released on his
own recognizance and Is due to
reappear in court Dec. 31.
H osp ital officials say the
chances o f Jacobs getting a Job
are slim.

Jacobs signed the note, gave
his a d dr e s s and t e l ep ho n e
number and ended the note
with. " I'm open for a Job."
Wolfgang said.
After the break-ln was discov­
ered. security officials at the

CLASSIFIED ADS

Saminol*

Orlando *Winter Park

3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 _________________ 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

■y JAMCT BA99
United Press International_________________________
W ASHINGTON - Health Secretary Louis Sul­
livan proposed Monday to Improve the U.S. infant
mortality rate, one o f the werst In the Industri­
alized world, by requiring states to link Medicaid
programs with a food program for poor women.
The 1988 U.S. Infant mortality rate was 10
deaths per 1.000 live births — the lowest ever on
record, but worse than 20 other Industrialized
nations. Japan leads the world with a rate o f 4.8
deaths per 1.000 live births, according to the
National Commission to Prevent Infant Mortality.
Under a proposed rule, states would be required
to provide written Information on the Special
Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants
and Children to Medlcald-ellgiblle women who arc
pregnant, who are breastfeeding within the first
year after giving birth or who gave birth within
the past six months.
The rule "w ill be an Important clement of our
program to reduce Infant mortality rates and
childhood health problems caused by nutritional
deficiencies In low-income families.” Sullivan
said.

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R

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J MW

W C F F M V .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Al each forward step we lake,
we leave some phantom ol ourselves behind " — John
Lancaster Spalding

Personal Representative
Eugene P. Phelps
Ml Taylor Road
Port Orange. Florida HI]/
tel toe W aji)
Attorney tor Personal

Representative
none

Publish Oecember H, ll two
DEAN

wowt Slatting gll area*I

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E M toian d f:M F M

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All amen
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totodrad. M U T gJ M ttw *
LAME MART • I r

ADJUSTMENT! AND CRBDITfi In 9 * m o t of
arras- In an at, too Sawtori Mart W wtlt Sr m pu N i l i I
f t » first iessdrttM RRfy bh9 Bohr to tot tRtoaf al tot a
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MOVEDTOTOMLOT

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For salt. I bdrm. f
l i v i n g roa m, kltchan
turnlshad. SIMM Moved and
foundation! US OTIS

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49—M fsctH antout
CHRISTMAS TRUS FORM U
Cut year eerw, til each
m -stM

Legal Notice
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS KAMI
Notice I* hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 415
Sourish Rd.. Winter Springs. FL
n r a , Seminole County, Florida,
under tho Ftctltleua Name of
K E N N E TH ANDERSON
CONTRACTING, and Met I In­
tend to register said name with
the Clark at the Circuit Court.
Seminole County, Florida. In
accordance with the Provisions
of the Fktltlou* Name Statute*.
ToWIt: Section 4450* Florida
Statute* I*57.
Kenneth Anderson
Prtllth: November 77 a De­
cember 4, 11. II. tteo
DEZ 717

tot Magnalla toy., laniard.
Dally, ably, mantoty rentals
t u t u a i t ...MiiwtnrMPM

benefit*. Will trdn. Hsatod
Park AvI Lg. rm.. tplc..
parchl Mlwk.utllad...

MW ATI _

Part lima Hiding la toll time
Start tr.M par haw. Apply In
■man, 174 Cammere* Wav.

______

tabM. share hH. STS par a*.
pfua VyutllHMa. t » IMS Eva*.

a MACHINE MECHANIC a
*7 50 hr I Put your knawkdg*
M work I Duty (top ho* Ml* of

NEW. I
ME OfCAL

IW.MH1M

l

faWEdTfii TtoKi

★ WAR’S * #

____

27CMM C art

ttlSTORIC RARLES NOTELI

C
--~A SPICB
w
^- -ece._|
*
toEntorTT^wI

■MAIM*

i l l

“-r^ -T T T T rrCL9AN ROOMS, kltchan 4
laundry MeilltMa. Cabto TV.
SfarttnaatSTthrt.---- MMM1

Sd^tTre 'p a r T i S ^ p l u *

aDOBERM AN

mg

atr. kttchan prhrlMdrt. S7*hrt—M M tto
A IR P O R T R L V D . A r e a FuntoRad R a m in p
ham etsst/w k.W tolt..
JMW.NR.1furn.RnH-.prtv. to
w/toawar. mkra/rafng. IMS

T Y P ttT ta a w k ty .it ham*. Mr
Into tend BASE. Tragic*!
Type. Rea 1*1 OH Tavamto.

j la loach a*ot III
If you oeelltr. Draw Mr sue

IS—S—ctol Ntttcts

aRl

• TELEMARRETRRe
SIM «k piu* eammisstonl
P e rfe c t spat Mr paapla
person I Learn computer I
Fentattk tonefltsl
__
AAA EMPLOYMEMT
1ilW.MR5M.MMm
a TRACTOR TRAILER#
a DRIVER#
SJ7I akl Nana at nlgMI Put
vewmtt an flie raet M • eraef
future l DynamtM cam
and great tanpfltsl H um
AMRMPLOTMQttT
FM W .M toM .M M W

P«rt/FuR Nmo. O N MMPtS
aPIDVRR CLERK#
It aft oto* « o horet Yaur hair
toe
gU^9W9|b|a
^CeewM^Ctof!

a DAILY WORK..DAILY PAT a
Coll 9oQ........JM7M5 afto Mm

Round trip to LAX, logvo
il/ll. Return t/1/Tl. leg*.
Round trig to Chicago OH are.
dap. 11/10return B/fy, S*J«

M r

AAA EMPLOYMENT

mm.m

eOENERALOFFtCRRALe
E M srtl Ftn |abl AaHat btaft
area* l PMnfy of variety to
heap ye* happy I Hiring now I
AAA EMPLOYMENT
5toW.MtoM.MM1M

MAOSIMS
Neon The Dey Rpfpre FuMkotlen
Sunday - tt A M. Saturday
Moodoy • 11:30 A.M. Sehtrdoy

TOYS* NOVELTY
l l P M P n t . Income

Nln|a Turtles. Batman, Disney
Slmpean*. Muppit* 4 more
O No rant or overhead
a Naparsanal sailing
o Accounts Provided I
o Immediate Incomat
O Investment SISJtoSMAM
MaprtodtagtcoNaow!
t e e a m a iq * * » . » «

A I- M t w t y t t L t w M

5

* * * *Miro UM n* * * *

S
S

SECURITY NATIONAL
IM P 77300*

I
f
S

ACTION LOAMS
al credit 11 u w to
_______ C 4 « L ^ W J * M W
EQUITY Lm m . Purchases.
ReRaaatMt 1st. Snd A Jrd
Mtgil Gaed/bed credit! Faat
approval*! ta o rtla a Mtg.
Carp....Lk. MM-Breton
M M M l/ H toN M N I

The nursing challanga of Ihe
TOs l* in long form core) It
you ore Making M get more
Involved and make a dif­
ference. you con |aln our
nursing team af:
• OraeftonefltsaFMii.hr*
• Tuition rolmbursomant

WCoring atm**gton
CmII t w f l i f m lutef

322-H4S___

X O t / fi

Avo.,
o METAL FABRICATOR*
SEN hr I HandM on
blueprints! Dsalwies shear*.
AAA EMPLOYMENT
M tW .lSNlM .M M lW

★ w POSTALJONS* *
Sll.*#To*l*.M/hr
No axp. nocoMoryt For eiom
AWPikatlon Into, call
( I l f ) (7*1157 a t. 707
0amlo*0m...7day*

KM ESTATtAUNTS

Tda gay yaur tulllan.
aaa

F/TI I

(toss. CaR Matty Mato H7-5**7

ASSISTANT PLANT MAIAfill

Must have chauffeur license 5
day wort include* Saturday.
E salient benefits. Apply
Urtee. *17 SsttaedAu
a AVON a NOW MIRINW
CHRISTMAS SELUNQHOWI

m oniori

Earo kMooyl StottowuoMpo* ol

Mi

tniM-c

Cereu*Olrl*tt.TXPgo7-tai
BRANCH DEALER NIHINQ •
Sttpar hour, wo train I
Noeaprr tores naaPsd.
Dealer position available

B IN Q O

KNIGHTS
OF

OT CASSC1KRRV

c M

Q

o t id a u ,

if t b

Weafter;

aTha Finest Training- In The
"Offlca" And The "FMId"
• Op p a lunlHts In RaUdsnllal
And Commercial Real
Ester*
# Tremendous Commission
And Award Flan*
aaa
Wad., Dec. lflh.7:OOFM
Limited Seating I
MSI Part Dr . Sento d
Contact : Al CTiiodl
Cawtory 11/CMadl Raatty

Far Lata Mary- Esparianca
or will 'rain. Full 4 Fart time.
METRO SECVR tTV
tot-Pto

tM

A

12— OHI C e r t lflc ift !
MOLLY RUUD • RMa « • gHI of
Ran M yamatt ar afto gar
aNtsactWcato. CaR 7*7m7
O S I A R Y E s te rm lM tla g :
Xnaa SMI CartHtcatost IIP aft
I New cmtowers only MM-MM
HOLIDAY CATERINOI Give
yaur tired wlM a braabl GIN
CertitkeM* avail. MMM1
HOLIDAY Fortran CarhfkaMs!
A lasting gl HI FrotoiekirwIS
Esp. Call Scan
StMtld
K U R A 41FT CERTIFICATES
Freddie's Diva Canto
rin sern tu i
Air

U

X

A

SCOYTISN Tar*Mr ton*. AKC.
Champ. Elaadlln**, shall,
warmed. 1 Mft. H 5 I4 H M .
X M A I P U P P IE S !) Carman
lhaphard. 1 male, a tonal*
AKC-iPdlCPttrtllMM an

14— C ra ft! 9itd
ColiOCtiMo!
BJ'S RESALE-COLLECTIBLES
open every Sunday hi Xmas
Mr Inside-Outside s#Mtl 55*1
t. laniard Ave. m-7es*
BLBOANT IMPOOTSI GIN*
and Hama Decor 1 Personal
Had shopping help. 4444114
HOUSEWIFE CRAFTS, Hallday
gift* GALOREII CaR Jewel
•wdDeww#------------ JtS-a*tl

Santo's Nrtparti Ry hr. *r day.
Maw the kids here! HRS 7S47.
n e ts . Part A v p . » - 7 a

17— tp o r tiw o o r

1 4 - F lorist!

FL SPORT WEARi 171514* Jag
•at*, sweats, night shirts and
socks t Downtown Santod.
MERRY CNRISTMAtll

DRIFTWOOD FLORIST! Men­
tion this ad and g** t*% ONI
Wire *vc. t s c I M to* R H

U -P e t*

1 9 - Luxury H orn!

LA4RADOR PUPS - AKC. l i l t
each. Will held to Christmas.
Cal lo tto 5PM. TTM43I
ROTTWEILER AKC PUPSI
Champ. Una*, querenteed
healthy and hagpyl 1235. •
wks. 11/11 ***-577-5*41
ROTTWEILER FUPSI AKC.
tic . temper/confirm. Paranfs
1 an pram ltat. A ll Shalel
5SBP-15B. 777*75*

OET HER MINK FOR XMAS)
White mink lackat w/inaw Mp
trim. S in mad. Appraisal
SLOW. Sal* 53.000....... W M
•WIRELESS REMOTE «X «
TRUCK wllh 71 Ntcad totMry. 1 hour charge and sMw
charger Ail other tottotos
Includod. Also hat read goer
lor high speed. Mado by
Soars. Coma* with custom
carrying case. tlto. 5740*41

The

Sanford Herald
SERVICE
I -L

IT M O T ? PJE.

S

«

1 3 - Holiday
Child C a rt

7 1 -H tIp W iw to i~

_______HIM tom i_______

\h. iM

\

if

, /,-

3 Lines
I \I ! I I &gt;I ‘ \ )

IN RE: ESTATE OF
Howard E. Phelps

It. mo

91—ApMtWMWtS/

NOAt tw r — f E MOd* *00

Corn &lt;

IM THICiaCUIT COURT
FOR S IM lN O it COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROSATI DIVISION
File Number tgtoPcp
Deceased
NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C L A IM S O R D E M A N D S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
ESTATE:
Thu administration of the
ottoM el Howard E. Phelps,
d ecu assd . F ile N u m b er
saSSf-cp, Is ponding In I ho
Circuit Court for Somlnole
County. F lo r id a . Prob ate
Division, tho address ol which It
101 N. Pork Avenue. Senlord.
F lorid a . T ho nem os and
addresses ot the personal repre
senti live end Ihe personal rep­
resentative's attorney are tel
forth below.
ALL INTERESTED P E R ­
SONS ARE NOTIFIEDTHAT:
All creditors ol the decedent
end ether persons having claims
or demands against decedent's
estate on whom a copy ol this
notke Is served within three
months after the date of the llrst
publication of this notice mutt
file their claims with this Court
W ITHIN THE LATE R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICF OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY » * THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All othor creditors of the
decedent end persons having
claims or demands against the
estate of tho decedent mutt tile
their claims with this court
WITHIN THREE MONTHS
AFTER THE OATE OF THE
FIRST PU B LIC ATIO N OF
THIS NOTICE
ALL C LA IM S AND OE
MANOS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARREO
The date ol the first publica
•Ion ol this Notlco It December

mm.mm&gt;w.MMm
*C H an *L m *M rs*

tM L M I*
Trattwa pasman all the way I
Don't pass to RM sggartuW
tytCah aaa. Mart rtgwawayl

Part andttth St. Has cstlar.

care af

AIDC/CNA • Wilt I
Ml

’

P M E te B M HRMfeUtt

KIWJUHS CLUB

Legal Notice

^ ^ • T s s n m Into **!»’ * '
**f AA&gt; BM A o Y M « NT

CLASSIFIED DEPT. PRIVATE PARTY RATES
HOURS
9 M *ta

" I d o n ’ t sec any Job o p ­
portunities for that man at this
time." said hospital spokesman
Elmer Streeter.

Sullivan: Link Medicaid
with W IC food program

S M oAl Growing campwry

i

■y DAV I MoHARY

n -H »9 i

e CNRIWCA1 SALESREPe"

r

‘H om e Alone’ lonely at top
for fifth consecutive week

I I I • III, ,1

*' '

II

COLUMBUS

THE GREAT AMERICAN
INVESTMENT

JACKPO T
$230
BMH
92S9
■MX
92S9
A il 6 A M !
9 SO
■NNMUM OP 9 U K !
ISO A U W
n u n .9 iiM .7 M L
ZSMOAMAVUUI

Jobs! Jobs!
We have immediate
openings!
•Painters
• Book Binders
•Construction
•Warehouse
•Production
Employees with transportation
needed Immediately

Apply
1018 S. French Avt., Sanford
5 A M. SHARP

LA B O R W O RLD U.S.A. INC.

i 7 7 . l l .....

H P H it tlW K I^ M

�1
*
1

Sanloni rshrtlG, Sin ford, Florida — Tuesday, Ddcombdr 18, 1990 — TD

IIS—Duplex*
TrffAex / Rent

99—Aprlmtfrts
ROOM, prtv»*» bam. house prlv
Itegas- Cable. t w * « plus &gt;j
Mtiiww. m tow, b w m u
[ ROOM m private I
privitofosl Mica Santord eree
Ml-Oita or tea-771-Wtl
SANFORD • Largo ream. con
vanlont, q u ls t location.
aw
SANFORD • Eeiy accau all
prteH , S7S/wk.

■■

UlfflPrriaM W wi t nVT
LK. JIN N IR APT 1 I I bdrm
o g la . w ith C/ h /A from
134*/me. Inctudaa water a
gaa. CaRRrabar— .....aasgm
MARINER'S VK. LAG!
Lake Ada I bdrm....... SMI mo
lbdrm...SMSmoAim.JMRMg

OORCHf STFHAPI a
Lab* Mary m a m
Cell between 11AM SPM

|

reduced rani ter houteherp
mat Fawiila praterradgl-MTT
S LIR FIN O ROOM. US par
Ml Br lard Ilf SI. San
JSL

97—Apartmantt
Ftfrahhod/Kirt
SANFORD • I bdrm, complate
privacy. ctoM la downtown!
fFS par waak plut MM Mcwrlty
inttudo* utiMttos. CaR » nes
ATTRACT IVR I ROOM A FT I
Quid, Mi ll, parkin* IIIOArk.
todjMte utilllto*. Canm o g
FURNISHED April NIc* A
ctean, utilities Inti., walk la
daanlwaninMiii/teavawHR.
SANFORD I bdrm. Efflctency
wltti private both. M wink
plwl I M security Mcludat
uttllttost CaM_______ . » n n
O N I R ID R O O M , a lllllla *
f EffTerGaMW* C
-a—
U R^M
aFin■^pH
■In^^
n
T
.Yv9q-F 16
araa. Call alter MM. I H H U
balora JPM call m i l l *

1229 HOVEIRSTCCIAI.

111-H m m
Fumtalwd/RrrT

TIR E D OF T E N A irr
a d t e f CaR e ra
^tS^T D
AidJlK
fe}peA
bl-.l tMglaw

SANFORD! Fara./Uatera. I M
A up plus dap and rtf'i. No
eats. MSMtaW Mate**
SANFORD large I bdrm, pool,
laundry, C/M/A, U»Vmo or
SliS/wk. N ed teo d ltp a w i
SANFORD ■Hug* &gt; bdrm.. cIo m
la dow ntow n. Camplato
privacy I tlOO p*r waak plus
I M aacurlty. Can m-wa*
SANFORD ■ I bdrm.. eictltonl
lacallon, complate privacy I
Ml F*r waofc plu* CM security
can.................— .— m n w
1 BORM. AFT • Partially turn..
All iHItltloa pd. tltt/wfc plus
Mc.dMoall.CanRHM

O I L A N D • G o lt v lo w
townhouaol 1 brim. Sri ba.
g o r y , clean, m i — kSf-MW
ORANGE
S i CITY, Naar 14. 3/1.
Fully Equip., woth/dry. Eaoc.
homal im . teSTOteM

99—Apartmtnti

SALEOff LEASE!

U n fu m W io d / R tir f
ATTRACT IVR I BORM AFTI
Porch, oH at. parking. Rtarty

lomovo Intel 4tao/wk. 111-4447

I A J ROOM IHtalaacy Apia.

1B3—Houses
Ursfumishod/ R»nt

RIRTBIS, KMTIU

Horn** In all aim . atartlng
from SM par month,M O*
Itone No la* to tented I
Global Naolty IMAMS
Santord. S/t. NIc* yard. CHA.
l i t Rotalla Or. U l l pr.
mo./ULfBB
TTTT_________
S A N F O R D • T i d * . 1*11.
Itata option, rant 11 Bdrm. 1ri
bath Clean, USO mo....IM-Silt

Fumiahad or not. a/c. from

IHO/mo uoo *et. Call M i-m i

CUTII O N I Btdraom apt..with
FI rm„ carpal and drapaa.
downtown Santord. UM plu*

1 bdrm 1 bath, new Interior
paint I .............IAN par monm

aac.Nocata. ISOI Ml_________
SANFORD - I l f Park Av. I
Bedroom Wkly or monthly +
drp. Vary Roe* 3111147 otter «

1kUu
Aprimut*
H it Lake Mary Rlvd Santerd
WHIR I YOU W IL L ................
O S I I i AP-A-C-I-O-U-S
H R lb A T H APTS. AND
a HEARi HOW YOU CAN
M O V !IN

FOtONLY$375! THEN
• SPEAK: OUICXLV TO
R IS IN V IO N IF O N Y O U
OUR INO THIS
IlnBiltoiibto rd l I rmcIrIT

CiM121-0584FORDETAILS
l HIM m QUIET!)
Sing'* *&gt;ory iluoio. I A 1
Bdrm. Apti. Many oitraa Incl.
•toraga apart I Quiet. coiy
Community) NIc* landacapIng. On-alt* managara who
CAREll Starting at3)1*/mo

SANFOROCOURT.. 323-3301
mow In balora
mat I lal rani du* on I t ) .
Inc/cable I Mattel

la

1/1, big tencod yard, naar
ichooli. W Bradshaw Dr.
Avail, alter Jan. I. Laata UM
par mo. Call called alter 1PM
B A N H B I _________________
SAAALL 1 bdrm. C/H/A. nice
neighborhood. U S plu* SM
lacurity. m
laa-see*
WINTER Iprlaga ■4 bdrm* iri
ba. Nice arMlAvaUabte newt
USO.Ut Atari.... s » M » a v * «

105—DupltxTripldx / Rtnt
SANFORD 1 Bedroom, kit.
appll.. carport, hook up*.
Alr/Heet.UOOprmotUaOM
1 BDRM.. central H/A. Sanford
araa. HOC per month plu*
dapoait. u o o rw or MO try7

•A

! .im! 2 Built 0 0 m Afjl-y Av.iikitjle
St i ir tuuj ,il $ ! ‘/U UO
25lh

5a

115—Reel Estate

St , S a n t o n l

322-2090

CORNER 4TT A If/ t l Fraa
iteodlaiEME Suit, tor car lot.
tea. CO. McW-bMF/ElFMMM*
LOWRWOOO • 1 olBraal Prim*
Hwy. 414 tec I Rant ana/both1
C aradw teM teakllJPH JJ^

121—Cendeminium
Rentals
♦ COMO* 23MSMIR

» Bdrma., Iri bath tewnhauM.
aernd. patio. Adults. SMI In­
cludes water. Coll Naacy
-------- --- i-Frl dAAAIPM
LAKE MARY, Hidden Village.
1/1. all appliance*. Ilraplac*.
No pari. SIM pr, mo. «mS41
SANDALWOOD Villas, 1/1.
w/pool, waah/d. yor, UM par
mo , no dag* a/1-fdTl hr.QWA
SANFORD • Pino Rldga Club. 1
bdrm. 1 bath*. Alt agpt. Incl.
waahar/dryer. Starring at MSI
RENTARAMA
UMJM................- ...... He Fa*
rated FI. lot./l
S P E C I A L ! * 4 IS te e a tb t
N O RTH LAK E V I L L A S !.
N e w 1 /1 . a p p lia n c e s ,
llraptaca. pool, tennis. Call
I KteNteww 11-UJJSM AayRwa
Eva* Owoar H » M » » W tatewf

127—Office Rentals
A RAND NEW OFFICE ELOO
«M a*. R. teLMEaq.lt.
eC H O N IN O I
Meva In Spatial.......... sue/aw.
C ALL....................... m-WM
OPPICB/RBTAIll 1 unlit. IMS
aq. It. *a.. MIS/ma. Can ba
_uateltojathar I.-MA WT/aMf.
1 SMALL RENTAL OFFICES
Vary rqaaanabla. 11X 14. Far
datalla. call nqwl B M P S

141—Hmimb tar Sale

LESS THAN SU M OOWN
WITH NEW FINANCINO
•OND MONET, FHA.VA
OR CONVENTIONAL LOANS!
Assumable no quality loan* In
thasa arta* I Choose homo*
t rom SamInol* /Orange
Volusia/Lake Count lari

LESSTNM$1100DOM
IHCUIOfllGCLOSINGCOSTS
1/1, llv din- lam- room*, appi..
carport, c/h/a............. U3.S00

3/L with lamlty, living, dining
rmt. Iplc. anctosau porch,
tencoyard. Hugo lot, ua.IOO

ST. JOHN’SAMOLI M0M0C
5 acre ariatel 4/1.1500 *q. If.
custom built. SH7.M0

LMEMMY
LESS1HMS2.CMDOM
l/t. living, dining, lemily
room*, lanced yard, naw
paint, carpet and til*. 141,100

OVtlOO 1.25ACRES
Custom built 4 bdrm. 1 bath,
Ilraplac*. screened pool and
apa. 3 car garaga- SI7t,t00

3/2CUSTOMBUILT

Ceram ic tile , Lavalora.
Ilraplac*. 1 car garage.
Pool/tannli avail........ tai.JOO

Lata Irian SUM down! 1/1 with
10«14 aernd porch...SU.M0

$3300OONNIRCl CLOSING

of Regatta Shores

L u x u ry A p t L ivin g
•Clubhouse with Fireplace

• Indoor Racquetball
• Weight Room
• Pool &amp; Jacuzzi
• Washor/Dryor Connections
• Garden Windows
• Fireplaces
1 Bedroom from $450
2 Bedroom from $540
2US W. Seminole Blvd.
Hwy. 17-02, Sanford

Pinacratl. 1/1, living, dining,
family rm., aacurlty lyttom.
lanead yard ...Idl.tOO

OWUfOTAPOOLHOME
1/1. flrtploce, access to Lek*
Mill*, on 1/1 acre........1/7.500
mj
4*

\^
N

*1

** •Y'

41 •

l
NEWLY RCAMOC IE D 4 fcdrm.
I fcalh. laundry A lamlly rm*.
Corner tot 1113.500..... MI AMI
NEW HOMES........... *4145.0*0
MODELOPEN 114..... VA/FMA
CACNOMELInc . aq»4»l4M

ACA0CMYHANOI, SANTORO
ZERO dawat V450/mo Llk*
naw I Compl radon* I 1/1.
garage, tone* Owner I tte tttl

ALTAMONTESPRINGS
1 bedroom, 1 balh. pool.
*41.500 Scburan Realty
4*7 45) 1*47

BATEMAN REALTY
344) SanlurdAv*

321-0751.......... 321 2257
BUIIMR’SSPECHOMES

ON LAKE MONHOe

i

CaklraiteiWMMW

Camplataly ran*wad and
madam 1 bdrm. t balh ham*.
Cantrat H/A. all naw a#pnante* and llaturaa, large
la n c e d 1*11 R r l c * ra ducadl...................... *41,100

CALL BART
r s a l iit a t i

REALTOR................. .m-teW

STENSTROM
REALTY, I N C .
•%

O n 3 4 (4

*

Include* Scravnad Pool
Special Rato Financing
________ Can m tm ________
DELTONA. )/ }. CHA, Non
quanting, etiumebto. Nice!
lata, p i *aa.*oo p »O M

MANAB1MC NT A REALTY

m-nwnutm

Lovely Lech Arbor local Ion1 1
bdrm. I both, largo corner tot.
doap wall, living, dining, dan.
laundry roam, naw raol.
145.000. eaaumabto. m 7487

THEOARS, SMF0RD

FOB SALE

2 bdrm. 1 both. I,M0 sq. ft.,
large living and dining area
with tlreptaca. Ealra room tor
ottlca/habby/lhlrd bedroom
Wood dKk, large treat, tennis
and peat prlvltogat. IIOSAM
W i l l MEN
STILL S IIK H IM
Larry Harwtar, Rrakar I3H3R
# ♦ * * * * * ♦ *
L 1 aad a badraare haaaa* with
ROMO MONEY whan avail
abto. Alta, government repos
and bank feraelosurea.

•I 1 B O R M . 1 B A T H
SPARKLIHO REW SPLIT V I |
B E A U T IF U L L Y L A N D ­
Spacious great rm , vaulted &lt;
SCAPED. tcraanad porch
calling*. Inside utility, big
toadlng to nka sited pool.
pat la. Only.................M i MS
Privacy It priority 1.....SU.tOO
NEVI COUNTRY L O V E ill
F R IT T Y 4/1 an 4 acre*.
Treat, pasture A bam aa bring
hors**. Gotta tae thl*..1144.WO
SURER STARTER V lr i. Big
bedroom*, termor dining,
tone*, nice yard. Naar park.
You'll Ilka It .tu n o

CaR Janet Manatlald
Day*, s n -tm Eva*. n &gt; m i
AA Carat*, lac.

C^ntuiKn

a SOFA Contemporary floral
dotlgn In thadH of arang*
only ME. Ml-7174___________ _
d W A L l UNIT, S Ff. X 4 Ft.. I
section*, adluttebto sholvt*.
445. H U M
_____________
• W A SH E R -W H IR L POOL,
Works greet I White. Can hat*
you move. 441-4711

1*3—Television/
fUMte/Steree
S T R R IO . PanasaniT^duai
cassette and compec disci
UkeNewl SMEOeO—.W-MM
WITH YOUR OWN SaNIHf*
System, yte watch NBO.
Claamaa. ESPN, CN4L aad

AFFORDABLE SPLIT V I. Big
earner ri acre tot. warfcahap,
wall, iprInkier system. Leak
into ltd* on*................U t n g
TOW BRINA tree*, dark a
gaiaba mqk* thl* Dattan* V I
great tor entertaining. Sea this
hem* today I............... SALIM
E X C E L L E N T RR.
TIREE/STARTER V I. Super
lamlly nalghhnrhood. Big lot.
N a a r p a r k a , s c h o o ls .
.................

ursoo

CALLANYTIME

321- 2720
322- 2420
2S4I Park Or., Muter*
441W. Lake Mary BJ„ LA. Mary

■XCHAHBE OR S IL L ra w
praparty tetatedaai wbai tl
lwvaatorataattv.41M***
Fraa Uat Bavaranwat Hamaa
Tarry Cbabal H H i n ar l r
ear* a Rayaaida BE h h m i

GOVCINMENTOMED
HOMES
1/1. good 11**r upper, SI IJM
1/1. a lot lor the money. 150 475
1/1 spec tout villa, M U M

METRO URAL
RBTAT* CO., INC.
Ptea*acall tor other listing*I

1317337

The Prudential
Florid* Realty
LOOKINGFORAHOME?
P laata tot mah* Ip.

CMIM GrEfMfcREALTOR
(teftEUtetM arm-iiM

LAKEMARY
140 Ettalla Rd. V I. 1 car
garaga. I.44Esq. tt. 1*3.000
A. H-R. Realty,»7l-0te*

LOVELY COUNTRY ESTATE
horn* on 1 acres. Ctot* to I 4 A
Hwy. 44. Many amanltlat,
great potential 1........ 1144.300
HUGE TREESI Large corner
tot! 1 bedroom home. Formal
dining room, Can. H/A, II.M0
down Only.............. Ul.aCO!!

323-5774
SALE BY OWNER
LOVELY! 2BDRM. 2 BATH
tail Bungalow wlthliraplaco
Ranovatad mild* and outside!
Landscaped Owner Amlousl
Dot Magnolia Av*.
at............... ...... 174-ain

SANFORO
Low Downpayment will buy
BRAND NEW HOME! Near
Lake Mary Blvd. 1 bdrm 1
balh with garaga In privet*
country area Close to schools
and shopping
1*1.710

2 * 8 1 8 R Mro"

153—AcreageU ti/ S a fe
1.1 A C R I I I Gorgaou* oak
hammock I 145.000 Sellar II
nanclng. Caldwell Banker
Ideal. Call i-EM-m-atu
O STR IN , S acre*, wooded.
130,000. OENEVA. 5 acre*
PORT OF SANFORD A R IA •
Busy Orange Blvd I 1 acres,
tenad AG. ri mil* to 1-4 tail
and entrance t ill Can divide,
high and dry. 1*4.300
Templte Realty la*. Old 4410
ST. JONH'S Rhrerl 3 acres!
Hug* eakt! siaf.OCO Sellar
11none log
Caldwall Banker
tdaal. Call ia*«-771-4441

155—Condominiums
Co-Op/Sek
FINERIDGECLUB
PRICIS STARTING AT 141.54*
1 Bedroom 1 Balh condomini­
ums. All appliance*, vertical
blind* throughout, clubhouse,
pool, tennis, aacurlty guard
CALL..m-447*
Laadarama FI. Inc./Brakar

157—Mobile
HomtB/Selt
HOMWHEYPOM
SIM par month on a Iat* 3
bdrm. 1 bath double widt
Call Lao, tib M M IM
I . ORANGE COUNTY - 3/3
Ooublowld* o.s .44 aerta
155.000...........W. Melkiewthl
Realtor....................... M -7 m
OSTRIN - 1 bdrm. I ba. on
r i acral Lota ol shade, him..
C/H/A. vary private. Needs
TLCI 417.500......m m i r v e s
SAVE tool NEW m i ttOMISI
WNY PAY RETAIL! 14X7*.
atAM. 14X74, TOMB R t R R

TAREOVERPAYMENTS

4147 par month on a Iff)
14X70. Call LaRoy:
_________ *44-4304155_________
1 BEDROOM I balh. CHA. good
condition. MUST SELLI15300
n&gt;»3M

1U—Waterfront
Property/Silt
NeUeb Riw! 3.5Ac/os!
ISO bulldabl* ft. on river!
Private easement to property.
Just I ml. tram Santord. Lake
Co. tidal Superb location tor a
drtamhom*. Dramatically
raducadl Now |u*t... SII0.000lt
(Maitland) *3»*347

1B1—Applfences
/ Furniture
ANATEISIDWORLDCO.
l aminate Plat* Casselberry
HOLIDAY DIPT SPECIALS!
SHEET SETVHIATERS l i f ts
U441M. Maw tel.. Itripns
• BABY BID/Crlb with 1 mat
tress pads. 7 sheats and mat
chlng rulll*. Mattratt naw
cond U0 OBO 15*7SOS
BJ'S RESALE
W* Buy/Sell Furmtura A Cal
teettbtet. Including Estates
a n S. Santord Ava„ m 744*
CNAFTMATIC Quean Bed. New
cond pd 4XN0 t m OBO
Wad gown 7/| pd SriOe. 1)00
Truck foal baa 170 t t l f l l l
a DINING ROOM labia and
mltc. chair*. 145 OBO

_________ m e g ________

a DOUBLE DRESSER. Teln
bad mattress and bos springs
*100 3114744_______________
a DRYER, get. Seers Kenmerr
White, like new! S*3 111 1744
OOOLDSTAR VCR with r*
mote, aecaliant condition!
4IQB (1041
775 3*44

. _ ..

115—Cempeftr*
•MfMORY E sponsion Card
tor IBM AT or Cion*. Naw In
Baal Complete wllh IMS 4.1
Proqram. ISO CaR 114l**l_ _

1B7—Sportiw Oetsh
• BICVCLB TTSTTreaw haaT
HandLrafcas. S3&gt;. Call m 1411
SURFBOARDS, wat suit* and
accatoorla*. good condition.
W-F4M Iv. msq.

ifi-BuiMtm
Mettriels
ALL STB EL ■UILD1NSI at
dealer Invoice, 3.000 to 30.000
sq H. Call 407W14141 cal tori
• BATH ROOM Cabinet, no
mirror, wooden front, like
laloutto*. Coot SSf. Will sacrl
lice 130 m-IM7

m —PetsRSuepftes
tomoia. will hold til X metl
*10. Call Louanao HU043
COCKER IPAINEL. Pup* and
Mato. 1100. Had. butt A white
colon m-«137 er » l **fl
a
P
R
I
■
DOBERMAM/ROTTHRILER
MIXI To good homa. 7 mot.
old tomato. All shots aacapt
rabies. (Wtklv* Falls)
________ leObMWOM_______
FREE YOUNG CATSI To •
good homal Oaad Chrtsfma*
Surprla*. Vary Pretty I Looks
Ilka Angora. W ill* ________
• LHASA A PIA vary lovable,
friendly, mat*. Whit* color.
Needs a lovable horn*. AKC
rag. SIS. Accasortoa Included.
Callavaalais W 4IW _______
MINI DACHSHUND - Black A
Tan. 4 mot. Great Christmas
preteat I Parents on pramtotal
4113. W4744eves AwkeedS
RETRIEVER PUPS-ISO
Available now tor Chrlttmeal
Cell 333443)

201—Horsts

gtnt

Bquatlsar, crvto*. HH, heated

MEMBERSHIP, Tlmocuon
Gaff and Cauntry CteB, by
i**'

GRAND OPRNINO DEC. Ill J
A J COUNTRY CORHERI Ml
Hwy 411, Ostaaa. Used
l a r a l t a r a l Antiques,
crafts. OPEN IA4

219—Wanttd to Buy
New Ferrous Matels.....
KOKOMO................... W-1IM
I H I E D F RE E WOOD
PALLETS. 4* In a 44 la. «

ONLY»D*M par mwHhl
CbHMr.FRrao.MSm3
l. i barrel
carO.. 4MM art#, mltotl Run*

&amp;

TANNWO BID • Brand NowI
Croat Chrittmo* glHI Will
, B rown tinted
I
K IRAS tree. «

Alter IFMMB40IB

a AVTO PARTS • Oedaa Aapan.
C t o v y N M t lt 1 R .U I

tt, 140: Off!

•nd crofts: mill pm
vanity, 471; Slngte
■at. EM 30-MM

dieter*, ate. Vahlclas yau
&gt;rra)Mt-Fite_________
O M IC N IL IN Radial Tira.
Brand ttewi taa/Ma NR JM

Stoat OK tor BROIMFWEE

231—Cars

M etric nisi

~

777777777777777$
Mnoum
*

SECURITY NATIONAL

i—Import Cart
234—1
M i Trod

t

TOYOTA STARLBTI I

m

i M t t t t i i m t
*4444 B O M DRIVES 0
^ M c u n jk u s tir a

M M .| N R * .H .H t m
I EBB T R O O F R R LB «B 4I
B copRar. Low, tew
...............All,EMI I

1*0* FORMULA FIREBIRD)

till If you're

.33

i TOYOTA PtCKUFt lasrp
etoon spatial I.... - .... „.M.44*

T l MAVERICK . I owner, 4 tr..
auto.. * cyt., radio, air, i

tSM TRO O FtRLIteat w tm ot
g r a y 1 'ta it* . L ow . law
mltob................ ... J1L4MI1

CLASIIFIHORRg

M IRCID BS MB BA m

request wtth our camputertiad
ItstqtvoMctoo.

UK

m -M si

RBNAULT Eacarel riL 1 dr.,
ac. S md/4* mpg. am/fm to*..

TMI IIPPAYWm

n s - T r v c fc s / -

t/Vma

ntto.atc

PONTIAC

F M T L M

t
M UST S EE ... Only M AM
mi to*and ONLY 1)40. )•/mo.
Call Mr. P o y n o ,» i n i

trectulsab

aft roodI

FAIRWAY
"Hsm oaflHbl
HMUttME
ACCORD I X , rid 4

air. stereo. wtwWd GREAT
BUY W ONLY Btfa.M/mo

Cell D o S ?

CaHMr.Forao.MSItll

TMI Nf PRYMITS
NOHOMYMMI

1BBIP— IMCI
311 Custom Windsor, mint
cand. 4LMB. MS4M3 after 3

■icaptlaa. tag. till*, ate

FORD TAURUt OL - It
LOADED WINS

ml to*, a cyllndtr, hilly
F A PS. A/C 17,aSS
teaTaos
MM TOYOTA Ptak-u*. Mach. 4

•lr, stereo, Vp.
ONLY 41*0.70 por month
tte ttM r^ o g v m rn

ms n 2M Mm

Rkk C. at Cpaootearry mid M*
truck by tho aacand day and
wo* wall satisfied with Nw
stunning rsoutttl Ho coltod Ms
Santord Horald Cloulflod
Consultant to stop hit ad fmm
continuing on its mwdutod
10-Day Spec 1*1. Something
YOU need to odraritoo at tow

suit*7 Try aur to. 14 A ItDey
Special ratoa. Lowe it coal por
lino ter caniocullvo days'
advsrtislng. Advertisers are
tree to concol m soon a*
results are roochod
CLASSIFIEDDEFT.

OGa Attars..
n CHEVY 1/4Tan Pkkuo. mu*

Wantad
WE PAY TOP Mi Mr i
cere/truck*I WE SILL tuar
AA AUTO
J A U fA G I a fn N a r jJ

■NiBMwt
MOPED • Raodmastar.
practically naw I Rra* treat I
E3MICOR4-----------

m - llll

TMENfMVWnS

211—Antiques/
Collectibles

ETCMttM.taR.Wte.atc
PLYMOUTH RELIANT-It

tors, ato. TUI ter 4EB. MB-W1
SUZURI BW*HR«yG, VA C M A
adapter. IIM . WoH U gtaI1MD. VP. IIM . Maori EMM
sporti m doy/dote. SIM.
------ ----it —

2D3-Livestock «nd
Poultry______

eSECONO GENERATIONS e
Your clothing sold tor com
mission only I Call.....314-3474
Country Club Square Canter
nth A Alrpart ttvd-. Saalard

CoHMr.FRraKMBltO

•0 4 .0 RECORD Catted ten.
IM IB RFM
tact. M f bond*. |ou.
claa*teat. Hawalki. jotaaa,
m—
. .- — *^i^ag
it .

HORSES BOARDS DM ACRES
open Pasture! 150 a month to
board I 407-33+4*31

20Y—W iring Appertl

•Ml*. THIS CAR NAB
EVERYTHING! OMy___
EBU.Wpar m tm l I

I

• PUELIC AUTO AUCTION a
EVERY TUESDAY TiMFM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Nary. H. DaySsao Booth
________ R W N 1 I ________

Q U A R T I R HORSE. 14 IS
Hands, dark brawn. 4 years
J j4 U 0 M 4 M 4 ^ _ ^ _

.mta.ak
___IKRT

ANNIVERSARY MOOELI

tot*Htea ta/me CaR n e w s

• ANGORA BUNNY • White
SUPER NICE DREARY V I
Big family rm., ceuntry kit.,
peddle fans, carpal, moral
Realty nice. NOw.....tu .u a

' Hi wV

Lie Oral Estate Broker

R EG A TTA
SHORES

SARTRSMOVE-fiSPCCUU

POOLHOME
POSSfUELEASI/PMOMSC

DCLTOIU

W From Ho'
'V
The Staff

141—Hemes ler Sale

141
a IR . brick Name |br «V y
El,ME dawn. MEWme. Priced
radwcadl IM.MA Far detail*

1 badroama Ir i ba. C/H/A.
Ilraplacal UBS/ma. sec. dap
Cad B1-HI7/teovo teoaaaga

GtNLVA G a KDIINS
A paktmiinis
RENT TODAY
FOR OUR
MOVE-IN SPECIAL
15 0 5 W

AAA BUSIHISS CRRTRR Now attka/WliM. M It. b
1,4*5 ft. Roy* with ar w/o
attic** starting at IMB/mo
If/*1BSR«I7

"THCTIIMCE" SafeSm IM

Unfumithod 1 bedroom S bath
horn*. Can. H/A. I-c a r
garage! SAM month. 1430 «e
curlty dtp. Coll anytime, ERA
» « *

reams) Living ream tulte,
bedroom suite, glasi dlnatt*
sat/4 chair*, all cantemperary
ttyto.ll.7tS Mutt M*1
Celt a i a*n.**k far Tam
OPORTARLB DfSNWASMER.
Kanmore. Front toadtn
canmtton.47S.W-WM
STOOLS. 1.
aBATAAN
.......JH-4IM
4MB.........
a R I F t i e i R A T O R 'I E . i
Cu Ft., Whlripeal. hmttrra.
Good cond S4B Eraafngt
M1-44EI____________________
OSOFA. 7 ft., revartifato tip **
try cushion*, gold. Vary ***d
candlttonl IIM. CaR MI4447
* SOFA A LOVE SEAT [mat­
ching). Infra nk* and clean.

115—Industrial
Rewtets

117—&lt;

GO CART • I r i Nl
and clutch. I n .

ONLY3MONTHSNEW

1 bdrm. I both tel S

SMA/mo. Can m tO Sl
TRUCKERS Iporitel I
trolter. Rm.te pork truck.
Claa* 10 Interalote..... JM-MW

AMOWL EM. par
1 cirM. Yaw pkh i*.
CatI nawI -------

Rk.R

H13M4________________

ELDER SFRINDL off Hwy W .
I. A S bdrm*. W M per wfc.
lIR R a R H N lP IN H R
e i N I V A , Country oraot 1
I bolN. tm/pfua ate.
OSTRIN

“

LARRY’ S MART. I l l Swstord
Av*. Naw/Utad him. A app&lt;Bay/SaM/Tradi----- JD4M 1
0 MAPLE DINING Tabto. w/4
chair* *40 Call attar 4PM

117-MtaMle
lZJ

tn-CDTB

iii-AppliaficM

/r

O U F L II • La * bMm. CarparT
mtMa utility rm .. C/H/A. no

l tear awn ibalh
and I badraam 1bom aval labte
ai i bdrm.. I
bam. nka araa. oft at. prtmg.
i/Cpcw* , SIM loc. m-awa
SANFORO - Ml dll n |
degtea. appu.. mini
C/H/A. SM/mwndi....SaMIM
SANFORD • Largo I or 1 bdrm.
From IMS/mo or |Wt/wfc. No
dapoall.FoW, CHASM MM
SANFORD Hear 14 . Ctean and
Quiol. t/l. Mini Scat rant
tm Sacurlty SSM. MS-Mto
STUDIO Apt I SAS/wk. I Bdrm.
Stt/wk., Both In convantent
location*
O0-t)rt/nk»n a g*

NEAR LK. MON ROC t S bdrm. I
bath, fum . appli. m.
rmt tPi/mo. Realtor._______
RIVERFRONT On* bdrm. cot
lag*. Partly I urn Utlllllat

KIT ’N* CARLYLE® by Lorry Wrifkl

• MOPED. Vatoa/Piagoto. Low
mitooga. Goad condHton. Bit.
&lt;WL----------------AM-1171
ISM M l QUAD Recarl a
whaolarl Mint cond. Selling
pricolMMCi

eCASHe FOR YOUR JUNK
CAR OR TRUCRII ANY

E «capl loa. tag. HU*, ate
CHEVY CA V ALIIR - Ito*. 4
door. auto. air. store* I
Only 1140.40por month
For ONLY M monltto
Cell Mr. Payne, a u t o

COHDITIONI CALL XtSM47

MTOP DottertB Paid ter Irak
cars, trucks, a wheel drive.

Ken Rummel
Quality I M Can At A Fair PHce
No Application Refuted
tW.

way's. Will nick uw....13)14»
WOOD F U R N I T U R E
WANTIDI Any COHDITIONI
At*afcuyl»&gt;»»»tau**.Uiri*ll

221-Good T iin g s
to E it
e * U PICK NAVELSIll IN I
CELERY AV.. SANFORD
BBINOCOHTAINEBSH
U PICK NAVEL ORANOES.
U bushel. Hwy. 44 E. Santord.
1 bib E ol Beerdel I Are noet
to Auto Auction W1I7II___

222—Musical
Merchandise
CONN OROAN Medium site,
good condition. 1450 (I need
the space) Cell 313 7145______

PIANO FOB SALE
Wanted Responsible party to
take on smell monthly pay
menls on pieno. See locally
^elM Aene2*r_et&gt;0a«S7*l^_

223— Miscellaneous
■UY........ SELL......... TRADE
HUEY SCROWN PAWN
___________) 1317*4__________
ODOG HOUSE. Large shingle
root Built up. treated wood
tloor Can dell.er 143 *43 1753
• EA SA PHON E Panasonic. 2
line interpreted, telephone
system KX THIS Originally
&gt;90 Selling at 115 40 Call
balora iAM or evening* alter
4 P M Keen trying )J) 55*9

84 CHCVY CELEBRITY CL

Two Ton#, Evory Power Option
84 PONTIAC FIREBIRD

Auto., Air, Stone, Look* A Rune
Good
87 MERCURY LYNX

S M GL

Auto, Air And Mora
H I G H W A Y 17-92. S A N F O R D
(1 2 m ile N oM It o f t .ihe M .ify U ivd i
fcdby IO lllicl Itotl i tidy w llt'ft*

hi

C e u ifd i t 1,1

Phone (40/) J/i /boo ot (40// d .'m 'it

�•

9f

■Hi

I

M — Sanford H M M . Sanford, Florida - Tuaaday, Dacambar II, 1N0

Skimming of fuel taxes on the rise
cents a gallon. Peterson said an
informant characterised the tax
‘ ’W h e n y o u consider the increase as an "early Christmas
numbers of gallons of gasoline present" for the scam artiste.
Fuel tax evasion Is a relatively
that are sold, you can begin to
understand the magnitude of the new area o f law enforcement for
potential problem and the the Justice Department. Since
temptation to cheat." Peterson 1987, the tax division has won
•aid, “ because there'a Just 29 convictions against compa­
enormous money to be made for nies and their officers.
In one case that attracted
those who are able to find ways
national attention. Getty Termi­
to cheat the payment of the tax.”
T h e J u s t ic e Department nals Corp.. a subsidiary of Getty
estimates those who siphon off Petrol mm Corp., was Indicted
gas taxes cost the U.S. treasury for avoiding more than 81 mil­
more than 81 billion a year. The lion In gasoline taxes by falsify­
government took In 816 billion ing sales Invoices and corporate
In federal fuel excise taxes In records.
Last month, a U.S. District
1968.
And the lure of Illicit profits Court Jury In New York found
has only Increased with the one Getty official and two In­
recent rise In the federal fuel tax dependent wholesalers guilty of
this year from 9.1 cents to 14.1 conspiracy and tax evasion
number of people antgned to the

UnltodPr— InfamHonM
WASHINGTON - Skimming
federal fuel taxes, once the
bootleggers, has become a f l
billion a year bonanaa far white
collar criminals. Justice De­
partment officials said.
•What atarted In the New York
area now appears to have spread
across the country,” Shirley
Peterson, assistant attorney
general In charge of the tax
dtvteon. said Monday. W e have
Indications that these schemes
are going on tn Florida. Texas,
the Midwest and California."
The department currently la
Investigating 100 separate caeca
in 18 dties. and In Its 1992
budget la seeking to double the

NEAI-N-TBTMl OIAX

i significant
that was one of the first
that Involved a legitimate
_______ Peterson said.
Often the scams Involve shell
companies that use fake invoices
and bogus fuel tax waivers to
flout IRS regulations. Another
popular scam Is m islabeling
diesel fuel, which Is taxa* le. as
home heating fuel, which Isn’t.
"T h is Is a very complex kind
o f scheme,” Peterson said.
•There are vast paper trails.’*
In addition, the Justice De­
partment Is trying to track down
gasoline bootleggers and extor­
tion rings that prey on gasoline
distributors.
Peterson said many gasoline
distributors are contacting the
Justice Department

New trial ordered In rape,
multiple personality case
OSHKOSH. W ls. — A Judge
a c k n o w le d g e d m a k in g a
mistake in a trial of a man
c o n v icted of s e x u a lly
assaultin g a wom an with
multiple personalities and
ordered a new trial.
Winnebago County Circuit
Judge Robert Hawley Monday
signed an order for a new trial
for Mark Peterson. 29. con­
victed Nov. 8 under a state
law that makes It a crime to
have sex with someone who Is
mentally 111 and cannot un­
derstand the consequences of
the behavior.
Peterson admitted having

Business Review

Uosnasd Bonded, Insured

aex with the 27-year old
woman but said he did not know ahe was mentally ill.
The woman says she has 4 6 ;
distinct personalities and.
BMumcuI the
me tdenUt
i^vti.ilties of lev-

era! of them In her testimony.

Hawley acknowledged in :
his order that he erred in :
rcftiatng to allow a defense
psychiatrist to Interview the
victim. But he also aald thedefense attorney. Edward
S a lssle d er. should have
pursued that effort.
M ary Lou R o bin so n .
Peterson’s new defense at-,
tomey. aald she thinks there:
were numerous errors in the'
trial.

SCIN IC AIRjOAT. BIDES
■ ■ ■ A N D TOURS

of the
1 5 ”., O F F
f l i r u [)••i

Gift Grtjftcofcc A m A M e |

l - 1 1K

Do h Now! Hurry!
WIDOWWOOws

321 7 6 9 9

fab 322-2611 %ml

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE
WWmo

Sanford Antiques

Marina Itle Flth Camp

Aovuvnama

Now That’s A Deep Subject

700 W. lot Street
Florida 88771
(407) 881-8088
18 Quality Dealers

When It comes to wells. Bill Dearolf knows a
deep subject when he sees one.
BUI Is the owner of BUI Dearotfs Pump Service,
a Longwood company that has been in business
for approximately twelve years.
Dearolfs provides well pumps for pumping
domestic water supplies. Irrigation w ells and
sprinkler systems. BUI was factory trained and cer­
tified In 1978. by Stx-Rlte Pum p Manufacturing
Co., which la one o f tiie moot common pumps
used.
In June. Dearoirs purchased Jim Smith’s WeU
Drilling Service. Dearoirs la licensed as a water
well contractor by the St. Johns River Manage­
ment District (state license • 7103).
BUI works alongside o f hla servicemen Howard.
Larry and Ted. Bill has been a resident o f
Longwood for 40 years. His w ife la a second grade
teacher at English Estates Elementary School. BUI
has two children, three grandchUden and one
more due anytime now. Bill's favorite hobby Is
spending time with his son and their race car at
the track.
Summer Is the busy season for D earolfs
because o f the frequent afternoon thunder­
showers. Unfortunately, lightning and water don’t
mix and many pumps are damaged because water
conducts electricity. WhUe m any well pump com­
panies leave their customers without water for
several days, Dearolfs strives to provide same day
service because of their up-to-date hydraulic
equipment, specially designed for deep well
retrieval. Most brands o f replacement pumps are
available locally.
All trucks are radio equipped for fast service.
In most cases. Dearolfs can drill a complete well
from start to finish In one day. old. dry wells or
a new well for a new home.
Give Dearolfs a call anytime for well pump ser­
vice. You wUI get quick, friendly service with quali­

M 'F 1 0 ’ 7,8tL fO-8
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Sun.

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aw » a.

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" A Christian Business"

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For FREE ESTIMATE
Pick Up and Delivery
Call Day or Night

ty equipment and experience. D earolfs W*dl
Pump Repair Service can be reached at 695-2700
or 323-8590 at Highway 427 and County Home
Road. Member o f the Florida Hom e Builders
Association.

1 ML

365-3740

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Mr. Waiter Hendrix owner ol Hendrix Antiques.

Refinishing Is A Pleasure
WE'VE
MOVED

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Convenient
Location

Bifocals White G lass $ e Q
Lenses Includes Frames w v
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• Scratch Resistant • Licensed Optician

Budget Optical • 323-8080
601 E. 25th SL

Rf

Sanford ________ *

UP

Located two and a half miles west of Oviedo on
State Road 419/434. is Hendrix Antiques. Hendrix
Antiques is owned and operated by Walter Hen­
drix. A father of six children, two o f which still live
at home. Mr. Hendrix has spent the last 30 years
with the same loving wife, and working In the
same business, making old look new.
When asked what makes him different from
other reflnlshcrs In the area, he replied, "nothing.
I Just feel that the customers should be satisfied
to the best o f my ability." Hr learned the art of
reflntshlng antiques from "on e of the area's best
reflnlshers." D.L. Montgtomcry.
He takes a lot of pride in his work and It is
guaranteed. Somr of his customers have had their
furniture shipped In from miles away to have It
redone. People are pleased enough with his work
to ship their furniture from Miami to have it
re finished. He has had repeal customers for 21
years.
Mr. Hendrix says he will take in any wood piece

In any condition, strip It to the bare wood, r-pair
It and prepare It for a new finish. All stripping Is
done by hand, not dipped, for more careful atten­
tion to quality and results Mr. Hendrix can also
handle pieces for commercial offices, such as
desks, chairs and typing stands. Som e pieces Mr.
Hendrix recently worked on are from some of the
area churches such as: All Souls. Ml. Cavery. and
First Baptist. He Is In the process o f reflntshlng all
of the church furniture for St. James Methodist
Church.
Besides reflnlshlng. Mr. Hendrix also pastors
Friendship Missionary Baptist Church m DcLand.
for the past year and a half, so you can be assured
that Hendrix Antiques Ls a Christian business.
Mr. Hendrix buys, sells, and trades. He is
always happy to give a free estimate, uiul does pick
up and delivery. No item is loo small.
Mr. Hendrix can lx- reached at 365-3740. Call
or stop in today.

_S

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WILL
Owner
O r n f MS
M O
D a n l SUM C ot. I T U B

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FREE ESTIMATES!!
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I

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                    <text>ovember 21, 1990

Sanford Herald
83rd Year, No. 77 — Sanford. Florida

P o lk ’s c a re e r to end

N EW S D IG E S T

Herald he hail no reason to retire
early.
Polk's only other candidate as the
governor's
appointee. Longwood
SANFORD — Critically III Sheriff
John Polk's 32-year law enforce­ private Investigator Harvey Morse.
ment career Is slated to end Dec. 31 48. who Is active In Ihe Republican
with his retirement after 22 years as Party, was denied appointment by
Martinez last week. The Herald's
sheriff.
source said Morse* reportedly did not
A source with lies lo both Polk meet Martinez' qualification stall
and Tallahassee saiil on Sunday dards lor appointment as sheriff.
Gov. Bob Martinez approved Polk's Morse has no experience as a sworn
choice of MaJ. Donald Esllngcr to law enforcement officer.
complete the final iwo years of
Last Wednesday Polk vowed he
Polk's sixth term
would not resign. A s|K»kesman said
Polk said his early retirement retirement rather than resignation,
hinged on Ills key Input Into e n s u re s Polk lull re tire m e n t
appointm ent of Ills successor. tx'iicflis. including continued medlOtherwise. Polk told the Sanford L See Polk. Page SA
By SUSAN LOGIN
Herald stall writer

□ Sports
Peters takes team to bow l gam e
LAKE MARY — Dmijf Peters has led Ills tram
to a 5-5 season. In only Ills second year as head
coach of the Lake Mary Ram Imlhall team, and
a chance In the Rotary Howl Thanksgiving Day
at Lyman High School.
SeePage IB

□ People
Local women share cookies
SANFORD — As the Pilgrims shared their
bounty and cooking knowledge 369 years ago.
so too did the Unites of the Moose and the
Unites Auxiliary of the Fleet Reserve In Sanlord.
In 1990. The ladles gathered together to start
Operation Cookk* for the men and women In
Saudi Arabia.
See Page 4B

John Polk

F o rm e r c o u n ty
m anager seeks
return to post

Stocking up for Thanksgiving

□ Florida
Medical tampering discovered

■y J. MARK BANFI1LD
Herald stall writer

HOLLYWOOD — A nurse at Memorial Hospi­
tal discovered a bizarre ease of medical
tampering In which an intravenous feeding line
connected to a 4-year-old girl was filled with
urine.
See Page 2A

C h a m b e r seeks m o vers, shakers
LAKE MARY — Chambers of commerce
usually know Ur- movers and shakers in their
community, but there Is always the chance that
some outstanding deeds mlgiil slip bv without
due attention. So the Lake Mary Chamber of
Commerce Is calling for nominations of out­
standing people and/or businesses lor an awards
banquet being planned for early next year.
The chamber Is looking for names of Individu­
als. organizations or businesses who have given
somctlilng special to the Lake Mary community
through volunteer activities, employee relations,
social service agency assistance, special projects
or aid to an individual or the entire city. The
recipients do not need lo be m e m b e rs of Ihe
chamber. .
Nominations, complrte with name, address
and phone number of the individual or llrm and
specific reasons for the nomination, arc to be
mailed to Beverly Paulk, at the Lake Mary
Chamber of Commerce office. 3821 Lake Emma
Road. Lake Mary. Fla.. 32746.
Deadline for nominations is Dec. 5. Full details
on the chamber's first annual awards banquet
will lie announced at a later date.

Gospel sing benefit set
SANFORD — The City of Sanford Fire
Department's Firemen's Benefit Fund. Inc. will
feature Its Annual Gospel-Sing on Filday at the
Sanford Civic Ccntci from 7 p.m. to midnight.
The featured acts for the unnuol event will
include the Singing Americans. The Florida
Boys Quartet, and llrst time appearances by The
Buxtons and The Brashears.
Proceeds from the benefit are used lo help pay
hospital and doctor bills for the members of tin1
benefit fund.
Tickets are $5 and may be purchased from Ihe
fire stations at 1303 S. French Ave.. or 3770
Orlando Dr.. Sanford. Retired Flrcchlef William
C. Galley, acting emcee for the program, will
deliver tickets to patrons by calling 322-2250.
Hot dogs, popcorn, coffee and cold drinks will
tic on sale and dixir prizes will be given awav.

Don Esllngcr

Doug Cline (l| puts Jeremy Bell in the stocks
while rehears'ng (or Ye Olde Pilgrims Festival

H.I.M
b*lMW| Vlnconl
to be held Saturday at Park on Park Irom 1 to 4
pm

Th anksg ivin g services,
d in n ers slated fo r a re a

H o lid a y d eath
to ll p ro je c te d

By NICK P F IIF A U F

From staff reports____________

Herald stall writer

TALLAHASSEE - During the
four-day Thanksgiving holiday
weekend 42 persons will die as
Ihe result of traffic accidents In
Florida. That Is die prediction of
the Florida Highway Patrol for
ihe 102-hour period.
Most of those fatal accidents
are expected to be alcoholrelated. according to MaJ. Morris
E. L eg g e tt. All a v a ila b le
troopers will Ik- on patrol wat­
ching for Impaired and Impa­
tient drivers who speed. FHP
Director Bobby R. Burkett said.

SANFORD — The Sanford area on Thanksgiving will see
Pilgrims, a parade, prayer and help for the needy.
The llrst event ts a communltywlde Thanksgiving service,
beginning ut 7 p.m. this evening sponsored by the Sanford
Ministerial Association.
The Central Baptlsi Church. 3101 W. First Street will host
the all-dcmonlnallon service with Ihe l!cv. Ed Johnson,
pastor of the First Christian Church. Disciples of Christ,
serving as guest preacher.
Destiny, a musical group from Seminole High School, and
Blrdella Hall-Walker, associate minister of Freedom Assembly
of God. will present special music for the program. The public
Is cordially Invited to attend.
The Rescue Outreach Mission of Sanford. 1701 W. 13t li
See Dinners. Page 8A

Central Florida Thanksgiving closings
By NICK P F IIF A U F

Couple claims jackpot

Herald stall writer

TALLAHASSEE — A Winter Haven couple
claimed half of the $28.18 million Lotto Jackpot
Tuesday and will receive $704.5(X&gt; In 20 annual
Installments. Lottery Secretary Rebecca Paul
sold.
William R. LUtrell. 51. and Ills wife. Mary
49. will receive $1,928 a day. every day for the
next 20 years.

SANFORD — Local govern­
ment employees are not only
looking forward lo dial Thanks­
giving turkey, hut to a four-day
weekend as City balls in Sanford.

Lake Mary. Longwood and
Oviedo will be shut down both
tomorrow and Friday.
The Seminole County court­
house. annex and services build­
ings and public schools. Includ­
ing Seminole Community ColIrgc. will also he closed holli

days.
There will he no refuse pickup
Thursday. S a n l o r d 's refuse de­
partment will not o|RTatc Friday
Inn regular service will resume
beginning Monday Longwood
areas served by IWS refuse
See Closings. Page 3 A

SANFORD — Three Seminole County
commissioners secured the ouster of former
county manager Ken Hooper more than a
year ago and with Ihe scaling of Uirry
Furlong. Hooper may have three commis­
sioners willing to take him hack.
"I would like to come back." Hoo|&gt;er said
last night. "I would prefer unanimous
supjxirt but I’d be willing to consider a 3-2
kind of offer. It -------------------------------- depends on the
stre n g th of the
opposition."
Cl would like
But even as a
g r o w i n g c o n ­ to come back.
sensus favors re­ It d e p e n d s on
hiring Hoopci. he th e s tre n g th of
faces a potential
c h a lle n g e from th e o p p o s itio n .)
Roger Nclswendcr.
the county's first
-Ken Hooper
executive.
N c ls w e n d c r Is
r u r r cn11y on a ------------------------------- —
* 1IT, per h o u r re m o te r w ttli tlie c o u n ty to
help acting county manager Boh McMillan
until a new manager ts hired.
"I'd like lo see what happens with Ken
Hooper's candidacy." Nclswendcr said
Tuesday. "But I’ve found I like the work a lot
more than I thought. The commission lias the
potential to settle down and move ahead. I
think I can work with them."
Hooper has the support nf newly-elected
commission chairman Fred SI reel man and
vice chlarinaii Hot) Sturm, re-elected to a
four-year term. Sturm had a written motion
prepared Tuesday lo begin negotiations with
Hooper and suspend the county's search for
other candidates. Furlong checked the move
and Instead gained near-unanimous support
lo hold a discussion on the search next
Wednesday morning.
Only Sturm voted against the proposal, fie
later said Hooper needs to tx- rehtred to get
county momentum resumed.
Furlong said it was premature to discuss
hiring any can d id ate Tuesday during
sweartng-ln ceremonies.
"I didn't know lor sure what Hot) was going
to bring up. but I know I was not prepared to
vote on It." Furlong said "I have several
questions minor In nature I need to discuss
with Ken privately In-fore I ran make that
decision. But there is no question In my mind
Km Hooper is a qualltied candidate."
Furlong said he would prefer at least a 4-1
vote of support lor Hooper tint may lx- willing
lo accept a 3-2 vote, lie would say what
questions he had for Hixipcr nor under what
circumstances would lead luui lo vole with
the majority on 3-2 split of Hie tx&gt;ard.
Sec R eturn, Page SA

W illia m s takes sch o o l board gavel as m em bers sw o rn in

Prom staff and wire raporta
By VICKI DaSORMlIR

Herald stall writer

INDEX
Movloa....................... 5B
Nation................. BA.8A

Classifieds....
.......... 8B

Police.........................3A
School Monu........... 3A

Deaths............

Editorial......................&lt;*A Talovlalon.
Florida........................ 2k W eather....
Horoacopa................. 8B W o rld .........

.SB
.2A
. 7A

Perfect turkey shopping day

Mostly sunny with
the high near 80 and
an easterly wind ai 5
to IO uiph

F or m ora w a a th a r, aaa P ago 2A

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A X " V =.

SANFORD — As chairman of the Seminole
County School Hoard. Joe Williams promises tills
year will lx- one that hoard members won't soon
forget.
Williams, who was chosen lo lead the board at
last night's meeting following the swearing In of
die three new members, lias been chairman twice
before during his seven years on the hoard. He
held the lop position during the 1986-87 fiscal
year and the 1987-88 year.
"Tilts is going to tx- a real Interesting year."
williams said "And tl all siarts right now."
Williams promised lhat he would not sjx-nd
much time talking as chairman. Rather, tic said
lie was anxious to get to the business at hand and
keep meetings a s short as p o s s ib le .
The lirsi meeting under Ills gavel for Ibis term
a s chairman lasted less than two hours
"I don't want to spend lime telling you how
good we're going lo lx-." Williams said. "Let's |u s t
get lo It."
Wtieii lie's not on the |xxlluni as a school board
member. Williams is a vocational Instructor ai
Seminole Community College. At SCC. he has
served on Ilit- personnel and arehlteel selection
Sec Williams. Page 2A
i ^

M.,.id Photob, KoilyJordon

School board attorney Ned Julian swears in Sandy Robinson as her husband Garry watches.
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iA —Sanford HoroW. Sinford. Ftortdo - Wodnttdoy. Novambtr 21,1900

Skinheads charged
in Daytona beating Woman presides over Senate
N E W S FROM T H E REGION A N D A C R O S S THE S T A T E

I

charges were filed under Flor­
ida's hate crim es 'statu te,
which Increases the penalties
when It can be proved that
prejudice played a role.

United Press International

DAYTONA BEACH - Five
yo u n g men described as
“ •klnheadt" were charged
wNh attempted murder under
Tanner said the suspects
the hate crimes atatute. ac- beat
the man with their boots
cuaed of beating a Jewish during sn Oct. 7 beach parly.
m an with their boots and Two allegedly dragged him to
trying to drown him.
the water and one hetd hla
State Attorney John Tanner head under white another
Wed criminal charges Tues­
day accusing them of at* . attempted to choke him.
tempted first-degree murder,
The victim loot conscious­
conspiracy, aggravated bat­ ness and appeared to have
tery and being a principle tq drowned but a beach ranger
a g g ra v a te d b a tte ry . T he found him and revived him.

TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (UPI) - Owen
Margolla of North Miami was Installed as the
first woman to preside aver a state Senate
T uesday aa th e Florida L egislature
reorganised and took up a package of ethic*
reforms.
Lawmakers were going ahead with a vote
on the ethics reforms. Ignoring a request by
Oov.-elect Lawton Chiles to wait and
consider'campaign finance reform at the
same time.
Chiles made the best of It, noting that on
Monday legislative leaders agreed to elimi­
nate loopholes critics that said would permit
lawmakers to evade Intended restrictions on
gift-giving by special interests.
"That's their right, to go forward and
make tnprovements." Chiles told reporters.
But be added. "When we get finished
studying, we might want to make some

!.i
i

A This is a new day in the
Florida Senate }
further improvements, Including campaign
finance reform.
The revised ethics bill bans gifts worth
• 100 or more from lobbyist or thetr
employers: makes It clear that expensive
trips commonly given lawmakers by lob­
byists are considered gifts: and prohibits
solicitation of gifts by lawmakers.
Lawmakers could still accept meals to be
eaten at a single sitting. But the reforms
were Intended to halt practices that have led
Gov. Bob Martinez to appoint a special
prosecutor to review legislative ethics.
Margotts was elected 23-to-l7 by the
reconstituted state Senate. Then Sen. Jim
Scott of Fort Lauderdale, the Republican

leader, suggested making Margotts' selec­
tion unanimous, and the full Senate agreed
amid a standing ovation on the Senate floor
and galleries.
-This ts a new day In the Florida Senate."
Margotts said.
"It was not easy for me to reach this
historic moment, but I think you know that
easy is not In my vocabulary, and I caution
anyone who thinks the next two years will
be easy."
On the House side, T.K. Wetherell or
Daytona Beach waa formally Installed as
speaker. He decided to forgo the traditional
speech outlining his goals for the next two
years.
Aides said Wetherell wanted to let
Margolls enjoy the limelight. He planned lo
discuss his agenda when the Legislature
next meets in December for committee
Margolls urged the Senate to put all
political manuevering behind It.

Wastewater plant fined
PEN SA C O LA - T h e
Escambia County Utilities Au­
thority has agreed to pay a
•135,000 penalty for water
q u a lity violations at Its
A v o n d a le W a s te w a te r
Treatment Plant, federal 'ofRctpJs aald Tuesday.
The fine waa part of a
proposed settlement between
the authority and the Envi­
ronmental Protection Agency,
which has been pushing the
authority to come Into com­
pliance with the Clean Water

Naney Wsrrsn

Williams_ ilA
committees,' the child
care task force and the salary
and benefits committee. He is
also president of the college's
faculty senate and chairman of
the college's Equal Acceas/Equal
Opportunity Committee.
william s promised that he
would be more accesaable to the
board members, the district nta/T
and the public.
He began what he called a new
tradition of opening the floor to

unasai

public comment at the con­
clusion of the meeting. He had
no takers for hla offer at last
night's meeting.
The school board decided to
continue meetings on the first
and third Tuesdays of each
month. In December, there will
only be one meeting, on Dec. 11
at 7 p.m.
Afternoon meetings have been
moved from 2 p m . to 3:30 p.m.
Evening meetings will remain at
7 p.m.

1968 bond money to pay
for school construction
• « V IC K I I

Herald stilt witter
SANFORD The. Seminole _
C o u n ty S c h o o l B o a rd
approved a transaction last
night at Its meeting that will
allow the district to pay for
part of the construction of the
new art and music suite
planned for Lake Mary Elem e n t a r y S c h o o l w ith
•337.983.48 from a 196B
bond tsaue.
l a k e Mary Elem entary
School Is located at 132 S.
Country Club Road in Lake
Mary.
Bond money must be used
for construction projects and
It m u st be used for the
specific projects advertised.
Since the money was not
used In 1968 for the project
for which It was Intended, the
plans for Its use must be
readvertised at this time.
According to Mary Cham­
bers. the assistant superin­
tendent for business and fi­
nance. the money has been
held In the school board's

LO TTER Y
TALLAHASSEE - The dally
number Tussdsy In ths Florida
Lottery CASH 3 gams was 7SS.
□Straight Play (numbers In siact
order): $290 on a SO-cent be., 4500
on tt.
□ Box 3 (numbers In any order):
$80 tor sSfrcent bet, $160 on $t.
□ Box 8 (numbers in any order):
$40 forsSOcenl bet, S80on 11.
□Straight Box 3: $330 In order
drawn, $80 In any order on a SI bet.
□ Straight Box 6 $200 in order
drawn, *40 if picked In combination
on $1 bet.

bank account for 22 years.
The bond, all Its principal.
Interest and other related obUgaUfWL was paid jofT .in
1988.
The art and music suite at
Lake Mary Elementary School
will be con stru cted on a
parcel of land that the district
has still not purchased. They
plan to advertise an ofTer of
•520,000 on the 1.7 acre site
at a later date.
The board, at the urging of
th e n e w e r m e m b e rs ,
postponed a vote on th e
matter of the land purchase.
" I ‘d like to have some
questions answered." Barbara
Kuhn, who was sworn in last,
night, said.
The money for most of the
land purchase was earned
fro m th e s a l e of th e
rtght-of-way along Lake Mary
Boulevard. T hat parcel of
land. 1.500 feet long and as
narrow as 15 feet In ^ m e
spots, could not be used for
school construction.
In July, the county paid the
district 5228.762 for the land.

am

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Bex iai7, faster*. PL » m .

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(Oaity A Sunday)
Hama D#1iv#ry A Mail
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C N N surrenders ja ilh o u s e tapes,
N o rie g a seeks fine fo r c o n te m p t
MIAMI — Cable News Network surrendered
tapes containing jailhouse recordings of Manuel
Noriega's phone calls Tuesday, and the deposed
dictator's lawyers said they would ask a Judge to
One CNN *600.000 for airing them.
CNN compiled with a court order and turned
over copies of the tapes lo U.S. District Judge
William Hoevelcr. He then gave them to U.S.
Magistrate William Turnoff, who will listen to the
recordings and advise Hoevcler whether broad­
casting them would violate Noriega's right to a
fair trial.
"We are confident that after Magistrate Turnoff
reviews the tapes and reports to the Judge that
the court will’ conclude that Mr. Rublno (Noriega
attorney Frank Rublno] and Gen. Noriega have
not met the heavy burden of establishing the
propriety of prior restraint here." said CNN
attorney Steven Korn.

At Rublno's request. Hoevelcr temporarily
barred CNN from broadcasting the tapes last
week and the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the
order Sunday.
But CNN played a portion of the tapes after
Hoeveler'a order, and Noriega's lawyers have
asked the Judge to hold the network In contempt
of court and fine It *600.000.
Jon May. one of Noriega's attorneys, said the
defense team would ask that the money be used
to help pay Noriega's legal fees.
Hoevcler, the Judge presiding over Noriega's
drug trial, will not consider the contempt hearing
until after the tapes have been reviewed.
He will not listen to the tapes himself because
he fears he would be forced to recuse himself
from the trial If he heard recorded conversations
pertaining to Noriega's defense strategy.
The government taped the calls made from a
phone at Noriega's cell In the Metropolitan
Correctional Institution south of Miami.

"Then she noticed It had gone
from a clear liquid to a yellow
HOLLYWOOD - Police are liquid. She Immediately dieInvestigating a bizarre case of connecld the bag."
medical tampering In which an
The nurse asked other nurses
Intravenous feeding line con­ whether anyone had replaced
nected to a 4- year-old girl was the bag or added any medication
filled with urine.
and she found that none had.
A nurse at Memorial Hospital Cunningham said.
discovered the altered bag about
The girl was admitted lo the
8:30 a.m. Saturday. She had hopsltal about six weeks ago
checked on the little girl about with a high fever and flu-Ukc
20 or 30 minutes earlier and saw symptoms. Doctors diagnosed a
no problem, police spokesman bacterial and yeast infection in
Ed Cunningham said.
her bloodstream.
"The nurse walked Into the
She suffered no severe effects
room and noticed the liquid was from the urine being Introduced
not going down at the same rate Into her bloodstream, police and
it had been." Cunningham said. hospital officials said.

MIAMI — A 6 0 -y e a r-o ld
Bahamian fisherman missing for
five days was found Tuesday by
a tanker that spotted his 12-foot,
wooden dinghy drifting about 80
miles east of Daytona Beach.
Coast Guard officials said.
The 630-root tanker Pecos
notified the Coast Guard shortly
after 2 a.m. that It had picked up
Ellaja Misalck of Freeport. Grand
Bahama Island. Coar' Guard
officials had launched a search
for Mlssick on Thursday aftet
the Bahamian Air Sea Rescue
A ss o c ia tio n re p o rte d h im
overdue.
Mlssick had gone fishing
W ednesday night, m e etin g
another man who was In a
separate dinghy. However, the
weather worsened, forcing the
men to return to shore.
Mlssick's vessel did not make
It back and his wife reported him
missing, triggering a Coast
Guard search that covered 8,000
square miles In three days.
Despite his ordeal. Mlssick wasl
In good condition when he wasl
picked up by the Pecos, which 1
traveled on toward Norfolk, Va..
where It is expected to arrive at
9 a.m. Wednesday.
Coast Guard officials said Ihe
Gulf Stream current had carried
Mlssick 180 miles north. Mlssick
will be met Jn Norfolk by the
Coast Guard and Immigration
and N atu ralizatio n S ervice
agents.

Police would not release the
names of the girl or her parents.
Further tests on the contents
of the bag were being conducted
Tuesday to determine whether
there were other chemicals or
liquids Inside.
The s ta te D epartm ent of
Health and Rehabilitative Serv­
ices was also Investigating the
incident and has placed the child
u n d e r p ro te c tiv e c u sto d y ,
ag e n c y s p o k e sm a n R uben
Betancourt said.
C unningham said such a
measure Is routine In an In­
vestigation of possible child
abuse.
Police sould not say whether

the pare. ts had been questioned
or whether they were suspects.
Attorney Mark Goldberg said
he waa hired by the famly after
the Incident and that he and the
family are trying to find out
what happened.
"We are trying to find out why
and how.” Goldberg said.
Hospital spokeswoman Linda
Hamlin said there was no evi­
dence that a hospital employee
was Involved.
Dr. Jacques Bourgolgnlc. a
kidney specialist and professor
at the University of Miami Medi­
cal School, said If the urine Is not
infected. It Is basically harmless.

TH E W EA TH ER
■ X T I N M D O U TLO O K
Cily4 F*r#ca*t
Albuquorquome
Anchor*q* pc
Atlantat
T
M
J'A
-------Bolllmoroty
T T "
Birminghampc
Biwnorckpc
THUMOAV
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUROAV
Bo*tonty
FHyCldy 75-56 FHyCldy 76-67
EttyCMy 73-17 tsR R y 74-55
Brownaviitew
Bull.topc
Chorlottoty
ChicagoIt
Cltvttendpc
• TA TItTIC t
Daltotcy
Donvarw
The high tem perature In
FIRST SOLUMA * TABLE: Min. 7:50 Sanford Tuesday was 75 de­ Dotrollth
uluthcy
NtMf.SB a.m.. 8:20 p.m.; MaJ. 1:40 a.m.,. grees and the overnight low was D
ElPmopc
2:05 p.m. TIDES: D a y to a a 46 as reported by the University Fargopc
highs. 10:03 a.m.. 10:19 of Florida Agricultural Research Hortterd*y
m.: lows. 3:24 a.m., 4:18 p.m.:
and Education Center, Celery Honoluluih
*w
“
Houttenpc
highs, Avenue. *
Bsuch:
FULL
LAST
Indianapotl*me
10:08 a.m.. 10:24 p.m. lows.
Recorded
rainfall
for
the
Kan***Cityt*
D M .E
3:29 a.m.. 4:23 p.m.;
p e rio d , en d in g at 9 a.m . La*V*gatpc
Stock: highs. 10:23 a.m.,-10:39 Wednesday, totalled 0 Inches.
LlttteRockcy
p.m.; lows. 3:44 am .. 4:38 p.m.
The temperature at 9 a.m. LotAngotetpc
loultvlltopc
today was 64 degrees and M
ilnoukoo*h
Tuesday's
overnight
low
was
Minnoapolltcy
B O A TIN G
52, as recorded by the National No*Ortoon*pc
Weather Service at the Orlando NonYorkty
D ayteaa Beach: Waves are St. A sg n stia* to J n p lts r In le t
Omahacy
2-214 feet with a alight chop.
Today...Wind northeast to east International Airport.
Philadelphiaty
Other
Weather
Service
data:
Current la to the south with a
Phooniipc
10 to 15 kts. Seas 2 lo 3 ft. Bay
water temperature of 68 degrees. and Inland waters a moderate □Tuesday's Ugh............... 76
Pittsburghpc
□ B arom etric prsasurs.SO .22 Provldtftct ty
Nsw Sm yrna Bench: Waves are chop.
□ ■ •latlv u H um idity....75 pet Richmondty
2-3 feet and send choppy. Cur­
Tonight and Thursday...wind □W
Loultth
inds. •****«••&lt;••*.N orth 9 m ph St
rent Is to the south, with a water east 10 to 15 kts. Seas 2 to 4 ft.
SonAntoniome
□
R
ain
fall
O
in.
temperature of 68 degrees.
Bay and Inland waters a moder­
lagopc
□Today's su nset.....5:33 pan. SanD
ate chop.
Soattlor
□ T om orrow 's su n rise....6:53 Spokonome
Wathingtonty
Wichitat*

Today...Mostly sunny with a
high near 80. Wind east 5 to 10
mph.
Tonight...Fair with a tow in
the mid and upper 50s. Light WEDNESDAY
wind.
FtyCldy 7S-5S
T hanksgiving day...M ostly
sunny with a high near 80. Wind
east 10 mph
Extended forecast...M ostly
cloudy Friday with an Increased
chance of showers. Fair Satur­
day and Sunday with the lows tn
the 50s and highs near 80.

Wednesday. November 21,1990
Vot. 83, No. 77

Class P#*tee# Pete at faster*.

gional office In Atlanta.
Under the Clean Water Act.
the federal government sets
lim its on pollutants d is­
charged into U.S. Waters.
Despite the fact that the
facility was operating under a
num ber of adm inistrative
-orders set down by the federal
government, it was still held
accountable for the violations,
he aald.
The authority has now
completed upgrading the fa­
c i l i t y . r e c e iv in g th e
appropriate federal permits In
January 1989.

Patient’s IV bag filled with urine

iU lP t W i lts )

riiSIliked Daily se t Swteay. •«•*!
le tw dsy by Tbs fester* Iterate,
lac., MS H . Frsecb Ay#., fatter*.
Pie. SO Ti.

Act at the facility since 'May
1904. said EPA attorney Allan
Dion,
The settlem ent will not
become final until a public
comment period ts completed
and the U.S. District Court for
the Northern District of Flori­
da approves the agreement.
The facility dumped treated
effluent in to the B ayou
Marcus Creek for five years
despite the fact that It did not
have an appropriate permit
from the federal government,
•aid Hagan Thom pson, a
spoke-man for the EPA's re­

Fisherman
found after
five days

I

MIAMI — F tor.cm u hour temporal***
andralnlallat 7 a m E O T W«dw#id «y :
City
M U
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Apalachicola
71 V POO
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n *1 0 00
Day Iona Boacti
71 *0 000
Fortlaudwdate
re aa 00*
ForlMyort
03 17 0 00
OateMvIllo
I I 41 000
Jacktonvlllo
75 41 004
K ly W n l
70 4* 0 00
Miami
re *1 000
Pon**COl*
75 51 0 00
Sarotola Bradenton
75 S3 0 00
Tallahat***
77 41 T) 00
Tampo
77 54 0 00
Voro Beach
71 54 0 00
Wml Palm batch
M 45 0 00

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Sanford Herald, Sanlord, Florida — \

Battle over bar location
o f v m n o N w o u v tiy d u v v t u i i
SANFORD — The following person facte a charge of driving
under the influence of alcohol (Dili) In Semlnofc County:
•Ronald Mark
of vOrlando,
waa arretted
at 12:48
m m aHedglln.
n i y n n
«19.
» » w
i
A i i m m
T
e.m. Tuesday.
~ a ahertfTe deputy pumied hie fleeing van
y. after
for two miles
» on U.S. Highway 17-92 Sanford. The deputy
reported the van waa
. » speeding
■ ■ ■ and
« weaving.
» . .HedgUn
.»»» also
eras
charged with realsting arret: without violence, fleeing to etude
police, driving with a suspended license and careless driving.
h u i w

i

w a v

a i

i a i

u

Wommsiys photo It ow m poM d
LAKE MARY — A 39-year-old Lake Mary woman reported to
Seminole County sheriffs deputies her 10-year-old daughter
found a photo of a partially nude map Inside the woman's
unlocked car.
The woman, who lives In The Reserve at The Crossings, said
the photo, which was near the passenger's seat of her car, was
probably placed there between 3:30 and 8:15 p.m. Monday.
Deputies confiscated the photo as evidence.

Two armstod in traffic stop
SANFORD — City police who stopped a defective car on W.
Third Street. Sanford, at about 1:19 p.m. Tuesday, report
arresting the car driver and passenger.
Amy Brace well. 28, and David Steven Alls. 28. both of
Orlando, were charged with possession of cocaine and
marijuana after police got permission to search the car. Alls
was also charged with driving with no license, having an
improperly equipped car, driving with a suspended license and
giving false Information to police.

Dsputy reports dtafth threats
OENEVA — Seminole County sheriffs deputies who
confronted Andrew Allen BalUey. 32. 2046 Jackson Court.
Geneva, after receiving a report of a disturbance at his house,
arrested Ballley.
Ballley, at about 10 p.m. Tuesday was charged with three
counts of aggravated assault and one count each of battery,
assault and corruption by threats to a law enforcement oUlcer.
He was also charged with resisting arrest with violence,
disorderly Intoxication and battery-spouse abuse. Ballley's wife
reportedly accused him of throwing her around the house
before deputies arrived. Deputies said more than once Ballley
threatened to shoot deputies and he allegedly ordered his
pitbull dog to attack them. Ballley reportedly was armed with a
knife, a pistol and a shotgun at various times during the
confrontation. He allegedly fought while being subdued and
song a song containing death threats to the deputies, a sheriffs
report said.

Suspsctsd cocaine daalar arrested
SANFORD — An agent for the Sanford police drug
Investigations unit reports the arrest of a man accused or
selling 410 worth of crack cocaine to the agent.
Gilbert Strawtcr, 34. 1012 Holly Ave.. Sanford, was arrested
at 10:26 p.m. Tuesday after the sale on Holly Avenue at 10th
Street, police said. He is charged with possession and sale of
cocaine.

Marijuana lound In Impounded car
SANFORD — A City County Investigative Bureau agent with
a search warrant reported finding .5 grams of marijuana In a
car impounded at the Seminole County Sheriffs Department.
That led to a charge of possession of less than 20 grams or
marijuana for the car's owner Samuel LcRoy Anderson. 49.
821 New England Court. Altamonte Springs. He waa arrested
at the county jail at 2 p.m. Tuesday.

Atlantis ends
military flight
at Kennedy
By WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Science W rlfr____________
CAPE CANAVERAL - The
Atlantia astronauts, diverted by
high winds In California, glided
to a picture-perfect touchdown
Tuesday at the Kennedy Space
Center, capping a successful
military flight with the first
Florida landing In 5 Vs years.
Despite the flawless landing,
NASA officials said it likely will
take another 1 Vs years to
complete extensive landing tests
at the ship's normal Mojave
Desert runway before shuttles
a r e c le a re d fo r ro u tin e
touchdowns In Florida.
Heralded by two shotgun-like
sonic booms. Atlantis streaked
Just north of Disney World and
Orlando at twice the speed of
sound before gliding to a smooth
touchdown at 4:43 p.m. EST on
ru n w ay 33 a t th e Florida
spaceport, one day late because
of persistent crosswinds at
Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
Barreling down the 3-mlle-long
runway at more than 200 mph.
co m m an d er Richard Covey
gently brought Atlantis’s nose
down and pumped the shuttle's
beryllium brakes lo bring the
ship to a stop alter a 2- mil­
lion-mile flight.' presumably
leaving a secret Pentagon spy
satellite behind In orbit.
"Welcome home, that sure
was a beautiful sight " astronaut
Kenneth Bowersox radioed the
crew from mission control In
Houston as Atlantia came to a
halt Just a few miles from the
launch pad where the flight
began last Thursday.
. Forrest McCartney, director of
the Kennedy Space Center, said
A tla n tis appeared to come
through Its launch and re-entry
In excellent condition.
"I was very pleased lo see the
successful completion or the
mission here." he said. "We
have had In place for quite a
while contingency plans such
that tf we needed lo land the
orblter here, we could. We Im­
plemented the plan and It turned
out extremely well. It's good to
have the vehicle back home."
It was the sixth Florida shuttle
landing In the 37 flights In the
program's history and the first
since April 19. 1985.

'1

■

•91
nwruq wiml w flif
LONOWOOO - A new battle Is
shaping up over an old Issue in
Longwnod: whether to allow the
establishment of a new Plus in
Lounge In a former TOAY store
on U A 17-92. Round one of the
bout started Monday night, with
round two scheduled for Monday
* night of next week.
Discussion of the Issue was
finally tabled u n til a work
session next week.
Earlier' this year, a variance
w a s r e q u e s t e d to a llo w
establishm ent of the lounge
within the Longwood city limits,
and although approval was re­
commended by the city's staff as
well as the planning and zoning
board, the commission voted it
down 3 to 2.
Since the Nov. 6 election has '
changed the make-up of the
commission, a new request has
been submitted for reconsid­
eration of the matter.
During this-week's city com­
mission meeting, a number of
citizens discussed the request
during the public participation
period, with m ost of them
speaking In opposition.
One citizen, Terry Welsh, told
th e com mission the lounge
would be within 80 feet of a drug
rehabilitation center and within
100 feet of a church, 'i t Just
doesn't belong there,” he said.

fit’s not necsssarlly a conflict of Interest,
but It could be an ethical question, j

MIAMI — Florida Power A
Light Co., the state’s largest
c le c ttlc u tility , so u g h t
permission Tuesday to raise Its
average residential bill by 6
e rc e n t b e g in n in g J a n . 3
rcause of rising fuel costs.
In Seminole County. FPL
serves about 33,500 utility cus­
tom ers In Sanford, Geneva.
Chuluota and the northern 10
percent of l.ake Mary.
FPL said It filed papers before
the state Public Service Com­
mission seeking an Increase
that. If allowed, would raise the
typical 1,000-kllowatt-hour resi­
dential bill to 480,37 from
475.85, an Increase of 44.52.
Rate Increases for FPL's other
customers vary under the pro­
posal. FPL spokesman Gary
Mehallk said. FPL serves 3
million customers In Florida.

E

WHEN IT COMES T O INSURANCE
WE GIVE YO U MORE FOR LESS.

Another Longwood citizen.
Rudy Carmack, suggested that
because of the campaign con­
tributions from Shader. Lovestrand and Hefter should dis­
qualify themselves from voting
on the matter. "It'a not necessar­
ily a conflict of Interest." he said,
"but 11 could be an elhlcal
question."
Newly seated Interim City At­
torney Jerry Korman suggested

A spokesm an for Florida
Power Corp. In St. Petersburg,
which serves 1 million custom­
ers. said that utility has no plant
to seek such an Increase. Its
r e s id e n tia l c u sto m e rs pay
471.89 for 1.000 kilowatt-hours
of electricity.
Mehallk said PPL needs the
extra money-because of rising
fuel costs that have created a
466 million gap between pro­
jected collections and expenses
for the six-monlh period begin­
ning Oct. 1.
The company also said II
burned more oil than expected
In October because of unusually
w arm w e a th e r d u rin g th e
month, which Increased the
demand for air conditioning.

H .uLAWm
or
MAY HKB &gt;

•szssss s « ®
Vfi

_
__ - - = ■ ■=■ —

/ C H R Y SLER

__
,____ ____
ZZT ZLZ -- — a t

• PLY M O U TH

i

AUTHORIZID
r
i
i

10% O ff

i A nv Service Work
^PRESENTTHiS A O ^ &amp; P W &amp; M 4 M 0

Service on ell Chrysler vehicles
•Tune ups/brakes/aJignments
•Transmission Service
• Scheduled Services (on, interchange. uwi)

•Air Conditioner Service
•Other repairs, engine, electrical, cooling
4113Hwy. 17-82

A J M

E G IIR

SANFORD

Houn:730-530
Moodsy - Flfdsy

fW '

NOTICE OF ESTABLISHMENT OF
CHANGE OF A REGULATION
AFFECTING THE USE OF LAND
Th e Board of County Com m issioners of Seminole County, Florida
proposes to adopt or change a regulation affecting the use of land in the
unincorporated area shown on the map In this advertisement.
A public hearing on the regulation affecting the use of land will be held
at 7:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as possible, at its regular meeting on the
27th day of November, 1990, at the Seminole County Services Building, 1101
East First Street, Room W-122, Sanford, Florida.

(®) mm
im W A N C I M B M C Y , nk.
413 W. F irst St.
Ph. 322-5752
William H. "Bill” Wight C.P.C.U.
Prssidtnt
Sw ing Cantral Florida Sinca 1949

Commiesloner Adrienne Perry,
who eras one of the two vote* In
favor of the lounge when ft waa
first brought up. Add she feds aa
though she la a hnstagr being
held In face of a lawsuit.
Mayor Hank Hardy postponed
further discussion on the lounge
until a special workshop aesMon
set for Monday, Nov. 26. at 7
p.m.. In the
tiers at the 1Longwood City Han.
rrotAve^
175 W. Warren
i

Gary Shader, attorney for the the lounge reconsideration be set
Plus IB lounge owner, said he up for a workshop session. "I
had filed a lawsuit against the know a lot of people don't like
city over the case and suggested the Idea of the lounge." Korman
the city reconsider the matter said, " b u t legally there la
rather spending 812,000 to nothing In the o.dlnancea to
918.000 In legal expenses.
prevent the lounge from operat­
ing
In the city." He added that
Carolyn Emmellng called at­
tention to the fact that Shader
was a campaign contributor to
the candidacies of Gary Hefter
and Raul Loveatrand. who have
now replaced former Mayor
Gene Farach and former Deputy
Mayor Jeff Morton, who voted
against the original lounge re­
quest. "Now. here It Is. the very
first m eeting with the new
commissioners and you bring
this up again." she told Shader.

FPL seeks rate increase
due to high fuel prices
By DOM PMKPIIOCK
UPI Business Writer

he didn't think If'would be "In
the city's best Interests to let the

Sanford

Hfe're gota newM
enu!
IS Dinners under V I
Flounder

Fried Boneless Chicken Breast j

Stuffed Flounder

Stuffed Shrimp

M ah i Mahi

D eviled Crab Cakes

AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NUMBER 90-5 RELATING TO
“ LATE NIGHT BUSINESSES, STORES OR OPERATIONS”; AMENDING SAID
ORDINANCE TO COMPLY WITH CHAPTER 90-346, LAWS O F FLORIDA;
PROHIBITING T H E TIN TIN G OF W INDOW S; REQUIRING SIGNAGE
RELATING TO TH E AMOUNT O F CASH ON HAND; PROVIDING STANDARDS
FOR THE ILLUMINATION O F PARKING LOTS; REQUIRING TRAINING
COURSES TO BE APPROVED BY TH E ATTORNEY GENERAL; REQUIRING
SILENT ALARM SYSTEMS; PROVIDING FOR T H E ASSESSMENT OF CIVIL
FINES; PROVIDING FOR PROCEDURES; PROVIDING FORQOMPLAINTS BY
TH E SEMINOLE COUNTY SHERIFF; AMENDING SECTION 53.1 OF THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY CODE BY EXPANDING T H E JURISDICTION OF THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY CODE ENFORCEMENT BOARD; PROVIDING FOR
LIBERAL CONSTRUCTION; PROVIDING FOR APPLICABILITY TO MUNICI­
PALITIES; PROVIDING FOR CODIFICATION; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILI­
TY AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
SEMINOLE C O U N TY
r—i uw£G«ip&amp;ufff» m §cc*K**tio

Seafood Pasta Broccoli Fried Shrimp
R ock Shrimp
•••* ^ orc
Served withfamous conch chowder, choice ofpotato,
ctwice of salad orfresh simmered vegetable, banana
fritter A hath puppy

Early Bird Dinners 4-6 p.m.
$4.95 to $6.95
induJn kfimj* &amp;Jeueri

2508 French Ave. (Ilwy. 17-92)
SANFORD • 322-5281 '

« * R 3E : £

P e rson s are a d vise d th a t, II th e y d e c id e to appeal a n y d e c is io n m a d e at th is hea ring,
th e y w ill need a re c o rd o f th e p ro c e e d in g s , a n d , fo r s u c h p u rp o s e s , th e y m ay need to Insure
th a t a ve rb a tim re c o rd o f th e p ro c e e d in g s is m a d e , w h ic h re c o rd in c lu d e s (he te s tim o n y and
e v id e n c e u p o n w h ic h th e ap p e a l is to be b a s e d .

(SEA L)

M A R Y A N N E M ORSE
C le rk to th e B oard o f
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e rs
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a
By: C a ry lo n C o hen
D e p u ty C le rk

1

�«■
is
_

■'

4A - Sanford Herald.4antord, Floridam

,

:i

W I L L I A M A. R U S H E R

Dear Mr. President: Please read this

IMPS 44t-»)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-333 9811 or 831

SUBSCRIPTION RATS:
3 Months........... ........................419.90
8 Month*....................................439.00
lY tif ....................................... 47400
#

mjiJ

E D ITO R IA LS
1

Educational tyranny
Lynne C heney’s stroke o f fm h ia to h e r title,
■Tyrannical M achines/* H er report on "Edu­
cational Practices Gone W rong and O ur Beat
Hopes for S etting T hem Right/* a a the
subtitle h as It, breaks no new p o u n d — but
th at central Image crystallises an Im portant
argum ent.
C e r ta in p r a c t i c e s a n d v a lu e s In stitulonallxed in th e Am erican educational
system are counterproductive. Mrs. Cheney
says. They actually en su re th e low achieve­
m ent of American stu d en ts, yet they resist
change because they a re so widely entren­
ched. Real reform m ~ iH t of developing
alternatives and Increasing people's freedom
and ability to choaae am ong them .
The phrase h taken from Am erican phttotophet W illiam Jam es. In a 1003 essay
w arning of the grow tng specteiiiaU on of
higher education. Mrs. Cheney, chairm an of
the N ational Endow m ent for the Hum anities,
applies th e term to prevailing m ethods of
train in g teachers, selecting textbooks and
testin g students, aa well aa to colleges'
undervaluing of teaching and overvaluing of
ever narrow er scholarly research.
T he p la in e st exam ple of a tyrannical
m achine Is teacher education. The barren­
ness of m ost education courses has been
c ritic iz ed fo r decades. A well designed
alternative would stress liberal education,
know ledge of th e subject to be taught end
supervised experience In the classroom.
,T-’£ 3 »

In the matter of President Bush’s deviations
from conservative orthodoxy. I have generally
more forfhrlng than most of my
on the right. For one thing. I
sympathise profoundly with hi* basic problem:
how to cope with a Congress both Houses of
which are controlled by the opposition party (a
problem. Incidentally, that Ronald Reagan didn't
have for the first six of his eight year* in the
While House).
Bui 1feel obliged, now, to warn Mr. Bush that I
am beginning to detect rumbles on the right that
are deeper and mare serious than any I have
heard heretofore. If he disregards the disaffection
that M now growing among conservative*, it la
not Impossible that he may confront a rebellion
tn 1989 that win spell the end of his presidency.
Normally the response of a president to
supporters farther than he is from the supposed
"center" would be. "They have nowhere else to
go." He might even welcome their criticism on
the theory that It would simply endear him to
voters nearer the center who might otherwise
vote for his opponent.
But the bod news for Mr. Bush is that serious
conserva tives have begun talking seriously
about running an Independent against him In
1993. even 1if the1iresult Is a short-term victory for

the Democrats. And the things about hH
administration that
are beginning to dtsaffect conservatives
a r e n o t firm ly
centrist policies that
can be expected to
rein support for Mr.
Bush among "mod­
erates." They add
up. instead, to a
sense of directionless
drift that alienates
l i b e r a l s as
thoroughly as con­
servatives.
Thus, the latest
Issue of “Policy Re­
( Ha m ay c o n ­
view." the quarterly
fro n t a re­
publication of the
b e llio n In 1992
Heritage Foundation,
th
a t w ill s p e ll
the largest and most
th a a n d o fh ls
I m p o r ta n t of a ll
p re sid e n cy. J
conservative think
tanks, contains an
article by Heritage's
senior vice president. Burton Yale Pines, pro­
posing that conservatives walk out on Mr. Bush
In 1993 and run a candidate against him, much
as Theodore Roosevelt walked out on the GOP In

JA C K ANDERSON

Tra ve l agent kisses
off governm ent cash
WASHINGTON - Maryland travel agent
Jack Skloff knows firsthand how cavalier the
federal government Is with your money. For
th e p a s t seven years, his company.
Dimensions Travel, has made travel plans for
several federal agencies. But no more.
SklofT has kissed 47 million a year in
business goodbye because, ”1didn't want to
c o n tin u e to help
them to rape the tax­
payer." he told us. “I
w ant to work for
p e o p le w ho sa y .
'J a c k , s a v e me
money.' not 'Jack,
spend my money.

Such a n alternative Is twinging excellent
results in New Jersey — but only two. other
states, C onnecticut and Texas, are following
suit. W hy? Because the teacher-certification
m achine h as the law an d mighty
Interests on Its side.
Mrs. Cheney has h it on a crucial truth:
Som e sy stem s are unreform abie. Hope Iks
only in getting out from under them . T his Is
the prem ise o f the m ost sweeping proposal for
public school reform yet m ade, th e radical
choice p la n recently advanced by Jo h n
C hubb an d T erry Moe of th e liberal Brookings
Institution. Public schools will never achieve
the freedom from bureaucratic control that
private schools enjoy. C hubb and Moe anige,
until they are forced to com pete for students.
Mrs. C heney cites C hubb and Moe’s work
appro v in g ly : Mare Im p o rtan t s h e brings
needed reinforcem ents to the view th a t
educational orthodoxies m ust be bypassed
rath e r th a n adapted from w lthin.The skim py
resu lts of education reform In the 1980a show
how easily the tyrannical m achines have
w ithstood reform ers' efforts so far.

G ra ss-ro o ts d ip lo m a cy
S in ce 19 4 0 ,when 130 Latin A m erican
Journalists were invited to visit th e United
S tates os p art of a new visitor exchange
program , nearly 100,000 foreigners — m ost of
them rising politicians, governm ent officials,
jo urnalists, scholars and others — have fpent
u m onth here a s part of w hat's now called the
International Visitors Profpam, ru n by the
Stutc D epartm ent. Fifty years on, th e pro­
gram is going strong and, In Its way, m ay well
one of th e m ost effective form s of
diplom acy.
Most of those Invited here have not yet
achieved VIP status, th u s they are able to see
A m erica, and meet Am ericans from many
w alks of life, on an inform al level. They are
usually accom panied by a free-lance escort —
not a governm ent official — who doubles as
an In terpreter when necessary. T hey may
m eet w ith scholars, students, politicians or
farm ers, often staying overnight in private
hom es.
T h ere 's no guarantee, of course, th a t such
neoplc-to- people contacts will result In a
friendlier race toward th is country
count If, a s often
happens, a foreign guest later becom es a
p re sid e n t o r prim e m inister o r C abinet
m inister, os m ore than 700 such visitors have
done. Indeed, some go hom e with th e same
prejudices they cam e w ith. Yet m ore often
th an not. the experience leaves a lasting
|N&gt;sitive im pression, as It did w ith such
" a lu m n i" a s Willy B randt (1954). M argaret
T h atch er (1967) and South African President
K.W. de Klerk (1976). Saddam Huaaeln. be it
noted, never got with the program .

LETTERS TO EDITOR
l.t iter*, to iIn- editor are welcome. All letters must
U signed. Include the address of the writer and a
davlime telephone number. Lellcrs should lx-on
■i s in g lile subject and be as brief as possible.,
11 lb rs are subject to editing.

1912 and ran on the "Bull Moose” ticket.
"As In 1912." Pines argues, "there la great
merit in opposition even If Immediate election
victory Is unlikely and even tf It may give the
Democrat* near-term gains. Open opposition
would allow conservatives to go on record
against the betrayals of the Bush administration.
Open opposition would challenge the While
House’s monopoly on what a Republican (or
even a conservative) is. Open opposition would
■how the public that conservatives are not
responsible for nor even associated with the
economic and other disaster* toward which
Bush and his top advisors are driving the
nation."
Aa if that weren't enough, the current Issue of
National Review, the oldest and biggest journal
of conservative opinion, describes even Mr.
Bush's veto of the ao-called "civil rights btll" (a
veto It approved) as follows: "The Democrats
deserve most of the credit. They're the ones who
made the alternative unbearable even when he
was ready to capitulate."
The same Issue calls for the firing of Budget
Director Richard Damian: “Most or the Presi­
dent's problems today derive from his failure to
recognise his mistakes. Sacking Darman would
represent the first sign that he has begun to
understand where he went so disastrously
wrong.'*

ELLEN GOODM AN

K in g : C o n te n t of his ch a ra cte r
BOSTON — At the beginning, the subject
was so touchy that the scholar* were asked not
to even use the word. For over a year, those
working with Martin Luther King Jr.'s, papers
called It, cynically and sadly, "the P-word."
Now the revelation that King appropriated
the words of others throughout his graduate
career la common knowledge. Great passages
of his Ph.D. thesis weren't his.
Again, a P-word has tarnished the bright
heroism of this leader. Last time It was
promiscuity. Today It Is plagiarism.
Once. Martin Luther King Jr., talked about a
time when his children would live In a "nation
where they will not be Judged by the color of
th eir skin but by the content of their
character." Today, he is being Judged by the
complex content of his own character.
The country Is learning or the flaws that
their owner felt so Intensely. King was no stick
figure, appropriate for holiday framing, no
object for the school lessons we offer up to our
tat
holiday heroes. George Washington fathered
the country. Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves.
Martin Luther King championed civil rights.
Class dismissed tor the long weekend.
This person of great courage and vision had,
wide fissures In his moral makeup. The man*
who had a dream also had secrets, though not
from himself.
,
By all accounts. King was mercilessly
self-critical, often Insecure, wounded by guilt
and nagged by a sense of unworthlnesa. Once
h e p r ae a c h e d . ' ' T h e r e l a a
schizophrenia...within all of us. There are
times that all of us know somehow there Is a
Mr. Hyde and a Dr. Jekyll In us."
While he was far and away his own harshest
Judge. King was also wisest perhaps In
calculating the distance between a hero and a
human. It Is something the rest of us find
difficult.
To be sure, promiscuity Is not a felony, nor Is
plagiarism. It matters little to the world what
King might have written on the Ph.D. subject
of "A Comparison of the Conceptions of God In
the Thinking of Paul Tillich and Henry Nelson
Welman."
*
It was what he did tor. and said to, the
country that crystallized our Ideals as much as
any Geltsyburg Address. But where do we put
the revelation that the man who took on the
mantle of leadership In a moral cause, also
cheated. On hla wife. In his scholarship.
In the time-honored tradition. King has gone
through the transformation from ordinary
person tn leader tu martyr to saint. The cause
was personified and the personification was
Martin Luther King Jr.

The people who discovered his plagiary
knew In their dismay that this would give aid.
comfort and ammunition to enemies. Not Just
the enemies of King, but of civil rights.
Now. as David Oarrow, a King biographer
deeply surprised by the evidence of plagiarism,
says: "Using King as an Inspirational symbol
for children or teenagers is much, much more
difficult now. There's no getting around that.'
B u t m a y b e we
have had too much of
heroes manufactured
and disassembled. Aa
Claybom Carson, the
head of the King
papers project, says:
*‘l don’t think It's
healthy In a democ­
racy to believe that
there are some peo­
ple who were born
g re a t and not
without human (laws
and limitations. To
me a heroic figure is f T ho m an w h o
som eone who re ­
had a d re a m
cognizes hts or her
a ls o had
own limitations and
aacrata,
yet has the courage
• th o u g h n o t
to respond to the
fro m h im s e lf. J
demands of historical
moments."
perhaps It's time not Just for a revisionist
view of King, but of hero-worship Itself. We
have lived, after all, most familiarly with the
notion that leaders make change. The Great
Man school of history is taught to our children.
America doesn't celebrate National Founding
of the United States Day nor The War to End
Slavery Day nor Civil Rights Day. We give
faces and names to our crises. Today, many
talk about a lack of leaders aa if the genetic
strain had run thjn. But Is moments and
moVements that produce greatness In people.
In one sermon. King said prophetically: "You
don't need to go out this morning saying that
Martin Luther King is a saint. I want you to
know this morning that I am a sinner like all of
God's children, but I want to be a good man
and I want to hear a voice saying to me one
day. T take you In and I bless you because you
tried."'
After all the P-words arc placed In the
alphabet of his character, this is the lesson for
the .children. Here was a man, an ordinary
man. with human strengths and weaknesses.
But when the time came and much was
demanded of him. he found the greatness
within himself. Martin Luther King Jr., "tried"
—and he changed the world we live in.

No longer will he
face the rush to book
tickets to Las Vegas
arid PsTm Springs tor
" m e e t i n g s " ju s t
because It's the end
of the federal fiscal
year. (One federal
f S k lo ff h a s
agency called SklofT
k is s e d $7 m il­
one September and
lio n a ye a r In
exclaimed. "We’ve
b u s in e s s
got 449,000 left In
goodbye. J
our travel budget.
Set up some meet­
ings! We'll figure out
what they're about later.")
Our associate Jim Lynch has examined the
ledgers of several federal agency travel
budgets for last year. The amount spent on
travel In September, the end of the fiscal year.
Is almost double that spent In August and
most other months too.
That's not all. SklofT said federal travelers
are encouraged to use their frequent flyer
miles to upgrade their tickets to first class
rather than save them for a free coach ticket
later.
Not only Is the government wasteful. Skloff
has seen It be downright stupid when It
comes to venturing outside Washington D.C.
One federal travel co o rdinator called
Dimensions asking for help to find the town
of Vicinity. Her of__
&gt;mce told her to book travel
to St. Louis and Vicinity, but she couldn't
find It on the map. Another federal employee
asked for help finding the town of Maconga.
Aa it turned out, the destination was Macon.
Ga.
SklofT has also had to cope with some
ulrks. like the bureaucrat who kept demanlng advance boarding passes from airlines
that didn't Issue them, and the woman who
complained to him that there were "gay
people In the lobby" or the San Francisco
hotel where Dimensions booked her to stay.
She also griped that the counter In the
bathroom was too small to hold her curling
Iron.
SklofT said he doesn't mind going above
and beyond the call of duly for his clients.
But seven years of watching the government
throw away taxpayers money went beyond
common sense. SklofT did not bid to continue
hl» contract work with the government last
spring. But he still had some leftover
contracts to fulfill with a few agencies,
including the Nuclear Regulatory Com*

a

In late September. NRC Chairman Ker
Carr went to Europe for an Internal
meeting on nuclear energy. An assistant
went along, Stephen Bums, planned to
In Europe after the meeting far a vacatlo
he wouldn’t be coming home with the n
the team, according to a travel docui
Carr filed In August.
But when It became clear that Bums a
have to spend about 4400 of his own m
to change his return ticket. Carr signed a
memo saying that Bums would return o;
same day as the others, (lying first cla
the others were. It wasn't true, but It be
Bums a ticket with enough face value tl
could be exchanged to cover his &lt;
vacation travel.
Carr says he wrote the second men
give comparative costs for Bums' t
plans. Burns says the trip was "fully a
board. Carr and Burns both noted tha
travel bf being reviewed by the NRC’s
office.

�M M IU U J n W T P O , O V I 'w v i r P O n W i •

- - -*--- tin i!■■!#! n &lt;M 4 | M ___
IM I
*

fT V U n v P U 1 f , m r U T T IW f m lv I I W

Return‘Ourtprowte’ startSaturday
MAtTLAMj - The Florida Audubon Society's Center far
Mrds l&gt;ey will bast its annual antes of “owl pn
Saturdsy starting Nov. 34 through Dec. 23.
The evening tours of the av tv y to hear
Horned. Barred. Bern and R inuw lug owls wfll he from 4 to 8
p.m.. starting at the Florida Audubon gift ato p on 8. Lahe
«ybeha Drive. MaHfaod. The prowls a r e W S o p ro to lS e
public.
For more Information, can the center at 647*3815.

Dinners-

lA

Street.
will be serving Thanksgiving
dinner from 1 until 4 p.m.
tom orrow , to p erso n s w ho
otherwise would
mid he without any
food at all. much
a festive
meal.
This year, the Salvation Army
is Joining the Rescue Outreacn
Mission's event and helping to
supply much of the food, some of
which was pre*prepared by
Army workers and volunteers.
Capt. Gary Bergen of the
Salvation Army said. "Our advi­
sory board took a look at the
situation this year, and de*
termined that while there wasn't
enough demand for us to have a
sep arate meal here a t o u r
headquarters, we could help
many people by Joining In with
the mission."
Eighty-five baskets of food
were handed out to needy fami­
lies this morning at the Sanford
Salvation Army office. "Folks
took them home to do their own
cooking and have their own
meal." Bergen said.
The Salvation Army tomorrow
is also providing vehicles and
help In delivering a number of
complete turkey dinners to the
homes of shut-ins in Sanford and
the surrounding area. In all.
some 20 to 25 turkeys have been
prepared for the event.
Other help for those In need is
being supplied by v ario u s
groups, dubs and organisations.
The Lake Mary Community
Im p ro v em en t A sso c ia tio n ,
which, during the annual pre­
cooked turkey sale tomorrow,
will also provide a number of
free turkey dinners for shut-ins
In the Lake Mary area.
One event, scheduled for Sat­
urday. is both a Thanksgiving
observance and an anti-drug
event. Ye Okie Pilgrims Festival
will be held at Park on Park.

ROBERT A. BBfNB'i i
Robert A. Bennett. 63. of 1
R abbit Run. O rand Island,
passed away Sunday. Nov. 18. at
his residence. Bom Nov. 31.
1926, In Sanford, he moved to
Grand Island In 1982 from
Winter Park. He waa an engineer
and owner of Tel Sat Earth
Stations of Grand Island and a
member of the Church of Re­
ligious Science. He was a U.S.
Army World War II veteran.
Survivors Include wife, Phyllis.
G rand Island; aon. R obert
Morgan. Stafford, Va.; daugh­
ters. Mary Harriet Adams of
Groton. Conn.. Candice Burden
of Pompano Beach, Tam ara
Q u ille n of O rla n d o . B ebe
Chudeusx of Euatis; atepdaught e r . J o a n n e N ic h o ls o f
Philadelphia: brothers. William
and Boyd, both of D allas.
Charles H. of DcBary: nine
grandchildren.
Hardcn/Paul! Funeral Home.
Eustla, in charge of arrange­
ments.
NORMA MA R J O R I E
CLAYTON
Norma Marjorie Clayton. 57.
344 W. Hornbeam St.. Longwood. died Sunday at Orlando
Regional Medical Center. Bom
July 23. 1933. in New York, she
m oved to Longw ood from
Honolulu In 1967. She was a
homemaker and a member of
lhe Orlando Christian Center.
Survivors Include husband.
Edwin Robert; sons. Edwin Rob­
ert J r .. Orange City. Jo b n
Fredrick. Honolulu; daughters.
Carol Lynn Jones. Londonderry,
N.H.. Susan Elizabeth. Longwood; sisters. Jeanett Florence
Kolas, Eleanor Lois Leonard,
both of Dallas; seven grand­
children.
Baldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs- In
charge of arrangements.

Ninth Street at Pork A
I until 4 p.m.
H starts with a
No" parade arour the Mock at
1 p.m.. featuring a
depicting the
for puansri and drug us
m arching pilgrim s
frtn events
attention to
Yesterday. Labor World USA.
330 B. Commercial Ave..
fam ilies of presently unem ­
ployed peoptr In the
fkm and labor trades.

annual salary as
$80,000. After 33 years
lawman, (he firm 10 as a
trooper. Polk wfll receive a large
percentage of that amount an­
nually In retirement.
In his letter submitting his
retirement and appointee re­
quest. Folk d ie d his faffing
health and his confidence In
EaUnger as hts reasons far retir­
ing.
"I know of no other Individual
who would be satisfactory." Folk
wrote In the fetter dispatched
Tuesday to the governor. To
accommodate Orange County
newa media, a spokesman an­
nounced Folk's plans and rec­
ommendation Tuesday night in
Sanford.
"I'm very honored be re ­
commended me. It’s very flat­
tering he has confidence In my
ability," E alln * r said of Polk.
“ la an Institution In

A n n e tte N o rm an . V irg in ia
Beach. Va.: 30 grandchildren: 31
g r e a t - g r a n d c h il d r e n : tw o
great-great-grandchildren.
Wllaon-Elchelberger Mortuary
Inc.. Sanford. In charge of ar­
rangements.

IT

departure,
a—
» -DJr K.nm
IwO
&gt; deputies
the county more than
n severance pay. ac­
crued benefits and consulting
fees to Netswender's Orlando
firm. Much of that am ount
would have been paid to Hooper
and the three officials under him
had they stayed.
Sentiments on the board have
Streetman said he would sup­
port the return, preferably with a
4-1 or greater show of support
but even with a 3-8.
Kelley and Warren remain
a d a m a n t In th e ir p o sitio n
agMnst Hooper's return.
*1 will not support him coming
back," Kelley said. "I accepted
his nomination and I don't see
any reason to faring him back. It
would be potitkml suicide to Arat
his resifiation
realm
then a
year later offer him the Job

the county — not only in law
enforcement,
but politically as
--Vas
W
1I.II
EaUnger waa to have become
Folk's underaherlT in January.
EaUnger said his appointment to
as sheriff :h as not
officially been announced by
Martinex. He has not choaen an
undenhertfr or chief deputy to
serve as his second In command.
Inter-department speculation is
focused on Capt. Roy Hughey.
Lt. Marty LaBruactano. Lt. A1
Sanches and 8 0 . Jerry Human
aa potential candidates for that
position.
Polk la suffering from con­
gestive heart disease and com­
plications related to his second
heart bypass surgery performed
one year ago. His doctors report
he is too ill to receive a needed
heart transplant, and they
commended Polk retire.
EaUnger. 33. has been acting
admiatrator for the department
during Folk's many recent hoapttsUsatiouh Polk's latest hoapir a ­

brother. David E.. Mingo Ju n c­
tion; slater. Betty ,L. Isley,
Bloomlngdale. Ohio.
.G arden Chapel Home for
Funerals, Longwood. in charge
of arrangements.

Clayton Thomas. 75. 115
Salem St.. Altamonte Springs,
Hasel M. Moos. 83. 363 Cler­ died Monday at Florida Hospital.
mont Ave.. Lake Mary, died Orlando. Bom Nov. 30. 1914, in
Monday at Central Florida Re­ Augusta. Ga.. he moved to
gional Hospital. Sanford. Bom Altamonte Springs from there in
Sept. 23. 1907. In Sanford, she 1940. He was the owner of Club
waa a lifelong resident of the 436 and a Baptist. He was an
area. She waa a homemaker and Army veteran of World War II.
a member of the First Baptist
S u rv iv o rs in c lu d e w ife.
Church of Sanford. She waa a Catherine; daughter. Quecnle
m em ber of th e Lake Mary Stevens. Stamford. Conn.: sister.
Women’s Club and the Lake Mary Wallace. Augusta; five
Mary Homemaker's Association. g ra n d c h ild re n : one g r e a t­
Survivors Include son. Richard grandchild.
L.. Severna Park. Md.; brother.
Bruton's Funeral Home. Or­
Richard Packard. Sanford; sister. lando, In charge of arrange­
Louise P. Malone. Sanford; three ments.
grandchildren.
G ram kow F u n eral Home.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.
SCH M ITT, a O S IR T A
Funtra' aarvkaa Hr Mr. BannaM will ba
haM a* Nw MarSWFaull Funaral Hama
mat an FrMay at 131 p.m. Calling hour*
I la NaM an Than** avantag tram 4 till •

Engeiena Ravenhorst. 80. 156
Lake Shore Drive. Altamonte
Springs, died Monday at her gm.
Funaral arranjamirtt ara undar Nw diracresidence. Born June 30, 1910, Man at Hardan/Faull Funaral Hama at
in Iowa, she moved to Altamonte ■uatia.
Springs from Bay Springs. Mias., M O U .M A IIL M .
in 1976. She waa a homemaker
Funaral aarvkaa tar Mrv Moral M Mata,
and a member of Weklva Pre- n . aI Lafea Mary. «tw &lt;*ad Monday, will ba
M;M Manday nwrnlns (Nau.» ) at Oramkaw
tertan Church,
sbyteria
Hama Ownal with Rav. Or. Virgil
Survlrivors Include son. Vernon. Funaral
Bryant aMcMtof. bitarmant will ba In
Bay Springs; daughter. Beverly fyargraan Camttary. Friandt may call at
Gramkaw Funaral Hama Sunday tram 2 la 4
O lson. A ltam o n te S p rln g a; p.m.
brothers. Andy. Minnesota. Mert.
Arranfamanta by Gramkaw Funaral
Lansing. Minn.; sister. Cornelia
Felty, Brownadalc. Minn.; five
g ra n d c h ild re n : five g r e a t­
grandchildren.
B aldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Orlando, in charge of
arrangements.

F.rocsi Lee Schayes, 40. 183
Canterclub Trail. Longwood.
died Tuesday at Orlando Re­
HENRIETTA BELL AUSTIN gional Medical Center. Bom
April 2. 1950. in Steubenville.
KNIGHT
Ohio,
he moved to Longwood
Henrietta Bell Austin Knight.
82. 1013 W. 11th St.. Sanford, from Gatlinburg. Term., in 1965.
died Nov. 15. In Hartford Hospi­ He was southeast regional sales
tal, Hartford, Conn. Bom Aug. manager for Len-Gordon Co..
30. 1908. In Quincy, she moved Calif., and a member of Redeem­
to Sanford In 1911 from there. er Community Church. Long­
She waa a homemaker and a wood. He waa an Air Force
member of Christian Fellowship veteran of the Vietnam War and
Primitive Baptist Church where a member of the National Spa
and Pool Institute. Florida Chap­
she waa Mother of the Church.
Sur/Ivors include sons. Louts ter.
Survivors include wife, Karen
Bell. Hartford. Setmon Austin
and Rev. Miles Austin, both of S.; daughter. Mailssa Lvnne.
Woodbrldgc. N.J.: daughters. Longwood: parents. Mr. ad Mrs.
Annie OxTdinc. Delray Beach. Ernest T.. Mingo Junction. Ohio:

m

than a year
chairSandra Glenn, with the
of rommUafoncrs JenKelley and Pat Warren,
strated Hooper's
tion. Otmn event
tag the fab t o !
teWng Hooper he had loot the
support of the majority of the

Nawly ch o san com m ission chairm an Frad Nswty atsctsd commissioner Larry Furlong and
Straatman (can tar) gives outgoing*chairman Sandra commlesiooar Jennifer Kelley applaud at yester­
Qiann a gift In appreciation of bar years of asrvica. day's masting.
him she would not vote to rehire but did not offer his own rec­
‘I would not be able to support him. She said she has also been ommendation. Harllng is a local
his return." Warren said.
contacted by Hugh Harllng who engineer and was an advisor for
Warren said she has been told her Hooper had told him he W arren 's 1988 com m ission
contacted by Hooper but told
Interested In the Job again campaign.

tal nation in Altamonte Springs
began Nov. 7.
EaUnger has served Folk 13
y e a rs . Polk a n n o u n c e d In
August that in January EaUnger
waa to become his underahertff.
A couple of months ago Polk
promoted EaUnger from the rank
of lieutenant to major. Since
August. EaUnger has acted aa a
key admlnatrative aide to Polk.
He is slated to attend the FBI
National Academy for 11 weeks
beginning in April.
F or th re e y ears p rio r to
becoming underahertff desig­
nate. EaUnger was chief of the
C ity C o u n ty In v e ■
s IlgSlIVC
tig a tiv e
Bureau, the countywide
aide drug
task force. EaUnger developed
de
that unit, comprised of isheriff's
deputies, and dty police from
Sanford. Lake Mary. Longwood.
Casselberry. Altamonte Springs,
and Oviedo. Into a top flight drug
fighting team . He h as also
worked as a road patrolman and
s u p e rv is o r, an d aa an In ­
vestigator.
In 1989 the Greater Seminole
County Chamber of Commerce
named EaUnger Public Safety
Officer of tne Year for his
leadership of CCIB and
against drugs In the community
on several levels. Including
public speaking. He has received
other similar awards.
A Sanford resident. EaUnger
began his career with the de­
partment as a dispatcher. Even
during his one year as a dispat­
cher. EaUnger became a member
of the SWAT team and worked
with the undercover drug unit of
the departm ent For two yean
he was assigned as an agent for
the U.S. Drug Enforcem ent
Admlnistation.
Although he is a Republican.
EaUnger has not been a political
activist. He said he has been too
busy doing his jobs and related
community service to become
Involved In politics, except In
support of Polk. Polk switched
from the Democratic to Re­
p u b lic a n P arty to su p p o rt
Martinex in (he 1966 election.
EaUnger declined comment on
the 1992 sheriff's race.
Esllnger has the support of Lt.
Gov. Bobby Brantley to All Polk's
slot.
Polk. 58. took office In 1969.
He was a state trooper 10 years
before that, and also owned a
Sanford print shop.
He is dean of Florida's sliertil's. During Polk’s tenure the
county saw phenomenal growth,
with the snerifTs department

II .1 Mi l

attack.
The November surgery and
congestive heart disease re­
turned Polk to th e hospital
numerous times this post year,
with fluid In his chf-it cavity,
damaged ribs, ana medications
problems. He Is a long-time
diabetic. After extensive evalua­
tion In September, doctors at
Shands Hospital In Gainesville
told Polk he Is not a candidate
fora needed heart transplant.
Congestive heart disease has
damaged Polk's lungs, ruling out
the surgery. His shortness of
breath and related problems
have caused him to base his
work from his home or the
hospital from much of this past
year.

Closings------C a a tla ssd from Pag* 1A
company will not be effected as
regular pickup days are Wednes­
days and .Saturdays. Western
Waste In Lake Mary will be
clpsed for Thanksgiving but
operating on the normal routes
Friday.
Other operations to be shut
down both days Include Cham­
bers of Commerce and the San­
ford City Recreation Department
facilities.
While post offices will be closed
Thursday, regular mail service
and deliveries will be operating
as usual on Friday.
Although (he Central Florida
Zoo and the Sunford Boy's and
G irl's C lub on P ersim m on
Avenue will take Thursday off,
they will both operate normally
on Friday with the usual non­
school duy schedule in effect at
the club.

L r d . P a r t n e r s h ip s

BuylNq...ScUiNq
V a I u a t Ions ???
C aU RJdtAftd EcksTiiN

“STOCK
REDUCTION
SALE”
F U R N IT U R R
2 0 -8 0 % O FF!

F m rs Office Sepgly Ce.
117 MAGNOLIA AV£ . SANFORD

Swtih Ba r ky . Harris UpltAM

It Co_ Inc

(4 0 7 ) 2 7 6 -9 0 8 7

svru.s.

SAVINOSSOMAS
For the currant fatocoll...
!«#

322-5543

ATTENTION

5250 Reward!
1 I, lllft.MX.

H l l s l l l t s s I I l s u r . l i l t l .*
••l h

and county Jail staff increasing
from 35 to 500. The department
operates with a 824 million
annual budget.
Polk Instituted a countywide
SWAT team and the City County
Investigative Bureau — one of
the state's leading drug task
forces, which EaUnger led. Dis­
patching systems and record
keeping became computerised,
and the 911 emergency phone
system was Installed here.
The county Jail waa expanded
to house 812 prisoners, with
funds from federal and state
grants and a 1965. one-year,
one-cent sales tax. all requested
by Polk. A similar tax for similar
purposes was nixed by voters
earlier this month.
The retiring sheriff has served
the state as well as the county,
on state law enforcement and
corrections boards. Polk wan
Instrumental, through the Flori­
da Sheriff’s Association. In
making most Florida sheriff's
departm ents self-insured.' He
tw ite tra v e le d to London.
England to develop that program
as chairman of tne association.
Polk lobbied in state and na­
tional arenas for law enforce­
ment causes.
The rank-and-file workers and
Seminole County sheriffs depu­
ties. through the rank of lieutn a n t, have Job p ro te c tio n
through the department's Civil
Service program. Polk's top
aides, including three captains,
serve at his pleasure, and could
be replaced by a new sheriff.
Polk has reportedly specifically
requested that his Admlstratlve
Aide Sherry Clark. Finance
Director Betty Slmcoe and Jail
Administrator Duane Rutledge
be retained.
Polk's health has declined
since last yekr's open heart
surgery performed at Duke Uni­
versity Medical Center In North
Carolina. He underwent hts first
successful double bypass sur­
gery In Gainesville In 1978. In
1988, he suffered his only heart

-.1 \ '

II In 'I

TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
F h . 3 2 2 -0 2 8 5

SS 78 S. F r c s d i Awe., S a a fs n l
% s 4 u to - O w n e r s I n s u r a n c e
I ilr. Home. 1 »r. R u«ln,«. One name u n u all.

Personal
A funeral is an expression
of personal loss and
should be personalized.
At Brisson Funeral Home
the family always makes
the funeral decisions and
we honor them.

Brisson Funeral Home
Prearranged Funeral Program
C orner o f 9 th S tre e t a n d L aurel • Sanford. Fla.
(407) 333-3131

�DA —Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida —

.11

Wilder bucks VMI
a v u m n
United Press International

NBTMCMCWIt COURT
OPTNSIMMTBINTN

( I can atata that had I to make
the determination for the court,
or hed to make the decision,
period, I would admit women. J

RICHMOND. Va. - Gov. L. Douglas Wilder
broke his silence Tuesday over the admission of
women to Virginia Military Institute, saying he
believes the school's historic all-male policy is
discriminatory and should be abandoned.
Wilder stopped short of suggesting that the state
stop fighting a federal lawsuit seeking to reverse
the admissions policy, but he hinted he may cut would hope cooi and calm heads could prevail.''
off state funds u the school In Lexington remains
Asked if there were anything he could do to
closed to women.
p rt — pu t VMI to include women, the governor
"As a legal conclusion, the determination of —id. "It's r question of whether I could bold funds
whether VMl's present admission policy la dis­ back with the case in litigation."
criminatory must be made by the court," Wilder
said. "I can state, however, that had I to make the
Karen Petersen, the alate'a deputy education
determination for the court, or had to make the secretary, said Wilder haa vartoua options on
o c c is io n &gt;p e r io d 1 1would Munii w(HIk fl *
withholding funds under Virginia appropriation
Asked whether he wanted Virginia to lose the lavra. Including pleading lower state revenues or
case. Wilder said, "I'm saying as a defendant in "program evaluation" — meaning he could say he
this case. It la my Judgment that state* supported disagrees with the school's admissions policy.
schools should not discriminate on race or
His threat to withhold funds front the Institute la
gender."
likely
to provoke widespread anger among VMl’s
In March the Justice Department filed suit In
U.S. District Court In Roanoke saying VMl's network of loyal shunnl. whose well-known male
all-male policy violates the Constitution and the comradeship was depicted in the movie "Brother
Civil Rights Act of 1964. The suit was filed after Rat."
an unidentified student from northern Virginia
"I'm not threatening the board one way or
complained that she had been turned down by the another," Wilder said, referring to the school's
school,
governing Board of Visitor*.
Until Tuesday. Wilder had refused any com­
VMI and The Citadel in Charleston. S.C.. are the
ment on VMl's admissions policy on the grounds
unly
(wo state* supported military schools Inthe
that It was pending litigation. He broke his silence
the same day he filed a motion with U.S. District nation that refuse admission to women.
Judge Jackson Kiser saying he would not appeal
the Judge's ruling that he remain a defendant In
Lsflll WotiCM
Legal NotjCft
the suit.
The high-profile governor, seen as a possible
NOTICR OF
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
1992 Democratic vice presidential candidate,
FICTITIOUS NAME
dy^JLn^^ U
. I«^ * 'fettoui — to
I^WIFfcWTa
W
IW—T ITtaBI ” W
Nofke to hereby given that —
emphasized that his announcement was not
a n engaged In fcuatoau af IIM
engage* In Hutto*** of 141
motivated by political considerations. "I'm not or*
iandataoii O r, Font Park. FL
E«l «kO0 Avo.. Lon— M S FL
337to laminate County. Ftor—
Interested in national office." Wilder said. "It has « 7 to Somtooto County. Fltr—
under the Pkttttaua Nomo of
unOer tho FlctWou* Nomo of
nothing to do with the future or the past."
ADVANCE SION COMPANY,
S F SALES ono toot— totohd
Wilder said he would not advise Terry, a fellow O
and that — Intend to reglttor
to rag+ttoc iota nomo with too
told noma with too Ctorfc of to*
Democrat who hopes to succeed him as governor, Ctorfc of too Circuit Court, tom
Court. l amlnato County.
to withdraw from the legal dispute, but he said, "I topfo County. Ftor— In ec- Circuit
Ftor— In accordance with to*

BOUTHCa ST MORTOAOS
COMPANY.

DALE J. VANANTWERP, SR .
tlitvfng.ttuB.atat

Legal Notlcao

HOTICI o r
PICT IT to o t HAMI
Nodes I* hsfsby |lvsn mat I
am i i | i | i j In bualnsu «t MS
litanOer Ct.. Langwud. Somlnot# County. FtorM*. under to#
Flctlttou* Nomo at ISLAND
LAKE SALON ana Mat l Mona
to reglttor toM namo wtlh tho
Ctorfc ot mo Circuit Court. Saminoto County. P tor too. to ect arOanc* with tho Proulttoni ot
tho Pktlttouo Hama Statute*.
ToWIt: Sactton H I P P lortoo
Statu— IM7.
Almoo Echonroria
Publlth Octohor SI S Novomb*r 7, t4.11.tPM
OCV-SM

NOTICE OR
FICTITIOUS NJkMI
Notice Ip hereby given that wo
are eng sped In bualnoaa at WPP
Orlando Dr. "I7-P1". Sanford.
PL 11771, SomInale County.
Florida, under tho Pktltleue
Namo of NICK'S AUTO, and

NOTICE or
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nodes i« hereby ftvan that I
am mg«god In builnau at SW
L i n w i t Hill* ltd., Longwaad,
PL WTPH. &gt;«mt—to County.
Ftor— , virioor tho Ptctlttou*
Noma at SHIRAZ NURSERY
and that I Intend to roglttor told
nomo with tho Clarfc of tho
Circuit Court, Samlnolt County,
Florid*. In accordance with tho
Provltlont at tho Fictitious
Noma Statvtot, To-Wit: Section
•U.9P Florida Statute* IM7.
FUTURE MAKERS. INC.
Abba* Ahhorl
Pubflrh: November 7. 14.1t. » .
IIM
DEZIP
NOTICK OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* hereby given that I
•m engaged In butlneu at 113
Felt Ion* Clr., Sanford. FL 11771
Seminole County. Florida, under
th e F i c t i t i o u s N am* a t
WALOOW DISTRIBUTING and
•hat I Inland to reglttar u ld
name with the Clark at tho
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida. In accordance with Hi*
Provltlont at tho Fictitious
Nemo Statute*. To Wit; Section
MS ot Florida Statute* 1PS7.
Lent* T. Waldo*
Publish - November 7, la. It. to
lthl
DEZ 10
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO: tollPI-CA-14-E
M cC A U G H A N M O R TG A G E
COMPANY. INC..
Plaintiff,
v»
ANTONIO J.KUVACH.atal,
Defendant*.
TO THOMAS F. A LORRAINE
DOLL
I Ailing St.
Weil Haven. CT OPS14
end any unknown heir*, d*
vlteet. granleei, assignee*.
Iwnort, creditor*. Iruttee* or
othor claimant* by. through,
under or against THOMAS f
DOLL 4 LORRAINE DOLL,
whose whereabouts ara un
known

NOTICE OF ACTION
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action tor lorectopur* at a mort
g«g* on the lot lowing property:
Lot 44. TIBERON COVE, ac
cording to the plat thereof, at
recorded In Plat Book I I Peg**
IS end 14, Public Record* ol
Seminole County. Florid*,
has been tiled against you and
you er* required to serve e copy
Ol your written defense* to It. It
any. on JO H N C ENGLE
tlAROT. P A . 1S14 E Llv
ingiton Street, Orlando. Florida
1JP01. Plaintiff* attorney, on or
before December 1 Iwo. end
III* the original with the Clerk el
this Court either before service
on Plaintiffs attorney, or Im
mediately thereafter, otherwise
e default will be entered against
you lor the relict demanded In
♦he Complaint lor Foreclosure
WITNESS my hand and saal
ot this Court on October IS. IWO
tSEAL!
M4RVANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCU'T COURT
ftr Ruth King
P.bllsh October It 4 Novem
far 7, I4.lt, Iteo

OEV JO,

III7 K L
4SYINRBBONM
hi. *wr a w cm eWL.

4 4 jwA
tn ft w i

IJ .4 U U I
in n ™
id

r v g iiiv r

m. 1 4
m a

name with the Clerk at the
Circuit Court, Seminole County.
FlerMa. In ac car dance with the
Provlplena at tho FlctltlouP
Namo Statute*. To-Wit: Section
eas e* Florida Statutes IPJ7.
Nicholas Dlrlenro
Nicholas Hanenberg
Publish: November 11, TP 4
Decembers, i t tPM
DEZ MS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IIOMTSENTM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OR FLORIDA,
IN AHOFON
OINIRAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO.
PP-MII CA Otv. 14 P
LINCOLN SERVICE
CORPORATION,
Plamtltf,
vs.
DOUGLAS J. MORLEY.atal.,
NOTICE OR
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment ol
Foractoaura dated November 4
1PP0. and entered In Caen No.
H l f l l CA Dtv. 14 P. of It*
Circuit Court ol tho EIGH
TEENTH Judicial Circuit In and
tar SEMINOLE County. Florida
wherein LINCOLN SERVICE
CORPORATION Ip Plaintiff and
DOUOLAS J. MORLEY, at at.
I will sail to the
at the West Front Dear of the
SEMINOLE County Courthouse.
In Sanford. Florida, at ll:M
o'clock AM. on the 10th day ot
December, ippg, the following
In sato Final Judgment, to wit:
Lot to Bloch E. OAKCREST.
according to the plat thereat as
recorded In Plot Book IX Pag*
*•. Public Records ol Seminole
County. Florida,
DATED this ISth day ef No­
vember, IHO
MARYANNE MORSE
At Clerk ol said Court
By: JanoE. J opowIc
As Deputy Clark
Publish: November II. a . ISM
DEZ IPS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN ANO FOR
SEMINOU COUNTY,
FLORIDA
OENIRAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO.PI 1SS4CAUL
THE DIME SAVINGS RANK
OF NEW YORK. FSB.
Plaintiff.
vp.
CLAYTON D. LOCKLIN.
Individually and as TRUSTEE.
PATRICIA0. LOCKLIN. Ms
wlte. HOUSE HOLD R I ALTY
CORPORATION, and ANY and
ALL UNKNOWN TRNJU9TX
a/k/a JERRY WALTER
BLYTHE.
NOTIC1 OF SJLLS
NOTICE IS O IV IN th at
pursuant to that certain Final
Judgment, dated November 14
IHO. In Case No. to 1SS4 CA !4L.
ot the circuit Court af the ISth
Judicial Circuit In and tar Semi
note County. Florida, In which
clavton 0 . LOCKLIN. indi­
vidually and a* TRUSTEE.
PATRICIA 0. LOCKLIN. Me
wile. HOUSEHOLD KEALTY
CORPORATION, and ANY'and
ALL UNKNOWN TENANTS,
a / h / e J E R R Y W ALTER
BLYTHE, are tho Defendant*. I
will sell to tho highest and botl
bidder tor cash at lha West
Front door ol tho Swmlnei*
County Courthou**. Sanford.
Florida, at tl:SS e'etock AM ,
an tho 17th day of January INI.
tho tallowing described property
tat torth in the Order or Final
Lot I. CHESTNUT HILL,
cordlnd to the plat tharaal
rec o rd ^ In Plat Boob IP.
7P 74 Public Record* ot Sami
note County. FlerMa.
DATED November 14 tPW
Maryann* Maria
Clark of Me Court
By: Jana E Jeaewk
Deputy Clerk
Publtsh: November i t . « . tew
DEZ NS

torSuncu ertto too Provltlont of
ton Flcttttout Nomo Statute*.
To-Wit: loettan S t i t t FNrtot

William C. Govomtl*
Jtto p h J
uMIth: C
Jl 4 Novembor7.t41l.tPfS
0EY-M7

NOTICIOF
FICTITIOUS NJUtW
Notice It hereby given toot I
am tngogtd to butlneu at 114
Sand Pine Circle. Sanford, FL
317TX Samlnolt County. F lortot.
under tho Flcttttout Name ol
CAREERS AMERICA, and that
I Intend to reglttor tald name
with too Clerk ol tho Circuit
Court. Somtooto County. Fieri
do. In accordance with tho
Provltlont of the Fktlllou*
Name Statute*. To Wit: Section
MLOPFlorida Statute* 1PS7.
Valeria M. Ajar
Publlth: November 14 11. 29
4 December J. 1H0
OEZ-m v
1
NOTICIOF
FtCTITfOUP NAME
Notice It hereby given tool I
am engaged In butlneu ot 17M
S. County Rd &lt;77. Longwoed
37714 Somtooto County. F tor to*,
under too Flcttttout Nomo of
Amorlcon Solor 4 Security
Film* end toot I Intend to
reglttor told nomo with to*
Ctorfc of to* Circuit Court, Sem­
inole County. Florida. In ac­
cordance with tho Provltlont ol
to* Plctltlout Nome Statute*.
Towif: Section ML Of Florid*
Statute* 1*17.
Mark 0. Stovonton
Publlth: November 14 ji, j*
4 December 4 Ifto
DEZ-IS4
NOTICIOF
FtermOUSNAME
Notice it hereby given tool I
am ingtgtS &gt;" butlneu ot 1PJ
Drotdlck Drive. Couolborry.
FL 317(7, Seminole County,
-florid*, under to* FIc lit lout
Nomo ot IMPACT ENTER­
TAINMENT COffCEPTS. and
that I Intend to reglttor tald
name with to* Ctorfc of to*
Circuit Court, Somtool* County,
F tor Ma. to accordance with toe
Provltlont at the Fictltlaue
Namo Statu— To-Wit: Section
MLOt Florida Statute* IPS7.
Torrlo L. Miner
Publlth: November 14 If. M
4 December J, IHO
OEZ ISJ
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
FILE NO: PB-HLCP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
RUTH E. STOOTHOFF.
NOTICIOF
ADMINISTRATION
Tho oWntolttretton *1 the ottato
of RUTH r . STOOTHOFF. do
caned, File Number U747 CP.
It ponding to lh* Circuit Court
tor Somtooto County. F tortoo.
Probate Dtvtoton. the adWouof
which to: Circuit Court, lam I
not* County CoKlkoN , SontarA F tor too 37771. Tho name*
and a d ir illll af too Porunal
R e p r o ie n f o li v e a n d th e
All -----------------------required to lllo with tola Court.WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: It) ail claim*
again*! too attoto and HI any
obloction by on Intoroatod
urvod tool dWilangu too valid­
ity at to* will, too guotiltcoHoM
of too Penan*! RopreeontoHvo.
venue, or lurltdldtan *1 to*
C ourt. ALL CLAIMS ANO
O B J E C T IO N S NOT SO
PILEO WILL BE FOREVEB
BARRED.
Publication ot toil Notice ha*
begun on November 14 teas
Penenal Repretan tall**:
Janet Dayton
IPX Lime Tree Drive
iOsenatar. Florida 37141
JOHN V BAUM. PA.
Ftor— Bar — 19*939
II1S. Maitland Avenue
Maitland. FlerMa 33711
&lt;4971*47 7MB
MARYANNE MORSE.
Clark. Clr cull Court
BY: Patricia Thatcher
DEPUTYCLERK
EMINOLE COUNTY.
LORIOA
Publlth: November 1411. IPPO
OEZ 1»

f

i

Provltlont of to* Plctltlout
Homo Mattox. To-Wit: Section
•tLM FtorM* Statute* IPS7.
OavMFerguaon
ChartoaFarguaan
Publlth: November 7, 14 It.
M.I99B
DEZ-M

CITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
FVBLIC HEARINR
NOTICE IS HERESY OIVEN
by to* City Cammluton at to*
City *1 Lake Mary. PtorMA tool
o Public Hearing wilt be held on
December 4 IPP4 Ot 7:W P. M,
or u toon tooraoftor ol paaaibto. to canaldar a requeit tram
Judith Lang far miner Sito Flan
rllh variance*, tar on
dotcr toed property:
Lota X and 14 Bloch » .
Cryttol Lake Winter Hemet
Subdlvltton. Plat Book 1. Fee**
114 through lid ot too Public
Record* of Somlnoto County.
FtorM*.
The Public Hearing will b*
held In to* Commluton Cham
ban. IN W. Lake Mary Bird,
Lake Mary. The Public it In­
vited to attend and be heard.

from time to tone until a final
daciUen I* nude by to* City
A TAPED RSCORD OF THIS
MEETING IS MADE BY THE
CITY FOR IT S CONVE­
NIENCE. THIS RECORD MAY
NOT CONSTITUTE AN ADE
QUATE RECORD FOR PUR­
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MADE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECTS TO
THE FOAEGOING MATTER.
ANY PERSON WISHING TO
ENSURE THAT AN ADE­
QUATE RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS IS MAIN­
TAINED FOR APPELLATE
PURPOSES IS ADVISED TO
MAKE THE NECESSARY AR­
RANGEMENTS AT HIS OR
HER OWN EXPENSE.
CITY OF
LAKEMARY. FLORIDA
CAROL A. FOSTER.
CITYCLERK
Dated: November IP. IIPO
Publlth: November II. IPPO
OEZ Ml

t ee*. BatiBOM *. crodltoM |
o th er poraoot claiming by,
__ ________ —
a It
1U1I KINOFISHIR DRIVE.
C H A R L O T T E . NORTH
CAROLINA MM.
YOU ARE NOTIFIED toot on

to taroctaoo o
I

|

LOT m T h ID D IN LAKE
V ILLA S PHASE IV . AC­
CORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK to PA M S 1414
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI
NOLI COUNTY. FLORIDA.
DALE J. VANANTWERP. SR,
I f 11 u l n a e n d R I N A
VANANTWERP, h it urlta. If

NOTICt IS HEREBY OIVEN
BHB By (Moo Ol BMP CM*—
Writ of iMCuftaN tom— out ot
and uodu B» u o f of too Ceunfy
Cowl ol Somtooto County, Ftor
— upon a fMal judmmant
rendareO to too itaruoM couH
m too UBi My of May AD.
tP*4 t o BWt --- ------------R
Martm and Mara 0.
Oefandanf. wMch ofwoaaM Writ
of laocettan — * Jeff ru ed to
mo oa Sheriff of Somtooto
Ciahfy. Ftortdto M i I

ot AMomonto
Towing Service. Altamonte
of Soml__ I ______
will of l l : l AM. an the urn
My af Dacambar, AD. — 4
oftor tor aoto and aaN to Iho
Mtowtf MRtor. tor cam to hon4
ubfoct to any onO od eaMtos
Horn, of too Front (Stoat) Dear
ot tho atop* of the la
Caunty Caw—
In S
Ftor— toa
pVHMIlfMIfnp,
Thai aoM aoto la
to aoitafy too torma af aoto EMI
otlmcufton.
John I.P a iu Sharltf
Somlnoto County. Florida
.........

1: WortmOor 11 ; IS

DBZM7

■4 IX WNhtoOt— M
-ix ten.
»
MOTICS OF

^ ^

o th er portent clolmlnp by,
n am ed Defendant*. SCOTT
MILLER and you o n reputred
to tar** 0 copy of your wrltton
dotanoox If any, to It on:
JO SEPH M. PANIELLO.
ESQUIRE. PlotntUf* attorney
reflate odtoeuta:,
Ml to. Frank!In Stroot, Suite
7714 Ton— . F torMo 33*01
to toth day of
1PP4 and file tho
_______.m too Ctorfc of tola
Court eltoer before lorvlce on
Plotnttfra attorney or ImmoOI-

toe Complgtwt or Petition.
DATED on iMa md doy ef
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
to M l. JU—.uB lkuu A . ,
~
IT ! 'rVHVTmPr ■NT-w—V

Qjpijty Clsrl

Publlth: Nevombor 7, 14 II. to
1*10
DEZ-P7
AUCTION
nm m
BUICK
VINf fPMJaXlMBSI
OKLAHOMA
MERCURY VINf aZAfSMWI
OLOS
VINflUPHIEMUai
BUICK
VINf 1G4A)U*YKH4U7*4
CHEVY
VINf 13*371 BI77P40
FORD
VINf C7EUL30PS40
PLYMOUTH
VINf VLMaBJ71 IIS
FRUEHAULTRAILER
VINf MEDMOtM
FORD
V IN flE H L im u
OLDS
VINf 1E0P7AWI77B71
1S/I1/P0
TOYOTA
VINfJTtMXklEIDMIOM

OHIO
11/ftrW.

CHEVY
VINf JtlRGSITlHMMMS
11/tUPO
FORD
VINf EISBHBC334S
McConnell Tewing B Recovery
MM Santard Am .
Sanford. FL 30773
407 333-3—
Seta Begin* e ttl:M PM
View One Hour
PrlertoSoto

Publlth: November 31. IPPO
DEZ IPO

nliUR 14*1
lu
WI9t
are pngogad to butlneu at MSB
N. Hwy 17m . Sulfa ItX Lab*
M ary, FL SUM. Sam Inal*
County, Florida, under the
FictiHoua Nome of ACCENT
AFFAIR o— tool — Intend to

m tn c c m q n teH
BMNTEERTN JUO KIAL

lha FktHtoua “fame Statu—
TeWit. Soctton aas.ea FlerMa
SfoMaa **S7.
PERSONALITY PLANTX
INC
J r J. Lahew. PraaMant
Publlth: Noromber 11, M 4
Dacambar XIX INS
DtZto*

___ RRBMMXCA-toF
I SOUTHEAST MORTOAOE
COMPANY,
r ooo- m y er s e q u it ib x

INC, I T .A L ,

JOSEPH D. SCHIAVO— ,
If living, of im. of ol

TO: ROXANNE KEARNEY.
LAST KNOWN
MAILINOAOONEM:
DRIf-i
ANY UNKNOWN HEIRS.
O E V IIIR S . G RA NTEES,
CREDITORS ANO OTHER
UNKNOWN P IN IO N S OR
UNKNOW N S P O U I I S
CLAIMING b y . t h r o u g h
ANO UNDER ROXANNE

Lata*!* and to. BLOCK A.
W EST A L T A M O N T E
h b io h t i . s e c t io n O N I.
____m Ptof Boob 1 4 ____
ol m public r o a r * ot
__ 1Ineta County. Ftor—
h u bam Woi by too Plaintiff
eo o laat you a n d ROOD •
MYERS EOUITIIX INC. o
FlerMa toroarafton; CARPET
•R O K IR S OF CENTRAL
FLORIDA. INC, a Ftor— car
parol— 1 CENTRAL FLORIDA
RIOIONAL HOSPITAL. O Ftor
Ido corporal— ; OAVID A.
MORRIS; LINDA D. SMITH,
f /v a Lb— 0. Mtrr la; UN­
KNOWN TENANT(S) (DAVE
BLAKIIi to too above amfttaO
cauaa and you ore rp— roS to
•orvo 0 copy 0* your written
OaPwwoa It any, to It an Plainf lf l't attorney!. SMITH 4
SIMMONS. P.A .. I l l Waal
Adam* .Straat.
Suit* IIM.
..

ten

CLERn
NOTICE OP SALE
NOTICE IS MIREBV OIVEN
toot purauont to a Summary
Final Judgment ot Faroctaawra
If—

1—

Wtor — T111

I

cauu In toa Circuit Court ef too
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
and tar Somlnoto County, Flori­
da. I will u ll ot public auction to
to* htgheat bidder — cath ot
Iho watt Iron! dear at tho
1tot I
County. FtorMe at too hour of
11:90 o.m. on Docombor 141—
toot certain parcel of root proparty dtacrtoM aa toliawa:
I I I ) . B l a c k U.
SWEETWATER OAKS. SEC­
TION i t according to tho Plot
thoroaf oa recorded to Flat Book
11. Pegu IP and M. Public
Record* ef Seminal* County,
Ftor—
it Ota day ot NovemMARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Jan* E. Jeaewk
Deputy Clerk
Pubitih: November 14 It. 1—
DEZ 14*

In tho comWITNESS my hand and teal
ef tola Court «n tol* and dry of

DEZ PS

Plaintiff.

■ it
miH
to
ll —
— Ia E
U&gt; ilent

14 1—
Ctorfc af IMa Court either batora
aarvko en PlamtifTa attorney or
im m ed iately t h a r a o l t e n
*thermit*, o default will bo

Publlth: Novambor 7.14 11. to.

JOHN FENNE and MARTHA
PENNE.Mawlto,ofal,

STATE OF FLORIDA
TO: J O I I P H D. 8CHIAVO— . N Itvtay and H m ar
r— MRX JOSEPH O. SCHIAVOI9E, Mo wtto. H living.

of to ld Dotondontt oro dothotr roepoctlv* un-

YOU ABC NOTIFIED that an
aettantof
encumber log tho following
M a r ty to Somlnoto Comfy.

(CawrtSeal)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark tf Circuit Court
By* Hoothor brgrmar
Deputy Dork

IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNI IIRNTIIRTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASIR&amp;M-M 4CAI4P
RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION oaCanaarvator
tor PIONEER FIDE RAL
SAVINGS BANK.

Ml TNR CIRCUIT COURT
OF T I N H O N T 1 M T N

TALMAN HOME MORTOAOS
CORPORATION, an lllinota

Ctorfc ef too Clrcuft Court, lem­
mata Caunty, Ftor— In ocCeiTBB— PWi W IIH f l — r w Ww UMlEYw O f

Ltg«l jjg jjc ti

NOTICIOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Netlet t* hereby given toot I
am engaged In bualnoaa at 131
M oatweed C irc le . W inter
Sprlngh Somtooto County. Ftor— under too Flctltwua Nomo
•f MATTSON FAINTING and
toot I Intend to roglator ioM
namo with too Clark of toa
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Ftor— In accordance with toa
Frovli— a of tho Plctltlout
Nomo Statute*. To-Wit: Sect—
(•LOP FlerMa Statute* 1U7.
WordMottun
Publlth: November 7. 14 It, 14
IHO
OEZ *4
NOTICIOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged to butlneu at tap
Diana Circle. Coatetoerry. FL
31797, Seminole County, Florida.
under too Flctlttou* Nome ot
TBICOUNTY CLEANING
SERVICE, and toot I Intend to
reglttor toM name with the
Ctorfc af too Circuit Court, Sem— to County. Ftor— m ac­
cordance with the Provltlont ef
— Flctlttou* Nome Statute*.
ToWtt: Sect— 1419* FtorM*
Stafutot 1M7.
.Kelly
Publtlh: November 7, 1411, to.
IM
DEZ-tOI

4411 FARMINGTON AVCNUB.
NICHTON PARK, ILLINOIS
YOU ARB NOTIFIED MM on
act— to torictou 0 1
LOT 4X D « I r RUN UNIT
14A, ACCORDING TO THE
PLAT THEREOF A t R«&gt;
CONOCO IN FLAT BOOK It.
PAGRB IB AND P7, PUBLIC
RECORDS OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
D B IR RUN HOMEOWNER
ASSOCIATION 114 INC, a cor
BO—
PAUL J. MORIARTY.
JOHN DOC and JANC DOC.
a n d a ll o th e r p o r t e n t In
1 of tub|acf roof prep
to wruo o copy ol your writ—
dtN n u t. Horry, toll en:
JOSCPH M. PANICLLO.
CSQUIRC. Ptainftfft attorney
Ml N. Franklin Straat. Sulla
I — Tampa, Ftor— SHW
“
1 doy of
flto the
original wtto too Ctorfc of tota
Court either batora urvtce an
PtatnflfTt attorney or Immodta
default will bo entered

:

too Complaint or Potman.
DATED on this 2nd day of
m—|*
■Ywremwi t alanw
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
CY: Haatoar Brunner
Deputy Ctorfc
Publlth: November 7, 14 II. 74
I—
DEZ-P*____________________
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Net— It hereby given that I
am engaged m butlneu at 140
OM laniard Ovtoda Rd. Winter
Spring*. FL 31— Somlnoto
County, Florida, under Iho
Flctltloua Noma at DAN T.
JACKSON 0/E /A JACKSON
ENGINEERING 4 MFO. and
toot I Inland to reglttor laid
namo with too Ctorfc ot tho
Circuit Court, Som lnoto County,
Ftor— In accordance wtto too
Previa— t at the Ficiittaua
Nomo Statute*. To-Wit: Sect—
0*19« Ftor— Statute* t*S7.
Klrfc L.Jeckun
Publlth: November 7, 14 11.14
1—
DEZ PI___________________
NOTICIOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Not— I* hereby given that I
am engaged to butlneu at MO
Ohio Avo, laniard. FL 3377X
Somlnoto County, Ftor— under
tho Flctltloua Noma af SHARD
FRAMES otto that I Intend to
register said name with toa
Ctorfc of tho Circuit Court, Sam
Inet* County, Ftor—
ac­
cordant* with too Previa— a at
tho Flctltloua Nomo Statute*.
To-Wit: Sect— te l Ot Florida
Statu— IPS7.
Tedd Braden
Publlth: November 7, 14 11. to.

to

im

DEZ-P3

Beal The lax!

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE EIGHTEENTH
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
NO: W-I7P4CA-I4-P
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY.*
corporation organized and
•xltllng under to* Law* of to*
United Statu ot America.
Plaintiff,

IlmewlourSanfordHerald
SubscriptionHowandSore!

TERRY W. WATSON and
MARJORIE J. WATSONaA7a
MARJORIE S. WATSON.Ml
wltoi ALLIANCE FUNDING
COMPANY and BARNETT
RECOVERY CORPORATION

t

NOTICE OF ACTION
•TO: ALLIANCE FUNDING
COMPANY. Whoa* AdOreu It:
US Chaatnul Ridge Read.
Mantvato.HJ treat
YOU ARC HEREBY NOTI­
FIED that an acton to tonctoao
a mortgage an lha. following
property In SemUtato County.

E F F E C TIV E D ECEM BER 9.1990
Th e Sanford Herald and all newspapers In Florida
are subject to Florida sales &amp; use tax.

Lot B. too watt iir.ea t**t at
too Coat m o t toot ot too South
17S toot Ot too North 4*9 Net ot
lh a N a rth w a a t to o l tho
Southwott to of Section IP.
YownaMp tP South. Range M
Ee*l af lha Public Reeve* of
Couoty, FtorM*. Sub
read ever lha South 31
you oro required to to n * • copy
ot your wrltton Oafonui. If eny.
to It on HARRY 0. REID. III. of
M O N C R U P , R E ID ANO
WALUCE- P A . Attorney* tor
Ptainttttt, Foal OftIce lo i *7TP.
Sanford. Florida 33771137*. and
flto to* original otto to* Ctorfc of
too above Court on or baton
December X IPfB. other*it*, a
Judgment may bo anlarad
again*! you tor The relief de­
manded In toe Complaint
WITNESS my
Official tael el tote Court. —
tale lam day ef October, IPto
(SEALt
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: RutoKing
Oaputy Ctorfc
Publlth: October 31
bar 7.1411,1—
DEY let

N D D CEBPSN BRtFP^lALE

STATE OF FUND DA
TO: SUSAN I . MILLER. H

m

L o ll Notlcoa

Liflll NoWc—

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fPleas* start /renewmy subscriptiontothoS a n f o rd H e r a ld

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�EAT THANKSGIVINGING DINNER WITH USt

WASHINGTON - The Iraqi
announcem ent that another
390,000 troops will be sent to
Kuwait does not automatically
mean the United States will rum
more troops to the region, a
Pentagon official said Tuesday.
Pentagon spokesman Pete
Williams said there has been no
evidence yet th a t S addam
Hussein has started moving
forces foward Into Iraq. There
are more than 430.000 Iraqi
soldiers with 3.500 tanks located
In and around Kuwait.
"If they are going to do It. It
could well take a long time. It
could take over a month to do
U.” said Williams.
“ As G en. (Colin) Pow ell
pointed out this morning, the
additional troops they are talk­
ing about would probably be less
capable than the troops that are
deployed there now. It Is not
clear that If this announcement
were followed through that It
w ould add to th e co m b at
power.”
“ T h ese fo rc e s p ro b a b ly
wouldn't be as well trained or
well equipped as the forces that
are there now." added Williams.
Should Iraq follow through, he
said. "It would be a further
-tightening of Its grip on occupied
Kuwait and Just the opposite of

what the world community h u
asked Iraq to do, which to to
withdraw form Kuwait.”
Some military authorities have
suggested that extra Iraqi troops
could Increase the vulnerability
of the Iraqi army, particularly
because of the strain It would
put on supply lines.
Williams, asked IT It might
require additional U.S. forces to
counter and maintain a cred­
itable option to go on the offense,
said:
" T h a t 's a n im p o s s ib le
calculation to make now. It may
well be that we don't need to

•end any more. It depends on
who they send. Just the addition
of sheer n u m b ers In Itself
doesn't necessarily ... give Iraq
an addition to Its combat power.
So we'll have to wait and see
whether this Is something they
Intend to do and how they do it
before we can make any kind of
decision like that.”
Williams also said that Opera­
tion Imminent Thunder had
some successes, even though an
amphibious landing had to be
called off because of safety
considerations.
Hovercraft were to have been

used to ferry Marines ashore
from ships held over the hortoon
but those plana were Junked
when seas rose to 10 feet to 13
feet. About 400 Marines were
alrtlAed to the shore In helicop­
ters.
The operation also Included
multi-service alrpower over the
b eac h , a v ia tio n o p eratio n s
elsewhere tn the country and an
exercise to let U.S. forces pass
through S au d i lines headed

• W ln S tn in tH V p
With AO The Trimmingt

T h e o p e r tl o n w in d s u p
Wednesday, the day President
Bush arrives In the country.

Bush says G&lt; &gt;rbachev agrees on force
By LBSSTBBBS
Unltsd Press International

Arabia. Wednesday aftemooon for talks with
the exiled emir of Kuwait and Saudi King

President Bush Wednesday r lectett reports
th a t he' and S oviet Preaid enl Mikhail
Gorbachev do not see eye-ti -eye on the
possible use of military force 1i the Persian
Gulf, declaring the two counth re and many
other nations are "on the same w velength."
"I've said all along we're n the same
wavelength with the Soviet Unit i." Push told
reporters In Paris aa he prepared to Journey to
the Saudi Arabian desert. "I t ink we have
good synchronization with the n and many
other nations aa we face the pr &gt;blems of the
gulf."
Bush was scheduled to fly to eddah. Saudi

Thanksgiving day visiting American and
British troops at several locations In desert.
Meanwhile. Iraq promised Tuesday to release
all Oermana held hostage tn Iraq and Kuwait,
Reacting to Saddam’s to release German
hostages. White House press secretary Marlin
Fltzwater. In Parts with Bush, accused the
Iraqi president of building "a cottage Industry
of political ploys. It seems like every day
Saddam Hussein comes up with new cynical
approaches with reaped to the hostages."
Saddam, he added. Is "prepared to use any
pretext to split the alliance and our response is:
It's not going to work."

,

Thatcher vows
leadership race
PARIS - B ritis h P rim e
Minister Margaret Thatcher says
she Is disappointed the contest
for Conservative Party leader­
ship was going Into a second
ballot but cooly announced she
would light the final round of the
political battle. ‘
"I am disappointed that It was
not quite enough to get the thing
through." Thatcher told report­
ers Tuesday In the courtyard of
the British Embassy.
“But I am very pleased that
half the parliamentary group
voted on my behalf and I will put
my name forward for the second
ballot."
Presidential press secretary
L Marlin Fltzwater. in Paris with
I ' President Bush, said of the vote.
f
"We would not take any position
\
on the Internal affairs of Britain.
\ The prime minister has been a
personal friend of President
, . Reagan and President Bush. She
has been our strongest ally but
we have no further response
whatever the outcome of the
vote In London."
It was not immediately clear If
Thatcher would attend a ballet
and banquet at Versrillea as
scheduled. "Now I must ,*o and
make some telephone calls."
said the Iron Lady, looking Icily
cool In a black evening suit with
a fur collar.
Earlier a British Embassy
spokeswoman said Thatcher
would go to Versailles.
S he w ill th e n tr a v e l to
Versailles for congratulations or
commiseration from her coun­
terparts from around Europe at a
b**'lct In the Royal Palace
performed by the Opera dl Paris
followed by a banquet hosted by
French President Francois Mit­
terrand.
"She Is definitely going to
Versailles," the spokeswoman
said. "She will come back (to
the embassy), presumably wait
for the result then change and go
(to Versailles)."
Hordes of British journalists
besieged the British Embassy to
try to catch a glimpse of the
beleaguered prime minister. But
only a small pool was authorized
lo enter the courtyard of the
mission lest she speak before
heading to Versailles.
Thatcher looked relaxed and
smiled broadly during a morning
meeting with Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev at the Soviet
Embassy. She also met with
Mitterrand.

More Soviets
seeking asylum
in Germany
By LION MAMABAMAH
United Press International
BERLIN — The number of
Soviet citizens and army de­
fectors seeking asy lu m In
Germany has doubled in the
past four months, a Berlin news­
paper reported amid reports of
growing discontent In the bar­
racks and Increasing assaults
against Soviet soldiers.
In July there were 219 Soviet
applications for political asylum
lodged with German authorities,
rising lo about 400 in September
a n d O c to b e r, th e B e rlin
Morgenpost said Tuesday.
Of the 1.791 Soviet ctll.'cns
who have applied for political
asylum In Germany this year.

*

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�1i

•A - Sanlord Herald. Stnlord. Florid* —W*dn**d*y. No*fftb*r21.1990

Junk bond king faces sentencing
I

NATIONAL

■ t -------------------

UPl Business Writer

18
New AIDS vaccine tested in humane
WASHINGTON - Human test* are starting on a possible
AIDS vaccine that appears to be better designed and more
promising In chimpanzees than other vaccines being tested In
people, researchers said Tuesday.
Government-affiliated AIDS researchers and officials from
Intmuno-U.S. Inc. of Rochester. Mich., announced the Food and
Drug Administration has approved tests of their Jointly
developed AIDS vaccine In about 60 healthy people.,
From United P ress International R eports_________________

NEW YORK - Admitted felon Michael
Milken, who came to symbolize the Age of
Greed as he earned a fortune peddling the
Junk bonds that fueled the 190Oi takeover
mania and ran afoul of the law. faces
sentencing Wednesday on six guilty pleas to
securities and tax violations.
U.S. District Court Judge Klmba Wood,
who accepted Milken's guilty plea April 20.
could hand him up to 28 years In prison at a
10 a.m. sentencing In federal court In lower
Manhattan.
Before sentencing Milken, the Judge
earlier this month heard long arguments
from federal prosecutors who painted

.

.

Milken as a manlpu itive financial consplrawho said he merely
tor and defense law.
slipped into Illegality
Allken. 44. pleat | guilty to five counts of
Mllkei
each of which
Illegal securities tr
carries a minimum rntence of five years In
kt of filing a false tax
prison, and one
statement for a mini jium three-year term.
Federal officials ur_ I that Milken serve the
sentences one after ar jrther.
As part of his pita bargain with the
Justice Department. .Milken agreed to pay
$600 million In fines ^nd penalties. Pleading
avoid some tougher
guilty enabled him
In the original 98racketeering cha
I up In March 1969.
count Indictment I
The financier's fencing not only conwhich Investigators
eluded his own

. . .
a*_i . 1
/a tt &lt;
started
building
In 1986 Milisn
when U
Wall
Street
arbitrager Ivan Boesky agreed to cooperate
with their probe into Milken's activities, but
brought down the curtain on the 1980s era
of debt-fueled enrichment schemes.
Milken virtually Invented high-yield,
high-risk Junk bonds, touting them as a way
for companies without access to traditional
credit markets to finance mergers and
takeovers. His firm. Drexel Burnham Lam­
bert Inc., dominated the Junk bond market.
In December 1988 Drexel reached an
agreement with the U.S. Attorney's office In
the Southern District to plead guilty to six
felony counts Involving Insider trading,
stock manipulation and other securities lsw
violations and topay $650 million In
penalties and fines.

Leaders call
for national
skills tests
■yJAMTBASS

United Press International______

I
!

\ ;

WASHINGTON - Business
leaders told Congress all high
school students should be re­
quired lo take a national compcnlcncy examination lo ensure
they have adequate skills for the
working world, but Education
Department officials rejected the
Idea.
At a House Education and
L abor C o m m ittee h e a rin g
Tuesday, four business leaders
testified that America's competi­
tiveness Is being Jeopardised by
a generation of children leaving
high school without a firm grasp
of basic skills.
For many years, business orinflations have sensed that
ere Is a growing problem with
the level of competencies In
entry-level workers. Now we
know from research data, sur­
veys and Individual companies
that the problem Is real." said
William Kolbcrg. president of the
National Alliance of Business.
"America cannot be competi­
tive." said Sol llurwltz. presi­
dent ol the Committee for Eco­
nomic Development, "unless we
succeed in educating all of our
children to their highest capaci­
ty. Hut when we look at the new
generation growing up. we're
worried that they won't measure
up."
To establish confidence In
student achievement. Kolbcrg
said all students by the age of 16
should be ublc to puss a national
competency examination. &lt; • •
"T h e estab lish m en t of a
system of national standards,
coupled with a.wessmcnt. would
ensure that every student leaves
compulsory school with a dem­
onstrated ability to read, write,
compute and perform at worldclass levels In general school
subjects. Kolbcrg said.
"Students should also have
exhibited a capacity to learn,
think, work effectively alone and
In groups uud solve problems."
liurwritz generally agreed that
competency exams are neces­
sary. but said extra help must be
given to disadvantaged students
early so that they would be on
equal footing with the more
privileged students by the time
they all are In high school.
Assistant Education Secretary
Christopher Cross said In an
Interview that competency tests
are fine, as long us they arc
handled by the states, not the
federal government.
"O ne single exam Is not
practical ... or appropriate."
Cross said.

S

A g e n t: D ixon
paid too m uch
for ‘sex h o m e ’
■y WILLIAM H. INMAN

United Press International______
DALLAS — A California leaslug agent testified Tuesday that
thrift king Don Dixon paid five
times too much for a posh
corpo rate beachfront home
which prosecutors say was de­
voted largely lo "sex parties."
"There Is mo way you can
justify what was paid, even
u n d er th e m ost o p tim istic
circumstances," said Lori Goetz,
a leasing agent testifying as a
prosecution witness.
The home, located In Solana
Beach. Calif., should have leased
for $3. (XX) lo $3,500 a month
during the mid-1980s when Dix­
on arranged paym ents, she
testified.
Instead. Dixon paid between
$13,000 to $1^.000 a month In a
complicated arrangem ent In
w h i c h t a x b e n e f its we r e
swapped with tlx- home's owner
and the entire package was
s u b s id iz e d t h r o u g h l oa ns
furnished by Dixon's thrift.
Vernon Savlngsand Loan.
In a 38-count Indictment. Dix­
on Is accused of Illegally filtering
expenses used for prostitutes,
politicians and high living
through Vernon corporate ac­
counts When Vernon failed In
1987. taxpayers were socked
with $1.3 billion in losses.

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�November 21, 1990

W EDNESDAY

Sanford Herald

orts

■People, P*
■Classified,
■Com ics, Page

Rams in Rotary Bowl

IN B R IE F

laotp
March of Dimes Classic sat
LONOWOOD - The eighth annual March or
Dimes Golf Classic will be played at Alaqua
Country Club on Friday. Nov. 30. The event will
begin with a shotgun start at noon.
PGA pro Donnie Hammond will serve as
honorary chairman for the four-man scramble
event. A $200 entry fee Is required per player.
There will be a hole-ln-one contest In addition
to other prizes. A buffet and awards pres­
entation will follow the tournament.
For more Information, or to enter, contact
Virginia Grey at 8494)790.

SAILING
Registration lor Rad Lobster
ORLANDO — Registration Is now open for the
1990 Red Lobster Cup Regatta. the nation's
largest Inland regatta, which will be held Nov.
30 to Dec. 2 on Lake Monroe.
The regatta will be hosted by the Orlando
Yacht Club and will feature 600 boats In 46
classes on six different race courses.
Registration, which closes at 9:30 a.m. on
Saturday. Dec. 1. Is S37 for single-handed
entries and $40 for crewed boats.
For additional Information, call John II.
Gardiner at 42*0583 or 4230468.

lA S K IT IA L L
Warriors hold off Magic
OAKLAND. Calir. - Tim Hardaway scored 23
ponts and added 11 assists Tuesday night,
leading the Golden Stale Warriors to a 123-120
victory over the Orlando Magic.
Hardaway hit eight of 17 shots and added six
rebounds while Sarunas Marclullonls. starting
In place of the Injured Mitch Richmond, scored
19 points. Chris Mullen, Golden State's leading
scorer, contributed 18 points.
Orlando was led by Terry Catledge. who
knocked down 17. and Dennis Scott, who came
off the bench to score 16.
The Warriors outacored Orlando 9-1 In the
final 1:28 of the first half to go to the locker
room with a 64-54 lead.
The Warriors boosted their lead to as much as
22 points In the final period before Orlando put
together a 26-7 run In the rinal 2:24 or the game.

Heat lose to Pistons, officials
MIAMI — John Salley scored 24 points and
Detroit's defense shut down the Miami Heat
106-90 Tuesday to extend the Pistons’ winning
streak to four games.
Detroit. 7-2. also was led by Mark Aguirre with
22 points and Joe Dumars with 17.
Glen Rice led Miami. 3-6. with 19 points and
Sherman Douglas added 16 as the Heat shot
only 38 percent from the field.
The Heat protested calls by the officials all
game long. In the first quarter. Miami's Terry
Davis was called for a technical for protesting a
foul and then was assessed another one and
ejected when he bumped official Mike Costablle
with his forearm.
Before the ejection with 4:18 left In the first
quarter. Davis made two free throws to give
Miami Its last lead at 15-13. Joe Dumars hit a
12-footer and sank the two technicals for a
17-15 lead the Pistons never relinquished.
Dumars hit another free throw on a (ethnical
on Heat Coach Ron Rothsteln (o make It 22-17
at (he quarter.

Peters’ rebuilding project
turns corner with bowl bid
Herald Correspondent
LAKE MARY - In only his second
year as head coach of the Lake Mary
Ram football team. Doug Peters has
led his team to a 5-5 season and a
berth In Ihe Rotary Bowl Thanksgiv­
ing Day at Lyman High School.
"W e're still In the rebuilding
process." said Peters. "I Jtnew It
would be a tough Job when I came
to Lake Mery, but everything Is
starling Income together."

Dr. Phillips High School, with a
7-3 record and a fourth place finish
In the Metro Conference, will supply
the opposition.
"We're tickled to death lo lie
playing In the Rotary Bowl." said
Peters. "Dr. Phillips Is a very good
learn and we'll have lo be at our
best to win."
The Rams will need a tremendous
effort from All-County selection
Chris Haney, who has rushed for
1,131 yards an 11 touchdowns this
season, second only lo Lake

Herald Correspondent

"Academics comes first at Lake
Mary." said Peters. “ We have
stressed to the players that they
have to focus on doing the things
that make you a good person and a
good representative of the commu­
nity. It all starts with an education."

AVON PARK - Seminole Community College's
men's bosket boll team played Its beat game tn
several weeks but tt waa still not good enough as
the Raiders dropped a 75-70 decision to Sorth
Florida Community College at Panther Gym
Tuesday night.
The lose waa the third straight on the road, and
fourth overall, far SCC as It fell to 1-4 on the
season. The Raiders will finally return home
Saturday night when they host Columbia State
College of Tennessee In a 7:30 p.m. contest at the
Health and Physical Education Center on the
SCC campus.
South Florida (5-1) Jumped out to an 18-9
advantage halfway through the first half. But the
Raiders, behind Brian Nason and Dennard Ford,
came back to tie the game at 27-27 at the 2:00
mark on a steal and dunk by Ford. SCC took Its
first lead on two free throws by Nason with 1:12
□I

SANFORD — Teressa Martin scored 23 points
and pulled down 18 rebounds to lead the
Seminole Community College Raiders to a 56-55
victory over the Indian River Community College
Pioneers In women's basketball action Tuesday
evening at Ihe SCC Health and Physical
Education Center.
"We've been giving up our position too soon In
Ihc other games." said Martin. "So we worked on
holding our positions longer In practice and It
worked for us In the game.
Led by Andrea Popwell and Nollta Wilson, the
Pioneers led 28-21 at halftime.
"We came out slow In the first half." said SCC
Coach lleana Gallagher. "We were very flat and It
look us a while to get going."
The Raiders came out blazing In Ihe second
half with a 12-0 run. eight straight by Martin, to
lake a 33-28 lead.
"I got on a roll, so I asked for the ball more and
kept taking It (o the hole." said Martin.
□ S ea Women. Page SB
INDIAN RIVISCC (55)
Davit J 100 0 X Pop wall 14 001. Svttto M 00 X Wilton 417 44 IX
Lowlt I S 0 0 4b Rotlor 0-1114 IX Slmwrt SOM IX W hit,0 1 0 0 X
Frond, 0100 0. Tofolt *4 5f » I] U.
tCMINOLI CC 114)
Kumpt &gt;11-17. Grov»t I t 00 4. Martin 1014 &gt; 0 IX Oltton 14 00
4. LotNr 1 1 7 1 4 . Ladboltor 4-10 01 X Wllllomt 71 00 4. 14 0 1 7.
Total! 15 454 1] 54.
Holltlmo - I SCC a . SCC 71. Total FouN - IRCC IX SCC 14.
Foutod out - Mono. ThrM Point Goolt - Nano RoSoundt - IRCC
73 (Rotlor 111. SCC 70 (Mortln III. AtoltN - IRCC « IPopwall II.
SCCt (Grovnol. Rocardt —IRCC0-4. SCC 77.

Peters. "The kids see a lot of college
teams Invited to bowl games and
now they're playing In a bowl game.
It fives them something to be proud
of."
Lake Mary has accomplish as
much off of tha field as on the field.
The Rams have not lost a player
because of grades all season and a
majority of the team carries a B'
average.

Improved effort
not enough to
net S C C a win

Raider wom en
ull out w in in
nal seconds

HoraMPMSsSyRoRyJ

Brandis Groves had three assists during a
second-hall run lo help Seminole Community
College beat Indian River Community College.

MMNOOXB C C (70)
Whittington OQOOX Ford 45 00 X Vmionl 17 00 X M otto, 17
1 7 4. Hooon 7 14 44 .*1, R odttt 7-7 00 A RoWmsn 411 &gt;0 17. Moor,
&gt;15411 IX Totort: 144317-17 7X
SOUTH FLORIDA C C (75)
Hordv 1-5 00 4. OAot 00 00 X PHI* I I 74 4 LvIm M &gt;5 IX
Wilton 0-0 00 X Torino 0 0 0 0 X Cottlnghom U I IX Imbry &gt;17 &gt;5
IX McSpoddtn 40 l-l 0. Mow &gt;U M II. Rtaortt 1 J 00 X Lomor
OlOMlXChovovtOOOOXTotoN: 1005107511
Holltlmo - SCC SX SPCC M. Thrw point fw tt - SCC I f (Noton
IX Roduk &gt;1. Mottoy &gt;4): SFCC 1-0 IlmOry IX McSpodWn &gt;1.
(Moot O il. Total Fault - SCC IX SFCC U Foulod CM - SCC.
Varuanl; SFCC More,. Lomor. Tochnkoit — bow . Rohound, —
SCC 70 (Moor, il, RiSinmn 10); SFCC 17 (Lomor ID. Atoltlt SCC II (FordS); SFCC 17 (Mow 4). Rocordt - SCC )-4; SFCC » .

S e m in o le blanks DeLand
From staff report!

Del.AND — Dawn Burks and
Jennifer Benge each scored a
first-half goal Tuesday night to lead
Seminole High School to a 2-0 win
over DeLand In a Seminole Athletic
Conference girls' soccer match at
Spec Martin Stadium.
The win Is Seminole's second in a
row. lilting the Tribe's mark to 2-1
overall and l-l In the conference.
"It was a total team effort." said
Seminole Coach Suzy Reno, who
made some changes In the starting
lineup before the match. "The girls
went over there determined to do
they best they ran. They really
work hard In practice. Tonight. II
showed."
Just 10 minutes Into the match.
Burks put the Scmlnotes ahead lo
stay, scoring on an assist from
Sabrina Riley. Benge gave Seminole
a cushion 18 minutes later when

Henderson wins AL MVP
NEW YORK - Oakland outfielder Rickey
Henderson, who used power and speed to lead
the Athletics lo (heir third straight pennant.
Tuesday won the American League Most
Valuable Player Award over Detroit home run
king Cecil Fielder.
Henderson curned 14 of the 28 first-place
votes from a committee of the Baseball Writers
Association of America. He totalled 317 points.
Fielder, the first major-leaguer to hit 50 home
runs since 1977. collected 10 first-place votes
and 286 points. Henderson and Fielder were Ihc
only players to be named on all ballots.
Boston pitching ace Roger Clemens garnered
three-first place votes and finished third.
Oakland reliever Dennis Eckersley received the
other llrst-place vote.
Two writers from each American League city
were asked to name 10 players on their ballots.
The point system was 14 for first. 9 for second, 8
for third, etc.
Henderson Is the fourth Oakland player to win
the MVP and second in three years. Jose
Canseco claimed Ihc honor In 1988. Reggie
Jackson In 1973 and Vida Blue In 1971. T h e n ’s
also provided tills year's AL Cy Young recipient
In Bob Welch. __________________________

Howell's Marquette Smith.
"Chris Is a major reason why we
are here." said Peters. "The Rotary
Bowl people saw that we were
playing well at the end and decided
to take a chance on us."
Two years ago. Peters took over a
program that went 5-9 In 1988. In
Peters' first year, the Rams went
3-7. the three wins coming In the
last five games of the season.
Counting Inal 3-2 finishing run In
1989, the Rams have won eight of
their last 15 games over the last two
years and finished second In the
Seminole Athletic Conference this
season.
"We're trying lo build a col­
legiate-style program here." said

•he played a 22-yard free kick
around the DeLand wall.
Benge, who Reno moved to mid­
field. did a nice Job directing Ihe
offense, distributing the boll well.
Also playing well on offense were
Burks. Riley. Cheryl Hathaway und
Valerie Benge.
Reno was concerned that her
learn only capitalized on two of Ihe
12 shots on goal they look. "We
have lo work on our finishing." she
said.
Defensively. Seminole was led by
Amy Williams, who saved a pair of
su re DeLand goals with two
beautiful sliding tackles. Goalie
Christy Oliver made 10 saves to
preserve the shutoul.
L isa L in d a m o o d . M c llssu
Robinson ami Darlene Pinto also
played well In the back for Semi­
nole.
Seminole's next match will be
□So# Tribe. Pago 3 B

Lake M ary draw s Lym an
By TONY DeSOftMIBII

Herald Sports Editor

Kennon makes early decision
With Ihe start ol Ihe high school basketball season still a week away,
Seminole High School'a Koacia Kennon haa decided whal aha will do
next year. On Tuesday, Seminole Coach John McNamara announced
that Kennon had accepted a scholarship to play basketball at Stetson.

Com plUd from w lrs Mtd atari ropocts.

LAKE MARY - Just because
Lake Mary and Lyman are among
the schools favored lo challenge for
the Seminole Athletic Conference
girls' soccer championship doesn't
necessarily mean Ihcy're Immedi­
ately ready lo pay for the stale title.
On Tuesday evening, after Ihe
teams had played to a thrilling 3-3
tie. both Lake Mary Coach Bill
Elssclc and first-year Lyman Coach
Jim Thompson both said Ihelr
learns have a lot of work (o do.
"We'rr young." said Elsselc. who
guided Lake Mary to the slate

championship Iwo years ago. "We
made a lot of young mistakes at the
beginning of Ihc match (when
Lyman Jumped out lo a 2-0 lead|.
But we corrected them at halftime
and played well In Ihe second half.
"The girls showed a lot of charac­
ter. They fought all the way lo Ihc
end."
For Thompson, whose learn built
a 3-1 lead In the second half only to
sec Luke Mary score twice In the
(Inal seven minutes lo tic Ihc score,
the game underscored some things
that the Greyhounds will have (o
work on.
"We don't have them fit and
□See Tls. Pag* 3B

M cG regor’s goal lifts Lake Brantley over Lake Howell
TV

BASKETBALL
(J9 30 p.m. - WKCF 68. Orlando Magic at Utah
Jazz. (L| __
CompUts listin g

mi

SyPNll. SMITH
Herald Corresponded'
ATLAMONTE SPRINGS - Jean McGregor got
to a loose ball In from of Ihe Lake Howell goal
and put It Into the net with 17:55 remaining In
Ihe game to lift the Lake Brantley Patriots to a
2-1 victory over the Lake Howell Silver Hawks In
girl's soccer arllon Tuesday afternoon al Tom
Storey Field.

F O R -T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R TS IN

Y O U R

Sarah Hoberts ran down Ihe right wing with
the ball and made a good centering pass Into Ihe
Lake Howell goal box. The Sliver Hawks were
unable lo clear the zone and McGregor capital­
ized.
The Patriots, now 3-0 overall and 1-0 in the
Seminole Athletic Conference, took a 1-0 lead
only four minutes Into the game when Roberts
blasted a shot from 35 yards which Ihe Silver
Hawk goalkeeper mlspluycd right tnlo the goal.

AR EA , READ T H E

Lake Howell, now 2-1 overall and l-l In Ihe
SAC. had a golden opportunity to tie the game
midway through the first half when Monica
Compton sent a centering pass lo Kelly Mullins,
who was all alone In front of the Patriot goal. But
she couldn’t get a shot ofT.
"We Just couldn't get any breaks lo go our
w ay ." said Lake Howell Coach Gerhard
Tauscher. "In a game like this with two relatively
□8«« P atriots. Pago 2B

�Sanford Ha raid. Sanford, Florida — Wadnaaday. Ncvambar 21,1090

Orangewood Christian
tops Mount Dora Bible

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S

MAITLAND - Daniel Parke
•cored 12 of hla team-leading 25
points In the decisive fourth
quarter to guide the Orangewood
Christian School Rams to a
63-55 win over Mount Dora BiMe
Academy In a lA Dtatrtct 8 boys'
basketball contest.
The win keeps Orangewood
Christian perfect on the young
season at 2-0 overall and In the
district. Mount Dnrta Bible Buf­
feted Its first loss of the season to
fall to 2-1.
After taking a 10-13 lead after
the first quarter, the Rams
suddenly ran Into foul trouble in
the second quarter as Mount
Dora Bible started to work the
ball Inside. Mount Dora Bible
was 10 of 14 from the free throw
stripe as they oulacored Orangewood Christian 18-8 to take
ta 31-27 halftime lead.
Mount Dora Bible still held
that four-point lead heading into
the final quarter. 42-38. That's
when Parke and hla teammates
took over, outacortng the visitors
25-13 In the final frame to pull
out the victory.
Parke also had 15 rebounds
and seven s te a ls . He still

m* - OMfartar.cttitid
W l - Jb*i Rk», Bwtan

IW7 - n r t t s r i miwsun
1«* - TfMeman.MwnMn.Ntw York
NT) — Fmdlynn, Saatm
— Jaff Swr raxWn . T w o

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Patriots
even teams.
the breaks can decide a game."
Lake Brantley missed on two
opportunities to Increase Its lead
late In the first half.
Katie Tultla threaded two
passes within minutes of each
other to StAci Fox Inside tl&gt;e
penality box. But Fox missed
both shots wide and the game
went to halftime with The Patri­
ots holding a 1-0 lead.
Four minutes Into the second
half, (he Sliver Hawks tied the
score when Jessica Cardarelll
played a ball through the air Into
the penalty box. Michelle Cook
headed the ball Into the upperleft corner of the net from 15
yards out.

managed to lead the Rama in
scoring despite the fact that
Mount Dora Bible employed a
box-and-one defense.
Tim Seneff. a Junior forward,
pulled In nine rebounds for Ihr
Rama while scoring 21 points on
8-for-13 shooting from the field.
Cade Reaves chipped tn with 10
points. Including the Rama* only
three-point field goal. David
Jacobs led Orangewood Chris
lian with four assists.
After taking Thanksgiving
weekend off. the Orangewood
Christian Rama will return to
a c t i o n in a g l r l s - b o y s
doubleheader neat Tuesday,
playing at home against Master's
Academy. The girls' game Is
scheduled to tip off at 6:30 p.m.
w ith the boys to follow ai
approximately 8 p.m.

After McGregor’s goal broke
the tie. the Sliver Hawks pressed
forward In hopea of getting (he
equaliser.
With 11:00 remaining. Lake
Howell received a set-play oppor­
tunity. Cardardll took the freekick from 35 yards out and sent
the ball Into the penality box
where Jenny McDonald rocketed
a sltol Just wide of the Lake
Brantley float.
The Patriots defense held the
rest of the way and preserved
the victory.
"It was a typical Seminole
Conference game. It's what 1
expect them to all be like.'* said
Lake B rantley Coach John
S chaefer. "D efenalvely. we
played a great game."

NEW YORK — toting Nr Mw Amarkan
L a a s a MVP Awar* aa cm SucNS By Mm
BaaaSaU Wrltar* Aaactatlan o* Amarica
(lilting lit placa va*m In atranttma* and
fatal aalnH):
Cacti FlaMar, O tto H IN) W .
Raaar Clemens. Rattan ()) 111.
Kally Gruber, Taranta 171
Sakiy TWasaa. Cklcasa i l l

Portland
Golden SUM
Ptwonla
Seattle
LA Clippers
LA Lakers

NY Rangers
New Jersey
Philadelphia
Washington
Pittsburgh
NY Islanders

Ellis lurks. R attan )!
Rafael Palmetrw Tessa n .
Carlton Flak. CMcage ta.
Davo Parkar, Mllwaahaa 11.
Oiila Gwllton. Chicago 10.
Jody Rood. Saatan *.
Kan Grlttay Jr., laattta 7.
Alan Trammell, Detroll 7.
Tany Pane. Saatan A

S ll i I RADIAL
Mi rim HI ackwalls

Doug Jones. Ctauatand 1

P15VMR13

40.000m

C ontlnusd from IB
next Tuesday at Lyman.

Q«ltz iMds Horiuts
ORLANDO - Winter Springs
residents Amy and Jill Gcltz
com bined for six goals on
Tuesday afternoon to' lead the
Bishop Moore Hornets to a 8-0
blitz of the Deltona Wolves In
girls' soccer action.
Amy Gcltz scored four'goals,
giving her 156 for her career.
She Is now Just 21 goals shy of
the national scoring record for
girls. She and Jill each had an
assist.
Karep Butz and Stephanie
Gringcr scored the other goals
for the Hornets, who oulshot the
Wolves 36-0. Stephanie Fculner
had three assists while Gringcr
and Maureen Kelleher had one
each.
Sophomore goalkeeper Corl
Vallcau did not have to make a
save In registering the shutout.
By comparison, the Deltona
goalie made 15 saves.
Bishop Moore also had an 8-0
advantage In comer kicks.
Now 2-0-1, Bishop Moore will
participate In Lake Howell's
Thanksgiving Turkey Shootout
n
---MM Ifl
l kiff
w VaJke vWSwl
1n rrfa fi
"F
tF»-*nQ
T o u rn am en t th is w eekend,
April Goss (No. 18) and her Lake Mary teammates had reason to hosting one of the three-team
celebrate Tuesday afternoon alter Goss scored a goal to earn the pools. The Hornets will play the
Apopka Blue Dorters at 9 a.m.
Rams a 3-3 tie with the visiting Lyman Greyhounds.
Friday. Iben turn around and
play the Land O'Lakcs Gators at
noon.
The first, third and fifth place
Lyman went back up by two gam es are scheduled to be
Coo Honed from IB
goals when Sara Kane scored played Saturday.
(hut's our (the coaches) fault," again 15 minutes into the sec­
said Thompson. "We're still de­ ond half. Danielle Garrett picked
veloping things. We have some u p th e a s s i s t fro m th e
klds playing In some new posi­ Greyhounds. •
tions. That will come with time."
Action was fast and furious
It took less than 10 minutes across midfield for the next eight
for Lyman to take the lead. to 10 minutes. Lake Mary finally
Adrian Kane scoring on a pass broke through at 72:11 when
from Amy Smith. Ten minutes Shay lie Thomas lofted a perfect
later. Kane's sister Sara scored a volley |o the far tup corner. With
well-executed goal on an assisl less than four minutes remain­
from Tracy Shcr.
ing. April Goss played a volley
Joy Gorman got one of the across the Lyman goal that
goals back for Lake Mary nine Gorman nodded home for lhe
equalizer.
mlnules before halftime.

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165R-15 ...
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P195/75R14
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TRUCKS *RV RAOULS

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Apopka’s Russell prepares lor Florida Cracker 200 with a pair of wins
NEW SMYRNA BEACH — Tuning up for this
Saturday’s 13th annual Florida Cracker 300 U te
Model Chanipionahlp. David Ruaaell drove the
Horoen Around Farms Ftrebfrd to victory In the
FASCAR-sanctloned 29-lap U te Model feature a t
Sniyrns Speedway Saturday night.
Bruce Lawrence, who made a strong challenge
for the lead all race long, finished on RuaarlTs
back bumper. Taking third through fifth were BUI
Posey, &lt;lne Middleton and Mark Hlnkofcr.
The Florida Modified final went to Mike Fitch
with early leader Leo Cleary hanging on for
second.
Marc Klnley barely managed to power by
Chuck Stanley at the halfway point and went on
to win the Limited U te Model m ain event tn the
Cellular Dimension Mercury Cougar.
Going from first to last In one lap. Rick Johns
took the Sportsman win over Joey Sluts. Ronnie
Brooks. BUI Loomis and Walt Kahra.
In Four Cylinder Mini Stock action, a late race
wheel-to-wheel duel for the lead between Buddy

IngersoM and Bobby Sears ended on lap 11. when
IngeraoU’s engine exploded, sending the pair
crashing hard Into the outside rail on turn one.
In the closing laps, young Dwane Cochran
pasted newcomer S.C. Klinger for the lean and
the win.
Barbara Pierce edged Sanford's John Ripley to
win the Bomber feature. Spectator racing events
went to Todd Worthington, who drove a Ford,
and Tom Henderson In s Chevrolet.
The Four Cylinder Enduro went to Randy Grief,
who had to mount a super effort to hold off
second-place finisher Oary Roberts. On several
the field was directed to turn around
and go the opposite direction on the high-banked
half-mile oval.
ORLANDO - David Ruraell. the 1900 FASCAR
U te Model champion, turned his recent string of
bad hick around with a wtre-to-wtre victory on
Friday night at Orlando SpeedWorld.
RusseU led every lap In taking his first win for
his new sponsor. Horscn Around Farms. Dave
McCabe finished s dose second ahead of Don

SANFORD — Cabinet Aire scored five
runs in the bottom of the seventh inning to
erase a 15-11 deficit and win a playoff with
Sanford U ndlng Apartments for the San­
ford Recreation Department Tuesday Night
Men’s Fall League championship at Chase
Park.
The playoff was necessary when the two
teams finished with Identical 9-1 records
and -had split their two regular season
games. Cabinet Aire won the first game 10-6
earlier in the season. Sanford Landing
Apartments came back with a 6-5 triumph
two weeks ago.
Sanford Landing Apartments broke on top
with a nin In the first Inning. BUI Gracey.
Don Anderson and Tom Gracey all singled
to load the bases before Jim Smith lofted a
sacrifice fly lo left field lo score BUI Gracey.
Cabinet Aire came back with the first of
Its three five run Innings In the bottom of
the second. Scott Farmer led off with a
single and went to third on a Jeff Kruger
single, Kruger taking second on the throw to
third. Brad Kruger singled In both runners.
Brad Kruger took third on Greg Register's
single and scored on a single by Mike
Edwards. Dave Rape reached on an error
that scored Register and Edwards scored on
a sacrifice fly off the bat of Scott Carter.
Sanford Landing Apartments got a run
back In the third on a single by Tom Gracey
a fly ball and an RBI single by Mike Dalton.

_______ *.n

Clary, IS D W M f; a O a rp

s ) lNf 6 rj5&gt;'- Themiocar*
VonUmjfed'jo
nth Toifghahdd over the
whlfo Harcar Alumlnum*”Prddiidta-and
Electonc moved Into a tie for second In
Sanford Recreation Department Women's
Fall Slowpltch Softball League action at
Plnehurat Park Tuesday night.
Thermocarbon crushed Sanford Auto
Auction 20-0, Harcar held off Seko Air
Freight 9-7 In extra Innings and Electone
scored nine runs In their last two at bats to
stop Dick Joyce Well Drilling 14-8. Jones &amp;
Associates had the week off.
Thermocarbon remains two games atop
the league with a 7-1 record followed by
Harcar and Electone Iboth 5-3). Seko 14-4).
Jones &amp; Associates (3-4). Dick Joyce (2-6)
and Sanford Auto Auction (1 -6).
Next week. Dick Joyce plays Sanford Auto
Auction at 6:30 p.m.. Harcar faces Jones A
Associates at 7:30 p.m. and Seko squares off
with Electone at B:30 p.m. Thermocarbon
has the bye.

Seko Air Freight scored four runs In the
bottom of the seventh Inning to lie Harcar
and send the game into extra Innings. But a
single by Lynn Anderson, a triple by
Tammy Nadeau and single by Diana
Montgomery scored the two runs that
spelled the difference In the game.
Providing the offense fur Harcar were
Nadeau (triple, two singles, two runs scored.
RBI). Marie Byrd (three singles, run scored,
two RBI). Sharon Gloss (three singles, run
scored, RBI). Montgomery (two singles, two

Ml M « - )

Ml # - • 4

Ml S - M M
444 144- 14 It
M4 ( t S - • II

OkSMTMWMOriHtos

runs scored. RBI). Chris Locke (two singles,
run scored. RBI) and Virginia Feudner (two
singles, run scored).
Also, Pam Logston (double. RBI). Teresa
Flnck (single, two RBI), Anderson (single,
run scored) and Denise Byrd and Rose
Heaton (one single each).
Pacing (he Seko Air Freight attack were
Diana Sowers (three singles, run scored.
RBI), Sue McRae and Gayle Davidson (two
singles and one run scored each). Janet
Morris (two singles). Denise Burton (stnglr.
two RBI). Bobble Mosley (single, run scored.
RBI). Sally Foust (single, two runa scored)
and Sally Ann Davidson (run scored).
Thermocarbon Jumped on Sanford Auto
Auction for nine first Inning runs and never
looked back In ending the game by the
20-run rule after four innings.
Thirteen different players contributed to
the 24-hlL attack led by Denise Levinson
with a double, two singles, three runs scored
and three RBI. Also contributing were
Teresa Walburger (double, two singles, two
runs scored, two RBI) and Sue Sojka (three
singles, two runs scored, RBI).
Also, Sharon Paulk (home run. single, two
runs scored, three RBI). Terri Mann (double,
single, two runs scored), Micnclle Wldcner
and Ruth Tempcsta (two singles, two runs

because we proved we can
play with a good team on the
road.
"We've been saying all along
that the record doesn't mean
anything until the conference
starts in January. We Just
want to learn and get better
each game."
Once again. It was poor
shooting that did the Raiders
In. They hit only 26 of 63
shots from the floor (41.3
percent). Including I of 9 from
three-point range, and 17 of 27
from the free throw line (63
percent). They also committed
30 turnovers in the contest.
Nason led all scorers with 21
points followed by Darnell
Robinson 117). Moore (10) and
Ford (8|. Moore and Robinson
combined for 21 rebounds (11
and 10 respectively) and Ford
led In assists with three.
For South Florida. Tony
Lyles led a quartet of Panthers
In double figures with 15
points. Also In double ngures
were M.C. Embiy 114). Rodney
U m ar (13) and Gabriel Moss
(11). U m ar tied Moore for
game high rebound honors
with 11 white Moss had four
assists.

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ImmWr, ttspr tatanVi a IS Ratty, Latvians.
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tactwarn-' a Han Wl
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R S n . S W M w n S 'T^S o Jl

M s OrHaw; a Oary MvMtrs. Daytons Batch.
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SMMty. Orlanto; a Mlhs TM0. Ortas*; 4 Allan M M .
Pstm Sty; a VanC rm . Ocaas.
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BamSart tt s f r a US to * ) - &gt;• Barbara P lan s, OrtsnSs; t.
Ossrfa McKlaatct. O rton*; a Bat Htnar. OrtanSa. 4 D am n Gould,
Cacss; a Dssw Pa
--------

W om enIS
But SCC then went Into
reverse just as quickly, allow­
ing the Pioneer* lo go on a
.14-2 run of their own to
re-eaiabollsh a 7-potnt lead at
42-35 wtth 10:16 remaining tn
the game.
" W e j u a t d i e d . " a a ld
Gallagher. "We've had trouble
In that area. We play hard
enough Just to stay wtth a
team. Once we take control of
a game we need to learn how
to put It away."
Pamela Williams, Brandle
Groves and Martin led the
comeback as Williams and
Groves each hit two shots and
Groves dished out three assists

f

If You Are:
Moving Into O r
Around Th e Area
Getting Married
Having A Baby

Let your Welcome Wagon representative
answer your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.

Doing the damage for Electone were Rosa
Williams (four singles, run scored, three
RBI). Robin Martin (three singles, three runs
scored, three RBI). Shelly Jackson Ithree
■ingles, two runs scored. RBI) and Joyce
Bean (triple, single, three RBI).
Also. Jocsy Sanders (two singles, three
runs scored. RBI), Gloria McMIller (two
singles, two runs scored, two RBI), Patsy
Harding (two singles. RBI). Tony Glttles (two
singles, two runs scored) and Jane Perrone
(single, run scored).

If You Live In One Of These Areas,
Please Call
Sanford — 323-4614
Lake Mary — 321-6660 or 330-3311
Longwood — 331-4016 or 869-9369
Winter Springs — 696-2515
Altamonte — 869-4340
Casselberry — 699*9255 or 696-2515
Oviedo — 695-3819

Leading the Dick Joyce attack were Debra
Hinson (double, two singles, two runs
scored, two RBI). Beth Sparks (three singles,
run scored). Tina Wheeler (two singles, run
scored) and Rhonda Gorman (home run. run
scored, two RBII.
Also, Penny Stewart (single, run scored.
RBI). Michelle Cooke and Cheryl Hubbard
(one single and one RBI each). Kim
Eltanhead (RBI) and Karen Lathem and
Joanne Lawrence (one run scored each).

kd

to Martin, tying the game at
52-52 with 3:20 remaining.
Wliaon hit three out of four
foul shots down the stretch to
ive IRCC a 55-54 lead with
:27 rem aining. But Tina
Lester drove along the baseline
at hit the lay-up with :01 on
the shot dock and :06 re­
maining In the ffune.
Martin then stole the Inbounds pass to preserve the
victory.
"I'm very pleased with my
girls.” aald Gallagher. "We re
Just taking It one game at a
time and as long oa they're
Improving with every game. I
can’t ask for any more from
them ."

la a proud member of tho “Welcome
Wagon” Family In Samlnola County

■cored and two RBI each). Jackie Suggs (two
singles, run scored, RBI). Paula Songer
(double, two RBI). Linda Lewis (single, run
■cored. RBI). Dcbbtc Leigh (single, run
■cored) and April Laurence (run scored).
Doing the hitting for Sanford Auto Auc­
tion were Jamie Riddle. Shelly Harley, Sue
Mangham and Loretta Cerchia with one
single each.
Dick Joyce erased a 4-0 deficit with a
six-run third Inning and Increased Its
advantage to 8-3 with a run In the fourth,
but Electone scored four runs In the sixth
and five In the seventh to take the win.

^T, re &gt;•
E xpre s s

Men
C o atlaasd from IB
left In the half.
SCC played Us best defense
of the season, (being 18 turn­
overs and committing only six
fouls to take a 33-30 lead Into
the intermission. Nason led
the way with 10 points while
Ford and Sanford's Robert
chipped in with .six points
each.
The game stayed close until
the Panthers tied the score at
49-49 with 10:38 to play In the
game. The two teams con­
tinued to trade baskets and the
score was still tied 58-58 with
5:36 to play. But over the next
3:17. South Florida outscored
the Raiders 9-2 to take a 67-60
lead with 2:17 left.
SCC fought Us way back to
trail by only three points,
71-68, with 0:25 left on a
basket by John Mackey. But
th a t was as close as the
Raiders would get as the
Panthers hit 8 of 9 free throws
down the stretch.
"We played a very good
defensive game tonight.” said
SCC coach BUI Payne. "But we
got tired at the end and started
reaching on defense. You can't
be happy because we lost but
y o u c a n be e n c o u r a g e d

it

“ i Wstars rn top) - I. Van Crsara. Ocaaa. t
1 MMs TMS. OrtanSa; 4 Timmy TaSA,
trtonSs
in tasal- t. ScsHMcOsSb. Osttona; I.

a 0s*W InStyarl, OrtanSa; 4 Oary

jsara»)M taM _04jr«M4; a Mwit h m m m t .

Thermocarbon continues winning ways with rout
IS ttl H - I N

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AsapSs; a Os«s AkCMa, Cscss; a Dan Pann, unlsn Part; 4
Sfai naSMMall. MitoBSrt a Hat Parry. MIim .

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on an error and Tom Oracey scored on a
Ml t s i - n
ground out by Dan Gracey.
Ml IM I — 14
But Cabinet Aire came up with Its third
’ five-run Inning in the home -half of the
Cabinet Aire Increased Its lead td 10-2 seventh to take home the league title.
wtth another five runs tn the bottom of the
Cohen led off with a single and went to
third Inning. Rob Cohen's single, an error, a third on a single by Eric Hiller. Braaaeur
fielder's choice and a single by Farmer * forced Hiller wtth Cohen scoring. Scott
loaded the bases. Jeff Kroger singled In one Fanner singled Braaaeur to third and
run. Brad Kruger cleared the bases with a Braaaeur scored on a single by Jeff Kruger.
double and Register singled to score Jeff Brad Kruger then doubled In two runs and
Kruger.
Register singled to score Brad Kruger with
Sanford U ndlng cut the lead to 104 with the winning run.
a six-run fourth inning. Duane Smith
Contributing to the IB-hlt Cabinet Aire
alngled. Tom Barnes and Bill Gracey attack were Jeff Kruger (double, three
reached on errors with Smith scoring. singles, three runs scored, three RBI). Brad
Anderson singled In a run before Tom Kruger (two doubles, single, three runs
Gracey and Jim Smith reached on errors ■cored, seven RBI). Register-(three singles,
and Dan Gracey singled In another run.
run scored, two RBI) and Farmer (three
Sanford U ndlng retook the lead with four singles, three runs scored).
more runs In the fifth. After two quick outs.
Alto contributing were Cohen (two
Barnes reached second on a throwing error singles, two runs scored). Braascur (single,
,and scored on a single by Tom Kelly. three runs scored. RBI). Edwards (single,
Anderson reached on an error and Tom run scored. RBI). Hiller (single) and Rape
Gracey singled In Kelly. Jim Smith reached and Carter (one RBI each).
on an error allowing Anderson and Gracey
Doing the damage for Sanford Landing
to score.
Apartments were Tom Gracey (four singles,
Cabinet cut the advantage to 11-10 with a four runa scored, three RBI). Bill Gracey
run tn the fifth. Trey Braaaeur singled and (th re e s in g le s , th re e ru n s sco red ),
advanced to second on a fly ball from where Anmderaon (two singles, two runs scored.
he scored on Jeff Kruger's single.
RBI) and Dalton (two singles. RBI).
Sanford Landing Increased Its lead with
Also hitting were Kelly (single, run scored.
three runa In the top of the seventh Inning. RBI). Dan Gracey (single, two RBI). Duane
Barnes and Bill Gracey singled. After a fly Smith (single, run scored), Jim Smith (run
out. Barnes scored on a Tom Gracey single. scored, two RBI) and Barnes (three runs
Bill Gracey scored when Jim Smith reached ■cored).

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Cabinet Aire rallies to claim Tuesday Night title
From sta ff report*

&gt;- 1. Om n Csdtrm. Oak HIM; I.
I, JadtMftvilla; 4. Safe Pm*.

Fcnn. Wayne Marshall and Hal Feny.
After two complete restarts and several more
caution flap . Von Crews em erged victorious at
the conclusion of the Limited U te Model feature.
Scott McDade led all the way to win his first
ever Florida Modified feature. McDade. In the
Cellular Dimension Cavalier, held off a last lap
charge by former U te Model driver Donnie
Strickland to secure the win.

OUR COMMITMENT
TO YOU:

W ould yo u b t w illing
to T O Y U S ?
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operated for 8 years.

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Holidays, cookies
E itu lie k

Recipes backed

Cub Scout* Pack 34 le boating its Annuel AO You Can Bat
Pancake Breakfast. Sunday. December 3. a t the Pint United
Methodist Church. Magnolia and Fifth Streets. Sanford, from 7
a.m. to noon.
Adults. 62.50; children 3 to 13, S1.BO and children under 3.
free.
Tickets will be available at the door, but may be purchased In
advance from a Cub Scout or at the Sanford Chamber of
Commerce.

b y 6 0 0 y e a rs

County 4-H tiM M f programs
Seminole County 441 has again set Its schedule for 1900-91
4-H special Interest programs. These program s are short term
In length and are ottered In various project areas. This year’s
schedule Includes classes In Poods and Nutrition. Child
Development, Horticulture. Recreation. Public Speaking.
Clothing and Photography. Programs ate held at the Seminole
Couty Extension Office at 350 West County Home- Road,
Sanford, and are open to 441 Club members and non-member*
8-18 years at age. Pre-registration for daaaea to required as
class size for each program to limited. If you are Interested in
receiving a schedule oftthis years’* rlassrs call the 4-H office at
333-3500 ext. 5500.

Send postcards to troops
Once a week, postcards win be packaged and shipped to
troops of the 24th Infantry Dtvtotoo who are now stationed In
Saudi Arabia. The cards win be shared by everyone In the
division to help bolster morale, and let them know they are
remembered. This will be an ongoing project through the
holidays.
To participate, send postcards to Postcard. U.S.A.. P.O. Box
493. Godenrod. Florida. 33733. Religious or pin-up postcards
are not acceptable by the host country.
Far more Information, call 678-6060.

Walkort run to mooting*
The Mid-Florida Mller Volkssport Walking Club holds its
regular monthly meetings on the third Wednesday of each
month at 7 p.m. at Winter Park Memorial Hospital's Education
Department Auditorium on the second floor. For more
Information contact Ann Elfert at 894-0606.

Stomporo to hold club mooting
The Old Hickory Stampers clogging group holds club
meetings every Wednesday at the Knights of Columbus Hall on
S. Park Avenue. Sanford. For more Information, call 349-9539.

Toootmootoro
to moot for brookfoot
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Daybreakers Toastmasters Club meets the second and fourth
Thursdays of the month. 7 a.m.. at Christos Restaurant.
Downtown Sanford.

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SANFORD - In 1630, the
Pilgrims landed In Plymouth.
Massachusetts aboard the good
■hip Mayflower. U was that
maiden voyage to the new world
that brought our forebearers to a
great land mass of good and
plenty.
The cooks aboard the small
vessel are assumed to' be every
mother and young maiden who
made the Journey. History does
not record specifically who could
cook nor their years of experi­
ence. What Margaret Hodges. In
her book. “Hopkins of the May­
flower” does record are the
recollections of Bradford and
Winslow of the first Harvest
Festival In America In 1631.
Their menu for the feast In­
cluded five freshly killed deer, a
gift from Massssolt and his tribe,
wild turkey birds, geese, ducks,
lobsters, eels, clams, oysters,
f is h , d r ie d g o o s e b e r r ie s ,
strawberries, plums, cherries,
white wine, red wine, com bread
and Indian pudding. The menu
has been deduced to be the
official fare for the three-day
celebration with 90 Indian
guests at the Plymouth Ptanlatlon with the Pilgrims.
As the Pilgrims shared their
bounty and cooking knowledge
369 years ago. so too did the
Ladles of the Moose and the
Ladles Auxiliary of the Fleet
Reserve In Sanford. In 1990.
Recently, the ladles gathered
together In the well-equipped
kitchen at Moose Lodge *1651 to
start Operation Cookie. •
The cookie brigade collectively
represented about 600 years of
cooking experience and shared
some of their favorite ThanksglvIng recipes while baking cookies,
All of the cookies baked. 140

Moose Lodge *1651 and downs
of other cookies were made In
homes throughout Sanford and
donated by mothers and young
homemakers who cared enough
to give.
“Sanford Fleet Reserve headed
up Operation Cookie.” said
Jackie DuBols.
”1 was talked Into It by Marge
Miller, president of the Fleet
.
R eserve Ladies A u x iliary ."
so they may have a touch of DuBols said.
Wanda Hubbard heads a pool
home while there.
kB aklng cookies e m itte d tournament and instead of hav­
aromaa of peanut butter In- ing a banquet this year, they
termlngled with oatmeal, raisins donated their money to Opera­
and cinnamon, and venison chill tion Cookie.
Vivian Mann Is Senior Regent
cooking on top of the stove
brought visions of home to the of Chapter 1404 of the Ladles of
ladles. The missing element to the Moose who Inspired the
the scene was apple cider and a ladles to bake for Operation
Cookie. When she asked for
little snow,
Just os nostalgia awakens the volunteers, every Moose Lady
senses of times and places past, participated.
The recipes for today's column
so too will the cookies when the
are
offered to enhance your
soldiers and sailors bile Into the
holiday meal. The chicken cas­
serole may be used for leftover
turkey Instead of fresh chicken.
OYSTER DRESSING
by H argis C— hraw
1 double pkg. Stove Top
Dressing. Prepare as directed on
package.
2 stalks celery
1 small onion, chopped
Salt, pepper and sage to taste
1 pint oysters, drained (retain
liquid)
Use oyster liquid to mix with
stuffing, about V4of the liquid
Mix all together well and place
Fooding tho noody
In a lightly greased Iron skillet at
Members ol the Ladles of the
350° for 30 minutes.
Elks 1241 gathered at Ihs
Sanford homo of Juno Miller
recently to assemble 10 food
I pound marshmallows
baakote for noody families. The
6 fresh sweet potatoes
baskets Include turkeys and ail
6 fresh apples
th t trimmings for a filling
14 cup brown sugar
Thanksgiving. Shown with
V4 slick margarine
Miller, right, Is Ann McKIbbin,
Cook sweet potatoes (boll
left. Food was donated by
about 20 minutes). Peel and slice
members and by area busiInto 14-Inch rounds. Peel apples
and slice 14-Inch thick. Layer
apples and sweet potatoes In
casserole dish. Mix brown sugar
and n*argerine. Use the mixture
between each layer. Bake 30
m inutes at 32 5 a , then add
marshmallows on top and bake
an additional m inute or so.
Serves 10.

CHICKEN CASSEROLE (use
leftover turkey)
by VlvtaaM aaa
1 — 3 lbs. poultry, cooked and
deboned
1 lb. noodles
5 qts. salted water or bioth
1 cupCheeze Whiz
14 cup cooked mushrooms
6 crackers (crumbled)
Cook noodles In broth or railed
water, drain. Break up poultry
and Cheeze Whiz, mushrooms
and place Into casserole dish.
Cover top with cracker crumbs
and bake at 350s until bubbly.
CANDLESTICK SALAD
by Marglo Coekraa
Arrange lettuce leaves on
salad plates. Place pineapple
rings In center of lettuce. Peel
and roll bananas In lemon Juice
so they do not turn brown. Stand
each banana uptight Inside Ihc
pineapple ring and top with a
red cherry on a toothpick. Circle
the base of the banana with
mayonnaise and gated cheddar
cheese to simulate melted wax.
Chill before serving.
Note: Bananas may be cut In
half and stood on the (1st end.
Vt cup boiling wa*er
1 cup peanut butter
1 cup sugar (brown or white or
mix half and half)
2cupsBlsqulck
Preheat oven to 350°. Cream
s u g a r a n d p e a n u t b u tte r
together. Add hot water until
well Incorporated, then add
Blsqulck. mix well, and roll Into
little balls. Place oti cookie sheet
and press with a moistened fork.
Bake a t 350° for 8 to 10
minutes.

Titanbtfivtog
Make your holiday dinner reservations now
at one of these fine restaurants.

us
ON YOUR
HORIZON—

catch

Starting W ednesday, Nov. 21
W ell be setting up early to serve
you breakfast. O r cotne by for
OPEN F 0 &amp;
lunch o r dinner, and try our
world fam ous catfish, j m L
steaks, prim e rib,
seafood o r chicken.
Open 7 Days.
JQ H W
LEGACY BAND FBI. A SAT. 9 P M - 2 AM .
’C f l u i l
HAPFY HOUR 4 • 7 PM
**|
BANQUET F A C IL IT IE S AVAILABLE

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Have Dinner with us.
i

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£ o A
a M
Roast Turkey or

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Baked Hem with
ell the trknmlnQi
Buffet Style.

1 *10.95
Open for Thanksgiving *
Dinner S erved12 Noon - 6 P.M.
A lso Serving D inner Wed. k F ri.
5 :3 0 -8 :3 0

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H ln ia a t a n l
Thanksgiving Dinner Served

12 Noon-6 P.M.
ROAST TURKEY ft DRESSING

with glblst gravy....... ........ ........ .

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BAKED HAM

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King Cut...
BROILED FILET OF FLOUNDER

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

MNN
17-92 ON BEAUTIFUL
LAKE MONROE IN
SANFORD SINCE 1924

• RESERVATIONS

NEEDED CALL...

468-0121

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�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida — Wednesday, November 21,1980 — M

No Thanksgiving islcomplete
without American cranberries

□

No Thanksgiving dinner would be complete
without the truly American cranberry. It can
appear on the menu In many forma.
The fresh cranberries are available In 12 ox.
bags from October until late December. The
berries freeze well, so buy several bags while they
are plentiful.
Cranberry sauce, made from fresh cranberries,
taa breeze with microwave preparation.
1 pkg. fresh or frosen cranberries
tocup water
1to cup sugar
Rinse cranberries. Combine with water Ins a
2-qt. batter bowl. Cover with plastic wrap.
Microwave on 100% power 6-7 minutes or until
cranberries begin to pop. stirring once. Stir In
sugar. Microwave on 100%. uncovered. 5-6
m inutes or until mixture starts to thicken and all
cranberries are popped, stirring once. Pour Into
serving bowl. Dust with cinnamon. Serve warm
or chilled.

This relish makes a colorful accompaniment for
turkey or ham .

1 pkg. (12 ox.) fresh cranberries
1 cup w ater
to cupsugar
1 pkg. (3 ox.) orange flavored gelatin
1 can (11 ox.) mandarin oranges, drained
Combine cranberries, w ater and sugar in 2-qt.
batter bowl. Microwave on 100% power, un­
covered. 6-9 minutes, o r until cranberries begin
to pop. stirring once or twice. Mix In gelatin, until
dissolved. C od slightly. Stir•in
I oranges: cover and
refrigerate until served.
This relish will keep up to 2 weeks In the
refrigerator.

featuring fruit, are wonderful additions
to holiday meals. This one Is simple to prepare.
cranberries as well as grapes and

Feasting while staying fit
In 1900 our holiday dinner can
gloriously satisfy our tastebuds
but steadfastly uphold our new
dietary goals as well. Without
losing any of the traditional
dishes, we can create around th e’
turkey a zero cholesterol, low-fat
feast. A stuffing and mashed
potatoes with rich brown gravy,
savory sweet peas, spicy cran­
b e rry re lis h , a n d p e rfe c t
pumpkin pie all come home to
"roast” on the new and Im­
proved Thanksgiving table. So
as we give thanks for all our
blessings, our bodies can give
thanks too!

and celery In a heavy pot. Saute’
until the vegetables begin to
soften, then add bread cubes,
sage, marjoram, thyme, celery
seed, paprika. and pepper to
taste. Mix well. Cook, stirring
frequently, for 5 minutes over
medium-low heat.
2. Add hot vegetable stock to
pot and mix well. Cover and
cook over low heat for 30
minutes or longer stirring fre­
quently. until bread cubes have
broken down. (The secret to a
good stuffing Is In the slow
cooking and the frequent stir­
ring.)
(lto hours!
3. Place potatoes, celery stalks,
Stuffing Is an all-American garlk*. bay leaf, and peppercorns
favorite, but u n fortu n ately , In a large pot of cold water. Bring
when baked Inside the turkey. It to a boll, cover, and simmer for
becomes a high-fat food. We can 15 to 20 m inutes, or until
keep this excellent complex tender. Potatoes are ready when
carbohydrate healthy, by mak­ they pierce easily, but do not fall
ing It part of a deep dish pie with apart.
a thick mashed potato crust and
4. Use a slotted spoon to
a rich, low-fat gravy. Preparing remove potatoes from water,
our stuffing In this fashion, reserving water for mashing. If
allows us to seve up second needed; leave p eppercorns
helpings without the slightest behind.
reservation.
5. Begin mashing potatoes.
• t s f f ls |
Incorporating
soy milk and ad­
to cup olive oil
ding oil and pepper to taste. Add
1
shallot, finely chopped (2 additional
potato water In small
tsp.)
Increments
If potatoes appear
1 large white onion, finely too dry.
chopped(IW cups)
1to cups finely chopped celery
6. Prehat oven to 375#F. Oil a
12 cups stale whole-grain deep casserole and press stuffing
down gently Into bottom. Top
bread, cut In Vi-inch cubes
w ith m ashed potatoes and
2 tsp. ground sage
smoth the crust with a spatula.
Vi tsp. dried thyme
D ust top of p otatoes with
Vi tsp. ground celery seed
paprika.
Vi tsp. paprika
7. Bake for 45 minutes or until
Freshly ground pepper
1 Tbsp. chicken-flavored vege­ potatoes have formed a golden
table stock dissolved In 2to cups crust.
Serves 6 to 8.
boiling water, or 2to cups other
strong vegetable stock, heated
HOLIDAY PUMPKIN P H
H is lM d P iU ts C n u t
10 small White Rose potatoes,
Just one cup of tofu In this pie
peeled and quartered (approx. 8 supplies us with 50% of the RDA
cups)
for protein and magnesium, over
30% of the RDA for calcium and
1 celery stalk
iron, and 24% of RDA for zinc
1 large garlic clove
and phosphorus, plus substan­
1 bay leaf
tial amounts of copper, folic acid.
8 peppercorns
Vi cup soy milk (plus addi­ B-vltamlns and the essential
fatty acids. Yet it contains abso­
tional potato water. If necessary)
lutely no cholesterol or lactose
1 to 2 Tbsp. olive oil
and relatively little saturated fat.
Freshly ground pepper
U sing to fu to su p p ly th e
Paprika
1. Heat the oil. shallot, onion. crcamlncss. rather than dairy.

results In an unexpectedly
nutritious pumpkin pie!
Ptlliag

to lb. firm tofu
2 cups cooked or baked purred
pumpkin
to cup FrultSource. or to cup
honey cr maple syrup
to cup oil (to If you use liquid
sweetener)
2 Tbsp. sorghum or cane
molasses
1to tsp. ground cinnamon
to Up. grated nutmeg
to Up. powdered ginger
to tsp. mace
to Up. sea salt
I unbaked Sweet Crust
Sweat Croat
to cup whole-wheat pastry
dour
to cup unbleached white (lour
3to Tbsp. soy margarine, cut
Into bits
to Up. grated nutmeg
Dash of salt (optional)
3 Tbsp. Ice water
1. Place flours, margarine,
nutmeg, and salt In a food
processor and process 10 sec­
onds to a cornmeal texture. With
processor ru n n in g , add lto
Tbsp. Ice water. Add remaining
water slowly, and stop the
machine as soon as the dough
begins to form a ball. Tiny pieces
of margarine should be vUlble In
dough.
2. Form the dough Into a ball
and flatten Into a thick dUk.
Flour your work surface and
rolling pin. and roll dough from
center out to sides, turning Into
a perfect circle about 10 Inches
In diameter.
3. Place the rolling pin in the
center of the dough. Fold half
over the pin and transfer to a
9-Inch pie plate. Press the dough
genllv Into the pie pUte. fold the
rough edges under neatly or trim
them. Cover pie plate with a
slightly damp kitchen towel and
place In the refrigerator.
1. Preheat oven to 350°.
2. Blend IngrcdlenU for filling
until smooth and creamy In a
blender or food processor. Pour
Into pie shell and bake for 1
hour.
3. Chill and serve.
Rtclpe* i n by Marilyn Diamond, author ol
Tha Amur lean Vegetarian Cookbook from Iho
Fit lor Ills Kltchan.

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1 pkg. (12 ox.) fresh cranberries
2 qU. water
lto cupssugar
3 bags black tea
2 cinnamon sticks
2 cups orange Juice
Wash and sort cranberries, discarding soft
berries. Combine cranberries and water In 3-qt.
casserole. Cover with lid. Microwave (100%)
18-20 m inutes or until boiling and cranberries
pop. stirring twice. Strain cranberry mixture to
remove seeds and pulp, squeezing cranberries to
extract all Juice. Discard pulp. Return Juice to
3-qt. casserole. Add tea bags and cinnamon
sticks. Cover. Microwave (100%| 4-5 minutes or
until boiling. Allow to stand 2-3 hours. Remove
tea bags and cinnam on sticks. To serve,
microwave (100%) covered. 10-12 minutes or
until steaming hot. Stir In orange Juice. Ladle Into
cups or serve from heat resistant glass pitcher,
garnish with orange slices.
Happy Thanksgiving!

Give thanks for freedom,
health, food and friends
AD VICK

-

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

Here's an
u p d a te on my tra d itio n a l
Thanksgiving column:
Tomorrow Is Thanksgiving, so
why not take a few minutes to
count your blessings?
How’s your health? You have a
few minor complaints? Well,
thank God they’re not major.
Obviously you’re still alive. You
can probably think of at least
one person who Isn't around this
year, (lean.)
If you awakened this momlng
and were able to hear Ihe birds
sing, use your vocal cords to
utter human sounds, walk to the
table on two good legs and read
the newspaper with two good
eyes (or even one), praise the
Lord! A lot of people couldn't.
How’s your pocketbook?
Thin? Well, most of the world Is
a lot poorer. No pensions. No
welfare. No food stamps. No
Social Security. No Medicare. In
fact, one-third of the people In
the world will go to bed hungry
tonight. Would you rather be In
Poland, the Soviet Union or Iraq
—God forbid!
Are you lonely? The way to
have a friend Is to be one. If
nobody calls you. pick up the
phone and call somebody.
Are you concerned about your
country's future? Hooray! Our
system has been saved by such
concern. If you don’t like your
elected officials, you can go to
work and vote them out of office.
Freedom rings! You can still
worship at the church of your
choice, or not worship at all If
you don't want to. You can cast
a secret ballot, or criticize your
government without fearing a
knock on the head or a knock at
your door In the middle of the
night.
And If you prefer to live under
a different system, goodbye and
good luck. You are free to go.
In closing. I'll repeat my
Thanksgiving prayer. Perhaps
you will wunt to use It at your
table tomorrow. Let one of the
children read It.
"O. heavenly Father, we thank
thee for food and remember the
hungry.
" W e t h a n k t h e e fo r h e a lth a n d
r e m e m b e r t h e s ic k .

For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE msgszins of Friday, Nov. 16.

Serve this spicy tea at a holiday brunch for a
change.

2 cups fresh cranberries
to cup water
to cupsugar
2 tsp. unfavored gelatin
3 Tbsp. cold water
2 cups miniature marshmallows
1 cup red seedless grapes, halved
1 can (8 ox) crushed pineapple, undrained
1 cup whipping cream
2 Tbsp. sugar
1 Up. vanilla extract
Combine cranberries and to cup water In 2-qt.
batter bowl. Microwave on 100% power, un­
covered1. 5-6 mlnutet or until cranberries pop.
stirring once or twice. Stir In to cup sugar. Add
gelatin to cold water: let stand 5 minutes to
soften. Blend into hot cranberry mUturc.
Microwave (100%) uncovered, 2-2to minutes or
until gelatin U dissolved, stirring once. Re­
frigerate until mixture begins to thicken.
Fold marshmallows, grapes, and pineapple Into
cranberry mixture. Beat together cream, sugar
and vanilla until thickened. Fold Into fruit
mixture. Pour Into serving bowl; refrigerate until
set. about 2 hours.
About 8 servings.

"We thank thee for friends and
remember the friendless.
"We thank thee for freedom
and remember Ihe enslaved.
"May these remembrances stir
us to service
"That thy gifts to us may be
used for others.

"And. d*ar God. please bless
and watch over our men and
women In the Persian Gulf and
bring them home safely — and
soon. Amen."
Have a wonderful Thanksgiv­
ing. and may God bless you and
yours.
Lavs, A M Y

.... ........

ADJACENT TO SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
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* Grand Opening
Special
• Lose all the weight you want
NO Time Limitl
• Grocery Store Food
• Medically Supervised
• Lose 3-7 lbs. per week

Th a t’s right! T o our 1st
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program Is

FREE!

NO HIDDEN COST!
jgrar Includes:
The Program

• Stabilizationi I 12
12 mo maintenance
program
• Lab work optional
• Weakly urtnalyala monitoring
• Behavior modification couneeiing
• Food sheet 4 diary
• One-on one counseling

C A LL T O D A Y
This special oiler good al Sanlord
V location onlyl

THE WEIGHT
LOSS CLINICS
OF CENTRAL HORtOA. MC
SANFORD
2479 S. Park Ava
125th St. &amp; Park)

324-1316

LAKE MARY

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Shoppes ol
Lake Emma #183

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333-9416

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CtROPtT W ANG FOR

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FLORIDA.
CABRriOtWMW CA-tbP
UNIVERlirV MILLS, INC..
PtotnttH.
*e.
STCPHI N a. ADCOCK and
DIANE A ADCOCK, htowtto
JOMNOOt (William Wagnari
andJANC DOE (Mary P.

and CaraiS.
Inc., a w n gram FlarMa
carpai afton. and Ja w / John

NOTH I OF
FOOICLOBWRI SALE
NOTICE II HRRIOT GIVEN
pursuant ta a Final Judg-

Ma. «&lt;n a i « a M i * r a

December. t m at 11 :M attack
a m . at ta# Who! Front d n r at
tha Sam Inala County Caerfhauaa. SantorA Ftortde. altar
tor sato and sail ef public outcry
ta to* Mgwat ana feaat
ta rc a th .m o ' '
praparf) tituata in
Caunfy. FlarMa:
A pan tan at Lai It ana taa
Marta
at Lat tJ. Black D.
Lincoln MARK, atcarrinp ta
taa plat maroat aa nearPia m
Fiat Back 7, papa ta. public
at lomlnata County.

t tWB. and antarad In
Na. taSBTS CA14 L at tao
Orcutt Court of taa KlWttaanta
Jadktal Circuit ta and tar Sami
IM
b U Kg
* wnpvwi.
iwBor wwiTTf IrwmM
'■
FA.

Inc., a new grant
ara taa O r
1 trill Mil ta tha
at taa What front dw r at tao
m taouM. in
Ftaridaaf tliMa'ctach
AJM. an taa tata dag at Docom
bar. IMB. ta* triton-tog d r
aertadd prgpartp M Mt tarta in
said Final Judgment, towtt:

Bapin at taa Nartanaal taraar
at aaM la f l l sal* paint aMa
bain* taa l iMtaaail crime at
Lai ia MM camar kata* an taa
' right at wap llna at
Ian Drive. Thence South
IB mlngtat $7 tacanPi
Coat atanp m M Eaetoriy rt*ta at
way llna at WaMtaptan Drive a
dittanca at II J l taot. taanca I t
degress V mlnwtat I t second
I Ml a dittanca at Itf.l* Mat ta
taa Caatarty llna at uM Lat IS.
thence North M da grass II
minutat as tacand t a i l along
taa u l t Easterly llna at aaM Lat
If-a dittanca at II.M taot ta taa
Northaatl camar at taM Lat IS.
ta ld paint a lta balnp tha
Southeast camar mi tald Lat IL
taanca continue North M d r
greet SI minute* &lt;S tacandt
Watt aien* tha Caatarty llna at
tald Let 14 a dittanca at 17.71
faat, taanca d ap irtln f tald
EMtarly llna of taM Lat U
South at dipratt XI minutat SS
tacondt Watt a dittanca at
I If .34 Mat to tat ■Mtarly rlfht
of nay llna ol With Infton Orlva.
taanca continue South 00 de­
grees IS minutes SI tacondt
Eotl along m M EMtarly right ol
way llna of Washington Drive o
distance ol 2504 Mat to tao paint
ol beginning
pursuant to taa Final Judgment
entered In a cate pending In taM
Court, taa ttylo ol which It
indicated above
WITNESS my hand and of(idol eool of toM Court this Tta
day el Novambar, IWO.
(COURT SCALI
MARYANN! MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: JeonBrlltont
Deputy Clerk
Publish: November 14. SI. IWO
OEZ-141

Lat IS. BMcfc C. SWEET
W A TIR OAKS SECTION 4.
ta Flat Maroat m
t Fiat BaoO it , Payot
IF and *•. Public Racardt at

rWHi*

Having a ttreat adrift* at:
IIB Patawtt# Court, Longwood.
F torMo SUIT

Togotaor with all Interatl
i Borrtwer now hat or may
acquire In or to laid
and In and to: la) all
waurtanant taaroot; and (b) all
buildings, structures. Improve
montt. future*, and apeurtonancao now or haraattar pieced
tharaan. Including, but not
limited to. all aagaratut and
agulgmant, whothar or not phys­
ically affixed to tha land or any
building, wood ta gravida or
supply air-cooling, air condi­
tioning, heat, gat. water, light,
power, refrigeration, ventila­
tion, laundry, drying, dishwash­
ing. garbagt, disposeI or other
services; and alt waste vent
s y s te m s , a n te n n a s , g o al
eqilpmont. wtndw* coverings,
d rap es and drapery rods.
carpeting and ttoor covering.
hooters and attached cabinets;
It being IntondM and agreed
the! such Items be conclusively
doomed ta be affined to and to
bo part of tha real property; and
(c) all water and water rights
(whether or r jt appurtenant)
and shares of stock pertaining to
such water of water rights,
ownership of which effects said
property; and (d) tap rents.
Income. Issues and profit* of all
OATEO this tta day of NoCIRCUITCOURT
By: JantE . Jasawlc
Publish: November IASI. IfW
O E M * .......... ................
ST, JOIIM RIVRR WATER
MAHABIMINT OttTRICT
latoadsd Agency Acttoe

The District alve* notice of its
intent to tteue a permit to taa
following applicant!t) on NO­
VEMBER IX tkta:
ORLANDO-LAKE FOREST
JOINT VENTURE. P.O. BOX
PI4SM LONGWOOO, FL M7S1.
application 1*117 OOSAMl. Tha
pro)eel is located in Seminole
County, Section l*. and S«
Township IF South. Range SO
Eari. The aggikafton is to- a
17.IW acre SINGLE FAMILY
SUBDIVISION known as LAKE
FOREST-SECTION SR. The
receiving water body Is SMITH
CANAL (CLASS III).
Tha tikis) containing each at
taa above listed appliestton(t)
are available lor inspection
Monday through Friday oacopt
tor legal holidays 100 a.m. to
S:0t pm . at taa SI. Johns River
Water Management District.
Highway 100 West. Falotka.
Ftor Ido
The District will take action
on oach permit application
listed Wove untoss o petition tor
on administrative proceeding
(hearing) is filed pursuant to tao
provisions el section 11017. F.S..
end section 4tC-l.SU. F.A.C. A
person whew substantial Inter­
ests oro affected by any of tao
District* pro*Bo d permitting
decision* tdontlftod above may
petition tor an administrative
hearing In accordance with toe
lion TS0.J7. F.S. Petitions must
comply with tao requirements ol
Florida Administrative Code
Rules 40C I.IU end 400.531
and be filed with Irecalved by)
the Olstrtct Clerk. PO. Boa
USt, Palotko. Florida 170IS
14 1 f. P o l l t l o n s to r a d ­
ministrative hearing on the
above application!il must bo
tiled within lourteen | lal days of
publications el this notice or
wltain fourteen 114) days ol
actual receipt of this Intent,
whichever first occurs Failure
to file a petition within tat* time
period shall constitute a waiver
of any right such person may
h a v t ta r a q u o t t a n a d ­
m inistration datarm lnatlan
(hearing) under section 1M57,
F.S.. concerning tha tub|oct
permit application. Petitions
which are not Iliad In accordance with the abavo pro­
visions are sub Iact to dismissal.
Publish: Novambar II. 1MB
DEZ-177

vt.

JOHN J SANTORO.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO THE FOLLOWING DE­
FENDANT. IF LIVING. AND
IF DEAD. ALL UNKNOWN
PARTIES CLAIMING BY,
THROUGH. UNDER OR
AGAINST THE NAMED DB-'
FENDANT. WHO ARE NOT
KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR
ALIVE. WHETHER SAID
UNKNOWN PARTIES CLAIM
AS H E IR S . D E V IS E E S .
GRANTEES ASSIGNEES.
LIENORS. C RED ITORS.
TRU STEES. OR OTHER
CLAIMANTS AGAINST SAID
DEFENDANTS NAMES AS
FOLLOWS
TO NANCY RACKI
ADDRESS UNKNOWN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED that in action hat boon
hied ego inti you to loreclota a
mortgage In the Circuit Court ol
the l»ta Judicial Circuit. In and
lor Sammole County. Florida, on
the following described proper
ty
L ot I . B lo c k B, THE
WOOOLANOS - SECTION
FIVE, according to the plot
mereol at recorded In Plot Book
Ik. Pago 41. ol the Public
Records ol Seminole County.
Florida a/k /e Its Ootplnor
Lone. longwood. Florida HIM.
and mot you oro required to tile
tour nritten defames. It any,
aim tha Clark at tha above
tty led Court and to serve a copy
thereof on Lorry P. Sluder.
Akermon. Senter till A Eldton.
p O Boa lit. Orlando. Florida
11102 on or belore the lOta day ol
December. IWO.
It you loll to do to. Judgment
by default may be ontorod
■goinst you tor the relief d r
mended In too Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and tool
mltlnd day of November, iwo.
(SEAL)
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUITCOURT
Seminole County Florida
BY: Hfather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish November 7. 14. II. SI,
ie «

DEEM

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cmtmarm, epkat risatogtrioo ere wselea Iram m aw iw Oy I

Y M O B R

Z S V Z J R

T B S

O R B

C V K C L M V Z Z I C
Z S O T

R E V

D L K C

V M

V R C
*

N V K

R R

J V W W F

3 22-2611 _____________ 6 3 1 -9 9 9 3
CLASSIFIED DEPT. PRIVATE PARTY RATES
HOURS
14 h rfw MM W M B ...9 H R M

9.7MMI-CA14P
OMAC MORTGAGE
CORPORATION OF
PENNSYLVANIA.
Plaintiff,

M

U

L - M

ir i

19 f f m i i W i i ■ ■ » . . . IBB a ~

M N H Y f l n FU M Y
M T M M V • ■Hddtt ____

■RADLEY J.
DAUF FENBACH. deceased,
and any unknasen heirs ef at..

V T
V W ■

N F O I

J I V W K

Q W L N D T . '

V
~

C W V D S .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Conriatancy require* you to be
a s ignorant today aa you atdra a year ago.” — Barnard
Baranaon.

w , _

•RANCH OEALER HIRING
IT7p*rhaur,e*tratol

Far Hama Improvement Co.
- |i - n
c i i ti W r iv n iitf pMftUM'
CaRMMftotor totorvlsa

_

has atoa storeduftoL-.JMMn
a S m T r S h U U I T FAY*
Cat! tori........Jto m ia lto rto m
R R YIS FLA.. INC. Raelton.
ears lultton to Root Eslato
Scharil
MEDICAL

are*, la p . a muaf.
‘

to :

II yeu are a sail mafi rated.

•Mt Trier I
dFLMTTl

6H6Ffl6M^

tfRHfl 6PflMiM

Itaa to make a different* to

• AVON a I .............T„ .
CHRISTMAS S ILLIN G MBETI

b ta* Ihres ri

Camenttonri TOSB KWs. Call
lan to riH Y M M I
V PT R W I
weekly check gMraalaad.
Fret total Is. writ*. 10. IlSto
Control, suite M5SFL, Chine.
__________
CA7T7M
Exp. regeired. F art time
perifton In vMw dote. Itoarito
(tours Call Stove, B a ir n

NOWSICLIANlNGf Sanford.
Lk. M*ry-Lan«wd. araat.
E xtrefs. Own trenopjaa 7141
WILL clean your ham* arolfte*.
Laundry b Iranlnp all*. RaaBVW/ima
V l-A p e rtw w ih /

yeu to
mi Great

tncl ull IIties nw rito;.:

T ra W e i

*ashEim*m*
HEALTH FORCE naadi ywu

LOST CAT • Whlto.

naw l S talling all a ra a s l
Ptenfyofwerkl CaNMB-ma

F r i t Rd.
I1/IS/7F. toward!FW-HF7

K ooecA w n iT
For Details: I (W an 4754
FitrflA H ||g^ ^A itlilliR
HOME R M IRE MUOATSI
On* Way ticket to loultvlito,
Kentucky. *aa n r n a i .

l. in
Wftllnflr
ate. Inriltvttonef facility

NHSC

Attorney Instructed. Hash*
Study, Fto, Aid Avail. FREE
CATALOO. SCt. ‘
PI. m u
Chrtf lorvtoe A
Flt.fS hr. N* *&gt;p Exam,

—tratoto^Aktojj^jjjjjMlj

i

t-Frli

WHY?
OWjotsAM CHAT

..R.O.E./H

O M S IlV tC I tSFAST

MEHAVE

t in all
phases at quality. Military
centract aopartonca a must.

JQ tS R M T H S ItU E O
JO K RM FIOnsSiONALS

salary history to baa 417. c/o
laatorG NoraW. F.O. Bos
taa7.i awtord.FL 7X777.

OURSERVICE
ISSUPER!!

M- F. *• 11:10pm b S a t.
1:10tom. Delivery Can FL.

I. Dal* R. Ottooa. am net

mveaHtrem IIH 1IWII
V.
myeeWa* at Seat. M, IMP

hw boon (lied against you and
v*u are requited to :#rv* a copy
of your written do tenses II any.
to It on ta* LAW OFFICES OF
WILLIAM P. McCAUGHAN.
Plaintiff's atto rn ey , whet*
address Is World Trad* Cantor.
Suit* ISFFl. 10 S.W. Elghln
Street. Miami. Florid* HIM. on
or before December i s lf« .
and file the original with the
Clerk of this Court, either before
service on Plaintiff's attorney or
Im m e d ia te ly th e r e a f te r ,'
otherwise a Default will b*
entered against you tor the
relief demanded In tat Com
plaint or Petition.
THIS N OTICE sh a ll ba
published once oach week tor
tour canwcutlv* week* In ta*
togai paper of public*1 Ion
WITNESS my hand and ta*
Soal Of this Court on this 5th day
Of November, m o.
(COURT SEALI
MARYANN E MORSE
Clark of ta* Court
ty : Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Novambar 7. IS 11, IF,
IMF
OEZM

27— N u r s # r y *

Child Cart
SMALL QUALITY NOMI-LIKE

O a y c a r* A P r o tc b o o l.
if Floygroundt Felly
HCdt Lic.r aaa-i.------ .t u t u s

DAYCARE In my Hidden Lakes
homo. Lots el TLC. 7am 4pm
1070X1............... .......m a l t 7
IN MY SANFORO HOMEI
Clilldcart tap ’d Infants 4yri.
CPR aip. S55 wk. Call Ut-MIt

U M Ifl&amp; litV M r tN M i
Established MLM Ca - Nave to
SB. 1-MBaTXtriX Mr. Curvy
SICN b TIRED ef your present
Job? KH* your boo* "ariosi”
Buy your own buttons* I We
have n r* to choaos from 11
CaR Jw Btogmrito
i^ to to to rih ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
1 1 —M o n ty to L tn d
ACTION UMMS
Rogardtos* of cradllll *500 to
S5B.MB.CaRI....... m j
EQUITY Loans. Porches**.
ReffaaacMI 1st. tad b Ird
Mtgsl Good/bad crodltl Fast
approvals) beard Ian Mtg.
Carp....Lk. Mfg- to skin

MMMI/l-BM-NMMf

Legal Notices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMI NOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIRCUIT CIVIL
NO. f*-1477CAMP
AMERICA’S MORTGAGE
SERVICING. INC., l/k/a FIRST
FAMILY MORTGAGE
CORPORATION OF FLORIDA.
Plalntllt.
vs.
JAMES E. BLAKE, otal.
Defendants
NOTICE OF M LB

Notice it hereby given that,
pursuant to ta* Order or Final
Judgment entered on November
X 1770 In this cause. In the
Circuit Court lor Somlnol*
County, Florida. I will sail th*
properly si fueled In Seminole
County, F tor Ids. described os
Lot IS. WEKIVA RESERVE.
UNIT ONE. according to plot
thereof e t recorded In Plat Book
» . pages aa and 47. Public
Record* ol Somlnol* County,
Florito.
at public sol*, to the highest and
bast bidder, tor cash, at ta*
West Front Door, Somlnol*
County Courthouse. Sanford.
Somlnol* County. Florid*. *t
11:00 A M. on January 10. IMI
MARVANNE MORSE
CLERKOF THE
CIRCUITCOURT
By: JanoE. Josowlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: November IL11.1770
DEMSI

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that we
are engaged in business at taa
Wllshlr* Blvd., Casselberry.
Seminole County, Florid*, under
tao Fktltleu* Nam* ot BEST
WATER SYSTEMS, and that we
Intend to register said name
with taa Clark ef taa Clrc»lt
Court, Somlnoto County. Fieri
da. In accordance with the
Provisions ot Ih* Fictitious
Nemo Statutes, To-Wit: Section
IU.OF Florida Statutes 1717.
FLORIDA TRAOR
INTERNATIONAL. INC.
Paul Schlflllltl, Pres.
Publish November II. St A
December X IS. IWO
DEZ-m

vs.
WILLIAMC. GRIFFINand
JOYCE F .G R IF F IN .rial.
Defendant*
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that, pursuant to Final Judg
ment entered In the cew of ROY
L. CHASE end SHIRLEY M.
CHASE v*. WILLIAM C.
G R IFFIN a n d JOYCE F.
GRIFFIN. JAYANTILAL S
NAYEE. MAOOWACHARYA
T E W A R I . D A T H E R R.
TEWARI. an d KENTUCKY
F R I E D C H I C K E N OF
STATESBORO. GEORGIA.
INC. to ta* Circuit Court ot
Seminole County. Florida. Caw
No. M-14SS CA 14-P. the un
dorslgned Clerk will wll at
public sale to the highest and
bast bidder tor cash at the West
dear. Seminole County Court
houw. In Sanford. Seminal*
County, Florida, at tat hour of
I1 :M a m., on ta* 10th day ol
December. A.O.. IFPO. that car­
tel n real property situated and
being In Samlnoto County, Flor­
id*, described a* M lews:
Lot 41. Stock U. SUNLANO
■STATES, according to tha plat
thereof, at recorded to Flat
Reek II. Pago* IF through 71. of
ta* public record* of Somlnol*
County. F tor Ida.
DATED tal* llta day ot No­
vember, A.D. IFW
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By- J a n e t. Jatowlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish November 11,7*. IMF
CEZMI

....... -....-JEMtlt

sec/heokkaeping rag'd, i
hrs/dey, M doyeAek Musi
- rlri egeto
,-JW-WW
TRACTORTRAILRR
DRIVERS - 4»r « rie carrier

LARbl NOME To More wita

Official R etards Book 1451.
Fagt MB. Official Records Book
1411. Page Pal. Official Records
Book UTS. Page 7. Official
Record* Book 14*7. Pag* 771.
Olflclal Racard* Book teat.
Pag* i «m . Official Record*
Book law. p*g* in . Official
Record* Book ISIS Pago Of,
Official Record* Book 1517.
Page FIS Official Record* Book
1541. Pkg* US Official Record*
Book iSax Pag* isif and Of
tlclaf Record* Book IMS Pag*
755 and a t recorded to Plat Book
17, Pag* IS IS ef the Public
Record* of Seminole County.

Plointllt.

N M &amp; C ilA M v te tf t U M f

m

ADJUSTMENTS AND CRKDITSi Iff ftM event Pf an
• n o r In br aG, Nm tanfeeG Hbpr M w M 9 b reeoeoelMe to r
Mt lift! fmtrtfM atriy and anfy to Mt titetn tf Mt ettf
tf Mat Nutrlltit. Mata check ytwr ad Nr Kcurtcy M*
first Gay it nm.

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
PIED taot an action to torsctow
a Martgage an ta t tallowing
prw arty igcatod to lomtoato
Comfy. Ftoeida:
Unit H . SOUTHPORT. A
CONDOMINIUM. PHASE a.
acearring to the Dociaranan of
Cahdrinlnlum ae recorded in
Official R acardt Book taM.
Page 1177 IM*. Amendments In
Official Racard* Baak ta ll.
Page IfFt, Official Racardt
laai. Paga t. Official

CASE NO. SO-lkSS CA IS-P

~sr
F/TI fto waoboadk. Fd. t

R v f a lu .) a

SOWN Street

ROY L CHASE and
SHIRLEY M. CHASE,

M
M

OfADIRMS
Naan The Day later* Puktktoien
Sunday 11 A.M. Stoveday
Monday - 11 10 A.M. Stoveday

«■

t Easy

RXCILLINT

***-

Prices obnve tel test a SI .SOtosh discount to* pempt peimont. SchedvL
mg moy include Herold Adveihser at taocMtefrii addtawvd day. Cancel
when you get results Pay only lor days yew od rum to ret* owned.
Us* lull description lot Iin test lesults. Copy must tot tow occoptobte
typographical form

and all unknaem parties claim­
ing to haug any right, titto or
In ta ra a t In th a p ro p e rty
herelftOftor Peter Ibod

(NTHE CIRCUITCOURT,
IN AND FOR
SEMI NOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA

compantok to tao U1A -____ ,
X q u a lifie s S a la s /M g m f
tratoae* t o ConSrri Fla. Far
Appt. caMMr. Netty

M-F, E :J»X Dritvary Con FL.

P
K

TO: BRADLEY J. DAUF
FENRACH, doceeeed. and any
unknawn h e irs, asstflnaet.
grantees, Itoners, creditor*,
trustoas or ether claimant* by.

Loot Known AA*

Part li m a. Mature,

ON* arm* MSI

I U mb

Carat S. Mem*. Mg wtta and

BEING M O R I PAR TICU­
L AR L Y 0 1 ICR I B I D At
FOLLOWS:

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE WIN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. W-Wtf-CA-14-F
FORDCONSUMER CREDIT
COMPANY.
Ploinliff.

Orlando • Winter Park

n o t k r o f a c t io n

MOTICC la hereby th a n
m aatorgn w d maryai
MOMC. Clark m toe Ctreott
C u rt at l awtoato Caunfy, Ftor-

O Y Y

Seminole

71—HRtptAAwAsi

o o o V G L T o e* |

CLASSIFIED ADS

GENERAL JURIIOICTION
ICJtML
Hama Savings at America, F.A..

71—HMpWawtRd

n-iNN tomato

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* hereby given that w*
are engaged in business at 447
Sun Lake Circle « m , Lake
Mary. Seminole County. Florl
da. under th* Fictitious Nam* of
P R E F E R R E D BUI LDI NG
MAINTENANCE, and lhal we
’ Intend to register said name
with ta* Clerk ol the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florl
da. In accordance wllh Ih*
Provision* ot th* Fictitious
Name Statute*. To Wll: Section
tas 07 Florida Statutes 1757
Byron Haynes
Toni Haynes
Publish: November 7. IL It,
It. 1710
DEZ71

NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
o n engaged In business at P O
Boe JHOtt, Longwood. FL
MJSliOM. Seminole Cewnly.
Florida, under ta* Fictitious
Norn* ol COMPLETE CON
CRETE and taot I Intend to !
register told name with the
Clerk ol ta* Circuit Casirt, Sam
toato County. Florida, to ac­
cordance Wtta the Provisions of
the Ftctltlout Nome Statutes.
TeWlt Set Ifon gat Ot Florida
Statute* 1757
DewnM Dor a no
Publish: October it L Novem
ber 7. IL St. Itso
DEY ill

--------il l.................Hl-Ifto

R ITA IL M A N A O IR
No oxportonca need*J I Top
RCQISTRATION CLERK
Check thorn In and out I

nei-MM.„.Ap*af

WAITER/WAITRISS
Keep food moving I
FR ESALE R EF
Established territory!

Keep them In running order I

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* hereby given taot I
am engaged In business at P.O.
Boe i l l . Genova. Somlnol*
County, Florida, under th*
Fictitious Nam* of CONTEM­
PORARY VENDING and taot I
Inland to register sold name
with th* Clark et ta* Circuit
Court. Somlnol* County, Flori­
da. In accordance with th*
Provltion* ot th* Fictitious
Nemo Statute*. TeWlt: Section
MS 07 Florid* Stotuto* 1757.
Cynthia M. Brosflold
Publish; October 11 A Novem
ber 7.14,71,1770
DEY 107
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given taot we
or* engaged in business at 7441
Pork Av*, Sonlord. Fla. 11771.
Seminal* County. F lor Ido. under
th * Fi c t i t i o u s N a m* ol
CENTRAL FLORIDA SUPPLY
CO. and that w* Inland fo
register said noma with ta*
Clerk ot ta* Circuit Court, Som­
lnol* County, Florida. In ac
cor dance with ta* Provision* of
th* Fictitious Nam* Statutes.
To Wit: Section MS 07 Florida
Statutes 1717.
Reginald Marlin
WllltoMoor*
Publish: October II A Novem
ber 7, IL 11.1770
DFY114
______
7______
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice it hereby given lhal I
am engaged In business at P.O.
Boe 711. Geneva. Somlnol*
County, Florid*, undor th*
Fictitious Nam* ol VETERI­
NARY SERVICES and that 1
Inland to rvglsler sold name
with th* Clerk ef th* Circuit
Court, Somlnol* County. Florl
da. In accordance with th*
Provisions ol th* Fictitious
Norn* Statutes. ToWIt Section
M5.07 Florid* Statute* 1117.
Cynthia M. Brotlleld
Publish: October 11 A Novem­
ber 7, IL 11.1770

* SALESREP*

MEDICAL R IC IF T IO N IS T

Vertical*, mini Minds, ate.
Commission and bonus. Great
territory. Col I I P II44______

Greet poopto with a smile I

M ACN IN I ELECTRICIAN

Ltflll Notlcti

SRUS K P S
toy's the Limit! Now
track record. Strong closer
Excellent opporfwiltyt

bonafih!

PRODUCTION MANAO SR

Schedule and keep things go­
ing I

SECURITY OlVJCtRS
For Lake Mary. Experience
or will train. Full b Fart Hm*.
METRO SECURITY.....M1-1777
SECURITY IECEFTWRIST
For Lake Mary facility.
7:10*m'Spm, Monday thru
Friday. Call Metro Security In
Orlande................ ......Ml-1777

PARTIAL USTINC ONLY
nA M M SISA V A IU H E
AMEMPLOTMERT
m jm

Nice. Clean. Cabri. air, bitch
enarlvlieaos S7V w *&gt;H lt*l
CLEAN ROOMI, kitchen b
laundry lactltttos Cabto TV.
SfarttodatIWwk.— J 5BMM
SANFORD ■ Furnbhed rooms
tori, utilities Mwi protorrod.
Mriweek. NOdedMW.J» M M
HISTORIC OABLES NOTILI
4*1 Magnolia Av.. Sanford.
0*1 ly. erkty, monthly ronlalt.
"RERTEOIRANCEII
M rs J. W. of Sriitord rented
her room within • week and
called her Sanford Herald
Classified Adverilsng Con
sultont to stop her od from
continuing on Ih* It Ooy
Special rat#, SamolMng YOU
need to advert)** at low tost
and editor* quick results?
Try our 10. 14 b 1* Day
Special rale*. Lowest cost per
lino lor con sec u Mv* days'
advertising. Advertisers or*
free to cancel as soon as
results are reached
CLASSIFIED DEFT.
__________ m -M 11__________
LAROB reem and hath. Private
entrance. SSSper totk.

________caam -aiw _______
SANFORD • kitchen, laundry
privileges. Private homo. MS
ear week, &gt;41deposit. M l 7744

GO FROM MCH SCHOOL
TO M G IH IO I— RASK

DRIVR GY

SURVEY PEOPLED
1400 to 1700 potential, outside
work. NO SELLINGII Must
have reliable transportation.
Call III
■ara U M to Slat per week
Reading Book* at horn*. Call
UlL47&gt; 7440Ext.S*M
EARN EXTRA INCOMEI Slut
ling envelop** ol home. Be
your own boss! Start Immedi­
ately w/no prior exper. Fra*
supplies postage. Fra* Into b
no obllg., tew* sotfaddressed

stamped lav ilip i to QoMon
D I s t rlB a t a rt . F .O . l e a
tllSieC. Carpet OritoN. Texas

Satellites...
lasers... avionics
...microchips...
T he Army deals
with all of them
and m ore. See if you qualify for the
training in one of m ore than 50 hightech skills. And th e choice of a
specialty is yours.
Call:

SCWH01E CENTRE,
M 4 7 SOUTH ORLAMRO RRTVE, IM T t U 4
SANF0R9, FL U 7 7 M M S
(4 R 7 IS 2 M 4 R 4

UnlBadWby

M M tHALUOUCANBB.
The

-

..

. . . wai yndittf

sra

Sanford Herald
'dSwb
yfef/ SERVICE
4iy

B B ca» ‘ 'l *

DEY m

Jobs! Jobs!
We have immediate
openings!

•Painters
•Book Binders
•Construction
•Warehouse
•Production
Em ployees w ith transportation
needed Im m ediately
A p p ly
1 0 1 8 S . F r e n c h A v t., S a n fo rd
5 A .M . S H A R P

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. INC.

I
I

�,1

Sanford Horafo. Sontord, Florida — WadnoadRy, Novamb f 21,1990 — 7*

K IT •N1C A 1 L Y L E # fry L a rry W rig k t

f l-

197— AAsMA*
H * m * 9 /i* t *

1W — L e w B B e rR W
F M N H X M S TM P P E B
top Hit tor set*, sib
per cubic yard. IB atotc yard*
ermara.MMtSt
m -M n c M n e r v / T n e t o

WHY PAY RETAIL* M I L

• Ototo Saw*. A Hemetit* ar
^P jk d a jJH iB B Jto ^to J, warto

TARE W E I PATMVTS
•147 par manth m a H
14X77 CatlLoRay:
PL

i

ah

carpeting, haat/air wind, wv
Its, calling tons, f *

Labs Mary m a n )
Can between I)AM-3PM

PASLOOB Impute* naif Bun.
UW i Oaa toet nail pun. BlBBt
Paetod* etopto pun. l i f t V4
HP tampreeear. StBBi
CdNHe-toBtMB
||ft Btolw m
1F F ™ "rw Tl Ol 1 ^ ^ 9 0 9

1 NORMS. I l l
abtol Sot-up Pork Av. Mobil*
Pork. lontordm -M tt.P IpP l
1 BORBL, I both. NO DOontl
Aooum* 111) per me. plu* let.

C/H/A. SW/mger
s***/*utotn&gt;et8

J M T A B A A A EM US
C M B S n M t lT M C U A
tnefruettan. ministry and
M to N M ftC 4 S »fi€ ---------221— C a rs
ARK CD4KDRB1 'l l . la c .
running, great gas mi n w dwn
•aNNdRd M to Rto)Bfa~IBAdMt
I7BI PONTIAC PIE BO - 3 ipaad.
A/C.ttaraa.................. U.*t*

Mrs. V C. at Santord placed
bar tovaty d g with p nice
tomlty |uet b m day atier tor
Switord (torpid Ctoeellted Ad
storked1 All alia dW wa* call
and cancel her ed In erder to
ttoB It* canitnuing. SemaRHng
YOU need to aduarttoe at taw
caet end achtov* gakh ra•uttsT Try awr IB, 14 A M-Day
Special rate*. Lawaet cast par
line tor cantacuilva days’
■ftmrttslng. ^i^b^ertlsare era
(raa to concat as nan a*
results era raschad
CLA StiP IID D C P T.

F*rS*l*
I ■Large 1bdrm. peel,

229— A v io N o n

ra n o n
•■■tor mrbI Rad BMP Bbbm *
Mr Bar eato at Mnet Rtoay era

NOME • 1 bdrm. 1 both,
control air. 3ISJBB...

tt. Goad btvaotmontl til
Owner moving, muol ootl I
CattMr.Awg. ~

Land. Bultdlng and
Inventory. Terms. SMBJM
PAULBBETH OSBORNE
VIRTURII PROPERTIES

PAIRWAV MOTORS
"NBMBBi t m BMHIB R W
MM US 17 *1 1 1 1
-------------it—
—
n
(7M. High mltoagt. runt peM
never wrechtPMM. Call
Jady/RkB.... „
..81-**•*
a PUBUC AIITO AUCTION a
■VERY TUESDAY 7&gt;MPM
DAVTOMA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. 71 osytoei BeaeB
*B*8*4411
f**B BU7CX R EBAL.) dr. *1*3.
Oaad Candlllan. n i t)44
(Days) arm-4144
7t PO O Bi DART ■SUM A 4 dr.
euto, PS. PR.nmgraB4.Ca4h
•nly. 8W to*. 8 7 -8 8
'B l M R R C U R Y T O P A S
automatic, store* LIKE NEW
HIM CaRttl-MM
m CAMARO IROC S &amp; Putty
La a dtdM U U S IN U ill B«c.

• RITTItoS P R II to P gaad
hamal 1 Gray, t Yaltow (KittanChjm to^UHkd^lhae)

111— Apflianc**
/r

RETR IEVED PUPS • Black.
Avaltobtonm^torChrtetmael

HOLIDAY Bl PTSPt ClALSI
SHEET SITt/NBATERt W1.7B

C/H/A. 8 B3/me or

STEN STR O M

•% Cm 3M 1fm •

Duncan Fyto log*. Lt. tan
w/ombrodiry. smell Wowors.
Ilk* now! MUST SELLI
SIM.......................... 83.1004

more property Hum
Anyone In Hi* Greiter
Sanford/Uk* Mary area.

LM ENM TI
) BIDROOM. lh beth.New
CHA, stove and trig, near sta­
menlevy school. MM per
manm.Utandtad.Wim

RENTALS, ROITALS
Hemet In all aim. *'*riing
(ram U N par manth. No (aa to
tanantl Global Realty
Hlstork district. 1 bdrm. 1
bath, cantral H/A. 33M par
manth. 03*0770 or 440074)

SANFORD -1 bdrm. 1 bath. 1410
Magnolia Ay., nice araa.
S4M/month. Call___ ID -1771

^ m o n m Sn r

SANFORD, HIDOlil IAIE

) tingle family homat tor rant
All aval labia Immadlatolyl
From tSt) par month

2000 Lake Mary Blvd
* Spedout, Affordable.
Homaiika
d 1 Badream 1 Bath
a Bast Buy For Your Rental ■
a Includes. Water, Sawaroga.
Troah Pick-Up. Peat
Central. Pool and Tennis I

-'-Sss-

towmhouio. screened patio,
m s S. Park Ava.. Adults.
33*1 Includes water.
CallMawcym-Mi)
Mandat Friday. IAM3PM.
1 bedroom, t both. 31
thty. Ciatory 11, AH Bwortna

SANFORD &gt; Pino Ridge Club. 1
bdrm. 1 baths. All appl. Incl.
washor/dryar. Storltag at S40S
RENTARAMA
M7SML................. .........Rp Poo
i PL I

1 3 7 -O H k t H a a tato
BRAND NEW OP FtCE BLD*.

SUHIAM ESTATES SPECIAL

) bdrm. I bath, air, clean, no
pats, 3473 OtscoeaSsai MI-474B

CbM 321-4544
H IM THE QUIET1

1209 NA6N0UA, SAHFOftD

Single alary studio. I A 1
Bdrm. Apts. Many extras IncI.
storage space I Quito, cocy
community I Nlca landscap­
ing. On site managers wno
CARE 11 Starting at 311*mo.
SANFORD COURT____8 ) 8 0 1
LARBE I bdrm. or STUOIO
Aptl Good parking. 170/wfc
tact. util..... .ao-nei/messag*

Vito, large horn* with C/H/A.
Ilraplaca and fenced yard.
3334 par month. Opan Sunday
trorn II noon 1PM..... 477 0)70
1 BDRM. 1 BATH VILLA •
Ilraplaca. pool. Iannis courts.
3330 par month plus lecur Iiy.
Call p a 4*8 or 8 ) 34*3

4 M t* R . t o U M l * tt.
•C1XONINBI
Mava la Special........$)**/am.

.................... 311-0000
OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT
remodetod to suit. M il S.
Orlando Dr.. Sontord WOMB
OFFICE/RETAILt 1 units. I.SM
*q. It. aa , 3413/mo. Con ba
usedtaaothar I—DAim/ma*
1 SMALL RENTAL OPPICES
Vary reasonoblo. 11X 10. For
dstails, call newt 814571

3IEOMOM2MTH

G A k D IN S

ASSUMI NO QUALIFYI LK.
M A R Y 4 / &gt; In T H E
CROSSINGS. POOL. DECO
R A TED . LANDSCAPED.
Shews Uba Modal I— I 1M 7H
HIRE'S A V I TWO STORY
naar downtown Santord.
Naada rapairt. Potantiai Invaslmant proporty. Only
SIMMII
WE HAVE A V I COUNTRY
NOME In DaRary with mart
atras than you can shako a
Okk at I Supar araa. ..11HWO
SEE THIS HOMEY 1/1 ON
CUL DE SAC. El* lot, spa.
hl|A wood tanca. now A/C.
Ona ol a hind. Call nawt Only
M4.m ii
LK. MARY V I. M IC K PPLC.
1 maatsr sulfas, sunkan living
rm„ country kit., moth maro.

321-2720
322-2420

R E N T

T O D A Y

F O R

O U R

M O V E - I N
I , i nd

SPECIAL

l i f d i o o m A p t A v.iil.iblt*
St.ifliiUJ ,il
DO

150b W ^btti St , S a n f o r d

322-2090

1

tram Samlnola/Orangs
Volusia/taka Cauntlasl

LESS TXM S U M DOM
IM U M K O D SIIK COSTS

1/1, llv-dby lam- rooms, appl..
carport, c/h/a..,,,

POOL HONE
POSSIDU LEASE/P1MCWUE

V I to. Santord, 317,7)0
4/], Orovavlaw, 341,730

1/1, with family, living, dining

r n t tplc, anclosad porch,
tancayvd. Hugo lot. SSt.TOO

131-7337

S aero aslatal 4/1. 13W sq. It.,
custombuilt, 817.708

IM E N M Y
LESS TM M S24M DOM
1/1, living, dining, family
rooms, ftncod yard, now
point, carpal and Ilia. 147.700

0VEID01.H ACRES

Custom built 4 bdrm. 1 bath.
Ilropiaca. scroanad pool and
lpa, 1 car garaga. » 174,700

Relax ,...

1/1, Hidden Laka............ 337.000

NRTOO NEAL
I EBTATR CO., INC.
PtOMOcall tor othar Itslmgsl

ST.JOMrSMMIXNONROC

V

Th e Prudential (&amp;

Florid* Realty
NAMT TO SEU TOUt HONET
I am leaking tor nka homat to
match with buyers.

CM DM firoprj. REALTOR
I4B7) ----------

1/1 Reduced to 3114,300
Asaumabla VA...Fa*» nmva tol
ivAmni joaoeritonu
MUST SELL! WILL SACttFKI

3 /2 CUSTOM DUILT

OEUONA

Oaks el Santord. 4 bdrma. 1U
bo. Reduced I i l l . 700/make
....jn-7W M iM 4*asai

Last than U 300 downl 1/1 with
10 a14 semd porch... SS4.S00

CHUUMTA POOL HONE

On Beautiful Lake Monroe

1/1. Ilraplaca. accass to Laka
Mills, an 1/1 acra .....177,300

HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM THE STAFF OF
REGATTA SHORES

• Clubhouse With Fireplace
• Indoor Racquetball
• Weight Room
• Pool &amp; Jacuzzi
• Washer/Dryer Connections
• Garden Windows
• Fireplaces
1 Bedroom from M 5 0

2 Bddrooms from *540
2 33 S W. Samlnola Blvd.

Hwy. 17-OT, Santord

3 2 3 -2 6 2 8

REGATTA
SHORES
On Lab* Monro#

77*1 Bannister SI. Brkk front,

spill plan, with screened

n I* .-

A a
mortgage....

a b I a
....tei.tM

CALLBART
■ ■ A tIS T A TI
■ ■ALTON................. m -N H
. no que'lfy. mava In.
Rant to buy, 7 bdrm. Sanford.
Sunwnarlln Aye. B% 14) 1-4774.

133— A c r a a g *
L o ts /S a l*
AOKAfiCMWTD

Appro*, jo acroa naadad In
Samlnola County sutlabta tar
building imall airport.
J'.
*|i
Ifa
a
■IRil
S.-----n^w^mBaaHu
R H Ii jr»#»P
BWW
IMW

_________ Ml-1)47_________
LAKIFRONT ■ DaBary, owner
I InantIn*, lowdown, SIMM

1SS— C ondom inium s
C o -O p /S a l*
PINE IID t t CLUB
PRICES STARTIN G A T 3 4 tM
1 Bedroom 1 Both condomini­
um!. All appliance*, vertical
blinds throughout, clubhouse,
pool, tennis, security guard
CALL...77)4470
to FI. twc./l

SANFORO/l*. NARTC0N00

Price ReducedI Largo Master

BR w/bath. Guest bdrm A
bath, eel In kit. w/dishwashar
A disposal. Formal Dining
Rm., Living Rm w/tlraplaca.
aernd. porch w/lokovlow.
washer dryer I From 347.700 to
3*4.700 BY OWMBRI ID -W )

COUNTRY CHARMER 1 bdrm .
1 Bath, family rm. 100’s 100
yard, huge beautiful oekt.
r a la o d p o l i o . Easy
Terms.. ..................... 331.000
INVESTOR'S DREAM I Large )
bdrm. 1 bath homo, Ilraplaca.
formal dining, detachad dou
bto car garaga 7- Iga 1 story
CB const, apt. house w/lcar
garage. Corner toll...... 3M.300

123-5774
321-9759............. 371-2257
* toSANFON) * *
1ST TIME BUYER SPECIALI
Neat aa a pin I 4BR brick
tame lavar 1.300 a 7 &gt;Is avail,
tor only 337.700 Easy qualify
tor I ]/4\ Bond monay Only
ll.m down. U I 7/monlh 11

Call Brastan Grata Hamas
toO-WI t r l « BOB

199—O H ic t S u pplies
/ E q u lp m o n t
111 desks, single pedlttai 1*3 *s.
1 occastonol chairs. 34) a*. 4
stacked chairs. 3D.JO *a. (II
took case. US. (t) Soto, wood
tram*. 14). I arm desk chair.
14). 4 swivel doth choirs, 344
**
*104*8 *r 80-471laves

to S T M U O M n *
17B7 SI. Trap*) 4343, Gen., Air
Radar, Laran, Auto pitot, and
all tha amanlttae.
GRAB THIS ONE FOR ONLY
347,MB. iin ilB iiii Baai Yard
aad Y a c h t Sal at . In*.
tatW-BtBB.

217— O e r n g n

In le t

ESTATE SALE
73*SUN on. U L MARY
Friday A Saturday. * am until
Derkl 1 C O M P L E T E
HOUSEHOLD CLEARANCE
6 M A 6E SALEH
Kings!is bad and csuch alto •
mltc. Item*. During the wh.
celt after SPM. Weekend* call
alter *AM. m-MB7.
WSJT S O H H O U F A M
ABB M A P R E A A U D IT
OPEN EVERY U TU B D A V
’ AND SUNDAY! IMB
3BMIMOLA BLVD. (Behind
Dog Track. Cateetoerry)

MMTIOfl

Large up to t toet held roller
and mower. 18-1134 or 8 *
478 Anytime.

221— G ood T h in g s
to E a t
HOLIDAY CATERIHOf Pre­
pare. set up. serve A cleery up
Your choice! Dead torn*
caahlna. Bsc. rat*.__ MS-7S4I

223— M itc B lIn iw o u t
BUY........ SELL......... TRADE
HUEY’S CROWN PAWN
8S-B7M

79 CHEVY BLAZER

SIMM

14X40
) bedroom,
317.000

l bath.

Broker. n H I U / B U H l

A U C T IO N
ORANGE CITY AUCTION BARN

SATURDOT NOV. 24th

2 PM

Household Tools, Musical,
Collectibles, Appliances &amp; Misc.

BUILDER'S SPEC HONES

LOCATION 257 S Vokjua Avo . 1 Bln. S ol Graves
GOOD CLEAN CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME

Includn Stream. Pool
Special Rato f nonetog
Call 8 ) 1770

MARVIN E. PERRY, Aucttoomr 407-668-7219
TEXAS VALLEY AUCDONERS
n_ u*. a t» « M

237— ^T ra c to rs a n d
T ra ito rs
CAR TRAILER! With rsmptl
Heavy-duty metal, exc. con
dlttonMBA Caft------ .81-****

238— Vahictos
W antod
WE PAY TOP m tor wrecked
cers/trwckst WE SELL guar
entoed used peris. AA AUTO
SALVAGE *4 Celery, il) MM

243— J u n k Cars
* CASH a

FOB YOUR JUNK
CAR OR TRUCKII AMY
CONDITIONI CALL 8)1737
MTOP Deitor** Paid tor |unk
cars, trucks. 4 wheel drive
Any tendHton.
Cell 8137*0

Turkeys
Here!

14X40-1 bedroom. 31.000

1 bedroom. I'y bath,

M CNEYV V) TON PICK UP ■•built Ml Cu. In. angina.
Gaad alt., brakes, shocks,
radiator, U |eint*. Needs body
work MM Cal 1144871

No
$ 888°°

14X 00

to
YOLRSWAOON BUSI Nice
Map*, run* greet 1It.**)
Magto Isaea...
.
.8341*4

tm TOYOTA PICK UP - 4
spaed. A/C................... Il.ttS
MegH lean.................. 784M4

219—W n n tn B tn B u y

ALL STEEL BUILDINOS ot
dealer Invoice. 1.000 to SO.OOO
tq ftC ell 407 771 0101 collect
• MIRNORBO bl (old close!
door. M In. Gold colored trim
and track Never used Ideal
hall or linen closet Paid 343
asking 38 Calll*3-4Mt

"2 0 U 1 O 2 B B C M U III
Mrs. P. T . at Lk. Mary *Md
her car by the and day to the
Md cal tori She called her
Sanlerd Herald Clatillled
Advertising Consultant la Map
her ad (ram canitnuing an the
lAOay Special ret*. Some­
thing YOU need to advertise
•t lew caet and achieve quick
result*? Try our 18. 14 A
M-Day Specie* retoe. Lowest
cat! par line tor cantacuilva
days' advertising. Advertisers
era ha* to camel a* seen at
result* era reached
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
8S-MII

U S — T ru c k s /
B uses/V ans

WOOD P U R N I T U R I
WANT EDI Any CONDITIONI
Aieabaytog laRgeM. 87-4*11
W AI»AtauA C$m »Nn u n r a
NoPlfFMA ftlWtih......... R itil
KONOMO.................. ..m-DM
BOOK UNOENTLY KEEDEO
"FI. Mellon. 187 47" by
Arthur Franck*. *4*1711.

191— B u ild in g
M * f t r i« li

&gt;

I7B4 TOYOTA PICK UP • 1
sated, a /c ................... s i.m
Meek Naaa.---------------- X H M i
178 HOMO* PRBLUOE - Sun
reel, 1Mead, redl H.HB

F tIC E D TO S E U n
Welkrott Spartortdp I7BL
4343, Radar. Laran. VHP,
Riggers and MUCH M O R III
Asking S*f.M4 LIbAWWb h
MAT TAPS AAA TACAV lAMtp
lae. 7e*/7s7 ssei

14X04 1bedroom. 37.000

11X40 - 1 bedroom I'y bath.

and T rv d u

V

113—TE ltviS iO A / _
R adio / S toroo

^nto^roowrvojJLjjjJlMITS

234— Im p a r l C a rs

215— B e e n a n i
U r t iiie r iit

3107 per month on o 1774 )
bdrm. 1 both double wide
Coll Loo. 704-4)07704
CAR R A IO I COVE, SANFOBD
1 bdrm. I bath, vary clean
34.773 obo or 30% down By
..................... M l 4414
M OBILE HOME. 11X40. good
condition Central heat and
A/C. Ironl/raar awnings
34 MO Call )47 3171__________

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Raal EtlalaBrokar
1040 SantordAvo.

no) t Motor# Am.. 1O- 70M
S P R B B I E R . Flroslonouprlght. Runs goad. Soil
defroster. 3» M. Can nt-OBO.
toKINO SHE bad. cemptoto.
SIMM. Con dollvor.
cant
K I N O S I I B Watarbad
w/podostal.Rooo mirror
haadbd. w/matchlng bureau.
Woo31MOMOW. IMP. 8 1 -1170.
LARRY'S MART. 11) Santord
Av*. Now/Usod turn. A appl.
Buy/JH/Trado.........D3-4ID.
LIVINO Room Pondtar* - Esc.
condition, Include* tofosloopor. Priced to 7*11.8 1 1731
dMABIC CHEF rang*. 10”
slid* In otoctrk. Never used
nosds burner elements 373.
_________ a s m _________
NIFRIBBRATOR - 4 m m . 30
cu. It. w/kamoker. Llk* newt
First 311)lakes lit MO, 1134
• ROLL-AWAY tod. Small sit*.
Raody tor your company.
343 M Will dotlvar. 8 1 s m
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drawers, hood board. Queen
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34J0. Color TV I* In. 340.
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S33M DOM IHCt C tW IH t

Pirocmt. 1/1. living, dining,
family rm., sacurlty syslam.
toncad yard 147.700

3 N H L 2 M1H DCL10M

----------

1 bdrma. 1 baths. Croat room,
vaulted callings. Scar garaga.
big tot. quiet neighborhood
Now 347.700 Call 040771 aval

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Ilraplaca. 1 car garaga.
Pool/tonnls avail........ *71.300

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schools, con divide. 5 rented
units. 3170.300. For details coll
TimpMo Realty Inc, S30-44I7

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�OB — Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida

'

D B A I D R. OOTTt I'm a
40-year-old fem ale recently
diagnosed with having a fibroid
tum or of the uteruo the alxe of a
r
&amp;
__
•f
—i
:
X

com m ended hyaterectom y. I
opted for th e hormone Lupron
Depot to reduce the tum or'a rise
with eventual removal through
the vagina. My Lupron Injectlona
win continue for aeveral months
prior to aurgtcal removal. I've
also considered a myomectomy,
instead of hysterectomy. In the
. hope I can continue a normal aex
h
life, yet have read there is a 10 to
30 percent chance fibroids will
recur. What are the pros and
JL cons of thla procedure?
f
M A I B tA M R i Fibroids are
'
benign grow ths arising from the
muscular wall of the uterus.
When small, they rarely cause
((n symptoms other than Increased
m en stru al flow. As fibroids
enlarge, however, they can lead
to m enstrual hemorrhage (and
A anem ia), excessive m enstrual
cramps, lower abdominal dis­
comfort and painful Intercourse.
Fibroids, even big ones, may
spontaneously degenerate
L
(shrink an d disappear).
\
Therefore, treatm ent Is reserved
f
fo r w o m e n w i t h l a r g e .
/
symptom-producing fibroids

W H A T * THE
S P E C IA L S
AT LUNCH t
TO D A Y ? I?

TH E BORN LOSER
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vaat majority of women, reduce
k i drive or rexuat pteaaure.
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O
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However, like any surgery. It la
beat avoided If a t all poasible.
Flbroida tend to recur. If. you *
e v e n t u a l l y d e c i d e o n flbroida thnt would poaalbly re­
myomectomy. you may expert- quire further Lupron treatment
ence fu tu re grow th o f new or limited aurgery.

w
n a n

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f WHY ARE YOU \

THE FAT 6U Y
WITH THE W HITE
BEARD AND THE
w RED SUIT...

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HIS N A M E
A 6 A IN 7 .

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{ SUBSTITUTE MATH.
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VCR. WE CAM MATCH
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FRANK AND ERNEST
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TH A v E f

GARFIELD
I DON'T KNOW WHV SOU'RE
tSISTINGr ON COMNG TO POTTERY
—
WITH ME.
Rw f p 'f T Y X

GARFIELD

,

1 WENT TO SEE
THESE'VITAL AND
STIMULATING■ pco plctm I
I)

j

^

A P IN TH E

PAPER

PROMISED

ARE. THESE THE
STUPENTS OR
THE POTS? ,

ll-Zl

By Jam es Jaceh y
The four-heart contract was
not easy to play, but declarer
might have done better. He won
the ace of hearts In his hand,
and then played dummy's A-K of
clubs and ruffed a club. East
throwing a spade. A spade was
played to dummy's king, and
then a diamond back to the king,
West took the ace and played ace
of spades and a spade, ruffed by
East. East still had the queen of •
hearts to take, so the contract
was down one. Of course South
has a lot of work to do In the
slightly ambitious game contract, but the bidding holds
s o m e c l u e s to th e r ig h t
approach. West, a passed hand.
came In with a takeout double
over one heart. Almost surely
that denied a five-card spade
auit. (With five, most practical

players simply make a one-spade
overcall.) So declarer can take
the heart ace and play queen of
spades from his hand. West will
take the ace. When West fails to
play a second heart, that Is a
strong Indication that the open­
lng heart lead was a singleton,
So declarer can cash two spades
and then lead a diamond. West
will win the ace and perhaps
play a second diamond, ruffed In
dummy. Now South can safely
play A-K and ruff a club, ruff
another diamond, and ruff still
another a club. It docs no good
for East to rufT In with the queen
of hearts, since that will be the
only trick left for the defense,
This time the eight of hearts In
the South hand Is as good as a
face card,
( 0 1 9 9 0 . NEWSPAPER ENTERPKISE ASSN.

NORTH U-ti-M
4KJ3
4K10M
♦7
♦AK1074
EAST
WEST
4073
♦A1012
4Q752
fJ
♦AJ»3
4Q134
♦JUS
♦QJ
SOUTH
SQM
PAMS
♦K10•1
Alt
Vulnerable; Both
Dealer West
Writ Null East
Pass 14 Pass
Dbl. 34 Pass
IS
Allpass
44
Openinglead:4J

TOUR BITHDAT
Not. S 3 .1SS0
Your earn in g potential Is
much greater In the year ahead
than It has been for some time.
However. It will be up to you to
expand upon and develop each
opportunity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Things have * way of eventually
leveling out. A situation that has
been a liability for quite some
time might do an about face
today and s ta r t producing
benefits. Trying to patch up a
broken romance? The AstroGraph Matchmaker can help you
to understand what to do to
make the relationship work. Mall
$2 to Matchmaker. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. OH 44101­
3428.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your determination will In­
crease considerably today once
you set your mind upon a
specific objective. Your success
will be predicated upon your
ability to establish goals.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You should do well In
commercial situations today.

because you're not apt to take
things at face vaiue. You'll be
equally as Interested In what's
behind the facade as well.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Don't let titles, trappings or
appearances Intimidate you to­
day If you have to deal with
Influential persona. In fact, you'll
be a lot luckier dealing with big
wheels than you'll be with the
little guys.
ra C K fl (Feb. 20-March 20)
Even though you may be the key
player In bringing something of
significance o(T today. 1st an
Insecure associate who had only
a small hand In the matter take
some of the bows.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) A
repeat performance on a grander
scale Is possible at this time
regarding something with which
you were moderately successful
In the past. Get out the old play
book and try again.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Your greatest successes today
are likely to come from en­
deavors you w ork on w ith
others, especially If It Is a
venture from which you're try­
ing to generate extra Income.

OBMlIfl (May 21-June 20)
Instead of demanding that your
mate do this or that, (list set the
proper example. Your spouse
will cooperate with you If you
show him/her you’re willing to
pull your share of the weight.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
something In which you're In­
volved hasn't been working to
your advantage, make positive
changes today. It's time to be the
victor, not the victim.
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
have a valuable social contact
who can play an Instrumental
role at this time In helping you
advance a personal interest.
Don't be reluctant to solicit
his/her assistance.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The
requirements of those you love
should be given precedence over
your own Interests today. Think
of these duties as opportunities
and not sacrifices.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Personal benefits can be derived
today If you move In the areas In
which you're most effective. If
possible focus an the social and
take care of worldly Interests
tomorrow.

ANNIE
BUGS BUNNY
CHON. TOM/ KEEP HOISTINGTHOSE
RUBBELLS' THIS DETANDEXERCISE
PROGRAMIS GONNAKEEP YOUOFF
THEFARMERSMENU/ YOU'LL SEE/
vw f —----- j r —

— u - * ----- "

REALLY3

WHY?*

OH, MRY. SAHPy/t
Pvk/A# M SA ’T L
s'p o u p
RAM6A ‘TIL I
i
HAP TH’S&amp;RA 1
ju t c c f t z w . . . L

by Leonard Starr
...w -w hat po w e p o H
go in a n j d e e if w e cV

HELP W A T * u r r o&gt;

PUHJA&amp;P...AH' TA*e .
OUR chance * WITH l
TH' PeAAQN. O R...
TH' i

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                    <text>New state law hangs up on telemarketing calls - for a fee
United Prase International

□ Sports
Greyhounds take championship
LONGWOOI) —According to first-year Lyman
coach Kick Trlhll. the Greyhounds haven't won
their own tournament since 1974. but on
Saturday, the second day of the Lyman
Christmas Wrestling Tournament. Matt Pippin
and Scott Chance — two of Lyman High
School's tri-captalns — turned In Inspiring
performances to lead the Greyhounds to the
team championship.
B c tP a |e IB

FORT LAUDERDALE - Florida residents fed
up with telephone sales calls arc eagerly plunking
down $10 apiece to get their names on a state list
that prohibits telemarketers from calling them.
The list Is distributed quarterly by the Florida
Division of Consumer Services. Under the
Telephone Sides Act. companies that call tele­
phone numbers on that list can face lines up to
$

10, 000 .

The law applies to nearly all businesses calling

In the slate, whether they are based In Florida or finding out about It as phone companies across
Ihe slate send out notices. Southern Bell, lor
not.
To get on the list, consumers can send a card or example, mailed curds with last month’s bills
letter to the Florida Division of Consumer telling residential customers how to sign up.
Consumers are signing up In droves. The lirsi
Services In Tallahassee with their name, address
list came out in the fall with nearly 2.IXK) phone
and phone number on It.
They should ask that their number In- Included numbers. The January edition Is expected to
In the “ no sales solicitation calls lisling" and have up to ll.(XM) numbers, said Scott Patton,
the state ofliclnl who handles complaints or
Include a $ 10 check payable to t he division.
Next year and every year after that. It costs only questions about the program.
“We're back up to receiving 200 to 300
$5 to keep the num tier on the list.
x
The law took effect In October. Consumers are H See Calls. Page SA

Singing a sleighing song

New reports suggests area
could support development

Quake felt in central Indiana
LAFAYETTE, hid. - A slight earthquake
shook central Indiana early today but no
Injuries or serious damaged were reported.
The National Earthquake Information Center
In Golden. Colo., said the quake hit at 12:25
a.m. EST and measured 3 on tin* Klehter scale.
Its epicenter was about 15 miles north of
Lafayette.
People In the area had been sensitive to
earthquakes because of predictions by New
Mexico cllmatokiglst Iben Browning, who said
the Midwest would experience a major earth­
quake around Dec. 3 along the New Madrid
fault. Officials said today’s tremor apparently
was unrelated to Browning's prediction.
M any p e o p le In t h e L a f a y e tte an d
Crawfordsvllle areas called police to report the
quake. Some callers reported cracked ceilings
but no Injuries or ma|or damage were reported.

B y J . M AR K B A R P IIL O

Herald staff writer

Commission to meet tonight
SANFORD — The Sanford City Commission
will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in Its chambers at
Sanford City Hall. 300 Park Ave.
On the docket for tonight Isa public hearing to
consider the adoption of the second annual
comprehensive plan amendment for 1990 as
well as the adoption of a small scale comprehen­
sive plan amendment.
The commission will also be asked to rezone a
portion of property belonging lo the Northsiar
Business Park on State Hoad 46 from agricul­
tural to development (AG-1 to PD). The land will
be used for the construction of a 35.000 square
foot building which will be occupied by
Mobll-Tcch. Inc. of Longwood.
A request for an additional building Inspector
for the city has also been made. Citing
additional revenue from $04,393 In permits, an
official In the building department said the
additional Inspector Is needed to keep up with
the projects.
Prom staff and wire raports

Keonisha Black. 4. sings “Jingle Bells" while donning a Christmas
tree sticker on her forehead. Black and other children in the Midway
Elementary School Headstart program sang during a visit to Sanlord
Middle School. More photos, see Page 3A.

........... A B

P o l i c e . . . ................

......... 3B School Menu..
Deaths...........
......... 0B Talavlalon.......
Dr. Qotf..
......... 4A Weather.......... .
■dltorlaf.
Florida...........

Beautiful sunny day

Mostly sunny with a
high In the upper 70s
to lower HOs. Light
east wind.

For more weather. ••• Page 2A

GENEVA - The "Geneva Bub­
ble.” to most folks' understanding.
Is an extremely sensitive drop of
drinking water floating on a salty
sea which could burst If mo much
development comes to the area.
But a new study by the St. Johns
River Water Management District
seems to suggest a conclusion that
careful placement of larger wells
could support many more homes In
the area. Urban neighborhoods
could be built and supplied with a
central water system without con­
I a m I n a I e d o flier w ells w ith
saltwater.
Or nearly the entire 15.000-acre
central Geneva area could bo devel­
oped Into one-acre homcslles. more
than 10 times the current number
of homes. If each used a shallow
private well.
“Il tells you the more disbursed
you place the wells, the safer you
are." said Brian McGurk. a district
hydrologist that worked on the
study. "But l ilitnk 2.5 million
gallons per day (mgd) might be
reasonable as long as you had a
relatively large wcllflcld."
Pumping 2.5 mgd of water from
the ground could supply up to 6.666
homes, five times the number of
houses In Geneva now. according to
district figures.

McGurk said the study wasn't
designed lo say more development
was possible in Geneva but to show
a three-dimensional picture of how
pum ping and rain fall affects
Geneva's drinking water supply.
"Mv Initial reaction Is one of
concern." said Lee Vcxtrhees. presi­
dent of the Geneva Citizens Associa­
tion. "I want to challenge It. The
pro-development people are going to
Jump on that and use II as an
excuse to promote development."
Geneva, located at the northeast
corner of the county, currently has
about 1.300 hom es and 3.5(H)
residents, according lo the Seminole
County Planning Office. Residents
there enjoy a rural lifestyle and
scorn substantial Increases In new
home construction which could
bring city hassles closer lo their
community.
The main weapon Geneva resi­
dents have used In fending nlf
development is the "Geneva Bub­
ble," a name coined by the League
of Women Voters in the 1960s to
describe the phenomenon, says
local historian Lorraine Whiting.
But the "bubble" ts actually a
thin lens-shaped sheet of fresh
water ih.it is completely surrounded
and underlain by undrinkable
brackish water according to more
recent studies. It Is resupplied try
rainwater filtering down through
See Bubble, Page 5A

Bush picks Alexander to replace Cavazos
ing Rep. Lynn Martin. K-lll.. at Ills
side. Bush said of Alexander. "No
WASHINGTON - President Bush governor in the country Is so clearly
a n n o u n c e d M onday he w ill Identified with the Imperative to
nominate former Tennessee Gov. Improve education."
Again sounding his own com­
Lantar Alexander lo head the Edu­
cation Department, replacing Lauru mitment to education reform. Bush
noted that Alexander has previously
Cavazos.
Speaking to reporters with Alex­ been Involved In efforts to re­
ander and his new nominee to lake structure U. S. schools as chairman
over the Laltor Department, outgo­ ol the National Governors' Associa­

United Press International_______
Bridge............
Claselflads....
Comics..........

Geneva bubble
gets reprieve

tion.
"Education Is our most enduring
legacy, vital to everything we are
andean become." Bush said.
Alexander, if confirmed by the
Senate, would replace Cavazos, the
low-profile education chief who was
forced out of the |M&gt;sl last week.
Pointing lo at least one issue cited
in Cavazos' removal — that not
enough was being done to raise

educational standards — liusb said
Alexander would give education
reform a needed boost in his
administration.
He also pointed to the goals
outlined last year at the summit
meeting of the nation's governors as
Alexander’s mandate.
"Our mission is clear and I look
Inward lo achieving these goals by
See Alexander. Page 3A

Recent fire resem bles
7 8 -y e a r-o ld inferno
B y N IC K P F K IP A U P

Herald stall writer_______________
SANFORD — The lire that hurtled
nearly an entire city block of
downtown Sanford last week Itears
eerie resemblances to a blaze at that
same Sanford Avenue location more
than 7H years ago.
Both fires struck the 300 block ol
Sanford Avenue.
Both fires started In the middle ol
the night.
Buildings were totally destroyed
both limes.
Both tires were considered the
worst In Sanford In the previous
four-year period.
Platts for restarting burned out
businesses tu txitli Instant es were
announced within three days
While last week's lire Is still
considered "suspicious." there was
little difficulty in determining the
cause ol the 1912 lire Authorities
said ll started with an overturned
lamp In a three-storv riMittuug house
owned by K S. Johnson on the
western side of Sanford Avenue,
near the corner of Fourth Street
The alarm, then consisting of a
sireit-whlstle at the Sanford Water
Works near the lakclroni. went "tl
at approximately 4 a tu
Firelighters reportedly had dilliculty getting thetr equipment to
the area, and hv the time they
arrived, the Haines had spread to
the adjoining stores and the entire
block was ablaze
Fire Chtcl W II Underwood a l s o

reported a number of fire hydrants
hud failed when firemen arrived.
All of the buildings were of
wooden construction.
Among those who were tdentllted
as having suffered heavy losses tu
the 1912 tire were: C.ll Leffler.
Frank Woodruff. J.E. Laing. T.E.
Wilson. K.S. Johnson. J.B Magruderaud II I.. Duhart.
Duhart may possibly have suf­
fered the greatest loss. He had been
operating several stores In Ilint
block, including a restau ran t,
barbershop and the Little Daisy
Theater, which featured silent flints.
"Talkies" did not start mull 15
years after the theater was (le­
st roved.
Firefighters bark in 1912 said it
was the worst lire they had In the
dly tu four years. Imt the specific
lire was not Identified. This time,
firelighters s.nd It was the worst lire
slnee the paint company blaze on
Atrjmrt Boulev ard m 1983
lu last week's lire, the alarm was
not a siren whistle, hut through a
phone call to 9-1-1. at 11 3H pm
Tuesday. Firelighters were dispat­
ched immediately, hut Lt. Ron
McNeil of the Sanford Fire IX-part
ment said. "By the time we got
there the tire had gone s o tar we
couldn't slow It down
Firelighters made an attempt to
light the lire front the interior, but
when tl was determined the walls
and celling were unsafe, they were
pulled back and lougbt the flames
Sec Fire. Huge 5A

Hlltld PFtOlObf *#l»f
Fire Marsnal Don Morhead trom loll Sanford Tirotignter Paul Kedfi Daytona
Beach firefighter Ken Sigler and Shea, a fire sniffing dog c o m b the remains
of the fire rvnich destroyed a Sanford city block last *eek

�&gt;

■A — Sanford Harold. Sanford, Florida — Monday, December 17, 1990

N E W S FROM T H E REGION A N D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Slow brushfire season predicted
_ __

United Press International

Chile# appoints new DER secretary
TALLAHASSEE — Gov.-elect Lawton Chiles announced
Monday the appointment of former legislative nldc Carol
Browner as Secretary of the Department of Environmental
Regulation.
Browner was Chiles' chief legislative aide on environmental
Issues when he was In the U.S. Senate.
Browner Is a native Floridian who spearheaded the former
senator's efforts to preserve the state's natural resources
through federal regulation.
Chiles told a news conference that Browner Is n lawyer with
considerable experience in Issues relating to federal and state
land acquisition, clean water and clean air policies.
Chiles also credits her with helping him win a federal
moratorium on offshore oil drilling in the Keys In 1987 and
with securing federal money to buy and protect crucial
endangered habitats In the state.
Browner la currently the Legislative Director for U.S. Spn. A1
Gore. D-Tenn.. managing Gore's legislative staff arra Im­
plementing his environmental agenda.
Prior to her work In the U.S. Senate, Browner 'Lived as
Counsel to the Florida House Governmental Operations
Committee. During her tenure she was charged with
fine-tuning the process of state land acquisition.

Mother msy be freed before Christmas
CHATTAHOOCHEE — Naomi Lovett, a mother of three
children who was sentenced to 20 years in prison for killing her
17-month-old daughter, may be freed by Christmas.
Lovett maintains she's Innocent and claims prosecutors and
a Judge misinterpreted her cool demeanor at a highly
publicized trial two years ago.
A Jury that didn't believe her decided Lovett, then a
27-year-old mother raising three young children alone,
delivered the fatal blow to her 17-month-old daughter. She was
convicted of third-degree murder.
Hillsborough County Circuit Judge Harry Lee Coe III was so
horrified by the case he made Lovett's prison scqlcnce three
times longer than state guidelines allow. An appeals court
overturned Coe's 20-year sentence.
Lovett w|U be resentenccd by Coe Wednesday. Assistant
Slate Attorney Ron Flcarrotta predlrtcd Lovett's sentence will
be reduced to seven years to meet the guidelines.
If that happens, under rules to case overcrowding that let
Inmates out early. Lovett could be freed by Christmas.

Counselor charged with sexual battery
TAVARES — Authorities have charged a counselor at the
private, non-profit Lake County Boys Ranch with having sex
with a 15-year-old boy In his care.
The Lake County ShcrifTs Office is holding Kevin Michael
"Bubba" Evans. 30. Eustls. without bail o n ’two counts of
sexual battcr&gt;'. Evans was arrested Sunday. If convicted. Evans
would face life In prison.
Tom Manning, executive director of the camp, said the
alleged assault took place In an area being used as a shelter for
temporary care. Evans had been working In the shelter for
about three months.

Group tries to save Upper Black Creek
MIDDLEBURG — Conservationists trying to preserve u
20.000 acre tract of environmentally sensitive binds on Upper
Black Creek are one step closer to their goal.
The Nature Conservancy bought about 6,000 acres of thg;
land. That land, combined with another 6,400 acres purchased
by the St. Johns Water Management District, brings the group
about one-thtrd shy of Its goal.
George Willson, director of The Nature Conservancy's field
office In Tallahassee, said the purchase was forged Iasi week.
The group is buying the Mlddleburg property for $9 million.
The land's owner. Bryan Jennings of Orange Park, said the
property Is one of the most beautiful tracts of land In Florida
and he wants to sec It stay that way.

ACLU : City can put cross back on tree
MAITLAND — The American Civil Liberties Union said
Maitland officials can put back their cross-like decoration on
topofa Christmas ti’ce.
Howard Marks, a lawyer who volunteers his time to the
ACLU. said Last week he would sue If the city didn't remove the
decoration, which he claimed w a s a religious symbol.
City officials insisted It was a slur but took the decorqtloti
down anyway because they feared an ACLU suit. .
ACLU officials Sunday declared the decoration was "ambig­
uous." In a carefully worded statement, the central Florida
chapter of the ACLU said they had never taken a position on
the decoration and had never discussed suing the city.
Cltv officials plan to vote to put back the decoration.
From United Press International Reports

LOTTERY
TALLAHASSEE - The deity
number Sunday in the Florida
Lottery CASH 3 game was 481.
[.Straight Play (numbers in exact
order) $250 on a 50-cent bet. $500
on SI.
Box 3 (numbers in any order)
180 lor a 50-cent bet. S160 on SI
Box 6 (numbers In any order):
$40 tor a 50 cent bet, S80 on SI.
[ Straight Box 3: S330 in order
drawn. S80 many order on a SI bet.
Straight Box 6 S290 in order
d'awn, $40 it picked in combination
on St bei

IUSPS 4(1 2(4)

Monday. December 17, 1990
Vol 83. No 99
Publuhed Daily end Sunder, eactpl
h lu rd a y by The Senlerd Herald.
Inc.. 1M N. French Ave . Senterd.
Fie n m .
Second C la n Pottage Paid el Sanford.
Florida 11231
PO STM ASTER Send addret* changer
te T H E SA N FO R D H E R A L D . P O
Bex 1452. Sanlord. F L )1771
Subtcription betet
(Daily A Sunday I
Homo Delivery A Mail

1 Month*

119 40

4 Month*
i Veer

439 *0
i n oe

Florida Retidenli m u ll par 4% tale!
tax in addition to rale* above
Phone (407) 133 3411

A slate forestry expert who has developed
a me* hod of predicting how bad Florida's
wildfire seasons will be says his research
Indicates the threatening blazes may be
virtually noncxlstant next year.
Other forestry officials, however, say the
1991 wildfire season has the potential of
being among the worst ever.
In a paper submitted for publication
recently to the Journal of Climate. Jim
Brenner, fire management administrator for
the Florida Division of Forestry, concluded
that there Is n direct correlation between
rainfall patterns In Floridn and water
temperatures In the central and eastern
Pacific.
"The fact of the matter is that when these

Yahwehs named
as suspacts in
vagrant killings

temperatures llucluatc they have a pro­
found effect on Florida." he said. "In fact,
there has been study after study that
Indicates that the global climate Is very
much Influenced by what Is going on In the
Pacific.''
Brenner makes his predictions by de­
termining potential rainfall amounts In
Florida based on water surface tempera­
tures In the Pacific during the stale's
wildfire season, which runs from January
through May. He says there Is less rainfall In
Florida, and therefore more serious brush
fires, when water temperatures In the
Pacific are lx-low normal.
"There have been cases where the
temperature has been slightly below normal
there and we have had below average
numbers of fires, but when those tempera­
tures remain below normal for long periods

.

.i

- * --------------- - t

of time It (wildfires) goes through the roof.
Brenner said he came to his conclusion
that there was a correlation between Pacific
and Florida weather patterns after studying
■10years of records front the two regions.
"In averaging the sea surface temperalores In the Pacific from January through
May and correlating that with our fire
season It shows that In no case where the
average temperature was above normal and
the walci was warm did we ever have an
above uverage fire season." he said.
When asked to make a prediction on the
upcoming brush fire season he expresses
cautious optimism there will be few If any
wildfires.
"ff Ihe Pacific temperatures continue to
rise as they are forecast to do. we are
looking at a very strong possibility of on
almost nonexistent fire season."

Learning to shars

MIAMI — Investigators suspect
Yahwch followers may have
killed three Miami vagrants In
addition to ihe 14 victims listed
In the recent murder-conspiracy
In d ic tm e n t of th e s e c t, a
published report said Sunday.
Detectives are also Investigat­
ing at least two out-of-state
murders that may be linked to
the sect and are searching for
two potential witnesses who
have disappeared. The Miami
Herald said.
In. n u m ero u s debriefings,
former Yahwch disciple Robert
Rozicr. who Is serving a 22-year
sentence for four murders, has
described other sect- ordered
slayings not Included in last
m onth's 25-page federal In­
dictment.

by K*»y Jordan

Federal authorities are seeking
corroboration fmm other wit­
nesses before filing charges, the
newspaper quoted a law en­
forcement official as saying.
Hut investigators think Rozicr
is telling the truth. So far. police
have not caught him In a lie and
he has described details In the
other deaths that only someone
familiar with the killings would
know.

Two- and 3-year-olds from the Parent
Resource Center at Seminole Communi­
ty College last week donated goods to
Ihe Sanlord Christian Sharing Center,
which will distribute them to needy
families In Seminole County. At left,
Tommy Harness, 2, reaches tor canned
goods with his mother, Wylene, who
teaches at SCC. Above, Kit Carson of
the Sharing Center gives a tour of the
facility.

B a rgain hunters snatch u p T ru m p co n d o s
United Press International
PALM BEACH — Bargainhungry bidders snatched up 35
luxury condominiums at Donald
Trump's Trump Plaza of the
Palm Beaches, bringing In more
than SB million at an auction
ordered by the beleaguered ty­
coon’s lenders.
The top draw In Sunday's
auction was a 32nd lloor pent­
house that went for 9720,000 —
down from the original asking
price of $1.8 million. The lowest
successful hid was 9180.000
paid for a condo originally priced
at 9300.960.
The auction, conducted ut the
swank occanlront Breakers re­
sort. brought In more than 98
million In a little more than two
hours.
"It went great. The Trump
o rg a n iz a tio n is e x tre m e ly
pleased." said Sheila Starnes of
LSC Real Estate Marketing Serv­
ices. the Newport Beach. Calif.,
company that conducted the

Trump’s 32nd floor
penthouse went for
$720,000, though he
asked $1.8 million.
The iowest bid was
$180,000 paid for a
$300,960 condo.

Donald Trump

auction.
"They were able to move a lot
of Inventory today and the
buyers did get some tremendous
bargains."
Trump attended but kept a
relatively low profile.

"He was wandering around,
walking through the ballroom.
He did talk with some of the
bidders." Starnes said.
Minimum bids sta rte d at
$150,000, about 50 percent
below the original asking price.

Orlgnlally. 45 units In the
32-story building were to be
auctioned Sunday.
"We were Instructed last night
1 to remove 10. I don't know if It
was a bulk sale or what. Our
marching orders were basically
to sell 35 today and we sold
them all," Starnes said.
Successful bidders were reim­
b u rs e d for the ro u n d -trip
domestic airfare to Palm Beach.
The 221-unlt Trump Piazu
overlooks th e In tra c o a sta l
Waterway In West Palm Beach.
Trump bought It out of foreclo­
sure In 1986 for 940 million.
Marine Midland Bank holds a
927.1 million mortgage. It or­
dered the auction as part or a
reprieve granted to Trump,
whose loan was due Oct. 22.
Trump had to deposit 91 million
with Marine Midland to get the
loan extended.
He has until Sept. 30. 1991. to
sell the rest of the units. Before
the auction, fewer than half had
been sold.

TH E W EA TH ER
LOCAL FORECAST

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

Today...Mostly sunny with a
high In the upper 70s to lower
80s. Light east whirl.
&amp;
* \J^
e VJ'A.---------- J
TH J-'A ------------ 1
Tonight...Partly cloudy with
(talehy dense Tog again forming SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TU ESD AY
WEDNESDAY
late. Low In tlie upper 50s to
tunn y 74-99
FtlyCldy 79-99 FtlyCldy 79-97
FtyCldy
72-59
FtlyCldy
72-97
lower 60s. Light east wind.
Tuesday...Patchy morning fog
lifting. tx'CDinlug |&gt;artly cloudy
TIDES
STATISTICS
with a high In ihe lower 80s. MOON PHASES
Wind becoming southeast 10 to
MONDAT:
15tnph.
The high tem perature In
SOLUNAR TABLE: Min. 4:50 Sanford Sunday was 78 degrees
Extended forecast...M ostly
LAST
cloudy with a chalice or ratn
D «c. • a.m.. 5 05 p in.: MaJ. 10:55 a.in.. and the overnight low was 50,as
11:20 p.m. TIDES: D aytona reported by llie University of
Wednesday through Friday.
Beach: highs. 7:53 a.m.. 8:06 Florida Agricultural Research
Lows in the lower 60s Wednes­
3.m.: lows. 1:18 a.m.. 2:08 p.m.: and Education Center. Celery
day dropping into the upper 40s
Kcw S m yrna Beach: highs. Avenue.
to lower 5(K by Friday.
7:58 a.m.. H:ll p.m.: lows, 1:23
NSW
FIRST
Recorded rainfall for the
D «c . 17
Dac. 29 a m.. 2:13 p m ; Cocoa Beach:
P L O R II
highs. 8:13 a.m.. 8:26 p.m.; jieriod. ending at 9 a.m. Mon­
day. totalled 0 Inches.
lows. 1:38 a .m . 2:28 p.m.
MIAMI ' Florida 24hour tempera
The temperature at 9 a.m.
lures and ramljtl at 7 a m EST
today
was 66 d rg rres and
BOATING
Monday
■EACH CONDITIONS
Monday's overnight low was 53.
C ity
Hi Lo Rain
a&gt; recorded by the National
Apalachicola
77 58 OOO
D aytona Beach: Waves are 1 St. Augustine to Ju p iter Inlet
Crestview
75 54 0 00
Today...Wind variable 5 to lo Weather Service at thr Orlando
turn
and
&gt;4’tiu gLissy. Current Is
Daytona Beach
80 52 0 00
slightly to the south with a water kts becoming east 5 to 10 kts in International Aiqxirt.
Fort Lauderdale
79 62 0 00
Ot her Weal her Service data:
trrnpcratuic of tifj degrees New the afternoon Seas near 2 ft.
Fort Myers
84 61 OOO
S unday's high.................. 70
Sm yrna Beach: Waves are ‘-j Bay ami Inland waters smooth
Gainesville
75 50 OOO
B arom etric p ressu re.30. IB
Miami
82 64 Ira
fool and fiat. Current Is slightly Visibility this m orning orPensacola
74 59 0 00
R elative H um idity....84 pet
to the south, with a water caslonally below’ one mile In log
Sarasota Bradenton
76 54 OOO
W lnda......... .....North S mph
extreme north part. Isolated
temperature ol 66 degrees.
Tallahassee
77 60 0 00
R ainfall..........................0 In.
showers.
80 56 0 00
Tampa
T
oday's su n set.....5:31 p.m.
Tonight
Wind
southeast
10
Vero Beach
79 55 0 00
Tom orrow 's sunrlse....7:12
kis Seas 2 to 3 II
West Palm Beach
79 59 tra

©

NATIONAL TEMPS
City 4 Fer tra il
Albuquerque in
Anchorege ty
Atlanta r
Belli mure pc
Birmingham r
Blimarckpc
Boiton iy
Buffelope
Cher lottery
Chitego r
Cincinnati r
C leva lend r
Dalle* ft
Denver in
Detroit
Duluth cy
E 1 Pe*o cy
Evenly tiler
Fargo pc
Hertford pc
Honaiutu th
Houiton ih
Indienepoinr
KaniaiCily r
Lei Vega* *y
Little Rock t*
Lo* Angela* *y
Loutivllle r
Metnphuf*
Milwaukee *n
Minnaepohicy
Nath villa r
New Vork pc
Omaha in
Philadelphia *y
Phoeniepc
Pitflburgh r
Providence ly
Richmond p&lt;
SI Loultr
Van Antonio me
W i Diego ly
San Juan pr
Spokane m
Waihingionpc
Wichita r

HI 1Jt Pep
49 34 03
04 03
*1 M ....
41 34 01
*1 53 04
X 10
4) 33 34
33 33 .5*
*1 11
34 33
39 34 teee
n 34 04
43 43 .14
50 33
43 35 04
33 10
$4 44 m
39 M
33 14
4) 13 19
u 43
31 43 .03
40 34
43 35
i l 15
44 40 31
*3 44
43 17
4) 43 Oil
33 34
a 14
41 15
44 40 15
)9 33 04
SI 43 05
43 51 t3
M 34 0*
43 41 34
54 40 04
M 15
3) 55
40 S3
(3 33
30 20
Jl
40 34 03

�.

■

ra p

Sanford H«r«ld, S&lt;nfc -d. Florida - Monday. Dacambar 17, 1930 — M

POLICB BRIKPS
Man charged with aggravated assault
SANFORD — A man who allegedly pointed a gun at another's
head when oilier suspects were beating the victim, has been
urrested by Sanford police.
Derrick Leon Mathis, IB, 4540 Dubois St., Sanford, was
arrested nt 1:26 a.m. today on Sixth Street. There were no
other arrests reported In the case.

Sanford man ehargad In hubcap thaft
SANFORD — City police here charged Author George Tyson,
35, 615 E. Third St.. Sanford, with dealing In stolen property
and theft. Tyson Is accused of stealing four hubcaps from a car
at 601 S. French Ave., Sanford. On Saturday the victim saw his
hubcaps on another man's car and notified police. The man
who had the hubcaps reportedly told police he bought them
from Tyson for $20.
Tyson was arrested Sunday morning at 422 E. Fifth St..
Sanford.

Saminola County DUI arraata
SANFORD — The following persons face a charge of driving
under the influence of alcohol (DUI) In Seminole County:
• Donald F. Deane Jr.. 44. 119 N. Alderwood St.. Winter
Springs, was arrested at 2:12 a.m. Sunday after his car failed to
maintain a single lane on Country Club Road. Sanford.
• Kyle B. Golladay, 28. 451 Stanton Place, Longwood. was
arrested at 2:28 a.m. Sunday after his car ran a red light on
U.S. Highway 17-92. Sanford.
• Michael Thomas Marion. 34. 1318 Mellonvllle Ave.. Sanford,
was arrested Sunday at 1116 Celery Ave.. Sanford, after his car
was In an accident.
• C. Carlos Escobar. 34, 354-E Church Ave., Longwood. was
arrested at 10:38 p.m. Sunday on 27th Street at U.S. Highway
17-92. Sanford, after his car was seen weaving.

N elson joins Orlando firm
Ellen.
llwHsd P f s i Istw iw tlw nl
"! am delighted to accept the
WASHINGTON - U.S. Rep. invitation of Maguire. Voorhls &amp;
Bill Nelson. D-FIa.. will Join the Wells to become part of their
law firm of Maguire. Voo.hls &amp; d y n a m ic fu lL s e rv Ic c law
Wells PA of Orlando, Fla.,.'pn.3. practice." Nelson said In «t pre­
N elson w ill open a new pared statement. "Its reputation
Maguire Voorhls &amp; Wells office as a firm of unparalleled integri­
In Melbourne. Fla., where he ty and committment to service Is
lives with his wife, Grace, and well deserved, and I look forward
two children, Billy and Nan to this new challenge."

Children In the Midway Elementary School Headstart program
recently visited Sanford Middle School. Above, the Sanford Middle
choir performs for the visitors. Shawnette Wiggins, eighth grader,
acts out "The Night Before Christmas" tor the group.

Vecemtiet SfreciaU

State investigates H R S job contract award
UnIM Frees International
TALLAHASSEE — The Florida comptrol­
ler's office Is investigating the award of a
two-year social services contract won by a
private company that helped write the
specifications for that same Job.
The company, Maximus Inc. of Falls
Church. Va.. has received 8449.768 so far
and stands to receive utmost 8400.000
more.
Florida Deputy Comptroller Tom Clemons
suld the stute would tiold up the lost
8400.000 In payments at least until the
Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services answers his questions about the
award.
Clemons wants to know If the specifica­
tions drafted by Maximus might have ruled
out any other companies.
Florida purchasing rules say any com­
pany writing state Job specifications that
■'restrict com petition" should not he
nllowed to seek the work.

Clemons ordered his legal stall to draft a
letter to HRS last week after a Tampa
Tribune Inquiry into financial and technical
records Involving a federal grant for the Job.
The grant paid for a program to streamline
the collection of child-support payments.
In 1988 Maximus, at Its own expense,
drafted an application for the grant at the
request of HRS. The slate agency made only
a few changes, then sent the application to
the federal government, which approved It u
month later.
The proposal, among other things, out­
lined the share of work on the child-support
project that would be done by u consultant.
The plan, with HRS modifications, was sent
to more than 100 potentlul bidders.
Maximus, which Is run by u friend of
outgoing HRS Secretary Gregory Colcr, was
the only company to respond.
The friend. Maximus vice chairman Jack
Svahn. said his company spent its own
money helping Florida win a hurd-to-gel
federal grunt with no assurance that II

would get the consulting work.
Svahn said he had no Idea why other
companies didn't compete. He said Max­
imus won the Job on Its own merits and that
the award had nothing to do with his
professional association with Coler or with
tils company's work on the specifications.

w 5tc,|° n.
V A |U &gt; S P e C I A ^ 3M

#2 Posls

Coler. who has resigned from the agency
effective Jan. 7. could not be reached for
comment.
The stale's selection of Maximus as the
eontractoi was fair, said Robert Johnson,
the HRS offlclnl In charge of the grant
project.
He said the agency released u request for
proposals and Maximus was the only ^ne to
bid on It.
"T h ey met all the req u irem en ts."
Johnson said.
Still, neither Clemons nor George Banks,
director of the state purchasing office, could
recall a similar case in Florida during the
past five years.

t 2.50

I ...... Dmk

* 8.001
‘11.00

G u a rd ra ils cu t deaths in m otorist canal a ccid e n ts
s h o u ld e rs . In s ta lle d m ore year. 76 were Intoxicated, the
guardrails and simply built bet­ DMV said.
DMV records also showed men
MIAMI — The num ber of ter roads.
were
much more likely to drive
According
to
DMV
computer
Florida motorists who drive Into
canals, lakes and rivers has records compiled for The Miami Into the water than women. In
dropped dramatically In the last Herald Sunday, water accidents the accidents studied. 2,183
five years, thunks to safety took place as often during the drivers were males, and 782
e ffo rts th a t w idened road day as at night, and they almost were females. The d rivers'
shoulders and Increased the alw ay s h ap p en e d In good gender was not known In 545
accidents.
weather.
number of guardrails.
In about half the Incidents, no
The drivers usually lived in
In 1986, canals and other
waterways swallowed 8.131 cars the county where the accident one was injured.
and trucks, according to records happened, and most of them
complied by the Florida Depart­ were sober when they crashed.
ment of Motor Vehicles. By last Of the accidents studied. 776
year, however, the number had drivers were under the Influence
of drugs or alcohol, while 2,082
dropped to 2.858.
During the same time, the were not. and results were pend­
number of underwater vehicle ing or unknown In 652 acci­
deaths drnp|H*d from 221 to 80. dents.
But drunk or drug-impaired
the DMV said.
The DMV attributed the Im­ drivers were more likely to die
provement to simple prevention. when their cars plunged into the
During the last five years, the water. Of the 80 people who died
s t a t e h a s w id e n e d ro a d In car-ln-the water accidents last
Unltod N n International

The accidents Included those
w here m o to rists drove off
bridges, off highway entrance
ramps and over the edge of
walerfrnnt parking lots und
driveways.
"Most accidents are caused by
o|ierator head gap: The driver's
head Is not where it's supposed
to be." said Broward County
Sheriffs deputy Chris Wagoner,
a Iraffle accident investigator.

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ED ITO R IA LS

Navy brass fails test
A blow w as struck for th e taxpayer and for
civilian control o f th e m ilitary w h en a
high-ranking Navy adm iral w a s cashiered
r e c e n tly for fa llin g to e x e r c is e proper
oversight on a procurem ent contract.
Procurement is Mg b u sin ess Indeed at th e
Pentagon, with a larger percentage o f th e
8 3 0 0 billion annu al budget going for w ea pons
than In any other Industrialised nation. W hen
th o se dollars are w asted , w h en d efen se
contractors are not held to account, w h en
delays or d efects In w eapon sy ste m s are not
promptly reported to the public, the derelic­
tion lit the duty o f those responsible Is Just a s
real a s if they had abandoned their post In
com bat.
That is w h y w e com m end D efense Secre­
tary Dick C heney for taking severe m easures
to discipline th ose responsible for allow ing
extensive delays and cost overruns In the
developm ent o f a new attack plane for the
Navy. The plane is the carrier-based A-13
Avenger, being built by McDonnell D ouglas
and General D ynam ics. C heney w as told the
project w as on tim e. Five w eek s later, the
m anufacturers told Congress It w a s at least a
year behind sch edule and 81 billion over
budget.
Vice Adm. Richard G entz. 55, the senior
purchasing officer, a three-star adm iral and
com m ander of the Naval Air S y stem s Com ­
m and, should have know n the statu s o f the
project and should have Informed h is bosses.*
Apparently, he didn't: he faces early retire­
m ent a s a result. Tw o other top m en In the
com m and are being reassigned and censured.

THOMAS

Bush plays role of communicator
WASHINGTON - President Bush is the most exercise Its constitutional right to declare war.
president in recent history from the
But he has the rare
of holding news conferences early quality of seeming to
and often.
even enjoy holding
He has had well over 80 formal full dress news news conferences. He
conferences an d m ore th an 40 informal calls them aa be see
"scrums." a term borrowed from the Canadians. them and they run as
In which he has submitted to interrogation.
long as he desires,
He does not resist communicating, except much to the delight
under certain circumstances, shunning most of o f re p o rte rs who
the time, but not all. questions in the Oval Office come In from the
during a picture-taking session.
cold and do not cover
Generally, he has bitten the bullet and th e W hite H ouse
submitted to cross-examination from reporters.
regularly but get a
Granted, like his predecessors, he prefers to hold crack at him during
f HohooMtton
news conferences when the dews is good and 45- minute sessions.
thobutlotond
going hia way. Bui that’s par for the course.
S in ce h is n ew s
oubmittod to
It must be frustrating for the president when conferences are often
crosshe la constantly being told in (Hint that he has I n f o r m a l g e t •xominotion
not explained hia reasons for sending 400,000 to g e lh e r a a t h ia
from reporttroops to the Permian Gutf. But he keeps trying.
behest when he has
The news conference la his style. He is something to say. he
i
confident that he can field any question thrown usually winds up by
at him, although some questions have evoked saying, "1*11 take two more questions." Often
painful emotion, such aa when he was asked that leads to six more questions. But that's fine
about the problems of hia son. Neil Bush, In the with reporters.
savings and loan scandal. *
Unlike President Reagan, whose aides totally
He also has displayed Irritation when asked
managed and controlled hia appearances, much
why he does not want Congress to meet and to ‘ to his detriment. Bush finds news conferences

ROBERT W ALTERS

Pacific fishing royalties a must
TARAWA. Kiribati — Stretching far beyond
the horizon In every direction is the single
largest geographic feature on the planet — the
Pacific Ocean, a vast expanse of water covering
one-third of the globe's surface.
Almost two dozen Island nations are scat­
tered throughout the region, but land con­
stitutes less than 2 percent of the Pacific's 4.5
million square miles — and much of the
ground is unsuitable for any form of agricul­
ture beyond subsistence farming.
"High islands" usually are the remnants of
volcanic mountain peaks whose steep, poorly
drained and rocky slopes are seldom arable.
"Low Islands’* are typically components of
coral atolls even less amenable to cultivation.
Thus, agricultural production often Is limited
to such traditional Ituns as copra, coconut oil.
taro and bananas. Moreover, economic
expansion or diversification usually Is Impeded
by a lack of ready access to markets thousands
of miles distant, a scarcity of various natural
resources and a centuries-old land tenure
system that precludes private ownership of
property.
As a result, a region mindlessly proclaimed
to be a "tropical paradise" by people who
know nothing about It Instead displays many
of the characteristics of a Third World
backwater. Here In Kiribati, for example, the
gross national product 1s equivalent to a paltry
$1 per person pier day.

But the 1982 United Nations Convention on
the Law of the Sea established a worldwide
legal regime that, for the first time, defines
ocean rights and responsibilities — even
though It has not yet been ratified by enough
nations to be formally adopted.

" Think ol it as a patriotic gesture. "

The president's Image makers have deckled,
however, that they want all the camera focus on
the president. They have told the networks that
only one camera will be allowed to take the news
conference, thus eliminating any shots of his top
aides on the sidelines and their varying
expressions and the reporters asking the ques­
tions.

WASHINGTON - The K eating Five,
hearings are a hot ticket on cable TV this
month, but the atmosphere la even hotter out
of range of the cameras.

Now, however, there Is cause for optimism
about the future —and the source of that hope
Is the Pacific Ocean and the abundant marine
life to which It provides a home. Until recently,
exploiting that rich fishery was difficult for
small Island nations because Ihr ubiquitous
fleets of more powerful countries dominated
what were presumed to be International
waters.

t) -not, Nl* me 11'■

But Reagan's news conferences were viewed
by millions more because they were held In
prime time, a period when they could watch
television. Bush s press conferences are usually
held during the day when shut-ins and retirees
have more chance to watch, although, segments
are always shown on the nightly news.

Behind the scenes
at Keating hearings

Talks, not
sanctions
&lt; . &gt;'11
■

Berry's World

In those sessions. Reagan would often show
his true feelings and his gifted sense of humor.
But such occasions were all too rare. He held an
average of about six news conferences a year.

JA C K A N D ER SO N

Cheney doesn’t fool around. He scolded one
Air Force chief of staff an d dism issed an o th er
fur loose talk a n d overstepping th eir au th o ri­
ty. W hen this defense secretary talks to u t
civilian control, he m eans it.

Economic, san ctio n s against S o u th Africa
m ade sense w hen th e aim w as to force th e
w hite governm ent to change. T he govern­
m ent has changed. The question Is w hether
sanctions should now be dropped, having
accomplished th e purpose.
South African President F. W. deKlerk h as
agreed to free political prisoners, ended the
state of em ergency an d begun to let exiles
return. He has prom ised to repeal residential
segregation law s a n d en d th e law th a t
reserves 80 percent of th e land for w hite
owners. His p arty h as agreed to accept
non-white m em bers. He Is ready to negotiate
constitutional reforms.
T he obstacle to further progress is not de
Klerk. It is the African National Congress,
which has delayed a m eeting betw een Its
spokesm an. Nelson Mandela, a n d his rival,
Zulu Chief M angosuthu B uthelesi. Black
tow nship violence u n d erm in es th e effort
toward ending apartheid. It m u st be stopped.
And sanctions w on't do that. Only blacks an d
their leaders can m ake peace w ith each other.
The ANC is insisting on m ass protest
dem onstrations, often In defiance of law. to
help it recruit m em bers an d gain m ore
credibility before It will agree to negotiations.
Such dem onstrations provoke police violence.
Foreign observers increasingly see the ANC
a s the chief obstacle to peaceful change. T he
sanctions do not affect the ANC. although
they do m ake it hard for the econom y to
absorb the young blacks into the work force.
It is time for Congress to consider lifting th e
sanctions.

his best way of communicating.
Reason would be given briefing books the i
of telephone books to prepare Tor what was
tantamount to taking an oral examination for a
Pti. D. He also would have a rehearsal in the
White House theater In the afternoon before a
formal Eaat Room evening news conference.

Specifically. It gives every coastul country
the right to claim Jurisdiction over the ocean
resources In an "Exclusive Economic Zone"
stretching 200 nautical miles out front Its
shoreline. Although small nations with limited
resources cannot immediately deploy oceanborne fishing fleets, they can collect royalties
from those who deplete marine resources
Inside ihrlrEEZ.

Among the most prized yet abundant of
those resources are several species of tuna —
including albacore, yellowfln. skipjack and big
eye. Moreover, pro­
cessing the catch
provides additional
e c o n o m i c opportunlties.
"Without our fish­
ing Industry, we're
d e a d — lite r a lly
d e a d ." say s Gov.
Peter Tall Coleman of
A m erican Sam oa,
the self-proclaimed
"purse seine capital
of the Pacific" where
35 to 40 percent of
f Much of the
all canned tuna fish
ground is
co n su m ed In the
unsuitable for
U n ited S ta t e s Is
any form of
packed.
agriculture
Purse seiners are
beyond
commercial fishing
subsistence
v e sse ls th a t rely
farming. J
upon helicopters and
electronic detection
devices to locate schools of tuna. When they
arc found, a huge net Is spread to encircle the
fish and then is pulled closed like a woman's
net purse.
In contrast with that targeting technique, the
discredited practice of drlftnet or glllnet fishing
Involves laying a 35- to 100-foot high wall of
nylon filament net stretching 35 to 40 miles
behind a fishing vessel.
Indiscriminately entangled and killed In
those driftnets laid by commercial fleets based
In Japan, Taiwan and South Korea have been
not only tuna but other species of fish, birds
and turtles as well as porpoises, whiles, seals
and other marine mammals.
That wanton slaughter Inspired worldwide
protest. At a meeting here on Tarawa Ui
mid-1989. the nations of the Pacific called for
an end to the deprivation In the region. In the
spring of this year, the packers of three most
popular brands of canned tuna sold In (he
United States — Star-Klst. Bumble Bee and
Chicken of the Sea — declared they would no
longer purchase glllnct-trapped fish.
Japan and Taiwan subsequently pledged to
halt drlftnet fishing In South Pacific by
mtd-1991. But there have been no similar
commitments to end the practice in the North
Pacific and South Atlantic, where glllnet
fishing is also recklessly depleting slocks.
(C)ltnNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

During one break in the hearings, witness
William Black found out Just how hot. Mack
was a regulator for the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board when it was trying to rein in
C harles K eating's
Lincoln Savings and
Loan In 1967. The
future of five U.S.
senators la riding In
part on what Black
remembers about the
way they may have
tried to Intervene for
Keating. The bearded
Black has been a cool
and smiling witness,
refusing to be bullied
by the attorneys for
C l t o boardad
the K eating FIVe.
Black has
D u r in g a lu n c h
been a cool
break, sources tell us
and amlllng
that Black passed the
witness, re­
lawyer for one of the
fusing to be
five. Sen. Don Rlegle.
bullied by the
D -M Ich., an d a t ­
attorneys. J
tempted a pleasant­
ry"Hello, How arc you?" Black said to
Rlegle's attorney. Tom Green. "Don't you
worry about how I am. ever!" snarled Green.
"You Just worry about how you are going to
bel" Black might have steered clear of Green
had he known that his own lawyer, not one
minute earlier, had received a dressing down
from Green because Black. In his testimony,
had said aloud the name of the law firm that
Green works for. "If Black mentions my firm
one more time I am going to (expletive) knock
his head off." Green said. Then he said It two
more times Just to make sure he wasn't
misunderstood. Why was Rlegle's lawyer so
touchy about hearing the name of his law
firm from the lips of a witness? Because
Green's firm Is a big Chicago outfit, Sldlcy
and Austin, that once lobbied for Charles
Keating. The law firm that helped Keating
pitch bis cause to the bank board in the
1980s Is now representing one of the senators
accused of pressuring the bank board to go
easy on Keating when his thrift was being
driven Into the ground.
Apparently Green Is sensitive about the
connection. After chewing out Black for
saying. "Hello," Green registered a complaint
with the Ethics Committee concerning
Black's repeated references to the law firm.
Sources told our associates Michael Binsteln and Tim Warner that the heated
exchange continued. Later that day. the
dauntless Black passed Green again, tapped
him on the shoulder and said. "Hello." "If
you ever touch me again. I'm going to take
you outside." Green said. "Don't you ever
talk to me again."
We asked Green about the exchanges, and
he refused to comment. Green Is no babe In
the woods on Capitol Hill. He represented
Richard Secord during the Iran-contra
hearings. But that and other experiences
apparently have not thickened his skin. In
1988, Green did not work for Sldlcy and
Austin, but Marjorie Waxman did. One of her
assignments was to lobby the bank board on
behalf of Keating. In May 1988. Keating won
several concessions from regulators, among
them reassigning his case to a different
regulatory office and out of Black's hands.
Just before the bank board voted on that
Issue. Waxman wrote a memo to Keating:
“You have the board right where you want
them. I have put the pressure on (bank board
Chairman Danny) Wall to work toward
meeting your demands and he lias Instructed
his staff: If they mess up this lime ... it's all
over."
Sldlcy and Austin is also a defendant In a
lawsuit filed by 20.000 investors who bought
now-worthless Junk bonds from Keating's
American Conlincntal Corp.

�Bf.«
i
*

Swifonl Hm M, Sanfort, Florida - Monday, Doesmbsr 17. 1990-0$

&gt;r proposes troops sing-a- long Calls—
the slng-along
The Idea for (he
came when she found out from
an astronom er at the Adler
CHICAGO
Anne Bickett P lanetarium th a t the moon
Schiller has found a novel way to would be visible from California
boost the morale of U.S. troops e a s t to S a u d i A r a b ia on
stationed in Saudi Arabia and Christmas Day.
"Even If there are clouds
hopes millions of people will join
hiding the moan, the moon Ig
her In singing at the moon.
S c h ille r's Idea Is Project still there. I'm hoping G -J is
Moonbeam: everyone singing the cooperating w ith th is." the
same five Christmas carets at mother of four said Sunday.
A local radio statio n has
the same time Christmaa Day (3
p.m. EST) while staring at the agreed to record the carols —
moon, which will be visible at sung by people Including fami­
the same moment In Saudi lies of troops In the Persian Gulf
— and make the tapes available
Arabia (11 p.m. Saudi time).
Schiller. 44. whose oldest son. to other stations.
"I think It's going to happen. I
Brian, is a Marine stationed in
Saudi Arabia, Is the founder of have 3,000 radio stations that
Operation Over There, a project are going to do this." Schiller
to m ake su re le tte r s and
Armed Forces Radio Network
packages from home get to the
will air a "hummed version" of
troops.
K SN X
United P m i tmtmathxwd______

thefivesong*the five songs.
"'Host sensitivity' Is the term
(the military) Is using." said
Schiller, adding that she was
told the words cannot be sung
onAFRN. "These kids all know
the words and one major said to
me. 'So what's to stop them from
singing the wonhff"’
The live songs to be recorded
are "Oh Come All Ye Faithful."
"Jo y to the World." "Silent
Night." "We Wish You a Merry
Christmas" and "Let there be
Peace on Earth."
"I know full well they can't
hear us singing. But if 200
million people are singing, that
knowledge for them has got to be
a tremendous morale boost.”
S c h ille r said . " T h e whole
country Is for them no matter
where you stand on the war."

American to acquire routes
FORT WORTH. T ex as American Airlines has agreed to
pay $443 million lo Trans World
Airlines for six routes between
U.S. cities and London. Ameri­
can announced.
Four of the routes would
Include access to London's
Heathrow Airport. American's
five gateways to Heathrow would
be New York's Kennedy Airport.
Newark. N.J. Chicago. Boston.
Los Angeles and Philadelphia.
Two gateways Included In the
deal, which have authority to
London airports other than
H e a th ro w , are B altim o reWashington and St. Louis.
"The assets being acquired
today will greatly strengthen
A m erican's position In the
U.S.-London market and will
enable us to become a more
effective competitor on both
trans-A tlantic and domestic
routes." said American Chair­
man Robert L. Crandall In Fort
Worth.
As part of the deal. American
agreed to acquire all of TWA's
airport facilities at Heathrow and
Gatwlck airports and agreed to
hire TWA’s 380 employees In
the United Kingdom. It also
transfers to American a number
of unsued TWA authorities be­
tween the United States and
Europe unless TWA begins serv­
ice within one year.
In December 1989 American
a g re e d to a c q u ire TW A 's

that pact, which Is still awaiting
approval by the Department of
T r a n s p o r ta tio n , h a s b een
e x te n d e d u n d e r th e la te st
agreement.
The government must also
approve the new pact, but Amer­
ican hopes to s ta rt serving

Heathrow by May IS and plans
to serve the Gatwlck routes
beginning Nov. I.
In addition to the London
routes. Aemrtcan Is acquiring 40
takeoff and landing slots, plus
three gates, at Chicago's O'Hare
Airport.

Fire

1A
(requests) a day from
people applying to be on tlie.
list." Patton said. "From a
numbers standpoint. It's been
very successful."
T h e law a l s o p r o h i b i t s
automated dialing syiUems from
calling anyone with an unlisted
number.
And It says consumers must
finalise any deal made ov**r the
phone with a telemarketer by
signing a contract and returning
it to the business. In other
words, no one can charge i
thing to your credit earn from an
unsolicited telephone sale unless
you agree In writing, with few
exceptions such as financial
services.
Telem arketers are not en ­
thusiastic. Iris Fleat. a manager
at National Energy Service, a
Lauderdale Lakes telemarketer,
said the law may put phone
salespeople out cf work.
"I'm very much against It.”
she said. "You’ve got a lot of
people who are senior citizens or
handicapped and this Is their
only way to make money."
"It's a negative law," said Lou
Calabrese, owner of World Lotto

although the Homes had been
1A
extinguished.
The buildings were of brick
from the
construction, with metal roofing.
exterior of the structure.
As late as Thursday morning, By the end of this past week, all
small areas of rubble from the but the rear walls of the busi­
structure were still smoking nesses had been demcllshed
either through the fire or by fire
crews. The state fire marshals
had all of the debris brought out
onto Sanford Avenue so that a
m o re th o ro u g h an d sa fe r
Caatlaasd frsos Fags 1A
examlniation could be made In
the year 2000." Bush an attempt to ascertain the
said.
cause of the fire.
Alexander told reporters.* "I
By T h u r s d a y , s ta t e In ­
think my Job Is to understand
his goals, develop a plan and vestigators had determined that
help him do th a t." But he the fire "w as of suspicious
declined comment on what poli­ nature."
cy he might .pursue. He side­
Friday. Assistant Chief Ron
stepped in particular questions Neel confirmed the initial findon the adm inistration's con­ Isig. “We have determined that
troversial decision last week to there are suspicious bum pat­
eliminate minority scholarships. te rn s throughout this floor
The 50-year-old Alexander area." he said, motioning toward
served as governor of Tennessee the a re a ,formerly occupied by
for two terms and gained na­ the Army Navy store.
tional attention by pushing
W hat Neel called "an ac­
through a merit pay plan for celerant-location snifTlng K-9."
Tennessee teachers.
had been summoned from the
He currently serves as presi­ Daytona Beach Fire Department
C h Ic a g o - London route
by Sanford as well as state fire
authorities. The expiration of dent of the University of Ten­ Investigators. That's the official
nessee.

title of a highly trained dog
capable of locating certain flrecausing chemicals or elements
th a t are not com m on In a
specific area.
The length of bine for a return
to business In the two fires also
bears a similarity. By Wednes­
day afternoon of this week.
Susan Ferguson, manager of the
Army Navy store reported a
10-year lease had been signed to
relocate the stare into a former
furniture store at 1401 S. French
Ave.
In 1912. H.L. Du hart took out
a building permit. Just three
days after the fire, to reconstruct
a one-story building, with 103
foot frontage on Sanford Avenue.
He announced that the new
building would be of brick con­
struction.
One Interesting difference be­
tween the two fires was the
action taken by the Sanford City
Commission of 1912. After Chief
Underwood reported on the dif­
ficulties he had In fighting the
fire, the city commission took
Immediate action toward pre­
venting any future problems •
they bought the fire department
a new horse.

Wekiva Court. Longwood. died
Friday at AMI Medical Center.
Orlando. Born Nov. 10. 1935. in
T ehran. Iran, he moved to
Longwood from there in 1973.
He was a self-employed retail
clothier and a Moslem.
S u r v iv o r s I n c lu d e w ife,
Mahvash; father. Had!. Orlando;
m o th e r . K o b ra . O r la n d o :
brother. Saeed. Longwood; sis­
te rs . F a rld e h H am zeh lo o l.
Flroozch, both of Orlando.
B aldw in-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

CMIdrtn’t HotpiMI. Peal Otlka Boa af,
Umatilla. PL H 7S4 004*.
Arrangement* art by SetltoWIMtr Chapel*
404 South Orange Straat. Maw Smyrna loach.

FERDINAND M. BAYER
Ferdinand M. Bayer. 74. 100
Cottesmore Circle. Longwood.
died Sunday at Florida Hospital.
Altamonte springs. Bom Sept.
14. 1910. In Queens. N.Y.. he
moved to Longwood from there
In 1979. He was a citrus grower
and a member of the Catholic
Church of the Annunciation. He
was an Army veteran and retired
commander of the Coast Guard
Reserve.
S u rv iv o rs In c lu d e w ife.
Carolyn: son. Mathew Moyer.
Altamonte Springs: daughters.
M arla G orges. C learw ater,
K i m b e r l y D e a r d e n . St .
Petersburg: brother. Erwin. Fort
Lauderdale.
Baldwin-Falrchlld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

Alexander—

FELTON "JERRY”

Felton "Jerry" Jcmlgan. 78.
405 Lake Blvd.. Sanford, died
Sunday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital Bom Aug. 17.
1912. In Dunn. N.C.. he moved
to Sanford from Hollywood in
Mildred W. Cobb. 62. 903 I960. He was the owner and
L ocust Ave.. New S m yrna operator of Sanford Dry Cleaners
Beach, died Saturday at her and Laundry and a member of
residence. Bom Sept. 24. 1928. the First Presbyterian Church of
in Sanford, she moved to New Sanford. He was past member of
Smyrna Beach from there In the Sanford Klwania Club.
Survivors include wife. Mar­
1978. She was a retired florist
and a member of Elks Ladles of jorie; daughter. Patsy Cawood.
B.P.O.E. 1557. New Smyrna Philadelphia: son. Ron. Sanford;
sister. Elma Collins. Altamonte
Beach.
Survivors Include husband. Springs: brothers. S .J/an d Paul,
Thomas; sons. Thomas Jr.. Fort both of Orlando; four grandPierce. Michael. New Smyrna c h i l d r e n ; s i x g r e a t ­
Beach. Allan. Deltona: daughter. grandchildren.
G ram kow F u n e ra l Home,
Janet Hlnze. Toronto. Canada;
Sanford.
In charge of arrange­
sister. Betty Diaz. New Smyrna
Beach; mother. Allcne Hoover. ments.
New Smyrna Beach: six grand­
children: one great-grandchild.
William Morrell Sr.. 84. 804
Settle-W llder Chapel. New
Smyrna Beach. In charge of F lo rid a B lv d .. A lta m o n te
Springs, died Saturday at Manor
arrangements.
Care Nursing Center. Winter
LBROYDOB
Park. Bom Sept. 5. 1906. In New
Leroy Doc. 80. 1802 Persim­ York, he moved to Altamonte
mon Ave.. Sanford, died Satur­ Springs from Stratford. Conn., in
day. Dec. 15. at his residence. 1959. He was a rivets salesman
Bom March 17. 1910. In Allen­ and a member of the Casselberry
dale. S.C.. he moved lo Sanford Veterans Inc.
in 1940 from Altamonte Springs.
Survivors Include wife. Thirza:
He was a citrus worker and a son. William. Maitland: one
member of Holy Trinity Church grandchild.
of God In Christ. Sanford. He
B aldw in-Falrchlld Funeral
was an Army veteran
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
Survivors Include brothers. charge of arrangements.
Edward. Altamonte Springs.
Benjamin. Sanford: sisters. Ruby
W illiam s. Sanford. Vernlce FRANCIS JOSEPH RISO
Francis Joseph Rlso. 77. Shed
Ivory. South Brunswick. N.J..
Martha Jones. Alberia Hinton, Street. Oviedo, died Friday at
Georgetown Hospital. Washing­
both of Rochester. N.Y.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­ ton D.C. He wus born July 6.
1913. in New York. He was a
ford. In charge of arrangements.
self-em ployed glazer and u
Catholic. He was a member and
HAMID JAVAHEBI
llamld Javahrn. 35. 101 l.ltllr past state commander for the

Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Survivors Include wife. Lucille
D.; sons. Francis J.. Clifford
L o rrain e McCloskey. Alice
Cannavo; one brother, four sis­
ters: 18 grandchildren.
Murphy's Funeral Home. Falls
Church. Va.. In charge of ar­
rangements.
JOHN C. WOLF
Jo h n C. Wolf. 79. of 601
B e v e rly A v e.. A lta m o n te
Springs, died Friday at Life Care
Center. Altamonte Springs. Bom
Dec. 9. 1911. In Wheeling. W.
Va.. he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Phoenix. Ariz.. In
1955. He was a former city
council member for two terms
about 30 years ago and was a
police officer and Tlreflghter. He
was a shipping foreman for T.G.
Lee Dairy and a member of St.
Mary Magdalen Catholic Church.
Survivors include wife. Stella;
daughter. Joan Mueller. Allamonte Springs; son, John S..
M a ry v ille . T e n n .; s is te r .
Madeline Smith. Pennsylvania:
six grandchildren; three great­
grandchildren.
B aldwin-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
LBROYDOB
Leroy Doe. 80. 1802 Persim­
mon Ave.. Sanford, died Satur­
day. Dec. 15. at his residence.
Bom March 17. 1910. in Allen­
dale. S.C., he moved to Sanford
In 1940 from Altamonte Springs.
He was a citrus worker and a
member of Holy Trinity Church
of God In Christ. Sanford. He
wus a World War II Army
veteran
Survivors include brothers.
Edward. Altamonte Springs, El­
der Benjamin. Sanford: sister-.
Ruby Williams. Sanford. Vcmlcc
Ivory. South Brunswick. N.J..
M aitha Jones. Rev. Alberta
Hinton, both of Rochester. N.Y.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
ford. In charge of arrangements.

F IIM IM L S

von-

COBB. M ILOaiDW .
Gravotlda lunaral tarvlcai Ior Mrt
Mtldrad W Cobb. *1. at Now Smyrna Baach.
who dlad Saturday al tor rw d m a . will ba II
a m Tuaiday al baa Plnat Manorial
Gar dm 1 In Edgtwatar. with tha Rav Hobart
C Brown. Coronado Uni tod MathadlU Church
ot Maw Smyrna Baach. oHtcialtog Thar* will
ba no calling houri In Uaw ol llowart. Iha
Iamity tuqgtlft memorial* to HoipKa ot
Voluila/Flaglar. Po»t Ofllca Boa 1104.
Daytona Baa-h FL DIU. or Florida Elkt

J IBM 10AM. M L T 0 N*M1 RRV~
Funarai tarvlcat tar U r. Fattan "Jerry"
Jarnlgan. 70. of Sanford, who dtoS Sunday,
will ba bald M o'clock Thunday morning at
Gramkow Funarai Hama Chagai with Mi
•on In law Rav. John W. Cawood dfklatlng.
Intarman! wll ba mada al Oaklawn Pa-k
Comalory. Frlandi may cal at Gramkow
Funarai Homa Wadnaaday arming from as
r.m.
Arrangamanli by Gramkow Funarai

MITCHELL. OS BN "SS O "
Funarai tarvlcai lor Mr. Oran "Bro"
Mitchall. 40. of m i Jonai A va.. Sanford, who
dlad Wadnaiday. will ba bald I p.m. Saturday
al Maw Bathal Mlttlonary Bapltil Church.
Sanford Informant lo tallow In Evorgroan
Camatory. Sanlord Frlandi may pay lhatr
rotpacH al tha funarai homa Friday from II*
p.m.
Sunrlta Funarai Homa, NO Loculi Ava,
Sanford, IT jr jU . In charga ol arrangamanli.

Products In Pompano Beach. "It
will hurt the people who am
legitimate more than those who
■IwVl l*

The Illegal operations often
fold up and move on before
they’re caught, he said.
It Is up to consumers to report
violations to the Division of

Consumer Services. But Patton
thinks if a couple of 010.000
fines are handed down lo vio­
lators, telemarketers who are
Inclined to Ignore the law will
start paying attention.
"W e re getting calls from
around the country from people
wanting to comply." Patton said.

Bubble
1A
th e ground.
The area of the drinkable
water is about 10 miles long,
extending from about a mile
south of the S t John River to
about a half m le north of the
Econfockhatrhee River. The area
Is about seven miles wide,
extending from about one mile
east of Lake Jesup and extend­
ing almost a half mile Into Lake
Harney.
But the area abo extenda only
about 300 feet underground at
Its deepest near the center locat­
ed at about the Intersectfoil of
State Road 46 and Tint Street.
"I prefer to think of it more as
a lens more than a bubble."
McGurk said. "A bubble Bugsomething larger than It

P*
To study what could happen

to the lens under a prolonged
draught or Increased pumping,
th e d is tr ic t com m issioned
HydroGeoLoglc Inc. of Herndon.
Va. to create a computer model
program for the Geneva lens.
The model was adjusted until
the computer cfoaely simulated
conditions that have been re­
corded by scientists.
After the model was function­
ing accurately, new data was
entered to slmhitate new situa­
tions. And some of those condi­
tions were modeled In a threedlmlnslonal diagram to help
visualize how those conditions
affect the lens.
The study concludes. "The
lens Is stable under current
recharge (rainfall) and pumping
conditions and could probably
s u s ta in co n sid erab ly more
pumping without adverse im­
pact."
M cG u rk a a ld th e m a in
drawback to the model was the
lack of data about the saltwater
boundary of the lens. He said
with more sampling, the bound­
aries and movement of the
brackish water could be modeled
better.
The first scenario modeled
what happened to the lens area If
the area was subjected to a
severe long-term drought condi­
tion that failed to replenish the
lens. W ithin 25 years, the
southern boundary of the lens
will move north by two miles
leaving contam inated wells
behind The depth of the lens
will reduce to about 250 feet
underground.
After 50 years of draught, the
southern boundary of the lens In
some places will be almost a
half mile north of SR 46. ac­
cording to the model.
After ISO years, the Geneva
Bubble will become a mile-wide
horseshoe contained north of
Osceola Road — more than five
m iles n o rth of Its c u rren t
so u th ern boundary. It will
extend to a depth of about 200
feet underground, m eaning
deeper wells even In the lens

(

ill

area will become contaminated.
The "bubble" will have col­
lapsed and will not auataln
Geneva.
The next scenario examined
waa the effect of a central
wellfteld pum ping 2.5 mgd.
enough to supply 6,666 homes
with an average of taro to three
people residing in each home.
Four model arel a arete placed
about a quarter mile from each
other about 1V4 miles north of
SR 40 east of First Street. The
wells were dug to about 200 feet
Into the lens but pumped from
no shallower than about 100
feet.
If the four wells pumped a
total average of 2.5 mga. the
m odel showed th e no rth en
boundary of the lens would
travel south by a quarter mile by
the year 2140. The east and west
boundaries will col lapse inward
by about three-quarters of a mile
during the same time.
A lth o u g h u n d r i n k a b l e
saltwater underneath the wells
will be drawn sharply upward by
more than 100 feet. It still
remains beneath the bottom of
the well and dees not contami­
nate the wetheater. Although the
wells weren’t contaminated In
the model. McGurk cautions
against the well proposal.
"The upconlng* still gives me
concern." McGurk aald. "There
are tome uncertainties and the
mode) Isn’t accurate to five or 1C
feet. Also, much higher con­
centrations of brackish water are
J u st u n d e r th e (m o d erate)
levels."
If the pumping rate for the
same four wells was decreased to
0.5 mgd. the model showed little
change to the depth or area of
the lens. But If the pumping for
the four wells was Increased to
3.75 mgd. the wells quickly
becam e co n tam in ated with
saltwater.
Finally, the study examined If
every bulldable acre of the
15,000-acre "suburban estates"
area of Geneva-were developed.
U nder th e s c e n a rio , about
11.000 homes would be built,
drawing a total of 4.2 mgd from
shallow household wells.
Under the scenario, there Is no
c e n tra lise d " u p c o n ln g " of
brackish water that occurs with
concentrated pum ping. The
overall depth cf the lens will
decrease by about 50 feet,
meaning no household wells in
the areas would be alTected.
The area of the lens decreases
by less than a half mile on all
boundaries and decreases steadi­
ly until about 150 years where It
remains constant In size. By
then the area has decreased In
size by about three-quarters of a
mile on the north, west and east
boundaries and about a hair mile
on the southern boundary. Any
Individual household wells left
behind will become contami­
nated.

I MSl I l i l l H l ?

i ini ii i iii
001. LI BOY

Funarai tervkee lor Mr. Loroy Doa. IS. oI
imj Partimman Ave., Sanford, who dlad
Saturday, will bo bald 10:10 a m. Saturday at
Holy Trinity Church d God In Chrlit with
Eldar Alta Sconlari officiating. Informant to
lotlow In tha vatorani taction ol Evorgroan
Camatory. Santord. Frlandi may call from
4 * p.m. Friday al tha lunaral homo.
Sunrlta Funarai Homo. NS Locutl Avo .
Santord. m H U . In charga ol arrangamonti.

TONY BUSS1 INSURANCE
n

.

3 2 2 * 0 2 0 5

ZB TS 8 . Preach A ve ., SaaferS

%s4uto- Ow ners insurance
I ifr. Home. I sr. Hilda***. One name *z** it all.

Independent...
!And 'Proud

lUnle C. Banes
SapL 3,194$ * Ddc. 17,1906
In loving m em ory of my son
an d our b ro th er, os time
passes us by o u r memories
of you lives w ithin us. Never
fo rg o tte n a n d alw ay s
missed. Remembering, and
longing for th e happy days
when we were all together.
O ur h earts are with you.
Love,
Mother Eva. Slaters,
Brothers. Slater-la-Law.
Brother-In-Law. Nieces,
Nephews and family.

i V e take pride in the fact that
we're an independently owned
and operated funeral home. We're
very much a part of this
-rommunity and we like it that
way.
'i V e like the feeling that we
can serve you our way. And ycu ll
appreciate that personalized
service when you turn to us at a
d.f'icult timo.

GRAMKOW

FUNERAL HOME
OOWEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Telephone (407) 322*321/

�I
♦/

•A — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Monday, December 17, 1990

Blacks question commitment
■fW CNAILK.1
Boston Globe
WASHINGTON - Leading
black Republicans assailed the
Bush administration's record on
civil rights last week, some
calling the ban on scholarship
programs for minorities another
step toward reversing gains the
party pas made with minorities
In recent years.
Black Republicans expected
the Bush era to be an Improve*
ment over the Reagan years,
when gains for minorities were
under continuing attack.
Ironically. Republicans saw
gains in btack support during
last m onth's elections, when
th e ir c a n d id a te s re c e iv e d
roughly 22 percent of the black

vote. A black Republican was If he rescinds this policy, and If
elected to Congress from Con­ he doesn't, the moderates and
necticut. and a black Republican blacks will be angry.” he said.
B. Ja y Cooper, the com ­
won appointment to a statewide
office In Oklahoma.
munications director for the
But a series of actions has Republican National Committee,
caused some blacks In the party conceded there has been a
to question the administration's perception over the last 25 years
commitment to civil rights. The that the party does not represent
flrsi was Bush's veto of the civil the Interest of blacks. He said
rights act. followed last week by recent events might fuel that
Republican Party statem ents perception. The party, said Coo­
that affirmative action will be per. has recruited btack can­
used nationally as a GOP target didates for city, stale and federal
and then the ruling on college offices as part of the long-term
effort to change that perception.
scholarships.
Some black Republicans see a
A black Republican who asked
not to be Identified said the clash between the moderates
scholarship Issue, like the civil who want to build ties to black
lights bill, would force Bush to voters and the conservatives
seeking to retreat from the effort
make a political choice.
“The right wing will be angry made since the 1960s.

Ban on honoraria
too far-reaching
■y DAVID IV A M
Chicago Tribune_______________________________

WASHINGTON - A law intended to ban
outside Income for U.S. House members will also
revent millions of government workers from
ring paid for speeches and articles after the
legislation takes effect next month.
The prohibition, which even applies to articles
and speeches that are not work-related. Is under
attack as a violation of First Amendment
frec-specch guarantees, and an effort to rewrite
the law is expected In the next session of
Congress.
"The new law aays If you want to write an
article on birdwatching, you can't do it and get
paid." said Terry Davis, an official with the Office
of Government Ethics.
The prohibition la part of (he 1989 Ethics
Reform Act. which takes effect Jan. 1. The law
raised the pay of members of Congress but
eliminated honoraria to members or Ihe House for
speeches and appearances — payments widely
perceived as a way for special Interest groups to
Influence legislation. However, Ihe law was
written to also apply to all 2.5 million federal
employees and hundreds of thousands of military
officers.

E

•tj

B

1

Legal Notlco
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H E EIGHTEENTH
j u d i c i a l c ir c u it

OF FLORIDA.
INAMDFOa
SEMINOLE COUNTY
GENERAL JURISDICTION
• DIVISION
C A IE N O .M -3 U C A M E /L
WEYERHAEUSER
MORTGAGE COMFANY.
Plaintiff.

jvi an p. rivera:*! in:.* ,i.;
NOTICE O r " *
1*
"*
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment 0I
Foreclosure dated December J.
I»*0. and entered In Co m No.
M3*13 CA 14 E/L. ot lt» Circuit
Court ol too EIGHTEENTH
Judlctol Circuit In and tor SEM
INOLE County, Florida wherein
W E Y E R H A E U S E R M O R T­
GAGE COMPANY It Plainlllt
and JUAN P. RIVERA, at Ui..
*t at. ara Defendants. I pill Mil
to the highest and bait bidder
tor cash at ftw Wnt Front Door
ol tho SEM IN OLE County
CourthouM. in Sanford. Florida,
at 11:00 o'clock A M. on too 151ft
day ol January, Itot. Ilia follow
Ing described proparty at K t
forth In said Final Judgmant, to
pit;
Lot ft. MAYFAIR MEAD
OWS. a tubdlvltion. according
to tha plat tharaof at racordad In
Plat Book to, Pag# I t , 33 and 33.
ot tha Public Racordt ol Sami
noia County. F lor Ida
DATED this 4th day ot Dp
ctmbar. IWO
Maryann* Morw
A , Clark of Mid Court
By; JanaE. jAMPlC
At Deputy Clark
Publish Dacambar 1/,34, Itoo
OEA UI
u Tt h

E CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTEINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
INANDFOS
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO: M-*4*3 CA-1XP
PATRICK F STflOHL.

Ptalhfllt.
«&gt;
GILBERT SCHWARTZ, C P A .
P A andGILBERT
SCHWARTZ, individually.

Dafandanli
NOTICE
TO G ILBER T SCHWARTZ
YOU ARE NO TIFIED that
lha P lainlllt. PATR IC K F
STROHL. ha, Iliad a Complaint
lor Declaratory Judgmant lor
determination ol home,teed on
Ihe lolloping described
properly
Lol )}. Cava Aloma. according
lo lha plat thereat a, recorded In
Plat Book IS. Page 7. Public
Record, ol Seminole County,
Florida
in the above ,tyled Court and
you are commanded to verve a
copy ol your prllten detenu,. It
any. upon BRENDAN F LIN
N A N E . Plaintiffs attorney,
•has* addre,, I, 3701 Hansel
A,enue. Orlando. Florida. JtoOt.
on or before January I. Itot. and
tile Ihe original Pith the Clerk ot
the Court, either before service
to Plainlllt’, attorney or imme
diately thereafter, otherpiu. a
default may be entered against
you &gt;or the relief demanded In
the Complaint

WITNESS my hand and ual
at the Court at SanloriL Florida.
!tu, 7th day ol December. IWO
(SEAL)
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT

JeneE Jasepic
Publish December 10. 17,14. II.
iwo

DEA |j

Ltgal Notices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
OF TH E IIO M Tf IN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
INANOFOH
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE N O i toll7-CA
INRE: GUARDIANSHIPOF
CASEY JAY CLASON.

Incompetent ICHILOI,
TO: HAROLOCLASON
NOTICE OF ACTION

SANFORD. FLORIDA 33771
• rSTATE OF INDIANA
YOU ARE HEREBY N O TI­
FIED mat a Petition tor Ap­
pointment ot Guardian has been
Iliad against you, and that you
ara required to tarn a copy of
your Rospenu or Ploading to
tha Patltlon upon tha Patltlonar'i attorney. A.A. MeCLANAHAN. JR.. IM S. Park
Ave. — Sulfa B. Sanford. Florida
37771, and (IN tho original Responie or Pleading In tha office
ot too Clark of ftw Circuit Court,
on or before Ifw 7m day ot
January. Itot. If you fall to do
so. a Default Judgment pill ba
taken against you lor tha relief
demanded In lha Petition.
DATED at Senlord. Seminole
County. Florida, this 7th day ol
December, ItoQ
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
BY: PATRICIA THATCHER
MAR YANNE MORSE. Clerk.
Circuit Court
BY: Patricia Thatcher
OEPUTYCLERK
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Publish: December Id 17.14. 31.
ItoO
DEAN
IN TN E CIRCUIT COURT,
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CA IEN O .M 44»CA 14
DIVISION: P
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, a
corporation organlted and
alisting under the lap, ol the
United States ot America.
Plaintiff.
vs
LILLY PRINGLE.etal..
Defendants

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO AM ERICANSTEEL
FENCE COMPANYOF
LONG WOOD. INC .a Florida
corporation
Last Known Mailing Address:
HO N Highway 437
Longwood. Florida
YOU ARE NO TIFIED that an
action lo foreclose Ihe mortgage
encumbering Ihe lolloping
property In Seminole County.
Florida
Lot IS, Block "G ". WASH
INGTON OAKS SECTION O NE.
according to the plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 14. Pages
7 A (. Public Records ol Semi
nole County. Florida Together
w it h . O ne O rbon R ang e
(electric). One Mecury Hood
(electric). One Comfort Pec
Furnace (electric)
has been tiled by the Plainlllt
egsinst you and others In Ihe
above entitled cause and you
are reouired to serve a copy ol
your written defenses It any. to
It on SMITH &amp; SIMMONS. P A .
Piainlill's allocner t lj West
Adams Street. Suite 1114.
Jacksonville. Florida 37307. on
or belore January II. Itot. and
tile the original with tho Clerk ol
this Court either before service
on Plaintiff's attorney or imme
diately thereafter. otherwise, a
default will be entered against
you tor Ihe relief demanded in
Ihe complaint or petition
WITNESS my hand and u a l
ol this Court on this IJth day ot
December. Itoo
(SEAL)
MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk ot theCircml Cour I
By Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk

Publish December 17. 2a. II.
IWO A January 7. levi
OEA lla

L«gal N o tjc f
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
I* hereby given that I
in busineta at PO
Bo* 1233. Lenin pad. Somhso _
County, Florida, undor the
Fictitious Name at ABOUT
M ARKETING A ASSOCIATES,
and mat I inland to register uld
name selth lha Clerk of tha
Circuit Court. Stmlnato County.
Florida. In accordance with It
Previsions of tha Flctlttou*
Name Statutes To Wit: Section
MS B* Florida Statutes t»S7.
Deborah Brooks
Publish: November 34 A De­
cember X 10.13, IWO
OEZna
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice l» hereby given that I
am engaged in buslnau at 1300
N. County Ed. 437, Longaod.
Seminole County, Florida, under
the Flctlttou* Name, of MEXITE L S . M EX IM AR K ETIN G .
that I Intend to register said
name* with the Clerk el the
Circuit Court, Seminole County.
Florida, in accordance with the
provisions at tha Fictitious
Name Statutes. Te-Wtt: Section
0*3.00 Florida Statutes 1*37
Tho Corporation Interested In
Mid business enterprise Is as
lollops:
Imcco. Inc.
John G. Rombough. Jr.
Vice President/Secretary
Publish: November M A Decamber X 10.17, ItoO
DEZ-230
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H E EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. M-3N3-CA-1XP
WEKIVA HUNT CLUB
COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION.
INC..
Plaintiff.
vs.
F RANC IS XAVIE R CASE LLA
and P E TE R A. CASE LLA,
Defendants.
NOTICE OF
NOTICE IS HEREBY OWEN
that on lha 22nd day ol January,
Itol at 11:00 a m. at tha west
i Courthouu In
of fhwCour
SEMINOLE County, at Sanford.
Florida, too undersigned Clerk
will otter ter ule the following
described real preparty:
Lot 14. GOVERNORS POINT
SECTION I, at recorded In Plat
Book 3*. Pages 34 through 3*. el
lha Public Racordt ot Seminole
County. Florida, with tha follow
Ing street address: 431 Stanton
Place. Longwood. Florida I377f.
together pith all structures.
Improvements. futures. appli­
ances. and appurtorsances on
Mid land or uud In conjunction
therewith.
The aforoMld Mlo will bo
made pursuant to a Summary
Final Judgment entered In Civil
No to 1433 CA I4P ponding In
the Circuit Court ol ftp EIGH
TE E N TH Judicial Circuit In and
tor SEMINOLE County. Florida.
D A TED this 7lh day of Do
MARVANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: JaneE. Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December 17.34. ItoO
DEA 143
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT.
IHANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
F IL E NO. toOfl CP
INRE: Estate ol
EMILY HOYLE.
Doceasod.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Tha administration ol the
•stale ot EMILY HOYLE, do
ceased. File Number to tfl CP.
Is pending |n the Circuit Court
lor Seminole County. Florida.
Probata Division, the address ol
which Is North Park Avenue.
Sentord. FL 3377). Tha names
and addresus of the personal
representative and tha personal
repreuntatlve’s attorney are
u l forth below
All Interested persons are
required to file with this court:
lal All claims against tha tslato
W ITH IN TH R E E M ONTHS
AFTER THE FIRST PUBL1
CATION OF THIS NOTICE and
lb) any objection by on Interest­
ed person lo whom this notice Is
urved that challenges too valid­
ity ol the will, the qualifications
ol ihe personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol tho
Court WITHIN THE LATER OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE OR TH IR TY
DAYS A FTER THE DATE OF
SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS
NOTICE ON THE OJBECTING
PERSON
a l l CLAIMS AND 08JEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ot this Notice has
begun on December 10. ItoO
Personal Representative
BARBARAH HARPER
144Humphrey Road
Lake Mary. FL 33)44
PhillipM Logan Bar (044171
Attorney lor Personal
Rtpreunfative
P O BoeSaa
Sanlord. F L 32772 0444
14071 321 7770
M ARVANNE MORSE
Clerk, Circuit Cowl
BY PatriciaThalcher
D E P U TY CLERK
SEM INOLE COUNTY.
FLO RIDA
Publish December 10.17. ItoO
DEA 74

lagal Notlcat
IN TN E CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT.
- IHANOFOR
IEMMOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NOi fMMT-CA-la-P
PATRICK F. STROHL.
Plainlllt,
OILRERT SCHWARTZ. C P A ..
PJL. and GILBERT
SCHWARTZ. Individually.
NOTICI
TO: GILBERT SCHWARTZ.
C .P A .P .A ..
a dissolved Florida
corporation
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that
tha Plaintiff. PATRICK F.
STROHL. has tiled a Complaint
tor Declaratory Judgmant tor
determination ol homestead on
the lollopIng described
Lot 13, Co m Aloma. according
to Iho plat Ihoreot as recorded In
Plat Raah IX Page 7. Public
Records ot Seminole County.
In tha above ttyled Court and
you are commanded to serve a
copy at your written dotenses. It
any, upon BRENDAN F. U N
NAME. Plaintiff's sltornoy,
whose address Is 3705 Hansel
Avenue.Orlando, Florida, 33*0*.
on or before January X Iff I, and
tlla lha original with lha Clark el
tho Court, either bolero servlet
to Plaintiffs attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter, otherpiu, a
default may bt entered against
you tor lha relief demanded In
the Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and seal
ol tho Court at Sanford. Florida,
this 7th day ot December, ItoO.
(SEAL)
CLERXOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
JonoE.Josewk
Publlth: Docombor IX 17.34.31,
ftoO
DEAI5

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IHANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASINO: fMllt-CA-14-L
JAMES E. ALFORD sod MARY
C. ALFORD, Ms wile.
Plaintiffs.
PESTONJI .
Dofondant.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: SANTA PESTONJI
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIEO thaI an action to qulel
title on tha following property In
SeminoM Cow&gt;ty, Florida:
HOMESITE 110. el SEMI
NOLE WOODS. Florida, ac­
cording to that survey ot record
recorded In Official Records
Bert 1117, Pages an through
MX ot the Public Records ot
Seminole County, Florida: more
particularly described In Eihib
II "A ” attached hereto
EXHIBIT "A "
SEMINOLE WOODS
HOMESITE 110
Legal Descrlpllen
THAT PART OF:
Tha E to of ftw NW W ot
SECTION If. TOWNSHIP 30
iOUTH. RANGE 33 EAST. Sem
Inote County, Florida,
Being more particularly do
scribed as fallows:
Commence at lha Permanent
Reference Monument detIgnat
Ing Ihe SW corner ot sold
S e ctio n 3 fi ru n thence
N00*I3‘17"W along the W.
bounder; line thereof 1334.41' to
tho Permanent Reference
Monument designating tha NW
corner ol the SW to ol Iho SW
ol sold Section if : thence
N l t * i r e i " E along the N.
boundary lino thereof 1313 IT to
Ihe Permanent Reference
Monument designating tho NE
corner of Mid SW to el tho SW
to; thence N00*3*'0f"W along
the W. boundary lino ol tha E is
ot the SW to and the E to at the
NW to el said Section 3f 3740 SO’
to the POINT OF BEGINNING,
continue thence NOO-34'Ot"W
along said W. boundary line
401.34'; thence, leaving Mid W
boundary line. S»0*33‘3I"E
*43 •*' to a point on a circular
curve concave to the E'ly hav
Ing a radius el 2 0 4 0 M id
point being on the WTy R/W line
ol Seminole Woods Boulevard
and boors tN I-TTH 'W Irom Ihe
cantor el said curve; thence S ly
along Mid W ly R/W lino and
the arc ot Mid curve through a
central angle of «7-M’Sf" 2*3 Os­
lo a point on Mid curve, thence,
leaving Mid W'ty R'W line.
S*t*lYSI"W *30 37' to Iho Point
ol Beginning.
Containing 3 173 acres, more
Of IfU.

IN TN E CIRCUIT COUNT
OF THE IfTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT INANOFOH
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. W-Mlt-CA-lf-L/F
AMERIFIRST BANK. A
FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK,
termart» knewwoa Ameet First
Fedorel Savings and Leon
Association,
Plaintiff,
v*.
WILLIAMS. GREENAN.
ETA L.
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE M i l
NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a luminary Final
Judgmant of Feractoture ('
December IX IfW and entered
In Cose Me. M3S31 C A U L / P of
the Circuit Court of IN* IfTH
Judktot Circuit to and tor Samiib
usJLa.
- Jk
-—■flMsPi'
FlOW
nf, Kr LuLrta
w iM i -W
Tw
AMERIFIRST BANK, A FED­
E R A L S A V IN G S B A N K ,
formerly known aa AmerlFIrst
Federal Saving* and Loan Am o
elation. Plaintiff, and WILLIAM
S. GREENAN. R T AL., are
dstsndanti. I will sell to the
highest bidder tor cash at Ihe
West Front Dear ot tha Seminal*
County Courthouse, Ian lord,
Florida, at II :■ o'clock AJW. on
lha 32nd day ot January, INI,
14. m a - n - . . »
-a--------- i s . — a - - - *
If^w
l^^wwBgf^^wTTy
at sot forth In told Summary
Final Judgment, to wit:
L O T 1. B L O C K A.
S W EE TW A TER OAKS. AC
C O R D IN G T O T H E P L A T
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK IX PAGES I I AND
33. PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORI­
DA.
TOGETHER with all lha Im
easements, rights. appurte­
nances. rents, royalties, miner­
al, ell and gas rights and profits,
water, water right* and water
slock, and all nature* now or
hereafter a port Ot Iho preparty,
Including replacements and ad­
ditions thereto.
DATED this 10th day ot DoMARVANNE MORSE. Clerk
Circuit Court
By: Jane E. Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish; December 17,3X 1*M
OBA-141

in t h e c ir c u it c o u r t

OF TH E BIOffTE ENTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA
INANO FOH
SERHNBLE COUNTY
CIVIL DfYtSION
CAM NO. M M M CAMP
MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE
REAL ESTATE FINANCING.
INC..
PteMlH,
ZAIDA MORALES.
CLENOALEFEDERAL
SAVINGS* LOAN
ASSOCIATION. THE
LANDINGS HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION. INC.
and UNKNOWN
TENANTS/OWWERS
N O TKE OF ACTION
TO: ZAIOA MORALS X and
ALL PARTIES CLAIM!NO IN
TE RESTS BY, THROUGH OR
AGAINST ZAIOA MORALES.
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
Yau are nrtttod that an ectfon
to toritNM a mirtgags an tha
tottowtoa property Is SaminaN
Ceunhf.Ptartog:
LOT *X THE I AN D IROS.
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF A l RECORDED IN
FLAT IX PAGES I, X X SAND
X PUBLIC RECORDS OF S IM
INOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
AndCemmewTy KnewnAs: Til
Weedbrtogt Plains. Lenyawad
Florida 137Jl
has keen tiled against yau and
yew nr* raqrted to MTV* a cagv
of your written ditonsax It any,
to It an RICHARD X MOVER.
ESQUIRE. Pletotltrs attorney,
whose address It: Andwssn b
Orcvtt. P.A.. Ml I . Kennedy
Baulevard, Tampa- Fltrlde
33402. an ar batore January IX
IHI. and lilt lha original with
tha Ctork at this Csurt either
before service an PloMflff't
ath

Hwrwisa a Default
In Ihe Cam

MARVANNE MORSE
Clark at Ihe Court
By: Patricia F. Meath
Deputy Clark
Publish: December 17. 34. II.
IfM A Jan,wry7, tffl
OCA-133

IN T H I CIRCUIT COUNT, EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. IIM IN 0 1 I COUNTY,
FLORIDA CASE NOifb**31-CAto«/L
IN RE: FORFEITURE OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
PROPERTY: III ONE ISM MERCURY LYNX AUTOMOBILE.
VEHICLE IDENTIFICATION NUMBER: IMEBP*JtJGWt331*4
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE PROCEEDINGS
TO: Robert F. Muttner, Jr., 7S33
Seventh Grand Orlande, FL JJM7
and a-'l other* who claim an Interest to Bw following property: el
On* IN* Mercury Lyn* Automobile. VIN: IMEBP*3»3GW*t3J**.
which wa« wuad on or about the tZtti day at October, IfM bt or near
Trotwood Baulevard and Northern Way, Winter Spring*. Seminole
County, Florida, by and being held by Bw Winter Spring* Folic*
Department. Seminole County. Florid*, who will appear before lha
HONORABLE NEWMAN D. BROCK, on the 11th day ef February.
Ittl at t oo A.M. in roam S330 tor Bw purpoM of tiling a Petition tor
Rula to Show Cause and lor Final Order ot Forfeiture why Bw
described property should not be forfeited to tw uw ef or sale by Bw
Chief ol Police, Winter Springs Polk* Department, Semlneto County,
Florida, upon producing due proof that Bw tame was used In
Seminal* County. Florida. In violation ol Bw tows of Bw State el
Florida dealing with contraband and other criminal oltenses
pursuant to Florida Statutes *33.701-.704. YOU DO NOT H IE D TO
APPEAR. I HEREBY C E R T IF Y that this Nolle* and Its
accompanying pleadings ar* being served pursuant to Florida
Statutes *33.70) 704. this 13thday of Decernbw. ItM
NORMAN R. WOLFINGER. STATE ATTORNEY
BY: ANNE E. RICHARDS RUTBENO. A .SA ,
F lorIda Bar No. 3*740). IM East First
Slraet. Sanford, Florida 33771
Publish: December 17,IX IfM
OEA 111

lg S g r -S8 Notlctt
IN THE CIECVIT COURT,
EM N TIEN TN JUDKIAL
CIRCUIT. M AND FOR
tEBMNOLB C0MNTY.
FLORIDA
CASENGM-47M-CAI4-E/L
D1YISION: E

O FTNE WTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND PON
S B B M N ^C JU N TV .

CASE NO. fM M CAM
CBNTRUSTFEDERAL
SAVINGS BANK UNOER
RECEIVE RSHIFOF THE
RE SOLUTION TRUST
CON DONATION.
Plainlllt.
vs.
LENOY COCHILL, at at..
DefendantU).

NOTICE OF ACTION
tlllto
TO:
LER O Y COGHtLL. CANDICE
COGHILL. LEROY CHARLES
COQMILL
If ailed, end/ee dead Ms
(their) known heirs, devisees.
kgstot i ar grwttoes and all
pereens ar parties claiming by.
through, under ar eg*Inst him
Khom).
YCxT a r i NOrnPTED thal an
Action tor foreclosure el a
mortgage the tottewtng pnaperhf
to SombMto Ceunty. F tartda:
Let X HOLLOW! ROOK, ac
carding to tha map or plat
U
BBW^h^edrtall1 low D llr tG ELjMkA
nT*rW0f M
ITiODwTBPi
III P I* ! PCWW

3X Page* M and 17. In toe Public
Record* el Semlneto Ceunty,
Florida.
hat bean D M again** you and
f r t are requited to serve a copy
at your written is tonu s. If any.
to it an SPEAR AND HOFF­
MAN. Attorneys, whose address
t* Tea South oixto Highway,
Caret Gables. Florida 3314*. an
ar before tlth day of January.
l**l. and tofll* the ertgma! with
lha Clark el mis Court either
before service en SPEAR AND
HOFFMATX attorneys or imme-

ALLIANCE MORTGAGE
COMPANY, a F torIda
carper eINn.

PlaintIff,
DOLORESCOLEMANELLIS,
•til.,
^
Oefindant*.

N O TK E OF SALE
Net tea Is hereby given (hat.
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgmant ef Foreclosure an
tered heroin. I will sail the
picpeitf sltuatod In Samlnato
Ceunty, F Pride, dwertort aa:
CandwnMum Unit IX BulW
tog 4 0 at HIDDEN VILLAGE
CONDOMINIUM! according to
the Declaration ef Condominium
record* an March n . IMS to
Otticiel Record* Bart tux
Pago* i l l ! thru 1717 and
amandad by ftnl amendment
thereto recerdid May IX IMS to
Official Record* Bart 1*30.
Page* 1*73 thru tM J and
■
i for i
‘

cardad May A lt a i to

Official Records leak 1*41,
Pag* m i

June X IMS to Official Records
■art Max Page* 1311 thru 1331
of lha PvMlc Record* el Semi
neto County. Florid* leg*Bu r
with ell ippurtonenees thereto
and en undlvIdMf Interest In the
common elements of said Con­
dominium at set forth to said
Declaration. Together with:
Range. Rebtg«reter. D/W, OH
petal. Microwave. Wither.
Dryer, Paddto Fans. Fireplace.
*1 public set*, to Bt* highest end
lfwinp®flBYj OlfWeWIISP ® best bidtor tor cash, at Bw west
default will be sntored against front entrance. Semlneto County
M
U
I**
Mir
|U| MTTWNMB Ire
Im CourthouM to Sanford Florida,
F** W
EI Imllfll
at ll:M A A en Bw ITBi day at
the Complaint ar Petition.
WITNESS my hand and seal January, m i.
WITNESS my hand and Of
al Nil* Caurl an this 13th day of
lielal Saal at said Court this 4th
December, l*M.
day ol Dacambar. ItM.
(SEAL)
(Seal)
MARVANNE MORSE
MARVANNE MORSE
Ac Clerk el the Court
By: Heather Brunner
CLERK. CIRCUIT COURT
By: Jane E. Jasewlc
A* Deputy Clark
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December 17. 3X II.
Publlth: December 17.IX IfM
A January 7. Iff I
CC A -130
D IA IM
NOTICE OF PUBLIC NEARING
The Samlnato County Beard Ol County Commissioner* will hold a
public hearing In Ream W-111 el tha County Services Building.
Sanford. Florida, m January X Iff) at 3;M P A . or at soon
Ibarwattoe as pe*slbl». to cansldw Bw tol towtog:
RBZONINOS
1- ETO N PROPERTIES - REZONE FROM A l. AGRICULTURE
AND C-l RETAIL COMMERCIAL TO PUD PLANNED UNIT
DEVELOPMENT. Tea Parcel IA In SeclKn 1*3X30. *2 013 acres
lecafod A lha southwest earner at Lake Mary Blvd. and Greenwood
■hA.north of Greenwood Labes PUD.
D IS TR IC Trt
1. C DAVID COCKMAN - REZONE PNOM R A 1, MOBILE
HOME RESIDENTIAL DISTRICT TO C l. RETAIL COMMERCIAL
Lot* H i*. Midway Perk Section 1. Plat Bart X Pago to. Further
Ascribed a* 1.4 acre* en Bw northsld* ot *37, west at County Home
Road. In Section 7130-JX
d is t r ic t n
Those in attendance will be heard and written comments may be
tiled with Bw Land Management Department. Hearings may be
confirmed from time to time a* found necessary. Further dtfailt
aval labia by calling 331-11A Extension 744X
N O TE: Persons am advised But It they with to appeal any
decision mad* at this meeting, they will need a record at ftw
proceeding*, and tor such purport, they may need t o ensure that a
verbatim record el ftw proceedings it mad*, which record includes
Bw testimony and evidence upon which the appeal It fa be based, per
Sect tan laxOIBX Florida Statutes.
BOARDOF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
B Y : HERB HARDIN. DIRECTOR
LAND MANAOEM*NT DEPARTMENT
1101E. FIRST STREET
SANFORD. FLJ3771
Publlth: December 17. IfM
DEA-gi

SANTA

has been D M against you and
you are required to serve a copy
Ct your written delenses. It any,
to it on RICHARD S TAYLOR.
J R . ESQUIRE. Plaintiffs' at
torrwy. whou address is S3I Dog
Track Road. Post Otllco Boa
1117. Longwood. Florida 32732
1117. on or before January IX
IH I. and til# the original with
the Clerk ol this Court either
before urvlce on Plolntills'
attorney or Immediately there
alter, otherpiu a default will
be entered against you tor the
relief demanded in ihe Com
plaint
OAT ED on December 13. IWO
(COURT SEAL)
MARVANNE MORSE
CNrk el the Circuit Court
By Heather Brunner
As Deputy CNrk
Publish December 17. 24 21.
M l January 7. IN I
O FA 12*

FR E E B IE A D S
Takeadvantage ol this special otter
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our regular classified customers at no cost to you. Just follow these
Instructions.
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Only 1 Item per ad and 1 ad per household per week.
You should call and cancel as soon as Item sells.
Available to Individuals (non Commercial) only. Does not
apply to rentals or garage &amp; yard sales.
8 . The ad must be on the form shown below and either be
mailed In or presented in person fully prepared to the
Sanford Herald Classified Department.
7. Ad will start as soon as possible.
8. Classified Managements decision on copy acceptability wilt
be final.

Sanford
Herald

BUY IT.
SELL IT.
FIND IT.

�Sot fort Htrakl. Sanford. Florida — Monday. Oactmbar 17, 1990 — 7A

Haitians protest election problems
United Press Infmatlonal______
PORT-AU-PRINCE. Halil Haitians voted Sunday in gener­
al elections marred by ballot
Sisters die In bathtub accident
shortages and polling stations
that opened more than seven
AMARILLO. Texas — Two young alalrra taking n bath were
hours late. The problems trig­
electrocuted when a lamp sitting on a tabic fell Into their tub.
gered brief street demonstra­
police said.
tions but no violence.
Jordan Burkham. 4. and Halley HIU, 2. were pronounced
Some 2.7 million people were
dead on arrival at a hospital after the Saturday night accident,
eligible to vote for president, a
police aald.
tw o - c h a m b e r N a t i o n a l
The girls' mother told police officers the lamp had been
Assembly and hundreds of local
placed In the bathroom because a celling light was not
officials amid heavy security at
working.
some 18.000polling stations.
Investigators say the mother had left her children In the care
The election was the third
of a boyfriend while she ran an errand.
attempted In four years in the
poor Caribbean nation’s quest
Polh Raise taxes to dean environment
for democracy since the 29-year
NEW YORK - Most Americans are willing to pay an
Duvaller dictatorship collapsed
to help clean up the
additional *200 a year In .tai
In February 1986, when Jeanenvironment, but many people are confused over how to deal
Claude "Baby Doc" Duvaller fled
with the messy problem, a new survey shows.
to France.
The Time m agutne and Cable News Network survey,
In w ealthy neighborhoods
released Sunday, found that 80 percent nf those asked agree
such as Petlon Vllle. where
with the statement: "There ara so many contradictory things
U.S.-backed presidential can­
said about the environment that It la sometimes confusing to
didate and former World Bank
know what to do."
economist Marc Bazin was the
favorite among 1 1 candidates,
Drug trafficking convictions up sharply
polls opened on time at 6 a.m.
WASHINGTON — The number of people convicted In slate
and all materials were available.
court of drug trafficking charges Jumped SO percent in Just two
But In City Soldi, a slum on
years, the Justice Department aald Sunday.
the western side of the capital
A Bureau of Justice Statistics study also found that 41
seen as a stronghold for fiery
percent of the drug traffickers convicted In 1988 were
presidential front-runner and
sentenced to serve time In state prison, an increase from 37
priest Jean- Bertrand Aristide,
percent two years earlier.
some voting stations opened
"In 1986. about 185,000 adults were arrested for serious
seven and a half hours late
drug trafficking offenses," said Bureau Director Steven
because of a shortage of ballots,
Dillingham. "By 1988. the number of these arrests reached
boxesand Ink.
almost 290.000."
Radio and television reported
that from 5,000 to 6.000 people
From Unltad P ra ia International Reports
______
demonstrated In the streets and
security forces were sent In to
restore calm. Thousands of
voters who had been lined up at
the stations finally began casting
their ballots at 1:30 p.m., after
b e a t- u p t r u c k s d e liv e re d
supplies.
Juao Bacna Soares, secre­
tary-general of the Organization
own Institutions, such as police of A m erican S tates, which
■y JONATHAN KAUFMAN
Boston Globs_________________ functions and education. Na­ brought a team of election ob­
tional governments would still servers. said although "there
ROME — Still reeling from the meet and elect prime ministers were some difficulties starting
changes that have reshaped the and presidents.
the vole ... I don't think this
But In fundamental and far- episode could threaten the elec­
m ap of E u ro p e . F ran ce.
Germany. Italy. Britain and their reaching ways.' Europe Is on Its tion.
n e ig h b o rs arc a c c elera tin g way to becoming a united conti­
•'The people arc coming to
toward another goal that once nent.
vote." he said. "There has been
seemed unthinkable: a United
—A driver In Munich will still no violence ... and this morn­
States of Europe.
register his car with the local ing's problems arc being re­
From summit meetings of police, but the pollution control
leaders to the way students equipment It carries will be solved." ■
Election officials decided, to
decide where to go to college. determined by the all-European
keep the polls open beyond the
Western Europe Is beginning to European Commission.
official 6 p.m. closing time to
fuse together and exert a mag­
—An Italian will still have to allow anyone In line by that time
netic attraction on the countries serve In the army, but his
of the former Eastern bloc, who regiment will be under Joint to vote.
OAS observer Jean Jacques
are clamoring to enter.
European command.
Lnnglols. meanwhile, was con­
Last week Sweden voted to
—A British couple will still go cerned about the potential for
apply for membership to the to a British bank to get a
12-nation European Communi­ mortgage, but the Interest rate fraud.
ty, Joining a line that already will be set by a European central
After the long delay In opening
includes Austria and Turkey. bank.
the polls, election officials used
Switzerland. Norway, Iceland
trucks to rush In
Perhaps most Importantly, the unofficial
and Finland are expected to
voting
materials
contained In
f o l l o w s o o n . H u n g a r y , currencies of hundreds of years, boxes without seals. Also, only
the
Italian
lire,
the
British
Czechoslovakia and Poland have
pencils Instead of pens were
served notice they Intend to pound, the French franc, the distributed for voters to mark
German
Deutschcmark.
will
be
apply by 1995.
their ballots with an "X" —
On Friday a pro-Europe de­ replaced by a single currency, before their thumbs were dipped
the
ECU.
or
European
Currency
monstration on the streets of
In Ink as proof of voting.
Rome Included representatives Unit, administered by a single
Because of Halil's high Illitera­
from the Baltic states of Latvia. European central bank. Analysis cy rate, names on the Sunday's
say the use of the same money
Estonia and Lithuania.
ballot were accompanied by a
"We have today a rendezvous from Britain to Spain, France to* picture of the candidates and
Germany
will
open
a
massive
with history," said Jacques Detheir party symbols. Aristide
lors. president of the European market and create an untold was using a rooster to symbolize
psychological
Impact.
Commission, at the conclusion
his populist coalition.
of Saturday's European Com­
Saturday, at the end of Its
munity summit meeting that summit meeting In Rome, (he
mapped out a future political European Community Issued a
union of Western Europe.
series of guidelines paving the
"As the postwar order breaks road to Increasing political and
down and uncertainty reigns In economic unity. Although the
the Soviet Union, the European British remain cautious, the goal
Community Is the most impor­ Is to have a single European
tant factor for stability," said central bank by 1994 and a
I or h i for motion
Karl Kaiser, head of the German single currency a few y ean later.
Council on Foreign Relations. "It
Politically, the European
' l,J‘
. lu ■I. ' I ) ! '
Is the anchor around which Community alms to expand
t' i j■■ »■i * , i" 11 i i* A i, ( .(i
things will continue to evolve."
powers of an all-E uropean
»'V I .&lt;■
1 •.
A United States of Europe Parliament and to create com­
It .1 I It. .« i • I
It.. . !• ’
would be more decentralized mon foreign a n d d efen se
. , O.ll I U I. •'!
t h a n th e U n ite d S t a t e s . policies. The details arc to be
Countries would retain their own hammered out In a series of
languages and many of their conferences over the next year.

United Europe one step
closer through summit

ATTENTION

s300 Reward!

Chronology
of events
PORT AU PMNCE. Halt.
— The following is a chro­
nology of key events In
Halil since the end of the
Duvaller dictatorship In
1966 and leading up to
general elections Sunday:
•February. 1966: After
weeks of violent protests,
th e s o - c a l l e d P r e s l dent-for-llfe Jcan-Claude
"Baby Doc" Duvaller flees
to France on a U.S. Air
Force plane, ending nearly
30 years of dictatorship of
the Duvaller family. A
live-man military-civilian
unta. with an adviser,
caded by Gen. Henri
Namphy. announces It Is In
control.
•April. 1966: Soldiers at
Fort Dtmanche open fire on
marchers commemorating
an April 26. 1963 massacre
under former President
Francois Duvaller. Six peo­
ple die. three are shot and
others are electrocuted or
crushed In the panic.
•Ju n e. 1986: After days
of roadblocks an d d e ­
m o n stratio n s. N am phy
announces general elec­
tions will be held before
Feb. 7.1988.
•October 1986: Haitians
vote tn small numbers for
41 m e m b e r s o f a n
assembly to create a new
constitution.
• November 1987:
Haiti's military-controlled
government suspends the
first presidential Nov. 27
vote following a massacre
In which at least 34 people
are killed. After the Inci­
dent, the United States
cuts off $100 mllllon-a-ycar
In aid to the strife-torn
Caribbean nation.
•January. 1988: Leslie
Manlgat. a political science
professor, wins a widely
boycotted national election:
Manlgat's leading rivals
claim the elections arc
rigged by Namphy's pro­
visional government to en­
sure a Manlgat victory.
• F ebruary. 1988:
Manlgat assumes office as
Haiti's first elected presi­
dent In 30 years.
•Ju n e, 1988: Namphy
ousts Manlgat, declaring an
all-m ilitary governm ent
with himself as president
after Manlgat attempts to
curb the general's powers.
• S e p te m b e r. 1 9 8 8 :
Avril, an aide to JcanClaude Duvaller. seizes
power from Namphy In a
coup, promising Haitians
to save the country from
"anarchy and chaos."
• March. 1990: Supreme
Court J u d g e Ertha
Pascal-Tmutllot takes office
as Interim president, pre­
siding over a 19-mcmbcr
Council of S late, after
dictator Avril Is driven
from power following a
week of violent protests.

Haiti: At a glance
army 2 to I — and were
d e p lo y e d In fo rc e wi t h
Duvaller's declaration of a
state of siege In January
1966. Reports cited numerous
random murders of Haitians.
F o llo w in g th e y o u n g e r
Duvaller's departure from
Haiti Feb. 7. 1986. the new
government dissolved the
Tontons Macoutes. whose
members had become targets
of w id e s p r e a d r e p r is a l
killings.

6.300.000
10.714 square miles
C f H l l t Port-au-Prince
PvaaMaait Ertha PascalTrouillot (March 1990)
■ l a l a r j — C o lu m b u s
l
a
n
d
e
d
a t C ape S t. N ico las In
northwestern Haiti Dec. 6,
1492. It later became a base
for British and French bucca­
neers. A French colony was
established In 1677. Slaves
defeated Emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte's troops and Haiti
gained Independence In 1804.
becoming the world's first
black republic. A succession
or dictators has run the nation
with little interruption. To
quell political violence, the
United States occupied Haiti
from 1915 to 1934. Nearly 30
yean of dictatorship under
President Francois Duvaller
and then his son ended when
Jean-Claudc Duvaller (led
Haiti Feb. 7.1986.
The Tontons Macoutes —
" b o g e y m a n " In H aitian
Creole — were founded by
President Francois Duvaller
after an attempted military
coup In July 1958. Duvaller's
son Jean-Claude curbed their
powers after he came to
power in 1971 and renamed
them Volunteers for National
Security tn an effort to Im­
prove Halil's Image aboard.
They remained an Important
counterbalance to the military
how ever — w ith 15.000
members outnumbering the

I

Geography — Mountainous
Haiti, the size of Maryland
with 10,714 square miles,
occupies the western third of
the West Indies' Hispaniola
Island, which It shares with
the Dominican Republic.
— Most of Haiti's
6.3 million people — 95 per­
cent black. 5 percent mulatto
— live below th e World
Bank's absolute poverty level
with a per capita Income of
$380 a year. Some 80 percent
are Catholic, but voodoo Is
widely practiced. French, the
official language. Is u n ­
derstood by only 10 percent of
the population.
»y — The poorest
nation In the Western Hemi­
sphere and most densely
populated. Haiti imparts 45
percent of Its food. It has no
oil and few exploitable miner­
als. Tourism, which Increased
as Francois Duvaller's shadow
diminished, dwindled to near
nothing after reports Iden­
tified Haitians as a high-risk
group for the disease AIDS.

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�UnHud Pr— a Intamatlonal______

W ASHINGTON - W hile
avoiding the word "recession."
T reasury Secretary Nicholas
Brady acknowledged what all
the government’s numbers have
been showing — that the na­
tion's economy Is In a "slgntflBut Brady said Sunday a
recession Is "no big deal" and
this one will be short — over In
less than a year.
He did, however, call on the
Federal Reserve Board to lower
interest rates to spur economic
activity and bring the nation
m o re q u ic k ly o u t o f th e
downturn.
Brady made his comments on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
"I've been a little slow to
d e c la re 'n a tio n a l recesalon
day,'** Brady said. "But Its quite
d e a r — there's no point In being
unrealistic — that we're going to
have a significant economic
slowdown In the fourth quarter
of this year.
"1 expect that that will con­
tinue into the first quarter of
next year. We don't know how
much, but we expect that during
1901 It will turn around and we
will be back on the growth path
(of) Jobs and Investment during
that year."

that
9X P «
I We expect
during 1991
1991 it will
turn around and we
will be back on the
growth path (of) jobs
and investment dur­
ing that year 9

He did say. however, "there Is
ample room for a further reduc­
tion" In Interest rates and said
he hoped the Federal Reserve
Board — which Is scheduled to
meet Tuesday - would take
note oT both a recession and the
budget agreement worked out
between Congress and the White
House In the rail as reasons for
an Interest rate reduction.
Brady also said the economy Is
beginning to feel the effects of
the Persian Gulf crisis.
Private anlaysts have said the
severity of the recession could
depend on how quickly the gulf
situation Is resolved, but Brady
said he "has never heard the
economy discussed as any kind
of incentive" to action among
top administration officials.
Michael Boskln. chairman of
Bush's Council of Economic
Advisers. Interviewed on ABC’s

Am ericans hopeful but
anxious over G ulf crisis
Dull— Morning News________
NEW YORK - Holidays are
supposed to be a time of peace
and hope, and this year Amer­
icans have a modified version
ofeach.
Celebrations are set against
a background of war clouds.
Ju st over two weeks Into the
new year — normally the time
for a fresh start — comes the
Jan. 15 deadline for Iraq to
leave Kuwait or face U.S.-led
military force.
Americans from coast to
coast paused during their
shopping, their lunch hours
and their work shifts last
week to give their views on
the Persian Gulf crisis.
In a random, unscientific
sampling taken by The Dallas
Morning News, they talked
about what their government
should and shouldn't do.
what causes are worth their
compatriots' blood and the
oversupply of uncertainty.
Nearly all have hopes for
peace — hopes that were put
cautiously and thinly but­
tressed.
"Just the fact that they're
talking may open up the
possibility of peace." said
Cathy Fitzgerald. 24. a payroll
clerk In S outh Portland.
Maine.

"It's crazy how Saddam
H u ssein p la y s w ith o u r
minds." said Tseghe Foote.
35, who operates a Denver
Import company specializing
In African art. "I go up and
down about being optimistic.
Today. I'm 50-50."
The feelings of those with
relatives and friends In the
Middle East were more In­
tense.
"I know people who have
family there, and they feel like
everyone else." said Carol
Bason. 32. a Durham. N.C..
hospital messenger. "They
don't want them In a war.
They're scared they won't
come home again."
For most Americans, there
are principles worth dying for.
Many say it Is Important to
take a stand against agv
gresslon such as that In which
Iraq has engaged. And mang
support military action to
keep Iraq from developing
nuclear capabilities.
But they prefer economic
sanctions to bullets and say
they don’t want a war over oil.
But many people — even
those who are avow edly
hawkish — don't favor fight­
ing a war strictly for oil.
Recent polls show oil interests
as the least popular reason for
backing a war In the Persian
Gulf.

"Issues and Answers.'
It Is likely the recession will be
m lK l B n u DflCI.

He said he expects the federal
reserve to lower rates but shied
away from urging such a course.
"1 like to conduct my business
with the Fed in private." he said.
All analysts, however, seemed
concerned that the current eco­
nomic troubles could be ag­
gravated by the fragile system of
the nation's banking and finan­
cial Institutions.
WUllam Seidman. chairman of
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, has estimated that
the FDIC — which Insures bonk
customers against tosses — will
lose 94 billion this year.
On Monday, a report expected
to be made public at a House
banking committee will predict
tosses even more glum — more
than 960 billion In lhe next five
years.
But Seidman. also appearing
on “Meet the Press.” brushed
the report off. saying. "I don't
take seriously" reports that pro­
ject that far into the future.
He said the government Is
seeking ways to buttress the
banking Industry, where some
1,000 banks are on the list of
troubled Institutions the FDIC Is
worried about.

The driver of a heavy duty pickup truck kept
trucking even after this sailboat fell from a
towed trailer md landed on Interstate 4. The
boat trailer hitch apparenlty broke and the boat
crashed onto the road at the State Rood 40

overpass west of Sanford. Tne accident
occurred at 7:45 am. today and the driver
continued eaabound after losing the boat. At
930 am. today the Florida Highway Petrol said
the driver had st11not returned to the scene.

Iraq loudly insists on keeping Kuwait
Boston Globa
BHAHRAN. Saudi Arabia Iraq vowed Sunday that It would
never quit Kuwait and lam­
basted President Bush and his
advisers as a "pack of villains
and ty ra n ts" exploiting the
Persian Gulf crisis to gain mili­
tary dominance In the region.
In a bellicose editorial, the
newspaper al-Thawra. run by
President Saddam Hussein's
ruling Baathtst Party, also de­
clared: "Iraq Is determined to
stick to Its national and histori­
cal right, and there will be no
going back on Its eternal de­
cision to get Kuwait. Iraq's 19th
province, back to Its people and
origins In Iraq.”
The White House would not
comment on the statement.
Secretary of State James A.
Baker III said, meanwhile, that
he still believes the United States
and Iraq will settle their quarrel
over scheduling *n!ks In time for
him to visit Baghdad.
He told reporters traveling
with him to a NATO meeting In
Brussels. Belgium, that he Is
convinced that the U.S. public
and the world community will
blame Iraq If the talks collapse.
"We hope something can be
arranged." Baker said when
asked If he believes the Impasse
will be broken. Iraq proposed
Jan. 12 for Baker's visit to
Baghdad, but Bush said any date
after Jan. 3 Is too close to the
Jan. 15 deadline the U.N. Secu­

rity Council has set for Iraq to
withdraw from Kuwait.
A senior State Department
official told reporters aboard
Baker’s aircn.lt later that Baker
would go to Iraq on Christmas
Day If Saddam asked him to.
The official Iraqi news agency
INA reported Sunday that First
Deputy Premier Taha Yassin
Ramadan "stressed that dia­
logue desired by Iraq with the
United States Is an effective and
equal dialogue that provides
clear and positive atmosphere
for establishing Just and com­
prehensive peace."
But Ramadan, at a meeting
with a visiting delegation of the
Amertcan-lraqi Cultural Society,
also reiterated that "Iraq only
has the right to fix a date for the
meeting of President Hussein
with James Baker."
Iraq has threatened to destroy
the entire Arabian Peninsula —

"leaving only ashes," In
attributed to Saddam — and
torch Kuwait's oil Installations If
the U.S.-led multinational forces
attacks after the U.N. deadline
for Baghdad's "total and un­
conditional" -withdrawal from
Kuwait expires. Iraq has also
promised missile attacks against
Israel If the ground forces and
ships from 26 nations deployed
In the gulf seek to liberate
Kuwait by force.
In other developments, the
commander of U.S. forces In the
Persian Gulf. Gen. H. Norman
Schwarzkopf, said he expects a
war with Iraq to be an all-out
battle that could last six months
or more.
In an Interview with reporters
In Riyadh. Schwarzkopf said: "It
won't be an easy fight. ... If we
have to fight the Iraqis, there’s a
lot of them. I think they will

fight, and I think It's going to be
a tough light."
In addition, the 11.333-ton
"peace boat" Ibn Khaldoun
sailed through the Suez Canal
bound for Iraq with a load of
medicine and Infant formula.
The attempt to break the U.N.
blockade was organized by Arab
women and European peace
activists. However, many of the
Europeans left the ship In Tunis,
saying they believed the "mercy
mission" was really thinly dis­
guised pro-Iraqi propaganda.
"The women didn't want to
talk about Kuwait and Iraqi
violence." said one of the Euro­
peans who parted ways with the
mission. "They Just want to
make the West look bad. What
they really hope Is the ship Is
stopped by the U.S. Navy and
they can scream 'U.S. baby
killers’ to the TV news."

Join the Celebration
Registration Now Underway

e m u siM A S
CHCTUt
A Wealth of good feeling from our family to yours. We're hoping you have
a safe and happy Christmas filled with all the rich delights of the season.

Powell's Office Supply Co.
Since 1945

117 Magnolia Ava., Sanford

322-5842

PUBLIC NOTICE
This is to advise the residents of Seminole County that the Planning Department
of Seminole County has completed its annual Grantee Performance Report for the
1989*90 Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Program. The Grantee
Performance Report describes in detail the amount of funds spent, the various
activities undertaken and the percentage of lower-income residents benefited by
each activity under the program.
The Grantee Performance Report was approved by the Board of County Commis­
sioners on December 1 1 ,1 9 9 0 and will be submitted to the U.S. Department of
Housing &amp; Urban Development (HUD) on or about December 2 0 .1 9 9 0 .
The Grantee Performance Report is available for review by the public at (he
following location during the hours of 8:00 am • 5:00 pm. Monday through Friday:
Community Development Section
Seminole County Planning Department
County Services Building
Room W -200
1101 E. 1st Street
Sanford, Florida 32771
Any questions may be directed to Buddy Balagia or Matt Kane at 321-1130,
extension 7384.

SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
(407) 323*1450
Sanford

100 W tldon Booltvard, Sanford, PL 32773*0199
AN EQUAL ACCES&amp;EOUAL OPPORTUNITY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

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Orlando

�Decem ber 1 7 i 1 9 9 0

Sanford Herald

orts

Wrestling tourney

IN B R I E F
soeem
Lyman blanks Qalnssvllla
LONGWOOD — Brian rooks had a goal and
two assists for the Lyman Greyhounds In a 3-0
win over the visiting Gainesville Purple Hurri­
canes In boys* soccer action Saturday afternoon.
Now 3-1-2, Lyman hosts Lake Brantley in a
Seminole Athletic Conference match today
before traveling to Daytona Beach-Seabreeze on
Tuesday night.
Mike Sellcs pul the Greyhounds ahead to stay
with a goal four minutes Into the match,
converting on a throw In from Fooks. A couple
minutes before halftime. Fooks played a free
kick that Toby Lelbln headed home.
Focks scored hta goal 20 seconds Into the
second half on an assist from Sellcs.
Lyman outshot Gainesville 14-8 but the
Purple Hurricanes had a 4-2 advantage In comer
kicks. Greyhound goalie Marcus Dewberry made
three saves In notching his second shutout of
the season.

Patriot girts odgo Orango Park
ALTAMONTE SPR1N0S - Kim Black scored
the game's only goal despite a 41-shot attack to
lift tne Lake Brantley Patnots to a 1-0 win over
visiting Orange Park In a girls’ soccer match
Saturday afternoon.
Orange Park 'keeper Amy Calvert made 19
naves to thwart the undefeated Patriots, who
also had 10 corner kicks.
“It was a great game." said Patriot coach
John Schaefer. "Their 'keeper was tremendous.
She was everywhere. My girls probably played
their best game of the season and only had one
goal to show for it."
That goal came at 21:48 of the first half. Black
scoring on an assist from Nicole Delahoussaye..
Goalie Alyssa O'Brien made the goal stand up,
saving all four of Orange Park's shots to post her
ninth shutout.
Now 10-0-1, Lake Brantley will play again In
the Burger King Tournament on Thursday.

No. 2 Hornets whip No. 1 CCC
ORLANDO — Amy Geltz and Stephanie
Fculner each scored two goals as Bishop Moore
hammered Clearwater Central Catholic 7-0 In a
girls' soccer contest played Saturday afternoon.
Bishop Moore entered the game ranked No. 2
In the Class 3A-2A-IA state rankings while CCC
was ranked No. 1.
Stephanie Gringcr. Denise Lombard! and
Becky Demlng scored the ether Bishop Moore
goals. Amy and Jill Geltz each had two assists
while Karen Butz and Fculner each had one.
Amy Geltz, of Winter Springs, now has 21
goals on the year and 170 for her career. Just
seven shy of the girls' national scoring record.

BASKETBALL
Lions crunch Luthsr
OVIEDO — The Oviedo Lions girls basketball
team evened Its record at 4-4 with a 59-34 romp
over Orlando's Luther High School Saturday
night.
Christa Vaughn led the way with 12 points
followed by Betsy Hughes and Erin Munns with
10 points each. Sylvia Dames chipped In with
nine points.
Next action for the Lions will he Thursday at 6
p.m. when they take on Clermont In the opening
round of the F.ust Is Christmas Tournament.
LUTHIRIM )

Smith J 0 4 4. Ms Hon t M X C.m*ron 4 0 I X Vandml I SOX
Woltwrt 1 04 X C. Dud* 0 1 1 X Roumttrw 4 OS 4. A. Ouda I *4 4.
Total*: 140-1134.
OVIlDOtStl
S«. Domoi 4 114, Munn* 415 IX CoOro J X 4 X Jockton I 0 1X
Mlm* J 0 1 X Hugh** S00 10. Sh Domot J 04 X Voughn * 00 IX
Total*: JT 014 SO
vftar
h M

4B
Classified
Pa o s ee

* II
» H

4 W -M
II » - »

ThrM point Hold goal* — non*. Tu rn tout* — Lulhor IX O*lodo
IX Fowled Oil — non*. Ttchnlcol* — non*. Record* — Ovlodo OX

Tribe’s Mathis
wrestles back
to finish third

Captains lead
Greyhounds to
championship
LONGWOOD - When a coach
picks captions for a team, the Idea la
that those individuals will lead as
positive role models.
On Saturday, the second day of
the Lyman Christmas Wrestling
Tournament. Matt Pippin and Scott
Chance — two of Lyman High
School's tri-capUlns — turned In
Inspiring performances to lead the
Greyhounds lo the team champion­
ship.
According to first-year Lyman
coach Rick Trtblt. the Greyhounds
haven't won their own tournament
since 1974. Rounding out the top
five. In order, were Lake Brantley.
Oviedo. Lake Mary and West Or­
ange. Lake Howell finished 14th.
Chance was the Individual cham­
pion a t 189, d e fe a tin g Lake
Brantley's Tim Warren 10-9 In
overtime of the finals, while Pippin
□Baa Lyaaa. Pag* SB

Lyman trl-captaln Matt Pippin ovarcama a first-round loss lo aventual
champion Doufl 8chramm and Injured aya auffarsd during tha wrastlabacks
to finish third at 140 and halp laad tha Qraytiounda to tha taam tltia.

Central wins
rematch with
St. Stephen’s
SANFORD — In a rematch of last
year's fall cham pionship game
Central Baptist and St. Stephen's
Catholic of Winter Springs met for
the 1990 title. But this time. Central
came away with a 5-4 triumph to
win its first Sanford Church Softball
League "A" Division fall Saturday
at Chase Park.
Central Baptist advanced to the
championship game by defeating
First United Methodist 6-2. St.
Stephen's Catholic advanced by
demolishing Church of God or
Prophecy, which held first place
most of the season. 24-lO.
The four trams had finished the
regular season tied for first place at
8-4.
Also In the "A” Division were
M aranatha P entecostal (which
finished 6-6 ) and Calvary Christian
and First Baptist Geneva. Both of
whom finished 2-10.
In th e ch am p io n sh ip gam e.
Central Baptist ied 3-2 after six
innings, but St. Stephen's Catholic
rallied with two outs In the seventh
Inning to take a 4-3 advantage.
Rick Holt started the effort by
reaching on an error. Heath Short.
Jeff Sladek. and Chris Causseaux
then singled.
But Central Baptist, aided by
three walks and two errors, re­
bounded to win 5-4 In their half of
the seventh Inning.
Walks to Mike McCoy and Roy
Templeton and an error off the bat
of Dave Moss loaded the bases.
McCoy crossed home plate as Bobby
Vonherbulls walked. An error off
FlntUettaSltaStaSHt

IXIMMartCaNMUc

C T 114 I - X a

OwcittOsO** RnpSitr in JM o - io 0

Blazers bop Magic
PORTLAND. Ore. — Clyde Drcxler scored 31
points and Buck Williams added 26 points and
20 rebounds Sunduy night to help the Portland
Trull Blazers turn a 4 point fourth-quarter
deficit Into a 126-107 victory over the Magic.
The Blazers appeared to have the game
under control when they opened up an 18-polnt
lead, their largest of the night, at 91-73 with
3:39 left In the third quarter.
But they mode only two baskets In the next
9 1/2 minutes. During that span the Magic
outscorcd Portland 26-4. Including 16 straight,
to take a 99-95 lead with 8:16 left In the game.
Portland bounced right back, though, scor­
ing 15 unanswered points to take a 110-99 lead.
Drcxler's 3-polnter with 5:54 left gave the
Blazers the lead for good at 100-99.
Scott Sklles led the Magic with 21 points.
Dennis Scott and Nick Anderson each added 16
for Orlando.
C o m » I M t r * m « lr o

TV
F O O TB A LL

D9 p m. - WFTV 9. NFL. San Franslsco 49crs
ut Los Angeles Rains. |LI
Consists listing o n k o | * 2 l

t

DOUBLE TAKBB

Herald Correspondent

Cm»*IS«»M*«

1PBO BASKETBALL

DAYTONA BEACH — Seminole
High School's wrestling program
turned another comer this post
weekend as the Tribe competed In
the Seabreeze Christmas Tourna­
ment held at D aytona BeachSeabreeze High School.
Tommie Mathis was Seminole’s
top placer, flnlshlnd third In 130pound class, scorings 13-8 decision
In the consolation finals over a
wrestler from TltusvlUe-Astronaut.
Ken HufTman was fourth at 275
while Russell Heubner took sixth at
119.
Almost as important was the fact
the Seminole was represented in 11
of 14 weight classes. Last year, the
Tribe rarely had more the four or
five on the varsity.
Another indication of the progress
the Semlnoles have made are the
comments of first-year Coach Matt
□Baa Baaslaola, Bags SB

T a k in g It to th« holt ,
_ . . _
19 &gt;M(|v
Robert Redoing (No. 12, lelt)
Semlnoles, along wllh J

the Seminole Fighting year's Central Florida Classic. The tournament tips oil
10 . 8
wl(h (our n rat.r0und Qames Tuesday at Seminole
. nthcr four Seminole Community College. Seminole and Lake Mary, having
«• »&lt; —

a

* *

&lt; * - ■ . P t t , ...........

□B m Softball. Pago 2B

Get the parkas and hot cocoa — it’s soccer
season
fall like It is In most other parts of
*
It finally happened last week.
To the answer of the prayers of
Seminole County High School
ath letic d ire c to rs a n d soccer
coaches. Dr. Jorge Deju of the
Seminole County Health Depart­
ment gave his blesaing for the
county to resume scheduling out­
door athletic events at night.
The m o rato riu m cam e Into
existence with the outbreak of St.
Louts en cep h alitis c a rrie d by
night-flying mosquitos.
Because athletic d ep artm en t
budgets at county high schools
depend on the money that they
raise, gate receipts are an Important
part of their operating capital. By
playing games In the afternoon, the
schools saved money by not having
to turn the lights on but lost money
due to a sharp decrease In atten­
dance.
It'll be a while before anyone can
say with any certainty If the schools
came out ahead or behind, but the
consensus based on Informal con­
versations Is that the schools will

_____________

TONY
DeSORMIER

find they lost money (some hint at
substantial losses) from having to
play football and soccer In the
daylight.
Soccer coaches have been unani­
mous In their distaste for playing In
the afternoons, saving that players
are unable to properly prepare
themselves mentally or physically
and that the quality of officiating
has suffered.
At the risk of casting the only
dissenting vole. I'm not so sure I'm
happy that schools will go back to
playing soccer at night as soon as
the schedules can be reworked.

Th^rr
There arp
are nmhablv
probably more good
reasons for playing at night than In
the aflernoon. It's easier for purents
and fans to attend games. It's easier
for officials to work the games Into
their schedules. It's easier to ar­
range transportation for the teams
and It's easier for the players to
make the transition from clars room
to soccer pitch.
They should still be playing In the
afternoon.
Why? For one very good reason It's wanner. Laugh If you will, but
stan d in g around for some 90
minutes as the temperature drojrs
exponentially Is not my Idea of a
good time. When Lake Mary played
TampaGalthcr In the boys' Class
4A state semifinal two years ago.
the thing I remember most ts how
bitterly cold it was.
Lust year, the finals of the Burger
King girls' soccer tournament had
to be postponded because of the
severe cold (It even snowed, re­
member?)
Without getting into the debate of
why soccer should be played In the

fall like It Is In most other pari!
the country, soccer Is not a sport
that should have to be called
because of cold. A look at the
short-sleeve shirts and shorts that
make up the accepted uniform tells
you that.
Watching a Florida high school
soccer game being played In lyplcully frigid conditions, someone
once made the observation that
___ the son or daughter of un
once
elected official catches pneumonia
from playing soccer In near-freezing
weather, the sport will be moved to
a more temperate lime of the year.
But It's not going to happen any
time soon. So we unpack our
sweaters, get out the heavy Jackets,
look for two gloves that match and
try to remember what wr did with
the scarves ami knit hats llook In
the sleeves of the Jacket — that s
where I always find mine every
yrurl. we're ready to go watch
soccer.
Don't forget the thermos of hot
chocolate.

�'•I

STA TS &amp; STANDINGS
ITOPAVA
BOYS BASKETBALL
Junior varsity at 6:15 p.m. with
varsity to follow.

varsity to follow.

■l

Boult draw, drawing S tuartMartin County’s Doug Schramm
(a state finalist last year) in the
first round b o th times th e
brackets were drawn.
"I can’t My enough about
Matt," M id Titbit. "We drew

tnkrsaaa. Junior varsity at B
p.m. with varsity to follow.
boys soccer

Lake Brantley at Lyman. Junior
varsity at 1 p.m. with varsity to
follow.

NY
FWl*4»i*M*
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tle S c h r a m m a n d h ls g o a l w a s to
b e a t S c h r a m m . W h e n it d i d n 't
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m i t w in •«

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Winnipeg
is it rin ti iN

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Edmonton

OffralU. PMlnNtpW* 1
MWrwwtA J, CMcng* I
Nnw Jnrtty T, Boitat 1

Hartford
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—
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RUSHING - Mlanaaffa - WaSar 7 31.
Dai tar t- A Rka 1 minus 1 Fannay 15. Smith
I t, Wlt*an M A Andaman 11 Tampa Bay —
AnWrwn MSA CaM A-M, ToUdwarSa 7-MA
Hill 14iHarvay A ll. N rtlral-*.
PASSING — MJnnatata — Gannon
1 1 * 14. Wllaan 1+3*4374. Tampa Bay TtUavarda 1*3*1-IN. ChaoMir 11-*W.
SICK IVINO —mrnmm - Andaman
H Jana* M4L JardWl ASA A.Cartar SWA
Fannay H A C.Cartar *44. WalLar A*.
Tampa Bay - Hill A ll, Harvay M A CMb

LA Lakara
Galdan Stata
LA Cllppar*
Saattla
Sacramanto

LA Rolda n at Mlnnaaat*. 4pm.
Waihlngtan a* IndlanapiltA 1* 1* .,
Ana4ay.Dac.tt
Nam t upland at NY Jat*. l pm.
OaliM at SMMdWBtdp t pm.

MtoaUNBaNNAlpaA

CI*mland at Fttt*&gt;nr|ti. I pm.

1ICOLUIM
------------

b a c k a n d placed t h i r d

After hurting his eye, Pippin
l*onned a mask and wrestled two
more matches. Trlbli said that
he had given serious conald" ® |'° n o,° forfeiting P ippin
against Swearingen because of
the injury.
“ 1 had planned on forfeiting
him because o f his eye. but he
came to me and said ‘I can get
us a couple ofpoints if I beat this
g u y / " u ld Tribit. "So I asked
the doctors and the trainers and
t h e y a s s u r e d m e th a t h i s

CMcngo 5. MJnrw*ffnt
Calgary i. Vmtemmr I
St.LoultLRuftelnl
Plttthurgti*. Ottrnlt I
SMIadtigSlaAWtanjgagl
WanMngton nt NY Rang**. 7:3t p.m.

TaaadaySaawa
Buffalo at Harttard./:* p.m.
Taranto at NY lilendwa.7:Mp.m.
Boatan at Naw Jartay. 7:N p.m.
Wlnntpng at Ptttiburgh. M l p.m.
Mantraal at Qunhnc. 7:3* p.m.
PMIadtlpMa at Datralt. 7: N pjtt.
Vancouver at Calgary, t:Up.m .
La* Angatn at Edmontan, A: N p. m.

Jull Inkttar, MAan
Mart AraM*. 04.3M
Kami Ctaaraatar, SIX U*
Howard Twltty, *11,154
Aldn Tapia. ffX IN
BlaWaMcCallltHr. 57.500
Bryan Gorman. (A IN
Mark Wlaba. SAIN
Mika Sprlngar, 15,150
Bat Glidar,t5.1N
Cathy Jahn*ton.U.I75
Brian Claar.tAffS
Johnny Millar, IAR7S
Jim Tharpa, tANR
Oawga Bum* III, n .M

Datratt at Oma?Cy?!?~»pm. '

ORLANDOOtt)
Scott A IS AS 14. CffMg* Alt M A KIN
M 1-4 A SkllM A ll AS 31. Smith A7 13 t,
Andtftcn MS *01*. A cm A l M A WINy A4
»• t. Amity 13 Al A RaynoMn A N A l IA
Wright IS A * * Total*: 43 WIAI4 107.
FORT LAND (IN I
Ktrwy 413 44 I t WlllldflM A ll A 10 IA
Duckworth 47 44 I t Droildr 11-14 AW 31.
Parlor A ll &gt;3 IA Aing* r-13 l-t It. RMinton
I * A l 10. Coopor 03 AO A A-yant I t 04 A
Young A4AAI. Tot4l«: 43NJA4SIAA
OrUod*
N N tt n-W 7
FkrtUad
34 M 77 31-IN
Throo point g u ll — OrUndo A ll (Andvrton AS. Scott At. Wtloy M ), Portlond SIS
(Young A l Orailar 1-1. PerWr 1-4, Alngo
171. Foulad out - Acm*. TdAtn Null —
Orlando 33. Portland 31. Toctmtcsl — Aero*.
Flagrant foul — Skllt*. RMound* — Orlando
43 IAero* (I. Portlond SI (William* N I.
Auitt* - Orlando I* (SklW* A), Fortland M
tPortar II). A — T3.WA

NYI»1dnMf*7.0u»h*tt
St. Logt« 4. Taranto 1
Loe An§eHi aidm e ntw l

*“
f o r u a ."

iFwnt

San From t o at LA Ram*.* pm.

SJ

th e ru o m e .
" H e k n e w all w e e k tha t h e w a s

LA Bam* at Atlanta. I p m.
Tampa Bay at CMaagp ip m .
Cincinnati at HauaWn. I pm.
NV Giant* at FhaanU, apm.
Kanam City at San OtapA 4pm.
MataOrtaana at tan FrancHca, *p.m.
DanyaralluttW .lpm .

Mia*a*ia u rn

Marian Danti lar, U N O
BakPy Clampatt, tAMO
Barrv Jaackal. U N O
JfffWUaan.UTOO
Ru*aCachran,tt.m
GaryMcCard.tt.NO
Dam Stackton, tt.100
DavtdFaMH*.P.nO
BMIrvtna.tt.nD
AndyNarih.tt.no
OtarlaaGlhaan.tt.no
Kirk Trtplftt, tt.ne
Adam Armagoat. 11,150
Laran Rahart*. |),*so
John Adam*. tl.MJ
Danny BrlggA SIJ1S
Tim Loutlalot. tl.700
Ray Stawart, tt.700
ErlcWoada.tl.no
Bruca Soulthy. 11,175
P*rry Parkar, 11,575
Ra4Curt.tt.4N
Data Rllay, I1.4N
Jolt BrMaut, II.*50
Brian Magg.tl.3M
EdHummlk.tl.3U
DdnFenman.ff.JU
Brant Upper, tl.TW
Ron Carruda. 11.3*0
David Glafu.ff.3W
Larry Emory, 11,3*0
Lon Hlnkla, 11.3*0
Danny Edward*, tt.300
DM Richard. SUM
Tad Narky, ( U N

BAM UVM Ul

■AST
W. Connactlcut 13. Moutl St. Vlncanl 70
SOUTH
A/kanM* SI. 71 Miululppl *.
MIDWEST
SI Xavlar 71, Marycrotl N
FAR W IST
La Sail# 13. Idaho *1
Wyoming ft, Mamphl* SI. 73
TOURNAMINTS
ScraaiM Holiday InvHattaaal

w r e s t l e d we l l for t he
Greyhounds.
Lake Brantley finished second
on the strength of seven Patriots
finishing In (he top four of their
respective weight classes. Jason
Truster was the champion at
112 while Steven Roth (12S).
C h y le r Davis (M B ). C raig
S treetm an (152) and Craig
Streetman (152) all ftnlshed sec*
and. Nowels (119) and Tony
H arm on (171) both placed
fourth.
For third-place Oviedo, Nathan
Prior (103). Jam es Vela (145)
and Kyle Lamm (171) were all
individual cham pion*. Mike
Holland was third at 135 while
Chris Iaon placed fourth at 160.
Lake Mary, which hasn't done
well at this event in the paat.
claimed fourth behind thirdplace finishes by Adam Cobb
(119), Marcus Cobbe (130),
Kevin Miltonic (MS). Chrla
Napoletano (152) and Damien
GefTen (220) as well as fourthplace show ings from P aul
Wehrley (103). Swearingen (140)
and Paul Clayton (189).
Brendan Buckley (second,
130) and Ron Stanton (fourth,
220) were the only top-four
finishers for Lake Howell.

"As a whole. I’m fairly pleased
with today." said DcVincenzo.
"We still have a very long way to
go. We Oiled 11 weight classes,
which Is a step in the right
direction. We’re on our way but
we’re nowhere near where wc
should be."
Seminole won’t have another
match for about three weeks,
coming back on Jan. 8 to wrestle
at Deltona before going to
Gdgewateron Jan. 10.
"We’re looking to keep work­
ing hard and hope things start to
fall In place for us." DcVincenzo
Mid. "Our main outlook has to
be to continue to wrestle. We
have to keep at It. The guys have
while competing In hia first to get experience.
"They’re not getting discour­
tournament. Heubner sulfered a
couple of close losses during his aged because they're losing.
s i x m a t c h e s d u r i n g t h e T h e y ’re s t a r t i n g to c ome
together and act Uke a team."
tournament.
m

M s u rJ tr f f .h r k k i mmmk

Softball
Coatiaatd from IB

Jam es
Sealey's bat then scored Moss
with the winning run.
Leading C entral B ap tist's
championship attack were Moss
Krlplc. single, three runs scored).
Vouherbulls (two singles, run
scored. KBI). Tom Holland Sr..
Templeton and Sealey (one
single and one KBI each). McCoy
(run scorcdl. Ken l’erry. Eric
Luce and Blake Smith (one
single each).
C o n t r i b u t i n g to the St.
Stephen's Catholic attack were
Holt (t*&gt;o singles, two runs
scored). Short ((wo singles, run
scored I. Sladek (single, two KBI).
Tom Wilkes (double, run scored)
and Don Sr.. Chris and Scott
Causscaux (one single carh).
Powering Central Baptist's 6-2
win over First United Methodist
were Moss (two doubles, three
runs scored). Vouherbulls (dou­
ble, single, three KBI). Luce (two
singles. KBI). Templeton (single.
KDI|. John Lamer. McCoy and
Sealey (one single and one run
scored each Iand Perry Isingle).
Contributing to First United
Methodist's offense were Dean
Smith (two singles, two KBI).
Chr i s Byrnes and J a c k
Eltonhead (two singles and one
run see -ed apiece) and Mark

Whitley (single).
Taking part in St. Stephen's
24-10 romp over Church of God
of Prophecy were Chris
Causscaux (homerun. double,
three singles, four runs scored,
two RBI). Don Causscaux Jr.
(two single, four runs scored,
three RBI). Steve Woodley (two
doubles, single, four runs scored.
KBI) and Scott Causscaux (triple,
two singles, three runs scored,
RBI).
Also contributing were Holt
(two singles, three runs scored,
RBI), Wilkes (double, single,
three runs scored). Short (two
singles, three RBI). Sladek (tri­
ple. two runs scored. RBI). Don
Causscaux Sr. and Jim Nulty (
one double, one single and one
run KBI each) and Keith Sparks
(run scored RBI).
Providing the offense for
Church of God of Prophecy were
Darryl Swift (single, three runs
scored). Jason Mock (double,
single, run scored, two RBI).
Drwaync Ceres! (triple, single,
two runs scored. RBI) and Brian
Mock (single, two runs scored).
Also chipping in were Charles
Welch (run scored. RBI), Kevin
Welch (single, run scored). Joey
S h ield s (single. RBI), Rick
England (run scored) and Doug
Nash (RBI).

•KSTSUIVICBI
Would you be willing
to TRY US?
Locally owned and
operated lor 8 years.

SIZE

175-70R 13
206- 70R 14
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1B5SR13

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I

�terford H U M , Sanford. Florida - Monday. Dsesmbsr 17, 1 I I 0 - 8 S

Xeriscape reduces watering needs
N#w offlo#rt tfeofed
The Sanford J aycees elected new officers at the general
meeting held recently.
New officers are: Pam Rymnlak. president: Brent R.
Adamson, vice president: Brian L. Adamson, secretarytreasurer. Mathew Altemose. director: David Rusal Jr., director
and John ZabeL director.
Past president. Shaun Briggs, officially passed the gavel to
Rymniak at the installation meeting November 27.
Sanford Jaycees meet the second and fourth Tuesdays of
each month. Call Rymniak at 324-3985 for more Information.

Audubon Socfety to m##t
Seminole Southwest Volusia Chapter of Floirda and National
Audubon Societies will have a Christmas luncheon and
meeting. December 20. 12 noon, in the Sunshine Room at
Florida Power and Light Co.. North Maple Avenue. Sanford.
Roas Pell of Pell's Nursery In Osteen will be the speaker at the
1 p.m. meeting. Bring a covered dish and place setting. Guests
are welcome.
Contact Chellis Engstrom at 321-4418 for more Information.

Bakoatoarlng
Seminole County 4-H and the Extension Home Economics
Program are offering the first In Its aeries of intergenerationa]
programs. Tuesday. December 18. from 10 a.m. to noon. The
program la open to youth 8-18 years of age and adults 55 years
of age or older and will give participants the opportunity to
make a special holiday tea ring. The purpose of the series of
programs Is to give youth and adults the opportunity to learn
from each other by working together. Youth will be paired with
adults in this workshop. Coot is $2 to cover material.
Pre-registration Is required. Call 323-2500 ext 5560.

Oddfellows to havo mooting
Lodge No. 37 of the International Order of Oddfellows meets
the first and third Monday of every month, except July and
August, at 8 p.m. at 101 Majgnolta Ave.. Sanford.

Plgoon Fancfero to gothor
The Central Florida Pigeon Fanciers Association meets the
third Monday of each month at the Seminole County
Agricultural Center. 4300 Orlando Drive. Sanford. For
Information, call Art or Jean Anderson at 831-8033.

Xeriscape Is a term used to
i describe • landscape that re*
quires less water and mainte­
nance than a traditional or
conventional landscape. The
traditional landscape is charac­
terised by large areas of turf
accented by well-manicured
trees and ehrubs.Thls type of
landscape la typical In the cool,
t e m p e r a t e r e g i o n s of th e
northeast US. and was brought
to Florida as people moved here
from the north. Unfortunately,
this traditional type of landscape
Is not well-adapted to Florida's
sandy, porous soil, hot sub­
tropical climate, and well de­
nned wet and dry seasons. Aa a
result, traditional landscapes In
Florida require large amounta of
water and maintenance.
Dr. Oary Knox. Extension
Water Management Specialist,
believes the x eriscap e
landscaping can reduce the
water and maintenance re ­
quirements while stll) providing
aesthetically pleasing landscape.
One component of xerlscsping

CELESTE
WHITE
that he feels Is very Important Is
the use of drought tolerant
plants. Drought tolerant
Inherently require lesa "water
because they are adapted to arid
areas or to regions wtth frequent
droughts of poor aoUs with a low
w ater-h o ld in g capacity.
Drought-tolerant plants, howevt drought tole
established.
water needs must be looked after
for the first few months after
planting.
A n o t h e r c o m p o n e n t of
xertscaptng Is the concept of
natural landscaping. In natural

landscaping, plants are used
that are adapted to the climate
and the environment of the area.
The basis of this concept Is that
plants Inherently adapted to the
climate and ecology of a region
will usually require leas Irriga­
tion. pest control and mainte­
nance than less adapted plants.
Native plants work well in natu­
ral landscapes, but plant selec­
tion should take Into consid­
eration the microclimate and
topography of the site. In some
cases, native plants would not be
the most appropriate choice
because of the development of
the site cause alterations. But In
many Instances, native plants
are the perfect choice because
once established, they may not
need any water other than what
nature provides.

be toned so that each grouping
receives only the amount of
water that It needs. This set up
also has the advantage that
plants In the same area win not
be over or u n d e r watered
because they all have similar
water needs.
Another way to reduce water
and maintenance Is to reduce
some turf afeas with plants and
mulch. Turf is the largest water
user in the landscape and it
requires the most maintenance.
Instead of turf, replace with
ground covera. shrubs and
mulch.
There are seven basic prin­
cipals of xertscaptng. In this
article I’ve covered plant selec­
tion. For more Information about
the concepts of xertscaptng.
please give me a call or drop by
the Extension Service across
from Flea World off 17-93.

Orouptng plants together .by
their water requirements can
help conserve water. By group­
All Seminole County Coopera­
ing plants together In the land­ tive Extension Service !~
scape by their similar water are open to all regardless &lt;
needs, an Irrigation system can color, sex or national origin.

A rot# It t rot#...
Janat Ball says aha doesn’t
anything special to the roses
which grow In her 8anford
yard. She waters them and
fertilizes them occasionally.
She recently picked a whopper
of a blossom from her rose­
bush, though. It measured
seven and one quarter inches.

Modtfert Club to coma togathar
The Sanford Aero Modelers Club meets every third Monday
of the month starting at 7 p.m. with the "Model of the Month”
competition at Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E.
First St. All phases of R/C model aircraft are represented. The
club's flying field is located in Sanford. For more Information,
contact Lee Dargue at 574-4732.

Ovaraatara to hava atap study
A step study of Overeaters Anonymous is conducted on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. at West Lake Hospital. State Road 434.
Longwood. For more information, call Charlie at 323-8070.

Narcotics Anonymous to mast
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Ave . Sanford.

Clogging groups to hava claaaas
Dixieland doggers hold classes 7-8 p.m. each Monday at the
old Lake Mary fire station. First Street and Wilbur Avenue.
Lake Mary. Cost is $28 per 10-week session. For more
Information, call 321-5267. The club meeting Is held from 8-9
p.m.. at the fire station.
The Old Hickory Stompers hold classes 7-8 p.m. each
Monday at the Knights of Columbus Hall on S. Park Avenue.
Sanford. Cost Is $2.50 per class. For more Information, call
349-9529.

Halp for gamblars offarad
Gamblers Anonymous‘and Gam-Anon for family and friends,
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-smokers) at 7:30
p.m.. Church of the Good Shepherd. 331 Lake Ave.. Maitland.
For more Information, call 236-9206.

Caaaalbarry Klwanla to maat
Klwanls Club of Casselberry meets at 7:30 a.m. every
Tuesday at Village Inn. U.S. Highway 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road. Longwood. For more Information, call 831-8545.

No happy ending in child abuse cases
ft Some months
ago. you published a letter from
."Anonymous, Please" regarding
her 4-year-old child’s experience
with child molestation. She said
she had taught her daughter
abut her private parts at age 4.
and "within five months she was
molested.”
That letter was not the first
you have published on the
" h o r r o r s to r ie s " of chi l d
molestation. I have been waiting
for some letter giving balance to
the near hysteria that Is gripping
our society on the subject.
As a lawyer who has handled
many cases Involving children
who were said to have been
sexually abused, may I share the
following observations:
Children do lie. They don’t call
It lying — they call it "making
up sto rie s." And with e n ­
couragement from a parent and
"professionals." these children
will eventually believe their own

______________

stories. On the basis of an
accusation alone, the accused
rent may be denied access to
Is child for months — or even
years.
For years children have been
sexually abused by neighbors,
baby sitters, misted friends and
relatives. Teaching them to
scream, kick, hit and run will
not protect them . The best
protection Is to watch your
children closely and keep the
lines of communication open.
I was in court recently on a
child m olestation case. The
Judge stated that more than 80
percent of such cases that had
come before him had been
frivolous — the accusation has
been made for the purpose of
gaining an advantage In other
actions. I have every reason to
believe that what the Judge said
was true.
One prospective divorce client
said to me. "My husband Is a
sexual deviate — a pervert —
and I want you to see to It that
he has no unsupcrvlsed contact
with our children!"
When I pressed her for an
e x a mp l e of h e r hus band' s
perverted sexual behavior, she
replied. "He hides Playboy mag­
azines in his underwar drawer. ’’
f

t

DBAS LAWYER: Thank you
for an excellent letter to Il­
lustrate the other side of the
story.

For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, Dec. 14.

DBAS ABBY: I am writing this
lettei on behalf of my father who
died last week of lung cancer. He
was very smart about so many
things, but he wasn't smart
enough to quit smoking before It
killed him.
I want you to know that my
father loved you and your col­
umn for as long as you've been
writing It. I used to tell him that I
always read Dear Abby last
because I wanted to save the
best for the last, then he’d say.
"I can't wait that long. I read her
first."
Mv father loved The Houston

Post and he taught his chlHrrn parly Is ahead of you." was the
to love It. too. Anyway. Abby, 1 reply, "so we can all go." Any
Just want you to know that you further explanation from me was
brought a lot of Joy Into the life met with anger and insults.
of a wonderful man whose name
Please clarify this for me.
was Charles Elton. We burled
him with his beloved newspaper Abby. I always thought that
— your section being on top. He latecomers should go to the end
would have wanted It that way. of the line and wait their turn. If
I am Joined by a friend. Instead
With love...
of causing hostility by letting my
frjend In. I give up my place In
line and Join my friend at the
My heartfelt end.
condolences to you and your
Was I...OUT OF LINE?
family on the loss of a loving
DBAB OUT O r LUVSt You
father. Thank you for giving me
permission (on the telephone) to were not out of line, but you
publish your name. You said you were outnum bered. Too bad
"knew" your father would have there were no security guards
loved soilng your letter In The present at the time. Free-for-all
Houston Post. Who knows? fights have been known to erupt
due to that sort of rudeness, but
Perhaps he can.
given today's climate for un­
't Recently at an predictable violence, you used
amusement park. I noticed a good Judgment in not making an
group of people waiting In the Issue of It.
middle of a line, when one of
them broke in. By the time we
-------B W o y d T t» $ rtitt
were even with them (It was a
double, divided line), they had
(h a u t »5S \
all broken In at that spot. When
the lines merged, my group was
MWY.i7-n«ro-7in
Immediately In front of them.
Then, one of them crowded In
ahead of us. Shortly thereafter,
all of t hem tried to push
through.
Thinking they did not un­
derstand that this Is rude. I
began to politely explain, asking
If they felt that we had crowded
In front. "No. but one of our

�)

40 — Sanford Herald. Sanford, Ftortda - Monday, December 17, 1W0

71— WHpWewM

CLASSIFIED ADS

IN IMS CIRCUIT COURT
OPTNK lie H T IR N T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
M A U D FOR
ICMINOLS COUNTT,
PLORIOA
u tiM e iiS a u r
THE FIRST, P A .
Ptotatlft.

Sw m lnol*
M TC 4N P

O rla n d o • W inter Park

3 2 3 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3
w w .w m .w m

PMntIN.
SONOAGUICB BR YAN T
PUBLICATION
Te: long* Oufco Bry ant
itm i.w s i.
Tilton Oa. 117*4
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D that a
Camptaint Nr Outof Tttto muaMng real prapaily to ha
County of Samtoeto. Stole ef

TOWNS CENTRE. INC. at. at..
D o t a n d a n t t .
NOTICE OP SALE
NOTICE IS HSEBBY GIVEN
that wt Nw IMh Pay *4 January,
teat, at 11.4 A M . at me w w
Dear el mg Mam Ceurtheuw fn

Stvvtsvflt

equity pior-

Ida. M ARYANNS MORSE.
Ctort at Ihe Cfrrett Court, will

G ? n tv iiv

•t public
County.

LEO SEC IS TW O S*B ROE
M W H OF NW to OP SW to
OP SB to
i tiled In Iht* Court. You
■ N aarw wrttton
N any. to Nto cam-

11IS Palm Bey Read. N.E.
Palm Bay, Ftortda a n a
an ar Bator* January 4. m i , and
totltohaartghdtWthawrttton
' wth ha clark at hi*
Fallura
raautt to a |wdgwtlhaul torthar naftca.
WITNESS my hand and Rw
anal at hi* Court an N « M h day
*4 November. IM .
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Aa Ctort af lha Caurt
By: Heather Brunner
PiMtoh: December 1. ml 17.14.
19BB
DEAN

LISA L A O V IR TIf H M R T
BID! W/TI-tt
R O T I C I IS N I R I S Y
RIVER. Nut Rw OTy Pi l « M
FierMe will receive
up N 1:0 PAL an i
January }, 1f*1, k
lag Office, Ream Ml *a
following Item*:
CYPRESS MULCH

FICTITIOUS NAME
Naffc* to hanky gtvaw that we
arg engagad to BaaNtoaa at M
Sa Karvwi. lantord. Samlnela
County, Florida, unear the
Ftctltfau* Name at LIVINO
W A TE R C A TH ED R A L HOM E OF CALVARY CHA­
P E L. and that an Mend la

meite# to: The City at I
Purchasing Offiea. OS H. Part
Avenue. Santord. Ftortda 0171.
The naiad MM will ha publicly

Clark of ho ClrcuM Court, SamIneta County, Ftortda. In accardanca with ha P ta iliia ii at
Nto Flcttttou* Name Statute*.
T »W N : Sactton M AM Ftortda
Slatwto* ftp.
T H E REAPING AND THE
REAPER MINISTRIES. INC.
Dr. Denial Flachar. Nan.
PuRNrt: Navamkar to a Dvcamkar A 1417, M B
DEZ11S

e p p w e ie rif m er gemw o r y or

1 : « P M In the City Cemmiglen Chamber*. Ream 117,
SanHri City Hall.
S^o^tlicAtiou
tho pCB^9l
SM tarew are available. el na
ceet. m Ihe Purchasing OHM,
Ream Ml. OB N. Part Avenue.
SenNrtL tier Me. (M l) XOMU.
Pa
wliitwlbai
The City at
i right la accent er rated any
all M l with er without

HO T N I CIRCUIT COURT
FORSCM4NOLICOUWTT.
FLORIDA

to accept the MB M ich In IN
IuPgtmanl bo^it o^irv^i^i h
attaf ihe City.
CITYOP UN P OR O
Welter Sheerin'
Purchasing Agent
Oecembcr IS M S
Publlih: December 17. m i
DEA-111

IN R l t ESTATE OF
GORDON EELCHBR.
NOTICE OP
ADMIN 1STRAT K M
The admlnlilrallan el the
• M ia ef OOROON B ILC H ER .
d e c e e te d , F ile N u m b e r
oe-eae-cp. m pending m me
Circuit Cauri tar Seminole
C o u n t ,. Florida. P -»b a te
Division. Ihe aOdrn* of which la
County Courthouee,
FL a n i. The name*
and addrttMt e&lt; the personal

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EISWTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

i? » » \W 2 Z :

Ci m Nb.1 (MHDCA14A
i’l

FierMe SerNe.i i
S O U TH E A S T M O R TO A O E
COMPANY,
Plaintiff.

A L L IN TE R E S TE D PER
SONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All parten* on wham thl*
notice it terved e to have oh
lecttona thet chaltonge Ihe valid­
ity el Ihe will. Ihe qualification*
el Ihe pertenel rapre aentallve.
venue, ar |uri*dktton el IM*
Court are raqulred te tile lltolr
ebiectlani with thl* Court
W IT H IN TH E L A T E R OF
TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R THE
O ATE'O F THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS A F TE R THE
D A TE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS N O TICE ON
THEM .
All cradltart at the docodont
and other person* having claim*
er demand* agalrvtt dacadint *
attato an wham a copy el too*
notice l* aerved within three
month* otter the date el the lk*t
puts! leal ion at IM* notice mvtl
llto their claim* ertlh thl* Court
W IT H IN TH E L A T E R OF
TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R THE
D ATE OF THE FIRST PUELI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY OAYS A F TE R THE
D A TE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM .
All ether credltere el Ihe
dacedanf end perten* having
claim* or demand* egeimt Iht
decedtott'i atlato mutt llto thalr
claim* wim Ihl* court WITHIN
TH R EE MONTHS A F T E R THE
D A TE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
A L L CLAIMS. DEMANDS
AND OBJECTIONS NO T SO
F IL E D WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
The dale el the flrtl public*
lien at Ihl* Notice It December
&gt;0. 1toe.
Pertenel Rapreienlellve:
IRENE G. NETTLES
Apt. 110. Sallpolnto Apt*.
401W. Samlnole Blvd.
Sanford. FL 11771
Attornay tor Ptrtenal
Rapreyentatlva:
THOMAS A. SPEER
Ol SPEER 4 SPEER. P.A.
P. O Boa 11*4
Santerd. FL H77111*4
Talaphona 14(7) m e ta l
Florida Bar No.: 07*473
Publish Dectmbtr 14 IT, Ito*
OEA77

o a le j .v a n a n tw e r p .

II living,
etui, del.
NOTICE OP ACTION
STATE OF FLORIDA
TO: SCOTT MILLER
Whcee reilBence It unknown.
YOU ARE NOTIFIED th«1 an
edNn to toroctoee a merlgege
on the tallowing property in
Semlnoie County. FierMe:
LOT II. H IO O E N LAKE
V IL L A S P H A S E IV . A C ­
CORDING T O T H E P LA T
THEREOF AS RECOROEO IN
PLAT BOOK O. PAGES » W
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA,
he* been Hied egelntt yeu end
OALE J. VANANTWERP. II
l i v i n g and R E N A
VAMANTWERr-. hi* wlto. If
living. Including any unknown
teeute *t »eld Defendant*. II
either he* remarried and II
either or bom a* *aid Defendant*
er* d*ceet*d. their respective
unknown heir*, devlne*. grent**t, aitlgn***. creditor*,
lienor* and Iruatoe*. and ell
other eerion* claiming by.
through. under or again*! the
named Defendant*. SUSAN E.
MILLER and yeu ere required
to *erve a copy of your written
dttonse*. II any, to II on:
JOSEPH M. PA N IELLO .
ESQUIRE. Plaintiff* altornty
who** addr*** I*:
101 N Franklin Street, Sulto
J7M. Tempo. Ftor Ida m Bl
an er before the 4th day of
January, m i , end Ilia Iht
original with the Clark oI thl*
Court tllhar bafore servlet an
PlainlllT* attorney or Immedl
airly thereafter; otherwise a
dtieuil will be entored egelntt
yeu lor the relief demanded In
the Complaint or Petition
DATED on thl* l*th day ol
November. I**0
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Haalhar Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publitn December L 10, 17.1*.
itoo
DE A 11

' R O

X R O E

X O Z P

N X

J 2 R L X

V N T K I T I
D R O X ,

N X

X N H X

P I R t D N H

N V

N P T X X J L X X
W X K V • I

. *

—

M N I I

J H S O R X D Z T
X M U I Y I A .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A lady la ona who navar shows
nar underwear unintentionally * — Lallan Day.

We pey your tuition.
• ••
WY Oftor:
•The PMwaf Treming- In The
"ORta*" And The "Field"
•Ogportuniftotin Re*M*nti*l
AndCemmertlai Reel
■Mato
• Tramandeut CammHtton
Akjud|mume
AwMrfH
tana
ww
r ip
i»
*•»
Wad.. Doc. l*m.7:MPM
L knifed SaaffngI
IM P w k Dr., Santord
Contact: AlChtodl

’ n M ir t -A Tha ttorth IF7 toot at the Eaat
M l JB MM at (ho NarttMealto at
Sectton a, TaamaMp It South,
Range 11 B a it. Seminole
County. Florida. LESS that part
ol the Norm n s * tool ot Rw
to at Sectton n . TawnaMp it
South. Range It Eaat. Samlnato
County. Ftortdh more particu­
larly Pater Ibed a* fallow*:
Commence at the toertheett
at Ihe toermwaU to at
I Sectton 11. lhanca run South
i at the Merthweil to et
aaW Sactton a • dtotanco at
a * Nat to the Pemt at Reg*
«s'4P* weal &lt;
Beet line MB.M tout; I
North a degree* 411*" watt
along Ww South Una at Rto Norm
I D S Nat. a dtotanco at X I
area* U ' 4T ’ Eaat. a dtotanco at
is o* tott la the Paint at a
Curvature at a Curve COncava to
the Southwel l and having a
radius at IMS Nat and a Central
Anglo at I I dagrea* t r IT ';
the Art at aaM curve J*.H Net
te the Paint at Tangancy thane*
run South m degree* 4114” Beat
a dtotanca at 4».*1 hut to the
Point ot Beginning TOGETHER
W ITH Wtot part at Ihe North
s*7JB hat at Rw Eaat Ml JB toot
of the Northeda lto el Section H.
TawnaMp II South. Range 11
Eaat. Samlnato County, Florida
ttoaa the Sauth M i Nat of Rw
Narth 4BS toot of m* Wet! mb
Seat ot lha Eaat MB toot and Rw
Narth I S toot aMha Weal MB
toat at lha Narth tSS Sait at the
Boat m toat
RlgM-af-Way).
ly BaatJtoad a
mewca at the
#t Itl9' NtHfMMMri1 It •*
Sectton a . hence net South M
dagrea a War* Wbat atong Rw
Eaat Una at the Narthem t to of
aatd Sactton n a dtotanca ot
ISS.RB teal te the Paint at
Beginning; thence cenllnue
“
w a r Waet
run Narth I I
4114" Wbat atong Rw South If
ef the North W7 tott at the aeid
Warmwatt to a dtotanca at 1113
toat; mwtea run Narth I t de­
gree* Strtl Wb*t a Pittance at
0.1* feet to the Point el •
Curvature ete Curve Canceve to
the ‘ iertheetl and having a
radlue at H I M Net and a
central Angle et te
•tang Me Arc of Sold Curve
143.** Net ta the Point ol
Tangancy; hence run North 00
dagrea* aS'4*" E*»t a dtotanca
ef m i l toat; hence run South
i t dagrea* 41147 Eaat a dlt
fence el S.M Net to Ihe Point of
Beginning.
The above late la made
purawant la Final Summary
Judgment el Farectoaur* en­
tered In h* above-«tytodcaua*.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I
have her*unto tat my hand and
oHlclei tael mi* nth day ot
December, ifte.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk al Circuit Court
By: Jana E. Jewwlc
Deputy Ctort
Publith Dacember 17,14. I M
DEA IM

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle# It hartby given that I
am engaged In butlnat* at 170S
Hwy. 17*1. Sanford FL H77I.
Semlnew County, Florid*, under
Itw Fktllfeu* Name el HI TECH
ELECTRONIC SUPPLY, end
the! I Inland to regtttor Mid
name with Iht Clerk el Ihe
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida. In accordance with Itw
Provlilant el the Flctllleu*
Name Statute*. TeWIt Section
**S 0* Florida Statute* 1*57.
John Vtrrtngle
Publith: Oactmber 1. 10. 17,14,

1*10

O EA n

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT.
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. WSIfhCA-14-E/L
C.V . BUTLER FARMS. INC .
Plelnlill,
vt
DEBORAH A. DYER. THOMAS
O. DYER, tooutaot DEBORAH
A. DYER, and any unknown
hair*, davit***, grantee*,
creditor*, and ether unknown
perten* or unknown tpouta*
claiming by. through, end under
any ol lha above nomad
Defendant*.
Defendant*.
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE I* hereby given that
Ihe undesigned Ctort el Ihe
Circuit Court el Samlnole
County, Florida, will on the 17m
dev el January, m i. el 11:00
o'clock am al the Watt Front
door at lha Semlnoi* County
Ceurtheuw in Sanford. Florida,
oftor tor Ml* and toil *1 public
outcry to Ihe highetl end betl
bidder hr ceth, the tallowing
deteribed property tllueto In
Seminole County, Florida
L a i II. Block It.
W EATHERSFIELD SECOND
ADDITION, according to Itw
plat thereof at recorded In Plot
Book II. Pagr* 101 and 101.
Public Record* ef Samlnole
County. Florida
pwrtuen! to Itw Final Judgment
entered In a caw pending In Med
Court. Ihe Uyto ot which It
Indicated ebev*
WITNESS my hand and of
llclel Mai ol ten) Court Ihl* tm
day of December. I M
fCOLIRT SEAL)
Maryann* Mart*
CLERKOF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By JerwE Jewwic
Deputy Clerk
Pubilth December 17. J*. IMO

OEA II*

o o c .id .m t.w n H i
••ALP R IM Y *
Will train an cemp-iter
•yttoml Light Will* a n all
mar* needadlDwYt ha unem
ptt^ S S 7 m ftS n u m

80B8WPWMMPW
• DAILY SM*E_DAILY PAY*
Ceil Bab....... T O TNl attar 1pm

Q
&lt;P&gt;
12— O f t t C e r H f k D t H

41— Monty te L u ll

I SECURITY NATIONAL I
S
ItR D H h
g
K t t i g n i t t t i i t t

L t g il N o llc tt
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS KAMI
Notice W hereby given hat I
am angagad In Buakwa* *4 P.O.
■aa U l. Chufuafo FL u m a
l amlnala Caunty. Ftortda.
me Ftcnnewe name at
POWER OROUP. and that I
Inland to ragiitor Mid name
wim the Secretary of Stela.
Telleheaaee. Ftorlde. in eccardanca with the provision* al
ha Flcttttou* Nam* Statute*.
To-Wit: Section t*5*t. Florida
Statvto* I*J7.
Marvin Van Warmer
Publith: Dacamiar 17, I M
OEA-117
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME
STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN:
NotIc# It twraby given that ha
undanigned. purtuanl la the
"Flclltleut Name Statute’*
Chapter M LN , Ftortda Statute*.
Intend* la rtglttor m* toitowing
Flctllleu* Nama with lha
Dlvliion al Carperatlent of the
Department of Slat*, tor the
State et Ftorlde and wim the
Ctort el he Circuit Ceurt. In end
ter Seminole County. Ftorlde.
all upon receipt of proof ef the
Pubtketlen of mi* Mafic*, fo­
wl ! : A M E R I C A N
DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIES,
under which the following I*
angagad or will be ingagiB In
butlnett et I M Height* Lane,
bongwood. Seminole County,
Florida 127SO.
The wtoartlgnad I* the owner
and Intarestod party to *uch
llctltleut name and will be doing
butlnet* under laid tictitlou*
nam e; F lo r id a P rin tin g
Equipment end Supply Co . I M
Height* Lane, bongwood. Florl
da 127)0
Dated: November it. I M
F lor Id* Printing Equipment
end Supply Co.
By: MlItenMercado.
Pr**ldonl
Publith: Novomtwr to 4 Docamber 1.14 17, I M
0EZD4

M UN LO W S
ot credit 11 * M to
Cadi....... 4P-S
EQ U ITY Uett*. Purthato*.
M t u a c u l HI. Md A tod
Mfgtl Good/bad credit I Fett
approveltl Ooer
Cer»....Lk. Mlg. I
aHhUgt/1-BMh

Logal N o llc tt
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
OP T H E B IO t m iN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OP PLORIOA,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLECOUNTY
•BN IR A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO. tg-MSCA I4E/L
WEYERHAEUSER
MORTOAOE COMPANY,
Ptemtllf,
v*.
JAMES R. McGILL e/k/a
J B . McGiLL.et.ua..
Detandent*.
NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY OtVEN
purwant Ip a Final Judgment ef
Farectowrq deled December S,
1*14 end entered In Ceee No
to-ltto CA 14E/L. ef the Circuit
Ceurt of the ItO H TE E N TH
Judicial Circuit In end tor SEM­
INOLE County. Ftorlde wherein
W EYER H A EU SER MORT
GAGE COMPANY to Plelnlltf
and JAMES R. McGILL a/k/a
J.B. McGILL. ef. in. are Defen­
dant*. | will tall to ha Mgtwat
and bat! bidder tor caah In he
lobby ef Rw SEMINOLE Caunty
Courthouee. In Santerd, Ftorlde.
at U :M o'clock AM . on the IMh
day of January, M l, he toilow­
ing deter hod pcqpocty a* tot
term In t*M Final Judgment, to
Let 1*. H ID D E N L A K E .
PHASE III. UNIT VII. accord­
ing t* the Plat thereof a*
Recorded In Plat Reek M.
Paged) 7* and IS el he Public
Record* ef Seminole County,
riorirti
DATED mi* tm day ot D*
MARYANNE MORSE
At Ctort ef tefd Caurt
By: Jane E. Jewwlc
A* Deputy Ctort
Pubilth: December 17.141*
OEA IM

&lt;fg)

Jobs! Jobs!

We have immediate
openings!
• P a in te rs
• B o o k B in d e rs
• C o n s tru c tio n
• W a re h o u se
• P ro d u c tio n
E m p lo y e e s w ith tra nsp o rtation
n e e d e d Im m e d ia te ly

Apply
1018 S. French Ave., Sanford
____________8 A M . SHARP____________

LA B O R W O R LD U.S.A. INC. I

*

MM O U S T
Thl* wet the comment ef Mr.
Gary I . el Santerd whan he
celled hia l aniard Herald
Ctaaalttod CenauNanf t o atop
hia ad tram continuing an It*
tchedutad 10Day Special. Hi*
ad ran only a tow day*I Seme
P e titio n Y O U need te
edvertite el tow ceat and
achieve quick reauttiT Try aur
14 14 4 M-Day Special rate*
Lowed coal par line for con
aacutlvo day*' advortldng.
Advertiser* era troo to cancel
e» won ea rewlt*ere reached
CLASSIFIED D IP T .
u n t i l ___________

S tA M

o M ot
C tA

if— Pit*
SCOTTISH Tarrtor Pup*. AKC.
Champ. Elaadllna*. that*.
TM Jd U fW .

"OVtt 21 AffUCMTST
Mr*. T. E. el Santerd catted
her Santord ttorafd Cleadfled
Canwttant to stop her ad Irem
continuing on It* scheduled
II-D a y Spaclal. Mr*. E.
further commented. "The
Santord Herald WORKS I”
Seme Positton YOU nood to
advortlM at lew ceet end
achieve qolcfe rewtt»7 Try eur
to. (4 4 MDoy Speciet rate*.
Lowest cast par lina tor canwcutlve day*' advertising.
Advertiser* ere free to cencef
e» «een w rewlt* are reached
CLASSIFIED DEPT.

o H o

D R E A R Y B if o rw lM t le B i
| K ^ D t W &amp; I ^ J to, | M W t
HOLIDAY CATE Rl HOI 01v*
your tired wfto a break I Gift
Cartthceto* avol I M d-M I
HOLIDAY
A lotting gift I
Eafe CaRSdaN
SCU M DIPT CERTIFICATES
Freddto’t Ohm Cantor
1&gt;— H o J M o y
C M M C a re
N M artl By hr. ar day.
toavattwkfditwril HRS7KL
1BRS. Part Aug, M -7 M
14— P t o r f t H
30 FLOW 1STI M
ad and gat W%
«
| | | |
Wtreavc. j —j- k aiii| f i| tl e il?
1 S -P « t t

XMAS P U P P IIStl German
I twpfu rp. 1 mat*. 4 tomato.
ARc-RaaiCuttotii m aw*
14— C ra f t * a n d
X T* R IS A L I C O L L IC T ia L d
apon ovary Sunday tit Xmat
tor InddeOutdda Sato*! m i
4 t aaford Are, m-140*
■ L ID A N T IMPORTS! Gilt*
and Hem# Dacarl Personal
l*ed m weina htfp. aaMtU
H O U SntlF* CRAFTS. Holiday
lift* GALORE 11 CaM Jaeat
.— .....n t a ii
17— S p o r t s w e a r
FL SPORT WEAR: m SM4 Jog
wf*. yweet*. ntgM thjrt* and
m a a a v c w n T «a A * ii

1»— Leiury Items

I T N i l MINK FUR XMASI
LABRADOA PUP* - AKC. St* • White
mink |ackat w/tnow top
each. Will Iwid tor Chrlttma*.
trim.
Sin mrt. Appraisal
Call after 1PM. m 1*21
MM*. Sato U OOa....... MM*H
R O TTW E ILE R ARC PUPSI • W I R I L I t t REM OTE 4X4
Champ. I In**, quarantaed
TRUCN with 7.1 Nlcad bet
healthy and happy* **M. I
tary, 1 hour charger and liew
wk*. 12/n aaemawt
chargar All ether bettor kt
RO TTW EILER PUPSI AKC.
Includad. Alw ha* road gear
aac. tompar/canWrm. Parent*
for high ipood. Mad* by
on premise*. A ll Shaltl
Soar*. Came* with custom
carrying can. 1100. S744MI

�i

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Monday. Dacambar 17. 1990 — l

7 1 -W t»W n f«

K 7 T 'N * C A B L V L E P by L i n y W ric k !

1R 7-

99—Ap artm ents

• a aVOLT# • *

U M P O I M Y SERVICES
* m iP N O M S M n *
A manufacturer at tockmito

SANTORO - rtf Port A*. I
Bedroom. Wkly m monthly t
dep. Very BtasPTTUJMtaf 4

o TRACTOR T t A IL IR a
• DRIVER*
V hr I Start up your career
today! Thriving manufacturer
pay* all evomlght enonw t I
AAA EMPLOYMENT
m m .n m u .a y v H
TYPIST U00 wkfy. at homo, lor
Info tantf SASE. Tropical
Typo. Boo 1*1 OH. Tavernier.

FLPCT_____________

UP TO t i l hour procowing mall,
woobly chock puarantooa.
Proa detoll*. arllo. SO. IS N
Central. Milo 2S5SFL. China.

CA»ma_____________

S t-S It.s a per hour plot
benefit*. Will train. “ '
nowI MF1-IHA...A—
I full time.
Start SAM par hour.• Apply m
portan, m Commercei Way,
Way

91—
Afartimnft/
HeusetoShere
T lM A L i - 5art™DeB»ry- hom&lt;
with m i n . All amanlllo*.
tns/mo piut 1/1 util, for*

ropuiroo. mna/mrru

LAKE MARY • 1 Roam mat**
neededI 1/1 home, downtown
area. *100/month pay* all I
JmmedlateaccegJlOIOOleve*

92—

Senior Citizen
Discounts

9&gt;— Dooms for Pont
LOMOWOOO-Lk. Mary aroal
Nlc*. clean. Cable, air. kltds
en privilege*. 575/wh«l131«3
A IR P O R T R L V D . A re a •
Fumlihad Room In privet*
homo I US/wh...PM4H.S-2pm
TM W. M L 1 turn. Rm«.. prlv. be
w/thowor, mlcro/refrlg. 1100
wh. SingleRm»
CLEA N ROOMS, kltchon A
laundry tocllltle*. Cebto TV.
Start In* at *75/wt......I » H O
IISTORIC OASLES NOTSLI
01 Mapnolia Ay.. Sanford.
Dally, wkly, monthly rental*
q is a u p ii ....a i u w

a i-iw

PORO walk to town
Park AvI Lg. rm „ fplc..
parchIMSwk. utllpd- OO-lUl
•IVATI Entrance and bath,
table, there kit. i n p a r e k .
plu* v&gt; utilihe*. 3U-4543 Evet.
ROOM, private bath, houte prlvllago*. Cablo. uo/wfc plu* to
utllltlat. Ml- I0W. leave m«g
ROOM In private homo. Houte
prlvllagotl Nice Sanlord area

m-atiooem-m-ioot

SANFORD • Large room, con
venlent. quiet location,
«3S/wo*fc....p»-Htr/tao*o tat*
SANFORD - Eaty accatl all
aroat. Haute prlvll.. SlS/wk.
Dh count tar menDUy 222-47*1
Sanford - Clean roomI Contlder
reduced rent lor houtakeep
InoI Female p«*taii*dMI-*477
SLEBPINO ROOM. M J per
waek. 701 Brlarclllf St. San

MM Labe Mary R M Sanferd
WHERE YOU W ILL................
• SEBi SP-A-C-t-O-U-S
IRRtRATNAPTS. ANO
• NEAR) NOW YOU CA N ’

r w o u t ssTsi i w a
d SPEAK I QUICKLY t o
RESERVE ONE POO YOU
DURUM THIS
IM elm M iFdlSsoddf
c d m iP S M W fm u
M M tm g M C Tn
Single itory ttudto. I A 1
BWm. Apt* Many eitraa Incl.
*tarage tpect! Quiet, eery
community I Nice lartdtcap
I. On-tll* manager* wh*
a R i l l Starting at Utf/mo

* COURT

ITT-TSAI

LO. 1 Bdrm. move In before
Xmaal it* rent due en I f 1.
*05 Inc/cable 1DA P H
LK. JENNIE APTSI I bdrm
apt*, with C/H/A from
*Jd/iN . Include* water A
a**. Cad Braber-------- J H M
MARINER'S VIL LAOS
Lake Ad* I bdrm.......O ff me

lbdrm..tmmoAup..m**&gt;*

DORCHE STE M AIMS
Labe Mary m a m
Call between 11AMSPM

1223 MOVE IN SKCUU
I bedroom I bath
and I bedreeml bath available
*1 I bdrm.. I
bath, nlc* area, off tt. prklng.
*Wprwk.,*IMiec. m g w *
SANFORD • Madera 1
dealer, appll., mini Mind*.
C/H/A. *3**/month.... *0441*4
U N FO R D •Large I or 1 bdrm.
From SMS/mo or SltS/wk. No
depoalt. Pool. CHA P3-MM
STUDIO Aptl US/wk. I Bdrm.
S/O/wk. Both In convenient
location*.....SN-llfl/metaaa*
101— H o u s e s

Fu m is h o d / P o n t
RIVERFRONT On* bdrm. cot
tag*. Partly (urn. Utllltle*
Inc, adult* weaetainaaio
I D — Ho u s es

U n fu rn is h e d /Went
CHAMMG HISTORIC HOME
1 bdrm. I bath. C/H/A. U1S v
tec. Comer loll.......... m a m
D E L A N O • G olf-view
townheuaol 1 bdrm. H i ba.
garage, clean, U1S..... ilf-****

RENTALS, RENTALS
Home* In oil *Im l darting
Irom tie* per month.In De­
ltona. No loo to tenontt
Global Realty IM44tl

SANFORDI Furn./Unturn. U00
A up plut dep. and re ft No
pet* n i n e or IN -*044
U N FO R D Large I bdrm. pool,
laundry. C/H/A. KNS/mo or
lllS/wk NodepotllIPa**l
U N FO R D Hug* 1 bdrm . dot*
lo downtown. Complete
prlvacyl 1100 per weak plut
*100 tacurlty Call m -m *
U N F O R D • I Bdrm.. excellent
location, complete prlvacyl
MS per waek plut BOO tacurlty
Call.......................- ......m -m *
1 ROAM. APT •Partially Iurn .
All utllltlat pd. SlOO/wk plut
tec, depoalt. CaU........ MO Ml*

9t— Renters Specie!
99—A p a rtm e n ts
U nfurnished / Rent

SANFORO
1 bdrm 1 both, now Interior
paint I............ U N per month

1 0 5 - DuplexT rip le x / R t n f
D UP LEX ' Lg. 1 bdrm Cerporl.
Inaldo utility rm .. C/H/A. no
pot*. MCO/mo t- dep...122-*441

REAR DUPLEX
At MIS Kentucky Ave, OFF E.
SI. Rd it. 1 bdrm. I bath. 5371
per month Call 221OA3
SANFORD 1 Bedroom, kit.
appll., carport, hook-up*.
Alr/Hool.unpr. mo *41 UM
1 BDRM.. control H/A. Sanford
area, taoo per month plut
depotll *300/21or *00m l

W * * J450* * w
1 bdrm 1 bath duple* Walk
Ing dltlanct to Lake Monro*
aero** from park. No pat*
STAIRS PROPERTY
MANA0 CM1N TA R EA LTY
_______ 77* 7271/277457*

107—M o b il*
H o ftfs / R t n l
ELDER SPHINOS. Otl Hwy 417.
I. 1. 1 bdrm* |7S*S per wk
IlSOdep W - t W u W - I l d
O EN EV A . Country art*I 1
bdrm. I bath tltvplui i*c

M R H d R f l l H H l _____

G linlva G akdlins
A l’AKIMI m s
RENT TODAY
FOR OUR
MOVE-IN SPECIAL
l d iid ? B e d r o o m A p t s A v j i l i t b l e
SlcirtiM Cj .tf S J b O UU

150b W

1 1 7 —C R m n w rc ia l

25 th St . S c i n l o r d

3 2 2 -2 0 9 0

i»-i|

CONNER OT R IT/fl Free
UaadtogMdg. Suit, tor car lot.
In*, CO ottNMaP/BISAM-MM

• ***•*»e u w

• CARIOLH PORTABLE T V. S
Inch with radto. In oortocf
cond. Battor/otocfrk. Can f t
tWdngwIthygul SH^JEM W f
S T E E E O . Pana»#nlc, dual
ocl
LlkotoowliSMOeo..
WITH YOUR o w n
you waft
ESPN. CNN.

119—F l t t U f f l f R u t
M INIM UM R EN T. 4 K m .
hl/d ry w/natural cover.
formally citrus I H - f g _____
111

w T W R IillT lfw T Il

R e n ta l*

wCOMO* 2MS.PAM
1 Bdrm*., It* bath townhoua*.
temd. potto. Adult*. (ITS. in
cluda* water. Call Maucy
M - I R l Mwe-Frt. bAM-SPM
HIO O IN LAKE 11 bdrm. 1 bath
TOWNHOUSE I Comm, pool I
USf mu. Nko. Realtor!
SANDALWOOD Villa*. 1/1.
w/patl. week/dryer, *400 per
mo., no doe*. *71-OFT! hr. mag.
U N F O R D - Pin* Ridge Club. 1
bdrm. 1 beth*. All appl. Incl.
w*th*r/dry*r. Storting at «4bS
RINTARAMA
417-SSM.......................... NaFoo
ram* PI. Inc./Br*a*r
S P B C I A L I M I S month I
NORTNLAKB VILLA GE.
N a w 1/1, a p p l l a n c a t .
fireplace, pool, tonnl*. Call
(Klllimmoe) 1 -M IU t Anytime
Owner H t-IM H H coWocI
1 bedroom* 11* ba. C/H/A.
flropiacal MBI/mo.. see dep
CaR Ul-ftfl/toava i

127—O ffice R R fftils
BRAND NEW OFFICE RLDO
4Mtq.lt. to 2.Mi eg. tt.
OC-1ZONINOI
Move In Speclei...........tlM/mo.
CALL............................ niw **
O FFIC B /R ITA ILI1 unit*. 1.000
t q tt. •*.. *425/mo. Can b*
ueed together I...220-1tet/me*.
I SMALL RENTAL OFFICES
Very reetenable. 12X1*. For
detail*, call nowl S I *571

141—Hom os to r S * it
A GOVERNMENT R E U L E
Sbdrm. 11* bath............ ASTAM

CaR WORTS

141— H t w m l f $Ak

141—Hom es I f la te

■ M R C rS S P B HOMES

STAIRS PROPERTY

Includee Scraomd Pool
Spatial Rato Financing
________ Call m *77*________
E. ORANO I COUNTY 1/1 an
Mac ret. large bam.... Mt.SM
W. Mallu owM L ~

_______ mim

II
STENSTROM

REALTY, INC.
•%

34d 1fm •

RRAND NEW OSTEEN 4/1 on S
gorgeou* acre* with Iraot.
paeturt Big aat In kit.. Ian*,
worfcthep. barn.......... Silt, too
MIDWAY SECTION. 1/1 mobile
home being told a* it. Value It
In 1 tot*. Nicely tre e d .t21.S00
CNAEMIND COUNTRY V* ON
I acre In Weklva area. 1 itory,
big kit., fplc.. larga k retried
patio Now..................SI2t .237
PRETTY V I. LOVELY LOT.
quiet area. Naw AC. aat In
kit., bring tha family. Big
picture window. Only... S44.M0
WASNINOTON OAKS SPLIT
4/1. Foyer, frldg*. CH/A.
woetwr. dryer, Imid* utility
F o r b ig f a m i l y . Saa
nowl........................... SSI.MO
NICE. SPACIOUS. POOL 4/1.
Big Umlly rm.. fplc.. big
shaded tot. fence. Ideal tor big
family. See Ihlel.......... Mf.OOO
(1410 NICE 1/1 plut eitra rm.
Big lencad yard. Aeeuma
t.2S% FHA bond mtg. Sugar
buy tor affordably....... .141.411

LESS THAN 12J M DOWh
WITH NEW FINANCINO
ROND MONEY. FHA. VA
ON CONVENTIONAL LOANSI
Assumable no qualify loam In
thee# ereeel Chooee homo*
Irom Somlnoto/Orang*
Voluda/Lak* Counttotl

CALI ANYTIME

321 - 2720
322- 2420
IMS Park Dr.. Santord
M l W. Lake Mary Bl.. Lk. Mary

1/1, llv din- lam room*, appl..
carport, c/h/a..............*42.too

POOLHOME
POSSIBLE LEASE/PURCHASE
V I . with family, living, dining
rm*. fp*c. anclotad porch,
tone* yard. Hug* lot. u t . m

ST. JOHrS ANDLX MONROE
S acre eelatel 4/1. ISM *q It.,
cuetom built. *D7.«00

LAME MART
LESS THAN S2,MO DOWN
1/1. living, dining, family
room*, loncod yard, now
paint, carpet and tile. tat.tOO

OVEIDO US ACRES
Cuetom built 4 bdrm 1 bath,
fireplace, icreened pool and
■pa. 2car garage *171.(00

3/2 CUSTOM BUILT

Ceram ic til*. Lovolor*.
Ilroplac*. 1 car garag*.
Pool/tonnli avail..........tfl.SM

DELTONA
Late than 12100down I l/ l with
101 14 ternd porch. 454.500

$3300 DOWN INCL CLOSING
Plnocroel. V I. living, dining,
family rm., tacurlty ayettm.
fenced yard M2.*00

CHULUOTA POOL HOME
1/1. Ilreplac*. acceee to Lake
Mill*, on 1/1acre ...... ( 77.100
p:

•*| V.Bl) 9 N t

i»N

T
1 —

OSTEEN 1 bdrm I bam on S
acre*, wathor/dryor hook up.
tlSO/mo Call 3D f ill alter t

i l l — T elevtil n /

COUNTRY Club Rd. Santord. 1
bdrm I be , laundry, fenced!
Ateumabtet*42.SOO m (M l
NEW HOMES.............MS-MAM
MOOEL OPEN 11-4___ VA/FHA
C A C HOMES, lac *4» « 22MM

ACADEMY MANOR. SANFORO
ZERO dowel SeSO/mo Like
nowl Compl redone I 1/1.
garage, tone* Owner I «WM1)

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
1 bedroom. 1 both. pool.
tai.JOO Scburen Reolty
________ 4*7-411 IMT________

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
1 bedroom 1 bath. pool.
Ml.MO Schurm Realty
________ 1*7*111147________

BATEMAN REALTY

EXCMANOE OR SELL yavr
praparty lacatad anyu^karaI
luvottor* Realty, aif-WM
Fra# Ltd Government Hemet
Terry Chehol *411122 *r Eggar* B Reynald* RE 1*2-4441

SUB. Ndfflagt*.
t(*4D. VP. S i l l M W l SMB*
(part* Mb dey/doto. SIW. M
CaN Beef, novur nrudt W/b*e
• ■uor.UM.CaR------- B m q
•WINORW. fcrawn tinted
thermo pane. Howl B4B. OBO

wunq_______

M BALLON, ptaaftc and ttoel
drum*. MMl tor tree terming.
StoMOK tor BBQI US-DM

Program. (W CHI 2» r t n

THE OAIS, SANFORO

BY OWNER
2 bdrm. 2 bath. t.fOO tq It .
large living and dining area
with llrtplaca Eitra roam tor
oltka/hobby/thlrd bodraam.
Wood Each, largo tree*, tonnl*
and pad prlvUogo*. SIOLOM.
CaEW M M orm -fta*
* * * * * * * * *
t lead (bedroom home* with
BOND MONEY whan avail
able. Alto, government repot
and bonk lortcloturot.
i b O R M . l B A T H
B E A U TIF U L L Y LANO SCAPED, terttnod porch
loading to nlc* tiled pool.
Privacy Itprtorltyl..... S4MOO
CaR JaaotMomHoM
Day*, m i l l * Evet. m -T llt
AA Cama*. Inc.

C ^ n tu iK n
153— A c rM ftLets/Sal*
l.S A CEESI Gorgtout oak
hammock I SAS.000 Sol lor IInanclng. Caldwell Banker
tdaaL Call l-**»ni-a*42
OSTEEN. S acrat. wooded.
S10.00* GENEVA. S acret
S23.S**. Broughton Realty
__________ 1444254__________
PORT OP UNPORO AREA •
Buty Orange Blvdl S acre*,
toned AG. to mil* to 1-4 aelt
and entrance *S3I Can divide,
high and dry. SM.300
Tampfln Realty lac. B U I I
ST. JOHN'S Rlverl 1 acret I
Huge eafcel tie*,at
financing CaMnil
IdaoL CaK 1444771-4*42

2.17ACRES EAST SR4f
Make 1 tile*, loned County
A-t. Public wotor. OK tor
mobli* homo. Rootonablo
down. Miter tormt. U f .(00

CAU BANT
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR....................222 7*4*

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/Salt
PINK RIDGE CUM

1 « 7 —S p e d in t OeeMs
• BICYCLE - M m Freewheel
. ( 30. Cal IDS-14If
SURFBOARDL wet sulfs and
KCtUOFiM, 900d CWWIWOfl.
tfl-fOlhp. m tf.___________

191— BuiMHlf
AAelerieii
A LL STEEL BUILOfNeS at
dMtor Invoke, x m fa H U N
*»tt. Call 4Ef.W EMt collect
• •ATM ROOM CaRtnot. no
mirror, woodon front. Ilka
latouoto*. Caet U f. Will iacrltic* (30 m i 247

199—P e t i t S u p p lie T
• AN«ORA BURRY • Whit*
fomak. will hold HI X nwol
*30. CahLauaanoWHfM

•

F

E

R

E

DOBERMAN/ROTTWEILER
MIXI To good ham*. T mo*.
oM tomato. All ihaf*
rabtot. IWaklva Fall*)

FREE YOUN# CATSI Ta a
good hen
Very Pretty I Leekt
IIke Angero. D&gt;P1*________
MINI DACHSHUND • Black B
Tan. 4 mat. Sraat aukfmae
prevent I Pnrento on promkdi I
(175. D3-474*evot B wbondl
M IN I POODLES • Mai* B
tomato. T mao. White. All
(hot*.cutolSW*a..... -ID MM
RETRIEVER PUPS-SW
Available now tor ChrtrtmMl
CaNMMWS

3 9 1-H o m e
APPALOOSA • Booutltul Loopard. Rog.. IS yr. old fokBng.
good troll hart*. U H . . J » 1 l »
BARRRL (ADOL1 •|* In. MdfEecellent candlttonl USE
CaR.-----------------------------.340IIP
HORSES ROAROBD-M ACRES
open Pattural SSO a month to
board I W7 3M4M1_________
QUARTER HORSE • Rag. II
yr*.. bay adding Ooc Ear
bldllno*. Good gamo/caw
hone. Quiet, gontto. Can ropo,
hunt from II.SM.........Mf-3137

2 0 3 - Live sto c k a n *
P o u ltry
Q U A R T E R HORSE . 14-IS
Hand*, dark brown. 4 yoort
old.l ............

209—W ee ri w Apparel

1/1. good lleor upper, *21.100

157— Mobil#
Hom#»/S#l#

211—A n tiq u e s/
Collectibles

1/1. a lot lor the money. SSI.473

NO MONEY DOWN

ORANO OPENING OEC. 171 J
A J COUNTRY CORNER! Ml
|wy 411, 0( t **a. U(*d
v r n l t u r t l Antlqeot,
croft*. OPEN to-4

GOVERNMENT OWNED
HOMES

V 7tpadout villa. SU.450
M ETRO REAL
E S T A T E C O .,INC..
Ptootecall tor oitwf litungtl

131 7337

The Prudential
F lo rid a Realty
NANI 10 S EU TOUR HOME?
I am looking tor nlc* hornet to
match with buyer*.

Call 1*9 G/ttarj, REALTOR

l i l t per month on a ItfO 1
bdrm. 2 bath double wide.
a i l Lae. (*♦ 12047**
OSTEIN • 2 bdrm 1 bo. on
to acral Lott ot shade, turn..
C/H/A. very private Neodt
TLCI ( 27,300.......221 11IIeve*
U V E SUI NEW Ittl HOMESI
WHY PAY RETAIL7 l«X 7i.
(M M . H X 7t, S jM N 2*217(4

TAME OVER PAYMENTS
SI47 per month on a m i
14X 70 Call LoRoy:
________ (441204255________
S EEOROOM. I bam. CHA. good
condition. MUST SELLI 45S00
I2S-S2M

le*7)*M44Mor 22711*4

LAAEMARY
IM EttaIla Rd V I. 1 car
garag*. 1.440tg tt. US.000
A.N.R. R4alty,«n-*4M

II M l li T \ I 1^
COUNTRY CHARMER 1 bdrm .
2 bath, family rm. 100'e 200
yard, hug* boaulllul oak*,
r a i l t d patio
Eaty
term*
2SJ.OOO
INVESTOR'S DREAMI Largo 2
bdrm &gt; bath horn*, fireplace,
formal dining, detached dou
bl* car garage t lg* 2 tlory
CB contl apt houte w/3 car
garag* Corner loll . Mi SCO

323-5774
SALE BY OWNER
LOVUY! 2 BORM. 2 RATH
1*25 Bungalow with fireplace
Renovated intid* end outtide!
Landtcaued Owner Annout1
INS Magnelia Av*.
*1__________ ___71**112

SANFORO
Low Downpayment will buy
BRAND NEW HOME I Near
Lake Mary Blvdl 1 bdrm 7
bath with garag* in private
country area Clot* to Khoott
andtheppmg
141.720

321-4739 .................. 321 2257
4 BR brick home tar only
SI.WO down. I tee mo Priced
reduced! SS* *00 For detect
Call Bratton Groan Hemet
2442*41 er 24*7/24
DELTON A. 1/2. CHA. Non
quallftng. attemeble N&gt;c*t
4444 PI 14**00 174 in*

m-mvni-un

2IO-SIOO
SUrt*t/Ritir*m*flt Horn*
Lovely L o th Arbor location1 &gt;
b d rm I bam. large corner lot.
deep wen. living, dming. den
I t undr y ro o m , ne w r o d
U S 000 attum abl* 271 747

1A 3 -Waterfront
Prop«rty/Sal#
PMuvaRiftf! 3.5 Acres!
150 bulldabl* II. on rlverl
Private easement to property
Jut 11 ml Irom Santord. Lake
Co. tide I Superb location lor a
dreamhom* Dramatically
reduced I Now |utl «t 10.00011
(Maitland) 1205547

111—Appliances

/ Furniture
AYMTERtCD WORLDCO.
Samlaeto Ftaia Cjttelberr?
HOLIDAY OIPT SPECIALS!
SHEET SETS/HEATERS Slf.fS
* U «22S. Mow Sat., IQtpm
OBABV BED Crib with 2 mat
tret* pads. 7 sheets and mat
thing rulli* Mattress new
tond ( 400BQ S20-740C
BJ'S RESALE
W* Buy/Sell Furniture A Cel
lectMlet. Including Estates
15(21 Santord Ave , H I 744*
CRAFTMATIC Queen Bed. New
cond pdSlOOO. t ( 50. OBO
Wed gown 7/1 pd 11500 VJOO
Truck tool boeSTO 4*2 4711
eDININO ROOM Ubl* end
mite chain. H I OBO
__________ 22&gt; «54i __________
ODRYER. gat. Sears Kenmore
Whit*, like new 11(5 12117*4
* GO LOST** VCR With re
mol*, eecellent condillonl
1100 1(041
__________ 775-2( 1*__________
LARRY’S MART. 215 Santord
A&gt;* New Used turn 4 eppi
Buy/Sell/Trade
111 1122
BM AFLI DINING Tabl*. w/4
chain MO Coil altor »PM
111 2*1(
ORATAAN ■AR STOOLS 3

ni nu

t
SECURITY NATIONAL
tfB* FORMULA FIREBIROI
Laadaflll It Tuu-r» paying

n................ *e,me

After SPM
•am SOWN DRIVES*
tot CUTLASS SIERRA 4 OR
...324-4424

•AUTO PARTS ■ D*dg» Atpan,
Chary Novo 11SMA
AUTOM ATIC
transmits Ions
from STS; oschang* radtotort
from *3*: Uoodllm tram U ;
Tire mounting oval took.
lltfC M u y W .p t-MS*
Engines. Trantmletton*. Ro
dtofpr*. etc. Vohlclot you
moke run I D t-ftlt_________
• M IC N B L IN Radial Tiro,
■rand N*wl 110/MS HR 1*0
aa»4 . i j atm e ,w M a i
MflrlG.
F1T1 ruVfNi WO

9 1 MAVERKK •1 awnar. 4 1
auto., * cyl.. radto. air.

F - lm e e r t C e r s
w iT r u d a

H U FiREBIROf 4Eb 4 (pd.

•MEMORY Eipantion Card
tar IBM A T ar Cion*. Hem In

PRICES STARTINO AT M2.2M
2 Bedroom 1 Bath condomlnl
urn*. All eppIlancet, vertical
bllndt throughout, dubhouu.
pool, tennis, security guard
CALL..222447!
Landere me FI. Inc./Broker

Lk R*4lE d 4t* Broker
74*0 Santord Av*

SANTA’S MOVE IN SPECIAL'

MANAGEMENT A REALTY

1

'U C H E W Nova. 207. 2 barrel
carb. 4 M U artg. ml tot I Runt
Inf. •»

SS

M aM Le/Slerea

LESS TNM $1100 DOWN
INCUMNNC CLOSING COSTS
SMALL 1 bdrm. C/H/A. nlc*
neighborhood. WSO plu* UOO
security. mMwma-itf-saa*
114 CROOKED PINE DR.,
Sanford. 1 Bdrm.. 1 bath. MOO
pr. mo., Sot, ssoo. Ht-M if

•SOFA •T ft . rovorttoto tap**
fry cixhton*. gME. Vary pood
conditionI IK S CaRMMWT
• SOFA Confomporary Her*I
dodgn In (had** af orange
only MB. Mf-WFf

T IN B D OF T E N A N T NeadIT Cad

1 **

1 A 1 ROOM Ctftctoncy Apt*.
Furnlthad or not. a/c. Irom
*250/mo HOP tec Call m ills
CUTE I ONE Bedroom apt .with
FL rm , carpet and drape*,
downtown Senlord *2*0 plut
*oc.Mopet*.U»-m*

room*I Living room (ulto,
bedroom (ulto. giaoa dtootto
eof/4 choir*, oil tontamportry
(fylO.St.7f* Mud *0*1

l i t — RrrI E s ta h

SALE OR HASH
Sanford. 1/t. Nice yard. CHA.
( I f Rdibll* Or. la IS pr.
mo/uieo*. **»«**!________
S A N P O R D • Trod*, lo ll,
loaa* option, font 13 Bdrm. Ill
bath. Clean, MS* mo....P4-U37

■ 11

M R M S IR tN in. Tlmacuan
QaN and Caunfry Club. By

OMIT 3 MORfTWS NON

AAA BUSINESS C B N TE E •
New *ffic*/Wh*e. MS ft. to
l.ees ft. Bay* with or w/e
offleet darting el MSt/m*
N w v.il/flR S N O T

1M EIE1IA C E" Safe Seated

97—A p a rtm e n ts
Furnished / Went
SANFORD 1 bdrm., complete
privacy, dot* to downtown I
t t] par week pluttlOO tacurlty
Include* utllltle*. Calim -IN*
FURNISHED Aptol Nlc* A
clean, utllllle* Incl.. walk to
downtown IDJ*D*/toovo msg.
SANFORD • I bdrm. Elllclancy
with private bath, tto week
plu* (100 tacurlty Includtt
utllllle*! Call..... - ......m n t t
O N E RBOROOM. utllltlat
tumlthed. clot* to thopplng
area. Call alter SPM. I l« -m i
before SPM call S ll-lt lt

g f t t f H - l f g ttp g (Lgjg. P R jH L ^ P .g f

115— Indwfrial

an *eport*nced telephone
Mias person Cmidwalian of
a "homa operation" will bo
•Ivon Id Itw right pooplo All
contact Noel
U f D1-UAT, bo-

TRUCKERS Ipodatt I
Halite. Rm to park truck.
CM** to Inientefe.......Jiteiei

231—C e r *

111—
/

• SECOND GENE RAT IOM1*
Your clothing told tor cam
million only I Call...... 2342474
Country Club Square Cantor

urnai

f

I2U-I2W
CLASSIFINOERS
Save tun* I Laf ut match your
regutd wl»i eur computer lied

Iklefvehkte*.
FHP

trs-Mu
OUTSIOE ORLANDO

num m m m
Eecaprtu.toB.ttfta.Mc
PONTIAC LEMANS - l t d
auto. Mr. (tome, (part model I
MUST SEE... Only S8.EM
mile* end ONLY S iu.il/mo.
CMI Mr. Ppyno, P S -lin
PAIRWAY MOTORS
-m m •» sh * o m m a a t+ r
SU* US tM* L«dWU**M.J*1-WU
HONDA ACCORD LX, m 4
tkT'uUS. CMI DoMdWWBN

TMUIIf MVMKVTS
W M ORKYM M
Eiceprtu.tM.fltto.efc
FORD TAURUS O L
ltd.
l o a d e d wHh leather, auto,
air, stereo. V-4.
ONLY SIU.IO p*r month
IIP
S
IM fX D U M
S
Rkk
s s sC.sMs Ceee*
s s sbsesrry
s tedd
s sMs
s
truck by Ih* eocand day and
w m wotl eotltftod with Ih#
stunning roeutltl Ho called Mi
S*nl*rd Herald Claulftod
Cwwuftant to (top M* ad from
centtnulno Ml It* »ch»dutod
IE-Day Specie!. Something
YOU need to odverllu af tow
cat! and achieve gukk reluttst Try our Ml 14 A 24Day
lino tor conmuflvo days'
fro* to cancel a*
results ere reached
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HI

nn

TO Y O TA STARLET! S
• ca u c .g M m i.tlfU
............. .332-4344
I O P B R LS 4*41
A copoer Low. low
mltoa....................... $13.(Ml l
Magi* t w o ....... ..... — JP-4344
H M TOYOTA PICKUPt Eatra
ctoanigoclMl................t t l t t
MAE** tOMU................ ...333-4344
HER TROOPER LS 4MI White A
g r a y 2-ton*. Lae*, low
mUM........................ S ttW Il
«R*gk f e w .__________ E H N
MERCEDES M SO. 'EL high
mltoc g*od cond. china Mu*.
EWE OBO.................-MS-SMI
RENAULT Enear*I &lt;**. 2 dr .
•c 1 epd/4* mpg. am/fm cut..
good cond. (t.TfUAo DA-Dt*

235—T r u c k s /
B ueet / V e n t
CHEVY PU 9b CIA acto. air.
nood* paint, run* g**d. SUMO.
» » M 1-«**b EW b 22X 472
F2M 9 *. ant owmr. (&gt;c work
truck. I tot* tiro* an road and
oft roodI *HEb«EM*»«D*

TAKE UP PAYMEItTS
Recapt toe. tag. title, etc
C H IV Y PICKUP lUf.outo.
•Ir, ttoroo. wheels. GREAT
BUY M ONLY SITf.70/mo
CMI Mr. Payne, m i l l s

19 M FM 0 TIU C I
121 Custom Windsor, mini
. V I 5225 liter 3

I
mltot. 4 cylinder, fully
PE. PS. A/C. 57.4(5
D I *02. *dk Nr Tom________
IH* TOYOTA Pick up. black. 4
•pood. oec. condition. 14.00*
PRO. Altar 5 . . - ........ PS-3*47
n CH IV Y 3/4 Ton Pick up. mud
tiro* on rear. Good condition

239—Vehicles

* PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION*
EVIBV TUESDAY TittPM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Nwy.ftOiTfWMl

W l PAv'.fDe U* tor wrecked
carVtrucks I WE SELL guar
anteed ueed put*. AA «U TO
SALVAGE M DeEuy. 24* MU

TMIVfPftYMITS

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes

E ecapt toe. tag. fttto. etc
MERCURY COURARXR7
ANNIVERSARY MOOBLI
Equollur. cruleo. tilt, hoatod
eopft. THIS CAR HAS
EVERYTHING! Only......
SMI.ttpar month! I
CMI Mr. Ppyno. p s -i i p

T H E Ilf PAYMNTS
10 MONEY DOHN
Eiapftu.tAE.tltto.ofc
CHEW CAVALIER • IfM. 4
door, auto, air. stereoI
Only sift 40 per month
For ONLY 2* months
Call Mr . Feyno.ro 2173

• S • IH*. 3 wheeler.
run* good. *3U . M . Ut-U M
________BVO*. 02-4472_______
HONDA IU XL • 1(4). Run*
good. Good condillonl 4400
•A caR Ut-UU . Eva* D 24422
MOPED • R o idm ultr.
practkafly nowl Run* great I
42MI CaK 442-431.1(44
•MOPED Vespa/Plogglo Low
mlkoge. Good condition IH
CaR............................ D A ltn
1*4* 1S*R QUAD Racorl 4
wheetorl Mint cond. Soiling
price 11*00. ail n ] *)l*

TAKEUP PAYMENTS

243—Ju n k Cars

E seep* toe. t*v. title, etc
PLYMOUTH M LU 5 N T •IWA
4dou, auto, air, ttoroo. power
stateIng, power brakes!
ONLY tllMOpor month!
Call Mr. Poyno. D2-IIBI

*CA5H* FOR YOUR JUNK
CAR OR T R U C K I I ANY
CONDITION! CALL 222 2(57
U TO P DMtor** Paid tor lurk
cor*, truck*. 4 whoaI drive
.... CMI 312 sn*

219—W anted ta May
toon For nut Metals...
..m-itoe
KOKOMO...
I N I E D F R E E WOOD
PALLETS. N l e i K k *
way's. WUI pkb up..... Dll***
PRIVATE INDIVIDUAL wants
to buy wash/dryer/retrlg. No
dealer* pleat* I *M-I(*4
WOOD F U R N I T U R E
WANTS DI Any CONDITION!
^ I m I q I(|I*M j N 4 U N I I ^

221—G ood T h in fs
to E e l

Ken 'Rummel
Quality Used Cara At A Fair Price
No Application Refused

• *U PICK NAVBLSIII 2M1
CELERY AV., UNFO R O
BRINO CONTAINERS! I
U-FICK NAVEL ORANGES.
U/buthol. Hwy M E . Santord.
I blk E ol Beardall Av* noil
to Auto Auction. SD-tlll

222— Musical
Merchandise
CONN OROAN Medium Sir*,
good condition. S4S0 II nood
the tpocol Coll 3D IMS

PIANO FOP SALf

LOWAS

MIT ITIMS
Swing, walker, carseat.
highchalr. atari game.SN-tMt
BUT......... SELL..........TRADE
HUEY'S CROWN PAWN
_______ 122 47*4___________
GO CART 3's HP. new tires
and clutch Esc. mechanical
shape 1200 obo Great emat
glHI ID SDSattorS_________
TANNING BED Brand Hew!
Great Christmas giltl Will
hold 57500 *34-1*1*_________
• OAKLEY ELAOES. Indium
Includtt cos*. 3 nos* pieces
and neck siring Sacrifice 1*5
DI 523*__________
(O L D RECOBO Collection.
Approeimatoly Id) 7| RPM
records, incl big bends. |tu
elastic*!. Hawalln. Jolton.
Sousa. Hoi toll. Andrews SI*
■ers. etc All lor ISO 4(3 2111

35

* J&gt; J PER WEEK

B papcmwt?

Wanted Responsible party to
taka on small monthly pay
menu on piano So* locally
Call Manager al*C8*2S 7411

223— Miscellaneous

DOW N

LOWAS T

m

NO INTIRiST

Call
(407) 321-7800
HIGHWAY 17-92

SANFORD
1 1 2 mile Nof 1ft ol i .the Maty UivO |
L ji&gt;y lo ImU from jn y wfieie in Cenlfd^f U
Phone 1 40/) J2i 7000 of |407) 62b 9/79

�rrP H

Polymyalgia strike
adults over age 50

PETER
GOTT.M.D

O O TTt Pleane this occurs In the brain, resultor m at Ion oh inf in
heumatlca. My cO Tm c^y^hosrver. the nose **
ifetlaone. and we
P""*1* * ^

r,he,hou“,“*
ta re Js?s£p&amp; ^

normal (19090 or below), your
nosebleeds should become less
frequent and km severe.
ommonly affects high blood pressure. M a good
( 0 1 9 9 0 NEWSPAPER ENTM COMING POWM
WITH A lAPCOtP-

w a u W
I CATCH IT Q

affliction la marked by muscle
pain and attffneas, fever, lose of
appetite, hesdsebe. weakness,
and malalae. Anemia may be
present. Patients suffer from
diffuse Inflam m ation of the
body's muacles and. often, major
arteries. If the arteries tor the
scalp are affected (temporal
arteritis), visual disorders. In-

t

your
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TW 5U FH JU B 3M SHORT

-TlRM MUACRTUSSOR
&gt;

,

SITE

AHEAD

STOP DOING IT'

WILL. 1 D O IT 5AY IT
^/k M i y w m u &amp; n j

why A f t
a l w a y s

TW

Jiffa

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f f P A If

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fltV f H

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PHOTOS?

aintie

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♦ --♦ AKJ

BA R
♦ M l
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♦JIM !
♦ W7I t

WEST
aw«7»i
RQS7IS
♦ AW
♦ I

SOUTH
♦ ---

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♦ KQI711
IQ IIH

Vulnerable. North-South
Dealer South
Wnt

North

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DW.

)♦

«♦

Pam
Pam
DhL

7d

Boa*
!♦

Pam
Pam

All pam
major Mils, uook hood
Opening Usd ♦ A

•Both

you're stymied by something Conditions In general are rather
you can't handle alone. You favorable for you today, but your
have several frienda who'll do all greatest benefits are likely to
thev can to make things easier come from a partnership arfnrvou
rangement in which your cohort
■m j i m iF^h QO-March 20) If I®more active than you.
you find yourself Involved with
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Some­
negative people today, don't let one with whom you are rather
them put limitations on your cozy socially might be In u
t h i n k i n g . W h a t y ou c a n position to pull a few strings for
envision you can accomplish, you loday regarding a mailer
evenlfthey can't.
that tntttld be meaningful to you
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ,n
* ' ___
—
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - . .
You might be a...........
trifle.........
slowVIROO
In
-----getting your Irnpoiianr plans Greater progress In an Important
formulated to your satisfaction Involvement can be made at this
_r _.i time If you reorganize your
today, but once you decide upon
a course of action, tthe
: “results
““ *“ procedures In ways that will
make them more effective. Start
should be Impresalve.
20) Improving methods today.
TAURUS (April 20-Mav
20-May 20)
L IM A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
Today you might find yourself in
It will could be quite lucky today In
an unusual position uwhere
'.i r ; !'.
be necessary for you to make a being able to finalize three mat­
critical decision for someone ters you have left hanging. Each
who Isn't present. Fortunately. Is of significance to you flnan-

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B-n-w
♦ AKQJt
TAJ Wit

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JftgdJOO

If IT’/
ATfNPf/ffON COMPANY

Ui ( J

,11J
II 111

trump.)
% s u d d e n 5 p t o a grand slam Declarer now discarded the good
often in d i t e * that the slam king of hearts, ruffed the low
hidder has a void aomeplace. For remaining spade and cashed the
W c st\n ia h th a v e K-Q of diamonds. A club to the
guessed that his ace of diamonds Jack left the lead In dummy with
would not live. Still he doubled, declarer holding 0-9'
**“ }*
-rtiai mvp French olavcr Palrick over East a 10-7. Without the
Suaaefthe opportunity to score a diamond a c e l e a d . a c a r e f u l
coup in the World Open Pairs In declarer might 11‘ make the
September. After ruffing the grand slam. Knowing fm n the
noenim* lead in dummy and weak iwo-dlamond cue- bid that
playing one high trump, declarer West held length In both majors.
s S r e l ro^ecUy analysed that South would have a chance to
West was short In clubs and was hit upon the right line of play.
. • . .w* m a i m . So declarer Sorry — there a not enough
^ h e d dum'rnvT^eart ace and room today to explore all the
then played on high spades from possibilities. But In several of the
rinmmv When the last high play scenarios, it would be
spade Ywaa led. East shed a impossible for West to keep both
diamond. (If he had ruffed, the are of diamonds and the
South would have overruled. {£«•*•*J rh^ ^ spA P E R EN.
pUyed a club to dummy .Jack.
1990 NEWSPAPER
the l y t low spadc ar&gt;d TERPR1SE ASSN

ib tc M o u it

fA dUW PUMMOnFfT
L L Y W ^ W IV L

JIIU

the patient's symptoms subside.
In th e p r e s e n c e of eye
symptoms, prednisone must be
continued IndeBnltely. even for
years. However. In most cases,
t r e a tm e n t la sts for several
weeks. Family physicians are
trained to d isp o se and trtit
polym yalgia rheum atics.
Therefore, your sister needn't
see a specialist, such aa a
rheumatologist, unless she
wishes. Ask the doctor sbout
this.
DBAS DM. OOTTt 1 have
periodic nosebleeds, and my
doctor has me on Capoten. Is
this for high blood pressure, and
are the nosebleeds related?
D I A I I I A D I I i
H y p e r te n s io n ca n cause
nosebleeds because as the blood
pressure rises, small arteries —
especially those In the nasal
lining — may burst. Sometimes

U)UAT HAPPENED
TO ALL THE
FALL C0L0A5?

IflfJG TtRAA

1

vJ U U

tdM.'ild - jU U
UtdLlll
.111 J U
j III^MIIl'JUki

rate: Blood ecus fell swiftly to the
bottom of a tube when left
standing. Biopsy may be neces­
sary for confirmation. Pred­
nisone (purified cortisone) Is the
treatment of choice and typically
relieves symptoms within 36
hours. In temporal arteritis,
prednisone therapy should be
promptly administered to pre­
vent oertnanent visual com-

5"“° , W

I

1(1 .III . ' J U I I U
(I .I M U ! I .Hi
iJil

R J0U S H THOR MEMOIRS AS
SCOM A61HEV LEAUE OfFICE
AEJD OTHERS lOAfT A FEW

II

JM tdi I

SLEIGH

rThe
s rewards
a r a from
y stwo
t endeavors
i - . *» Much of importance
*•*».
™
can be
In which you're presently Involved will be predicated upon
the contribution you make. It
behooves you to do your very
uenoovc* ,
7
CANCER (June 2M uly 221

accomplished today If you use
your Imagination and Inlllatlvc.
Don't wait on others, even In
partnership arrangements
(C )1990. NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISEASJ*N.
b y Le o n a rd S fa r r

KNOWUHOlfc^
KNOCK-KNOCK

r JUST A LITTLE Rtm DER THAT
CHRISTMAS IS COHN&amp; SOON; MY
SWEATER SIZE IS 7 * 0 0 ^ I
p r e fe r POWER STEERING, a n d

A FIW M INUTM -. | W f U - I f
-rWlRfS iOATKid' YOU W Nor

OH YEAH... AND HAPPY

HCuorrs a n d
THAT JUNK

dA-iU Jownou 1 QHT uA
AT TH' H006E IN P * 3 V tR YR I
1 H*t TO
M 1 n

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—re-

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�</text>
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                    <text>Danger at the door: Study finds latchkey children at risk
.

By JA N E T BASS

United Press International

INSIDE
□

‘

Sports

H aney named player of the week
Our Ram stood head .iikI shoulders alxtve (he
rcsi last SalnriLiv as Lake Mary upsrt Seminole
In .1 24-21 vlrlorv Senior tunning bark &lt;'lirls
Haney rushed lor Hi9-ynrds. caught two passes
lor 2H yards and scored all lliret* of Ills tram 's
touchdown* For Ills perlormanrr Haney has
hern named the Sanford Herald I’laycr ol the
Week lor a sei olid lime
See Page II)
□

N ation

S o m e airlin e s are in tro u b le
SAN FRANCISCO — Four or live US airlines
could go out ol business, some within six
mouths, unless the federal government arts
soon to lower Jel fuel prices
See Page 51)
□

WASHINGTON — Nearly hall of a recent
sample ol school-age youngsters were lelt home
alone al least occasionally. If not regularly, and
many risked dahger by Improperly answering
the phone ora knock on Ilie door.
The Child Welfare League of America sur­
veyed 447 children In kindergarten through
third grade who live In urban, rural and
suburban areas. In lis Novembcr-December
Issue of Child Welfare, the league found that -12
pereeni ol Ihe children were left unsu|&gt;ervlscd
al least occasionally, ifnnl regularly.
“ Ii was apparent that its children got older,
parents were more and more willing In leave

them without supervision." the authors said.
The percentage of “latchkey" children left
alone oernslonaliy or regularly In kindergarten
was 2H percent: In first grade. D7 percent: In
second grade. 45 percent: and In third grade
77 percent.
"These figures lar exceed any previously
published estimates." the authors said.
For years. Congress has tried to tackle the
child care Issue and was finally able to gather
enough votes this year by folding a child care
hill into the federal budget package. The
measure Includes $732 million In 1991 block
grants to states fur expanded child care services
for pre- school and school-age latchkey
children.
The Child Welfare survey also found that

urban children were far more frequently left
unattended occasionally or regularly than rural
and suburban children.
Parents said In Interviews with the authors
they were "doing the best they could" and felt
they had no alternative.
While suburban parents were less likely to
leave their children unsupcrvlscd. they were
considerably more likely to leave them unat­
tended for the occasional trip to the grocery
store — 3 percent regularly vs. 35 percent
occasionally.
These parents did not consider day care
relevant for these spontaneous situations,
according to Interviews.
"T h is leaving young children without
r See Danger, Page 5A

New era beginning
Three new board
members ‘doing
their homework’

W o rld

Iraq m a y s e n d m o re tro o p s
CAIRO. Egypt — The official Iraqi news
agency IN'A reported lrai| would send more than
250.000 additional Imops io Kuwait In an
llelpallnn ol a |msslblc attack liom the U.S.-led
uiiiltlnatlou.il force In the Persian Gulf
See Page 6A

■y VICKI DstORMiCR
Herald staff writer

BRIEFS
S t o c k s killed in a u to a c c id e n t
SANFORD A 22 year-old Orange City man
was killed when he Ins! control ol his I9HO MMW
on Silver Fake Drive near Ohio Avenue m
Sanlord.
Police duel Steven Ifarrlell said the ear ol
Thomas Stocks was traveling at more than 70
mpli when Slin ks lost control ol the vehicle at
.iImiiii 2:52 a.in Sunday Tile car hit a sign, a
post and a gale and rolled several limes before
slopping uboul 2ih i feel oil the road. Harriett
said Slocks who was traveling alone, was
killed The accident may he alcohol related.
Harried said
A n n u a l S w e d is h g a th e rin g set
SANFORD
The second animal Swedish
Gathering lor descendants of the Swedish
immigrants htonghl to Seminole County by city
Iminder Henry Shelton Sanford In the lH7()s will
he Nov DO from D to (• p hi at die Cultural Ails
('enter Filth Street and I ink Avenue. Sanlord
The event will he hustl'd by the Si. Lucia
Festival and the Sanlord Historical Soca'ty.
lab Gall.ml eluiirtmui ol (he lesllval's docent
program, said lit a release she will sei up
Interviews wlih iho-&lt; wluiattend the gultierlng
I he gathering will leaiure Swedish foods and
Sanlord ariist Item,- Reagans painting ol the
old Swedish schonlhousc ih.it once stood on
Upsala Road near tin- Upsala &lt;'hurt'll
For more Inlortwallon. call the St Lucia
lleadtpiarlersat 323-91 7H
‘W o m e n for W in e S e n s e ’
SAN FRANCISCO — Io entlliter negative
messages about alcohol alined al lemale
drlnkeis. a group ol promlneiil women in the
wtne Industry liave handed logeiher to promote
moderation
Called Women lor WineSense. the group was
lurinetl (Ills year to delend wine against
anil-alcohol Inn es which have Increasingly
Incused iheir campaigns on women and the
dangers ol drinking, particularly during pro
gnanev

Since Kodcno eoneelvcd the Idea lor the group
this spring It has atlrai led more Ilian KM)
women executives hum throughout the US
wine Industry. The group s message that wine
in niotleralluu has been an ciijoyuhle pari ol
soeteiv tor Ixith men and women lor thousands
ol years, and can continue lo be
l hi' group is a i t iled Ion ol die movement in
the U S. wine industry In counter what
winemakers call "lieu Prohibitionists." The m
diistry has hallled a niunher &lt;&gt;l projinsals over
ilie past live vc.iis mostly m Calilotnia
F ro m staff and w ire rep orts

INDEX
C l a s s i f i e d s . . . . __ 6 B , 7 B
.. . 4 B
4B
3R
D e a t h s ...............
in
E d i t o r i a l ............ .............4 A
F l o r i d a ............... ............. 2 A
H o r o s c o p e . . . . .............4 B

M o v i e s ..................
N a t i o n ....................
P e o p l e ..................
P o l i c e ....................
S c h o o l M e n u . ..
S p o r t s ..................
T e l e v i s i o n ..................... 3 B
W e a t h e r ...............
W o r l d .................... ..........6 A

L o o k s g o o d for tu rk ey d a y

M o s tly

s tiiillV

W illi

ill) high hi ai HI I ami
a light northeaster Ii
wind al 5 mph

For m ore w eath er, se e Page 2A

H orsld Photo by Tommy Vlnconl

Circuit Judge O H Eaton Jr (tar right) this morning
presided over swearing in ol county commissioners Bob

Sturm (I). with his wtfo Margaret, and Larry Furlong, with
his wife Emily and daughter Mary

Furlong, Sturm take commission oath
B y J . M A R K B A R F IE L D

Herald stall wrilor
SANFORD —Today. Seminole t'oumy Clilel Clr*-mt
Judge O il Eaton Jr harkened m the llrsl crack In the
siruiighnld Republicans have had on ilic Seminole
County Board of County Commissioners for 14 years
Larry Furlong, u Democrat, became the tlrsl
non Republican elected t&lt;&gt; the county commission in I I
years Ills nomination tx-cumc lnrm.il with Ills oath ol
ollicc administered by Falun

Along with FTirloiig. commissioner Itnh Sturm also
was to lx- sworn to a fourth four-year icrin In office. Not
since county commissioner W.l). Kllhce began his
IH year term In 1937 will a person have served so long
on (lie commission hy the time Sturm completes Ills
current term In 1994.
Fred Streeinan was the commission's unanimous
i hoicc lor hoard chairman, and Sturm was unanimousIv elected vice chairman
Sturm, a Republican, bucked the "Throw the
Sec Furlong. Page 5A

SANFORD —Going Into their llrsl
mecP'ig as school Ixiard members.
Barbara Kuhn. Jeanne Morris and
Sandy Robinson, said they are
prepared for the challenge.
To thetr advantage, they all agree.
Is the accessibility of the school
district stall to answer questions
and find Information lhai will help
them make Informed decisions
about the Items In the 332-page
agenda packet.
The three will he sworn In tonight
al 7 p in. during a brief ceremony
before the school Ixiard meets at the
district office. 1211 Mcllnuvtllc Ave..
Sanlord.
ScIkkiI hoard attorney Neil Julian
will preside over the short ceremony
Supt. Robert Hughes will then tic
In charge until a new chairman Is
chosen.
It is expected that vice chairman
Nancy Warren will I k - elevated lo
the lop spot, h w unclear who might
he nominated to fill the position of
second In command.
Preparing for tonight's meeting.
District 4 representative Barbara
Kuhn said. "I've been doing my
homework and I have a lot of
questions."
Kadi ol the hoard members has
Ix'cn paired with an assistant super­
intendent who will act as a liaison
between the Ixiard and the district
stall to make researching the an­
swers to questions easier.
"They've always been accessible
See New board. Page 5A

D is tric t s e e k s
la n d p u r c h a s e
in L a k e M a ry
B y V IC K I D e S O R M IE R

Herald stall wider
LAKE MARY - The Seminole
( dimly school 1 11siru I will oiler
$520.(MM) In purchase a I 7-acre site
ud|accnl in Lake Ma-y Klcmcularv
School. 1.12 s i ouiilry (Tub Road.
Lake Mary
The school's play area will he
expanded Into the site when a new
art and music suite is hull) on a
pm lion ol the current playground.
Part of the m oney (or the
purchase ol the land has been
budgeted Irniii the sale id the
light ol-way along Lake Marv
Boulevard
In July Seminole Cimmy paid the
school district S22H.762 ior nearly
live acres ol land purchased lor the
niir|xise nt widening Lake Marv
Boulevard north ol ihc school
"Tills works mil well lor everyone
involved." Richard Wells, assistant
superintendent lor lacillllcs. said al
the time he received Ihc cite* k from
ihc county "T h n get the land they
need lo expand Ihc road and we gi I
the property and the l.iclllllcs wi­
nced lor the si liuil "
The land which was sold hv tin
school i mild not have been used io
build the new lacillllcs hi (he form
ol two narrow strips along Lake
Mary Boulevard and Cnunin Club
Ko.nl as thin as 15 lci-1 m some
plat I S till luded a |clcl|tli*ll pond oil
iln- northeast &lt;nriicr ol the campus
Lake Marv F.lcmcni.iri is a till
smaller than most clcmctilarv
schools in the district Ii has a
capacity ol 094 students, while
inosi others have an average cap.n l
See D istrict. Page 5A

Hoioid Photo by Tommy V lncont

Reg Howe (I lo r) and Phyllis Conklin Salvation
Army advisory board members make the first

contribution ol the drive as Clifford Woodworth
rings the bell

Army rings in the season of giving
Salvation Army kettles
drum up financial help

Kettles brew up business
U n ite d P r a s i In te rn a tio n a l

B y N IC K P F E IF A U F

Herald staff writer
SANFORD I In-Sail.it ton Army hi Sanlord
npciird Its I'l'M) Keith t allipalgli yesterday
with tin- tirst keltic being s i - i up during spet tal
1 1 icunimcs ai Seminole Centre
mi I s
Ihghu a\ 17 ‘*2 in si mill Halliard
I In pl.n mg &lt;&gt;t the lirsi kcllh lor tins holidav
season in trout ol the Wal-Mart was marked hi
a gathering that Included Sanlord Mayor
Sec K ettles. Page 5A

VERONA \ J
The Salvation Army's Christmas
kellies ari mil only a welcome sight in shopping malls.
Inn Ilicit presence generates holiday business, a survey
released this week shuns
I In- survey was prompted hi ri's(imw in the policies
--I some ui.ill chains dial prohibited Salvation Army
kellies and bellringers mi their premises First lardy
B.uhara Bush cvcutualli resolved Ihc issue hv staling
she supported the worldwide uou-seitariaii organi/a
See Business. Page 5A

�XA

Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida —Tuesday. November 20,

N E W S F R O M T H E R E G I O N AND A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Program targets Hispanic teens
I l f we have peers giving
sltive pressure, hopefully
t will keep others out of
R°
trouble. J

GAINESVILLE — A University of Florida
program that uses peer pressure and teen
counselors to fight drug and alcohol abuse
will Urge! Hispanic students In the Tampa
and Miami areas, school officials said
Monday
The program, funded by a 8121.700 grant
from the U.S. Department of Education. Is on everything from teen pregnancy to
aimed at eighth- and ninth-grade students drugs.
"We will teach the counselors how to
In Dade, and Hillsborough county public
teach the students to be advisors to their
schools with large populations of Hlspanics.
"That Is a crucial age. It Is when they peers." said Gonzalez.
He said counselors also will be taught to
start m aking decisions." said Gerardo
deal
with the specific needs of Hispanic
Oonzalez. chairman of the university's
department of counselor education. "We students.
"They will leave with a better understan­
can step In and make a difference."
Oonzalez and profesaors Robert Myrick ding of how culture affects these students."
and Joe Wlttmer will teach school counsel­ Gonzalez said.
Myrick said students at the schools will he
ors the basics of peer advising, a method
taught
to take on four roles: counselor.
that calls for students to advise each other

Former Green Beret subject of manhunt
JACKSONVILLE — A former Green Beret who allegedly Is
involved In a racial hate group that stockpiled weapons had
lied the Clarksville. Tenn.. home where he was supposed to be
u ttder house arrest.
Jacksonville police had asked military authorities In
Tennessee to guard Michael Tubbs. 25, a former Jacksonville
resident. They learned Monday he had escaped and had not
been under guard. Police believe -Tubbs could be armed and
beading for Jacksonville.
During the weekend they found a supply of military
weapons. Including stolen machine guns, an anti-aircraft gun.
explosives and mines at several Jacksonville locations.
Federal court records said a childhood friend Implicated
Tubbs In the weapons scheme. The records said Tubbs was
Involved with white supremacist groups, and Jacksonville
authorities said he may be linked to the Ku Klux Ktan and the
Aryan nation.

Kogcr Properties under Investigation
JACKSONVILLE — The Securities and Exchange Com­
mission has begun an Investigation Into allegations that Kogcr
Properties may have been Involved In Insider trading.
The company disclosed the ongoing Investigation In Its
Wallace
quarterly financial report Monday and said3 president. Wall
Klcnast. had resigned. Klcnasl was report ed last month to be
on Indefinite sick leave.
The Investigation stems from 23 lawsuits filed by sharehold­
ers In federal court following sharp declines In Koger stock.
Some of those suits allege insider trading.
Koger common stock fell from 25 V5 a year ago to 6 3-4
quarters at Monday’s close. One of the lawsuits claims Klcnast
sold nearly 35,000 shares of stock In August for more than
• 120a share

Kids pitch In
S tu d a n tt from Rock Laka
Middla School, 250 Slada
Road, Longwood, gathered for
a group photo after assisting
the Ladles Auxiliary of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
5207, by collecting canned
goods and non-perishable food
Items for needy families during
the holidays. The auxiliary
members picked up the dona­
tions Friday and are assembl­
ing the baskets for distribution
this week.
IHf»Hn &gt; f t | KstyJirtw

Amtrak allowed to dump human waata
PALATKA — President Bush has signed a bill allowing
Amtrak paaser.ger trains to dump human waste over rail beds,
leuvlng pending cases In Florida and other states In limbo.
The bill Includes a clause retroactively preventing prosecu­
tion of the passenger service for dumping wastes back to 1976.
Amtrak was convicted last year In Palakta of criminal
littering for dumping raw human sewaFt over two train
trestles.
The rail company was never sentenced. U.S. District Judge
Howard Melton In Jacksonville enjoined the sentencing until It
could be determined whether the case fell under federal or state
Jurisdiction.
Assistant state attorney Dennis Bayer argued that an existing
federal exemption did not pre-empt state environmental law.
He said the enactment of the new bill proves that point.
The state appealed to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal In
Atlanta, but nclthelr the appeals court nor the Jacksonville
federal court has issued orders In the case;
Other cases are pending in Oregon. Nevada and Idaho.

Exercise may make elderly better drivers
ueroblc." Toole said. "This
means you can’t go out and lift
TALLAHASSEE - Aerobic weights and get great benefits to
exercise such as bicycling or reaction time. But elderly adults
brisk walking may make the can speed reaction time without
elderly better drivers by speed­ having to do anything but going
ing their reaction time, a Florida out and walking briskly."
Toole maid researchers are Just
Stale University researcher said
Monday.
beginning to learn the lm"Driving depends heavily on
reaction tim e and older adults',
reaction times are slower." said
Dr. Tonya Toole, an associate
professor of nutrition, food and
movement sciences.
"We're seeing that exercise
can retard that slowing process
and speed reaction time."
Teats with simulated brake
FORT LAUDERDALE and accelerator pedals showed B lo ck b u ster E n tertain m en t
those who regularly participated Corp., the n atio n 's largest
in aerobic exercise had reaction v ldeocassctte reta ile r, said
times that were one-tenth to Monday it agreed to buy rival
two-tenths of a second faster Erol's Inc. for 840 million In a
than those wh.. were sedentary.
move that will boost Us profile In
“We're not talking about very the nation's capital.
much time but In situations
"We wanted to get a foothold
where quick responses are re­
quired It can be very Important. In (Washington) D.C.. and they
It's possible It could make a a re h eav y In D .C .," said
Blockbuster spokesman Wally
difference." Toole said.
She said walking, Jogging, Knlef.
swimming and bicycling all In­
B lockbuster said th e two
crease oxygen Intake and Im­ chains had reached an agree­
prove reactions. She said It takes ment In principle on the ac­
a minimum of three 20- to quisition of Erol's. which owns
40-mlnute periods of aerobic 208 rental stores In Washington.
exercise a week for at least four Baltimore, Philadelphia. Cleve­
months to benefit reaction time. land. Chicago. Richmond, Va.,
"The exercise needs to be and Tidewater Virginia.

Dairy owners urged to use bottled water
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) — State regulators are urging the
owners of some north Florida dairies to use bottled or
municipal water because of high nitrate levels found in their
drinking water wells.
Elevated nitrate levels were Itmndln some wells at dairies In
Gtichrist and Lafayette county wells, but not at wctla neaV ike
dairies.
Dairy farmers questioned the flndinga and were going about
buMfWBS as usuatuntll more tests can bemadc-.
■
The Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services took
the samples for the Department of Environmental Regulation
in order to determine the dairies' effect on the region's water.
Nitrates arc found In cow manure and can cause health
problems for humans, especially in infants and the elderly.
HRS sampling has shown nitrate levels above the state's
drinking water standard of 10 milligrams per liter at some of
the dairies.
MIAMI — The Mervyn’s department store chain said Monday
it plans to open 12 stores in Florida In 1991. Including five that
will replace existing Lord &amp; Taylor stores to be bought from
May Department Stores Co. of Si. Louis.
The Hayward. Calif.-based Mervyn's. a subsidiary of Dayton
Hudson Corp. of Minneapolis specializing in moderately priced
fashions and home goods, said it expects to hire about 2.000
people as part of the expansion.
Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed.
Mervyn's said it agreed to buy Lord &amp; Taylor stores In Dade
County, Coral Springs. Boynton Beach and Jensen Beach. The
company said It expects to close the stores In January and
re-open them as Mervyn’s stores In July.
Mervyn’s bought and converted two Lord &amp; Taylor stores in
Houston In 1989.
From U nittd P rts s International Reports

TALLAHASSEE - The winning
numbers Monday In the Florida
Lottery Fantasy 5 game were 2, 5,
a, 34. and as.
The daily number Monday In the
Florida Lottery CASH 3 game was
080.

□ Straight Play (numbers in exact
order): 1250 on a 50-cent bet, *500
on SI.
□ Box 3 (numbers in any order):
MOfor a 50-cent bet, $160 on SI.
□ Sox 8 (numbers in any order):
$40 for a 50-cent bet, S80 on St.
□ Straight Box 3: $330 In order
drawn, $80 in any order on a $1 bet.
□ Straight Box 6: $290 in order
drawn, $40 If picked In combination
on$1 bet.

(uses mi iso)
Tuesday, November 20. 1990
Vol 83. No 76
Published Doily rod Sunday, tictpl
Saturday by The Santerd Herald.
Inc., )0« N. French Ave.. Santord.
Fia. n m .
Second Claes Pottage Paid al Sanlord,
Florida mil
POSTMASTER: Send addreti changes
to THE SANFORD HERALD. P.O.
Boi l*}7. Sanlord. FL 55771.
Subscription Rates
(Daily ASunday)
Home Delivery AMail
] Months
HT.se
4 Months
SIS 00
1 Tear ..............
S«.W
Phone Her) HI Mil.

portance of aerobic exercise to
not only physical health, but
also to m ental health. Her
stuiles also showed that elderly
ad u lta who p articip ated In
aerobic exercise recalled sets of
numbers better than those who
did not.
"We're learning a lot more

about how simple (asks like
physical reaction time are Inte­
grated with more complex
behavior like memory." Toole
said. "We're finding that the
neural pathways responsible for
those more complex decisions
arc ulso benefited by aerobic
exercise."

Blockbuster Entertainm ent Corp. will
acquire rival Erol's Inc. for s40 million

M trvyn’s to acquire five stores

LOTT1R V

tutor, special friend and small group leader.
"The program gives students a chance to
learn from each other." Wlttmcr said. "It is
peer pressure that sometimes gets them Into
trouble. If we have peers giving positive
pressure, hopefully It will keep others out of
trouble."
Studies have proven that peer counseling
Is the most effective drug and alcohol
intervention method among adolescents.
Myrick says In his book "Peerventlon.
which will be released In January 1991.
By teaching students to help each other,
the program also will mobilise more re­
sources within schools that usually have
only a handful of counselors, Myrick said.
"Kids won't listen to me and they won't
listen to a counselor, but they'll listen to
each other." Wlttmer said. “Lets take the
peer pressure out of the parking lot. turn U
Into something positive and get It Into ihe
classroom."

Executives at Erol's were said
Knlef said the bulk of those
stores will be transferred to lo be notifying the company’s
franchisees of Blockbuster, in 2,700 employees Monday of the
agreement, and were not Imme­
areas where operations overlap.
"The company will not own diately available for comment.
Erol's stores In areas that are
However, Erol's founder and
already covered by our fran­
chisees. Those stores will be principal stockholder. Erol Onacquired by our franchisees. aran. was quoted by the com­
There will not be a mix." Knlef pany as saying he believed the
acquisition served the best Inter­
said.
He estimated that Blockbuster ests of company shareholders
will retain ownership of 10 and employees, "particularly In
percent to 15 percent of the view of Blockbuster's significant
financial resources."
acquired stores.
Blockbuster said It agreed to
For the first nine months of
acquire Erol's in exchange for 1990. Blockbuster earned 947.5
cash, a note, common stock and million, or 60 cents a share, on
the assumption of certain debt, revenues of 8 8 15 million.
which together It valued at 840
Also Monday. Blockbuster
million. Knlef said no further
details on the amount of cash or announced the opening of 11s
number of shares Involved In Ihe 1.500th store. In Vancouver.
British Columbia.
transaction were available.

TH E W EA TH ER
|n a t io n a l

LOCAL FONBOAST
Today...Mostly sunny with the
high near 80 and a light north­
easterly wind at 5 mph.
Tonight...Fair, low In Ihe low
to mid 50s. Light wind.
Tomorrow...Mostly sunny with
a high near 80. Wind cast 5 to 10
mph.
Thank s g i v i n g day
forecast...Fair wtlh the high In
the lower 80s.
E x te n d e d f o r e c a s t...F a ir
T h u r s d a y a n d S a tu r d a y ,
becoming cloudy on 1 rtday with
a chance of showers. Low In the
mid to upper 50s and highs near
80.

FLORIDA T IM M

THURSDAY
RUyCHif 7 8 -8 7

LAST
Dh . I

]

Hi 1la Rain
Of 40 000
St 45 000
75 40 ooo
71 Sf 000
II so 000
4f 54 OOO
75 It oao
7f 40 ooo
II 40 ooo
75 4t ooo
74 so ooo
74 40 ooo
74 so ooo
n 54 ooo
n 40 000

SATURDAY
M yC W f 7 M 5

SUNDAY
PHyCMy 78-87

| BTATSBTtCB

M IA M I - Florid* 74 hour tem penture*
and ramlall at 7 4 m EDT Tuesday

City
Apalachicola
Creslview
Daytona Btach
Fori Laudtrdate
Fort Mytrs
Gainatvilla
Jacksonville
Kay Watt
Miami
Pansacola
Wasola Bradenton
Tallahassee
Tampa
VvroBeach
Weft PalmBeach

FRIDAY
Sunny 74-88

Daytona Bench: Waves are
2-214 feet and semi-glassy. Cur­
rent is to the south with a water
temperature of 67 degrees. New
Smyrna Beach: Waves are 2-3
feet and semi glassy. Current is
to the north, with a water
temperature of 68 degrees.

TUESDAY:
T he high tem perature In
SOLUNAlt TABLE: Min. 6:55 Sanford Monday was 73 degrees
a.m.. 7:25 p.m.: MaJ. 12:45 a.m., and the overnight tow was 52 as
1:10 p.m. TIDES: D aytona reported by ihe University of
Beach: highs. 9:28 a.m.. 9:42 Florida Agricultural Research
).m.;
m lows. 2:50 a.m.. 3:41 p.m.: and Education Center, Celery
ci Sm yrna Beach: highs, Avenue.
9:33 a.m.. 9:47 p.m.; lows. 2:55
Recorded rainfall for the
a.m.. 3:46 p.m.: Cocoa Beach: period, ending at 9 a.m. Tues­
highs, 9:48 a.m., 10:02 p.m.: day, totalled 0 Inches.
lows. 3:10 a.m.. 4:01 p.m.
The temperature at 8 a.m.
today was 57 degrees and
Monday's overnight low was 52.
BOATINO
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
St. A ugustine to Jupiter Inlet
International Airport.
T o d u y ...W ! n d n o r t h to
Other Weather Service data:
northeast 5 to 10 kts. Seas 2 ft □M oaday's high.................. 78
with moderate northeast swells. □ B a r f U ic preeeure.SO.22
Buy and inland waters a light □ R elative H um idity....8 0 pet
chop.
□ W iade.....N orth/northeast 8
Tonight...Wind northeast 5 to m ph
10 kts. Seas 2 ft with moderate
elafaU ..........................O In.
northeast swells. Bay and Inland □R
□Today’s su nset.....5:30 p.m.
waters smooth.
□ T sm srrsw ’a em nrtsc....8:82

&amp;

t b m »b

Temptraturt* indicate previous doy’s
high sod ovsrnight low to • pm. E5T. by
Associated Prtss
CityAForecast
HI Lo Prc
Albuquerquecdy
U 57 ...
Anchoragain
» 15 07
Atlantadr
M If ...
Baltimore dr
u 57 ...
Birminghamcdy
t* 15 ...
Bottandr
44 37 ...
Chicagodr
u 45 ...
%inclrwvt1l cdy
51 40 05
Dtnvordr
u 55 ...
Dttroll rn
49 If
Duluthcdy
44 55 ...
Evansville cdy
M 47 ...
Fail-hank*cdy
14 05 ...
Honolulucdy
11 75 04
La*Vtga*dr
*» 40 ...
LitlteRock cdy
re S3 OS
LosAngele*cdy
44 57 ...
Louisvillecdy
54 45 ...
Momph1*cdy
M 51 ...
Mpls StPaul cdy
54 55 .„
Nathvillocdy
4) 40 ...
NewOrteens cdy
74 40
NowYorkCltycdy
50 X
Norfolk.Va. dr
55 15
Philadelphiacdy
51 50
Phoanli cdy
•0 St
Pllttburgh cdy
50 55
Portland Mainedr
54 II 55
Portland.Or* rn
47 II Of
Providencedr
41 55
Watttern
45 54 05
Topekacdy
4] 15
Tucsoncdy
12 55
Tulsa cdy
44 55
Washington.DC.dr
54 If
Wichita cdy
if 54
Wilkat Barracdy
« »
Wilmington,Del dr
50 54 ...

�-

Santofd HtiM, Ssnford, Florid* - Tussday, Novsmbsr » , 1M 0- M

POLICB
Man accuMd of fighting pollc#
SANFORD — Sanford police report charging David Stanley
SlerputowaHI. 22. of Deltona, with battery on a policeman,
resisting arrest with violence and disorderly conduct, after an
incident that occurred at about 1 a.m. Sunday on Orlando
Drive.
Police said they were Investigating a disturbance Involving
about six men. one of whom was reportedly stabbed.
Slerputowskl allegedly tried to Interfere with police and
became violent. The man who was reportedly stabbed left the
urea before police arrived, an arrest report said.

Rttfetent threatened, rifle stolen
SANFORD — Edwin Scott, 35. 4731 Douglas Drive, Sanford,
was charged with armed burglary and aggravated assault, after
allegedly entering the house where he reportedly lives and
taking a rifle without permission.
Police allege Scott pointed that gun at resident Johnny Scott,
when Johnny Scott asked him what he was doing with the
gun. PoHce allege Johnny Scott was threatened with the gun
before Edwin Scott left the house at about 2:30 p.m. Sunday.
Edwin Scott was found and arrested on Orange Boulevard.
Sanford, after Johnny Scott arrived there an naked that he be
charged in the case, police said.

Pollct halt abduction attempt
SANFORD — Sheriff's deputies acting on a tip from a
convenience store worker, stopped a man's suspected of
abducting a woman at about 10:30 p.m. Saturday.
David Nelson. 55. 815 Hickory Ave., Sanford, reportedly told
police he had let the woman out of his car In Midway, before
deputies stopped him on Sipes Avenue and Midway Avenue.
The woman was not located, but deputies said they found a
pistol and a butcher knife hidden In Nelson's car. He was
charged with possession of those weapons und driving with a
suspended license.
The possibly abducted woman reportedly left a note with a
worker at the Handy Way. 4140 E. State Road 46. The note
said she was being held against her will and thought she was
being taken to Midway, a sheriff's report said. The clerk
reported seeing the woman leave the area In n car driven by a
man. Based on the clerk's description of the car, Nelson was
stopped.

Big-named, small eats ATTENTION
showcased in exhibit s250 Reward!
Herald itaff writer
SANFORD — Judging from
the name of the anim us In ■ new
exhibit, visitors at the Central
Florida Zoological Park might
expect to find some type of large
powerful cat with Mack spots.
Not so. say too officials. The
name Jaguarundi has no direct
relationship with ■ Jaguar, other
than both of them ore mem bers
of the cal family.
The Jaguarundi is a small
feline weighing from 10 to 20
pounds. The average length of
Its slim body is 25 Inches. It has
short legs and small rounded
c a n and comes In a variety of
color variations.
Although they look mare like
the family cat than the powerful
Jaguar, these animals are on the
endangered species list and
quite rare In tootoglca) parka.
Only 16 too* currently Hat them
as official exhibits.
With a formal name of Fells
yagouaroundl, they are also
called Eyra or Otter Cats. The
male In the Sanford exhibit la

slightly over one year old. and la
on
from the Cincinnati Zoo,
while the female, over two years
old. Is on loan from the Arisons
Sonora Desert Museum.
The new exhibit featuring the
two Jaguarundi has now been
opened to the public, in a
"M exican C an y o n " settin g
complete vtui • cuapwy ov rock
cliffs, a waterfall, dry river bed
and live plants. Zoo officials say
this type of exhibit Is the fore­
runner of a new standard for
future feline exhibits. Similar
renovations are planned for
other Mine and primate exhibits
a s soon a* funding become
available.
A cc o rd in g to M ark etin g
Coordinator Andrea Farmer, the
coat for this new exhibit was
approximately 55.000 and re­
quired over 400 staff hours to
complete construction.
Commenting on the new ex­
hibit. too director Ed Posey said.
"We hope to promote natural
behavior with this naturalistic
habitat. This new exhibit should
promote future reproduction for
this pair of Jaguarundls."

117 MAGNOLIA A VC , SANFORD

J222-5542
tu u s

Used Car Dsalsr —

Bargain Or Bust?
The first question In everyone's mind should be "where do these cars
come from?" A typical Independent used car dealer normally has 30 or
40 cars on their lot. It's Important to know the origin of these cars. These
cars are not the "shrapnel of a new car dealer". These cars are bought from
new car stores trying to liquidate their inventory, a product that Is not part
of their new car line, or something older In year than what a new car store
can finance.
Another source for used cars are folks like yourself. Private uwneis that
no longer have a need for their car or truck for many various reasons usually
take them to a used car dealer, selling the vehicle for a fair price for both
parties.
In this day and age many people have had financial problems that have
resulted In a repossession on a car with a bank or finance company. These
cars are also sold from Independent used car lots. Another source for used
car dealers are the auto auctions. This gives the dealer the opportunity to
supplement their Inventories with a variety of cars that are possibly hard
to find.
ft Is not enough to Just purchase these cars, therefore the next step
would Include reconditioning The car at that point Is checked by a cer­
tified mechanic, serviced, and professionally cleaned by an automobile
dctaller.
Buying a car or truck from an Independent used ear dealer can bring
a smile on your face for several reasons. With the small store having leas
overhead you can definitely save money with the purchase of a quality and
inexpensive car or truck. Many of these dealers will even helpyou arrange
financing If necessary, no matter what your credit background may be.
The staff at Mincer Motors Is proud to say that we offer all of these
things. Our reputation speaks for Itself. If you ever have any doubts about
our operation or any of our fellow dealers be sure to check us out with the
local Clumber of Commerce of the Better Business Bureau.
Sincerely.

Longwood residents split
on development tax refund
Herald staff writer

LONGWOOD - Citizens who
follow governmental activities In
Longwood are not only split Into
two camps, but the separation Is
Woman charged in shotgun threat
getting further apart each time
SANFORD — Stephanie Knlghten, 24. 909 Bay Ave.,
the city commission meets.
Sanford, has been charged with aggravated assault. Sanford
One side Is ted by Mayor Hank
police allege that on Nov. 15. Knlghten pointed u shotgun at
Hardy and commissioners Paul
someone at her house during an argument.
Lovestrand and Gary Hefter: the
Knlghten was arrested at home at 11:49 a.m. Monday.
other side has former Mayor
Gene Farach, former Deputy
Mayor Jeff Morton, commission­
Man accused of stealing, forging check
ers Rex Anderson and Adrienne
SANFORD — Sanford police report the arrest of Darryl Keith
Perry and a group of staunch
Thomas. 33. 1318 Lake Ave.. Sanford. Thomas Is charged with
supporters.
dealing In stolen property and uttering a forgery.
In preparing the city's budget
He Is accused of on Oct. 29. cashing a stolen and forged
that went Into operation Oct. 1. a
check In Sanford. The check was drawn on the account of
tax Increase of almost one-mill
David E. Rowland Farms, and wns cashed at B A W Market on
was approved In order (o pay for
Sanford Ave.. police said. Thomas wns photographed during
planned downtown redevelop­
the transaction and police said that led to his arrest at 3:30
ment. a new city hall complex,
p.m. Monday.
and other Improvements In the
city.
The plans were formulated
Seminole County DUI arrests
after a series of town hall
SANFORD — The following persons face a charge of driving
meetings, by Farach. Morton,
under the Influence of alcohol (DUI) In Semtnotr County:
Anderson and Perry, phis former
• Michael Courtney Aitken, 37. 2821-107-Sun Lake Loop. Luke
city admtnstrator Mike Abels.
Mary, was arrested at 2 a.m. Monday utter Ills car failed to
Farach and Morton were de­
maintuln a single lane on Lake Mary Boulevard. Lake-Maryr Hr
feated In th eir re-election bids
was also charged with driving with a suspended license and
and Abels was fired last wreck.
with an expired vehicle tag.
During their successful politi­
cal campaigns, newly elected
• Gregory Alan Fisher. 32. 1200 W. 25th St.. Sanford, was
commissioners Hefter and Lov­
arrested at 10:33 a.m. Sunday after police received a tip
estrand. said they wanted to halt
reporting an erratic driver. He was arrested on 25th Street, and
the growth plana until they
also cahrgcd with carrying a concealed rifle found Inside the
could be put on a pay-as-you-go
car.
basis because the increase In
• Stacey Elizabeth Armstrong. 23. of Sun Lake Drive. Lake
taxes was not necessary.
Mary, was arrested at 6:30 p.m. Saturday after her car was in
Last night, a group of citizens
an accident on Lake Emma Road, Lake Mary.
rebelled.
■ Henry Kay field Humphrey. 36. 6550-B San I’cdro Square.
The tone of the meeting was
Winter Park, was arrested at 2:45 a.m. Sunday after his car
set early, during the public
was clocked speeding on U.S. Highway 17-92, Sanford. He was
participation period when Diane
also charged with possession of cocaine after seven packets of
Fedderer told the commission. "I
the drug were reportedly found in his car.
urge you to move forward on
• James Catrclt. of Lockhart, was arrested ul 6:56 a.m.
redevelopment, or give us our
Sunday, after his truck, passing in a no passing zone, almost
money back that you're taking
struck a state trooper's patrol car an Lake Markham Road, near
In taxes."
State Ko:id 46. west of Sanford. He was also charged with
Crrolyn Emmting told Hefter
driving without a license.
and Lovestrand. "Roll back our
• Thomas Michael Bowers. 26. 1114 Dove Lane. Casselberry,
taxes. Take the money and put It
was arrested at 9:33 p.m. Saturday after Ills weaving car was
In an escrow account then reim­
clocked traveling at about 60 mph on Luke Markham Road at
burse us at the end of one year.
State Hoad 46. west of Sanford.
But don't use the money for
anything else."
Morton presented the com­
mission with a petition signed by
132 people asking for a tax
refund If the downtown redevel­
opment project Is not going to
1.000 pounds, the slow-moving, move forward. Morton said. "I
United Press International
gray-brown mammals arc dif­ want you to pass a resolution on
ficult to sec from the surface. that tonight."
MIAMI - A s F l o r i d a 's Consequently, boaters histori­
Later in the meeting, An­
manatees swim south for the cally have been their worsl derson commented that "Com­
winter, the death toll for the enemies, causing about one- m issioners Hefter and Lovendangered scu cows has al­ third of the manatee deaths.
cstrand talk about
ready passed last year's record
Last year. lx&gt;ats caused 50 of pay-as-you-go. but so far I
and biologists ure wondering th e 166 m a n a te e d e a th s . haven't seen any plan on how to
how much longer the species Through October this year. 41 do It. I move that we return the
can survive.
manatees have been killed by tax money to the citizens."
Through the first 10 months uf boats.
1990. |81 manatees were killed
Florida Marine Patrol officers
In Florida wulcrs. 9 percent write plenty of speeding tickets
more than last year's record of In slow-spced zones. Lt. Denise
166.
Warrick said. Fines range from
Public awareness Is ul an $35 to S 191.
Studies of more than 1.000
all-time high and restrictions on
boaters are expanding but the manatee deaths since 1974 also
manatee death toll keeps mnun- Implicate poachers, flood-control
gales, fishing gear und pollution.
tlng.
UPI Science Writer
Despite the Increased deaths,
"If you look ut the mortality
over the last four years. 1 don't manatee researchers have hope.
CAPE CANAVERAL believe we rail sustain this rate, For one thing, this year's record
The shuttle Atlantis's crew
cvrn If we have more animals total of deaths was skewed by 46
enjoyed a bonus day in
space Tuesday and awaited
than we think." said Robert deaths during a January freeze.
Researchers also expand Ihclr
Turner, manatee coordinator for
a decision on whether high
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv­ knowledge each year, said Calhy
w in d s a t t h e s h i p 's
Heck, a biologist with a U.S. Fish
ice.
California runway would
Only about 1.200 of the en­ und Wildlife learn In Gainesville
block a day-late landing
dangered mammals are thought that tracks manatees by radio
a ttem p t to w rap up a
to remain In Florida. Right now. and satellite.
five-day military flight.
The research shows where,
hundreds are making their an­
C h ief flig h t d ire c to r
nual migration from north und how far and how fust I he
Randy Stone would not
central Florida to the warmer unlmals move. It may lead tu the
rule out the possibility of a
establishment of better refuges.
waters off smith Florida.
la n d in g T u e s d a y or
Last year, lawmakers ordered
The m igration takes two
Wednesday at the Kennedy
weeks lo a month. Seasonal 13 counties with large manatee
Space Center if the outlook
speed rules went Into effect ixjpulattons in design manatee
remained unfavorable for a
touchdown at Edwards Air
Thursday In many soulh Florida protection plans. Most plans arc
canals and waterways. Including still In the works hut researchers
F o rc e B a s e , C a lif ..
see them as |M-rhaps the last real
Atlantis's primary landing
the Intracoustul Waterway.
Despite the manatees' size, tool In the fight to save the
site.
which averages 9 feet long and manatee

Manatee death hits record,
biologists grim about future

Atlantis crew
spends extra
day in space

“S TO C K
R ED U C TIO N
SALE"

Commissioner Peny seconded
the motion, but Hardy objected,
saying. "We haven't even had
one work session yet. This
shouldn't be brought up so
quickly."
The 'vote on returning the
tuxes was 3 to 2. with Hardy
Joining Lovestrand and Hefter in
opposing the motion.
Several times during the dis­
cussion. Hardy had difficulty
srlth a rather vocal audience and
called on Longwood police to
assist in keeping the meeting
orderly.
Perry admitted that the com­
mission may have been overly
am bitious in m aking such
large-scale plans for city Im­
provements, "but that doesn't
mean the Idea Is wrong. Maybe U
Just needs to be postponed, and
we should return to the fray
everything was before."
Perry added. "If the two new
c o m m is s io n e r s ra n o n a
no-new-tax platform, as the peo­
ple have discussed here tonight,
1 would vote that the people
should be given, back their
taxes."
Lovestrand, however, called
attention to a parting memo
from Abels, who reported that
the city Is now $ 6 0 0 ,0 0 0 short o f
Its expected revenue.

&amp; £ * $ « T fU m tv i
Mincer Motor*

AOV

Pfwyvey 1

W h at’s for luneh?
Wsdn*sdsy,Nov.&gt;1
Manager's Choice

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Free-trade in peril
After four yean of coocerted effort. It
appear* that the Uruguay Round of Interna*
t io n a J free-trade nefouadona could adjourn In
failure. If thM lamentable event occur*. It win
be because of the unwillingness of the
European Community to reduce It* unfair
agricultural subsidies.
The 14-nation Calm* Group, a compact of
rich and poor farm exporter* that got Its
name from the Australian town where It held
its first meeting, ha* threatened to withdraw
from the round by mid-November unless the
EC becomes more flexible.
The Calm* Group propose* a 75 percent
cut In overall EC farm supports
supper during the
next 10 year* and a BO percent cut In export
subsidies. This dovetail* with an earlier
proposal by the United States, whfc di I* not a
Calms member. The American plan . .Tiled for
the EC to open Its markets to more Imparts of
wheat and com while the United States lifts
Its Import restrictions on sugar and dairy
roducts and Japan accepts more rice
EImports.
The United States and the EC have done far
more damage to the world agriculture market
than the other 94 signatory nations of the
General Agreement on Tariff* and Trade.
American farm subsidies total $67 billion
annually; the EC, $97 bUUon. But while the
United States has been amenable to curbing
its protectionist practices, the EC nations
have been recalcitrant.
Not only do EC nations oppose the Calms
proposal, many also resist a more modest
counterproposal by the European Com­
mission calling for a 30 percent cut In farm
supports over 10 years, using 1966 as a
favorable baseline for calculations.
The m ost unfortunate aspect of this
stalemate is that It threaten* to undermine
substantial progress made in other important
areas of trade during the Uruguary round.
Accords are nearly completed In 14 areas of
negotiations. Including market access, serv­
ices. Intellectual property and Investments.
The Calms Group warned that the absence
of a farm pact not only Jeopardizes the
Uruguay round, but also calls Into question
the value o f the entire multilateral trading
system. The none-too-subtie Implication of
this warning Is that a trans-Atlantic trade war
could tesult If the EC remains Intransigent on
farm subsidies.
There would be no winners In such a trade
war. On the other hand, nearly all nations
would benefit from freer trade. Indeed, since
GATT came into being, the major trading
countries have Increased annual global
commerce from $60 billion to $4 trillion.
If the Uruguay Round Is successfully
completed and GATT dictates are extended to
every major area of trade, the overall growth
In global com m erce would yield an adc
Jdltlonal
$200 billion a year In domestic output In the
United States alone. The EC would see similar
growthWith so much to be gained by combating
protectionism and by opening markets, the
EC wuld be serving Its own Interests to yield
to the will of the other 95 GATT treaty
m em bers. If, however, the EC rem ains
Intractable on farm subsidies. Isolating Itself
from the rest of the trading world. It would
lose considerably more than It would pre­
serve.

i

!

vm

LETTERS
I

Thumbs up to Florida
Floridians deserve a big "Thumb* Up" and
"Thank-you" from citizens across the country for
passing the three-day. coallng-ofT period for
handgun aales on Election Day.
Adoption of Amendment 2 will help atop the
"cash-and-carTy" sale of handguns which are used
not only by criminals in Florida, but are trafficked
Into states like New York and New Jersey, which
have tough gun law*.
If the Florida legislature had had the courage to
stand up to the gun lobby, there would already be
a seven-day cooling-off period on the books. The
■ I Sof' Florida
Tloi
■ - the
■ legislature refused to
people
did what
do: take action against gun violence. And they did
so In a resounding way. approving the waiting
period by an overwhelming 84 percent.
Unfortunately, the U.S. Congress adjourned last
month without acting on a national cooling-off
rlod for handgun sales. A September Gallup Poll
i
found
that 95 percent of Americans favor the
Brady Dill, requiring a national, seven-day waiting
period fur handgun sales. Federal lawmakers
should Ignore the jingle of the gun lobby's cash
register and Instead heed the wishes of the public
and follow Florida's lead In taking step* to reduce
handgun violence.
James S. Brady
Former While House Press Secretary
Washington. D.C.

G

Is Gulf consensus disintegrating?
Besides the United State*. Is there s democra­ on military Ir
Intervention before the elections.
ey said
cy In the world that would prepare for war for They
sold they sue
more than three months before finally deciding Ilona and sendlni
to debate the enterprise?
troops to the G
Not Britain, Germany or Japan. Each of those but refused to say
d far less than the w hether they also
contributed
United States to the allied effort in the Persian favored an eventual
Gulf. Yet each has also enjoyed more freewheel- attack by the United
nip OK8CU9MOC1 over inc enon* i nc uipuivic States should sanc­
Prime Minister. Toahlkl Kalfu. ran Into a political tions Call. When pre­
chain asw when he proposed sending 1,000 or so ssed . th e se s to u t
non-combatant volunteer* to the Gulf. You'd h e a r ts u n ifo rm ly
have thought the Imperial Army was about to e x p l a in e d , a s If
m arch again. Unlike thetr American coun­ reading from a script,
terparts. Japanese opposition leaders didn’t that they didn’t want
merely voice "concern.” They shook down the "to limit the presi­
rafters with their protests.
dent's options."
Here at home, the lock-step consensus In favor
Odd, isn't it. how
f ToahtklKaifu
of Bush'* Gulf policy has begun to break In the these politicians have
ran into a po­
post few days — but only after the elections, no' q ualm a ab o u t
litical chain
naturally. Until then, the media and Congress limiting the presi­
saw whan ha
seemed to compete In how loudly they could d e n t’s options In
proposed
sing hosannas In praise of the president's every other policy
sending
vol­
strategy. Not a single congressional election a r e n a . Yet w hen
unteers to the
reportedly turned on disagreement over our American lives are at
Gulf. J
approaching military adventure. In moat races, •take, suddenly they
the issue hardly came up at all.
grow mute. Perhaps
Many members of Congress. Including several they need to review the Constitution. It explicitly
I've Interviewed, wouldn't even admit to a view gives Congress — and Congress alone — the

power to declare i
The performance of the press has been no I
i pride themselves
lackluster. Although the i
they've spoken In
■ U n . With a fo r
pm voice on

ve

UA. vital interests were at stake, rather than
.m m iH im the nature of those “ Interests." And
to the extent that editorial writers and cotumnlats have dissented from the administration
tine, it usually has been to question Bush's
timetable, not his general policy. Many, for
example, have pleaded with Bush to give
aanrtfons more time to work. As dissents go.
these ore mere quibbles.
In recent days, fortunately, our sleepwalking
Congress and media have awakened. The smell
of gunpowder on the bortion has concentrated
their minds. Some members of Congress sud­
denly want to debate the Oulf policy, or even
vote an the Issue of war end peace. Newspapers
are lining up in support of a vote. too.
Well and good, but where have they been for
id they think
the past three months? What did
Bush intended to do with the hundreds of
thousands of troops he'd sent to Saudi sands?
Where did they suppose the Inflexible logic of
the president's position —the Invasion of Kuwait
"wtu not stand" -* led. If sanctions Galled?

JA C K ANDERSON

GSA chief takes
a paid vacation

ISSUE S T H A T HIT HOME

Driving home the need to vote:
answer to apathy is in the mail
By STEVI aCRSTU.
Unittd Press International
WASHINGTON - More than 13 years ago,
the Flood Control District in Monterey. Calif.,
was faced with one of (hose special elections
that excite only apathy. It seemed a waste to
even set up polling boot tin.
So Monterey decided to hold the first all-mail
vote under which a ballot is sent to every
registered voter. The result was stunning.
The Flood Control District was Inundated by
16.500 ballots, an increase of more than 50
percent over any previous election In that
Jurisdiction, and the election saved nearly
• 10 .000 .

Slnce then. Jurisdictions In Oregon. New
York. Kansas. Montana. Missouri, Washington.
Nebraska — perhaps as many as a 1.000 —
have used the all-mail ballot, most In local,
uncontcstcd elections.
Now the General Accounting Office. In a
report, has suggested that Congress consldere
mall voting, as well as other, more conven­
tional methods, to reverse the deplorable voter
turnout In the United States.
In the Nov. 6 general election only about 36
percent of all Americans eligible to vote
bothered to cast ballots. That tied the record
for the lowest turnout ever In off-year elections,
set two years earlier.
Among the suggestions made by GAO. the
congressional watchdog agency, la using
toll-free numbers on each state by which the
voter could request an official absentee or mall
ballot and find out he or she is about to be
purged from registration rolls; mailing pam­
phlets explaining propositions and referen­
dum*. conducting mock elections tn high
schools.
GAO has offered for Congress' consideration
proposals to make registration automatic and
also suggested setting registration deadlines
closer lo the day of the election. As many as 37
states might Increase turnout by 5 percent or
more by adopting election-day registration.
Although many members of Congress back
changes to Increase .participation In elections,
resistance to new methods have been strong.
In 1989 the House approved the "motor
voter" bill that would have required states to
Include a registration section In the application
for a driver's license. That bill was killed In late
September of this year when the Senate failed
to crack a Republican filibuster 55-42. 5 short
• of the needed 60.
"Resistance to proposal for reform In this

area appears to be brood and baaed to some
extent on concerns for m aintaining the
security of elections from fraud and abuse, and
possibly because there has been little public
pressure for registration reform." the GAO
said. "Resistance has also been noted In the
case of elected officials who may seek to
perpetuate the administrative ground rules by
which they were elected.”
The GAO said all-mall election would have
the "most dramatic effect on turnout" — an
analysis of data showed the range of Increase
between 20 and 40 percent — but acknowl­
edged that the major concern is the possibility
of fraud and a b u s e . -------------------------------"But since convenUonal elections have f ,n th e Nov. 6
not always been free
a |« r .
of such problems, the
important question Is
w h eth er they a re
SOOUIJO
more likely to be
percent Of *1
e n c o u n t e r e d In
A m sricsnsalall-m ail ele c tio n s
IglbletOVOt*
than In conventional
bothered to
elections," GAO raid.
cast ballot*.
The report said the
J h s t tj«J the
one study conducted
record for the
showed little evilowest turnout
dence of fraud or
eveM noff.
* " ifo w e v e r. th a t
yt*T*l*Ctlon*.
study was confined
set two year*
to local uncontcstcd
earlier, j
elections, usually on
bond Issues or refer­
endum*." GAO said.
'It Is not clear what level of fraud or abuse of
would exist If contested state and national
elections were cpnducted by all-mail ballotmuGAO said there are three arras where fraud
or abuse could occur: the forging of signatures:
the completing and mailing of ballots sent to
recently deceased; the paying or coercing of
voters to fill out their ballots In a certain way.
The report acknowledged that If the stakes
are Iflghcr or in areas where political corrup­
tion Is rife, a "considerably lower level of
Integrity” might surface than In the mall
elections studied.

LETTERS T.O EDITOR
Lt-ltera lo lilt- editor arc welcome. All letters
muni Ih- signed. Include the address of the
writer and a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be on a single subjcrl and Is­
as brier as possible.. Letters are subjeel tu
editing.

WASHINGTON - The head of the General
Services Administration turned a one-day
speech at a conference tn Amsterdam Into s
12-day grand tour of Europe for himself and
five staffers,. at taxDsver*' exoense.
GSA Administrator Richard Austin and his
entourage spent more than $22,000 on the
trip In late September. Among the travelers
w a s ,a b o dyguard --------- ------------whoa Just
just happens to '
be the son
i
of the
C ap ito l Hill sta ff
d i r e c t o r fo r th e
House subcommittee
that seta the GSA
budget.
Tne GSA la the
federal government's
landlord and supply
store — managing
office buildings and
doling out pencils.
A pparently Austin
th o u g h t he could
f Apparently
learn something from
Austin
touring castles In
thought
he
Dublin and meeting
could
learn
the queen's paper
something
supplier In London.
from touring
In a memo to the
castles In
White House In July
Dublin. |
to explain the need
for the trip. Austin
said he wanted lo "foster Improved relations
... and exchanp: Information ... personally
view GSA operations and dlacuaa... views on
how well we are providing sendee." Austin's
report of the trip strains to make It sound like
business. He lectured the International
lum on Office Accommodation In
on the topic, "Office Accom­
modation Policy of the American Govern­
ment." As scintillating as that sounds, It was
not the highlight of the trip.
The delegation toured a palace In the
N etherlands, the Dutch Parliam ent, a
museum In Amsterdam, Dublin Castle and a
National Park In Ireland, and U.S. military
bases in England and Germany. In London
they stayed In a four-star hotel where the
rooms go for S200 plus a night. In London.
Austin visited Her Majesty's Stationery Of­
fice. Why? Because, according to his report,
the director of the office had visited the
United States and Austin wanted to find out If
"there were any outstanding Issues lor GSA."
There weren't, the report says, but there's no
harm In checking.
A GSA spokesman told us that each GSA
administrator makes a similar trip to review
(he troops, but sources In the agency told our
associate Dean Boyd' the trip was "a sad
waste of money.”
If the trip alone was not enough to stir
grumblings within GSA. the selection of
Jam es Gunnels as a security guard for the
entourage did the trick. He la the son of Tex
Gunnels, the staff director of the House
subcommittee that doles out money to GSA.
Jam es Gunnels Is a criminal Investigator
with the Federal Protective Service stationed
In Fort Worth. Texas. The service la within
the GSA and Its Job la to provide security for
federal buildlnp. There are some 200 Federal
Protective Service agents in Washington that
Austin could have taken, but a GSA
spokesman told us James Gunnels was
chosen ''because he's one of the best.”
We asked his lather. Tex Gunnels. If his
powerful position with the appropriations
subcommittee could have had anything to do
with the choice of his son for the European
trip. "I don't ace how the hell U could." Tex
Gunnels told us, adding that his son was
"ordered lo go." It was a tough Job. but
somebody had to do It.
Exactly what the younger Gunnels did on
the trip la not clear. Federal Protective
Services officers can't carry guns overseas,
but the GSA said it needed a security man to
plan the trip because of overseas travel
warnings posted by the State Department
after the Iraqi Invasion of Kuwait.
There Is a bright side to this story. Austin's
wife Joined the delegation In Ireland, but she
paidliter
her own way.

�Sanford Hsrald, Sanford, Florida — Tuaaday, Novrebsr SO, 1010— M

Eight charged w ith rape, New board—
1A
fatal stabbing of m other public).
to us (as members of the
jbUck" said Jeanne Morris, the

two separate arraignments to
charges of murder, rape and
BOSTON — Eight teenagers robbery and were ordered held
are being -held for allegedly without ball.
Carlos G arcia, 18: Corey
staying a 26-ycarold mother
who was beaten with a tree limb, James. 19. and Che Barnes. 17.
raped repeatedly and stabbed all of Dorchester, were scheduled
dozens of times In a park on to return to court for hearings
Halloween night In what one Nov. 29.
The Juveniles, Including four
police detective called an apparfrom thnehester and one from
ent case of "wilding."
Police rounded up and ar* Malden, were scheduled to re­
rested the eight alleged gang turn to court Dec. 9.
members at about 8 a.m. Mon­
Boston Police head homicide
day In B oston's Dorchester Detective Edward McNelley said
neighborhood after a two-week It was one of the most heinous
Investigation Into the death of crimes he'd ever seen, reminis­
Kimberly Harbour, 28. of Milton.
cent of the "wilding" gang-rape
Harbour's beaten and stabbed and beating of a Central Park
body was found In Franklin Jogger In New York In April
Field, a park In Dorchester, In 1989. a crime that shocked the
the early morning hours of Nov. nation because of Its brutality
1. She was the mother of a and random nature.
7-year-old girl.
"I don't know what 'wilding'
"They beat her with a stick,
its bbed her repeatedly," Boston Is, but If you say. *!s It the same
Police Lt. Peter O'Malley said a s w hat happened In New
during one arraig n m en t In York?'. I'd say there were a lot of
Dorchester District Court. "More similarities,’' McNelley said.
than one person stabbed her.
O'Malley said the suspects set
More than one person raped her out as a group late Oct. 31 "with
... One person Jumped up and the Idea to rob females" and
down on top of her."
cam e upon Harbour and a
Media reports quoted police companion, Laura Peterson.
sources as saying she had been O'Malley said the suspects first
stabbed about 100 times.
took a set of keys from Peterson,
The eight, all alleged members but "threw" them at her and
of the Franklin Field Pistons tu rn e d th e ir a tte n tio n to
gang, pleaded innocent during Harbour.

Seattle, Montreal are among
world’8 most livable cities’
llnltad Press International______
WASHINGTON - Melbourne.
Australia, along with Montreal
and Seattle-Tacoma, Wash., are
the world's most livable cities,
according to a study released.
Those three locations are
closely followed by Atlanta and
Essen- D ortm und-D ulsburg.
Germany.
Monday's study. "Cities: Life
In the World's 100 Largest
Metropolitan Areas." by the
Population Crisis Committee,
also found the five largest cities
with the worst living conditions
are Lagos. Nigeria; Kinshasa.
Zaire: Kanpur. India: Dhaka.
Bangladesh and Recife. Brazil.
In the study, the committee
ranked 100 metropolitan areas
in 45 nations and used 10
indicators to come up with Its
score — m urder rate, food
expense, living space, access to
utilities, com munciat Ions, edu­

Business—
C oatlausd from Page 1A
t Ion's efforts.
The survey found that almost
90 percent of the shoppers
agreed that Salvation Army ket­
tles add to the holiday spirit, and
97 percent felt that the money
collected by the Salvation A m y
was put to good use.
Most of the shoppers surveyed
at a mall that did not allow
Salvation Army kettles on the
premises felt that donating to a
Salvation Army kettle actually
put them In a better frame of
mind for shopping.
Many shopping malls whose
holiday plans traditionally In­
clude the Salvation Army's pre­

DEATHS
JUNE O. DOWDY
Ju n e O. Dowdy. 61. 5590
Wayside Drive. Sanford, died
Monday at her residence. Bom
June 28, 1929, In Holly Hill, she
moved to Sanford from Daytona
Beach In 1960. She was a retired
systems technician for Slrombcrg-Carlson and a member of
the First Presbyterian Church.
Lake Mary. She was a member of
the Fleet Reserve Auxiliary and
a Boy Scout troop mother for
troops 8 3 1 and 529.
Survivors Include husband.
W a v e rly E .; s o n s , Lew is
Wavcrly. Patterson. Ga., Tracy
William. Sanford; daughters.
C aro l A nn F ro n k , M iam i.
F ra n c e s E. G ill, S an fo rd ;
stepsons. Waverly Earl Jr.. Fort
M y e rs. P rin c e C h a rle s .
Whltesburg. Ky.; stepdaughters.
Kathryn L. Campbell. Knoxville.
T c n n ., J a n ic e E la in e Mc­
C ullough. Maryville. Tenn..
Nancy Earlene Bennett. Virginia
Beach, Va.; brother. Charles S.
B a r th lo w . P a n a m a C ity .
Panam a; 16 grandchildren;
three great-grandchildren.
Baldw in-Fairchild Funeral
Home. Oaklawn Chapel. Lake
Mary. In charge of arrange­
ments.

cation. infant mortality, air qual­
ity. noise pollution and traffic
congestion.
"More than half the world's
100 largest cities are faced with
astronomical population growth
and. for many, their ability to
rope Is already overwhelmed."
said Sharon Camp, senior vice
president of PCC
"It is nearly impossible for
these sprawling metropolitan
areas — many located in the
world's poorest countries — to
keep pace with the need for
tra n s p o rta tio n , s a n ita tio n ,
utilities, schools and hospitals,
as long as their populations
doubt* every 12 to 20 years."
she added.
A ccording to C am p, th e
statistical snapshot dem on­
strates th a t for devleoplng
c o u n trie s , c u rb in g o v erall
popualtlon growth will have a
significant and positive Impact
on the quality of future urban
life.

sence reported increased traffic
In their places of business, said
Clark. Martlre &amp; Bartolomeo,
which conducted the survey.
All funds received In the
Salvation Army's traditional
Christmas campaign go directly
to the needy, said Lt. Col. Leon
Fcrraez. spokesman for the
S alv atio n A rm y's n a tio n a l
headquarters in Verona. N.J.
Last year's donations enabled
the Salvation Army to provide
food, clothing, shelter, compa­
nionship. gifts and visitations to
more than 6 million needy
people across the country. Thts
year, the number of people
needing help Is expected to be
even higher, he said.

District
ct 5 representative, "but
now It is our responsibility to get
i no 0c answers.

An orientation session for the
whole board was scheduled for
yesterday morning to help ac­
quaint the new members with
the procedures they must follow
and to help them prepare for the
next lour years of service.
“It’s a lot of the housekeeping
th in g s we need to know ,"
ex p lain ed D istrict 1 re p re ­
sentative Sandy Robinson.
Following that session, the
new members spent an hour or
two with the assistant superin­
tendent who would help them
understand the Items on the
agenda on which they had ques­
tions.
"I had some questions on
some of the change orders."
Robinson said.
She said she was familiar with
the bulk of work she would face
a s a school board m em ber
b e c a u se sh e h a s a tte n d e d
countless meetings as a con­
cerned parent and as a member
of various school board com­
mittees.
She added that her experience
as a member of the Lake Mary
Planning and Zoning board will
be to her advantage In that she
was prepared for a bulky agenda
package.
“It's a lot," she said, but I
expected It.'
Kuhn said the agenda
ager
Is one
that "a person with
rlth reasonable
i
Intelligence and an ability to do

some detective work" would
have no trouble understanding.
Even so. she said she will ask a
lot of questions.
"1 have a lot of watchdogs out
there making sure I do the right
thing." she said.
Morris, who has been Involved
with the school board for about
IB years as a leader In the PTA
and as a member of many board
com m ittees, said she looks
forward to being on the board so
she can get answers to things
that were often passed without
question.
“I used to sit and wonder how
som ething was going to be
accomplished or why It was
done a particular way. she said.
"Now I have access to those
answers."
Each of the new board mem­
bers said they have In place or
are setting up additional sources

Also at tonight's meeting the
new board srUl decide on the day
and times when their meetings
should be held.

Kuhn said she has a list of
business contacts who will help
advise her. Morris said as a
member of the PTA and other
committees, she built up a long
list of school and community
resources she feels she can call
on to help answer her questions.
Robinson Is currently setting up
a pair of committees at the
primary and secondary levels of
teachers, adm inistrators and
parents from each school In the
district who she hopes will be
able to provide her with informa­
tion from the school-level.
All the new board members
said they are excited by their
new responsibilities, and looked
forward to serving on the board.
"I was expecting they'd go a

L ast year, m eetings were
m oved from Wednesdays to
Tuesdays because most other
school boards ki the state meet
in Tuesdays. Representatives
from Seminole County often
were disadvantaged at state
meetings because they could not
arrive until after a Wednesday
meeting.
T ra d itio n a lly , one school
board meeting each month Is
held during the day and the
other In the evening to ac­
comodate citizens with various
work schedules who wish to
attend the meetings.

Furlong
Continued (nun Paga 1A
Hypocritical
Rascals O ut" movement and
defeated two challengers In a
primary and runoff. He faced no
Democratic challengers. Sturm
fostered an environmental pro­
tectionist stance, winning a key
endorsement from the Sierra
Club, which overshadowed his
en d o rsem en t from the probullder Home Builders Associa­
tion of Mid-Florida.
Furlong squeaked out » ' -Na­
than one percent win over Re­
publican Sandra Glenn, the Drat
w om an' elected to the com­
mission and the first woman to
serve as Its chairman. Furlong
ran on a strong co n tro lled
growth plank- calling for new
residential construction to keep
pace with new schools. Glenn
balked at the school proposal
and said population growth has
been managed correctly.
Furlong has arrived at a
c e n tra list position betw een
commissioners Jennifer Kelley
and Pat Warren and commis­
s i o n e r s S tu r m a n d F re d
S t r e e t m a n . The twocommissioner coalitions have
often formed on key votes such
as the forced resignation of
former county manager Ken
Hooper, leaving Glenn as the
swing vote.
The first key vote the com
mission took today was election
of a new commission chairman.
Sturm nominated Streetman. an
com m issioners voted un an i­
mously to approve hls nomina­
tion.
The next key vote which did
not arise today Is the selection of

a new county manager. There Is
growing Interest In offering the
Job to Hooper after more than a
year of failed attempts to entice a
new county executive to the
oft-dlvlded commission. Sturm
and Streetman have supported
Hooper since hls resignation and
have said they would support hls
return.

.other commissioners vote for
him.
Warren said she has spoken
with Hooper about returning to
the position and said she has
been contacted by Hugh Harling.
engineer and her 1988 campaign
manager, on Hooper's behalf.
Warren faces a possible District
1 commission challenge from
Hooper In 1992 and aald Hooper
Furlong said he would vote for referred to the elimination of
rehlring Hooper If at least three that challenge with hla ap ­

pointment during a recent con­
versation.
Warren would not aay whether
she would support rehlrlng
Hooper, but she did say this
morning. "I don't want to hurt
Ken. I'm Just hoping I won't
have to say anything negative
today."
Kelley said she would not
support Hooper's appointment.
Hooper did not return calls.

Danger
1A
supervision provides Its
own special challenge to poli­
cymakers precisely because it
appears to be spontaneous," the
authors said.
In another part of the survey,
parents of 16 children were
asked to prearrange a 15-minute
block of tim e w hen th e ir
children normally would be
hom e alone. C h ild ren 's re­
sponses were monitored when a
telephone caller asked to speak
with their mother and when a

delivery person knocked on the
door.
Only two of the 18 children
performed appropriately on the
telephone simulation. The op­
timum response was that their
mother could not come to the
phone and that they would like
to take a message. At no point
should the child give their name.
None of the children handled
the package drlivery portion
effectively, with 13 opening the
door and taking the package.
The optimum response was lor

The authors say the survey's
results emphasise the need for
more study Into "the thinking of
'parents and their children, the
resources available to them, and
the process by which so many
families come to leave very
y o u n g c h i l d r e n w ith o u t
supervision and without ade­
quate training to minimize risk."

The kettles will be manned by
various cluba, groups, organiza­
tions and private volunteers who
will be ringing handbells to
attract donors to the project.
According lo Sanford Salva­
tion Army statistics, the local
service clubs work with the
kettles last year n etted an
estimated $6,000. In all, (he
Salvation Army was able to
obtain a total of 835.400 during
the 1989 holiday season from
the kettles, the annual mail
appeal and other events. The
money was a great assist In the
Army's goal of helping those
w ho a r c u n a b l e to h e l p
themselves, and helped not only
during last Christmas but during
other times of need during the
subsequent year.
In addition to the kettle drive,
the local Salvation Army Is also

Involved In the Angel Tree
program, with Christmas trees
act up at (Ive area locations
decorated with small cut-outs of
angels. Each cut-out contains
the name, age and clothing sizes
of a local child determed by the
Salvation Army as in need of
help during the holidays.
Shoppers are asked to take one
of the cut-outs ofT the tree,
purchase a new winter outfit for
the child, then return It with the
angel cut-out pinned lo ihc
clothing. Distribution will be
made to some 800 families In
this local area on Christmas day.
The ages of the children are from
Infancy through age 12.
For Information on any of the
Salvation Army projects, the 700
W. 2 4 th St. office may be
contacted at 322-2642.

the child to go to the door, ask
who la there without opening the
door, and then ask the de­
liveryman to leave the package
by the door.

Kettles

Cootinasd from Page 1A
Bettye Smith. Salvation
Army officials, representatives
from local churches and area
business and civic leaders.
By the time local Salvation^
Army personnel called ft a day
yesterday, they had a total of
nine kettles placed In strategic
areas around the area.
Most of the kettles are located
at shopping centers where the
largest number of passers by will
be doing their holiday shopping.
The campaign, to raise money
for the needy, will continue
Dec. 23.
Diego In 1962. He was an owner Gulfport. Miss., died Saturday. through
A lthough the nationw ide
of a cytology laboratory In Nov. 17. at Gulf Coast Commu­ Salvation Army Kettle drive of­
Winter Springs and attended the nity Hospital. Biloxi. Miss. He ficially began last Friday, many
Church of Christ. He was a Navy was a native of Georgia and was cities started their Individual
veteran of both World War 11 and a resident of Gulfport for two drives as of yesterday. The aim
the Korean War and was a life months. He retired from the Air was to have all kettles In place
member of the VFW Post 5405, Force as a Technical Sergeant before the upcoming weekend
Winter Springs.
and was a member of the DAV.
after Thanksgiving which Is
S u rv iv o rs In c lu d e w ife.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e w ife, traditionally the heaviest shop­
Madelyn; son, Daniel J . III. Patricia R., Gulfport; mother. ping weekend of the entire year
Winter Springs, sister. Orla Mattie. Rochelle, Ga.: daughter. as people begin their holiday gift
Willis. New Smyrna Beach: two Elizabeth Ann. Sanford: sons. buying.
grandchildren.
John Christopher and Elliot,
Gaines funeial Home. Long- both of Texas City. Texas; slv
wood. In charge of arrange­ term. Patricia Adkison, Hebbecca.
Ga., Joyce Cravey. Dublin. Ga., C oatlausd (row Page 1A
ments.
W a n d a B r u c e . G u lf p o r t;
ty of 733. There are cur­
brothers. Jam es R., Sanford. rently about 1.000 students
JEANETTE TREASA ROY
Jerry W. Rancho Sana MarJarlta. enrolled in the school.
Jeanette Trrasa Roy. 62. 246 Calif.
T h e r e a r c 13 p o r t a b l e
Cambridge Road. Longwood.
classroom s on the cam pus.
Bradford-O 'K eefe F u n eral Space for an art and music suite
died Monday at her residence.
B orn M arch 22. 1928. In Home. Gulfport. Miss., In charge had not been possible preWinooski. VI., she moved to of arrangements.
viosuly.
Longwood from Burlington, Vt..
In I960. Stic was a homemaker
and a Catholic.
Survivors include husband,
Bernard A.; sons, William. Pep( ;n I n s u n t i K v ?
pcrcll, Mass.. Richard. Ventura.
Calif.. Thom as. B urlington:
t h it i i .i:in -..i \ &gt; 11 In
daughters. Nancy Haeckers.
Maitland. Karen Boisvert. Man­
chester. N.H., Linda Paquette.
Colchester, Vt.: brother. Donald
LuCrotx. Burlington; 11 grand­
children.
Beacon Cremation Service of
Central Florida. Wlnlcr Park. In
2575 S. Freach Avc., Sanford
charge of arrangements.

DANIEL JAMES MKLVIN JR.
Daniel Jam es Melvin Jr.. 71.
54 S. Edgemon Avc.. Winter
Springs, died Monday at hi*
residence. Born May 4. 1919. In
Monroe County. Ala., he moved JOHN ELLIOT WILSON
to Winter Spring* from San
•John Elliot Wilson. 55. of

of Information to help them find little easy on us for the first
solutions to dilemmas facing the meeting." Kuhn said, reflecting
board or to help them make on the agenda. "1 guess we'll
have to get right lo It."
informed decisions.

District

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Iraq to send more troops to Kuwait

r*®fi ■W * *■ ;rr*
y 7 ,j r #

are about 400.000 Iraqi troops already In
the occupied emirate, w hkh Iraq Invaded
Aug. 2. Iraq Is estimated to have 1 million
troops In Its regular army and another 900.
0 0 0 men In the reserves.
The United States has deployed
230.000 troops to Saudi Arabia and plans to
deploy another 100,000 in the coming

A j. ^ V

■

w iv ill j i r i ,

United Prate International

• •. . v^ v■ -f 1f l« p r&lt; 'k

CAIRO. Egypt - Iraq aald Monday It
would send more than 290.000 additional
troops to Kuwait In antklpatlon of a poaalbk
attack from the U.S.-led multinational force
In the Persian Gulf.
The official Iraqi n ew t agency INA
President George Bush, meeting
reported the decision waa made during a
meeting of the general command of the Iraqi leaders during a historic treaty summit and
armed forces presided over by President Parts, said Monday there was "no room for
compromise" with Saddam and dismissed
Saddam Huaaeln.
"During the meeting It waa deckled to an Iraqi offer to free thousands of foreign
m ass Immediately an additional aeven hostages held In Iraq and occupied Kuwait
divisions (of about 20,000 men each) and beginning on Christmas Day.
Bush. In Paris to officially end the Cold
call In more Than 190,000 reserves." INA
quoted an -official statement as saying. War with the signing of the Conventional
"Therefore we are adding to our strength in Forces In Europe Treaty, called the surprise
Kuwait more than quarter of a million Iraqi announcement a "cynical ploy" and
fighters to keep our superiority, whkh Is joined British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher In demanding the immediate and
unquest Ionabk."
According to American estimates, there unconditional withdrawal of Iraq's invasion

IS 0 ------ ua Aamama |k*iU ^ a II a I a
U Ia I i i a m
UtSo w i t r v i i r m i m iiv a c iirw c in VM tnavvv
BANGKOK. Thailand — A group of American veterans of the
Vietnam War la building a d in k In a village pounded by
American warplanes in the "Christmas bombings" of 1972, the
official Vietnam News Agency aald.
"American Vietnam veterans are helping the Vietnamese
people heal war wounda by building d in k s far them." aald the
newa agency In a dispatch dated Sunday.
The agency aald nine American veterans arere working with
Vietnamese villagers to build the 10-room d in k at Yen Vkn. 6
miles east of Hanot.
It said the village "was raxed by U.9. carpet bombing In late
December 1972" when then president Richard Nixon ordered
expanded bombing In an effort to force North Vietnam to sign a
peace agreement.

South African miiw aecktont kills four
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa - Barth tremors at two gold
mines have killed six workers and left six missing thousands of
feet underground, mine officials aald Monday.
A tremor measuring 1.67 on the Rkhter acak caved In a
shaft at the Western Deep Levels mine early Monday, killing
three men and leaving six others missing, parent company
Anglo American Corp. aald.
Rescuers were searching for the six. an Anglo spokesman

Bush, Gorbachev split on gulf
course" Iraq’s announcement
earlier in the day that It was
Whits House Reporter
sending another 290.000 troops
Into Kuwait, w hkh would raise
PARIS — President Bush and
the figure to about 690,000.
S o v ie t P r e s id e n t M ik h a il
" S a d d a m H u s s e i n 's a n ­
G orbachev have reach ed a
nouncem ent ... only demon­
"conceptual agreement" on the
strates his disinterest in a peace­
possible use of force In the
ful response.... He Is thumbing
Persian Gulf, but It appeared
hla nose at the U.N.." the press
Gorbachev was not embracing
secretary said. "We must keep
the option as strongly as Bush
-Martin Fitxwator the pressure on."
would like.
The two leaders, who met
In recent weeks. Secretary of
Monday at a multi-nation arms Saddam Hussein. Instead, he State Jam es Baker has traveled
conference, continued Ihelr said, they dlscunsed under what the world, seeking to drum up
touchy talks on the subject of circumstances one might be support for possible military
using force to oust Iraqi troops sought.
force against Saddam, who has
from Kuwait.
Initially. Bush and Gorbachev thus far refused to bend under a
“There are still people we need were to'liold a news conference. 3-month-old U.N.- m andated
to talk to (thal) they want to talk But amid mounting signs ol economic embargo.
to — so we simply have not disagreement on the Issue of
But Baker has been met by
reached the point of decision force. Fltzwaler and his Soviet
yet." White House press secre­ counterpart briefed reporters resistance, particularly by the
Soviet Union, which Is holding
tary Marlin Fltzwaler said after a Instead.
out
for a negotiated settle­
dinner meeting between two
”1 would say that we have a menthope
to
Iraq's
Aug. 3 takeover of
leaders.
conceptual agreement that force
Fltzwaler said Bush did not cannot be ruled out.” said Kuwait.
specifically ask the Soviet presi­ Fltzwaler. "We must be ... very
Bush Is on an eight-day trip to
dent. who urged "patience" firm In knowing what course we Europe and the Middle East that
earlier In the day. whether he want to take before taking any will take him to the Persian Gulf
would support a U.N. resolution further action."
on Thanksgiving Day for a
authorizing a possible military
T he p re s s s e c re ta ry d e ­ holiday celebration with the
attack against Iraqi President nounced as a "treacherous troops.

^ H u s s e i n ’s an ­
nouncement demon­
s t r at es hi s d i s i n ­
terest in a peaceful
r e s p o n s e . He is
thumbing his nose at
the U.N. f

The accident at the mine west of Joliannesburg took place
some 11.900 feet below the surface, the spokesman said.
Three men died 6.900 feet underground at the Buffelsfonteln
mine in the central town of Klerkadorp Saturday after a tremor
treasuring 3.2 shook loose tons of earth, mine onwer Genmln

Milll Vanilll stripped of Grammy
LOS ANGELES — With the photogenic If not phonographic
pop- singing duo Milll Vanilll stripped of the Grammy it won
without singing a note of their mega-hlt album "Girl You Know
It’s True." the music business la In something of a tlxzy.
MUll's award as Best New Artist of 1989 was rescinded
Monday by the National Academy of Recording Arts and
Sciences' national board of trustees, the first time such a thing
has happened In the 33-year history of the Grammys.
President Mkhael Greene said the ruling to rescind
Academy Pi
Milll Vanllll'a award had been taken "regretfully.*

Lsuksmia victim diet
HOFFMAN ESTATES. III. - Jean-Plerre Bosxe. the Hoffman
Estates leukemia vktlm whose father tried to force a bone
marrow transplant from the youth's half-siblings, has died, an
attorney for the family said.
Jean-PleiTe. 13. died at home Monday with his father.
Tamas. mother and several nurses In at his bedside, said
Attorney Edward Jordan.
He was admitted last week to Lutheran General Hospital but
waa sent h o p e to die Thursday. Jordan said. "He went
peacefully. He waa a great kid.'He was a really sweet kid. He
didn't.#wanti to
- dk."
* saidkJordan.
..
. ««»*. | .. ...
•«*«•

Arms treaty launches European summit
United Press International
PARIS — Leaders of 22 NATO and Warsaw Pact
nations signed a massive conventional arms treaty
Monday, ending a four-decade era of Cold War
tension by eliminating the risk of surprise attack
In Europe.
The treaty-signing launched a 34-nation summit
of the Conference on Security and Cooperation In
Europe, a three-day meeting ushering In a new
age of East-West harmony Just a year after the
dramatic fall of the Berlin Wall.
The Charter of Paris for a New Europe, declaring
"a new era of democracy, peace and unity." Is to
be signed Wednesday at the summit's formal
conclusion.
"We're putting an end to the previous age,"
French President Francois Mitterrand said mo­
ments before the 110-page Conventional Forces In
Europe pact was signed by 22 heads of state In a
chandellered conference room at the Elysec
Palace.
Only a few hours later. Soviet President Mikhail

Scientists seek AIDS spending limit
BETHESDA. Md. - The National Institutes or Health should
devote no more than about 10 percent of Its overall budget to
AIDS, the head of the government's AIDS research effort said.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the NIH's Office of AIDS
Kesearch. said Monday that the NIH currently spends about
one-tenth of Its budget on AIDS and should not spend
substantially more. "I'd be very concerned to have the AIDS
budget above 10 percent" of the NIH total. Fauci told an NIH
advisory panel. "You could have an encroachment on other
programs" like those Involving heart disease or cancer.

From Unitod Pratt International Reports

Abortion pill ban prom pts criticism
from researchers, doctors, lawmaker
UP! Selene# Editor
WASHINGTON - Promising
medical research Into a diseases
ranging from breast cancer to
AIDS la suffering because of a
goverment ban on the French
abortion pill In the United
S tates, doctors and a con­
gressman charged.
Medical researchers and Rep.
Ron Wyden. D-Ore.. sharply crit­
icized the Food and Drug Ad­
ministration during a conten­
tious three-hour hearing Monday
on the status of the controversial
drug RU 486.
"In the name of taking some
kind of symbolic action ... criti­
cal medical research Is being
derailed." Wyden said. "Ameri­
cans are going to suffer need­
lessly due to this position. I
think It's very Irresponsible."
FDA officials defended their
decision to Issue an alert that RU

486 could not be brought into
the country for personal use
because It can cause serious side
effects like bleeding and may be
u s e d w ith o u t a d o c t o r 's
supervision.
"The Import alert waa to try to
protect Individual citizens lu this
c o u n t r y . " aald Ronald
Chesemore. the FDA's associate
commissioner for regulatory af­
fairs. The alert, similar to that
previously Issued for nearly 60
other drugs, placed no limita­
tions on Importing the drug for
research, he said.
RU 486 has been shown to be
safe and effective for Inducing
abortions early in a pregnancy,
allowing women to avoid sur­
gical procedures. The drug has
been made available for that use
In France and other countries.
But the drug has not been
approved in the United States.
T he d r u g 's m a n u fa c tu re r.
Roussel-Uclaf of Parts, has no

plans to seek approval. In part
because of strong opposition
from anti-abortlontsts.
The FDA does, however, make
exceptions In rare cases for
individuals to bring small quan­
tities of unapproved drugs Into
the country for their own use.
But In June 1989 the agency
Issued an "Import alert" an­
nouncing RU 486 would not be
permitted In that way because of
concerns over "safety of the
user. "
Wyden charged that the move
was spurred by pressure from
anti- abortionists and "sent a
message around the world" that
could discourage Rouaael-Uclaf
from making the drug available,
even for testing for non-abortion
uses.
If RU 486 was not also ef­
fective for Inducing abortions. It
would be considered "a major
medical breakthrough." said Dr.
William Regelaon.

Excavation pit collapses near White House
Bp DAVlD CRAM
United Press International
WASHINGTON — A giant excavation pit next to
a subway station four blocks from the White
House collapsed In a roar of earth, sparks and sled
Monday night, prompting the evacuation of
several office buildings and a six-hour search for
possible victims.
No Injuries were reported and authorities called
off their search at about 2:30 a.m. EST Tuesday,
saying they were reasonably certain no one was
trapped In the rubble.
The walls of the 50-foot-decp construction pit,
which took up a quarter of a city block, gave way
at about 8:19 p.m. EST. Monday at the comer of
14th and H streets. NW. Just behind the world
headquarters of United Press International.
"It was like an earthquake! It was unbelieva­
ble!" said Arncl Morris, a pedestrian who was
crossing the street when the collapse occurred.

forces from Kuwait.
The U.S. dominates a multi-national force
of nearly a half-million Hoops In the Persian
Oulf area to discourage Iraq from expanding
Its Aug. 2 invasion and annexation of
Kuwait to other nations, especially the
Saudi Arabian oil flelds.
Thatcher said after a breakfast meeting
w ith Bush at the U S. Embassy that
"evil has to be be stopped" and
'either he withdraws or the military
option has to be used."
Iraq's Information minister condemned
the taro leaders for the statements, coun­
ter-charging the U.S.-domlnatd military
buildup in the Persian Oulf Is a Western
ploy to dominate oil resources In the region.
Meanwhik. a chartered Iraqi alrtlner with
76 Americans. 12 Britons and 22 other
former hostages arrived In London early
Monday from Kuwait on a flight delayed by
an emergency stop in Athens for repairs.
Cairo radio said.

"Everything, the sidewalk, the trees. Tell into the
hole."
The cave-ln also swallowed three construction
trailers, a large crane and much of the alley
separating the excavation site from the UPI
building.
Bystanders said the collapse was accompanied
by an explosive roar and hall of vparks. flares and
smoke that shot out of the pit for several minutes.
Fire officials said the fireworks apparently were
caused by a short-circuiting electrical transformer
at the site.
"It was real scary because It looked like
something could blow up any second." one
passerby said.
Another witness reported hearing a person
scream for help.
Mayor Marion Barry stopped by the scene about
four hours after the accident and peered into the
hole.

I

Gorbachev called for further arms talks on
reducing short-range nuclear weapons and navalbased armaments. In addition to sharp curbs on
military manpower throughout Europe.
The CFE treaty sets strict ceilings on tanks,
artillery, combat vehicles and aircraft and
establishes detailed rules on verification and troop
monitoring to provide months of warning for a
possible military offensive.
"The opportunity for a surprise attack Is gone."
said British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
The leaders also signed three other documents
relating to the CFE treaty. Including a declaration
that the 16 NATO nations and six countries of the
Warsaw Pact "are no longer adversaries, will build
new partnerships and extend to each oth~“ the
hand o» friendship."
The historic CSCE summit Is being compared to
the legendary Congress of Vienna In 1819. where
storied names like Mcttemlch, Wellington and
Talleyrand redrew the map of Europe following
Napoleon's defeat.
Mitterrand said the 1990 summit Is in many
ways even more majestic.

Middle East
Christians
fear war
ly M V IB L M M M N

United PressInternational
WASHINGTON - Middle
East Christians, a segment
of unheard voices In the
Persian Gulf showdown be­
tween President Bush and
President Saddam Hussein,
fe a r th e c r is is co u ld
t h r e a t e n t h e i r v e ry
existence, the head of the
Middle East Council of
Churches said Monday.
"There Is the fear the
r a d i c a l g e o - p o litic a l
changes (of the crisis)
would put Into question the
v e ry p re s e n c e of th e
church and the contribu­
tions of the churches to
th e ir s o c ie tie s ." said
Gabriel Habib, genera) sec­
retary of the Middle, East
Council of Churches.
But it Is not Just the
threat of war but also the
long-term consequences of
the U.S.-Europcan buildup
and military presence In
the region that threaten the
churches, especially If they
are again regarded as tools
of a renewed Western colo­
nialism.
At the same time. Hahlb
said In an Interview with
United Press International,
the crisis Is distracting
from other Mideast pro­
b le m s — n o ta b ly In
Lebanon and the IsraeliPalestinian conflict — that
are equally likely to erupt
In war.
Habib Is In Washington
meeting
'h administra­
tion officials, congressional
leaders and church repre­
sentatives In an effort to
provide another
perspective on the mount­
ing threat of war In the
Middle East.

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-

�TU ES D A Y

•November 20, 1990

B

■ P b o p Ib , P bqb 3B
■ C o m ic s , Pago 4B
■Classified, Pkflt 6B

Seminole wins playoff
Advances to
regionals
Friday night ;

PREP SPORTS
O B Club to moot
WINTER PARK — l-akc Howell High School'!*
Quarterback Club will conduct Its weekly
meeting this evening In Ihe school cafeteria
beginning nt 7:30 p.m.
Tonight's guest speaker will be Sanford
Herald Sports Editor Tony Ik* Sormicr.
For more Information, contact the l.ake
Howell High School Athletic Department nt
678 0165.

By DEAN W ITH

YOUTH BASKETBALL
Boys &amp; Girls registration
SANFORD - Boys ft Girls Club basketball
registration Is underway until the end of
Novemlicr at the West Sanford branch for youth
ages 8 to 15.
Leagues will Ik* broken up Into age categories
of 8-9 for Instructional. 10-12 for juniors and
13-15 for Intermediates. Groups are based upon
age youth will be as of March I. 1991.
Practice begins the end of November. The first
games are played In mid-December with the
season continuing Into February. Every tram
member gets a chance lo play at least one
quarter In each game.
Boys A Girls Club basketball Is free for all
members. Cost to Join Is Just $1 per year, which
Includes full access to Club programs and
activities. Youth must bring a parent or
guardian, along with proof of age. to the Club to
sign up.
For more Information, call Ihe West Sanford
Boys ft Girls Club at 330-2456 or stop by their
clubhouse located at 919 S. Persimmon Ave. In
Sanford.

S a n fo rd s ig n u p s
SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation De­
partment Is accepting registrations for youth
basketball for the Pillowing leagues:
Junior League: ages 12 and 13. no one who
turns 14 on or before March 15. 1991 Iscloglhlc.
Senior League: ages 14 and 15. no one who
turns 16 before March 15. 1991 Is eligible.
Registration fee Is $8 per player (non-residents
must pay and additional $10 non-resident fee).
Players may register a, the Downtown Youth
Center, lower level of City Hall. Participants arc
encouraged to register as early as possible lo
ensure being placed on a team early enough lo
allow ample time to practice.
Tryouts will not be held. All registrants will be
assigned to a team by the Recreation Depart­
ment according to their age. Everyone will make
a team.
For additional Information, contact Jim
Adams. Athletic Su|&gt;ervlsor. ul 330-5697.

FOOTBALL
R a id e rs s n a p D o lp h in s tre a k
MIAMI — Manus Allen rushed for a 2-yard
touchdown and Jelf Jaeger kicked two field
goals Monday night to help Ihe Los Angeles
Raiders lo a 13-10 victory over Miami, snapping
the Dolphins' six-game winning streak.
Allen gave the Raiders a 10 0 lead late In the
second quarter with Ills TD run. He finished
with 79 yards on 19 carries, while teammate Bo
Jackson rushed for 99 yards on 17 attempts.
Jaeger kicked a 23-yard field goal In the first
quarter and added u 43-yard boot In the third
quarter to help Ihe Raiders. 7-3. end a twogame losing streak. Miami. 8-2. entered the
game tied with the Buffalo Bills for first place In
the AFC East.
The Raiders gained 177 yards on Ihe ground,
while the |j&gt;s Angles defense limited Ihe Miami
running (Kicks lo 14 yards on 12 carries.

BASEBALL
B o n d w in s N L M V P
NEW YORK — Barry Bonds completed
Pittsburgh's sweep of mujor post season awards
Monday by easily heating out Pirate teammate
Bobby Bonilla for National League Most Valu­
able Player honors.
Ikmds received 23 of 24 flrst-plr e voles from
a committee of Ihe Baseball Writers Association
of America. Bonds totalled 331 points and
Bonilla, who collected the other first-place vote,
had 212. Bonilla received 18 second-place votes.
Darryl Strawberry, who signed with the
Dodgers after his contract with the Mcts expired,
finished third. Chicago second baseman Ryne
Sandberg was fourth and Lot* Angeles first
baseman Eddie Murray fifth.
Two writers from each National League city
were asked lo name 10 players on their ballots.
The point system was 14 for first. 9 for second. 8
for third, etc.
The American League MVP will tie announced
Tuesday. Rickey Henderson of the Oakland
Athletics is Ihe leading candidate.

Seminole's defense, led by Darius Johnson (making hit),
Andrea Jones (76) and Richard Peterson (48), stopped
Leesburg runner Bryant Reed cold on two straight
carries and went on to complete a two-game sweep of

and win the Class 4A-District 7 playoffs at OrlandoEvans' Double E Stadium Monday allernoon. Seminole
will advance lo the regional game at Tarpon Springs
Friday night starting al 7:30 p.m.

Com ploto listing on F ag s 3B

PINE HILLS - Seminole High
School finally showed the domina­
tion lhal everyone has hern looking
for this season and as a result the
Fighting Scmlnoles took home their
third district title In four years by
defeating both Edgew atrr and
Ixesburg In the Kansas lie-breaker
at Double E Stadium Monday af­
ternoon.
It look two scries hut Seminole
slopped Edgewater 10-7 und then
eliminated Leesburg 7-0 to advance
to Friday's Regional showdown with
Tarpon Springs. The game will be
held al Tarpon Springs starling at
7:30 p.m.
"We showed we belong In the
playoffs today.*' suld Sei. ..ale
coach Emory Blake. "We kind of
slopped around late In the season
and let some games get away. But I
told the kids If we aren't capable of
coming down here und running
8-12-16 plays and winning we
didn't belong In Ihe playoffs any­
way."
Seminole was an example of
offensive efficiency on this day as
they ran three offensive plays und
scored 17 points. And the defense
did Its part too holding Its oppo­
nents lo only seven yards on nine
plays.
"I feel vindicated because I think
the best team deserves to go (to the
L S ee F ootball, P ag e 2B

SANFORD HERALD PLAYER OF TH E WEEK
Level V i’s
c o n tin u e to Haney turns in another gem in upset
d o m in a te
■y DEAN SMITH

Herald sports writer

From ataff roports

1

GAINESVILLE - The Level VI
girls from Brown’s Gymnastics
Central of Altamonte Springs con­
tinued to dominate their competi­
tion as they won the Level VI
Sectional meet by Just under 12
l^ilnls at Sun Country Gymnastics
of Gainesville this past weekend.
Tills was the last quality log meet
fur the Level VI girls hill ull of
Brown's Central (cam had already
qualified so they used this event as
a tune-up far the stale meet next
month.
Tlic next competition lor Brown's
Central will Ik - Ihe Level V-Stalc
Championships at All American
G y m n a s tic s of J a c k s o n v ille
F rlday-S unday. November 30Dccembcr 2. All 20 of Brown's
Central Level V girls arc qualified
fur the slate meet. This will he the
last compel It Ion of Ihe season for
the Level V's.
Team results. Level VI:
1. Brown's Gymnastics-Central.
18605
2. S un C ounlry-G alnesvllle.
174.95
3. Jack so n v ille's Gymnastics
Center. 172.70
L See G ym nastics, Page 2B

Last Saturday Lake Mary coach
Doug Peters called Ills team's
upset of Seminole a total team
effort. Bui one Ram stood head
and shoulders above Ilie rest and
led his learn lo a 24-21 victory, a
.500 season record and a twrtii In
the Rotary Bowl.
Senior running hack Chris
Haney rushed for 169-yards,
caught two passes fur 28-Vards
and scored all thr-e of Ills team's
touchdowns. For Ills performance
Haney has been named the
Sanford Herald Player of the
Week for a second time.
Haney's rtfnrls pushed him
over the 1.000-yarrl mark In
rushing for the season. He has
rushed for 1.110-yards on 173
carries and scored I 1
touchdowns, lie has also caught
184-yards worth of passes and
another touchdown.
Other players considered lor
Player of Ilit- Week honors were
Seminole's Kerry Wiggins and
Henry Williams, Lyman's P ililiy
Washlnglon and Lake Brantley's
Daryl llusli and David Sprinkle.
Muncy quickly showed the
Flglillug Scmlnoles on the first
play of Ihe game lliul he had

\

Editor's nots: Lake Mary's Chris
Hansy accounted for 197-yards of
t o t a l o f f e n s e and t h r e e
touchdowns to be named the
Sanford Herald Player of the

Week.
Other players considered were:
•Lyman's Bobby Washington,
who rushed fer 64-yards and his
team's only score.
•Sem inole's Hsnry Williams,
who accounted for 12t-yars of
to ta l o ffe n s e and a 43-yard
touchdown run.
Seminole's Kerry Wiggins, who
completed 9 of 12 passes for
102-yards and two touchdowns.
• Lake Brantley's Daryl Bush,
who recorded 12 solo tackles and
h e lp e d h o ld Lyman to only
124 yards ol Iota! olfense.
•Lake Brantley's David Sprinkle,
who rushed lor 140 yards and two
touchdowns

Chris Haney
showed up lo play. Taking a
handoff from quarterback Joe
Meuellu. Haney hursl through Ihe
line, cul lo ilie left sideline and
wasn't slopped until lie hud
rumbled for 72 yards down lo the

Seminole- six.
Huncy will attempt to keep up
his hot running Thursday when
he and the rest Ihe Rams take on
Dr. Phillips In (lie Rotary Bowl ul
Lyman starting at 11 a.m.

SCC hoopsters
hope to break
losing streaks
From staff report*

Compiled from wire and lU tt ro port a.

BASKETBALL
L18 p.m. — TNT. NBA. Houston Rockets at New
York Knlcks. (L)

j

Herald sports writer_________________

Teressa Martin (L) and Brian Nason will lead their
respective teams Into battle tonight as both Seminole
Community College basketball teams will atlempl lo
break losing streaks. The men will travel lo Avon Park to

face South Florida Community College while the women
w ill host Indian River at 7 p.m. Nason is averaging 19 3
points for the men's team while Martin is averaging 17.5
points and to rebounds per game

Both of Seminole Community
College's basketball teams will lx*
looking to break losing streaks
when they take to the hardwood
tonight.
T he w om en, lo s e rs of tw o
straight, will look to get healthy
against a pcreniully strong Indian
River Community College team.
Coach lleana's team lost two close
games In their tournament last
week and have shown signs that
they are ready to be a good
basketball team.
Tina Lester and Teressa Martin
have been doing the Job In the paint,
while guards Michelle Kurnpf and
Brundie Groves have been running
Ihe show.
The game will he played at SCC's
Health and Physical Education
Center starting at 7 p.m. and as
always admission Is free.
The men. meanwhile, will be
finishing a lough three game road
trip when they travel to Avon Park
to lake on South Florida Communl11See SCC, Page 2B

�QJHLS'IOC2K8
^
I bwIhbIb 1 ftf l— &lt;, 7pm .
3:30 p.m.

■OVB'B^KCTPAU
M «mrI Dora llk ls at Or.
angawaatf C M illm . Junior
vanity at 5:30 p.m., vanity at
7:30 p.m.

not much better aa Brown.
H e n d e r s o n a n d Tommy

penalty.

im u m i
m . » are
J P lt l
sw
1 Garay
o t*-s&gt; «*.«* p n - u H u * t t u n m

Edgewater had the ball first
this time but Powell lost the
handle on a pitch and Anally
fumbled after being hit by
Bernard Brown. Britt Henderson
grabbed the recovery lor Semi­
nole at the 10. Blake wasted no
time In calling on Davison to
kick a 27-yarder to win It. The
kick was perfect and It was on to
meet Leesburg.

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MJtwsukao 114. u m i S i
L A Labors in , S s s S m
Socramanto at Washington. 7: W p.m.
Atlanta at Chariorts, 7 » p .m
OoMM M M iam i 7iM a n .
Houston* Now York.*pan.
Minnawta at Dallas. t:M pm .
I la u ,
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Houston at Boston. 7;Hp.m .
hacramontoat Phllodotghi*. 7: JO a m .
Miami at Cl i ra il ad. T ilt m l
Detroit at Indiana 7:Sp.m .
Atlanta at Mltwoufcoo. 0 » am .
Minnawta at San Antoni*. I:ltp .m .
Orlaado at U M l VtM p a .
Chicago at Phoonlx,V:«p.m.
Denver at LA Lakara.» : JOp.m.
Maw Je ra y at LA Cllpgan. W:W a m .

-

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».1

■ A lU ■
M
PINAL
K I T - SaminoM (SI. Lata Mary (LM)
Lyman (L ), O v M a (0 ). Lata Brantloy (LSI,
LataHowall(LH).

A tithing

Soon Thompson (L B I ..
Bobby Washington (L).
Korry Wiggins (SI
Joa Pagan (L B )........
RebSaymora (L B )......
Adam Nation 10)......._
Titus Francis (LM )
Chris Colton |L)....
Tim Hampton 4S).
Toby Durham (L ).
Jail Jackson (L I— .
Dallas Simpsnn (L )....
Laon Lawman (0 1 ......
Paul Thompson (LH ).
Shawn Marlin ILB) .
Jason Paary ( L B I ....
Scoll Goldrn (L H )......
Carlos Mar I Ins t (LH )
Sadat Smith IL B )......

Harlan Wllcoxson 101 ....
Jason Donaldson lLAW ...
Chris Hannia Road (LH )
Gaordia Davison IS)......
Paul Davis ILHI
Vashon Williams IS)
Joa Palm (LB) ........ .
Mika Warntr ILMI .
Karl Calm (O )................
Chris Roscos (0 1 .....—
Joa Manailo I L M I .........
hart) Jankins IL) . .......
Vincanl Alaxandar ILM)
Chris Gray (L B I............
Mika Lyons I D ..............
Hobart Fsnnswald ILB).
Draw Jackson 10)........
Todd Clavvlsnd IL )........
J.D Russall IL B )..........

TOUCHDOWNS: » - Marqualta Smith
ILH I. 11 - Chris Hanay ILM ); ■ - Cadrle
Bouay (L I. S — Dana Allan (0 ) and Rjon
Thomas ILH ). S - Harry Wiggins (SI: 4 Ervin Alaiandar 10). David Sprlnkla (LB)
and Hanry Williams IS). J — Dan Hargrava
(O ). Pat Jorgansan (LH ), Paul Thompson
Laon
ILH I and Bruca McClary (SI; 1
Low man (Ol and Joa Pagan IL B ); t — Anush
Collins ILM I. Toby Durham (L I. Titus
Francis (LM ). B*an Grayson (L ). Chris
HannwHoad (LH ), Al Holt ILM ). Draw
Jackson 10), Jolt Jackson (L ). Shown Martin
IL B ). Jao Manailo ILM ). Bob Saymoro (LB ).
Dallas Simpson (L ). Saan Thompson ILB )
and Bobby Washington (L)

Despite the win Blake still was
not enamored with the playoff
system. "I still don't like tie­
breakers." said Blake. "1 would
rather have been home practic­
ing but it didn't work out that
way. I told the kids we just
needed a little medicine to get
better. Today we got that medi-

imS

Orlando «t Sa*Saa Mata, M ill p a .

U S 040

MarqutHa Smith (LH )
Chris Nanay ILM ).....
David Sprint la (LB&gt;._,
Cadrle Bouay (L )........
Bruca McClary (SI.....
Pal Jorgansan (L H )....
Ervin Alaxandar (01....
Dan Hargrava (0 )......
Ryan Thomas (L H I___
Brian Grayson (L )......
Anush Collins (LM ).....
Hanry Williams (S ).....

Seminole again tiad the ball
first against the Yellow Jackets
and. running out of the same set
as against Edgewater, Wiggins
faked to Tyrone Williams and
pitched out to Henry Williams
who broke around right end and

pared, add B&amp;ke. "We were
ready for anything that they
could have thrown at ue today.
S atu rd ay after we loot the
homecoming game we went
right back on the field and
worked on plays for 45-mlnutc*.
We couldn't let them think
about the looses, we had a
district to win."

Rob Saymara (L B )-------- I t
t
n
M4
Vashan William* (SI.... 1
I
IV HSJS
Paul Thompson ( L H ) .... IS
4
41
SSI
Sadat Smith (L B )........
t
1 1* IM S
Tony Chavars (S I....... . . 1
I
» 100 0
Honry William* IS )____ 1
1
IV 10S.V
ToddClavalondlL)....... 4
I
It
15.0
Mika Lyons ( L i ......... ..
1
I
15
SB.O
David Sprlnkl* (L B )..... I
I
V 100 00
Hobart Fannawald (L B I. I
I
-S M S I
Simon Harpar (01.......
I V
• S3
Joa Pagan ( L I ) . ........
I t
0
SO
Chris Hanay IL M )......... I V
0
At
TOUCHDOWNS! II - Marry Wiggins (SI; 4
— Jail Jackson (L ) and Ryan Thomas (L H );
1 - JoaManallo (LM ) and J.D. Ruaaatl (L B );
I — Tony Chavars (SI. Draw Jackson (O ).
Rob Saymoro (L B ). Sadal Smith (L B ). David
Sprlnkla (LB I and Hanry Williams (S).
IN TER C EP T IONS: U - J*fl Jacksan (L )
and J.D. Russall (L B ); IS - Jvo Monaila
(L M ); • - Draw Jackson (0 ) and Korry
Wiggins (S I; I - Rob Saymoro (L B ); &gt; Ryan Thomas (L H ); l — Dan Hargrava ID)
and Pawl Thompson ( U i ) .
Rtcatvlng
Bill Kanasky IL M ).......
JoJo Murphy (S )..........
Hanry Williams IS ).......
Simon Harpar (O ).......
Tony Chavars IS).— ...
Toby Durham (L I.......
Andy Bootha IL B )--------Laon Lawman (01.....—
Gsordia Davison (S )__
Brian Grayson &lt;L
Chris Hanay (L M )-------Thomas Damp* (L H )...
Sadal Smith IL B )........
Ervin Alaxandar (O ) ...
Saan Marlin (L B )........
Scot) Goldan (L H )........
Marqualta Smith (LH )..
Scot! Mackintosh (LH ).
Tim HampSon (S ).........
Dan Hargrava (O ).....Bruca McClary (S )------Pal Jorgansan (L H ).___
Mika Warnar (L M );.....
Dana Allan (0 )____
Tracy Duncan (L I........
Paul Thompson (L H )— .
Cadrle Bouay IL )---------John Jump |L)......—
Colby Bargtr IL M ).___

G ym nastics4. All-American-Jacksonvllle.
5. B ethea Ebsen-Orlando,
165.60
6. G ym nastics UnlimitedJacksonville, 165.50
Individual results:
8-11 year olds:
Vault — 1. Vanessa Serrano,
8.95; 3. Julie Arnold. 8.90; 5.
Jamie Garber. 8.75; 6. Laura
Pratt. 8.70; lO April Hudtett,
8.55
Uneven Bara — 1. Lindsey
Hall. 9.60; 2. Jamie Garber.
9.40; 3. Julie Arnold. 9.30; 4.
(tie) Tracy Edner and Vanessa
S e r r a n o . 9 .1 0 : 6 . C r is ta
W agenbach. 9.05; 8. Laura
Pratt. 9.00
Balance Beam — 1. Jamie
Garber. 9.25; 2. (Ue) Lindsey
Hall and April Hudlett. 9.10; 5.
Crista W agenbach. 8.95: 7.
Tracy Hetrick. 8.90: 8. Tracy
Edner. 8.85; 10. Julie Arnold.
8.80
Floor Exercise — 1. Crista
Wagenbach. 9.30; 2. Lindsey
Hall, 9.25; 3. Tracy Edner. 9.20;
4 Jamie Garber. 9.10: 5. Va­
nessa Serrano, 9.05; 6. Tracy
Hetrick. 9.00
All-Around — 1, Jamie Garber,
38.50; 2. Lindsey Hail. 36.35; 3.
Julie Arnold. 35.85; 4. Crista
Wagenbach. 35.75: 5. Tracy
Edner. 35.60; 6, Vanessa Ser­
rano. 35.45; 7. Tracy Hetrick,
35.20

12-14 year olds:
Vault — 1. Davette Starkey,
9.45; 2. Sara See. 9.35: 3. (tie)
Llaa Konlng. 9.30; 6. Lori
Young. 9.10; 7. Lana Konlng.
9.05
Uneven B an — 1. Llaa Konlng.
9.55; 2. Katie Hulke. 9.45: 3.
Davette Starkey. 9.30; 5. Neysa
Hand. 9.20; 8. (tie) Sara See.
Janel Clark and Lina Konlng.
9.15; 9. Michelle Southall. 9.10
Balance Beam — 3. Lori
Young, 9.15; 4. Neysa Hand.
9.10; 5. Davette Starkey, 9.05; 7.
Sara Sec. 9.00
Floor Exercise — 1. Davette
Starkey. 9.45; 2. Llaa Konlng.
9.30; 3. Lori Young. 9.25; 6.

ty College. The
Raiders have been In a horrible
shooting slump and have lost
three straight. Game time Is set
for 7:30 p.m.
G uards John Mackey and
Brian Nason have been carrying
the brunt of the scoring load for
the men whlje Sanford's Robert
Moore has been the inside force.

See &amp; Bet The Best of Iwo Worlds!

ORLANDO

JAI-ALA/

FIRST GAME
7:19 RM.
(daily axcapt Sunday)

SEE IT LIVE!
World's Fastest
Game!
Noon Matinees

Mon.TNjr.SeL
1 P.M . on Sunday

TH OROU G H B RED
R A C IN G
P O ST TIME 1230 P J i
(dally axcapt Monday)

LARGE
SCREEN
Payoffs at Track
Price*! Racing

\

�Ban(on), Florida — Tuesday, Novm bf 20. i wo - JB

ill

-Q-Q-Q------- --M . n l i . fram fl..
D M - n c K N i i c a n v i m 11 w i k i s , i s m i i y
The American Medical Tranaport emergency medical
■crvlcea and ambulance transportation company will donate
transportation on Thanksgiving Day to bed ridden patients
who nave no other means of visiting the homes of friends or
ibers for Ahe holiday. AMT *.'111
transportation to Individuals th selected area
tong-term care facilities. AMT will pick up the patients from
their facilities on Thanksgiving morning and return them to
the same location later that evening.
AMT la offering Its "Home for the Holidays" program In the
holiday spirit of Thanksgiving and companionship, according
to Dayna Maradel. public information manager for AMT.
For five years AMT hss provided exclusive emergency
ambulance transportation to Seminole County. AMT operates
five advanced life support units, all staffed with paramedics In
the Seminole County area.
For more Information, call Dayna Maradel at 296-6700.

Adopt a Milor
Have room for two more on Thanksgiving? Adopt a sailor.
Call the Central Florida USO at 647-2241 for more Information.

EatatthoVFW Pott
The Winter Springs Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5405 and
Its Ladles Auxiliary will be holding a Thanksgiving dinner at
the post at 420 N. Edgemon Ave. Dinner will be served from I
to 5 p.m. Public la Invited to enjoy the day with family and
friends. Call 327-3151 to RSVP and for more Information.

Benefit to bo held for cancer patient
On Friday and Saturday. November 23 and 24. from 0 a.m.
to 5 p.m.. the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5405 and Its
Ladles Auxiliary will be holding a special benefit for a cancer
patient, a member of the auxiliary, at the post home on
Edgemon Avenue. There will be a rummage sale, bake sale and
auction to raise funds. Anyone having anything that can be
used la asked to bring It to the post this week. Baked goods
should be delivered Friday or Saturday.
For more Information, call 327-3151.

K

Scouts aim to have fun
Area Boy Scouts oalhsrsd recently fer fun and games at the Boy
Scouts Fun Feat, held at Plncrest Elementary School. Pictured
left: Nick Alexander, troop 507, Sanford, tries his hand at the ring

TOPS chapters to matt about fating
Take OfT Pounds Sensibly Chapter FL 79 will meet Tuesday
at 6:15 p.m. at Howell Place. 200 W. Airport Blvd.. Sanford.

Happy mom finds adopted son

Cancar support group maats
Support. Help, and Recovery, a self-help cancer support
group for cancer survivors will meet every Wednesday at 4:30
p.m. at 1621 W. First Street. Sanford.
For more Information, call 323-9374 or 322-7785.

ft This concerns
"Closed Chapter.” who wants to
close the book on her past. I
know what she went through
because 32 years ago. when I
was 16. I also had a child out of
w edlock and gave him u p
because I wanted him to have a
better life than I could provide
for him.
1 beg "Closed Chapter" to at
le a s t co n tact th e adoption
agency and give them her medi­
cal history. She need not dis­
close her present whereabouts,
but she should give them some
Information about her family,
and the family of her child’s
natural father. (It might not be
anything to brag about, but a
least the child will know some­
thing about his or her birth
parents.)
Abby, four m onths ago. 1
located my son living In another

Laam about footing wall
Membe.s of the Deltona Health Education Club'Invite all
persons Interested tn health and well-being to Join them at 7
p.m.. tonight. Nov. 20. at the Center for Better Living. Suite
4.2922 Howland Blvd.. Deltona.
Brltta Meinhart. a registered dietician at Florida Hospital, will
speak about "Diets for Health Problems." Public Is Invited free
of charge.
For more Information, call (904) 532-9290.
f t A jy

V.i

Toastmasters meat
Seminole Community College (SCC) Toastmasters Club
*6581 will meet each Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. In the SCC library
building, room L-205. Meetings that fall on the second Tuesday
of the month will be held at Village Inn. Dog Track Road and
17-92 In Longwood. Contact Claire at 699-9318 for more
Information

November 3 —Glen and Kathy
' Slnlscalco. Apopka, baby boy.
N o v e m b e r 4 — Mi n a
Setordcpou^ and Robert Bryan
Culver. Casselberry, baby girl:
Jacquelyn and Kelvin Ellis.
Apopka, baby boy.
November 5 — Kimbcrlcc and
Charles Garland. Casselberry,
baby girl: Sandra and Mitchell

Overaatars to gathar
- A regular meeting of Ovcrcalcrs Anonymous Is conducted on
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Florida Power and Light. 301 Myrtle
Ave.. Sanford. For more Information, call Carol at 322-0657.

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For 24-hour listings, sso LEISURE magazins of Friday, Nov. 16.

■MMKHkinBM

&gt;T

Last month, he flew here to
m eet my husb an d and his
half-brothers and sisters, and
ADVICE
they all got along beautifully.
I realize that not all reunions
turn out as well as mine did. but
the point I want to make Is this:
W
^ ABIGAIL
There should be no secrets.
VAN BUREN
Adopted children should have
the chance to meet their birth
parents If they so choose.
P H B H B
o m OF T m LUCKY ONES
city. I wasn't sure he would want
DEAN
LUCKY: I a g re e ,
to see me. so 1 had him con­
tacted through a third party. He adopted children should have
telephoned me Immediately, and the chance to meet their biologi­
when he said. "Hello. Mother." I cal parents If they wlah to. but I
wonder how many people are
couldn’t hold back the tears.
He asked how soon we could aware that adopted children and
meet, and did I want to come to biological parents can register
him or should he come to me? I with International Soundex Re­
decided to go to him. Abby. he's union Registry. P.O.Box 2312.
ta ll, h a n d s o m e a n d w ell- Carson City. Nev. 89702. The
mannered. He is married to a children must be of legal age
beautiful woman and they have (legal age varies from state to
state).
a lovely uaughter.

,z

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PROBLEM
CHILD

%

Florida Hospital, Altamonte Springs

Agoraphoblo/Panlc Attack Support Group meets each
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at West Lake Hospital. 589 W. State Road
434. Longwood. The support group Is for those who arc afraid
to go out of their house and be active In public.

C ll M m

I

7%

NOHTIV

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7:10 SOSO
PRESUMED
INNOCENT

vVljtlchlield

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NEW ARRIVALS

Panic Attack group to meat

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toss. Right: Joey Butlers, 13, troop 507, rings a few cans with hla
steady aim.

Burke. Sanford, baby boy:
Sharion and Lawrence Rcynurd,
Santord. baby boy: Amy Wallen.
Altamonte Springs, baby girl.
November 6 • Donna Benn.tt.
Winter Park, baby boy.
November 7 — Susan and
Robert l.cwls. Casselberry, baby
girl: Sharon and Matthew Ballou.
Deltona, baby girl: April Lynn
Markcl. Altamonte Springs, baby
girl.
November 8 — Tracy and
Gilbert Hill. Casselberry, baby
girl.

November 9 — Cary and
Christopher Beck. Deltona, baby
girl; Angela and Donald MolTatt.
Longwood. baby girl.

V

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Central Florida
Regional Hospital
October 30 — Charon K.
Willingham &amp; Phillip A. Howard,
baby girl; Sanora W. Brown &amp;
Willie Fisher, baby girl; Peggy J.
A r r u d a A S h a n n o n W.
McGowan, baby girl: Tonja R.
DcBose baby girl.
October 31 — Robyn L. A Jay
P. Martin, baby boy.'
November 1 — Lucille A Otis
L. Davis Jr., baby girl: Gina L. A
James E. Thomas, baby girl: Jan
Johnson A Tommie Lovcjoy.
Sanford, baby girl.
November 4 — Felicia An­
derson A Jimmie L. Daniels. Jr..
Sanford. Itaby Itoy: Jane M A
Robert E. Goodin. Jr.. DcDarv.
baby girl.
November 6 — Norma O. A
Teodoro Morales. Jr.. Sanford.
Itaby boy: Suzanne L. A Ronald
E. Cook. Sanford, baby boy.
November 7 — Barbie A Jason
Stone. Sanford. Itaby girl: Angela
J. A David W Loomis. Long­
wood. baby boy.
November H — Maggie M.
Bucknci A Karl Pritchard II
S u u lo id , baby girl. D iann
Nelson. Santord. baby boy; Marie
P. A Carl G. Karlckbolf. Winter
Springs. Itaby girl.
November 9 — Lillian K. A
Ralph E. Stone. Sanford, (twins),
baby girl and baby !&gt;oy.

-V|..

Kountry Shoppe
and

CHRISTM AS KOTTAGE&lt;
THANKSGIVING
NIGHT SALE
5**00 PM -10:00 PM
THIS IS O U E U U IO iS T S A U OF THE
TEAR. EVERYTHING IN THE STORE IS
O N SALE FOR 5 HOURS O N LY.
O R LAND O LO CATIO N O N LY

We S h ip
A nyw hereI
;j

a

M

1 1247 E. Colonial I)r.
Orlando, FL 32817
(407) 277-7480

�D B A S D l . O O TTi I'm a
57-year-old male In reasonably
good health. Prior to 1967. I
caerctoed regularly. Jogging (We
to K een mile* a week. Now
other demands have taken prior­
ity, and cxerctae Is not regular.
While trying to Jag recently. I felt
a spasm In the middle of my
chest that has repeated on many
occasions. Then I began having
liMhgestion at night. My doctor
did an EKG, brief exam and
drew blood. He says It Is not my
heart. What could be the cause
of the spasm and indigestion?
DBAS SSADBS j You could
be experiencing angina, cardi­
ac-muscle spasm from Inade­
quate oxygen supply .j the
heart, caused by arteriosclerotic
plaque In your coronary arteries.
I am not as confident as your
doctor Is that your "Indigestion"
comes from other sources. An
examination, resting cardiogram
and blood tests are not enough.
In my opinion, to reach that

IT* A
W O W A*
JNW H&gt;1M9 BANK, IL0ETMY

normal. If so. you'll want to
Investigate your symptoms by
directing attention to your Intes­
tinal tract. The pain of gsstrttts.
peptic ulcer and arid reflux can
mimic angina. Therefore, an
upper gastrointestinal X-ray |GI
series) may be In order.

1
TT

P E TE R
Q O TT.M .D ,

(C)IBBO NEWSPAPER EN
TERPRISE ASSN.

1

1

■

lu

I NEVER KNOW IF"Rl6MT
NOW" MEANS *RIGHT NOW
OR "RIGHT NOW'/..

A IL RI6HT. TOO STUPID
BEAGLE, LET 60 OF THIS
BLANKET RIGHT NOW!

W V PO
v x n m iK ,
3H0RIY? ,

2
L * !B K 8 IS ^ Jiff ( W H Y t o w N M M lWff
6UV... HU THE- U TILE G W . • I
MAKE THE LTTTLE GUV fW ,:

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10-00

HE PIDtiT GAY UO
OCREAGEOFEXIWUG

By Jam as Jacoby
In yesterday's deal declarer
was lazy, missing a chance for a
safety play to make a doubled
contract. Today we see a defend­
er exhibiting the same laziness.
Forget the fact that East-West
can make three clubs. Neither
defender felt like entering the
bidding, and neither can be
blamed. Against two spades,
West had a tough opening-lead
decision. He did not want to lead
trumps away from the king, and
both red suits had been bid by
Ihe opponents. So he decided on
» dub. For whatever reason, he
led the three-spot. The deuce
was played from dummy, and
East, not thinking It possible
that West had underted the ace,
lazily played the eight of dubs.
Declarer gratefully won the

YOUB BIRTHDAY
Nov. 21.1BBO
Before moving on to new
endeavors In the year ahead,
make the ones In which you're
presently Involved pay off first.
Y ou're m uch closer to the
winner's circle than you realize.
flCOBPSO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
People with whom you're in­
volved today will appreciate the
fact that you are not one who
’
makes Idle promises. They'll
believe you when you say you
are going to do something.
Scorpio, treat yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead by mailing 91.25 to
Astro-Graph, d o this newspaper.
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.
BAOITTARIUB (Nov. 23-Dec.
I'M GONNATAKE A POTTERY OAW
21) Your probabilities for mate­
THE LEONARDO rial gains look encouraging to­
day. either through your own
L ACApl&amp;V
JLC* POTTERY? efforts or from some type of
unusual arrangement put into
motion by another.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) To thoroughly enjoy your
friends today you must first take
them at face value. The pleasure

'M

ARFIELP/
INTELLECT/
!ATIVE VOO/

queen and eventually m ad' •.ine
tricks. Look what might happen
If East had the strength to put up
the club king at trick one. lie
should then lead back a low
h eart. P resum ably d eclarer
would play low. and West would
lake the queen. West would play
back a heart to East's ace, and
now East would shoot back a
club. West would win the ace
and play a third heart, ruffed by
East. That's five tricks In, and
West would still make the king
of spadea. Readers, take heart! If
E ast, a n e x p e rie n c e d p ro ­
fessional player, could be as
careless as this, all of us should
reduce our rcr.-orae over errors
and th in k positively about
avoiding mistakes In the future.
( 0 1 9 9 0 , NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

NORTH
♦ J 10 7 4
W 10 4 5 I
♦ AKO
♦ 101
WEST
♦ KOJ
♦ Q0 7 4
♦ 05
♦ A7 i 3

SMth
1♦
14

Wen
Pan
Pan

ELTili
rjrftifsu

Eell
Pan
All pan

Opening lead: ♦ 3

have to work hard for everything
you hope to gel. If you sense
Improvements, don’t slack off.
Instead dig In and drive.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
No one likes to make difficult
decisions that could negatively
reflect on someone with whom
we're associated. Today, howev­
er. falling to protect your interest
could prove foolish.
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're
not apt to take much satisfaction
today In doing things that come
easy, but, conversely, you win
take great pride In overcoming
challenging complications.
V1BOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Several hats may be required In
order to cope with today’s devel­
opm ents. Fortunately, when
conditions warrant It you'll be
easy to get along with, yet you
can also be serious when neces­
sary.

TAUBUB (April 20-May 20)
Without discounting your pres­
ent concerns, also strive to look
ahead a bit. Consideration given
now to future plana could later
prove to your advantage.
OBMDII (May 21-June 20)
Material trends are shifting In
your favor today but you'll still

LIBBA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
There are Indications you should
be able to profit today from a
situation you think Is of little
worth. After you make your
score. It will contribute to your
reputation as a financial whiz.
( 0 1 9 9 0 , NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

KNOW/ PUNJAB TOLP
US T’WAlT OUT&amp;PC
UMPL H£...H£.« /----

imwWA f t AWeWEjOTfleeR

North
iV
]♦

of these associations will be
diluted If you start looking for
motives behind their behavior.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Two good deeds you have re­
cently done for others could be
coming home to roost today. In
both cases the returns may be In
excess of your considerate in­
vestment.
PISCBS (Feb. 20-March 20)
You have a gift today for being
able to effectivdy adapt things
you have learned from others to
your present needs. Fortunately,
what produced good results for
them should work equally as
well for you.
ABISS (March 21-Aprll 19)
Your possibilities for achieving
two important objectives today
look good. Your Initiative .*nd
d e t e r m i n a t i o n will be
supplemented by strong support
from effective allies.

...ALL RIGHT, SANDY...

atw5*7toireomtmuoiiT

EAST
♦ 15
WAS
♦ 0043
♦ KJII O

SOUTH
♦ AQO*
WKJ I
♦ J 10 7 1
♦ 05
Vulnerable: Neither
D eaier South

ANNIE

CH*i! TOM BASC, LETS GO'LETS
LIFT HOSE HCJORTS/ ONE/
THQf ONE/
LOSE THATtiUT/

U-tS-W

...UNTIL

WHAT.

�■f

"“■•ft
, 8*nfcfd, Florida — Tuesday, November 20, 1900

Sanford

■

ii;
J«ny Herman (I to r) and Krla Strlno, of Sanford
Public Works Department, and Scenic Improve-

V_A

txw ..— ai m,.. oajviume
m y rn e,

ro v n iT “ r i o u m , n e w

—

W h e n on a s s i g n m e n t , t h e
pictures shot by Hsrald photog­
raphers very In angle, pose and
content, and not all of them are
published Im m ediately. From
time to time, tha newspaper
takes a second look at those
news and features scenes from
around Seminole County.

11

■

m

j

School band performs during the county band fettlvat.

g W |M « i

Lorenzo predicts five airline failures
UPI Business Writer

mwHHWWSfT— ,
Kelly Baillngal (I) and Phudung Van help during Trash Bash II.

parade.

Processor recalls frankfurters
The bulk-packed frankfurters
were distributed In California.
Illinois. Mas sa chus et t s .
Pennsylvania and Texas. The
fran k s w ere d istrib u ted to
grocery stores and supermarkets
In the Chicago area.

WASHINGTON - A Chicago
food proccaser la voluntarily
recalling 10,000 pounds of beef
frankfurters and 1.400 pounds of
dell beef franks because they
may contain a 111neaa-causing
The Food Safety Inspection
bacteria, the government said
Service said the product may
Monday.
The recall by David, Qerg &amp; Co. contain the bacteria that can
?liea*o *10.000 sounds of cause listeriosis, a rare but
Beef; -potentially serious disease. The
clad
•• problem was discovered during
routine testing.
V * ^ * v t d Berg l)cll Beef

SAN FRANCISCO - Unless the federal govern­
ment acta soon to lower Jet fuel prices, four or five
U.S. airlines could go out of business, some within
six months, former Texas Air Corp. chairman
Frank Lorenzo said Monday.
While not naming the specific carriers he
thought In danger. Lorenzo said the airline
Industry was In a “competitive crisis" caused by a
combination of higher fuel costs, “ flawed"
deregulation and a lack of access to foreign
capital.
“If the current environment continues without
any government response, four or, five U.S.
airlines will disappear, some perhaps falling
within six months.” Lorenzo told the Com­
monwealth Club of California In a speech
broadcast over more than 200 public radio
stations. “That means American travelers could
be left with Just three or four major carriers in
three years.”

To alleviate the effect of higher fuel prices. which have more than doubled since last July.
President Bush should release a portion of the
nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve to airlines at :
hclow-market prices. Lorenzo said.
He also recommended Congress eliminate the •
law prohibiting foreign ownership of more than 25
percent of a U.S. airline, which he said deprives
weaker airlines of a critical source of funding.
“If the Dutch can own one of our principal oil
companies. Shell, why can’t they awn the Trump
Shuttle?" Lorenzo asked. “ It makes no sense.”
Lorenzo's speech was a rare public appearance
by the controversial airline executive, who
resigned this summer as chief executive officer of
Continental Airlines Holdings loo,, the successor
to Texas Air. He sold Ms Interest fn the company,
which owns both Continental and E a ste rn '
airlines, to Scandinavian Airlines.
Lorenzo became a scourge of organized labor In
1983. when he took Continental Into bankruptcy.
as a means of bringing the carrier's labor costs
down.

It's true, our Consumer Information Catalog is filled with booklets that can
answer the questions American consumers ask most.
Tb satisfy every appetite, the Consumer Information Center puts together
this helpful Catalog quarterly.containing more than 200 federal
publications you can order. It's free, and so are almost half of the booklets it
lists. Subjects like nutrition, money management, health and federal
benefits help you make the right choices and decisions.
So get a slice of American opportunity Write today for yourfree Catalog:

Consumer Information Center
Department AP
Pueblo,
Colorado .81009 ” „*
— ' Wj gJj gf y rra iH s j* * .. 5
i

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-&lt;

el Pioneer Days In Sanford.

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H t T U N I I
N O T IC I It h e r e b y
O IV K N . IM * Richard t. ar

• 3 1 -9 9 9 3

ha* Mat taw cartMcatato) l*r a
ia&gt; a n t ia n muad maran.
Th* certificate number!*) ant
va a rli) of Ittuanca. ttw datcrlptton ef m
tha nama(a) la
m ««**d la/araaa
Ctrtmcata M a n n
se'

^

S c T j iI l a
&lt;a f t o f s » w &gt;* f t o p W 7a*
CHO C MW M O # »«IM4
Mama* m which aaaaaaat
Fkaato Parker
All af aaW am a i l ! being *
ttwCeuntyaf Samlnato. S4aM *4

P IB P that an rattan ta I
a Claim at wan an Ma &gt;
M SEM tNO Li

Full

within &gt;a hour* a lta r I ha
advirtlMd time of tha taM. All
payment* ihaii to eaah ar guarantaat inttrumant, mata pay*
aMa la tha Clark al Circuit
Court.
Oatat IMa W h tap af Oct*
bar. m t .
(1CALI
MarpannaMaraa
Clark at tha Circuit Court
SamInaM County* Flarlta
■y: TlnaM . Taylor,
Deputy Clark
Ptodl*h: Octabar 30 A Novambora. a n . i«ta.
d i y -n f

■ ....

.

T O : JO HN EDWARD
P IT Z L IR , III aad
SANDRA LOUISE F IT Z L IR
R ESID EN C E:

N O T K E OP ACT ION
STA TE OP PLORIOA
T O t L A N D IN G S H O M B OWNERS ASSOCIATION. INC.
Pfhaaa damicito. principal
ptaaa at buNnaa tounknown.
^ YOU ARE N O TIFIE D that^an

P im .B R . Ill
■ Md S A N D R A L O U I S !
P i m i R and M ail
bavtna a r ctaNhbw M hava any
right. Htto ar totyaaf M lha raM

N O T IC I OP tM f R IFF'S SALE
NOTICE I I H l l l t Y O IV IN
that bp virtue of that certain
Writ af Eaacuttan Ingot aut at
and untar lha aaal at tha County
Court at Oranpa County. Flori­
da. upon a final judgamint
rantarat in lha aMraaalt court
an lha Hh day of Aupuat. A.D.
i no. in that curtain caao en­
titled, Oaotar Floor Covering,
Inc., Plaintiff, — va— Poalty
Option* af Control Florida. Inc.
and David Chapman, .ndtvtdually. Dotandai.............................
W rite! Execution'
to ma aa Sharltt of IcmlnaM
County. FtorMat and I hava
lavlad upan tha tollewlnf do
acrlbad proparty awnod by
David Chapman. aaW piapait)
balnp lacalad In lam lnala
County, Florida, mara particu­
larly daacrlbad aa M la M :
On* Ita* ChavraMt Cava)lor,
b lu a In c o l o r . I D I
1G1AD44PIE J1W0C3 On* lt«t
CHdtmobile Taranada. whit* In
color, ID I 1G M Z0YM E31M M
being ttarod at Altamanta TawIn* Service. Altamonte Spring*.
Florida.
and lha undaralanad at tharltf
at Sam Inala County. Florida,
will at iL M A Jk L e n tfwNhday
at Dacombar, A.D. 1*40. oftar
tar a*M and call to tha hlghatl
biddar, Mr caah In hand, aukloci
to any and all anlaUn* liana, at
tha Front (Watt) Daar at tha
•tap* of tha laminaM County
Ceurthouaa In Santard. Florida,
tha abova daacrlbad portenal
That aaid tala It balnp mada
M aatlaty tha M rm t Of taM Writ
of EMCutlan.
John E. Path. Sharltt
SamlneM County. Florida
To ba Publlahad Navambar I t
JO. 17, Dacombar 4. with tha tala
DEZ 114

14*0

L IA A L A D V E R TIS E M E N T
b io tfa / fi-M
N O TICE II NERRBV
O IV IN . mat tha City at Sanford.
Florida will ractlva taaMd bMa
up to 1:30 P M. an Wtdtaaday.
Dacombar t 1**0. In lha Purchaaini Office. Roam 141 tor lha
following Itomt:
R EC R EA TIO N SNIRTS
All Mdt ara to ba dallvarad or
m il lad to: Tha City af Sanford.
Purchaalng Offlco, MO N. Park
Avanua. Sanford. Florida MJ7I.
Tha aaatod Mdt will ba publicly
apanad lator that tama day at
1:00 P.M. In tha City Cam.
million Chamber*. Room 111,
Sanford City Hall.

m
--in—u--- __-J , ----I f f C l i l C f l i W R V • O Q TTW p a w fW *

Md tonal ar* avallabto at no
coat. In ttia Purchaiing Ottlc*.
Roam 14). Ma N. Park Avanua.
Sonlord. Florida. (4S7) DO M i l
will net ba accaptabto.
Tha City of Sanford rn erval
lha right to accept ar re|*Ct any
or all Md*. with or without
cauie, to waive tochnicallltoi ar
to accept the Md which In It*
ludgomonl boat larva* tha Inter•it of lha City.
C ITY OF SANFORD
Waller Shear In
PurchaalnpApanf
November IS. 14*0
Publllh: November JO. 1440
DEZ-144

I . BLO CK M, CASA
PARK V I U A S PHASE I. AC
C O R O IN O T O T H E P L A T
T H E R I O P , R EC O R D ED IN
P U T ROOK * PAOES U A Ml
PUBLIC BBCDR0B OP SEMI
NOLB C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
baa boon fiMd apamat you and
you ara raqaiiad
taaarvt
a copy
________
RHL
JBL.Papy
at yaur written P b w a If any.
M It an Curry. TayM rb Cart*, at
1SS B. RaMnaan s.ra*f. Suit*
44A Orlando. PMrtda M S I. and
fIM tha artpMM wtm tha Clark af

W I T N J T l m y hand and tha
aaal at aaW Court an tha Mlh
day at Octabar, itn .
(S E A L)
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT CO URT
E V : HaoNwr Brvnnar
PuMIth: Navambar a. II. M l 77.
1440
DE2-4E
N O TIC E OP APPLICATION
FO R T A X OEBO
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
O IV IN . that Leonard Ceeeei
karry, tha hoWar at lha taftoer
mp cartmcatMa) ha* find aaW
cartttkatala) M r a Ma daad M
caM numbar(a) and yaar(t) at
‘
“
a llh a
(a) In
whkh it wot aaeataad it/era a*
CartltlcaM No. IDS
Vaaref laauanca: ltN
OatcrlptMn at Praparty: LE O
S IC SI T W P MS ROE M E
PROM N l COR RUN S M M
F T S D D E O I I MIN 11 SEC W
7440.14 F T S M DEO I M IN 11
SEC W 1017 47 F T S P D I O I I
M IN 11 S IC W 744 45 F T S M
D I O 1 M IN 11 SEC W 1*4454 F T
S m F T T O POE RUN S MS F T
S P DEO ■ M IN I I SEC ■
14*41 F T T O SHOES LI NLV
ALONG SHONE LI TO A F T S
S4 DEO a M IN 7 SEC E OF
■ B O N S4 D E O 41 MIN 7 SEC W
M70 M F T T O •10111.41 AC1
Mama* In whkh tiaaii**J«ea*h W. Todd. Dtherah M
Todd
All af aald praparty balnp In
lha County at SaminaN. Stato at
Florae.
Uni*** auch cartlllcatola)
according M
1
daacrlbad I
auch cartltkaMli) will ba aaW
M tha hlphett bidder at tha watt
Irani daar. Samlnato County
Ceurthouaa. Santard. Florida, an
the 3rd day af Dacombar. 1440.
at 11 A M .
Approximately H U M caah
Mr Sat* It raqulrad M ba peM by
lha tuccaetouf bidder at lha aaM.
Full payment at an amount
equal M tha highaal Md plu*
applicable documentary tlamp
w ithin 14 haur* alter tha
advarlliad time at lha aaM. All
puymanta mail ba cam ar guar­
anteed tnatrument, mada pay­
able M tha Clark el Circuit
Court.
Detad thla u m day at Octo­
ber. 1440.
(SEAL)
Mery anna Mara*
Clark of tha Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
■ y: TlnaM . Taylor.
Deputy Clark
PuMIth: Octabar M A Nov-m
bar 4.1170.1*40
D IV J4 *
LE O A L A D V ER TISEM EN T
•101*4/41-11
N O T I C I IS H E R E B Y
O I V I A that Itw City of Santard,
Florida will receive aaatod Mda
up to l:M P M. an Thuraday.
Dacombar 4. lata, in lha Purchafing Office. Ream 741 tor the
following Item*:
U T IL IT Y STORAEE
■UILOIMO M ODIFICATION
All Mda ara to ba dallvarad ar
mailed to: Tha City at laniard.
Purchaalng OTfke. M t A Park
Avanua, laniard. Florida 17771.
Tha aaatod Mda will ba puMkty
7:00 P A L In tha City Cam
mltakn Chamber*. Ream 117,
laniard City Hall.
ara available, at no
caat. In the Purchaalng Office.
Room 141. MO A Park Avanua,
Santard. Florida. ( 4P ) D P M I).
will not ba
Tha City at Santord ratarvaa
lha right to accept ar reject any
ar all Md*. with ar without
cauta. to walvo tochnkalltlat ar
to accept tha Md whkh In It*
judgement beat aarvat ma inter
ett atlh* City.
C IT Y OP SANFORD
Waller Shaarln
/Purchaalng Agent
Navambar 14. i**t
PuMim: Navambar A 1*40 .
OEZIU

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.peer crvetogrmwwa creeledtoe oueoebon*h Uowe
andw*Mn&lt; (ecutenor e Weember Wandatar

Ca.abr.lv ember ervewgrame are cr aw** H e aueubam by
douand praawd lech taner.w We ember
peopta pew
enomer feday a cue H aguwu C

' H M B O F O P K I H U
T K R J F T K O
A K

W O

W D M . *

P M

P O R M T W E P

P M V W U
C K T K

U M J

W O
W

U M J

U K W T
—

A K T I W T V

A K T K B O M B .
PR EVIO US SO LLPTKM r " D o ovary Paw aomatNng no on#
^ a li # » o u l d ^ ^ * i r y ^ n o o o M o d ^ ^ - ^ h m l o p l h d ^ U « t o ^

14 N N R K N —

AMERICAN SAVMQBR LOAN
ASSOCIATION OP F LO R ID A
KEVIN 0. DINNER N
llllvlnp.ataa..Hal..

S JE R IR O R O A O
WOEURN. M A S W 1

traMaaa

SamlnatoCaaM^FtorkM:
LO T M . TH E LA N O IN O l.
ACCORDING T O TH E P U T
TH E R E O F AS RECOROEO IM
P L A T BOOK U . PAG ES t
TMROUOM1 OP TH E PUBLIC
R E C O R D S OP S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. PLORIOA
Hgg Beer filEtf eenMRFI ybu e RB
K EV IN 0. D IN N E IA NNvbw,
and tt marrtoA MRS. K EV IN 0 .
D I N N E I A Mt w lA It living.

I M: Th* CHy af
Purchaalng Ottlc*. MB A Park
Avanua. Santar d. PtarkS* M m .
The t*d*ad M M m il ba puMkty

e ie e w te w

__

...W tih B

SntW N T •• Hmn bm nm pn Mag*. In*im a S Dn ^
h b

I

clerT o p th e

CIRCUIT COURT
• Y : M**m*r Brvnnar
Deputy Clark
4. I I M. 17.
DEZ-E1
Caaafy
Samlnato Caanty, P torIda
Ca**&gt; *"*M iSP*i
F leal Natianal Bank,
vl
Edward L. Harrington.
Caanty Court
Caanty, Flartd*
Caaa t M/4H CC #7 F
Stato WM* Cel lection
Carperalien n/k/a Barnett
Racavary Carparatlen. Flalntltt
vl
RAuedA
EuNBihUbwolnn^M
HM*rin^TOn. UittlHMn)
NOTICE OP SHBRIPP’S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that by virtu* at lhaaa certain
Writ* of Exacutton. a* atylad
above, and mara partkutarly
that certain Writ at Exacutton
liauad out at and undw the aaal
at the County Court of Samlnato
County, Florid*. u*an a final
judgment rendered In lha
atoratald court on the IJth day
af Auguaf. A.D. 1440. In that
certain caaa entitled Stato WM*
Collection Corporation, etc.,
F la ln tltt, v t Edward H a r­
rington. Defendant, which
atoratald Writ at Eaacutlan wa*
dallvarad to m* at Sharltt at
Samlnato County, Florid*, and I
have levied upan lha fallowing
described praparty owned by
Edward Harrington. *Md prop­
erty being lacalad .n Samlnato
County, Florida, mar* particu­
lar ly deterWad a* Wtowt:
On* 14ta Ford I Door. ID (
1 F A IP 4 4 1 IO H U M 7 S being
ttarod at Altamanta Tewing
Service. Altamanta Spring*.
and tha underHgned a* Sheriff
at Samlnato County. Florida,
will at 1!:M A M. on tho 1th day
af Dacombar. A.D. 144*. attar
tor tala and tall to lha hlghatl
biddar. FOR CASH. *ub|ocl to
any and all axltllng lien*, at tha
From (Waal) Dear, at tha ttopa.
of the Samlnato County Court
hout* In Santord. Florida, lha
above daacrlbad paraanai prap­
arty.
That aald tala li being mad*
to Mttify lha farm* at Mid Writ*
at Exacutton.
John E. Polk. Sharltt
Seminole County, Florid*
Ta be published November I),
70.17, December 4. with the Ml*
on December 5.1440
O C Z -lll
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D E E 0
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that Richard $. ar
Leonard Ceaaalbarry, lha holder
*f lha tollowing cartlfkatoltl
ha* filed Mid cartiikatolt) tor a
tax daad to ba luuad thereon.
The carl Ifleet* number III and
year It) el Inuance, the do
tcrlption of the praparty, and
the named) In which II wa*
aaaaaaad la/araaa tol Iowa:
Certificate No. IMS
Year at laauanca: 14*7
DeterIp*Ion of Property: LEG
LO T M SEMINOLE RACEWAY
1ST ADD P E I ) POM
Nemot In whkh aliened:
E C Gibb*
All *1 Mid property being In
the County of Seminal*. Stato at
Florida.
Unlait tuch cartlflcatalil
•hall be redeemed according to
law. the preparty datcribad In
tuch cartiikatolt) will ba laid
to Ina hlghatl biddar at lha wail
front door, Seminole County
Courmouao, Santord. Florida, an
the Srd day el December, 1H*.
at 11A M .
Approximately t ill.M caih
tor toil It raguirad to be paid by
lha wccattful biddar at m# M l *
Full payment at an amount
equal to tha hlghatl bid plut
apptkabto documentary tlamp
taaei and recording toe* It due
within 74 h e u ri alter tha
advarlliad lime af tha teto All
payment! than be ceth ar guar
anteed tottrumanl. made pay
able to tha Clark e l Circuit
Court.
Dated thlt llth dag at Octo
bar.' 14*0
ISEAL)
Maryann* Mart*
Clark at lha Circuit Court
Sam tool* County. Florida
By: TlnaM Taylor.
Deputy Clark
PuMIth. Octabar M 4 Novam
bar*. I ) M. 1440
DC Y 1*1

A

■ D A IS Y W O R K ..B AILT P A T #

W .’

KBVCB P U L . U K ., Aaattar*.
pay* toman M Boat IttaM
School 1M
....... M M 444

• AVOW ■ H I

_____

M M M M M M M H lk ~
FeB (pglgNig
I ug ta*H

at na

caat. in tha Purchaalng wMca.
S41, Mi N. Park Avanua.
Florida, &lt;4M) MBMl)
wtllnatbai
Th* City at
■ ■
„
lha rlgM M accant ar tafact any
ar all M il. with ar without
taut*, to wahto tachnketittaa ar
to accept th* ME whkh in
IvdgamintkaatMrvaal
act af lha City.
C IT Y OP SANFORD
W, 1
M. 1*4*

Prkaeabov* reflet* o SI-SO cathGtcaunt Me prompt poymant. SctwdulMg may awtudaHaeaid Adrertbaraldw coal af an adAtkimd ifny. Cancel
when you get rawifti. Poy onty Mr day* yaw od runt at rata earned.
* 1 deecrtpttan Mr fattotl ratehv Copy mutt fellow atceptoM*

DUfiUNtS
Naan Th* Day M et* PwMkotwn
Sunday •II A M . Sotordey
Monday. ILM AJM . Saturday

ADJUSTMENTS ANO CRIDITSi In Mb rrattf tf bn
( ( y b ) 'iBBMrNflMk B w ly Bmp
B®
4b b k t B b b * PBb ®1
®®
H r tl A b t N ru m .

( b .'IBb

to

lh a

Mutual Baneful
Partner* — 11, L.P., a Rhode
111and limited partnarthlp
Genaral Partner
Mutual Benefit Financial
Sarvlca Management
Company. Inc..
a Now Janay carperalien
General Partnar
PuMIth: November a, IX 10.17.
1440
DEZ 77
N O T IC I OF
CHANGE OF
LAN D USE
Th* City el Santord
to change lha u m at lha land
within Itw area daacrlbad In th*
tol towing legal dMcrlpt Ion:
Th* North ] acre* el th* Beat
ot the HE ta of Itw NE tool
ttw NW to (tot* thoaett IS A tor
rood right-of-way) el Section D .
Townthlp If. Range M Eatt.
Samlnato County. Florid*
A public hearing on to* pro
petal will b* held on December
t. 1440 al 7:t0 P M. or a* toon
thereafter at pettlhto. by th*
Planning and Zoning Com
mlttton at Santord. Florida. In
ttw City Commlttton Roam, City
Hall, Santard, Florida. Th*
Planning and Zoning Commluton will cantldtr a tmall
teal* amandmanl to tha Future
Land U m Plan Element of ttw
Cempratwntlva Plan.
Inter*1 ted partial may appear
at th* moating and ba heard
regarding ttw propotad plan
amandmanl.
C a p ia t of th* p ra p a ia d
amendment to th* Future Land
U m Plan Clamant at th* Com
prahentlv# Plan ar* avallabto at
Itw Department at Engineering
and Planning and at th* City
Clark'* office. City Hall. San
terd. Florida and may be in•pactod by lha public.
AD VICE T O TH E PU B LIC: If
a partan decto n to appeal a
dec It Ion mad* with retpecl to
any matter conttotrtd at the
above moating ar hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record of
proceeding*. Including the tee
llmony end evidence, which
record It net provided by the
City at Santord. (F S M M IM ).
PuMIth: November M .M . 1*40
DEZ-144
NO TICE OP A
PUBLIC HEARING
OP PROPOSE D CHANGES
AN D AM ENDM ENTS
IN C E R TA IN DISTRICTS
ANO BOUNDARIES OF
TN B ZONING ORDINANCE
O P T N E C ITY OP
SANFORD. PLORII A
Notice It hereby given that a
PuMk Hearing wilt be held In
Itw Commlttton Room at lha
City Hall In Itw City at Santord.
Florida, at 7:00 a'cleck P.M. on
Dacombar 10, 1440. to cantldtr
change* and amanWnentt to th*
Zoning Ordinance of th* City ot
Santard. Florida, at follow*:
A portion of that certain
praparty lying between Baordall
Avanua and Cameron Avenue
and between Stato Road 4* and
Moore* Station Rood It propotad
to bo rtionod from AG. Agricul­
tural. to R l-I, Rattrkwd Induttrial. Said praparty being more
p a r tic u la rly da tcrib a d at
Th* north to Lot 11A, Plan ot
Santord Calory Della. According
to ttw Plat thereof a* recorded
in Plat Book I, Pag** 75 k 7* ot
th* PuMk Record* el Seminole
County, Florida
All peril** In Intorttt and
cltlnna than hava an opportuni­
ty to be hoard at Mid hearing.
By order ot the City Com
million of Itw City of Santord.
Florida.
ADVICE TO TH E PUBLIC: It
a per ton decide* to appeal a
dec It tan made with retpect to
any matter centldtrod at the
above mooting or hearing, he
may need a verbatim racord at
ttw proceeding*. Including th*
tottlmony and evidence, which
record ll net provided by Itw
City at Santord IFSTMOIOS)
Janet R. Donaho*
. City Clerk
Publlth November 70. M. 14*0
OEZ 1*1

fWBAV RMBT ? PJB.
S2S-SSGS1H
(2) SZSd 1ACSFSTS
M S-M 2 )

° * A fiW iu J Y R M irr
IR W .IIA B ,B H IN

BRANCH D IA L E R NtRIWD ItTpM haor.w atraM t
MPiegirtoxune

waaVOLTaaa

b b Bb b

'Bt B i b
(B p BccEEPBcy (B®

A M

K l« «»
N In Pro­
Control ■ program -

Far OaMHa: I N —
— rN*4^0 fMkaey ApagaMOMn R

Kantocky.MB M4-TMF.

U N IF t M liv A a R
EttaMWwd MLM Ca •Maw M
S.E. IM M 77 4N X Mr. Curry
SICK B T IR E D al yaur praaanl
Jab* Kit* your bee* “adM tl"
have IOTi ta
C M IJM
.
ll-Ovtod* Baalty

U S JS L

41— A A u B V t p U w d ^

27— N i i m r y A

O liM C S f
SMALL Q U A L IT Y NOM E-LIKE
D i f i i r * G PreaeBeel.
pregrew l Flaigratadl PaBy
Ik'd! L M JW B I-------- JW-7US
D A V C A B I M my HMBmi Lakat
ham*. Lott of TLC. Tam 4pm
““
............ ..... n i - t i t l
IN M V S A N P O B O H O M E I
CMMcara axp'd. Intanta-ayr*.
CPR aap.SSSwk. C aH ni-M ff

LtflPl N o tlc f
IN T N E CIR C U IT COUBT
OP T H E E IG H TE E N TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN AN O FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
S TA TE OP F L O R ID A
CxtaNe.1 404114-C A M E
PMrtda Bar N*. ■
C IT Y SAVINGS BANK. F.S.B..
Flalntltt.
v*.
JOHN M. PARKER.
lfllvMg.atux.atal
NO TICE OP ACTION
S TATE OF FLORIDA
TO : JOHN M. PARKER. If
liv in g , and P A T R I C I A B.
PARKER, hit wIM, II living.
Including any unknown tpout*
ol Mid Defendant! if either hat
remarried and It either or both
ol M id Oofondontt ar* Ot
coated, their rotpocllv* un
known heir*, devlteet. grant***,
•uigneet. creditor*. Honor* end
truttooe. and all ether partant
claiming by. through, under or
agalntl Itw nomad Defendant*
Who** retldenc* addrett It
unknown
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D Itwl an
action to NractaM a mortgage
on th* tallowing property In
Samlnato County, Florida:
LO T 14. TUSCAW ILLA UN IT
X ACCORDING TO TH E PLAT
TH E R E O F AS RECOROEO IN
F L A T BOOK 17. PAGES 75
T H R O U G H IS. OP T H E
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI
HOLE COUNI Y. FLORI DA.
ha* bean filed agalmt you and
SECURITY PACIFIC FINAN
CIAL SERVICES. INC.. • cor
poratlon. J. E. G ALLAG H ER
and C.S. GALLAGHER. DEN
NIS J. DONOVAN. JOHN OOE
and JA N E DOE, and all other
portent In pet ten tan of iub|*ct
real praparty. whot# real name*
are uncertain and you ara re­
quired to tarv* a copy ol yaur
written detente*. II any, to II on:
J O S E P H M. P A N I E L L O .
ESQUIRE, Plaintiff* attorney
who** addrett it:
M l N. Franklin Street. Suit*
2770, Tampa. Florida 73*07
an ar baler* tha 7th day of
Dacombar, 1*40, and III* th*
original with tha Ctorfc at ihit
Court either katara earvka an
PlaMtltfe attorney ar Immadl
atoly thereafter; gltwrwlt* a
default will ba entered agalntl
you tor ttw reHat demanded In
lha Complaint or Petition.
D A TE D an thlt lit day at
lfWYUniGGe
U n m m h i f a(■trry,
M
C LE R K O F TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
B Y: Heather Brvnnar
Deputy Clark
Publlth: November t, IX M. 27,
I4M
DEZ It

i n TyterOr.
FL 3*773

*ours*im* Mrs*

H E A L T H P O G C I need* you
nowt Staffing a ll aroaal
Ptonfy of wwrkl CM UM -HI4
OGIVE G Y

[Al

N
MEfNWEMUIRVSI
One Way ticket M LauMvllM.

Pull flm*. (iperfenced in
ttwr cere t h ipping, woelng.
ok. Inatltvtionoi facility
’ “
' xe-Prii
i A m ., Santard
■E.ftE./M
a P LA N T M ANAGER a
IM Well etlMHthod company
Making M r • manager with
m ach in e iit e m b ly
backroundl T h lt opanlng
won't latll Murry I
A A A EM P LO YM EN T

area. I up. a mutt

d c a W—

___________ B M N . . .
S li ts hr. N t aep. Exam,
trainIn*, k MM..... .....S H IM *

i at cradilll L5M to
S5MBB. CaRI........4*71
E Q U I T Y Leant, Perch*tat.
RaBninti l l HI. 2nd A Trd
Mtgtl Gaad/bad cradltl Fat I
approval*I Boardlan Mtg.
Carp..... Lk.M M . r ‘
N54XI/1 M b!

71-HdpW ARtM
* MAIDS* MNWffiMI

7MW.MMtt.m-5l7«

* * p o n eM s* *

I ta |7M poN total, outtlde
k, N O S IL L IN G II Mutt
have rellabk tranaportatlon.
Cad EM
Bant U N to WSS per week
Reading Rook* at homo. Call
I4I5-4W-74M Ext. BOM
EARN R X T R A INC0MBI Stuf
ting a n v iliipai at homo. Ba
your own boot I Start bnrrwdtatety tv/no prior axpar. Fra*
luppltot paatiaa. Fra* Into A
na abllg.. eanJ id f addrei-td
tie wood anvatage to Gatdan
D l t f r l B a t a r i . P . O . Bon
771U * c Carpet atrktL Taaa*
EXCELLENT

Incomal

*11.40 Ta|14M/hr
No exp nocatMryl For team
A application Into, call
l i l t ) 0 * * 1 0 M t.7 U
4am to4pm...7dayt
Should ba knowledgeable in all
phatat el quality- Military
contract axpar lance a mutt.
Sand relume and complete
M lary history to Boa 4tT, c/a
Sanford Herald, P.O. Bat
.P L lim .

HUMU RlfiNTDMVII
M - F . t - 1B:10pm A Sal .
3 :lB lp m . Delivery Can FL.
area Cad........... ....... 771 ina
a R ES TAU R AN T M A N A G IR a
It you're Intorettad In learning
all phatat at ret tourant man
agamant. thli job It tor you!
AA A KMPL o Y M E N T
7M W .m hS7,3»&gt;ll7*

Eat y

ducHathonw. 1 1 » 7330507
Ext. MSB. 14 hour*_____________

FUU TIME Off NMR
M -F, 1:705. Dtlhwry Can FL.
~*U.................... 371-115*

F/Ti Ma waakiedi, Pd. vaca■Cad MaWy Mild 7*7-M*7

Legal Notices
NOTICE OF
FICTITIO U S NAME
Notice li hereby given that w*
ar* ingagad In butinatt at 3710
E. Hwy aa. Santord. Semi not*
County, Florida, under the
Flctlttoua Nam* ot O A L A U TO
R EPAIR k D ETA IL and that
w* Inland to raglttor Mid name
with ttw Clark el ttw Circuit
Court. SamMel* County, Flori­
da. In accordance with lha
Provltlont ot th* Flctltleu*
Nam* Statute*. TeWIt: Section
*410* F lor Ida Statute* 1457.
Latll* F. Mangeur
Richard A. Mongaur
Publlth: November 4. I). 20. 77.
1440
OEZ-71

N O TIC I OF
FICTITIO US NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In butlnett at 501
Tan Oak Ct.. Alternant* Spring*.
Seminole County, Florid*, under
the F l c t l l l o u t N o m e ot
NICE N -N IF TY PROMOTIONS
and that I Intend to raglttor Mid
name with Itw Clark ol ttw
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida. In accordance with ttw
Provltlont ol Iho Flctlllout
Nam* Statute*. To-WII: Section
143.04 Florida statute* 1457.
J. ErlcNalten
Publlth: November *, ‘X JO. J7.
14*0
DEZ7S

Jobs!
Jobs!
We have immediate
openings!
. • P a in te rs

• B o o k B in d e rs
• C o n s tru c tio n
• W a re h o u se
• P ro d u c tio n
Employees with transportation
needed Immediately
Apply
1018 S. French Ave., Sanford
5 A.M. SHARP

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. INC

TheSanford Herald
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raM property, whaaa reel name*
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S IC 0M 0 B I N ! RATIONS

furniture Inti. Mini blind*,
carpeting. haat/eir wind, un­
it*. calling jN ftjfcgft m * m

Iflo rk to R fttlty
UMIMRMRHOMT

SKMOMtMIN

234—Import Cars
and Trucks

Ptaatt tot m* haft.

Large family ream, C/H/A.

w^fckHiflkTTn-irr-fttgil
NURTNfQKTI

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Raducad ta tlM .M O.
Aiwmaftta VA . F at t move tal

U f t b Mary i M * , I ft 1
Bdrm. Aft*. Marry i x t m Incl.
*tara ft i f at* i Quito, coxy
community) Nlct landscapIng. Onsite managers wtro
CAN ■ 11 Starting a*t i l t mo.
s a n f o r d c o u r t ...... j » n * i

w arn pintawMbnu

"SOU) TO2110 CAUill
Mr a. P. T. of Lb. Mary told
har car by tfra md day lo th*
Jnd cal lari Sh# callad har
Sanlord Harald C lanlllad
Advertising Contullanl ta stop
har ad from continuing on Ih*
lb Day Spatial rata. Soma
thing VOU naad to advarliM
at low coil and achltva quick
rotulttf Try our 10. 14 A
M Day Spatial rata*. Lowatt
coal par IIn* tar comacutlv*
day*' advartltlng. Advartliari
art fra* to cancal at toon a*
ratultiararaachad
CLASSIFIED D IP T .

217—Oftrsflft S u it
firipficd* icra m d post m d
ip*.) cm i t r t f i . f 17MI0

3/2 CUSTOMMAT

"RUTH) III RM ill
Mr*. J. W. of Sanford rantad
hor room within o woob and
callad hor Sanlord Harald
Classified Advartltlng Con
tultant ta ttaf har ad from
continuing on Ih* is Day
Spoctal rata. Somolhing YOU
naod ta advartloo at taw coat
and oditava quick results!
T r y our It. 14 ft It-D ay
Spoctal rota*. Lowott cat! par
lino tar contacullvo day*'
advortlilng. AdvartHar* or*
fro* ta concol a* toon a*
results ar* reached
C LA S S IFIIO D IP T .
m -M It ___________

C o r a m l c III* . Lovol or*.
Ilrapiaca, I car garaga.
Pool/tannl* avail.......... ttl.JOO

OUU6CSMII!

CUSTOM ftU ILT •1 badraom. I
bath ham*. Family room with
brlch Ilrapiaca. Can. H/A.
hortai ho* kltchan. park Ilk*
totting on big lot. Many traotl
Call quick I.......... .........IM.S00
L A K IF R O N T ham* In OaBary

Klngslx* bod and couch alio
mile. Itamt. During Ih* wl
call attar SPM. Weekends cal
attar tA M m ta W .

319—WRiitod to Buy

V O L K S W A O O N BUSI Nlca
thap*. run* groat I Sl.tfS

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plu* du oilt,

&amp;

DOHCMLSTl H AIM

MNTIDIt
Large up ta I ttaf (laid roltar
and mowar. 1 U I1 U or JTa
4131 Anytime._______________

*4 C H I V Y l* TON PICK UP
Hahull I i l l Cu. In. angina
Good all., brakai. thockt.
radiator. U |ointi. Naad* body
work. MOOCamay H II

221—Good Things

SAN FORD •targ* prlvata bdrm.
w/prlvata bam. fumlthad. All
hot— privileges, incl. TV and
utllltto*. 171/wk plu* MO dtpaall. Prtfar mala, tang larm
hm*nt. C a iim s m .

Hug* I bdrm., anctaatd tun
room. set In kltchan. C/H/A.
Light ft Bright I Tha ftaatl
H*l/mo.,tMtec------- »&gt;**n

O RANT PROP|RT1HMa-4t*»

R IS T O R ID DOLLHOUSI
IIS Myrtle, historic Sanlord.
Central H/A....................tatJ
T iw M o Realty lac, *1*44U

K IN D S T I W etarbad
w/ padat l al . Roi a m l r r a r
haadbd w/matchlng buraau.

CAR TRAILIRI With rampil
Heavy duty malal. *&lt;c con
dllion MOO Call...........HI 1044

w*»*iioonow, t«at. niim .

• BOY' S I I " Fraattyla It.
weight, chroma blk*. Vary
good condition. MO.ma***.

231—Vthiclos
Wanted
J

STENSTROM

SANFOdD • Largo t b ^ m . pool,
laundry. C/H/A. fltl/m o or
SW /wh. S ata/outatm gM i

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•

243—Junk Cars

REALTY, I NC.

346

• ROLL-A WAV bad. Small sit*.
Ready tor your company.
S4100 Will deliver. m 411*.

Wr list and sell
more property that
anyone In Ike Greater
Sanford/lake Mary area.

CO UNTRY CLUR - J bdrm. 1
bath, tancod yard r 'li r g *
utility building. Family room.

•SOFA, three piece sectional
Esc*! tan! condition, t / l
________ m m h i .

KMCatalina Dr, San lord.______
MXII ABOVI graan* peal.
1110; M taction* *t Cypratt
tacurity taacing. M each plu*
SI lor each 4X4; F ra la b
Ilrapiaca. SIM; 111 4tal

N I C ! 1/1 F I R S T F L O O R
CONDO. Fully appllancad
Incl. washer dryer Screened
porch. Aroa pool. NnnlU47.SOO

hraplaca, SIM motah, m -Ttal

O L O IR HISTORIC A R IA *•
STORY J/lto. Solar walar
ha*tar, new Insulated win

Ca U Jggg)
Day*. U 3 I U 4 Evas, m - m t
AA Cara**, lac.

Q u ality Iked C a n A t A F air Price
No A pplication R efuted
price In area. So* III SM.M0

SPARKLING NIW SFLIT V I
Sfactaua'great rm., vaulted
calling*. Insld* utility, big

Relax.

petto. Only....................1*4. *00
S U P I H LR. MARY
L A K IF R O N T 1/1. G re a t
room, fple., hug* screened
porch. Irrigation system. And.
only taa.no 11

153—A crtsgtLois/S«l«
LAKIFRONT - DaBary. owner
financing, taw down. 1H.*00
Larry Harman, I n t o n a u s a

119—OHic* Supplies
/ Equlpmtnt
111 dash*, single padislal **} *a
1 accastanal chairs. *41 a* 4
slacked chair*. I l l » *a It)
baakcata. 141 (I) Sola, wood
tram*. 1*1 I arm dash chair.
Ml « swlval dash chairs. 140

R I C I 1/1 on 1/4 acre. Pal* shad,
toned tar horses. Irrigated
gar dan are* Security lights.
Tmadtl....... SSt.fOO

LO W AS
PER W E E K

LOW AS

155—Condominiums
Co-Op/Salt

On Beautiful Lake Monroe
HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM THE STAFF OF
REGATTA SHORES
•Clubhouse With Fireplace
• Indoor Racquetbali
•Weight Room
• Pool &amp; Jacuzzi
•Washer/Dryer Connections
•Garden Windows
• Fireplaces
1 SiOroBtw from $450
/r~ ifS K r W —\
R M room o from $540

Condition I *110.080 111)1*4
TV SATILITI System*. Locally
own*d/Dpar*tad. Call tar Ira*
Info! Fraa survey 11.....U » H H

FIRE RIDCE CUII
PRICES STARTING AT MUM
1 Bedroom 1 Bath condom In I
urns. All appliance*, vertical
blind* throughout, clubhouse,
pool, tannl*. security guard
C A L L ...m ean

SMRJRO/U. MARTC0N00
3214759

.3112257
i a Sanlord Place. N 0 .»
4/1. Crystal Ridg*. tll l .n o
Vito, Sanlord. country 1t a

Price Raducadl Large Master
BR w/bath Guest bdrm ft
bath, ta t in hit. w/dith*a*h*r
ft dispotal. Formal Dining
Rm.. Living Rm w/firaplac*.
Scrnd. porch w/l*ktvl*w.
washer dryorl From Mt.tOO to
tea.— g v o w n i i i m m u

193—Lawn A G trd tn

195—Machintry/Tools
HIGHWAY 17-92, SANFORD. FLA
11

m ile N o rth o l l,s u e M.iry Ul vd )

f .i-sy lu hi i d ( r o m j n y w f im e in C e n l f j i I
I'f'o i'u I 10/1 I . ' I

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PUT

YOUHBUSINESS ON THE MOVE

FREE 18 Day Trial
t

B P

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* JUST HAM BUSY fC O fil

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It's an electronic answering service •
2) You get your messages when you’re
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3) 24 hours 7 days a week service
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CALL NOW 831-5543 ext. 1212
S A V IN G S H O M E W O R K

Add a Farm Bureau Auto Insurance Policy to a
Homeowner’* Policy* and you automatically save
10% on your auto Insurance. Or add a Homeowner**
Policy1* to your auto insurance. The answer is (till the
same. Anyway you figure it adds up to smart aarings.

•Hmmw H04• n Sw*i

:J

'I

1

41MN.USHury.17-M
322-2221 3658316

A

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v

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0 0 OFF

3Any Perm
2 0 0 OFF
Any Haircut

I

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And We Do Windows!
Let us Introduce ouraelvest We are the Neat
and Tidy Cleaning Service crew, and we want to
serve youl
We feel sensible rates and qunllty service Is the
heat combination of a service-oriented business,
such as ours, and we want you to be the benefac­
tor of the philosophy!
We would like to contact you In the near future
to review with you personally the services we of­
fer. We ofTer such a wide range of nrrvlces. we feel
we can meet the needs of every cleaning situation.
Our staff manager Ruby Payne la a dedicated
Christian who specializes In Immaculate house
cleaning. In a matter of 2Vk to 3 hours, our mini­
staff. (we have 3 crews) will come Into your home
and deep clean It to your total satisfaction,
guaranteed.
After the Initial deep cleaning, our standard
residential cleaning ranges In price from $40.00
to $53.00 depending on the size of the house. The
weekly, bl-weekly or monthly cleaning Includes
total vacuum, mop and wax (If needed) all floors,
dust and wax all furniture, total kitchen prekage
Including cleaning stove, refrigerator, microwave,
wipe down all cabinets and polish, elenn all ap­
pliances and wipe all counters. Bathrooms Include
total clean, mop and wnx floors, clean all mirrors,
wipe down tiles and shower doors. Star Richie Is
staff supervisor, nnd Mike Stroum does the carpet
cleaning.

We will also change linens, towels and make
beds, cltan celling fans and clean window sills.
And...we do windows! Inside and out and screens
Included. You should see what a beautiful, bright
difference clean windows make.
Office packages are available with small offices
starting at $20.00.
Under the same roof we can also handle the
heavier end of house and home upkeep.
We have one crew that handles minor home
repair, painting, plumbing, carpentry and
wallpaper.
Imagine the convenience and the peace of
mind that comes with being able to trust all your
house care needs with a reliable company that you
see on a weekly or bl-weekly basis. You will know
that If you are not happy with any part of our work
that you will be able to contact us and get the Job
done right.
No Job Is too large or too small; hang a fan. fix
a fence, have new vinyl flooring Installed, we can
do It all.
We are licensed and bonded for your peace of
mind. We supply all cleaning materials and
equipment.
We cater to the working person: we know how
valuable your lime Is. If you have any Immediate
or future cleaning needs, please do not hesitate to
rontact us at 321-7699.

.W ell D r illin g &amp; P u m p
L
R e p a ir S e rv ic e
• r*—i
a n--------io n w ow

■■l

LO O K W HAT YOU CAN DO!
...
•

__ _ Designer Flower

Pot W/Base
10"

high 1 1 " diameter

In Greenware
Entire Setl

Clay Creations

Now Taking Requests..
O p ening* For N e w Mu*ic Student*
• Plano • Keyboard
•Organ •Collar
• Drum • Voles

FREE ESTIMATES!!
■N0MMN .muTasnutsete

• Theroy • Compaction

L it

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N eet A
All-Cleon

t

uv**

Service be your Christmas Angel.

Sanford. Como by and too thorn or call 322-413$.

Discover a New World of Ceramics
at Clay Creations Ceramics.
D on't L et
G utter
M aintenance
D rain You!

Picture It
New !!

C all T oday! UC4COCOU336

Take a short trip to the Sanford Airport, but
You can find almost any kind of greenware
don't get on a plane. Find your way to 2764 piece at Clay Creations, from utility pieces such
Navigator Avenue, ard discover Clay Creations as pasta bowls, egg plates, com holders, casseroles
Ceramics.
and canntstcr sets, to antique dresser sets, a three
Open to the public now for 3 years. Clay Crea- foot decorative horse, table pedestal, clocks and
tlons Ceramics has more than 15.000 molds and a Southern Belle. Clay Creations also has many
2.000 pieces of poured greenware to choose from, bisque Items. If you are looking for an odd bull
You won't need to pack a bag or make ar- piece. Clay Creations Is the place to look,
rangements for overnight accommodations, but
do allow yourself some time to look around this
You will also discover good prices at Clay Creaspacious shop.
tlons. Anyone who knows ceramics knows that
There's greenware on the shelves, greenware buying greenware also means that eventually you
on the walla, greenware everywhere, most of It are going to have to pay for firing. The lower the
poured by Helen Malloy herself. Helen, and her price on your greenware means the lower the cost
husband John, own and operate Clay Creations, of firing. Clay Creations only charges 50% of the
The Malloy's have been residents of Sunford for already low greenware price for firing. For the first
the past 25 years and have six children ranging twenty customers who bring in this advertiseIn age from 6 to 27 years old. While John has Just ment. Clay Creations will give you a free greenstarted learning to pour. Helen, a twenty year ware piece for each $20 order. This piece will be
veteran of ceramics, has been pouring for 10 years shop choice, a $3 plus value, limit one per
and taught herself almost everything she knows customer and will expire December 1. So If you
about ceramics. One of the most difficult, and are looking for something different, look no furlovely pieces she pours Is a delicate ballerina.
Iher than Clay Creations Ceramics.

m er le n o R m i
★ SANFORD *
EUROPEAN
FACIALS

White Glass Lenses
Single Vision...indudes Frames

Large Selection o f Frames

• Tints A Photo Orry Available
• Your Doctor's Prescription Killed
• Glosses Duplicated • Adjustments &amp; Repairs

Budget Optical • 323-8080
601 E. 25th SI.
Sanford

to L !i£ !2 i iff*
am* m
* ***

I Made It M yself At
... You Can Jjtjjim/a
Too!
CR EATE YOUR OW N
T-SH IR T OR USE O N E OF
S P A T TE R S DESIGNS!

EVERYONE'S
AN ARTIST HERE*

,

L A **

'

«

Special only *30
Mon A Woman

C rf: 322*2611

Just as you
)
tune your
car's engine
So should you tune up
your heating &amp; air
conditioning system.
And Fall is the
perfect time.
I

Call now for an 18 £*
Point Maintenance v 9!
Inspection^
^
For Only $34*95

15th t t 4 17-12

323-6505

m

HAIR, NAILS. WAXINQ, TAN.
KAN F1ERCIN0, PEDICURES

324 0682

\ i i w

�</text>
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                    <text>Se x , d ru g s, m urder: ju ic y detail u n v e ile d in U.S. report
■if RUSSBLL SNYDER
United Press International

□ S p o rts
Expectations are high
LONGWOOD — Till' new wrestling coach .it
Lake Mary High School. Klcltard Batchelor. lias
stepped Into a sllitallon dial Is. at d ir saint*
dim*, niu* nl most enviable and Irani rnvlalilr In
dir rmmly.
See Page ID

WASHINGTON - An Fill olTlelal
In a "highly sensitive position"
abuses drugs ami steals secret
documents. A federal prosecutor
packs a pistol In Justice Depart­
m en t h e a d q u a r te r s . A DKA

employee Is arrested for possession
of cocaine.
T h ai’s just some o f the dirty
linen buried In the latest report
from the OITlre of Professional
Responsibility, the Justice De­
partment's Internal watchdog.
OPR's annual report Is a tan­
talizing glimpse at the depart­

B y N IC K P F E IF A U F

Graham visits troops

Herald staff writer

Sen. Hob Gruliani. D-Fla.. told iroops during a
visit lo Saudi Arabia dial Saddam lliissrln
srrms ninrt* inlrrrstrd In munl|&gt;tdullng Intcrnallonal opinion Ilian holding talks with U S.
leaders over the Persian Gulf rrlsls and avoiding
war.
See Page 2A

SANFORD — li could be a happier holiday fur
dozens of Seminole County residents who are
among 2.655 |M*nplr In North and Central Florida
If they knew the Internal Revenue Service was
looking for them
The IRS has nearly $1.3 million In unclaimed
15)89 federal Income tax refunds for this area of
the state.
James J. Ryan, director of (hr Jacksonville IRS
district, said lit a release the 2.655 checks were
returned by the U.S Postal Service early this year
because they were undellverahle. The cheeks
were returned because nl Incorrect addresses,
taxpayers moving with no forwarding address or

Christmas party set for Saturday
LAKE MARY — The new Lake Mary Central
Park Amphitheater at city hall will lie the site of
"Holiday In the Park". Saturday. Dee. 22.
beginning at 11:30a.m.
Simla is expected to arrive at noon with toys
and candy for the children. Refreshments will he
available with proceeds to benefit the Youth
Center program.
A variety of entertainers will he on hand hut
additional entertainment, singles, groups, etc.,
are still being sought. Interested persons should
contact John Holland, director nl parks and
recreation through Dec. 20. at Lake Marv Cltv
Hall. 324-3053

simply a matter of such poor handwriting that the
address could not Ik- read.
Areawide, unclaimed check amounts run from
$1 to a high of $33,167. to he refunded to a
woman In Leesburg If she can Ik- located.
lo Seminole County, the IRS has 5)6 unclaimed
tax return checks totaling $45.5)26 or an average
of $47H per recipient.
According to the most recent report from the
IRS. they are presently holding Income tax refund
cheeks for the following people listed with
Sanford addresses, whom they are unable to
locate. They Include: Clarence and Joyce Pearl
Gordon: Patricia and Mark Grlse; Kenneth M.
Hinson: Charles D. Jackson: Cassandra Manor:
Samuel Morris; Michelle K. Murphy: Hector R.
Neuarez: Dclmuso Oglesby J r : Ernest and Linda

Herald stall writer
SANFORD — Seminole County
Sheriffs Investigator Dan Prast Is a
top Investigator and a quiet guy.
He probably has one o f the
roughest Jobs In the department:
making rases against those who
sexually molest children, according
toCapl. Roy Hughey.
Prast recently was honored as
Public Safety Officer of the Year by
l l'.e Greater Seminole Chamber ot
Commerce. Enrllcr this year the
Kiwanls Club o f Central Florida also
recognized Prast as Officer of the
Year for Ids department.
Prast. 29. w ho has been an
Investigator for more than five of Ids
seven years with the department,
said he Is flattrred hy the recogni­
tion — hut he's really Just doing his
Job.

INDEX

By SUSAN LODBN

H e a lth ? F ltn a s s ..
H o ro s c o p e ...........

Herald staff writer

......5C
N a tio n ....................
P a o p ls ...................... 1 -3 C
HttlVJ ®holo by Tommy Vlnconl

Most Iv sunny with a
h i g h III t h e l o w HOs

Veralynne Williams of Sanford ties another ribbon on one ot the trees in her
yard to help remind passers-by ot tne troops in Operation Desert Shield.

Sanford mom wants
troops remembered
B y V IC K I D a S O R M IE R

Herald stall writer

F o r m o ra w aa the r, »•• Pag* 2A

Veralynne Williams who lives at
102 Loch Arlxir Cl. to Sanford
wants |xi|ile to remember the U S.
troops stationed in Saudi Arabia
with O|icrat!on Desert Shield during
the Christmas holidays
W illi a m s ,

d a y s u n t il
C h r is t m a s

H*f

Photo by Suton LoO«n

Dan Prast
"Ever since I was a kid the only
tiling I wanted to lie was a jiollee
officer." Prast said. "It didn't take
See Top Cop. Page S A

S ta te in ve stig a to rs re n e w
p ro b e of sheriff crim e lab

F ro m staff and w lra ra p o rta

W arm winter day

F. Padgett: Arthur J. and llaoull C. Pleanso:
Nnrah V. Salmon: Greg A. Stevenson: James It
Terwllleger Jr.: and Gordon and Genevieve
Verge.
Lake Mary residents with tax checks watting for
them Include Rex It. Gilpin and Glen C. Plguct.
Lake Monroe resident Zada Ann Nclib a lvi has
a refund due.
Longwood residents Include: Jonathan P.
Fisher: Carol L. Giillcdgc; Larry L. Payton: Solo
Blank: William C. Boyd Jr.: Valerie N. Brown:
Trudy R. Fcldcrmnn: and Shirley M. Sulla.
Several persons on the list Include those who
d ie d . In w h ich ease the IRS Is s e e k in g
beneficiaries or close family members.
According to Ryan, anyone who was expecting
C See IRS. Page BA

By SUSAN LODSN

HOUSTON - Police Chief Kll/al.eth Watson
gave birth Friday to an H-pound. 12-ounce hoy.
The baby was born at 1 If) p in at Methodist
Hospital, a spokeswoman said, adding I m i i I i
mother and son were doing well. The baby, who
Is 2 1 Inches long, has yet to he named.
He Is the third child nl the chief and her
husband, pollec Sgt. Robert Watson, who drove
Ills wife to the liospilal and was with her III the
delivery room
Watson. 40. Iierame pregnant .liter being
named police chief last year She Is the llrst
woman police chief In Houston and the Hist
woman lo head a major, jxillee department In
I he nation
A 17-year old poller department veteran.
Watson has worked In many Jobs within the
department. She became the ik'partineut's tirst
woman dcjMily clilcl m 15IH7

T e le v is io n ............ ......5C
W e a th a r................ ......2 A
W o r l d .....................

□ See Ju ic y , Page BA

Top cop looks out
for all our children

Chief, child are d o in g fine

B u tin * * * .......... ......... 4B
C la s s ifie d * ...... ......5-7B
C o m ic s .........................4C
C r o s s w o r d ......
O sa r A b b y ........
O s a th s ............... .......... 5 A
E d ito ria l............
E d u c a t io n .......
F lo rid a ...............

ed). The fact that the OPR rcjMirt
contains no names only raises the
level of tlllllallon.
I t 's c o m p ile d hy M ic h a e l
Shahccn. the only person ever to
hold the position o f counsel to the
Office of Professional Rc*qxmslhlllty. Thcofllrc turns IS on Tuesday.

IRS owes you money?

□ Florida

BRIEFS

ment's nasty little secrets, which It
cites drily as •'representative
e x a m p le s o f m is c o n d u c t in ­
vestigated by the office."
The cases range from a federal
drug agent suspected of murder
(he was later cleared), to FUI
agents subm itting questionable
meal receipts Ithcy were suspend­

w hose

d a u g h te r

K -l

Tract Williams Is an army reservist
who lias been stationed there since
Scptcmchcr. lias decorated tier yard
with yellow rthlxms
"There are lols of them." she
joked. "I don't know how many."
There arc bright yellow rihtxms
on trees, on shrubs and on the
house.
See Mom. Page 5A

SANFORD The Florida De­
partment of Law Enforcement Is lo
arrive In Sanford from Tallahassee
Monday to begin a third. Indepen­
dent |&gt;rnbc of actions o f Seminole
County Sheriffs Department chem­
ist Chris Alt.
"W e fell It essential Dial an
outside. Independent organization
Investigate...This will he a totally
separate Investigation." S h eriffs
Cajd. Roy Hughey said Friday
night
An Internal Oviedo police In­
vestigation has already cleared the
name ot Oviedo Police CorjMiral
Raljdi "G en e " Taylor. 33. who.
based on apparently lalse results In
a urine test performed hy Alt In
early October, was arrested here for
possession of a trace amount of
cocaine In tils urine on Oct -I
When it surfaced a few days later

tliat other labs received negative
results In tests on the same urine
saiiqilc tin- charges against Taylor
were dro|i|H'd. He was returned to
patrol duly In Oviedo. At the time of
tits arrest Taylor was assigned to
the C ity C ou n ty In v e s tig a tiv e
Bureau as a drug agent He was
arrested hy CCIH agents after All
performed a random drug test on
urine sauqiles of 17 ('('III agents.
She rcjiortt'dly got
positive result
on Taylor's sample
The Oviedo Internal Investigation
rc|&gt;ori cleared Taylor's name and
raised questions about how Alt
conducted Taylor s test anil how
she r'*|Nirted or tailed lo rc|torl lest
results
Based on Information m the
Oviedo rcjxirt. Ilie Seminole County
Sheriffs l)c|&gt;artmcnl began an in­
ternal |&gt;rotx- ot Alt's actions and Its
III house lab. wliii h All hasnjx ralcd
for less iti.ui one year. O|&gt;crallon of
See Crime tub. Page SA

Here’s a stroll down back down Q &amp; A lane
H ie more we delve hack Into Sanlnrtl history
the more the readers rem ind us ot various events
T h e y quiz us alxiul w ho did ihts" and w ho did
dial " S&gt;. toil.iv let s go d o w n "q u e s tio n " and
a n s w e r" lane
Q u estion: W h o was tin manager nl the old
M il.me Theatre w.i&gt; li.u k w hen who had such
an aiirai-live daughter'*
A n s w e r : Ills name was lor M.irenlelte Ills
d a u g h te r H elen tieeame the wile ot A n d y
C arr.iw av You i r right* She was pretty
Q: W lin wi l e tin .ig n illlltir.il ti.u lle is at the
O ld S.m loiil H igh III the t'lJD s .m il at St m m ole
llig ti in tin 15131N *
A: V i i i i it th in kin g I It si ot R F i oo jxr and later
Alex Io I iiis o ii I o o j x r now 5)3 still resides al 5KIM
Magnolia A m
I o I iiis o ii died a i otqile years ago
But lie II in m i he forgotten t&gt;\ tile hundreds til
lii s lim .ill Utv s w ho w i re required lo lake biology
I he M i u t l g s t e r sjietil Ills 11r si semester at
Sem iuoh i basing hutterllles .Mill assem bling a
requited rolleetloii
Q: When tin- Nanlonl Naval A ia drm v was
established alld liascd at tile old Forest l.akt
Holt I II.iter tin M.ivlalf Inn and now the New
I r i l xs Mission) win. ow iiftl anil ojieraietl thr

M lloul *

Way
back
when
B y J u lia n
S te n s tro m

A: I lie lit -rn.tr &gt;1 M&lt; f- .it It It-11 Foundation I li.it a l s o
owned amt operated tile Carlisle Military
Academy m Tennessee Mi Faddcii hecaim
t.minus a-&gt; publisher ol the old l.llx-rtv weekly
newsmagazine, a iiatloii.il pulilit lion in the 15120s
.inti 15t.lt)s Itie magazine jirrdletrd President
Ihxiyti would dele.it Franklin Roosevelt III I ** 12
W inn TDK tarried every stale tnu Maim and

Vermont the magazine went under MeFarldeti
lK-came a health l.iddlsl He celebrated his HOili
birthday hy making a 10.000 loot ji.iracliutc
Jump. The building across the street Imtn the oltl
tiotel was limit as the McF.tddcn (iym iiasliiin
The present ix t up.ints use ili.n liuihliiig Im a
limiting plant
Q. There were two well known brothers ol
eastern Eurojx-.m .uutstrv who were celery
tanners when I was a young man Would von bv
any i hum e know their last name'*
A: You've got to tx- asking .itxnil the l.uilwig
brothers t )ne was known as Bill and lfie oilier
was ''.jim'
Both wire great baseball tails and
sup| xir let I ItM.il s|xirls ii« tiv 11its
Q: During tin l‘ )2(K the Hi:ItK land even later)
the First Preshvteri.in &lt; Inin h ol Santoril li.ul a
pastor whose name I cannot i t « .ill But In was
there a very long linn
A: lit- was Dr K l&gt; ilrowiiht lh Im-c .iiiii ji.istor m January 1**1 i - three mouths t M 't o r e
the Florida Leglslaliile t re.tlt tl Sciiillioh • oiintv
He serv etI die i Iiiiii h lor 17 yt .u s
We retail a sioiv told by Di W I' lliook-.
pastor ot Satilntd's fust ll.ijitisl i him h lot it
years It seems Brow nU-ss and III m e Antler si hi lot
See Way Buck. Page 3A

�•A — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday. December 16. 1990

FLORIDA!
BRIEFS
Woman was human shiald
BARTOW — A woman cleaning an opossum for supper was
briefly a human shield when a man fleeing three armed men
ducked behind her In Lake Wales.
Betty Mae Smith. 76. was cleaning an opossum for supper In
her yard Thursday night when Lindsey James Alexander ran
behind her for cover. The Tampa Tribune reported Saturday.
Polk County sherlfTs spokeswoman Lynne Brcidcnbach says
the Alexander. 37. of DeLand. ran cn when his pursuers
hesitated at the sight of Smith. But he was shot In the leg a few
blocks later. Smith was uninjured.
Breldenbach said Alexander was with three other men when
two cars were stolen from a nearby residence. For some
unknown reason. Alexander fled one of the vehicles and was
chased by the other men.
He came upon Smith and h|d behind her. and then ran away,
followed bv a fusillade of bullets.
Alexander, who was treated and released from Winter Haven
Hospital. Is being held In the Polk County Jail In lieu of
$10,500 ball on two counts o f grand theft and two counts of
armed robbery.

11 win in Fantasy 5 gam#
TALLAHASSEE — Eleven players matched all five winning
numbers In Friday s Fantasy 5 drawing to win $104,265 each.
Lottery Secretary Rebecca Paul said Saturday.
The total first-prize payout will be more than $ 1 million.
Four of the winning tickets were sold In Miami and one each
In Arcadia. Blountstown. Haines City. Hollywood, lamonla.
Plantation and Titusville.
In addition. 1.115 players matched four numbers to win
$291.50, while 38.346 players selected three correct numbers
to win $4.
The winning numbers In Friday's Fantasy 5 drawing were 3.
6 .8 .2 4 and 31.

Sottlemont offered In Lykes dredging
TA M PA — Lykes Bros. Inc., the giant Florida mert-pneking
and farming corporation, would pay $35,000 In fines for
Illegally draining marshes near Lake Okeechobee under a
settlement offered by state regulators.
Under the proposed settlement, the company also would
have to restore the wetlands, something a company lawyer
says It already has done.
Charles Lee. a lobbyist for the Florida Audubon Society, said
the settlement proposal Is a "cop-out" on OER's part. He said
the fine Is too small and the settlement would allow the
company to keep the canals It excavated without a permit.

Nassau schools cleared of bias

Lawman convlctad of beating Mexicans
TALLAHASSEE — An Investigator for a Louisiana district
attorney has been convicted on five felony counts for beating
up Mexican farm workers at an Interstate 10 rest stop while
traveling to a law conference last year.
Walter Vcrtrces Adams. 51. o f Slidell. La., was ordered hclJ
In the Leon County Jail pending sentencing Feb. 8.
Adams' lawyer did not contest that his client grabbed two
farm workers by their shirts and slammed them Into Ills car.
knocked their heads together and slammed their faces Into Ills
knees.
He also admitted Adams rummaged through their car trunk,
look u wallet and Hashed his badge and claimed to Ik * an
•nm igratlon agent.
When Leon County sherllTs deputies asked him about
complaints filed by the farm workers. Adams reportedly
responded. "W h at's the big deal? They ain't nothing but
Mexicans."
F ro m United Press International Reports

Th e w inning num bers Saturday
In the Florida L O T T O game were:
13. 17. 1 8 .2 5 .4 2 .4 3 .
Th e w inning daily num ber Satur­
day in the Florida Lottery C A S H 3
gam e w as 5 2 6 .
Th e w inning num bers Friday in
the Florida Lottery Fantasy 5 game
were 3 . 6 . 8 . 2 4 and 3 1.

Sanford
employees
recognized
SANFORD — City officials,
d e p a rtm e n t h ead s and
employees were honored In a
special ceremony at Sanford's
City Hall Friday afternoon, for
their long-term service to the
city and the community.
Recently rc-electcd city com ­
m is s io n e r A .A . " M a c ” MeClanahan received a service
award for 10 years. Mayor Bcttye
Smith and Commissioner Bob
Thomas received 5 year service
awards, as did City Manugcr
Frank Faison.
Others receiving awards:

FERNANDINA BEACH — A federal study has cleared the
Nassau County school system o f discrimination against blacks
In the recruitment, hiring and promotion of teachers, but a
probe into the treatment of students continues.
Local officials were notified last week that the U.S.
Department of Education found that over the past three years,
the number of blacks hired as teachers was proportional to the
number of black teachers available locally.
The study also found no discrimination In promotion.
" I knew we were not discriminating," said Superintendent
Craig Marsh. "T h e board I work for should be commended, not
condem n ed.".
However, the federal officials were still Investigating
allegations that the district indirectly encourages blacks to
drop o u t.b y discriminating .against them In disciplinary
actions, course assignments and placement In gifted and
special education classes.
Jacksonville NAACP President Johncll Prellou said he Is not
satisfied with the findings.
"Statistics can do anything." Prellou said. "You walk Into
some o f these schools and you don't see u black face anywhere.
The kids still don’t feel they're represented or arc getting fair
treatment."

LO TTER Y

The group of honored worked number 7*. representing more than 700 years of combined emp*

C ity

c le r k ’s

Carla

o ffic e :

Grant, five years.
E n g in eerin g an d plan n in g:

W illiam A. Simmons. Arlene
Rumblcy. Danny M. Florlan. all
five year recipients. Marion C.
Anderson. 10 years and Gary L.
Winn. 20 years:
P lre dep artm en t: Robert E.
Vaughn. Tim othy E. Grarey and
T h o m a s M a rtin , five years:
Cindy L. Harrison. 15 years.
Ronald M. Neel. Edwin Keith and
Thurman R. Picklcslmcr. all 20
years. Larry Helman. 25 years.

P olice dep artm en t: Thomas
Sklba. Michael Horur.. Curtis P.
Cox. James M. Murray. Ned D.
Golden. Kenneth Kaiser, David
J. Dr IRosso. James McAullfTe.
Leon G. Charles. Chris A. Colllson. G ary Sm ith, Fred R.
J o h n so n . T r a d e T u rn erJackson. Jacob Cohen. Joseph
Ort. Robert C. Bartholow and
Joyce D. Goodenough. all five

U tility dep artm en t: Carla J.
Sweet. Gary A. Hage. W illie J.
Kllllngsworth. Robert L. Bagley
and Victor M. Cortes, five yean;
Sammle L. Myles. Billy Gilchrist,
Donald E. Major. Leon Hampton.
Johnny Kettcr. James Reynolds
and Brenda J. Rupert. 10 yean:
Lawrence D. Hagan and William
Magncr, 15 yea n and William E.
Flowen. 30 yean.

P erso n n e l

d e p a rtm e n t:

Graham: peaceful Iraqi solution dwindling
B y D B ' A N N W
United Press International
Saddum Hussein seems more Interested In
manipulating International opinion than
holding talks with U.S. leaden over Ihc
Persian Gulf crisis und avoiding war. Sen.

Florida Retidonl* mutt pay »% tala*
tea in addition to rate* above
Phone 1*071 1111411.

Bob Graham. D-Flu.. said Saturday during a
visit to the troops.
"The way (the talks) have been trealed by
Hussein, he seems more directed toward
manipulating the event und attempting to
drive a wedge between the allies. This
unfortunately has lessened the possibility of

having a positive solution." Graham said In
a telephone Interview from Saudi Arabia
with Florida reporten.
Graham was one of seven U.S. senaton In
u delegation led by Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell. D-Malne. visiting Operation
Desert Shield positions In Saudi Arabia.

E X TE N D E D U U TLO O K

LO C AL FO R E C A S T
Today...Mostly sunny with a
high In the tow HO*.
Tonight...Partly cloudy with a
low In Ihc 50s und a light wind.
E xten ded fo re c a s t...P a rtly
cloudy with u low In the 60s
Monday through W ednesday
and u high In Ihc low 80s and
upper 70* Wednesday.

*

A

SATURDAY
PtyCldy 72-54

▼ VJ'A---------- 1
SUNDAY
MONDAY

NEW
Due. 17

FLORIDA TEM PS
MIAMI

C

FIRST
Dac. 25

Flort«Sei 74 hour Irmprr

4ndrj.rf.ill jl/ jm EOT Wurd^y
City

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TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
PtlyCldy 75-86 PtlyCMy 7S-S7

TID E S

MOON PHASES

wi :m i

POSTMASTER. Send addrett change*
to TH E SANFORD HERALD. P O
Boi MJ7. Sanford. FL JJ7M.
lubtcriplion Rate*
(Daily A Sunday)
Home Delivery A Mail
) Month*
llt.SI
t Month*
ug M
I Voor
171 M

Utility w ock tr W illiam E. Flow ora gats h ug from m ayor

TH E W EA TH

Sunday. December 16. 1990
Vol 63. N o 96

Second Clan Pottage Paid at Sanlord.
Florida 11771

w o rk s d ep artm en t:

Sabrina Benton, five years.

P a rk s d e p artm en t: Jan C.
Henry. Larry D. White. 10 years
und Josh Black 15 years.

0 «o . •

Publitltad Daily and Sunday, t u r p i
Saturday by The Sanlerd Herald.
Inc . )oo N. French Aye . Sanford.
Fla. m i l .

P u blic

Thomas E. Sheltz and James E.
Butler. 5 years: Lloyd N. Strtne.
Anthony D. Helton. Marilyn
Kempnlch and Charles E. Miller.
10 years: Elwcll F. Ferrell and
Paul Wright. 15 years.
Recreation department: Robert
L. Robinson. 15 years.

LAST
iu s p s

years; David G. Semones. Paul
U. Little. Martha C. Cohen.
Donna S. Weiss. N. J. Raby. Guy
S. Brewster and Darrel Presley.
10 years: Mitchell Tlndcl, Carlos
Monti. David M. Ansley and
Steven D. Harriett. 15 years:
W illiam Bcrnosky. 20 years:
Edward H ayden and Ralph
Russell. 25 yean.

REACH C O N D ITIO N S
D aytona Beach: Waves arc 2
le d with a slight chop. Current
Is slightly to tlx- m iii th with a
water temperature of 64 degrees.
N ew Sm yrna Beach: Waves are
3
le d and m -i i i I glassy. Current is
to the south, with a w ater
temperature o f 6 6 degrees.

SUNDAY:
SO LU N AR TAB LE: Min. 4:05
a.m.. 4:20 p m.: Ma|. 10:10 a.m..
10:35 p.m. TIDES: D ayton a
Beach: highs. 7:15 a.m.. 7:2H
p in : lows. 12:41 a.m.. 1:32
p.m .; N ew S m y rn a B ea ch :
nighs. 7:20 a.m.. 7:33 p.m.:
lows, 12:46 a.m.. 1:37 p.m.:
Cocoa Beach: highs. 7:35 a.m..
7:48 p.m.; lows. 1:01 a.rn.. 1:52
p.m.
________________

B O A TIN a
St. A u gu stin e to J u p ite r In let
Today...Wind variable 5 to It)
Kts Seas I to 2 ft. Bay and
inland waters smooth

S T A T IS T IC S
The temperature at 4 p.m.
Saturday was 79 degrees and
Saturday’s overnight low was
■19. us recorded by the National
Weather Service at Ihc Orlando
International Airport.
Other WeatheT Service data:
S a tu rd a y 's high.............. 80
B a ro m e tric p rc s s n re .3 0 .I7
R c la tlvb H u m id ity....49 pet
W in d s...............South 9 mph
R a in fa ll....... ..................O in.
T o d a y 's su n set.....5:31 p.m.
T o m o rro w 's su nrise....7 :1 1

City S F n c n t
Albu^uarqua pc
Anchoraga cy
Athavlllar
Atlanta cy
Baltlmora r
Billing* ly
Birmingham cy
Bltmarck ty
Bo*ton in
Buffalo in
Charlottar
Chicago r
Cincinnati r
Clavtlandr
Dallatcy
Danvarpc
Da* M o l n t t
Dalrotlr
Duluth cy
El Patocy
Evantvillor
f «rgo ty
Hartford in
Honolulu m
Moulton cy
Indianapoilt r
k antat City ty
Lima Rack cy
lot Angtlaim
Lounvllla r
Mamphitth
Viinaukta in
Nathvillam
Nan York r
Omatiapc
Phoann ih
Richmond r
11 County
Ian Antonio cy
Van O ago m
Watt lath
Spobanafy
Wathington r
Wichita ty

Ht Jt Ftp
U n a...
\t ot ....
U 14 01
17 41 03
*1 24 ....
X) 10 .12
u u a...
n oa ....
*} 21
32 M
it 41 ....
3* 11 .14
41 17 U
It »
43
s 14
*4 11
C V 1 4 11
30
24 32 34
27 21
47 44
40 44 13
37 12
34 U
12 73
II 44
41 32 2S
42 34 02
40 42 02
44 42
40 44 49
44 42
32 33 14
44 S3 02
41 a
34 33 04
70 40
SI a 04
42 43 04
79 M
44 40
42 41 02
32 II
44 32 01
44 22

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Dacambar 10, 1990 — SA

Students wrap gifts to raise money
tary. were wrapping gifts on the
first shift Saturday. Within the
first ten minutes following their
arrival, they had three custom­
ers with more than one package
apiece.
Teresa Freeman o f Sanford
slopped between shopping at
various stores In the mall to drop
off her packages before going on.
" I like this," she said.
Miller said she was confident
that the project would be suc­
cessful. though It was not one
they had done before.
" I think people will want to
have us do this for them ." she
said. " I think we'll do pretty
good."
The Juniors at Seminole have
traditionally paid for the prom ns
a gift to the senior class. This
year the bill Is growing.
"T h e room rental alone Is
• 1.500 more than It was last
year." Cooper lamented.
Cooper was pleased with the
number o f students who had
given up a part o f their winter
holiday to help with the fund
raiser.
"Adults sometimes don’t real­
ize how willing young people are
to help out with things." she
said.
McGill said she hoped the
community would support the
project.
"W e 'r e doing this for the
seniors," she said.

■y VICKI D«SOMfttHt
Herald staff writer_______________

Boy, two womtn irrattod
OVIEDO — A boy and two women allegedly In a vehicle when
one o f the woman allegedly sold I I 00 worth o f cocaine to City
County Investigative Bureau agents In Oviedo, have been
arrested.
Th e boy was booked Into the Juvenile Jail. Alcshia Lavcnc
Pauldo. 23, 1202 Taylor St., Oviedo, who allegedly made the
deal In an Oviedo parking lot ofT State Road 419, at about 10
p.m. Thursday, la charged with sale and possession o f cocaine.
Darla LeAnn Qualls, 28, 351 Second St.. Chuluota, driver of
the truck. Is charged with possession of cocaine, marijuana and
drug paraphernalia.

Knlft found In starch
SANFORD — Sanford police investigating n report of
gambling on 10th Street Thursday night report finding a
butcher knife In a search o f a man at the scene.
That lead to a charge o f carrying a concealed weapon for Earl
Thom as Williams, 19, 910 Holly Ave., Sanford.

Sanford man charged In domestic fight
SANFORD — Reginald L. Grant. 25. 1822 Harding Ave..
Sanford, was arrested Saturday morning on domestic violence
charges.
Grant's wife. Eurncstlne Grant, told Seminole County
deputies her husband choked her with his hands and struck
her on the head with his list.

Lake Mary man charged with DUI
LAKE MARY — Louie Michael Freeman. 35. 425 Sun Lake
Circle, Apt. 205, Lake Mary, was charged with driving under
the Influence o f alcohol Friday night after a Lake Mary
policeman reported seeing his car speeding on Longwood-Lake
Mary Road.
He was held at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility on $500
bond.

SANFORD — Weary shoppers
drag themselves from stores,
spent from the hunt for the
bargains. Many do not look
forward to the chore o f wrapping
the gifts they plan to place under
the tr-e.
The Junior class from Semi­
n o l e H ig h S c h o o l . 2 7 01
Ridgew ood A ve. In Sanford,
wants to help ease work load for
those tired masses.
For a small price, ranging from
50 cents to two dollars, the
students and som e o f their
te a c h e r s w ill be w ra p p in g
Christmas gifts at a store front In
the Sanford Center o f 17-92.
The students are trying to
raise money to help pay for the
Junior-senior prom.
From now until Dec. 23. the
Juniors will be cutting and tap­
ing during peak shopping hours.
On Saturdays they will be In
place from 1 until 6 p.m. On
Sundays they will be there from
1 until 5 p.m. During the week,
they will be there from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m.
"W e have 27 two-hour shifts
and four or live students have
signed up for each shift." said
class sponsor Jane Cooper, un
English teacher at SHS. "Every
slot was filled."

tfVM IC

Terete Freemen, Sanford, drop* of package* to bo wrapped.
Th e space lor the wrapping
service, located next to Fantastic
Sam 's, was donated by the
Seminole Center Merchants* As­
sociation for the nine days.

"T h e y were very good to do
this for us.** Cooper said.
Juniors TlfTaney Miller, who Is
class treasu rer, and C heryl
McGill, who Is the class secre­

Mistletoe
pickers
get no pay
MIAMI — Mistletoe pickers
who climbed up dozens o f Flori­
da trees to retrieve the parasite
popular at Christmas time were
rew a red with o n ly bounced
checks by a mlstlctow merchant.
Th e pickers snagged 'h e mis­
tletoe for a south Dade County
business that was looking for up
to 400.000 bags o f mistletoe as
purt o f a plan to help the
homeless.
Christmas Company said It
was going to enlist an army of up
to 500 poor and homeless In
Dade and Broward counties to
sell plastic sandwich bags of
mistletoe for I I a bag.
C hief executive officer Jeffrey
Simmons, who was to pay the
pickers, had said the homeless
seller would keep a quarter from
the sale, while the Christmas
Company used a portion o f Its
share o f the profits to make
donations to charity.
The Idea appealed to people
like Joe Moody o f Lakeland who
along with three friends spent
the first two days o f December
clim bing trees and gathering
1.000 pounds of mistletoe.
Moody then drove 220 miles to
Miami to sell the mistletoe. He
received a chcckfor S I.075.15.
but unfortunately it bounced or
as Moody put It: "That sucker
played basketball all the way
back to Miami."
" I did what I was supposed lo
do, in good faith," Muody said.
"But I got the shaft.**
University o f Florida student
and m is tle to e p ic k e r P age
Baldwin was also given u bad
check for S I. 125. said Jim
Walker, u Dade County accoun­
tant who chairs the company.
W u lk e r says S im m o n s has
"w alked off and left me holding
the bag."
There Is no money In the
com pany's bank account and
Wulker Is S 15.000 In debt as a
result o f the scheme. The firm
" d i d not get one dollar In
mistletoe sales." he said.
Christmas Company literature
a l s o m e n t i o n e d M i a m i 's
Cumlllus House, which provides
for the homeless, us u charitable
Institution that would benefit
from the mistletoe sides.

SPECIAL HOLIDAY HOURS:
S w x la | ltM - 7 r M
H

United F r t u International
M A IT L A N D An ACLU
lawyer said It looked like a cross.
City olflclals Insisted It was a
star, hut removed the lighted
o r n a m c u t fr o m t h e e 11 y
Christmas tree rather than fight
It out m court.
Howard Marks, a Winter Park
lawyer who volunteers with the
American Civil Liberties Union,
said he received several com­
plaints from (x-oplr who were
nllendrd that the city was dis­
playing a religious symbol.
"T h e I^UIn cross Is the most
prom inent sym bol o f C hris­
tianity. This was a promotion of
one religion over another and a
violation o f the constitution."
said Marks, who hrl|M'd In the
court battle that forced the
nearby city nt St. Cloud to
remove a cross Irom Its water
tower.

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LOW PRICE GUARANTEE BEFORE vOUBUt ti you see .1tower aflver Tiveti price on.in idemitat item that we sell show us ttie ad and well veil the item to you at the same price
AFTER rOLIBUv if you fax] a lower .XJverraedprxecnyour pureh.e,ed item a thin 50day. mpty brmg intneailarxl your McDutl sates receipt We w&gt;ll send you arefund for the
price difference inn guarantee does not apply to manufacturer s closeouts rebates special purchases liquidations limited quantity floor demonstrator or going our of
business sale items The ad must tie tor merchandise that is readily ava-i.itw- tor 'immediate pxk up or delivery Item a local store Copyright 1990 McOuff ft Worth Te«as

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�. . M , . :s&amp;L

Is HRSlmeeting Seminole’s needs?
B U M C Itm ION RATE:
3 Months................................
6 Months................................
1 Y e a r ...................................

• 19.50
•39.00
•78JQ0

ED ITO RIA LS

Em otional appeal
Would you pay 915 to sample an assort­
ment of snacks worth leaa than half that at
fun retail prices? Of course not. Yet, more
than 100.000 Americans have paid this
exorbitant price to an enterprising firm In
Virginia to have so-called “0.1. Gift Pacs"
delivered In their names to servicemen and
servicewomen In Saudta Arabia.
The emotional appeal being advertised In
newspapers across the nation Is designed to
prey on the sympathy most everyone has for
our troops In the Persian Gulf. A headline In
the advertisement reads: “Please send a G.l.
Gift Pac. Tell a 0.1. In Saudi Arabia you care!”
Gift Paca contain two small bags of potato
chips, a bag of tortilla chips, nuts, “goldfish**
crackers, cookies, raisins, dates, butterscotch
and peppermint candles, Commits and
Sweetarts. The coat of the contents, packag­
ing and shipping to an A.P.O. on the East
Coast toapproximately $7.

been to court. There are two supervisor* for
these workers. The Foster C are Unit haa one
supervisor end eight workers to place and
m onitor children hi foster care.
Another m odel that might be considered for
delivering services to delinquent and dependent
children m ight be a fam ily court model. There
would b e taro divisions In this model. One would
deal w ith fam ines separated or dtvorred to be
certain that child support, parental visitation
a n d o th e r p e rtin e n t fa m ily Issu e s w e re
■ddwsaeJ. The other division would be the
Juvenile Probation Department. Juvenile pro­
bation officers would be responsible for all
dependen t an d delinquent cases and be answerable to the Judges. The Juvenile Division would
be staffed b y male and female probation officers.
The m ale staff m em bers would work solely with
delinquent boys. The fem ale staff m em bers
would serve delinquent girls and all dependent
cases. D ividing case loads according to gender
provides role m odels o f the sam e aex and
poeaibfy w ill facilitate clients sharing their
concerns m ore readily. A single probation officer
would follow the child through the system.
Duties w ou ld Involve: investigating allegations,
prpepartng cases for Judges, supervising clients
and/or securing placement facilities In con­
sonance w ith Judicial decisions.
The area o f providing hum an services should
be continually analysed to ascertain whether we
are really m eeting the needs o f our clients and
what m ight be done to Improve services.

F lo rid a's Departm ent or H ealth a n d Re*
habUltathre Services (H R S) to the sole govern*
m ental agency In this state charged w ith
m eeting the service needs o f the population. T h e
Secretary o f HRS to the chief executive officer at
the state level. Hto cabinet to comprised o f the
following Deputy Secretaries: Health, M an age­
ment Systems. Operations. Program a n d A d ­
ministration. The State Program Dtvtaton de­
termines what program s w ill be available. They
also outline when and how they are to be
implemented. The Operations Division delivers
these services. Accordingly, the state h a s been
divided Into 11 geographical district*. Bach
district has s district adm inistrator a n d staff
mem bers. 8etnlnole. Brevard. Orange a n d O s­
ceola counties comprise District 7. D istricts
function as operational units for deliverin g a
wide range of services. Services provided are:
A ging and Adult: Economic: Children. Youth
and Families: Medicaid; Developm ental and
Residential. H.R.8. to also obligated to license
and certify facilities providing services.

Services to Children. Youth and families to a
particularly critical area o f concern aa w itnessed

L E T T E R S

S alvatio n A rm y's buslnaaa

So where does the other $8 go? Like many
other Questionable charities, the majority of
donor funds for G.l. Gift Paca are used to pay
for advertising and other expenses, including
high executive salaries.
The standards set forth for charities by
most watchdog agencies are of little help In
Judging performances. The National Charity
Information Bureau states that at least 60
percent of a group's proceeds should go
directly into Its charitable project. The Better
Business Bureau standard la that “at least BO
percent of total income should be spent on
programs and activities directly related to the
organization's purpose.**
A b e tte r m e a su re o f a c h arity ’s w o rk is the
percen tage o f do n o r fu n d s that a c tu a lly reach
b e n efic ia rie s^.T h e .Q n q st cha r itie s m a n a g e to
*n*in tg ip r p lf s pf W p c n ^ i ^ o r m o re .
.

GIs In the Persian G ulf tjeserve no,less.
D on ors sh o u ld bewasa. afwffora-th a t-d o n ’t
d eliver fa ir v a lu e a n d s e e k ou t m o re attractive
options. B e tte r yet. s im p ly p a c k a b o x w ith
good ies a n d m ail It to a n e ig h b o r's son o r
d au g h te r in c a re o f th e A .P .O . o r F .P .O . at S a n
F ran cisco . P ostage fo r a tw o -p o u n d pack age
at the p a rc e l post ra te la o n ly $ 1 .0 7 , le a v in g
$13 fo r th e contents.

B u sh ’s trek to south
W ith U .S . troops m o b iliz e d a n d read y for
w a r In th e M id d le E a s t, w a s th is a n y tim e for
P residen t B u sh to J o u rn e y to L a tin A m erica?
A b so lu te ly . A ll too o fte n . U .S . o ffic ia ls fixate
on the g lo b a l crisis o f th e m om en t a n d forget
ab ou t b e in g a good n e ig h b o r to th e S ou th ern
H em isph ere.
South A m e ric a Is Im p o rta n t to th e U n ited
States, w h e th e r w e c h o o s e to Ig n o re It or not.
It haa o il a n d th re a te n e d rain fo rests. U h a s a
re su rg en c e o f d e m o c ra tic g o v ern m en ts. Y et.
m an y o f Its n a tio n s s u ffe r m a ssiv e foreign
d ebts. In flation a n d p o p u la r u n rest.
O u r b a n k a a n d in te rn a tio n a l assistan ce
o rg an iza tio n s h av e In v e ste d h e a v ily In the
region. T h e y h ave a s t a k e In Its sta b ility .
T h ose a re Just a fe w o f the re a so n s w h y the
p resid en t d eserves p ra ise for g o in g a h e a d
w ith h is six -d a y v isit to five L a tin A m erican
co u n trie s — B razil. U r u g u a y . A rg e n tin a . C h ile
an d V e n e zu e la . N o t e v e n an u n su c c e ssfu l
revolt attem p t in A rg e n tin a d e te rre d h im
from m a k in g hla sc h e d u le .
T h e p resid en t took w ith h im a g ra n d visio n
o f a "n e w d a w n fo r th e N e w W o r ld ." aa h e
called it. fo r o p en in g u p trade o p p o rtu n ities
betw een N orth a n d S o u th A m e ric a . H e a ls o
su g g e ste d that L a tin c o u n trie s c o u ld red u ce
their fo re ig n d ebt b u rd e n In e x c h a n g e fo r
In v e stin g in their e n v iro n m e n t, p a rtic u la rly
for protection o f th e v a n ish in g A m a z o n ia n
rain forests.
T h e p resid en t h a d to e n d u re protesters,
leftist b o m b in g s a n d oth er e x p re ssio n s o f
an ti-A m erican ism . A n d B u sh w a s frequ en tly
distracted b y the n e e d to resp o n d to rap id ly
c h a n g in g d e v e lo p m e n ts In the M id d le East.
B u t h is s u p p o rt fo r S o u th A m e r ic a 's
b u d d in g d e m o c r a c ie s a n d h is h o p e fo r
boostin g th eir a ilin g e c o n o m ie s se t the righ t
tone for b e tte r re la tio n s In the 1990s. S ad d a m
H u s s e in 's in v a sio n o f K u w a it is to d a y 's
preoccupation . P re sid e n t B u sh u n d e rsta n d s
that g o o d foreign p o lic y m ust In v o lv e the rest
o f the w o rld , too.

L E T T E R S T O E D IT O R
LcUere to the editor an- welcome. All leilcra must
be signed. Include the address of the writer and a
daytime telephone number. Letters should Ik- on
a slnghle subject and be as brief as possible..
Letters are subject to editing.

x

I’m replying to the article In the paper
about the Salvation A rm y being too busy
with Its ow n business to help the needy one
day a month for food from the government. I
never knew they had any other business than
looking after the needy — now what other
business do they have?! Maybe the United
W ay and all the other people who pour
m oney Into these people's taps should take a
hard, long look at what to going on.
1 c a lle d the Mayor's office o f Sanford to try
to find a way out o f this mess, like a vacant
store like Zayrc’s used for this once a month
and he different churches would be happy to
help, as (the stores) have no other business.
But again I was surprised: I was told the
Mayor only comes In only in the AM and
leaves a t lunch. Did the people vote In a
half-day Mayor at that salary, or a full
8-hour-day Mayor? What about all our other
elected officials? I f thetr salaries were given to
the needy they could feel what It's like not to
have a place to sleep.
No wonder the vacant lots arc overgrown
with weeds. We have no new business here
for these people, no one is out there trying to
find new business, who can do anything In a
h a lfd ay?
Mary R. Jolly
Sanford

Thanks to Salvation Army
ELLEN G O O D M A N

No equality found in genetics
BOSTON — So. another pair o f genes has
been discovered In our biological closet. It
happens regularly these days. A group of
scientists goes mucking about In the private
comer of our DNA and comes out with
something new.
This time. Boston researchers have un­
covered a mutant gene. T h e mutant PS3 can
produce cancers that “ run In fam ilies" like a
train crashing over the generational track.
In the 80 families they studied with the rare
Ll-Fraumanl syndrome, seven o f 13 m em bers
had cancer at a young age. Many relatives had
experienced so much o f the disease that It was
considered a family curse. Indeed, people in
families who carry this defect have a 90
percent chance of cancer by age 30 — and now
they can know the odda at birth.
The study reported In Science magazine may
be the first such documented genetic cancer
link, but It's not the last. Nor la this cancer link
the most devastating o f the genetic discoveries.
W e already know the genes for Huntington'schorea and sickle-cell anemia, for cyatlc
fibrosis and muscular dystrophy. W e are
learning what makes some susceptible to
aneurysms and may learn what makes others
prone to alcoholism.

your diet.

The Human Genome Project, set up to map
chromosomes over an Internal human apace as
vast aa any universe, will seek out some
100.000 genes stretched out over the D N A. But
there will be a "la g " between the knowledge
and the cures. We are discovering diseases
faster than we can fix them.

What happens as we discover that some o f
us are more susceptible from birth than
others? Some at greater risk, biologically, to
certain diseases and certain environments,
even work environments? What happens when
w e add genetic risk to the list?
W hen doctors take
a fam ily history, that
history Isn’t always
assumed to be de­
stiny. But when fami­
ly membership Itself
becomes a factor, will
this create another
■octal division?
T o d a y . It o fte n
seem s that race, re­
ligion. ethnicity and
gender compete with
the Ideology o f the
m elting pot. In many
w a y s , ta lk s of
d i v e r s i t y Is
f T h q g t n lt t n d
c h a l l e n g i n g the
th O Q *n «*ro
traditional language
out o f th#
o f equality.
bottle. J
Could biology ex­
aggerate this? Could
it c r e a t e a n o th e r
claaa — a biological
underclass, unlnsurable, unemployable. The
Joneses have a mutant P33. Nice people, but
you wouldn't want your daughter to marry
one.

What will happen as scientists learn what
"runs in families"? Those families will h ave to
decide what they want to know, and what they
want others to know. As we learn about
genetic susceptibilities, we will all h a ve to
think about the nature of risk. And aa w e delve
• Into DNA. we will hnve to reconcile the Idea of
equality with the facts of biological Inequality.

If this sounds like a dark outpouring o f
science anxiety, let me lighten tt. The genie
and the gene are out o f the bottle. The
possibilities o f the research are stunning.
Moreover, this time scientists are studying
ethics along with genetics. For once, they
aren't leaving social concerns to a mop-up
crew.

Genetics Is going to change the nature o f our
health-conscious society. Today, after all. we
prefer to pin llh. *ss on human behavior. We
talk o f risk BEHAVIORS und risk FACTORS.
It's comforting to look for the smoker in the
heart-attack victim, to search for the fat In the
diet of the deceased.

But as Eric Juengst. a director-philosopher
with the Human Genome Project, recognizes.
•T h e challenge to how lo protect our com­
mitment to social and moral equality In face o f
the fact that we are biologically diverse and.
against some parameters, unequal."

Our second-most popular culprit for Illness Is
the environment. We arc obsessed w ith risks
that range from asbestos to Alar, from dioxin
lo Equal.
But these risks are the ones wc share. W e arc
all presumably at danger from the environ­
ment: we'rr all able to alter our behavior. If
you are what you eat after all. you can change

T h e Rescue Outreach Mission would like to
thank the Salvation Army. Sanford Christian
Church. American Legion Foal 53. for their
support during the Thanksgiving holidays.
Sylvia Drake
Sanford

POA salutod
At a community service dinner the other
night. I spoke with an old friend. Carl Bogle,
comm unity relations executive for Peterson
Outdoor Advertising. Carl had Just returned
from up north where he accepted a national
m arketing award on behalf o f POA'a philan­
thropic billboards on missing children. They
haven't sought publicity on this honor, but I
think it’a time POA got some local recogni­
tion!
PO A has been a good friend In this
community. Ever time I have approached
Carl for free billboard space for "another one
o f m y good causes" he has yet to say no. Off
the top o f m y head, I can count free
advertising for WMFE-TV/FM (which also
w on a national award back In 1980).
Am erican Red Cross, Seminole Community
College. Silver Spurs Rodeo, Central Florida
YMCA. Seminole County Dividends Program,
and m any. many. more.
I asked Carl to send me some information
on the depth o f POA community support.
What he sent Impressed me even more. In the
first ten months or 1991 along. POA donated
81.35 million In free outdoor advertising
; space to this community!
Th is letter Is written In hopes that you will
salute POA somewhere In your newspaper.
It's tim e somebody did! I'm just sorry It took
me ten years to lead the way.
LortC. Booker. APRP
i
President
Carlman Booker Public Relations
Maitland

Berry's World
0

Americans have long wrestled with dif­
ferences and democracy. On the one hand,
people have uneven abilities: on the other
hand, we arc all equals.
Now we ore facing a biological variation on
that theme. In a country baaed on the notion
that at people are created equal, scientists are
unrovertng nur designer genes. They are not
always a comfortable flt.

"H ere’s some GREAT news about global
warming!”

�M fV M B H H H B V B M fM p llM

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday. Pacarabtr 16, 1M0 — SA

W ay Back1A
th r
R o u m lllat A A n d e rso n
d r u g s t o r e ) w e re f i s h i n g .
Brownlee hooked a good-sited
bass. W h ile trying to get It In Ihe
boat Brow nlee’s line broke. He
said to Anderson. “ B ruce, say
what I’m thinking because I
don’t use that kind of lan gu age."

» I read In the Herald the
or d a y that the origin a l
Lyman School In Longw ooa was
financed b y a 119.000 bond
Issue. E ven before th at the
Sanford High School w as built
on Palm etto Avenue between
Ninth ahd Tenth Streets. Any
Idea what that school coat?

B

A t O ld Sanfont H igh, a twosto ry a ffa ir , w a s b u ilt fo r
$20,000. In January 1B27. San­
ford H igh moved to 1700 French
Ave. and becam e Sem inole High:
The new high school w a s built
for $245,000. Later the Sem inole
High cam pus became Sanford
Middle School. It Is currently
being refurbished at a cost o f $6
million.
01 D o you rem em ber the old
guy w ho for years pushed a
two-wheeled cart all over San­
ford and sold peanuts an d snow
cones? W hat was his nam e?
At T h at’s a good question. My
generation always called him

Juicy"J o h n ." Som e local folks a bit
older than I am say he was
know n as “ Dom inic.’7 But they
aren ’t sure that w as his last
nam e. If anyone reading this
know s the vendor’s last nam e let
u a know. “John” pushed that
cart at least a ’’million’’ m iles alt
o ver Sanford for 40 or more
years. He w a s alw ays where
people gathered. And w e ll bet
Ih e only ride he ever got eras to
the cemetery.
Qt You m entioned W arren
O dham In one of your articles.
H ow many Odham boys were
there and didn’t one run for
governor?
A t There were six — Billy.
RuaseD, Bralley, W arren. Alvin
an d Glen. A ll are gone except for
Bralley and Glen. There were
tw o stolen — Minnie Ruth and
Katherine (Kitty). They, too, arc
Bralley. a form er hom e builder
an d developer, to now a real
estate broker In the Orlando
area. Yea. he did run for gover­
n or — twice. Both times he won
the first Democratic prim ary.
But both tim es he did not get a
plurality. Both times he faced
the num ber tw o candidate In the
secon d p rim ary. Both tim es
Bralley lost. In the 1B60a Bralley
ran for the U .S. Senate but lost

To p Cop-

to Incumbent Speaaard H olland.
G len becam e a teacher and
football coach In south Florida.
W e understand he to n ow re­
tired.
By the w ay. Bralley to credited
— at least by the Reader’s Digest
with being the “fa th e r" of
what to known today aa the
"telethon." T h e only difference
w a a t h a t B r la le y u a e d a
statewide radio network durin g
one o f hta cam palgna Inatead at
televtalon. There Juat w eren't
that m any T V stations w a y back
w hen and the technology w a sn ’t
available. But he waa the drat to
use the Idea.
0 i In your article about gro w ­
in g and shipping celery 1 recall
an Independent produce broker
w h o had a ground floor office on
North Park Avenue In the old
V a ld e x H o te l b u ild in g . R e -'
m em ber hta name?
A t You're tailin g abut the
short and somewhat rotund gen­
tleman w ho alw ays "w o re ” a
cigar and had a big sm ile for
e v e r y o n e . H e w a s J u li u s
Dtngfelder. He had a son. Sim on,
w ho became a New York City
physician. He atoo had a dau gh ­
ter. Margaret. Mrs. D lngfelder
w as quite active in civic affairs.
She w as a m em ber of the Garden
C lub. Or, could It have been the
W om an's C lub. Probably. both.

Mom1A

me a long tim e as I
got older to decide what I was
going to do. Hopefully I'll be
around a long lime.”
Prast said al Drat it was
difficult to deal with the child
sexual assault cases to which he
Is assigned. “ Not being very
experienced. 1 showed a lot of
a g r e s s i o n t o w a r d the
perpetrator." Prast said he’s
learned, "yo u don't run up and
call them a child m olester and
t .'l them they're going to jail for
the rest ofth elr life."
Instead he cultivates coopera­
tion from Ihe suspect, hoping for
a confession, which would save
Ihe child from having to recount
his or her trauma publlcally. In
some cases, he said, the child Is
too you n g to know how to
communicate, so the suspect’s
cooperation can be critical.
“ The harder I work, the better
case I make, the less likely It Is
(he child w ill have to testify,” he
said.
"H e’s probably the best we
have when dealing w ith child
sexual abuse.'7 Hughey said o f
Prast. " H e ’s good w ith the
children. It's hard to stay ob­
jective. because you're looking
at people accused o f abusing
children."
Prast gained renown Just over
a year ago as the first law officer
In Ihe world to arrest women
addicted to cocaine for delivering
cocaine to their unborn children
through their umbilical cords.
One woman who was convicted
la appealing her conviction. A
second woman, who entered a
guilty plea and was placed on
probation, has subsequently
been rearrested on a prostitution
charge. Both have been In drug
rehabilitation programs. Several
other women have been arrested
here on the same charge.
Prast was instrumental one
year ago in the arrest o f a man
accused o f terrorizing Central
Florida women and extorting
m on ey. Jewelry and p orn o­
graphic photos and videos from
them over a period o f more than
18 months.
Michael Thomas Guardlno Jr..
38, o f Deltona, was arrested In
that case Dec. 27, 1989, and was

DEATHS
R .U . H U TCH ISO N

R.U. Hutchison. 88. or 2855 S.
Sanford A ve., Sanford, died
Friday at his residence. Bom
May 22. 1902. In Rock Hill. S.C..
he moved to Sanford from Nine­
ty Six. S.C.. In the 1920s. He
was a retired Independent farm­
er and a member o f the First
United Methodist Church o f
Sanford.
Survivors Include son. Joe o f
D ora vllle. Ga.; th ree grand­
children.
Brisson Funeral Hom e o f San­
ford Is In charge o f arrange­
ments.
DR. W L A N K O LA R IK

Dr. Milan Kolarik. 77. o f 2022
Inner Circle Dr. in Oviedo, died
Wednesday In Memphis. Tenn.
B o r n N o v . 28 , 1 9 1 3 , In
Tarentum. Penn., he moved lo
Oviedo from Gainesville In 1984.
He was a clinical psychologist
and an ordained minister. He
was a member o f St. Luke's
Lutheran Church and belonged
to the American Psychological
A s s o c ia tio n , the Eastern
Psychological Association, thr
Ohio Psychological Association,
the Southeastern Psychological
A ssociation and the Florida
Psychological Association.
Survivors Include sun .lames

sentenced In October to serve 10
years In prison, followed by 10
years of probation for 15 cases of
extortion. Gu irdlno is believed
to have vie: -nixed at least 32
women, with n m t cases occur­
ring in Seminole County. Prast
said.
G uardlno would ca ll local
women and paw as a police
officer who had Just arrested the
victim ’s husband. The husband
hadn't been arrested, but to gain
a husband's freedom, many
v ic tim s c o m p ile d w ith
Guardino’a demands for cash.
Jewelry, vehicles, and porno­
graphic photos or videos o f the
victims.
Prast said the ca w brdke when
he got a tip that a Lake Mary
woman was being victimised. He
tracked her to W al-m art In
Sanford, where she was buying a
video camera, to comply with
the Guardlno's demand for a
pornographic tape. The woman
earlier that day had dropped off
$7,500. which was picked up by
Guardlno at a Sanford location.
Prast follow ed the woman
hom e and tape recorded a call
she received Trdm Guardlno,
w ho directed her in the produc­
tion of a pornographic video. The
woman was commanded to drop
the tape at a Sanford telephone
booth. She was under police
surveillance when she made the
drop o f a dummy tape. Guardlno
picked up the tape after the
woman left. Prast said he and
Florida Department o f Law En­
forcement agents who Joined the
probe at that point, followed
Ouardlno to hta Deltona houw
where he was arrested. Victims’
Jewelry, money and incriminat­
ing photos and tapes were re­
c o v e r e d In a s e a r c h o f
Guardlno's houw.
A s s is ta n t S ta te w id e P r o ­
secutor Beth Blcchman. who
prosecuted Guardlno. said his
v ic t im s w ere the m ost
traumatized o f any w x crime
victims she has worked with.
Prast said he felt he had a good
chance o f catching the fake
police olTlcer because o f the
m an's high activity In Seminole
County and public awarness of
his methods.

1A
W illiam s Is a m em ber o f the
Y e llo w R ib b o n S ociety, the
nip which Is responsible for
vtng placed all the yellow
vlng
ribbons throughout fthe city.

S

She has also decorated the
m ailboxes o f all the hom es on
her street with the ribbons.
W illiam s said she hopes people
w ill see the ribbons an d re­
m em ber the troops w h o are
stattonlP in the Middle East
aw ay from their fam ilies at a
time o f year when fam ilies are
usually together.
"These men and wom en are
a w a y from their fam ilies at
Christm as." she said. "W e are
th in k in g a b o u t them o v e r
there."
W illiam s said she does not
know how long her daughter will
be stationed in Saudi Arabia.
“ I guess sh e'll be there 'till It's
over." she said.

She noted that the Sanford
community has been very sup­
portive o f her efforts and the
efforts o f the Yellow Ribbon
Society.
“ People have let us put thew
r ib b o n s u p . ” she sa id .
"Everyone in the neighborhood
has a yellow ribbon on the
mailbox.”

Crime lab
C o a tla s s d fro s t P age 1 A

the
lab has been suspended and the
FDLE Is conducting lab tests for
the departm ent In O rlando.
Hughey said the sH-rtfTs probe
is expected to be complete soon.
Meanwhile. Hughey said, at
about 5:30 p.m. Friday MaJ.
Donald Eslingcr contacted Tim
Moore commissioner o f FD LE In
Tallahassee and officially re­
quested that FDLE conduct an
Independent probe of “ all facta
and circumstances related to
Taylor's drug test.”
,rWc will have three separate,
totally Independent Investiga­
tions. With three agencies going
to this length I don't think
there's going to be any doubt
about what occurred." Hughey
said.

A l w K r t i f &gt;■■f '&lt;£■£:■■. v
M i l a n o f B ro o k ly n . C on n .:
daughter. Dorothy Ann Edwards
o f Bradenton: brothers, Ivan of
Pennington. N.J.. L u th er o f
Cupertino. Calif., and Walter of
Covina. Calif.: sisters. Eleanor
Schwnlm o f Cabot. Penn. Vera
Howe of Carrollton, Ohio; five
grandchildren.
B ald w in -F a lrch lld Fu n eral
Home. Goldcnrod. In charge of
the arrangeiqents.
GEORGE W . W L 6 T E A D

George W. Mlbtead. 78. o f 832
Spanish Moss Dr., Casselberry,
died Friday at South Seminole
C o m m u n i t y H ospital. Longwood. Born April 10. 1912, In
Wilton. Ala., he .noved to Cas­
selberry from Miami In 1971. He
was a retired general contractor
and a Baptist. He was head of
the maintenance department ut
Seminole Community College.
Sanford.
Survivors Include wife Sophie
K.: son. John o f Longwood;
daughter. Ruby Ann Pamientcr
o f Jacksonville; sisters. Murtha
Pasch al o f Gulfport. Miss..
G ladys Lucus o f Monteviillu.
A l a . : b r o t h e r . J o h n E. o f
Dolom ite. Ala.: eight grand­
children: five great-grand­
children.
naldwI n-Falrchlld Funeral
Home, Forest Cliv. In rharge of

arrangements.
AR TH UR URBAN

Arthur Urban. 94. of 241 W.
State Road 426 in Oviedo died
on Friday at Lutheran Haven
Nursing Home. Oviedo. June 16.
1896. A native o f Germany, he
moved to Oviedo from Atlanta In
1971. He was a tool and die
maker and a member o f St.
Luke's Methodist Church.
S u r v iv o rs Include w ife,
Martha: sons Arthur L. o f Red
Lodge. Mont, and Donald W. of
Dallas.
Baldwin-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Goldenrod. In charge of
Ihe arrangements

In releasing hta
1969. Shaheen dutiful
that the office opened
In vo lvin g m isconduct u f d e ­
partm ent em ployees, closed 3 18
c a se s and h ad 409 m atters
pending.
H e s a id h is o ffic e a ls o
m onitored 1,041 m laconduct
c a se s bein g handled by the
internal Investigation units at
the FBI and D ru g Enforcement
Adm inistration.
" O n the w h o le ," Sh ah een
c o n c lu d e d . "D e p a rtm e n t o f
Justice employees continued to
p erfo rm th eir d u tie s In a c ­
cordance w ith the high p ro ­
fessional standards expected o f
the nation’s principal law en ­
forcem ent agen cy."
B u t enough about the dogooders. The Juicy stuff begin s
on page 7;
O P R Investigators were tipped
o ff that an assistant U.S. a t­
torney brought a handgun Into
the m ain Justice Department
bu ild in g In W ashington. T h e
p r o s e c u t o r “ a d m it t e d to
possessing and displaying the
handgun, but denied that he
knew such conduct may h ave
violated local crim inal statutes."
He received a two-week suspen­
sion.
A n oth er assistan t U .S. a t­
torney. apparently in a fit o f
Jealousy, decided to dig up som e
dirt on a m an w ho dated him
girlfriend. OPR investigators said
the prosecutor had police run a
com puter check of the m a n 's
drivin g record and got a copy o f
a police report on the m a n 's

Wor$t section
of I highway .
highlighted

M tfU V V I
17-62 — Fa* Farit
GaftoHunt. Owner

em inent vehicle while under the
Influence, shoplifted, kept a re­
volver under the seat o f hta car,
and rem oved classified docu­
m ents to hta home and later
destroyed them. "T h e employee
resigned after being notified o f
the FBI's Intention to Initiate
rem oval proceedings."
Occasionally the OPR gets bad
information, like the tip from a
local police department that a
DEA agent w as a prime suspect

in i m urder. The agent
test en d

oetenrunro nw gun
in the kttltng. A suspect

not

Other times, whet eppeers to
be bed information turns out to
be prophetic. A relative o f one
em ployee accused him o f
cocaine and voluntarily
subm itted to a He-detector test.
After the relative Bunked the
teat, tt w aa decided that no
action w ould be token against
About tw o m on th s!
ever, the aamt
a rre ste d b y lo cal p olice for
p o sse ssio n o f c o c a in e . T h e
employee w aa ordered to take a
dru g test, w h ic h -c a m e back
poatttva. H a real)$ied.

ilA
a refund
from thetr 1606 Income taxes
but h as not received It, should
check with the DtS office in
The free phone
num ber Is 1-800-TAX -1040.
Ryan said he believed people
w ho did not attempt to And out
where thetr refunds m ay have
gone h ad probably forgotten
about It.
But not everyone la perfect. In
co m p ilin g its report on un-'
delivered refund checks, even
the IR S erred. They had Longw ood . T allah assee. Leesbu rg
and Merritt blan d ail listed as
cities in Orange County.

MNKtimCY
-M IT FOR YOU?
•i w i our o m i •w w vaua FaoFiarv
•STVCOUfCnON TWISTS

MSUWMTI

Knlflht-flkktaf Newspapers
CALH O UN, Tenn. — For m ost
travelers on Interstate 75. T en ­
nessee Is Just a drive-by state.
Sure, you m ay atop for g a s —
$1.29 for regular unleaded, a
blu rry restroom m irror and an
RC Cola. Or perhaps a chicken
din n er at a Cracker Barrel.

B u t m ore ty p ic a lly . T e n ­
nessee's t-75 blows by In ■
160-mile blur o f ridges, w hite
p in e trees and S h o n e y 'a
billboards, It seem s benign,
often rural-pretty, but little m ore
than a bucket-seat watting room
between Michigan's frostbite and
Florida's fruit punches.
Wrong, say truckers who drive
this road regularly. This section
o f 1-75 la dangerous.
“ T h e whole state of Tennessee
Is the worst part o f that In­
terstate. period." said Jim Pitta.
46. a trucker from Detroit w ho
has driven Ihe highway for tw o
decades.
Painful proof exploded T u es­
day morning at Calhoun when a
dense patch o f fog on 1-75 caused
a fiery plleup of 63 trucks and
cars. It killed 13 people and
Injured 50.
Fog la the big problem In
Tennessee, say the road pros.
But It's not the only one. and
Calhoun la not Ihe only problem
area.
Many drivers give bad marks
to Jelllco Mountain Just south o f
the Kentucky border, and others
add Clinton, traffic-heavy K n ox­
ville and the entire often-foggy
stretch between Knoxville and
Chattanooga. Just north o f the
Georgia line.
Other problems Include black
Ice. white-tailed deer and a glut
o f traffic.
In southern Kentucky. 1-75
cruises along a gentle valley
with coal-blackened road cuts.
Then drivers hit Jelllco, Tenn..
and the border.
There, the highway clim bs
Into the clouds. Trucks gear
down there, and down again.
Som e drop to 35 mph. A s the
clouds thicken, the windshield
bead s with fin e, silver-dark
drops.
“ Jelllco is Ihe steepest grade
on 1-75. You might get down to
20 miles an hour." said N ew ell
Lacky. 49. who had stopped lo
nurse some Java at the A m oco
North-South Auto-Truck Good
Food You Bctchaat Clinton.
At Knoxville, the problem Is
traffic. Six lanes of It. as 1-75
runs with 1-40 for about 20
miles.

DONNIE TERRY
1976-1969

HUTCHISON, SOSSSTU.
MamorUI wrviett lot Mr. Rotor I U
HulcMton ol Sonlord. oho died Friday will bo
told 1:30 p.m. on Monday ol (to Firtt Umiod
MoitodIU Church ol Sonlord with tto No*.
J U Guorry oHkialhv interment to toilow
in Oehtewn Pork Cemetery in toko Mery.
Friend* mey vltil Iron* J to Ip on Sunday
Briitnn Funerel Home. Senlord. In cherpe
of erren^ement*.

drunken driving arrest.
He atoo obtained the m an's
divorce petition and turned it
over to the Immigration and
N a t u r a lis a tio n S e rv ic e “ to
further an INS inquiry Into a
possible 'sham ' m arriagr by the
individual." The prosecutor re­
ceived an official reprimand.
And what report an miscon­
duct w ould be complete wtthout
sex? T h e office investigated
allegations that a "high-ranking
official" had "engaged In sexual
Intercourse with a subordinate
who h ad a personnel action
pending wtthln the offletal'sarea
of responsibility."
The o ffte U Initially denied the
allegation, but foiled two FBI*
adm inistered lie-detector tests.
“ After registering deception on a
second polygraph examination,
the subject admitted that the
allegation.w as true. The subject
retired before formal dtactpltnary
action w aa taken."
Som e investipitions turn up a
treasure-trove at violations. One
FBI em ployee " In a h igh ly
sensitive position” w as found to
have: uaed Illegal d ru g s on

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BEIJING — City authorities tried and executed 16 offend ers
recently for unspecified "s evere crim inal acts," an official
new spaper said Saturday.
The death sentences were handed down by the Beying
Interm ediate Court and prom ptly carried out during the w ees
o f Dec. 11-15. the Beijing Evening N ew t reported.
The state-run dally said 12 o f thoae put to death w ere repea t

offenders to such prtaons far u p to three years without a form al
trial.
Aside from a terse statement that all 16 o f the accused
corn ini lir a m t c r cn m in u acta neaem ng m e drain i n r
tence." there were no details given as to the nature o f their
crim es.

H undred! o f M a e fk tlin e aneeted
JE R U SA LEM — Hundreds o f Palestinians, Including I
religious lea ders and supporters o f an outlaw ed
m ovem ent, were arrested durin g a 24-hour period in the
Israeli-occupied territories. Palestinian and m ilitary
said Saturday.
The Israeli m ilitary declared the occupied O sxa Strip a dosed
m ilitary tone Saturday after police said they suspected O ata
supporters o f the outlawed Islam ic Fundamentalist Movem ent
in F rid ay's slayings o f three J e w s toi the Israeli coastal town o f
Jaffa. Palestinian sources said they suspected the maaa arrests
w ere connected to the slayings.

EC lifts inveatm ewl te n on South A frica
ROME — The 12-nstkm European Community on Saturday
abolished a 4-year-old EC ban on new Investments in South
Africa in order to recognise reform s by South African President
Frederikde Klerk.
Other EC sanctions, which include an anna ban and a
prohibition on Imports o f South African Iron, steel and gold
coins, rem ain Intact pending further steps to abolish apartheid.

Philippine rebala daclare holiday tn io a
M A N ILA . Philippines — Com m . nist guerrillas announced
Saturday a five-day cease-fire against President Conuon
Year's.
A qu in o 's government during Christm as and N ew Yi
allow ing FWptnos to celebrate the holidays in peace.
A re b e l statem ent sent to n ew s agen cies said the
17.000-strong com munist New People's Army w ill observe the
cessation of hostilities for 48 hours from Dec. 24-to Dec. 26 and
for 72 hours from Dec. 30 to Jan. 2.
A qu in o earlier this month ordered the 159.000-member
arm ed forces to observe a sim ilar cease-fire against the N PA
and her right-wing enemies for three days during C hristmas
and three (fays during the New Year.

Phnom Panh, Hanoi reject peace plan

th o How o f tra ffic :

In S am lnala County H int m ay

BANG K O K . Thailand — Vietnam and its Cam bodian allies
flatly rejected the U.f.\ peace plan for Cam bodia, saying It
violated Cam bodian sovereignty and the Untied Nation’s own
charter. Hanoi radio reported.
T h e strong. explicit rejection o f the U Jf. plan by Vietnamese
Foreign Minister Nguyen C o Tfaach and Prime Minister Hun
Sen o f the Vietnam ese- Installed government appeared to
torpedo the plan, which w as seen as the best hope to end 12
years o f conflict In Cam bodia.

from Charlotte Strati to State
R oad 434. Lan a (o p a rt w ill
axtend from tho railroad tracks
north o l 6R434 to MHwoo Mtddfa
S c h o o l. C o at: 63.3 m illion .
C om pletion d a ta : O ooam bor
1160.

From Uof tod Proas International Hopofto

Oral nag#

Improvement*

and poring roadways In Lake

26,1900.

Rrllliw vUvQVTloKJfl,

Chuluota (off the map). Coat: 61
million. Completion dale: Feb.
26,1001.
Q
W id e n in g , p avin g an d
ornnspe from Longwood Hills
Rood to FMmotio Avenue. Coat:
6(25,000. Completion date: Dec.

Paving and drsinsge Im ­
provements on Citrus 8trssl,
M arlon A vanuo and Orange
8trsst, w a tt of Interstate 4 In
A lt a m o n ta S p r in g s n ear
Swilsndo Park. Cost: 690,000.
Comptetlon dsls: Jsn. 31,1991.

Iraq calls off Aziz-Bush talk
B y I A V L B
Y O U R
United Prose International

Iraq said Saturday It w as
canceling a meeting between
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tarlq Axis
and President Bush Monday In
W ashington. Intensifying the
deadlock over efforts to arrange
high-level talks between Iraq
and the United States.
In fo rm a tio n M in ister L a ttf
Naaslf Jaaslm said that Iraq was
canceling the Monday meeting
and rejected attempts by Wash­
in gton to set a date for a
proposed meeting between Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein and
Secretary of Slate James Baker
in Baghdad.
" B e c a u s e o f t he c u rre n t
circumstances between Iraq and
the United States, the scheduled
visit by Tarlq A ziz to Washing­
ton on Dec. 17 will be canceled."
he said In an Interview with the
British Broadcasting Corp.
Th e official Iraqi news agency
INA reported earlier Iraq had
rejected a proposal by Washing­
ton that Baker and Saddam meet
Jan . 3. quoting a foreign
ministry official as saying "Iraq
alone sets the proper appoint­
ments for its president to meet
foreign officials.”
Saddam had wanted Baker to
come to Baghdad Jan. 12. but
Washington rejected that date as

(B e c a u s e
c

u

r

r

of the

e

n

tory dates (far the high-level
m e e tln g a ) s h o u ld b e s e t ."

t

c irc u m s ta n c e s be­
tween Iraq and the
United States, the
scheduled visit by
Tariq Aziz to Wash­
ington on Dec. 17
win be canceled. |
-Latif Massif JsMkn
too close to the U.N.-Impoeed
Jsn. 15 deadline for Iraq to
w i t h d r a w I ts t r o o p s f r o m
Kuwait, which It Invaded Aug. 2.
Bush had said Friday his
meeting with A ziz was " o n
h o ld " until a d a le for th e
Baker-Saddam m eetin g w as
worked out, and a senior Iraqi
official reportedly said Friday
that Aziz was delaying his trip
until the Issue was resolved.
A spokesman for President
Bush, who was spending the
weekend at Camp David. Md..
said Iraq's form al announce­
ment Saturday canceling A zls'a
trip to W a sh in gto n p ro v e d
Baghdad Is not serious about the
proposed talks.
“ We have communicated to
the Iraqis that mutually satlsfac-

Bush w an serious a b o u t the
m eetings a n d only proposed
them s a a w ay to appease
Congress an d the international
community.
"President Bush only w ants to
show the Congress that he is
doing his best far peace.” Jaaslm
said, also neciHlng W ashington
o f trying to Impose dates far the

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rejected the Jsn. 3
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date far

"A fter a ll. his m ain interest Is
holding o n to Kuwait a s long as
be can. a n d any chance ha aces
to m an ipulate this situation,
he'll g m b ." ~ ‘

Ads will b t schsdulsd to run for 10 days.
Pries of Itarn must bs statsd In tha ad and bs $100 or lass.
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b. Ctaaslflad Managamants decision pn copy acceptability will
ba final.

Haitians prepare for electiona
■»
United Press International

PORT-AU-PRINCE. Halil — Former '’ resident
Jim m y Carter Saturday congratulated interim
President Ertha Pascal-Troutllet for bringing Haiti
to the door of democratic elections that pH a
populist priest against a former World Bank
economist.
The streets of downtown Port-au-Prince were
unusually quiet with little traffic and few
pedestrians as Haitians prepared for today's
election, the third in four years os the poor
Caribbean nation seeks democracy In the wake or
the 29-year Duvaller dictatorship.
T w o policemen patrolled the central plaza with
hands resting on their guns. A ban on sale o f
alcohol took effect at 9 p.m. Saturday amid
rumors o f a possible curfew.
A ban on campaigning 24 hours before the polls
open ut 6 a.m. today kept 11 presidential
candidates out o f public. Some 2.7 million people
arc eligible to vote for president, a two-chamber
Congress and hundreds of local officials.
One o f the tcudlng presidential candidates Is

Jean-Bertrend Aristide, a fiery 37-year-old priest
expelled from the Catholic Saieelan order In 1966
for pursuing popuUrt political activities. H e has
draw n huge support from ru ra l voters.
Aristide s m ain
|e Marc Bazin, a
farm er W o rld Bank econom ist whose support
com es m ainly from H aiti's m iddle d a a s and the
far right.
On Feb. 7. the w inner w ill succeed PascalTrout!lot. a supreme court Judge who h as led the
country since March.
Carter, w ho la am ong international observers
present to m onitor the election, sold registration
at 80-85 percent of eligible voters was higher then
expected. Observers expected the turnout to be

TO:
••too om its

high.
But TonTon M acoutrs' leader Roger Lafantaine.

whose presidential bid w a s turned
turned dc
dow n by the
country's Electoral Council, called early Saturday
on his supporters to abstain from voting.
The Tonton Macoutes. a group o f thugs loyal to
form er dictator Jean- Claude "B a b y D oc"
Duvaller. have been blam ed far meet o f the
atrocities In Haiti In the past few decades.

. FHOMf.
I t s The)

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•l

�Influenza'
reported in
13 states
ATLANTA W ith the
beginning o f winter Just
one. w eek aw ay, federal
health experts reported an
in c re a s e in D u -lik e illneaeee, with 13 elates Hatf o g ^ u e a o f the contagious
Nationwide. 775 deaths
attributed to Influenza and
pneum onia w ere reported
for the week ending Dec. 8.
w h i c h l a b e lo w t h e
epidem ic thresh old, the
national Centers for D is­
ease Control arid T h u n ­

der*
H ow ever. C D C officials
■old there were Indications
that flu or other flu-llke
infections m ight be m ore
widesp r ead than the figu re a rep o rte d b y state
health departm ents.
T h e C D C 'a su rv e y o f
•e le c te d fa m ily d o cto rs
from 4 9 states showed 3.5
percent to 3.7 percent o f
recent patient visits were
for evaluation o f flu-llke
lUneaaca. That percentage,
although significant, la atlU
below epidem ic levels, the
CD C aaid.
T h e 13 states, plus the
District o f Colum bia, re­
porting sporadic cases o f
flu -llk e Illn e s s e s w e re :
A la b a m a . H a w a ii, K en ­
t u c k y . M a s s a c h u s e tt s .
M i n n e s o t a ,
N e w
H a m p s h ire , N e w Y o rk ,
N o rth C a r o lin a , O h io ,
R h o d e la la n d , T e x a s ,
V erm on t and West

Flu cases typically begin
to Increase dramatically In
middle or late December
and peak In late February
or March.
Last year, the United
S ta t e s e x p e r i e n c e d Its
worst flu epidemic In five
y e a rs . A t least 10.000
deaths have been docu­
mented In each o f 19 U. S.
ep id em ics betw een
1957-1966. In each o f three
o f those ep id em ics the
death toll exceeded 40,000.

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Flortdi — Sunday, December 18, 1980 — 7A

r

VCpm at the MOM Grand, C aesar* P rtaeaan ditaffotara.

Ife

Area residents seek flu
SANFORD — Though It la still
early hi the coM and Hu season,
more than 2,000 senior citizens
and chronically ill people In
Sem in ole County have been
Immunized against the deader
Influenza virus by the Seminole
County Health Department, ac­
co rd in g to D r. J o rge D eju ,
director o f the departm ent
Defu said people tn those two
group s have the most to fear
from a bout with the flu.
“The virus can be deadly,“ he
said. “A s many a s 90,000 people
nationally die from the flu. moat
o f them are In those high risk

high fever, a dry cough an d an
upper respiratory Infection.
D eju ad d ed that there are
many colde that display flu-tike
sym ptom s. bu t m ay not be
influenza,
“t h e only w ay w e can tefl if it
la the (hi la through M ood teats,”

th e Sem inole County Health
Departm ent for SO. Oroupa o f 20
o r m ore senior citltena tat Seminote County m ay request that a
h e a lt h d e p a r t m e n t re p ra *
aentatlve bring the shots to th e*
location, t h e coat o f thntacrvtce
taadaotSperahot.

a b le at the C en tral Florida
Com m unity Cttme. 9472 Park
A ve.. Sanford, for 95; at Lake

n a is d r u l—
Ctt*
CfUv fCS*M

Deju said there are two types
o f influenza virus. The “A type"
lath e moat severe. The “B type"
does not affect its victims quite
as strongly. He added that the
types seem to return In In*

b e r r y , fo r 9 1 5 ; at the
Emertmcdtcai Fam ily Practice.
119 W. State Rood 434. Winter
Springs, for 915 plus the coat o f
a n office visit; at the Family
H ealth Center. 2911 Red Bug
Lake Road. Casselberry , for 915
an d at the Lake Mary Urgent
C are Center. 130 W . Lake Mary
Bhrd.. Lake Mary, for 50.

ienwinca ejeset,
Deju aatd the " A " vtrua Is on a
throe- to four-year cycle, while
th e "B “ la on a tw o-to throe-year
rotation.
"It’s too early to teQ what virus
w e w ill have thla y e a r," he said.
Influenza la characterized by a

• CHMSTMAS SINO-A4.0NQ • WMNHMMfB
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boards Afeamonta or Volusia Mad Store tor Turn s.

i w i n i j jj
Soullieasl Keyboards

Som e private physicians may

Bush looking Into rulln
WASHINGTON President
Bush said he la looking Into a
con troversia l E du cation De­
partment ruling banning racebaaed scholarships, which took
the White House by surprise and
stunned civil rights advocates.
"W e*re looking at It right
now.” Bush told reporters Friday
at a brief news conference on the
south lawn before heading for
Camp David.
Michael W illiam s, assistant
education secretary for civil
rights, who is black, evoked a
storm o f protest In the educa­
tional community Wednesday
when he announced his In­
terpretation of the civil rights
law s as th ey relate to un­
iversities.
Bush said described Williams
as "sensitive ... extraordlnarly
Intelligent person,” adding. “ 1
don't think that anyone would

The president's statement, tn
response to a question, ran
counter to truncations that the
department intended to stand
Ann, despite angry opposition.
The N A A C P w as ao provoked by
the ruling It threatened to take
legal ection.

TREE SWOPPING HOURS: M - F 3 PM -10 PM
scholarships designated for a
particular minority or race pro­
vided b y a university receiving
federal fun ds w ill be considered
Illegal. T h la reverses the policy
that has been in effect since at
least the 1970s.
" I have no reason to believe
that there w ill be a different
approach than what M ichael
W illiam s believes la ... the la w ."
Etta Ftelek, press secretary to
o u t g o in g S e c r e t a r y L a u r o
Cavazos, told reporters T h urs­
day.
There .w ere reports that the
policy rulin g also upset Cavazos.

Bates or Ahw Hours Cal:

R *34“

SAT. B SUN. 9 AM *10 PM
“ S
AUM M

(407) 321-2010
2499 OLD LAKE MARY RD.
SUITE #132, SANFORD

CHRISTM AS

1 CMLAM*,
•
m _ _
9
1

■ EACH BAG OF GRAIN
M

RECYCLING
SWEEPING S A N F O R D

STARTING THE WEEK Ol
Dacambar 17th Racyding Bins
Dalivarad
January 7th Racyding Pick-up

Recycling makes resources out of waste like old newspapers, gloss,
aluminum and plastic beverage containers.
More information on your pick up date and recycling will be in­
cluded with your bin.

City of Sanford
Public Works Department

Recycling Office

330-5678

I

SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
(407) 323*1450
Sanford

100 Weldon Boulevard, Sanford, FL 32773-6199
AN EQUAL ACCESS EQUAL OPPORTUNITY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

843*7001
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a p

�•A — Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida — Sunday. December 16. 1990

Bombing suspect convicted
Untlad

P t—

I w t f w a t t m l ______________________

BRUNSWICK. Ga. — Wnllcr Leroy Moody Jr.
has been convicted In federal court on 13 counts
of bribery, obstruction of justice and witness
tampering In an attempt to have his 1972 federal
bombconvlcllon overturned.
Moody, the suspect In the December 1989
bombing deaths o f U.S. Circuit Judge Robert
Vance and Savannah. Ga.. Alderman Robert
Robinson, tares 69 years In prison and 91.3
million In fines.
He still faces a 70-count Indictment for making
and mailing the pipe bombs that killed Vance and
Robinson. He Is also accused o f sending bombs to
Hit* Jacksonville. Fin., office o f the NAACP and
the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals building In
Atlanta.
The eight-woman, four-man Jury deliberated 3
Vi hours Ix-fore finding Moody guilty of paying
Iwo women to provide false testimony and false
affidavits In 1988 und 1989 in an effort to have
his 1972 conviction overturned, and far trying to

First Union Consumer associate Susan Casey and
Commercial lender Steve Allman were among

local guests touring the Cedar Creek Apartments
affordable housing units, still under construction.

New look in affordable housing
previews in Sanford for officials
Developers of the project arc
Sanford Arms Associates. L.P..
and Broad. Inc., o f Los Angeles,
SANFORD - City officials and along with local partner William
area dignitaries were given a Demetrre. Spokesmen were on
sneak preview of a 85.4 million hand to explain the concept o f
140-unit nffordahlc housing the project being built on a
project last week.
l O-acre parrel.
Cedar Creek Apartments, at
Tracy S. Forrest, of Winter
2450 Hartwell Avenue, off 25lh Park Construction, said. "People
Street. Is designed to fill the need arc amazed that w e’ve built tills
for affordable housing In the much In Just *K) days since
Sanford nrea.
construction started." He said he
BUI Simmons, city director of expected to complete the* Initial
engineering and planning, said units within 30 days. For I luhe was pleased with the concept total project, tin- completion date
after touring the facility.
Is scheduled for May 19 9 1.
" I ’m glad to see new housing
Alan Glnshurg. with Sanford
In the affordable range here In Arm s Associates, officiated al
Sanford." Simmons said. "A ll of the preview. He said the first
the recent talk centered on the residents are expected lo begin
Impact o f the Seminole Townc m oving In by Jan. 1.
Center mall certainly proved
In order to obtain one of the
there ts a need for more of this two- or three-bed room rental
type o f housing In the area."
units, certain criteria must ImCedar Creek Is being devel­ tnci. At least 20 percent will bo
oped under an award of the rented to Individuals whose In­
Florida Housing Finance Agency come- ts 50 percent or less of the
und the Low Income Rental area median gross Income. Forty
Housing Tax Credit program.
percent will be rented to those
Monthly rent will start at S413 whose Income is 60 percent or
per month, said by the develop­ less o f the area Income. Those
ers to be $100 to 8200 less than incom e levels w ere obtained
normal rental fees.
through the U.S. Department o f
C it y C o m m is s io n e r Bob Housing and Urban Develop­
Thomas, who attended the pre­ ment through the local HUD
view showing Tuesday, ques­ office.
tioned whether many people
S p e c ific a lly , u n its w ill titcould afford to pay rent even In
available for a two-person family
the 8400 category.
" I t ’s an Impressive place." with u maximum income of no
Thomas said, "and I’m sure It more Ilian $18,000 or a fivewill be o f great benefit to our person family w itli maximum
citizens, but we need even more Income of $24,300.
O f the 140 units. 10-1 arc
housing that the average man
can ufford. What we really need, two-bedroom, two-bath apart­
and what I’ve been pushing for. m e n ts . w h ile 3 6 units are
are Jobs. Some kind of light th re e -b e d ro o m tow n h ou scs.
Parking facilities will accom­
in d u s try that w ill p ro v id e
employment for our people to m od a te 280 v e h ic le s . Each
help them aftard to pay this kind apartm ent Is equipped with
most o f the major appliances.
o f rent.”
■ y NICK PF IIFAU P
Herald staff writer

tall an Investigation of the payoffs this year.
Moody, who fainted In federal prison when told
(hat his wife was divorcing him and when
Indicted In the mall bombings, showed no
emotion when the verdict was read Friday.
"H e knew It was coming. He was not surprised
by the verdict." said Edward Tolley. Moody’s
court-appointed lawyer.
Tolley argued In court Thursday that Moody
was Insane, but Moody objected. On Friday.
Tolley told Jurors that Moody was not Insane, but
had sufficient mental disorders to leave him
unable lo Intentionally commit a crime.
"H e has the IQ ora genius and all the Insight of
an Imbecile." Tolley said of being forced to switch
defenses In mid-lrlal. "H e made Ihe decision and
he’s not back there bellyaching about It. I would
rather have done It another w ay."
Al one point In Ihe trial. Tolley referred lo
Moody as "nuts, goofy, screwball, idiotic and
simplistic."
But federal prosecutor Lewis Freeh said three
out of four psychiatrists who testified found no
serious mental defect In Moody.

PUBLIC N O TIC E
This notice is to inform the residents of Seminole County that the Seminole County Board ot County
Commissioners has amended Ns 1990-91 (5th year) Final Statement ol Community Development
Objectives and Projected Use of Funds under the Community Development Block Grant (C D B G )
Program. T h e original Final Statement, submitted in August, 1990, contained an activity entitled:

Also Included In the complex
Is a clubhouse, (tool and sundeck.

Before You Buy, Shop
ja C tiu L 'J tiiitL iix
204 S. Park Avt.. Sanford
322-6909
OVENIAT.MDEC.

WATCH B ATTERIES • EN Q A A V N Q

North Target Areas Emergency Housing Repair
Emergency repair to owner-occupied housing In Midway, Lockhart’s Emergency repair to owneroccupied housing In Midway, Lockhart's Subdivision, Rose Land Park, and Bookertown in unincor­
porated Seminole County.................................................................................................................. $100,000.
O n December 1 1 ,19 9 0 , the Seminole County Board ot County Commissioners amended the 1990­
91 Final Statement to add the Oviedo/Johnson Hill target area to the activity. Th e activity is amended
to read:

Seminole County Emergency Housing Repair
Emergency repair to owner-occupied housing in Midway, Lockhart's Subdivision, Roseland Park,
Bookertown and Oviedo/Johnson Hill in Seminole County...................................................... $100,000.

ATTENTION

*300 Reward!

Th e Seminole C o unty Planning OH ice will submit this amendment to the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development (H U D ) after seven (7) days following this notice. Any questions or
comments should be directed to:

F o r In fo rm itlio n
leatfiuq to the arrest .iitdc o n v ir

lion ot persons dumping q.tr
b.iqe illegally on 0 m « Way Lot
Please respond to

Blind 8 o » 116 P O Bo» 16S7
Santord. FL 32771

Buddy Balagia, C D Principal Planner
Seminole County Planning Office
1101 E. First Street
Sanford, FL 32771
407/321-1130. ext. 7384

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�D e ce m b e r 16, 1990

SUNDAY

S a n fo rd Herald

Building on

IN B R I E F
—

Batchelor entrusted
with R am s’ tradition

Card Show at Chric Cantor
SANFORD - SporU Collectables o f Flea
World will sponsor a baseball card show at the
Sanford Civic Center today from 10 a.m. until 8
p.m.
Also on the agenda will be an autograph
signing session by the No. 1 pick In thtai years'
free agent droll. Chipper Jones o f the Atlanta
Braves. Jones' autograph will be available for
•3.

Q O LP
Brooksss, Klllabmws win svsnl
SANFORD - Stella and Harold Brooks
combined with Helen and Ron Klllebrew to arln
the Sunday Mixed Tournament organised by
the Mayfair W om en's G olf Association at
Mayfair Country Club last Sunday.
Play followed a best two balls out o f four
format.
The Brookses and Klllebrews shot a com posit
120. one struck ahead o f the second place
foursome of Jonnle and Dick Elam and Carol
and Daryl Miller.
Finishing third with a score o f 128 were Peggy
and George BlUups and Doyyte and Warner
Sullivan.
A covered dish supper was held following the
tournament, complete with Christmas carols
sung to the accompanlement of Terri Sullivan.
The Wednesday. Dec. 19. will be a play day. A
luncheon will follow.

C 0 L L K 0 1 S O C C IW
Ex-Ram aims academic honors'
ROME. Ga. — Lake Mary High School
'raduate Kelly Broen. daughter of Longwood's
•
. —Broen. has .been
------------*
Robert
named -to the fl attonal
Association o f Intercollegiate Athletics Scholar
Athlete list.
Broen has maintained a 3.52 grade point
average while playing defense for the Berry
College Lady Fury soccer team that won the
NAIA national championship. A senior business
administration major at Berry, she Is a 1987
graduate o f Lake Mary.

C O L L M B HOOPS
H lllim an among scoring Isadora
JACKSONVILLE — According to the National
Junior College Athletic Association. Adrian
Hlllsman. a 1989 graduate o f Seminole High
School. Is sixth among the national Individual
scoring leaders.
Hlllsman. a sophomore at Florida Community
College-Jacksonvllle, has scored 155 points
through eight games, good for an points per
game average of 25.8.
As a team, the FCC-J Stars are ranked 16th In
the NJCAA women's national poll. The Stars are
currently the third highest scoring team In the
country, having scored 557 points In six games,
an average o f 92.8 points per game. Only
Nltchcll College of New London. Cl. (112.6 ppg)
and Sullivan College or Lexington. Ky. (97.2
ppg) average more points per game.
FCC-J will host the Seminole Community
College women In a Mid-Florida Conference
game on Jan. 19. The Stars will visit Sanford for
another conference game on Feb. 13.

Davis, Gators rough up Augusta
GAINESVILL — Dwayne Davis scored 17
points and the Gators enjoyed a 58-29 reboun­
ding edge as Florida had little trouble beating
Augusta College. 82-43 Saturday.
Davis, despite not playing most o f the second
half, dominated the smaller Jaguars (Q-«l on
both the offensive and defensive boards, picking
up 10 rebounds for the double-double. Stacey
Poole also had a double-double with 11 points
and 10 rebounds for the Gators.
Derek Stewart led all scorers with 18 points
for the Jaguars.

Auburn gets by FSU
AUBURN. Ala. — Center Robert McKle scored
a career-high 22 points and guard Ronnie Battle
also scored 22 points to lead Auburn to a 99-96
win over Florida State Saturday night.
Florida Stale. 3-2. was paced by forward
Aubry Boyd, who scored 22. and forward
Michael Polite, who added 21 poln:i- Guard
Chuck Graham scored 18 for theSemlnoles.
The Sctnlnolcs shot 64.5 percent from the
floor In the second half and pulled within one
point. 97-96. with nine seconds left In the game,
and Battle converted two free throws for the
(Inal score.
Coctpltod tra m wto*

TV

FOOTBALL
□ I p.m. - WESII 2. Seattle Seahawksat Miami
Dolphins. |L)
□ 4 p.m. - WCPX 6. Green Bay Packers at
Philadelphia Eagles. |L)
C o n s is ts listing on F s # o 1

Herald Sport* Editor
LONG W O O D — W hen Richard Batchelor was
nam ed the new wrestling coach at Lake Mary
High School, he stepped into a situation that is,
at the sam e time, one of most enviable and least
enviable tn the county.
For starters, he Inherits a program from Doug
Peters that ban w on the last seven consecutive
conference, district and regional championships.
Outstanding facilities - Lake Mary has Its own
w restling room — and booster chib support
complete a very enticing package.
But there are thorns In this rose bush. Because
of t-sk* M ary's tradition of excellence, no less to
expected. Not only that, but the Rams rarely do
w ell at the state meet. Those who expect
Batchelor to continue that seven-year run w ould

Tournament raautta on Monday
also like to see the Rams extend their reign to
Include a state title.
This weekend. Batchelor led hte Rams, w h o are
off to a deceptive 0-4 start. Into the Lym an
Christm as Tournam ent, an event that In w hich
Lake Mary traditionally underachieves.
' W e graduated a lot of people last year
mder Paul
Batchelor as sophom ore 103-•poundei
W ehrley w as getting ready for nto first round
match Friday night. "In any program, you're
only kidding yourself if you think you don't have
to build every year. W e started fast March getting
the kids ready for this year."
Not only did Batchelor have prospective
wrestlers w orking out In "T h e R oom ." but he put
together s schedule that w ould give the R am s a
very accurate Idea of Just how good they are
compared to the rest of the state. On Dec. 1. Lake
Mary opened w ith Winter Park. Then, on Dec. 5.
they went to Sarasota, which h as been no worse
than second at the tost four state championship
meets.
After those two and matches with West Orange
and Lake Brantley. Lake Mary to now CM. Ram
fans m ay be concerned, but the start as told
Batchelor what he needed to know.

Marcus Cobb* (abovt) and Chris Napototano
(bslow), along with Dam ton Gaffsn, art th* thra*
aanUf

pm

I bIr b

lln i.v a t&gt;

t akm M am

Coach

Richard Batchalor ar* counting on to
.
Ram* continue thalr savan-yaar hold on the
conference, district and rsoionai championships.

Silver Hawks
get by Rams

Davison’s
two goals
lift ’Notes
SANFORD — After a scoreless
first half. Seminole exploded for four
second-half goals to post a 4-1 win
over Lake Brantley In Seminole
Athletic Conference boys’ soccer
action at Seminole’s Thomas E.
Whlgbam Stadium.
T h e win evens Seminole's record
at 2-2.1-2 In the conference.
" J o n W illiam s (the Sem inole
g o a lk eep er) m ad e a cou p le o f
cular saves In the first half
spec tact
us to go Into halftime
that enabled
cna
DO." said Seminole Coach Carlos
Merllno. "A t halftime. 1 told the
guys that the team that scored the
first goal would probably get a
couple."
Maybe Merllno should go Into
tellin g fortunes, because that's
exactly what happened.
Gcordie Davison put the Seminoles ahead when he scored 10
minutes Into the second half on an
assist from Travis Groover. Seven
minutes later. Groover scored an
unassisted goal. Raymond Tossl
made It 3-0 with a goal seven
minutes after that. David Lambert
getting the assist.
Davison scored his second goal
Just four minutes after Toast's score,
completing a four-goal outburst that
took all over 18 minutes.
J o s e Marrone scored Lake
Brantley's only goal on a penalty
kick at 75.25.
i-afcr Brantley actually outshot
Seminole 15*10. Williams coming
B o tv s r, F a g s 9 1

Herald sports wrltor
W INTER PARK - In a gam e that
featured four of the most talented
players In the county. It was two
unexpected stars (hat made (he
difference as Lake Howell came
from behind to defeat Lake Mary
72-62 Friday night In a Seminole
Athletic Conference boy's basket­
ball game Friday night.
The four star players — Lake
Mary’s Mike Mertiilc and Jaaon
Hamelln and Lake Howell’s Josh
Kohn and Thomas Dcmps — did
combine for 86 points, but Ryan
Thom as and Roger Johnson hit key
baskets that gave the Silver Hawks
the edge they needed to take their
□ • m Lak e H o w s U . Pags S B

Patriots hand
Tribe fifth loss

In th« middle of things
Both Ssmlnole's Jim Johnson (No. 6) and Lake Mary s Brian Coduto
(No. 5) played key roles In thslr games on Friday. Johnson and the
Tribe defense limited Lake Brantley to a penalty kick goal In a 4-1 win.
Coduto scored the Rems' only goal In a 1-1 He with Lake Howell.

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Jason
Vallery hit two free throws with six
seconds left lo thwart a tremendous
comeback effort by Seminole os
L a k e Brantley posted a 72-70
triumph In Seminole Athletic Con­
ference boy's basketball action
Friday night.
The win raised the Patriots record
to 4-3 overall and 1-0 In the SAC
while Seminole fell lo D 5 .0 -l.
Next uctlon for both clubs will be
In the Central Florida Classic at
Seminole Community College next
week. Lake Brantley will take on
□ fte s Lak e B ra n tle y . Pegs 3 B

Sixth-ranked St. Petersburg Ju n io r College gets by S C C
i t . p it ib s s u r s jc twt

SANFORD — Barry Brown and Wndyl Daniels
combined for 43 second-half points as the
sixth-ranked Trojans of St. Petersburg Junior
College overcame a lOpoint second-half dencll to
defeat Seminole Community College 88-76 In
men's Junior college basketball action at the
Health and Physical Education Center Saturday
night.
‘
Th e Trojans Improved to IDO with the win
whUe SCC fell to D6. The Raiders will now take
off until Jan. 4. when they will host North Florida
Community College.
T h e lOth-ranked Raiders look a 35-29 halftime
lead as Dennard Ford came off the bench to score
I I points and Seminole High graduate Robert
Moore scored eight points.
SCC continued to hold the lead until an

F o t W r e lD U . Turtmr ) J00 J. JonotOO J JJ. Broan )1I4S7,J4.
Np«p*r J J 90 4. Roach 910 &gt;4 It. P4lln**« 0 0 11J. Denial* IS I* I *

v . Total* n stii ns.

SIM IM OLI CC 174)
„
......
Ford 4 1 ) 4 It. Vanjant 14&gt;4 7. Macha, 11004. Ne»on 19111).
OoJ4tw* &gt;11 I X 0. flediak 1100 4. Caghu* &gt;111 II. RoWn*on t S
111. Moor* 4 1! I H I. Total* 1049111 « »
Halftime - Seminole CC 11 St P«l»ftfx.ro JC 14 Thrto point
fietd goal* - SPJC J J (Bro«n 1 1 . Fo»*r I I. Roach 01). SCC MO
(Natan JS. Meckty I X OoJttu* l It. Variant 01) Ttam tool* SPJC IT, SCC It Fooled oot - SCC. Na»on Technical* - SCC.
Natan Rtfaoundt - SPJC 14 IRooch X Oonlolt 7). SCC H iCtpru,*
4) Attittt - SPJC 17 (Fottof 4). SCC 14 |V4nianl 41 Rtcord* SPJC WO. SCC 94

the Trojans their first lead of the night.
SCC got as close as one point bul could never
regain the lead.
St. Petersburg hit 14 of 16 free throw attempts
down the stretch to maintain Its advantage.
A (lurry of three-point attempts that missed
turned Into layups for thr Trojans In the last
minute turned the game from a thriller Into a
r°Brown. the fourth-leading scorer In the nation
at 28 per game, scored 18 of hb game-high 2J
points In the second half, while [Xinlel. who was
held to two points In the first half catnc through
with 25 second-half points.

unusual seven-point play lumed u four-point
Raider lead (52-48) Into a three-point deficit.
Lincoln Roach scored on a layup but SCC was
called for a technical for slapping the backboard.
After Brown hit both free throws to lie the
game at 52-52. he nailed a three-pointer to give

Also in double figures were Lincoln Roach and
Anthony Foster with 11 points each.
Moore led Ihe Raiders with 13 points despite
silting out most o f the contest In foul trouble.
Freshman center Leslie Cephus scored 10 of his
12 points in the second half.

�M — Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida — Sunday, Dacambar IS, 11

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Fordham Ti. Manhattan M
GI**afeer*St 4S. Rutgers Camden*!
HerMeraoo.SartmU.IO
Harvard 40, Dartmouth 75
Jemei Meaitm 71. MMunt U. Mery'v M i. 71
Mama 71,1. imnelooa _
Near Haven OM, Bart m t Ml
OMoH. WO. American U. 71
Phil*. Textile 42. Queen* Cell a
PtWrturgh 10. Rrtart Marrli 74
Prtncrtw iW R v lp u t f
Remap* «*. Rvt**r*to*w#rk37
“
“ Ill.44.40an4rtalrll.l7
I *4, Mona 11
T implar t .044r|laTac7i47
ToaaA ll Pa4a 71. Ollip lla w M
YortLW.7ACaBWIcU.00
SOUTH
M Sam W.FlarrtoM.W _
E. Kentucky OABrttarynta* 77
East Carolina IA ComiBeR M
F N rtM «.M B M W O I
FlartBiTOjRM WMlSiRRirtWTT
Kentucky IA TA-dtarianaafa 70
Lanaf7.SoWrt.TMwi.fi
Mount Olivo M. Oartpa Can. oo
H.C. OwrtrtW NR Crtmam Ml
Harm CaraMnaOA AMBm w I f
OM DamMm ■ , te n t Wood U. 00
Pembroke St. 04, WlngrtaM
Randtfpk Macaw H . LyndWargrt
Southern Mist. 14. NE LmitaUa* 71
M.CAOT
Aquinaa 4A lim a Height* a
Ashland 7A HIIMate 40
AuoM4aaa.in.fACarraU.onAN
Butler Oi.WtocanrtnW.IOT
Capital 4A Kbnfelngum a
Cine tnnaH M. EvawavlWa rt
Denlmn77,Wtknlngldi.On*»*3
Gr'ca M l Cant. SX, (M e ML OT
Oraanvllta 17, Trtntty OrtaHmOA OT
Hmavar OA Eartham rt
Hiram Cal. * , ON* NortMm U
Indiana f7.00. Mktupm 40
Indiana It. 11. Miami. OMoH
team It. 01. MKMpan 71
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Taylor 5*. Indima lauwaaat M
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. (artrrt Pivltto*

t iir t a
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Milwaukee '
Detroit
Chicago
Cleveland
Atlanta
Charlotte
Indian*

IS 7 *4714 1*3* 1
i ] a ol* iv*
10 12 .455 5
4 11 .455 3
• 13 .4M 3VJ
• 14.144 7
Western Cwirtreixe
Mrtvrnt Oivltien
w l p w . as
San Antonio
11 f ,722 —
Uleh
14 7.447 V*
Houston
12 15.545 1
Dalles
7 17 .31* 4rt
7 12.250 7
Minnesota
Denver
5 t* .230 4V*
Orlande
5 17 .127 10
P*«Hk QvisJon
Portland
20 1.404 Phoenix
13 7 .421 4V&gt;
11 0.414 4V*
Golden SI*It
LA Lexer*
11 7 Alt 7
LA Clippers
10 II .474 4V*
5**&lt;tl*
4 12 .214 12V*
Sacramento
4 15.111141*
Friday Retoltt
Ptuladalyfela rt. Miami tl
Boehm 104. Octroi 1100
San Antonie III. Oayaland 104 (O T)
Washington 104. Houston 72
Chicago I7A LA Clippers*
Portland 10*. D*|l*&gt; 104
latwrOay iaialti
llrw York at New Jersey. night
Houston ot Charlotte, night
Betton ot Miami, night
Wathington at Atlanta, night
Cleveland at Chicago, night
LA Clipper* at Milwaukee, night
San Antonio at Minnetola. night
Phoenix at Denver, night
Indiana at Utah, night
DailaialSaaltla.nlghl
LA Lakeri at Golden Slate, night
Orlande at Sacramento, night
Sunday Garnet
Orlande at Portland, II Am.
Indiana at LA Lakart. 10:30p.m.
Monday Garnet
Utah at Mew Jertey. 7 30p.m.
Atlanta at Cleveland. 7 70p.ni.

coLLtoi l A w n m i l
EAST

Adtlphl 107. N Y. Tech 71
Blooml.eid *7. Caldwell at
Brooklyn Col 41. Liberty*!
CW Poll« . Sacred Haart **

SettwL Town. IA Lana n
Breed# TAFWevtBan
fl.Krtduckyn.t
FSS
itAVoHmtaM . t l

Grand Valley St. TA Lake Superior St. 5*
Third Plow
Northwd. M kk.tA Maud laaarte 70
S M n M B M k PNrtBi ARM H
■
AUrtUSTfetrt) Mann A ll 00 71 Stewart 017 M IB) Hurt!
0-2 0-10 ; Fattttard04000; K.Harrta»7PIS;
Butler P t PP 0) LaMar 711-11; MIPrtitm P t
04 0; lliw oon 20 PO 0; B.Harrta PP 04 •;
Delta 1-1 P4 it NUm 04 04 0; DuBooo
Sdvnldt 04 POA Total* 1P01M 42.
FLOP I DA (47)
Poole P t 1-111; Davit P I P7 17) Hqpm 1-7
PO 4; Garcia 14 04 1- Grlmaley I S 44 Ot
Stewart I S PO Si Brawn 1-7 I I 1; Carter I t
PO 1; Kulema P t 12 7) Row* 40 OO 10;
Ulmer P4 1-17; Tumor 04 P I 1; Zehner PO
P 0 0; F Indley PO 04 A Total* MAO I P H a .
Halftime — Florida 24. Augusta t l;
Three point abort — Awguite PI* (Mann 17,
Stewart t - i Hunt Pt, K.Harrl* 12. Butter
P I. Latter P I. Bake P I). Florida M l
(Hogan 2 4. Garcia 1-1 Brown Pt. Conor M ,
Kuitma P I. floveo P A Slowort I I); Robound* — Auguita 2f (Hurt). K Harrlt 5),
Florida M (Davie, Hwtt 10); Aaaltrt —
Augueta tl (Hunt 4), Florida It IStewart t&gt;)
Total loul* — Augueta 21. Florida 10; Fouled
out — none. Technical hull — R.Harrle;
Attendance —ASIA
FLORIDA ST. (It )
Graham PllOO IA Copeland 1-1I S A Word
PO PO A Boyd f-14 PS » . Myers PO I I 7.
Millar 00 00 A Edward* P it P I 10. Doberd
P7 M II. Raid P I I I I, Polite PIS PO It.
Total* *2471024 44.
AUBURN (ft )
Wrencher 00 00 A Parson 411 47 IA
Gallon 14 7-10 IA Patrick 24 1-2 7. Baltic M l
40 22. Coylor P f 1 2 II. McKlo 412 4$ 2A
Arnold I IP O A Brandt 15047, Simmel 7 12
5. Total* » « 1 241444.
Ho IIII mo—Auburn 44, Florida SI. 27.
Three point goals-Florida St. 411 (Graham
15. Copeland 12. Boyd I A Edward* P I.
Poilte l-7t. Auburn 711 (Penan l-A Gallon
2 A Patrick PA Battle 2 2. Ceyler 02). Fouled
out—Bayd. Myers, Pallia. Caylar. Ra
bound*—Florida St. 24 I Doberd A Polite I).
Auburn M (Caylor I). Assists-Florida St. ts
(Myers 0), Auburn 21 (Caylar 4). Total
l o u l t — F lo r id a SI. 10. Auburn IS.
Technicals—Edward*. A—AHA
EAST
Adtlphl 71. Bowling 50
American U TA Clevel«td St. tv
BroafelynCal.Tf. Stilton 70
Connecticut 41 Mlnnetate 40
C W. Pott IA Sacred Haart 44
Daemon 7*. Point Park 51
Indiana. P a.lA Pltf-Bradford 54

7 OP JM142144
7 0 0 JM 224 70
7 00 JM 0 4 M i
1 It 0 .1S4MI IN

Romo* City
LA Raider*

f O O J fllU lff
• 4 0 JflM OrtS
7 * 0 J M O ttlrt
0 7BJ01SnflB
1 W 0 J J 1 17700
W L T P tt . PFPA
3 1 I N I N Ml
S B 4 0 2H 2 0
00 JM 225 225
70.442 I N 250
00 J N 2 N 3 N
Cartral
20.70* IN 207
70.412147 20
00.442141270
00 J O I N 111
40 JM Ml 245

■ NY Gloats
Philadelphia
Dalle*
■ Chicago
Groan Bay
Tampa Bay
Detroit

Mkh.47

■ Sm Francrtca
New Ortoon*
LA Rom*
Altana

City 47
, IN OA Toam CkrMim S7
r7NSimpfmo7
r '

»

Peart SMn. U.S.
DertalN A m m etcag** U.S.

Sa. Cant
Caliiamia
Michigan

MNtissIpel MW
Hall rt Fama Baerl
imnots Its
CIA ■* Baal
Georgia Tech 1
CatlaaBawl
T a u t «w
Ftesta Bead
LaulSvMN 7W

Nebraska

IFNai)

t. Oa*e Bamhardl *3.0034**; A Mark
Martin 5UBA4M; A Gaotl Badlna Ot.lll.lO;
A Bill I Hiatt IIJ4A7M; A Ruaty Wallace
MPA 114; A Ran Schradw 5704.41*; 7. KyN
Fatty C74A 04; A Morgan Shipyard SMAtll;
V. Rkky Rudd A371A50; 10. Darrlka Cop*
5544401.
CART
(Flaol)
I. Al Unsar Jr. S t.fM ^O j 1, Aria
Lwvandffe ll.7tf.4eai 3. Cmanm Fittipaldi
IlilA tT * . A Bakfeynhal 0144A4M; A Nkh
Maora I ) , 41AI44; &gt; . Mlckaal Andretti
OIJBUM/ 7. .Marl* Andretti 4*7A 731; A
DtfWt) M l l w r OlAW tf f.'K ddrt Chaavar
Mrt.720; 10. Tea Fabi Ml AOA
(Flaal)
t. Amtato ManacdU tJOATTS; 1. Chris
Warren 1147,101; A Farter Bakn III 1 14*475;
A Ban Paternal Jr. II474M; A Brian Vats
414X170; A Jim Ptncafe IIJt.170; 7. Robert
Lawrence 012)JM; A Dave Husted 4124440;
4. Dava Ferrara 1)11,IM; 10. Tony Watltoka
510*471
THOROUGHMEO RACING
JOCKEYS - I. Gary Stevens itAJOSASJ;
A Jew Santa* 112451.3*7; A Craig Parrot II I,
54X457; A Pat Day SI0b4XA77l; A Angel
Cordero *4,231,744; A Jerry Bailey 44.I4I.IM;
7. Mike Smith MJSLItf; A Chris McCarron
41132,14*1 4. Eddie Daiehousaay* 17,741005;
IXAIavSrtN 17.414441.
TRAINERS - 1.0. Wayne Luka* IIA lit,
757; 2. Carl Nafigar SA0*3.302. A Chortle
Whlttlngham 1X571441 A Ron Me Anally t l
142.044; 5. Roger AttOaM 4X052.255; A Shug
McGaughey U72AOS5; 7. Rickard Mantel la
534*7,*50; A Jama* Day SX23SJM; *■ Scatty
Schulhoter 5X10A530; 1A Jerry I leiWndor tsr
53.77X417
HORSES - 1. Unbridled U7IA14T; A
I; vestI# 5X4*5417; X Criminal Type 0.370.
IN ; A Bayakoa 11.23440*; A Summer Squall
51.333.350: 0. Flying Continental 5i.ot4.700, 7.
Ruhlmann tl.0rt.400; A With Approval 51.
04X540; 4. Thirty Sia Rod II44A535; to. Bast
Pol 51.034.1* 1
HABNESS RACING
(U.A Trottlat AaaocloMea)
D R IV E R S - 1. John C o m p b tll
It 1.514.147; 2. Michel Lockonco 57411144; X
Doug Brown 55.74A11S) 4. Cot Monti
55.242.733; 5. BUI O’Donnell 5A3*0.43*: I.
nerve Flllon 54.10*. 7*3; 7 .,Bill Fohy
5X477.140; i. Ron Waple* SX *14.343; 4. Dove
Magee 41.3St.3Slt 10. Steve Condren
41441410.
HORIES — 1. Beach Towel 41.0*1.4*0; 7
Jrt* and Elwood tl.33S.03l; 1. Artsplac* tl.
I4A771; a. Apache* Fans* lt.IS7.731; S. Die
Laughing IM42J2J; A Mis* Easy tT.11t.M4;
7. Harmonious 4I.UXM3; A Embassy Lob* 11
11.005.175; *. Dor urnin Bluagrass U5U55;
l0.TopnotcharM00.10l.

IMFk ITAMPINai

Notre Dam* E

Colorado

I. Drag Nrttwm S1.UA477) A Wayne Levi
•1. M A 0 «; A Payne SNvaart OfTAMt; A Foul
AUngw 0B4A7HI A Jodie Mudd (411.744; 0.
Hrta Irwtn B A M ; 7. Mark Cokavecchia
OOAOt; A Tim Slmpwn 4404.771; f. Fred
CarttwOW.Mli N Mark O'Meara S707.I7A
SERtOR FRA ROLF
I. Lae Trtrvtne rtfeAtll; 2 Mika Hill
•NAI7B) A CkartesCaady M74.M1; A George
Artkar 44701441; A Jim Dent 4434.414. 4. Chl
CM Radrtguei 5437.741; 7. Bab Charles
UOJtO. A Gary Flayer 5*45.5*4. 4. Data
Oauolati 4404, IN; 10. RIvotMcBoa &gt;41742*
LPGAGOLF
(Fleet)
t. Raw Daniel teas.574; 1. Fatty Shnhan
4722J II; A Betsy King 0S4AP4I; A Cathy
Oarrtng 1407.224; A Fat Bradley SOOOJtl; 4.
Raala Janet 4252JM; 7. AyabaOkamata 5302.
•OA A Nancy Lapat 434IJU; V. Danielle
Amntaccapane 5JN.tr; N Cindy Rarlck
U5..J4A
M 0NATINH I5
(Flaal
). Strtm Edbar# 1 1,44AMI; A Andre
Agaaal 11,741 j u ; A W rit Backer tl.547.503,
A Ivan Lendl IM 4 1 7 «; A Fata lampra*
4404447. a Andres Gtmat M »J M ; 7. Emilio
Senchoi 5724.2(1; A Goran IvanIMvIc
P A W ; 4. Jakob Hlmak 1*40471; 10. Guy
ForgrtOtVJN
tVOMEITf TENNIS
(Final)
). Steffi Oral 11,421453; 1. M mka Sale*
11.517JO ; A Martina Navratilova SIJJA7S4;
A Gabriele Saketlni W75JM; I. Jana Nov
etna I04SJM; A Zina GarrNm MW.Ml; 7.
Helena Sukova 5541.715; A Mary Joe
Fernanda* 5114444; 4. Arantme Sancha*
Vicar la UI7. M l;' II. Natalia Zvereva
54*3.770.

|

(All Timet EST)
Aattrtco* CaaNrtoca
East
W L T Fct. FF FA
12 2 0 557 340 220

....... 1

: /

W L T P tv G F G A
I4113GIJ5 W4
ti 1130131117
M 11*34 124 IN
IS 110 34 111 HO
14 M i l ) t o m
10 14 2 23 M IN

N YR *
Phi lad .
Now Jirtay
NY I
Boston
Montreal
Hertford
Buffalo
Q w tvc

Detroit at Green Bay, 12:20p.m.
LA Raiders at Minnesota, 4p.m.
Washington at Indlenapell*. f p.m.
Sunday, Doc-13
New England at NY Jetv I p.m.
Dalles at Philadelphia. 1p.m.
Miami *1 Guttata, 1 p.m.
Cleveland*! Pittsburgh, I p.m.
LA Rams at Atlentv t p. m.
Tim e* Gay at Chicago. 1p.m.
Cincinnati at Houtlon. I p.m.
NY Glanrt at Wtoanli . a p.m.
Kama* City rt San Dtaga, 4p.m.
New Orleans at San Francisco. 4 p.m.
Denver at Seattle, a p.m.

IC B U —

Virginia SW

To

Indianapatl* at NY Jetv I pm .
SeemaaURleatAigbaA
MWaataN at Taatga Be*, i p m
Atlanta at Cleveland. 1p.m.
Pittsburgh at New Or leans, t p.m.
Phoenl» at Drtloo, I p.m.
Houston at Kansas City. I p m.
Groan Bay rt Philadelphia. 4 p.m.
San Dtageat Denver. 4 p.m.
Onckmetl at LA Raiders. 4p.m.
Chicago ol Detroit. Ip. m.
MaaG^Gotwot
San Frandtcaal LA R am i 4p.m.
Saturday, Oac.tl

G PO G 1G A5A1

NEW YORK - Th* IrtO OTE Academic
Al I-America football team:
Uateerstty DrtWan

Quarterback — Bill Mu»greve. Oregon
Running back* — Chris Howard. Air
Force Academy, and Helen Scotton, Georgia
Tech.
Wide receivers — Andy Boyct, Brigham
Young, and Ed McCafIrey, Stontord.
Tight ond — Patrick John Jackson.
Bawling Green.
Offensive linemen — Jome* Appel.
Moreheod St., David Edaal. Nebraska. Jim
Hanson. Colorada, Eric Schwalkor, Fordham,
and Jim Wanak, Nebraska.
Placaklckar — Ira Adler, Northwestern,
Defensive linemen - Irvtn dark, F NrIda
AAM. Don Davey, Wisconsin. Lao Tllleman.
Washington SI., and Kyla Slroh, Cincinnati.

ho McGowan. Med­
ian*. Jett Nialian. William and Alary, and
Pat Tyrone*. Nebraska
Defensive backs — David Easterling.
McNaos* St.. Shon Harkar, Lehigh. Brad
Preble, Dartmouth, and Mika Watch. Baylor.
Punter — Jason Hasson. Washington St.
Collags Dtvtslaa
Quarterback — Tracy Randall, Alabama
AAM.
Running backs — Fran Ballant*.
Carnegie Mellon, and Shan* Stadlar, Baloll.
Wide recalver* — Sean Grady. Abllana
Christian, and Ed Huonder, Rosa HuIman
Tight and — Karl Kuhn, Arkansas Tsch.
Oftenslva lineman — Andrew Barrlsh.
Waynosburg. W.R. Jaws, Hampden Sydney,
Chad Hummail. Ohio Northorn. Mike Love­
less. Torleton St., and Jorrod Slaack.
Wortburg.
Placsklcksr — T im Elmorm ann,
MUIIIkln.
Defensive linemen — Tom Beaulieu.
OePauw, Robert Heck. Rhode*. Joel Nerem,
Luther, and Mike Shepard. Calltomlo Davl*
Llnabackars — Ton Longer, Northern
Colorado. Robert O’Toole, CarnegJo-Mellon,
and Darcy Prather, MIT.
Defensive bock* - Scott Blttoli. Albion.
Michael Bltsler. Casa Western Reserve. Mike
Hoffman. Muhlenberg, and Victor Tarebuh,
Wittenberg
Punter — Steve McDowell. Southern
Utah St.
NCAA Division I AA Ptayafts
First Round

_____

1110440 tit 100
U 14 2 25 105 Itt
13 15410 41 107
1014712 45 101
7 20 0 20 42 142

Norrtt Dtvtoto*
W L T Pt*. OF OA
Chicago
22 11141117 I f
St. Lout*
10 4440100 05
Detroit
10 13 411124 t il
MlnnetoU
10 10020 W ill
Toronto
0*4 1 17 rt 124
■
Smylfea DhrMaa
Calgary
I I 15 4 41 130 104
Lo* Angeles
14 0527 )21 44
Vancouver
1] 14114 1a 111
Edmonton
l l t S t t t 41 M
_
4 W 7 0 1 I2 II4
Friday Basalts
Pittsburgh A Buflatol
NY Rangtrs 5. Vancouver!
Saturday Rasatts
Detroit A Phlladrtphla I
Mirmesata X Chicago I
New Jersey at Boston, 1;05 p.m
Hartford at Washington, 7:25 p.m.
Montreal al Winnipeg. 4:05 p.m.
NY Islandirsal Quebec. 7:33 p.m.
St. Louis at Toronto. Oi l p.m.
Edmonton ot Los Angeles. 10:35 p.m.

Minnesota at Chicago. 2: IS p.m.
Calgary at Vmcouver, 3:05 p.m.
SI. Louisa! Buffalo. 7:01p.m.
Detroit at Pittsburgh. 7:S9 p.m.
•
Philadelphia at Winnipeg. 1:05 p.m.
Monday Goom
Washington at NY Ranger*. 7.25 p.m.

IGB5F

*

'

At Dared*, Puerto HI**, Dec. i f

(Per72&gt;

6

*5*4-131
*54*-111
*7-47-124
75**-11*
*5*4— 12*
*540-11*
*540-13*
*5-71— 11*
*7-75-1J7
7545-110
75*5-130
*5*4-111
75*5— 134
*571-114
7575-140
4571— 140
7245-141
7571-141
4572-141
757*— 143
7175— 143
71-71-143
7**5-144
7271-144
7473-14*
77 75-147
7571-147
71 7*-l47
7175-147

Mike Hill
DeieDougle*
Chl Chl Rodrigue)
Ben Smith
Lee Trevino
Charles Caody
Bob Chart**
Al Gtlberger
Don Messengel*
Den January
Waller Zembrisk)
Rocky Thompson
Jim Dent
Brut# Crompton
Georg* Archer
Frank Baerd
Millar Berber
RIvnsMcBe*
Harold Henning
Orville Moody
Dave Hill
Terry Dill
Lorry Mewry
Al Kelley
Tom Shew
John Peul Cain
Jo* Jlmanei
Jimmy Powell
Don Bias

13*0.40* DaIky* Australian Masters
At Palm Maadavn, Australia. Dec. n
(Parti)

Al Stattskore, Go.
Georgia Southern It, Nevada II

(Australian unless noted)
LAS VEGAS. Nav - Odds tor this year's
college bowl games by Caesars Palaca
Olympiad Spots Book

Favsetta

Pt*.
Tuesday. Dec. is

AIMaaglNag.0
IFW21)
4Wat
Nkk Faidv Britain
Ian Wfaanam. Warts
Mika Claytan. Australia
LaaPorrtr, U.S.
Todd Hamilton. U.S.
Renan Rafrtrty. N.Ireland
Richard Zakrt. Canada
RkkGrtaan. Canada
Han Kyi Hla, Burma

.IS
71404240-274
45407047-774
72704047—175
40704070-274
45707047-774
47054573-777
70400072-174
45457071-774
75704000-274

— Traded pitcher Mickey
Wettan ta Toronto tar pitcher Paul Kllgut;
I they will iwt ••
(hitter Ran Kittle.
— Released
Marty Barrett.
CNcaga IN U - T ra d * mtlekrtr Greg
Smith rt th* Lea Angela* Dodgers tor
Inlle'rtr Jos* Vltcalna.
CtackawN — Signed tree agwtt pitcher
Ted Paewr rt a otia-yov contract.
Cleveland — Named Kan Duilch South
Florida scout.
La* Aagartt — Signed outfielder Brett
Butler rt a 3 year caniract; gave pltctwr Ray
Saarsge Ms uncandlticna) rsNooe.
SI. Laart - Signed pitcher Juan Agetlo to
a three year contract.
Tareata — Announced chief executive
officer Peter Hardy has stopped dawn.
Named William Ferguson chairman rt ttw
beard, and P.N.T. WUdrlngton chief execu­
tive officer.
Utka (NY-Pawn Laagrn) — Announced 7year working agreement with Chicago (AL):
nomad Mika Galling^ manager and Bill
Ballou. Charley Leu Jr. and Ron McKay
coaches.
i football coach
John Jenkins on a tour year rollover.
James Madrtan — Named William “ Rip"
Scherer head football coach.
lertkMIl Mrtaearl Start - Gave 3 year
contract axrtnalen ta football coach John
Mumlord.
Atlanta — Placed corrwrbeck Roland
Mitchell on In|grad reserve, signed defensive
back Rkhey Royal oft the practice squad.
BaMart — Placed corrwrbeck Kirby
Jacfcsan an ln|ured m a rw ; activated dertnalva hack Mark KeNaatt rtiurad ryearve.
Capital Dtatrrtt (AML) - Signed cantor
Kirby Linda! to * tryovt contract.
OUcaga — Traded forward Mika Eagles
to Winnipeg tor future consideration*
Now J ersey — Sant dalansaman
Vlechaslav Fetisov to Utka ot the American
Hockey League tar conditioning purpose*.

TVIItADIO
TalatUeSm^k
BASEBALL
) p.m. — SUN, SPBL Sun City Rays at
Daytona Beach E xplerars, IL)
BORING
4 p.m. — UN. Robert Carson vs. Danny
Trevino
FOOTBALL
noon - ESPN. NFL GameOay
noon - WCPX A. Tils Is Itw NFL
!2:J0p.m.-WCPXA NFL Today
17:20 p m. - WESH X NFL Live
1 p.m. - WESH X NFL. Seattle Seahewkt
at Miami Dolphins, (L)
4 p.m. - WCPX X NFL, Groan Bay
PackarsatPhlladalphiaEagrts, ID
4 p.m. — WESH 1. NFL. Cincinnati Bengali
al Los Angeles Raiders, ( L)
4 p.m. - ESPN. NFL. Chicago Beers at
Detroit Lions. |L)
g o xf

1120AM Caelum Classic
At Caelum, Australia, Dec. 15
(P e rn )

Oaargta Sautkam 4A UCF 7
Nevada St. Boise Slat* 53II OT)

Harm# Mlyatawa, Japan
Jan SNphsnaaw
KNkaTagawa. Japan
AN* HashtmaN Japan
Chtefco Nlsklda. Japan
RelkaINh. Japan
YumlfcaFukuda. Japan
Mayami Yam ada. Japan
Aytke Htkai. Japan
KlmN VamagucM, Japan
KatrWMrtNrsNdt.)
Shu) uko l afcngatfilra, Japan
FumlkaOmata. Japan
Sachiko Nagana, Japat

41 mUllaa New York U N CtWWpNns

(Australian unleu notodl
1**7*7-200
ten Baker Finch
*54**4-20*
Stephen Bennett, Britain
70*7 *5-205
Craig Perry
*575*4-207
Devkl Delong. U.S.
M
*570-307
Rodger Devi*
75*511-104
John Mars*. U S.
*7 75 71-20*
Peter Lonerd
72*0*5-204
Lucian Tinkler
72 75*0-310
Mike Colendro. U.S.
**•575-210
Glenn Joyner
7577*5-211
Jack Kay. Canada
71 7144-211
Jim Empty. US.
7**445-111
Peter McWhlrmey
71-7271-111
Luke StoventM. U.S.
*27275-111
Berry F*byen.U.S.

Boise SI. 20. Northern Iowa 2
UCF M, Yeungs town St. t7
Furman 43. Eastern Kentucky 17
Georgia Southern 31. Citadel 4
Idaho it, Southwest Missouri St. 15
Middle Term. SI. 2A Jackson SI. 7
Nevada 27. Northeast Louisiana 14
William feMary 3A Massachusetts o
Quarterfinals
Bolt* St. 30. Middle Tennessee SI. 13
UCF SA Wllkam A Mery M
Georgia Southern M. Idaho 27
Nevada 42. Forman35 (30T)

7474-1 *
7574-144
4470-1M
7570-151
41-00-151
4540-151
4045—111
F5I5-1SS
7574—155
7402—114
•275-157
• 175-154
7505-154
•50-140
0475-142
•2*2—144
4045—101

Caterada St *&gt;v
.0 *4 .0

II I a .*02*71*4
• 7 0 .442 235 224
5 00 J M 30344
1 NO .01241 I I I

BuffaN 17, NY Giant* II
WatMngtan O. Now England »

(Ftart)

y Buffalo

ChMralNakaftmo. Japan
JonoCralNr
TammNOroon. U.A
Krtslrt Parkor. U.S.
All mo Mart
Cindy FlggCurrtor. U.S
Amy Alcart. U.S.
Karan Lum
AfelNakanfe Japan

law* 4
.u_ J M m m

71-72-U&gt;
727B-I43
71-72-144
72 72-544
21-42-144
7*74-144
7272-145
7174-145
7471-145
72-72—145
7272-141
7271144
727214*
7175-144
7571-1*

iMwBBuchl. Jrttf*

ta i a .too m ta*
S 10 .JOS MO Mt
4 e tJ N ltO IN
1110.071 144 Mt

Cincinnati

SanDtege

171 CwnpBoltovtlN 40
|7A N C N U rtrym tAO T
St. JilMR*Alnd.7ARmtuckySt.42
Ta -CMH— apafAUnwfeU MmarlalB

achn

lnd.-Fur.-ln#lA OA OUvat 01

10 4.I W -

Cortrol

AUTO RACING

FranfclMOA Marian. InA 41

Bolton
Philadelphia
Mavr York
f
New Jersey

f A N Y . rt. St. Eliiafetiti't rt
B w L O w w w w ^ rt M
ifM
ppori 54
Face BA CdncardlA N Y . M
Rlrtr 7A Leap Itlmd U. 71
Rrtawa-NwaarktA Ramapail
SI. JeWWtrt. FarrtbmwTf
Satan Han 4A Cant. Camacttcut St.rt
•MblraatdyeCrt.71
LOA Sacred Heart to
.

cmainii.'Ta^CaB.a«Chwtas C y *'V* n

A -1,344/M - I I 14.722

Atlantic DhrMen
W L Pet. OB

Indianapolis
NY Jots
Now England

Cor inn* Dlbnah
Del* Eggtllng. US
Jana Geddev US.
Ann* Jones
Aytko Okamoto. Japan

71*0— 140
*074-143
74*0-141
7072— 141
7440-141

3 p.m. - WFTV 4, Now York Lila
Championship*, final round. IL)
HOCKEY
11:30 am. - SUN. Col leg*. Lake Superior
Start al Michigan
TENNIS
1 p.m. — ESPN. Grand Slam Cup. prion's
singles final
MISCELLANEOUS
3p.m. - WCPX 4. Winter Sportscast
3:30 p.m. — WCPX 4. Winter Sportscat!
BASKETBALL
10 p.m. - WWNZ AM 1740). NBA. Orlando
Magic at Portland Trail Blarar* (L)
FOOTBALL
noon - W8ZS AM (1370). NFL. Pigskin
noon r WWNZ AM (740), NFL. NFL
Prsvlaw'
noon - WDBO AM (540). WPUL AM
(IM &gt; . WKIG AM IIMO). NFL. Mlnnesoto
Vikings at Tampa Bay Buccaneers. (L I
11:20 pm. - WWNZ AM (740). WTRR AM
(1*00). WNDB-AM (1150). NFL. Seatlle
Seahewk* at Miami Dorthln*. (L )
MISCELLANEOUS
11:04 p m. - W8ZS AM (1370). The Sports
F Inel/Sport* Overnight

Winter’s cooler conditions make it easier to catch really big bass
IJfCrinber, .January ami Feb­
ruary art’ my favorite months for
rak'lilng ^lant bass. Air and
water lt’iii|M'ratures have rooted
and blf&lt; l»av* art- on the move as
they fallen uo for (he rigors of
s|iuwtiilng.
Catt'hlug big bass Is highly
speelulljed. and there Is a world
of dlffercntt* Iwlween bass fish­
ing and fishing for big bass. A
few huge Im is are caught by
accident, hui when 1 go Imss
fiHhlng. I am tlshlng s|H-rittiullv
for bass over 10|xitmds
One of my battle strategies for
talehlng looker bass is to eoneenirate my elforth In big fish
areas
ll all sounds pretty easy, but
like many tilings In life, there's u
lot m ore to this sim p listic
uppriMrh lh.ni rn e rts the eye. ll
has laken me years and years to
build up a “ milk run'* of big fuss

honey holes. I have found these
spots by spending many hours
on th e w a te r p ro b in g and
searching. These special holes
are rare, and I am very secretive
about their exact locations.
Monster bass are very selective
when choosing a "h om e" and It
must be perfect in every way.
Such a place must have easy
access lo deep water, a plentiful
food supply und ample security.
Once you have found such a
spot, ll is possible lo catch giant
bass i here year after year. After
one moves out or ts caught,
other big fish will move In. I
have places In lakes and rivers
that have hern producing bass
over 10 pounds for many years.
It Is obvious to me that there Is
som ething about these areas
(hat s p e c ific a lly appeals to
oversized bass.
The St. John's River still has
plenty of big bass, hut the

catch most o f my 10-plus pound
fish around the full moon period.

F lt N I N O

F IS H IN G FO R E C A S T
George from G e o rg e 's B a lt
an d T a c k le wants to remind

JIM
SHUPE

area anglers In call 322-03-10
after store hours fpr a recorded
fishing forecast. George updates
this forecast dally, so It contains
a lot o f valuable fishing Informa­
tion.

pressure Is getting heavlrr by
ihe day. For this reason. I prefer
to fish Ihe river from Pu/zlc
Lake south to Lake Winder. This
stretch o f river Is less crowded
and has plenty of big fish.
Make II a point to read next
week’s column for additional
pointers on how to catch bruiser
bass.
S H U P E '8 SCO O P

Statistics bear out that the
majority of big bass are caught
in late whiter or early spring. 1

Count on specks In L a k e
M onroe In front of the power
plant. T h e 1-4 b r id g e und
nearby r a ilr o a d t re s t le arc
always good for specks, ulong
with sunshines and striped bass
As water temporalurrs cool,
look for more bats to move Into
the w arm er w aters o f the
W ek iva i .tve wild shiners Will
Is- the lu st halt for big bass In
a re a la k a * ami In the riv e r
Look for some good action
around the O steen B rid ge with

lots of Bpecks In
and around (he m o n t h o f the
o ld r tv r r ch annel. Bass will be
hitting in Lak e M onroe and in
a re a s o f ru n n in g w n tsr In the
river. Bream and catfish can be
found In good numbers around

Inshore r t a fa and w re c k s with

M a rin s Isle.

the colder weather. These fish
will remain In shallower water
until late spring. When seas
permit, sallflah. scattered king
mackerel, wahoo and a few
dolphin will be present In 100
feet o f water on out.

The cold weather will put a
damper on the snook fishing at
S e b a stia n In lat, but flounder
will Improve with each passing
rold front. Bach year, flatfish to
14 pounds are caught on finger
mullet In this popular Inlet.
Swanns of blucflsh will
also
Invade the Inlet with the cold
weather. Redflsh will also be
present, but it may be hard to
catch one under the 27-Inch slot
limit.
C a p t a i n J a c k at P o r t
C a n a v e ra l said lhal there will
he some fantastic bottom fishing
for grouper and snapper on

Inside th e P e r t , look for
flounder, blucflsh, sheepshead
and. a few mangrove snapper.
Trout and redflsh In the
and S a n a a * r lv s r a w ill be
moving back and forth from
deep to shallow water, depend­
ing upon the cold fronts.
Giant sheepshead will be pres­
ent In good numbers at the tip
o f th « n o rth Jottleo at P on e*
In let. Live shrimp on the bot­
tom fished with a small weight
will produce. Blucflsh, drum,
redflsh and flounder will also be
hitting around these popular
fettles for I h e next few months.

�Sanford HsraM, Sanford, Florida - 8undar. Otemtm 16, 1 9 9 0 -Be

Lake Howell-

Wrestlingl m im m t m

(h eir season record at 3-2.
Johnson scared six points o ff
offensive rebounds in the third
quarter as L a te Howe!) started
to take control o f the fa m e
whiled Thom as hit two lum p
shots in a row in the fourth
quarter to help the Silver H aw ks
m aintain the lead as the Ram a
tried to rally.
"It waa fo o d to ace Roger ptay
w ell.” said Lake Howell coach
Steve Kohn. "H e ’s real Im por­
tant because he’s the only b ig
kid HMD in school. And Ryan hit
those two Jumpers down the
stretch that 1 fell w oo the gam e.
If he doesn’t make those ju m ­
pers. I think the gam e goes right
dow n to the wire.
Behind Merthie, HantcUn an d
John Roche, Lake Mary Jumped
out to a 10-2 advantage at the
start o f the gam e and increased
the advantage to 10, 90-10. at
the end o f the flmt period.
T h e Silver Hawks got even.
32-32, on a 3-potnter by Joe
Sm ith w ith : 12 left in the second
stanza, but Merthie gave
M ary a 34*32 halftime
w hen he nailed an 1 8 -fboter w ith
4)1 left.
Lake Howell took Its first lead
o f the game, 36-34. with 6:57 left
In th e th ird q u a rte r w h e n
Johnson tipped In his own m iss.
T h e Hawks pushed the advan­
tage to seven , 46-30. on a
three-pointer by Kohn but Lake
M ary fought back and o n ly
trailed by one, BO-49, going into
the last eight minutes.
Kohn took control of the gam e
early in the fourth quarter an d
again gave the Hawks a sevenpoint lead, BO-52, on a steal an d
a lay-up off a 360-degree m ove

)

M ti. term s : tan n.
«tecOMWS&gt;4X B rw nlM i. S K ta ll J
U f f W t M l I r u M p U M * Tstefr tv
iw a

I Draw* IB
"T h e y know what they have to do to get
to
to that level," aald Batchelor, refcrrt
the lessons the Rams learned In their

losses to W in ter Park. Sarasota. W est
O range an d Lake Brantley. "W e know how
w e m easure u p against the best o f the state.
"I w aa m ore afraid o f going 4-0 than 0-4. If

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waa played by both team s.”
First-year Lake Howell Coach
Anatote Popovich agreed.

up with eight saves. Patriot
fe Josh Kaye had four saves,
h team took taro com er
kicks.
Sem inole w on ’t play again
until Jan. 4. when the Tribe goes
toD eLand.

A th le tic C o m p e titio n ). L a k e
Brantley will play at Lym an

the 78th minute.

On Saturday. B o b Hartmann
gave Lake Brantley a 1-0 lead
seven minutes before halftime,
■ co rin g on M u r ra g u l’a firs t
a s sist. Four m ln u te a la te r.
Johnston made ft 2-0 , R ob Fuller
picking up the assist,

“ I thought It w aa a
.w e ll-p la y e d g a m e b y
team s." aald Popovich, "ft could
have gone either w ay. W e played
well as a team. It
team effort."

Same, Silver Hawke Me
LA K E M ARY - Brian Codulo
o f Lake Mary and Lake Howell’s
T ed Lane each scored a second
h alf goal Friday afternoon as the
Ram a and H aw ks played to a 1-1
tie in a Sem inole Athletic Con­
fe re n c e b o y s ’ so c c e r gam e
played at Lake Mary’s Don T.
Reynolds Stadium.
" I f you throw out the first half,
the second half waa a really
excellent m atch ." said Lake
M ary Coach L a n y McCorkle.
"T h ere w asn’t much going ei­
ther w ay In first h a lf In the
second half, a lot of good soccer

Johnston scored again in the
62nd minute, Joae M arm nr get­
ting credit with the assist. Marrone then capped the scoring
with a goal o f h is own tw o
m ln u te a la te r a n M u rra g u i
handed out his second assist.

N ow 3-3-1 (1-2 vs. Seminole

R ob Kenney m ade i
on the nine shots o n goal that
Gainesville got off. B y com pari­
son. Lake Brantley took 14 shots
on goal, forcing the Purple H ur­
ricanes’ goalie to m ake three
saves. Each team h a d four cor­
ner kicks.

^M AJO R BRAND TIRES AT
K MART S EVERYDAY LOW PRICES.

Lake BrantleyIB

Bishop Moore Tuesday
at 7 p.m. while Seminole w ill
face the Lvman/West Orange
winner on Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Seminole came from 13 points
down with 4 minutes left to tie
the game 70-70 on a three-point
Jumper by Robert Redding with
48 seconds left. But the Patriots
ran the clock down until Vallery
d ro v e Into Sem inole’s C a rlo
White. The call could have been
a charge or a block but the call
w e n t against Sem inole and
Vallery went to the line for the
fateful free throws.
Semtnote’s Jeff Hail waa \he
big man during J»e comeback,
■coring all seven of his points
and blocking two shots.
"Overall, we did real w e ll."
a al d S e m i n o l e coach O r e g
Robinson. "T h e kids did a great
Job o f coming bock. Our Inexperlence Is hurting us. The last
three games, w e’ve been tied
with a minute left. But the team
has kept a good attitude and if
the young aids come along. I
think we’ll be all right."
Lake Brantley used Its superi­
or size at guard to great advan­
tage with Trevls Certo tossing In
a game-high 31 points and Craig
Brock hitting far 11. Vallery and
Lazar also were in double figures
with 12 and 10 points, respec­
tively.

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In ttta history of sports, only
ons man has svsr bssn both a
major taaguo bsssbstl managsr
AND tho hsad coach of a Na­
tional Football Lssgus tssm...
That amazing doubts waa ac­
complish'd by Hugo Bszdsk,
who mansgsd ths Pittsburgh
Ptratss In big lssgus bsssbstl In
1917, ’18 and ’19, and waa hsad
coach o f Clsvsisnd In ths Na­
tional Football Lssgus In 1997
WKT3S.

R edding paced S em in ole’ s
balanced scoring attack with 14
points, followed by White (11),
Kerry Wiggins (10), J J . W iglns. Sean W ashington and
Lesley O’Neil (eight points each)
and Hall (seven).

S

Th e game waa held up for 40
minutes In the third quarter
when Brock tripped over. J.J.
W iggins and hit his head on the
floor. Brock was held In Florida
Hospital South for observation
with a concussion.

Amazingly, In ths 4 Supsr
Bowls that Jos Montana has
playtd, hs has nsvsr thrown an
intsrcspi ion.. in all, Montana has
thrown 122 psssss In 4 Supsr
Bowls, and no Intarcaptlons.

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tor m a n y c a n a n d light truck*

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m any U S. cart. Imports
a n d light trucks extra.

2. Install 1 Moforvator oil liltar (tor
many cars)
3. Chassis lubrication (liftings astro)
4 labor inducted
H W Y . 17-62 S A N F O R D
9S 1*7900

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Ssnu metallic podi eitra

VNOHROET

Ss'lo Price

As law As...
^% ^ ^ 0 7 corryou M o*
t e V s i l t Pricn

Arrestor muffler, m a n y I

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cars, light (rucks.
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49 — Sanford HareW, Sanford. Florida - Sunday, D scm b tr 13. 1 « 0

Business
Area home sales exceed U.S. rate

IN B R I E F
Silts decline brings layoff*
LAKE MARY — Stxty-two engineers, aaai ibtera and other
workers art being laid o ff at N C R Corp. aa a
In computer sales.
The announcement brings to 130 t h e ___
employees cut at the Lake Mary plant since July, c
Lost week. American T elephone R Telegraph Co., which la
trying to acquire NCR, announced a «*otw n
rraucuon of
3.000jobs, including teas than 100 In Florida.
The NCR cutbacks are not a result o f "th e A T &amp; T situation."
said NCR spokesman Mark FH ghety. " W e ta v e taken the
action simply because o f business conditions and
In
the personal computer m arket."

Pan Am adds Florida routs
DETROIT - Pan American W o rld A irw ays says It w M begin
dally no.i-stop service between Detroit Metro Airport and
Miami International Airport on Feb. 0.
The new service w ill be operated with W— fc»g 737-300
aircraft. Pan Am now offers 107 dally departures out o f Miami,
compared with 63 a year ago. Pan A m Express. It 's com m uter
service which began tmra-Florida service tn May, serves 11
destinations in Florida and the » * » ■ " « « t
of service Dec. 15 to Marsh Harbour and
Cay In the
Bahamas.

Growth viewed optimistically
MIAMI - South Florida's business comm unity Is guardedly
optimistic about Dade C o u n ty 's grow th and abtttty to
withstand s slumping national econom y, ncebrdfag to. The
Beacon Council's Annual Business Outlook Survey.
The fourth annual survey exam ined the attitude* o f 400
executives In Mlaml/Dade County. T h e results &lt;
last week to business and governm ental lenders at the 1
Council's Economic Outlook luncheon.
According to the survey. 53 percent o f the respondents
predicted that Dade County's econom y wtU remain stable or
show a modest upturn In 1901. w h ile 33 percent predicted I
growth and 14 percent aaw the national recession as a A
Dade's economy In 1991. Twenty-live percent o f t h i s _____
group predicted that the United States w ill experience a
recession In 1991.

Cat odor eliminator to bo introduced

i
3

BOCA RATON — InnoVet la c. repors that E m it Odor
Eliminator, a patented, unseen ted additive that eliminates eat
litter pan odor, will be Introduced nationally in February 1991.
The product Introduction la aim ed at the 38 ml’Uon U.S.
households that own 54 m illion eats, spending 3400 million
annually on cat litter. Enxtt ta a granular, biodegradable,
non-toxic and non-allergenlc product deaigned'to be added to
cat litter at the rate o f one u os. package for each 3-5 lbs. o f
litter. Consumer marketing o f Enxtt Odor Eliminator will
initially center on direct response, generating sales through
1-600 marketing and m agazine coupons. InnoVet. head­
quartered in Boca Raton, develops and markets animal
healthcare products.

Emarton h im Pupko, Clark
ALTAMONTE SPRINOS - Barbara Pupko and Lee Clark
have joined Emerson Realty G roup. Inc., aa new home mica
associates, sccordlng to Bob M o o n , chief .executive, officer.
Both Pupko and Clark have rejoined Emerson’s sales staff
alter briefly leaving to work for Spectrum Realty.
Pupko has been a realty, for seven years, five o f those as a
site salesperson for new home developments. She la a top ten
sales associate and a m em ber o f Emerson's Golden Eagle
Society for Realtors with o v er four million dollars In home
sales. In 1969 Pupko'a tales totaled 37.8 million.
Clark has been a realtor for nine years and a broker for seven.
He has been Emerson's south office sales associate o f the
month over 20 tim es for general real estate sales. Since
working at Emerson. Clark has been repaooslble for sales at a
number of new hom e developm ents Including St. Ives at
Orange Tree and Alm ond T ree Estates, both o f which have
been recognized as outstanding communities In the area o f
sales performance.
Both Pupko and Clark w ill continue to w ork In new home site
sales. Pupko Is responsible for sales at Bristol Park and Clark la
responsible for sales at Brentwood Chib, both o f which are In
southwest Orlando.
Emerson Realty Group. Inc. calls Itself Central Florida's
largest Independent real estate organization.

Tax specialist Long completes court*
LAKE MARY — T a x specialist Judith Long, ow ner o f
Diversified Business Financial Sendees. Incorporated, has
completed a two-day professional conference designed to
familiarize the professional w ith all new or revised tax laws
that will affect 1990 tax returns.
Held in Los Angeles, the conference featured seminars,
round-table discussions and presentations by tax experts, all
dealing with tax laws, tax forms, new regulations and recent
tax court decisions. All aspects o f the most current tax
legislation proposed by Congress also were covered.
The conference was presented by Trip le Check Income Tax
Service, the nation's second largest incom e tax preparation
company. Long's office is one o f some 350 tax offices In 43
states that are affiliated with Trip le Check.
The special educational sessions are held yearly. Immediate­
ly prior to the tax season.

W INTER PARK - Although
home sales activity in Orange
and Seminole counties dipped
slightly In October, the area’s
market continues to fare better
the rest o f the nation,
to the latest survey
by GotfAtlantic Title
’ o f Winter Park.
nattonaRy fell 3.5 percent to their
lowest levels tn eight years,
warranty deed activity for the
two-county market slipped only
1 percent, despite another strong
month b y Seminole County, the

GulfAUantic's survey reflecting
just th e activity o f the 34 title
insurance agencies and compa­
nies operating In the two-county
m a r k e t . W h i l e the s u r v e y
doesn't reflect all sales activity.
It d o c s serve a s a relia b le
barom eter of the marketplace.

TP

G u lfA tlan tlc title President
Dsn Wallace said tn the press
release there w ere a total of
2.352 warranty deeds posted In
Orange and Seminole in Octo­
ber. Just 26 few er than the
num bers recorded the previous
month.

Warranty deeds are the aco f sates
cepted i
volumei in the title Industry, with

For the fourth straight month.
Sem inole County surpassed the
1.000 mark, registering 1.025.

DPI Business Writer
ATLANTA — A small com ­
pany tn South Carolina la mak­
ing u new type of night-vision
goggle lor the military, which Its
Inventor stays will help correct
some of the problems that have
led to aircraft crushes and
fatalities tn Saudi Arabia.
Frank Witt, founder and presi­
dent ol Instrument Flight Re­
search Inc. In Cayce. S.C.. Just
outside Columbia, has been de­
veloping optical equipment for
the Defense Department since
1979,
The company's current project
Involves goggles that simulate
nighttime viewing conditions.
The goggles allow pilots to
undergo night- (light training
(luring daylight hours, said Witt,
who has been working on the
device fur about 10 years.
The goggles, which will be
markrtrd under the trademark
NITEI'AQ. weight 24 ounces and
arc nude from a substance like

plastic. Th ey also can be used tn
tanks, armored vehicles, tracks
and by ground combat units.
The goggles are being tested
by the military and could be
approved for production within
six months. WUt said. Several
other countries also are Interest­
ed In them.
If the Defense Departm ent
approves the g oggles and a
contract for thetr production.
WUt estimated first-year sales
could reach 35 million.
Witt said safety Is the goggles’
biggest selling point.
"Oui goggles will eliminate
most of the safety hazards en­
countered during night-vision
training flights, w hich have
become a very controversial sub­
ject due to what many experts
feel are excessive looses o f lives
and costly aircraft.” W itt said.
"Standard night-vision gog­
gles have various limitations
that one must train for.” he said.
"It's a good device, but there
have been numerous accidents
that many people felt were the
result o f the training process.

Through October, warranty
deed activity in the two-county
market totaled 23.446, up over 9
percent from the 21,704 deeds
recorded in the comparable
period last year. There were a
total o f 26.665 deeds recorded tn
I960.
"Even though overall activity
has cooled off the past taro
months, are are arell on pace to
smash last year’s record fig­

u r e s ." s a y s W a lla c e . " T h e
Mkteaot situation and a general
malaise about the economy have
co n trib u ted to the local
slowdown , but Central Florida's
housing outlook rem ains far
more optimistic than some o f the
country's other major m arkets."
Individually. GulfAtlantlc once
again ted all agencies and com ­
panies operating in the twocounty market with a 12.69
p ercen t m a rk et sh are, o u t­
d is ta n c in g th e secon d-place
company by more than 2 full
percentage points. It was the
22nd straight month that the
privately owned company has
held the top position.

.. .. Showcase
building
underway
SANFORD — Construction o f
the 1991 HBA Showcase Home
I t wen underway at Lake Forest,
an N TS community located west
o f Sanford.
R. J. Thom as Construction.
Inc. Is building the Showcase
Home which will be complete for
the 1991 Parade o f H om es,
March 10-24. T h e Showcase
Home la an annual HBA m em ber
effort and highlight o f the Home
Builders A ssociation o f MidFlorida Parade o f Homes, ac­
cording to a press release.
The two-story design o f James
C. Lucia creates nearly 6.000
square feet o f unique livin g
space set across the lake from
the Lake Forest clubhouse, pool
and recreational complex. Th e
living room, family room, kitch­
en. breakfast nook, master suite,
g a m e r o o m and a d j o i n i n g
porches w ill take advantage of
the lake view through an abun­
president; Jos Davidson, assistant airport director;
Sytvssitr Chano, of ths Greater Sanford Chamber
dant use o f glass.
and Harry Lawrence, vice president of Jett-Alre.
o f Commsrea Welcoming Commute* (twft); Stsvs
A classic pool, planters, a
Cook*, airport director, Tony Russi, chamber
lighted trellis, and native Florida
'plant materials are Included in
the landscape design plan o f
Post, B u ckley, Schuh A
J e r n lg a n . Inc., la n d s ca p e
T h ro u g h Its headquarters
picture star Clint Eastwood. In
architect o f the 1991 Showcase
addition to an ultra-modern operation at the Central Florida
Harald staff writer
Home.
cockpit control system, the craft Regional Airport facility. JettA private outdoor area off the
Alre
is
expected
to
help
bring
also
sported
reclining
swivel
SANFORD - Mayor Bettye
. w l U . Include a
Sm ith" cut the ribbon Friday chairs, a television set and a many new visitors to thtsare* of;
fountain, spa, and terrace.
Central
Florida.
VCR.
afternoon, to officially welcome
one o f the city’s newest busi­
nesses. Jett-Alre Aviation, locat­
ed on the northern aide o f the
Central Florida Regional Airport,
next to the 8,000major runway.
In ceremonies emceed by Dave
Farr. Executive Director o f the
Greater Sanford Cham ber o f
Commerce. Jett-Alre President
Bob Dose explained the opera­
tion o f the aviation facility. Dose
was assisted by other officers of
the corporation.
Jett-Alre is a corporate aircraft
service, the first o f Its kind in the
Central Florida area specifically
built fo r corporate a via tion .
Through a membership plan, it
offers such bonuses as specially
H
arranged flights to cities not
U
If s a very special time
"•v
served by major airlines, dis­
counts on aviation fuel, gourmet
.it
forth© whole family!
catering and aircraft cleaning, as
•A
3
w ell as many other aircraft
Celebrate your child's
*i&gt;
services.

Sanford welcomes Jett-Aire

F IR S T C H R IS T M A S
...A TiME To CeUbRATE
iN t Ne Sanford Herald

The Jett-Alre fleet currently
consists o f Sabre liners. Lear Jets
and Turbo Prop aircraft. During
the grand opening‘ Friday, city
and airport authority officials as
well as other dignitaries had the
opportunity to not only leant of
the Jett-Alre operation, but In­
spect the aircraft that were on
display.
The one aircraft that drew the
moat attention was a sleek Lear
Jet. formerly owned by motion

Firm aids military’s night vision
■y STAN DARDIN

although the figures were 3
percent down from the 1.061
recorded tn September. Activity
In Orange County remained
unchanged, with 1.327 deeds
recorded in both October and
September.

r a t h e r t h a n t he g o g g l e s
themselves. We believe that our
goggles, which can be used
during the day when the train­
ing pilot has full vision, will
eliminate the mid-air accidents.”
Not only could NITEPAQ elim­
inate the need for training at
night. Witt said, but If a pilot
gets Into trouble, the Instructor
can alter the goggles Instantly to
give the pilot a clear view o f the
ground and Instrument panel.
T o properly train a pilot at
night. W ilt said, there must be
sufficient moonlight or starlight,
and weather conditions must
meet certain standards, which
m akes scheduling o f nighttraining flights a real problem.
"But with our goggles, night
training can be conducted In
daylight and under any kind of
weather conditions.'' he said.
"T h e goggles have an electrooptical system which duplicates
what the pilot sees while flying
at night. And they are capable of
sim ulating mist. rain. anow.
w in d -d riv e n s p r a y and
explosions."

first Christmas In this
newspaper. Send a
photo of your child or
grandchild along with a
special message an d we'll
publish It In our Sunday
paper on D ece m b er 23.

H

W
.1/
JA

%t*
M

DeodNne*. December 16th
Coth $13.00 visa/m c Accepted
Fill out coupon and mall to the
(to h a v* photo returned,
SANFORD HERALD, Ckmtfled Dept.
pteos* provide a stamped,
•effaddreaed envelope.)
P.O. Box 1657, Sanford. Florida 32772
322-2611

to

1

BABY'S FIRST CHRISTMAS

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Sanford HsreM, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Oacamoar 16, 1690 — M

Perfect gifts

Legal Notice*

Saddam Huoaein could wind
u p u n d e r y o u r t r e e t h is
Christmas.
One of the hottest-aellinf nov­
elty gifts o f the season Is a
Saddam voodoo doll complete
with Instructions about the best
tim e to prick the "Beast o f
B aghdad" — like when you're
filling up your fa s tank.
The 10-inch-tall doll costs
about 99.96 and. according to Its
pack aging , represents "y o u r
chance to stick it to Saddam like
h e's stuck It to u s."
‘‘It's a great frustration relief
Item for people who have sweet-'
hearts, fam ily and friends aw ay
from hom e particip atin g In
Operation Desert Shield this
C h r is tm a s ," sa id M ax C o lclasure. president of Laid Back
Enterprises, the Oklahoma City
com pany that developed the
Item.
W ith the threat of war in the
Middle East and a pall over the
economy, stress-relief items o f
m a n y k in d s a r e p r o v in g
especially popular this holiday
seaaon. said Beth Schlanaky.
spokeswom an for Spencer Gifts,
a nationwide retail chain based
In Atlantic City, N J .
T o anyone w ho has been laid
o ff recently, consider giving a
"B oos Tear-Apart Stress Doll.”
Because Its appendages are at­
tached with Velcro, you can rip
the head, arm s and legs right off
this beady-eyed captain of In­
dustry. priced at about 91B.95.
It's m anufactured by Blue
Rldge/The Item Co., of Sky land,

^Y o u 're a dope;
stupid jerk; you're an
idiot; drop dead.j
W .C , w hich also m akes tearapart dolls fashioned after a
referee, um pire, golfer, lawyer,
and T V -bo g — "th e person in
your fam ily w ho w on't let go o f
the rem ote control." President
Robert Capps said.
But the final word In strrsarellef this season la the “ Last
W o rd ." a voice-synthesis gadget
shaped like a beeper that stores
four savings on a microchip.
Freaa the beeper and hear a
v o ic e a s g r a t in g a s B a r t
Slm paon'a utter. "Y o u 're a dope:
stupid Jerk; you’re an Idiot; drop
dead."
T h at's the G rated version.
The X -rated version stores four
unprintable Insults and Is out­
selling Its tam er cousin — both
priced at about 916.90 — by
4 - t o - l, a a ld T e re s a B o y le ,
spokeswom an for Banning En­
terprises, the Farm lngdale. N.Y..
com pany that m akes the pro­
ducts.
"Everybody has gone en u y
over It. said Boyle, w ho pre­
dicted a m illion Final W ords
would be sold by Christmas.
"B u t the people down on W all
Street, the Investm ent-banker
types, are especially w ild about

If you're looking for an item for
the golfer In your life whose
handicap w ill never resemble his
or her shoe size, new this year is

a
" R u b b e r D u ffe r S tre s s
W edge." This 925 item is a
pliable g o lf clu b that fitfu l
Itnksters can wrap around trees
or bend over their knees.
Tw o gifts targeted for office.bound athletes are the 999.95
"H e ro H oop s" and the 925
"W aste Basket." Both are from
Charlotte, N.C.- baaed Express
Yourself Inc.
Hero Hoops attaches to a pole
or a door, include* an electronic
time clock and storekeeper and
cheers, applauds and says "good
shot” when a player sinks one.
The Waste Basket attaches to a
trash can and makes a ruckus,
thanks to an electronic housing,
after a shot Is made.
Be aware that gag gifts know
no age limits.
The "O ld Age Combat Hat and
Survival K it" Is a 914.95 Item
meant for any age-defiant senior
citizen. The cam ouflage hat
cornea with an array o f goods
Btllched to Its aides — including
aaplrtn. denture cleaner and
wrinkle cream — to help battle
the ravages o f time.
And for that woman you know
who has yet to find the Ideal
man. you can give her one this
Christmas for about 939.95.
The "Ideal M an" doll, devised
by television talk show host
S a lly J ea a y R a p h a e l, la a
brown-haired, blue-eyed Yup­
pie-type who'll tell you. " I re­
spect your career; you relax and
I'll do the dishes; you inspire
m e" and five other expressions
you'll likely never hear in real
lire.

It's available from the Anatom­
ical Chart Co. o f Skokie. 111.

Martinez, Chiles sue PSC unit
UnltDd Prats Intsmat tonal________
TALLAH ASSEE - Gov. Bob
Martinez and Gov.-elect Lawton
Chiles teamed up Friday to pick
• constitutional fight with the
Legislature over who will get to
nam e two m em ber* of the Public
Service Commission.

Chiles and Martinez filed suit
In the Florida Supreme Court to
b lo c k the. PS C N om in a tin g
Council from filling two vacan­
cies on the board that regulates
Florida utilities.
T h e n o m in a tin g c o u n c il,
which Is appointed by the House
speaker and Senate president,
was preparing to fill the vacan­
cies on Friday morning. But the
high court blacked any action
and gave council members until
Dec. 24 to answer the complaint
raised by Chiles and Martinez.
No final ruling was expected
u n til the n ew year. C h iles
assumes office Jan. 8.
" T o allow non-clected officials
to appoint a public officer would

b e to c ir c u m v e n t c l e a r l y
established Intent to make a
public officer responsive to the
p e o p le ." the Martlnez-Chiles
petition said.
“ There is no other example In
the Florida Constitution or in the
Florida statutes which provides
for a public officer to be ap­
pointed by a body or person not
elected by the people."
Under Florida law. the gover­
n o r c h o o s e s fr o m a m o n g
n o m in e e s s e le c te d b y th e
nom inating council In filling
vacancies on the PSC.
But the law also gives the
council the power to g o ahead
and make any appointments If
the governor falls to act within
two months. The deadline for
filling the current vacancies was
Dec. I.
Martinez Ignored the deadline,
saying he wanted the incoming
governor to have a chance to
shape the PSC. He had earlier
announced that he would back
any challenge to the law.
M artin ez and C h iles both

argue the arrangement violates
the constitutional separation of
powers. If a .legislatively ap­
pointed panel is permitted to fill
PSC vacnacies. Chiles told re­
porters. the Legislature could
conceivably assert control over
the appoin tm en t o f agen cy
chiefs answerable to the gover­
nor.
" I w ant to see a stron g
Legislature. I always fought for
t h a t w h e n I w a s In t he
Legislature." Chiles said. “ Now
that I'm going to have a chance
to be governor. I want to see us
have a strong governor.”
Among the eight finalists for
the PSC Jots are two Incum­
bents. Gerald Gunter and Frank
M e ss ersm lth . w h ose t er ms
expire Jan. 1. Another finalist is
Tallahassee lawyer Craig Kiser,
whose brother. Sen. Curt Kiser.
R-Palm Harbor, sits on the
nominating council.
C hiles said he thinks the
whole selection process should
begin all over again.

Ltflil Notjgflg

Ltflffl Nollctt

Ltflil NotlctB

Leflal N o tlcf

MOTICI OS
PICTITKM/i MAMS
Static* M hereby given that I
am a w t r i to buslnisi at taf
W. M 4M. Suita «X Lregweed
u m . Ianwwa Caunty. Flat Ma
unSw i s PicW i n Mama ¥
PORI CL I AMI Si. ant Wat I

MOTICSOP
FICTITIOUS MAMS
Nsttca la hanky pivan Wat aw
an snpapad in kualnaaa at Sulla

IN TN I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I IIOMTIIMTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND POM
SIMINOLR COUNTY.
•TATBOS FLORIDA.
Caaa Na.i to HM CAM P

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EISHTIENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NOi
W-tIU-CA-lAL
CARTER JT SAVINGS BANK.
INC
Plaintiff,
v*.
RAYMOND W. WHITEHURST,
at at..
Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION
To: RAYMOND W. WHITE­
H U R S T end C Y N T H IA
WHITEHURST. Ms wlto. net
known to be dead or alive. AND
A L L HEIRS. DEVISEES,
GRANTEES. ASSIGNEES,
L IE N O R S . C R E D IT O R S .
TR U STE E S AND OTHER
CLAIMANTS BV. THROUGH,
UNDER OR AGAINST THE
DEFENDANTS. RAYMOND W.
WHITEHURST end CYNTHIA
WHITEHURST. Ms wlto
Residence: UNKNOWN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIED Wei an action to foreclose
a mortgage on tha tallowing
daterlbad property In SEMI
NOLE Caunly. Florida, to wit:
The South I tool el the East IS
to«t of Let ISA and to* South 1
toot at Lei I4S and vacated allay
on the South and the East 11 feet
el Lei ISA and all of Lot ISJ
(toss to* read). MM. LORD'S
FIRST AODITION TO CITRUS
HEIGHTS, according to Wa plat
toaraof a* recorded In Plat Book
X Pag* 17. ot tha Public Record*
ot Samlnala County. Florida,
ha* boon Iliad against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written datonte*. II any.
upon GRACE ANNE GLAVIN.
ESQUIRE. IS40 Tuakpwllle Rd .
Peal Chile# Boa 1/74 Wlntor
Spring*. FL 7770* J77A on or
betore the tto day of January.
IPtl. and III* the original wlW
the Clark ot Wia Circuit court
•itoer before service upon the
Plaintiffs Attorney or Immadi
atoly thereafter, otherwise, a
Default will be entered against
you tor tha rail#! damandad In
tn* Complaint or Petition
WITNESS my hand and seal
ol tois Court on this SW day ol
December, two
(Court Stall
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By. Cecelia V Ektrn
Deputy Clark
Publish December *. is. u. so.
iwa
DEA 70

w m m w tupiwr

» tw Wa Clark at Wa Circuit
Court. lemlneto Caurrty. Fierida. In accarSanca ertfk Wa
Previa)*** at Wa PWiiiaw
Mama UaMaa. Ta-WM: Section
■SMP PMriSa UaMaa IM7.
AWariVKa
PuMMi: MaaamSar H t &gt;
camSar t ft M. 1*W
D IZ IU
NOTKSOP
PICT IT lOOl MAMS
Matica M hanky p*v*n Wat I
am engagta w bualneee at M7
Waklva Spring* OS.. Sulla Ml.
Altamanta ipringA Fla. X77T,
SamInal* County. Florida. under
Wa Pictmaua nama at CLASS
ACT M 006LI AMO ISCOSTS.
and tool I intend to register aatd
nama with Wa Sacralary at
Slata. Tallahaaaaa. P lan ts In

m . r n Wad S R 414. Langweed, PL 117S*. Samlnala
Caunty, Flarlda, undtr tha
Flcfltlnua Nama at N IW AV
CO., and Wat aw Inland la
Clark at Wa Circuit Caurt, Sam
mats Caumy, piarida. in accwdinca with Wa Pravlalana at
Wa PktWaua Nama Statutes.
Ta-WIt: Ssctlan MSIP Flarlda
Statulsa )PSf.
F radarlek S. Nawman
Linda D. Naarman
Publish: Navamkar a a Da
cim biU P. tAlPtP
DEZ-117

IMTMI CIRCUIT COURT
O P T M IIM ttT IIN T N
JUOtCIAL CIRCUIT
OP FLORIDA.
IN AMD POM
SSMINOLI COUNTY
O IN IR A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASS NO SP-MU-CA-lf-SP

SOVRAN BANK, aa Cualsdlan,

Ta-WIt:

PlaintId

O. Susanna liman
Publish: Dacamhar 14. IMS
DEAIJJ
NOTICS OP
FICTITIOUS MAMS
Natlea la hanky (Ivan Wat I
I in huatasaa at m
Waklva Springs RA fM l. Lana
weed. PL J i m . Samlnala
Caunly. P lari da. unOar Wa
P lent lava nama at TOTAL
CHARM, and Wat I M a d la
Sacntary at Stats. Tatlahaaaas.
Florida. In actardanca art* (ha
pravlalana at tha Pktlilaua
Nama Ststvtsa. TaWIt: Sadler
• u s t P NrIda Statute* IW7.

OCA 114

1A IP

MOTtCIOP
FICTITIOUS MAMS
Nattca la hanky (Han Wat aw
an anfapad m kuaiami at xuo
S. HtpAuey if n. CaaaaMarry.
PL Ufpf. Samlnala Caunly.
Flarlda. refer Wa Fkimswa
nama at CHKNYN’S HAIR
and Wat aw Inland la
MuTfgry P M M t il
Flarlda. In
pravlalana at Wa Pictilisut
Nama Ststvtsa. To Wit Sactien
MS m Flarlda tlatutss lfO
OWP *M Tf RPRISf S. INC.
Brian M. La*. Registered

u. taw
DFA US

va.
RICHARD J. McORANI, at ua..
at at.,
Oatandanla.
NOTICS OP ACTION
TO: M. P. B. SALES. INC.

Cajsnavia. Nsw York
YOU A R I NOTIFIED Wat an
ad Ian Mr Fandsaura at Mod
an Wa following described
II. Dsar Sun. Unit IA
to Wa plat Waract aa
! ln Plat Soak it. Page*
to and PP. Public Racarda at
Samlnala County. Flarlda
you a n reqilred to larva a copy
at yuur wrlttan detente*. It any.
to It. on Shipptrd Fakar. At
tar nay (or Plalnlllt. whose
sddroaa la Sulla WP. ISIS
Madrupa Avanua. Coral Gablet.
Flarlda. H IM an or hater*
January II. IPtl and Ilia Itia
arlpinal atlW Wa Clark at Wit
Caurt aithar baton aervka an
Plamtltr* attorney or immadi
a
datault will ha entered agatnat
yaw tor Wa relief damandad in
™ Cufrif! #ln?
WITNESS my hand and Wa
aaal at Ihto Court wit aw day at
(S IA LI
MARYANNS MORSE
As Clark alWaCaud
Sy ItoaWar Srunnar
Aa Oaputy Clark
~
P. IA ZL Mb
OEAfS

Flarlda Bar Na i MPNP
FIRST FID SRAL SAVINGS
SANK tormarly known a*
STANDARDFIDSRAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plaint Ift,
y*.
GARY M. HARSTAD. If living,
at ua. at at.
Defendant.
• NOTICS OP ACTION
STATE OP FLORIDA
TO: OARV M. HARSTAD. It
living and DEBRA HARSTAD.
Ma WIN. II living. Including any
unknown apowaa at aald Dolan
dints II alWsr has remarried
and II el War or beW el sold
Defendant* a n deceased, Weir
nape d ive unknown heir*, da­
vit***, grantoea. assignees,
creditors. Iloners and trustee*,
and all other persona claiming
by. through, under or agalntl
Wa named Defendant*.
Whoa* resident* It unknown.
YOU ARE NOTIFIED Wat an
action to toredea* a mortgage
an Wa tel lowing property In
Seminole County. Florida:
LOT I. BLOCK C. COUNTY
CLUB HEIGHTS, UNIT I.
ACCOSOING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK IS. PAGE PA IN
THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORI
DA.
ha* bean tiled against you and
PAUL A. ROGGIOand BONNIE
M ROGGIO. hit wlto. THE
U N I T E D S T A T E S OF
AMERICA. STATE OF FLORI
0A. DEPARTMENT OF REV
ENUE and you era required to
tarv* a copy el your written
defenses. If any. to II on.
JOSEPH M. PAN IE LLO .
ESQUIRE, Plaintiffs attorney
whea* address It:
Jtl N Franklin Siraat. Sulla
m e. Tampa. Florida M*M
an or before to* llth day el
January. 1PPI. and III* in*
arlpinal wlW the Clark at hut
Court aithar before aorvlc* an
Plaintiffs attorney or Immadi
atoly IharealSar: otherwise a
default will be entered against
you far to* reflet demanded in
to# Complaint or Petition
DATED on wit SW day el
December. IPS*
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
SY: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December P. IA IX A
IPM
OEA4P

o

United

CLASSIFIED ADS

OP TWO EtOffTIINTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN A M POM

Balm for a society’s stressed out denizens
United Press Intemeuonai

Ltgal N ottet
Sffminol*

Orlando •Winter Park

3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 _________________ 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3
______________ I CAMP
Hem# Ipvtogi of America, P A ,

CASE NOkfDtffP-CA-M-L
BUM. INC.

John T. Olan and Mery LaCreta
Otre,hto wlto. Met.

PSJ ALTAMONTE INN. LTD-

MOTtCIOP
FOMECtOEUSE SALE
NOTICE IS H IR IO V 0IVEN
Wat pursuant to* Final Judy

HOURS

CLERK'S

WM penult to 4

Gee* Na fbaag CA up of w*

IwMggRta
the Samlnala County Courthavaa. is Isn Sa^—^l, In f l^i^ffa
County, PlarlOa at t t : « o'clock
AXL an flwiMM Sap ol January,
prepsttj^ as « | NrW In gold

I towtt:

L a i SE , H o d

C.

SWEETWATER OARS, oc
cerfeng M Wg Mat Wareaf. aa
recerfed hi PMOaMi 14 Pagao
I ) red I t PukMc MotwSo aI
tarnWafaCauMy, Flgrtfe.

m

N0TIC1 IS HEREBY GIVEN

FUtof Jidpi' silt *7
refund bs in
CRUM in NM Ctnutt Caret et toe
E l»toreto JudkIM Circuit. M
and Nr Sumlnre* County. Fieri
S A I wM MS e l puktlc eedSre to
Mb N p s d Mddur Nr creh at
top weal front dear at the
Ciurto n w to the City at terv
h rA SamlnuN County, PtortdA
at toe User ■I ii;MM am . re
Jreuury X IPtl, tout curtain
psrcul at nut prepsrty de“ 11n IMdMt " A " pNadtod
BXtttBfT-A"
A PORTION OP THE POL
LOW1NO:
^Bt^jn 1AP toot le a l at ^toe

Pahn Lake Caurt. Lanp

wood. FtorMunm

Tigatoir with all Interest

pi^aity and m and M: (a) ah
cerements and rtant* at sany
I taruafi and (kl an

thereon. Including. JSut not

otoetoar ar net ghyv
F I W ta Wo lanS ar any

drape* ait# drapery 'raJa,

I* Hwfl mWnffH 9H|
la ki aWired ft and fa
ba pert al Wa real preparty; and
tc) Ml water and wafer hghta
(whether ar net appurtamnt)
such water ar wafer right*,
ownenhlp of which alMctt said
prapsrt, i and Id) toe rents.
Income, Issues and profits of all
pruparty.
DATED Wit 4W day al Dacamber, ires
mmryamwmorm
Clerk al We Circuit Court
By: Janel.Jaapwk
Dreuty Clark
Pukltah: December P. IA. Iffk
DEA-47

IN TNB CIRCUIT COURT
POR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
PLOMIOA
PRORATE DIVISION
FMaNemkarfMtPCP
IN RE: ESTATE OP
DONNA YVONN WHITE
FORMAL NOTICE
I V PUBLICATION
TO: UNKNOWN NATURAL
FATHER OP DONNA YVONN
WHITE
AOORESSUNKNOWN
YOU ARE NOTIFIID that a
Petition far DETERMINATION
OF BENEFICIARIES he* bean
tltod In Wl* court. You are
required to III* your written
datone** to to# petition rtto to*
dark al tola caurt and fa serve a
copy thereof net later Wan
January IA IPtl. an petitioner's
attorney, whea* name and.
KENNETH M. I I A N E .
ESQUIRE
MSS S. Highway 17Pi
Ceaseibarry. FLM707
(407)1141111
If you fall to do IA judgment
may bo entered In due court*
upon We petition.
WITNESS my hand and to*
seal el (Ms court on December 4.
IMP.
(SEAL I
MARYANNE MORSE
A* Clark *1 tha Caurt
By Reaamery Hamilton
Aa Deputy Clerk
Publish: December P. 14. Iff*
DEA 71

INTNE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE l(TH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
SIMINOLR COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NQ **-M74CA-l4P
A SCO FIRST FUNDING, INC..
* Florid* corporal ton.
Plaintiff,
JOSEPH W ATKINS, d/b/a
JOE'S BAR 4 PACKAGE and
S T A T E OF F L O R I D A .
DIVISION OF ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES AND TOBACCO,
NOTICE OP SA LI
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Wei to* undersigned aa Clark at
Wo Circuit Caurt at Seminal*
County. Florid*, under and by
virtue *1 to* Final Judgment *f
Foreclosure entered In that
cause pondtog in to* Circuit
Court ot Seminole County. Flor­
id*. Cere Na f»S4J4CA I«P. in
which ABCO FIRST FUNOING.
INC., a Florida corporation I*
th* P laln lllt end JOSEPH
WATKINS. DJB/A JOE S BAR
4 PACKAGE and to* STATE
OF FLORIDA. DIVISION OF
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
ANO TOBACCO are Defendants.
I, as said Clark at th* Court,
under and by virtu* ol th* Final
Judgment at Foreclosure, will
offer tor sat* and sett el public
sal* to the highest and best
bidder tor cash at the West
Front Doer el to* Sammet*
County Courthouse. Sanford,
Florida on the l»th day el
January, m i at ll H am
o'clock. In accordance wlto Sac
liens 41011 and Ml ASIA). Fieri
da Statutes, to* following de­
scribed property set forth In the
Final Judgment el Foreclosure
Liquor License No **(1074
IP S
DATED this k d day of Da
camber. IHO
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE .
CLERK OF THE COURT
By Jan* E. Jaaewk
As Deputy Clerk
Publish December t, IA 1tW
DEA**

IT a n P M T

f ll lin TTii r - T

a A _ MMMMif

■ret t o n Nutt
« A 7 t Nutt tores
LtS Nutt

»•

It toreca ton to n ip s

MORE PARTICULARLY^DE­
SCRIBED AS:
Cumregncs f t k paint IS Nat
l ( M af tot Nurtowuet esmar et
l b * le u t h e e a t ia a t th *
M ( I Section IA
11 Santo, Brega »
iCnrHy. PNrtduj
aaMpatot baton an r ~
rey line if
at 09M t«

I p s r r i.N F J t ieet tea ptont
re toe SNaSwty right et atoy line
at tntontoto Rauto Na A toancu
S. n*irat" r. gtreg said Waat
arty rlghtet-wey lint I77.F1
toot; toreca S. N*SPST* W.
along said right at wey line
~ ‘
(drecrtgMre). D R
(maeaured) to a treettto
It thane# S. IP W N "
W. NAM toot tore kregtpe re
6^mB6IMnW pUAeA^re* W
“—mo
tw Ol
Deugla* Avenue, kfergmenN. W ITT*" W.
n
ASIA
a,.
-- - th
Inlf M
I9S,
il A
n—
MrT rl9VK&lt;flil9n
(» U S Net Imeeeured) to to*

at Del Rpylstetoe Sukdlvtolen
at retarded In Ptat Bare ix
paw M&gt;*l to* Public Record* at
l imlnetoCPunty, Flarlda.

sihtetod re to* Lend,
nature*, machinery,
a p p lia n c e s , e q u i p m en t,
furniture, and garereal property
of every nohMo btgr

w

to be

to* merefton af. toe tons, butldingA alructure* ar ether lmgrevomentA ar In connection
with any construction being

tubloci to' any lire, socurity
Interest or claim together wlto
toe benefit *# any dreeaitt ar
pdymreta new ar hereafter

modi re such pareenel property
or nature* by borrower or re Its
ktllfllf

Dated tola Jto day of Dtctm
her. HR.
MARYANNE AAORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
by: Jane E. Jaaewk
Deputy Clark
Pubttoh: December*, IA t f «
DBA-71
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* hereby given toot are
M WlflBflMl Ivt hullfltll
344
Wllahlr* Blvd . Ceaaelberry.
Seminal* County. FtorkU. undtr
to* Fktttlau* name el BEST
QUALITY WATER SYSTEMS,
red tool we Inland to register
said name wlto tod Clerk el to*
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florid*. In nccordrec* wlto to*
prevision* el th* Fictitious
Nam* Statute*. TeWIt. Section
M A (t Florid* Statute* i*S7.
FLORIDA TRADE
INTERNATIONAL. INC.
Pout ScMnilltl
Publish: December IA )*N
DCA IM

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE B IO H TIf NTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANO FOR
IHMINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Co** Ma. SOCHI
C AS FAMILY CREDIT. INC.
Plalnlllt,
JAMCST.WAHD.g r AC IE
LEE WARD. FIRST FAMILY
FINANCIAL SERVICES. INC.
rkj
fanilanti
Ufiinaintiv
NOTICE OP M LB
NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN
that, pursuant I* p Final
Judgment al Foracleaure en­
tered In toe Wove Styled causa.
In toe Circuit Court of Seminal*
County. Florida. I will sell tot
property situated In Seminal*
County. Florida, described**
Th* South 71 teat ol th* North
i n n Met el th* East 107 1 Net
el Lei (or Bloch) A. WE1T
SANFORD R E ALTY COM
PANY'S SUBDIVISION, v
cording to th* P itt thereof
recorded in Plat Beak x Pag* u
ot to* Public Records et Semi
note County. Florida
al pubik sale, to to* highest and
beat bidder, ar cash, at to* waal
front door ol to* Courthouse In
Sanford. Seminole County. Ftor
Ida. at 11.00 a m on January II.

tees

DATED DttrmOrf X Its*
CLERKOF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
Sy: JaneE Jasewk
Deputy Clark
Publish Decamber y, i a (tag
DEA 45

• '! S ! ???

• #a WWW m WWW

U n are par Nm o , fcamO m s 1 1

JUMP I

i reWect o |l .SOtosh discount for prompt payment. Ichedul
big meylnctudeHaiuidAdi et User el too tool el r e eddittonat Bey- Cancel
you get reauht. Pay only ter dey* your ed runt at rat* earned.
ter to*tost results. Copy must tallow acceptable

DCA’XPNI
Neon The Day before Publkotten
II

11'fiAM Sflfurdow

ADJUtTMINTS AND C RID ITtt Mi Ms SVSRt « s «
srrar 1MMRM9r NM iDRUril NsraM wM hs rasgsRSlMb fgr
Nm «rs» MNDfUSR DRtT RUN SRly Id IMd s i Mr* s* INS «DS1
A n y

SM

TVflV MRf IV rVMk

27— M u rso ry *
O H M C a rt

IA Tawrehtoll!

Rang* &gt;• ipafTTemlnel#
County. Ptortdui

Avenue: m m run S. tr ir t o "
I . algng aald la t t e r ly
ayatam a, antannaa, paal

lZ
’ " t 1" * ?
m 9969999w*v ■ ■ ■

O S it 1 J o N B tP* rtWnW#'
WA1HINGTON NATIONAL
INSURANCE COMPANY, and
RCV FLORIDA
MANAGEMENT, INC.

camber 4 HP*, and encored In

!!• * * £ •

9 0 9 A J L • 9c99PJL
bm

Circuit Caurt at IRt Eighteento
Judicial circuit In and Nr SemlHtoOto’ldvtogi
PiPWMt, and John T. Otan and
Mary LaCreta Otan. hto srHo,

C LA SSIFIED D E P T. P R IV A TE P A R T Y R A TES

Per Detail*: 1-4
PNilSgtoMiii

SMALL DUALITY HOME LIKE
Oaycare 4 Pr#*cbe#l.

Per sal*. I bdrm. 1 both,
l i v i n g r o o m , k it c h e n
IX H 7I1

ONE-WAV PLANE Ttdwt tram
ttowerh ta Ortredb. Sunday,
Ooc.1d.tlta.MLMM
iiu r n a m
Orlande ta Beaten. Delta,
non stop. Mato. Dec. Mto to
Jen tod. MM 11740 tan
27— M u m r y *

C M M C a ra

KAPM M XM L
Accredited Member n h s c .
Attorney InatructoS. Hem*
Study. Fin. AM AyeM. FREE
CATALOG. I MParemi SCI,
Sect Baton. FI. n o t ________
Chril tereke S I s*M
|)g.*S hr. Ne esp. Beam,
trekitoK, 4 Into......... HI-MM

CHILDCARE PRCVtOfD •U .
M sry BIvS. area. M -F,
IV IN IR O S or pyprnlght,
weekends. By eiperlenced
MS toil
Lit. MARV/Dnseceae Areal
Quality cMMcare. I yr./Up
Lunch, rag, pending...JH-WI7

m u m

nans

Round trip to LAX. toov*
11/11. Return 1/1/fl. S4S«.
Round trip to Chicago OHere,
deg. tl/JO return 11/17. CM
s*M no/m c n*ito» 7pm

QUALITY CMILDCARII TLC.
small group. Educallenai
programs. M-F. Near Airport
Bted. 4 17-tl.........

L*gal Notlcts
IH T N I CIRCUIT COURT
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVIItON
PSe Numbsr to m-CP
IN R l: ESTATE OF
BARBARA O. BRIGGS
HBTICIOP
ADMINISTRATION
Thu edmlnlstratlen el th*
eatafe *4 berkera O. Briggs,
d o e e a a e d . F ile - N u m b e r
tasn -cp . la pending In to*
Circuit (Zdurt ter Seminole
County, F lerld a, Probate
Division, to* eddrett ol which I*
Ml N. Park Avenue, laniard.
Flerlda 11771. The name* end
i ot mo p i n m rtprt-

A LL IN T IR C S T IO PER
SONS ARE NOTIPIIOTHAT:
All persons on whom tola
neffco I* served who have eto
lectton* toet cheUenge the valid­
ity ot to* will, ma qualification*
al the pareenel repreareietlve,
venue, or |url*dkh*n el tola
Court are requires to file their
*b|*ctl*nt with thl* Court
W ITH IN THE LATE R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OP THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPV OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All creditor* al to* decadent
having claims
estate re whom a copy ot tola
nolle* I* served w.toln tore*
months attor tow data qf to* Itrat
publication et toil* notice must
III* totlr claims wlto tola Ceur*
W ITH IN THE LATE R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OP THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTV DAVS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
-II ether creditors el th*
decedent and persona having
claim* or damandt against the
dtcadanl's estate must III* their
claims wlto tola court WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS. DC.4AN0S
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
Th* del* el tor first publico
lien al tola Notice la December

t, IMP.
Personal Representative:
Laurie B. Ceasln
11N. Thornton Avenue
Orlande. Flerlda J710I
Attorney for Personal
Representative
Waller R. Moon
12l( E. Robinson Street
Orlando. Florida77*01
Telephone: &lt;4071 r n 4400
Florid* (o r No : in tn
Publish: December ». 14.1HO
DEAD

Legal Notices
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I WTN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND POR
SSMINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASBWUMMdCA-lAP
AMIRIPIRST RANK. A
FEDERAL SAVINGS SANK,
formerly known as AmerlFIrst
Federal Savings and Lore
Association,
Plaintiff.
RICHARD L. BROWNING.
ETAL..
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE M LB
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgmanl el Foracleaure dated
December A 1H0 and entered In
Cat* No. taaMACA la p et toe
Circuit Court of the IPTH
Judicial Circuit In and ter Semi
net* County, Florid*, wherein
AMERIFIRST BANK. A FED
E R A L S A V IN G S B A N K ,
formerly known a* AmerlFIrst
Fodwet Saving* and Lore Asso­
ciation. Plaintiff, and RICHARD
L. BROWNING. ET AL.. are
dHendanta. I will sell to th*
highest bidder far cash at to*
Weal Front Oear *t to* Semlnot*
County Ceur thou**. Senlord.
F lend*, at 11:M o'clock A AA. on
to* 10th day et January. IW1.
toe following described property
a* set forth In said Summary
Final Judgment, to wit:
Condominium Unit No. 47 E.
DESTINY SPRINGX a Condo­
minium. end on undivided
Interest In th* land.
tapenat* appurtenant to said
unit, all In accordance wlto and
aubiect to to* covenants, condi­
tion*. rrsfriction*, form* end
ether provision* at th* Declara­
tion et Condominium of Oeallny
Spring*, a Condominium, a*
recorded In Official Records
Seek l i l t . P ag* U W i at
emandad In Otllclel Record!
Beak 1140. Page 1447, Public
Record* ol Seminole County.
Florid*.
INCLUDING SPECIFICAL
LY. BUT NOT BY WAY OF
LIMITATION. THE FOLLOW
ING EQUIPMENT
RANGE/OVEN
FAN/HOOO
DISPOSAL
OISHWASHER
REFRIGERATOR
CENTRAL HEAT 4 AIR
TOGETHER with all to* lm
prevementa new or hereafter
erected on to* property, and all
easement*, rights, appurle
nances, rent*, reyaltlea. miner
al, ell and gas rights and profits,
water, water rights and water
Stock, and all llitures now or
hereattor a part ot the property.
Including replacements end ad
dltions thereto
DATED this 4th day ol 0*
comber. IWO
AAARVANNE MORSE. Clerk
Circuit Court
By: Jan*E Jasewk
Deputy Clerk
Publish December*. IA IHO
OEAM

SEMINOLE COUNTY BOABOOF COMMISSIONERS
NOTICS OF PUBLIC MEARINO
JANUARY A IHI
tiMP.M.
Tn* Beard et County Ca.imlseWners ol Semmof* County. Florida,
will held a public hearing to consider to* tottoeing
t DONALD P. FAHEY - BASO* tslV - A I Agriculture Ion* Appeal against to* Board ol Adiustment In approving a tot an#
variance from 4X140 sq ft to 10.140 sq it and width at building line
(torn IH n to M It on Taa parcel 41A. Section » JOU. E Ad* ot
SR Stand &gt;v mil* Wot SR 11 (DISTS)
This public hearing will be held In Room W in ot to* Seminole
County Servke* Building. HOI E. Flrsl Street, Sanlord. Florida, on
January A IH I.a tt H p m or et toon thereafter as possible
Written comments filed with to* Land AAenegement Director will
be considered Persons appearing el to* public hearing will be
heard. Further delells available by calling HI njo.eit tut
Persons ar* advised toet It they decide to appeal any deciAon
mad* et this hearing, they will need to insure that a verbatim record
ol to* proceedings it made, which record includes th* testimony and
evidence upon which to* appeal IS to tw bated, per Section 7** OIOS
Flor Ido Statutes
BOAS DOF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
BY FREOSTREETMAN. JR. CHAIRMAN
ATTEST MARYANNE MORSE. CLERK
Publish December it. IHO
DEA 111

�V &gt;

.. — —

I — Sanford Heratct. Sanford. Florida — Sunday, Cgcember IB, 1900

71-1

49— Miscellai
OMNSnMSTKBRMMU
*

141— Hemes ter Sale

Start tdOOL
. N aa^.
rteary.
t t n—t f l tom torn
1- “ m• *n
*—

Clt )MC M l . 11* M d l
CTUM _ _ _ _

55—IwBiu.M

aSm m SBSm

O g p O ftw H tiB B

Mr* T. I

*D tsT tin n M *
TOYS ft NOVELTY

at

Consultent to step her ad tram
continuing an If* I cl* dalad
10 Day Special. M r*. C.
further commented. “ Tit#
Sanford Herald WORKSI"
Soma Petition YOU naad fa
advarllte at taw coal end
achieve quick n a dt i t Try aaa
to. M ft » day Special rate*.
Lowaii ceit par line 0 * cantacutive dart* advertiting.
AdvertNar* are Nee la cancel

1100.000Pel* Income
Nin|a Turtle*. Batman. Disney
Simpsons. Moppets ft more
• No rent or overhead
• No personal telling

• Account* Provided!
• Immediate Income!
• Investment 113.004*30,000

Stopreadingft call aewI

HIRSMIY SMCIROUTI
Gross U3.000 tint year I Re

■ aaS yyM

61-Money to Lend
0

■RANCH D IALE R M I N M
t II par Naur, we tralnl

*CNA’s*Lnr»*MTl*

EQ U ITY Laaat, Purchases.
Rettaancetl lit, Ind 1 3rd
Mtgil Good bad credlll Fast
approval*! Oeardleo Mtg.

71— Help Wanted
♦ MAIDS* M R HIEING!

* D C IM IT F I t M N *
Earn eetre menay i

F/TI No aaetroda. Pd. vactttons. Call Meltv M*M W-SM7

Part/PuHHnta.CoRWMHS
Over ttw read, trader treiiar.
must Neve I year* taper lance
end fe e d driving recerd.
Averagetrtp todays.
A# Carrtoes. Tee****. Ft.
FIRST A ID * SAFETY R I P

CHRISTMAS
M ocntrw nur

&gt;tea
mi
PROM
AM EMPLOYMENT

The nursing cherteng* of the
YEs N In tang term carol If
you are laabing le gel men
involved end make e dll

..tUO ark I
13*0wk I
Mortgage Clark.... .
1330wkl
Othee Helper........
Driver............ ............SJ73 wkl
Taiemarkatar............ m o wki
Warehoute Manager... 0*00 wkl
Machine Inste'tor...... m o wki
Cutlomar Service..... SM0 wkl
Receptionist............ tnowkt

NcwYutsmoumott
Career tn Redl RitaN. Can*
ry

OROONDWORKERS

Must have chauflour license. 5
day weak IncludM Saturday.
Eseal lent benefits. Apply
t IsiN rd Av
e AVON * NOW HIRING
CHRISTMAS t l l U N D NOW I
m -c m a n a d to o
B A B Y S IT T E R N I I D R D
OVERNIGHT ■ My Sanford
apt. Nonsmoker to stay with 1
boys, age 7. t and W. Sun.
Mon. Tua*. with overtime
when needed. Salary rwf. Call
B M P L Nava man age.

Senterd Housing Authority
will b* pccapemg spall cotlont
Ground Workers position*.
Must possess p valid Florida
drivers licanaa. Alda A must
bo available lor stand-by
hours, and h evo phono.
Application* maybe obtained
at M Caette Broaar a . . Saw
IN * N o N UtEBPRL
Dsc. if, nog.

12— Gift Certificate*

IS -P itt

MOLLY MAID ■ Give tbe gift el
lime te yturtell ar alts eur
put certificate- Call W WW
O E R A R Y E ita rm ln a lln g i
Xmas Gilt Certificates! 110 eft
I New cuttamer* miy &gt;M* IN I
HOLIDAY CATERINOI Give
your tired wife a break I Gift
Certificate* avail NMSfl
HOLIDAY Pertrsll Certificate*I
A lasting gift! Professional ft
E*p Call Scatl
OT-tltt
SCUBA OIFT CERTIFICATES
Freddie's Oiv* Center
Classes ......131 f i l l .........Air

SCOTTISH Terrier Pup*. ARC.
Champ. Blaodllnos, shots,
war mod. 1 loft. WeMPeOM.
XMAS F U P PIE S Il Gorman
Shephard. 1 mole. 4 Is male .
ARC Reel CeNosIt

14— Crafts«nd
CoIIrcIIM rb

Santa’s Helpers! By hr. or day,
leave the kid* her*I HRS 7*43.
3300 S Park Aye m r tn

Far Labe Mary. Ewertence
or wttl tram. Full ft Perl time.
METRO tftCURITY....JSM7W

♦TPIW MI i m i u

an Infers Nw: canted Neal
4BMH-MW,
wdlPbL
TYPIST I t wkty. at heme. Nr
Info tend SAIE. Tropical
Type. Baa 1S3 OH. TevemNr.
FL 33*30
UP TO H I hour processing mall,
weekly check guaranteed.
Free details. wvlN. SO. ISSN
Central, suite 333-SPL. Chine.
C A ftllf
&gt;4111.&gt; i par hour plus
benefits- will treln. Needed
newt l-m -M W A n w d

91— A p R rtR M H tB /
FEMALE there Peftary home
with tamo. All a menHies.
dS/mo plus 1/3 util. R eft
required. 3737343/4447774__
LAKE MARY • 1 Reem metes
noedtdl J / th n e , dawntown
area, UOO/monlh pays till

BJ'S RE SALE-COLLECTIBLES
open every Sunday til Xme*
for Inside Outside Sales I t m
S. Sufsrd Ave. H&gt;-f4M
ELEGANT IMPONTSI Gilt*
and Home Decor I Personal
Ired shopping help. **04114
HOUSEWIFE CRAFTS. Holiday
gilt* GALOREM CaN Jana*
--------- J23441I

Nice. cMm i . CabW. air, klkhanpr Ivlieges sllAvk .J ll l i q
A IR P O R T R LV O . A rea •
Furnished Roam In private
hems I *S3/wk...3334411.4tam
te*W. IN*. 3 lum. Rm*. prlv. be
w/dwwer micro/retrlg. I1M
wk. Staple RmstSS/taJO-IMI
CLEAN EOOMI, kitchen ft
laundry led lilies. Cable TV.
Sfertlne at &gt;33/wk.— .H44e33
HISTORIC EARLES HOTEL!
*01 Magnolia Av., Sanford.
Dolly, erkly, monthly rentals.
n if t U o t i....Qnuesmi-eoei
SANFORD WON N
Perk A vI Lg. rm., fplc..
eorthl &gt;43 wk. util pd...3343*33
PRIVATE
tabN. shore kit. l i t per wk.
phie WuttWNe. MMBM Eve*
got heet ft cooking .
IMhet,. TIM dtp.-----.333*033
ROOM, private both, house prlv
IWget. Cable. *30/wk plus Vs
utilities 333 10*3. Navemso
EIB p*--1■- —■
|
l*
prtvtlegesl Nice Sanford area
Ot-Ofie or *&gt;4373ion
SANFORD ■ Large room, con­
ve n ie n t, quiet location.
MS/woek— MblHF/Novo wsa
SANFORD • Easy access all
oeo prkrif.. I3i/wk.
Nrmewddy3334»M

17— Sportswear

Inal FentoNpreferredni w ?
1 L IE F IN O ROOM, *43 per
Ml IrlercilN SI. San

DRIFTWOOD FLORISTI Man
tion this ad and i* l 11% Oftt
W lr e tv c e t tll

F L I PORT WEARi M1-SIB4 Jog
tats, sweat*. night shirts end
sockil Downtown SanfordMERRY CHRUTMASIt

97— A#artmeiits
Fwfwbhpd/Rent

15— Pets

II— Luxury ttewis

LABRADOR FUPS AKC. t iso
each Will hold lor Christmas.
Call alter SPM. 371 1431
ROTTWEILER AKC FUPSI
Champ lines, guaranteed
healthy end happy I m i *
v»h* 17 71-4333 5341________
ROTTWEILER PUFSI AKC.
e*c temper-confirm Parents
on prem ites All Shots!
13001W 333 « U

OCT HER MINK FOR XMASt
White mink lecket w/snow lop
trim. Sire mad. Appraisal
**.000 Sale &gt;3.000..... » N H
• WIRELESS REMOTE 4Xt
TRUCK with M NICad bat­
tery. I hour charger and slow
charger. All other batteries
Included Also ha* rood gear
lor high speed. Made by
Sear* Co-net with custom
carrying case. MOO &gt;344 1

14-Florists

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Cawtvil, C«tw&gt; Urtkoorm we Creeled Dm qjoMhon* try temou*
peoole put end pine'll
tech teller « the opne, etende lor
ennhei rode, ■eju« p eguew f

*Z

M i l l

E W

F H D

V G F

H O K D N

C O N

O H S D N V D Z N

O H E H P D H F E

W

O F V W

F H Z M M R . ’

WHERE YOU WILL..........
fS E E iL F A C - fftlM
I U 1 E A T N APTS. AMO
• NEARi NOW TOUCAN

PHtNiTtm ilMR

O SPEAK! OUKXLY TO
RRSERVE ONE FOE VOU
o u w \ m TMii
-- AAm----LJI
^ W I B i FBI I f M i

■to Story ttudto. I ft 1
Bdrm. Apts. Many edrae Ind.
it Quiet, eery
Ing. On-tiM
11
|
CAR E ll StartingaflllS/m*
.S 2 9 S H I
LDv 1 bdrm., move In
Xmaal 1st rani due an 1*1.
*«31 Int/cebtat M4BMB
LK. JENNIE AFT1I I bdrm
a p t*, w ith C/H/A Irtm
&gt;34*/me. IncludM wafer ft
00*. CaM
MARINER'S VILLAftI
Lake Ada I bdrm....... MM me
3bNm .JMem eftup.M 3M M
iRC Mf M f M A R M i
Cad between HAM SPM

I bath
endlbeWoemlhefhaveltabie
bath, nice area, off tf. prktng.
tMprwk.SIMsec.M3Rn*
SAN FOR O 1 ROfUL Specleu*,
edutta. no pet* ell elecl.
IMS/meUp.iaMdmM3WI*
SAMFOEO • Madera 1 bdrm*.
deptaa. oppil., mini blinds.
C/H/A. «3W/menN....jneil*
SANFORD • Large I ar I bdrm.
From BMS/me or IMS/wk. No
Peol.CHA 33300*3
STUDIO Apt) M3/wk. I Bdrm.
SM/wk. Beth In convenient
lecalien*
n e im / a nstap*

101— Houses
Furnished/WbhI
RtVIRFBOMT On* bWm. ”
tag*. Ferity him. Utllltle*
Inc ■adults no pets 333 **?0

143-Houses
Unfurnished/Kent
fHMMIBt WCTHIC mm

1 bdrm. 1 bath. C/H/A, &gt;573 +
sec. Camor lo ti,........3334331
CLEAN, fully carpeted 4 b&lt;
ivy bath. Heat and air, nice
nelghbarhoed. &gt;323 per month
plus UW security, Call
D E L A N D • O e lf v ie w
townheusel 1 bdrm. IVy be.
oarage, dean, t m ....*34i m

HVTAL5, KNTiUi
Hc-nes in all sites, starting
tram tup per month. In D r
Ilona. No toe to tenant I
Global Realty MO4f43

SALIM LIAS!)

c St/U M CtA

13-Holiday
Child Care

You can make a fortune N a
I I

j to full time.
Start B4JB per heur. Apply In
person. H i Cemmerte Way,
Own
teat*, pick up truck, home
repair shag ft tin d H Ii rag'd.
PNceworkl MMttft/MMHB

LAftORIRS

ASSISTANT PUWT MANAGER

KSTKUd NfdMCIS

an eiporlenced telephene
selee person. Centidtaaeton of
a "heme eperelNn” will be
given le the right
1 sdR '

AAAEMPLOYMENT
323-5176
700W25th ST

SALES

M ANONM M M NARTD

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
W-SOII

SERVINO FLA. SINCE IMS

te Itd-fftthr. For oaem
MdftMj ^MfleRfwl
RHlIeeilM HI^NInRnWe
InWmkHjin
cell tH flM M BW.eM.FL'ISO

Te Mil first eld ft safety
supplies. I10.BMS1B.BM.
Vehicle provided. Tr

secullve days’ advertising.
Advertisers are free le cancel'

NEWJONSDAILY
TOOMANYT0UST

NeWrts&gt;M M f»* P I*

ELDER SFRiHMDS. Pit Mwy 417.
U3*S per wk.
1. I. 1
»e*774l3M
B E N IV A . Ceuntry oroat 1
bdrm.. I both, tm /ptw tec.
OSTEEN 1 bWm. 1 beta an S

—

M E M M E Z H
S Z R .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A ctin g is R way to overcome
your own inhibitions end shyness." — Shirley Booth

SANFORD - 1 bdrm.. complete
privacy, d e w le downtown I
f*3 per weak pfuetJH security
Include* utllltle* CaM33331**
CLEAN I BDRM. Apt. Heat/elr.
util pd., phono, cable.
SBS/week, |MBsec..... 3331*34
FURNISHED Ap tll Nice ft
clean, utilities ind.. walk to
downtown 1313*33*/toovemsp.
SANFORD - 1 bdrm. IMklency
with private both, see weak
plus &gt;300 security Includes
iHHItosI CaR............ 333-tot*
ONE BEDROOM, utilities
furnished, dot* to shopping
area. Call attar 3PM. S74I3S1
before SPM cell l l l l l l f
M * * ? 1-_________________
SANFORDI FunL/Uwfuns. &gt;300
ft up plus dep and rot's No
pet* 3333X3 or 334*0*4
SANFORD Large 1 bdrm, pool,
laundry. C/H/A. SJOi-mo or
&gt;IIVwk. No deposit 333eesi
SANFORD Huge 3 bdrm. ctoM
la downtown Com plete
privacy I &gt;100 per week plus
MW security Call 3331101
SANFORD I bdrm . eacellenl
location, complete privacy I
SS3per week plus &gt;300security
CaM.......................... -3330**
I BDRM. APT • Partially turn.
Ail utllltle* pd SMO/wk plus
eM........334U 34

Senterd. 3/1. Nice yard. CHA.
11* Rosalia Or. t*IS pr.
mo./&gt;*L*W. H I MW_________
SA N FO R D - T ro d *, sell,
lees* option, rent 11 Bdrm. IV*
both. Cleon. UM mo.,.. 1343*37

LYW8
* » f . JrdSt ,

Ntaal

lot. Priced tar quick Sato at
I4MM or finance SMJWIW IB
yrvat*m J3/m e, ll% APR
(Subtoct I* erode approval 1
Fw Wta. U R I N N ISM

Oaks af Santord, 4 bdrmt. IVy
be. Badecad titl.NB/mah*
offer------Bn-TMWtlBftSBMBS

INT RESALE
Sbtam. !*s beta.— .....*37,
Larry Hi no on.
NEWLY REMODELED* I
I beta Launtay ft ramify rm*.
Canwr ton SOvJta......n i F x i
_________ JB.______ .*N4M ta
MODEL 0 FC N II4---- VA/FNA
C AC HOMES, tot..

NO DOWN FAYMEIfTf
LESS THAN GREAT CHEOITT
IF YOU'RE SERfOUt ABOUT

MANAOEMINT A REALTY
M »M a m i4 S N

M T A T IM e B N .
Ftoaee call kw otaer Hsltngs!

017117
SXCHANftl ON B IL L year

NONONOII
1/1 lane# commercial. *3*.S«
Low down. Raborts Real

C II M V \ C l \l &lt;l M N S

A . *\l&lt; I Ml

BRAND NEW HOME I Near
Lab* Mary BlvdL ] bdrm. 1
bath with parapa In private
country ar*
--------tfl.73*

TIR E D OF TENANT
achasf C d b a
W

1/1 , aver IMP eg ft......... 4*3.IN -

ZERO dewel ia«/m*. Like
newt Cempt. redan# 1 1/1.
earaee. lence.Owqer t4taNI&gt;

MMUR
m

BMJHR

M S

RENT TODAY
FOR OUR
M O V E IN SPECIAL

lit — Re*I IsSaft

|wakai RMuiu

snaw

CALL ME I

IIS — In d M trto l

■Jffi

5 /1 Vy, Very Spcatou*. &gt;37J N
3/1*y. Handyman special!

Nl.Sta. Sdtoree Needy
________ N74311K7_________

METRO R IA L ESTATE
CI7337or PO Ital

AAA BUSINESS CENTER •
Now emca/Wfwa. MB fl. to
M M If. Boys wllh or w/e
offtce* startuie at WM/m*
ffwy. t7 / e ifttR 4 »
t*R.-M M WB &gt;

141-Hemet tor tele

141-HMneffrSeie

1 beProem. 1 bath. peel.

TRUCKERS tpecMI I Bdrm.
traitor. Rm.ta pork truck.
Ctoea to Inferstato..... J314t*l

CrE U1-9544 PODKTJUU
NUIIKQM It!

A manufacturer M tadsmiN
lI Y
1^
- - - »---ujov
YwofryiCfl

This wee the cammanl of Mr.
Gary E. of Sanford wfwn he
celled hi* Senterd Herald
Classified Consultant te step
hi* ad from continuing on IN
scheduled Id Day Special. Hi*
ed ran only a few day* I Seme
P o s it io n Y O U n eed te
advertise of lew cast and
achieve gulch results? Try eur
10. 14 ft so-Day Special relot.

Salat Rap............

^

**M Ts*#

siM l

Local/Caribbean. TV MS/MI

GET THE JOY

CUT El O N E _________ |
FL rm.. carpet tnd Nape*.

l bdrm. I t a i l i
Ing dtotanco
acroee ^re^n pa^b. ffs pet*
STAIRS FROFEXTY
MAMAftEMRNT ft REALTY

CaN

HEALTH FORCE mad* pat
near I Stalling e ll ereeel
Plenty elwerktCeBM fttm

‘

♦ * *$499* # *

Fumhfwd or*rwt**I^c,

M3ft/mo.HWmc. CaRM3:

*. t
. Wkty ar monfhfy 4
-Very A—O H -you odor 4

i

Dealer penmen evelltato.
le iS M a m i

Regardless of credit! I ISO* to

&gt;30.000. Calll..... w in aoo

MM

H yr eM training company.
svMUng te teeth whet H
Mm

O O r e l bdnofll* dPNk.hr*

a n a B im

s
1 100733 me*
•
i i i i i i n i n i m i
ACTION LOANS

Carp....Lie. Mtg- r
M44MI/I4 '

DAILY FAY*
J D t R l after Mm

Earn

m i n t m n i i i i
*
AUTOLOMS
i
SECURITY NATIONAL

a DAILY
CaflD

nursing teem ef:

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

quiret 1 10.000 to Itarll
_ _ _ ^ * j0 3 * * J 4 e e _ ^ _ _ ^

*

Triplex/htnf

w f r l w I W B W 9 W illi

m

” * ....... t TSb !

117— Cemmerciel
CORNER *37 ft 17/*3 Free
steading Mdp. tuff. tor car taf.
Ins co vtc3333W7/*ll *4S MM
LONOWQOO - 1 offices I Prime
Hwy. *34 tod Rant ene/bafhl

1•&gt;()■&gt; W .’ ■itn l )»

STENSTROM

3 2 2 -2 0 9 0

REALTY, I N C .
•% Aw 34d

M INIM UM RENT. 4 acres,
hl/dry w/natural cover.

H I— Cofthominiwm
Rewtolt
♦ CONOOr S3N1FARI
2 BWm*., IVy born townheuse.
tend, petto. Adults sits. In­
clude* water. Call Nancy
------------ SwFrttAM SPM
HIDDEN LAKE! 1 bdrm. I bath
TOWNHOUSE I Comm, pool I
SSMme. Nice. Realtor f
SANDALWOOD Villas. 3/3.
w/peel. wash/dryer. MW per
m o. nodue*. 4714073 hr.
SANFORD • Fin* Ridge Club. 3
bdrm. I bath* All apgl. Mel.
/dryer. Starting efMM
RENTARAMA
4I7-SM4.........................He Fee
Fl. lac./Broker
S P E C I A L ! 1411 m p p tb t
N O R TH LAK E V I L L A S ! .
N ow l / l , a p p lia n c e s .
tlreplace, pool, tennis. Cell
(Kissimmee) 1447 7333Anytime
1143*41111 ceiled

"TNI TUMCP SafeSestet
I bedrooms ivy bo. C/H/A,
IIreplace 1&gt;443/mo., sec. (top
Call 33iate7/toov^ mossey

OENEVA 3/3 cn 3 i acre*. Stone
firep lace, contemporary.
Zoned tor horses. You’ll love
It. Soe It today........... ISS SOS
GREAT LK. MARY CUSTOM
3/1. Many upgrartod «tras
Like new. L 3 • ' Lead* ot
reem . W arranty. See It
now....................... Ill, Stall
A R E A L R U V I Lk. M ery
poolside 1/1. Fpk. All appll.
ance* Incl. washer, dryer,
micro. Assume no qualify
sas-ftaii

Meve le Special..........SIS*/me.

call................. anew

^

H

Lu xu ry A p t Living
•ClubhouM with Flraplac*

IDEAL 1/1 FDR VOUNO OR
RETIRED couple. Eat In kit.
Washer, dryor. Ian. On 1 tots.
Nice porches. Just..... IS4.N 0

•Indoor Racquotball
•Weight Room
•Pool &amp; Jacuzzi
•Washor/Dryar Connection!
•Garden Windows

N E W LY REDONE FERN
F A R K 1/1. Acre tot. New kit.,
point, carpet, ill*. Access to
take. Clip this ad. Now S*4.*TC
SUPER LAKE MARKHAM 3/1
CUSTOM leg home. Big
country kit. Fplc. A many
m o r e l i r e * . C harm ft
quality.................. &gt;13414011

CALLANYTIME

o

From The Staff
of Regatta Shores

VERY. NEAT 3/IVy. Hew win
dews, lance, solar water
system, many appliances.
You’ll (Ike It. How only. U7,S30

~ 177— Office KewUis
~IRAND NEW OFFICE BLDO
4M sg. ft. to 1JM sg. ft.
OC-lZONINOt

‘ tri11&gt;N|

• Fireplaces
1 Bedroom from $480
2 Bedn
1339 W.

321-2720

Hwy. 17-99, Sanford

O FFICE/R ETAILI1 unlit. 1JM
»g. ft. • * . S413/mo. Can be
used too*therl...334l3*7/ntse.

1 SMALL BENTAL OFFICES
Very reesonabl*. 13X14 For
details, call nowI 3334373

3S4S Park Dr.. Senterd
441W. Lake Mery Bl.. Lb. Mery

141— Hemes tor Sale

R E G A TTA
SH O R E S!

w nm m am vw H j
3 bdrm 3 bath, new interior
paint!.............&gt;410per month

4 BR. brick horn# tor only
Sl.tOO down. IS**/mo. Priced
reduced! W.fOO For detslli
Call Rraitow Green Hemes
1*4IW1 Or 3*433*4

The

Sanford Hefald

BUILMrS SPECHOMES

SERVICE

IncludM Screened Pool
Special Rato Financing
________ Call 323177*
t .A

SMALL 3 bdrm. C/H/A. nice
security. m-ta*UW47tM4M
114 CROOKED FINE DR..
Sanford. 3 Bdrm., 3 bath. MW
pr. mo.. Sec. MM. 331 343*

105-DuplexTriplex / Rent
DUPLEX - Lg. 3 bWm. CarporT
Inside utility rm C/H/A, no
pet*.t*W/mo. i- dep...33334*3

KAIMPUX
At 3011 Kentucky Av*. OFF E.
SI. Rd 4*. 3 bdrm. I bath. S37S
per month. Call 323*3*3
SANFORD 1 Bedroom, kit.
appll.. carport, hook ups.
Air/Heal.MOO pr mo. M3f*M
3 BDRM. central H/A. Sanford
area. MOO per month plus
dsposit &gt;30073* or MO *7*7

i I'.'lll ( I LI

\ r , . I,,I /

&gt;,

,

m 3 Lines ,„ .J 45 „

CUSTOM BUILT - 3 bedroom. 1
bath home. Family room with
brlch flreplaca. Can. H/A.
horsashoo kitchen, park Ilka
setting on big to*. Many trees I
Call quick I..................*44 300
LAKIFRONT hem# In OoBary
(SOW down, assume no quell,
tying. 3 bdrm., family rm,
Insid* util, dose to 14.130.000

i

\ 1 1 1 1 &gt;i 1 1 »

M i

ill,,)

i *

i i i

32M77f
mnmT

SALE BY OWNER

virtualty everyfhlna to top*

LOVELY! 2MM. 2MTM
I*33 Bungalow with llroptaco.
Renovated inside and outside I
Landscaped Owner A/ulousI
33*3 Magnolia Ave.
I!...™ ......... ...... n«431J

N YB TB FAWT ft DRV WALL.
IgoctaHai In maNblng teatore. C ato H Vera.....74473M

a iF tH T tlA llto l

•nSS

S3S &amp;

Lic’ d. mN Ineurodi
lelarences. IB y r*. e ip .

THB DOOB IF E C IA L ItT

Jobs! Jobs!

We have immediate
openings!
•Painters
•Book Binders
•Construction
•Warehouse
•Production
Employees with transportation
needed immediately

Apply
1018 S. French Ave., Sanford
S A.M. SHARP

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. INC.

ywffgwwfr
N D T IB fE N e

. B ^ e w t o e r o ia

ilA K K IE ’S N O IIH M Ilf

A.F1ALI
yea. s eaperloncal Soofars'
tpectol etocwvatal 133 3774
A N Y T V F E H O M I IM
FNOVEMSNTl Fro* **» Call
ftLAVE.Ked!..------ JBS4W
C A B F IN T H Y . MASON4RY
asllmatok Llsc’d.

tad kewno. town mart,,
melf.. ve.'ta
v*.ta
patching wid pruning,
uvufc«N4«H3______
BCA D A I I N Lawn Mail, aid
total lawn carol
M K leb ln g, se ed in g and
cleanup* FREEeaf-WS4gB

tS K IfT■ lwei
la w T
Tree Sarvfce A

nx-ir-nsTiNc.

"Ono Call To O elf AIT
Your N iltabirf i dHan ryMan
II

COMPLETE Service!
trimming, removal. _ _ _
Froeest__ l — i i
M in

O il

PBintiac. Carpentry. Cibiiwts
I Dedu I lic'd. A Ins'd
CALL 3293161

M E T TREK IIR V IC R I AN
‘ LNn '
Fro*

CA VITAL CLEAA MASONRY I
Glass black s p e c le llilt.
In t/ E it ter re s id e n tia l

—^remodsjto^MMSI^^^^

•isassanst *
'Let Tbe P rill si Weeto deH-

JOHN ALLS MLAWN ft TR E E
Trseromevel-ctoanug

Monday Fftoftaglpeclelt
Uceneae ft Insured. FREE
IBTIMftTEBII MftBta

Prruurs deenlnq, 331 :

�Santo** H M M , Sanford, Florida — Sunday. December IS, 1990 — TS

141—Hsmss ter Site
DELTONA, 1/1. CHA, Non
quoIIling. M l w i H l . Nkol
w w .F i.y a .w a .w -iM !

ThePmctonbal ( £

141—Hunts ( f Bate
” ”

ummant”

MO Ettetla Ed V I . &gt; car
wage, i.aaetq.
garage.
L4Mte. iIf. MSJII
A.N.R. Raaffy, BTMOW

1*1—AfpUancts

K I T ‘ N ’ C A R L Y L E S By L a rry W rig h t

T rv c f c s /

m — Can

/r
amjtn o M u n .

r

FAIRWAY
MM US IMS

N ! XL - ISO. Run*

SNR I T 5ETVRE A T IR 5 M U

MOMS,

a BABY BRD/CrM with I mat

F lo H d i R s s lt y

£ u M H S M * lA Iv * « W M a n
M O P IB • R ea d m a tler.
ml Rum r e e l!

m /w m ia n

chlng rutile. Martrett new
M m * M y.
iw m iM M t a r m iM i

REYES BIST BUYS
o a rn i a u t s m u t m * u
. or* J/l Is I n ________ _
condition. Largo m atter
w/Remen tub. Gourmet oat In
kit. BHn*»ttvu'out.._.....RBM
con Dotty m n o t i m t m - n u

1 bdrm, 1 bath. I,M i tg. ft..
largt living and dbdng area
with flrepieco. Cilra room far
off Ice/hobby/third boWiPm.
-a
. |___ » ■■- 1,-----IWOO
dMCI,
Nwyl TTVI1, IHWhI
and peel privilege!. SMS.MS
* * * * * * * * *
1. lead 41
BONO m
abte. AIm ___
and banb foredoeurM.

LK. IM M A LAKSFRONTI
Cuttom i Mrm. 1 both. 2 car
korofo- Ftgnty at room lor
boat parking. Serna, pool I
Inglirim
LOW............ RPN
w m -a w i

1 B O R M . 1 B A T H
B E A U T IF U L L T LA N D
SCAPED, tcreened parch
toedhtg ta nice tln d paal.
Privacy It prtarltyt....JSiMS

ASMMAABLIVA Ai% Caotom 1
1 So. noor wooded golf
courto. Quiot nelghberhoed
Vary nka. Boot valuo m araol
c u wott/iWo tn-naa.....a cm

Beys, a t m o leoo. m - n n
AA Carnet, Me.

LAN* MARTI I t octet
M outfit ovality built 4 bOrm.
I Vi Solti aMbrkh hamal Otar
ITS! a.f. of living apart.

piceltonUchoottHSXJJW
‘

-----RCO

B IB IN H I R I 1 1 barm. I bam
Kamo w/semd. pool, covoraa
pat i o, f a mi l y room
w/fl replace B Ig. kitchen.
I K cond. Only..yy,m..RAM
otia

G n t u i^
SMtlMUOM
2711 BenMeHr St. Brick front,
•put plan, with tceenad perch,
rage, m s * . It.
mortgage... 147,1m

CALL BART
R IA L 1STA T I
REALTOR..................tn -N N

COMMERCIAL Frap. comer lot

iss— A c t b r « r *

term Inraitmant. MS% loattd.
Sellar will loate back promite
to guarantee occupancy. Call
W.loNaom-MW. ---------- CFM

Uts/Bak

S A L I/ L IA S I/ IN V IS T I 1
barm, t ba. Cenao. Renta far
Woo mo. All oppllancet, acmd.
perch, convenient to shops,
tramportallon.....us.000. Call
Welter J4m...i24im.......RAJI

Neat Office Waraboaae. Coital
berry, arc. loc., min. tram l a,
!7/n A Hwy «M. t.taa a.f.,
12.000+ a.f. lot. Paved tec
fencedatoragel 1125,000 ..CCS)
Ipivey/McKenna m n a a
LKSS THAN t TR OMI V I

Canaltront w/acceaa to Lakea
Clear A Ada! Scmd. porch,
loti ol ceramic tile. Tonnit A
Comm, pool *44,000........RE It
McKenna'a 2242200/22*4175

OR BAT Llttte Hooael Great

little Price) Perfect tor lit
time buyer, imell family or
Inveilor. Ovartliad lot.
beautllul froetl *31.100 ...RBI*
m&lt;Kamui noani/m-nw

MAONIFICINT a/} on I acral
15x40 ternd porch, freeform
poof, healed tpa. laviih
landscaping, fenced backyard.
tpr. lylfamt 1115,000..... RCM
Me Kemtai n a t fn / n t m t

COUNTRY LIVINO el 111
Flneitl Only I ml to 10.
Roomy 4/7 on a acree. Lott of
cedar, toncod gesture* Morn
•over* will love ttilil 1225.000
McMrnnaa 204-0221.......... A Hit

3 2 3 -3 2 0 0

&amp; W

S

U|fMfe

' KETOrfllNTHtSOUTH
NORTH S IM IN O L I. Owner
mult Mill a Mrm., 1 bath,
pool home. Lg. living rm. end
fbrmel dining room. New root,
. 1 car garage. Juil titled end
&gt;rlced to Mill ULTC0. tuning
gntemeNenel Reelfy 122-IMP.

J SANFOtO-IDYlUmOC
clout a bdrm., pool/tpa,
cerpel/v'nyl. Seller peyt
loan cotltl »#1.S00 The
i Cemaaay IW-mr

' L l IS THAN s u n d o w n
{WITH NSW FINANCING
Ea o n d m o n b t . f h a . va
I CONVENTIONAL LOANS!
i no quality loant In
Jfm e areal I ChooM homei
from Seminole/Orange
iyolutia/Lake Countletl

' LESSTHAN$1(00 DOWN
tNCUIMK CLOSINGCOSTS
4/1. Ilv din lam- roomt, appl.
itarport, c/h/a............ 142.500

;
POOLHOME
tOSSJHE LEASE/PURCHASE
4/2. with lamlly. living, dining
,’th i *. tplc. indoied porch,
fence yard Huge lot. *41*00

SlTJOHN'SANDLKM0NB0C
1i acre eilalat 4/2. 1500 tq It.,
/cutlorn built. 1221.100
f*

LAKEMANY
LESSTHAN$2,(00 DOWN
1/1, living, dining, family
roomt. lanced yard, new
paint, carpel end Ilia tat.no

BATEMM REM.TY
BENIVA • S nke acratl With
well. Term*........... *14.10011
OSTEEN . II acretl Cleared,
wlthkarn................laAfOOll
LAKE MARY • a acretl High A
dry I Good term*. Owner teyt
tubmlt all oflert. Atklng Sl.l
MMSanfardAve.
3 2 1 4 m ................ m m ?
S.S ACRESI Gorgaout oak
hammock I 145.000 Sellar II
nanclng. Caldwell Banker
Meal . Call l eak-221-4*42

OSTEEN
10 acrat with acceta to the St.
John't River I Mobile hornet
OKI Financing aval table.
Lake Mery Reedy, 2244110
OSTEEN. 5 acrat. wooded.
120.000 BENIVA. S acrat
122,000. BrvvgMea Realty

__________ aa»«2ia__________
PORT OF UNFORD A R IA
Duty Orange Blvdl 5 acrat.
toned AG, It mile to 1-4 exit
end entrance f i l l Can divide,
high and dry tte.500
TamgUn Realty Iwc.WWH
ST. JOHN'S Rhrarl 2 acretl
Huge oektl tlal.OOO. Seller
financing Caldwell banker
Meal. Cell l -Mk-TTl-ttai

1SS— C o fM o fn in iu m s
C o -O p / S a to

RNASfe
B J 'S R IU L I
Wb Bey/SeR I

A Cef-

cars, trucks. 4 wheel drive.

•et/a chain. &lt;
ltyle.tl.71S Mutt tea I
Caa n u «n .a e k le r Tern
ORATAAN BAR STOOLS. 2.
SMB......................... 22I4IM
e to F A • 7 ft., revenibte tapettry tuthlont, gold. Vary goad
condition t H R . CaW22I-M17
# SOFA Contemporary floral
dttlgn In thadae of orange
only Mi. 2277174

113— T t t e v W o n /
Mr MIb / S t t f B B
• CARIOLI PORTABLI T.V. J
Inch with radio. In perfect
cand. Batter/electrie. Can go
tithing with yeul t« .. . 222-4271
S T I R I O , Panaionlc. dual
caaaatto and compac dltcl
Like New 11208OBO. .. .I22-4IM
WITH TOUR OWN letotllt*
System, yea watch HBO.
ISPN. CNN. aad
121/me. CaU H415M

Its—Coiwputtrs
OM IM ORY E i pan,Ion Card
for IBM AT cr Clone. New In
Beal Complete with EMS ao
Program. *M Call 222-2171

M B lt r k ls
ALL STEEL BUILOINSS at
dealer Invoice. 2.000 la 10.000
aqft Call 407 211 M il collect
• BATH ROOM Cabinet, no
mirror, wooden front, like
laleuelee. Coal 150 will Menlice 170 222-1207

female, will hold til X mail
«0 . Call Lawaane 227H07
•
F
R
E
■
OOSERAUN/ROTTWEILER
M ill To good home. 7 moi.
old female. All »hoti eicepi
rebiei (Weklva Fella)
_________1-1»»2*2-7044________
F i l l YOUNG CATSI To 4
good homei Bead ChrHtmei
lergrtM. Very Pretty I Look!
Ilka Angora. 212-271*_________

MINI DACHSHUND • Black A
Tan. 4 moi. Oreel Cbrietmea
pneeatl Parent! on premiml
SITS. 221-4740evet AI
MINI FOODLIS • Male A
female. 7 mo*. Whito. All
thoH. cute1150ae...... 222 5*a*
R IT R IIV IR P U PS-150
Available now tor Chrlitmet I
Call 222*472

W N * 24X71, H U N 244I7W

M l—Horsts

TAKEOVERFITMENTS

APFALOOSA • Beautiful Leop­
ard. Rag., IS yr. old gakting,
good trail home. MRL-S4A2IP
BARREL SADDLE •15 In. laal.
Eicellent condltionl 1150
Call.......................... ,2*42127
HORIKS IO AR D IO -M ACRES
open Paiturel UP a month to
board! 407-2244111__________
QUARTER HORSE • Reg. IT
yrt.. bey gelding. Doc Bar
bldllnei. Good geme/cow
hone. Quiet, gentle. Can rope,
hunt Irom 11.500........ 241-1117

l M - B u s ii w s i

Fw SrIb
EUCTK COMPANY
Butlneta. Land. Building and
Inventory. Tar mi 1X0.000

PAULA BITH OSBORN!
VINTURII PROFIRTIIS
221-4244

143— W a te rfro n t

Propafty/Sala

M3—Livtstock and
_______Poultry
QUARTER

HOR SI,

14 IS

Hand*, dark brown. 4 yean
Old. 1200 140-2442

Wotusa How! 3.3 AcmJ
IS! bulldabie tt. on rlverl
Private aelement to property.
Jut 11 ml. tram Sanlord. Lake
Co. tidal Superb location lor a
droamhomo. Dramatically
reduced! New lust. ...1110.0001I
(Mefflead) 42*042

2 0 *— W t o r i n g A p p a r t l
* SECOND OENE RATIONS a

Your clothing told lor com
mlulonanlyl Call......224 2474
Count) | Club Sqaer* Cantar
21M A Airport Elvd., Saalard

^

t

1*2.100

k Hi&gt;0
4 *

SlarlRt/ Rttif tmsat Homs
ly Loch Arbor local on 1 7
I bath, large corner tot.
j well, living, dwung. den.
Sundry room new root
(45 OOC avium &gt;m« rjl rat;

Water healer, buffet, ifeve.
hide* bed* couches, tele A
Re+rlewr pupal C a h .m e a n

2 1 » - W a n t e d te i w y

KOKOMO...

..322-11M

I N E E D F i l l WOOD
PALLETS. f b i B A t

way'*. WIN pkb *g-....22t-l«M
P B IV A T I INDIVIDUAL wantt
to buy wpth/dryer/refrlg. No

in.TtEEi

dMkfiplMMl Mi-tfUA

Artificial Chrlitmet treel
Good Condltionl Feld 1200.
Setting at StN.
...............SttMBI

WOOD F U B N I T U R I
WANT EDI Any CONDITION!
SMASH

231— Goad Things
♦oEat

M A Y F A IR S E C T IO N O F S A N F O R D
203 S C O T T S T R E E T
Uvmg room with hreplACd. cSrang room, oat in kitchen
Large mailer bedroom with cbeuing room and clotot
(the fund ol mailer suite one would hod in a much more
Bipen uve home)
Landscaped and located in a choice area with
covered lot Back yard fenced

itl-u

P rf a o d * 1 1 5 , 0 0 0

322-8643 or 830-6907

le a p t M a
EOMMUer. erwtae. HR.
wefe. THIS CAR HAS
■ VIRYTM INOI Oety......
SMi-SSjermewRill
CMI Mr.Pwywe. IP -rtC

Eecepfldx.feAfttfe.afe
CHEW CAVALIER - ISEA 4
4m r.m M .o4r.

Only Stag41.
Par O N L Y )

Cali Mr. Paywa, WS-ltg

TAKE N f FBIM P T S

in m m u it U B K i

w

■■opt ta*. fed, tttte. etc
PLYMOUTH RELIANT
4 dear. auM, afr,

AUTO •HOME •BUSINESS

*OHl!T|,|J*Wp*rf l "

Cal'Mr. Payna. 2a2122
’Of CHEW Nm m JW. I barret
cart.. 0A M ortg. mltoaf Aunt
ifrw-0 '

s s After SPM

TUCKER 8 BRANHAM, INC.

e M il DOWN OR IVES*
*M CUTLASS SIERRA* ON

211 W. 1st St.. Sanford, FL 32771
(407)322-4451

231-Can
*

"Serving Central Florida"
Since 1933

AU10L0MS

S

SECURITY NATIONAL

t

*

I
1000 222 0204
I
l l l l l l t l l l l l t l l l

list FORMULA FIRIBIRDI
Loadedlll II you're paying
attention I........... ........10.100

•AUTO PANTS
Chevy Neva 11SNA
AUTOMATIC
trammlMlene
tram I lit exchange reditor !
from 020; U o d tire* tram •!;

Tire mounting ivillM H.

'72 MAVERICK • I owner, a dr.,
auto., * cyl.. radio, elr.

CONN ORGAN - Medium Hit.
good condition. S4M (I need
the ipece) Cell 222 7142

114* FIREBIRD! 400. 4 ipd
Holley 4 barrel cart. Run*
good I WOO/beUoffer 1224-1122
CLASSIFINOIRS

FUWOFOBSALE
Wonted: Retpontlble party to
lake on tmell monthly paymento an plan*, tee totally.
Cell Manager at 1X412-7*11

llWCetery W.W4MB*
e i n i u u r o k i i a i at
P IliR R Ik in M A M
Engine*. Tr enem In tone. R *
dialer*, etc. Vtblclee-yev
make run 1222-OU*__________
• M I C H I L I N Radial Tire,
•rand Newt lie/144 HR JW
Metric. rniPuagaet.WA

Runt To Own

.

Save lime I Let u* match your
r*qu**l with eur compwferlied
Htl ot vehicle*

3hi

your noxt

d te J U

Automobile!

fu n

234-Imp

ncr

Swing, walker, c a rn a l,
hlghchelr, atari geme.MAffet
■UV........ SILL.........TRAGI
HUEY'S CROWN PAWN
__________ 2224744__________
CHRISTMAS T RI E FARM,
Open wk end!. 4700 W. 2Jlh St.
----------------122-21*2.
OO CART - lli HP. new tire*
and dutch. Eec. mechanical
thepe. 1300 obo Greet imet
glttl 222-1221after 2_________

274244)
OUTSIDE ORLAKOO
_________H H j R H H ________

1*01 TOYOTA STARLBTI I

TAKEOFFATMCIUS

1*00 T R O O P B R LS 4B4I
Burgundy B capper. Law. few
ml lee....... n..............412.OBO11

M M OanDOM
E icept tax. lag. tlU*. etc
PONTIAC LIMAHS - INO.
auto, air, iferae, iport model I
MUST SEE... Only 20.000
mlleiandONLYII41.il/mo.
Call Mr. Payne, 2241122

TAKEOFFATMUTS
NOMONEYDOM
Except tax, teg. title, etc
FORD TAURUS OL - INI.
LOADED with leather, auto,
air. iferee, V i,
ONLY IlH, 70per month
Call Mr. Payne, 2241122

final CMWmm CMtenI
M IM E IR IH IP , Tlmecuen
Golf and Country Club, by
Individual of dlicountod price
for Information Celt!

two TOYOTA PfCXWPt l i t r e
eclall.............42.W0

* Bad Credit?
* Slow Payments?
* No Credit?
* Repo's?

1W0 TROOPER LS«e*t WMle A
g re y l io n * . L a w . le w
.................HtWOll

MERCEDES M W

A M p

ysr.
RENAULT
ec.fapd/M

I *SA I dr.,
am/hnee*.

QK/
OK/
££/
OK/

DrhfB a Lot* Model Car
for a t littla as *499°p2
A LOW monthly poynwnts
N O GIMMICKS
Call 834-4849

Ken'Rummel
P

i

P

CHRISTMAS GIFT

WithThePurehaseOfANewHomeByJknMMNr
Just In time tor Christmas, with the
purchase of an&gt; of our standard
models. Jim Walter Homes is offering
a F R E E $500 gift. For a limited time
only, when you order your new home
from us. take your choice of one of the
following:

ANAMEBRMi

m .m n M n rm m trn tn

10 a 24 irrnd porch 154.500

, •V

I ams BBfsfTste SMi Ftinsl

■
I
Em. Frewntl MBA-^JM-ltW
• OLD RECORD Celfectlen.
Appra iimefety IN M RF*A
record!, Incl. big band*. |en.
c lattice I. Hew* Iin, Jetton,
Seme, Helfeti. Andrew* l i e
ton, etc. All fer tie. M l-till
s m u K i Ow n n o n . ' s l c o m b
adepfer. I1M. N eH -legfe,
1M0-D. VF. SHA MNY* S*fb*
tperfi I0A dey/defe. SIM. MS
Cell Beyl., never And I W/bea
A power, lid . Cad-----R M M
TANNUM B IB - Brand Howl
Greet Chrlitmet glttl Will
hold. BMOOM-Hl*__________
•W IN D O W . Brawn Unfed
thermppen*. Now 1140. OBO
___________2*4+710___________
M GALLON, plottic MW it**l
drum*. Meal tor free terming.
Stool OK tor » » q t 224774*

Choose from our more lhan 20
models, built on your property from
the ground up. to almost any stage of
completion W e ll build the ahell, com­
pletely finished outside, unfinished
inside, to one that is 9 0 % complete
You tell us where to stop then finish all
or part of the inside your sell lo save
money

DELTONA

, CHULUOTAFOOLHOME

# B a te s

1*1— B u i W in g

Leu than 12500 down! V I with

2/2. fireplace, ecceti to Lake
||Mini, on 1/2acre........ 1/7.500

h

222— Musical
M»rchandisa

e ra m lc tile , L e v a lo rt.
replace. 1 car garage
ool/lennli avail
....111.100

i fenced yard

t

Handbrake!. 12B. Call 2271411
SURFBOARDS, wet lull! end
ecceeaorle!. good condition.
221-PCMIv m e .

agtCYCLI - M in. Freewheel.

3/2CUSTOMBUILT

.Plnecretl V I. living, dining,
family rm . lecurlty tyitem,

117— 0

* * U PICK RAVILSMt M l
CELERY AV., SANFORD
BRINBCOMTAINERSII
U-PICK NAVEL ORANOIS.
ta/bulhel. Hwy. 40 E. Senford.
1blk. E. of Beerdell Ave. neit
_ jo A u t o A iK U 2 + « r f n ^ _ _

117— S p c r t i r f Goods

•OAKLET BLADBS. Iridium.
Include! ceeo. I
end neeb string. Sacrifice 1M.

i D IC tit J
B J COUNTRY CORNER! Mt
H w y I IS , O t f e e a . Uiad
fe r a lt e r a l A a flg e es .
beaRmede crefte. OPEN tM
P O R C E L A I N DOLLS end
heirloom tewing: drettet.
ehrlttonlng gown) and day
gewni. After 1PM-227722*.
AerfYIiiiibI

BABYITEMS

SI42 per month on a 1HI
14X70. Call LeRoy:
_________ M H 2 H U I_________
2 BEDROOM. I bath. CHA. good
condition. MUST S I L U 11500

• CASH* FOR YOUR JUNK
CAR ON TRUCKII ANY
CONBffIBNf CALL 2241W7
•STOP OeRerSS Paid fer |unk

221-MM

0VEID01.25ACRES

B3300DONN INCl CLOSING

EVERT TWISRdTTi:

• ANBORA BUNNY • White

......W.htalkMwtkl

cm r ytH

K3—in k Can

LARRY'S MART. 21S Sanford
Ava. New/llead turn. A appl.
Bay/SaR/Tradt—..... 2244m.
a M A P I! DfNINB Table, w/a
chain, m Call attar «PM

PRICIS STARTING AT M U M
I Bedroom 1 Bath condomini­
um!. All appliance!, vertical
blind! throughout. clubhouM.
pool, lennls. lecurlty guard
CALL...273*470
Laedarama FI, lac./Broker

................ .................. 222-2M2
OSTRIN • 1 bdrm. 1 ba. on
Vt-ecrel Lott of thado. turn..
C/H/A. very privete. Need!
TLCI 127,500......122-11II evet
U V I MM N IW IHI HOMISI
WHY PAY RETAIL? 14X70,

New buying temgtoto cars A
truck* by wafeM B.2S p/10!
lb* dbllverad. m si.71 g/IOS
Qe-we gtak up. Exempt*: 7*
Cadllec (JJH lb* x S225
IHAS2). B m w b N
p*M te RUt

PRO After*.]
R

223— Misctltenaows

NOMONETWWW

Wanted

HM tBYRTA Ptok ve. b fettol

IIR (••*)
_________ ro-iwg_________

M ill

234—Vthtetet

Ml

a D R T IR . gae. Sean Kanmere.
Whlta. like new I tw. 222 2700
OBOLDSTAR VCR with re­
mote, eicellent condltionl

I f f — P B f l B S u p p It t S

Slit per month on a IH0 2
bdrm. 2 bath double wide.
Call Lae. 104-4244200
I . O IU N B I COUNTY • 2/2
Doublewlde on .44 acrat

•MOPEQ.
mil

I an m
IAI
YOU Mad *ei

FINEttOfit CLUB

1 5 7 -M o k ite
H o m ts / S A k

GREAT
BUY at ONLY IlfS.tmwe
Cei Mr. Pewit. 2M-1I22

Sanford Herald Claoeiffed
I to Hep k

IAv*-2247*M
CRAFTMATIC Queen Be
cand. pd.SJOOO; R N . OBO
MM. gown m pd. SIM!; 0200.
True* feet bee P A OMdW
ODININB ROOM la b * and
mite, chain. MS, ORO

Custom built a bdrm. I bath.
Iireplece. tcreaned pool and
\ tpa. 2car garage 1174.too

f-.

i i - rm. 2
LWAAAMf

p y u ^ e t o NT.

O vtr 20 Models • 2 to 4 Bedrooms
1 .2 A 2V&gt; Baths • O n s in d T w o
Story M odel!
Jim Walter otters everyday LOW.
LO W prices and LO W LO W LO W
10°. A PR morigage financing with
NO M O N E Y D O W N to qualified
property owners This adds up to
LO W atlordable monthly payments
on your new home

Quality Iked Can At A Fair Price
No Application Refused

Hi

10%A.P.R. Fiud-FMt FteMCtei
No “Points” No CtosiN Costs
lo Qualiftid Praforty Ownort
Our offer for your choice of one of
these line gifts Is for a limited time,
and applies only lo our standard line
ol homes sold for Immediate construc­
tion. fou wilt receive your choice ot
gills when your home goes under
construction. Jim Walter H om es, Inc.
must be authorized to begin construc­
tion within 60 days ol contract date.
Ask about our C O M P L E T IO N
A L LO W A N C E ol up to $2000 toward
the purchase ot Items of permanent
improvement such as well, floor
covering, landscaping, etc.
For any cash payment m ade at
Ihe time you agree to purchase one ot
our standard model homes, w e ll also
oiler an additional credit of 151. of the
amount paid, either down payment or
total price
(No other discounts and or prom o­
tions a p p ly)

actual home and may
include option! and perional item*
provided by me cuilomer and at option!
mar a&gt;e not pari ol our itandard offering
SNubi and landleaping have been
added i
rjvnWiaw
norm.
me.
fvwvw ■
wnw* ■
ww-* IMPCopyuhr
■*• w "Vf 'O
f Mnctty artorcad

i.

...

L0WA8H*S
LOW AS

$ «K
J J

PER WEEK

Call

(407) 321-7800
HIGHW AY 17-92

ThafiNtioinB'^rovfltuAdvrcilon-ioui'lol norm**

Call Toll Fr*e 1-800-4-WALTER (1-800-492-5837)

- 5*1 8 A U - 6 PV Surt t PM -9 PM

DOWN

NO CM Bin BAP fiBIWT?

J im g U f e HOMRB

OcM9N7D*r* 4 *M* /*Me*nd

HERE

.„.

1Ar twor k depict!

dot tiff bsOCFi**fNOf VLil Out iTOd*HF*CJfYt*CttfMgf
ORLAND O , F L
DELAND, FL
4540 W. Colonial,
Hwy. 92 East
Hwy. 50 W.
(3Vi miles East ot DeLmnd)
2495 International Speedway Blvd.

B B 1

mum MM..N

SANFORD
1

mil.- Nortfi of l dkO Mdry OlvO 1
t is , to into from diiyvrfiete hi CiMilral F Id
HhOMu t-lQr'i J J I /duo or ;4U/| t&gt;2U-9//y

�r »

t

# t

f r

' f

I * * •

f •

*•

Depression, holidays go hand in hand

IN B R I E F
W idow wkkMMra Buooort orouD to mMt
O R LAN D O — W idow ed F e n o o s Sendee, a program o f AARP.
holds weekly support meetly
In the p e ster Orlando area for
both w idow s so d widowers. Many widowed persons have found
the group an d related acttvltiea an Important source of
guidance, em otional support, and fcBowshlp.
Afternoon support groups w ill meet as follows: Pint and
Third W ednesdays o f each m onth from 1:30- 3 p.m . at Beardali
Senior Center, located at the corner o f Gore and Delaney In
Orlando.
Second and Fourth W ednesdays o f eaeh month bom hSO- 3
p,m. at the Casselberry Senior Center, 300 W . Triplett Lake
Drive. C aaselbeny. (U .S. H ighw ay 17-03 south to Liike Triplett
Drive, then left at the light for about 1 mile.
For further Information, please call the W idow ed Persons
Service office at 6 4 9 *3 0 9 ."

Chrlsfn— n t lt cfrd to i t i f position
B.

W IN TER PAR K - Rom a
Christensen, director of volunteer
services at W inter Park Mem orial Hospital, has been elected
state president o f the Florida Association o f Directors of
Volunteer S ervices She w a s Installed at the annual meeting
which took place earlier this month.
The purpose o f the association Is to promote and Implement
professional stan d ard s com m unications education and an
exchange o f Ideas and information am ong the directors of
volunteer services across the state.
Roma is In her 11th year o f service as an employee of Winter
Park Memorial Hospital.
In addition. Jerry L. Branham , director o f environmental
services at W inter Park M em orial Hospital, has been elected as
president o f the Florida Society for Healthcare Environmental
Services. He w as also installed earlier this month.
T h is statew ide society Is devoted to the education,
professional growth and skill development o f healthcare
d ire c to rs a n d m a n a g e rs o f e n v iro n m e n ta l aervlcea,
housekeeping and laundry/linen departments.
Jerry has been with W inter Park Memorial Hospital for 10
years.

Santa Claua la coming to town
ORLANDO —
The A lph a Tau Om ega Fraternity at the
University o f Central Florida w ill operate Its 10th annual
"R en ta-aS an ta" project, with proceeds to benefit the Muscular
Dystrophy Association.
Santa and his elves w ill be available by appointment for
surprise visits to homes, offices and parties. Fees start at I3S.
or ISO for a party o f forty o r more. Santa w ill make special
Christm as Eve visits for 635.
Last year’s program raised over 61,000 for MDA. Santa’s
24-hour answ ering service Is open now through Dec. 24.
For more Information, call (407) 657-7596.

Crib death risk reportedly
greatest in winter months
A T L A N T A — Babies appear to
lace a greater risk o f dying from
crib death during the winter
than In any other season, a
federal study showed recently.
The study from the Centers for
Disease Control also showed that
sudden Infant death syndrome,
or SIDS, Is most likely to strike
babies ages one month through
four months.
The CDC offered no explana­
tion for why seasonal factors or
age may boost a baby's risk o f
SIDS.
Another finding o f the study
was that the SIDS risk for white
babies was greatest In the West.
No reason was given for that
geographic pattern.
A m ong black babies. SIDS
seemed to strike hardest In the
north central part o f the United
States. The CDC concluded that
risk probably reflects "that re­

gion’s higher mortality rates for
most causes o f death among
black Infanta.”
SIDS Is the sudden death o f an
Infant under 1. the cause of
w hich rem ains unexplained.
SID S usually occurs during
sleep. It Is the leading cause of
death In children ages 1 month
to 12 months and the eighth
leading cause o f years of poten­
tial Ufe lost.
“ Although infants at high risk
for SIDS cannot be identified
early, several maternal, neonatal
and' p o a t n e o n a t a l f a c t o r s
associated with such increased
risk have been Identified.’' the
C D C a a i d . ’ ’ P a r e n t ! a nd
health-care providers should be
aware of the Increased risk of
SIDS during the winter season.’ ’
Data for the study was gleaned
f ro m death certif icates for
112.804 infants who died across
the nation from 1980 through
198?.

American Red Cross announces
nurse assistant training course
LONGWOOD — The American Red Cross Nurse Assistant
Training Course presents and reviews more than 60 clinical
skills, is supported by more than four hours o f video material,
and Includes Illustrated workbooks with glossary and prepara­
tion for certification testing.
The program provides 120 hours o f core instruction, including
40 hours classroom, 40 hours practicum/lab. and 40 hours
within a clinical setting.
The American Red Cross operates as a licensed school in the
Stale o f Florida. The program has been approved by the Board of
Education and meets all state and federal mandates In reference
to nurse assistant training requirements.
The courses will be held at Seminole County American Red
Cross Service Center. 70542 West State Route 434. Longwood. 8
a m. through 3 p.m. on Jan. 3-Fcb. 1. Evening course runs Jan.
7-March 18. 1991. on Monday. Wednesday and Friday from 5 to
9 p.m.
For information, call 332-8200.

H as the happiness o f the holiday
changed into depression? A re you eating o r
drinking too m uch? Many people, especially
women, find the holiday season em otionally
and physically overwhelm ing. However .
Alice Mac M ahon, director o f the Center for
W om en's M edicine at Florida Hospital and
the author o f “ W om en and Hormones — A n

-------------—
on
2. Stmptfy gtfl giving, give
your llet the same type of gift
gift for exam ple
□OOttA.

tetkevour
3. Practice
your seserthrmets — don’t be
afraid to say NO.
4. Eat and drink wisely. T ry to avoid

Diets high in an im al fats
boost colon can ce r risk
U H S cien cs W riter________________

BOSTON — A study Involving
more than 80,000 women has
produced the strongest evidence
yet that diets high In animal Cits
appear to sharply Increase the
risk o f developing colon cancer,
researchers sold recently.
Women In the study who ate
beef, pork cr lam b every day
were two and one-half times
more likely to develop colon
cancer than those who ate red
meat less than once a month,
the researchers said.
Dr. W a lter W ille tt, of the
Brigham and W om en's Hospital
In Boston, who headed the study
published in T h e New England
Journal o f Medicine, said the
aaaociatlon w a s surprisingly
strong and clear.
“ T h e message is that It ap­
pears the animal fat in red meat
Is related to colon cancer risk
and reducing red meat con­
sumption Is likely to reduce the
risk. There is n o cutoff point, so
really, less Is better. ’ ’ he said.
Th e six-year atudy also found
those who ale chicken without
skin two or more times a week
had half the risk o f colon cancer
o f women who ate It lesa than
once a month.
In addition, the researchers
found that eating fish appeared
to cut the cancer risk, aa well aa
consuming fiber from fruit. They
did not find that fibers In cereals
such as bran reduced the risk.
But " I think that is still an open
issue." Willett said.
Although a number o f pre­
viou s studies Indicated that
animal fat appeared to play an
Important role in causing colon
cancer, the new atudy is the
largest to date and found the
clearest link between red meat
consumption and cancer risk, he
T h e r e are a n es tim a te d
110,000 new cases o f colon
cancer in the United States each
year and m ore than 50.000
deaths — m aking It second to
lung cancer In the number o f
death It causes. T h e rates of the
disease in Western industrialized
countries are up to 10 times
those o f many Aslan and devel­
oping countries, where much
less red meat is eaten. WUIett
aaid.
Dr. John Stevens, vice presi­
dent for research o f the Ameri­
can Cancer Society, said the
study's findings and recommen­
dations that people substitute
chicken and fish for meats high
in fat arc In lin e with the
organization's existing dietary
guidelines.
" I n our guidelines, we re­
commend a balanced diet" that
reduces the percentage o f Cats
the average Am erican consumes
and Includes a variety o f fruits,
vegetables and whole grains.
Stevens said.
" A t best, you are going to be
reducing your cancer risk, and
at worst, you are going to be
eating a healthy diet.” he said.
T h e 88.751 female nurses In

■ugnr and caffeine. Remember, that all
though alcohol will give you an Initial lift. i(
is a depressant.
5. Express your needs to others. Don't
expect others to read your mind or to know
you are going bonkers!
;
6. Believe all will be well. If you believe. I(
.will.

Easential Guide to Being Fem ale," has six
quick Ups to help holiday etreea.
1. Don’t try to do H sU - you can’t. For
Instance Instead o f sending C h ristm as

Finally. MacMshon
enjoy” your holidays.

says, “ relax and

CARNIVORE’S COSTS:
Price of a portion of meat

the study ranged in age from 34
and 59 at the beginning
were typical o f the U.S. pof
Uon In terms o f lifestyle and
nutrition. Willett sold.
The nurses w ere asked to fill
ou t d e ta ile d q u e stio n n a ire s
about their eating habits at
two-year intervals. During the
study, researchers documented
150 cases o f colon cancer am ong
them.
The scientists did not (lnd any
apparent link between animal
feta in dairy products such aa
w h ole m ilk, cheese and ice
cream a n d in creased colon
cancer risk. Nor did vegetable
fete appear to boost the cancer
rate. W illett said. ’
Researchers do not know why
anim al fate apparently play a
role In colon cancer, but animal
studies suggest they increase the
form ation o f bile add s which
seem to act as tum or promoters,
he said.
Bacteria with Increased capac­
ity to turn bile a d d s Into poten­
tial carcinogens have been found
In the Intestines of people In
popu lation s w ith high colon
cancer rates, WUIett noted.
" I t Is a p r e t t y g o o d
hypothesis.” he said, adding
other researchers have proposed
that diets high In red meat boost
cancer risks by Increasing con­
centrations o f cancer-causing
agents in fecal matter or — In
the case o f som e processed
meats an d bacon — through the
added presence o f preservatives
called nltrosam lnes.
• A sim ilar study la underway
Involving men. although “It is a
relatively safe assumption that
these findings also apply to
men.” w h o have colon cancer
rates about equal to women.
WUIett said.
The good news In the research
Is that because consumption of
chicken and fish seemed to be
som ewhat beneficial, “you do
not have to become a vegetari­
an” to reduce the colon cancer
risk, he said.

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Cancer linked to vasectomies
BUFFALO. N Y. - There ap­
pears to be . link between
vasectomies and an Increased
risk of contracting prostate
c a n c e r , r e s e a r c h e r s said
Thursday.
Researchers from Roswell
Park Cancer Institute said their
study is the first to (lnd an
increased cancer risk for men
w ho have undergon e a
vasectomy, a simple operation
for mate sterilization. The study
also shows that the earlier In life
a vasectomy is performed, the
greater the risk.
Howev er . It Is unclear if
vasectomies cause the Increased
cuncer risk or If some other
fuctor is the actual source o f the
risk.
"W e ’ve established an associa­
tion. but i t ' s u n c e rt a i n If

vasectomy Is a risk factor." said
Dr. Curtin Mettlin. co-author of
th e s t u dy a nd di r e ct or o f
Roswell’s Department of Cancer
Control and Epidem iology.
"Th ere's no strong btologlctal
rationale for Increased prostate
cancer risk after a vasectomy.”
he added.
Mettlin said further studies
wUl be needed to determine If
the frequency o f sexual in­
tercourse and numbers of sexual
partners are factors In increased
cancer risk.
“ By contrast, other studies of
vasectomy have examined large
numbers of men and have been
consistently reassuring about
the safety o f vasectomy.*' said
Janet Halpem. spokeswoman for
the Association for Voluntary'
Surgical Contraception.

How far would you walk for a
pastrami sandwich?
Lace up your walking shoes and stretch your leg*. Because the fact is. you'd
have to walk almost 12 miles id bumoff thecalones in one pastrami sandwich.
But cal a turkey sandwich, which has just squatter of the calories, and you'd
only have to go a few miles.
In that simple fact lies the essence of the HMR Weight Management
Program. That by learning the skills necessary, you can balance food caloric*
and exercise eateries to manage your weight for life.
Through a nutritionally complete diet of supplements and entrees, HMR
can help you reach your goal weight quickly and safely. And through aproven
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not by healthcare
teamto
maintenance program,
svpcrv iscd
health care professionals, you'll
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the foods you like, without having to become an athlete.
If you're concerned about your weight, lake the moat important step of your
life. Walk to your phone and call the HMR Weight Management Program.

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365 d a y s a ye ar

P IS T IIIC T IO IW

H«*t an outstanding cltizan
Woodmen o f the World, a 100-year-old life
Insurance society, held Its Christmas party
recently In Sanford. During the festivities, the
award for Outstanding Citizen was presented to
Steve Alford, who spearheaded the drive to raise
money for the Fourth o f July fireworks display
In Sanford last year.
Field Representative Claude M. 'Mike' Rlsh.
presented Alford with a plaque.

^

[

W

SANFORD — C.J. 'HU* Canon haa a a few
theories about volunteerism and about being
hungry tn America.
The outspoken president o f the Sanford
Christian Sharing Center thinks volunteering
time to a cause is preferable to being a couch
potato.
" I think o f life like a piece o f fruit. If tt hangs on
the tree long enough. It w ill fall down and rot. Do
som ething with It! Oet. In v o lv e d !" he en­
thusiastically said.
Carson also thinks not enough men volunteer.
"A lot o f men think this is women’s w ork." he
•aid. gesturing toward the corrugated boxes filled
with canned goods which are stacked against the
wall tn the storeroom o f the center. "T h e se cases
weigh 30 and 40 pounds and I'm linin' 'em all
myself."
'
. .
4.
Carson admitted when he first heard about the
center, he thought of a "place where little ladles
were puttin' up a few food baskets at Thanksgiv­
ing and Christmas." He also admitted, as he
hoisted a case of canned vegetables above his
head, his initial thoughts were wrong.
___
Carson said the center distributed over 1.000
food baskets during November. He estimated
December's totals would be higher. .
"W e help the people who fall between the
cracks o f bureaucracy, the ones with no money
and no address." he said.
The Sanford Christian Sharing Center serves
as an emergency source o f food staples for
persons who are experiencing unforeseen set­
backs such as loss of a Job and lack o f food or
money due to Illness, desertion of the head of the

Kit Carton foots hit Chooriot to ho ditcuttoo trrtunUadom.

All the world is young pianist’s stage

to get It the way I want It."
Life In Israel Is pretty different from Central
Florida. Ahuvia said.
Herald People Editor
"S o many cultures are put together tn Israel.
LONGWOOD — Saar Ahuvia believes all the
You will .meet Russians. Ethlopeans, Hebrews
world's a stage.
and Americans on the streets." he said.
The 15-year-old concert pianist has certainly
Ahuvia felt people living In Israel are more
performed on his share of stages all over the
aware, more Interested In what's
going on
world. I nc l u d i n g the Florida S y m ph o n y
around them all the lim e than are many
Orchestra In Orlando.
Americans.
Bom In Kubbutz Belt Hashlta. Israel. Ahuvia
Perhaps the close and constant threat of war or
moved to Puerto Rico. Argentina and finally
the vast cultural melting pot Israel is considered
Longwood. where his parents. Ofer and Rachel,
has something to do with residents' awareness.
now live. Ahuvia attended Lake Brantley High
Ahuvia added having to study very hard In
School for two yearn, but Is currently living with
school has helped to make him more aware of
relatives and studying near Tel A viv. He visited
the world around him.
his Longwood home recently, and performed In
"School Is much more demanding In Israel.
concert at the Jewish Community Center tn Standards, blech! It's real hard." he said.
Maitland.
Ahuvia said he Is fond o f America for all the
Although he counts Beethoven. Chopin and opportunity It affords him to polish his perfor­
Rachmaninoff among his favorlst composers.
mance.
Ahuvia said he's still a fairly typical teen.
" I get a lot o f feedback from the audience here.
"I'm a little bit o f a whack teenager. 1 like to There Is so much opportunity to perform and
disco, and we do have M.C. Hammer In Israel. I compete." he said.
listen to him. too." he said.
For now. Ahuvia Is concentrating on his music
Ahuvia can always remember having an and his schooling.
Interest In music. He started formal training at
"I never considered doing anything else." he
age 9 when he "w as offered the piano as an said. "I Just want to finish high school and serve
Instrument."
In the Israeli Arm y,” he said.
Rachel remembered her son at an earlier age.
All Israeli citizens. Including women, must
"His musical career actually started at age 3 serve a mandatory stint In the army.
•n he made drums out of boxes." she said,
"W ar Is Just part of life In Israel. I feel safe on
huvla believes his successes at a young age the streets there." he said. "Nobody goes against
n from "never being satisfied."
tt the army. It’s Just part o f life.”
It's not enough to Just play the right notes,
□ ft s * P ia n is t. P age &amp;C
he said. " I want to Immerse m yself In the music

■yU eV D O R N

NfttaMft WftW

Sht's a rlt’ng star
Recently the Florida Dance Masters certified
judges awarded Sanford dancer. Natalie Weld,
daughter o f George and Valerie Weld, the crown
for 1990's "Florida’s Rising Star." The title Is

-

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Women's Club of Sanford recently held Its
annual Arts and Crafts Festival. Award winners
and their categories were, from left to right, left
photo: Joyce Bisson, counted cross stitch and
doll clothing; Jean Marcel, paper works and

photography; Mary Childers, fabric decorating;
Doris Dietrich, photography; Viola Frank, crochet
and family clothing; Frances Mitchell, special
drees and L es sie Pauline, holiday table
arrangement. Photo right, from left to right:

Hazel Cash, knitted clothlnQ; Jean Melts,
decorated ware. Christmas wreaths and fabric
craft clothing; Jane Saxon, floral arrangement;
Tina Joseph, oil painting. Jean Skipper, basketry
and decorated eqgs; Fran Morton, pressed

flowers and Florida materials wreath and Martha
Stevens, hand quilting. Winners not pictured:
Carol Ann Smllh, ceramics; Charlotte Smith,
needlepoint; Relha Blankenship, handmade doll
and holiday jewelry.

FOR A LL TH E PEOPLE NEWS IN YOUR AREA, SUBSCRIBE T O TH E SANFORD HERALD

3H9

�I — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, December 16, I960

W om en herald holidays
T h e en cha nt ing sound o f
music echoed throughout the
Sanford Woman’s Club at tlie
December meeting. Creating the
heavenly sounds were members
o f the Woman’s Chib Chorus
under the direction of Mayor
Bettye Smith, founder o f the
chorus.
Dressed In royal purple, the
chorus sang a delightful medley
o f Christmas tunes. The chorus
was comprised o f Viola Prank.
Jane Saxon. Leasle Pauline. Tina
Joaeph. Eve Rogero. Kay Hall.
Francis Mitchell. Irene Brown,
Alice Magro, Phyllis Conklin and
Carol Ann Smith.
President M arty C olrgrove
presided over the business meet­
ing when routine reports were
heard. Following the meeting, a
catered luncheon was served.
The club’s annual Arts and
Crafts Festival was also held at
this meeting. Under the chair­
m anship o f F aye Siler, the
clubhouse was alive with vivid
and colorful exhibits crested by
members. First place winners
will go on to district competition
which the Sanford club will host
In February. At that time, first
p la c e winners In 23 clubs
belonging to District VII o f the
Florida Federation o f Women’s
Clubs will be In competition.
Winners o f the district festival
will compete In the state festival
In the spring.
First place winners In the
crafts division were: Carol Ann
Smi t h, c e ra m ics : Charlott e
Smith, needlepoint: Hazel Cash,
knitting: Martha Stevens, hand
quilting: Viola Frank, crochet­
ing; Viola Frank, family clothing:
Joyce Blssen. counted cross
stitch: and Sarah Bowen, home
accessories.
Other first place craft winners
were: Francis Mitchell, special
dress: Mary Childers, fabric de­
corating; Relha Blankenship,
handmade doll;.Joyce Blssen.
doll clothing; Jane Saxon. Flortda a r r a n g e m e n t : R e th a
Blankenship, holiday Jewelry;
and Jean Melts, decorated ware.
Other crafts (list place winners
w ere: Jean Skipper, woven
basket: Jehn Skipper, decorated
eggs: Fran Morton, pressed flow­
ers; Lew ie Pauline, holiday table
a r r a n g e m e n ts ; Jean M etts.
Christmas wreath; Fran Morton.

r * *

SANFORD
d ft
SSL
jW £ »

“

DORIS
DIETRICH
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Florida m aterial wreath: and
Jean Metis, fabric craft clothing.
First place w inners In the Arts
Division were: T in a Joseph, oil
painting: Jean M arcel, paper
w o rk s; J ean M a rc e l, p h oto­
graphy. nature an d hum an in­
terest; and this w riter, photo­
graphy, general Interest.
The clubhouse w as festively
d e co rated In the C h ristm a s
m otif. Individual tables w ere
centered with red cone-shaped
trees. The mantel held a can­
d e la b ru m a rra n ge m e n t su r*
rounded by Christm as greens.
The head table w a s centered
with a single large table potasettla accented with red candles In
crystal hoklersI Teddy bears and
potnsettla plants decorated each
side o f the stage.
Hazel Cash and Isabel W ilson
w ere chairm en of hostesses w ho
in clu d ed P eggy D eere. V id a
Sm ith. Vivian Buck and Sarah
Bowen.
In the spirit o f the season, clu b
m em bers con tributed n early
§500 to Hacienda G irls Ranch.
Also the president presented a
check to Irene Brown, director o f
the Christian Sharing Center.
The funds represented monthly
birthday collections for the year.

Qala bogirta festival
The second annual* Candle­
light Gala at the Sanford Civic
Center on Dec. 7 set the pace for
the St. Lucia Festival the follow­
ing day. About 73 patrons paid
§50 each to attend the wellplanned evening which included
complimentary champagne, a
balletic vlgneftc. a Swedish buf­
fet dinner. Swedish delicacies
and rain ...lots o f rain.
The auditorium was perfectly
beautiful. The tasteful decora­
tions were a labor o f love o f the
Ixora Garden Club. One patron

commented. "This loo!&lt;s like the
cham pagne ball used to look.’’
M e m b e r s of the J u n io r
W om an’s C lu b o f Sanford were
the hostesses fw the gala. Greet­
ing guests as they arrived were
Clndi Goem bel. chairm an; Lisa
Robertson, clu b president: Kathy
K raattoff a n d C in d y O u lle s.
Harpist Rosalind Beck presented
background dinner m usic.
Seated at ou r table w ere Dr.
and Mrs. Frank (Jean) Clontx
and Dr. Marta Peres w ho was
accom panied by her attorney
son. Ttco Peres. Jean wore a
lo v e ly b la c k c o c k t a il s u it
enhanced with white satin and
pearl trim. Marta looked stunn­
ing In a chic beaded gown.
O pening festivities Included
the appearance o f Miss St. Lucia
Stephanie Russell and her court.
V a le rie W e ld , co-directo r o f
Ballet G uild o f Sanford- Semi­
nole Introduced MUdred Caskey
a s the creator o f “ C ircle o f
Light.” a ballet about a night
with Gen. and Mrs. Henry San­
ford.
The ballet w as w ell done and
w as very well-received by the
a u d ie n c e . T a le n te d so p ran o
H e le n H ic k e y sa n g v a rio u s
Christm as tunes from the era
w h ile gracefu l M egan Lugen
danced the role o f St. L u d a.
Although the catered dinner
w a s a big disappointm ent, other
segm ents o f the gala w ere Just
•lovely. The G rand Finale, held at
the Cultural A rts Center, m ade a
hit with the patrons. Decorated
by the Sanford Flower Shop. Kay
Bartholom ew, festlvel founder,
said. "It w as beautiful."
The Caroling Com pany
perform ed from the gallery a-id
w as Joined by Rosalind Beck.
Junior W om an’s C hib m em bers
also served as hostesses and
served delicacies and coffee they
prepared In an elegant setting.

O l t honors dignitary
Sem inole Chapter No. 2. Order
o f the Eastern Star, entertained
P a u lin e B e n n e tt, A ss o c ia te
G rand Conductress o f the Ormnd
Chapter o f Florida w hen she
m ade an inspection tour as
deputy for the W orthy Matron of
the G rand Chapter o f Florida.
A b a n q u e t w a s h e l d in
fellowship hall o f the First Unit­
ed Methodist Church. T h e ban*

Chorus, (I) wKh chorus wsrobero Viols Frank, Jans
Bason, Lassie Pauline, Thro Joseph, Kva Pcp r o,

Kay Had. Francis MHchetl, irons wnm
Magro, FhyMIaConkhn md Carol Ann BmRh

quet room w as decorated in the
Christm as motif. Overlaid with
white doths, the tables featured
M erry Christm as runners
table fovors. T h e bead table
decorated with a ceram ic tree
and red candles.
In c invocation w aa given Dy
Luctle Eaton, ch aplain. M ari
McMuUan, W orthy Matron
G eorge Francis, W orthy Patron,
w elcom ed M rs- Bennett an d
other local and state dignitaries
oftheO E S .
D uring the evening. Henrietta
Zorn w as presented a 50-year
pin aa
i a m em ber o f the 0 C 8 by
Start
T h e BO m em bers and guests
presen t w ere deligh ted srlth
Lyndall Francis singing “W hite
C h ristm as." She w as
panted by Evelyn Brock.
Following the catered dinner,
m e m b e rs d e p a rte d fo r th e
Masonic Temple for the chapter
m eeting and Inspection o f the
chapter work.

Artists party

Ife ri M aM iilfen .

T h e Sanford-Sendnole Art A s­
sociation held the a n nua l
Christm as party and dinner at
the American Legion building.
According to Chairm an Faye
Siler, "It w aa wonderful.
Everybody waa so pretty and the
steaks were delicious."
There waa a gift exchange and
door prizes were the table ar­
rangements.

held the Annual Christmas Re­
ception at the Henry S. Sanford
Library-Museum on Dec.4. Or­
g a n i z e r s w e r e Myr a B ales.
Donald V incent and Barbara

Entertainment was provided
by Mary Huckabone. singer and
guitarist.

Historians gsthsr
T h e Sanford Historical Society

About 30 guests attended be­
tween 8 and 8 p.m. They were
served Christmas refreshments.
According to Alicia Clarke, a
recent gift o f an accordlan was
displayed for the first time. The
accord tan was presented to the
museum by Julian Stenstrom. It
belonged to his grandfather, a
captain o f one o f the ships that
brought the early Swedish set-

(te n to America, and then to the
Upoala community. The grand­
father walked from Jacksonville
to Sanford and later operated a
— , H R -------

T «t honors Swodos
During the St. Lucia Festival
activities, descendants of the
early Swedish settlers met for a
Swedish tea at the Cultural Aria
Center. It ws a lim e for story­
telling and festivity.
In charge o f the event were
Myra Elsies. Elizabeth Gallant
and Ruth Lee.

If time allowed, he would live with her another 50 vears
Herbert and Mary W ilson.
Longwood. will celebrate their
50th Christmas together this
December 25.
They were married by Father
E.F. Cray In a Catholic ceremony
held In Barre. Vt. Chrlatamas
Day. 1940.
Residents o f Longwood since
1965. Herbert became philo­
sophical about marriage to hfa
lady.
“ I’d live with her another 50
years If Icould." he aald.
Mary said Herbert "did a lot of
hunting and flailing while living
in New Hampshire," where the
couple moved after they mar­
ried.
He owned Wilson's Taxidermy
and Sport Shop and waa one o f
the few taxidermists to mount a
cow's head for an Ice cream
shop, he said.
kutry worked for Princess Shoe
before the move to Orlando,
where Herbert worked for Martin
Marietta until he retired.
D og-fa n ciers, the W ilsons
belonged to the Orlando Dog
Training Club. Herbert served as
president and vice president. He
held both offices in the Orlando
Poodle Club also.
Mary showed poodles In breed
and obedience categories.
Both are m em bers o f the
Independent Order of Foresters.
Court Gator 463, Orlando, for
which Herbert serves as senior
promoter, officer, and editor o f
the newsletter.
The couple will be guests of
friends Gus and Mia Halkls and
their family, at an anniversary
celebration on December 25 at
the Halkls home In the Land­
ings. Longwood. Mta will, be
baking several delicacies, with
assistance from her mother-inlaw. Jenny Halkls.
Herbert said there are two
secrets to a long marriage: a long
engagement and lint to ever fight
about money.
"W e went together three years
to get to know each other well.
We also decided as long as we
had the money, we could buy
anything we wanted. But we
never charged unythlng. We pay
cash." he said.

red and white Christmas floral
airangement. which waa a gift
from the Longwood Civic League
W o m a n 's Club. B la n ch e la
parliamentarian o f the club and
librarian for Its Maxine McGrath
Memorial Library.
Among (he guests were sever­
al members of the Pink Ladles
from Central Florida Regional
Hospital, where Blanche volun­
teered for many years.
Also attending were members
o f the Longwood Civic League
Woman's Club, one guest from
Canada, and many other family
members and friends. Assisting
t h e L e e ' s as h o s t s w e r e
Blanche's grandson and his wife.
Mr. and Mrs. Woody Lee, and
their son. Chris.

Rotary callad to sarvica
Lake Mary Rotarlans gathered
’cn masse’ to spruce up Rinehart
Road In Lake Mary recently.
Chairman for the Adopl-A-Road
program Is Paul Osborne.
"W e had a super turnout and a
super good time." he said.
Rotarlans will maintain the
road six times a year. They’ll be
back out there spearing garbage
for Ihcir canvas bags on Febru­
ary 2.
Participants In the clean-up
were: Mike Avcrill. Mike Black.
Roger Campbell. Brent Carll.
Ernie C avallaro. Dennis
Courson, Lew Crawford. Mike
Curasi. James Curl. T y Dedman.
Gordon Dehler. Vcm Feddersen.
Gene Gregory, Lurry Gulgnon.
Don Jackson. Pete Jamison.
Chuck Lauderdale. Maureen
Llbcratorc. John Litton. Brian
Loc. Paul Marlin. David Mealor.
John Norden. Paul Osborne.
Kathle Ragan. Tom Rosser.
Ke i t h S a m u e ls and B obby
Sharp.

Happy birthday, Blanch#
Blanche Klssane. Longwood.
celebrated her 9Eth birthday
with a large gathering of family
and friends ut the lakeside home
o f her daughter and son-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lee. Longwood.
Blanche looked lovely as she
received her guests In u pale
lavender chllTon dress with a
matching corsage.
R efreshm ents w ere served
from a table resplendent with a

Bingo banatita acadomy
Scott Wyac, Lake Mary Rotary
Club, reported proceeds for yes­
terday’ s bingo game at Flea
World will benefit the Rachel
Pace T h e r a p e u t i c Ri ding
Academy.
Dr. J a n e Puce s p o k e to
Rotarlans last week, explaining
how handicapped children, with
a doctor's prescription, use and
strengthen muscles needed to

walk by riding the academ y'*
hones. Fifty children attend the
academy, with many more on a
watting list.
Scott aald L a n y Gulgnon Is
Rotary's ace bingo caller. Many
other members assist by passing
out cards and verifying wins;
The Jackpot w ill be tabulated
later this week, with a total
donation to the academy to be
determined. Scott aald last lime
Rotary hosted bingo, about #150
was raised for charity.

Cantor eloats lor holidays
Lake Mary Seniors will close
the center at 158 N. Country
Club Rd. for the hpUdays. A ctivi­
ties will resume on January 8.
because Tuesdays are senior
days In Lake Mary.

Club will cofebrato
The South Seminole Garden
Club will meet Tuesday. Deccmb e r 18, 1 1:3C a . m . at
T o w n s e n d ’ s P l a n t a t i o n In
Apopka for the club’ - annual
Christmas luncheon.
E m i l y W h a l t o n aald club
members also look forward to
seeing the beautiful holiday dec­
orations at the restaurant and to
louring the upper floors full of
lovely antiques.
President Doreene Fish urges
members to Include guests at
this luncheon and also says the
public Is Invited and most wel­
come.
Call 830-9809 or 767-8840 for
more Information.

Sharing ovar lunch
Lon gw ood Civic League
W o m a n ’ s Club m em bers
gathered to share aome holiday

spirit last week at the clubhouse.
Th e ladles shared a covered
dish luncheon, and according to
President Elda Nichols, were also
prepared to share their recipes.
Elda said the members had
f i n a l o p p o r t u n i t y to b r i n g
canned goods and staple food
Items for the Christmas baskets
the club will donate to the
C hristian Sharing Center
Longwood.
G ifts were exchanged with
'S ecret Pals.' and m em bers
brought gifts for George Harp,
club member Ila Harp's son. who
Is serving In Ssudl Arabia with
the 82nd Airborne Division. The
w om en 'adopted* G eorge to
cheer him through the lonely
holidays away from home.
C arolyn Blstllne sang solo
Christmas carols at the lun­
cheon. and then led the other
ctub members In a Christmas
sing-along, according to Emily
Whalton.
" E v e r y t h i n g waa perfect.
Carolyn has a beautiful voice."
she aald.
Dore«*ne Fish prepared her
renowned chicken dish, one of
the culinary hits o f the after­
noon.
June Lormann held the win­
ning ticket In the club’s raffle of
a beautiful framed print.
" I'v e never seen
being so shocked to
thing." Emily admitted.
Back row: Larry Dries. Stan
Helen Elkins and Herb
Front: Dean. Garren. Kerry
Klmblcy Elkins.
G 8n

Longw ood. P ag o BC

Paul Oabomo haul* hi# trash bag down Rinohari Road.

�Holidays coincide with
Crooms class reunions
It's d o se to that tim e tor the
Croom s Clsaa at 0 8 After Holi­
day Regale to host Its first affair.
The event will be held at the
Holiday but on Loire Monroe.
Sanlord on Friday. D ec. 28. at 8
p m. an d an 11 a.m . service with
the Rev. Blake and congregation
on Dec. 30.
Thte function w ill allow the
c lass to share a m eal w ith
frien ds, rem inisce about old
times, share love, lifestyles, suc­
cess — share all that they can.
G iving thanks to G od enables all
to be physically, m orally and
spiritually present, a n d In doing
so, to help some needy child.
Join u s far the events of the
year. Cost tor the R egale Is 825
per person or 840 a couple, and
a toy which should be marked
tor a boy or for a girl. All
proceeds w ill be used to help
hind the Class o f'6 8 Scholarship
Fund.
If you are unable to prepay,
please let us know you plan to
attend and pay at the door along
with the donation o f a toy. This
event la also open to all our
Croom s High School friends, so
be sure to spread the word.
Paym ent may be m ailed to:
Class o f '68. P.O. Box 2712.
Sanford. FL 32772-2712. Invite
as m any o f your friends as you
wish; It's your Holiday Regale.
Need more Information? Call
F . A m a n d a A l e x a n d e r at
407-321-7226 or Bernard Mit­
chell at 407-322-5212.

pwofv reunion nowv
The classes o f the 50th Class
Reunion w ill meet today at 0
p.m. at the Elks Hom e. Cypress
Avenue and Seventh Street. For
all concerned Croom s Academy
students during those years and

and 87.SO for children.

all persona Interested In attend­
ing this class reunion Dec. 27
thru Dec. 30. last minute plans
and activities w ill be finalised.
Richard (Dick) Evans. Chairm an.
• t —iR— tJ a l t

n w w i g p fovvj f i m

Visiting w ith the Alfred DeLattlbeaudlere's are (heir daugh­
ter Cynthia McDonald and son
N athan. T h e M cD onalds are
from England. The McDonalds
w ill be visiting throughout the
holiday season.

" T h e O re a te st C h r i s t m a s
E v er", a religious pageant will
be presented by the Youth De­
partm ent o f the New Mt. Calvary
M issionary Baptist Church. This
pageant w aa written, directed,
produced by the youth o f the
church. C om e and. enjoy an
evening o f Christian fellowship
Dec. 23. 6 p.m . st the Sanford
Civic Center. Donation Is 83.
Tickets a re available through
youth leaders by calling 3233224 o r 322-6432.
f M a r v a H a w k i n s Is •

n f -4 4 1

BfMk Mriy for b day
Oospel Music W o rksh op
sponsored by TBJ Music School
w ill be sailing, Saturday. Janu­
ary B. to Freeport for a day of
m usic w ork sh op experience.
Break aw ay for a day. call
321-0483 TBJ Music School.

Tlektts on salt
Commemorative Banquet for
the 1091 D r. Martin Luther
King. Jr. city-wide community
celebration birthday observance
tickets are on sale from m em ­
bers of the committee: Shirley
A l l e n , 3 22 - 9 4 76 or G r a c e y
Posley. 323-3030 or your corre­
spon den t at 322-5418. T h e
banquet w ill be held Monday
evening at 7 p.m .. January 21.
at the Sanford Civic Center. Get
t h e m no
Christm as

H o n o re d for
Tw o cltlzsns war* rtcsntly honored lor their faithful sarvlca to
young ministars. Rapresanting ths Deacon's Layman Union, ths
Rav. W illis Parkins, left In left pholo, prsssnts a plaque to Ruth

Livingston. Perkins shakos Deacon Joseph Jackson's hand In
photo on right.

It’s not dumb to want
information on drugs
D R AM M A R T : I'm In 9th grade
and I hear kids talking about
different drugs, but I really don't
know what some o f them are. I'd
be embarrassed to ask anyone I
know. Can you tell m e what It
means to "freebase" and what
"crack " really Is?

DUMB 9TH GRADER

■iu l X • •

B ««t caregivers from left: DaLols Pttsrson, Sharon Brown, Bonnie
Read, Karen Hudson, Joanne Hardy, 8hlrtey Kunkel, Gertrude

Johnson and Ken Elmers, administrator.

lest caregivers chosen from Hillhaven
SANFORD — In recognition of
atton al F am ily C a re g iv e rs
eek recently, em ployees and
aft at Hillhaven Healthcare
enter participated In a program
i honor the most outstanding
i r e g l v e r s at t he f a c i l i t y .
Illhaven's 360 facilities around
le country look part In the
ogram .

"T h is presents a wonderful
) port unity for us to recognize
ic important contributions In
tring that our em ployees make
ich d a y ." O. Ken Elmers,
clllty administrator, said. "For
lany o f our em p loyees the
im m ltm ent to q u a lity care
x t e n d s far b e y o n d the

workplace. Activities such as
taking care o f children, spouses
and elder parents at home are
Just som e o f the oth er r e ­
sponsibilities that they take
upon themselves In an effort to
help others."
A Hillhaven "Best of the Best"
caregiver Is someone who gives
freely, without return expecta­
tions: Is there when needed,
often going above and beyond
the call of duty: puts others'
needs before I hrl r own: Is
sensitive, forgiving and com ­
passionate: recognizes and re­
spects the worth o f others; has n
positive outlook on life: gives to
themselves, as well as others:

and who demonstrates a heulthy
sense of humor.
Finalists for best cureglvcrs
are: DeLols Peterson. Sharon
'Peaches' Brown. Bonnie Read.
R.N.. Karen Hudson. Joanne
H ardy. S h irle y Kunkel and
Gertrude Johnson.
Winner chosen from the San­
ford location Is Joanne Hardy, a
10-year veteran. She was pres­
ented with an engraved silver
photo album. Kunkcl's name
will be submitted to the reglonul
competition.
" A s far as I'm concerned,
everyone who becomes Involved
In the program Is a winner,"
Elmers said.

DEAR O TH G r A d KR: You are
certainly NOT dumb to want to
get straight Information on these
drugs. The National Institute on
Drug Abuse tells us that freebase
la a form o f cocaine that Is
sm oked. It la an extrem ely
dangerous, but’ commonly used
street drug. Freebase does not
dissolve In water, so the only
way to get It Into the body Is to
smoke It. It Is more dangerous
than "snorting" cocaine through
the nose because It reaches the
brain within seconds, causing a
sudden. Intense high. However,
the high quickly disappears,
leaving the freebase user with an
Intense craving for more o f the
drug. T o make matters worse,
freebase users must Increase
both the amount and frequency
of the dose In order In produce
the desired high, thereby re­
sulting In severe addiction.
Crack Is the street name given
to freebase cocaine, which re­
sembles hard shavings similar to
s i l v e r s o f soup. T h e t e r m
"crack" refers to the crackling
sound lltul is heard us It Is being
smoked, bccuusc the fillers and
Impurities used In processing

JO Y C E IN K.C.
D E A R JOYCEt Here It Is. It was copy­

righ ted In
Whitman.

1987. T h e

author

%
■V

ADVICt
a

A B IG A IL
V A N BUREN

Is Joy

COMES TH E DAWN
A fter u while you learn the subtle
difference
between holding a hand and sharing a life
and you learn that love doesn't mean
possession
and company doesn't mean security
and loneliness Is universal
And you learn that kisses aren't contracts
and presents aren't promises
and you begin to accept your defeats
with your head up and your eyes open
with the grace o f a woman
not the grief of a child
And you learn to build your hope on today
as the future has a w ay of falling apart In
mid-flight
because tomorrow's ground can be too
uncertain for plans
yet each step taken In a new direction
creates a path
toward the promise o f brighter dawn
And you learn that even sunshine burns
If you get loo much
so you plant your own garden
and nourish your own soul

Instead of watting lor samrone
to bring you (lowers
And you learn that love, true love
. always has Joys and sorrows
seems ever present, yet is never quite the
same
becoming more than love and less than
love
so difficult to define
And you learn that through It all
you really can endure
that you really are strong
(hat you do have value
and you team and grow
with every goodbye
vou learn
DEAR ABBYl Will you please reprint u
request from u dog to Its owner, beseeching
the owner to put him to sleep when life
reuses to lie a happy experience?
EVA. A. MICHAUD.
BANGOR. MAINE
DEAR EVA: With pleasure. Herr It is
A DOG'S PRAYER
by Beth Norman Hart Is
Treat me klndlv. mv beloved master fur

Although you didn't ask. I'm
sure you know that the only safe

‘ ice to be when people you
ow are using these drugs Is as
far away from them as possible!

E

i

M ARy KAy
HOLIDAY
GIFT
IDEAS
It It easy to keep up with gift giving
occasion* all year long! Mary Kay can
help with gift ideas, wrapping and
delivery. Including Christmas, birth­
day and anniversaries. Call today for
gift Ideas, complimentary facials and
career Information.

Mary Kay Beauty Consultant
Qinny Com bs

322-7371

^ % tts «W W ^

Joann* Hardy

Calvary Christian Center

Don’t wait, make your own garden grow
DEAR ABBTi A couple o f years ago. you
had a beautiful piece In your column I
would love to have, but I can't remember
the name of It. In It was this line: "Kisses
aren't contracts, and presents aren't pro­
mises. and sunshine bums If you get too
much o f It."

the drug are being released.

no heart In all the world Is more grateful for
kindness than the loving heart of me.
Do not break my spirit with a stick, for
though I should lick your hand between the
blows, your patience and understanding will
more qulekly 'teach me the things yon
would have me do.
Speak lo me often, lor your voice Is the
world's sweetest muslr. as you must '-now
by the fierce wagging of my tall when your
footstep falls upon my wult Ing ear.
When II Is cold und wet. please take me
inside, for 1 am now a domesticated unlmul,
no longer used to bitter elements. And I ask
tui p ra ter glory* than the privilege of sitting
at your feet beside the hearth. Though hud
you no home. I would rather follow you
through tec and snow than rest upon the
softest pillow In the warmest home In all (lie
land, for you are my god and I am your
devoted worshiper.
Keep my pan filled with fresh water, for
although I should nut reproach you were it
dry. I cannot tell you when I suffer thirst.
Fred me clean food. Dial I may stay well, to
romp and play und do your bidding, lo walk
by your side, und slum! ready, willing und
able to proleet you with my life should your
life be In danger.
And. tteloved master, should the Great
Master see fit lo deprive me o f my health or
sight, do not turn me away from you. Italher
hold me gently In your arms as skilled
hands gram rite the merciful boon of eternal
rest...and I will leave you knowing wlih tinlast breath I drew, mv fate was ever sulesl tn
ynur bands

Celebrates Its
!

First A n n ive rsa ry

j

with an annual Hom ecom ing Service

SU N D AY DECEMBER 16
of the 10:00 am and 6 :0 0 pm Services
Special guests will Include Itcv. Donny Rogers from
Dothan. Ala. who ts a national evangelist. Sunday 10
ain Service concludes with a dinner feast tn the fellow­
ship hall. Pastor Max IViolc und the Calvary congrega­
tion Invites you to celebrate this day with them.
F o u rth S tre e t to L a u re l A v * „ S a n fo rd

V E R T IC A L
B L IN D S
• FREE in home estimates

[

• Large selection to
choose from
• Prompt, Friendly Service
•Quality Workmanship
• We Do Replacement Slats
•Custom Valances

For the finest in vertical blinds and mini-blinds, call

S A N F O R D V E R T IC A L S
"A Beautiful New Dinxtion ior Windows"
750 W ylly Ave., Sanford
(Nest to Sanlord Irrigation)________

321-3001

�4 0 — Sanlord Herald. Sanford, Florida — Sunday, December 16,1M0

*t 55T
M . II
Someone w h o w as once Im ­
portant to you awhile back could
reenter your Me again In the
i r ahead. Thta peraon m ight
ve a powerful, constructive
influence on m any areas o f your
life.
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 33-Dec.
*31) Y ou 're not apt to perform too
well under pressure today, ao
don't make things tougher on
yourself than they already are.
The person moat likely to goof
up your agenda la you.
CAM UCM M (D ec. 2 3 -Jan .
10) A friend of yours w h o la
presently at odds with another
friend o f yours might try to draw
you Into their disagreem ent to­
day. If you respond to the bait,
you'll be aorry.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Peb. 10)
You have the m otivation and
drive today necessary to achieve
your objectives. I f you Call to
attain desired results, it m ight
be due to your talents as a
tactician.
H K M
IFeb. 30-M arch 20)
You might And yourself on a
colltakm course today w ith a
person diam etrically opposed to
your view s on a volatile Issue.
T ry to give this Individual som e
space tn the paadng lane.
A M — (March 21-April 19) Be
finicky about your selection to­
day if you 're contem plating a

S

purchase that Is supposed to last
very long time. You may
pay m ore than you should and
end u p wtth a lemon If you 're
not careful.
TAURUS (A pril 30-May 201 If
you take an unyielding position
on .i tetch y Issue today, you can

expect the same type o f posture
e. He/shc Is not
from your mate.
likely to give In before you do.

OSMUn (M ay 21-June 20)
Someone w ho usually looks to
you to bail him/her out o f tight
spots m ight come to you with a
complicated problem again to­
day. You know what can result if
you get too involved.
CANCSRI
l (June 21-July 22) Be
extrem ely careful today you do
not yield to peer pressure and do
or participate In som ething that
does not serve your best Inter­
ests. T here's a chance you can
be m anipulated
U O (July
[July 23-Aug. 22) I f you

Dm . IT. 1990
Financial trends will be m ov­
ing in your favor In the year
ahead and this could result In
I m p r o v e d m a t e r i a l
circumstances. Make the most o f
your opportunities.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) The ways and means to
acquire som ething luxurious
you've been wanting for yourself
looks like it can be worked out at
this lime. Focus your efforts on
fulfilling this special desire.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Persona) interests can be
gratified today If you mask your
assertiveness with unselfishness
and charm. Be sure there Is also
something tn It for the other guy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Your possibilities Tor fulfilling
realistic objectives are belter
than usual today. Don’ t give up
on your expectations, m erely
keep them within pr act i cal
parameters.
FISCM (Feb. 20-March 20)
You are in an Interesting cycle

by Bob Thavn

FRANK AND ERNEST

X CAN'T M t

r

THiNfeiNO W f 'A f /TUNNING O U T ^
Of

W E IL G A R F i E L P , 1 fOliHQ
C H R lftTM A f* T R E E
WE COOLP A F F O R P

i

,

by Jim Davis

LH JU U
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11 fa*t*4&lt;

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1«W_.

HARM'S

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i

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i

■

■

j

\

m

J
are able to evaluate develop­
ments through the eyes o f your
competition today, you should
be successful. With limited vis­
ion you may lose what you’ve
already acquired
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) An
em otional response, such as
giving someone a piece o f your
mind out o f anger, will only
make a bad situation worse. Let
y ou r c o o le r Judgment lake
c o m m a n d in f r u s t r a t i n g
circumstances.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Re­

sources for a Joint venture must
be managed very skillfully et
this time where both parties artc o n c e r n e d . I m p r u d e n c e on
behalf o f either party could
deplete the endeavor.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You are likely lo be extrem ely
resistant today If anyone tells
you what to do and when to do
It. yet this may be exactly how
you treat associates or com pa­
nions.
(0 1 9 9 0 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

derived through persons with
whom you're Involved socially.
There could be a big payoff from
being nice to everyon e you
know.
AR BS (March 21-Aprll 19)
Don’ t duck tedious tasks or
assignments today, because that
which appears to be the most
arduous could turn out to be the
easiest to perform. Challenge is
the companion to opportunity.

similar dispositions. Something
Interesting, as well as fun. m ay
result.
LKO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
have a special knack today for
handling tasks that I nvo l ve
creativity or beautification. Th e
unsightly can be transformed by
your artistic touch.

V1ROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
D on’ t be surprised today If
someone you find appealing
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) It evinces an equal interest In you
behooves you to be observant o f today. This person has been
p e rs o n s you a d m i r e today, waiting for the right time to
because you might be able to make his/her feelings known.
profit from studying their expe­
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
riences and procedures. You can Make the concerns o f someone
use what you team.
you love your top priority today.
(May 21-June 20) You'll be adept at doing things
Som ething advantageous might for this person he/shc can't
be derived today from an ar­ accomplish unaided.
rangement that has been Initi­
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
ated by a person with whom you lavish In your praise today,
have stron g e mot i onal lies. provided there is Justification for
Th ere's room for you In this your comments. Sincere a p ­
endeavor.
proval from you will be o f
CANCER (June 21-July 22) enormous value to (he recipi­
Your pleasant and cheerful de­ ents.
meanor could serve as a magnet ( 0 1 9 9 0 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

M'RV'T IR H C
t,
»
J u Vv. M_

1 j

_

■ • V , ' j V,

«-

By James Jacoby

c iM M itA M THA*0f / l-&amp; ~

GARFIELD

IK f l T

'J U J U
D L iiiiJ

teams
•Davtimi

Here is a par-contest deal. You
are South, declarer In fou r
hearts, and can see the EastWest cards. You can't duck the
opening lead, since West will
give East a spade ruff, and East
will play a club to W est's ace for
one more niff. So you take the
diamond ace and play a high
heart. When West shows out.
there Is a second problem. I f you
try to get to dummy to pick up
East's trump Jack, the play will
go as If you had ducked at trick
one. with East Setting tw o spade
ruffs. So you cash three top
hearts, leaving the Jack out-stand-lng. You next lead the
spade Jack. West covers and you
play dummy's ace. but East does
not rufT. You play a low spade
back lo your 10, East again
discarding. So you play a third

spade to dummy's queen. Still
no rulT from East. Now what? If
you play a club. West will take
the ace and lead a diamond to
East’s Jack. East will cash the
heart J ic k and switch to a
diamond. You will ruff with your
last heart but won't be able to
score tw o d u b tricks. The same
result occurs If you play a
diamond. Suppose, however,
that you simply play a fourth
spade from dummy and discard
your little diamond. West wins,
but now what? If he plays a
diamond, you will ruff and play a
club. If he plays another spade,
you will roll and play a club. In
any event. East cannot gain (he
lead and cash his heart Jack. You
will be able to score your club
queen and make 10 tricks.
( 0 1 9 9 0 . N E W S P A P E R ENTERPRISEASSN.

NORTH

U-U-M

♦ AQSS1

*&gt;711
♦ SI
♦ KJ
WEST

EAST
♦ -•-

♦ K9I7S

*--.

♦ J SS3
♦ J 10 91 3
♦ 9S13

♦ KQ76
♦ A 10 71

SOUTH
♦ J 101
♦ A K Q 10 a
♦ A1

♦ QS1
Vulnerable: Both
D e a le r West

Sm U
1*
3*

Writ
1*
Dbl
Pais

Norik
Pass
Kcdbl
1*

Kail
Pail
3♦
All pau

Opening lead: ♦ K

Leonard Starr
BUGS BUNNY

�Sanford HsraM, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Dactmber 16. TWO — SC

Longwood
Herbert W ilson reported the
Elkins family,- whom Indepen­
dent O ld er o f Foresters, Court
Gator 463 hosted, has returned
to England after touring Central
Florida. Oarren and Dean Elkins
suffer from cystic fibrosis and
their parents felt a trip to the
entertainm ent capital o f the
I world w ould do much to imI prove spirits.
i H erb spoke to parents Stan
and H elen during their stay.
They expressed appreciation to
Foresters. Inc lu di ng Chief
Ranger Larry Dries and hls wife,
Connie, w ho helped make the
vacation a success.

B yatt o ffe rs p o st-m o d e rn ro m a n c e
■ v A A Im tt

(BsaiimH-sa, SSS pf.. SSS.M)

Pianist*
Ahuvta w ill take tests after
I high school before entering the
[arm y . He w ill be able to continue
I h ls studies and w ill be given
[am p le piano practice time.

Pvt Karl Wrttftt

B o b b y L . a n d P a t r i c i a A.
Robinson o f Sanford, h as gradu­
ated from the Hawk Missile lire
control repair course at the U.S.
A rm y M issile an d M unitions
Center an d School, Redstone
Arsenal. A la.

Pvt. Karl W right has comale training at Port
r.Ky.
During the training, students
Ahuvta has some advice for received Instruction In drill and
I friends at Lake Brantley who c e re m o n ie s, w e a p o n s, m ap
la y be begin n in g to w orry r e a d i n g , t a c t i c s , m i l i t a r y
Ib o u t I m p e n d i n g a d u l t re- courtesy, m ilitary justice, first
aid, and Arm y history and tradi­
' Utles.
tions.
•
•
He is the son o f Vera O. and
‘I’m very young but I've been
Clarence W right o f 640 Lincoln
it awhUe. I’ve learned
Parkway, O vled a
to face things by m yself 1
The private la a 1990 graduate
you can be responsible for
o f Oviedo High School.
rself. It's not easy, I've
that. too. But It's possl- rVl* r ®lftwH PPlilw
beaald.
Pvt. Patrick T. Mike, son o f

The course provides Instruc­
tion for students to perform
m aintenance on the Haw k fire
control equipm ent as w ell aa to
operate an a perform operator
testa and adjustm ents on battery
contr ol cen ters a n d related
equipm ent.
He la a 1969 graduate of
Sem inole High School, Sanford.

In an old book once owned b y the Victorian
poet Randolph Henry Aah. Roland Mitchell, a
part-time, underpaid academ ic researcher,
cornea acroaa the draft of a letter by the poet to
an unnamed wom an. The letter suggests the
end o f an am oroua episode in A sh 's life, an
eptaode heretofore unknown In an otherwise
well-chronicled life.
Thun beglna A.S. Byatt'a ambitious, in­
triguing and wonderful “ Possesion." which
ahe calls, citing H awthorne's preface to “The
House of Seven G ables,'* a “ rom ance" but
which might Just a s well be labeled the first
"post-m odem rom ance" — a self-conscious
exploration and exam ination o f the nature o f
language, literary Influence and the changing
values and m ores that surround that moat
delicate of Issues, hum an sexuality.
But that substructure — daunting as It can
be In the more than BOO pages o f this In every
w ay "b ig " book — should not put the reader

F IC T IO N
1. D m k — Judith Krxntx (last week No. 6
— 6.091 copies ordered)
3. lla n ln m , Ha. i t D ark B a b y — David
E d d ln fi (3 — 4.832)
3. T M Right R e fe rs C h ristm as — Clement
Moore (3.868)
4. P la la a a f P a ssage — Jean Auel (1 —
3.703)
5. A Christm as Caret — Charles Dickens (7
. 3 309)
6. H ig g le Passage — Charles Johnson
(3.234)
7. P e a r P a s t M lg a lg h t — Stephen King (3
- 3 .1 8 8 )
8. T h e W itch in g B e a r — Anne Rice (5 —
3.051)
9. J s r a s e k P a rk — Michael Critchen (7 —
2.354)
10. PessesM aa — A S . Byatt (2.035)

NON-FICTION
1. A Ufa ea the Reag - Charles Kuralt (2
- 2 0 .4 4 8 )
2. The Civil Wart Aa Ulaatratod History
- Geoffrey Ward (1 - 12.504)
3. Iran Jsha— Robert Bly ( 3 - 1 1.068)
4. Ba l e a s e Be — Bo Jackson (4 — 9,852)
5. Uaga McCartney's Hems Cashing —
Linda McCartney (6.309)

»WlCo—M

6. The Pragai Oaanaet aa Oar Immigrant
Aacaaters—J eff Smith (5 — 5.650)
7. Millie's Rank — Millie, as told to Barbara

y l CwwmiV
OiMMIlR
a*' iTO
rlMwM
.'
isi.—
"'*™i
-1

rt» +m+u ♦»«»

Bush (4.996)
a. Prlgay Fright Lights — H.G. Blaalnger (6
- 4 .7 3 6 )
9. Martha Stewart's Christmas — Martha
Stewart (4,533)
10. The Jap of Cooking — Irma Rombauer
(3.360)
.. „

ow n **?, * "» * r T V

off. for " P ossesston " Is also a very, very good
read.
Actually, jn some ways It Is two very gcod
reads for Byatt tells two stories In the course o f
the book. First, there Is the contemporary story
o f Roland Mitchell and Maud Bailey, an
academic feminist, as they pursue the mystery
o f the relationship between Ash and Christa bel
LaMotte. And there is the story o f Aah and
LaMotte revealed In hints. In fits and starts,
through Byatt's amazing creation of the letters.
Journals and poems o f the two Victorian
writers.
Along the way there are many mysteries to
be solved, mostly o f the Intellectual sort, and
some wonderful send-ups o f academia and Its
c o n t e m p o r a r y I n h a bi t an t s — s t r i de nt
fem in ists, academic back-slabbers, pro­
fessional climbers and scholarly plodders — os
their Jealousies and rivalries clash.
Thoughtful without being heavy-handed.
"Possession." which won the Booker Prize —
Britain's moat coveted literary award -- Is one
o f the best books o f the season.

M A M PAPERBACKS
1. Oaatla Ragae — Joanna Lindsey (5 —
13,361)
2. Dsaess with Waives — Michael Blake (3
- 1 0 .8 2 6 )
3. It— Stephen King( 8 - 10,271)
4. Misery— Stephen King (8.432)
5. Bag Pises — Dean Koontz (5 — 7,403)
6. Rsaseashle Doubt — Philip Friedman (2
- 6 .7 9 7 )
7. Call Me Aaaa — Patty Duke (8 - 4.166)
8. P e e c a a lt ’ s Pendulum — Umbert Eco
(3.555)
9. High Treasea — Robert Groden (3.547)

10. Star Trek No. Bit Hearn la tha Master
— Dana Kramer-Rolls (2.465)

TRADE PAPERBACKS
1. All I Ntegfg to Enow I Learned from
My Cat — Suzy Becker (1 - 2 3 .8 9 3 )
2. Cartoon History of the U elvers# — .
Larry Gonick (15.586)
3. Lata Night with David Lettermaa —
David Letterman (4 — 8.662)
4. Otager Tree — Oswald Wynd (3 - 6.125)
5. Lave Tan Forever — Robert Munsch
(5.160)
6. The Jeopardy Book — Alex Treback
(5.006)
7. The Authoritative Calvin and Hobbes
— BUI Watterson (3.912)
8. Haw Rida on the Block — Lynn
Goldsmith (2 - 3 .4 8 2 )
9. Daacos with Wolves — Michael Blakc
(3.383)

10. World Almanac aad Bask of Pacta (7
- 3 .0 0 4 )
Rankings based on orders to Ingram Book
Co. from more than 7.000 bookstores na­
tionwide.

Carson-------- Wlf- Bno&gt;tfTh"a"
□ C o H a n o d fro m P a g e 1C

laid off."
C ar s o n said b e c a u s e the
center's policy Is to help as
many people as can be helped,
some clients may take advan­
tage o f the free food.

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"W e ll. Instead o f alighting
someone who needs food. I'd
rather give it. even If someone
who doesn't need it gets It." he
said.
The avowed 'scrounger' for the
center. Carson collects discount
priced or free food from area
grocery stores and bakeries.
He Is past president o f Klwanls
and serves as an usher In the
Grace United Methodist Church,
and la a certified lay speaker. He
recounted once while preaching
a sermon In an Orlando church,
a congregation m em ber In the
first pew fell asleep with hls
mouth agape. The snoring was
deafening. Carson said.
" It was very disconcerting.
Maybe people don't always want
to hear what you have to Bay."
he mused.
Carson said hls wife, Faye,
affecllonalely calls him her
"R aging Aging Bull" because he
Is so opinionated.
" I have an opinion about
hunger. We need to get back to
basics and help each other. If
every person would buy a few
extra cans of food when they go
to the grocery store, and then
donate those cans once a month
to organizations like the sharing
center, nobody In this country
would ever go hungry. One
person would feed another. And
with the state of the economy
and lack of Job security, you just
never k'low ." Carson warned.
You might be helping your
neighbor someday. He might be
helping you.

»»iK w

For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, Dec. 14.

1

(ItHi (■»

I

CFLASATWnm
HWY. 1749-223-7X2

2.) NAVY SEA
30i M l BAT

fe

JA CO B'S LAOPER
FLATUNEhS

S a n fo rd H e ra ld
is a proud member of the “Welcome
Wegon“ Family In Seminole County

If You Are:
M o v in g Into O r
A round The A re a
G e ttin g Married
H aving A Baby

Let your Welcome Wagon representative
answer yo u r questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.
If You Live In O ne Of T hese Areas,
P le a se Call
San fo rd — 323-4614
Lake M ary — 321-6660 or 330-3311
L o n gw o o d — 331-4016 or 869-9369
W inter S p r in g s — 696-2515
A ltam onte — 869-4340
C a sse lb e rry — 699-9255 or 696-2515
O viedo — 695-3819

�__ .__ ____ —
__

___

IN B R I E F
O h e co lle g e for C h ristm a s

.

SANFORD - The Florida Prepaid College Program has a
anggrslkai far those who don't know what to get their children,
grandchildren or other special person for Christmas.
Th e suggest the perfect gift would be a college education.
Buying a college education far the future at today's prices
makes It a flnactally arise gift as well.
They program coordinators w ill even throw In a free gift card
to announce the gift, which must be purchased by Jan. 11.
1991.

For more Information about the program, contact the Florida
Prepaid College Program at 1-800-552-GRAD or pick up an
application at any Barnett Bank' office throughout the state.

recently passed her state
b o a r d e x a m i n a t i o n to
become a Licensed Practical
Nurse (LPN).
Rentsch graduated from
the Seminole Community
College nursing program
earlier this year.
She la also a graduate o f
the International Business

^

Students wrap up projects
before ending for holidays

■*

# ________I t S ______ S S I ___________ L t ____I

t r

.

ii
I

Cattwrin# Rtfrttch
College In El Paso. Texas as a certified stenographer.

N «w parenting

c Im s m

at S C C

SANFORD — Seminole Communly College and the Parent
Resource Center are co-sponsoring a group or new classes
beginning Jan. 7.
Parents and babies are encouraged to enroll early In the
Some o f the classes Include:
The Baby Lab for parents and babies from birth to crawling.
Mondays and Thursdays. Jan. 8 to Feb. 28 from 12:30 to 2
p.m. 920 per eight week session.
The Baby-Toddler Lab for parents and toddlers approximate­
ly 12 to 18 months. Tuesdays and Fridays. Jan. 8 through
March 1 from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. 825 per eight week session.
The Baby-Toddler Lab for parents and toddlers approximate­
ly 18-24 months. Mondsys and Thursdays. Jan. 7 through Feb.
28.9:30 to 11:30 a.m. 925 per eight-week session.
The Two-Year Toddler Co-op for two year olds to attend
Mondays. Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 9 to 11:30 a.m.
Parents attend one morning a week and on Monday evening
from 7 to 9:30 p.m. From Jan. 7 through Jan. 30. 932.50 per
eight week session.
The Two-Year Toddler Co-op for two year olds to attend
Wednesdays. Thursdays and Fridays from 9 to 11:30 a.m.
Parents attend one m om lng a week and on Monday evening
from 7 to 9:30 p.m. From Jan. 7 through Jan. 30. 932.50 per
eight week session.

Qmnwood Lakts brings Toys for Tots
LAKE MARY — Students at Greenwood Lakes Middle School
collected more than 500 toys for youngsters In the Head Start
program at the Hopper Exceptional Education Center. 1101
Bay Ave. In Sanford, and the pre-kindergarten program at the
First Impressions Day Care Center 1221W. 7th St. In Sanford.
The group, sponsored by Betty Crypzer. Karen Dugger and
Susan White, wrapped the gifts and delivered them this past
week to the students In the programs.

Ufsgossonst UCF
ORLANDO — The Learning Institute For Elders (LIFE) at the
University o f Central Florta will have an open house on
Tuesday. Jan. 15.1991 at 10a.m.
Life Is a program at UCF that Is geared toward retirement
aged men and women who seek continued social and
Intellectual stimulation.
There will be annual dues for members, though the exact
figure has not yet been decided upon. College-level study
groups will be formed within LIFE for those who wunt to
continue to learn.
Members need not have a college degree to Join. They must
have a willingness to participate and a commitment to
learning.
For more Information, call the LIFE office at 823-5433.

ly M M O M U T M
High school corrsspondsnl

LAKE MARY - One can
definitely tell that It Is the
holid ay season at Lake
Mary High School.
Students have been run­
ning about In Santa Claus
capo and their best red and
reen garb and teachers
ave decorated their rooms
In holiday colors.
On Dec. 10. the Music
Department also got Into
the spirit for their annual
W in t e r C o n c e r t. Lake
Mary's huge and award­
winning chorus teamed up
with the Band to produce a
night Tull o f holiday cheer
and surprises. The show
opened with the acclaimed
Odyssey Show Choir sing­
ing the Beach Boys' classic
"B e True to Your School."
which dedicated the show
to new Principal Don Smith.
Other highlights Included a
group of male singers, call­
ing themselves the "Golfers
In the Da-'k." singing oldie
"T h e Lion Sleeps Tonight."
senior Shelly Gltckson's
solo. " I Dreamed a Dream."

S

t

_____

from "L e s Miserabies"; se­
nior Corey Harrelsoa's ren­
dition o f BUly Joel's "A n d
So It Goes," and the grand
finale, sung b y all the choirs
and LMHS chorus gradu­
ates home from college,
which consisted o f "J oy to
th e W o r l d . " H a n d e l ' s
"H allelujah" and the LMHS
alma mater.
The student government
gave some fay to those w ho
really needed It this week
when they performed tw o
service projects.
The first w as a
trip to both the
Nursing Home and the Hill
Haven N ursing Home,
where members sang tradi­
tional carold and gave the
residen ts hom em ade
Christmas cards. The other
project was a trip to the
Russell Home for Atypical
Children in Orlando, where
the students gave clothes,
toys and food to the men­
tally handicapped children
at the home.
S t u d e n t s a re l o o k i n g
forward to all new activities
In when classes resume In
1991.

9S

school correspondent

SANFORD - Students at
Seminole High School were
ready far the holidays by
the tim e classes wound
down on Friday afternoon.
Everyone was ripe far some
time o ff from t»*e pressures
o f school.
"T h ree, two. one. g o ."
T h e days until Christmas
v a c a t i o n w e r e c o unt ed
Students weren't the only
ones marking o ff the days
and watching the clock.
Faculty members as well
l o o k e d f o r w a r d to a
three-week-long break.
T h e Semin ole family
would be broken up for the
holidays.
For acme It will be a time
for visiting relatives In other
states, while others try to
battle their way to bargains
at the shopping centers.
" I walked out o f the
Altamonte Mall with about
eight different bags." said
s e n i o r D a m a r l s B e c hl r
about her Christmas shop­
ping.

B efore students could
enjoy their holiday vaca­
tion, t h e r e were m a n y
things to take care o f at
Juniors were able to pick
up their class rings on
Wednesday. Dec. 12.
A s Juniors were paying for
their m em entos o f high
school, seniors ordered caps
and gowns for June cere­
monies.
Mu A l p h a Theta, the
math honor society also
kept busy before vacation.
During lunch. Mu Alpha
T h eta m em bers took
Christmas candygram or­
ders. A card and candy cane
were delivered to friends,
boyfriends, and girlfriends.
Junior class officers got
Into the Christmas spirit
and offered to give presents,
for a price, o f course, that
varied with the size of the
gift. Officers will station
t h e m s e l v e s In front o f
Wal-Mart and wrap all aorta
o f gifts next week. Junior
officers will uae the pro­
ceeds to help finance the
1991 Junior-Senior prom.

Locals named to national Dean’s List
LAKE FORREST. III. - The
following students from Semi­
nole County were named to the
National Dean's List. The stu­
dents must be In the top 10
percent o f their class In an
accredited college.
• From Sanford: La Telaha B.
C a r t e r , w h o Is a t t e n d i n g
B e t h u n e - C o o k m a n Col l eg e ;
James F. Davis, who Is attending
the University o f South Carolina
at Columbia; Dionne Nichole
Green who Is attending Harvard
University: Jeffrey S. Haner who
Is attending Oral Roberts Uni­
versity: Kimberly D. Jackson,
who Is attending Georgia Col­
lege: Sheryl A. Jones, who Is
att ending Bethune-Cookman
College; Theresa M. Savage, who
Is attending Warner Southern
College and Trenton L. Schake.
who Is attending Liberty Univer­
sity.
• From Lake Mary: Tcmlka L.
Alexander, who la attending
Livingstone College and Phillip
A. Bocttjcr. who Is attending the
University o f Central Florida.
• From Longwood: Thomas H.
Baker, who Is attending the
University of Central Florida:
Shannon M. Duffy, who Is at­
tending the University o f Central
Florida: Laurie A. Gratio, who is
attending the University of
Central Florida: Calvin F. Hard­
ing Jr., who Is attending the
University of Central Florida;
Natasha S. Harwell, who It
attending Oral Roberts Universi­
ty: Mary A. Hungerford. who Is
attending the University of
C e n t r a l F l o r i d a ; V l n a y H.
Jotwanl. who is attending the
Untvcristy o f Florida: Julie R.
Kllck. who 1s attending the
University o f Georgia: Leslie L.
Larsen, who Is attending the
University o f Central Florida:
Mark S. McCready. who is at­

tending the University of Central
Florida: Susan H. Somach, w ho
Is attending the University o f
Central Florida and Charles M.
W e e k s w h o la a t t e n d i n g
Gallaudct University.
• From Chuluota : Donna
Rasmuaen Srofe. who Is attend­
ing the University of Centra)
Florida.
• From O v i e d o : Robin L.
Calssle. who Is attending Fisher
College: Kendra Y. Green who la
attending the University o f
Central Florida: Benjamin F.
Heald who la attending Milligan
College: Anna L. Hollis, who Is
att ending the University o f
South Carolina at Cloumbla;
Samuel R. Hughes who Is at­
tending Culver Stockton College:
Patrick D. Murchison who la
attending Wl nt hr op C ollege;
Jason P. Paris who Is attending
the University o f Florida; Or­
lando Portalatln who Is attend­
ing the University o f Central
Florida: Michelle A. Stricklnd
who Is attending the University
o f Central Florida and G ary
Lewis Wentz Jr. who Is attend­
ing the University o f Central
Florida.

University o f Central Florida and
Stacy Zimmerman who to at­
tending the University o f Central
Florida.
• F rom Casselberry: Joan
Anderson who to attending Un­
ion College: Petlna P. Knowlton

who to attending Central Florida
Community College; Lisa M.
Kunerth who to attending the
University of Central Florida and
Brian R. McComlck Jr. who to
attending the University o f Flor­
ida.

T o p vocation al stu d e n ts
fo r D e ce m b e r honored
LONGWOOD - Th e Sem­
inole Vocational Association
recently presented their
monthly awards to the out­
standing middle school,
high school and community
college students In Semi­
nole County.
The awards arc given to
youngsters who have met
certain goals set by the
association.
The Seminole Vocational
Association's awards meet­
ing. which was at the Quali­
ty Inn North, on State Road
434 In L o n g w o o d . was

sponsored by Sun Bank o f
Lake Mary.
Mary C r a g e r . a
c o o r d i n a t o r wi t h t he
diversified cooperative edu­
cation program at Seminole
High School and president
o f the association said the
students arc the "tops” In
t h e i r f i e l d s . T h e y a re
nominated for the awards
by their Instructors.
T h e association was
formed last year to support
vocational students in the
district schools and at Sem­
inole Community College.

• From Altamonte Springs:
Shannon W. Brandt who Is
attending Oral Roberta Universi­
ty. Jull A. De Castro who to
attending the University o f
Miami: Eric D. Dunlap who to
attending Samford University;
Sheri Fetzko who to attending
the University o f Central Florida;
Charles G. Geltner who to at­
tending the University of Central
Florida; Ivan G. Hernandez who
to attending Nova University:
Angela Moulton who to attending
Belmont College: Debra Sapp
who to attending the University
o f Central Florida: Geoffrey
Wartell who to attending the

District holiday schedule

Andrea Talley, 8, seems like she could hardly wait for the end of the
Medieval Day activities at Wilson Elementary School in Sanford this
paet week. Other students, from all accounts, had a better time

Sem inoles countdown to
a happy hoiiday season

The offices will reopen after
SANFORD — Seminole County
schools will be closed until Christmas for three days (Dec.
26. 27 and 281. though that Is a
Thursday. Jan. 3.
W h i l e s o m e o f t h e ad* popular vacation time and many
mlnlstrators may be In the offices will be operating with a
schools next week, the teachers skeleton crew during that three
and students will not be on day period.
campus.
The district offices will be
The Head Start p ro g ra m s a t a ||
closed again Dec. 31 and Jan. 1
locations around the district will
and reope ,i for business on Jan.
be closed until Jan. 3 as well.
2.
T h e administrative offices.
It Is best to call the county
1211 Mcllonville Ave. In Sanford
will be open regular hours offices at 322-1252 before going
•there during the holiday period.
through Dr-. 21.

fh# awards wars presented to (lira! row) Mlchaal Wnilnay, Lake
Mary High School; Slave Wails, Greenwood Lakes Middle
School; Heather Lorenz, Tuskawllla Middle School; Shalonda
Johnson, Crooms School ol Choice; Jamey Jones, Crooms
School of Choice; Robert Dugger, Milwee Middle School;
Kathleen Furlong. Tuskawllla Middle School; (second row) Erika
Henderson, Seminole High School; Bobby Robinson, Oviedo
High School; Stacy Gold. Lake Brantley High School; Glenda
Bass, Seminole Com m unity College; Christina Ainsworth,
Seminole High School; Rebecca Olmeda, Milwee Middle School;
(back row) Natalie Fontaine, Lyman High School; Dr. Marion
Dailey, district assistant superintendent for instruction, who
spoke to the students; Richard Hardway, Oviedo High School;
Carrie Ferguson, Lake Brantley High School; Rarhel Collier,
Lyman High School and Angela Ferguson, Lake Brantley High
School

\

N TK1

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                    <text>November 19, 1990

M ONDAY

25 CeHis
" r — w-vi

Sanford Herald
83rd Year, No. 79 — Sanford, Florida

•

N E W S D IG E S T
V

'i

•.

___

□ Sports

Toamt fight for champlonahlp
O R L A N D O — Seminole. Edgewaler and
Leesburg high schools will collide at Double E
Stadium on the campus of Evans High School to
decide the Class 4A-Dtstrtct 7 champion to meet
Tarpon Springs In the first round of the state

□ Pooplo
Drfod plants art forovar
As winter approaches. It can be fun to take
long walks looking for dried plant materials to
place Into permanent flower arrangements.
Dried plants can add beauty to an arrangement
so don't overlook twigs with an Interesting
shape or pine canes, grasses and sedges.
,

•

■

—
-| m ?

B u s t

*

, i n-g-r- - V

f p r

Sanford ordinance keeps
the peace, police report
Florida now has a statewide taw covering what
m any Seminole County municipalities have
already enacted Into city ordinances, aimed at
reducing those booming sounds from automobile
speakers.
Across the state, effective Immediately, you
d o n 't have to be m oving, you need not
necessarily be on a public street and n police
officer need only hear your thumping bass to
hand you a citation under Florida's boom car law.
In Sanford, the ordinance has been on the
books for many months and has apparently made

Lake Mary road
widening hits
more obstacles

Advisory committaa to moat

Haratd staff wrltsr

SANFORD — The Seminole High School Local
School Advisory Committee (LSAC) will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. In the school's media
center. Seminole High School is located at 2701
Ridgewood Ave.. Sanford.
Seminole's LSAC serves as the primary
communications mechanism between parents
and the school. All parents and any other adults
Interested In the students of Seminole High
School are Invited to attend this and all other
L S A C meetings.
On the agenda for Tuesday night's meeting Is
the school's Involvement In community-based
after-school programs. Plans will also be com­
pleted for the Mfes SHS contest, which will take
place In January.

LA K E MARY - Luke Mary will not honor
Seminole County's request to loosen Its zoning
codes for condemned property In the proposed
path of the Lake Mary Boulevard widening
project.
Last week Seminole County butted heads
with Lake Mary during a city commission
meeting In trying to obtain a special exception
to the city's zoning codes for two businesses on
Lake Mary Boulevard.
The county has been obtaining right-of-way
along Lake Mary Boulevard In preparation for
the massive widening and beautification pro­
ject that will be a Joint effort of the two
governments. The county last night requested
the city ease Its building codes for two
condemned structures standing In the pro­
posed path of the widened road.
Following comments by the city and county
attorneys and city staff members, city com­
missioners agreed to uphold Its ordinances and
deny the county's request.
Mayor Paul Trem el summed up the matter
by saying. "Th is city will continue to uphold
all of Its ordinances. The county's request Is
denied."
Th e county has filed suit to condemn the
Lake Mary Boulevard property, but the
amount to be paid for the land is yet to be
□ S e e Road. Fags 8 A

Australian found guilty
S A N F O R D — G ra h a m Dobson. 33. of
Australia. Is guilty of the attempted murder of
Seminole Sheriff's Deputy Thomas Johnson on
March 30.
That was the finding of a Jury In Sanford
Friday after two hours of deliberation. Dobson
was also round guilty of armed robbery. He and
a Colorado man were accused of robbing a Sun
Bank In rural Longwood. Johnson foiled their
getaway In a shootout. Although Dobson fired
no shots, the other robbery suspect wounded
Johnson and shot and killed himself.
Dobson's three-day trial was before Circuit
Judge C. Vernon Mize J r . He faces a possible
sentence of life In prison.

1-4 'bomb' a hoax
SANFORD — Seminole County Sheriff's Bomb
Squad Lt. Marty LaBrusclano said today the
reported "bom b" that caused a four-hour traffic
tie-up on Interstate 4 Saturday morning con­
tained no explosives.
The Interstate was dosed and traffic rerouted
from State Road 436 while explosives techni­
cians removed a device from a car parked near
the highway. Altamonte Springs police had
received a telephone warning that a package
found near the car contained a bomb. The
package was recovered and examined, but
contained no explosives, LaBruadano said.

Polk may bo homo Thanksgiving
A L TA M O N T E SPRINGS - Sheriff John Polk,
who has been hospitalized In Altamonte Springs
since Nov. 7 with a heart condition, hopes to
spend Thanksgiving Day at home In Sanford,
Dr. Benjamin Newman said today.
Polk. 58. was expected to possibly be released
from the hospital over the weekend, but
Newman said, “ He never asked about getting
o u t." Newman said Polk Is comfortable at the
hospital, and received many visitors over the
weekend.
It was one year ago that Polk underwent his
second heart bypass surgery in North Carolina,
and his health has declined since. Newman said
Polk wus hospitalized last Thanksgiving for that
surgery, so he hopes to be home by Thursday.

— I ffiTTT

•

. v p •,

‘ b o o m

Its mark on helping keep peace and quiet In the
city.
"We've handed out numerous citations on
this." said Police Chlcr Steven Harriet. He
explained that the Sanford ordinance pertains
only to motor vehicles. "Th is Is actually the same
as a traffic violation." he said, "and the people
who receive them will either have to go before the
county Judge or pay a fine."
Lake Mary and Longwood had also enacted
similar ordinances earlier this year.
Longwood's ordinance, passed June 18. took
the problem one step further and Included loud
sounds from any amplifiers, radios or sound
producing machines no matter where they were.
The wording of the Longwood ordinance called
It "excessive and unnatural, prolonged and
unusual sounds."

Joseph Britt, 9, It drsassd at a character from
the book "How Glooakap Found Summer” by
Godfrey Leland Students In Deborah Kelly’a

,

. . .

c a r s ’

Florida's new law waa clarified by regulaiitlons
approved
unanimously
.
. last week* by Oov. Bob
Martinez
farilnez a
and the Cabinet.
The statewide law took effect Oct. I and la
Intended to quiet down those supercharged stereo
systems some people Install In their cars. The law
provides for fines of 839.
Critics said the law was too vague. So the:
Department of H ighw ay Safety and Motor
Vehicles crafted the regulations which agency
chief Leonard Mellon std should clear up any
questions.
"Booming stereos are not only a nuisance, they;
are a safety hazard.” Mellon said. "Drivers who
can't hear the sound of traffic for the sound of
music likewise can't hear another car’s horn, a
D

third Qrade d a t a at GoWaboro Clementary
School d ra tted a t charactara from their favorite
stories last week.

Board may consider ‘protective zones’
to shelter sensitive parcels of county
B y J . MARK ■ ANFIBLD
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — Seminole County commissioners may
consider allowing developers to exchange densities
from one site to another In order to preserve land.
The concept would protect sensitive areas of the
county from construction but could congest nlrrudy
developed areas.
County planning director Tony VanDcrworp told
commissioners the practice might require selection of
"protection zones" in areas of (he county where Mime
homes might be built but are environmentally scnsltlvc
and should be preserved.
The practice also requires selection of "receiving
zones" where higher concentrations of housing can hc
allowcd by transferring Ihc development rights or
"credits" away from protection zones. VanDcrworp
said. He also suggested commissioners consider
authorizing county officials to buy development rights
to ussure protection of land without actually pitying the
full cost of the land.
The county's 820 million conservation land acquisi­
tion bond approved overwhelmingly by voters Nov. 6

will also play a major role In protection of county lands.
Major sections of the county could be purchased during
the next five years und preserved from development
and nearby development.
Commissioner Pat Warren, who proposed the refer­
endum. said the bond proceeds should also be used lo
acquire bulldable "uplands" to allow for the repllnlshmcnt of the underground drinking water ac­
quirer.
"For exumple, land near Ihc expressway that Isn't
developable." Warren suid. "Th a t should be purchased
for recharge purposes. I had that In mind when I
proposed the referendum. You can have areas for the
little critters hut then you need lo have areas of
recharge foi the higcrlltcro. us. too.”
The concepts were among several commissioners will
I m- considering during the next several weeks us
methods to conserve the county's natural resources.
Nuluml resource protection Is required by the stute
under growth management and planning guidelines.
Ollier areas commissioners will consider Include
protection of groundwater, the sole source of drinking
water for central Florida. A new stale requirement for
See Zones, Fogs BA

Lake Mary
seeks board
replacem ents
Herald staff wrltar
LA K E MARY - Lake Mary
citizens, theetty wants you.
Each household In the city of
Lake Mary Is to receive a letter
from City Manager John Lit­
ton this week, concerning a
need for volunteers for a
number of city boards and
commissions.
Several people have resigned
recently for various reasons
and the city Is faced with
filling a number of positions.
Lilton's letter is actually a
survey, seeking Information
on persons who might be
willing to serve In a particular
capacity. Also included Is a
□ B e e L a k e M ary. P a g e 5A

Sharing perspectives: Croom s students, faculty sw o p jobs
B y V ICK I DaSOftMIBft
Herald staff writer

1•••••••••••••i

Dwar Afcky...........
..... *«**«M^V VgVVWMHMIMHOM 1
lsstssssssasssasss4A
...................... U W u « P Waasssssss
.......... M W o rM ..........

Sunny skins, cool tomps

Sunny with a high In
the in Id to upper 70s.
W i n d mostly
northeast 5 to 10
niph.

___■
P ap a SA

:.

Sitting Bull

From staff raports

F or mors w oathar, i m

; j***yi**^

Shannon Freeney (I to r) took on the job ol school
secretary, while Brandi Cole was receptionist and

a*T«
Kenneth Sheppard was principal during the
student faculty switch.

SANFORD — Some of the students al Ihc
Crooms School of Choice were trouble makers
at other schools. They usually weren't given
the opportunities to explore their leadership
potential.
At Crooms. however, they're turning their
lives around.
"And we want them to be leaders and to take
Ihc responsibility." said Brenda Ford, a
language arts teacher at the school.
Ford coordinated a program used last
Thursday where the students and the teachers
and administrators traded places for the day.
"The y do this sort of thing at other schools." •
said Ford, "but these wouldn't be the students •
who would be chosen for the programs ut the :
other schools."
k j
Crooms School of Choice Is an alternative
learning center for students who had been
discipline problems at their zoned schools or
who are pregnant or young mothers with
Infants.
"These arc special students." Ford said.
Many of the youngsters are gifted, but have
had trouble In traditional classroom settings.
"We let each leacher and administrator
chose a student who would replace them

S U B S C R IB E T O T H E S A N FO R D H E R A L D FO R T H E B E S T L O C A L N EW S C O V E

Sea Croom s, Page 5 A

F * m

» n i F

TT

I |v '*

�BA — Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida — Monday, November IS, 1980

N E W S FROM T H E REGION AND A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

High court rules against CNN
United Press International

Clark axacutad In Florida
S T A R K E — Robert Raymond Clark was executed In Florida's
electric chair Monday for the 1077 kidnapping and murder of a
businessman.
Clark. 40. was granted a temporary stay Saturday by the
U.S. U t h District Court of Appeals In Atlanta to allow the
Supreme Court time to hear the case. But the Supreme Court
denied his appeal Sunday by an 8-1 vote.
Th e stay expired at 7 a.m. E O T Monday and Clark was
executed at 7:06 a.m. at the Florida State Prison in Starke.
He made no last statement and corrections officials described
the execution procedure as "routine.**
Witnesses said the only visible sign of the execution was
smoke rising from Clark's right leg. which Jerked when the
current was applied.
Clark was condemened for the 1077 kidnapping and murder
of Pinellas County businessman David Drake.
He ate part of his last meal, filet mlgnon and french fries,
correectlons officials said. He was visited Sunday night by his
three attorneys and a Lutheran minister, the Rev. Jack
Saarela. who stayed by his cell until the execution.

Punta Qorda, Wintar H m n tlckita win
T A L L A H A S S E E — Tw o lucky tickets sold in Punta Qorda
and Winter Haven matched all six numbers In this week's
Florida Lotto drawing, lottery officials said Sunday.
The winners will split an estimated $30 million jackpot.
The winning numbers In Saturday night's Lotto drawing
were 6 .9 .2 2 .3 0 .3 1 and 34.
In addition to the two grand prize winners. 509.337 tickets
qualified for smaller prizes. Payouts were:
-5 3 1 tickets matched five or six to win 83.039.
— 27.423 tickets matched four of six to win 886.
— 481,383 tickets matched three of six to win 84.50.
Next week's Lotto Jackpot Is estimated at 87 million, paid to a
single winner in 20 annual Installments.

W A SH IN G TO N - Th e Supreme Court
refused Sunday to lift a restraining order
barring Cable News Network from broad­
casting tapes of telephone conversations
between Imprisoned former Panamanian
dictator Manuel Noriega and his lawyers.
Atlanta-based CNN. In an emergency
appeal, had asked the high court to decide
whether a federal judge's temporary in­
junction barring CNN from broadcasting the
tapes for 10 days and ordering that they first
be reviewed by a federal magistrate violated
its freedom of speech.
Bui in a 7-2 ruling, with Justices Thurgood
Marshall and Sandra Day O ’Connor dissen­
ting. the Supreme Court let stand the
temporary restraining order from U.S.
District Judge William Hoeveler, which was
upheld by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals.
Noriega. Imprisoned the past 11 months,
is awaiting trial on federal drug tralTIcklng
charges.
His lawyers contend that telephone tapes

CGagging CNN will serve
only to punish a news
meaium.f
-C a b le N a w s N e tw o rk

were illegally made. They said that broad­
cast of the tapes would violate Noriega’s
Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial and
also m aintained that the sanctity of
attorney- client communication should take
precedence over the free press issue.
The Bush administration entered the fray
Saturday with an unusual government
demand for prior restraint.
Solicitor General Kenneth Starr acknowl­
edged that a "lasting prior restraint on
publication may be Justified only In the
most extraordinary circumstances." but
cited the ‘‘peculiar circumstances" of the
CNN- Noriega case. In which the Judge who
Issued the restraining order does not even
know the content of the tapes.
Starr argued the restraint should be
allowed so the court "can make the factual
findings necessary to determine whether an

W A SH IN G TO N - Florida Gov.
bob Martinez Is the leading
candidate to replace William
Bennett as federal anti-drug
chief, while Bennett Is the top
choice to head the Republican
National Committee, officials
said Sunday.
While House press secretary
Marlin Fllzwater said Martinez,
defeated In his Nov. 6 re-election
bid by Democrat Lawton Chiles,
has the Inside track for the
drug-fighting Job.
M e a n w h ile . R e p u b lic a n
sources said Bennett. 47. who
served as director or the Office of
National Drug Policy Control for
20 months, has ngreed to take
the R N C post and that an
annouccment Is expected next
week.
Bennett resigned as director of
the Office of National D rug
P o licy C o n tro l e a rlie r this
month, effective on or about
Thanksgiving Day.
Fltzwatcr said no announce­
m ent has been set on the
possible nomination of Martinez,
but confirmed an earlier report
that the outgoing Florida gover­
nor Is "the lending candidate" to
head the anti-drug office.

T A L L A H A S S E E — Th e newly elected Florida legislature
begins Its biannual organizational meeting Tuesday and the
big issues will be ethics reform and reapportlonmcnt.
House Speaker T .K Wetherell and Senate President Owen
Margolls will be sworn In as the new legislative leaders for the
1991 and 1902 sessions.
Many of the 160 legislators have already promised changes
to strengthen the state's ethics laws, prompted by a crimnal
Investigation Into trips and other gifts some lawmakers
received from lobbbylsts.
A reform package approved by a joint House-Senate
committee last week would ban the acceptance of gifts,
Including trips, that arc valued at more than 8100.
It would also apply to thousands of local and regional officials
who fall under the Jurisdiction of state ethics laws.
The Legislature also must deal with the thorny task of
reapportlonmcnt.

Family Indlctad on dreg chargas

Child wtlfare employ** charged
TA M P A — State child welfare administrators were to decide
Monday what duties to assign a Juvenile-care employee
charged with kidnapping and sexually assaulting a 14-year-old.
They said Steve Marshall Akins, 23. would either be given
administrative duties or be placed on leave until the charges
against him are resolved.
Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services spokesman
Tom Jones said Akins became friendly with a 14-year-old girl
Friday at a shopping mall and persuaded the teenager to go for
a ride In his car.
Sworn statements filed at the Hillsborough County Jail
alleged that they then went to Akins' home where Akins held
the girl against her will and sexually assaulted her. Tampa
police arrested Akins Saturday.
From U n iU d P r a tt International Reports

He wrote: "Our precedents make un­
mistakably clear that any prior restraints of
expression comes to this court bearing a
heavy presumption against Its constitu­
tional validity and that the proponent of this
drastic remedy carries a heavy burden of
showing Justification for Its Imposition. I do
not see how ihe prior restraint Imposed in
this case can be reconciled with these
teachings."
CNN has already aired a portion of the
tapes, putting Itself in possible contempt of
court. The network claims that at least one
tape Includes conversations between
Noriega and hts lawyers, although what has
aired to date was a discussion between
Noriega and a secretary for one of his
attorneys.

Martinez candidate
for anti-drug chief

Ntw legislature begins meeting

V EN US. Fla. — A federal Indictment charges a rural
Highlands County family with running a methaquaione.
cocaine and marijuana smuggling operation.
A Indictment said the late Joseph Henry Peeples J r ., former
dean of the state House of Representatives, encouraged his
sons Johnny and Joey to open airstrips on the family ranch to
planes flying In contraband from Colombia and Jamaica.
Joey Peoples was charged with marijuana smuggling. Hla
brother. Johnny, and Johnny's wife Patricia are charged wilts
racketeering, kidnapping and threatening to kill a federal
witness to protect the family drug smuggling business.
All three are scheduled to appear for arraignment In Fort
Myers Tuesday.
Johnny Peeples was being held wlthlut ball. His wife and
brother are free on 8250.000 bond each.
The government Is seeking to seize the family’s 5,200-acrc
ranch.

Injunction Is Justified.'
The ruling runs counter to the high
court's historical refusal to allow prior
strain! on the publication or broadcast of
news.
In his dissent, Marshall called the case "of
extraordinary consequence for freedom of
the press."

High hoops
During half-time at a recent Seminole Community College
women's basketball game, Antone DeJeeus, 5, whose dad plays
on the men’s basketball teem, attempted some free throws.

Lust week. Martinez brushed
off questions about a possible
future In Ihe Bush administra­
tion and said his only immediate
plans wheit he leaves office In
January were ta spend lime
fishing and golflnf.

"Other than that. 1 don't have
any Immediate goals," the oneterm governor said.
A s g o v e r n o r , M a rtin e z
spearheaded efforts to'expand
drug testing In the workplace
and to Impose the death sen­
tence for narcotics kingpins.
Bennett. 47. would replace the
ailing Lee Atwater as RNC exec­
utive director.
Sources said Atwater, who has
been battling a brain tumor
since March, will become the
party's general chairman and
remain active In strategy and
planning, while Bennett will take
over the party's day-to-day busi­
ness.
President Bush, on an eightday trip to Europe and the
Middle East, waved off questions
from reporters about the RNC
shift Sunday. And at one point,
said he was unaware of It.
Republican sources, however,
said Bennett was Bush's choice
for the Job and that Bennett
agreed to accept the poit after
m eeting w ith senior W hite
House officials.
The RNC Is expected to vote
on the appointment In January,
when Atwater's two-year term as ||
RNC chairman expires.
R e p u b lica n sources sa id
Atwater wanted to remain active
In party planning despite his
fa llin g h e a lth . He h e lp e d
engineer Bush's 1988 victory
and GOP aides say he has
remained in almost constant
contact with party leaders.

W o rld ’s oldest person celebrates 116
a iie
a arn
aa
llan
aa
u n iiM p r e s sn (m
e iio
s il

P A L A T K A - Th e w o rld 's
oldest living person celebrated
her 116th birthday Sunday with
a "Sweet 16" party and a
congratulatory call from former
President Reagan.
Carrie C. Joyner White Is
certified by the Guinness Book of
Records as the oldest living
person In the world and the
oldest American ever. Only one
person has ever been authen­
ticated as having lived longer,
Shlgcchlyo Izuml of Japan, who

died In 1986 at age 120. ac­
cording to the Guinness Book.
When White was born in
Gadsden County. Fla.. Nov. 18.
1874. Ulysses S. Grant was
president of the United States.
F o rm e r President Ronald
Reagan sent her a recorded
birthday message he taped In
Beverly Hills.
" I Just wanted you to know
there will be a prayer for you in
my heart while I'm In church
today.” Reagan told Mrs. White.
White has lived for the last
four years at the Putnam Memo­

rial Nursing Home In Palatka.
where more than 200 people ate
Ice cream and birthday cake
under a tent at an afternoon
lawn party.

well." Allen said.
"She has senile dementia but
she lets ua know what she
wants, if she's pleased or dis­
pleased."

White la a widowed housewife.
She Is childless and has no
known relatives, said her guard­
ian. Marjorie Allen.

White sat in a reclining wheel
ch a ir covered w ith a p in k
blanket. She kept her head down
and showed little response as
"She has very good distance various proclamations were read
vision, not any worse than what wishing her w !&lt; But she perked
comes with normal aging. She up and smiled when her friends
can hear. She can communicate wheeled out a slx-tlered birthday
with her caretakers, she and 1 cake decorated with pink roses.
especially communicate very She ale several pieces.

LO TTE R Y
TALLAH ASSEE - The dally
number Sunday In Ihe Florida
Lottery CASH 3 gene was 834.
□ Straight Play (numbers In exact
order): 9250 on a 50-cent bet. 9500
on 91.
□ Box 3 (numbers in any order):
980 tor a 50-cent bet, 9160 on 91.
□ Box 0 (numbers In any order):
940 for a 50-cent bet, 980 on 91.
□ Straight Box 3: 9330 In order
drawn. 980 In any order on a 91 bet.
□ Straight Bor 6 9290 In order
drawn, 940 If picxed In combination
on 91 bet.

(U S P $ «i tie)

TH E

W EA TH ER

LOCAL POMCABT
Today...Sunny with a high In
the mid to upper 70s. Wind
mostlynortheast5to lOm ph.
Tonight...Fair, low in Ihe lower
to mid 50s. Light wind.
Tuesday. Mooriy sunny with
the high near 80. Wind mostly
northeast 5 mph.
T h a n k s g i v i n g day
forecast...Fair with a high near
80.
E x te n d e d f o r e c a s t ...F a ir
W ednesday a nd T h u r s d a y
becoming partly cloudy with a
chance of showers on Friday.
Lows In the 50s and highs In the
mid to upper 70s.

Monday, November 19, 1990
Vol. 83. No. 75
PuMithod Daily and Sunday, y ictp l
Saturday by Tha Sontord Herald.
Inc.. See N. French Ave.. Sanlord.

Fla. 22771.
Secend C ta ii P o it. 0. Paid at Santard.
F tar Ida » l l l
P O S TM A S TE R : SendaddrettcKanfat
ta T H E S A N FO R D H E R A L D . P.0.
Sex last. Santard. FL m i l ,
Ita u rlp tie n Rale*
(D ally A Sunday!
Home Delivery A Mail
1 Month!
H0.50

a MontM

wo.oo

I Year

170.00

Phene (40/1 m u l l .

K i AMI - Florida 24 hour temperature!
and rainfall a l l l r n E D T Monday
HI La Rata
CUT
a . a ooo
Apalachicola
Creitvtaw
21 mm mm •
Day tana beach
n u ooo
Fori Laudwdatt
n JO S OS
Fori Myeri
to a
ooo
42 14 OOO
Galneivllta
Jockunvllta
M 24 SOD
Key Weil
2* 44 OOO
Miami
II 40 0 00
Pemacoia
a 42 000
Sarawla Bredmtan
24 4« OOO
Tallahauee
to 20 000
Tampa
24 4f ooo
Vero Beach
21 U 000
Weil Palm Beech
2t It 000

I r a t ih a a

■XTBNDKD OUTLOOK

{

*

&gt;

----------

\ j* -k

TU E S D A Y

W ED N ESD AY

P ty C M y

P tly C M y

7 1 -8 8

7 3 -8 7

TH U R SD A Y
B u n n y 7 4 -8 8

F R ID A Y
P tly C M y

7 8 -8 8

------------------ 1
S A TU R D A Y
P t ly C M y 7 3 -8 7

STATISTICS

o— ®

LA S T
Dm . t

■BACH CONDITIONS
Daytona Beach: Waves arc
2-3 feet and choppy. Current Is
to Ihe south w ith a water
temperature of 69 degrees. New
S m y rn a Beach: Waves arc 3 feet
and semi glassy. Current Is to
the south. with a water tempera­
ture of 69 degrees.

M ONDAY!
BOLU1VA B T A B L E i Min. 6:05
a.m., 6:35 p.m.: M a J .-------------a im .. 1 2 :2 0 p .m . T I D E S :
D aytons Beach; highs. 8:50
a.m.. 9:04 p.m.: lows. 2:15 a.m..
3:05 p.m.: New Sm yrn a Bsnch;
highs. B:55 a.m., 9:09 p.m .:
lows. 2:20 a.m.. 3:10 p.m.;
Cocoa Beach: highs. 9:10 a.m..
9:24 p.m.: lows, 2:35 a.m.

BOATING
St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
Today...Wind northeast to cast
5 to 10 kts. Seas 2 ft. Bay and
Inlaqd waters a light chop.
Tonight and Tuesday...Wind
northeast 5 kts. Seas 1 to 2 ft.
Bay and Inland waters smooth

T h e high tem perature in
Sanford Sunday was 7 1 degrees
and the overnight low was 46 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
period, ending ut 9 a.m. Mon­
day. totalled O Inches.
The temperature at 8 a.m.
today was 55 degrees and
Sunday's overnight low was 49.
•is recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Ot her Weal her Service data:
□ S u n d a y 's h ig h -— ..............74
□ B a ro m e tric p rcssurc.30 .1 7
□ Relative H u m id ity — .8 0 pet
□ W in d s
.N orth 6 m ph
□ R a in fa ll— — — ................. O In.
□ T o d a y 's sunset *•«**8 :3 0 p.m .
□ T o m o rro w 's su nrise .— 6:82

CMy A F tn c M t
Albuquerque pc
Anchor40*ta
A Maniaf
BaJ tlmore ly
Birmingham ly
Blimarck pc
Boitanpc
Brourmvllta pc
Buffalo ty
Charloftaiy
Chicago cy
Cincinnati pc
Ctavolandpc
DallMcy
Dtavorpc
DotMolnoipc
Datroll p&lt;
Duluth pc
ElPeeoty
n r s s ,,
Honolulu th
Houitonpe
Indlanapollipc
Kama* City me
Lai VogMpc
LltttaRockpc
Lot Angola! th
Louiivlllaiy
Momphli ly
Mllaoukee me
Mlnnoapolltpc
Naihvlltaly
No* Or loom pc
Now York 1
Omaha ly
Philadelphia ty
Phoenlopc
Pittsburgh ly
Portland Mo r
Provldorico pc
Richmond ly
SI Lout! me
San Antonio pc
San Dtagacy
San Juan pc
Soatttar

M
44
20
41
40
44
44
41
04
*
41

1L« N r
24
21 its
27 ***«
24
21
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24
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44 a . . . .
40 a . . . .
21 a . . . .
42 24
42 a :vi
20 20 *2
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a a ....
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22 40 . . . .
JO 40 . . . .
20 12 . . . .
14 a . . . .
a a
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40 a
14 » . . . .
41 a . . . .
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a a
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T

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida — Monday. N ovem ft

19, 1990 — 3 A

Mall developer helps out festival
I V M

W

N W

M

f

HeraM staff writer

Arm«d man arrested
O EN E V A — A man allegedly dropped a machette when two
Seminole County ahertfTa deputies grabbed him Inside a shed
behind his house. The deputies were investigating a reported
disturbance and udd the man tried to hide from them In the
shed.
Benjamin Lee Deuyour. 32, 1490 Mullet Lake Retreat.
Geneva, was also reportedly sitting on a butcher knife. His wife
accused him of battering her and Deuyour was charged with
battery and two couhts of aggravated assault on a policeman.
T h e arrest was made at 6:99 p.m. Sunday.

_____________________________ ft______________

SAN FO R D - Th e Candlelight
Gala, one of the spectacular
entertainment presentations of
the 1900 St. Lucia Festival, has
been selected for sponsorship
this year by Melvin Stmon ft
Associates, developer of the
p ro p o se d S e m in o le T o w n e
Center mall.
The announcement was made
last week by To m Schneider,
vice president for development
at Melvin Simon.
Th e gala will be Dec. 7 at the
Sanford Civic Center, beginning
with a champagne hour at 7
p.m. Later In the evening activi­
ties are also scheduled for Cen­
tennial Park and the Cultural
Arte Center.
Tickets for the Candlelight
Gala may be obtained at the St.
Lucia Festival headquarters.
209-D East First Street, Sanford,
or by calling 323-9178.
T h e St. Lu cia Festival Is
scheduled from noon until 9
p.m.. Saturday. Dec. 8.

Tom Schneider, Melvin Simon vice president,
presents a check for the St. Lucia festival. At the
presentation were Gail Calcutt (I to r), Ixora Garden

Board to consider extra
costs for school project
Sanford Middle
project continues
B y V IC KI I
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — Sometimes you

Ifcf KtlfJcfiM

Opportunity Lunchoon
Newscaster Steve Rondinaro of Channel 2 Television spoke to
members of the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce Friday.
Rondinaro was the featured speaker of the chamber's
Opportunity Luncheon.

Longwood to select panel
to conduct attorney search
■ y NICK PP1IFAU P

Herald staff writer
LONGW OOD — A screening
committee la to be selected
tonight to weigh the merits of
attorneys seeking to become
Longwood'* new city attorney.
Since the expulsion of Richard
Taylor as city attorney June 4.
Frank Kruppcnbacher. who had
been utilized by the city as a
labor attorney, was named act­
ing city attorney and has served
since that time.
F rid a y m o rn in g d u rin g a
special meeting of the city
com m ission. K ruppcnbacher
was replaced by Longwood A t­
torney Jerry Korman. who will
serve as Interim city attorney
until that position can be filled
on a permanent basis.
Ncwly-appolntcd Mayor Hank
Hardy suggested the appoint­
ment of Korman. which passed
on a 3-2 vote that saw strong
opposition from commissioners
Adrienne Perry and Rex A n ­
derson.
A three-member panel has
agrred to serve as the screening
committee. James B. Byrne J r.,
of Longwood. will be the chair­
man. with Dorry A. Bragg, of
Orlando, and Larry L. Carpenter,
of Altamonte Springs, filling the
other two committee positions.
As of Oct. 31. the closing of the
time period for the submission of
applications for the Job. at­
torneys representing eight sepa­
rate law firms had applied. Of
that number, five arc head­
quartered In Orlando, and one
each from Winter Park. Maitland
and North Miami. Korm an's
name was not on the list of
applicants.
According to the city charter
pertaining to the hiring of a full

time city attorney, "all can­
didates will be screened by a
committee of members of the
Florida Bar Association, ap­
pointed by the city commission.
If the three member commit­
ter Is approved at tonight’s
meeting, they will be charged
w ith re v ie w in g all of the
applicates and make recom­
mendations lo (he commission
as to the Individuals from these
firms who appear to be most
qualified.

have to spend some money lo
save some money.
About 600 linear feet of con­
duit systems to the future loca­
tions of the classroom buildings
at Sanford Middle School will be
Installed at a cost of 84.950 If the
school board approves the ex­
penditure at tomoorow night's
meeting.
The work was not part of the
original bid submitted by A.D.
Arnold Construction, the con­
tractor working on the renova­
tions and reconstruction of ihe
school, located at 1700 French
Ave., Sanford. Th e construction
at the school began In August.
The revision to the contract
brings the total cost of the
project to 85,690.790.
Money from the 1986 8105
million bond Issue is being used
to complete the project.

BANKRUPTCY “&gt;

•19 IT FOR YOU?
FEDERAL LAW MAY HELP -

•WIPE O U T DC I T S - KEEP YOUR PROPERTY
•C U N 9 Q L O A IE 81X9
• STOP COLLECTION THREATS
•STO P FORECLOSURE AND LAW SUITS

Scott E. Stegall, supervisor of
construction for Ihe district, said
In a memo lo School Superin­
tendent Robert Hughes the
systems should be put In now
because all areas around the
existing buildings are currently
under construction and "the
Installation of the conduit would
be m uch less cosily at this point
In time.”
T h e present b uildin gs In
which Sanford Middle School Is
housed will be demolished dur­
ing Ihe summer of 1991. New
c la s s r o o m b u i ld i n g s , a d ­
ministrative facilities, a media
rrn trr and a cafeteria arc under
construction on ihc site.

V

OferweWVwlewye
S m '',

$250 Reward!

? ? ?

SmItH Barney. Harris UpltAM

Pie.ise respond to

(407)* 256-5085

B lin d B o x l i h
Sanford, F I

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P h . 322-0285
2S75 S. F re n c h A v e ., S a n fo rd
%s4u to - O w ners Insurance
l ife. Httmr. ( ur. Htikinrkk. Ilnr namr .jk .il all.

meRLe noRfnRO*
★ SANFORD ★

• Poracba. BMW. Wna.ate. Truck*, bom. 4 wUm I •
• *f», TV*. iiarata. furntur* by Drug Entotamatt •
• Agtncy. FBI. IRS Ur*a*a»*t*a bargan. O k U l l

EUROPEAN FACIALS

Call I &lt;04 M J •

•

B y Matis of Paris
November Special O nly
Men &amp; Women
Hair,
Nails
Waxing

" A»a.Ut&gt;la Irom Ob.. irw* Irom t l you rap*i No
*crad4 chack Mto drug kwuraa and IRS loracio- *
• turaookj lor backtaia* Cad I *04 4M-7SSJEXT •
• H-24A4 tor r^o tat your araa ICal 7 day* a waak) a

im

It will then be up to the
commission lo determine which
of the attorneys will be consid­
ered for personal interviews
prior to selecting a final can­
didate.
The city commission will meet
tonight at 7 p.m. in Ihc city hall
chambers. 175 W. Warren Ave..
Longwood.

a t Io n s

F o r In f o rm a tio n

ROBERTN. KIRGIK IA
ATTORNEY A T LAW
: REPOSSESSED VA !
&gt;104 -1771 s
~ a_ 339-2022
&amp; HUD HOMES :
leeAnnby

Iu

, I f M d i n y to tho
inr| c o n v i c ­
tion of p e r s o n s f l u m p i n g g.ir
b.icjn illpq.tily n n O m n W*iy Lot

FREE LECTURES -NOON, SATURDAYS

((114 Ml* SOUAP S R A M )
"You may oblMn hop » l « i War mow mgawljr^

a

C a U RJdtARd E ck s Td N

: SEIZED CARS :
• JIM EXT. C-7006 (Call 7 bay* 4 m « |

ATTENTION

Lrd. P artnerships
BuylNq...SclllNq

"W e re building a whole new
sch ool." said principal Dan
Pelham.
Th e buildings which will be
demolished next year were built
between 1927 and the 1950s.
Until 1960 the building was
the home of Seminole High
School, followed by a short stint
as the Sanford Ju n io r High
School, before becoming Sanford
Middle School in 1970.

• m oms A r r l J M your a i H i m

Club president, Cindl Goembel, Junior Women's;
Club of Sanford chairman, and Marian Relhwlll,;
Pilot Club president.

1st S T. &amp; 17-92

323-0505

*11#

Ia n ,
P e d ic u res
E a r P ie r c in g

Centra Care Announces Your
Neighborhood Family Doctors.

Public school menu

ROBERT T. WILLIAMS, M.D.

JAMES F. COY. M.D.
Dr. Lcry, .1 Del.mJ nniJent. it the
North ( irLnJi &gt;Dot n it McJ h j I
Dinxtor. He it .1 grjJiute o f South
uoirrri U n htn ity Collette o f
M cJkmc in CYhu City, rhilippinet
j nJ eompleteJ h o pont.grjJu.ite
trjim ngjl the Kjto.it ( rmrrwly
MeJit j l Center 1:1 Kj n u t City,
X’jm jh lo r 'i* tv-ifi. l)r. L *&gt;v h.i.1
a &lt;ienerjl I'n eth e ol Medicine,
Surgery jn J l Ihttctriet in .1l.try*yilte,
kjrisii prior to returning to ho
home Tin* ri ol l hljnJo 111
I &gt;r. C'i'v h.o heen tttth l Ywra Cjrr
time h &amp; i extepr tor to o ir.irt ol
N inth lilt Jit me ill DeLinJ ill l'#i?
anJ l'*tS.

What's for lunoh?
Tuesday, Nov. 20
Italian spaghetti with
meat sauce
Tossed salad
Chilled pineapple chunks
Roll
Milk

l)r. lliH uim , j h o j ttxidml ol
SjnlorJ, o J gr.iJujleot the
l ’niierutyot \lutni Sthoolol
Metln tin- in MUnu, HonJ.i .in.1
ioinpleteJho intern Jup ji IX11 il
Me Ju j I 1 enter in h.L &gt;. »n jlie.
H onJj. Dr. Uii/unn. .t member
o f the flort.t.i M eJitjl A ttot iiiron.
S'lnmole L iiunlr tln fk d i St&lt;t it 11
jn J A m rritjn At .i./. rm ■ 1/ Ijtn ih
I’hvJt ijiw h jt prjetweJ h irh ( Vni n
Cjre tilkT.'lururl I. 7*Ap»/. /Vn&gt;f hi
hit
uliirn 1* ith ( entr.i C.ue,

Dr Wiliam*pTMlierJhinih
\fc Jn me m libkeh, ih o tg u .ml
Emergent} M eJktttein llu li ih jm l
lit tot 1He. H onJj

W hen \ou or your l-im iK m n l im ilita l attention, lo rn 10 th* o c n ot quality
healthcare. 1Ik - S a n fo rd C e n tra C a re M c Ju .il Center. lo|*ether, U r. I n
anJ D r.
i l i u m , brine m e t 10 year* o l « ilt M c n t c ( hcvr highly Iranu &lt;1
ptivtkian* w ill pro%iJc iht S a n lo rJ.l.a ln - M .iry an J Soulhwost
C o m m r n k lc n o c o n v c n k 'n l.n u .iliu kcailhi .in- lo r 11n -1m i n t.inul.
W l u 1 Y m ir I K a li h C a n ’t W ail

SANFORD DENTAL CENTRE
- General Dentistry Peter D. Welsbpich, DOS. P.A. • J. Dwight Williamson, DMD.
•Preventive - Restorative
Cosmetic Dentistry
•Emergencies Seen Promptly
•Visa. MasterCard. Discover
American Express
S E M IN O LE C E N T R E H w y. 17-11
D W th n lV n M b M Ia

In-Hcuse Dental Laboratory

•Crowns &amp; Bridges
•Partial Dentures
- Full Dentures
- R elines &amp; R epairs
OfianADdyi
A Waa.

U w i F/t A J. Sat *■ I

321-3820

s 4nt*»rJ C e n t r a L *tr Vt. J u at C e n t* t
\ M

BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONOS
For Ihe current rale c o ll...

V-1 0 O -U J -IO N D S

N. O vL

ikI h

Dttvc 117-VJi

H 'n Jn -FrkLav: I

*7 p n*

^jiurJjt 5*'sy.ttdUv k*i
4 c*iia&lt;&gt;n ^

» p .m .

i::7 v iv »

When Your Health
Cant W tit.

TA. Ja n l C w n m a o n on Accm»t*bon ot h t n n c n Ogaouaboau

�MM

Sanford He raid
(U M M 1 W )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322 2611 or §31-0963
_____n

W i f i f V. Irvyivt
W. Hss*.

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 Months................................,. §10.90
6 Months....................................§90.00
1 Year ........................................ §78.00

EDITORIALS

Th a tch e r v. Europe

f«4 M |

S ir G e o ffre y H ow e’s resign ation as B rita in 's
d e p u ty p rim e m in ister the o th e r d a y reflected
m ore than Just another in tram u ral sq u ab b le
w ith in th e ru lin g C o n s e rv a tiv e P a rty . It
rep resen ted th e fu rth er Isolation o f P rim e
M inister M argaret T h atch er, and a fu rth er
b low to B rita in 's d w in d lin g In flu en ce w ith in
the E u ropean C om m u n ity.
T h e d ep a rtu re o f H ow e. T h a tc h e r's old est
p o lit ic a l a l l y a n d t h e a r c h it e c t « f h e r
m ark et-orien ted ec on om ic p o licy , w a s trig ­
gered b y th e p rim e m in ister’s in tran sigen t
op p osition to step s tow a rd p e s t e r E u ropean
u nity. A t an EC su m m it In R o m e ea rlier, th e
o th er 11 m e m b e rs Ignored her o b jectio n s and
a g r e e d t o a tim e ta b le fo r s e ttin g u p a
E u ro p e a n c e n tra l b a n k a n d . e v e n tu a lly ,
a d c o p tln g a co m m on E u ropean cu rren cy.
T h a tc h e r h a s prevailed w ith in h e r C ab in et,
w h ere d ecis io n s are su pp osed t o b e m a d e
c o lle c tiv e ly , d esp ite th e fa ct th a t sh e Is
In creasin gly Isolated In h e r resistan ce to
y ie ld in g m o r e British s o v e re ig n ty t o bu reau ­
cra ts o r c e n tra l bankers o n th e co n tin en t. In
part th a t's becau se o f h er Iron d eterm in ation ,
but m osU y It reflects T o r y fears th a t a pu blic
q u a rre l w o u ld ensu re d efeat a t th e n ext
election , w h ic h m ust b e h eld w ith in 19
m on th s. A s I f to va lid a te th at fear, a poll
tak en rec en tly sh ow ed that 6 4 p ercen t o f
th ose qu estion ed said T h a tch e r sh ou ld quit
n ow .
P o p u la r re s e n tm e n t d e r iv e s b o th from
T h a tc h e r 's co ld , a brasive p erson ality and
fro m p o lic ie s that h a v e strea m lin ed the
e c o n o m y bu t w hose effects have hit hard at
lo w -in co m e Britans: cu ts In social services,
h igh u n em p lo ym en t, resurgent Inflation and
an e x tr e m e ly u n pop u lar and In equ itable
per-head ta x In place o f a property tax based
pn m a rk e t valu e.
.
B rita in 's m em b ersh ip in the EC is hardly at
stake,, E ven Th atch er. Jealous a s she is o f
B rita in 's s o v e re ig n prerogatives, endorses
E u ro p e a n in te g ra tio n , albeit on a m ore
co n fe d era tlv e basis. T h e danger n ow is that
T h a tc h e r's stu b b o m ess and G erm a n y's in­
cre a s in g c lo u t m ay fu rth er m arginalize B ri­
tain ’s role in th e com m u n ity, and thus In
E u rope g en e ra lly . Lon d on is still E u rope's
la rgest fin an cial m ark et b y far. but it’s not
, w ritte n In s to n e that that w ill a lw a y s be the
:case.
B ritain sta n d s a t a crossroads. In the past.
T h a tc h e r h a s protested lou dly, then gone
a lo n g q u ie tly w ith in tegration ist m oves, the
latest b e in g B rita in 's belated jo in in g o f a
; E u ropean exch an ge-rate regim e. P erh ap s she
w ill c o m p ro m ise again; i f sh e d o esn 't. B ri­
ta in 's v o ic e in Europe w ill g row w ea k er at a
tim e w h en ou tside ev en ts — In Eastern
E u rope, es p ecia lly — are im p e llin g W estern
E u r o p e t o w a r d g r e a te r u n ity . A s i f to
u n derlin e th e point, recen tly a t th e v e ry tim e
w h en H o w e q u it T h a tch e r’s C abinet. B ritish
an d F ren ch c re w s borin g a tunnel u nder the
E n glish C h a n n el m ad e contact a t m idpoint.

LETTERS
Giving thanks In Amtrica
With much of the world In political turmoil and
economic uncertainty, what do we have to be
thankful for? A t the Thanksgiving holiday
mes only a
approaches, what do we lose If it becom
time for fun and recreation and the original Ideas
associated with the day become last or forgotten?
W hy be thankful for anything?
We can be thankful, that In America, we have a
degree of freedom not possessed by any other great
nation on earth. That freedom is guaranteed by a
Constitution which defines our rights and liberties,
a Judicial system which seeks to preserve them, a
legislative system which tries to expand them, and
an executive system which seeks to protect them
from our enemies.
We can be thankful for freedom of religious
choice. While some complain about increasing
secularism and educational humanism, yet. we
have substantial guidelines, reinforced by the
courts, which protect and preserve the right of
individual freedom of conscience and religious
practice. We are responsible to God according to
our own consciences, or even to disdain such
Irelief, and are not enshrouded by a national state
religion or communist type atheism.
We can be further thankful that in our country
we can choose our own careers, and arc not
confined to one dictated by the government, or
decree'd by Inheritance. Individual Initiative,
gumption, imagination, capabilities and dreams
can still guide the direction of our vocations. We
are limited only by our own aspirations.
A multitude of further reasons could amplify our
notes of thanksgiving. In the midst of family
reunions, televised games and parades, let's reflect
lor a few moments on why we have a national
holiday of Thanksgiving. Then as our heritage
Ix-comcs clear in our thinking, may we take time to
give quiet and humble thanks to God for both
personal and nutlonal blessings received.
Chaplain Jim Specs*Lt Col. USAFKrt
Altamonte Springs

ROBERT WALTERS

Geothermal alternative Is heating up
GEYSERVTLLE. Calif. - During the late 19th
and early 20th centuries, the rich
trekked 100 miles north from Ban Francisco to
obtain the presumed medicinal benefka o f the
vapors rising from the bubbling fumarotes in the
remote Mayscamas Mountains.
Although there never were any true geyaers
spouting columns o f ateam and water, the resort
built to accomm odate those pilgrims was named
Th e Oeysers: and the closest town. Geyservtile.
W illiam Jennings Bryan and William Howard
Taft came, as did Ulysses Grant. Theodore
Roosevelt. Mark Twain and members o f the
nation's wealthiest families. The trip was surely
Invigorating, but the sulphuric fumes offered
iprove their health.
little to Improve
I
A s that health fad
i losing Its appeal In the
1920s. h ow ever, a visionary entrepreneur
n a m e d B .C . M c C a b e r e a lis e d th a t th e
superheated water and steam spurting from
fissures In the earth's surface could be harnessed
as geothermal power — the world's oldest and
cleanest source o f energy.
Expanded commercial development o f The
Geysers began during the 1900s and 1960s.
Today, It Is the world's largest and most
successful geothermal energy project, with the
Pacific Gas A Electric Co. operating 21 power

plants on the ridges overlooking Big Sulphur
Creek and on the valley floor below.
At a time when a
in the
_ In made
the nation conscious
o f the im p e ra tiv e
n eed to d e v e lo p
n o n - p e tr o le u m
e n e rg y a ou rcea .
g e o t h e r m a l
technology la one of
th e n u m e r o u s
alternatives already
In p la c e h e r e In
California. Indeed. It
la arguably the state
f Today, H i t
where the potential
tha w orld's
o f new fuels Is being
m ost a g g r e s s iv e ly
la r g ttt and
explored.
m ost sueThe Unocal Corp..
c a ttfu l
a C aliforn ia-b ased
geotherm al
diversified enerjBr
J P «&gt; company, la both
jact.
w orld's largest de
veloperof
geothermal energy and the leading producer at

where It delivers the ateam to drive
i o f PORE'a turbines. Other proat The Oeysers include Shell OU
In the Imperial Valley, near
m Up. Unocal has another
the State's southern

■

might be able to satisfy
i ' b demand for electricity
If Ma potential were IU&gt;y developed In the state.
oihennal generating stations have
Utah and Hawaii. District heating
In du es such as Klamath FaUs, Ore..
Idaho, utilise geothermal energy.
A i m s wkh undeveloped geothermal potential in
moat o f the West and
i on the Atlantic and Gulf
In Italy, the use o f geothermal energy datebock to the Roman Empire. Today the world !
moat extensive utilisation o f geothermal energ)
la hi Iceland. Moat o f the Island nation's home!
i rely upon it as a source o f dlstrici
Other nations nations where It already In us«
Inclu de: the P h ilippin es, In don esia. New
Zealand. Japan. Mexico, the Soviet Union
China. France. Portugal and Greece.

JAC K ANDERSON

Murder of Polish
clergy unresolved

HELEN TH O M A S

Bush policy falling from favor
as Mid-East tensions escalate
W ASH IN GTON - Someday
they arc going to give a war
and nobody Is going to come.
President Bush m ay be
thinking of that Ironic quip as
the drums of opposition to a
war in the Persian Gulf grow
louder.
Bush had overwhelm ing
support for his quick dispatch
of troops to Saudi Arabia to
block further aggression by
Iraq's Saddam Hussein after
the takeovr of oil-rich Kuwait
last Aug. 2.
S i n c e t h e n he h a s
masterfully promoted a
U .N . coalition against Iraq
. .
•
w ith
the
Security
Council
voting for 10 resolutions call­
ing for Iraq's withdrawal from
Kuwait and Imposing light
economic sanctions on that
country.
Bush also Is increasing the
military pressure on Saddam
by raising lo some 400.000
American troops facing his
forces In the gulf.
A ll this Is designed, ac­
cording to White House press
secretary Marlin Fltzwater. to
bring about a peaceful resolu­
tion of the crisis.
B u t It Is fra u g h t w ith
danger, and the
president's support for oust­
in g Sa d da m by force Is
beginning to unravel. Some
columnists and former offlcluls are cc, ltendlng It would
be the wrong war in the wrong
place.
Sen. Hichard Lugar. K ind .
ranking GOP member on the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, backed up by
Senate R epublican leader
Robert Dole, wants to call

P e rh a p s the p re s id e n t
should take heed of the prin­
ciples laid down by former
President Ronald Reagan In
his newly published memoirs
“ An American Life" In the
aftermath of the bombing of
the Marine barracks tn Beirut.
Reagan wrote that sending
the Marines to Beirut was the
“ source of m y greatest regret
and my greatest
president."

^ The presiden t's sup­
port for o ust i ng
wwwwwwv* by
WJ
■vy WV is
IV
Saddam
fqrce
baginning to unravel.■

Congress back Into session
and to debate the possibility of
a declaration of war.
Although the United States
has been In two major wars —
In Korea and Vietnam — since
World War II. there has not
been a declaration of war
u n d e r the co n stitu tio n a l
perogattve reserved for Con­
gress since the bombing of
Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7.1941.
Certainly Bush feels by flex­
ing U.S. military muscle, he
can get Saddam ‘‘to come to
hla senses” but that Is not a
certainty.
Critics claim that the presi­
d e n t has not e x p lic it ly
explained the objectives of
Operation Desert Shield or
■old them so that the Ameri­
can people will be convinced
of the righteousness of the
cause. But oftentimes no ex­
planation Is possible or ac­
ceptable.

He said that In the months
and years that followed the
catastrop he In 1983. he
adopted a set of principles “ to
guide America In the applica­
tion of military force abroad,
and I would recommend It to
future presldenta."
— " T h e U n it e d S ta te s
should not commit Its forces
to military action overseas
unless the cause Is vital to our
national interest.
— “ If the decision is made to
commit our forces to combat
abroad. It must be done with
the clear Intent and support
needed to win. It should not
be a halfway or tentative
commitment and there must
be clearly defined and
realistic objectives.
— "Before we commit our
troops to combat, there must
be e reasonable assurance
that the cause we are fighting
for and the actions we take
will have the support of the
American people and Con­
gress.
— "Even after these otfter
tests are met. our troops
sh o u ld be co m m itte d to
combat abroad only as a last
resort, when no other choice la
available."

LE TTE R S T O EDITOR
Letters to the editor ure welcome. All Inters
must lx* signed, include the address uf the
writer mid a daytime telephone number.

letters should be on a single subject and be
us brief as possible.. Letters are subject t )
editing.

WASHINGTON - The Polish government
has arrested tw o o f Its own generals high
enough Into Its government to get justice for
the priest known as “ Father Jerzy/
During a recent vtstt to Poland, w e pressed
authorities tn the new democracy to revive
the Investigation into the murder o f Father
J erry Foptetuatko. The outcry among poles
after hla death forced
th e n - c o m m u n is t
Ita d tr Gen. W ojdech
Jaruselakl to try four
low -level agents o f
th e P o lle h s e c r e t
police, the SB. They
convicted, but
th e bu ck sto p p ed
there,r. Januelskl was
not about to shine
the light further Into
htt own SB.
O n Sept. 30. we
published a column
urging further action,
and six days later the
tw o generals w ere f Jaruzelski was
arrested. That
not about to
marked the first at­
shins the light
tem pt by the new
further Into
government to make
his own SB. |
the old regime ac­
countable for what
happened to Father
Jerry. One o f Uinse arrested was the former
ch ief o f the SB section that spied on and
harassed outspoken Catholic priests. Wc still
believe the order to murder Father Jerry and
the Impetus to persecute and murder other
priests came from higher up. We raised the
Issue In Gdansk when we met with Solidarity
leader Lech Walesa. He told us that “ a good
explanation o f the facts is In everybody's
interest.” and he backed a more thorough
In vestig a tion . P rim e M inister Tadeusz
Mazowiecki told us he would look more
closely Into the case, but he has shown
reluctance to lean on the old communist
leaders because they have been cooperating
In th e tran sfer o f pow er to the new
government.
That cooperation would have to be sub­
stantial to make up for the sins o f the past.
From our aourcea we have learned the
specifics o f a reign o f terror by the SB against
priests.
Auto accidents were the preferred SB
method o f killing the clergy. Waclaw Schenk,
a papal chaplain, was the first Polish priest to
die In a mysterious car crash after the
Imposition of martial law In 1961. Tw o other
clergymen were killed in car accidents In
1964. Still another was found dead that year
In a forest. Officials claimed U was a suicide,
but he was tied to a tree and there was dirt In
hla mouth.
Th e SB tried several times to murder
Father Jerry before succeeding in 1984. The
SB first tried to kill him by throwing a b o m b
Into hla apartment In 1962. More than once
he was run off the road.
Those already convicted o f hla murder
testified that one month before Father Jerry's
death, the SB decided to make another effort
to kill him, either by a “ beautiful traffic
■ecldent" or “ a good b c a t ii«" that would
“ shake him to the edge o f a heart attack.''
Father Jerzy had a weak heart.
The SB finally got him by driving his car ofl
the road, kidnapping him and torturing him
to death.
The brutality against the Polish clergy did
not atop when the two SB agents were
Imprisoned In 1964. The next year was a
particularly bad one for priests. In April 1985.
a pariah priest was severely beaten. In May
another was burned by attackers with
cigarettes. In June another was nearly killed
when his car went out o f control oiler the
front wheel rolled off. In July another priest
was assaulted by men presumed to be SB
agents.
Save ua the names of
hauardoscQ other Polish priests who died
under mysterious circumstances.
Th e Pattern of. abuse was so obvious under
^**2**** watch that only someone who
7 * * &gt;aX ? ***
could have missed it. Yet
Jaruselakl claims he had nothing to do with

—

�•anfotfl Herald. Sanford. Florida — Monday, Novem ber I S 1 N 0 — B A

Astronauts pack lor re-entry
w

i . . - - t a t - 1* __

ocPence ffinei

C APS C AN AVERAL The
A tla n tia a stro n a u ts p a ck ed
Sunday for a Mojave Desert
landing Monday 'w ith aatcQtte
trackers debating the myaterloua
hide-and-seek behavior o f the
shuttle's Pentagon payload.
Atlantia and Its mre-man crew
are scheduled to glide to a
landing Monday on runway IS
at E d va rd s A ir Force Base.
Calif., sometime between 1 p.m.
PST and 5 p.m. Sources said
before launch that touchdown
waa planned lor around 3:43
p.m. PST Monday.
The weather forecast called for
winds gusttng to 25 knots out o f
the west. The shuttle cannot,
land If croaawlnds exceed I S
knots, but with a news blackout
In effect. It was not Immediately
possible to determine what Im­
pact. tf any. the forecast might
have on NASA's landing plana.

W h ile A tla n tis 's m ilita ry
mission Is being conducted un­
der a veil of secrecy, amateur
satellite watchers spotted the
shuttle's cargo flying about 125
miles ahead of the spaceplane
Friday evening. Indicating the
satellite was launched earlier
that day.
The satellite appeared as a
bright, reddish "star” sailing
through space just ahead of the
shuttle, which was ss bright or
brighter than brilliant Jupiter.
When Atlantia flew over Cape
Canaveral. Fla., Saturday even­
ing. the shuttle was alone. But as
It entered Earth's shadow and
began fading from view. It
changed from brilliant white to
ruby red. making U look like the
satellite the night before.
"I think what they were seeing
Is the shuttle plus something
and that something la the big
question." Ted Molczan. a re­
spected C a n a d ia n satellite
tracker, said In a telephone
Interview. "Was It an optical

Croom s1A

during
this special day.” said Ford.
She added that there were no
criteria set by the school for how
each teacher could select their
shadow.
Th e students wete chosen
from among the eighth graders
In the disipllnary program and
the 11th and 12th grade girls In
the teen age pregnancy pro­
gram.
All together. 28 of the school's
220 students made the switch.
Prtndpal-for-the-day Kenneth
Sheppard Is an eighth grader tn

m u n ica tlo n a fro m an o rb it
22.300mRes above the equator.
But Atlantis was launrhrd Into
an orbit carrying It only 28.5
to either side o f the
w ell south o f Iraq, for
•t m o tne soviet union.
WHBI U K y W p W y tu Of) ¥ VlflBjfs
W h y 'a photo-reconnaissance
objects. It's hard to square satellite would be launched Into
such an orbit Is for from clear.
everything otherwise."
Compounding the m ystery,
Bean S u lliva n , a sa tellite
tracker who routinely follows sources told United Press In­
shuttle missions at the Kennedy t e r n a tio n a l th a t A t la n t ia 's
not equipped with
Space Center, said the
of
the shuttle as It faded from view an "Inertial upper sta jp " boost
indicated the astronauts may er. which * required to push
have been flying In cloae forma­ hesvy weight "slg ln t" satellites
to their high orbits.
tion with the spacecraft.
W h a tever th e s a te llite Is.
"It waa ruby red." he said.
" T h is waa not your normal Atlantis's crew began training to
shuttle pass. I can’t think o f any launch N m May 1988. Any duty
the spacecraft might ultimately
’see aver the Persian Gulf. then,
missions, we might ss well do It would appear to be coincidental.
with a bang. And this one Is a Otven the shuttle's orbital "tnbang."
Atlantis and Its five-man all- not clear how useful a spy
m il i t a r y c r e w b la s t e d o f f satellite could be In the Persian
Thursday from the Kennedy Oulf crisis.
S u lliva n sa id the stran ge
Space Center to kick o ff the
seventh and last fully classified behavior o f Atlantis’s payload
shuttle flight, a four-day mission raised a third possibility: that
conducted under a cloak o f the shuttle was carrying a new
secrecy with all communications type o f satellite altogether, or
between the astronauts and one dedicated to Strategic De­
m ission control In Houston fense Initiative - "Star W ars" missile defense technology reblacked out.
On board Atlantis are A ir
An 8DI payload is scheduled
Force Col. Richard Covey. 44.
A tla n tis's com m ander. N avy for launch early next year in a
Cmdr. Frank Culbertson. 41. the declassified m ilita ry shuttle
co-pilot. Marine Col. Robert mission.
But Atlantia la not believed to
Springer. 48. Air Force Lt. Col.
Carl Meade. 40. and A rm y MaJ. be equipped with a mechanical
arm th a t w o u ld a llo w th e
Charles Gemar. 35.
The astronauts presumably astronauts to retrieve a payload
spent the day Sunday testing the once It had been launched from
shuttle's re-entry systems and the shuttle.
"What would cause them to go
packing up for the long glide
back to It? There are some
back to Earth Monday.
Atlantis’s payload has been nagging things that would tend
widely reported to be either a to say maybe we didn't see a
re-rendezous. that maybe we
low- altitude photoreconnaissance satellite or an saw something else," Moiczan
electronic signals Intelligence — said. "Th ere are so many things
"slgln t" — spy station capable o f about this that are strange."
wmv* •acuuou protection will
In te r c e p tin g m ilita r y com require the county to adopt
construction and fond use re­
strictions near public drink­
ing-water wells to assure they
the disciplinary program.
don't become contaminated by
H e w o rk e d w ith B a rb a ra
pollution.
Kirby, who Is the principal every
VanDerworp mid the protec­
other day to learn about the tion does not extend to house­
trials and tribulations o f running hold wells.
the school.
W ellfleld protection usually
"T h e student teacher swtich Involves creating tones extend­
day was a career day In a ing out from the well where
■cuss;;.. K|rby *•*». "The stu­ certain kinds Of constructton or
dent* go* a 1chance, to be a chemicals are prohibited. T h e
teacher* *, gulflar)ch counselor, a wellfleld protection zones have
.secretary or alrectgRtonlat. They been established for several
saw the work that goes Into years In south Florida where the
keeping this school going."
drinking water acqulfer Is within
Ford said the students may a few feet o f the surface and
very w ell have made career more vulnerable to contamina­
choices based on the opportunity tion than Seminole County's
they were given.
acquifer.
Ouatoii? Was It something in the
cargo bay (for the (cradte) for the
Mtcntte?
m e that Is kind o f
M the poaaltditir
that they rendexvouaed with

■

r a t- a r s n fi&amp; A -

Lake Mary
C o a tia u e d fr

i Pago 1A

breakout of
the roles played by each board, a
meeting schedule If one has been
established, and a list of current
openings.
In filling out the Information
form, citizens have the opportu­
nity of expressing their Interest
In the Board ol Adjustment.
Cod e E n fo rc e m e n t B o a rd .
Firefighters Pension trustees.
Historical Commission, Local
Planning Agency. Parks and
Recreation A d vis o ry Board.

JENNIE SAMANTHA UNO
Jennie Samantha King. 07.
2007 S. Mellonville Ave.. San­
ford. died today (Monday). Bom
June 4. 1893. in Mullinvllle. Ks..
she moved to Sanford In 1980
from Greensburg. Ks. She was a
retired school teacher and a
member of the First United
Methodist Church, Sanford. She
held a ministers license and was
a Sunday school teacher.
Survivors Include son. Rev.
Leo F.. Sanford: grandson. Rich­
ard Thom as. McIntosh: five
great-grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home. Longwood. In charge of arrange­
ments.

VIVIAN E. OLSON
Vivian E. Olson. 69. 514 Lake
Shore Circle. Lake Mary, died
Saturday at Florida Hospital.
Orlando. Bom June 15. 1921. In
Chicago, she moved to Lake
Mary from Niles. Ul.. In 1983.
She was a homemaker and a
member of First Baptist Church.
Orlando.
Survivors Include husband.
John: son. C u rt Saginaw. Mich.:
daughters. Gayle. Altamonte
Springs. Joan Vanderschaaf.
Lon gw o o d; brothers. Ralph
Malmedahl. Chicago, Harold
Malmcdahl. Crtvltz. Wls.: seven
grandchildren. • .
B a ld w ln -F a irc h lld Funeral
Home. Lake Mary. In charge of
arrangements.

Planning and Zoning Board, and
trustees for the M ic e Pension.
A financial disclosure form
would also be required if a
person Is selected for any o f the
boards, with the exception o f the
parks and recreation board.
While filling out and returning
the forms Is not mandatory.
Litton hopes to receive a suffi­
cient number so that the form
might become a part o f the
appointment process.
The main goals o f the mall-out
a r e to e n c o u r a g e c i t i z e n

participation In city government
functions, and to obtain as much
information as possible so the
city might make the best selec­
tions for the various positions.
Lake Mary residents who wish
to take an active part In city
government are urged to re­
spond as quickly as possible,
either by return mall or drop­
ping off the forms at City Hall.
Several new appointments will
be made during the next city
commission meeting, scheduled
for Dec. 6.

A ft 7J. ol h n h r i wh*
TSunSsy. •*)) V* cswSuWS IS a m . Tuoiteay
•t tit* Oohlown Park C ha*«l *1 tk*
SaMwbvFalrcMM Fursr*l Nam* «rtte Patter
Patricia Jotentn oMkteMn*. Intarmaul will
telteor at Oaklaam Park Camalary. VMtaMan
tor trlanSa trill k* today (ManSay) tram 1-4
and SS *.m. at Si* 0 * 1 atm Park Ckapal.

K IM . JIMMIItAMANTMA

LakaMaryBaWvkt-PalrcMM Funaral Hama. Oaklamt
Otapal. Lak* Mary. In char** *1 arra

M am arlal aarvlca tar M r*. Jannl*
Samantha Kin* a** f7. at l aniard, who Mad
today (Monday) trill ha hold 4 ».m . W t d in
day at P in t United Mathadiat Church.
Santard. trite Rav. Joan U. Guarry and Rar.
0- Joanna Davit arttdatWt*. Private inter
mant trill teltetr In Ira ry a a n Camalary.
laniard. Family trill racalv* trland* at tea
twnaral ham* Twaaday tram 44 s-m.
Gam** Funaral Hama. ) » Oaf Track Rd..
Lanytroad. In chars* *1arransamanta.

Independent.
And 'Proud
i V e take pride in the fact that
w e’re an independently owned
and operated funeiai home. We re
very much a part of this
community and we like it that
way.
■VVo like the feeling that we
can serve you our way. A n d you'll
appreciate that personalized
service when you turn to us at a
difficult time.

GRAM KOW

waa found that a dental office at
515 W. Lake M w y Bhrd.. and the
a d ja cen t b u ild in g. D es ig n er
Pools at Central Florida, would
end up bring too dose to the
new highw ay boundaries. In
fact. N waa arid that parts o f the
building fronts would actually be
In the way o f the eventual road

In
before the city
When the
_____ were approved, the budd­
ings w ere not completely In
com pliance, but were allowed to
r e m a in aa n o n -c o n fo r m in g
It la now a question o f how
much money the county win
have to pay the property owners
to have take the right-of-way

land Involved.
A t last night's commission
m eeting. Assistant Sem inole
County Attorney Lonnie Oroot
requested the cMy to allow the
owners o f the buildings to r .w e
them frirther back on the proper­
ty without having to bring them
up to code.
"T h e county now owns the
front part or this property."
Groot arid. "Sam e o f the build­
ings are now In the right-of-way
and win have to be m oved ."
He added that "th is la an
Involuntary move for the proper­
ty owners. It w ould be Im­
practical If they can't b e moved
u n less brought u p to code
standards. I think the property
ow ne rs should have the right to
m ove their buildings further
back on the property and con­
tinue to operate,** he concluded.
Groot said If the buildings

w ere m oved and had to be
brought up to code, the damages
would be between 8200,000 and
8250.000 w hile merely m oving
ih w n back further on ine proper­
t y would o n ly cool between
9120.000and 9130.000.
Lake Mary City Attorney Ned
Ju lian countered by saying.
" T h e city ordinance dearly m ys
t h a t I f a b u ild in g la n o n ­
conforming. It must be brought
up to code."
C ity b u ild in g official Stan
W elling explained that I f a buildln g la moved o r if 50 percent or
m ore o f the structure la re­
novated. It must be brought up
to all code requirements.
Julian said the matter o f how
m uch the property owners win
be paid tn the condemnation suit
to obtain th e land, w ill be
decided in court.

Boomcars
1A
Mcycllst'a bell or a
child's screams." Mellon said.
In Sanford and Longwood. the
often booming sounds need only
be heard for a dtotance o f 50 feet
from a motor vehicle. The state
la w ta rg e ts sound " p la in ly
audible'' at a distance o f 100 feet
T h e re g u la tio n says th a t
applies to any auto or portable
stereo inside or outride a car
"th at can be dearly heard out­
side the vehicle by a person
u s in g h is n o r m a l h e a r in g
faculties."
In other worth, officer* must

hear the noise with their own
ears, without the assistance of a
microphone or even a hearing
aid.
Officers must be In direct line
of sight and hearing, to be able
to calculate the distance and
Identify which vehicle is making
the noise.
" T h e officer need not de­
termine the particular words or
phrases bring produced or the
name or any song o r artist
producing the round.” the rule
says. " T h e d e te c tio n o f a
rythmic baas reverberating type
sound to sufficient to constitute a
plainly audible sound."

T h e vehicle has to be on a
public street, but the regulation
says that Includes any parking
lot or driveway open to traffic.
"T h e m otor vehicle m ayu be
stopped, standing or m oving on
a street or hl^iw ay. Including
parking lota and driveways," M
says.
T h e regulation also applies to
aounds "lou der than Is neces­
sary for the convenient hearing
o f persona Inside the m otor
vehicle” near churches, schools
or hospitals."
*
T h e regulation took effect Im­
mediately. Mellon aaid.

Suppressing anger may be deadly
anger also had double the
mortality risk.
BOSTON - Women who do
not show the anger they feel
co u ld be m a k in g a deadly
mistake, a Michigan researcher
says.
A survey of 372 women and
324 men found that women who
h a b itu a lly suppressed h ig h
levels of anger were three times
more likely to die than those
who did not. although the aarne
waa not true for men, Mara
J u liu s of the U niversity of
Michigan School of Public Health
arid Sunday.
During an 18-year period,
women In Julius' study who
scored, h ig h on a scale, n f.
suppressed anger had triple the
death rate of those jvljo scored
low. she told a meeting In Boston
of the Gerontological Society of
America.
Among men. however, anger
suppression appeared to play a
role In mortality rates only for
those who had high blood pre­
ssure or chronic bronchial con­
ditions. she said.
Men with systolic blood pre­
ssure of 140 and above who
tended not to show their anger
had twice the death rate of those
with high blood pressure but low
suppressed anger scores. Julius
found. Men with bronchial con­
ditions and high suppressed

The study also discovered that
Inen w ith a high degree of
suppressed anger but low blood
pressure were four times leas
likely to die than those who were
both angry and did not show It
and had high blood pressure.
Julius arid that Indicates anger
Itself does not appear to be a
mortality risk for men.
Those In the study ranged in
age between 30 and 69 In 1971.
Julius tracked their mortality
rates through 1989. adjusting
for age. weight, blood pressure,
the condition of their lungs and
bronchial passages, education
aqd smoking habits. During the
study period. 17.3 percent of the
men and 9.4 percent of women
died.
T o determine the levels of
th e ir anger and h o w they
showed It. Ju liu s asked the
study participants to describe
how angry they would feel If

their spouses yelled at them for
something they did not do or if a
policeman did the same thing.
T h ey also w ere asked to choose a
phrase describing how vigor­
ously they w ould protest.
Julius found that about 40
percent of each sex was likely to
react by trying not to show
anger. H ow ever, "m e n were
more likely to report suppressing
anger In the marital confronta­
tion while women were more
lik e ly to rep ort suppressing
anger In the policeman con­
frontation.” she said.
While It appears that express­
in g anger Is a healthier w ay of
coping. Julius said this "does
not mean one should rant and
rave at the slightest provocation.
" I believe In the reflective
method of coping with anger —
count to 10. or higher, and then
deal directly but calmly with the
issue that provoked the anger."
she added.

Don'tMteeOutOnASingl*Dayo ltta«

Sanford Herald

Call OarCirculationDept. Today 4*4*1*4*a j 4
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NAME

FUNERAL HOME

UOWCST AIRPORT bOULEVARD
SAN FOR p, FLORIDA

f i M M i ( 497) 33*3213

DELIVERY ADDRESS
CITY

_________

STATE

ZIP

^ M A lL TO : Sanford H orrid • P.O. B ox 1557 • Sanlord, FL 32772-1557
U U T Ii IIV IR A W.
Funaral tarvlca* ter Mr*.

p p e

�*

I

•A — Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida — Monday, November 19, 1990

1990 Longwood Arts Festival

/

Henry Longw ell, Sanford, displays b o ttle s and wind ch im es at the arts festival.

Sue Q jelsten , Franklin, Tenn., u ses paint to sto p Santa In his tracks.

Booths lined Warren Avenue In front o f city hall.

The arts festival took place on Church Street and Warren Avenue downtow n.

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Not e* Is hereby given mar I
&lt;m engaged In business el 75/
N H w , 17,92. Suit* 107,.Winter
Spring,. F L 32708, Seminole
County, F lo rid a , under the
F le t lt t o u , N a m e ol J U S T
F LOORS and that I intend to
register ,ald name with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court, Sem
Inole County. Florida In at
cordance with the Provisions ol
the Fictitious Name Statute,.
To Wit Section M I 09 Florida
Statute, 1917
Philip A Ha t
Publish November I. 12, 19. 26.
1990
DEZ 73

N O TIC E U N O I R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E S T A T U T E
T O WHOM I T M A Y CONC E R N
Notice I, hereby given that the
undersigned, pursuant to the
" F ic t ltlo u i N am e- Statute''.
Chapter 86] 09. Florida Statults.
will register with the Clerk ol
the Circuit Court In and tor
Seminole County, Florida upon
receipt ol prool ot the pubiica
lion ol th l, notice, the lictlllou,
name, lo w lt C O U N TR Y LAK E
A P A R TM E N T S under which we
intend doing business
That the entity Interested In
said business enterprise I , as
follows
ERIC C O E. M D
By Sovereign Management
ol Florida. Inc .
authorised managing agent
By Diane Bottallco
Property Manager
D A T E D at Orlando. Orange
County. Florida this )th day ol
November 1990
Publish November 12. 19. 26 A
December 3.1990
O EZ 141

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Notice is hereby given th'.t we
are engaged In business at 4SI
E Altamonte Dr.. Altamonte
Springs. Seminole County, Flor
Ida. under the Fictitious Name
ol G IF T S FR O M N A TU R E , and
that we Intend lo register said
name with the Clerk ot the
Circuit Court. Seminole County.
Florida, in accordance with the
P ro vis io n , ol the Flctlliou,
Name Statute,. To Wit Section
865 09 Florida Staluti, 1937.
Douglas Stanbary
Jane Chandler
Publish November 12, 19. 26
&amp; December 3.1*90
D E Z 143

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice I, hereby given that I
am engagad In business at 418
F o re ,I Park Lane. Casselberry.
Seminole County. Florida, under
the Fictitious Name of U N L IM
I T E O LA W N A T R E E SVC. and
that | Intend to regliter Mid
name w llh the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, Seminote County.
Florida. In accordance with the
P ro v is io n , ol Ihe Fictitious
Nam e Statute,. Tu W tt- Section
U S 09 Florida Statute, 1*S7.
Kenyon M. Nolan
Publish October 29 A Novem
ber s. I I . 19.1990
O E Y 2*2

w

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notict I , hereby given that I
am engaged In b u ,in e » al 1131
Aloha Cl , Winter Spring,. F L
32708. Seminole County, Florida,
under the Flctltiou, Name ol
IM E T Y P IN G P RO and that I
Intend to teg liter Mid name
with the Clerk ol the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florl
da. In accordance with the
Provisions of the F lctllio u ,
Name Statute,. To Wit; Section
865 09 Florida Statute, 1917
Halite J S Milter
Publish November 5. 12, T9. 26.
1990
OEZ 74

J o y ce Patterson, Sanford, displayed this plaster o f Paris cougar.

N O T IC E O F R ES O LU TIO N
CLOSING. V A C A TIN G .
A N O A B A N D O N IN O
R IG H TS O F W A Y .O R
D R A IN A G E E A S E M E N T
TO WHOM I T M A Y CONCE R N
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
I ha I the Board ol County Com
m l,,loner, ot Seminole County.
Fiorid.t at It, Regular Meeting
held on the 23rd day ol October.
A D . 1990, In the County Com
m l,,loner,' Meeting Room at
tne Seminole County Servlet,
Building In Sanford. Florida,
puriuant to Petition and Notice
heretotor.- given, pa tied and
adopted a Revolution closing,
vacating and abandoning, re
nounclng and disclaiming any
and alt right of the County ol
Seminole and the public In and
to the follow in g described
right, olw ay or drainage ease
menl. to wll
73 00 F O O T D R A I N A G E
E A S E M E N T O V ER TH E
SOUTH 2500 F E E T OF TH E
NORTH IM0 00 F E E T OF TH E
EAST SOOOO F E E T O F TH E NE
’. O F SAID S E C TIO N 33
By the Board ol County Com
m i ,,loner, of Seminole County.
Florida. Ih i, 23rd day ol Oclo
ber A O 1990
(S E A L )
B0ARC3 0 F

COUNT Y COMMISSIONERS
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Mary anne Mor s*.
Clerk to the Board 9)
Publish November 19.1990
D EZ 173

N O TIC E OF R E S O LU TIO N
CLOSINO, V A u A TIN Q ,
A N O A B A N D O N IN O
R IG H TS O F W A Y . OR
O R AIN A O E E A S E M E N T
TO W HOM IT M A Y CONC E R N :
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that the Board ol County Com
mlssionere of Seminole County,
Florida at It, Regular Meeting
held on the 33rd day ot October.
A D . 1990. In the County Com
m l,tloner,' Meeting Room at
the Seminole County Service,
Building In Sanlord. Florida,
pursuant to Petition and Notice
heretofore given, passed and
adopted a Resolution closing,
vacating and abandoning, re
nounclng and disclaiming any
and all right of the County of
Seminole and the public In and
to the follow ing described
rights ol way or drainage ease
menl. low lt
the South 2 S feet ot the North
7 ] teet of lot IS. Casa Aloma
according to the plat Ihereol as
recorded In Plat Book 13. page 7,
public records ol Seminole Co
Florida
By the Board of County Com
mlssloners of Seminole County.
Florida. Ih l, 73rd day of Oclo
ber. A D . 1990
(S E A L!
BOARD OF
C O U N TY COM M ISSIONERS
OF S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
Maryanne Morse.
Clerk lo the Board
Publish November 19, 1990
D EZ 174

UnltadWbu

Your new employee 2
is just a
s
PHONE C A LL AWAY.X
c a now M place your help ••nied
*.! You ten drpend on steisilied to
Mi the position laetl

h V s
Elizabeth Brady, Bradenton, displays Victorian wreaths and other crafts.

1

\

322-2611

/v
Tk
V

$

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Notice I, hereby given that we
are engaged In butines, at 333
E Alta m on te D rive . Suite
1700171, Altamonte Springs. FL
32701, Seminole County. Florida,
under the Fictitious Name ol
C U S TO M R EP AIR S B ADDI
TIO NS. and that we Intend lo
register said name with the
Clerk ot the Circuit Court, Sem
Inole County, Florida. In ac
cordance with the Provisions ol
the Fictitious Name Statute,.
To Wit: Section US Of Florida
Statute, 1937
Jack Layne
Lana Layne
Publish November 12. 19. 26
A December 3.1*90
D E Z 144
N O T IC E O F
F IC T ITIO U S NAME
Notice 1, hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 131 S
W y m o t e Rd . A lta m o n te
Spring,. F L 327)4, Seminole
County. F lo rid a , under the
F l c t l t i o u , N a m e ol A B S
S YSTEM S and that I Intend lo
register M id name with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court. Sem
Inole County. Florida, in ac
cordance with the Provision, ot
the Flctltiou, Name Statute,.
To W it Section USO* Florida
Statute,1957
Jim Bell
Publish November 3. 12. 19. 26
1990
O E Z 72
N O T IC E O F PROCEED ING S
FOR T H E VAC ATIN G .
ABAN DO NING .
D IS C O N TIN U IN G . AND
CLOSING OF
R IG H TS -O F-W A Y OR
O R AIN A O E E A S E M E N T
TO W HOM IT M A Y CONCERN
Y O U W ILL P LEAS E TAKE
N O T IC E that the Board ot
County Commissioners ot Semi
note County. Florida at I 30
p m on the llth day ol Decern
ber. A D . 1990. In the County
Commissioners' Mealing Room
at the Seminole County Services
Building In Sanlord Florida,
will hold a public hearing to
consider and determine whether
or not the County will vacate,
abandon, discontinue, close,
renounce and disclaim any right
ot the County and the public in
and to the following right, ot
way or drainage easement run
ning through or ediecenl lo the
described property, to wit
the north 20 lent ot Lot 48.
Block C. Middleton Oek, Plat
Book 3*. Page, 33. 34 and 35
P ER SO N S IN T E R E S T E D
M A Y A P P E A R A N D BE
H E A R D A T TH E TIM E AND
P LA C E ABOVE S P E C IF IE D
BOARDOF
C O U N TY COMMISSIONERS
Maryanne Morse.
Clerk to the Board
Pobnsh November 19 i*ag
| D E Z 1U

I

N O TIC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that we
ere engaged In buslnese In
Seminole County. Florida, under
the Flctltiou , Neme of N IN E TO
F I V E .
THE W E E K L Y
E M P L O Y M E N T G U ID E end
that we Intend to register Mid
name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida, in accordance with the
P ro v is io n , ot the Fictitious
Name Statutes. ToW it; Section
US 0* FlorldaSletutes 1957.
G O O D H E AD A M E R IC A . INC
D A V I D C ASHBURN
A t t o r n e y lor G o o d h ead
Am erica, Inc.
Publlsi
October J9 A Novem
ber S. 12. 19. 1990
D E Y 295
N O TIC 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 641
W Lake M ary Blvd . Suite 119,
Lake M a ry , FL 32740 In Sami
nole County, Florida, under the
FIctHlous Name ol
G E N A IN T E R N A T IO N A L
and that I Intend to regliter M id
name w llh the Clerk al Ihe
Circuit Court. Seminole County.
Florida. In accordance with the
P rovisio ns ol the Fictitious
Name Statutes. ToW it: Section
8*5 09 FlorldaSletutes I9J7.
Gena Ayala
Publish October 29 A Novem
ber S, i i , i*. lyeo
D E Y 298
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Nollce Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business i t 114
Robin Road Suite I700A. Alta
monte Springs. F L 32701. In
Seminole County, Florida, under
the Fictitious Nameol
O R L A N D O P E R C U S S IO N
SALES A S E R V IC E end that I
Intend lo register M id name
wllh the Clerk ol the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florl
da. In accordance w llh the
Provisions ot ihe Fictitious
Name Statutes. ToW it Section
U5 09 F lor Ida Statutes I9S7
James V, Russo
Publish October 29 A Novem
ber s. 12. 19. 1990
O E Y 2*9
N O T IC E O F
F I C T IT I O U S NAM E
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 770*
S Orlando O r , Sanlord. Florida
32771. Seminole County, Florida.

with the Clerk ol the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florl
da. In accordance with the
Provisions ot me Fictitious
Name Statutes. To Wit Section
MS 09 Florida Statutes 1997
Vickie Chrlstotfer
Publish October 29 A Novem
bars. 12. 19. 1990
O E Y 294 *

\

�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Fforlda — Monday, Nowmbar 19, 19S0 — 71

Bush: Holiday release just a ‘ploy’
Barbara Bush to cov* up

United Press International________

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE — Barbara Buah. wearing an
"Operation Deaert Shield" bracelet, aald Sunday ahe has no
fears about venturing near the front lines In Saudi Arabia. But
ahe aald ahe will do so In pants.
In apparent respect for the Saudi dreas code, which requires
women to cover up. the Drat lady revealed that her outfit for a
Thanksgiving Day visit with U.S. troops will be a pair of slacks
and a shirt.
"I hate Tor the troops to see me In pants." but that’s the way
It will be. she told reporters while en route with her husband
from Germany to Paris on the third day of an week-long trip to
Europe and the Middle East.
The first couple will celebrate Thanksgiving with some of the
more than 230,000 American troops In the Persian Gulf,
Including many near the Saudl-Kuwaltl border where Iraqi
troops are stationed.

Trudaau bumpad from Saudi trip
NEW YORK — Cartoonist Garry Trudeau, the creator of
"Doonesbury." was mysteriously bumped from a Thanksgiv­
ing trip to visit troops In Saudi Arabia. Newsweek magazine
said Sunday.
Newsweek said Trudeau was planning to take the USOsponsored trip with comic Jay Leno, but was dropped without
explanation from the trip’s manifest.
The official reason from U.S. headquarters In Riyadh. Saudi
Arabia, was that Trudeau was not barred, but his visit was
merely postponed
"due to logistics and transportation
limitations." Newsweek said.
Trudeau might have ruffled some feathers, however, with
strips satirizing U.S. policy In the Persian Gulf, the magazine
said.
A senior administration official denied the White House knew
anything of Trudeau’s trip, but added. "If we had known, we
would have bumped him. too." Newsweek said.

! [

ii

President Bush, meeting with
world leaders Monday during a
historic treaty summit In Paris,
said there was "no room for
compromise” with Iraqi Presi­
dent Saddam Hussein and dis­
missed an Iraqi offer to free
thousands of foreign hostages
held In Iraq and occupied
Kuwait beginning on Christmas
Day.
Bush called the surprise Iraqi
announcem ent Sunday a
“ cynical ploy.” and he Joined
British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher In demanding the
Immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of Iraq’s Invasion
forces In Kuwait.
After holding a breakfast meet­
ing w ith Bush at the U .S .
Embassy. Thatcher told report­
ers that Saddam’s "evil has to be
stopped.” and vowed "either he
withdraws or the military option
has to be used."
Bush repeated his position
that there Is "n o room for
compromise” with Saddam and
added. "W e’re rachetlng up the
p r e s s u r e : I h o p e he u n •
demands."
Bush, In Paris to officially end
the Cold War with the signing of
the Conventional Forces In
Europe treaty, was scheduled to

hold a dinner meeting with
S o v ie t P r e s id e n t M ik h a il
G o rb a c h e v to d is c u s s the
Persian Gulf crisis.
A brier dispatch Sunday by the
official Iraqi News Agency In
Baghdad said the announcement
to release hostages beginning on
C h ris tm a s D ay ca m e after
Saddam met with government
officials.
"It has been decided that
foreign guests would be allowed
to travel In batches ... from Dec.

25 and within a period of three
months, the last botch of which
would leave the Iraqi territories
on March 25 unless something
would take place that (would)
mar the atmosphere of peace,"
INA said.
Observers said Iraq may be
trying to buy more time by
announcing the release of the
hostages over a protracted
period.
There are about 3,000 foreign

nationals, moat of them men. In
Iraq and Kuwait who have been
unable to leave for home —
either because they are being
held against their will at key
economic and military sites or
because they are In hiding from
authorities.
i

The United States, which has
led the International response to
Iraq’s Invasion of Kuwait, has
about 500 Americans under
Iraqi control.

‘T h u n d e r ’ scru b b e d by bad w e a th e r
LANDING ZONE EA G LE. Saudi Arabia High winds and rough seas forced the partial
scrubbing of a highly touted mock landing by
U.S. and Saudi marines on a beach near the
border with Iraqi-occupied Kuwait.
Helicopters managed to ferry 400 marines
ashore as part of the six-day Imminent
Thunder exercise on Sunday, but military
officials said the bad weather made It unsafe
for hovercraft to transport troops to the beach
some 100 miles from Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein’s occupying forces.
Officials planned to try the amphibious
landing again Monday.
"There’s no sense endangering people un­
necessarily for a training exercise." said Chief
Warrant Officer Charles Rowe, speaking to

reporters who were on shore awaiting the
arrival of the Landing Craft A ir Cushion
transport vessels.
The hovercraft are designed to carry troops
and military equipment to shore while skim­
ming over the waves at high speeds. But waves
of 8 feel to 10 feet slowed the vessels and
threatening to overturn them.
"In peacetime there are limitations and for
safety reasons you don’t want to lose any­
body." said MaJ. Gen. Harry Jenkins J r .,
commanding officer of the 4th Marine Expedi­
tionary Brigade.
Despite the postponement of the landingcraft portion of the exercise, military officials
called the day a success because helicopters
taking off from a five-ship task force got the
other U.S. and Saudi marines ashore.

Leaders meet
for closing of
Cold War era
United Press International_______

J

I

4 I

1 I

PARIS — Amid extraordinary
security, leaders of 34 nations
arrived In the City of Light for a
European summit formally en­
ding a four-decade era of Cold
War tension.
The three-day summit, laun­
ching a new age of East-West
cooperation, will be highlighted
by the signing Monday morning
at the Elysee Palace of a massive
conventional arms treaty that
removes the risk of surprise
attack In Europe.
Th e 160-page Conventional
Forces tn Europe pact was Ini­
tialled Sunday In Vienna, where
negotiators have m et since
March 1989.
Europe "stands at the thresh­
old of a new era — an era of
peace, prosperity and security
unparalleled In die long history
of this continent." said President
Bush, who had dinner Sunday
night with French President
Francois M itterrand at the
Elysee Palace.
Bush acknowledged that the
summit starting Monday "seems
to have been overshadowed by
w h a t ’ s h a p p e n in g In the
(Persian) Gulf but It la a signifi­
cant milestone."
Iraq said Sunday It would
begin on Christm as Day to
release thousands of foreign hos­
tages held In Iraq and Kuwait as
human shields against any at­
tack by U.S.-led forces.
Bush was to discuss the gulf
crisis at breakfast Tuesday with
S o v ie t P re s id e n t M ik h a il
Gorbachev, who flew to Paris
from Rome Sunday.
The three Baltic republics of
the Soviet Union — Lithuania.
Latvia and Estonia — were
invited Sunday to take part in
the summit as
"guests" of
France, diplomats said. The
Baltic states seek independence
from Moscow.

Pope plans trip
to Soviet Union
■ y C H A R L M N D L IV
United Press International_______

V A TIC A N C ITY - Soviet Pres­
ident Mikhail Gorbachev met
with Pope John Paul II for the
second time within a year and
told reporters later they agreed
the pope should visit Moscow,
but no date was set.
"W e will see each other on
Soviet territory." Gorbachev told
a reporter of the Soviet Novostl
news agency after the private
audience. "We agreed on this
today. We will talk about the
timing later."
However, the Vatican made no
mention of a papal visit to the
Soviet Union In a sparse eightline statement issued after the
visit.
Because it was a private au­
dience. the pope and Gorbachev
made no speeches, as they did
during their first historic meet­
ing which occurred during the
Soviet leader's official state visit
to the Vatican Dec. I, 1989.
Sunday, a Vatican reporter
said he heard Gorbachev say to
the pope as they shook hands in
a Vatican corridor after the
meeting: "Th e next meeting will
be on our ground." But Chief
Vatican spokesman Joaquin
Navarro Vails told reporters
what G orbachev said was.
"Maybe we shall see each other
In Moscow."

L-

a powerlinecan
bea
once-in-a-Kfetime
experience.

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around electricity A n d FPlk

It o n ly takes a

free bro ch u re, “D on 't C ontact

little electricity-

the E lectric C om pan y by

about whatfc

Mistake," can

n eed ed to p o w er

help you stay

a night light—tc

safer still.

give you a fatal shock.

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A n d the p o w e r lines
in your n e ig h b o rh o o d

w ays to

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c a rry m any m any tim es

operate appliances w ith ­

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prevent electrical fire

w o rk in g in the yard w ith

hazards, G ives tech ­
n iques for trim m in g trees

a ladder, antenna o r

safely A n d even lists special

p ru n in g tool, give p o w e r

cautions to give ch ildren .

lines a w id e berth.

For you r free c o p y call

Even if the o bject you’re
h oldin g Isn’t metal, it can conduct enough electricity to

u s at 1 -8 0 0 -D IA L -F P L , M onday-Friday 7 am-7 pm .
B ecause getting a nasty sh ock is an ex p e rie n c e

stop you in your tracks, if it touches a w ire.
Using com m on sen se can help you stay safe

you w on ’t w ant to repeat.

WE'RE HERE TO HELP

V

fPI Grac Lir^r,

�s)

•A — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Monday. November 19, 1990

1990 Longwood Art* Festival

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H «n M PtwW* By Tammy 9 m m

Htnry L on gw sll, Sanford, displays bottlaa and w ind ch lm a * at th * arts festival.

Sue QJelsten, Franklin, Tenn., u ses paint to sto p 8anta In his tracks.

Booths lined Warren Avenue In front o f city hall.

The arts festival took pla ce on Church Street and Warren Avenue downtown.

—

Legal
Notices
----------------------

N O TIC E o r
F IC T ITIO U S N AM E
Noltc* l» hereby given lhal I
am enqaged In bylines* at 7J 7
N Mwy 17 93. Suit* l07.JVInt*r
Springs FL 1370*. Seminole
County. Flo rida, under the
F ic titio u s N am e of J U ST
FLOORS and lhal I intend to
register said name with the
Clerk ol the Circuit Court, Sem
tnole County, Florida. In ac
i or dance with the Provision* of
th* Fictitious Name Statute*.
ToW lt Section U t 09 Florida
Statu tat 1957
Philip A Hart
Publish November J. II, 19, I*.
1990
DEZ 71
N O TIC E OF
F IC T ITIO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged in butlnett at t i l l
Aloha C l , Winter Spring*. F L
1370*. Seminole County, Florida,
under Ih# Fictitious Nam* ol
TH E TY P IN G PRO and that I
intend to regular sa.d name
with the Clerk ot Ih* Circuit
Court. Seminole County, Flori
da. In accordance with the
Provisions ol the Fictitious
Name Statutes. To Wit Section
MS 09 Florida Statutes 19S7
Hallle J S Miller
Publish November i, II, 19, 1*.
1990
DEZ 74

J o y c e Patterson, Sanford, displayed this plaster o f Paris cougar.

N O TIC E OF R ES O LU TIO N
CLOSING, VA C ATIN O .
ANO ABAN DO NING
R IG H TS OF W AV. OR
D R AIN AG E E A S E M E N T
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCER N
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that Ih* Board ot County Com
mlssioneri ot Somlnol# County,
Florida at It* Regular Meeting
held on the 73rd day at October.
A D . 1990. In the County Com
mis*ion*r*' Meeting Room at
th# Seminole County Service*
Building in Sanford. Florida,
pursuant to Petition and Notice
heretofore given, passed and
adopted a Resolution dosing,
vacating and abandoning, re
nounclng and disclaiming any
and all right ol the County ol
Seminole and th* public in and
to the following d e tc rlb td
rights ol way or drainage ease
menl. lo wil
3*00 F O O T D R A I N A G E
E A S E M E N T OVER TH E
SOUTH 3*00 F E E T OF T H E
N O R TH ISOOOO F E E T OF T H E
EAST SOOOO F E E T O F TM F NF
'. O F SAID S ECTIO N 11
By Ih* Board ol County Com
miss loners ut Seminole County,
Florida, this llr d day ot Octo
ber. A D . 1990
(S E A L )
BOARO O F
C O U N TY COMMISSIONERS
OF S EM IN O LE C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A
Maryann* Morse.
Clerk to th* Board ,,
Publish November 19.1990
D EZ 171

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

N O TIC E U N O ! A
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E S T A T U T E
TO WHOM I T M A Y C O N CER N
ilolict l* hereby given that the
undersigned, pursuant to th#
"F ic lllTc iu t N a m * ' Statute".
Chapter U S 09. Florida Statute*,
will register with Ih* Clerk ol
th* Circuit Court In and lor
Seminole County, Florida upon
receipt of proot ot the public*
lion of this notice, the fictitious
nama, to wit. C O U N T R Y LA K E
A P A R TM E N T S under which we
intend doing bus Inet*.
That th* entity Interested In
said business enterprise Is as
lol lows
E R IC C O E. M D
By: Sovereign Management
of Florida. Inc.,
authorlied managing agent
By: Oian* Botfaltco
Property Manager
D A T E D al Orlando. Orange
County. Florid* this *lh day ol
November 1990
Publish Novtmber 13, 19. I* A
December 1.1990

N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Nolle* I* hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 411
E Altamonte D r„ Altamonte
Springs. Seminole County. Flor
Ida. under th* Fictitious Nam*
of G IF T S FROM N A TU R E , and
that w* intend to register said
nama with th* Clerk ol the
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
F lorlda. In accordance with th*
Provisions ol th* Fictitious
Nam# Statute*. To Wit Section
U S 09 Florida Statute* 1957
Douglas Stanbary
Jan* Chandltr
Publish November tl. 19. 3*
&amp; December 1. 1990
D E Z 141

N O TIC E O F
F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
Notlct I* hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 4tt
Forest Park Lan*. Casselberry,
S*mlnol* County. Florid*. und*r
Ih* Fictitious Nam* ol U N L IM
IT E D LAW N A T R E E SVC. and
that I intend lo register said
name with th* Clerk ot Ih*
Circuit Court, Seminole County.
Florida, in accordance with th*
Provisions ot th* Fictitious
Nam* Statutes. To Wil Section
US 09 Florida Slatules I9S7.
Kenyon M Nolan
Publish: October 39 A Novem
ber S. 13.19.1990
D E Y 393

oez

iat

N O TIC E O F R E S O L U TIO N
CLO SING . V A C A T IN O .
A N O A B A N D O N IN G
R IG H TS -O F W A V , OR
D R A IN A O E E A S E M E N T
TO W HOM I T M A Y C O N CER N :
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that tha Board ot County Com
missionary ot Seminole County,
Florida at Its Regular Matting
held on Ih* 31rd day ol October.
A 0 , 1990, In th* County Com
missionary' Matting Room al
Ih* Seminole County Services
Building In Sanlord. Florida,
pursuant to Petition and Nolle*
heretofore given, passed and
adopted a Resolution dosing,
vacating and abandoning, r*
pouncing and disclaiming any
and all right ol Ih* County ol
Saminol* and th* public in and
lo Ih* follow ing described
rights ol way or dralnag* ease
ment. lo wil
Ihe South 3 5 leet ot th* North
7 5 teat ol lot IS. Casa Aloma
according lo tha plal thereof as
recorded In Plal Book I*, page 7.
public records ol Seminole Co
Florida
By Ih* Board ot County Com
missionary ol Seminole County.
Florida, this llr d day of Octo
ber. A.D .. 1990
(S E A L )
BOA R O O F
C O U N TY CO M M ISSIO NER S
OF S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
FLO R ID A
Maryann* Morse.
Clerk to th* Board
Publish November 19.1990
D E Z 174

o

U r r it u d W W y

S T * Your n e w employee
„
is ju ste
PHONE C A L L AW AY.;
am now M place your haipwsMed
nl. ton can depend on ciaoiliad lo
I,u tha position Man

C A L L

, I jiSS/JFFLtvr &lt;
0*
1LrSS *iNQtHtc* r

*

322-2611
Elizabeth Brady, Bradenton, displays Victorian wreaths and other crafts.

t

N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
Nolle* I* hereby given lhal we
are engaged In business al US
E
Altam onte D rive . Suit*
1700 171. Altamonte Springs. F L
13701. Seminole County. Florida,
undtr th* Fictitious N*m* ot
C U S TO M R EP AIRS B A DD!
TIO NS. and lhal w* Intend to
register said name with Ih*
Clark ol Ih* Circuit Court, Sam
Inol* County, Florida. In ac
cor dance with th* Provisions ol
th* Fictitious Name Statute*.
To W lt Section U S 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
Jack Layn*
Lana Layn*
Publish November II. 19. 3*
A December 1.1990
D E Z 144
N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice Is hereby given that I
a n engaged In business at 1S1 S
W y m n r # Rd . A lt a m o n t e
Springs, F L 13714, Seminole
County, Flo rida, under the
F ic titio u s Nam e ol ABS
S Y S TE M S and that I Intend to
register said name with the
Clerk ot Ih* Circuit Court. Sem
inol* County, Florida, in ac
cor dance with th* Provisions ol
th* Fictitious Nam* Statutes.
To W II Section US 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
Jim Bell
Publish Novtmber S. II. 19. 3*.
1990
D E Z 73
N O TIC E OF P RO CEED ING S
FO R T H E VA C ATIN G .
ABANDONING.
O IS C O N TIN U IN O .A N U
CLO SING O F
R IG H TS-O F-W AY OR
O R AIN A G C E A S E M E N T
T O W HOM IT M AY CONCERN
Y O U W ILL P LEAS E TA K E
N O T IC E that th* Board ut
County Commissioners ol Semi
not# County. Florida at I 10
p m on th* llfh day ot Decern
ber. A D . 1990. In the County
Commissioners Meeting Room
at th# Seminole County Services
Building In Santord. Florida,
will hold a public hearing to
consider and determine whether
or not the County will vacate,
abandon, discontinue, close,
renounce and disclaim eny right
ot Ih* County and th* public In
and to Ih* lo.'owmg rights of
way or drainag* easement run
ning through or adlacent lo the
described property, to wil
th# north 30 feel ol Lot a .
Block C. Middleton Oaks Plal
Book J*. Pages U . 14 and U
P ER SO N S IN T E R E S T E D
M A Y A P P E A R A N O BE
H E A R D A T TH E TIM E ANO
P LA C E ABOVE S P E C IF IE D
BO AR D OF
C O U N T Y COMMISSIONERS
Maryann# Morse.
Clerk to th* Board
Publish November 19. 1910
D E Z !•*

N O TIC E OF
F IC TITIO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that we
are engaged in busir.es* In
Seminole County, Florida, under
th* Fictitious Nam* ol N IN E TO
FI VE. THE W E E K L Y
E M P L O Y M E N T G U ID E and
that w* intend to register said
name with th* Clerk at Ih*
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florid*. In accordance with th*
Provisions at Ih* Fictitious
Nam* Statutes. To W lt. Section
US 09 Florida Statutes 1957
GOODME AD A M E R IC A . INC.
D A V ID C ASHBURN
A tto rn e y lor G oodhead
America, Inc.
Publish October 39 A Novem
ber 5. 13.19. 1990
D E Y 395
NO TIC E OF
F IC TITIO U S N A M E
Nolle# Is hereby given that I
am engaged in business al *41
W Lake Mary Blvd.. Suit* 119.
Lake Mary, F L 13740 In Semino la County. Florida, under Ih*
Fictitious Nam*ol

GENA INTERNATIONAL
and that I intend to register said
name with th* Clerk ol Ih*
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida. In accordance with th#
Provisions ot th# Fictitious
Nam# Statutes. To W lt: Section
US 09 Florida Statutes 1957.
Gena Ayala
Publish October 39 A Novem
ber 5,13.19.19W
D E Y 799
N O TIC E C F
F IC T ITIO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am, engaged in business at 134
Robin Road Suit* 1700A. Alt*
monl* Springs, F L 33701, In
Sc min si* County. Florida, under
th* F Ic 111ious Nam* ot
ORLANDO PERCUSSION
SALES A SERVICE and that I
intend to register said nam*
with the Clerk ol th# Circuit
Court. Seminole County, Florl
&lt;t*. In accordance with Ih*
Provisions ol th* Fictitious
N*m* Statutes. To W II Section
U S 09 Florida Statute* 1957.
James V Russo
Publish OctoOer 29 A Novem
ber S. 13. 19.1990
D E V 799
N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* It hereby given that 1
am engaged In business *f 3709
S Orlando Dr . Sanlord. Florida
33771. Seminole County, Florida,
under th* Fictitious Nam# ol
T H E R E N TA L STO R E, end that
I Intend to register said nam#
with the Clerk ol th* Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Flo ri­
da. in accordance with th#
Provisions ol th# Fictitious
Nam# Statutes. ToWl t : Section
MS 09 Flor Ida Statutes I9S7
Vicki* Christaller
Publish October 39 A Novem
her*, tl. 19.1990
D E Y 394

�Sanford Htftfd. Sanford, Florida — Monday, Worornbar 19, 1990 — ?*
&gt;-*rr-*

Bush: Holiday release just a ‘ploy’

y.

Persian

cr-v-i-*

■ ■ t l V L I VO M IM

Barbara Bush to c o m up

United Prt»s International_______

ABO ARD AIR TORCE ONE - Barbara Bush, wearing an
"Operation Desert Shield" bracelet, aald Sunday the has no
fears about venturing near the front tines In Saudi Arabia. But
she said she will do so In pants.
In apparent respect for the Saudi dress code, which requires
women to cover up, the find Indy revealed that her outfit Tor a
Thanksgiving Day visit with U.S. troops will be a pair of slacks
andaahlrt.
" I hate for the troops to see me In pants," but that's the way
It will be. she told reporters while en route with her husband
from Germany to Paris on the third day of an week-long trip to
Europe and the Middle East.
T h e first couple will celebrate Thanksgiving with some of the
more than 230,000 American troops In the Persian Gulf.
Including many near the Saudl-Kuwaltl border where Iraqi
troops are stationed.

Trudeau bumped from Saudi trip
N E W YORK — Cartoonist Garry Trudeau, the creator of
"Doonesbury." was mysteriously bumped from a Thanksgiv­
ing trip to visit troops In Saudi Arabia. Newsweek magazine
said Sunday.
Newsweek aald Trudeau was planning to take the USOsponsored trip with comic Ja y Leno, but was dropped without
explanation from the trip's manifest.
T h e official reason from U.S. headquarters In Riyadh. Saudi
Arabia, was that Trudeau was not barred, but his visit was
merely postponed
"due to logistics and transportation
limitations." Newsweek said.
Trudeau might have ruffled some feathers, however, with
strips satirizing U.S. policy in the Persian Gulf, the magazine
said.
A senior administration official denied the White House knew
anything of Trudeau's Hip. but added. "If we had known, we
would have bumped him. too." Newsweek aald.

President Bush, meeting with
world leaders Monday during a
historic treaty summit In Paris,
aald there was "no room for
compromise" with Iraqi Presi­
dent Saddam Hussein and dis­
missed an Iraqi offer to free
thousands of foreign hostages
held In Ira q and occupied
Kuwait beginning on Christmas
Day.
Bush called the surprise Iraqi
announcem ent Sunday a
"cynical ploy." and he joined
British Prime Minister Margaret
Th a tc h e r In dem anding the
immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of Iraq's Invasion
forces In Kuwait.
After holding a breakfast meet­
ing w ith Bush at the U.S.
Embassy. Thatcher told report­
ers that Saddam's "evil has to be
stopped." and vowed "either he
withdraws or the military option
has to be used."
Bush repeated his position
that there Is "n o room for
compromise" with Saddam and
added. "We're rachetlng up the
p r e s s u r e : I h o p e he u n ­
derstands."
Bush. In Paris to officially end
the Cold War with the signing or
the Conventional Forces In
Europe treaty, was scheduled to

hold a dinner meeting with
S o v ie t P re s id e n t M tk h a il
G o rb a c h e v to d is c u s s the
Persian Gulf crisis.
A brief dispatch Sunday by the
official Iraqi News Agency In
Baghdad said the announcement
to release hostages beginning on
C h ris tm a s D a y cam e after
Saddam met with government
officials.
“ It has been decided that
foreign guests would be allowed
to travel In batches ... from Dec.

25 and within a period of three
months, the last batch of which
would leave the Iraqi territories
on March 25 unless something
would take place that (would)
mar the atmosphere of peace."
INAsaid.
Observers said Iraq may be
trying to buy more time by
announcing the release of the
hostages over a protracted
period.
There are about 3,000 foreign

nationals, most of them men. In
Iraq and Kuwait who have been
unable to leave for home —
either because they are being
held against their will at key
economic and military sties or
because they are In hiding from
authorities.
The United States, which has
led the International response to
Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait, has
about 500 Americans under
Iraqi control.

‘T h u n d e r’ scru b b e d by bad w e a th e r
LANDING ZONE EA G LE. Saudi Arabia High winds and rough seas forced the partial
scrubbing of a highly touted mock landing by
U.S. and Saudi marines on a beach near the
border with Iraqi-occupied Kuwait.
Helicopters managed to ferry 400 marines
ashore as pari of the six-day Imminent
Thunder exercise on Sunday, but military
officials said the bad weather made It unsafe
for hovercraft to transport troops to the beach
some 100 miles from Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's occupying forces.
Officials planned to try the amphibious
landing again Monday.
"There's no sense endangering people un­
necessarily for a training exercise." said Chief
Warrant Officer Charles Rowe, speaking to

reporters who were on shore awaiting the
arrival of the Landing Craft Air Cushion
transport vessels.
The hovercraft are designed to carry troops
and military equipment to shore while skim­
m ing over the waves at high speeds. But waves
of 8 feet to 10 feet slowed the vessels and
threatening to overturn them.
"In peacetime there are limitations and for
safely reasons you don't want to lose any­
body." said MaJ. Gen. Harry Jenkins Jr.,
commanding officer of the 4lh Marine Expedi­
tionary Brigade.
Despite the postponement of the landingcraft portion of the exercise, military officials
called the day a success because helicopters
taking off from a five-ship task force got the
other U.S. and Saudi marines ashore.

Leaders meet
for closing of
Cold War era
B y C M A M R a M iB M H T N
United Press International_______
PARIS — Amid extraordinary
security, leaders of 34 nations
arrived In the City of Light for a
European summit formally en­
ding a four-decade era of Cold
War tension.
The three-day summit, laun­
ching a new age of East-West
cooperation, will be highlighted
by the signing Monday morning
at the Elysee Palace of a massive
conventional arms treaty that
removes the risk of surprise
attack In Europe.
Th e 160-pagc Conventional
Forces In Europe pact was Ini­
tialled Sunday in Vienna, where
negotiators have met since
March 1989.
Europe "stands at the thresh­
old of a new era — an era of
peace, prosperity and security
unparalleled In the long history
of this continent," said President
Bush, who had dinner Sunday
night w ith French President
Francois M itterrand at the
Elysee Palace.
Bush acknowledged that the
summit starting Monday "seems
to have been overshadowed by
w h a t 's h a p p e n in g In the
(Persian) Gulf but It Is a signifi­
cant milestone.''
Iraq said Sunday it would
begin on Christmas Day to
release thousands of foreign hos­
tages held In Iraq and Kuwait as
human shields against any at­
tack by U.S.-led forces.
Bush was to discuss the gulf
crisis at breakfast Tuesday with
S o v ie t P re s id e n t M ik h a il
Gorbachev, who flew to Paris
from Rome Sunday.
The three Baltic republics of
the Soviet Union — Lithuania.
Latvia and Estonia — were
invited Sunday to take part in
the summit as
"guests" of
France, diplomats said. The
Baltic states seek Independence
from Moscow.

Pope plans trip
to Soviet Union

arou n d electricity A n d FPlfc

It on ly takes a

fre e broch u re, “D o n ’t Contact

little electricity-

the Electric C om p an y by

about w h at^

Mistake,” can

n eed ed to p o w e r

help you stay

a night U g h t-tc

safer still.

give you a fatal shock.

■ y C N A R L H M O t lV

United Press International_______
V A TIC A N C ITY - Soviet Pres­
ident Mikhail Gorbachev met
with Pope John Paul II for the
second time within a year and
told reporters later they agreed
the pope should visit Moscow,
but no date was set.
"We will see each other on
Soviet territory," Gorbachev told
a reporter of the Soviet Novosti
news agency alter the private
audience. "We agreed on this
today. We will talk about the
timing later."
However, the Vatican made no
mention of a papal visit to the
Soviet Union In a sparse eightline statement Issued after the
visit.
Because it was a private au­
dience. the pope and Gorbachev
made no speeches, as they did
during their first historic meet­
ing which occurred during the
Soviet leader's official stale visit
to the Vatican Dec. 1. 1989.
Sunday, a Vatican reporter
said he heard Gorbachev say to
the pope as they shook hands In
a Vatican corridor after the
meeting: "T h e next meeting will
be on our ground." But Chief
Vatican spokesman Joaquin
Navarro Vails toid reporters
what G o rba che v said was,
"Maybe wc shall see each other
in Moscow."

It suggests

A n d the p o w e r lines
in you r n eigh bo rh o o d

w ays to

carry m any m any tim es

operate appliances w ith ­

that amount.

out m ishap Tfclls h o w to

So w h e n youTe

prevent electrical fire

w o rk in g in the yard w ith

h azard s G ives tech­
n iques for trim m in g trees

a ladder, antenna o r

safely A n d even lists special

p ru n in g tool, give p o w e r

cautions to give children.

lines a w id e berth.

For your free cop y call

Even if the o b ject you’re
#

h oldin g isn't m etal, it can conduct en ough electricity to

us at 1 -8 0 0 -D IA L -F P I , Monday-Friday; 7 am -7 pm .
B ecause getting a nasty shock is an ex p erien ce

stop you in your tracks, if it touchers a w ire.
Using com m on sen se can h elp you stay safe

you w on ’t w ant to repeat.

WE RE HERE TO HELP

*nFPlGrot*comjWTI

�•A — Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida — Monday. November 19. 1990

Hearings study limits to service
United Press International

Frank suffers heart attack
BOSTON - Rep. Barney Frank. D-Maaa.. suffered a mild
heart attack after exercising at a health club Saturday night
and was recovering at a Boston hospital Sunday, a hospital
spokeswoman said.
The congressman from Massachusetts' 4th district, who won
re-election this year after a House probe of his relationship with
a male prostitute, was "resting comfortably" In the Intensive
care unit of Beth Israel Hospital, hospital spokeswoman Kale
Robins said.

From United Pros* Intomationsi Reports

W A SH IN GTON — Just how far a member
of Congress ran go In assisting a constitu­
ent. particularly one who has contributed
campaign money. Is an Issue In sharp focus
during Senate hearings Into the links
between five senators and an Indicted
savings and loan kingpin.
The so-called Keating Five senators —
Sens. Alan Cranston. D-Calir.. Dennis DeCondnl. D-Ariz.. John Glenn. D-Ohlo. John
McCain. R-Arlz.. and Donald Rlegle. D-MIrh.
— received *1.3 million In donations to re­
election campaigns or pet causes from
Charles Keating J r . , w ho now faces

racketeering charges In California.
The hearings before the Senate Ethics
Committee, which resume Monday, are to
determine whether the five applied Improp­
er pressure upon bank regulators on the
behest of Keating and whether any of their
actions violated Senate rules.
A ll five say they did nothing that
reasonably can be called anything beyond
constituent service — o basic and accepted
part of the life of an elected legislator.
Several of the senators, however, say Ihe
Keating Five case underscores the need for
an overhaul of campaign finance laws, a
cause that has been stifled by partisan
bickering for several years.
Robert Bennett, the committee's special
counsel who has spent a year probing the

said he understood the frustrations of
the five senators, along with the 03 other
m em bers of the Senate. T h e cost of
mounting a political campaign Is skyrock­
eting. Bennett said, at Ihe same time
constituents Increasingly are seeking help In
dealing with the government bureaucracy.
"H ow can our system of government
maintain the appearance and reality of
Integrity as these trends continue?" Bennett
asked.
"N ow . none of this Is an excuse for
wrongdoing. If w rongdoing occurred."
Bennett added. "It Is, however... a booming
w arning that unless these trends are
recognized and dealt with, we will have
more cases like this.

H igh court
ruling spurs
media fury
■yW U LD U H N AM
United Press International_______

W A S H IN G T O N - Th e
Supreme Court's affirmation of
an order preventing Cable News
Network from broadcasting Its
Manuel Noriega tnpes drew In­
tense criticism from press repre­
sentatives.
In a 7-2 decision, the high
court let stand Sunday the
tem porary restraining order
from U.S. District Judge William
Hoevcler. which was upheld by
the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, slopping CN N from
broadcasting tapes of telephone
conversations between Ihe Im­
prisoned former Panamanian
dictator and his lawyers.
"T h is Is a single battle In a
long w ar." said CN N lawyer
Floyd Abrams.
CNN will submit the tapes to
Hoevcler. Abrams said If the
Judge refuses lo Uft the ban after
reviewing the tapes, CNN will
appeal all the way back to the
Supreme Court, If necessary. He
said he was
"hopeful and
confident" of prevailing If the
case comes back to the high
court.
However. University of Texas
law professor Lucas Powe. a
specialist in press freedom
Issues, said the damage has been
done.
"N o th in g can untie what
happened today because the
decision today was that CNN
must submit to censorship.”
Powe said. "W h e n e v e r the
Supreme Court sanctions an
erosion In our h is to ric a lly
exercised liberties, you can't be
certain where an erosion's going
to stop."
According lo the Reporters
Committee for Freedom of the
Press, which concentrates on
First Am endment Issues In­
volving the media, the American
public should be very concerned
with the court's action.
" W e 'r e alm ost a un iq u e
country In the world because we
have a First Amendment that
protects the press from govern­
ment censorship," said com­
mittee executive director Jane
K lrtle y . "P r io r restra in t Is
nothing more or less than gov­
ernment censorship and I think
most people understand that It's
very Important that the govern­
ment. with all of Its power, not
be allowed to stop the press from
reporting about matters that are
of public Interest.”
Klrtley added. "T h e re ’s no
question that the prosecution
and trial of Noriega arc of great
public Interest. And the fact Ihe
the courts would allow defense
counsel and the government,
acting In concert, to In effect
orchestrate the media coverage
of this very Important event is
something that ought to cause
anyone greut concern."

I

Nephew of Saudi
Arabian consul
arrested in L.A.
U sH M h w i Intenu tlis al
L a S A N G ELES - Th e nephew
of the Saudi Arabian Consul
General In Los Angeles has been
arrested for vehicular m an­
slaughter in Ihe hlt-and- run
death of an elderly pedestrian on
the westsldc. authorities said
Sunday.
Trad Esmat Nazer. 20. surren­
dered ul the West Los Angeles
station about 2 Mi-hours after the
accident that killed a 73-year-old
woman •'s she crossed Wllshlrc
Boulevard at Manning Avenue
about 11:15 p.m. Friday. Officer
Rodger Burton said.
When he surrendered. Nazer
was accompanied by hts uncle.
Saudi Arabian Consul General
llassan Nazer. Burton said.
Police said there were no pas­
sengers In Nazer's ear at the
time of the accident.
Th e victim, whose name was
withheld until relatives could be
notified, was walking across
Wllshlrc Bouclvurd when she
was hit by a late model red
Mustang, customized with a
black leather bra on its Ironl und
a spoiler on the back, detective
Bob Ockcy said.

I

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»

�Sanford Herald

N o v e m b e r 19, 1 9 9 0

Tribe faces
tiebreaker

V

OR LANDO — Ken Italaer of Menefee's Martial
Arts Academy was named the state cHampton in
the Heavyweight Class of the Beginners'
Division by FAM E, one of the Florida governing
bodies or point karate, at the Fame state
championships held Saturday at the Orlando
Expo Center.
In point luuate. competitors spar, making
contact only to score points. Whoever scores
three points drat or has the most points at the
end of a three-minute round.
The Beginners' Division Is for participants
with yellow to blue belts. The Heavyweight
Class Is for those weighting 17S pounds and up.
FAME'S state championships are determined
by the number of points a competitor ac­
cumulates by placing at tournaments during the
course of the season. Kaiser, a 26-year-old
member of the Sanford Police Department, had
hts state title wrapped up going Into this
weekend's state championship event.

Lions fall In finals
A L TA M O N T E SPRINGS - Apopka ended the
championship dreams of the Oviedo Youth
Football Lions In the finals of Mid-Florida Pop
Warner Pee Wee Dtvison with a 22-6 triumph at
Lake Brantley's To m Story Field Saturday.
The two teams are not finished playing as
they will participate In the Royal Palm Football
Classic In Ft. Myers next weekend.
Apopka got on the scoreboard on the opening
klckofT as a pass back resulted In a 61-yard
touchdown run. Apopka scored later In the first
quarter on a three-yard run to make the score
14-0 after one quarter.
The Lions only score came early in the second
quarter when Demetrus Scott scored on a
nine-yard run.
Apopka’s final score came on a 60-yard T D
run right before the half.
There was no scoring In the second half.
Scott (10 carries. 45-yards). Donnie Markey
(five carries. 30-yards) and Josh Greer (two
punts. 30-yard average) led the Lion offense.
Defensively Oviedo got quarterback sacks
from LeRoy Jackson. Chris Caldwell and J.R .
Billingsley and Joe Thomas forced a fumble
with Anthony Thermenoa making the recovery.
Andy Neufeld led In tackles with eight,
followed by Chris Sanders (seven). Jackson. Joe
Macak and Roger Halliburton (six each) and
Greer. Caldwell. Billingsley and Barkley Hughes
(five each).

Bucs fall to 49ars
SAN FRANCISCO - The San Francisco 49ers
and Tampa Bay Buccaneers were a case study
Sunday of two N FL teams heading In very
different directions.
The 49crs defeated the Bucs. 31-7. to pick up
an NFL-rccord tying 18th straight victory
spanning the last two seasons.
Tam pa Bay lost Its fifth straight and fell to 4-7.
Just how bad have things gotten for the Bucs?
Quarterback Chris Chandler was Tampa's
leading rusher, picking up 44 yards In six
carries. When Chandler wasn't running for
yardage, he was being sacked. San Francisco
sacked him seven times In the contest.
Wayne Haddix. a cornerback. scored Tampa
Bay's only points aod his 65-yard Interception
return for a score gave him three touchdowns
this year, tying him with running back Gary
Anderson for the team lead.
Joe Montana completed 23 of 35 pass
attempts for 230 yards, one Interception and
two touchdowns. His passing yardage against
the Bucs put him over 3,000Tor an Nr L record
seventh season.

Death mart season finale
HAM PTON. Ga. — In a race marred by the
death of another driver's crew member. Morgan
Shepherd Sunday won the Atlanta Journal 500
while Dale Earnhardt outdueled Mark Martin for
his fourth series championship.
Mike Rich and Tom m y Cole were servicing
leader Bill Elliott's Ford when Ricky Rudd's
Chevrolet plowed Into them after the brakes
locked on his car.
Rich. 32. of Blairsvllle. Ga.. died at 8 p.m. in
surgery at Georgia Baptist Medical Center In
Atlanta.
In winning the title by 26 points. Earnhardt
became only the second driver In Winston Cuff
history to claim more than three series
championships. Only Richard Petty has more
with seven.

FOOTBALL
U 9 p.m. — W F TV 9. NFL. Los Angels Raiders at
Miami Dolphins. (L)

HariMStateSt It**, t**m
Bacausa the 4A-Distrlct 7 title will be decided by the Kansas tiebreaker,
Seminole will not be able to take advantage of the breakaway speed of
tailback Henry Williams (left) and wide receiver JoJo Murphy (right).

O R LA N D O — For the last three
m onths, the football players of
Seminole. Edgewater and Leesburg
high schools have grunted, sweated,
been beat up and worked their tails
off.
A nd now. for two of the teams,
their whole seasons will come down
to eight plays.
T h is afternoon at 4 p.m. at Double
E Stadium on the campus of Evans
H igh School, the three teams will
meet to decide the Class 4A-District
7 champion, who will meet Tarpon
Springs In the first round of the
state playofTs Friday.
It was announced last week that
the champion would be decided by
the “ Kansas lie-breaker." Th e
format calls for each team to get
Tour plays from the 10-yard lint. If
both teams match after four plays,
they do the whole thing over until
one team outdoes the other.
Leesburg won the three-way coin
toss and will sit back and watch
S c m l r o l e a n d E d g e w a te r go
h e a d -to -h e a d . T h e S e m in o le Edgewater winner will then take on
Leesburg for the right to advance.

Seminole, the defending district
champion, could have avoided all
the confusion by beating Leesburg
last week. But the Yellow Jackets
pulled a 21-14 upset to force the
playoff.
Earlier In the season. Seminole
had beaten the Edgewater Eagles
20-7 and Edgewater had squeaked
by Leesburg 7-0.
Seminole and Leesburg are no
strangers to the Kansas tie-breaker.
The two faced each other In a
three-team playoff with Oviedo two
years ago. In that one. Seminole
beat the Yellow Jackets 6-3 but loot
to Oviedo 7-6.
If the Seminotes are to be suc­
cessful In the playofT. they must
eliminate their recent problem of
Tumbling the rootball (turning the
ball over nine times the past two
weeks) and a season-long bout with
penalties at crucial points of the ball
game.
Seminole (7-3) is led by senior
quarterback Kerry Wiggins, who
leads the county In passing, com­
pleting 34 percent of his passing
attempts for 1229 yards and I I
touchdowns.
His favorite target of late has been
So a l nolo, Pago 2B

Knights to
participate
in playoffs
In Its first year of eligibility for the
N C A A D iv is io n l-A A football
playofTs. the University of Central
F lo r id a has been In v ite d to
participate in the national champi­
onship-deciding tournament.
Th e Knights. 8-3 after blowing out
Texas Southern on Saturday night,
will travel to Ohio next Saturday to
face undefeated Youngstown State
( 11-0) In their first playoff game.
Youngstown State Is seeded sec­
ond In the 16-team field. UCF Is
seeded No. 15.
T h e w in n e r o f th e U C F Y o u n g s to w n S ta te gam e w ill
advance to play the winner of the
first-round game between No. 10
William and Mary (9-2) and No. 7
Massachusetts (8-1-1).
Th e rest of the l-AA playofT lineup
has the No. 1 seed Middle Te n ­
nessee State (10-1) hosting No. 16
Jackson State (8-3). Th e winner of
that game will play the winner of
the game between No. 9 Boise State
(8-3)and No. 8 Northern Iowa (8-3).
No. 5 seed Eastern Kentucky
(10-1) will play No. 12 seed Furman
(8-3). The winner of that game will
play the winner of the game be­
tween No. 4 Nevada (10-1 and the
Big Sky Conference champion) and
No. 13 Northeast Louisiana (7-4 and
co-champlon of the Southland Con­
ference).

Giving a little extra
While Coach Doug Peters said
that Lake Mary's upset win over
Seminole on Saturday was a team
effort, the Rams benefltted from
some impressive Individual ef­
forts. Troy Todd (No. 18, above)
gave the Rams good field posi­
tion with several outstanding
kickoff returns. Chris Haney (No.
20) scored all three ol Lake
Mary's touchdowns, breaking
several tackles on each one.

No. 3 Georgia Southern (8-3) hosts
No. 14 seed Citadel (7-4). Th e
winner of that game will face the
winner of the contest pitting No. 6
Southwest Missouri State (9-2 and
co-cahmplons of the Gateway Con­
ference) and No. 11 Idaho (8-3).

When on assignment. Herald
photographers shoot pictures
that vary In angle, pose or
content, not all of which arc
published Immediately. From
time to time, the newspaper
takes a second look at those
sports scenes from around Semi­
nole County.

U C F has played two ol the teams
In the final 16. losing to Eastern
Kentucky on Sept. 9 24-12 and
falling to Georgia Southern 38-17 on
Oct. 20.

Chemistry makes champs of Patriots, Greyhounds
When teams win championships,
coaches Invariably talk about chem­
istry. that vague &lt;but very real
magical quality that turns a group
of Individuals into a championship
team.
On Saturday. Lym an High School
cross country coach Fred Flnke and
Lake Brantley High School swim
coach Clay Parnell spoke of that
chemistry after their girls’ teams
won state championships within 24
hours of each other.
Friday night al the Orlando In­
ternational Aquatic and Fitness
Center. Parnell watched In amaze­
ment as the Patriots rallied in the
flnals to win their third consecutive
state title. T h e n , on Saturday
morning In Jacksonville. Fluke's
Greyhounds ran away wills their
state crown.
Even though the Greyhounds and
Patriots won team titles, you don't
normally think of team chemistry In

tF O R T S

._

.

TO N Y
DeSORMIER

Individual spirts like running or
swimming. Hut Flnke and Parnell
both said It was that chemistry that
made their teams champions.
According to Flnke. the seven
dt(Terenl members of the Lyman
cross country squad each contrib­
uted something unique to the col­
lective team personality.
"We have that'senior leadership
from Amu-marie Loflln.” explained
Fluke. “ Janet Greenberg's ug-

gresslvencss filters down through
the team. And Die young freshmen
provide that necessary enthusiasm.
It's a perfect combination.”
While Parnell wasn't so specific,
he did say that his team came
together during the finals after
struggling during the preliminaries
Friday morning.
"It was wonderful to watch." he
said.
Looking al the concept of chemis­
try In terms of how it applies lo
basically an Individual's sport, you
get a better Insight of what It cun
mean to a team.
Unlike team sports where your
success almost always depends of
the effort of a teammate, cross
country runners and swimmers arc
on their own. That's especially true
In events like slate meets, where
you can gel lost In the crowd. That's
when Its Important to have that
support — even If Its 111 sulrll only

T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R T S IN Y O U R AR EA, READ T H E

and not In physical proximity — of
your teammates.
In the finals of the Class 4 A state
swim meet Friday night, there was
o n ly o n e e v e n t — the 100
backstroke — where there were two
Lake Brantley swimmers in the pool
at the same time.
At the cross country state meet at
the north campus of Florida Com ­
munity College-Jacksonvllle. there
was al least 10 seconds between
each of Lyman's top five runners
(who made up the Greyhounds’
team score). That meant for much
of the two-mlle race, those five were
on their own.
The chemistry that Flnke. Parnell
and all other coaches speak so
reverently of transcends that Isola­
tion. K the chemistry Is right, even If
you're by yourself, you're not alone.
If the chemistry Is wrong, a team
can be In the same bus and still be
miles anart.

�— i— w —

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----------— Activated Patently* lack!*
Loraruo Fraaman bom telurad raaervo;
ptecad Palonsiva lineman Karl Dunbar an
Injured reserve

Sem inole'
C o o t la it d from I B
senior
tight end Tony Chavcrs. who has 28 catches
for 272 yards and two touchdowns.
Overall. Wiggins has sprrad the wealth
around, tossing touchdown passes to T im
Hampton (three). Gcordie Davison. Jo Jo
Murphy and Henry Williams (two each).

I

Junior varsity star Tyrone Williams was
'called up recently, which gives Seminole
one more weapon at receiver.
When Seminole goes to the run. It turns to
senior Hcary Williams and Junior Bruce
McClary. McClary leads the ground game
with 434 yards un 111 carries. Williams was
moved from receiver to running back two
weeks ago and has looked good, rushing for

•

R

IP avg

1M1I++

14
X4
17

B II ■

crown while Church of God of
Prophecy clinched a Us for the
" A ‘r DtvMon title Satunfay in
B tlM a S M
the 9anford Church Softball
n r fj
» ita n a
League play at Chaar Park.
» a is s s
tn the “ B " Dtvtaton. Hofy
M 0 I0 7 7 7 4
Cross Lutheran and
s a ts s n
s s a s a a ia
Neighborhood Alliance began
NV^hliMbr
a n a a s ir
Saturday with 7*2 records.
n assM «
Cross Lutheran beat Sanm a a sss
Christian 15-5 before First
/a a s s s
Naxerene upset Neighborhood
a aasss
Alliance 20-13 to wrap up play
ataa a s s
m the "B ” Division. Church of
O o d a n d G ra c e C h r is t ia n
W
X
T
Fta.
OF
BA
Oricags
IX I I S R R
forfeited to each other.
1*. Laute
14 S IM M It
The "B " Division closes with
DtaraM.
■ * 31*73 SI
Holy Cross Lutheran In first
MMfi—
4 M4 M0 M
T— H
_
4 t7 l * 0 N*
la c c at 8 -2 fo llo w e d b y
elghborhood Alliance |7-3).
t i l A— 1
M 413*14 M
Sanford Christian (5-5). Church
M 7 SSSW 0
vS S —
H H I0 0 0
of God (4-6). First Naxerene (3-7)
—
’ B M t 011 IB
and Grace Christian (1-9).
8 — — Im
S i l t MSI 0
In the " A ” Division. Church of
fxywtapasntet
G o d of P ro p h e c y c ru s h e d
il.Mmhaat I.OT
Maraoatha 14-2. First United
L t M l^ B a
te
S
^^^Sa^^STBS*
•
Methodist squeezed past St.
Caitapt t,Qw**acl
DatraltATarantet
Stephen Catholic 16-15 and CalCitaarylBtatateXOT
*vary Christian defeated First
St. Law* A Mii— teta I
Baptist Geneva 14-7.
LsAiteaSaXFllteSan * I.OT
With two weeks remaining In
SawJana* X FNtadtafhta I
" A " Division play. Church of
EtanentanlNY Itoandanl
God of Prophecy leads (he stan­
dings at 8*2.
tITl
7:39 p.m.
Four teams Mill can tic Church
7 :0 p.m.
of God of Prophecy for first
i at S T Rangarx t :S *m.
WaaMngtanto
place. First United Methodist
___ s i r -OatraN, l|)|^.ia.
p.m.
ChkagatoVa
arvl St. Stephen Catholic are lied
at 7-4. each with only one game
Winaigig at StTLotox I: n p.m.
Chicago to C*nantan.t:3lp.m.
re m a in in g . M aranatha and
New Janay tola* Angara*. N . 3lp.m.
Central Baptist are tied al 6-4,
each with two games left.
lA M T O W A C f .
I
Alto In the " A " Division.
Calvary Christian la 2-B and
First Baptist Geneva la 1-10.
There will be no games next
a. type i H w , lap*
week due to the Thanksgiving
Far*. St; X holiday.
On Dec. 1. Church of God of
1 Date
Jarrell. Harp. IS ; *. Darrell Watlrip.
Prophecy will scrap with SI.
Owvratef. 30 ; 1 Mar* Martin. Far*, mi t.
Stephen Catholic at 9 a.m.. First
Crate train. Clwyratet. S tj 1 Alan Kutwkkl.
Far* m i«. Rutty Wottact. Fantloc. m. w.
United Methodist Is scheduled to
0ratSaclu.Clwwratef.Ot.
play Maranatha at 10:15 a.m.
II. Kan I thrator. Owvratef, n t; 11.
and C a lva ry C h ristia n w ill
Darrin# Capa. Chavratet. SM; IX Hut
Stricklin. Bukh. 04 ; la Mctap Waltrlp.
challenge Central Baptist at
Pontiac. O il 11 BUI tlltett. F a n 04 ; M.
11:30 a.m.
Ricky RuPX Owvraf:*. OS; It. Rkfwrp
Leading Holy Cross Lutheran
Fatty. Pontiac. 04 ; 11 BraH Bedim. Pvkk.
W . t*. Harry Oant. CB te tS k 333; H
to their 15-5 "B " Division win
Dawa MaPar III. Pantlac. m
11. Tarry Lebontp Ofdomoblte, S3; 73 over Sanford Christian were
Bobby HillIn, Butak. B3; IX Chuck Bonn, Chuck Hengehold (two home
Chavrelat, 111; it. Slava Grltiam, runs, triple, double, single, four
OtdwMbik. Ol; 11 Oaway Aillion. Fan HI;
runs scored). Al Schmook and
M. T S Mtefcavo. Pcnllac. IS; 17. Chap
Llttte. Fan IS; O. Jimmy Maanv Pantlac, John Townsend (each with three
It*;
Rich Matt,
----- S.
----------&gt;m&gt; Owwralaf. 1M; »■ RoWwy singles and three runs scored).
Don Omundaon (three singles,
iv. Jim — .m . Fan IS; O. Pancha
one run scored), and Larry Lowe
j.Nn.M Wilton.
vr
*
Carter, Fan Ste
Olimablte,
S I ; S i Dava Marcia. Chavratet, M7; 11
(double, two singles).
Jimmy Morion, Chavratet. 144; M. Jock
Also contributing were Ken
Pennington, Oldtmobllo. 1M; 17. Olck
Mau (two singles, two runs
Trkkte, Pantlac. 147; It. Sterling Marlin.
Otpwnoblte. IO ; S . Jim Bmm. Pontiac, U ;
scored). Larry Schrelber (single,
S Bobby Hamllten. Pontiac. A
tw o r u n s s c o r e d ). L o u i s
41. Kyla Potty, Pom tee. 11.
Zombrano and Gary Beymer
(each with a run scored) and
Paul Hoyer (single).
Chipping In for Sanford Chris­
4134
tian were Joe Caputo (two
AINKyaatbl,
v.l*
Parh
singles, two runs scored), Kevin
Final
Driscoll (double, single). JefT
LrryMt
S S I * 71-174
O verba y (tw o sin gle s, ru n
NmchOtk
47 7X47 71 177
Tinyh Nk|m
scored). Tim Bolin (single, run
4*-7X 7X44-171
Dvdlth
497* 71-44 37*
scored) and Tom m y Preston,
Sv Bllstr*
71 4474*4 771
Dennis Marshall, and J.D . ScLrryNIln
71 S 7X7I- 17t
CrhmMrih
4* 714* 70- 17*
graves (one single each).
TmWten
4* 714* 7* 17*
Other* who chipped In were
RgrMcky
7X 714*4* MO
Barry Segroves and Darrell Dorn
TiksWtnb
47 7*71 71 1*0
MahrKrmt
74714*4401
(two singles each). Brent Driscoll
JtMrOUM
71 717147 -Ml
(run scored) and Bruce Preston
Yihyklimr
4*7447 7* HI
(single).
Stv Jna
71 7147 71-MI
MkRd
704* 4* 73-3*1
Lcudlng the Neighborhood Al­
Brn'Jm
4* 7X 71 7* IO
liance effort were Brian Davis
ScttHch
*4747* 7* Ml

n s i 1X4
m i ixi

14
14

I

1 0 MB I - M

M

U B IM M la f)

93411+4
141 1 11.5

194 I 1X 1
499 01+1

M
n
ii

i L I

r

IIS*:)
BVU
Kapp. Pacific
McGttlra.San Dtepotl

v •

&gt;l- R
►' « - »

M SB 7 * 0 J

B 0*

Holy Cross Lutheran tskes
Church *B' Division tltlo
sis h i :
a
.........HffH

3 4 5 y a rd * on
touchdowns.

77 c a rrie s and four

Williams has done a lot of everything for
Seminole with 294 yards receiving to go
w it h h is r u s h i n g y a r d a g e , s e ve n
touchdowns scored and a 35.5-yard punting
average. He has also returned a kickoff for a
touchdown and has a touchdown pass.

W l -

M

M
I N

IN B - I |
■ t -M M

(two triples, two runa scored).
Rod Corey (double, atfigle. run
•cored), Paul Llndstrom (double,
run scored). Scott Kaley (two
singles, two runs Beared) and Bin
Bents and L o w e ll Bowm an
(■Ingle, run scored).
Other contributor* were Jeff
Davia (two singles, run scored).
Rob Baker (single, two runs
■cared), Matt Mitchell and Bob
Bents {one run scored each), and
Dave Bents (single).
Pacing First Naxarene to their
20-13 upset of Neighborhood
Alliance were To m Clark (dou­
ble, five singles, four runs
■cored). Phillip Sutherland (tri­
ple. three singles, four runs
•cored). Shane G a ge r (four
■Ingles, four runa scored), Frank
Turner (three singles, two runs
■cored) and Todd Morgan (two
■ingles, three runs scored).
Also chipping In were Ron
Cordell (two singles). Careem
Gager (two singles, one run
■cored). Alfred Simigey (single,
two runs scared), and Wayne
Oager (tiro singles).
Powering Church of God of
Prophecy to Its “ A ” Division win
over Maranatha were John Klttrell (double, two singlet, run
■cored). Rick England (triple,
two singles, two runa scored).
Jerry Zlnn (two singles, three
runs scored). Will Galley (two
singles, two runs scored) and
Kevin Welch (single, run scored).
Also contributing were Brian
Mock (double, run scored). John
Oates (single, run scored}. John
M u lle n s (s in g le , tw o runs
■cored). Mickey Metx (double)
and Charles Welch (run scored).
P ro v id in g the offense for
Maranatha were Levi Raines
(hom e ru n . s in g le ). Kenny
Daniels (single, run scored).
Author Jackson (double) and
Ron Wise (single).
Pacing First United Methodist
to Its win over St. Stephen
Catholic were Robert Smith (four
■Ingles, three runs scored), Jon
El tonhead (three singles, three
runs scored). Fred Gaines (dou­
ble. single, two runs scored).
Robert Jones (single, three runs
scored) and Ja ck Eltonhead
(double, single, run scored).
Also contributing were Brian
Burke (single, two runs scored).
Dean Smith (two singles), Chris
Bume (single, run scored) and
Les Leggore (single).
Leading St. Stephen Catholic’s
attack were Don Cauaaeaux Sr.
(four singles, three runs scored).
Don Keller (double, two singles,
t h r e e r u n s s c o r e d ). D o n
Cauaaeaux J r . (double, three
singles, three runs scored). Tom
Wilks (three singles, run scored)
and Larry Taylor (single, two
runs scored).
Also contributing were Jeff
Sladek (double, single). Rick Holt
(three singles) and Scott and
Chris Cauaaeaux (each with a
single and a run scored).

Orangewood Christian opens
hoop season with two wins
From staff rspsrts
M O N TV E R D E Both the
Orangewood Christian School
girls' and boys’ varsity basket­
ball teams opened their seasons
with victories on Friday night,
taklung a pair of close decisions
from Montvcrde High School.
In the girls’ game, foreign
exchange student K a th rin e
Prammlng scored 17 points to
lead OCS to a 44-39 victory.
Prammlng. from Denmark, was
4 of 7 from three-point range.
U x Hufford added 11 points.
12 rebounds, six steals and four
assists for Orangewood while
Chtlsla Hogan had four points,
eight rebounds and five assists.
Becky Horner scored a gamehigh 18 points for Montvcrde.
For the OCS boys. 6-2 sopho­
more guard Daniel Parke was
Just one point shy of the Rams’
single game scoring record,
pouring In a game-high 39
points to lead Orangewood to a
76-73 victory.
Parke, who had 12 points In
the decisive fourth quarter,
made 10 of 21 shots from the
field and 14 of 17 from the free
throw line. He also had 11
rebounds.
T im Seneff contributed 16
IMilnis on 6 of 11 shooting from
the field. He also pulled In 17
rebounds. T e rry McCIIntock
added six points (making three
of four shots) and pulling In 11
rebounds. Cade Peavcs chipped
in with five points and six
assists.
For host Montvcrde. Karl Os-

SIRLS
OOAMMWOOO CHRISTIAN («•)

Fromm tag * I 1 17. Hultartf X 1-7 II. Gobte 1
*3 + Hogan 1XZ + Cllmof 0 * 1X Dwyer Z*0
+ DicXInaan iggz.Totat*: 17+ 194+

MOtrrvIRH 130)

5Herman 7 »4 + Motion 1 1-3 X Horner 7
4 3 IX White 3 ft* + Benton 3 * 04. Total*: If
X7M.
OnogaiaaiSCSrteSoo 13 14 4 II - 44
Muterwte
II +14 X - 3*

Three-potat goal* — OCX • (Tramming +
Gotta 3). M * Total touli - OCS II. M IX
Fouta* out — Nona. T+chntc+ia — Mont
Record* - OCS 14. I* dUtrtefi M ftl. *1
dlatrkt.

BOYS
OSAHSIWOOO CHRISTIAN IN)

Fork# N 1+17 M. Sanoff 4 44 14. Jacob* I
1-3 X Stewart 3 *1 + McCIIntack 3 *1 +
Reeve* IX* X Ryan • X IX Anterton 0 I 3 1
To*+i+: 33 3X133+.

M0NTVIRDK7I)

Triplett 4 XI IX Hal Intend 4 *• X Oafwo *
+4ZX Hltten 9 ft* IX C+tet4191+ Robortal
3 4 *. Tatata: MIXI 47X
(kaagowaadCkrtaMaa M 17 13 M - N
Mrataatte
II 14 It 14 - 73
Thraopoint gaol* - OCS X IFarfce S). M 3
(Triplett X Colo* I). Total Hula - OCS IX M
3+ Fouled out - M. Triplett and Cote*.
Technical* - OCX Jacob*. R+cordt - OCX
1X 11 dlatrkt. Mftl.fr I dlatrkl.

hca had 22 points. Including 12
In the aecond quarter. Vic Calcs
added 14 points while James
Triplett and Mike HUton each 10.
In Junior varsity action on
Friday. Ihe Orangewood Chris­
tian boys knocked off Montvcrde
67-62. Garrett Lord netted 18
points for the OCS Rams. Ricky
Prulm adding 14.
T h e Rama will play again
Tuesday night with Mount Dora
Bible Academy. Only the boys
will be In action, the Junior
varsity taking the floor al 6:30
p.m. with the varsity scheduled
to begin at 8 p.m.

I

�Viola Frank,
Mary Tillia, Jay Taylor and Barbara Moor*.

SISTERS to mott
Jay Taylor, from the Public Service Communications
Service, recently spoke to Sanford's SISTER'S, Inc.
The group will meet again Tuesday. November 90. 11:30
a m. at the Trophy Lounge. ISO Airport Blvd. at the Bowl
America. Quest speaker w ill be Martha Yancey, who will
update members on the Sanford Scenic Improvement Board
and share tips on working for a more beautiful environment.

1

saw

.

S £§

VFW, Auxiliary to gathor
Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Ladles Auxiliary of Sanford
Post 10108 meet the fourth Monday at 7:30 p.m. at their post
home (the log cabin on Seminole Boulevard). For more
information, contact Nina Crouse at 322-7671 during evening
hours.

Ovaraatara to hava atap study
A step study of Overeaters Anonymous Is conducted on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. at West Lake Hospital. Stale Road 434.
Longwood. For more information, call Charlie at 323-8070.

Narcotics Anonymous to mast
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Clogging groups to hava claaaaa
Dixieland Cloggers hold classes 7-8 p.m. each Monday at the
old Lake Mary Ore station, First Street and Wilbur Avenue.
Lake Mary. Cost is 823 per 10-week session. For more
information, call 321-5267. Th e club meeting la held from 8-9
p.m.. at the fire station. ‘
'
The Old Hickory Stompers hold classes 7-8 p.m. each
Monday at the Knights of Columbus Hall on S. Park Avenue.
Sanford. Cost is 62.90 per class. For more Information, call
349-9529.

Halp tor gamblsrs offarad
Gamblers Anonymous and Gam-Anon' for
" ' family
‘
Uy iand friends,
otters) at 7:30
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-smokers)
p.m.. Church of the Good Shepherd. 331 Lake Ave.. Maitland.
For more information, call 2389206.

Bridge club to mast, play
Sanford Duplicate Bridge Club meets at noon each Tuesday
at the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E. First St..
Sanford.

Sanford Llona to gathar
Sanford Lions Club meets at noon each Tuesday at the
Holiday Inn. Interstate 4 and State Road 46 In Sanford.

Seniors to meat for activities
LAKE MARY — The Lake Mary Seniors meet every Tuesday
for activities at the old city hall, North Country Club Road.
The program begins at 9:30 a.m. with watercolor class and
drawing. La]
a p quilting.
milting. 10-12 noon and cards and games
through the:day.
Crafts are taught at 1 p.m. Day ends at 3 p.m.
Details, call 323-4938.

baby's breath,
•otdenrod an
dry naturally If
in a
In foil
they w ill not open
after picking. Re­
tire foHage from the stem.
In atrawflowers. replace the nat­
ural stem with a w ire stem. This
la not n rcraaary with the other
flowers mentioned. Next, hang
the flow ers upside dow n In
groups o f 8 to 12 stem s in an
area out o f the sun that ts warm
and d ry and haa good a ir
circu lation . F lo w ers w ill be
ready to use when they are crisp.
Fragile seed heads or flowers,
such as those on pampas grass
and mature cattails, can be
sprayed with halnpray or other
aerosol lacquers to prevent dam­
age with age.
With the use o f dessicants,
many flowers may be preserved
so there is no need to limit
yourself only to naturally dried
materials. Preserving plant parts
In a dried form Is not a new Idea:
It has been sn art form for
hundreds o f years. With the
d e v e lo p m e n t o f n e w p r e ­
servatives and techniques for
drying plants and flowers, today,,
almost any plant or flower can
be preserved In an unbelievably
fresh looking form.
Silica gel Is the most widely
used dessicant today because It
dries quickly and Is easy to use.
Silica is available In most craft
shops. Other dessicants which
may be used Include clay (kitty
Utter) perlite, dry aawdust and
cornstarch. In other dessicants,
flowers take longer to dry than
In silica and delicate flowers
with a high moisture content

r&lt; O u r "Adopt a
Unit" effort la In full awing. The
volunteers from Taco Bell have
opened and processed more than
9,000 letters from schools,
groups and communities all over
the U nited, States who arc
"adopting "' units and ships.
From Africa to Asia. Europe to
the Persian Gulf, and Including
surface ships on three oceans,
your readers are at work for
"their" units or ships.
Now. as we have done together
since 1985, all Dear A b by
readers will have a chance to
send holiday cheer directly to
U.S. troops overseas. Here arc
their addresses:
For aircraft carriers at sea.
cards, letters and packages can
be addressed to "Dear Sailor" or
"Dear Friend":
American Remembers USS
John F. Kennedy

r M M

.v 'V -v
| 6 W

| * 00

| ’ JO | 8 30

| a Jt&gt; |

4 10

(Cstesta White la
Caunly I x l e n s l a n
axi

llrhan

181.)

Send holiday cheer to
United States troops

—

6 00

Another way to preserv e flowera and plant parts la to dry
them In a m icrow ave
Microwave drying, which
only a few
dried material that look fresher
and more colorful
pared to other dry log methods.
Flowers should be placed In a
su pp ortive substance before
placing In the microwave so that
the natural form la retained.
Silica gel and d a y (cat Utter)
worx wen: n o t ever, gei worxs
best. Use only glass, paper or
special microwave-safe contain­
ers to hold the flowers. Do not
co ver the container. A lw ays
place a small cup o f water In the
oven before cooking to prevent
excessive drying.
Microwave cooking times vary,
depending on the characteristics
o f the le a f o r Ik»wer. A fter
cooking, flowers must be left In
the drying agent for several
hours and some specimens may
need to stand tn It overnight.
When using the microwave for
drying. U wlU be necessary to
experiment with cooking time
and length of time that the dried
materials should remain In the
dessicant before removal.
C o lle c tin g and p re s e rv in g
flowes and leaves can be lots o f
fun for (he entire family. Dried
materials can be used in flower
a rr a n g e m e n ts or to m ake
p lc tu re a . p la c e m e n ts or
notecarda.
All Seminole County Coopera­
tive Extension Service programs
[
are open to all regardless
i race.
wa of
color, sex or national origin.

.y ‘ , y

,. w , / . : -

| 10 0 0 | 10 JO | 1 l 0 0 | t 1 JO

1 st

L a B eacH

UNISEX H A IR DESIGN

A ll • CURLS • PERMS
• RELAXES*

MO00 OFF

WEh orWthout This Coupon
Expires: 12-1MO

G{ft Ctrtyicain AvaUabk
937 Hwy. 1742
LONQWOOD

695-6699
Second

Generations
s

Your clothing - sold
on a commissionbasis

v

CLOTHING
LADIiStCHILM iN'S
E X C L U S I V E C L O T H I N G 8 T0 R B ~ S p tcia liiin g In

LADIES NEW 6 LIKE-NEW
DRESSES 6 FURS

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

Fresh ly P r sasad: O n H angars, a » d R E A D Y T O U N IX
COUNTRY CLUB SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER
2STH BT. 6 AIRPORT BOULEVARD. SANFORD

324-3474

Alt: Operation Dear Abby
C/O Commander
USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67J
FPO New York 095382800
A m e rica Rem em bers U S S
Midway
Attn: Operation Dear Abby
C/O Commander
USS Midway (CV-41)
FPO San Francisco 966312710
A m erica Rem em bers U S S
Saratoga
Attn: Operation Dear Abby
C/O Commander
USS Saratoga (CV-60)
FPO Miami 340732740
A m erica Rem em bers U S S
Ranger
Attn: Operation Dear Abby
C/O Commander
USS Ranger (CV-61)
FPO San Francisco 966332750
For A ir Force units stationed
throughout Europe, mall can be
addressed to "Dear Airm an" or
"Dear Friend":
America Remembers U.S. A ir
Forces in Europe
Attn: Operation Dear Abby
APO New York092580006
Abby. thanks to you and your
readers. O p e ra tio n Dear
Abhy/Amerlca Remembers
Campaign rolls into another hol­
iday season of sending cheer and
caring to every comer of the
world, to many thousands of
U.S. troops In 36 countries!

DONALD P. GRIMM.
RATIONAL CHAIRMAN.
AMERICAN X I M I M illl
CAMPAIGN

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DIMM LJ i
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For 24-hour listings, sss LEISURE msgszino of Friday, Nov. 16. .

INTatfTSlf^.lXBTOMTDH-HIMWiliSwscviSnXPBISDkiM EDnV tWWfMliOAE

mssoiiix nMflyow»«a*E2«sQT)i isiam nmi&amp;iou. .mms
TURHI1I1CI3C* ASSIFfiiraiBL. S ilW M N fi JU M W &amp; ilO l ■

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4S — Sanford Hgrald. Sanford. Florida — Monday, Novtmbar 19, 11

Ltgal Notices
NO TICE OF M l l i r r i M i l
N O T IC i IS H E R E B Y O IV IN
mat by virtue el Rial cartam
i at Execution Itaued out at
and undn th* Mat at Ifto Circuit
Caurt at Orange Caunty, Flanda. uaan a m at judgement
randarad tn me aiaraaaM caurt
on m* i * » day *• Auguat A.D
In
tltlad. Jack B. Ntcttoto. P A .
P la in t if f , - * • — J a m i l
William*. Defendant, which
atore Mid Writ at Kaecwtlen wet
delivered la me a* Sheriff at
Sam mete Caunty. Florida, and I
Jama* William*, tatd
bain* located In Seminole
Caunty. Florida, i
larty deter lead at
All n*M, title and mteraef at
the ditandanf in lha renewing
daacrlbad pr^a rty, fa wtt: The
South I St chetne* at the North
7 ft chain* at lha Whet IM S
Cham* of the sw to at tho NW to
ef Section 17. TownaMa a South.
Ran*e 11 la s t . Sem inole
Caunty. Florida He**
of way)
of Seminole County. Florida,
will at l l : « A M . an the &gt;7lh
day of Nevembar. A D. Iff*.
all ealeftn*
*any
Harm, at tho Front (Watt)
at the *lop* at the Seminole
County CourthouM In Sanford.
Florida, the
real property.
That told tale I* bain*
to tatlify the term* ef told Writ
of Execution.
John I . Polk, Sheriff
Seminole Caunty. Florida
To be publithed November S. 11.
it. M. with the ■
bar 17. If
OEZS4

■am

N O T IC I OF P R O C IIO tN R S
FOR T H I VACATING,
A tA N DONINR.
DISCONTINUINd. AND
CLOSINBOF
RIGHTS-OF-WAY ON
D R A IN A B IIA S IM IN T
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN:
YOU W ILL P L IA S I T A X I
N O T IC I that the Beard at
County CemmlM toners of Saminolo County. Florida, af 1:10
pm . an the 11th day ef Decern
bar. A D., 1HA m the Caunty
Commlttienert' MeetIn* Ream
at the Seminole County Service*
Building In Sanford. Florida,
will hold a public hear In* to
consider and determine whether
or net the County will vecet*.
abandon, dltcontlnue. clot*,
renounce and dltclaim any right
of the County and the public In
and to the following rlghteotwoy or drainage aoaomont run­
ning through or adlecent la the
deter Ibed property. to wit:
That part ef platted Third
Road a* ihown an the plat af
SPRING HAMMOCK, a* re­
cord* In Plat Beak l. Page* 1
through L Public Record* of
Sominote County. Florida, lying
t o u t h ef th e s o u t h e r l y
right ef-wey line ef State Read
427 a* dotcribed and retard* in
Official Record* Book 111.
Page* 24* through 1S2. Public
Record* ef Seminole County.
Florida, and lying north of Hie
easterly prolongation ef the
south boundary of Lot 5. a*
shown an told plat of SPRING
HAMMOCK.
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D
M A Y A P P E A R A N O BE
HEARD A T TH E T IM E ANO
PLACE ABOVE SPEC IFIED
BOARDOF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Mery anna Morte.
Clerk to the Board
Publish: November If. Ifto
DEZ lit
N O T IC I OF
FICTITIO US NJUMI
Nolle* I* hereby given mat I
am tngegad In butlnes* at lif t
Sunshine Tree Blvd.. Lang wood.
Fla. 2277*. Seminole County.
Florida, under the Fictitious
N am * ol C R O N IN C O M
M U N IC A T IO N S C O N S U L ­
TANTS. and mat I Intend to
register said name with the
Clark ol the Circuit Court. Sam
Inote County, Florida. In ac­
cordance wim the Provision* of
the Fictitious Nam* Statute*.
To-Wit: Section 1*10* Florida
Statute* 1*57.
William J. Cronin IV
Publish: November 12. 1*. 2*
A December 2. IHO
OEZ 143

Ltgal N o ttc f
m

t h e c ir c u it c o u r t

ATRBtVIttOW
IM * C *
• N R I: 1S T A T I OF

*^^w ^WVw^^WW n ^ Ww ^wfwW
at R U TH L. HARDRMAN. do
caaaed. PH* ttumbar IM tF C P .
M pandMg m lha Clrcutf Court
which M S I * . Part Avenue.
F L 8771. The name
at lha Perianal
Represen tative and at tho
af
re mitred la UN with iho Caurt
W ITH IN T H R U C A L I HOAR
M ONTHS FROM T H I O A T I
OP T H I FIR ST PUBLICATION
O F T H IS N O T I C I : I D all
(SI any *&gt;|*ctt*n by an Intero»t
I Sw *
tty af the will, the guailficattana
of lha perianal representative,
venue ar lurlidlctton ef the
Caurt. W ITH IN T H I L A T IR
OF T H R U MONTHS A F T E R
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC I OR T H IR T Y
DAYS A F T E R T H I O A T I OF
S IR V IC I OF A COPY O F THIS
N O T IC I ON T H I O B JIC T IN O
PERSON.
A L L C L A IM S A N O O B MANDS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
B l FOR EVER B A R R IO .
Date at the first publication at
thi* notice ef admlnlitraften:
November 12. Iff*.
DONALD W. HARDEMAN.
JR.
P*r*anat R«prae*ntaftva
W .l. W IN D ! R W I I D L I . JR .
Attorney N r Arsenal
I l f W .l
Winter Part. FI. 227fflff7
Tetaphana: |dW7) U t d d
F I* Ida Bar H e.fi 14*3*
PuMtoh: Navamber a If. Iff*
DEZ lit
NOTICE OF
F IC TITIO U S NAM E
Noftca Is hereby given mat I
am angagtd m buiina** af tfO
Miller Rd.. Alternant* Springs.
Seminole County. Fterta.* under
me Fictitieua Nam* et JAR
V E R T I C A L S , IN C . d/b/a
V E R TIC A L WORLD, wtd mat 1
intend fa register told name
with the Clark at ma Circuit
Caurt. l aminate Caunty. Flori­
da. In accardanca with tha
Provisions at tho Flctltlau*
Nam* statute*. Te-Wlt: Section
M M * Florida Statute* 1*17
Janet Kahl
Publish: November If. 2* A
December 2.10.1**8
OEZ IM
IN T N I C IR C UIT COURT.
OF T N I IIO N T R IN T M
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT.
IN ANO FOR
S IM IN O L I CO UNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO.: W-WtO-CA tJ-L
IN RR: The Marriage at
SH ER YL HIGGINS
C R A B T R E I.
WIN.
RAYMOND S. C R A IT R E E .
H
N O T IC I OF ACTION
TO : RAYMONDS.
C R A R T R IE
1M LONO LEAF PINE CR.
SANFORD. F L 32771
Y O U A l l N O TIFIE D that a
Petition N r Dttaolutten at Mar
rlaga hat bean Iliad against you.
ar* ragutrad to
•arv* a copy *1
y*gr Rospei
•f your
or Pleading to tho Petition upon
mo WIN'S attorney. A A. Me
Clanahon. Jr.. 10* Soum Fart
Avenue — Suit* B. Santord.
Florida a n t . and AN ma origi­
nal Raepano* or F taadlng In the
office of the Clark of ma Circuit
Court, an ar before the 2*th day
of November. If**. If you fall to
de so. a Default Judgment will
b* taken against you N r the
relief d*m*nd*d m tha Patman.
D A TE D af Santord. Seminole
County. Florida, mi* 2im day of
.1*
(SEA LI
M ARYANNE MORSE
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT COURT
B Y : Sharon Oum
Deputy Clark
Publish: October 2* A Novem
ber S. 12. I*. 1**0
OEY-2E7

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cwebtey C«**r cr»program era crxwed Si
people, peel bid preeeni
teen tetter at aw I
anuiSe foJer r caw *4 eguerr r

I I I H W

X Z E B L U O O T
B A X B

J Z .

J

K W

G Z

F Z D A J

X O A A W

I O Z D T U

Z Q I
N R
L Z

—

P U H O X L Z M U B H
E Z H A A W

IN TW * CIRCUIT COURT
OP TN R B IA N TB E N TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
O F FLORIDA
M ANR FOR

RUTH L. HARDRAWN.

N O T IC I OF PUBLIC NEARING
Tho Seminole Caunty Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a
public hearing In Room W 122 *f tho County Services Building.
Sanford. Florida, on December L Iff* A T 7 P M ., or at toon
thereafter a* postible. to consider mo Wtowlng:
A PUBLIC HEARING FOR CMANOE O F ZONING BEGULATKHfS
1. ETOR FRO FR R TIKS - REZONR FROM A -l. AGRICULTURE
ANO C-l R E TA IL CO M AURCIAL T O PUD. P L A N N IO U N IT
D EVELO PM ENT. Tax Parcel IA In Section 1*2*2* *2*21 acre*,
located at tha southwest comer at Lake Mary Blvd. and Greenwood
Blvd.. norm of Greenwood Lake* PUD. D IS TB IC T: f l
2. CRAIG J. KASUTA - REZONR PROM R-S. M U LTI FAM ILY
AND RF. R ES ID E N TIA L PROFESSIONAL T O O F. O FFIC E
DISTRICT. Parcels 30. 30A. If and 22. In Section 22212*. Further
described at a three ( ] ) acre* parcel located southwest of Iho
Intersection of Howell Branch and Leka Howell Bead*. DISTRICT:
II
2. FAR FOUR ID E R R II PARKER) - REZONR FROM A-t.
A O R IC U L TU R I T O PCD. PLANNED COMMERCIAL DISTRICT The west is el ttw SE vt of the NE W of Section 2*213* Further
described a* 3.7 acre*, located at the northeast comer of SR 42* end
Tutkewllla DISTR IC T: fl
Those In attendance will be heard and written comments may be
Iliad wim the Land Management Department. Hearings may be
continued from lime to tlm* a* found necessary. Further details
available by calling 331-113* Extension 7*44.
N O TE: Persons ar* advl**d that If they wtsh to appeal any
decision made at thi* matting, they will need a record af the
proceedings, and lor such purpose, they may need to en*tr* mat a
verbatim record of the proceedings I* mad*, which record Includes
•ho testimony and evidence upon which Its* appeal I* to be bated, par
Section 2*4 0105. 7 lor Ida Statutes
BOARDOF CO UN TY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE CO UN TY. FLORIOA
; B Y: HERB HARDIN. DIRECTOR
. LAND M ANAGEM ENT
Publish November I*. IHO
OEZ 1*0

•J Z

Ltgal Nolle—

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I battova that profaaaional
wrestling is clean and everything else In lha world Is
tixod “ — Frank Dolord

I RO l M M M C A -M -P
FEO CR A L HOME LOAN
M ORTGAGE C O R F .
MICHAL L. MICE I I I . e t u i,
atal..
NO TICE OF ACTION
TO : KAZUMI KAWAGUCHI
M l YORO KAWAGUCHI,
ktswtto
MBS Santa Msnka Court,
t Part. Colltomia
YOU A R E N O TIFIED that an
af
Lot S3. Black H. OAKLAN D
E S T A T E * 2ND SECTION, accerdtng to lb* plat thareaf. at
1 m Plat Bask ta
r* and 4*.
Caunty.
mat parttan af ma NW la af tha
NW la af Sectten 34. TawneMp 31
t» Eaat. tying
extension of l^t^t N*rf^^a^*alar^y
and tho South tines at said Let
n.
has hssn fttod sgslnet you and
you are required la h t m a copy
af your written axtenses. It any.
to It. on Noella Moreno I
address is Suits MB. 1S7B
Midrug* Avenue. Carol Gobles.
Florida. 2214* an ar before
Osw nbsr St. Iff* and tlto Hs*
original with the Ctork of HU*
Caurt aimar bators service an
Ptetotttrs aftomay ar Immedlf lf iy

H U fU ifU * i VlnVfWW ■

V tWVI Will IV P W rV f IftNIVi
you tor lha rsltof tomandad In
W ITN IS S my hand and lha
taal*f HU* Caurt this I4lh day af
(SEAL)
M AR YANNE MORSE
AaCtortal Iho Caurt
By Jean Rnllant
A* Deputy Ctork
Pubftoh: Navamber I*. 2* A
December 3. I* ifto
DEZ-1*1
IN T N B CIRCUIT CO URT
IN AND FDR
S IM IN O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. «M 2 t2C A -t« P
JUN E R .C ULLER TO N . an
unremarried wldou.
Plaintiff
CHESTER R. ELLISON.
IR V IN O L. K IC K and
M ARTHA L. K IC K , hi* wife,
and DO Y LE GIRONER and
M ARY GIRDNKR.MswIto.
Defendant*
N O T IC I OF ACTION
T O : Irvin g L. Keck and
Martha L. Kpcfc. ht«wtto
LAST KNOWN R ESIDENCE:
UNKNOWN
YOU A R E N O TIFIED that an
action to toricle** a m*rtg»ga
an the following property In
lemIn*to County. Florida:
Lot 13. FOXWOOO PHASE
M l. according la Jho plat
thereof, record** In Plot
73. Pag* 24. Public Record* af
Seminole Ceunty. Florida,
ha* bean tiled aaatnu you and
you ar* reaulred to tarve a copy
af your written N Jw tiii. If
to tho Plaintiff’•ertomey.
»i
w
name Is GEORGE C. K E L L E Y ,
and address I* P.O. Bex 1132.
Apopka. PL. 277*4-1122. on or
bators the 21st day of Decantbar. If**: and file the original
with tha Ctork sf mis court
either botore tervtc* an Plaintltfs attorney or Immediately
thereafter; otherwise a lodg­
ment may be entered against
you tor the relief demanded In
tha complaint or petition.
W ITNESS my hand and of
tidal seal at mi* court on
Nevembar I*, iff*
(SEAL)
M ARYANNE MORSE
Ctork ot Circuit Caurt
B Y: Patricia F. Haem
Publish: November if, 2* A
December J. I* Ifto
OEZ 1*1
IN T N I CIRCUIT CO URT
OP T N I E IR N T IIN T N
JU O IC IAL CIRCUIT
IN ANO FOR
S IM IN O L I CO UNTY.
S TA TE OF FLORIDA.
t-CAME
Florida Bar N*. t 1
S O U TH EA S T M O R TG A G E
COMPANY. Plaintiff.
ALLAN G. MILLER.
II living, at ux. dal..
Defendant*.
N O T IC I OF ACTION
STA TE OF FLORIDA
T O : DONALD H E N R Y
C H U R C H and E . J E A N
CHURCH, hi* wIN.
Whose residence address It
unknown.
YOU ARE N O TIFIED thol an
action to tor*cto*o a mortgage
on tho following property In
Seminole Caunty. Florid*:
L o t 2. C L U S T E R C.
W ILD W O O D . A P L A N N E D
U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T, ac
cording to tho PLit thereof, a*
recorded In Plat Book I*. Paget
7 through io. ef the Public
Record* ot Somlnoto County.
Florida.
i against you and
ALLA N G. MIL)
ilLLER. It living
and SHIRLEV A. M IL L E R , hi*
write. It living. Including
unknown spouse ol tha
married and It either or bam ot
said Defendants are dtceesed.
their respective unknown heirs,
devisee*, grantee*, assignees,
creditor*. Honors, and trustees,
and all other persons claiming
by. through, under or against
lh a n a m e d D a te n d a n ts .
*&gt;iLDWOOO HOMES. INC., a
corporation, and you ar* re­
quired to serve a copy of your
written defenses. It any. to It on:
JO S E P H M. P A N IE L L O .
ESQUIRE. Plaintiffs attorney
whose address Is:
301 N. Franklin Street. Suite
3720. Tempo. FlorId*33*02
on or before the 30th day ol
November. Ifto. end tile the
original wim the Ctork el mi*
Court either bolero service on
Plaintiff s attorney or Immedl
etoiy thereafter. otherwise a
default will be entered against
you tor the relief demanded In
the Complaint or Petition.
D A TE D on this 25th day ol
October. Ifto.
C LE R K O F THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: ttoather Brunner
Deputy Ctork
Publish October 3* A
bar S. 13.1*. If**
DEV 2M

L tg il N o lic t
C IT Y OF
L A R I M AR Y, FLORIDA
M T IC IO F
N O T IC I IS H I R I B V O IV IN
by to* City Cammtteton af toe
City m Labe RRary, Florida “ '
'M
'A
m i af m b P M fa
ief
AN ORDINANCE OF T H I
C ITY OF L A R I MARY. PLOR
ID A , A M E N D I N G O R D I ­
NANCE 241 O F TH E C IT Y OF
LAKE M A R Y. FLORIOA AS
C O D IF IE D IN C H A P TE R S
IS4AA 114*4 ANO 1S7COOE OP
O R D IN A N C E S ) C R IA T I N O
NEW CHA P TER S ISAM 124*4.
ISAAS ANO ISAAIi PROVIDING
.NEW ZONING DISTRICTS C l.
C L M IA . A N O M IA i PRO­
VIDING PON DESCRIPTIONS
O T T H I D IS TR IC TS ; PRO­
V ID IN G P I R M I T T I D AN O
C O N D ITIO N A L USES; PRO­
VIDING FOR SITE D E V E L­
O P M E N T STA N O A R O Si
P R O V ID IN G A D D IT IO N A L
R IQ U IR R M IN T S ; PR OVID­
ING FOR AMR NOAM N T T O
T H I COOR O P O ROINANCISi
PROVIDING POR CONFLICTS.
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AND E F ­
F EC TIV E D A T E .
The Public Hearing will b*
h*M In to* Cammtteton Chan
ban. N* w aw Lab* Mary Stvd..
Labe Alary. Tha Public I* InSaid

w ^ IrtWy ^RG
frsm lim a te tlm* until a
to made by to* City
Capias af toe Ord*
nance In toll ar* available m to*
City Ctort'sOffk*.
A T A P I O RECORD OP TH IS
M E E TIN O IS M ADE I T T H I
C IT Y P O R IT S C O N V E ­
N IEN CE. TH IS RECORD M AY
NOT C O N S TITU TE AN A D E ­
Q U A TE RECORD FOR FUR
POSES O F AP P EAL FROM A
D EC IS IO N M A D E I V T H I
C ITY W ITH RESPECT TO TH E
FOREGO!NO M ATTER . AN Y
PERSON W ISHINO TO I N
SURE T H A T AN ADEQUATE
RECORD O F T H I PROCEED­
INGS IS M AIN TAIN ED FOR
A P P f L L A T K PURPOSES IS
A 0 V I S I D T O M AR E T H E
N ECESSAR Y ARRANGE
M IN T S A T HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE.
C ITY OF
LAKE M AN Y. FLORIDA
CAROL A. F O S TIR .
C ITY CLERK
O ATEO: Nevembar*. 1*10
Publish: November 1*. Ifto
OEZ-MI
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T N I ISTH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT, IN ANO FOR
S IM IN O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASS M X *S-S3S1'CA-I*L
FOROCONSUM ERCREDIT
COMPANY.
Plaintiff.
LAW RENCE O R IE N . JR..
•tal.
N O T IC I OP ACTION
TO T H I FOLLOWING D E ­
FENDANTS. IF LIVINO. ANO
IF D E A D , A L L UNKNOWN
P A R T I E S C L A IM IN G B Y .
T H R O U G H . U N O IR OR
AGAINST T H I NAMED DE
PENDANTS. WHO ARB H O T
KNOWN T O I I O IA O OR
A L I V I . W H E T H E R S A ID
f UNKNOWN P A R T U S CLAIM
AS H U B S . D E V I S E R S .
O R A N TR R S . A S S IG N IIS .
L IE N O R S . C R E D IT O R S .
T R U S T ! I S . OR O T H E R
CLAIM ANTS AGAINST SAID
D E F E N D A N T S NAM ES AS
FOLLOWS:
TO : B IL L Y B. MOORE
AOORESSUNKNOWN
ZELM A s OWNSY a/k/a
KIMOW NRY
ADDRESSUNKNOWN
YOU A R E HEREBY N O TI­
F IE D that an action ha* been
tiled against you to torsetose a
mortgage In tha Circuit Caurt of
the tom Judicial Circuit. In and
lor Somlnoto County. Florida, on
tho following described proper
hr:
Lot II. Block t. Tier 2. E.R.
Trefford's Map ol Santord. ac
recorded In Plat Soak I, Pago*
SS through 44 ol tho Public
Record* ot Somlnoto Caunty.
Florid*.
and that you ar* required to til*
your written defenses, it any.
wim tho Ctork ot the above
styled Court and to serve a copy
thereof on Larry P. Sluder,
Aker men. Sentortttt A Eldson.
P.O. Box 211. Orlando. Florida
U S n an or before tha 7m day ot
December. t**e.
It you tail to do so. Judgment
by default may b* entered
against you tor the reltot de­
manded In tha Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand and tael
mi* 1*1day af Nevembar. IHO
(SEAL)
C LE R K O F TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
SamInote County Florida
B Y : Heather Brunner
Deoutv Ctork
PuMMt: November S. 13. 1*. 24.
OEZ 47

Ltgal

Notic—

N R T K I O P SMRRIPP’S I A L I
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y O IV IN
Rta* by virtu* af toal cartam
Kbit af Eaacaftan toauad aut as
and under to* teal *f to* Circuit
Caurt af Simlwato Caunty. Ftor
a final tudgarnsi-t
to to* atomata caurt
an to* IJRI M y af July. A O
t*IR to Mat cartam case anttttod. Emile W. Sbura. Piamttff.
- v s - Rasa O. Ztoato and RaZtoato.
Wrttaf l i
delivered to ma as Short ft af
&gt;. F t o r t d s a d l

71-H tlp Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

S«minol«

Par Ham* I
I xcattonf aomtng patortflal r
CaREIMSBSMrb^ rttow
aaaVOLTaa#
TEM P O R A R Y IS R V tC IS

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CaRf

CLASSIFIED DEFT. PRIVATE PARTY PATES
HOURS

...............................

g * * *

•«8AA-*MP.ai •!222222222" S!2E
i 7 7 S r T

S m m m P P m P m m .. ■ O l E a l w

*cari*mn*Mn*

tVV-ftNR M m mb (ar Nan, Im S■ a I Bw sR

H E A L TH FORCE nMdt you
newt S taffing a ll a ra a ti
PtonfyafwarklCaRMBma
• CUSTOM ER SERVICE*
Perfect tgof tor a poaato
person! Light aftkaduttoaand
public rataftam make* mi* a
ntobl Hurryl
Dwi tDelayl
tunlebl
I
AAA B4RPLOTMflRT
IU.W2-11T*
DRIVE B Y

Rata O
Ztoa!*. said
ka .
»m i
lt*alF*part7, to wtt:
Lai A tss* toe warn to teat,
and to* W**f 2* tost af Lat s.
Black a LONGWOOO PARK.
I to Me ptal tosrssf a*
m Plat Rash 71. Pag**
B thrauM w. Public Rsnrds af
SamMeto Caunty, Florida.
Lets S and B (lass read
r i g h t - a l - w a y ) . R l a c k *.
LAKEVIEW , accardtog to to*
plat lharaaf a* reesrded m Fiat
Rash 1 Pag* M. ef the Public
Record* sf I sm mats County.
Ftor Ids.
Lot* 1 and 4. Black *'C"
P R A IR IE L A K I PARK, eccardmg to Map ar Ptaf lharaaf
aa racardsd m Ptaf Beak 7. Pag*
44. Public Racards af Seminal*
Ceunfy, FtorIda.
■ R fR Y tff^

R»

m R

E R In T T W R S l

earner af Laf 43. ■ NTZAUNOE R
FARMS A O O ITIO N to* 2 ac
corosng to mm pvtr m P lP M
racardsd m Plat Raab 5. Page •
af to* Publk Racards sf Semi­
nal* County, Ftor Ids, run thence
af saM Lat 42. a dtofanc* sf t*s
tost, thence fast las toat. toanca
Saum to the Right af Way af
S 434. thane* Sauthwestarly
along said Right af Way at 1-434
to to* Point af Beginning. L I U
m* Right dt Way tor S.R. 4 K
and lha undersigned a* “
ot Seminal* Caunty. FtorIda.
will at 1t:M A M . m the 27th
day at Navamber. A D. t**b.
otter tar eoto and toil to the
highest bidder, tor cadi In hand.
sub|*ct to any and all aitotlng
iton*, at the Front (Was!) Dear
at the stop* at the Somlnoto
Ceunty CourthouM m Santord.
Florid*, th* above described
REAL property.
That eaM tal* It being mad*
to satisfy th* term* et said Writ
el Execution.
John E. Polk. Short It
Somlnoto County. Florid*
To be published Nevembar 5.12.
If. 2*. wim th* sat* on Novem
ber 27, IN*.
OEZ-S3
IN T H I CIR C U IT COURT
FOR S IM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
P R O M T I DIVISION
Ftto Number IM17-CP
IN RE: E S TA TE OF
ANNE JO U E T T HALE a/k/a
ANNE JO U E T T DAVIS HALE.
N O T IC I OP
ADM INISTRATION
Th* administration ot th* estate
ol ANNE JO U E T T HALE a/k/a
ANNE JO U E T T DAVIS HALE,
deceased. F ile N u m b e r
IO-S27-CP, I* ponding In the
Circuit Court lor Somlnoto
C ou nty, F lo rid * . Prebat*
Division, th* address ol which It
10t N. Park Avenue. Santord.
FL 32771. Th* name and address
ot th* Personal Representative
and at lha Per son*1 Reprttentative'* attorney ar* set
torth below.
All Interested person* or*
required to tlto wim the Court
W ITHIN TH R E E CALENDAR
MONTHS FROM TH E DATE
OF TH E FIR ST PUBLICATION
O F TH IS N O T IC E : I I I all
claim* against th* estet* and
12) any ob|*ctton by an Interest
td person to whom nolle* wot
mailed that challenges th* valid­
ity of the will, the qualifications
ot the personal representative,
venue or jurisdiction ol th*
Caurt. W ITHIN TH E LATER
OF TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
TH IS N O TIC E OR T H IR T Y
DAYS A F T E R TH E DATE OF
SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS
NOTICE ON TH E O B JECTIN G
PERSON.
A L L C L A IM S A N O D E ­
MANDS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED.
Dot* ot th# first publication ol
mi* nolle* of administration:
November 12, Ifto.
Robert O. Hal*
Personal Ropretanlallv*
W.E. W IN OERW EEDLE. JR.
Attorney tor Personal
Representative
2lt W. Comstock Avenue
Winter Pork. Fl. 237*0 n n
Telephone: &lt;407)42*4040
Florid* 04T No. 011442*
Publish: November II. If, lf*0
DEZ 127

Prices above reflect o I I . SO cash dtoceunt tor prompt payment Schedwltry may Include ttortod Advertwer ot the tost el on iM kllnnnl day Cancel
when you get reeutte. Poy only tor days your ad runs ot rare earned
Use lull dn crlptton ter tostosl results Copy must fellow acceptable

Th* Sanford Herald

We have immediate
openings!
•Painters
•Book Binders
•Construction
•Warehouse
•Production
Employees with transportation
needed Immediately

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. INC.

*40* to 1700 potential, outside
work. NO SELLINOIt Mutt
have rallabto tr«Mgarlattan.
Caff EH
Earn U (* to M** per
Reading Book* at home. Colt
14IS472 7448 Ext. B4I4
BARN E X T R A INCOMEI Sfuf
twig envetopa* af home. Be
yaur men best I Start Immedl
etoiy w/na prior exper Pro*
lupphu paeiiy^Free^nto^b

CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES

stomped envatop* to S aM m
D lr t r lb o t a r * . P .O . ■ * *
7711MC. Corpui Owtoft. Texas
7*477_______________ ________

Herald Advfttw P— dMnt T ube, 11 AM
TTwnMglvIng Day Doodllnt

SFGNDtNG MONEY
Yeung pqrtan needed to rake
verd Ceil A S A P I277 775*
E X C E L L E N T Incomel Easy

12 noon, ifto n tfo ® ]'

Friday Nov. fftd DeodUno S PM Wed.

ducts *1 home. 1 31* 277 05f7
. 24 hours

Ext.

★ FlOOftMM*

On* Way ticket to Lauttvllto.
Kentucky. IM . M V IB t.

iwytett from ))/*)/*ftl

Fail ttma. Goad working con
dltlon*. Exp’d.desired.....EOI
I ttoatfb Cere...22f-flM

IM R I FA 1st TbvXbmm

Far Detail*: 1 4M4X2 O U

6000WORKERSRUMIM

Established MLM Co - New In
S.E. t 4M472 44BLMr.Curry
JICK A T IR E D el yaur presen*
Job? Kiss your boss "edtost"
Buy your own business I W*
hove 100's to choose from 11
CaN J m l l i g m i t r , Cawfury
I I -Ovtoda Realty....... 245*4*3

17— Nuraaryt

. DAILY W ORK..DAILY P A Y *
Cell Bob........ .222 7SSI attor 2pm
Both tkillod and unskilled
workers needed In your area.
114.500 to *72.000 plus benefits
For a list of current lotos and
application to apply from
tv -to. call 1 000 3440043 Ext

A III

Child C a rt

41—M onty to Loud

SMALL Q U A L IT Y HOME LIKE
D a y c a r g B P ra * c k a * i.
Opening* I Moat*, toaralng
It Ptoygrixadl Putty
.....B1 7*25
DAYCARE In my l « dd*n Lake*
horn*. Lott of TLC. 7am 4pm
W7C4IL................. ...... 2214142
IN M V S A N F O R D N O M II
Childcare exp’d. Intents eyr*
CPR exp. US wfc. Cattni-MM

Regardless ol crodltll U 00 to
ISOMS. C*Kt.
■ Q U IT Y Leans, Pvrckate*.
ReW ax tell 1*1. 2nd A 3rd
Mtgsl Good/bad creditl Fast
approvals! Guardian Mtg.
Carp.....U c. Mtg brokers
n / M ............

K EYES F LA .. IN C. Realtors,
pays tuition to Real Estate
School I Call................ 223-13**
M EDICAL

ACTKMIOMS

II- -U L .

Ltgal Notices
PUBLIC N O TIFICATION
NOTICE O F FILINO
Th* applicant Oowell En­
terprises. Inc., owned U X by
David Oowell and 21% each by
Clyde end Evelyn Dowell. *n
nounces It* Intent to III* a
certincef* ol r-ood eppilcetion
on December S. IHO wim the
Department ol Health end He
hebliltetlv* Services ter ep
proval to construct a new *0 bed
com m unity nursing home,
dually certified tor skilled end
Intermediate car* residents. In
HRS Distrkt V II. Subdlitrlct A
Somlnoto County. Th* proposed
casts of the protect will not
exceed 13.000.000 Th* prelect. It
granted. It expected to become
operational July IH2.
Signed David Dowell. Chair
man of th* Board of Directors of
Oowell Enterprise*. Inc.. 1200 N.
Slone Street, P.O. Box ISO.
DeLend. Florida22721 4300.
Publtlh: November It. If. IHO
OEZ M0

-

-

If you ar* a Mil motivated,
energetic person who would
like to mok* a difference In
your own lit* A Iho lives of
others, w* challenge you to
join our nursing stall 11 Greet
benefits, ftoxibie hours! Apply
In Person. Monday- Friday:
♦54 Moltowvltto A**.. Santord
3724544.................. .....E O.E./H
M EDICAL

AMSNXS/M6MT

Chrtl Service A Fvttxl Jobs
Sig.tS hr. No exp. Exam.
treintng. A Into...........221-2514
FHgbt
. .
Serv ices For Free into, sand
selt a d d re sse d stampod
envetopa to P A I L P.O. Da*
tollto. Mafttand. FL 227*4

.

m n n a fo n m a i n c a r v o t i n '

71— Help W anted

IS— Training
A Education

6 Plfwrw Inctmt Opportwiity
On* ol the 704 tostosl growing
companies In the USA seeking
1 qualified Sales/M gm l.
trainees In Central Fla. For
Appl. call Mr Ktlly
1 *00 473 4407

FLOORPERSON
Full time. Experienced In
lloor core: stripping, waxing,
etc. Institutional facility
Apply In Person. Man-Frl:
*14 MeUenvIlto Ay*., Santord
777 4544 ...................... E.O.E./H
* N E W NATIONAL*
* COMPANY*
Searching tor experienced
person with pest control,
lerm lt* and management
beckroundl ItS end Great
Benefits! Greet opportunity I
AAA EM PLOYM EN T
7** w . 15m st. m i n t
* RECORDS CLERK*
If you or* detail minded and
*n|oy professional surroun
dings this |ob Is for you I
AAA EM PLOYM EN T
Tea w. ism st, sis-sii*
* RESTAURANT M ANAOER *
Net'I company will train e
service dedicated prolesstonel
person In oil aspects of res
teurnnt menagemenll Greet
benefits, good pay I
AAA EM PLOYM EN T
7**W. MIR SI. 113-117*

* MAIDS* MM MIRIM!
F/TI He wfllwad*. Pd. vocaWan*, a i l Molly Meld 747 5H7

CONSTRUCTIOtl ALLTRADCS
Local/Caribbean. Te*4*/HR
I 407A H HHTetoet Builder*Fa*
BRANCH D IA L E R HIRINO ■
S17 per hour, w* Irainl
No tipor lence needed.
Dealer postIIon available
I 411444-fill
c l e r ic a l

★ SECRETARY*
S o c k in g s h a rp , h ig h ly
motivated Individual lor a
challenging secretarial post
lion. Strong typing salllt. tel#
phono skills and general office
procedures Salary negotiable
Closing Deto: S PM November
IS, IH t. Private Industry
CkuncH *1 Semlneto County,
lac. 312 S. Santord Ava..
4tween f AM to S
____ IO .I./M /F /H /V

SALES REPS
Sky's th* Limit! Need proven
track record. Strong closer
Excellent opportunity)
Ilf t S t M
* *

The

S a n fo rd H e ra ld
&lt;t&amp;uy4ar/ SERVICE
1&gt;A

A J stjCRB
tol' j ,' »xa
U ± iU

M ax

\ b i ' i i i &lt; &gt;i n S/»t i i i i t I

1x11 I Vr J

\i i

ails w oi

/&lt;»/&gt; i &gt;

i

i .i n m

" T «# p«r Ttonlh

I ic ii

&lt;j :

NANCY MAN RICH • All types

|

or/Extorter. IS yrv exp. Local
retorwrea*. beeaar, 22*4414
* R**M. A CaoMM. a All urork
guarantoed........Best M c t t l l
Call tor Iree quote......... 42b7*41

JL U£UIIL U

fTA R

Buy/S*M*I
■ ^ ^ M O O S E L im iO N ^

l i i i i i &lt;■

3 Lines .„....s45
V
(

. a Carpentry
a Plumbing * Fair
•Etocfrlcai Can Be...
C A R P E N T R Y . M ASON A R Y
Md tlto work. Pro*
L tot'd..

; O

•pairs. "Got 1 osts..
call ua" Lk'dl.
LEONHARD ROOFING •Quail
fy residentl*l a n te * tor tout
U*k* L it. CCC642M4 277 » l

■ Trash RgrRm
L O T rrr= s =

trimmings, appl. ate. Small A

Jar^trurt^OwejniaMiao
Ralerencei. U yr». exp.
~
FL ratidpart CaN

aa

* CLM T R E E SERVICE a

I MEW. R EM O O E LR E P A IR I
HOMES. O P P K ES . STORES

ECHOLS T i l l SERVICE
Free ttlimatos! Fair Price*!
Lk In*...Stump Grinding. Toal
S G U ftoya M N

*,&gt;. aeruu, c k j i m x x

CAWHRnf

smsr
SflTffBSTSS
A ceramic
n « . » l a a T e m lre

Apply
1018 S. French Avt.. Santord
5 A.M. SHARP

S8RVCT PBFLKII

Classified Dept, will be
closed on Nov. 22nd
Thanksgiving Day!

M OM Ki

Jobs! Jobs!

i t

C O M P U T E OueUTy

La* TMa Pr*4e*stok*fs do It"
JOHN A L L E N LAWN A TR B ■
Tree removal c toon up
PrtMuro cleaning 231 53*0

TIMBERLIKE Tree Sarvka
Trimming/removal. Fro* Est.
PIREW OOOI SpecUtoni 2SI3

JEAMSUr* RRUMREEPNM
team. De

★ I
Have truck will

ll..............

o

3
l :

1:

•J

�Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida — Monday, Novambar IS, 19S0

S a m A*i

t M r m ., tpic,

aarmnww*. utiiae-Mo-m

1t»-Rett* Supplies

2000 like Mary Bhrd
* ' r --------- J **--|al‘i.

?M ana tart, WT-tto*

mltaian only I Call 77* 5474
Cooatry C M SgMrt Cantor
a n a Afrgw* n*e.. tontoed

T - i h l r l f a c t o r y tooh o

moiivefM ptrion for priming.

S/l. largo aaflrilUlthon. now
carpal and coconric flit,
ronfral H/A. LokoMory Ely*.

taggiiw and thlypfng. Will

n u M n n iM n n
5147 gar m an* an a I
14X70. Call LaAay:
from |7I; tichang* radiator*
from UO; Utad lira* from 15;
Tiro mounting aval lotto
UHCofocy M, M l-4*44
JEW ELRY

n»m in
LESSDMNSMM BOW
1/ 1, living, dining, family

roam*, fanctd yard, now
paint, corgof and flit. W M M

OVOOQ1JSACKS

DQRCMtS 1 LH APT

The Prudential (&amp;
Florida notify
wunroiKUKM m m ?
I am looking tor nkahamat to
match with buyar*.

Cuttam bull! 4 M rm . 1 both,
flroglaco. kcroonad goal and
•pa. 1 car garago. 5174.W#

3/1CUSTOMMUT
C oram lc III*, L a v t lo r t .
flroglaco, 1 cor garago.
Poaf/tomi* avail.........W ijaa

1/1
Roducod fa IIM.100.
AuwmoWa VA...Paat awva to I
7 * 7 tm * if 5 0 ia o r i»a t5

117—Oara— Islss

DfLTOM
Loss ffwi U * down I M with
IS* 14 tcmd porch...154.10*

3AMHX0 * MCXAKA

w/prlvata bath, turnlihod. All
fwuoa privilege*. Incl. TV and
vniltm . 175/wk plut 1*0 da
aaoH. Protor malt, long farm
Itoont. Call M1*41S._______ _

Hugo I t o m ., *KlM*d cun
room, oaf In klfdwn, C/H/A.
Light A Brlghtl Tka B n 11
1545/m o, 050 tac------OOP5071
lAM POdO 1 B D R M SgaclOM.
adult*, no pat*, all otactrk.
ro v iT M piutMoo dao m o o it

S3300M M IM L CUMMB
L0440WOOO •041 17/»1 IN PK.
5A0P tajaa U . from m a t *.1
m a w t p r o p s R Tigg ooa owl

Plnacrttl. 1/1. living, dining,
family rm . tocurlty »ytlom.
tone*d yard, W7.W0

CieiuiOT*MX*. NOME
IN * p o r o Bcanaftoa Van (Long vortlonl 140 4 cyl. 1
•goad, now point and brake*,
carpeted. run* graatl Ideal for
complato ro*tora lion I Mutt
tall. 01.500firm. M l 5757

1/1, Uroplac*. accau to Laka
Mill*, on 1/1aero.........177,500

SMTOtO/UL MMY
NEW 1 bdrm , l bath, *pllt
plan, Caffi. calling, 1 car
garog*. waahar/toyar. locatod
on qutot cul da-tac. kid* ok.
0475 mo. 15B0*ac. B W M B ,

FfgalMfiewn

Manat)
UMAn^tlm*.

MSSUMCHONQUALIFY!!

CO UNTRY CLUB • 1 bdrm. 1
bath. Itncod yard w/larga
utility building. Family room,
Uroplac*, 1550 month. TO-7747

HOLIDAY C A T IR IN 0 I Pro
part, Ml up. tarv* A clean up.
Your cholcol Ooad homo
caafclag. I k . rot*......1*1-*541

Sanford) IJ M i l l M rm . )v*
ba . C/H/A. appl. 14.000 dwn.

cauTHmu

1 bdrm 1 bath, central H/A.
Hrapiaca. wood ftaort, 1500
par month. 0000770 or 444*74.
aar month. Call 5M 015

01*5. Includot wafer.
Call Nancy MM441
Manday-Friday, 0A4A5P4A
N O R TN L A K I, Brand Nawl 1
bdrm., I Lath, wothor/drytr,
tern, porch, pool. 1575/mo

largo living and dtoing area
•tlh liroptact. Ca'ra roam tor
oltlco/hobby/thlrd bodrtom.
Wood deck, large Ira**, tomtit
and pool privilege*. I WOMB.
Cad m-PMO arm-5040

FURNISHED I BDRM. utllltiM
Included, clot* to downtown
Sanford. S by work only.
MT-MOU tor*; 5747101, ovo*

STENSTROM

Drotaar w/nighl tlond 1175.
Quaon tit* bad w/night tlond.
drotaar w/doubl* mirror and
a eftott of d a w n t i l l Large
dining room fobio with TWO
loova*. * chair*. 1 w/armt
taaf* 10 to 11 paopla com
fartably 0M5. Hutch | l » . Lova
•sat I X Solid wwd datk 031
Chair 015. Cut* floor lamp 110.
Upright froatar t775C*M attor

Starting at tn s par month I
Soma w e«hly* t available
ttortlng of Mb par weak.

REALTY, I N C .
127—Office Rentals
■M7-1H7

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|Awua |« (Mala]
CALL................

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Qualify Iked Can At A F a ir Price

■

No A pplica tion R efu ted

Wf list and sell
more property than
anyone in (he Greater
Sanford/Lake Mary area.

KINOSIIB N iiirb id
w/padatlal.Rott mirror
haadbd. w/matching bureau
W a tiiig g N O W .u o A P iiiT f.
LABRY'S H U R T. 115 Santord
Ava. Naw/Utad turn. A appi
bay/Saft/Trad*.........m a i n .
OM AOIC C H E F rang*. 70"
tilde In electric. Never utad
need* burner atamantv 075

LOCH ARBOR B E A U TY . Wall
tap I V I. Coll courts view
from trout porch. Family rm .
dan. Sooltnowl............ 574.000

■-

LO W A S

LOW AS

PER WEEK

A KAL SUfRISfI

O n B ea u tifu l L a k e M on roe

• Clubhouse With Fireplace
• Indoor Racquetball
• Weight Room
• Pool &amp; Jacuzzi
• Fireplaces
• Garden Windows
• Washer/Dryer Connections

) lidrimp kw $450
2M tbmmIrw 1540

Siataly 1 bdrm. 1 bath I ttory
home. Originally built In 1V70.
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lion, floor covarlng. toff It
tiding, ale. ate. Th* original
charm It prttarvad. Over 7000
tei ft of living arts tat on a
convan lent but quiet
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(1410 LOVELY DERARY V I.
Big family rm , country kit.,
paddta lent, carpel, moral
Realty nic*. Now.........154,144
TER R IFIC G IN IV A 1/5 Bait
pond, wood floori. fplc .
country Ityla kit. All on 4
lanced acrat. Only.... .5111. M0
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hortat Gotta too thttt 5144. wo

85 FORO ESCORT GL am*.

113— Television /
Radio/Stereo
L A K IF R O N T

Dr Bary, owner

financing, low down, 111.400

321- 2720
322-2420

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Eicallent condition *75
17* 4711. ________

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SLONDIE

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18, 1SS0
by OOc Y s m «

Many medicines
treat hypertension
Once a
puttmt h i
with
hypertension, how does a
phyatdan Ro at
far conthe come
trol? I’ve
ad of which produce a

I am Minding you free
my Health
.
T l p a on M e d lc l ne a
‘‘Hypertension."

and

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a red Ihwh. fatigue, etc. I
trial and error the only answer?
U S A S S I H U i To a large
e x t e n t , the t re at me nt o f
hypertension la a trial and-cim*
procedure. There are many
drugs available far thla purpose;
moat doctors hove their favorites
and. depending on the severity
of the high blood pressure, win
with which they are familiar. To
date, there la no one preferred
treatment that Is universally
far this common allphysicians
to
lid hypertei
treat m ild
hypertension with
diet, ex ercise and diuretics,
kidney-stimulants that reduce
excess body fluids
secondary effect,
pressure* Such drugs include
hydrochlorothiazide. Hy grot on.
Maxztde. Dyazldeandt
lathers.
For moderate hypertension,
more doctors are turning to
beta-blockers (such as Inderal
and atenolol) or to calciumchannel blockers (such as Calan
and laoptln). Recent studies have,
sh o w n th at a n g io te n s in ­
converting enzym e Inhibitors
(such as Captoprtl. Zestrtl and
Prlnlvll). are effective and safe,
especially If the hypertension Is
complicated by a weak heart
action.
Severe hypertension m ay re­
quire In-hospital control with
potent intravenous drugs (such
as nltroprusslde). followed by
one o f the above compounds,
alone or In combination with
diuretics, for out-patient man­
agement.
Other useful drugs for moderatc-to-severe hypertension In­
clude m ethyldopa (A ldom et),

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r r a e r p l n e (S e rp a s 'll).

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ty MCA. Inc.
y

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Look what happened here.
West doubled, but East had all
the trumps. Should that have
been a surprise to South? Prob­
ably not. Experienced players
know that a defender w ill some­
times double when he knows his
partner must hold a trum p
•tack. South waa guilty o f lazy
bridge. He played dum m y's club
10 at trick one. winning the
trick. Declarer could now guar­
antee his contract by leading the
heart nine from dummy. If East
played low. so should South.
The only way that South could
now lose his doubled contract
would be If East got on lead with
unusual trump length and came
through the king o f diamonds.
Instead o f leading the heart nine,
declarer played a heart back to
his ace. expecting the doubler to
hold a trump trick. W hen West
showed out. South waa dead In

dummy’s king and led the heart
nine. East covered, won the next
h eart tric k and p la y ed a
diamond. Declarer went up with
the king: West won the ace and
tried to cash the Q-J. Declarer
ruffed the third diamond and
now had no choice except to ruff
a good club, draw East’s last
trump and then try the spade
finesse. No dice. Down one.
W est's offside double should
have warned declarer. Notice
that letting the heart nine ride at
trick tw o cannot lose the con­
tract. If West wins the queen or
10. the A-K will subsequently
pick up the suit. Declarer can
then pitch two diamonds from
dummy on the A-Q o f clubs, and
give up a diamond and a spade
to make the doubled contract.
(0 1 0 9 0 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

better chance o f being advanced
today If your plaits are not too
tightly structural. The secret to
R a v .1 0 .lH O
your success wfll be your ability
Your restlessness and the urge
to make quick adjustments.
to travel and acquire knowledge
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
through personal experiences
You'll
be better able to size up
could grow stronger in you In
the year ahead. This need can be developments accurately today If
g r a tifie d through num erous you use the Information pro­
short trips rather than a long vided by your faculties both
In tu itively and dedu ctively.
Journey.
SCORFK) (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Each has Its use.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your ability to think on your feet
Is a quality that will give you the Someone you've recently met
through an old friend Is In a
ed ge o v e r oth ers today,
especially If you're Involved In position to introduce you to a
situations that have competitive new social circle If you choose to
elements. Know where to look develop this association. It could
for romance and you'll find U. be fun.
a m im b (March 21-AprU 19) Do
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
Instantly reveals which signs are not give up today when your
rom antically perfect for you. objectives appear to be un­
Mall 92 to Matchmaker, d o thla reachable and elusive. Events
newspaper. P.O. B ox 91428. could take a surprising turn and
put victory In your grasp within
Cleveland. OH 44101- 3428.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. the twinkling of an eye.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
21) If you are preaently Involved
In a situation that can be P l a n s y o u h a v e a l r e a d y
meaningful to you monetarily, formulated might be subjected
try to get It finalized to your to some constructive adjust­
satisfaction within the next few ments today when you receive
some new and unusual Informa­
days.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. tion you previously lacked.
(May 21-June 20) A
19) Personal Interest will have a

ANNIE

-v

*• v * ? * :

NORTH

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♦ QJ»
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♦ J 171

SOUTH
♦ A 7I
♦ A K ftS
♦ K!

♦ AQOS
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer. South
iiia
Mist
I NT
Pm *
Pms
IT
DM.
4*
■Jacoby transfer

NcrtS
*♦•
• NT
AU pass

Opening lead: ♦ &amp;

repeat performance, might be In
the offing now regarding an
arrangement that provided you
'
•icfoui recently.
with
a small- windfall
The circumstances that were
prevalent then are similar today.

CANCER (June 2lnJuly 22) Be
a good listener today, especially
If you are sharing time with a
person who haa the type of
mental attributes you respect
and admire. He/she may say
something you can put to Im­
mediate use.
(July 23-Aug. 22) The
aspects Indicate that something
fortuitous might occur for you
today where your work or career
Is concerned. It w ill be of an
unusual nature and m ay require
a co-worker to point It out.
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Although you won’ t put on any
airs or affectations today, fur
reasons difficult to describe, you
will make a m ore dynamic
Impression on others than usual.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Try
to surprise the family today by
doing something different either
In the foods you prepare or by
Inviting over people who all will
en|oy.

vnoo

Leonard Starr

e o ours/pe.
u r n s /vs6Y.\
QUICKLY.'!

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¥«

December 14
, 1990Br
T w rfllir i—

S a n f o r d H e r a ld
83rd Yoar. No. 97 — Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST

N a m in g the best y o u r m o n e y co u ld buy in 1990
C o s tn e r film to p s
1990 list of flic k s
Unltad Pra ts Intarnatlonal

□ Sports
Lyman to host tourney
LONGWOOI) - Lyman High School will host
one of the stale's most prestigious wrestling
events for the Hllli year. Five Seminole County
schools — Lake Mary. Lake Him ell. Lake
Hrautley. Oviedo and host Lyman — highlight a
16-team field that will parllelpate In — the
Lyman Christinas Wresting Tournament.
See Page IB

NEW YORK - "D am es With
W olves." an Orton film directed try
and starring Kevin Costner, was
named Iwst movie o f 1990 by the

National Hoard o f l&lt;evtcw. the
w orld's oldest award giving film
group.
The National Hoard also named
Costner Iwst director of the year for
Ills work oo the film, lint Its best
actor award was slum d by Robin
Williams and Robert DcNIro for
"Aw akenings."
C See Film . Page S A

Herald stall writer

JACKSONVILLE — In the 2-year-old seareh
for University of Florida Junior Tiffany Sessions,
work has stalled beeause leads have slowed to a
trickle and none o f those have been Irnlt lull.
See Page 7A

LAKE MARY - City and County
Commissioners met In a Joint work
session at the Lake Mary City Hall
yesterday afternoon to seek a
iandseaplug project agreement for
till- S5 million Lake Mary Boulevard
widening and beautification project.
County Engineer Jerry McCollum
explained the options that had been
determined after two weeks id
concentrated discussions with city
and county officials.
"It was two weeks." McCollum
said, "but we've been working on
this for three years."
In reaching their agreem ent,
commissioners selected the second
of two options, with certain minor
changes Involving specific types o f

BRIEFS
Black man denied Santa job

l.OS ANGELES — A Judge ordered the i lly ol
Beverly Hills on Thursday to tear down a 2H-looi
llanukkah menorah standing In a public park or
erect a huge Christmas tree by Its side, ruling
that only together can th ctw ob cllt.
U.S. District Court Judge Terry Haller Issued
the temporary order In a lawsuit llled against
the city by the American Jewish Congress.
From wire reports

INDEX
HrlftflA............. ........ SB
C lassified*......
C om ics...........
........SB
Ossr Abby......
Dsaths.............
Or. Oott........... ........ SB
Editorial..........
Florida..................... 7A
H oroscop e......

M o vies............. ....... 3B
N ation..............
P e o p le .............
P o lic e .............. ....... 3 A
R e lig io n ...........
School Menu...
Sports..............
T e le v is io n .......
W eather..........
W o rld ..............

Tem ps near 80
Mostly sunny with a
high from the mid
70s to near HO Light
northeast wind.

F or m o re w a t t

CHICAGO - Allstate Insurance
Co. singled out 5 1 ears as "special
values" Thursday bused on a review

By NICK PPBIPAUP

Work stalled in Sessions search

Menorah sparks controversy

By JACK L I S A *
UPI Business Writer__________________

of accident -damage repair costs and
the theft and hrrak-ln risks for 1990
models.
T li e e o m p u n y ' s a n n u a I
make-and-model ratings provide
consumers with Information about
which ears are the most expensive
to Insure — and which are least
exjicnslvc.
I ]See Cars, Page SA

Beautification
set for road

Em bracing excellence

□ Florida

HAYW ARD. Calif. — A college student sued a
shopping mall Thursday, contending he was
denied a Job as a part-time Santa Claus Irecause
lie Is black.
The federal civil rights suit by Michael
Whiteside. 20. of Hayward, demands $1.2
million In damages and $ 1.300 he said he could
have earned as a SlO-per-hour Santa a) the
Southland Mall.
Whiteside, a comm ercial art student, told a
news conference he responded to a newspaper
advertisement for Santas that said. "A long
white beard and a well-fed look Is helpful. Inn
not required."
When he showed up at the mall, the suit
all
a supervisor told him he wouldn't he
hlrcd. "T h e color of your skin Is too dark." the
suit quotes the supervisor as saying.
The suit said that when Whiteside told her.
"That's not right." she responded. "Th at's
discrimination. I know, but we want fair, rosy
checks for our Santa's Im age."
Whiteside said he declined the offer o f a
$7-per-hour Job as a Santa's helper.
" T h is Is so m eth in g I'll never fo r g e t."
Whiteside told reporters.

Top cars for cheap
insurance ranked

trees.
The total package Included the
landscaping project on Lake Mary
Boulevard from Markham Woods
Road to Country Club Road. C-15.
w h ich ru n s north and south
through the center o f Lake Mary.
Eventual widening o f the two-lane
boulevard will result tn four lanes
from C-15 to Rinehart Road, six
lanes from Rinehart to 1-4 and four
lanes from 1-4 to Markham Woods
Road.
The beautification project for the
I m p r o v e d r o a d w a y In c lu d e s
landscaping, installation o f Irriga­
tion systems, special Intersection
markings, mast arm signals, and a
maintenance program.
While the amount for the total
gateway project Is estimated at $5
See B ea u tify . Page SA

Harold appointed
to P&amp;Z com m ission
h eld
H.uld Photo

by Tommy Vincent

Jane Joan Floyd and her husband C larence em brace.

Lake Mary counselor
nominated for award
By VICKI DsSORMIER
Herald staff writer
____________
LAKE MARY - Janet Joan
Floyd, a guidance counselor at
Lake Mary High School, was
n a m e d S e m in o le C o u n ty 's
nominee lor the Distinguished
Black Educator R ecogn ition
Award In a surprise ceremony
this morning.
Floyd, who has been a counsel­
or In Seminole County for 17
years, was presented with flowers
by Supt. Robert Hughes, school
hoard chairman Joe W'illlams
and |)rloclp.il Don Smith In the
conference mum at Lake Mary
High School. 6f&gt;5 Longwnod-Lnkc
Marv Road, this morning.

"I'm surprised." she said. "No.
I'm shocked."
The award Is sponsored by the
Florida Department of Education
and th e S h c ra s o n -L c h m a n Ilntton philanthropic organiza­
tion.
Three finalists from across the
stale will be selected to compete
for the right to represent Florida
in a national compeMllon which
will begin next year.
The Distinguished Black Edu­
cator Awards program seeks to
recognize black educators who
make a significant contribution
to education and who serve as a
role model for other educators
and you n g people who may
See C ounselor. P a ge 5A

Herald stall writer
SANFORD — Juanita Harold, o f
Sanford, w ill replace longtim e
n e igh b o rh o o d d e fe n d e r F rank
Shelton on the Seminole County
Planning and Zoning Commission.
County commissioner Jennifer
Kelley, who made the appointment
this week, said Harold Is a longtime
friend and a retired Seminole High
School teacher who taught at the
same time Kelley taught school. A
member of the Douglass North Star
Republican Council. Harold was
described by Kelley as a "dignified
black Republican wom an." Harold
will lake office til January.
Harold said site hasn't formed any
views on Seminole County devel­
opment yet.
"I just got a great big stack o f
Information today and I'll be study­
ing that.” Harold said Thursday.
Harold, a Sanford native, retired
In 1989 from teaching In Seminole
County schools for 39 years. Pre­
viously she taught In Hamilton
County for about three years.
Harold said.

Juanita Harold
Kelley was critical o f Shelton
since he wrote the president of the
Friends o f the Wcklva River Inc. In
March I9H9 that he was betrayed
by the Friends support of home
clustering on the Plantation project.
Shelton wrote he had supported
See H arold. Page 5A

Castor asks Chiles’ help for schools
By MICHAEL MOLINE
United Press International
TALLAHASSEE — Commissioner o f Education
Betty Castor asked Gov.-elect Lawton Clitics
Thursday t" help her overcom e legislative
reluctance to give local school officials more
control over their own budgets.
During .i morning briefing. Castor told Chiles
and Lt. Gov t ied Buddy MacKav lhat she favors
eliminating a broad range ol state rest riel Ions on

how local officials can spend state and local
education lutuls.
She said the Idea meshes with Chiles' proposed
"dow nsizing" of slate government, or shitting
drelsion-iuuklng toward the loeal level.
Hut Castor said that In discussions with House
members and senators, she has met reluctance u&gt;
begin reversing a decade-long lr?iul towai.l more
slate oversight of local schools.
"T h e y did not run mil and embrace tills Idea ol
repealing statutes, some ol which many ol them

were rcspousltilc lor." Castor told the governorelect "(But) you're In a position o f great strength
in taking that message" to lawmakers.
Chiles said the key Is lo devise all uccountubillty system that lets local officials meet special
local needs while ensuring they don't ignore state
goals.
"Th ey've got to understand lhat ultimately, we
are going to approve a plan ol aceotmlahlllty and
lltcv al some stage have to irust ns that we care
See Schools, Page 3A

D e fe n s e a n a ly s ts s k e tc h o u t w a r
By ELIOT BRENNER
United Press International

t

S

Susan Ferguson

Suspicious
fire takes
human toll
By NICK PFEIFAUF
Herald staff writer

SANFORD
Susan Ferguson
manager ol the now destroyed
Artm Nav \ Surplus Slot*- has uoi
only lost her place ol employment.
See Fire. Page 5A

WASHINGTON - Retired military
men and defense analysis sketched
out lor a House panel Thursday
what an air and ground war to
liberate Kuwait might look like and
warned dial thousands could hr
killed or wounded
Depending on the m ix of bombing
and ground action, trail's reaction
and the Intensity, duration and
location ol Itghitng. I S, casualties
hi an allied assault could range from
I.N(X) — Including about HIM) dead
— lo as uiaiiv as lM.iXM). with 3.(XXI
dead, said retired Col T N Dupin', a
military historian.
Dupuy said that Iraq might sutler
tiO.O(M) casualties, among tlim i
about |5 (MX)dcud
Experts in air warfare also said
I S hirers should seek to kill huql
President Saddam Hussein and
regardless ot success in that should
irv In kins k out his top command to
liirtlicr isolate the (loops in the
Held
It wc must risk (he lltr ot a single

B lood drive for
s o ld ie rs b eg in s
B y R O B S T E
UPI Science Editor

I N

WASHINGTON — For die
..... time, the military lias
lusi
activated an emergency &lt;Ivil
I.iii blood io IIci I ioii program
in asc ol a Persian Gull wat
.....
'ml civilian hospitals have
been odd they may get &lt;asti
allies. Pentagon officials said
'I In- American Red Cross
and American Association ot
lib mmI Banks have been notifi­
ed liv the Pentagon to a&lt; tlvalc
ail cmergi-IK \ blood supply
eontrael culled the Armed
Scrvh es Blood Program
Sec Blood. Page 5A
Ament all warrior m conflict with
Iraq. 1 see no reason w in (In llle ol
th&lt; |M-r|K-trutnr ol this aggression
should Ik- spared, said retired Air

Force Gen
Russell D ougherty.
"Also, an cltcchvc elimination of the
ultimate Iracp command uud control
node would dramatically shorten, tf
not end. the conflict."
Similar com m ents led lo ihc
reeetil dismissal ol Air Force Chlcl
ot Stall Michael Dugan, w ho quietly
retired Thursday al a ceremony al
ucarhv Bolling Air Force Base while
the bearing was in progress.
I lupin and others laid out a
v a r i e t y ot t r o o p m o v e m e n t
scenarios — all preceded by u
massive air aiiai k against a variety
ol targets The air strikes Initially
would he aimed al air defense sties
and .tin rail iheii command and
control bunkers, and Imally supply
lines and mil ust rial ope ral lor is
I lie ground opiums Included a
siege to choke out the more than
250 ixxi Iraqi troops dug into three
tnrtllicd layers m Kuwait: m ove­
ments up lln- west border lo i ot
Kuwait oil Irom behind and lroiii.il
assualis at weak spots m the
southerii tinnier Also available as
an option lo wai planners is an
See War. Page 5A

�*A — Sanford l.erald. Sanford, Florida — Friday, Decembor t4, 1990

Findin g a new angle on history
Students see Civil War through
eyes of Blue and Grey soldiers
Sy VICKI DnSORMIER

Herald staff writer S A N F O R D — Y e s te rd a y
morning. 140 eighth graders
from Tuskawllla Middle School
took a new approach to learning
about American history at the
S r m t n o lc C o u n t y S tu d e n t
Museum.
Hope Lyons clutched a basket
of flowers In one hand and held
on to her straw hat with the
other. A flowered skirt and apron
clung to her legs as she ran
through the rorrtdors to another
classroom.
" I ’m a confederate spy," she

e x p la in e d ,

"t

h id e m e s s a g e s

hi

my hair and go back and forth."
Eight o f the 140 students took
on costumes of the day while the
others admired the authentic
clothing presented by the Amer­
ican Legacy League.
Lyons said she Irurncd a lot
about the civil war by wearing
the clothes and looking at the
military- rrgalta and crafts from
the mid- 1800s.
"Yeah. I think I can learn a lot
more than tf I was just sitting In
a classroom reading books."
She said she was a little
embarrassed to be dressed In
something other than the stall-

dard Jeans and sweatshirt, hut
she fell belter when she sawsome o f the boys In military
uniforms.
" I ’ m glad the guys are doing
tills, too." she said
Owen MeCarron. assistant m i - pcrlntcndenl lor administrative
services for the school district,
d id n ’ t understand why she
would Ik * embarrassed.
M e C a rro n . d r e s s e il ns a
northern seargent. stood In the
main hall of the museum w at­
ching the proceedings. He was
watting to take his place on the
steps outside to rrvlcw the
troops as they passed In review.
"T h e boys have been learning
different marching formations
this m orning." he said. " A t
noon, they will m arch."
David Hunter, an Orlando

printer, turned the hand crank
on Ills sq u ea k y p re ss and
pumped out u wet page o f copy.
"T h e Ink’s w et." he warned
tin- stu d en ts w ho gath ered
around to see how printing was
done during lhi-Clv*i-War. — *
"N eat." said one student in
the back.
"Not really," said another who
was closer to the press.
Jim Elliot, district coordinator
for social studies, said the pro­
gram went well.
"This has been grrat." he said.
"The students have been having
nlot of fun. I think."
Elliot said the program has
hern very suerrssful In Its first
two years and that he Is sure
they will be doing It again next
year.

Photos b y Kelly Jo rd a n
t

Terry Herring, first sergeant, shows guns from the Civil War era.

Erica Snlgg, 13, holds gun ammunition from the guns
Natasha Townsend, 13, looks at Civil War relics.

displayed at the Student Museum.

Rohit Chopra, 15, tries out a musket rifle

LOTTERY
T A L L A H A S S E E - The daily
number Thursday in the Florida
Lojlery CASH 3 game was 730.
Straight Play (numbers in exact
order): $250 on a 50 cent bet, $500
on $1
Bo* 3 (numbers in any order)
$60 tor a 50 cent bet, $t60 on $1
Bo* 6 (numbers in any order):
$40 tor a 50 cent bet, $60 on $ 1
Straight Bo* 3 $330 in order
drawn. $80 in any order on a $1 bet
Straight Bo* 6 $290 in order
drawn, $40 it picked in combination
on $1 bet

Students watch a demonstration of Civil War relics

THE WEATHER
LOCAL FORECAST
Ttxlay...Mostly sunny with a
high from the mill 70s to near
HO. Light northeast wind.
Tonight...Mostly lair, low In
tile low to mid 50s. Light wind.
Saturday...Mostly sunny with
a high In the upper 70s to near
HO Wind east 5 to 10 inpll.
E x ten d ed fo re c a s t...P a rtly
cloudy with a general slow
warming trend. Lows in the GtK
anti highs In the lower HOs.

tUSPS U t &gt;19)

Friday, December t4. 1990
V ot 63, N o

97

Published Daily and Sunday, c ic .p l
Saturday by The Sanlord Harald.
Inc., loo N French A v t . Sanlord
Fla n n I .
Sacond C la n Pottage Paid at Sanlord.
Florida M ill
POSTM ASTER Sand address change*
to THE SANFORD HERALD. P O
Bo* IAS/, Sanlord. FL M ill.
Subscription Halos
(Daily A Sunday)
Hama Delivery A Mail
1 Months
l i t 50
0 Months
Sit 00
1 Year
l i t 00
Florida Residents must pay l \ sales
t a i in addition to rates above
Phone (401) M l M U

Teacher Debl Farmerfl fo r) dresses up Hope Lyons, 14.

FLORIDA TEMPS
MIAMI
•ind r a i n f a l l

Ffor id.» 24 hovf temper a torn
ta m

C «!»
A p a lA C h fC Ola
C r f liv if f *
D a y to n a
* O f t L A u d i " d a i*
F o rtM y e ri
G .in * * v iM e
J a c k von* tile
*CY W f lf
M ia m i
P e n M 4 .o l4
V »r A i a t j B ra d e n to n
T a lV A h A ita w
Ta m p a
V tfo B «A &lt; h
W u l P a lm B e a ch

t ST F rid a y
Hi

P a ir
1Lo
47 0 0 0
45 0 0 0
4 j 000
41 0 0 0
• i S3 0 00
74 44 0 00
7s 47 0 0 0
74 47 0 00
71 41 tr A
74 ss o o o
74 47 0 00
t t 4 ) 0 00
n
44 C O O
44 0 0 0
n
71 4 ) 0 00

n
it
•n
tt

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

j$
SATURDAY
PtyCldy 72-56

NATIONAL TEMPS

r VJ'-a:-------- -1
SUNDAY
MONDAY

r
y
---------- TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
RtiyCldy 75-65 PtlyCldy 76*57

TIDES
FULL
D ec. 2

LAST
D ec. 9

NEW
D e c . 17

F IR S T
D ec. £5

O
•

BEACH CONDITIONS

D aytona Beach: Waves are I
loot and glassy. Current is to the
south with a water temperature
ot lit degrees N ew Sm yrna
Ucach: Waves are I loot and
glassy. Current Is to the north,
with a water temperature ol 64
degrees

FR ID A Y:
SO LU N AR TAB LE: Mill. 2:30
a.in.. 2:45 p.m.: Ma|. 8:35 a.m..
0:00 p.m . TID E S : D a y to n a
Beach: highs. 5:50 a.m.. 6:07
p.m.; lows. 12:10 a.ill.. —------p.m.: N e w S m y rn a B ea ch :
highs. 5:55 a.m., 6:12 p.m.;
lows. 1215 a .m ..----------p.m.:
Cocoa Beach: highs. 6 :10 a.m.,
6:27 p.m.: lows. 12:30 a.m.

BOATINO
St. A u gu stin e to J u p iter Inlet
Tod a y and to n igh t...W in d
northeast tO to 15 kts. Seas 2 to
I It llay and Inland waters a
light chop.

STATISTICS
T h e high tem peratu re In
Sanford Thursday was 73 de­
grees and the overnight low was
42 as reported by the University
o f Florida Agricultural Research
and Ed mat ion Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
(icrlod. ending at 0 a.m. Finlay,
totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature at 5J a.m.
inday was 57 degrees and
Finlay’s overnight low was IM.
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
T h u rsd ay’ s high.............. 74
B arom etric pressu re.30.28
R e la tiv e H um ldity....0O pet
W lo d s ...... N ortheast 5 mph
R a in fa ll......................... 0 in.

T o d a y's su nset.... 5:30 p.m.
Tom orrow ’s su nrise....7: lO

City S Forecast
Albuquerque pc
Anchoragesy
Atlanta cy
Baltimore pc
Birmingham cy
Bismarck cy
Boston ay
Brownsville pc
Buffalo pc
Charlotte cy
Chicago pc
Cincinnati pc
Cleveland pc
Dallascy
Denver w
Detroit sy
Duluth cy
E1Paso pc
Evansville pc
Fargocy
Harttoed sy
Honolulu cy
Houston me
Indianapolis pc
Kansas City cy
Las Vegast
Little Rock me
Los Angeles t
Louisville pc
Memphis r
Milwaukeepc
Minneapolissn
Nashville r
New Or leans pc
New York sy
Omaha r
Philadelphia sy
Phoent ■ p&lt;
Pittsburgh sy
Providence Sy
St Louis ly
San Antonio me
San Diego t
San Juan me
Seattle r
Spokane cy
lampasy

Hi 1Lo Pep
SI 42 01
n 10
47 S4 04
44 14
64 44 02
24 14 eete
40 2S
82 47
SS 11 OJ
69 At 04
V 22 ....
S2 24
SS 28
SS 44
J9 2!
SO 21
20 04
42 48
44 S9
24 It
58 2J
11 M 01
77 41
SJ 74
34 31
40 19
41 40
44 SO
S4 28
60 41 01
37 a
27 is
41 i * 12
78 S8
40 11
IS 26
S8 11
7S S4
14 22 02
S8 -1
41 30
71 V
4J S2
ti n
02
41 )•
11 74 04
78 4*

�Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida — Friday, December 14, 1990 — 3A

State All-Star musicians named
Arrest made in Jehad's theft
SANFORD — Rodney Armstrong. 25. 1320 Williams Ave.,
Sanford, was arrested last night on charges of grand theft.
According to a Sanford Police Department report. Armstrong
broke a window In the west side kitchen o f Jehad's Bar-H-Q.
1026 13th St.. Sanford, and entered the building.
The re|X)rt stated that he stole a Scars Kcnmore microwave
oven, valued at $350, and sold It to an unknown person.
Me was arrested without Incident. The mlcmwavr. however,
has not been recovered.

Seminole County DUI arrests
SANFORD — The following persons face a charge o f driving
under Ihc inlluener of alcohol (DUI) In Scinlnolc County:
• Roller! Edward Hauser. 50. 1950 Canal St.. Oviedo, was
arrested at 7:24 p.m. Thursday after his car was In an accident
on 13th Street. Sanford. He Is also charged with rarclcss
driving and disorderly Intoxlentlon.
• Ernest Julius Polly. 57. 2418 Cedar Ave.. Sunford. was
arrested at 12:42 a.m. Friday after Sanford police received n
report o f a suspected drunk driver In the area of Park Drive and
Elm Avenue. A charge of careless driving was added.

SANFORD — Slxty-onr Semi­
nole County students w ere
named to the All-State hands for
Ihe stale o f Florida.
The students auditioned for
. |vostilons on Ihcih an^j. They
were among
sand
students from aeross Ihe slate
who hoped to earn a spot.

High School Sym phonic Band
F lu le : Sarah M cCIIntick,
Lake Mary High School
B-flat Cl ari net : Amy
B rln k lo w , Lake Mary H igh
S c h o o l; Doug Lam pe, Lake
rantley High School
French Horn: Kevin Reid.
Lake Mary High School
Trombone: Birdie Henson.
Lyman High School
P e r c u s s i o n : Shannon
D u n aw ay, Lake Mary H igh
School; Heather Simon, Lake
Brantley High School.

Theft from car investigated

High school Concert Band

SANFORD — Seminole County sh eriffs deputies are
Investigating a burglary to the car o f Lester Watson. 2790
Bungalow Blvd.. Sanford. According to a sheriffs report the
burglary was reported at about 8:30 p.m. Dec. 5. The car was
located on Sipes Avenue. Midway, when Items, with a value
estimated al $ 100 by deputies, were stolen.

Flute: Jaime Shearer, Lyman
High School
E-flat Clarinet: Gil Wartel,
Lake Brantley High School
B-tlat Clarinet: Catherine

Arrest made In chiropractor search
LAKE MARY — Seminole County sheriffs deputies assisting
slate Investgators with a warrant In removing records from a
Lake Mary chiropractic office report arresting a man who
allegedly wouldn't Identify himself.
Theodore Thomas Navollo. 54, o f Port Orange, was charged
with resisting arrest without violence. His was (he only arrest
In connection wtlh Ihe search. Navollo was arrested al 9:15
p.m. Thursday at Advancccd Chiropractic Clinic. 641 W. Lake
Mary Blvd. Investigators for Ihe stale Insurance commissioner
reportedly told deputies Navollo Is allegedly associated with Ihe
chiropractic office, which Is under Investigation. The state
agents reportedly said he is known by several names and they
wanted him Identified at the scene. Navollo reportedly refused
to show’ u driver's license to law officers.

Langston, Lyman High School;
Lillian Ramos, Lake Mary High
School
Alto Sax: Eric Rosenfeld,
Lyman High Scnool
Trumpet: Alex Bonus, Lyman
High School; Kristen Jalbert,
Lake Brantley High School; Jon
Kuyper, Lake Mary High School;
Chris Lawnicki, Lake Brantley
High School; Adam Livingston,
Lake Mary High School
F r e n c h H o r n : A n th o n y
Grand, Lake Howell High School;
Relsh Santoyo, Lyman High
School
Trombone: Michael Jestus,
Lyman High School.

Middle School Concert Band
Flute: Erin Cain, Greenwood
Lakes Middle School; Lynette
Lowe, Teague Middle School;
Sarah Hardy, Greenwood Lakes
Middle School; Amy Bransford,
Greenwood Lakes Middle School
P i c c o l o : Erin C a i n ,
Greenwood Lakes Middle School
Oboe: Jamie Kruger, Rock
Lake M iddle S ch o o l; James
Det2el, Teague Middle School
Bassoon: Nathan Holladay,

United Press International
RICHMOND. Va. - Buddy Earl Justus,
believed to lie the only man under a death
sentence in three states, was executed
Thursday night for Ihe 1978 rape and
murder of a pregnant nurse.
Justus. 38. was pronounced dead at 11:06
p.m. EST In the electric chair at the Stale
Pen iten tiary In dow ntow n R ichm ond.
Justus, who had suspended final appeals,
said hours earlier he "was ready lo go to a
better place.''
Justus was condemned to die for Ihc Oct.
3. 1978 rape mid murder of Idu Mac Moses,
a nurse of Ironto. Va.. who was 8
months
pregnant when Justus broke Inlo her home,
sexually assaulted her and shot her In the
head.
Justus, who was abused as a child and
went on to marry and divorce his foster
mother, had asked Gov. L. Douglas Wilder
to cither commute his sentence to life or
watch the execution In person, but Wilder
refused.
Justus dined on steak and French fries for
a last meal.
Justus also was under death sentences in
Florida and Georgia for Ihe murders o f

Herald stall writer
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - If
you're tired of hauling the State
Road 436 traffic Jam twice a day.
thou a new program by TrlCounty Transit may help.
Under Ihc "VanPlan." a group
of eight lo 15 commuters will
receive use of a van to ride to
and from work each day for $45
to $65 each per month. The
price includes all lease pay­
ments. gas, repairs and Insur­
ance costs.
Program administrator Ann
Jnslln said groups from Alta­
monte Springs and Casseltierry
have already iM’gun using Ihe
VanPlan and another group from

Middle School Honora Band

Sr. High Repertory Orcheatra
Tuba: Cardy Moten, Lyman

Trom bone: Aaron Guidry,
South Seminole Middle School.
Named to the All-State Junior

High School

hull It Is concluded, said Florida Depart­
ment o f Law Enforcement Investigators
probed alleged criminal conduct by Lcbbano. That probe led to the FDLE pres­
enting findings o f probablr cause for the
arrest to the Seminole State Attorney. The
Stale Attorney requested the arrest warrant
Issued In Sanford Thursday. Harriett said.
The criminal charges. Harriett said, stem
from allegations by an 18-year-old Sanford
woman who alleges Lcbbano. who was on
patrol duly on Nov. 2. drove her home In a
police rar after a trutile slop. The woman
alleges she went home to get her driver's
license and Lrhanno entered her house.

By SUSAN LODIN
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — Sanford police patrolman
Joseph D. I.ebbano Jr.. 31. o f Sanlord,
remains suspended wllh pay pending Ihc
disposition of criminal charges (lied against
him lust night, und Ihe outcome of a police
Internal udmlnstratlve probe.
Lebbuno surrendered lo Seminole County
sh eriffs deputies at the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility lo face charges of
battery und false Implsonmcnt.
Sanford Police Chief Slcven Harriett, who
by law ean'l rommenl on the interal probe

Sr. High Concert Orchestra
B assoon: M egan Bryant.
Lyman High School.
Clarinet: Christy Pfann, Lake
Brantley High School.

Percussion: Todd Conway.
Lake Mary High School.

saleswoman Stephanie Hawkins In Tampa.
Fla., and Rosemary Jackson, a housewife In
Mountain Park. Ga.. before his Oct. 11. 1978
arrest.
His lawyer says Justus suffers from brain
damage, but In an interview wllh Roanoke
radio station WFIR. Justus accepted respon­
sibility for Ihe crimes, while clllng Ills
history’ of drug use and an abusive father.
"1 was able to forgive myself. I’m al peace
wllh myself. I'm ready lo go -to a better
place." he said. "In order to be forgiven,
you've got to forgive others.
"I still lake the responsibility solely for
myself because I wasn't strong enough to
turn uwuy" und avoid drugs and handle the
child abuse, he said. " I hold responsibility
for my actions because I should have been
strong enough to resist ihose drugs."
He also said he was prepared to die In
Virginia's electric chair though he opposes
capital punishment.
“ We are supposed lo lie u society that's
supposed to be earing
und that to
continue capital punishment Is taking steps
backward. There's better ways lo deal with
It than to take lives."
He said he tried to cim m lt suicide at
Mecklenburg Correctional Center several
months ago because he fell no useful

She alleges thal he grabbed her and held
her against her wilt. Harriett said It was
reportedly a "b rief encounter perse."
The woman filed n com plaint w llh
Sanford police and because of Ihc alleged
crimes Involved and In the Interest of
fairness and objectivity. Harriett said he
asked FDLE lo pickup that portion o f the
Investigation.
Lcbanno has been released from the Jail In
Sunford on 82.000 bond. He has been a
Sanford policeman forabnut three years.
The FDLE continues to investigate other
allegations against Lcbbano. Harriett said.

BANKRUPTCY "&gt;

purpose any longer.
On Wednesday, attorney James Coparino
said he persuaded Justus, who has refused
to eonllnuc his appeal, In allow him to
petition the governor for clemency. The
petition was based on new tests ilmt reveal
the killer suffers from organic brain damage.
"It's u real outside shot." said Copaclnu. a
Georgetown University law professor. " A lot
o f people disagreed wllh my decision nol lo
flic anything in court on Buddy's behalf."
Earlier this week. Wilder, who has refused
to Intervene In two previous executions this
year. Indicated lie would allow the execution
to proceed unless some startling new
evidence emerged.

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hours. She said the driving
reeords o f potential van drivers
are checked to assure they are
safe motorists.
The riders work out pick-up
schedules, mules and drop-off
points among I hcmsclvcs.
T r i- C o u n t y T r a n s it a ls o
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front H a.m. until 5 p.m.

ft

•4*WIST LAM MANY BOOLEVAAO
LAM MANY, FLOWOA STM
________ 11 M a tool OT M)

ATTORNEY A T LAW

Justus, the oldest o f seven children, was
beaten repeatedly by bis alcoholic father. At
age 13. officials say he intentionally stole a
pistol, bicycle ami a truck so Dial welfare
officials would remove him from bis home.
Justus would be the 11th person executed
in Virginia and the 143rd In Ihe Untied
Slates since Ihe Supreme Court lifted a ban
on capital punishment In 1976.

Deltona Is forming. Jnslln said particulates from Ihe air annu­
the plan is open to anyone that ally. Joslln said.
T r I - C o ii n t y p r o g r a m
uses SR 436 to get to work. It Is
financed by a state program coordinators will also calculate
designed to relieve traffic con­ (he average financial savings lor
gestion on (he busy Interstate 4 each group members.
Van drivers arc allowed use ol
to south Orlando connector.
Jnslln said every member of ihe van during evening hours
Ihe group does not have to use ami weekend for any purpose.
Joslln said as many of Ihe riders
SR 436 dally lo qualify.
"E ven If they cross SR 436 as jsisslhle should he designated
they may lie eligible," Joslln drivers, taking turns at the
wheel and using the van after
said.
Besides relieving SR 446 con­
gest Ion. Ihe VanPool program
can help all of us breath a III lie
easier. The removal o f Just one
car from the road eliminates 9
lbs. of hydrocarbons. 63 lbs. of ¥ A C E A U T O R A D IA T O R
HADIATORhEPAIH SPECIAL IS IS
carbon m onoxide. 5 lbs. of
7ii rmscN Avtsue. sasfond
nitrogen oxides and I pound of
12202IS

Driftwood Village

FREE LECTURES • NOOH, SATURDAYS

Coparino extended an Invitation lo Wilder
lo witness Ihe execution at the State
Penitentiary if he were lo deny clemency,
hut the governor rejected It.

VanPlan a im s to re du ce S R 436 c o n g e s tio n
By J. MARK BARFIELD

H igh O rc h e s tra W in d s and
Percussion:
Fluto: Am y Seay, Lyman
High School
Oboe: H eather W illia m s ,
Lake B r a n ^ a e ^ h Sr bool; Ana
School
T ru m p e t: G abe L o V a s z ,
Lym an H ig h S c h o o l; Brad
S c h rlck e r, Lake Mary High
School
French Horn: Travis Bennett,
Lake Mary High School; Darren
M oh le, Lake B ran tley High
School; Kelly Register, Lyman
High School
Trombone: Jennifer James.
O vied o H igh S c h o o l; David
Kam insky, Lake Mary High
School.

Sanford police patrolman suspended in probe

Florida murderer executed for Virginia killing
B yQ .L. MARSHALL

Rock Lake Middle School
Clarinet: Allison Lipscomb,
Rock Lake M id d le S c h o o l;
Michael Chang, Teague Middle
School; Evan Farkaah, Rock Lake
Middle School; Andrea McKinnls,
Rock Lake Middle School; Lori
Lukas, Greenwood Lakes Middle
School; Julie Davidson, Rock
Lake Middle School
Alto Sax: Daniel Boissy,
M ilw ee Middle School; Brad
Whldden, Milwee Middle School;
Brian Artrlp, Rock Lake Middle
School
Trum pet: Danny Shersty,
Greenwood Lakes Middle School;
Jarrod Graziano, Greenwood
Lakes Middle School
French Horn: Megan Froyd,
Greenwood Lakes Middle School;
Todd Marlin, Rock Lake Middle
School
Trombone: Phil Culpepper,
Greenwood Lakes Middle School;
Mall Thompson, Milwee Middle
School; Jerry Herzog. Greenwood
Lakes Middle School.

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�« A — Sanford H m M , Sanford, Florida — Friday, December 14. 1900

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(UtFS 491-M)
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Area Code 407-332-2611 or 831-9983

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I Year ..................................... 979.00

E D IT O R IA L S

Runway perils
a

A ir travelers can easily b e hilled Into false
sense of security w h en their plane is on the
ground. It should b e rem em bered, how ever,
that the deadliest accident In aviation history
w as a 1977 ru n w ay collision betw een tw o
fully loaded B oeing 747s In the C anary
Islands. T h at crash killed 583 people.
The recent collision betw een taro N orthw est
A irlin es Jetliners at D etroit M etropolitan
Airport, w h ich claim ed eight lives. Is a ll the
m ore d istu rb in g becau se o f the relative
frequency o f close calls at airports arou n d the
country.

WILLIAM

A. R U S H E R

Dem ocrats will pay
C o n g re ssio n a l D em ocrats h a v e pain ted
themselves Into a comer so tight that It may
w ind up costing them the 1903 presidential
election.
T h e trouble began, as so many troubles do.
with Sen. Ted Kennedy, who Introduced In the
last Congress what It pleased him to call "the
Civil Rights bill." (After all. who could poralbty
be against a Civil Rights bill?) Several recent
dectalona of the Supreme Court have held that a
plaintiff who alleges racial discrimination by an
employer has the burden of proving It. The
controversial provision of the Kennedy Mil would
In effect reverse these rulings, putting the
burden on the employer to prove that he had not
dtscrtm Inated.
President Bush objected to the bill as drafted,
pointing out that under It the only sure way an
employer could prove he hadn't discriminated
would be by adhering rigidly to racial hiring
quotas — something Mr. Bush and a great many
other people oppose. Sen. Kennedy blandly
denied that his MU would In effect mandate
quotas, and even added some language to the
text denying gratuitously that It had any such
purpose. But he refused to modify the provision
shifting the burden of proof. Mr. Bush thereupon
vetoed the bill, and his veto w as sustained In
both houses.

The Democrats’ have vowed to reintroduce the
Mil in the next Congress and fight for It to the
bitter end. But they
n r e b e g i n n i n g to
sense uneasily that
they are holding the
sh o rt e n d o f this
particular stick, and
th a t the Issu e . If
d r a g g e d In t o the
1992 p r e s id e n t ia l
cam paign, m ay do
them deadly damage.
(T h e y are a lre ad y
convinced that It was
responsible for the
defeat last month of
th eir libe ra l black
c a n d id a te . H arvey
(TD ttfO U bto
Oantt. by Sen. Jesse
tw g an .a tao
Helms.)
m anytroublM
Thus for. however,
th e c o n g r e s s io n a l
do, with 8«n.
Democrats and their
Tad Kanrwdy. J
liberal allies In the
media have remained
on their collision
course with disaster In this regard. Democratic
spokesmen are quoted by the media as refecting

Each year there are n early 300 “ run w ay
Incursions." accord in g to the Federal A via­
tion Adm inistration. T h e F A A ’s euphem ism
encom passes a w ide ran ge o f situations In
which plan es n arrow ly m iss each other as
they cro ss ru n w a y s a n d ta x iw a y s. T h e
National Transportation Safety Board w arned
last year that ground accidents pose “ a high
potential for catastroph e." D uring the last
four years, the agency h as placed ground
safety Im provem ents on Its list o f "M ost
W an ted " recom m endations.

Yet only a handful o f airports h ave even
antiquated rad ar system s for tracking planes
on the groun d. A s a consequence. It Is
com m onplace for air traffic controllers to
guide pilots on the groun d d urin g periods of
poor visibility to ensure they do not stray Into
the path o f another aircraft. In the case o f the
Detroit m ishap, how ever, vlslbiblllty w as so
restricted that controllers In the airp ort's
tower could not see the planes on the ground.

T h e F A A sh o u ld a c ce lera te Its testing
program . A t the sa m e tim e. U sh o u ld en sure
that a ll U .S . a irp o rts h a v e sta n d a rd iz e d
m a r k in g s , s i g n s a n d li g h t s a t r u n w a y
entrances a n d oth er critical locations. T h e A ir
Line Pilots A ssociation a n d the A ir Traffic
C ontrollers A ssociation h av e req u ested such
Im provem en ts a s w e ll a s c h a n g e s In the w a y
(light c le aran ces are Issued to pilots.
T h e collision In Detroit tragically u n d e r­
scores the n eed to de a l w ith the co n fu sin g
an d potentially u n safe con dition s at other
m ajor airports.

Berry's World

"Could I see the glass ceiling that
Mom works under?"

U IC m Y iS tO fl CM r n n C l K i .

The truth Is that the Democrats, In their
tlrelcaa pursuit of black voters, have gotten In
the bad haMt of disregarding the legitimate
Interests of white Americans. Their only hope
now is to prevent anybody from raising the point
by denouncing everyone who does so as
"racist."
But even this m alignant tactic has Its
limitations. Most Americans, after all. are white,
and their resistance to reverse discrimination In
hiring (which Is what quotas amount to) Is likely
to rise If that recession the Democrats have been
praying for actually arrives and the unemploy­
ment statistics begin to climb.
U is hard to see what political benefit the
Democrats can hope to squeeze out of this Issue.

Iraq could have
deadly missiles

Prelim inary Indications are that h eavy fog
n trib
m u u iu
iu m
e D
iscruu
w a s at m ujur
a jo r u
c oon
to r to
the
erolt
collision.
in. H ad Detroit M etro been equipped
with ai groun d rad ar system , it’s altogether
likely that this tragedy w ou ld have been
averted.

For starters, the p ro g ra m w a s su p p o se d to
b e operational this y e a r b u t h a s b e e n d elayed
until n ext year, la rg ely b e c a u se o f technical
problem s. A lack o f fu n d in g a lso w a s a factor
beh in d the delay. J o se p h D el B alzo. w h o Is
overseein g the F A A 's op eration , c o n c ed e d to a
con gression al com m ittee earlier th is year:
"T h e re ore th in gs that w e cou ld h a v e done
better, foster.”

"an grily" or "furiously" the contention that
Kennedy’s measure Is a quota MU - - which
merely means that they are petrifted by the
charge. They have lashed out at the bUI’a
Republican critics, charging them with "racism "
— probably the ugliest accusation currently
available In the lexicon of American politics.
' But the Republicans have kept their cool, as
they ought to. In the words of House Republican
whip Newt Otngrtch. "People who want acme
kind at quota or set-aside based on your racial
background should be forced to debate In puMlc

JA C K ANDERSON

But how m any years w ill it take for these
vital Im provem ents to b e Im plem ented at a ll'
m ajor airports?

T h e F A A Is testin g sophisticated r a d a r an d
com pu ter sy s te m s In 13 cities a n d p la n s to
Install u p g ra d e d track in g de v ic es In 2 0 m ore
cities d u r in g the n ext three y e a rs. B u t. like
a n y th in g else the F A A do es, this lo n g d elayed
u p g ra d e Is b o g g e d d o w n In b u re a u c ra tic red
tape.

‘quota’ bill

R O B ER T W A G M A N

Services vie for share of war
WASHINGTON — It will probably be weeks,
or perhaps months, before American forces go
Into battle In the Persian Gulf — If there Is to
be a war.
But ever since Saddam Hussein's forces
entered Kuwait, the various U. S. armed
services have been locked In their own battle,
to Insure that each gets Its own piece of the
action no matter the coat In dollars or lives.
The Pentagon and Its military commanders
speak glowingly of the new unified command
structure. Il was Instituted after the lessons of
Vietnam to insure that Inter-scrvtce rivalries
will not Interfere with the completion of
military missions. But in the face of shrinking
budgets and a plan to cut the active duty force
by as much as 500.000 over the next five
years, that rivalry has turned into an Intense
w ar for dollars. And each service's greatest
worry Is being shown up as not needed when
U.S. forces are actually sent Into battle.
By the time the U.S. buildup In the Gulf Is
completed — the U.N. deadline for the possible
use of force Is Jan. 15 — more than 400,000
Americans will be committed. They Include
large percentages of the active Arm y (more
than eight full divisions). Navy (six of Its 13
aircraft carrier battle groups, plus a battleship
and other ships). Air Force (planes from half of
Its 24 air wings). Marines (two expeditionary
forces — two-thirds of the C orp's entire battle
strength), and even the Coast Guard (six ships
and additional personnel assigned to Navy
ships for embargo duty In the Gulf).
This force, larger than the combined force
actually used In Vietnam. In part reflects the
military philosophy of Joint Chiefs of Staff
chairman Gen. Colin Powell. He represents the
prevalent thought In the Pentagon that the
biggest mistake the United States made In
Vietnam was the slow and gradual buildup of
force. It allowed the enemy to adjust to the
growing force and to successfully resist It In
the end. The new philosophy Is thul If the
United States must go Into battle. It should
have an Irresistible force In place before the
first shot Is fired.
That was true in Gru» adu and that wus true
In Panama. In both Instances, the number of
U.S. forces committed to the action was vuslly
more than what was culled fur strictly (ram a
military perspective. But the size of the forces
used In both Granada und Panama were also
Increased through each service fighting for its
piece of the glory.
Initially. In the hours and days after the Iraqi
Invasion, the priority was getting enough
troops and planes on the ground to dissuade
Saddam from rolling across Kuwult Into the oil
fields of Saudi Arublu. It wus simply a matter of
using whatever ready forces were available
from whatever branch of service. But once It

became clear that the buildup waa going to be
large and extended, then the service chiefs
began their fight to make sure that they had
Just os many people and weapon systems
committed to the Gulf as their rivals.
Now that the size
o f the buildup has
b e e n c o m p le t e ly
committed, the In­
ternal w a r in the
Pentagon has shifted
to the order of battle.
Each service wants
to Insure that If a
shooting war begins.
It will be allowed to
do what It has been
trained to do.
This shift of em­
f i t waa simply
phasis from buildup
" a m a tta ro f
to order of battle has
using
a lr e a d y b ro u g h t
whatever
about the first major
ready forces
casualty In the Pen­
were available
tagon's Internal war.
from whatever
Air Force chlcf-ofbranch of
staff Gen. Michael J.
Dugan was fired, and
service. J
he Is being forced to
retire, after telling reporters that the way to
defeat Saddam Hussein Is to simply bom b Iraq
back Into the stone age.
It was generally assumed that Dugan’s firing
was for making the highly Injudicious state­
ment at a time when the United States was
pushing In the United Nations for the Imposi­
tion of economic sanctions and the military
option w as being soft-pedaled.
But Pentagon Insiders say the reason Dugan
was sacked was that his Interview Infuriated
Army Gen. Powell and Desert Shield field
commander Army Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf.
They read the Interview as Dugan telling
reporters that air power alone could bring
Saddam to his knees and that the large use of
ground forces was unnecessary.
To the Arm y that thought Is absolute heresy,
und reportedly both Powell and Schwarzkopf
urged Defense Sccrcta;y Dick Cheney to fire
Dugan.
If all that was at stake here was the
unnecessary spending of tens of millions It
would be one thing. But Pentagon Insiders say
tliut the Insistence of all the services that they
get their fair share of the action Is going to
result In needless U.S. casualties.
Sim ply put. Dugun may have spoken
ln|udlduusly. but he was speaking the truth:
Military planners say that It Is very likely that
Iraq can largely be defeated from the air and
that large-scale ground operations — with their
high casually ratios — are unnecessary. •

W A SH IN G TO N Iraq has an arsenal of
formidable long-range missiles, which may
Include the Soviet SS-12 "S c a le b o a rd "
missiles that the Soviets agreed to destroy
under the 1987 Intermediate Nuclear Forces
Treaty. The Soviets made the missiles to
carry nuclear warheads, but It Is unlikely that
If the S S -i2 s were given to Iraq, the Soviets
w o u ld h a v e b e e n
foolhardy enough to
Include the nuclear
warheads. Top-secret
Central Intelligence
Agency and Defense
Intelligence A gency
reports say that a
Soviet diplom at In
Baghdad has secretly
warned both Turkish
and U.S. diplomats
th e re that the
S c a te b o a rd s w e re
given to Ira q . - T h e
transaction predated
f Even without
the Iraqi Invasion of
theSS-128,
Kuwait.
the Iraqi
T h e S c a te b o a rd s
mlxalle
a n d o th er Ir a q istockpile is
p ro d u c e d m is s ile s
have the capability of
formidable. J
dropping chemical
and conventional warheads on American
troops In Saudi Arabia and on Saddam
Hussein's most hated enemies. Israel and
Syria.
The only bright spot In the alarming
reports Is that Iraq has such a limited number
of missile launchers for Its several hundred
missiles that It Is currently trying to jury-rig
flatbed trucks as launchers. One classified
estimate says Iraq has no more than 60 fixed
launch pads and 36 mobile launchers. Soviet
Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze has
confidentially told U.S. officials that the
Soviets never gave Iraq any SS-12 missiles.
A n d given the glowing Soviet record of
nuclear non- proliferation. It is extremely
unlikely that *f.y nuclear warhead changed
hands.
But the recent warnings from lower-level
Soviet diplomatic channels are puzzling. At
first, a Soviet diplomat In Baghdad told the
Turkish military attache there that Iraq had
received SS-12s. Presumably, the Soviet
wanted Turkey to pass the word to Its strong
ally, the United States. Then, the same Soviet
diplomat set up a meeting with a U.S.
diplomat In Bagh dad and repeated the
message directly. The SS-12s. according to a
secret Defense Intelligence Agency report,
have a range o f more than 500 miles and
could give the Iraqis pinpoint accuracy that
they don't have with other long-range
missiles.
Even without the SS-12s. the Iraqi missile
stockpile Is formidable. Iraq builds Its own at
the 9200 million Saad-16 complex north of
Baghdad. It w a s designed by an Austrian
firm. Another 9400 million complex near the
town of Mosul, code-named "Project 395." Is
used to build and assemble rockets and
develop the warheads to go with them.
Rocket fuel and other components are
made at two sites south of Baghdad. At one of
those sites. Eskanarya. a huge explosion
occurred In August 1989. reportedly killing
hundreds of workers. A British Journalist who
tried to find out what happened there was
arrested by Iraqi police and hanged earlier
this year as a spy. A y e a r ago. Iraq
announced the launching o f its first space
rocket, the Abld. That and Its sister missile,
the Tammuz-1. have the potential to become
Iraq's first Intercontinental ballistic missiles
with a range o f 1.250 miles.
The man
Saddam Hussein has chosen to oversee his
missile program Is Hussein Kamil al-MaJId.
And as fits Saddam 's pattern, the man Is not
only a loyal employee, but a trusted relative.

LE TTE R S T O EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
must be signed. Include the address of the
writer and .« daytime telephone number.
Letters should lx- on a single &lt;*ubj**i t and In
as brief as (.ossthlc letters are subject to
editing

�1
«KM

Sanford HsraM. Sanford, Florida — Friday, Oacambar 14, 1900 — SA

Cars
________
Zoo offer*gift kfeat
SANFORD — The Central Florida Zoological Park has a gift
suggestion for this year's holidays: a membership or an
engraved plank lor the boardwalk.
A too membership provides m em bers with unlimited free
admission to the zoo. a quarterly newsletter, free or discounted
admission to over 100 zoos and aquariums throughout the
nation, plus a 10-percent discount on zoo gift shop purchases
and birthday parties.
The plank, to be placed on the boardwalk at the zoo. can be
engraved with a personal name or a company name.
The zoo gift Is- also a contribution tow ard w ildlife
conservation programs.
For information regarding the zoo gift Ideas, contact the
Central Florida Zoological Park In Sanford at 323-4480 or
843-2341. Memberships and planks may also b e purchased at
the zoo's ticket office.

Film

_ 1A

O e n e r a l M o t o r s le d a l l
automakers, placing 19 models
on the "special v a lu e " list of S I
cars rated exceptional Insurance
values because their Insurance
premiums are m uch lower than
a v e n g e for cars with similar
price tags. Ford placed 13 cars
on the Ust and Chrysler 11.
More than 200 cars were r t e d
In this year’s list - based on a
compilation of the company's
loss data for 1900 models In­
sured. and results of crash tests
that determine what kind of
dam age cars sustain and how
expensive It Is to repair.
" T h e rating Information Is
*ex trem a ly v a lu a b le to con ­
sumers who plan to buy a car In
the next several months."
Mike laMonica.

The best actress w a r d srent to
Mia Farrow for "A lic e ." which Is
Th e awards, considered sccuvoted b y the b o a r d 's m e m ­
bership. Including educators,
fUm critics and M m historians.
T h e board w a s founed In 1009
and has been giving Its annual
aw ards since 1917.
- 2 n d best picture -"H am let."
W arner Brothers, starring Mel
Gibson and G lenn Close.
— 3rd • “Ooodfcflas," W arner
Brothers, starring Robert DeNtro
and JoePesci.
- 4 t h • "A w ak en in gs." Col­
umbia. starring Robin Williams
and Robert DeNtro.
— 5th - "R eversal o f Fortune."
W arner Bros., starring Jerem y
Irons and Olenn Close.

Beautify
1A
concerned.” he said, "but w e ’ve
million, the t l . 066.001 cost been working on this project for
the past three years. I think It'a
of the landscaping program will
be shared almost equally be­ time we either fished or cut
b ait."
tween Lake Mary and Seminole
Sturm reminded the gathering
County.
The amount of expense con­ that "T h is project w as estimated
nected to the beautification pro­ at 92.4 million when w e first
started considering It. now It's
ject was the only area that
dow n to leas than half of that
slowed discussions yesterday.
County Commissioners Jennifer amount. I think we're really
Kelley and Larry Furlong both getting somewhere with this."
One stumbling block la the
expressed concern o v er the
amount of money to be allocated cost o f trees to be used In
landscaping. Kelley suggested
by the County.
that there must be someone
Kelley discussed the fact that
w illing to help by purchasing
the County was short on money.
trees.
" W e had lo let ten people go
" I know that some school
recently." she said, "so m e of
them had children to feed. It classes might take this on as a
makes youWonder w hat's more class project." she said, "an d
Important, buying trees or feed­ m aybe some civic groups or
even businesses might want to
ing children."
Furlong said. "W h a t am 1 get Involved In buying trees."
supposed to say when someone She added that people w ho have
asks me. how come I can’t get a direct connection with such
landscaping might also be more
my street paved and you are
going to spend 05 million In prone to help keep It clean.
W hen the meeting got around
Lake Mary?"
to the financial aspects o f the
L a k e M ary M a y o r R a n d y
project. Lake Mary City Manager
Morris told the group. " W e fully
John Litton and City Planner
realize the County can ’t be
M a t t W e s t p r e s e n t e d an
expected to do it all. Lake Mary
estimated cost breakout.
Is willing to cooperate in any
For Fiscal Y ear 1992. the
way we can."
beginning of the beautification
C it y C o m m is s io n e r P a u l
efforts. Lake Mary's portion of
Trem el said there w e re an
the expenses will be 0310.490
estimated 30,000 trips dally over
that roadway. "W h en you con­ w h ile the C o u n ty w ill pay
9239.735 which Includes com­
sider Lake Mary has only about
plete Irrigation. Intersections
5600 residents, you realize that
and mast arms. In F.Y. 1993.
we’re doing this project for more
than Just ourselves, w e're doing S e m in o le C o u n t y w i l l pay
9190.875 while Lake Mary will
It for a great part of this area."
begin paying 925.000 per year
County Com m issioner Bob
Sturm, who Is also a resident of fo r m ain ten an ce from Lake
Em m a Rd.. to Longwood-Lake
L a k e 'M iry commented on the
concern - voiced by his fellow ..M ary,Rd..The County continues
to pay for landscaping In F.Y.
com m issioners. " Y e a . w e 're

SchoolsC sw tlaasd frees F ags 1A
about these things." Chiles said.
Public school enrollment has
increased by 100.000 students
or more In each or the past
several years. Yet the schools
m ust also co n te n d with
budgetary constraints forced by
lagging state revenues during
the current economic downturn.
Some 9262 million had to be
cut from the current year's 927
billion budget last fall, and
another 9270 million In cuts are
expected next month.
C astor said the state has
developed computer programs
that give policymakers a better
handle on where lax dollars for

P H IL L IP D E M O N
P h i l l i p D e s s o n . 85. 122
Jackson St.. Altamonte Springs,
died Wednesday at his resi­
dence. He was born Feb. 13.
1905. In Virginia, and was a
barber.
S u r v iv o r s I n c lu d e wife.
Alberta: sons. Jack Jr.. Daytona
Beach. Phillip Millon. Chicago.
S h a w n . Al tamonte Springs:
stepsons, Morris. Bcllwood. ill..
Roy and Willie, both of Alta­
monte Springs; stepdaughter.
Willie Mae Kendrick. Miami;
sisters. Francis. Sanford. Alice.
Georgia: eight grandchildren: 14
great-grandchildren.
Batts Funeral Home. Orlando.
In charge of arrangements.

LOUIS C. LEE
Louis C. Lee. 69. 132 Country
Club Dr.. Sanford, died Tuesday
at his residence. Born Oct. 15.
1921. in Dunvillc. Ky.. hr moved
lo Sanford from Wilmington.
Del.. In 1972. He w as a butcher
and a Protestant.
Survivors Include stepson.
Charles Lively. Sanford: step­
daughters. Rhonda McClellan.
California. Connie Peck and
J u d y C o o p e r , b o t h of
W ilm in g to n : se v e n stepgrandchildren: one greatslcpgrandchlld.
Bal dwtn- Ful rchl l d Funeral
Hom e. Oa kl a wn Ch a p e l . In
charge of arrangements.
KATIE T.PRENTI8
Katie T. Prcntts. 93. 950 S.
Mellonvtllr Avc.. Sanford, died
Th ur s d a y at her residence.

education are being spent.
Statewide, she said. 93 percent
o f state and local education
money Is spent In the schools,
with only 7 percent going for
administrators In school district
offices.
O f the In-school expenditures.
77 percent pays teachers and
librarians. Ten percent ts for
classroom supplies and support
stafT Including custodians. In­
sch ool adm in istrators get 7
percent and the remainder is io
run cafeterias and school buses.
" A s wc enter a period pf
additional cutbacks for all state
services, it Is increasingly Im­
portant to assure that school site
expenses become the priority."
Castor said.

Hlllhavcn Health Care Center.
Sanford. Bom Nov. 29. 1897, in
Kissimmee, she was a lifelong
resident of the Central Florida
area. She w as a homemaker and
a Baptist.
Survivors include dpughters.
Katherine Watkins. Orlando.
Edllh Wimberly, Sanford; two
g r a n d c h i l d r e n : five g r e a t g r a n d c h l l dc n ; 5 great-great­
grandchildren.
G r a m k o w F un e r a l H o m e ,
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.
J A C K W IL L IA M S
Jack Williams. 82. 1205 W.
9th St.. Sanford, died Dec. 11. at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal. Sanford. Born July 4. 1908.
In Leary. G a.. he moved to
Sanford In 1945 from there. He
w as a fruit picker and a Method­
ist.
Survivors include wife. Carrie.
Sanford; sons. Richard Futch.
Sanford: daughter. Corine
D u v a l . S a n f o r d ; 26 g r a n d ­
children: n um erous gre a t­
grandchildren.
Wllson-Eit-helbcrgcr Mortuary
Inc.. Sanford. In charge of arrangcmrnls.

FUNERAL

Blood
ia

.

".The reason we are doing this
to ensure are have adequate
blood to support the expreted
Influx of personnel to Operation
Shield by early next
year." Pentagon spokeswoman
Susan Hansen said Thursday.
Hansen emphasized that the
Defense Department will con­
tinue to conduct Its own blood
drives am ong active and reserve
m ilitary personnel end their
relatives. " T h is (the civilian
d r i v e ) r e p r e s e n t s a s m a ll
supplement to what we need
overall." she said.
Beginning Monday, the two
civilian blood groups each have
been asked to begin sending 375
units o f blood to the McGuire Air
Force Base In New Jersey each
week and were told to prepare to
supply a minimum o f 000 units
o f blood per day.

IA
amphibious
assault on the gu lf coast.
T h e U n i t e d N a t io n s h a s
authorized the use o f military
might to dislodge Iraqi forces
from Kuwait after Jan. 15 unless
Saddam withdraws before then.
Dupuv said weather conditions
would m ske fighting difficult
after early March.
Th e U .S .-le d m ultinational
force would have to contend
with brief spring rains that can
soften the ground, followed by
strong desert winds and the
onset of sum m er In late March
running through late August.
"It should be done as soon as
possible after the 15th o f Janu­
ary." Dupuy said.
Retired Air Force Gen. Charles
Donnelly Jr. said Iraq has good
air defense equipment, bought
from Moscow.

Fire-

1994 and 95. while Lake Mary'a
maintenance expands to cover
more o f the new boulevard.

■091A
she has lost her
means o f financial support for
her sister, who Is seriously HI.
In other developments con­
nected with the Are that de­
stroyed most of the western side
o f S anford A v e n u e betw een
Third and Fourth Streets:
• T h e State fire marshals of­
fice has now officially declared
the cause o f the Are as "su sp i­
cious."
• T h e owners of A l's Arm y
N a v y S u r p lu s h ave a lre a d y
found a new location for their
business.
Ferguson, w hose sister
Virginia lives in Ormond Beach,
said she had recently spent over
two weeks In Intensive care
following a heart attack. "S h e's
functioning with only about a
fo u rth of h e r h e a r t ." sa id
Ferguson, "a n d on top o f that.
she's a diabetic."
✓

T h e actual trees would be
planted sometime during the
summer of 1993.
Part of the agreement dis­
cussed yesterday calls for Lake
Mary to take over Country Club
Road. C-15. south o f the city, as
well as C-15 northward to Rantoul Lane. Maintenance coats
will be transferred to the city.
At the conclusion of yester­
day's work sets ton, it was de­
cided that attorneys for each
govern m en t w o u ld continue
discussions toward preparaing a
draft o f an Interlocal agreement
that could be taken up by each
Individual board.
T h e Lake Mary City Com­
mission will take up its portion
of the agreement at the Jan. 3
meeting while the County would
bring It up at a Jan. 8 meeting.

Counselor—
C oatlaasd frssa F ags 1A
choose education aa a career.
"Janet does that.” Smith said.
"S h e really cares about the
young people here at Lake Mary
and across the district. She works
hard and does whatever we ask
and more, but always with a
smile on her face."
"I'm vfcry proud o f her." said
Clarence Floyd, her husband. "1
know this means a lot to her.”
Floyd has been very active In
organizing and promoting schol­
arships for students. This year,
she developed and implemented
the Children Scholarship Fund.
She personally raised 910.000 for
Individual acholarashlp swards
for 10 Seminole County young
women.
" I believe we have to imple­
ment programs which help our
students achieve academic suc­
cess." she said.
She said last year she began a
minority a w a re n e ss program
which she hopes lo continue this
year. The program, she said,
brought together students and
business and community leaders
from Seminole and Orange coun­
ties for a day of learning and
discussion.
" W e wanted to help motivate
the students." she said. "W e
wanted to raise their awareness
about social concerns and ca­
reer."
Floyd believes that education Is
the key to success. To that end.
she has established a tutoring
program. In conjunction with the
University of Central Florida'a
McKnlght Center o f Excellence,
to establish a tutoring program to

She said her slater's medles­
ion coats run 9104 per month.
‘O
top o f athat
she
a
w n
h
ssess
w
s iv
•has
••*»
pay.
monthly rent of 9350 to p
plus a 928 phone bill so she: can
c
keep her telephone In esse of an
emergency. ’
Ferguson's mother had made
a number of clothed teddy bears,
which Ferguson w as allowed to
sell through the Army Navy
store, with all profits going
directly to help her sister. "N ow
I not only don't have a place to
sell them, but the entire stock of
teddy bears Is gone.” she said,
and now I need help desiprately
for ray slater."
F e r g u s o n 's home phone
number to 323-1232.
Aa for the Investigation into
the blaze itself. Investigators
have not made any estimate on
the total amount of damage to
the Arm y Navy store and the
adjoining buildings, which were
used for a furniture storehouse
and headquarters for Amvets
Post 17.
A l t h o u g h some evidence
leading officials to believe the
fire started under suspicious
circumstances was believed to
have been found, authorities
would not reveal any specifics
following an Intensive search of
the rubble of the burned bust-

enable adults and young people
to obtain a high school diploma
through the G E D program.
" I think she la a line example of
the kind o f caring educator we
have at Lake Mary.7’ Smith said.
The 1990 Teacher of the Year
for Seminole County was Diane
Meanwhile, the owners of A l's
Lewis, a science teacher at Lake
Arm y Navy Surplus Store have
Mary High School.
announced that they have found
Those who were nominated to
a new location.
represent the district, but not
Ferguson said. " A 10-ycar
chosen were:
tease w as signed Wednesday to
Dtannetta Alexander, a teacher
take over a former furniture
at Longwood Elementary School.
iqtore budding, a quonset hut. at
840 Orange A v e .. Longwood;
140! French Ave.'
Myrtle Ashley, a teacher at Lake
Ferguson said she expected to
Brantley High School. 991 Sand
be In operation at the new
Lake Road. Altamonte Springs:
location try the first of February.
Betty Louise Brown, a teacher at
N le l a n d Fra nk Cr a s n o w.
Sanford Middle School. 1700
owners of the establishment,
French Ave.. Sanford: Delora
had purchased the building In
C a m p b e l l , a t e a c h e r at
July of this year, from Melvin
Tuskawilla Middle School. 1801
Siskind, who had owned and
Tuakawllla Road. Oviedo; Gerald
Caaaonova. an assistant principal operated the Army Navy Surplus
at Lake Mary High School:
Zenobia Craig, a teacher at
Eastbrook Elementary School.
5525 Tangerine Ave.. W inter
Park: Janice Hamilton-Kelly. a
teacher at Bear Lake Elementary
School. 3399 G leaves Court.
Apopka: Barbara Kirby, principal
at the Crooms School of Choice.
2200 W . 13th St.. S an ford:
L u r l e n e S w e e t i n g , g u i da n c e
counselor at Wilson Elementary
School. 985 Orange Ave.. San­
ford; Christine Watkins, a teacher
at Lake Mary Elementary School.
132 Country C lub Road. Lake
Mary; and Edw ard Wilson, a
guidance counselor at Seminole
High School. 2701 Ridgewood.
Sanford.

Harold
C m t ls w a d frs a s P age 1 A
th e " q u e s t i o n a b l e "
wetlands ex c h a n g e proposal
made by developers o f Lake
Forest, which has since been
reduced, in return for their
support o f his one-acre-onehome philosophy. Kelley asked
county attorneys to review the
letter saying it suggested a loss
of objectivity and vote-trading.
No violations were found.
Shelton warn appointed to the
planning a n d zoning com ­
m ission in 1987 by former
c o u n t y c o m m i s s i o n e r Bi ll
Kirchhoff. He Is a resident of the
Markham W oods area and past
president o f their community
association.

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store at the Sanford Avenue
location since April 1960.
The Crasnows also own and
operate A rm y Navy S u rplu s
Stores In DeLand and Orlando.
Merchandise in the new Sanford
store will be taken in port from
the two facilities as well as new
purchases.
"This lire w as sure a blow to
all of up.” Ferguson said. "W e
had recently re-stocked the store
and were straightening It up.
Just this last Saturday alone. I
took in over 92.500."
Ferguson com m ented.
"Things were going so well. W e
finally got rid o f our old cash
register and had Just gone Into a
computerized register system.
At noon un Thursday, an old
cash register w as recovered from
among the piles o f twisted metal
roofing and debris of the demol­
ished surplus store, and was
placed In the middle of Sanford
Avenue.
Former store owner Melvin
Siskind reported that as far aa he
knew, the cash register, which
had been used for some time in
the store, w a s manufactured
before 1930.

3-PieceDinner

•Nuur*

OVKES. W ILLIE JAMES
Funeral w r . K t t lor Mr WIIIM Jamet
Dykav II. ol Sanlord, who dwd Wadnatdaf.
will b* hald I p m Saturday at Sunma
Funeral Home Chapel Interment lo follow In
the Burton Cemetery. Seniors Frtendt may
call at the tuner el home Saturday Irom noon
until funeral time
Sunrite Funeral Home, too locu tl A r e .
Sanford. J71 rS ). bl charge si arrangements

War

1A

|

C h n ,^ H o u r.:M o .. Sun.!l .7
I » l » M to W y
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Landscaping A Irrigation Designs I
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TODAY L . J K S l . J

EXPIRES 12/31/90

1905 S. French Ave.
SANFORD
323-3650

IF-

�\
riKrsv)

^SBPBCVIHpW V V P P I

** — Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida — Friday. December 14, 1990

Furor spreads over policy
p o lio
on race-based scholarships
Itself, hut the failure to clear It v.Ith
high-level White House officials before
Williams held a news conference.
"W e found out about It when we r ul It
In the paper (Wednesday)." Flt/water
said. "Obviously, we'd like lo know In
advance o f decisions that have wide
repercussions. But we didn't. That's the
way It happened. ”
Flelek said lhere was discussion with
the White House, but apparently not with
the appropriate Individuals.
"T h ere was contact with the White
House. Oh yeah, absolutely. True, there
was no broad review at the White House.
And obviously, we’ ll Jry to coordinate
better in the future. Coordination obvi­
ously was not on a high-enough level,"
Flelek said.
She added: "Michael did brief the
secretary personally on the (overall civil
rights) enforcement strategy and he was
highly supportive."
Williams' policy led NAACP Executive
Director Benjamin Hooks to threaten
legal action.
“ We will fight this directive with every
possible means at our disposal and we
have instructed our attorneys to Immedi­
ately begin studying the possibility o f
bringing a legal challenge." Hooks said.
The American Council on Education,
which represents higher education In­
stitutions. said It will advise Its members
to continue the -urrent policy of handing
out scholarships for mltiorfllcs. us It has
been advised lo do for more than n
decade by previous administrations.

■yJAM TM SS
United Press International

Killer earthquake rocks Sicily

WASHINGTON — The Education De­
partment said It Is standing by Its pollcy
o f banning ruce-buscd scholarships,
which caught President Bush by sur­
prise. prompted a House committee to
schedule hearings, and provoked the
NAACP to threaten legal action.
Michael Williams, assistant education
secretary for civil rights, stirred up a
hornet's nest Wednesday when he an­
nounced his Interpretation o f ihc civil
rights laws as they relate to universities.
From now on, he said, scholarships
designated for a particular minority or
race provided by a university receiving
federal funds will Ik - considered Illegal.
This reverses the policy that has been In
effect since at least the 1970s.
" I have no reason to believe that there
will be a different uppronch than whul
Michael Williams believes Is ... the law ."
Etta Flcick. press secretary to outgoing
Secretary Lauro Cavazos, said Thursday.
But the White House said the policy
now "Is under review ."
While House deputy press secretary
Steve Hart said Bush does not endorse
such a policy. But later, press secretary
Marlin Fltzwater backed off a bit. saying.
“ We haven't had a chance lo analyze II
or look Into It. so we don't have an
opinion at this point. ... I can't say at this
point what we may do."
But what renily piqued the W hile
House was not necessarily the policy

SYRACUSE, Sicily — A strong earthquake lilt a coastal area
of southeastern Sicily early Thursday killing at least three
people and Injuring about 30 others, damaging buildings and
sending tens o f thousands o f citizens Into the streets In panic,
police said.
The Civil Protection Ministry In R o n e said two people were
killed when their home collapsed and an 86-year-old woman
died from a heart attack.
But police reports from the region said they feared the toll
would mount as rescuers searched for victims In the wreckage
of collapsed houses.
The Institute o f National Geophysics said the main shock at
1:24 a.m. registered 4.7 on thr Richter scale and was followed
within half an hour by four lesser tremors.

Japan defends its Q A T T role
TOKY'O — Japan Is not to blame for last week's breakdown of
the G A T T world trade talks, but It may be ready to rethink Its
positions. Foreign Ministry spokesman Talzo Watannbe said
Friday.
"During the Uruguay Round, we took so many measures to
Increase access to our markets. But when It comes to
agriculture, the main dispute took place between the Economlr
Community and the United States. " he said.
Wutanabe's remarks were the latest In an Intense review of
Japan s role In the Uruguay Round o f the General Agreement
en TardTs and Trade, which collapsed In Brussels Saturday at
the end o f a five-year effort to extend the rules governing
multilateral free trade.

From lin lttd Pr*ss International Reports

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

I N T H t CIR C U IT COURT.
IN AN D FOR
IE M IN 0 L F COUNTY,
FLORIDA
C A I I NO. fF -IW C A U E/t

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E IIT H JUD ICIAL
CIRCUIT IN A N D F O R
SEMIHOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
c a s e n o .: a r m s CAM U P

UNITED COMPANIES
FINANCIAL CORPORATION.
Plaintiff,

GREAT WESTERN BANK, a
federal tavln gt bank, l/k/a
GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS,
a federal ta vln gt and loan
attoc tatten.

GEORGE WATKINS. JR and
FRANCINAM WATKINS, hi*
wife. and any unknown helrv
devil***. grant***, creditor*
and other unknown perion* or
unknown tpou**t claiming by.
th ro o A »°d undtr any ol fh*
abov* nam*d Defendant*,
Defendant*

Plaintiff.
A BLAINE RANDALL, a! a t.

Defendant*
RE NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE It hereby given that
the underlined Clerk of the
C ircu it Court o l Seminole
County. Florida, will on the 17th
day ol January. IM I. at II 00
o'clock a m. at the Wet! Front
door of the Seminole County
CourthouM In Sanford. Florida,
offer lor tale and tail at public
outcry to the hlghetl and be*t
bidder lor cath. the following
deter Ibed property tltuat* In
Seminole County. Florida
L o t I ) . B lo c k - - B " .
HARMONY HOMES SUBDIVI
SION, according to the plat
thereof a t recorded In Plat Book
I). Pag* 11. Public Record* of
Seminole County. Florida,
purtuant lo Ihe Final Judgment
entered in a cat* pending In Mid
Court, the llyle ot ehlch u
Indicated above
WITNESS my hand and of
ficlel leal ol tald Court thl* tlh
day ol December. lt*o.
ICOURT SEAL)
Maryann* M ori*
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: JarwE Jatewlc
Deputy Clerk
Oecember la. *1. I HO
DEA lit

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
purtuanl to Order to Re**|
Foredotur* Sale dated Decern
ber 1. two and Final Judgment
dated November 10, Ittt. en
tered In Cat* No. I t JTW CA I*
L P ot the Circuit Court ol Ihe
Itth Judicial Circuit In and lor
Sam lnolo County. F lo rid a,
whareln GREAT W ESTERN
BANK, a federal tavlngt bank,
a* plalnllll and A BLAINE
RANDALL, et a l . are defen
dantt. I will tall to tha hlghetl
and bail bidder for cath at the
w ell Iron! door ol the Seminole
County Courthout*. Sanlord.
Florida at II 00 A M on the lllh
day of January. I f f I, the follow
Ing detcrlbed property at tel
forth In tald Final Judgment, to
Wit:
LOT Jl, APPLE VALLEY,
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
P L A T BOOK 11. PAGE 70.
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI
HOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
a/k/a 111 Lampllghlor Road
Altamonte Spring*, FL
DATED THIS 3rd day ol
December. IW0
MARYANNE MORSE
CIRCUITCOURT CLERK
By Jan* E Jatewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publlth December 7. M. two
DEA U

Europeans
move closer
to federation
■y CHARUM OOLOSMITH
United Press International________

nsl

ROME — The 12 European
Com m unity leaders begin a
tw o-day su m m it F r id a y to
launch historic steps toward a
common currency and Joint
foreign policy for post-Cold War
Europe.
The sum m it, m arking the
debut o f new British Prime
Minister John Major, culminates
with the Inauguration on Satur­
day o f twin constitutional con­
ventions. on ec o n o m ic und
monetary union |EMU) and polit­
ical union.
Heads o f state arrived Thurs­
day evening for a pre-summit
p e r fo r m a n c e o f P u c c i n i 's
"T o s c a " featuring superstar
tenor Luciano Pavarotti. Formal
summit business begin s on
Friday morning.
EC leaders arc expected to
approve emergency food aid to
the Soviet Union, and also will
discuss the Persian G ulf crisis.
South Africa and the stalled
world trade talks, which col­
lapsed in Bru.ssels last week over
the EC's program o f massive
farm subsidies.
The constitutional convcn*
l i o n s , k n o w n as " I n tcrgovcrnmcntul conferences,"
are scheduled lo end late next
year with profound changes to
the EC's founding churtcr. the
1957 Treaty o f Rome, including
landmark moves loward forging
a federal Europe out o f histori­
cally warring nation-states.
"Our feeling Is lhat Rome,
with these two conferences, will
Ik- an Important turn In the life
ol (lie Community." said Prime
Minister Glulio Andrcottl. the
current EC president, a leading
advocate o f creating a "United
States of Europe" with a single
currency and n common foreign
policy.

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■ y O H I O HKNOBASON

A group of seven |M&gt;licc orga­
nizations. in a friend-of-ilie-court
brief written by the Center lo
Prevent H andgun V io le n ce ,
asked the justices Thursday to
reject an appeal o f a federal
court ruling that upheld the bun.
.11). Farmer Jr. o f Smyrna.
Ga . backed by the National Rule
Association, Is asking the high
court to overturn a decision ol
the llt li U S. Circuit Court of
ApjH'.ds rejecting Ills hid to own
a machine gun.
In 1986. Congress banned the
private (tosst-sslon of machine
guns that w ere not already
lawfully possessed.
Tin* N RA Firearms Civil Rights
la-gal Defense Fund, counsel lor
Farm er, c la im s b e ca u s e o f
exceptions in the legislation, the
1980 law should not I n - in
lerpreted to prohibit private
possession of machine guns by
law abiding citizens. Hut if II
does, the NRA claim s, tb.il
violates Ilu- Second Am endm ent.
which guarantees the righi to
1tear arms

OOt I

nrWtO

C o p s ask c o u rt
to u p h o ld b an
on m a c h in e g u n s

WASHINGTON - A coalition
of police organizations Joined the
antigun lobby In asking the
Supreme Court to let stand
Congress's 1980 decision out­
lawing private ow nership of
machine guns.

Telephone!
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Sanford Horald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, Docambar 14. 1990 — Ik

Holidays create family tension
United P m i International

GAINESVILLE Christmas
family reunions Involving people
who arc not very close can-be
stress-filled rhores that lack the
warmth and happiness most
p e o p le e x p e c t , u n iv e r s it y
psychologist said Thursday.
Michael Murphy, a University
o f Flortdu psychologist, said
much of the stress experienced
by fam ily m em bers are the
result of them not being as close,
geograph ically or philosoph­
ically. as they were 20 or 30
years ugo.
Our more mobile society also
hns left fam ilies with fewer
opportunities to share, he said.
"Even If a family Is totally

Yulee man convicted In slaying
FERNANDINA BEACH — A 22yrar-old Yulce man convicted
« f killing it North Carolina fisherman . r a Job has l&gt;ern
sentenced loilrath for the 1989 slaying.
Circuit Judge Henry Lee Adams scm&gt; tired Ronald Wayne
Clark Thursday. Clark was convicted Nov. 2 ol llrst-dcgrrc
murder In I hr death o f Charles Carter, 37.
Clark shot Carter In Ihe chest Oct. 29. 1989. with a 12-gauge
shotgun. Police said Clark reloaded the gun. leaned over Carter
and shot him n second time in the head.
According to court records. Clark wanted Carter's Job on a
local shrimp boat.

Evidonce'tamptring case returns to trial
JACKSONVILLE — The evidence-tampering ease against a
Nassau County deputy and former reserve officer Involved In a
police chase and fatal shooting of a Yu Ice teenager Is going
back to trial.
The 1st District Court of Appeal has ordered the case of
Deputy Slunlcy Hurst and Ricky Pope hack on the calendar.
The appeals court ruled Dial Jacksonville Circuit Judge
Michael Weathrrby should not have dismissed Ihr case.
Doth men hud been charged with obstructing Justice and
evidence tampering after Andeaz Clark. 19. was killed In
February 1989 following a (miter chase from Fernandlna Reach
to Jacksonville. Pope was also charged with pcr|urv.

disintegrated or fragmented, at
the holidays, they're going to
feel like 'w e've got to get it
together.'" Murphy said.
Regardless who visits whom,
parents often treat their adult
children as though they arc still
10 years old. UF psychologist
Greg Nclmeycr said.
Many holiday get-togethers ar&gt;p u n c tu a te d b y p e r io d s o f
awkward silence, as If everyone
Is saying: "W hat do we do now?
Whai's th- basis for forging our
ren ew ed r e la tio n s h ip ? "
Nclmeycr said.
The amount o f stress a person
feels over n family gathering
depends on expectations, he
said. Many people expect the
holidays to be like something out

United F r a n International

JACKSONVILLE - Work has stalled In the
2-year-old search for University o f Florida Junior
Tiffany Sessions because leads have slowed to n
trickle nod none o f those have been fruit full, the
FHI said Thursday.
The FHI In Jacksonville, which has been
handling the Sessions probe In Gainesville, has
moved Invesligators on the case to other assign­
ments until a significant lead surfaces.
"T h e FHI office at Jacksonville still maintains
the Tiffany Sessions Investigation In a pending
status and all leads that are received are
immediately aggressively pursued," said FBI
J a c k s o n v i l l e h e a d J a m e s C a g n a s s o la .
"Appropriate FBI resources have been and will
continue to be uMHzrd as Investigative needs

MIAMI — A federal Judge has tossed out Dade County's
ordinance that limits the amount of money an auto rental firm
can charge for collision damage waivers.
U.S. District Judge Kenneth Ryskamp said the county should
he applauded for trying to protect consumers against
price-gouging and high-pressure tactics. Hut he decided the law
was not valid because the county doesn't have the power to
enforce It.

From United Press International Reports

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The 4th District Court o f
Appeal said the remarks by
Broward C ounty J u d ge
Paul M. Marko III were
Inappropriate, and reversed
his rulings. The appeals
court sent the ease back to
Circuit Court and strongly
suggested Marko withdraw
because he could not be
fair.
During a November 1989
divorce trial. Marko re ­
peatedly told M arianne
Price. 33. o f Pem broke
Pines, that she could not
make It on her own and
suggested she go to a
singles bar to find a new
husband.
He also ordered her not
to have a man live In her
house, while saying her
husband. Gordon J. Price,
could have the "e n tir e
D o lp h in s c h e e r le a d in g
squad running through his
apartment naked.”

TALLAHASSEE — Gov.-elect
Lawton Chiles praised Lottery
Secretary Rebecca Paul Thurs­
day as she announced Florida
has surpassed California as the
nation's top-selling lottery.
Hut she's still going to lie out
of a Job after Chiles assumes
office.
" I compliment her on the Job
she’s done." Chiles told report­
ers after being briefed by Paul
and her top lieutenants on the
lottery's operations.
But he quickly added: "W e
will be trying to put in our own

team ."
Paul, who was hired by Re­
publican Gov. Hob Martinez, told
reporters she has already started
looking fur another Job.
" I have not written a letter of
resignation," she said. "Hut 1
think It has been made clear to
me that that's something I ought
to look at doing soon."
Although he hud criticized
Paul during Ills election cam­
paign. Chiles, a Democrat, ac­
knowledged Thursduy that she
fa it h fu lly fo llo w e d p o lic ie s
established by the Legislature.
Since It was started In 1987,
the Florida Lottery has quickly
becom e one o f the nation's

biggest, posting sales of 92.1
billion for the fiscal year that
ended June 3 t.
In the first Tour months o f the
current fiscal year, the Florida
Lottery was $197 million ahead
of California’s In sales. Florida
officials said.
Chiles said, however, that prof­
its should not be the sole criteria
by which the lottery Isjudged.
He noted that Ihe games were
sold to the voters as a way to
enhance education. Although
lottery profits have balled the
schools out o f a number o f
budget crunches, education's
share of stale revenues overall
has actually declined.

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W EST PALM BEACH —
A Judge who told a divorc­
ing woman to go find a new
husband In a singles bar
because lots of "bim bos"
go there was strongly criti­
cized in an appeals court
review o f the case.

1

“

i EACH BAG O F GRAIN
!

Judge blasted
for ‘bimbo’
divorce ruling

Chiles praises Paul, but ax will still fall

Punrwi
Chow

CHRISTMAS
TREES

T o help solve the dilemma.
Murphy suggested, one or both
divorced parents should ask the
children what they want to do
during the holidays — no strings
attached.

dictate."
Cagnassola Issued the statement In the after­
noon to refute media accounts earlier In the day
that indicated the FHI was dropping the case.
Sessions. 20. a finance major from Miami, left
her apartment about 2 miles from campus Feb. 9
and never was seen again. He disappearance
prompted a nationwide search.
Her father. Patrick, said Thursday he was more
concerned with his daughter's safety than he was
two years ago. but he still has hope she will be
found.
" I would be forced to think the odds arc as good
as the day she left, and we're going to find her
w ell," he said by telephone from a business
engagement in New York. "Hut as I said the day
she left, until I find proof that something's
happened to her. I'm going to continue to look for
her with or without the FUl's help."

United Press International

-------

"T h e children arc struggling
with meeting their needs and the
expectations they feel from their
parents." Murphy said.

FBI says Sessions case has stalled;
father vows never to quit searching

Judge tosses out Dade waiver ordinance

|

o fa 1950s TV sitcom.
"Holidays sym bolize families."
Murphy said. " S o everyone Is
expected to have a good tim e."
H olid a y g e t-to g e th e rs can
prove even more dlfllri'lt when
parents arc divorced. Murphy
said, because children are often
torn between where to go for
Christmas.

r j

C ITY O F L O N G W O O D , FLORIDA
N O TIC E O F SPECIAL ELECTION

Join the Celebration
Registration Now Underway

TO : A L L TH E V O TER S O F TH E C ITY O F L 0 N G W 0 0 D :
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N by the City Commission of the City of
Longwood, Florida, that said City Commission has called a Special Election to be
held on Tuesday, January 15 , 19 9 1 , to submit the following question to the citizens
of Longwood:

PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENT
AMENDING ADMINISTRATION OF BUDGET
Shall Article VI, Section 6.10 be amended to add Subsection (b) to
state that unless authorized by the voters at a duly held referendum,
the City Commission shall not spend or allow to be spent any funds
derived from any source for the purpose of construction of any
capital improvement or lease or purchase of real property, the
payment of which extends beyond the end of any fiscal year?
Shall the avove described

Y E S : ______________

amendment be adopted?

N O : _______________

A copy of said ballot shall be available at the office of the City Clerk of the
City of Longwood, Florida, for persons desiring to examine same.
The polls shall open at 7:00 A.M. and close at 7:00 P.M. The polling place
forthe Special Election shall be located at the L O N G W O O D C IT Y HALL, C O M M IS ­
S IO N C H A M B E R S , C O R N E R O F W E S T W A R R E N A V E N U E A N D W ILM A
S T R EE T . LO NG W O O D , FLORIDA.
This Notice is to be published in the Sanford Herald, a newspaper of general
circulation in the City, once in the fifth week and once in the third week prior to the
Special Election.

SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
D. L. T E R R Y , C IT Y C L E R K

(407) 323-1450

S a n to rd

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D e c e m b e r 14, 1 9 9 0

Sanford Herald

t

S p o rts

INSIDE:
■ People, Page 3B
■Com ics, Page 6B
■ Classified, Page 8B

Lyman Christm as Tourney

IN B R I E F

JUCO BASKETBALL

I

Raiders prepare for Christmas
S A N F O R D - T h r IO 1I1 ran ked m e n ’s
basketball tram of Seminole Community Col­
lege will play U's Iasi pre-Christmas game
Saturday night when It hosts nftli ranked St.
Petersburg Junior Collrgr starting at 7:30 p.m.
at the Health and Physical Education Center.
This will be Ihc second time this season that
SCC has faced the 8-0 Trojans. SI’JC completely
dominated the first contest 91-69 as forward
Barry Brown and Lincoln Roach scored 35 and
19 points, respectively. Brown Is the second
leading scorer In the state at 28 per gam e and
Roach Is sixth at 23.8.
The Raiders were led by Brian Nason (19).
Darnell Robinson (15) and John Mackey (13).
Nason Is SCC's scoring leader at 19.9 per
contest.
SCC came up with a free win Thursday when
North Florida Community College was forced to
forfeit Its game with the Raiders after a
bench-clearing brawl at St. John's Wednesday
night. The 2-0 win gives SCC a 9-5 record going
Into the Saturday's game.

W restling event
in its 19th year
By TO NY DoSORMISR

Herald Sports Editor
LONGWOOD - For the 19th year. Lyman High
School w ill host one o f Ihc sla te’s most
prestigious wrestling events — the Lyman
Chrlstmns Wresting Tournament.
Five Seminole County schools — Lake Mary.
I*akc Howell, laikc Brantley. Oviedo and host
Lyman — highlight a 10-team field that will
participate in this year's tourney.

Rounding out the field are A|&gt;npka. Bishop
Moore. Colonial. Dr. Phillips. Evans. West
Orange. NVInlcr Park. University. Flagler-Palm
Const. Stuart-Martln County and New Smyrna
Ik-ach.
While defending team champion Sarasota Is
not back. Bishop Moore. Dr. Phillips and New
Smyrna Beach finished second, third and fourth,
respectively. Iasi year.
Lake Mary and Lyman were the highestplacing Sem inole County teams last year,
finishing In a Hr for eighth.
Lasl year, only 12 Seminole County wrestlers
placed In Ihc lop four of their respective weight
rlasses: Dike Brantley's Jason Truslcr (1st. 103);
John Roberts (2nd. 103) and Ken Times (2nd.
220) of Lake Howell: Lym an's W illie Campos

SANFORD — Things got uncom­
fortably warm at Seminole High
School's BUI Flem ing Memorial
Gymnasium on Thursday night.
With the rentral heat rreatlng an
oven-llke feeling In the building, the
Fighting Seminolcs had lo turn
away a pair o f laic charges by Ihc
Luke Brantley Patriots lo pidl out a
52-39 Seminole Athletic Conference
girls' basketball victory.
The win advances Seminole to
8-0. 3-0 In the SAC. while Dike
Brantley falls to I -5.0-3.
Trailing 31-17 early In Ihc third
quarter, the Patriots put together an
11-0 run over a four-minute period
to pull within three points. 31-28.
Seminole responded by scoring the
nexl eight points, only to see Lake
Brantley rally once again, cutting
the score to 39-34 on S h elly
Spencer's free throw wtlli 4:57 left
In the game.
But Seminole again stopped the
Patriots, outscorlng the visitors 9-3
down the stretch lo keep Coach
John McNamara's record perfect

PRO FOOTBALL
Holtz looking at Bucs
PHILADELPHIA — Despite Ills denials. Notre
Dame football coach Lou Holt/ has Intensified
his Interest In head coaching position with the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Sources told the Dally News that the Impetus
for Holtz's Job hunt Is the NCAA's 2V*i-year
Investigation of the University of Minnesota,
where Holtz coached In 1984 and 1985.
The NCAA Investigation for-used on reports of
payments to Minnesota alldetes. including
about a dozen football players, by Luther
Darvlllc. a former athletic department ad­
ministrator.

AUTO RACING
Bulcks practice
DAYTONA BEACH - Bulck Motor Division
teams testing their stock cars at Daytona
International Speedway on Thursday were
frustrated at being slightly slower than the
Chevrolet teams that had tested earlier.
"Our car's running pretty well, but It's not as
quick as those Chevrolets." said leant owner
Bobby Allison, whose driver. Hut Stricklin.
|Histetl the days' fastest lap at 191.734 mph.
Brett Bodlnebada best lap of 191.164 mph.
Rlckv Rudd, in a Chevrolet, turned in the best
lap ol ihc winter In pre-season testing on
Tuesday. 195 355 mph.
The Bulck teams, as well as two cars Irom the
Dodge International Race of Champions, are
scheduled to test on Friday.
Compiled from w ire end staff reports.

B AS K E TB A LL
H p m — TN I . NBA. Detroit Pistons at Boston
Celtics. (LI

t I M IN O L f (11)

Sandart 0 0 0 0. War* 1011. William* 4 44 14.
Jon** I 00 3. M*wklrk 3 00 J. K*nnon 4 1 J 10.
Washington 4 0 0 0. Mullln* 3147. FrancK J 0 3 4
Total* 31* 13 S3
Lab* Sranfl*,

»

I

11 1 1 - 3 *

Wmiiwl*
U II 4 If - 11
Thr** point (l*ld goal* - lak* Br*nll*y 3
(Schro*»f*l. P*nn*y). Somlnol* 1 (N**klrk).
Tot*l tool* — Lak* Br*ntl*y 11. S*mlnol* I*.
Foul*d out — Non* Technical* - S*mlnol*.
Mullln* Rtrordt - S*mlnol« 00. 3 0 SAC; Lak*
Branllvy I 4.03 SAC.

against SAC competition (27-0 since
taking over the Tribe two years
ago).
With only one game left before the
holidays. McNamara said that he Is
looking forward to getting bis team
some solid practice time as well as a
healthy dose o f rest for those team
members who have been fighting
the flu.
’ ’W illi all the games wc'vc played,
we haven't had a real practice In
almost two weeks." said McNamara
after the game Thursday night.
"Tom orrow 's practice will be Ihc
□ Bee T ribe , Page 2B

Prom sta ff reports

OIRL1
LAKE HOWELL (SI)

Magic lose 11th road game

LAKELAND - A 25-point perfonnanee by Derek
Flowers led Florida Southern to a 105-64 victory
over Knox College on Thursday.
Florida Southern remains undefeated through
seven games. Knox fell to 4-3.
Flowers, who also had II rebounds, scored 13
o f his points in the first half its the Moccasins
outscored Knox 56-32 In the first period.
Calvettl Pate contributed 14 of bis 20 points in
the llrst half for Florida Southern.

LAKE BRANTLEY lift
Wllion 0 0 S 0. Coaltar 4 011. Sthro*l«*l 4 4 4 13.
Sp*nc*r I I U Lldk* 1 » I 4. P*nn*y 1 » J 1. Fofll
13 4 7.ArliaOOOO Toltlt: 144143*

Morris takes charge, leads
Lake Mary to overtime win

PRO BASKETBALL

Florida Southern still unbeaten

On Saturday, there will be two sessions. The
morning session will feature the scmlflnuls
beginning al 10 a.m. with the wrestlebacks to
follow al noon. The Saturday evening session will
consist o f the consolation finals at 6 p.m. and the
championship finals al 8 p.m.
Admission Is 83 per session.

Herald Sports Editor

SANFORD — Sports Collectables o f Flea
World will sponsor a baseball card show at the
Sanford Civic Center Sunday from 10 a.m. until
6 p.m.
Also on the agenda will be an autograph
signing session by the number I pick In this
years’ free agent draft. Chipper Jones of the'
Atlanta Braves. Jones' autograph w ill be
available for 83.

COLLEGE HOOPS

There will lie two rounds In this evening's
session, the first round scheduled lo begin at 6
p.m. with Ihc quarterfinals set to start al 8 p.m.

By TO N Y DeBORMER

Card Show at Civic Center

PHOENIX — Kevin Johnson scored 15 of his
season-high 38 points In the fourth quarter
Thursday night to lead the Phoenix Suns to
their fourth straight triumph, a 125-114 d e­
cision over the Orlando Magic.
Tom Cham bers scored 25 points. J e ff
Hornacek 23 and Xavier McDaniel 16 for the
Suns. Scott Skllcs led Orlando with 25 points
and rookie Dennis Scott added 22.
The Magic lost for the 11th lime In 12 road
games.

(3rd. 119). Aaron Jordan (4th. 125). Danny
Glam mo (1st. 145) and Tom Callglurl (3rd. 171):
and Bart Buchanan (4th. 135), Adam Van Diver
(3rd. 145). Tom Henning (4th. 152). Carl
Bergman (3rd. 160) and Chris Israel (4th. 220) of
Dike Mary

Flu-bitten Sem inole able
to handle heat, Patriots

BASEBALL

Complete listing on Page 2B

1

HataM PSoto by Kaby Jordan

With several of her teammates slowed by the flu, senior guard Koscla
Kennon had to shoulder more of the load for Seminole against Lake
Brantley. Kennon responded with 10 points, nine rebounds and five steals.

LAKE M ARY - After a quiet first
half, sophomore Karen Morris look
over the game In the fourth quarter
and led Lake Mary to a 59-58
overtime win over Lake Howell In
an exciting Seminole Athletic Con­
ference girls' basketball game.
Morris scored nine o f the Rams'
12 fourth-quarter points as Lake
Mary rallied from a 43-42 deficit
a fte r th re e q u a r te rs to fo rc e
overtime.
In overtime. Morris scored Lake
Maty’s first four (Milnts before Pam
Flschl converted the front end o f a
one-and-one to put the Rams up by
five. Flsehl’s free throw would turn
out to Im- crucial as Lake Howell
scored the gam e's last four points.
With under a minute lo play.

B *rr*r*t 0 13 1. L*«*l» 4 3 4 13. Hiaki.i* *3 3 14.
Winston 0 3 5 3. Mill* 3 3 I I . Iyob* 4 I 4*. Clark* 3
I 37.Arla»3004 Total* 77 13 73 50
LAKE MARY 1511
Hull I 51*. Marrlcb 300 4. Judd 4 I 3*. FUchl 0
4 4 4. Scrutot 0 3 5 J. Morrl* II J 4 35. Cray 3 00 4.
Cllardla 00 70. Mau 1007 Total* 31 14 77 5*

Lak* Hawaii
17 It I I II
4 — 54
Lak* Mary
I I II II 17 J - 5*
Thr** point li*ld goal* — Lak* How*U 7 (Law It
3). Lak* Mary 1 (Hull). Total toul* — Lak# Howall
33. Lak* Mary 33 Foul*d out — Lak* Mary. Mau
Technical* — Non* Record* — Lak* Mary 4 4. 3 I
SAC. Lak* How dll 1.01.

Tanya Lewis went to the line for
Lake Howell after an Intentional foul
was called against Lake Mary. She
made both shots to cut the gap to
three. Qutya Hawkins scored on ihc
ensuing possession lo make It a
one-point game.
□ Bee Hoops, Page 2B

Hawks hand Rams fifth tie
From staff reports_________________
WINTER PARK - In a game of
constantly changing momentum.
Lake Howell and Lake Mary played
lo a 1-1 draw In a Seminole Athletic
C onference g irls' soccer match
pluved at Lake Howell's Richard 1..
Evans Field.
For the Lake Mary Rams II was
the fifth tie of the season, making
their record 4-2-5 while Lake Howell
Is now 7-4-2.
"It was a well-played gam e." said
L u k e H o w e ll C och G e r h a r d
Tauschrr. "T h e momentum kept
swinging hack and forth. We pre­
ssured In the first half hul they
scored right before halftime. We
controlled play early In the second
half but (bey pressured us well In
the middle of I be second half and
near the end of the game."
Dana Hoover gave Lake Mary a
1-0 wtirn she Intercepted the lull
and rilled a shot of (lie goal pusl 25
minutes Into the game. The Silver
Hawks equalized two rtilnutes lido
the second half when Michelle
Harris scored on an assist from
Beverly Dickerson.
"B oth teams played a very strong
gam e." said Tauschrr.
Lake Mary had a 14-13 tdge In
shots on goal and a 4 2 advantage In
corner kicks, lorclug Jocllr Fries.
Lake Howell's new goalkeeper, lo
make nine saves Lake Mary goalie
Jcn Preston made seven saves.
Next action lor boih teams will t&gt;r
In the first round ol riir Burger King
I n v i t a t i o n a l T o u r n a m e n t on
Wednesday

P a trio ts b la n k T rib e
ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS - Nicole
Dcluhoussuvr and M.ucl Siark r.u h

scored Iwo goals Thursday after­
noon lo lead the Luke Brantley
Patriots lo a 6 0 win over Seminole
In a Seminole Athletic Conference
g i r l s ' s o c c e r m a tch at L a k e
Brantley's Tom Storey Field.
Alyssa O'Brien made a save on
Seminole's only shot on goal to
register her eighth shutout In 10
games. By comparison. Seminole
'keeper Christy Oliver made 38
saves as the Patriots took 58 shots
on goal.
•
"W e played a lot of different
people and tried different tilings.”
said Lake Brantley Coach John
Schaefer. "Seminole played a nice
game. They hung In there."
Dclahnussuyc opened the scoring
with a goal at 6:15. Carrie Larson
getting the assist. Six minutes later.
Surah Roberts scored an unassisted
goal before D rlah ou ssayr and
Dirson teamed up again at 16.19.
Slark's llrst goal came al 29 08 on
an assist from Jody Burkhart
Stacy Fox made ll 5 0 wlih her
unassisted goal In the 52nd minute.
Stark cap|H-d the scoring with a goal
In i be 69th minute on an assist Irom
Dclahoussayc.
"Even (hough we were on the
losing end. I’ m satisfied with what
the girl did." s.ild Seminole Coach
Su/y Reno "W e were ll.it to the ftrsi
bait, but In ilie second hall, ihc girls
played great defense. Christy. Ann
IWilliams) and Jennifer I Benge) real­
ly shined tixl.iv "
Lake Brantley. U-O-l overall and
6-0 m the SAC. hosts stale |K»wcr
Orange Park on Saturday before
heading into the Burger King next
Thiirsdav Seminole. 6 6-0. w ill plav
an Alumni Game on S.iturilay
before hosting Mainland on Monday

Herald Photo by kelly Jordan

Even though returning starter Am y Myers (No 9. right) has been slowed by
an iniury, the Lym an Greyhounds are still oft to a 9-1-1 start But as of
Thursday, Lym an Coach Jim Thom pson said Myers is back at full strength

G r e y h o u n d s ro m p
DAYTONA BEACH — Danielle
Garrett and Drill Robinson I k i i I i
scored twice iii Lyman’s 7-0 girls'
soccer win over host Daytona
Ht-ach-Scabrce/c on Thursdat af­
ternoon
Oiitshootmg S «.iln it/ ' lo a ;u t i

margin, the Grey bounds look a 4-0
lead al halftime on goals by Garrett.
Sara Kane. Robinson and Heather
Rogers Sara Kane. Adrian Kane
and Tracy Slier curb bad an assist
during the ball.
In the second ball. Amy Smith
See Soccer. Page 2B

FOR THE BEST COVERAGE OF SPORTS IN YOUR AREA, REAP TH E SANFORD HERALD DAILY

�I
*■ — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Friday, December 14. 1990

SffcTS &amp; STA N D IN G S
BOYSSO CCER
Lyman at Merritt Island.
FRIDAY
BOYS BASKETBALL
DaLand at Ovlado. Junior
varsity at 6 p.m. with varsity to
follow.

Lafca Mary at Lafca Nowall.
Junior varsity at 6:15 p.m. with
varsity to follow.
Lyman at Laka Walr. Junior
varsity at 5:15 p.m. with varsity
to follow.

Orangawood Christian vs.
Master's Academy at Qian Rldga
Middle School, 7 p.m.
Seminole at Laka Brantley.
Junior varsity at 6 p.m. with
varsity to follow.

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Evans at Lake Mary. Junior
varsity at 6:30 p.m. with varsity
to follow.

Orangawood Christian vs.
Master’s Academy at Glen Ridge
Middle School, 5:30 p.m.
BOYS SOCCER
Lake Brantley at Seminole,
3:30 p.m.

Lake Nowell at Lake Mary, 3:30
p.m.

Oviedo at DeLand. Junior
varsity at 5:15 p.m. with varsity
to follow.

WRESTLING
Lyman Christmas Wrestling
Tournament, TBA.
S e m i n o l e , D e L a n d at
Seabreeze Wrestling Tourna­
ment, TBA.
SATURDAY
BOYS BASKETBALL
Lake Howell at St. Cloud.
Junior varsity at 6 p.m. with
varsity to follow.

Freshmen at noon with varsity to
fallow.
Seabreeze at DeLand. Junior
varsity at 5 p.m. with varsity to
follow.

am ts s o c c e r
Seabreeze ct DeLand. 3 p.m.
Seminole vs. Alumni at Semi­
nole, 2 p.m.
WRESTLING
Lyman Christmas Wrestling
Tournament. First session at 10
a.m. second session at 6 p.m.

S e m i n o l e , D e L a n d at
Seabreeze Wrestling Tourna­
ment, TBA,

JAI-ALAI
At Orlando irm inoli
Thursday night
Fir it gam*
aGabiola L o rm ro
io w
too 5 00
4Cot* Warn#
; *0 4 &lt;0
1 P tl* Elorrl
ago
0 |4t1 17.** P (4 4) M tO T ( M l ) 277 30
Second gam*
4 Guenaga
1« 00 * 10 7 *0
J Elorrl
* 10 1*0
SGablola
3 jo
0 (M l *3.4* p (« - }) *04 7* T (4 1 1 ) ] } * 44

00 (*-4) 1*4.50

Third game
1 Garay Wayn#
10 00 1 70 4 40
iZugara Chlmala
a io 410
7 Frla* Andy
ia 40
Q II J111.00 P ( ) )| 10).10 T ID-71 417.00
Feurthgame
7Marctl
12.10 5 00 4 40
4 Jot*
* 70 4 00
I Gab tola
AK
0 t o n It .lg T (7 4) fl.70 T &lt;7-4-11 1)0.70 *
(7-M A ll) ) « j . H
Fifth gam*
7 Pierre Chlmela
1160 7 *0 1 40
) Irlgoyen Lorenio
110 3 *0
iZugaiaJoy#
740
Q II 7) 40.00 P (7 1) 11.70 T (7-1-1117*1.00
Siithgama
7 Irlgoyen R eyet
17 00 * so 3 40
JMarcel Andy
) 20 3 70

4 Pita Chlmela
410
0 (1 7) M OOP 17 II I01.WT (7 1*144*10
Seventh game
5 Irlgoyen
9 so II 40 4 20
SZugaga
400 7 10
JFrlat
4 jo
a ( ) * ) 70 44 P 1) 41 301.10 T ( ) 0 I ) 1*35.10 S
IS * 3 A ll) l i n o
Eighth game
1 Ricardo Bob
11 40 5 40 1 40
1Otea Andy
17 30 4 00
2 Eduardo Chimela
140
O (!•?) 11.40 P (7 1) 11.00 T (1 1 1) 041.40
Ninth game
0 leigoyefi Bob
I I JO7 40 7 40
1 Pardo Andy
7 40 * 70
lO lea Uralde
7 40
0 (1 ( ) 17 14 P ( I 1) 1*4*0 T l ( M ) *10 *0
11th gama
5 Pardo
1)00 5 00 1 00
4Mikel
4*0 110
2 Pinson
340
O (4 5) 71 (0 P 15 4) 101.40 T (1 4 1 ) 111.40
11th game
4 Ricardo Uralde
10 10 10 00 11 00
1 Ur quid) Andy
*00 4 60
IT u gaiaJos*
) 00
O 114) *4.10 P (4 1) 10* 40 T (O i l) 017.40
P k * II oD&gt; 1.00 Jackpot 110.000
17th ga mo
4 0lea Mend I
1 10 0 *0 4 70
5 Said Arraiola
3 40 3 70
IM ikel Chlmela
460
Q (4 I I 41.10 P (4 II 114 00 T (4 I I ) 1)1 00
11th game
OUrquIdl Andy
10 00 4 00 *10
IM ikel Reyes
0 10 * 10
7Ouranqo Arrarola
10to
0 (1*1 41.40 P M i l l i t . 10 T 1*111 171.04
OD 14 ) S * All) » ) 00 141A All II H ) 00
14th game
ISald
lio o 14 40 11 00
* Eduardo
14 JO 1100
I Urquidi
1100
a (1 0 ) *4 04 P I ) 0) Ml *4 T (1 0 1) 101140 S
(10 All A ll) IU.M
A —1,100) M—101,100

NBA STANDINGS
Eailern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L Pet. GB
Bolton
17 a SI0 —
Philadelphia
14 7 466 3
New York
0 II 450 7'y
New Jersey
I 13 4C0 I ' l
Washington
6 14 300 lO'i
Miami
I It .141II
Ctnlral Dtvitten

Mllwoukee
Detroll
Chicago
Cleveland
Allan la
Charlatle
Indiana

15 7 ,0 * 1 14 7 4*7 11
17 * *00 1
10 II 47* 4 't
0 II 450 5
1 II 400 5&lt;1
I 14 .1*4 7
Western Conference
Midwest Ofvision
W L Pet. GS
San Anlonlo
II 5.704 —
Utah
14 7 *07 Houston
11 0 571 2
Dallas
7 11 300 1' j
Minnesota
7 11 330**1
Denver
3 M 210 0
Orlande
117 .217 * ' i
Pacltk Division
Portland
10 2 .005 —
Phoenli
II 7 *11 4
Colden Stale
II • a l* a
LA L ak er*
It 7 *11 *&gt;y
LA Clippers
10 10 500 I ' l
Seattle
4 I ] 114 II
Sacramento
4 15 l i t 14
Thursday Game*
Atlanta 104. New Jersey 07
New York 17, Minnesota 7*
Ulah 141, Denver l i t
Phaeni* 111. Orlande 114
Golden Slate tit. Sea me 104
Socramenlo 100. Portland I t
Friday Games
Miami at Philadelphia, 7:1* p.m.
San Antonio at Cleveland, 7 30 p m
Detroit at Bolton. I p m
Houston al Washington. I p m
LA Clippers at Chicago. I 30 pm
Dallas atPortland. 10 30 p m
Saturday Gamas
New York at New Jersey. 7 30p.m
Houston at Charlotte. 7 30 p m
Boston al Miami. 7:10 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta. ): X p m
Cleveland at Chicago. 1 10 p m.
LA Clippers at Milwaukee. Op m.
San Antonio at Minnesota. Ip m.
Phoenleat Denver, 0 30p m
Indiana at Utah. 010p m.
LA Lakers at Golden Slate, 10:20 p m
OrlandaatSacransente. 11:30 p.m.
DallasatSeattle. 10 pm.

scored an u nassisted goal.
Kristina Musantc set up Gar­
rett’s second goal and Robinson
scored on an assist from Stepha­
nie Cailoway.
"T h e girls did everything we

wanted them to do." said Lyman
The victory was minmrntcd by
Coach J im Thom pson. "W e tin- return to fulltime status by
asked them to go to a short returning starters Amy Myers
passing gam e and they did a and Cindy Kirkcunnell.
nice Job. W e would have four or
Hecky Carr made one save
five touches on the ball licforc a
goal. W e really worked Hie tiall during the half she played In the
Greyhound goal. Slier and Gar­
well."

(A ll Times 1ST)
American Conference
East

Lyman. 9-1-1. will next play In
the first round of the Burgre
King Tournament on Wednes­
day.

GIRLS
Morris had a chance to give LYMAN (10)
Lake Mary some breathing room
lr » t s 0 12 1. Stafford 10 12. Kruger 5 I 2
after she was fouled, but she 15. Clark 2 2 34. Robinson 5 17 11. Smith 2 0 I
4. Totals 15 5 II 30
missed the front end o f her
one-and-ane. I,akc Howell reDELTONA ( * « )
Ixiundcd the shot and quickly
Boothe 2 2 6 6, Smith 6 14 13. Rold 2 4 4 1,
moved the ball up court, where a Owon 3 12 7. Mindei 412 11. Workman 1 0 0
Ram committed another foul 7. Nolmesh 0 1 2 t. Toals I* 10 70
with six seconds left, giving the
4] t to 1 —10
Silver Hawks a chance lo move LYt"*"
O-JJ***
• 0 II I ) - 4*
ahead.
p®1"* H*W goats - Lym an4 (Kruger
Hut the first shot was off the 4). Deltona 7 (Mindei 2) Total touts Lyman U. Deltona 13 Footed out - None
mark and Morris pulled in tta­ Technicals — None Records — Deltona 5 2
Lyman 6 ]
re bound.
Morris finished with a gamehigh 25 points. Melissa Mau
contributed 10 rebounds before squeckc-d by Orangt-wood Chrisfouling out. Hawkins scored 14 flan 54-52 Thursday night.
and Lewis finished with 13 for
Tlu? loss was (lie first in
Lake Howell.
IA-District H play fur tin- Rams,
Now 4-4 overall and 3-1 in the wlio full to 4.3 overall and 3-1 In
SAC. Lake Mary hosts Evans the district while MCC remained
this evening. Lake Howell. 3-H undefeated al 3 0 overall and 2 0
and 0-3 In the conference, plays in flic district. Orangewood will
at Orlando's University High Ik- In action again tonight when
School next Tuesday.
it travels lo Glenrfdgu Middle
School |t, Orlando to lake on
Deltona rallies by Lyman Masters Academ y starting at
DELTONA - Trailing 34-28 6 3 0 p.m.
after three quarters, the host
Ilulford hit O o f 18 shots from
Deltona Wolves outscored the •lie Hour and 2 of 5 free throws
Lyman Greyhounds 15-5 In the for 20 |Hiiuls. grabbed 15 rcfinal ]M-rtod to post a 48-3!) win Ixnmds, came away will) seven
in high school girls' basketball steals and handed out nine
action Thursday night.
assists. Helping out Huffonl were
Deltona Improves lo 5-2 while Lisa G a b le (17 po in ts) and
L y m a n f a l l s t o 6 - 3 . T h e Christa Hogan (nine [Hiinis. 12
Greyhounds are now done for rebounds. B steals).
die 1990 calendar year, their
Both teams won half the game.
next scheduled game being on MCC winning Hu- middle two
Jan. 3a l Lake Mary.
32-23 and Orangewood winning
"It was a Ix-auttful gam e." said Hie first and fourth periods hy a
Lyman Coach Steve Carmichael. score o f 29-22.
"Deltona outcxeculed us In the
fourth quarter. Th ey’ re wellcoached and deserve It) win. Wi­ Parke leads O C S boys
nced lo work harder on our
M A ITLA N D Daniel Parke
defense."
scored 24 |Niinls and Tim Seness
Judy Smith scored 13 |Kilnls M to lead Orangewood Christian
and Melissa Mlndc/ added I I lor to a 6 8 - 5 1 t r i u m p h o v e r
the Wolves. For Lyman. Jennifer Melbourne Central Catholic in a
Kruger tossed in four three poliil Class lA-disiriet 8 conlcsl al
field goals on her way to scoring Maitland Thursday night.
a game-high 15 poInTs. Trisha
Every member of tin- Rains
Robinson chlp|K-d in with 11.
team got a lol of playing time ils
they ran out to a 34 20 hallllmc
advantage and cruised to Ha ir
M CC trims O C S girls
(onrili district win In five out­
MAITLAND - Kelley Harrcl
ings. Overall Orangewood im­
and Chris Waterhouse combined
proved to 5*3.
for 30 (minis to offset a great
g a m c by L i z It u 11o r d as
Also having big games lor the
M elbourne C entral C atholic Rains were David Jacobs (cighi

Tribe
Hedged practice we've had III
two weeks."
Al t e r M o n d a y 's g a m e al
Daytona lls-ach Seabreeze. Hie
Set ninnies will take off for sever­
al days over the Christmas
holidays For Nikki Washington,
who played less than It) minutes
against Lake Brauiley. and other
Seinlnoles who have hern under
th e w e a th e r, the l i me off
couldn't route al a In-tier lime
Because ot the number of
players who are rliher gel ting
sick, are slek or )ilst getting mer
b e in g siek. M cN am ara was
(meed to use an unusual ttumhn

704
700
743
10*

Saturday
BASKETBALL

W
_

World s Fastest G am e
is at
O rlando
Jai Alai

' free" !

Continued from I B

lirst lull

7 6 0 51*1*2
7 * 0 51* 734
7 * 0 13* 374
3 It 0 .134 201

10 a m
SC. High school. Popeye s
Classic
Noon
ESPN. College, Princeton at
West
Rutgers. (LI
Kansas City
* 40 * f l 314 leo
1x p m
SC, College, Augusta College at
LA R a id ers
0 4 0 4*7 1*0 133
Florida. (L I
Seattle
7 4 0 331 747 740
7 p m — SUN. College. Teias El OPaso at
San D iego
» 70 4*1 177 270
Georgetown. (L I
Denver
110 0 711 777 114
}p m
GN, College. UCLA al DePaui
National Conference
ILI
East
J 30 p m - SC. College. UT Chattanooga
W L T »c t PF PA
at Kentucky. (L )
1 N Y Giants
11 7 0 *46 2*5 1*1
4 pm
WF TV 0. College. Georgia Tech at
Washington
I 30 *13 200 742
Temple. ILI
Philadelphia
7 * 0 33* 373 775
7 30 p m - SC. Colleqe. Augusta College at
Dallas
* 7 0 441 193 255
Florida
Phoenli
3* 0 3*5 204 30*
7 30 p m - ESPN. Colleqe. Alabama at
Central
North Carolina, (LI
&gt; Chicago
10 3 0 760 100 107
a 30 p m. — SUN. College women, DePaui
Minnesota
4 7 0 447 707 732
Green Bay
6 70 441
741270 at Teias. ILI
GN. NBA, Cleveland Cavaliers
Tam pa Bay
3 (0 .11)
I I * 111 * M p m
Delroil
4 00 30* 301 345 al Chicago Bulls. IL)
0 10 p m — ESPN. College, Loyola
West
MarymountalOfclahoma. (L ),also alia m
* San Francis
II 1 0 023 307 100
11 p m
SC. College. Prairie View AuM
New O rlean s
* 7 0 4*1 135 130
at Louisville
L A R am s
3 * 0 3*5 303 344
BOXING
Atlanta
3 10 0 311 101 111
Midnight SUN. Miami Beach Brawl
1 clinched division title
FIGURE SKATING
y clinched pleyelf spot
Noon - US. Discover Card Stars on Ice
Saturday, Dec. 15
4 pm
WESH 3, World Professional
Buffalo at NY Giants, 12 30pm
Figure Skating Championship
Washington at New England. 4pm
FOOTBALL
Sunday. Dec. 14
II 10pm - ESPN. NFL GAme Day
Indianapolisat NY Jets. 1p m
Noon — WCPX 4. College. NCAA Division
Seattle at Miami. 1p.m.
I AA Championship Nevada al Georg 4
Minnesota at Tampa Bay, Ip m
Southern. (L )
Atlanla at Cleveland, Ip m
13 30 p m — WESH 2. NFL Live
Pittsburgh al New Orleans. Ip m
11 30 p m - WESH 7. NFL Buffalo Bills al
Phoenli at Dallas. I p m
New York Giants. IL )
Houston al Kansas City. Ip m
2 30pm - WCPX 4. NFL Today
Green Bay at Philadelphia. 4pm
4 p m — WCPX 6. NFL. Washington
San Diego al Denver. 4pm
Redsktnsal New England Patriots, (L )
Cincinnjtlat LA Raiders. 4p m
1 30 p m — SC, High school. Florida Class
Chicago at Detroit, ( p m
AAAAA State Championship. ILI
* p m — 11, 11, Colleqe. Independence
Bowl Louisiana Tech vs Maryland. ILI
GOLF
2 p m — WFTV 0. New York Lite
BASKETBALL
Champlons.secondround, (L I
7:10p m — SC. Colleqe, Georgia at Miami,
HORSE RACING
ID
6 p m — ESPN. Bay Meadows Handicap
• p m — TNT, NBA, Oetroil Pistons al
(L I
Boston Celtics. (LI
TENNIS
Midnight — ESPN, Col'ege. Murray Stale
2 pm. — ESPN. Grand Slam Cup. men s
a I Southern Illinois, (L I
senlfinals
BOXING

rett shared time in the second
half, comhlntng lo make three
saves In the shutout.

Hoops-----------

Continued from IB

Central
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Houston
Cleveland

* jop m
SUN. Miami Beach Brawl, (L l
H pm
UN. Luis Vasquer vs Ton,
Montgomery. (L )
GOLF
4 30p m
ESPN New York Llie Classic
SKIING
Ip m
ESPN. U S Men's Pro Tour

TVfVIADIO

Soccer
Continued from I B

W L T Pet. PF PA
tl 1 0 *44 371 107
to 1 * 740 17) tu
5 0 0 M l 700 711
4 00 30* 716 705
I 170 077 154 346

y Buffalo
V Miami
Indianapolis
N Y J e ll
N ew England

ol combinations, some ot which
worked
“ 1 w as tryin g to get the
healthy players out there." lie
said
We did il mil of necessity,
lint we were able to see w li.it
happens lu dtlfercnt situations
Rutliaiiti Williams scored a
game-high I • |h i i u i s lor Semi­
nole. including making all six of
her b ee throws Koseia Knmon
added to white Washington had
eight m iiitiiied action Kav Ka\
Mullins pulled in a gaon lilgli i 1
n-tHiurids
For l ake Hr.m iles, (.‘ luisia
Setirm-tfel had 13 points while
Kiisten F’ursl eoniribitled seven
pomis and nine rebounds

MELBOURNE CENTRAL CATHOLIC 154)
Shea 4 0 0 17. Burton 3 0 0 4. Hammond I 0 0
7. Harrel • 0 0 16. Waterhouse 1 00 14.
McGinty 2004 Totals 270 0S4
ORANGEWOOD CHRISTIAN 111)
Hutlord 0 7 5 70. Prammmg 7 0 14. Gable I
0 2 17, Cltmer 1 0 0 2. Hogan 7 5 10 0. Coleman
00 to Totals 22 7 10 52.
Melbourne CC
10 t* 1* 1 7 - 5 *
Orangewood Christian 17 11 10 17 — 11
Three point held goals — MCC. none.
Oranqewood I IGable) Team touts — MCC
17. Oranqenood ( Fouled out — MCC.
Harrel. McGinty Technicals — none Rec
ords — MCC 3 0 overall, 10 IA district I.
Orangewood Christian a 1 overall. 3 1 IA
district I

BOYS
M ELBOURNE C EN TR AL CATHOLIC (SI)
B oriel 4 J II, Cornell 1 244. Alvarado 100
*. Wands 4 2 7 10. Henderson 4 4 11 17.
Bonnenberger 1 0 0 2. Brady 2 0 1 a , Baida 0
127. Totals: 1* 12 2111.
ORANGEWOOD CHRISTIAN (**)
Jacobs 3 2 21. Johnson 10 0 7. Hultord 300
». Senna 11 S 4 * 14. Sttwarl 2 00 a. Behner 1
0 12. Parke 10 1 7 74, Ryan! I 21. McClintock
1002. Lord 11 2 3 Totals 2** 1)4*
Melbourne CC
11 * 1/ it — 11
Orangawood Christian 11 U I* 1) — U
Three point Held goals — MCC I (Borle),
Orangawood 3 (Parke 31. Team fouls - MCC
I*. Orangewood 10 Fouled rut — none
Ter-inic*ls — none Records — MCC 13
user ill, 1 3 IA district I. Orangewood Chris
Han 1 3overall. 4 1 IA district*.

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BASEBALL CARD SHOW
PE R S O N A l AUTO G RAPH S ONI Y $3 00

points, six steals, seven assists).
Matt Ilulford (six points. 10
rebounds) and Terry McClintock
ft wo points, nine rclMiunds).
Scoring in double figures for
MCC (1-3 overall. 1-2 lA-diatrlc\
8 ) were Terry Henderson (12
|K&gt;ints).Shanc Borle ( I I points)
and Kirk Wands) 10 pnluls).
Orangewood Christian will tie
In action again tonight when
they travel to Orlando lo lake on
Masters Academy at Glenrldge
Middle School starling at 8 p.in.

GRAND O PIN ING SPECIALS:

#1 D R A F T P I C K

C H IP P E R JO N E S

FIR ST 120 R ECEIV E S P O H U j U N U M I TED PROM OS

A

u to .

ForBtQn A DomMtlc • FREE ESTIMATES
SpcciBttltog In InQirwt - TrBntmlMton* S
17 S3 S Airport Sltd
(•crots from Krrwt}
114-4401
T U * I U *S
«C Y L t » H
«C U . I l l M
ACYL I N N

IM A P M *
)ncii*d*B C *M k Tuiunf
U M I A C »«* C *M M &gt;
&gt;1 P«**N M r o k *
■ rat* M x i I N N

fPrani m raw to*»»t1 «ar*»
OM Itakn F M r M M

NOUN

1PM

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16th
10 00 AM - 6 00 PM

SANFORD CIVIC CENTER
401 E SEMINOLE BLVD

SANFORD, FL

LARGE SCREEN TV CONCESSIONS
ADMISSION $t 00
Foi Into Call (407) 574-1290

UNDER 9 FREE
All Dealers W elcom e'

Jai-Alai Premier
Event of 1990!

CITRUS
INVITATIONAL
Saturday Dec. 15th
Matinee &amp; Evening
Set- On Dec. 15 - Hanford s Anastasia A James; Miami* Kent A Jimmy;
Tampa s Francisco &amp; Daniel. Daytona Beach » Oscar A Gerardo, Bridgeport s
Mark A Sola; Dania s Bchcn-tche A Chai; Palm Beach a Michael A Yanncl.
Orlandos Eduardo A Mendi!

HWY. 17-92 &amp; 436
407-331-9191
7:15 N IG H T LY E X C E P T S U N D A Y
N O O N M A T IN E E S MON.,
TH U RS. &amp; SAT. • 1 PM O N SUN.
A d m issio n From S1

�‘
\

I
Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida — Friday. December 14. 1990 — 3B

People
Welcome foreign guests for holidays
ORLANDO — International
Visitor Connell o f Central Florida
Invites area residents to host
mid-winter community seminar
participants over the holidays.
Unable to return to their distant
homes. 35 individuals will lx*
visiting Central Florida for a 10
day program entitled "Tourism
In Central Florida- Economic
Development and Environmen­
tal Considerations".

You can open your home to
one o f the participants on De­
cember 25. Share your holiday
traditions while learning about
another culture. The opportuni­
ty to experience a traditional
American holiday Is a unique
and priceless m em ory from
students who arc* eager to learn
about our customs and tradi­
tions firsthand. Observance and
particl|&gt;utiuti in ibis holiday Is
often tlie highlight o f their

Central Florida vls(|*

are cu rrently In the United
States In various master's and
doctoral programs sponsored by
the United Stales Agency for
International Development.

The countries represented arc:
Bolivia. Botswana. Burklno Faso.
C a m e r o o n . C o s t a Rica.
D om inica. G u atam ala. Hon­
duras. India. Indonesia. Jordan.
M o r o c c o . P a k i s t a n . Pe r u.
P h i l i p p i n e s . St. Lucie.
Swazllund, Taiwan. Thailand
and Yemen.

In addition to hosting visitors
Christmas Day. you are Invited
to welcome them at a breakfast
and to join In a Farewell Covered
Dish Dinner and Dance.

The visitors arc mid-career
leaders In Ihclr countries who

Cnll 246-0849 in Orlando for
more Information.

Deck the windows
John

C.

Smith and Jim Benton.

Keeping Sanford safe
Sanford fire 11fille r* mid paramedics can be seen at major
functions throughout the city where they may be needed. John
C. Smith and Tim Benton were on duty during the recent boat
races at the Sanford Marina.

Kris Harlch, 20. transformed
the plate-glass window at
Famous Recipe Chicken, San­
ford, into a Christmas canvas,
as he painted holiday scenes
depicting the religious and
cultural sides of the season.

Join softball team
HD Really Heart breakers Men’s Softball will be holding
tryouts lor Winter League on Saturday. December 15. 12 to 2
p.m. at Chase Park and Sunday. December 16. 3 to 5 p.m. at
Chase Park.
Call 330-1 H)2 tor more information.
HtttM Photo by Kolty Jordan

Get in the spirit
Get In the holiday spirit. Come to a special program at the
library for elementary school children on Monday. December
17. 2:30 p.m. Amelia lledella will he getting ready for
Christmas, trimming her tree.
The "Tw elve Days o f Christmas" will be presented. "Peter
and the W olf" will he shown.
The library Is located at 215 N. Oxford Road In Casselberry.
Phone 339-4000.

Hm i M Photo by Tommy Vloconl

Susan, Courtney and Gregory Tindell

All I want for Christmas...
The Tindell family ol Paola visited Santa Claus at Heathrow
recently. Courtney.' 2. t ried, but Gregory. 6. was happy lo
discuss toys u It h the bearded gentleman.

SISTERS to meet
Sanford's Interested Sarahs To Encourage Rejuvenation will
hold a Christmas luncheon at the home of Jean Fowler on
Tuesday.December 18.al 11:30a.m.
Members are asked to bring a gill for a boy or girl currently at
the Children’s Home.
Call Barbara Moore at 321 -0964 for more Information.

CALENDAR
Narcotics Anonymous to meet
Narcoties Anonymous meets Friday at 11 p.m. al the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Husband haunted by wife’s sexual past
D EAR A B U T : 1 have been
reading your articles for a long
time, but I’ve never seen a
problem like mine.
I've been married for 16 years.
When I was married. I was 25
and my wife was 22. 1 was u
virgin, but she wasn't On our
honeymoon she confessed that
she had slept with four of her
previous boyfriends. Now. every
lime we make love. I wonder
who she's thinking of — and
who she's comparing me with.
It ulso bothers inc during the
daytime when my co-workers
talk abut who's fooling around,
because I wonder If they know
abut my wife’s past.
Abby , pl ease urge y o u r
readers to abstain from sex until
marriage, because the most
important gift a person can give
a spouse Is virginity.
How do others deal with this? I
have forgiven my wife, but I am
still haunted bv her past sins.
D EAR BOTHERED: You can t
rewrite history, so don't dwell on
the past. Not to belittle the value
of virginity, tint one who Is not
able to give a spouse that very
special gift is not necessarily a
bad person. A far greater gill
would lx* a lifetime o f devotion.
D E A R A B B Y : A reader wattled
to know why Joggers and run­
ners run in the streets instead of
on sidewalks. The reasons are
varied: There may not lx- a
sidewalk: I he sidewalk may not
lx* continuous: the sidewalk may
In poor repair, blocked by low
branches, made hazardous by
drivers who don't slow down
when iKieking out of driveways,
or lx* occupied by other pedes­
trians or small children playing.
The sidewalk may he concrete,
whereas the street m ay lie
hlaeklop — and therefore a softer
surface upon which lo run.
As for runners who run al
night, those branches
overhanging the sidewalks can
lx- even more hazardous at night
when they ore obscured by the
darkness Ilian In the daytime
when they are Just an Inconve­

PI
y

ADVICE

A B IG A IL
V A N BUREN

nience.
If those who choose to run for
aerobic exercise are to live In
h a r m o n y wi t h mo t o r i s t s ,
bicyclists and pedestrians, these
suggest i ons should ke e p
everyone safe and happy:
Runners should run on side­
walks or designated pathways
whenever possible. They should
always remember lo wear bright
or reflective pieces of elolhlug.
Thanks. Abby. for priming
always run on the lefthand side
o f the road III order to see this.
R U S S PEERY.
oncoming traffic that's on the
H E L E N A , MONT.
same side, always cross al cor­
ners and obey other traffic and
C O N F ID E N T IA L TO A L L
pedestrian laws, and always
P A R E N T 8 : Parents who want to
carry Identification.
R U N N IN G S A F E IN irain their child hi the way he
DEAR

f

Thank you for some useful tips
for runners. According to the
California Deparimciil of Motor
Vehicles, walkers and Joggers
should always FACE oncoming
traffic. Carrying Identification Is
also Important. A reader wrote to
relate the tragedy of a loved one
who was killed by a hit-and-run
driver. And because he carried
no Identification, he remained
uiiliidcntlflcd until the bureau of
missing persons located him In
the county morgue.
D E A R A U B Y : W ou ld you
please do road travelers a favor
by priming ihls as an open letter
lo disc Jockeys everywhere?
"Dear Disc Jockey: W e appre­
ciate the information and entert ut nmenl you pr ov i de , bill
please, please tell us the city you
are broadcasting from. Siallon
call letters mean nolliiug lo a
stranger in your area, so we

S
ADJACENT TO SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
(

Alanon members to congregate

L

A la non will inert at H p.m. Sunday at Chrlsi United
Methodist church at Ciiimlv Road 427 and Tucker Drive.
Sanlord.

ItL V tS T f* h a l l o w

*

L 1 M3 45 * 00*

Sanford Rotarians to meet

f

Rotary Club nl Sanloril meets every Monday .it noon, al the
Sanford Civic Center

l

IS

2:00 4:30^ ' i/I/if [lu m p 1:30 3:15 5:00^1
7:30 9:45
8 45 8:30 10:15
|FGI3| J
rpcTTI J[ l i U l i t l TOO

r Iht* llmi-lc. sloiy
itx- N u K r.K tu r
10 30 |PC13| , ^

Poets to talk verse
First Florida Poets mcei al 10 a,m every Monday al the
Del.met Public Ltbrarv Interested pocis are welcome.

u o v n i Arm i) i

I M
(2.1U

C H

2:00

Welcome
Newcomer!
“ Florida’s o w n Nawcom er
service” — dedicated to
w elcom ing new residents.

Florida Owntd
Florida Mani|td
It is our desire to make you
leel welcome and to
acquaint you with our city.
II you are new in the area, or
know ol a family who is. a
phone call will bring a prompt
visit Irom our representative
She has brochures, civic infor­
mation, maps, and lo help wilh
your shopping needs, cards ol
inlroduclion and gilts Irom local
merchants.
Local m erchants are also
encouraged lo inquire about
the availability ol our services

Harriet Deas —
Sanford
322-3206

Diane Wright —
Lake Mary
32 3-1034

^
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4:00 6:00 ^
MISERY
&gt;*x&gt; 1“ oo
m J , THE ROOKIE

J

v m ’o m

rSf

r The Ultimate Humtir 2 15 4:45^
f U O M M O X E
)
^ 1.30 1 401 00* 15 10 20 [~p^~| j
(

IN O en W E M

JA C O B S LA D D E R ,
FLA TUNERS
MBMB1

f

CMUC«*1«*C*I
CHILDS 9
K ay^

Pigeon Fanciers to gather
The Central Florida Pigeon Fanners Association meets tile
third Monday of each month al the Seminole County
Agricultural Center, 4300 Orlando Drive. Sanford For
Informal Ion. c all At i or lean Anderson al 8 3 1-8033

7:10-*30 P a il

2.) NAVY SEALS w o - n
30* AU DAY WBNISOAY

D O W N E R 'S G R O V E
RUNNING SAFE:

Old cars put in limelight
The Celery City Cruisers, an antique and classic automobile
elub In Seminole County, sp ollsters a display of old ears each
Saturday from 7 10 p.m In the Wal-Mart parking lot behind
Wendy's on l S Highway 17 92. Sanford. Non members are
welcome to bring their old ears or browse. For more
Information, rail Herbert Partridge at 322-3687

don't know whether you are in
-------............................................ " “ J
front o f or behind us. This can be themselves.
very Important when you arc
VAN BUREN
giving weather and road Infor­
D E A R A B B Y : Who said. *Tc
mation: plus, you do a disservice rather be right than be prcsl
to your advert L -r s , because d e n t"? I say It was Wcndel
many times we would have
W ilkie. My husband says it wai
stopped to purchase the pro­ Adlal Stevenson.
ducts or services they were
E U N IC E A N D SHELDON
selling — If only we knew where
D E A R E. A N D 8.: You’ re hot I
l hey were located!
wrong. It was Henry Clay, wht
"W e are retired and travel campaigned unsuccessfully fo:
with an RV. so we arc free to president five times. (P.S. I thlnl
stop whenever and wherever wc what this country needs Is i
p erso n who can be right u n d h
ch o o se . T h ere arc litera lly
president at the same time.)
thousands of us roaming the
highways who are apt lo stop for
a day. week or month in your
B F fo y tfJ fttM lm
community If something strikes
our fancy, and we always leave
Cu m a t r S t
money behind! So. lei us know
MWY. 17*92•322*7902
where you are. and we may Just
slop by foru while."
1.
) QUIGLEY D O W N UNDER

FREUTBR

2

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.

1:15 5:00A
Kevin
CHI f G H O S T
COSTSt K (5Prf’
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904-734-6031

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LET US REPLENISH TH E SEED OF FAITH THROUGH

Auamb/yOIOoi

Baptlat

’ J'Srt

Congregational

Church Of Qod
To List Your
Church 8#rvtc#s
On This Pagt
Contact Tha
Advertising

CONORSAATKMAl
CHRISTIAN CHURCH (NACCC)
2401 S Park An
322 4544
Ha* ThomaaP Taachul Mimttar
Church School
»301030 am
WoraMp
It 00 am
Faaowaftp Limchaon I X p m . a«ary
2nd Wadnaaday
I*ary laat Saturday. 400am Man a
Club Braaaiaat

A «*

• -

Eastern
Orthodox
IT . JOHN-* ORTHODOX
CATHOLIC CHURCH
274) Country Club Road
Pallor
Ha* Donald B*no«
Church phono 32I4IU or U044S7
Dotna liturgy
1000 am
Sunday School
1000 am

To Advertise In
This Directory
C a ll 322-2611

«T. PCT4R-S (PI4COPAL
CHURCH
TOO Hrnahart Hoad
Laka Mary. Fla
1407) 444LOAD
Tha Ha* Bavarly l Barga Hoc
SundayHoly Communion
4 00 a
Christian Education
IAII Agasi
»00 a
Childran'a Church
1000 a
Choral Cuchanat
(InChurch)
1000a
(Nuraary. provtdad lor mlanla
baginning a« • am through
church sarvtcal
Wadnaaday
Holy Communion
700 p

United Church
Of Chrtat

Morning Sarvlca
' Poaar 4 Pralaa'

CHRMT1AN FELLOWSHIP
ICongragaltonal • Chrtailan
(«angaiical • Halormad)
Ha* Donald Staadty. Paator
Laka Mary Community Bid
240 N. Country Club Rd
t my u « y
Church School
BtSam
WoraMp Caiabralion
tOOO
Nuraary Pronldad
TaUorrahrp Tuna
1100
Unitad Church Offlca
110 Polo Lana
Sanford. Florida

HOLY CNOU
401 Park A t#
R*v Frederick E Mann
R#ctor
Holy Eucharist
/ 30 am
1000am
Choral Eucharist
Adult Forum
915 am
Youth Education
9 45 am

rosn*

THE FOLLOWING FIRMS ENCOURAGE YOU TO ATTEND YOUR HOUSE OF WORSHIP THIS WEEK
IR IH O M
FUN ER AL M O M
OR

tharty" Smith and
BM Warbam

•Hi S t m i L « « # t Am .
Sanford 222-2131

LONOW OOD
BAR GAIN M OTORS

HUSKY
M A LTY
3 3 3 -0 1 6 1

n mm

•inns# u a •Pa a a t •m

3505 U l Emma Rd.

U

l

Mary

e * e

A U T O PARTS

Fam ous U n r i p e .
COUNTRY M
«
- r r s h o m y o m rta r
IS M FM M CM A V I.
M l IS M

NSATtna a
AIR C O N O m O M N M

SP tC IA L O A M A S
M U V M Y M R V 1C I
210 9 .

French Av*.

sahnss

COMPLETE SYSTEMS • ADDONS
FREE ESTIMATES* SERVICE ALL BRANDS
RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL
HEAT FUMP EXPERTS'*
nor caar t caaa aw
• IS

W. 2nd St. 929-3517

T N I M cK IB SIN A O IN C V
Insurance

W

W

Country Homs Furnishings
10 AM 3 PM

B U D BAKES
IMSURAMCB A M M C V
•ComPlata FunarH Sanacat •Cramaaion
•Martara 4 Monumanta • Piaarrangamania
322 9219

T h is 8pace
A v a ila b le
C a ll
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1
S econd Im a o i
CONSIGNMENT CLOTHING
COSTUMES • BALLOONS
103 E. 1st BTRCET
SH O I

C O U R TE S Y 1 9

D A IH A T iU

R E* 4 USED CARS 4 TRUCK)

SANA FINANCE OR RUT HSM 4 P4Y HER*
H t l 4 HrgFmay 17 44. lauNrd
Ranlard H47) 123 » l 71 OrtaaSa H47) 4244444

Vpacukjing a* Church inauraica Programa
s u m m s • u a r m ity • m a jo r m s m c a l

» 1 W. 1M., SuJM 206 322-0501
*

MOM6 AffUAMCI C B IN L INC.

“

a iu 'r n

O SBO R N'S ROOK
AMO BIRLR STORS
2599 Sanford Ave.

T h is Space
A v a ila b le
CaU
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

g

P

B

Fa* A4 Vaar FtaNag Haad* CBS

F ssM sr * U m r
(34S7 a Part A n .)
• Caanal C M M ar • Church Waar
• SRma a Hot* a lie .
JACKIE COOPER
EUOEHI COOPER

Ratlaurant and Food Sanrica
Eqvlpmant and Bupphaa
Pa/ty Oooda and Papar flood*

STSNSTROM
M ALTY
Herb Stenstrom and Staff

(407) 322-0290

■ a S jB S
M
•".'fl!

ACEAUTO
RADIATOR
RAOATOR
REPAIR SPECIALIST

JOHN'S AUTOMOTIVE
Complx* Automat** Rapaa

111 W . *7#l S L
•awtRid. F l 33773
3 9 0 -1 M 0

jakn 11 'ltilima Jr
aamw a ■

2561 S. French Av.

LOCAl l * OtNNED t OPERATIO
HON RUSSI a STAFF

2S29 Iroquois Av.

322-2070

K e n Pum m el
G sa nQ v
Nwy 1340. Sm M
311 TIM

323-1933

ORSOO RY L U M S IR
TR U R V A L U IH A R D W A R E
500 Maple Ave., Sanford

p n p m HELPING YOU
)

W S S i is WHAT WE
mmrnm
do best
3222221 3954119
4194 N. U.4. HWV 1743

euoeer

K IN K IR N 'S
TR A N SM ISSIO N S
323-3040
500 Laurel A m .

Sanford

W IN N -D IX IE STORES
and Employees

FARKBRM KTNR
HAIR SALO N
BOC PARKIR4MTER — -THE MSN WITH
THS MAOtC HAMM"
M0MQUS EOWAROS - MAR. TECHNICIAN
■SM.1EM
*24*411
24*4*11

CflUHAL
BOSH
IIQ H F I

k it a u s a s t
&gt; u a a u r ir *
333-2SM
IU E .F W T t n u » « r

QINO’S CAFE

C H U R C H 'S
PRISO C H IC K IH
era Ptecis l i t t l e p r i c e s -

711 FRENCH AVE.. 8ANFOBO
BtUMcCsasy 332-0233

JIM ROWS
P U T CONTROL

NARRRLL A M V B R L V
THANSMISSIOM
David Beverly and Stall

^

1402) 334-0204
M l E Jam Plata
! • * « fl urn

A a 6 ROOFING
RE-ROOFING - REPAIRS NEW ROOFS
• LICENSED • BONDED
• INSURED
922-S417

711 N. Nary 17441 u g 111 4L M l

3 2 2 -3 8 8 3 " ’

PRIME CARRIER FOR AAA
Sanford A laka Mary
Pari* ol Oanaia
Oataan Oallnna A Long*ou&lt;J

Ww m

I I S

CBNTRAL SVSTBMS

W ILLIAM S A SON
TO W IN O S C R V IC I

••••EAMPRIM444R

BASKm(St)R0B8niS

723-4741

S41-1ST Laka M4ry SNR.
LlA* Mary. FL 32744
.
407 3301700

O

ORLANDO AREA I
4*4-4413
LOHQWOOO. HWV 1743
334-1111

3 2 1 -7 1 5 9

T H E A F F L E BASK I T
Tuka SM

T h is Space
A v a i la b l e
CaU
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

O PTICAL
GREAT SERVICE
GREAT EYEWEAR
Noa iarg*r ft aJfhaa To Sana Yoa 4aliar

901

E. 25th SL 3234090

Fins HsSsn Rsttaufsm
•UNOAT
MUMCN
TE44-SPJ1

■■

SUtW EU
LUNCH 4PECIAL4
M ON.SAT

9999 S ORLANDO OIL

3241919

T h is 8pace
A v a i la b l e
C a ll
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1
SUPPORT YOUR
LOCAL CHURCHES
$6.00 Per Week
To Advertise On This :
Per-Call 322-2611 :

�2TB

Sanford Hsrafd, Sanford, Florida — Friday, Oscsmbsr 14, 1N0 — M

Religion
»A

IN B R I E F

•t ■

£ “: THrv-j
)■' . i uTi

rt

a t e . 1.

Partake in active peace this season

'A Christmas FssthraT
SANFORD — The music ministry of Flret Baptist Church,
519 Parti Ave., Sanford, will present the Christmas musical “ A
Christmas Festival." The musical will be perform ed by the
oanctuary choir on Sunday at 8:55 p.m. under the direction of
Rev. Jim Cornell. Rev. Floyd Blake. Jr., pastor.
The public Is cordially invited to attend.

Annual Christmasdhmsr sst
SANFORD — The Lutheran Church of the Redeemer. 2525
Oak Ave.. will hove its annual Christmas dinner Sunday at
5:30 p.m. Special highlight this year will be the appearance o f
Annette Bruce, a storyteller from Eustis. Main entree will be
prepared at church, while salad, vegetable dishes and dessert
are to be cany-in Items.

Woman dissasd In whits announced
SANFORD — The women fend missionary departments of the
Rescue Church of God, 1700 W . 13th SI., will present 100
women tn white on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The theme will be
“ Wom en Working Together on the Battlefield for the L ord ."
The speaker for the event will be Evangelist Patterson from
Altamonte Springs. Mother Blanche B. Weaver, pastor.

Christmas Cantata sst for Sunday
LAKE M ARY - First Baptist Church Markham Woods. 5400
Markham Woods Road, will be having their Christmas Cantata
on Sunday at 7 p.m. The cantata. "W hite Christm as" by Lynn
Hodges and John E. Coates, will be presented by the sanctuary
choir. The service will be under the direction of BUI Schahn,
music director. Soloists In the cantata will be Elba Colon. Diane
Parker. Mark Bloom. Inex and Lorry Fisher with Robin
Terwllleger and Rebekah Colon, acting and narration by Andy
Kline.
On Sunday afternoon, from 2 to 4:30 p.m., m em ber* and
friends of the church are invited to the pastor's home in Lake
Mary for a Christmas Open House.

U va nativity tcana to ba praaantad
D ELTO N A — A Live Nativity Scene wUI be presented al Fort
Smith Blvd. Baptist Church. 229 Ft. Smith Blvd.. Deltona, on
Dec. 21.22, from 7*9 p.m.
On Dec. 23. there will be a outside play, with the choir
singing several Christmas songs surrounding the nativity
scene and a candlelight service afterwards.
Pastor Jimmy Moore invites all to come to help celebrate this
Christmas holiday. For more information call (407) 323-0442.

'Christmas Classics’ performed
SANFORD — The sanctuary choir and orchestra o f Sanford
Church o f Cod. 801 W. 22nd St., the "Christm as Classics"
Christmas story at 7 p.m. Sunday. The public ia invited to
attend. Rev. Troy A. Baggett, pastor, and Rev. David L. Baker,
minister o f music and youth.

First annivsrssry cslsbrstsd
SANFORD — Calvary Christian Center will celebrate Its first
anniversary with an annual homecoming service Sunday at the
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. services. "Special guest wtlliju d u rfs .
Donnie Rogers from Dotham. Ala. Dinner will be served In the
feUowshlp hall after the morning service. Pastor M ax Poole and
the congregation Invite the public to celebrate with them.

SI. Jam ss to present 'The Stranger*
SANFORD — The youth department of Saint Jam es A.M.E.
Church. 819 Cypress Ave.. will present a Christmas perfor­
mance entitled "T h e Stranger" on Dec. 21 at 7 p.m. The event
will be held al the Sanford Civic Center. 401 East Seminole
Blvd. Please plan to come and bring family and friends. A
donation of $2.50 is being asked.

•t us know what's going on
The Sanford Herald welcomes news about church activities
id news for publication In the Religion page each Friday.
The following suggeslions arc recommended to expedite
tbllcatlon:
. . .
1. All Items should be typed or written legibly and Include
e name of a person who can be contacted and a daytime
lone number.
2. Th e deadline Is 11 a.m. Wednesday before publication.
There Is no charge for publication.

It w as a circus at the mall today. There
were so m any people it w as hard to walk
around. The public address syatei
its announcements, con v e n ation
like bees swarm in g around a M ve and
recorded Christmas music from competing
stores )‘*0 Little T ow n o f Bethlehem*' didn't
stand a chance against "Rudolph, the Red
Nosed Reindeer") made for a cacophony o f
confusion.
One weary-faced mother had the appear­
ance o f a walking ChOatmaa present. She
had gifts plied up so high in front o f her that
she could hardly see where she
and the heavy
a crying thr ee-year-

o f her dress and the scene had all the
Ingredients o f a classic Norman Rockwell
It would need a title, 1 thought. Something
tongue-in-cheek Ufa "Christm as Peace. ”
fun n y? Yes and no. T h e probetm is that the
hassled mother represents many o f us In
microcoam. Christ a birth Is upon us and
there's sdll so much to do. W ill that mother
find peace this Christmas? Will we? That
m ay depend on our definition o f peace.
There are two kinds. I believe, one passive
pence suggests highly unrealistic
no-conflict, no-strain living. It Is
eved in Isolation from the real
liv e pea ce la a by-product that

comes from exhausting one's sell on a
worthwhile mission or endeavor, the out­
come o f which may not be known Immedi­
ately. If ever.
The latter I would submit is the spiritual
peace God gives to those who engage
themselves In the welfare o f others. You and
I will find peace this Christmas. In direct
p r o p o r t i o n to the d e g r e e w e spen d
ourselves. It will come not from withdrawal,
but from Involvement; not from receiving,
but from giving: not from wrapping pres­
ents. but wrapping people — In our love.
Show me the way to Your peace. Lord, the
kind the world knows not of.
This artkie w et aufenvIMefe fey Saw. 1MW* ferae* a f feint
IfepMit CtwrcX. It* fear* Ana , f a r t a i ttm m s «
ferae Bauer, s h W e n c i a r t W fresi fe te Jersey.

Holy Cross receives
grant for renovations
•yi
Harold stall writer
SANFORD H o ly C r o s s
E p i s c o p a l C h u r c h . 4 1 0 B.
Magnolia Ave.. has been notified
that It will receive a grant of
$29,000 from the special state
commission for historical resto­
ration.
The grant given to Holy Croaa
was the largest amount given by
the commission during Its recent
session.
The money will be used for the
replacement o f the roof on the
church building. The grant ia
expected to be received by no
later than mid February.
Drs. Storm and Jeannie Rich­
ards. along with Bob and Bettie
Sonnenberg were Instrumental
tn helping obtain the grant
through thetr work with local
committee members as well as
lobbying efforts In Tallahassee.
The ctyurch w as founded tn
1873, mostly through the efforts
of Gertrude Sanford, wife of city
founder Henry Sheldon Sanford.
It Is the oldest church tn Sanford
and the fourth oldest Episcopal

Church in the entire state of
Florida.
A hurricane that struck Banford tn 1800 demolished the
original church hmidtnga Even
though the same storm wiped
out the citrus crops o f many of
the pariabonera. money was
raised by the 42-family con­
gregation. and a new church was
bum, being completed tn 1002
It s h i g h s p i r e s t o o d a s a
landmark tn the area for many
years.
Then, after a period o f marked
growth, another rtlsastrr. Fire
demolished moat o f the building
and all of Its records in 1023.
Again a successful rebuilding
a undertaken, and the
as tt stands today was
Tin 1929.
M oney collected from the
congregation and from this latest
grant will be used for a new roof,
remodeling the bell tower, re­
p a i n t i n g t he e x t e r i o r a n d
waterproofing the basement.
Church officials hope to apply
for another grant In the summer
of 1991. to be used for re-roofing
of the Parish hall.

Th s altar Is tHs only feature changed in the 69-ysar-old church.

- **»■»* - a m ,*- ««»**•■■.&gt; » - * » fe

Christmas E v e ? "

What do you say to a mother
and father whose year-old son
dies on Christmas Eve? What do
you aay to yourself — If you are a
clergyman who has been telling
people that Christmas means
God loves us?

And through many Christmas
that, the question
always came back. Now older
and wiser, the priest still has no
answer. But he feels today thal
the question Itself was wrong.
"W e spend too much lime
a sk in g qu estion s about the
meaning of life and the meaning
o f our own existences. The
meaning.” he has discovered,
“ is tn living itself."
Eves after

GEORGE
PLAGENZ

T h ese were the questions
haunting the young priest.

"A n d through blurred vision. I
followed the server back to the
sacristy."
Th e question stuck like a hard

* tv# *\iiV lfew

^r~J

on Christfiias Day?

What do

"W h e n I finished speaking."
he explained, "th e family rose
and came out to the aisle beside
the casket. They stood there for
a moment. Then the father, the
mother and each of the children
bent over, kissed the baby and
turned and walked to the bock of
the church.

* ,W

lump In his throat: W hy. God. of
all times, on Christmas Eve?
He t h o u g h t o f w h a t the
Church would aay — that "God
w as taking baby Robbie to a
happiness even greater than he
had known in his ramlly." But
right now, although he may
have believed that, he couldn't
b u y It.
" W h y . G o d , on

And that no doubt 1s true.
S tu d d ert-K en n cd y said thal
when he stood before the etem a1
Judgment seat, he expected God
to ask him Just one question:
"W ell, what did you make o f It?"
Not "how did life treat you?"
— so that those whose lives were
filled with misfortune and trage­

dy would have It made up to
them In heaven.
W h a t s h a l l we say on
Christmas Day — this C hristmas
Day?
Only the old story in the old
way:
God's love Is with us still.
And wander as we will, and far
as we may stray.
Oh. never doubt, His love wilt
search us out
On Christmas Day.
Though faith may falter, with
her banners furled.
Still, still across a grim and
dark'nlng world,
He follows there.
So take your Father's hand.
You will not lose the way.
Love will be near, and Love will
understand
On Christmas Day.

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
ASSCMSIV Ofe 0 0 0
Freedom Aaaemfely ol God, ISIS W 510 81., Sanford
Weklva Aaaembfy ol God. 1878 Otion Ad . Longwood
BAfeTiaT
Antioch Baptial Church, Oviedo
CM.try S w llil Church, Cryatel Like 8 3rd. Lake Mery
CMMlborry Baptltt Church. 770 Seminole Bind
Control Beotlal Church. 3101 W li t 81.
Chuiuolo Flrot Soph*'
Clearwater Ulooionory Boplitt Church. Soul ho* it Ad
Counlryiida Baptist Church, Country Club Road. Laka Mary
First Baptist Church. 819 Park Av*
First Baptist Church ol Altamonte Springs. Rt 434 Allsmonla Springs
First Baptist Church ol Foratt City
Flrot Baptist Church ol Geneva
First Baptist Church. Markham Woods
First Bap"sl Church ol laka Monro*
First Baptist Church ol Longwood, 891 East SA 434
First Baptist Church ol Oviedo
First Baptist Church ol Sanlando Springs
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church. 1101 W 13lh SI
Forest Baptist Church ol Ostaon
Fountain Head Baptist Church. Oviedo
Hop* B «rtm Church, Forest City Community Canter. Forest City
Independence Baptist Mis* O n e laagua Bldg. Longwood
Jordan Missionary Baptist Church. 920 Upsaia Ad
Ughthousa Baptist Church. (88 Longwood ■Laka Mary Road
Lekeviaw Baptist Church. ITS L ake*** An*. laka Mary
Macedonia Mission Baptist Church. Oak Hill Ad . Oslaan
Missionary Baptist Church, Worth Ad . Enterprise
Morning Glory Baptist Church, Genera Hay
Ml Morten Prtmltlra Baptist. 1101 locust A r e , Sanford
Ml Oirve Missionary Baptist Church. Sanlando Springs A d , Longwood
Ml Sinai Missionary Baptist Church. 1800 Jerry A.*
Mt l ion Missionary Baptist. Sipes A,*
New Bethel Missionary Church. 9lh St A Hickory Am
New Mt Car.ary Missionary Baptist. 1109 W 12th St
Naw Salem Pnmili,* Baptial Church. 1809 W 12th SI
New Testament Baptist Church. Quahaly Inn. North Longwood
Naw Mt Zion Baptial Church. 1720 Pear Are
Now Lit* Fellowship. 4991 E Laka On,*. Caasaibarry FI 32708
Northside Baptist Church. Chuluota
People s Baptist Church. 1201 W First Street. Sanford
Pmacrosl Baptist Church. M9 W Airport Bird
Pram* Lake Bapttsi. Ridge Ad . Fern Pars
Progress Missionary Baptial Church, Midway
Second Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church West San lord
Smyrna Baptist Church. 280 Orartrook Or . CakSeibarry
Starlight Baptist Church. 190 Bahama Ad
SI Jamas Missionary Baptial Church. Si Ad 415. Oslaon
SI Luka Missionary Baptist Church ol Cameron City, me
SI Paul Baptist Church, 113 Pm* Am
SI Mellhaws Baptist Church. Canaan Hgta
St John * Missionary Bepl'kt Church 920 Cypress St
Springfield Missionary Baptial. 12th t Cedar
Suniand Baptist Church. 2828 Palmetto
Tempi* Baptial Church. Palm Springs Ad . Altamonte Springs

Victory Baptist Church, OM Orlando Ad. at Hosier Aye.
Westvlew Baptist Church, 4100 P-ola Road (44A)
William Chapel Missionary Baptist Church, Mar* A William SI.,
Altamonte Springs
Zion Hop* Baptial Church, 712 Orange Ay#

CATHOLIC
All Souls Catholic Church, 902 Oak As*., Sanlord
Church ot the Nativity. Lake Mary
Our Laka o l tha Lakes Catholic Church. 1310 Maalmlllan, Dalian#
St Ann's Catholic Church, Dogwood Trail. DaBary
St Augustin* Catholic Church, Sunial Dr . near Button Ad., Caasaibarry
SI Clare Catholic Community meat* at Osteen Civic Canter
St Mary Magadalana Catholic Chuttn, Maitland Av*.,
Allsmonla Spring*
CHRISTIAN
First Christian Church. 1607 S Sanlord Av*.
First Christian Church ol Longwood, 1400 E E. Williamson Ad , Longwood
Grace Chrtsliwi Church, Mealing at Seminole VMCA, SIS Longwood-lake
Mary Ad , Laka Mary
Lakavlaw Christian Church. Bear Laka Ad., al Jamison
Northern# Christian Church, Florida Haven Or. Maitland
Sanlord Christian Church. 132 W Airport Blvd
South Seminole Chrtsllen Church. 300 W SR 434, Oviedo
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
First Church of Christ Scientist. 978 Markham Woods A d , Longwood
CHURCH OF CHMST
Church ot Christ. 1312 S Par* Avt
Church ol Christ *1 Lake Elian. U S 1792, N Caasaibarry
Church ot Christ. S00 Palm Springs D r. Altamonta Springs
Church ol Christ. Ganava
Church ot Christ. Longwood
Church ol Christ. W ITthSl
Northsid* Church ot Chrtst. Fla Haven Dr. Maitland
South Seminole Church ol Christ. 8410 Lake Howell Ad
CHURCH OF QOO
Church ol God. 303 Hickory
Church of God. 803 W 22nd St
Church ol God. Oviado
Church of God Holmes*. Laka Monro*
Church ot God Mission. Enterprise
Church ol God. 1402 W tern St
Church ol God in Chnal. Oviedo
Church ol God ot Prophecy. 2809 S Elm A ,*
Church ot God ot Prophecy 1709 S Persimmon Ay#
Church ot God ot Prophecy. 499 S Central. Oviedo
Church ol God I7in Day). Deltona Community Center, Deltona lErac
Room)
Rescue Church ot God. 1700 W tXh S t. Sanlord
true Church ot God. 2700 Ridgewood Are . Sanlord
CONGREGATIONAL
Cong r* gal tonal Christian Church 2401 S Par* A v * . Sanford
EASTERN ORTHODOX
Eastern Ortnodoi Church St Georg*. 2001 Dylan Way. Welland
Eastern Orthodoa Churcn. SI Steven s o tO C A . t*93 lake Emma Road.
Longwood. FL 12790
Eealam Orthodoa Church St John Orthodoa. 2743 Country Club Road

Sanlord
episcopal
All Sainla Episcopal Churcn, E. DaBary Av*., Enterprise
Christ EDitt o o il Chtifch, Lonmpood
Episcopal Church ot the New Covenant, ITS Tuakawilla Road. Wtnltr

Spring*
Holy Cross Episcopal. Par* Av*. al 4th St., Sanlord
St. Peter* Episcopal Church, 700 Afnahart Road. Lake Mary
St Richard * Church. 9131 Lake Howell A d , Winter Park
The Church ol the Good Shepherd, Maitland. 331 Lake Av*
Celvery Christian Canter, 900 W. 4th St., Sanlord
Living Wears Cathedral, Waal IN 48 and Kannal Road, Sanlord
jawiSM
Bath Am Synagogue mealing at Comer ol Sand Lake and County Lin*
Road, West 14
Tempt* Shalom, 1798 Elkcarn Blvd., Deltona
LUTHCRAN
Ascension Lutheran Church, Overbrook Dr , Ceeeelberry
Good Shepherd United Lutheran, 2917 8 Ortando Dr
Holy Cross Lutheran Church ol Lake Mary. 790 Bun Drive. Laka Mary
Lord Of LH* Lutheran Church, 398 TuakewUI* Ad , Winter Springs
Lutheran Church ol feroetdeno*. Oahona
Lutheran Church ol Ih* Redeemer. 2828 Oak Avenue
Messiah Lutheran Church, Golden Day* Dr. S Hwy. 17 92 Casselberry
St Lube* Lulltc-an Church, At *29. Slavic
Si Stephen Lutheran Church, 434 jus! West ol 1-4, Longwood
M fT H O M T
Barnet I United Memonal Church, f . DaBary Av# . Enterprise
Bear Lake United Methodist Church
Bethel A M E. Church. Canaan Hgta
C asi * i berry Community United Methodist Church. Hwy f 7 92 Riney
Ftidg* M , C m iiN fr y
Christ United Methodist Church, Tucker Dr. Suniand Estate*
DaBary Community Methodist Church, W High banks Ad . DaBary
First United Methodist Church, 419 Pit* Are
First Method!si Church ol Oviedo
Fust United Methodist Church ot Geneva
Grace United Methodist Church. 499 N Country Club Rd Lake Mary
Grant Chapel A M E Church, Oviado
Oa*grove Methodist Church. Oviado
Otleen Methodist Church, Cor ol Carpenter 9 Murray S i. Oslaan
Paol# Wesleyan Mtlhodtal. 9980 Wayside Dr, Sanlord
Pvonser Malhodtsl Church. 110 N Poplar A t e . Sanford
Sanlando United MathodiSI Church. SA 434 and M. Longwood
St James A M E . Nh at Cypres*
St Luke M B Church ol Cameron City. Inc. Beerdall oil S A 48 E
SI Mary's A M E Church. St Rt 4tS. Oslaan
SI Paul * Methodist Church. Osteen A d . Enterprise
Siratiord Memonal Church. $ OwBary
First Church ot the Naiaren*. 2891 Sanlord Av*
Geneva Church ol the Neurone. 8 R 44. Geneva
Laa* Mary Church ol the Naurane. 1711 Crystal Laa* A v *. Lake Mary
Longwood Church ol the Naurane. Wayman 9 Jessup Av* . Longwood

Markham Woods Church ot the Naurane. SR 44. 3W Miles W**l Ol 14
at the Weklva River
PM U VTEAIAN
Gallon* Presbyterian Church. Holland Blvd 9 Austin Av* . Gallon*
First Presbyterian Church at Lake Mary
First Presbyterian Church. Oak Av*. 9 3rd Si
First Presbyterian Church ol DaBary. E Highland
SI Andrew* Presbyterian Church, 9813 Bear L*k# Rd
91 Marks Presbyterian Church. 1021 Palm Springs Ad . Allamont* Spgs
Tuscawllla Presbyterian Church. 3800 W ail Slate Ad 426. Oviado Fla
Upsaia Community Presbyterian Church, Upsal* Rd
Westminister Presbyterian Church. Rad Bug Ad . Caasaibarry
SEVENTH DAV ADVENTIST
Forest Lake Set an in Day Advanlisl Churcn, Hwy 438. Foratl City
Mar* Hill Seventh Day Advanlisl Church. 801 E 2nd S t. Sanford
Sanlord Seventh Day Advanlial Church. 8818 N Highway 427
Seventh Day Advanlisl Church. Maitland Av* , Altamonta Spring*
Winter Springs Seventh Day Advanlisl Church. SO S Moss Rd
OTHER CHURCHES
All Failh Chapel. Camp Saminol*. Wakiva Park, Rd
Allan i A M E Church. Otrv* 4 12th
Baardall Avenu* Holiness Chapel. Beerdall Av*
Chuluota Community Church
Church ot Jesus Chnal ol Lallar Day Saints 7318 Park A n
Family Church Chntlian Canter, 1844 Sammola Blvd . Cassatbavy
First Born Church ol Ih* Living God. Midway
First Church of Christ. Scianllsl. Elfcam Blvd and Venus S I. Deltona
First Pentecostal Church ol Longwood
First Panlacoslal Church ol Sanlord
Full Gospel Church ol God in Christ. 1829 Jerry Av* . Sanlord
Full Gospel Tabernacle. 7724 Country Club Roed
Grace B&gt;bie Church. 2844 8 Sanford Av*
Holy Tnnly Church ol God in Chnal. 1914 Mangouslin* At*
Kingdom Hall -&gt;f Jehovah s Witness. Laa* Monro* Unit. 1882 W Third St
Lane Monroe Chapel. Orange Blvd . La** Monro*
Mt Olive Hoiineiv Church. Oak Mill Rd Oaluen
Neighborhood Alliance Church. 301 Markham Wood* Rbad. longwood
Panlacoslal Open B&gt;bi* Taternaci* Ridgewood Av* . Ott 29th opposite
Seminole High School
Praise and Powar Church. I l l W Wilbur Av* Lake Mary
Rolling Hills Moravian Churcn. SR 434 Longwood
San Ion] Alliance Church. 1401 S Park At*
Sanlord BUM* Church 2*60 Sanlord Ars
Second Church Of Tn* Lir ng God 3428 IWardan A r e , Sanford
The Full Gospel Church ol Our Lord Jesus Christ Washington 31 Ca
naan City
The Salvation Army 700 W 74th SI
Triumph. The Church ot Ih* New Age 1008 W 8tn Si
United Church ot Christ Altamonte Community Chapel Allamont*
Springs
United Church ot Christ Christian Fellowship, 280 H Country CluO Rd ,
laa* Mary
U C S S Spiritual Cent-* 128 A South Vo-'Jt-a A,* Comer ot Qraret md
Volusia Av* . O'ange City
Wmier Springs Community Evangelical Congragalionai 211 Wade S t.
Winter Spnngi
„

�••-Sanford HorsM, Sanford. Floiida - Frtdiy, Oscambar 14, 1990

by CMc Yawnt

BLOND! E

Candida infection
causes vaginitis
O O T T : Have you
ever heard of C a n d i d a
syndrome? What causes It. and
what Is the treatment?
O S A R R B AD R R i Candida Is a
yeast that causes oral Infection
(thrush) In Infants, vafltnltla In
women taking antibiotics and
v a r i o u s a ki n I n f e c t i o n s In
rfia h rtif and persons with defi­
cient Immune systems.
A few years ajp&gt;, the concept of
a yeast syndrome, called chronic
candidiasis, w as popularised by
several non-M.D. authors who
believed that It caused chronic
f a t i gu e , d e p re s s io n a n d III
health. Candidiasis became a fad
Illness, a designer disease that
toppled hypoglycemia as the
affliction o f the decade. (Can­
didiasis has subsequently been
nudged out o f first place by
chronic Epstein-Barr virus In­
fection.)
•
rsn dld l**** Is diagnosed by a
fungus culture, and It Is treated
with nystatin (MycosUtln).

a n d death.
Evidently, your
d e r ma to l o g is t c h o s e to a d ­
m i n i s t e r the a n t i b i o t i c
tetracycline.

99 Of aberan

8 7 r^ T

M M
DR. O O T T ] I have a
rash and blisters all over my
body, which my dermatologist
has diagnosed as pemphigoid
dermatitis. He says there Is no
knosm cause, no known cure
and It will last 12-18 months.
I’m taking tetracycline three
times a day. Can you comment
on this?

mnSSSSt.)

“ SSfL*1

MEDICINE

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assu m ed the king was with
West, so he put In the sevenspot. It's easy to see the normal
outcome. West w ins the Jack,
plays a heart ruffed by declarer,
w h o now finesses West for the
trump king, picks up the suit
and runs the spades to make his
contract. But Katz won the first
diamond trick, not with the Jack
but with the king, and he then
led a spade. Declarer won the
ace In dummy and cashed the
ace of diamonds, certain that the
remaining Jack w a s with East.
W h e n East showed out. the
contract was set. O f course the
pl ay did not h a ve to wor k
(declarer might have played a
low diamond from dummy on
the second round, rather than
the ace), but W est's deception
gave declarer the opportunity to
go wrong.
(01990. NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

*A

by Bob Thavas

FRANK AND ERNEST

TH IS I»Atf I T U

rue
OF

TFAHfPOftrATIOH.
,t H * * «*

a -!*

• IW H N 4 M

by Jim Davit

GARFIELD

The year ahead could be a
v e ry favorable one fo r you
because some o f your Innermost
d e s ir e s mi g h t be fu lfille d ,
especially those which are o f a
financial or worldly nature.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Conditions In general look
rather benevolent for you In this
cycle both socially and material­
ly. Happy times arc ahead If you
keep a foot In each camp. Know
where to look for romance and
you’ll find it. The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker Instantly reveals
which signs arc romantically
perfect/ for you. Mall 92 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44 101-3428.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) S o m e th in g of real
significance financially might
develop for you at this time
through the capable efforts of
someone to whom you're em o­
tionally linked.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Because of your Inclinations to
tre a t e v e r y o n e wi t h w hom
you're Involved equally, regard-

ANNIE
D EAL'
WELL.WFY.T 7
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TO PC MO
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in G a p and
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♦ 743

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Opening lead: A 3

y

less o f their titles or Influence,
you could be in for a pleasant
surprise through a person you'd
least suspect.
PI8CR8 (Feb. 20-March 20)
Don't be afraid to elevate your
sights In this time frame where
your objectives und goals arc
concerned. You could be luckier
than you think going after big
game.

ARIB8 (March 21-April

U-I4-M

19)
Y o u c o u ld be l uc k y to d a y
through your social associations,
either with Individuals per sc or
through some d u b or organiza­
tion. It behooves you to make
your presence felt.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Today Is a great day to present
your case to the exact person
who can do you the most good.
Your chances o f gaining his/her
cooperation are excellent.

z

•

you should be able to find ways
to Increase your earning capaci­
ty. cither through your present
sources or a new side venture.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) En­
deavors In which you have an
active management role have
excellent chances of producing
desirable results at this time.
Don’t abdicate your authority.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) At
present the ways and means
might not be totally discernible
to you. but positive Influences
arc starting to permeate your
uffalrs. You may now know
success where you previously
experienced failure.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Ei­
ther today or very shortly you
may receive some news that will
elevate your expectations and
optimism. It pertains to a devel­
opment you've been wishing
would happen.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Someone who has your best
Interest at heart might make a Your long range financial pro­
decision on your behalf today jections arc starting to look
that could have far reaching, better and better. Lady Luck
favorable effects. This person might Intervene at this time to
has Intervened for you pre­ start you off on a new. more
lucrative path.
viously.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) 1 0 1 9 9 0 . N E W S P A P E R EN­
You arr now In a cycle where TERPRISE ASSN.

by Leonard Starr

by Warnor Brothers

BUGS BUNNY
know t h u s nch

NGMuAAT DCNT YOU

tAuSE THAT TREASURE
MAD A CURSE ON IT •IF YOU
MAD TAKEN EVEN O t f U T T lE
GOLD CON TWE ORSE WOULD
have fallen ON YOU.'

GO GET US ACQUfU

now, t w

r r ic u

it

17 Artftemtc,

la an unusual skin dfsorder.
marked by areas of Itchy, raised,
huge, reddish blisters. It Is not a
h a r m f u l c o n d i t i o n a n d le
believed to be an autoimmune
d i se a s e . In w h i c h p a t ie n t s
become allergic to their own
akin. Prednisone (cortisone) Is
the preferred treatment and will
usually shorten the course of the
aliment and prevent new lesions
from breaking out. Pemphigoid
m u s t be d i f f er en t i at e d ( b y
b io p s y ) from p e m p h i g u s , a
serious, related disease that Is
much more difficult to treat and
can lead to generalised Infection

TOUR BIRTHDAY
Dm . 18.1900

___

4 CosleS
7 Terse. enM
9 JaetUe'e 9n4

a s ^ --------- •

Pemphigoid

■yJ*
At the world championships
held In September In Geneva.
Ralph Katz made a deceptive
defensive play that caused de­
clarer to fail. 1 have changed
declarer's hand slightly and
have also altered the bidding to
conform to standard methods.
After North's two no- trump
opening. South's bids o f three
spades and four diamonds were
natural. North assum ed that
South had values that would
produce slam, and so bid six
diamonds. On lead. Katz tabled
his singleton club. Declarer took
d u m m y ' s ac e a n d q u i c k l y
cashed the A-K-Q of hearts,
throwing away his losing clubs.
He next led a low diamond from
dummy. He thought he fcould get
an Indication from East o f where
the diamond king might be
located. When East played low
without distress, declarer rightly

i

yC E C K A n C O C S ;

t

�&gt;

to ifo rd H r t i M , Sanford, Florida — F rW 'v , December 14, 1M0 — 7 1

Ltgil Nolle—
IR TtM C iR C M r COURT
OPTNERtRMTfctNTN
JUOICfAL CIRCUIT
POR T U B STATE OP
FLO* ISA
IMAMS P M
SEMINOLE COUNTY
FLORIDA
C M Ni.fa-MM-CA'iaF
; C IN T R U S T SAVINGS BAUX.
- formerly known u CENT RUST
SAVINGS AMO LOAM ASSOCI
ATIOM. formerly known o«
O A O t F I D I R A L SAVINGS
I ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
, (Ml
Pumntt.
»•
i T B N t V A . O LSEN , rial..

!

N O T IC IO F
FORECLOSURE SA LI
C IR C U IT COURT
Nebco to heroby given that ttw
Clork of A t C k n H Court of
SamtoaN County, Ptends. will,
on Mo I7M 4oy of January, loot,
• ! » : • A J* ., at Mb « W Front
Soar ft I N SambwN County
Courtkouoo. In toa Ctfy r i SonM r* FMrMo, ofMr Mr toM anO
toll Ot public outcry M Mo
h lf M t ana Boot bidder Mr caah,

aiu
lyaliloiMwlMMi
t t ^ SCFf P^^FIry^1Q u o C t I D N

Ltqal Nottc—

RETRR EMNTBBHTN

' H iT R f C IR C IM tC SO R T
R R TR S EM M TR H H V R

JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT

CASE NOti M M tlC A -M L / P
SUN BANK, NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION.
Ptotnttff.
M A L C O L M E . B L U B and
HORNE PROPERTIES, INC.,
N O TICE RP
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS H S E IB Y GIVEN
t h a t IB # m r R i i i I o a o R ,
MARYANNE MORSE. O ert of
Mo Circuit Court. Sami note
County. Florida, wM * Rw 1MB
Roy of January, l*rt, kotwoon
•ho hour* of 1l:M A M . and 3:10
F A , al Me woo* Nani dear al
the Seminole County Court
houoe, Sanford. Florida, offer
for eofo wtd sell al public aulcry
lo IBo Mgfwaf and hart Mddw
tar coaB. Mo followinf dwtrtood
prfoarli In l am lwala County,
FterMAlSwtt:
Lof L Bloch A, HIGHLAND
HILLS, accardtog to tho Rial
Maraaf aa recorded In Plot Bath
I I . Page M . el th# Public
Record* ol Somlnola County,

P r u p R i F|f

ntuaMO In Sam mot* County.
Florida, to-wit:
Unit M S -A . A L T A M O N T E
HEIGHTS, a condominium and
Interest In too
Doc Ioration at Condominium
fllod Fakruary U tiro. In Of­
ficial Record* Rook l « . roro
I I * FuMte Record* of SomlnoM County. FMrMo.
pursuant to Mo final docre* of
Mrodaturo entered In o c m
ponding In oald Court, Nw style
* at w h ic h la : C E N T R U S T
SAV IN O S B A N K . Iarm *rly
known a* C E N TR U S T SAVINGS
AN O LO A N A S SO C IATIO N ,
ferm arly known at O A O E
F E D E R A L S A V IN O S A N D
LO A N A S S O C IA T IO N O F
MIAMI. vs. T E R R Y A. OLSEN.
Otel.
WITNESS m y hand and of­
ficial teal of told Court Ml* 3rd
day of December. Itoo.
(SEAL!
By: Jana E. Jaeowk
Deputy Clark
Publish: DecemberT. It. 1000
DEA4I
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
FOR SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
PNo Number OMtl-C P

IN RE: ESTATE OF
CECIL B.CU LFIFP ER ,
Doc*e*ed
NO TICE OF
ADM INISTRATION
The edmlnlotrellon *1 the
• o l e l e o l C E C I L B.
CU LPEPPER, docseoed. File
Number fS M l-C P . lo pending In
ttw Circuit Court lor Seminole
County, F lo rid a , Probate
Dlvlllan, ttw eddrtti of which lo
P.O. Orewor C, Senlord. Florida
33771. The neme* and u M m m
ol tho percone I representative
•nd the p t r i o n e l ro p re M nlallvo't attorney or* M l
t--l---i|n,
OnIIfc
rl. D
RI'IvlRT.,
All Interaotod portent art
required to Ilia with ttilt court:
lo) All dolma again*! th* total*
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
AFTER TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION O F T H IS NOTICE and
lb) any ob|tctlon by an Inter**!
*d person to whom thlt notice I*
**rv*d that challenge? th* valid­
ity ol tho will, the qualification*
ol th* perianal rapremntatlv*.
venue, or |ur Iadlcttan ol the
Court W ITHIN TH E LATER OF
THREE M ONTHS A FTER THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
TH IS N O T IC E OR T H IR T Y
DAVS A F T E R TH E DATE OF
SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS
NOTICE ON T H E OJBECTING
PERSON.
ALL CLAIM S ANO OBJEC­
TIONS N O T SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED.
Publication ol thl* Notice hat
begun on December 14,10*0.
Per»onal Repreientellve
Stuart P. Culpepper
c/o 1401W. Falrbtnfei Avenue
P.O. Boa TO
Winter Park, Florida13710
Attorney Mr Partonal
Representative:
Denial J. LaFavro
IN I W. Falrbank* Avenue
P.O. Boa TO
Winter Pork., Ior Ida jjn 0
Telephone. (407) 447 3175
Fla. Bar No. 04430*
Publlth: Dacambar IA It, IftO
DEA III
IN TH E C IR C U IT COUBT
FOB SEM IN O LE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO: 00-111*-CAC1P
IN RE: T H E MARRIAGE OF:
BONNIE FU LFO R D ,
Petitioner.
MICHAEL EDAAOND
FULFORD,
Reipondent.
N O T IC IO F SALE
NOTICE IS H E R EB Y GIVEN
that I. M AR YAN N E MORSE.
Clerk ol th* Circuit Court ol th*
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
end lor Seminole County. Florl
da. on January A Iff) al the
hour ol 11 00 o'clock A M. at tlw
Wait door ol the Seminole
County Courthout* In Sentord.
Florid*, will tell at public tale
lor ca*h In hand to the high**!
bidder th* following deter Ibed
real property tltuated In Orange
■County. Florida, to wit:
Begin at the Northaatl Corner
ol the SW to ol the SE U o!
Section It, Township It South,
Range 7t E**t. run South 1M
Met. Well 130 Met. North ISO
Met, Eetl I TO Mat to the point ol
beginning, being part el W E.
F U LF O R D 'S REVISION OF
BLOCKS F TH R U O, HI ALTA
L I T T L E A C R E S . Seminole
County. Florida, according to
the plat thereof a* Recorded In
Pier Booh f. Pag* 30 ol the
Public Record* ol Seminole
County. Florida
Said ta la w ill b* made
pursuant to Judgment ol Parti
lion entered on ttw 14th diy of
November. l*tO. In Civil Action
No 40 1314 CA 03 P. which I*
pending In ttw Circuit Court of
the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit.
In and lor Seminole County,
Florida The caption ol ttw laid
civil action la IN RE- Ttw
Marriage ol BONNIE FU L
FOR D and M IC H A E L ED
M O N O FU LFOR D
WITNESS my hand and Ol
licial tael ol this HonorabM
Court, thl* ath day ol December
iteo
ISEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk of the Court
By Jena E Jaeawic
Dtoutv £l*rk
Publlth December 7. 14 1*10
DEA W

/

Ltqal Nolle—

purtuant fo Final

towbRi^w^bMwf
LugIW^Wi_
i

afylodponding cauto.
WITNESS my hand and
of aaW Court MM 4M day ol
(SEAL)
MARYANNEMORSE
Clork ol Mo Circuit Court
By: Jana E. Jooowk

«

Cterk

Dacambar I t It, lift
PEA-IM___________________
NOTICE OP SN IR IFF't SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Mol by virtue of Mel certain
WNI of Eaecutfon taauad till of
and undar Mo aoot ol the Circuit
Court at SamInoM County. Flerhta. uaon o final ludgamant
rendered In tho oOfrooold court
on tho I4Ri day al November
A O . tin . In that certain coat
entitled. Doom Lit* Inaurwtce
Co, PtotoWf, — v*— Bartnac
Managarwont Group, Inc.. *1 at.
Defendant, which aforalaid Writ
ol Elocution wee delivered to
mo a* Sheriff of Seminal*
County, Florida, and I have
acrlbed p rop erly owned by
■ermac Manage man! Group.
Inc., *1 al. told prfowrt) being
located in SemlnoM County.
Florida, mare partkuiarty dt-

tcrlbod a* folfowt:
A l l In v e n to r y , n a tu re *,
furnishings. o k . of the business
known ** ArbuchM* In th* Oak
Grove Shoppe*, f t } S.N. 434
North. Altamonte Spring*, Flor­
ida
and Ih* undoralgnod a* Sheriff
ol SamlnoM County. Florida,
will at 1I:W A.M. on ttw 11th
day ol December, A.D. tNO.
alter lor tel* ond loll fo Ih*
high**! bidder, lor c**h In hand.
*ub|ect to any and all eilitlng
liana, at the location (pacified
above. Oah Grove Shoppe*. 1*4
S.R. 434. Altamonte Spring*.
Florida, ttw above drierIbed
per tonal property.
That *ald *ate It being made
to letltfy Ih* term* ol wtd Writ
o! Eaocutlon.
John E. Polk, Shari If
SamlnoM County, Florida
Publlth: Dacambar 7.14. Iff*
DEAD

NOTICE OP SHER IFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
ttvit by virtue of that carteln
Writ ol Eaocullon latuod out ol
and undar th* teal el Ih* Circuit
Court ol SamlnoM County, Flor­
id*. upon a final |udg*rrwnt
rendered In th* * tore** Id court
on th* Jtth day of Augutl, A.D.
life . In that certain cat* anfitted. Public Bank, a Florida
corporation. Plaintiff, —vs—
Robert N. Hellrrwr and Robert
A. Mahaney, OaMndant. which
• foretold Writ of Execution wo*
delivered to me a* Sheriff ol
SamlnoM County. Florida, and I
have levied upon th* toltoxlng
datcrlbod property owned by
Robert A Mahoney, laid prop
erty being located In SemlnoM
County, FMrMo, mar* particu­
larly datcrlbod * * M lowt:
On* m o Cadillac automobile.
ID *04tHA1337313 being tiered
at Altamonte Towing Service.
Altamonte Spring*. Florida,
and-the undersigned a* Sharltf
of Samlnol* County, Florida,
will at 11:00 A M. on ttw 7th day
of January A.D. I ffl. oiler tor
w te and tall to th* high**!
bidder, lor cash In hand, subject
to any and all aaltllng lien*, at
th* Front I W ell) Door *1 Ih*
itopt ol th# SemlnoM County
Courthout* In Sanford. Florida,
th* above described personal

Thai w M Ml* I* being mad*
to Mtlity th* term* of told Writ
ol Elocution.
John EP oik . Sheriff
SamlnoM County, Florida
Publlth: December 14. II. 24.
IftO S January 4. Iffl
PEA 181____________________
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN
that by virtu* of that certain
Writ of Elocution Issued out of
and under Ih* teal of ttw Circuit
Court •( Somlnola County, Flor­
ida. upon a final lodgement
rendered in ttw ator***id court
on the 4th day ol September
A D tflO. In mat certain caw
emitted. Pretty Punch Shop
pattat. Inc.. Plaintiff, — vs—
F r a n k L . A le x a n d e r S
AttocleM*. Inc., a Florida cor
poratton and Frank L. AM*
andar. Individually. Defendant,
which tforest'd Writ ol Etecu
lion we* delivered to me at
Sheriff ol Seminole County.
F torMe. and 1 have levied upon
the following described property
owned by Frank L. AMiander.
Utd property being located in
SemlnoM County. Florid*, more
p a rtic u la rly described at
tel low*
On* 1171 F o rd Van. ID
I E I4 G B E J 3 4 1 1 On* 1*13
C h e v r o l e t C a m a r a . 10
I1G1AP4I11CL3T117. being
itortd at Alfamonl* Tewing
Service. Allemonl* Spring*.
Florida
and the undersigned at Sheriff
ol Seminole County. Florida,
will at II 00 A M on the Hhday
ol January A D tell, otter lor
Ml* end tell to ttw highest
bidder, tor catlt In hand. tub|*ct
to any and all aiitnng Item, at
ttw Front I West) Door at ttw
step* Ol ttw Seminote County
Courthout* In Sentord. Florida,
th* above described personal
property
That Mid Ml* l* being mad*
to Mtltly ttw terms ol Mid Writ
of Elocution
John E Polk. Sheriff
Seminote County. Florida
Published December 14 It. JO.
1110. January*, m l
OEA I0J

FLORIDA
C A M N D .IB -M D C A W L / P
N EW M AN CRANE A
ASSOCIATES
INSURANCE, IN C .
EM PLO YEE’S P R O F IT
SM ARMS TRUST.
K EV IN R .ILA C K M A N .
JOSEPH G UNTER. E T H E L
G UN TE R. DC P AR TM R N T OP
H E A L TH S R E H A B ILITA TIV E
SERVICES IN ANO POR TH E
S TA TE OP F L O R ID A BOARO
OP COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS IN AND
POR SEMINOLE C O U N TY,
F LO R ID A R
RORINSON.hN trite.

HRTtCSOPSALR
^^^^PvA^e

_ ___ _ _

te Mo l uHuwary Pbsol J uRr
man# ri Pwocteouro antored Me
4te doy ri CMcombe.-, mb. bt
CteU Action No. MIOfNCAteL/P ol Rw OrtuH Court Ol lb*
HMteonto Judktol CircuH, in
and ter Stmlmte County. Ftertdo. In nMcb K n k i R. Btecfcman, Joeoph Dun tor, Ethoi
Ouriter, Deportment el Hoolte 4
ter th* Note *4 F tend*. Board of
County Commto*tenon bs

A t tec late* Inooranco, Inc.,
■mpltyee't P ro m Shoring
True! N Mo PtatntIH, I wtfl *0(1
te Rie MRwri r
ter cadi of the I
Courthouse, Florid* oil
County Cow town* on tea tMh
doy of January. 11*1, the tettewM K rlM

^ 4 b

p n p P iv WT

l a |4 a C u a t a u M
t-.a
•win w
* nw RWyHiiwy rd mbe
Judgment at Friactoour*:
Lot 171. Map *1 Midway,
occordtog te tea Plot there*! ae
recorded In Plat book 1, Pag*
41. Public Record* of Simbwli
County,
fED Ihrt IIR» day of DoDATE

_ .ir.lW A
MARYANNEMORSE

CNrkritaoCircuit Court
By: JanaE. Jaaawlc
Deputy Ctertt
Publlth: Dacantbor 14.11, lfte
DBA-117

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
OP THE E IG N T IR N T H
JUDICIAL C IR C U IT,
IN ANO FOR
SFMINOLB C O U N TY,
FLORIDA
CASR NOt IM a tC A -ie - I/ L
TIM O TH Y S.RRUMLICK.
Plaintiff, va.
AMERICAN G EN E R A L HOME
E Q U ITY . INC..
Detendant/CounterPlalntlff, va.
D E N N IS F R I K S N I N and
CHERYN FRIESNERi
MONTGOMERY W ARD A CO..
INC.: U.S.A. D E P A R TM E N T
OP REVENUE and TIM O TH Y
S.BRUMLIK.
Defendants/ CounterNOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE I* hereby given that
th* wMsn lgnod Clark at Ih*
C irc u it Court ol Somlnol*
County, F terid*, will, an Ih* 17th
day of January, I n i , r i 11:00
A.M. of Ih* Waal Door of the
Seminote County Courthout*.
Sanford. Florida 33001 otter ter
Ml* and rail of public outcry to
caah. th* tel tewing daacribod
prepart y ilturiod In SEMINOLE
County Flortdo:
Let 11 (te** th* Northerly 30
teat) and th* Northerly s teat at
Lof n . Block N. Northgate,
according I* Mw Plot thereof, a*
recorded In Plat Book 1R Pago*
13 and 14 Public Record* of
Somlnol* County. Florid*,
pursuant to Ih* Final Judgment
entered ‘n * cat* pending In Mid
Court, ttw tfyto of which It
WITNESS my hand and of­
ficial aaal of MM Court thlt 3th
doy of Dacambar. me.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clarfc of Ih* Circuit Court
By: JantE. JaaowkD.C.
Publlth: Dacambar 7,14 lfte
O E A -14

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP TNB E IG H TE E N TH
JU O IC IA l CIR C UIT.
SEMINOLE CO UN TY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
CASE NO .fM Et-CP
IN R E : Eli***at
LOUIS LEE HARRISON.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* admlnlatrallon ol Ih*
Eatote ol LOUIS L E E HAR
RISON. Decooaod. File No.
10-S}f-CP I* ponding In th*
C ircu it Court o l Somlnol*
C ou nty, F lo rid a . Probata
Division, ttw addrou el which It
Samlnol* County Courthout*.
301 North Pork Avenue. San­
ford. Florida 33771. Th* n*mat
and addiotM i ol the Partonal
R a p r a t o n la llv * a n d th*
Partonal Representative's at
fomay are Ml forth below.
All Intarattad persons are
required to III* with this Court:
(o) All claims agalnit ttw estate
W ITHIN THR EE MONTHS OF
T H E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
TH IS NOTICE and (bl any
objection by an Interested
parson to whom nolle* was
mailed lhaf challenge* ttw valM
tty a* ttw will, the quail Heat lent
ol th* partonal roproaantatlv*.
venue, or jurisdiction ol th*
Court WITHIN TH E LA TE R OF
TH R E E MONTHS A F T E R THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
T H IS NOTICE OR T H IR T Y
DAVS AFTER TH E O A TE OF
SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS
NOTICE OF THE O B JEC TIN G
PERSON
A L L CLAIMS ANO OBJCC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of this Notice of
Administration hot begun on
December 14 IftO
M A R D ILLE Da YOUNG,
at Personal Representative
of the Estate ol
LOUIS LEE HARRISON
P O Bet 1331
Winter Pork. FL 33710
Attorney ter Perianal
K E N N E TH F M URRAH
Of Murrah and Doyle. P A
*00 West Mart* Boulevard
P O Bee 133*
Winter Par*. Florida 13710
Teteplwn* (4)7)444 teOI
Publlth December 14 31. m o
DEA It!

Lqqql Nottef

Ltqal Nottc—
IN TUB CIRCUfT COURT
OP THE EIR N TE IN TN
POR TH E STA TE OP
FLORIDA
W A R D POR
Co m

FLORIDA
tea. n -»n -C A i* -L / P

R.P. NORMAN
CORPORATION, doing buttons
a*MORTGAGE D E F A U L T
SERVICES COMPANY.
Plaintiff.

to buriiwm af W»

Cava. AHamanta
too County, Pter_
__ PI
*f SBRVKI CONNECTION,
Md tori l Intendto ragNiar arid

IN R E: ESTATE OP
DOROTHY M. WHITNEY

IN R I: RSTATROP
WE S L IY T . PLACE.

N O TK EO P
ADM INISTRATION
The administration Of RW
t s la l# gf D O R O T H Y M .
W H IT N E Y , tocca ta * , P in
Number RMat-CP, n ponabtg bi
to* Circuit Court ter Samfnate
C o u n ty, P lor Ida, ^ProRafo

Tba adntoittratlan af Rw
(Mate af WESLEY T. PLACE,
dacaaaad. P lia N am bar
IM S4CP, la pandbw M tea
Circuit Csurt ter Somlnol*
Caualy, P la rlto . Prabala

A L L E N R. FOSTER, of of..

B Y CL j B E O F
CIRCUIT CO URT

B lt u d t e D

bb

I m

Ii w I r

m —- —■*- ■

Ftertd*.tewtt:
Lot 33. black B, STERLING
PARK UNIT THREE, b e a r*
tog lb Iff* Plot thereof, at
M b M to Flat Rook l l paga*
W through 14 of Rw fibite
Record* of SomtooW County,
Florida.
W Rw final dotwo of
• coo*
to told Court. Rw Wyte
Of wbMN te: R.P. NORMAN
CORPORATION. M llt|b »liw &gt; i
04 M O R T O A O I D I P A U L T
S E R V IC E S C O M P A N Y , v*.
A L LE N R. FOSTER, ol ol.
W ITNESS my hand and ofItcial m o ! at **M Court tte* am
doy of Dacambar, m i .
(S E A L)
Ry: JatwE. Jooowk
Oopuiy Ctertt
Pwtoteh: D l comber 7,14 TOW
DEARS
IN T H E CIRCUIT CO URT
FDR SEMINOLE CO UN TY,
FLORIDA
CIRCUIT CIVIL M l
W -M fPCAH P
AM ERICA’S MORTGAGE
SERVICING, INC., l/k/a FIR S T
F A M ILY MORTGAGE
CORPORATION OP FLO RIDA.
Plaintiff,
va.
ALVIAW .VILES.otal.
M T I C I O P SALE
Nolle* I* heroby given that,
purtuant lo th* Order or Final
J udgment anterad an Dacambar
X m o to thl* co m *, to too
Circuit Court lor Somlnol*
County, F torId*. I will M il ttw
ii ■ w14,.■
|- P— i t—.
pWl^|^mT|r ml lu R IU U fET 3WTT1 FflQUEP
County. F torM 4 deteribadaa:
Lot 4 Black X GREENW OOD
LAKES, U N IT D-3 " A " , ac­
cording to Ih* Plat thereof a*
recorded In Plat Book 14 pages
t l through 33. of th* Public
Kocordt of Samlnol* County,
Florida.
af public tala, to the htgfwal and
-bait bidder, far caah, af to*
Watt Front Door, Samlnol*
County Courthout*. Sanford.
Somlnol* County, Florid*, at
11:00 A.M. on January 14 m i .
MARYANNEM ORSE
C L E R K O F TH E
C IR C UIT COURT
By: Ja n e t. Jatawlc
Deputy Clark
Publlth: Dacambar 7,14 tu b
OEA-51
IN T N I CIRCUIT CO U R T
OP T N I E IG H TE E N TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN A N D FO R
SEMINOLE CO UN TY,
FLORIDA
CASE NOt ft-lfU CA I4E/L
SHIRLEY FRIEND and
RICHARD FRIEND.
Plaint lift,
vt.
GUSSIE LEE COMER.olal.,
AM ENDED NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE S A L I
NOTICE IS HER EBY G IV EN
purtuant to a Final Judgment ol
Foreclosure dated November it.
tflO and entered In Co m No.
W lt t t CA 14C/L el to* Circuit
Court of th* n th Ju dicial
Circuit, to end for Seminote
C o u n ty, F lo rid a , w h o ro ln
SHIRLEY FRIEND and RICH­
ARD FRIEND or* to* Plaintiff*
and GUSSIE LEE COMER, at
al. are to* Defendants. I will Mil
to to* highest bidder tor cash at
th* west front deer of th*
Seminote County Courthout# to
Sanford. F tor Ida. on th* Ito day
of January, 1WI, at It 00 A M .
th* lei towtog described property
at tat forth In said final Judg­
ment, lying and being situate to
Seminal* County, Florid*, to
wit:
Lot 1 and X Block ■ of PINE
LE V E L, SANFORD. FLORIDA,
according to ttw Plat thereof, a*
recorded In Plat Book * at Pag*
34 and J7 of the Public Record*
of Somlnol*County. Florida.
D A TE D toll 10th day of D*
camber. IWO.
Clerk ol too Circuit Court
By: Jano E. Jetewle
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: December 14 3). 1*10
O E A -ltl

name with to* Clark af RW
Circuit Court. Samiiwto County,
PtorldA In accordance wlM toa
Praviston* af toa Fictitious
Noma Statutes. TaW It: Section
•MAI Florida Slahitot l«7 .
WtlltomJ. McGinn
33. a 4

t m

af ttw FktHtoua I
Ta-WW: lortten MASS Ftertda
ACE W A TER ANO FIR E
OP C E N TR A L FLOR IDA,
INC.
Maitoi W. Canto)

N O TICIO F

M* Circuit Court •«
County, Florida, will,
onto* I71h doy of January, m i .
P flliW AJKL. Pi *■ Woof Front
door of tho SamtooN County
CourthouM. In Mo CHy of Sonlord. Ftertdte offer N r toit and
of public outcry te Rw

State, T t R M U U

____ „_____ Pf IN­
T E R N A T IO N A L E M P L O Y ­
M E N T D IR ECTO R IES, and
t Intend to ragtotor laid

r 7.14 TOW
PEI-117
PKTITtOUSNAMB

D BA IIS
A LL IN TE R E S TE D PER­
SONS ARE M T IP WO TH A T:
All par
none# N i
jocttenetoeti
N va
OfflRW wM, RW 4
of Rw
______ .g f :

Court are tapteoR te Rte
*a|*ctta*t with thlt Caart
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OP
THREE MONTHS APTER THE
OATS OP THE PIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS APTER THE
D ATE OP SERVICE OP A
COPY OP THIS H O IK S ON
THEM.
AM cradHara af Rw

HI THR CIRCUITCOURT

pVMIMi,
r i MS
ta Hally
CawUy. Ptartda. Wrier
Ih # l l c t l l l a u i name ol
W A N S L E Y R E L O C A T IO N
SSRVKBS, and tori I Intend to

CIVIL ACTION
CMS MX IM S W C A -N U P
THE PIORLITY MUTUAL

____ af I
Ftertda. In 1
proylt
isione t l Iho Pictitiou*
town*

A L L IN TER E STE D PERS04M ARE NOTI PI I D THAT:
g g — .*

af
Cwrt am rawdrod la Ma Mate
sRIatlteM with Ihte Casrt
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OP
T H R U MONTHS APTER TH E
DATE OP TH E PIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICR OR
THIRTY DATS AFTER THR
D ATE OP SERVICE OP A
COPY OP THIS NOTIC1 ON
THEM.
af Rw

WANSLEY MOVING
4ST0NA0C
OP FLORIDA. INC.
By: Sue D. WtBdiwen
IteVka-PtaaMOnf/Mwwgri
Pvbhsh: Daiimbir 14 tl. M.
H U B January 4 HW PEA-iti
M THR CIRCUIT COURT.
O PTN R EM N TIBN TM
JWOKIAL &lt; IRCVIT.

THE LANCHNO Ml LIM ITED
PARTNERSHIP, by and
RBI
CONSTRUCTION OP
FLORIDA, and JAMES
CPRISRV.

ff qnq
fit* took ctofm* wt

W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OP
THREE MONTHS APTER THE
DATE OP TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP TIRE NOTICS OR
THIR TY DAYS APTER THE
O ATE OP SERVICE OP A
COPY OP THIS N O TKS OH
THEM.

W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OP
THREE MONTHS APTER THR
DATE OP THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS APTER THR
O ATE OP SERVICE OP A
COPY OP THIS NOTKS ON

AH other creditor* af RW

THREE MONTHS APTER THE
DATE OP THE PIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE.
A LL CLAIMS. OEMANOS
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
PILED WILL RE FOREVER
BARRED.
Ttw tote *1 too fir*# |
ton al tote Notice te I
14 IMS.

DOROTHYLEE
WINCHESTER
Attenwy ter Pirianal
MARGARET A. WHARTON
P.O. Sea ITT!
4J4I. Control Awnua
Ortod*. PL 33741
Totepfwno: I4S7) 344-7TO3
Ptertto Bar N t : m i l l
Publlth: Dacambar 14I I . m
DEA-114

THREE MONTHS AFTER THR
OATE OP THE PIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS N O nCt.
A L L CLAIMS. DEMANDS
ANO OBIBCTIONS NOT SO
PILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
Tba date af the flroi
ton at tote Nine* te
14 ww .

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
O P TH H E IG H TE E N TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN ANO FOR
SEMI N O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
CASE NO&gt; W-ISI-CP
IN RE: ES TA TE OF
EDWARD L.M IF F L IN . Ill

Th* admlnlatrallon ol too
•state el EDWARD L. M IF ­
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT.
FLIN. III. daceawd. te aandtog
In ttw Circuit Court tor laminate
INANOPON
SEMINOLE CO UNTY.
C ou nty, F lo rid a . Probat*
FLORIDA
Division, to* addroM *1 which I*
CASE NO. W-3WI-CA-I4-L/P
M l North Park Avenue. Soml
AVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES
note County. Sanford Ftertda.
Th# namat and addraeeat al Mo
OF FLORIDA, INC .
Plaintiff, I partonal representative* and
ttw portonal representative*'
vt.
JOHN R SHEA. SR and
attorney ere tat forth bolow.
LINDA K SHEA, hit wife,
All ml* ret led persons or*
Defendants
required to tile with this court,
NOTICE OF SALE
W ITHIN TH R E E MONTHS OF
NOTICE IS HER EBY G IVEN
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OP
tool, pursuant to Final Judg
THIS NO TICE: (11 all claim*
moot entered In to* c o m of
age inti ttw estate and IS) any
AVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES
objection by on Interested
OF FLORIDA. INC va. JOHN
person to whom this nottc* wo*
R. SHEA. SR and LIN D A K
malted that challenges Itw valid­
SHEA, hit wile, In ttw Circuit
ity ol ttw will. Itw qualifications
Court of Semlnete County. Ftor
of toa pertonal representative,
too. C a m No. *0 3WI CA ie U P .
venue or jurisdiction of toa
to* undertlgned Clerk will Mil
cwrt.
el public Ml* to the highest and
ALL CLAIMS ANO O B JEC ­
bast bidder tor cash at the Watt
TIONS NOT SO F IL E O WILL
dour, Seminole County Court
BE FO R EV ER EA R R ED
house. In Sentord. Samlnol*
Publication of toll Nolle* hat
County, Florida. *• the hour of
Oecember 1 4 1MB
II 00 o m . on ttw 11th day ot
Personal Representative
January. A D . m l. that certain
B E T T Y E L . M IFFLIN
reel property situate and being
343 Nob Hill Clr.
In Samlnol* County. Florida,
Langntood. FL 33771
described at toitowt
Attorney ter Personal
Let 30. replat of Grover lew
Representative
Village, First Addition accord
Paul V Moyer. Esquire
Ing to the plat thereof at r*
3*37 Weil S R 434
corded to Ptel Book 3*. Pago* 4
Longweod. Ftertda 31771
} and *. ol ttw Public Records of
140/J 734 3330
SaminoWCounty, Florida
FI* Bar No 113317
D ATED thlt tth day ol Do
M ARYANNEM ORSE.
comber. A D IriO
Clara. CircuitCourt
C L E R K O F TH E
BY: PatriciaThatchar
CIRCUIT COURT
D E P U TY CLERK
By Jen* E Jetewle
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
Deputy Clerk
FLORIDA
Publlth Oecember 1.14 1*10
Publish Dacambar 14 31. IWO
O E A tl
OEA 10a

DATED r i a
County. Ptortdx tote TOM day ri

m w « r W N r a dMatwa af
MM Not1 1) N 11*4111" W N r a
dNtoMB at SM S N rii S) N
m m r W ter a Wrianco at
131J i fori; 4) N a n te XT W ter
a riokmoa of IS14B N rii Rwnca
toautof irid owNra aRw ran N
t3»)4T3" W ter a dtotonca ri
111.14 laali lhanca ran N
M TO Ttr I N r a dtotonca ri
71.74 fast la thg gain! al
cur-afar* ri a curvo cancavu to
toa South having a radius af

JAMES A. BARKS
IIJIW . Pint Slnsl. Suite B
Santerd.PL s m ite *
Tateahww: (4*7) a v m t
Ptertto Bar N x: lam*
PubHrit: Oaeambar 14 H.1

Carton Harrte
NOTICE OP S N U IP rS SALB
NOTICE IS H IR IB T GIVEN
Mat by vfrtua *1
Write af “

of Hw Circuit Court of
County. Ftertda, vgon a hnri
ludgmaal rantorad In Ih*
ateroeoM court wi Rw ISM day
t t October A O . TOW to toot
R. Maxwell. PlatoMN. vt Oordut
H a rris , Dalanaant, which
ateroaald Writ at Im cuton wo*
drihwrod te ma aa Iharltt *1
Samtoate Caunty. Fterld*. and I
the tellowing

to
being locotod
local* In Samlnol*
Caunty. Fterld

*HTTf
- --M-*---W
-J
C T-M
4

One HM Dado* Rom Von. ID
I1B7FK43C1FR141441 being
aterod M Altamonte Twring
lervlco, Altamonte Sgrlnga.
af lomtoate County. Fterld*.
will ol 11:«• AJkL an too Tto 4*t

aria and b.11 te too
&gt;, FOR CASH, subject te
1existing Item, af Rw
Front Iatari) Dear, af to* step*,
af too Samtoot* County Caurtfwueo to SanterA Ftertda. tho
That said trio te bring mods
to satisfy toa terms at said Write
•I Eaacutten.
John E . Prik, Sheriff
Seminote Ceunty, Florida
Puritehad: Oecember 14 &gt;1.14
IW*. January 4 IWt.
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT,
O P T N R IM M T IE K T N
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.

IN ANO PGR
U M iN O il COUNTY.
FLORIDA
c a s e NOt ta-wracA-ia-p
TH O R P CONSUMER D IS ­
COUNT COMPANY. S V a ITT
FINANCIAL SiRVICIX
PtalntlM.
ROOSEVELT HUGHLEY and
DOROTHY J. HUGHLEY: rial.
N O TK E O P
FORECLOSURE SALI
NOTICE te horeby (Ivon tori
too undriklgnoa CterS oI Hw

C ircu it Court c l Seminal*
County, Ftertda. will, an toe llto
doy r i January. 1111. r i H M
A M . af to* W IS T FRONT
DOOR *1 to* Somlnol* County
Courthout*. SanterA Ftorldo
otter ter trio and Mil ri public
outcry te toa highest and bait

(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLER KO FTH E
CIRCUITCOURT
BY: ShorwtDuwn
Publish: November IX M A
7.14 t*N
DU-111
IN THR CIRCUIT COURT
POR SEMIN O LI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
PNo Numbor fSTSbCP
IN R I: IS T A T IO F
LAURA KRUEGER a/k/a
LAURA MAE KRUEGER.

Ito. 17 tori; M o m * run laotorty
•ten* Me arc r i said curve
through a central angle at
E W E tor a dtotonca r i I S A
tori; Mane* ran S m i ’U ' I
tor a dtotonca af SMB torii
Rwnca ran t toPN'to" E tor a
dtotonca at M.W tori to Ms print
r i taruriara r i a
to to# Northeast k
af II4J4 tori;

NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* odmlntetratlon *1 the
aOteM r i LA U R A KRUEOER

Ma arc at tab
control angto *4 11n rvr' tor a
dtotoncar ii x a tori toMo print
af compound curvature of a
cures concave to toa North
having a rsdhw at SUM torii
1af StoKST* tor a
t r i M l ! tori to Ma pefnt
1cureahtra at a curve
iflwScuMa
a rsdtoo r i MAS torii
Ma arc ri
a central
ll'er* tor a Statutes
ri 15-31 fori to Ms Print r i
^ M

joettana tool chattenge to* valid­
ity r i too will, to* guellflcriton*
ri to* portonal regrotentative,
venue. *r |urledktten ri H.i*
Court ore require* te flte Iheir
abjections with this Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OP THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAVS AFTER THE
D ATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All creditors ol to* decedent
having claims

ER WITH all r i Rw
’• right. tHto and InIn and to Mo

Thai certain Nan inclusive
Nhtateri March, was between
Grenade Canriructten Carp., a*
Orontor, and Landing !M
Limited Portoorshlp, Chritwm
Harbor Limited Partnership,
Granada Conakuctton r i Ftort
da. Inc., and Granada Canstruetten Carp., at Grantees,
and rocordM March IX TOM In
Official Record* Boob 1437.
Pago 14*1:
Thai certain Non eicluslv*
Parsing la wman! dated to* 4to
doy of March. TOM between
Granada C— IrucHow Carp., e*
Orontor. end Landing 140
L i m ited P a rln o rtk lp , at
Crontoo. and recorded March
IX I N I In Offklri Record*
Rook MIX Pago 11*4:
Thai certain Nan axclutlv*
witi

a/k/a L A U R A MAE
K R U 3 0 B R . deceased. Flla
Nunttar W-TObCP. Is penritou In
toa Circuit Court tar SEMIN O LI County. Florida. Prebat*
Dtvttten. too eOdrsie ot which Is
Somlnola County

A LL I N T I R I S T I D PER­
SONS A R I NOTIFIED THAT:
tote
All

eTh

•state an wham a copy ri tote
rwttca te w rvad within three
mantoe after toa Safari to* first
publication r i tote iwfteo must
flte toatr claims with Nils Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
TH R EE MONTHS AF TE R THE
O ATE OF TH E FIRST FUSLI
CATION OF TH IS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAVS A F TE R TH E
O A T E O F SER V ICE OF A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM .
All ether creditors el th#
decadent and parsons having
claims or demands against toa
decadwifs estate mutt file ttwlr
claims wito tote court W ITHIN
TH R EE MONTHS A FTER THE
O A TE OP TH E FIRST FU SLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
A L L C LA IM S . DEM ANDS
ANO O BJECTIO N S NOT SO
F IL E D W ILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
Tha date ri toa first public*
flan ri tots Notice Is December
7. llto.
Perianal Representative
GEORGE MAYBURV
P.O Box 13904}
Lake Mary, FI. 3I71SM4]
Attorney tor Personal

w y oi moren, i w Boiwoin

Granada Construction Carp., ax
Grontar, and Landing 1M
Llm lfod P a rtno rthlp and
Oranoda Conakuctton ri Ftort
da. lac., at GrankcA and rocardtd March IX HM in Oflklri
Record* Soak MIX Pag* 1713:
a « ri Ma Public Racordt ri
l omlnoto County, Ftertda.
Togptaor with all structure*.
improvemontA and additions
("Property").
r i publte tote, to to* hifftott
MddK. lor caah. af Rw West
front door *1 tho Somlnol*
County Courthout*. of Seminal*.
Florid*, al I t OR Am . on Janu­
ary IX Iffl.
W ITN ISS my hand and tfw
w ri r i tote Court an Dacambar
X INS.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CterS at tfw Circuit Caurt
■y: Jana E. Jaeawic
Duautv Clark
Publish IDecember 1.1 4 llto
DEAN

prM*rty tltuated In
SEMINOLE County Ftertda:
tat it ww aw West a n . o i
Lof 3A Stock A. Roglri ri Lake
w bw ie

In Ma Petltten.

4

O IA -M )
N O TICIOF
ADMINISTRATION

In Ma oMca ri Rw
Cterk of Ma Circuit Court, on or
batata Ma 14M doy r i DocentIR S If you M l to do is. 0

IIS

v*.

M A R YA N N I MORSE
A t CWrkriaaW Court
By Jana E . Jaaawlc
A t Deputy Oork
Publish: Oaeambar 7,141
DEA 43

ftlod agrinri you. and Mol you
w s nwdrad to aanw a copy r i
your Roipww* or PNaRng to
to* Pofltton vgon Ma WHO'S
attorney, A A . McClonchon. Jr w
Ml SouM Pork Auanuo - Brito
B. Sentord. Flortdo a m . and

tw li

SanterA PL N7T3

tM M lCAM O te.L/P
CITY SAVINOS BANK. P.B.B.,

to Mid Final Judgment, tawtl:
Lot IX TUSCAW ILLA. U N IT
7, accordtog te the Hal thereat
a* recorded to Plat Barit IX
Pagn 44 A 47. Publk Bacardi al
laminate County, Florida.
O A TE O tote 3rd day of (te-

TO: RANOY L I E PUCKETT
a m EATON DRIVE
SANTA P I . TX77SN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
PIED Mat a Poftften N r Dto-

a dtoteaaa af im ts tori)
ran N U P S ” W Mr t
dfitoneaof HAS N rii

Aton w y terl

GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION

104103 CA 14 Ol*. U P . of tea
Circuit Court *1 to* E IG H ­
T E E N T H Ju dk W Circuit In wtd
for SEMINOLE County, Florida
whoroln C IT Y SAVINOS BANK.
F.S.E. M PtatoHR and STUART
M. COHEN, at al. are Duten
trill w ll to to* MMtoof
I biddv ter caah at toq
n r ol to* SEMI­
NOLE County Courthouo*. to
Sanford. Florida , a l l l : M
o'clock A M . on too Wto day of
January. IW t, to* tel lewtog

S
ariSSw4 rwS ? South!
Rang* » f Baal. Seminal*

MB Nat la Ms wriara oftea af a

B B T T IB J .
m H n u m lP f l*

DIA-111

NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE SAXE
NO TICE IS H E R EB Y OIVBN
purtuant tea Final Judgment *4
Fortctoeure dated Dacambar X

RANDY L I E PUCKETT.
csmnwws*aff Rw Nomwaw

County. PNrtdsi Manes ran N
R N r r W. slant Ma NwBt Ena
af said Sautawaol to far a
of MAE fori la Bw dwri

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I BIGNTBENTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OP FLORIDA.
TR AND POR

STUART M. COHEN, alal..

■is taw c a m p
IN R I: Tba Marriage r i
CINCEEIA BAIL PUCKETT,

ROBERT K.McINTOSH
S TIN STR O M . MCINTOSH.
JULIAN. CO LSERT.
WHIGHAM A SIMMONS. P A
P.O. B e a m
SanterA FI 11771 1130
TatogAeno 1*07) 331 3171
Florida Bar No : 37*101
Publish Dacambar 7.14 1110
D EA 44

CELEBRITY CIPHER^
■M
EHi

v w V i teewamq w ™

Plat toarari. as recorded In Piet
RdRk A Page IX ri toe Public
Racordt r i l amtnala County.
Ftertda.
pursuant la Itw Final Judgment
entered In a caw pandto* In satd
Court. Hw Style r i which I*
WITNESS my fund and of
flclel seal of said Court tote Sto
dar of December, tug.
ISEAL)
MARYANNEMORSE
Cterk ef toe Circuit Court
■y. JaneE. JdtewkD.C.
Publish Oaeambar 1.1411*0
DEA 57

‘ • E Q U I P
O M

V N

•

M K O P E k d L O

I B D
DSRMP

M I R

V R R V J V a V M I K

B B C

K R D S O K K . *

K R V P H O D

—

J M M Q R .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Whan you or* dissalisfwd and
would kfcotogo bach lo youth, itonb of rigatr a ’’ — 0*n*

�••-Sanford HtraW, Sanford. Florida — Friday,

14. 11

I

71-H e» Wealed

CLASSIFIED ADS
tinole
•2611

Orlando - Winter Park
031 *9999

CLASSIFIED DIPT. PWVATE PARTY RATES
'HOURS
..............
M O U L I c N r A »•

HAM 5PM

3 bWm 3 bath, net
p p M I............ MW p w month

■MSpatWI
M S fTM M M REIMS

SPLITPLANM M
3 hdmti. IV* M k . C/M/A.
clean A tortcad. BSS/mp

RENT TODAY
FOR OUR
MOVE IN SPECIAL
s a s L a g fe ^
At MIS Kentucky Ave, OFF E
D 1 Bedroom, hit.
carpprt, h ookups
AWHept.l SBgr. n—.EM BBW
I BDRM, central H/A. Sanford

322 2 0 9 0

3 bdrm. l both duple*. Walk­
ing distance to Lake Monroe
across tram park. No pets
STAIRS PRO PERTY
MANAGEMENT A R E A L TY
m im r m m n

J hdrm. I bath, C/H/A. LS7J +
eec. Carwarletl.......... 3334333

ANFORD 1 bdrm.. 4ic»ll*nt
location, comptoto privacy!
«B1 per week plus UM wcurlty
an................ ............... » n a a

107-Mobile
Hemes/Rent

LK. MARV/THaectnn M i l

Quality childcare. I yr./Up.
Lunch, rag ponding— -731-0117

r1 1 a I n n

iip iu r i

O S T E IN 1 bdrm. I bath en S
acres, wesher/dryer hook up
tm Jttrn. Call 77MM3kHer a

&lt;$&gt;

L j- , . aj .
a n a a a la
n
w r ii •■■vriv

-referred. Nlca *N li

TRUCKERS Special I I B * m .
trailer. Rm.to park truck.
Ctoee to Interstate------U i - c n

Jobs! Jobs!

Civil Sarvlta a Paatal
Ito.ii hr. No aip. Inem,

4f— MiscalU www
CHRISDMSTHIS RM SALE
Cot year ewa. II# each

____________ _

♦1— Money to Lewd
*

AUTOLOANS

s

t

SECURITY NATIONAL

•

s i n

I’f f m

r t 'm

WR pay yaar tuition.
• ••
We otter:
•Th a Finest Training-In Tha
"DiMce'’ And The "F ield "
ROppartunlMee In Re ildenHM
And Commercial Reel

We have im m ediate
openings!
•Painters
•Book Binders
•Construction
•Warehouse
Production

i i 0(V&gt;JL7. ■ *
*• in »•#

i

ACTKNI LOANS
Regardless o ' crtd llll UBS to
uo.oeo Cali i....... m i-

!

1

'f

'M O

transportation
needed Immediately

* ’r

A p p ly

S t/U M O U '

Q&lt;fi&gt;

|

IS— F its

DERARV E ite r »l»a tle g i
Xwaa OHf CertHtoetesl itoatt
IWewcoitoakon wtyl.MP-aws

X M A S F U P F IE 1 II German
Shepherd. I male. 4 tomato.
AK C R eoiCettosii m a a a i

HOLIDAY CATERIHOI Give
your tired wife e break I Gift
Certificates avail. 34t-454t
HOLIDAY Fortran Cartthcatotl
A letting gift! Professional i
Eap. Cell teen
733-0314
SCURA GIFT CERTIFICATES
Freddie’! Diva Cantor
Cleiaet......... 3EMSU......... Air

14— Crafts and
Celiectlbits

IJ-rHelidey
Child Cars

■

‘

IM to ’ t Helper! I By hr. er day.
leave the kids here I HRS n o .
770# S. Perk Ave. B3 7B33

1019 3. French Ave., Sanford
5 AJVL SHARP

14-Florists

15— PstS

.EMPLOYMENT

ASSISTANT PLANTMANKIR

D,

S a n fo rd H e ra ld
SERVICE jgUfcg,

R O TT W E ILE R AKC FUFSI
Champ, lines, queranlrrd
healthy end happy! m s . 1
wts, 17/31104-1131141
SCOTTISH Terrier Pvpe. AKC,
Champ. Bloodlines, shell,
warmed. 3 left. W b W -M a .

•Clubhouse with Fireplace
•Indoor Racquetball
•Weight Room
•Pool A Jacuzzi
•Waahar/Dryar Connections
•Garden Windows
•Fireplaces

17— Sportswear
FL SPORT W EAR: J11-SJS4 Jog
•els, sweats, night shirts and
M ckil Downtown Sanford.
M E R R Y CHRISTMAUI

1 Bedroom from $450
2 Bedroom from $940

IN— Luxury Items

Mon Ihit ad end get tt% Off I

Wire ivc. aid.

From The Staff
of Regatta Shores

BJ'S RESALECOILECTIBLES
open every Sunday Ml Xmat
tor Imlda Outilde Salatl m j
L laniard Ave. 307444
E LE G A N T IM PORTSI G ift*
end Heme Decor I Personal
lied shopping help, 44P41I4
HOUSEWIFE CRAFTS, Holiday
gifts GALORE11 Call Janet
.... - ......CT0S1I

DRIFTWOOD FLORISTI Man

\ 323-5176

Ho

11— Oil? Certificates

GET HER M INK FON XMASI
White mink lacket w/snow top
trim. Site mad. Appraisal
U000.satou.000....... 333-0*34
•W IR E L E S S REM OTE 4 X i
TRUCK with 7.7 Nlcad bah
tory, l hour charger and slow
charger All other batter let
Included. Also has road gear
lor Me*! spaed. M ade by
Sean. Comas with custom
lease. 1100.1744**!

Mull hava chaufftur llcanaa. 5
day week Includat Saturday,
E icaltonl benefits. Apply
5tefcos.UI Banterd Av

■ RANCH D IA L E R HIRING
I I I par hour, we train I
No aiparlaflca naadad.
Dealer poll lion aval labia.
_________ W H j H j l l

Shenandoah Village

Dorchester Apts

Atfordsbts Rstst
Starting At 93301

Ask About Our
Hobday Special*

Oheaty acrow (torn Flea Merkel in 13/BB
LMeuetakBOrm.

OR 44A W*el d I7S I In lake Mary
Oreurd tend engto-ttory Damn
1 Radeon i Ion • 7 Bedmenw 3 Brow
• Hod bedan UL Mary • Bantord • la
• tosMlor i n n CkUsna
C
M TUOfCnwe
V ir r h iilG
» IK
500
Wfr oCKfU
MM
f#

• ktonMyPai
• Chewen k g m i Has wetams
Fer MomePon. H • F BO. CM

HEALTH FORCE need* you
noarl S ta llin g a ll a r a a il
Plenty ol work I Call 4 M II14

323-2920

Regatta
Shores

O

|debary v~
©

Cantsrbury At The
Crossings
M Em ltoU keH w yM
&gt;Bmgto «k*y 4**pn wpdto pkit carport
Easy Aeons to ApL* unity Haem nth
•ashar. 4ryw canraaons B m o Mdige
• Vauaedcaangsil

I B it

SANFORD

msw.

323-2628
"WINTOAfPUCANTSr
M n T E ill Sanlord called
her San lord Herald Claulllad
Consultant to atop her ad Irani
continuing on Iti Khaduled
10 Day Special. M r i. E
lurlher commanltd. "T h a
Sanlord Herald WORKSI"
Soma Poilllon YOU need to
advertise al low coil and
achieve quick reiultt? Try our
10. 14 A 34 Day Special ratal
Lowell con par line lor con
lecutlvo doyt' advartiilng
Advertiser! are tree to cancel
at toon at rotullt are reached
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
I7J M il

KEYES FLA.. INC. Realtors,
payt turf-on to Real Etlato
school'caii
. m not
a a a VOLT a a a
TEMPORARY SERVICES
______ Call M i tW*_________

a u r u .s .
SAVINGS BONOS
for the current rutocoU.,
1 -A 0 0 - U S-R O M O S

323-4923

f (5 j]

CAU TOOAY B Inquaa Hboia
Yau Haw Harm

Geneva Gardens
Specials From $350
t/4 nde wau d 17-48. Santoro
EOlcanoea. I.7 .B 3 — ww-T— tnomw
Ouetoaurwy iwngiCanvanaMto
f

it fo o S V W

i

Pe^LamWyWeslWktWyar fiemwowne
1S03 W. 2Slh Streol

®

322-2090

Sanford Court
Apartments
3301 S. Sanford Am.
t B4l Nam d Ik Urry Bed
Sngto Story Shako, t B 3 i t * to&gt;
•County too Swing •On i l l Manage*
•Storing * tltg monk
Come 4 Hear 0w Oim &gt;

O

323-3301
To Advertise
In This Rental
Directory

Call 322-2611

321-1911
J

o

jj

|0

WINTER SPRIN G S
Fountaintrse A$

D S -------- ^

Aak About Our
Uova-in Specials

\\

1 LAKE MARY

\1

LK. MANY BlVD.

o
LONGW OOD^
7 (
/ 'll
|

|

©

WINTER
SPRINGS
C2 H D

« B7BdntikpLhamaaand3b
toankerms on 434 • ctoaa to 17a
Fpk. B tWO Cannacbons n M t
Pod • Jacuitt • Sauna • Tanrta • Vi
EurcM Room• Spaooia Floot
Dacsrdd knrars • Canranar* to ____

.‘u T C . a Z . X ^

P

695-8733

DEBARY
Riverside
Condominiums
Eaey Accpm Is M

1 A 3 Bpdroonii
Boa Dock (Awry). Ph i Control
Saammng Poal W.O Hookpt
Q un ea Wdar Saaar Pad
***mg a $4J0 pat itantti

► (407) 668-6514

s
Hi

�i
iV

l&lt; 1-H » m w « f Salt

141— Htrnts for Salt

1

iSBHSnK.

£*h&lt;*»ScraarwdWoei
toclal Nat. Financing

________ c« ii m tm _____
V I. CHA. Nan
£ • " " " * • wwnutN. Ileal

umfi

LMI MARY
»«* Estella Rd. 3/1, I car
garage, m m aq.tt.MJM

g&gt;t.wa.n»w___

• ^ ■ c w m v

V im

TENANT

STENSTROM

REALTY, I N C .
An 56f

yrt. at taun/ma., 11%APR

Ifm •

UNO M M PARK IPLIT VI.
JutfraUna Big lot Haw kit.,
PMM. carpet tile. Lake accat*. Reduced Naar.....144.*00

l^ ^ i^ .T S 3 «Z 5 i,

«pmA whtog*---- 14*0477«

j W r --------Ml.nauMaaaaaawt

AUUMC RO OUALIPVI Naal
I/J villa. Area peal, tennis.
I car garage. warranty. Coed
location. Nowlutl.... 134.*00
IUP 1 R DUPLEX, great central
lecatlen, patiliva cash (low
Great Invattmanl property.
Call in new.......... tu .m il
JU»T RIOUUDI LIRR NEW
Lh. Mary VI. Custom itrat.
Jacuitl In matter Patti. On la
acre. New priced at....ti 14.000
N I C ! CONTEM PORARY
CUSTOM VI on 5 gorgtout
acre* naar St. John* A l a.
Amewtlei gaieral New lutt
t i 4t.m ii
INVITINO (POOL) in . Nice
area. Naar but. shopping.
Soma real nice aitrat. Chock
out Hilt ana. New........ue.too

3 2 2 -2 4 2 0

"TK TERRACE" SElSRRtoi

I bedrooms In ba. C/H/A,
lirapiacaI laAVmo., tac Up
Call UHItt/Nove attiaat

ROTJUSTMOTHER REALTOR

3 2 1 -2 7 2 0

ALL i f 111*

TFOR SALE BY OWNER?

TEXPIRED LISTING?

1Don't want to lltl your home
IF YOU'RE SERIOUS ABOUT
SELLING YOUR HOUSE
CALL ME I

BRAND NIW OFFICE BLOO.
4M tg.lt.tatm tg.fi.
OCIZONINOI
Move In Special.......... usa/aw

price* In orool------------MMTIt

METRO REAL ESTATE
Ml WTorMMaga

c a l l ............................ m

m
OFFICE/RETAILII unlit. I.0M
ig. ft. aa . 1433/mo. Can ba

CAT, FREE tagaadai

utad logattwrl...Ua-UTT/mtt.
&gt; SMALL RENTAL OFFICES
Vary reasonable. IIXI*. Far
detail*, call newt H I *531

$995
$1995
$5995
$6995

Starisr/RstinaBRt Hern

Lovely Loch Arbor location! I
Wrm. I bath, large comer let,
■Lapp wall, living, dining, dan,
laundry room, now reel.
tAS.00H. amenable. 113-7407

VIW, Vary Spcalout. UT,000
3 /1W, Handyman tpadall

AREALSUPRISEI

m

ESTATE C O .,IM C .

131-7337

THIS W E E K S

Auumabta no Quality loan* In
n*M araatl CIm o m hamat
from Samlnota/Orang*
Volutla/Lak# Count!*, I

Saturday a AM III T Baby
Itamt. furniture » mltcl_____

CARPORTSALE
HouMhold Ifarm. tool*. appll
anett. furnltura-much moral
Frl. and Sat. *-1 MS Samlnafa
Ava.. Ih. Mary

LESSTMMSIMO DOM
INCLUDINGCLOSINCCOSTS

VI, llv dln- tom- room*, appl..
carport, c/h/a............143.300

•i

W lnrwrchOMn from letters;100 words
or Im s explaining "Why I need to win
this c s r.f Received el either location
by Dec. 19. Winner notified by phone
Dec. 20.1990 at 11:00 am. Winner
mutt purchase license, tag &amp; title only
A provide auto ins. Must have valid FI
drivers license &amp; be 18yrs. of age. No
Purchase Necessity. Include Name,
Address A Daytime Phone #. Come
see ue for ell of your holiday needs.
Merry Christmas A The Happiest of

COMU PALMETTOi 25TH
LESSTHAN S im DOWN
WITH NEW FINANCING
•OHOUONdY.FHA.VA
OR CONVENTIONAL LOANS!

POOLHOME
rOSSItU IIJUE/PURCHASE
VI, with family, living, dining
rmt, Iplc. er cloved porch,
'mco yard. Huga lot, I4t.no

'%

I bdrm. 1 bath, i.too eg It.,
largo living and dining area
wllh fireplace. Eitra room tor
etflca/hobby/thlrd bedroom.
Wood deck, large free*, tannlt
and pool privilege*. |toj,000.
call m a u s *r n vstu

Plaau call lor othar lltllngil

*«,»• %■«

I lately I bdrm. I bath 1 itory
hpma. Originally built In ltjg.
but rattorad in itOT with new
plumbing, electrical. Install*
tlon, floor covering, tollit
siding, ate. ale. The ertpiaal
charm it prttervtd. Over noo
&gt;g II ol living area Ml on a
genarout wooded lol. Very
convenient but quiet.
Yeawill lava III
Priced le Mil at t H 4.no

SJl.tOO

ST. JONTS A M U MONROE
I acra atlatal 4/7. 3500 iq It.,
custombuilt. UlT.no

UUEIUUIV
LESSTHM S2,(00 00M
VI. living, dining, tamlly
fPomi, fenced yard, ntw
Mint, carpat and Ilia. 14a. WO

Taut I njsJYn *Salt Prictsl

ESTATESALE

Watar haaiar, buffat. Hove,

Appolnfmant only I . Collect
Iblat, antique*, old clock, iter
ling Itemi. gold welchei.

ttlda a bade, couch**. tola &amp;

Ratrtavar pupil caib.m -un

mite. Itwalry..............333 411*

estite/ tam sa u
Ito* MAGNOLIA A V. Sootard
Saturdayanly tAM (FirmI) III
3PU. Antique*. furniture,
clothing, tael*, refrig., bike*.
tdvt, above gmd. pod.

etartlng tAM.

2413S. ORANGEAVSanto*
Saturday 1:301:30. J famlllatl
UtttabtlafaeacyW—gl

24TOS.SARFOROAV

Saturday all dayll Toy*, gift
Itamt lor Chrlttmat at TER­
RI FI C PRI CES. Now
morchandltel Parking at
SamlnolaSporllngGoodtll

2S44 CUURM0NTAVC

•

• OVEIOO 1.25ACRES

Cuttom built 4 bdrm. 1 bath.
tVaplaca, tcreanad pool and
'fa. 3car garage 1 17*.too

O il ISth by Samlnola HS
Friday. Sal. A Sun. Loll of
toy* A cloth#*, turnltura

New Yeenl

* Bad Credit?
* Stow Paymente?
* No Cradit?
* Repo's?

fiK /
QK/
QK/

QE/

MINCER MOTORS
QUAIIIY

USED CARS

4000 E. Hwy 46
(25th Si) Acrot* From
SANFORD
AUTO AUCTION

Drivo a Lott Modal Cor
for as llttla as *499*12-.

SANFORD

3 2 1 -1 4 5 0
/ you can afford the month
payment dnoe home today.

C all $34-4049

Buy An Avia Car A t

; 3/2 CUSTOM MILT
Ceramic Ilia, Lavalort.
flrtplaca, 1 car garaga.
thaol/lennl* avail........ tt 1.500

|:

VOkMMCounty’* Largo*! Sngt* Famfy HomabuftMr

DELTONA

r

U t» than *3300 downI V I with
II a 14 lend porch. U 4.S00

$1300 DOM INCL CLOSING
Pinocratt. V I . 1‘vlng. dining.
Ibmily rm . MCurily tytlam.
&gt;tncad yard M7.too

1ME OLDSMOBILE Cl ERA
v«.P«.P«.PW.n, TAT. CRUISE
AUFU STEREO. AM. I HORE*430444

Only $7699
*

1E00 OLDSMOBILE ClERA
V*. PI. P«, PW. PI. TAT. CRUISE
AUFM ItlRCO * WOHE. AOI441

7 Decorated Models on display!

Only $9999
1EM CEO METROLS.I.

10 lo 6

Sunday 12 lo 6
Caelbruok
Daland

I DA HATCH PS. PA. AU*M STEREO
AIA 4UTONATCt MOAE3077W

Only $5499

736-7210

D t ir u f ti D tfiu d rfiiU y .

�100

2 1 3 — Au ction s
A U C T I O N TALE

323 5620
E L SI Lit A U 1S4 ABT4
Ht order of Owner* of Record
we will on VfervfJv the !/tf*
dJ* of ( V ( (beginning j f 10
A M » \»
,i* public Am t on *br
. ,&lt;» ' m s 4'f tN&gt; buvnn** fcnov n
a\ L
K R f i»ne%* Cenfer
&gt;Oi /**•••* r* S*nfn*d *♦
•
I ...... .
v r A.*» Suite A off
Airport Hu d

SHOP EQUIPMENT

•.

. •

• A *on 17 n rn*,|f , s,«nde*
• • *0 Bel*

• *.

4 •

.

v/e»
• R •• .

S .m fon l

TAKE UP TAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
f * i e p * * a « » a g title et,
F O R D T A U R U S GL
ivM
L O A D E D w-tt* leather au*o
4 &lt;r \*e»eo V •
O N l V 1 !W 20 per month
C .HI M r Pa y n r i ; j J 12 I
• PUBLIC A U TO A U C T IO N •
E w E R Y T u t SOAV J WPM
D A I I O N A A U T O A U f I ION
Mwy t 2. Day tona Hrac h
•04 211 t i l l

TARE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN

CONSIST INGOF
*p*ncjte d » ill p r f* *
Hi SkillHor-f R u m !

•

M#» r,iM

2 3 1 -C ars

If Wise DEU AUCTIONEER
204 Old v —
Rd Sjntofd

•

s.in torcl

\

•
11 • . I .
• no 000 fcif e! he.**er

F v e r p t t a * »a q title r*c
M f RCURYCOUGAR XR 7
A N N I V F R S A R Y MO D E L*
Eqoait/rr c r u i i # fill h r a ’r d
m a t * THIS CAW MAS
F v f R v T h i n g * Only
1241 V0 prr m o n t h * '
Cali Mr P a « o e )71 2121

Florid ,i

F »••!.*&gt;

r

231 — C a r s
*« 4f F I R E B I R D *
H o ll ey 4 barr el

234— Im port Cars
and Trucks

231 — C«irs

400
i
|,i
tarb
Run*

good' !*on f*r*toffer* 174 flu

2 h.»rrei

« arb 4nonOonq mite*' Run*
\trcwj Int e .
(.rv) l*Ofty
•)&lt;mk) f*eet)\ minor j i y *
ltt**&gt;
,1*4. After * P M *40 4/1)

TAXF UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
E * c e p t ! a * »aq »it'e e*.
CH E VY C A V A L IE R
vha
dOQf auto .*'* *tereo*
Only 1 14V 40 per month
F or CeNL y h month*
t a l l Mr P a yn e 121 7»2 i

4t CH E V Y t J ° « i

4

• f t TOY O TA •• *
nq t+xi
need* w»»rfc f •• -t &gt;,|i o» u V
•&lt;&gt;* p,*»* linu 4H 201/

233— Aulo Paris
/ Accessories

TARE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
P L Y M O U T H RE L l A N T
4 door auto a»r *tereo power
i t e e r i n q power |,r ah e* '
O N I Y I I H M p e r month
Call Mr P a yn e 121 2121

1981 DODGE OMNI 0?4
* *p e e d Run * g o o d ' I A 00
Cali
) 2i Jl*i

lt«|
T R C O P E W LS 4 . 4 *
Burgundy &amp; r opper L ow low
H 2 VtB* *
Maqic I* u «u
12) 4244

F 7W ’ /1 one owner e » r
work
truck 7 set* tire* on road and
oft road 1 1 IVJU 40/ &gt;40 2)14

TARE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN

it « i TOYOTA PIC K U P' F-»ra
« lean *pe&lt; t a l '
17 w v
Magic l* u iu
) 2) 4244

lit 0211
AU TO M ATIC
tr a n * m i * * i o n *
tr« • « 1/1 e i r h a n q e rad'atr*#*
f r . » m l )0 U\ed ti re* from IS
T .re mn4»ntinq ava il ab le
l i l t C a l e r y St. 121 4411

U n ite d W a y

238— Vehicles
______ Wanted______

• MOPE O V-*p » »• *n n

AA AUTO SALVAGE
Now b u yi n g complete '&lt;#r* A
truck* b y weiqhf 17 21 P 00
lb* d e l i v e r e d or 1 71 P IOC
lb* we pick up F ramp n
/^
Cad liar
IS 071 &lt;b* • 17 71
eq ua l* I I 11 O f , Guaranteed
hiqhe\t p r ic e * paid i " thi*
a r e a ' Cal l 44t 4000 tor quote

l i t C u * to m Wtndsof
m»nt
COOd I I S00 122 SJ7S a fter 1

t t M T R O O P E R LS 4&gt;4' ^ h . t e A
grey
1 ton e
Low
lo w
m il e *
fW .t iM H
M a q »r l* u fu
121 4244

• M I C ME l I N R ad 1
t re
Brand New* ito IAS MW )90
Metric f.t* Pn eg e ot 140
122 24)/

M O FFO

1966 FORD IRUCR

R E N A U L T Enco re* 14 7 dr
•i&lt; 1 t p d 40 m p g ^fY, fm c a *
g o o d co n d 11 /OOotio )) 0 l i l t

SS OOO m ile * I cylinder fully
loaded PH PS A C
1 / 4t l
t.rm 171 t 47l a*k for Tom

M O N O * J00 S

1*11 )

.•

run*grm&lt;j 1X2) ♦ 4 111 OtSO
Eve*. 121 44/2
HONDA 100 XL
l t »1 R *jn*
good
G o o d condition* S400
t 4. call 111 o t i o E m 21M 472

/) C H E V Y J/4 Ton Pick up. mud
fir e* on rear Good co n d 11ton
1AO0
12) I t ) !

R

•n r.«ge
Call

*. -- k 1 c nnililicyi (W
)W t t /7

17 K A W A S A K I 101 CSR' Re
. t*r*iy (.•••»hf|.,ied )00d &lt;r»»»
••
14U. 17 1 1 1 4 brl * 4pm

241- Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
t l DODG E Chinook f •'
,
rfdion *ei* &lt; onfameej w 40M'
. 122 1141 r.x • »* i P V

243— Junk Cars
• CASH*
FOR
YO U R I U N k
CAR OR
TBUCK"
ANY
C O N D I T I O N * C A L L 12) 2H 7
U T O P O o l l a r l l P a i d »r&gt;r
• ar* fr»». • *
4 wheel d r » je
Any condition
Call )22 IttG

•
dr *trt" i ,*t&gt; « * t
• r e l i e f h«.k

•
•

•
•

• s » c r i t\» nf.rq Cwbmnt
• ’ 7»t **ep
• 4« • ! drafting t^pie

dr*k

a

•

•

• A
• 4

\•

*0^ » p S.*A
* S ffjm \ &gt;

•

\

•

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you're buying from and t h o s e w h o w ill s e rv ic e y o u f o r ye a rs to c o m e
confident that If you c h e c k t h e fa c ts y o u n c o m e to m y a h N e w
Toyotalandl As the owner w h o w in n e at m e d e a le rs h ip
i'll personally make sure
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TH E C O M M ITM E N TS :

221 G ood T h in g s
________ to E a t________
• • U PI C A N A V E L S ! ! ! 1441
C E l E R T A V S A N FO R D
BR ING C O N T A IN E R S "

The lowest prices and the Oiggest
savings in Florida aren t goals at
Tovouiand. they re the way we
oo business Our new ow nership
is committed to saving you more
than any other dealer on every
new Toyota car I truer and
we stand behind every price
everytlme

U PICA
NAV E L ORANGES
Si 1»V \ lr Mwy 44 E Sanford
t • E of QeardaH A « e r e « !
A ,»p Auct on » 2 D l l _______

222— M u s ic a l
M e r c h a n d is e

SERVICE:

we are one of the highest rated
TOYOTA SERVICE GROUPS IN Tm F
SOUTHEAST i
want to earn
your trust for a lifetime Our
sales team will satisfy your every
need w ith courtesy a
FRiENOUNESS We re takmq
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION into the
9 0 s with our new ownership

CONN O R G A N
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PIANO FOR SALE

223

PRESIDENT

SATISFACTION:

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a SS00 million dollar oealep
group The otnef Toyota Dealers
,n our group nave won PRESi
DENT S AWARDS For EXCELLENCE
we nave the resources and the
determination to oe #’ And
we guarantee »0 u VE NEVER
BEEN TPtATEO BETTER OR FELT
MORE SATISFIED

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                    <text>Running to catch up
By J. MARK BARFIELD

Herald staff writer

□ S p o rts

Lake Brantley, Lyman take titles
Lake liranHry High School coach. Clay
Parnell, watched In amazement and delight as
the Patriots blew through the field to take the
stair crown for the third consecutive tram title
on Friday, while the Lyman I Huh School girls’
Irani rlalmrd the Class 4A state cross country
championship by a 25-point margin Saturday
morning.

SANFORD — During the next three weeks.
Seminole County commissioners will be grappl­
ing with ways to reduce — and pay for — a
projected $9H million five-year deficit that will lxcreated by an effort to catch up and match service
standards with |&gt;npulatlnu growth.
And that $98 million dix-sn't Include Inflation,
a factor that could semi the unllnaneed prlcetag
for county services to nearly $120 million, an
amount that Is alxiul hall of this year's entire
$222.7 million annual county spending package.

The deficit Is almost certain to force commis­
sioners to consider higher property taxes, gaso­
line taxrs. sales tuxes, utility taxes and new
Impact fees and user fees to pay for the cost. Tincost will lx- borne by every homeowner and
business, but will lx- shared by out-of-county
residents who pay gasoline and sales taxes that
are returned to Seminole County's coffers.
The staggering expense could also force
residents to accept a lower lifestyle to reduce tincost. That translates to roads that will lxeongested for longer periods of time, longer waits
for library bonks or other frustrat Ions.
The deficit has been created by state require­

ments that the county first adopt minimum
capacity standards for roads and services, ealeh
up with any shortfalls that may exist within the
next five years and then maintain those stan­
dards as Ihc population Increases. It Is a principle
called "concurrency."
Concurrency also serves as a scale that
Indicates how successful county and city com­
missioners have Ix-en In keeping pace with
previous |xipulation growth according to current
standards.
If commissioners fall to meet the requirements,
the state can withhold revenue. Including gasol See D eficit, Page BA

S e e P a g e IB

See Page 2A

Longw ood
leadership
shuffles

□ People

By NICK RFBIFAUF
Herald staff writer

□ F lo rid a

Woman sought for kidnapping
JACKSONVILLE — A woman who posed as a
welfare worker, to gain the confidence of a
teenage mother. Is being sought for the
kidnapping ol a J-month old babv.

Christmas looks bright for Ella
MIDWAY — Ella Mae Blur, burdened with
crippling arthritis, has a house In which she can
no longer live. But thanks to Habitat For
Humanity she will have a new home for
Christmas.
See Page IC

Faust’s closes its doors
SANFORD — Alter close to four decades of
doing business In downtown Kmfnrd. the doors
of Faust’s Drugstore were closed and locked for
the final time Friday afternoon.
The store, which continued to ojierate under
the name of Its founder. Dr Earl Faust, has been
owned and operated for many years by
pharmacist David Kllngensmlth and not only
served as a drug store but was also a location
where citizens could go to pay their Southern
Bell ielclphone bills.
Southern Bell official Larry Strlckler said he
had been notified earlier tills past week. "W e
knew Faust's did a good Job for us In collecting
phone bills, but until we actually got Into It. we
didn't know how outstanding (lie job was."
Strlckler said It Is estimated that Faust’s
scrvrd "between six and seven thousand
customers per month.” He sakl he believed it
could lx* the heaviest collection done by any
private business In the entire Central Florida
area.
Following the closing. Southern Bell will post
a sign on the door. Informing customers that
until a new location Is found In the Sanford area,
they will be required to mall their payments to
the Jacksonville office.
Several locations arc currently being consid­
ered as new pimne bill drop-off points In the
Sanford area, but nothing lias been made
official. Strlckler said that announcement will
probably be made early during this coming
week.

School employees injured
OVIEDO — Two M'liilnolc County school
district employees were Injured Friday as they
were repairing the air conditioning system at
Tuskawllla Middle School. IH01 Tuskawllla
Hoad. Oviedo.
During the disassembling operation, a copper
tulx- containing hot oil exploded, causing burns
tolMith workers.
Louis Sutton. 37. DeBary. sustained seconddegree burns to his hands and first-degree burns
to his neck, face and stomach.
Munson Cockayne. 59. Orange City, suffered
first-degree burns to his face and hands.
Both were transported by ambulance to
Orlando Regional Medical Center for treatment.
Cockayne. w Iki has worked lor the school
district for IH years, was treated and released.
Sutton, who has been employed by the district
for three years, was held overnight for observa­
tion.
From staff and w lrs raports

IN D E X
,...4 C
B rld fla .........
m..4B
Bualnasa....
. 5-7B
Classified*.
,...4 C
C o m ic s ....... .
C ro s s w o rd ................. 4C
Dear A b b y .................. 3C
D eaths......................... S*
Editorial...................... 4 A
Ed u c a tio n .................. OC

F lo rid a ...............
H a a lth TFitn o ss
M o vla s...............
N ation .................
P a o p la ...............
S p o rts ................
T a lo v la lo n ........
W o a tha r.............
W o rld .

.S A

Clear and cool

Sunny and cool with
a high In the lower
7(N Wind northeast
at 10-15 mph

F o r m o rs w o a th a r, s s s P a g o 2 A

Hh i U kSolo b* Tommy Vlnctnl

Spelling out pride
The Plnecrest Elementary School student body this
week gathered en masse to spell out the school
name Nearly 800 students took part in the activity.

which was one ol many held at schools across
Seminole County last week to celebrate American
Education Week.

Baseball was Sanford’s rite of spring
It was July 2. 1933. A New York Giant southpaw.
Carl llublM-ll. M'l a record when he went IH lonliiK" •«*
shut out the St. Louis Cardinals 1-0. A lew days later he
set another record at Comlskry Park In Chlcugo while
pitching for tin- National League In the major league's
Initial all-star game.
Huhlx-ll. called by writers as the "meal ticket." struck
out five batters In a row. That's been done many times
tint not In an all-slar affair. And. this particular feat was
emphasized by who lie fanned. They were Balx- Rulh
and Lou Gehrig of the Yankees. Jimmv Foxx and Al
Simmons ol Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics, and
the playing manager-shortstop of the Boston Red Sox.
Joe Cronin — leading the American League In hitting at
the time. These were the five heaviest hitlers In tinjunior circuit.
flits record still stands. It was tied a couple of years
ago during an all-star game In San Diego but tin- hitters
Involved couldn't hold a caudle to the quintet fanned by
Huhlx-ll.
The Hubbcll feat was no fluke. In 1936. lor example.
Carl won 26 games and lost six but ended the season
with 16 consecutive wills. In 1937. he won Ills first 10
starts for a string of 26 straight decisions.
After Huhlx-ll closed out Ills career he was retained by

LONGWOOD - The city of Longwood. long embroiled In political
battles. Is under new elected and
appointed leadership, following
Friday's clrcllnn of Hank Hardy as
mayor and a commission vote to
oust the city administrator and city
attorney.
Commissioner Adrienne Perry
walked out of the heated Longwood
city commission mining In protest
of the removal of City Administrator
Mike Abels.
At several limes during the meet­
ing. rltlzens In the audience at­
tempted to s|x-ak but were gaveled
out of order by Hardy.
The commission met Friday to
elect from among Its five members a
mayor and a deputy mayor. Former
Mayor Gene Farach and former
Deputy Mayor Jelf Morton were
removed from office by voters tn the
Nov. 6 general election, leaving the
city no mayor to sign the city
payroll cheeks that were due to be
lumml Krtctuy Mflernum.

Ilank Mnrrty was nomlnutrd by
newly-elected Commissioner Paul
Lovrstrandto hr the new mayor,
and newcomer Gary Hefter was
chosen by lots to serve as deputy
m a y o r . H a rd y hud I n it ia lly
nominated llrfter for the mayoral
|X)Sl.

Horace Stoneham. owner of the Giants, and named
director of the Giant farm system. The Giants decided
that each Spring they would bring all their farm clubs
to one lix-atlon each Spring for training and evaluation.
The question was where? Branch Rickey ol the
□ See Baseball, Page 5 A

S e m in o le H ig h H o m e c o m in g

The first order of business Wiis a
3-lo-2 vote to remove city attorney
Frank Kruppenbaelier. a move op­
posed by commissioners Adrienne
Perry and Rex Anderson. Hardy
then named Longwood attorney
Jerry Korman to serve as Interim
city attorney until a search yields a
full-time legal advisor to the city.
Frank Kruppcnbaehcr had been
serving on an interim basts for
several months following the tiring
of the previous attorney. Richard
Taylor. Tom Lang, an associate of
S ee Longw ood. Page 2A

festivities overshadow loss

S enior class president selected as queen;
Rams roasted during H om ecom ing parade
By V IC K I DoSORM IER

Herald staff wriler
SANFORD - Despite the 21 21
loss lo Lake Mary High School on
the fixitliall field, there was a festive
atm osphere at Sem inole High
School's Thomas E. Whighani
stadium Saturday morning.
Shannon Latimer, senior class
p re s id e n t and e d ito r o f the
yearbook, was crowned Homecom­
ing queen by Yolanda Baker, the
1989 queen.
"I was excited.” Latimer said
later, with an carlo-car smile. She
added lh.it as Homecoming queen
her only responsibility will lx- lo
crown next year's queen.
Latimer was escorted during the
ceremony by lu-r grandfather.
Glllx-rt Taylor of Sanford. She Is the
daughter ol Janice ami Clarence
Lallmer II of Sanford. Her father Is
an army speclalisi stationed in
California.
T h irty form er H om ecom in g
queens from 19-10 to 19HH were
presented w ith carnations.
The evening Ix-lorc al 5 p in..
Latimer and the oilier clglu mem­
bers ol the Homecoming court
l&gt;nurd In tlie celebration at the
Hoineeomliig Parade and pep rally
hi downtown Sanford
Rain early in the day and
threatening clouds ihrniighoui tin
alti-moon and evening caused some
concern that the parade and rally
might have to lx- cancelled
In s te a d , th e r.n ils h eld o il a n d th e
p a r a d i* w o u n d Us w a v d o w n K irsi

Htfdd Photo by MM» Jorts"

The Noles said no- to Rams on a
parade float
Street from Sun Curios Avenue to
the Magnolia Mall A strong wind
blew off Lake Monroe, tint didn't
harm any of the floats.
"Slam the Rams" was the theme
ol the parade
Orange and black costumed
"wrestlers" subdued hapless cloth
rams In championship style on one
llo.il while diners on the Seminole
"lunch wagon" al roasted rain lor
lunch.
Principal Wayne Epps, umbrella
tn hand, watched the parade pass
from the staging area on Seminole
Hlvd. through Its turn onto First
Street
"It I sit in my car." he said ol the
Sec Seminole. Page SA

Shannon La tim e r is 1990 H o m e co m in g qu e e n

HBrBfc) Photo by *B»ly Jo«do«

�N E W S FROM THE REGION AND ACROSS THE S T A T E

LO N G W O O D The 1990
L on gw o od A rta an d C rafta
Festival continues today aa
thouaanda of Central Floridians
Hocked to the ctty's downtown
historical district to tour the
displays snd exhlblta.

Longwood
C aw tteasd C r e a t e s ! A
5p.m . that same day.
Krumenbacher w aa
A bels then announced he

m a

y

—

A T lS tC T Im city attorn ey,
Kerman's first task was to read a
resolution orderina the ouster o f
Abelo. H ardyoffend Itap E S u n Ina/y reeotuttonBaytnd the city
hadjari^coalldence In the ad-

4

The preilm insry resolution
cmlled for Abels' immediate sumpension with pay until a final
resolutioncouldbeadopted,snd
pending any appeal A M s might
wish to make within a five-day

o f Cltv ClerkDemald Terrv to act

wnh the « n h c . ot the n ajom y
***** befwe the “ T wma
°™ '
“ “ "S !*
°n the rote he Ind W ed to ylay

jL'£^PKS3f«5!'3S2
Rf.„ An

JJ25SaS5S2»S-£!i
* ° * ~ n” * ” *1 ■PPo®**
Anderson said he had received a
s s s s . U 'B J P s r 's
!*■* hadproblem s with the city's
ment. l see an
ethical |
bert." Anderson
said.

Perry
saying.

Over 400 booths have been set
up. spanning a four-block area
surrounding the city hall build­
ing. Streets throughout the area
were blocked off to through
trafllc.
Although free parking spaces
are difficult to find during peak
hours of the morning and mtdsftemoon, local residents are
offering parking on their lawns
for a fee. thus spreading the
economic impact of the festival
throughout the downtown area.
Exhibitors are setting every­
thing from Christmas trees to
handkerchiefs. A great many

exhibits featured hand-m ade
w o o d e n o b je c la a u c h aa
bookahehrea. outdoor furniture
and wall clocks.

said she wouldn't m iss It. " I
came here far several years Just
to see what they had." she said,
"then we got the idea o f setting
up this booth and w e've been
coming back ever since." The,
W llsh tres had a d isp lay o f
various hand made Hems in­
cluding dolls, dot! clothing snd
wooden doll furniture.
With the Longwood festival
held each year on the weekend
prior to Thankjglving. many
shoppers said they used the
event each year aa a kickoff for
their Christmas shopping.
The festival w ill continue

Man convicted of killing a
former lover at auditorium
MIAMI — A Jury found a 52-year-old man guilty
of first-degree murder for gunning down hla
former lover at the Dade County Auditorium.
The Jury rejected Gerardo Balmaaeda's claim
that the March shooting of Celtlna Montenegro
was an accident. Balmaaeda waa also convicted
Friday of attempted second-degree murder In the
shooting of a policeman at the auditorium.
Montenegro stopped seeing Balmaaeda when
she found out he was married to someone else.
Tw ice she sought protection from him In the
courts and a Judge signed a "k e e p away” order
but It did no good.
On March 31. Montenegro went to the Dade
County Auditorium with two frienda to hear
Raphael, a Spanish balladecr.
Balmaaeda showed up unexpectedly and shot
Montenegro through the heart and head In front
o f shocked conccrtgocrs. He also exchanged
bullets with Metro-Dade Police Officer Phillip
Daniel, who was working at the auditorium.
T h e victim ’s daughter, Joennc Montenegro. 23,
celled th e verdict » victory tor eU w om en w h o

Adm inistrator. Hardy banged
the gavel for adjournment.
Aa cltlzena Bled out o f the
room, more than one waa heard
to comment on the downward
direction ihe city appeared to be
taking. One said. “ Well. 1 guess
It's time to put my house up for
sale and leave Longwood."

\
f
.
*
|

have suffered domestic violence.
"M en gel away with everything. But not today.
Not today." she said.
In a rambling monologue from the witness
sta n d , B alm a sed a sa id h e d r o v e to th e
auditorium, bumped Into Montenegro, decided to
commit suicide on the spot but accidently killed
her Instead.
Hla lawyer. Julio Gutierrez, said Balmaseda
was obsessed and was oo unstable he lacked the
ability to commit premeditated murder.

Throughout ihe seven-day trial before Judge
bomaa Carney, the defense lawyer pointed out
Babnaseda'a idiosyncrasies and his determina­
tion to be a blgshot. The great-grandson o f a
Spanish count. Balmaaeda paid t37.000 to obtain
the title marquis for himself, dieted constantly
and underwent surgery to Improve his appearU )C € ,

H e also had a fixation with death and he spent
90.102.90 to arrange his own funeral four days
before the killing, his lawyer said. Balmaaeda
tried to kill himself three limes in the United
States and In Spain, on different occasions using
pitta, a gun and carbon-monoxide poisoning in his
white Mercedes, he said.
Prosecutors Sally Welntraub and Jacqueline
Scola said Balmaaeda carried out a meticulously
planned murder. They said he was furious that
Montenegro dared to discard him and had taken
him to court. He pursued her. h a ra ssed her and
finally killed her. the prosecutors said.
"T h e only obsession the defendant had was an
obsession with doing things hla own w a y ."
Welntraub said. • —
A lta r ih e .jS H id c r,
_
break a date
with another gtrifriend.
T h e next day, April Fools, police found him
sitting In hla car In a friend's driveway with a
vacuum cleaner hose running from the exhaust
pipe to the door. Balmaaeda testified that the
suicide attempt m ight have been successful If he
had not Interrupted It to take a phone call.
Balmaseda Is also a suspect In Ihe 1987
disappearance o f an old girlfriend. Rebekah
Johnson.

Sham welfare w orker sought in kidnapping
JACKSONVILLE — Deputies searched
Saturday for a woman who posed as a
welfare worker to gain the confidence o f a
teenage single mother and then kidnapped
her 3-month old baby.
Stacey Ayn Smith. 18. said the slickta lk in g w o m a n d r o v e a w a y fro m a
McDonald's parking lot with her son James
Andrew Smith Thursday evening.
Deputies with the Duval County Sheriff's
department said they were following a few
leads but had no m otive for (he apparent
kidnapping.
"S h e seemed so professional and could

TALLAHASSEE _ Tha winning
numbers drawn Saturday night In

have fooled anybody." said Smith, who lives
with her mother, Terri Smith, who was also
fooled by the woman.
"I fell comfortable with her," said the
young mother. "1 didn’t think anyone would
be that cruel."
“ I believed every word she said." said
Terri Smith. "It doesn't make any sense for
her to come Into our house to take that
baby, knowing we all got a look at her."
Smith said the woman approached her
during a Christmas shopping expedition to a
local mall. The woman, wearing stonewashed Jeans and a white sweater, gave her
name as either Katie or K.D. Thomas. She
played with the baby and complimented

him.
The woman told Smith she waa a state
welfare counselor who could help her line
up baby clothes, welfare asslslancc and a
baby sitter for the child.
Smith said she accepted the wom an's
story without asking to see any identifica­
tion. She did say she wanted the woman to
meet her mother, ao the two drove to the
family's home In separate cars.
Smith's mother was suspicious at first but
eventually waa also won over.
Around 9:30 p.m., the woman persuaded
Smith to accompany her lo meet some baby
sitters. They drove past several houses but
did not meet anyone.

Senators ask
for report on
Peru murder
T A M P A — S e n s. Bob
Graham and Connie Mack
have asked the FBI to re­
l e a s e i n f o r m a t io n th e
agency gathered about the
murder In Peru last year o f
T a m p i Tribu ne reporter
ToddC , Smith.
In a letter sent late Fri­
day, Graham, D-Fla., and
Mack. R-Fla., urged FBI
Director William Sessions to
reconsider his agency's re­
fusal to disclose the file
requested by The Tampa
Tribune under the federal
F reed om o f In form ation
Act.
"O n e yea r a fter Tod d
Sm ith's death, the nature o f
his brutal murder following
his kidnapping and appar­
ent, torture la enveloped In a
shroud o f m ystery. This
'O a b e d e s e r v e s t o b e
expedited by the FBI." the
-letter says.
Th e FBI was asked by
Peruvian officials to In­
v e s t ig a t e th e m u rd er
shortly after Sm ith's body
was found last Nov. 21 in
Uchlxa, a sm all cocaine
boom town In a remote
area o f Peru.
Smith was on a working
vacation to research co­
caine trafficking and terror­
ism w hen he w as k id ­
napped at gunpoint from
an airstrip In Peru's Upper
Huallaga Valley Nov. 17,
His body was found beside
a soccer field Nov. 21.
Officials said he had been
strangled and beaten, and
had been dead about 24
hours.
A sign denouncing Smith
as a spy linked to the
the Communist Party of
Peru, the official name o f
Shining Path, a Maoist extremlst group.______________

TH E W EATHER

tha Pick 6 LO TTO Jackpot warn

#.«, 31,34,22 and 30.
The dally number drawn
Saturday In tha Florida Lottary
Cash3gam awaa 1 -1 -2 .
The winning numbers from
Friday's Fantasy 5 drawing ware
9 ,99. I t , 39 and It.

Today...Sunny and cool with a
high In the lower 70s. Wind
northeast at 10-15 mph.
Tonlght...Fair with a low In
the upper 40s to lower 50s and a
light northeast wind.
Tomorrow...Mostly sunny with
the highs In the mid 70s.
Extended forecast...Mostly fair
Tuesday and Wednesday with a
high in the upper 70s to low 80s
and a low In (lie high 50s to mid
60s.

&amp;
SATURDAY
PtyCMy T i l l

“

a

WMOAV
MhrCMy T t - I T

&gt;
MONDAY
leaay 74-BB

WEDNESDAY
TUBSDAV
PttyCMy 79-19 PtlyCMv 79-07

The temperature at 5 p.m.
Saturday was 75 degrees and
Friday's overnight low was 62.
as recorded by Ihe National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ S a tu rd a y 's high..............77
□ S a ro o M tric y re s s a re .2 9 .9 e
□ X e la tiv e H aaddity....4S p e t
□ W la d s ....!fo rth v e a t 12 m p h

Sunday, November IB, 1990
Vol. 83. No. 74

&amp;SXZT

MIAMI - Florid* J*hour tempo
end retnlell « t ram . EOT V.hirdoy

City

Suburlptlon R e in
(Dolly 4 Sunder I
Homo Delivery 4 Moll

Apalachicola
Crettv lew
Daytona Beoch
Fort Lauderdate
FortMyon
Oabwavllte
Jack tonvill* *
Key Well
Miami
Pentacoia
Saratola Bradenton
Tallehatta*
Tampa
Vero Beach
Weet Patm Beach

M L
7*
SB
7t
It
B4
71
7*
II
II
H
*0
70
It
IB
IB

-------------

Albuquerque iy
Anchored* in
Atlanta ly
Baltimore r
Birmingham ly
Bltmorck ay
Bo*ton cy
Brmmtvlllo pc
Buffalo pc
Chertattepc
Chicago ty
Cincinnati ty
Clavolandcy
Oallaapc
Donvorey
OeiMolnetiy
Detroit ty
Duluth ty
El Painty
Evantvillaiy
Fargo ty
Hertford ty
Honolulu th
Hovttonpc
Indlanapolltty
Kanui City ty
Let Vtgetpc
Little Rock ty

D a y te a a Beach: Waves are
3-4 feet and rough. Current Is to
•the south with a water tempera­
ture o f 70 degrees. N e w S a y r a a
B each: Waves are 1-3 feet and
choppy. Current Is to the south,
with a water temperature o f 69
degrees.

Bt. Aagvstiae to Jxplter lalat
Small craft exercise eaatioa
Today...Wind variable 10 kls
this morning becoming north to
northwest and Increasing to 15
to 20 kts during the afternoon.
Seas 2 to 4 ft Increasing by fate
a fte r n o o n . Bay a n d Inland
waters a light chop becoming a
moderate chop during the af­
ternoon. A few showers.

Mempnit ty
Milwaukee ty
Minnaapolitty
Nethvlllety
Haw Or leant pc
Haw Vorkpc
Omaha pc
PhiiedeiphJecy
Ptioenucy
Pittsburgh pc
Providence cy
Richmond cy
SI. Louit ty
San Antonio pc
Sen Diego pc
San Juan th
Seattle th
Spokane cy

1

I

H

□

�hastraal dub® as we D as local
buaiaaaata and governm ent
bodtoa v a n to father at 8 a.m.
yesterday for the kickoff at

sets off traffic snafu
rm a a M m a M
---------------

1

—

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS -

Interstate 4 and area roada were
jammed for hours Saturday aa
Altamonte SprUum police dis­
mantled an expuKuive device
found on the State Road 438
overpaaa at about 8 a.m.
P o lic e e p o k e e m a n J e f f
Hawkins said the device was
dismantled at the acene and aent
to the crime laboratory for InPolice received a telephone call
reporting what waa described as
a bomb on the overpaaa Police
d is c o v e r e d a s m a ll r e d
automobile abandoned on the
overpaaa with a white package
nearby. T h e package w ould
contain some kind o f explosive
device, police were told b y the

County Sheriff's Depart
and Florida Highw ay I

busily ptehing op traah and Utter
b d b ti that time.
^ k a y ta g e, r ts h m s n o fth e ctty
plsaaad with the turnout of

of the traffic conaietcd or football
fans headed for the Florida
State-Memphla State football
game played Saturday at the
Citrus Bawl In Orlando,
Ita O e w as rerouted to U A
Highway 17-03 which quickly
became clogged with the large
numbers of motorists. Travel in
so u th ern Sem in ole C ounty
became almost Impossible for
. many bouts yetrrday morning.

Ca|itwi.in«
Htv hnmtL
SR 436 w a r closed from
M h i,ic u n
th i j j t s s
g j j *»“ "
•»
not a hoax, but did not give him
Dnvefurther details o f the type o f
1-4 waa. re-opened at 10:30
device that waa found.
a.m.. although normal traffic
Law enforcement officers from flow didn't resume for several
Altam onte Springs. Sem inole hours.

Former Tampa editor found
apparent victim of auiclda

Ourldt.77.Aaau Chef
BmOtabateeCwrwKNIrvetudesMoodGlucose
MonNor. Softtouch’”Lon*
catdevice,Checmhip
bO* Skip*, andmora.

Propsns tssk
A Sanford flraflflhtar Friday scoured the scans
ol a propane leak on West Eighth Street. A
ruptured propane valve lad to a one-block

Smear* aoiafoefcsCon
O contain*everything
youneedtarbloodgtacoaataekng Inonecornplatakit. Accurate, dopendable, convenient.

AVAILABLE A T YOUR LOCAL
ORLANDO AREA KMART PHARMACIES

evacuation of Eighth Street, between Pecan
and Avacado avenues. Flo-Gae Corp responded
quickly to the scene.

M ake your holiday dinner reservations now
at one o f these line restaurants.

us
ON YOUR
HORIZON-

c atc h

Starting Wednesday. Nov. 21
Well be setting up early to serve
you breakfast Or come by for
lunch or dinner, and try our
world famous catfish,
steaks, prime rib,
seafood or chicken.
Open 7 Days.
LEGACYBANDFLU. A SAT. 9F it-2AM , ^
HAPPY H O U R 4 -7 PM
BANQUET FACILITIES A V A ILA B LE

LAK E

I

(TU tfam anl
Thanksgiving
12N oof

n

b b o

t

£' n o w .

;

Open for Thank,giving
Dinner Served 12Noon - 6 P.M.

j

Also Serving Dinner Wed. &amp; Fri.
5:30 •8:30
U V B E N T E R T A IN M E N T

RESERVATIONS •

-&lt;

na Hills

aasoiMM.
Ketervalkmi Suittiled

�&gt;

0

brhhm

M u

it, two

Editorials/ Opinions
Molding child’s personality takes time

imnai-an
SOON. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 33771
A m Code 407-333-3811 or §31-

SUBSCRIPTION RATS:
3 Month*................................ SI9.B0
0 Month*...............
939.00
1 V « ....................................§79.00

ED ITO R IALS

Voting the rascals
•p o ten titflsli
the m i

Psychologists have continually focused upon
individual differences and what fosters healthy
personality development. However, amid the
n e n sk d pace o f this society we often opt for
conform ity an d leave little room for individual

It Is an accepted given that children do not
develop physically, cognitively and socially at
the same rate. Therefore, It Is necessary for child
rearing practices to accommodate these dif­
ferences. Bach child is uniquely different from
every other child. He should be unconditionally
loved and accepted by the significant others tn
his life.'A chikTe personality evohres through the
process o f Interacting with the Mgndican! others
In his environment. The treatment afforded a
child during his formative years crystallises and
becomes his response repertoire to his surrmm-

w
LUR LENE
SW E E TIN G

patience and teaching a child to accept lim its
and take responsibility for his behavior. Lim it
setting is a function o f a child’s ability to
comprehend.
Individual differences should not be negatively

confirmed by m aking comparisons with a
Ninety-six percent o f tncuinbcnts M t U n f
re-election to the H o u r o f R epresents three
prevailed. T h at la on ly ahghtly
th a n the
w percent LncumDent re fle ctio n r o c ov tne
last tw o etoettons O n ly IS House m em bers
•fere beaten, an d m any o f those w ere g u ilty o f
ethical o r legal breaches.
In the end. the Dem ocrats increased their
m ajority In the House, w hich th ey have
controlled fo r the last 36 years, from 2 5 8 to
266 seats.
O n ly o n e In c u m b e n t s e n a t o r . R u d y
Boachw lts. R-Minn., w a s defeated. C onse­
quently, the Dem ocrats boosted th eir hold
over the Senate by one seat, 06 to 44.
T hanh goodness, for d em ocracy’s sa k e , that
the 3 6 gubernatorial races w ere less predict*
ab le. Incum bents lost in six of 2 0 contests,
seven tim es the turnover rate o f C on gress.
M o re o v e r, g o v e rn o rsh ip s c h a n g e d p a rty
h an d s in on e o f every three races.
A rgu a b ly the biggest w in ner — o r a t least
the biggest nonloaer — w a s G eo rge B tn h .
M an y believe the election am oun ted to a
referendum on h is presidency. If that la so. on

km

A lth o u g h D em o crats cam e o u t a net
w in ner, th ey did not d o nearly a s w e ll a s
forecast. T h ey w on t o r gubern atorial con*
tests In T e x as an d Florida, but fe lle d to
capture the largest prise. C aU fem la. a n d lost
control o f the governor’s m ansions in O hio
a n d M ichigan.
H olding onto the C alifornia govern orsh ip
w a s crucial to the G O P. W ith n ex t y e a r s
reapportionm ent, the state w ill pick u p seven
additional H ouse seats, for a total o f 5 2 . T he
veto poorer of R epublican O ov.-etect Pete
W ilson Is the party's on ly hope o f ach iev in g a
fair redistricting at the h ands o f the D em octh tic-con trolled Legislature.
In addition to tu n in g only one seat In the
Senate. Dem ocrats picked u p far few er H ouse
seats than Is norm ally the case d u rin g an
off-year election in w h ich the W hite H ouse is
in G O P hands.
In the w eeks leading u p to the balloting,
som e analysts were speculating th at Re*
publican s actually m ight kwe so m an y seats
th at th ey c o u ld n o lo n ger su sta in the
President’s veto In either the House o r Senate.
B ut D em ocrats did not com e close to w in n in g
the 30 additional seats in the House a n d 10 in
the Senate that they needed to m ak e this
happen.
President Bush also had to be encouraged
that tw o o f his leadin g potential riv als in
1092, D em ocrat* B ill Bradley of N e w Jersey
an d M ario C uom o o f N ew York, received less
th an reso u n d in g endorsem ents fro m the
voters.
Sen. B radley won a squeaker a ga in st an
un kn ow n Republican, even though h e outspent her b y a 12-to-l m argin. G o v . Cuom o
m anaged to get only 53 percent o f the vote
again st tw o unknow ns. Both D em ocrats had
w on 65 percent o f the votes w h en th ey last
stood for re-election.
R epublican s can And encouragem ent in the
fact that the Dem ocrats did not d o better at
the polls, especially In light of M r. B u sh ’s
sa g gin g popularity an d the split in the G O P
over raisin g taxes. Nationwide, m anytneum bents w h o w ere re-elected discovered that
their m argin o f victory w as m uch leas than
anticipated. T h is suggests that both parties
face a n enorm ous task in the stru ggle fo r the
A m erican electorate in 1002.

Berry's World

While the cat's away,
the mice can play

A child senses in feeling the degree o f esteem
with which h r Is held. His s rif esteem is derived
than the reflection o f himself that his parents
and caretakers project.
Consequently, parents and other caretakers
should be acu tely aware o f the awesome
responsibility they have in shaping a child's
personality. There la no substitute for love.

younger or older sibling. This appraoach will
have at least two outcomes: deflate the ego o f the
child being negatively compared and heighten
sibling rivalry. Parents] actions that foster
"favoritism " do nothing to aid In creating a
healthy personality.
The elementary school years represent a
critical period for the Initiation o f extra familial

relationships. When a child enters school his
realm o f significant others is expanded to
include teachers and peers. The stress o f school
entry may be minimised If the child has been led
to expect that this is the natural course o f events
for him. He should be free to learn without being
held accountable for a "perfect” performance. If
a child is doing his best, this’ should be
recognised as success.
An imperative for fostering healthy personality
development is being permitted to progress at
one's osm developmental rate without being
made to feel Inadequate or incompetent. Erlkaon
has asserted that the school age child expresses
his sense of Identity in the following way, ” 1 am
what I can learn to make work.” Therefore, the
danger o f the developing ego Is acquiring a sense
o f Inferiority for a child who feels unsuccessful.
One o f the greatest gifts parents and teachers
can bestow upon a child is a feeling o f security
about his personhood. A child should be helped
to feel that he is a alright with all o f his pluaaes
and minuses (assets and lisbilitfesl. He should
feel capable of accomplishing something. He
should also feet that he Is loved and respected for
no other reason than the fact he exists.

JACK

ANDERSON

Farmers not all
happy about bill
WASHINGTON - The 1990 Farm BUI has
some formers pocking their bags and m oving
to the city. Others are digging their heels into
the sod. determined to stay tn business. And
still others are looking for revenge on the
lltlcians and bureaucrats who dealt them a
dhand.
Farmers didn't get a good look at the bill
because the confer­
ence committee that
s h a p e d th e fin a l
version met into the
w ee hou rs o f the
m orn in g tryin g to
clean up (he business
o f the 101st Con­
gress. T h e Capitol
w as elosed to outsid­
ers nt that tale hour.
so by the time farm­
ers knew thetr fate. It
w a s td tT T a tV tty
change the bill.
Now they are not
pleased w ith what
( T h « bill cuts
they are reading and
farm su b­
not happy that Con­
sidies by
gress tried to balance
$13.6 billion
the budget on their
over th§ next
backs.
five years. J
The bill cuts farm
subsidies by §13.6
bUlion over the next five years. That and
other tinkering with existing farm programs
is all designed to cut the amount the federal
government spends on the farmers nearly In
half — from §80 billion over the last five years
(o about §40.8 billion in the next five years.
Cutting the deficit and reform ing the
convoluted system o f farm subsidies sounds
like a good Idea, but the farmers question
whether It's fair that their program was cut In
h a lf while other federal programs w ere
sim ply nicked. For the farmers, It’s a case o f
survival. Without federal support, they will go
under.
Most commodity markets sell farm product,
for less than it costs the farmers to raise It.
Government subsidies pay the farmer the
difference. Now cuts In the loan programs
and added taxes on farm goods mean farmers
w ill have less money to put back Into thetr
operations. Combines, tractors and other
expensive gadgetry make the Am erican
farmers the most efficient In the world. But
without federal help, they can barely afford
the gas to keep that machinery running, let
alone replace or repair the equipment when It
breaks down.
Farmers have good reason to worry. More
than 400.000 of them went broke In the last
four years, and that was under a more
generous deal than the 1990 Farm Bill w ill
give them.
The bUl Is so devoid of merit that members
o f Congress resorted to praising Its environ­
mental provisions — for example. It w ill
reduce soil erosion. That's nice, but it w on't
pay the bills.
The farmers are mad and looking for
someone to take It out on. Their gaze has
landed on Agriculture Secretary Clayton
Yeutter. who strong- armed the bill through
Congress. David Senter. national director o f
the American Agriculture Movement, said of
the bill, "It's so bad even Clayton Yeutter
supports It."
Yeutter doesn't like farm subsidies, but he
does Uke large corporate-owned farms. After
he was confirmed for his Cabinet post, he
shed his stock t.i some o f America's largest
agri-businesses.
Some farm organizations. Including the
National Family Farm Coalition, now want
Ycuttcr's head. Randolph Nodland. president
o f the coalition, lold our associate T im
Warner that Yeutter "sym bolizes all o f what
our folks believe Is wrong with U.S. farm
policy.” __________________________ _____ _____

C

ROBERT

WAGMAN

Highs and lows of Campaign ’90
WASHINGTON — Here ore my personal high
and low points o f Campaign ‘00.
Best Campaign — The "T w o Toms” race In
Iowa where Incumbent Democrat Sen.. Tom
Harkln turned back OOP challenger Hep. Tom
Tauke. W hile It was hard-hitting. It was
essentially a clean campaign, with both
candidates arguing sharp differences on abor­
tion and the budget.
Moat Effective Campaign — A California
Initiative would have significantly U. creased
beer, wine and liquor taxes with much of the
m oney going to fight drunk-driving and
a lco h o l p rob lem s. T h e liqu or industry
mounted a multimllllon dollar "N o on 134"
cam paign, based almost entirely on the
anti-incumbent mood. "D on't give them mure
money to spend” was Us message. It worked
and the proposition was defeated.
Good Guys Can Win Award — To former
Democratic Sen. Lawton Chiles, who defeated
first-term GOP Gov. Bob Martinez In Florida.
Chiles refused to accept campaign contribution
over §100. He ran a oosltive campaign both in
the tough Democratic primary and the general
election. It was a contrast to attacks from his
opponents based on Chiles' admission that he
has long been treated for depression.
Low Point — Third Runner-Up: The bitter
Oregon House race between Incumbent GOP
Rep. Denny Smith and Democratic challenger
Mike Kopetaki. When Kopetaki suggested
President Bush should adopt a cautious
approach to dislodging Saddam Hussein from
Kuwait. Smith came out with a radio spot
using the voice of Adolph Hiller to accuse
Kopetaki o f appeasement. Kopetskl won.
Second Runner-Up: Democratic Gov. Rudy
Pcrplch of Minnesota handed out copies of his
GOP opponent Jon Grunaeth's divorce papers
In an attempt to show that the Republican was
b eh in d in h is child-support paym ents.
Grunieth was not: but he later dropped out of
the race am ifl charges o f sexual Improprieties.
Voters expressed their feelings about Perplch's
campaigning by electing GOP state auditor
Arne Carlson In what amounted to a write-in
vote.
Absolute Low Point: A week before the
election. GOP Stn. Jesse Helms of North
Carolina found himself trailing his Democratic
challenger. Harvey Gantt, who was trying to
become the first post-Reconstruction black
Southern senator. Helms unleashed a racist
television barrage, accusing Gantt of support­
ing racial Job quotas and of personally profiting
from special FCC m inority broadcasting
licenses. It worked. Heims won.
Best Use o f Humor (tie) — The Oregon
gubernatorial race, where Democrat Barbara
Roberts was running neck and neck with
R e p u b lic a n A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l D a v id
Frohnmaycr. On the day tliat Barbara Hush
came to the state to campaign for Sen. Murk
Hatfield, the Roberta camp pul out a press

release heralding the startling news: "Barbara
Bush Endorses Roberts.” Of course. It Went on
to say the Barbara Bush who was endorsing
Roberts was a local
librarian.
In Minnesota, un­
d erfu n d ed c o lle g e
p r o fe s s o r P au l
Wcllstonc challenged
R e p u b lic a n S e n .
R u d y B o s c h w it z .
Wcllstone ran early
television com m er­
cials where he came
on apologizin g for
not having as much
money as Boschwitz
to buy TV time. He
f C hiles ran a
then speed-talked his
positive
way through the 30cam paign
second spot.
Both Roberts and
both in the
Wcllstonc won.
tough Demo­
Worst Political De­
cratic primary
cision (He) — Th e
and the gen­
d e c is io n by th e
eral election. J
W h ite H ou se and
GOP operatives not
to support New Jersey’ s Christine Todd
Whitman In her challenge o f Democratic Sen.
Bill Bradley; and the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee's decision not to support
Georgia's David Worley In his attempt to
unseat Rep. Newt Gingrich. R-Ga.
The White House did not support Whitman
because they never thought she could win and
did not want to anger Bradley, who sits on key
Senate committees. The DNCC did not support
Worley because he violated an agreement
between the parties not to use the congressio­
nal pay raise as a campaign Issue. Both
Whitman and Worley were vastly outspent.
Both lost narrowly. With real support, both
could have won.
Best Equivocation — When Democratic state
Sen. John Garamendl announced his can­
didacy for California Insurance commissioner,
hr vowed he would accept no campaign
contributions from Insurance executives. A c­
cording to the Los Angeles Times, when It was
later revealed he had accepted contributions
from at least 26 wives of Insurance executives,
he Insisted that the women were unques­
tionably "acting in their own interests'* and
attacked the questioner for Implying the
women were not "Individuals In their own
r ig h l m a k in g In d e p e n d e n t d e c is io n s .*'
Garamendl won.
Political Newcomer o f the Year — Jesse "T h e
Body" Ventura, 39. retired pro wrestler, actor
and sports announcer, who was elected mayor
o f B ro o k ly n P a rk . M in n., on an an tidevelopment platform.
IC)IWONEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

LETTERS TO EDITOR
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must be signed, include the address o f the
wrlier and a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be un a single subject and be
as brlel us possible . Letters arc subject to
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H M

MmHMNMBlBMmnmai

Sanford HgrsM, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novambar 18, 19B0 — SA

Baseball'
_ i*
Brooklyn Dodger*
hod held ■ similar camp In
Sanford In early 1946 before
setting up Dodgertown at Veto
With-the cooperation of
Sanford's John Krtder. a former
minor leaguer In the
i. the Giants i
They would bring their top
from Min­
neapolis and Jersey City to
Sanford along with 90 others.
In c lu d in g S lo u s C ity.
The Oisnts

S an fo rd

N aval A ir Station.

dlam onda appeared. Players
put in barracks. They were
fed In cafeterias formerly used
by the Navy. Offices, meeting
ro o m s a n d th e lik e w e re
UnaBOQbm kBng.
its also needed to look
fresh talent coming out of the
jes. They
prepared elaborate brochures
that were sent to those
Inquiries as the result of i
advertising In
tions. The plan w as to conduct
the "C a r l H u bble B aseball
School" every February. The
first year. 1948, over 800
youngrter* from all over the
country descended upon i
to let H u bbell. the G ian ts’
scouts, coaches and managers
rate their abilities. Those who
"h ad It” were signed to con­
tracts and assigned to the
various farm d u bs for spring
training.
The whole town was expecting
that the success of the farm
system operations here would
result In the parent dub. the
Giants, establishing Its major
league spring training base In
|8anford.
One evening Krtder read In
Herald that the Mayfair Inn,
the New Tribes Mission,
going to be sold on the
e steps. To make a
story short, there was only
bidder the New York
its! Not only did they take
ip of the hotel, they also
I the Mayfair Country Club,
see, the other love In
ibbeU’s life was golf. At least it
ton a par with baseball,
lubbell became a fam iliar

Schools losing money
to encephalitis scare

Into the Mayfak. And I believe
the next guest to register waa
Mrs. John J. McGraw — widow
of the fnmou* Giant manager of
many year* after the turn of the
cen tu ry . She d e a rly loved
baseball and the Giant organisa­
tion.
I had left The Herald In 1947
and entered Stetson University
to get a college education under
the 01 BIB. Since I could get
classes In the mornings I signed
on aa sports dkector of Radio
Station W TRR . D u rin g the
spring I would tape Interviews
with Hubbell. Mrs. McGraw and
other well-known Giant manag­
ers. players and scouts and send
them to radio stations around
the country where Oiant farm
dubs were located. Mrs. McGraw
The year the Dodders
to Los Angeles snidtbeOlanta to
San Francisco. I waa in Los
Angeles and saw the first game
the Dodgers played at home out
w est Entering the stadium. I
sp otted M rs. M cG ra w an d
Stoneham chatting. 1 couldn’t
help but apologise, go up and
say, “ I know you don’t re­
member me but..." She Inter­
rupted me by saying. "I can’t
recall your name but 1 believe
you’re the young man from the
radio station In Sanford." I waa
stunned! And. It waa the only
time I ever met Stoneham. I
confess my catenation of him
had dropped considerably.
Let me expisln. The whole
town waa expecting the Giants
to base their major league club
in Sanford. The City built a new
ball park, the present Memorial
Stadium. But one evening I waa
at W TRR preparing a late night
sportacaat when over the news
printers came an item saying
that Stoneham and the New
York Giants were moving their
spring training base from Florida
to Mesa, Arts.. Just outside
Phoenix.
I put in a call lo Hubbell at the
Mayfair and read the Item to
him. Sorry folks. I simply cannot
write what Hubbell said. The
Herald wouldn't print it if I did.
Hubbell was fit to be tied.
The farm system, however,
remained in Sanford at SNAS
until I960 when the Korean W ar
exploded and the local air sta­
tion w as reactivated. Hubbell
im m ediately m ade arran gementa for the dorm now located
at Celery and Mellonvllle. next
to the new ball park, lo be

O R LA N D O Eleven new
cases boosted the tally In Flori­
da’s encephalitis outbreak to
I IS cases as South and Central
Florida high schools said steps
taken to curb the epidemic are
costin g them th ousan ds of
were reported FriIn D ad e. Lee. M artin,
r. Grange. Polk, Sarasota,
and Pasco counthe 115 confirmed
, 50 people are presumed to
be suffering from the disease,
meaning a second blood test has
not yet confirmed encephalitis.
Orange County leads the state
with 25 confirmed i
d ay

Six people have died during
the current epidemic, the largest
far Florida since 1962, when 222
people were infected and 43 died
In the St. Petersburg area.
St. Louis encephalitis is spread
by the Culex nlgrtpalpus mos­
quito. The virus multiplies In­
human brain cells and in 7

percent to 10 percent o f cases
can cause brain swelling, coma
and death.
H e a lth o f fic ia ls said th e
chances for Infection are signifi­
cantly lower than one month
ago. as the mosquito enters a
dormant phase with the arrival
o f cooler weather.
” W e th in k fr o m an e n ­
tomological point o f view, the
e n d Is n e a r .* ' s a id J o h n
Mulrennan. chief o f the Depart­
m e n t o f H e a lt h an d R e ­
habilitative Services entomology
lab in Jacksonville.
The epidemic has forced resi­
dents o f south and central Flori­
da to shun the outdoors during
evening hours when the mos­
quitoes are most active. Five
counties that moved high school
football games to daytime re­
ported significant losses on gate
receipts and concession profits
that subsidise athletic programs.
E v a n s H ig h S c h o o l a n d
Apopka High School In Orange
County have each lost around
810.000. Winter Park High has
lost 917.000 dollars.

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red convertable Corvette
where Baker waited for him to
escort her to the pep rally, " I
can't see the rest o f the parade.”
So Epps watched the parade
from the sidelines before taking
h is p la c e a h e a d o f th e
H o m eco m in g court and the
football team.

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" I ’ m not going to sit back
there and miss all this." he said.
About 1.000 Seminole fans
and downtown merchants, who
couldn't leave the area when
First Street was cordoned off for
the parade, watched from side­
walks and windows. Some resi­
dents o f Bram Towers waved
from upper floor windows to the
teens on the street below.
"W e were afraid w e wouldn't
get to do the parade and the pep
rally," Latimer said. " A t noon
we were ready to call It off. but
the ral n stopped and w e were
able to g c tlt ail in .".

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Daniel E. Coughlin. 54. 637
Cove Terrace, Altamonte
died Wednesday at FlorHospital. Altamonte Springs,
m May 28. 1936, In Clevehe moved to Altamonte
from Memphis, Tenn..
I960. He w as a football coach
id attended the Church of the
a n n u n c ia tio n . A lta m o n te
prtngs. He was the former
I defensive Une coach at Memphis
[State Unlveratty and waa a
former member of the Unlveratty
of Florida and Unlveratty of
Kentucky coaching i
Survivors include sister. Mary
Coughltn-Colllm, Carmel, Ind.
G a rd en C h a p el H om e for
Funerals. Longwood. In charge
o f arrangements.

Virginia P. Johnson. 82. 2052
Inner Circle Drive. Oviedo, died
Friday at her residence. Bom
Aug. 9. 1906 in Baltimore, the
moved to Oviedo from Boca
Raton in 1979. She was a legal
secretary and a Lutheran.
Survivors include husband,
J o h n T . ; d a u gh ters. J o y ce
Avery, Pittsburgh. Jean Opcka.
Glendale. Md.; brother. James
Pressler, Deltona: sister. Rachel
Korz. Boca Raton; five grandc h ild r e n ; e ig h t g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
C o x - P a r k e r C a r e y H an d
Funeral Home. Winter Park. In
charge o f arrangements.
Elveda W. Smith. 75. 1906
L ocu st A v e .. S anford, died
Thursday at her residence. Bom
Oct. 9. 1915. in Windsor. Conn..
■he m oved to Sanford from
Springfield. Maas.. In 1957. She
w as a h om em a k er and a
member o f Good Shepherd Lu­
theran Church.
Survivors indude daughter.
Frances Jones. Sanford; sons.
Robert. Paisley. David. Geneva;
b r o t h e r . F r a n c is W r ls le y .
A lb a n y . N .Y .; n in e grandc h i l d r e n ; 10 g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch ild Funeral
Home. Oaklawn Chapel. U k c
Mary. In charge o f arrange-

Dr. Joseph a White Jr.. 57.
901 Charlotte St.. Longwood.
died Friday at his residence.
Born March 16. 1933. In South
Carolina, he moved to Longwood
In 1969 from Palatka. He was
vice president o f instruction for
Seminole Community College
and a member o f Community
United Methodist Church and
Christian Fellowship. He was a
member o f the church choir.
Paul Harris Fellow, and the
Sanford Rotary.
Survivors lndude wife. Dona
Lane. Longwood; son. Thomas
J .. Tam pa; dau gh ter. V ic k i
Robbins, Oviedo; father. Joseph

'

B. Sr., G a in e s v ille ; sisters.
Elizabeth Rivers. UmitUla. Jenie
Avery. Gainesville; three grand­
children.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch ild Funeral
Home, Altm onte Springs. In
charge o f arrangements.

Tuesday November
20th at 11 AM

WHITS. M L JOSEPH S JB.
Funorol torvkot tor Or. Jeeep* B. SMto
Jr.. W, at Longwood. who dtod Friday, will ha
conducted I p.m. MonWy at too Community
United M ithodlat Cfurch wrlth Saw. Kan
Croaiman. Bow. Oil Forwar and Saw. Mo
Parry officiating. Informant will follow at All
Follha Memorial Fork. Viol tatIon ter trtenda
will bo hold tram 0 * p.m. at Baldwin
Fairchild Funoral Homo. Altamonte Sprlnga.
Donation* may bo m o * to Hotplco of Control
Florida. U00 Maitland Canter Far*way.
SuyItem Maitland F LO W .
SoldoIn-Fairchild Funoral Hama. Alta­
monte Sprlnga. If) chtrpi of OFFOngOfDORtE.

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It,

Prfeetag for growth Is Seminole County:
A five-year outlook

Deficit
14
ltne_________.......JRj
fine (he county far failure to
comply.
Paced with a downturn in the
economy, the additional coota
will be a bitter pill.
^ " T h e w hole thing w ill be
forcing communities to accept a
lower level of service that they
normally would.*' said commis­
sioner Pred Streetman. "If tt It
gets to the point where Jobe are
going to be lost, attitudes sre
Most of the deficit, about 667
million, w ill go to begin road
projects scheduled to begin
during a 30-year period by 1006.
The atate requires the county to
catch up with the needs of
current residents within five
years. The county has a 30-year
ro ad Im p act fee p ro g ra m ,
partially financed 6y a 62S
million bond program.
But that 6310 million
designed for a cash
nrcrtne
1 years —
flow spread over
the 3
30
as money came In It would be
spent.
"Imagine If you fake out a
30-year mortgage to buy your
home and the mortgage com­
pany tells you. 'You have to pay

that off in IS years or live years.'
That's what we’re looking at/'

Pam Hastings, county capital
rets planner, said the county
have about 106.4 ndBton to
during the next five
year, far abort of the nearly 6136
mutton that w tl be
Hastings mUd the county will
generate about $10 million dur­
ing the next five years from
current revenue sources for
other county services. Including
drainage, public safety and
libraries. But the county will
need closer to $31 million to pay
to provide those sendees at
minimum sUUMfards far current
residents. And those figures
don't account for the 1.000
people who move here each

rf
the services the county will
provide wl6 be * a few level. On
is c a f a o T 'A " lo " P ~ w « k ” A "
level of
an d * T * b e in g the w orst.
Nafawaodrr mid the five-year

County offlefah cautioned that
the deficit was not created by
exhorbtfant demands.
"There la not a lot o f fluff In
this plan." said county planning
director Ton VanDerworp. "This
tanotapte-ln-the-aky plan. It Isa
plan that the program review
committee believes la needed by
the county."
The PRC la a commission-

Herald staff writsr
SANFORD — The price of
beauty m ay be loo big for
Seminole County commissioner*
— and ultimately taxpayers — to
bear.
"acing a $100 million deficit
during the next five years to
meet the current demands o f 20
year* o f population growth does
not include (he costa to beautify
roads as they are widened. An
additional $4 million will be
needed during the live years If
residents tell com m issioners
they want landscaped, tree-lined
roads as they are widened to four
and six lanes throughout the
county.
The county has to find about
$87 million during the next five
years to build roads they were
prepared to build over a 20-year
period. The state la requiring
counties to bring roads and
other government services up to
acceptable standards within five
years or to stop new construc­
tion. ..........................
C o u n ty c a p ita l p ro g ra m s

lit
„

"T h is font • level of
" C " Mbs you had In 1977."
Nctawender askl "It vdH coat
you $300 m ttkn If you want
" D " scram the board. You are
going to have to accept
" E 'V
To pay far the
sioM fs will look
sources. More thim $106.4 mltHoo artff be needed during the
nest 30 yean to estobttoh and

Deficit estimate doesn’t
include beautification
■y 4. MARK

u s

the county.

M n tf ffapMe hy Laura L Suthmn
have
&lt;s
to
of
61.6
the deficit la far parks Improvemento. Hastings mid the county
may have to consider seeking

.
J
"
^
'tiles « « rhm t

_
___
and a utility
1 only by
counties,

during the next five yean to
Charges for water and sewer assure no deficit la crated in
service, not Included In the those sendee areas. Hastlnga
deficit, wffl have to be reviewed aaid.

T ONIGHT ONLY!

planner Pam H astlnga told
com m ission ers Friday
landscaping and Installation of
irrigation lines in a plan similar
to tnoae proposed for Lake Mary
Boulevard and Red Bug Lake
Road coats about 2W percent of
the coat to build the road.
Hastlnga said landscaping also
adds about $7,800 per year to
the coat to maintain each mile of
roadway.
But county planning director
Tony VanDerworp did my the
2Vt percent figure could be a
goal that could be sought over a
longer length of time.
"T don't want to bite the
maximum." said commissioner
Pat Warren. " I don't want to sec
a 2.6 percent figure on all road
projects."
"W e don’t have to fall for It.”
s a id c o m m i s s i o n e r F r e d
Streetman.
VanDerworp suggested com­
missioners might delay Includ­
ing the goals In the county
co m p reh en sive d e vc lo p m a a t
plan u n til 1B92 and stu d y '
landscaping of each road projact
as the project Is begun.

1 E C &gt;1fA G S A L E
l HOURS5-S i:30 P.M. TO 9:30 P.M.

RED

Bush: Gulf may set stage
to forge new world order
■ y IM * STOftSS
United Press International

to the kingdom after Iraq's Aug.
2 Invasion of Kuwait. There are
230.000 U.S. troops In the gulf
and some 200.000 more are to
be deployed after the first o f the
year.

P r e s id e n t B u sh t o ld
Czechoslovaks In Prague Satur­
day that the Persian Gulf crisis
offered a unique opportunity to
—Secretary of State James
forge a new world order, while Baker met In Geneva Saturday
Iraq Instated It would hold onto with the foreign ministers of
Kuwait and defeat the U.S.-led
three non-aligned tem porary
"forces of evil."
members of the U.N. Security
J o r d a n 's K in g H u s s e in ,
Council, seeking their support
meanwhile, accused the United
for a possible resolution sanc­
Nations o f a double standard In tioning the use of force against
dealing with the gulf crisis and Iraq. Approval by Ethiopia. Ivory
the Arab-Israell conflict. In a Coast and Zaire would signal the
speech opening a session of coalition against Baghdad was
Jordan's parliament, he also firm and united, analysts said.
accused Israel and the West of
—In Beijing, visiting Egyptian
"expansionist schemes" In the
Minister of State for Foreign
Middle East.
Affairs Boutros Ghalt said Cairo
In other developments:
would go along with a U.N.
—Five hur.Jred troops from
the African state of Niger arrived resolution on use o f force. Egyp­
In Saudi Arabia to Join the tian President Hosnl Mubarak
U .S.-led m ultinational force •this week asked Washington to
confronting Iraq, becoming the delay any military strike for
three months to give Saddam
second non-Arab and African
state after Senegal to send troops time to leave the emirate.

■PETITES
•WOMEN'S
ACCESSORIES
•SLEEPWEAR
•SWIMWEAR
•YOUNG MEN'S
•ATHLETIC APPAREL
•BEDDING
•WOMEN'S HOSIERY
•MATERNITY

Gorbachev plea to Parliament
for more power given support
Unltsd Press International_______
M O S C O W - T h e S o v ie t
Parliament agreed In principle
Satu rday to give President
Mikhail Gorbachev expanded
powers after hta Impassioned
plea for them to place the
government directly under hta
control.
The legislature, gathered on
the second day of an emergency
session, rallied to Gorbachev’s
support when he sternly rejected
Russian Federation leader Boris
Yeltsin's call for decentralized
power In a stirring defense of the
need to maintain a strong union.
"W e sec from our own btttcr
experience, which witnessed
people's blood, that we will not
be able to dissolve the union."
Gorbachev proclaimed to loud
applause. "Therefore we tannol
und must nut embark on that
path."
.
Deputies voted 316-19 to make
the central ministries account­
able to Gorbachev and to create
three law-and-ordcr bodies to be
based In the president's odlcc.
approving In principle a plan
that will ngntflcantly Tnnsoll

l

date Gorbachev's power.
Final approval o f the plan by
the legislature Is still necessary,
but the overwhelming support
Saturday made that step only a
formality.
The vote was a defeat for
Premier Nikolai Ryzhkov, who
lost direct control o f the Soviet
C o u n c il o f M in is te r s am id
widespread criticism that hta
resistance to radical economic
reform has virtually paralyzed
the government.
Gorbachev’s fiery speech was
In marked contrast to hta desu'tory a ddress F r id a y , -w hen
Yeltsin upstaged him In de­
manding a vote of no confidence
In the central government and
t r a n s fe r o f p o w e r to an
"extraordinary anlt-crtata com­
m ittee" dominated by the re­
publics.

•MEN'S
ACCESSORIES
•MENSWEAR
•INFANTS
'
•DRAPERIES
•JUNIORS
•LINGERIE
•JEWELRY
•MEN'S
FURNISHINGS
•MEN'S SHOES

•GIRLS
•BATH SHOP
•MISSES
•DRESSES
•WOMEN'S SHOES
•MEN'S
SPORTSWEAR
‘ATHLETIC SHOES
•BOYS
•HOME
ACCESSORIES

REGISTER TO WIN
$100 JCPENNEY GIFT CERTIFICATE
STARTING AT 5:30 P.M.
Oiled Ries 4 Reguatcns posted r Catalog Department

DRAWINGS TO BE HELD FOR G IFT CERTIFICATES
AT 7:00 P.M., 6:00 P.M. &amp; 9:00 P.M.

JCFtenney ■

Though Gorbachev dtd not
directly accept the demand for
R y z h k o v 's r e m o v a l, h is
assumption of executive powers
and pledge to bring "new re­
sourceful people capable of mod­
ern thinking" Into the govern­
ment was a political death sen­
tence for the embattled prime
minister. *

F a s h io n c o m e s to life
\

tMMBfl 14rwpdmpncfft

�AMMQI

B fl
llawld sports writer

Patriots girls win first two
CLEARW ATER - N icole
Katie Tullla both aco
_
Saturday afternoon to lead the Lake Brantley
Patriots to a 2-0 victory o v er the boat Cteanrater
Central Catholic Marauder*.
After a acoteteaa flrat half, D dahodK aye put
the Patriots ahead at f
Staci Pox. W ith a little m ore than t w o :
left In the match. Tullla scored on an i
Eva Snyder.
Lake Brantley dominated the match, outshooting CCC 24*10 and taking three corner
kicks to the Marauder** one. freshm an Alyaaa
O'Brien made rtx eaves to register the ahutout.
The CCC goalie made 14 eaves.
It was the Patriots* second wfei In leas than 24
hours on different coasts. On Friday night. Lake
Brantley opened its season with an S-0 romp
over Eau Oallle at Eau Gallic (r
Stark had two goah
Roberts scored two goals and Poa had a goal and
two assists. O'Brien didn’ t have much to do to
cam the shutout as the Lake Brantley defense
held Eau Oallle without a shot.
Now 2-0. the Patriots w ill piav their first home
match on Tuesday afternoon, hosting the Lake
Howell Silver Hawks In a 3:30 p.m. Seminole
Athletic Conference match at Tom Storey fie ld .

i—

Mayfair woman’s golf
SANFORD - Th e Mayfair W om en's G olf
Association held the second and final rounds o f
the Eclectic Tournament.
The winners were:
Peggy Billups and Verne Smith — 57; Helen
Killebrew and Grace Sauers — 00
The Association also held a Sunday Mixed
Tournament November 11.
Th e winners were:
Stella and Harold Brooks and Jonnle and Dick
Elam — 119: Helen and Roland Killebrew and
Margaret Bolts and A1 Turm an — 127; Marge
Stainer and Joe Schultx and Becky and John
Schughart — 131
Closest to the pin on the 16th hole — Harold
Brooks
Closest to the pin on the 7th hole — Margaret
Bolts
: !

Americans take' big lead
ORLANDO. — Beth Daniel and Betsy King
scored a 4 and 3 win over England's Laura
Davies and Alison Nicholas Saturday, pacing the
United States to a 6-2 lead over Europe In the

Solhelm Cup.
The Americans have taken three o f four
matchups both Friday and Saturday, and can
win the event by taking (w o o f Sunday's eight
singles matches and halving another.

C O LLB O B F O O T B A L L
Florida schools romp
MIAMI — Craig Erickson threw for 133 yards
and three touchdowns In the third quarter
Saturday, leading No. 3 Miami to a 42-12 victory
over Boston College.
Erickson completed 4 o f 7 passes In the period
and finished with 13 completions In 26 attempts
for 320 yards. Including four touchdowns, to
Improve the Hurricanes' record to 7-2.
ORLANDO — Lawrence Dawaey caught two
second-quarter touchdown passes and No. 10
Florida State scared on Its last six possessions o f
the opening half Saturday In posting a 33-3 rout
of Memphis State.
A crowd o f 55.190 at the Citrus Bowl Stadium
saw the Seminoles. 8-2, take their fourth
straight lopsided triumph after consecutive
setbacks at Miami and Auburn.
LEX ING TO N . Ky. — Quarterback Shane
Matthews passed for 303 yards and four
touchdowns Saturday, leading Florida to a
47-15 Southeastern Conference win over Ken­
tucky.
Florida, now 9-1 overall and 6-1 In the SEC.
scored 24 points In the second quarter, taking
advantage o f four Kentucky turnovers, for a
31-9 halftime margin.

Number 1 falls again
SOUTH BEND. Ind. (U PI) - Freshman Craig
Fayak kicked a game-winning 34-yard field goal
with four seconds remaining Saturday, rallying
No. 14 Penn State to a 24-21 victory over
top-ranked Notre Dame that likely ended Irish
chances for a national title.
Tony Sacca completed 22 o f 31 passes for a
career-best 277 yards and three touchdowns as
Penn State. 8-2. won Its eighth straight game.
Colorado, a 64-3 winner over Kansas State. Is
likely to m ove from No. 2 Into the top spot In
Sunday’s UPI Coaches Poll.

F O O T B A LL

1.14 p.m. — WCPX 6. Tam pa Bay Buccaneers at
San Francisco 49crs, (L)
Com plete listing on Po po SB

18,

1990

Rams surprise Seminoles

IN B R I E F

k

November

SUNDAY

S a n fo rd H e ra ld

_______

Lake Mary
accepts
Rotary bid

SANFORD - All year long Lake
Mary coach Doug Peters has said
that his team had yet to play that
perfect game. On Saturday m orn­
ing. they may have come as close as
they ever will as the Rams downed
Sem inole 24-21 at Th om as E.
W h lg h a m S ta d iu m S a tu r d a y

K r U d Sports IdH or____________

The loss, the Tribe's second In a
row. put a damper on S em ln de’o
homecom ing festivities. At halftime,
with 30 former homecoming queens
In attendance. Shannon Latim er
was crowned the 1990 Homecoming
Queen.
According to Peters. Saturday's
win should be the turning point in
the rebuilding job he and fits staff
started a year ago.
"W e've been sporatlc because we
are so young." said Peters. "W e
played some good games earlier In
the year but let them slip away. But
the last 10 minutes o f the gam e
with Lyman last week may have
finally got us over the hump. Th is is
a great win foe the program."
The win was the second straight
for the Rams as they finish the
regular season with a 5-5 record and
earned a bid to appear In next
Thursday's Rotary Bowl game at
Lyman opposite Dr. Phillips. Game
time will be 11 a.m.
"Th ey (the Rotary Bowl) took a
chance on us." said Peters. "T h e y
let us know that if we won the bid

SANFORD When Lake
Mary defeated Seminole 24-21
In a Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence football gam e Saturday
m orning, not on ly did the
R am s ruin the Sem inoles'
homecoming, they also earned
themselves a bowl bid.
" W e have offered Lake Mary
a bid to play In this year's
Rotary Bowl and they have
a c c e p t e d . " s a id D ic k
Gudenkauf o f the South Semi­
nole Rotary Clubi
Lake Mary, now 5-5, will
play the Dr. Phillips Panthers
In the Rotary Bowl. Because of
the recent encephalitis scare,
the gam e will be played at 11
a.m. Thursday at the Lyman
High School sbxlium.
Gudenkauf said that ti.ls will
be the first Ume In Rotary
Bowl history that the game
w ill be played on Thanksgiv­
in g D ay ra th e r than the
Wednesday night before.

Senior Chris Haney rushed for a game-high 169 yards and scored ail three
Lake Mary touchdowns to laad tha Rama to a 24-21 upset win over Seminole
In Seminole’s homecoming game Saturday at Thornes E. Whlgham Stadium.

G re e n b e rg leads
G re y h o u n d g irls
to state c ro w n

Brantley g irls
rally to cla im
third s w im title
ORLANDO — After watching his girls swim in the
Class 4A state meet at the Orlando International
Aquatic and Fitness Center on Friday morning. Lake
^B ran tley High School Coach Clay Parnell wasn't too
^yptre o f their chances of winning a third consecutive
•'team title.
-f-— But In the finals Friday evening. Parnell watched In
amazement and delight as the Patriots kicked It up a
notch and blew through the field to claim the state
crown, outacoring second-place Winter Park 228-205.
Lyman was 13th with 66 points while Lake Howell
scored four points to finish In a three-way tie for 38th.
In the boys' portion o f the meet. Lake Mary's Brad
Bridgewater set two state records to lead the Rams to a
ninth place team finish. Lake Brantley finished In a tie
for 17th while Lyman was 28th.
"W e came In In the morning and did real bad." said
Parnell o f the girls. "The kids had put a lot o f pressure
on themselves and got all worked up. W e were way
down coming Into the finals. Th en they got going and
got cranked up."
1-sk* Brantley picked up several points by finishing
third In the 200 medley relay. T w o events later. Ryann
Pauley claimed the Patriots' only Individual champion­
ship. finishing first 12:05.20) In the 200 Individual
medley. She later finished second (1:04.63) In the 100
breastroke.
Cara Duncan helped bring the Patriots back with a
pair o f seconds (50 and 100 freestylcs). She also capped
Lake Brantley's championship In fitting style, coming
□I

Jantt QrttnbBrg

Cold-shooting
drilled by St. Petersburg

JACKSONVILLE — After running In the Class 4A
cross country state championship meet at Florida
Community Coliege-Jackaonvllle'a north campus on
Saturday morning, the Lyman High School girls' teem
was somewhat disappointed, thinking they had finished
a close second or third.
Then cam e the announcement that the Greyhounds
had actually claimed the state championship by a
25-point margin.
The Greyhounds scored 105 points to finish ahead of
the second-place Clearwater Tornado*. Winter Park was
third (132). followed by Sarasota (134) and Fort Walton
Beach (174). Lake Brantley claimed sixth (186) while
Lake Howell came In 15th (295).
"W e thought we had lost.” mid Lym an Coach Fred
Flnke. "T h e girls w ere wandering around, trying to take
pride In Just being there and finishing so well. Then we
heard the announcement that we had won. We went
from a low to ultimate high Inside o f seconds."
Janet Greenberg led Lyman, finishing third with a
time o f 11:49. She trailed only Vlvl Tlanen o f
Glbaonton-Easy Bay (11:28) and Tallahaaaee-Llncoln’a
Kathleen Ward (1 1 :3 6 ) Ktanah Breantck was 11th
(12:01) for the Greyhounds while Anncmarie Loftln w a s '
14th (12:11).
In the boys' race. D.J. Lewis took ninth to lead the
Lake Mary Rama to a sixth-place team finish. The Lake
Brantley Doya were 12th. Lamar Hardy o f PenaacolaWashlngton was the Individual champion, covering the
three-mile course In 15:13. Lake Worth-John I. Leonard
□ B a a C ro ss C o a a try . P a g * SB

Pensacola’s last second
shot stuns Lady Raiders
By PHIL SMITH

From sta ff ropsets

CLEARWATER - Poor shoot­
ing again plagued the Seminole
C om m u n ity C o lleg e m e n 's
basketball team as they dropped
a 91-69 decision to St. Petersburg
Community College Friday night.
The lorn was the third straight
for the Raiders as they fell to 1-3
on the season. They will stay on
the road to play South Florida
Community College at Avon Park
Tuesday night before returning
home to play Columbia State
College of Tennessee next Satur­
day.
St. Petersburg, the defending
Sun Coast Conference champion.
Improved lo 2-0 on the young
season.
Barry Brown scored 35 points
for St. Petersburg, hitting 10 of
14 shots from the field. He scored
21 points as the Trojans took a
47-23 halftime lead.
SCC got off to such a slow start
that the Raiders trailed 15-2 with
11:20 left In the first half. For the
half. St. Pete hit 63.6 percent to
SCC's 34.5 percent. The Trojans
also outrebounded the Raiders
23-11 In the first stanza.
The first part of the second half
was about the same with St. Pete
taking leads of as many as 34
points before (he Raiders made u
slight run at the end.

IIM INO LB C.C &lt;W&gt;
Ford 1 4001. Vtnitnl 1 * 0 J 4. GuttnploOO
&gt; I 2. Mock*v 4 10 I I IX Noton *11 2 2 If. Oo
Ji w i 04 2 2 2. Rtdiak 02 2 2 2. RoSIrnon 4 II
» l IX C. Jon** I t 12 X Mooro 21 112.
Tolollt 22 42 14 2240.
IT. PITIRSSURO J.C. (tl)
Fotlor 4-12 M IX Lotlmoro 01000. Turnor
M 00 2. O. Jonot M 02 X Broom I f 21 2 4 IS.
Word I $ 14 X Noopor 1100 2. Rood) I IS I 2
t». Pal Inkat 02 00 X Strolhor* 00 00 0.
Donlolt 14 SO II Total! 22 441021 • I.
Halltlmo - SPJC 42. SCC 21. Tliroo point
OOOlt - SCC I 12 INotsn I X Mockay 01. Do
Jotut 0 41; SPJC 2 12 (Broom XX Hooch J X
Fotlor 2 4. Pallnkot Oil. Total Foul* - SCC
IX SPJC 24. Foulod out — norm Technical! —
nano. Roteundt - SCC 14 (Mooro 2); SPJC 4)
(0 . Jonot *). Attltlt - SCC 12 (Vonionl 4);
SPJC 12 (Fotlor 4). Rtcordt - SCC I X SPJC

20

For the game, the Trojans hll
37 of 66 shots (56.1 percent) to
27 of 67 (40.7 percent) for SCC.
The Raiders were also outrebounded 43-34. Brown hit 15 of
21 shots (Including 12 of 13 from
two-point range) to account for
his 35 points.
Also In double figures for the
Trojans were Lincoln Roach (19).
Anthony Foster (15) and Wendyl
Daniels (11).
For the Raiders. Brian Nason
led the Raiders with 19 points.
Darnell Robinson (15) and John
Mackey (13) also were in double
figures. Sanford's Robert Moore
led the rebounders with seven,
while Lyman's Craig Kadzak and
S ee Men, P a g* 3B

Herald Correspondent
SANFORD — Curia Johnson hit a
10-foot desperation shot at the
buzzer to lift Ihc Pensacola Junior
College Pirates to a 70-68 victory
over the Seminole Community Col­
lege Raiders Saiurday evening to
win third-place in the 9th annual
w o m e n 's b a s k e tb a ll R a id e r
Tournament at the Health and
Physical Education Center.
Mtaml-Dadc Community College.
South and Edison Community Col­
lege met In the finals late Saturday
night.
Next action for the women will be
Tuesday night when they take on
Southern Conference power Indian
River Community College at the
Health and Physical Education
Center. Game time Is set for 7 p.m.
and admission is free.
Carla Ledbetter, who led all
scorers with 17 points, tied the
game at 68-68 with a driving lay-up
with only seven seconds remaining.
The Pirates had trouble moving
the ball up the court until Pam
Catchings threw a lung pass to Sara
Uivlnes along the baseline who
shoveled it to Johnson with only
one second remaining.
Brandic Groves (13 points, five
steals and four assists) and Michelle
Kumpf (seven steals, four rebounds
and three assists) both played a
great game In the back court for the
Raiders.

PBNMCOLA JC1201
BlvIn** 4 ♦ I 2 IX Horvoy X« » • X Johflton 42 » •
X Sandltor 4 100 01. Wolkor X22 I X Froomon }&gt;
21 II. Comodor* I f M 2. Moody I I I I X
Catching* 21 • « X Moor* »2 » « 0. Tolol* » 4 4

21120.
IIM INO LB CC (44)
Kumpl 0 ) 14 2. GrovotSII 24 IXOdton 11X0 2.
Marlin a l l I I I X Latlar a 10 1 11 IX LodboOor I t
2 0 12. Wllllamt 11 2 2 X Thomat *1 SO X
Klckllghtar 00 00 0. Colfoy 00 00 0. Total! 21 4t
24 41 40.
Halltlma - PJC 34. SCC 3*. Thraa point goal* P j C Fraaman X SCC Nona. Total Fault - PJC 11.
SCC 21. Fouled out - Nona. Rofeound* - PJC 10
(Sandllor 10). SCC 20 (Martin I). Attltl* - PJC t
(Catchingt. Marvay 1), SCC 10 (Grove* 4).
Record*-PJC I I.SCC 1-2.

SCC built a 44-38 lead early In the
second half us Ledbetter hit two
shots and Pumrla Williams and
Michelle Kumpf hit one each during
un 8-2 run.
Pensacola fought back and took
the lead at 53-52 with 8:06 re­
maining on a Marta Comadore Jump
shot.
The Pirates extended the lead to
64-60 with 3:12 before Ledbetter hit
u lay-up and Trrcasa Martin (13
points und eight rebounds) and Tina
Lester (15 points and seven re­
bounds) each sank a pair of freethrows to tie the game a 66-66 with
59 seconds remaining.
"Each game is like a step on the
ladder to success." said SCC Coach
Ilcunu Gallagher. "W e take u step
and then we stumble and we've got
to pick ourselves up and be ready
for the next one. My girls played
their iicarts out and I'm very proud
o f them."

F O R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R T S IN Y O U R A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A IL Y

HR

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itui&lt; Kt-it-A«) taut
Datraital NY Giant*. I g.m.
a t M h n - S 13S.7I 1
Ileu*tanat Claratan*. I p.m.
Bartonat Tsranta. night
Nat* EnglanSat Buffalo. I g.m.
Montreal at Quabac. night
NowOrtaanaat Wa*htngtan. 1g.m.
Minna*at* at NY Ringtr*. night
PhMoSatghtgat Atlanta. 1g.m.
Waaklaa^ w
m
*bPWrall
mi#■!^ *
SonDtogaat KanaaaClty. 1p.m.
Chicago
at
Vancauvor.
night
nv Jot* at tmHasagaR*. ap.m.
GroanBay at Phoenls. 4g.m.
Mlnnatota at Saattla. 4g.m.
Tamga Say at tan Frsnctsco, 4p.m.
L Pet. SS
Chicago at Danvar, 4g.m.
4 3 .730latttm Dtvtrtan
Dallaaat LA Ram*. 4g.m.
S3 A2J 1
W L Pet. OB
Pittsburghat Cincinnati. 0g.m.
S3 423 1
KanaaaClty
* 1.037 34.410 IV*
44.300 31*
7 5 3043to
43.4443
34.330 4
Ctovaland
3
4.41* 3
Danvar at Datrait. 13:31g.m.
Wirttra Otvtstaa
W«*hlngtan at Dallaa. 3g.m.
33.714Datroit
Tacoma
33.423 flo—late
l axity. Nw. M
LWTTima*
01447Dallaa
4 4.300 I
Atlantaat Navi OrWans, t g.m.
Mllwiuktv
S3 -413 W
St. Lowlt
3 3.37* 2
Chkaga at Minnssata. 1g.m.
Atlanta
44 JOOIVt
San
D
taga
3 4.333in
Indtenapail* at Cincinnati. 1g.m.
Chksga
44 JOB m
Mtoaslat QevstoW. I gm.
lltel—B
44.3*0 m
Friday Basalt
NY Giantsat PtulaOrlghla. 1g.m.
_
41.4443
Otorta—
Tacoma 3. Wichita4
. Tamga Bay v*. Groan Bay at Mlhaaukaa.
Ip.m.
MMatmt Dtvteten
Pittsburghat NY Arts. 4g.m.
W L Pet. OB
St. Loot**! Clavatand
NasrlnglanS at Phoanla. 4g.m.
SanAntonia
43 4*7Wichita at San Dtaga
•s
a
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'•
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City
at
LA
Rate**.
4
p.m
.
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Baltlmora at Tacoma
LA Ram at SanFrancisco. ag.m.
44 .3(0 1
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Saattlaat SanDtog*. 0g.m.
A
3S 3731
Kansas City •tD aim *"**
IWixSiy.Noa.lt
11 .20* IV*
Utah
Buffaloat Houaian. »p.m.
Ortaois
3* .23*3
17 .1134
Danvar
PgrtBcOhltten
Portland
70 1.0*0—. I C O U A S X P O O T B A U l f i O t F
03 .730 1V»
OatSanStata
SStajM Eltoatr Ladtot Ogaa
S3 .7141
Tasty's CaXsgt Football Rasvtts
At Kagawa, Jspsn, Nav. 17
31 .4001
SaaHla
1PW73)
IS .3734V* Brown 17. Columbia 0
LA Clippers
Cl
Mlroml Kabayashl
71-00-- 140
LALokart
IS .10*3
Bucknall 44. Fordham 7
Ayako Okamoto
70-70 - 140
0* . 0 0 0 tv* Connactlcut 31. Rhoda Island 21
Sacramanta
Mayuml
Mural
40-72-- 140
FriSsv
Comall 31. Ponn 13
Kumlka Hlyoshl
74-47- 141
Baatan 114. UtatiO
Dartmouth 33. Pr Incaton 0
iat
t^^
«--at
Wu Ming yah
FI-71-- 141
UvnWt
IPBWAfW]r IV
Hotslra 33. Cortland*
Mlltuko Hamada
70-73 ■ 141
FMIaSMpMa IIS.Washington in. 0T
Indiana I P s ) 40. Winston-SaWm 0
141
Haruya M lyaiawa
4*73
Chartana lit. Atlanta 100
Lahlgh 33. LafayrtN 14
Mayuml
Hirasa
73-71- 141
Lycoming 17. Cam sgli Mo Iton 7
CtovetoniW. Milwaukee *4
Tu Al-yu
73-71- 141
Navy II, Dalawara 17
Huang Bla-shyun
73-71- 144
Now HamgsMro 14. Massachusetts 10
DallaaOf. LA Lakarttt
PfwenU 111. LA Cllfipan 110.OT
Chang Mai chi
74-0*-- 143
Pittsburg St. St. NE Missouri 1
Huang Yuahchyn
7473 147
Ramapo 3 0 . Frortburg St. 14
Tal Yu-|utn
74-73 Boston at Washington, night
Syracusa 31. W. Virginia 7
a-Kally
Laadbattar
77-71ClavalanS at Chartottv. night
Trantan St. 3A Ithaca 14
Patty R lu o
74-77
#| O rlifliii gM|)
Union 33. Plymouth 1*
L o t Young Ma
73- 73 Atlanta at Datroit. night
vuiotwas 77. Boston U. 10
13.30 74* X40
llrifsyaM
7OSes
SM 340
AW
OP—
• 11-7) HMi P 0-7) — Jto T 0-7-0)
1,04440

tXMWS

W LTPrt.ro PA
oio Jtosratn
• lO J P Ifl ot
400.W0171&gt;14 .. ..
sot j a m in
lit .Ill ix w

Cincinnati

sot Jto s u m

[i

PhllaSrtghla at Naw York, night
Naw Jorsay at Mllwaukaa, night

W. Naw England 43. Assumption 0
VololS. Harvard 1*

Phoanlx at San Antonia night
Portland at Danvar. nipt
Chlcaga at Saattla. night
Sacramanta at Goldtn Stata. night
SaadayOama*
Utah at Minnasota. I g.m.
Saattla at LA Cllpgars. »p.m.
Chicago at Portland. tOg.m.
Goldan Stata at LA Lafcart, 10 30 p m

Alabama 43. Cincinnati 7
Appalachian St. 24. Jamas Madison0
Army a. Vandsrbllt 3S
Ctomson3A SouthCarolina IS
Florida 47, KaoSacby II
Ftortda S3.30. btompblsM. l
Furman30. Tho Cltadsl 17
Goorgla SouthomII, Samlord34
Gaorgla Trch &lt;3. Waka Forast 7
Marshall 42. WaslamCarolina 14
Maryland 33. Virginia 30
Miami I FI) 43. BartonCattogs 13
Middto Tann. St. 42, Tmn Trch o

Chartattaat PhllaSalphla. night
Utahat Milwaukee. night
LA Latari at Denver. night

It.MmMtton
AlbMyaiakl.
IParTl)
Lnrry Ntlson
Lnrry M lia
Jntt Slumnn
Tsukasa Walanaba
Scott Simpson
Sava Ballastaro*
Mika Raid
Tadaa Nakamura
Craig Stablar
Naomlchl Oiakl
David Ith ll

I Ustod with irlvar. typo at car jnd
qualifying apaad. I
I. Rutty Wallaca. Pontiac. 173.133 mgh.
1. Coott Bodlno. Ford. 173.117; 1. Alan
Kulwtckl. Fori. 174*41. 4 Davay Allison.
Fori. 174433: 1 Dorrall Watfrlp. Chavrotot.
173*44; 4. Dal* Earnhardt. Chavrotot. 17103:
7. Brott Bodlno. Butch. 171.717; A Ernto
Irvon. Chavrotot. I7XC3. ». Bill Elliott. Ford.
173.33*; 10. Ricky Rudi Chavrotot. 1711*7;
It. Mark Martin. Ford. 1710*1; 11. Harry
Gant. OMtmabito. 1710W; IX Dick Trlckto.
Pontiac. I73.7SO; 14. Kan Schradar.
Chavrotot. 173.400; IS Hut Stricklin. Butck.
173.313; to. Chuck Boon. Otdsmoblto. 171313;
17. Bobby Hamilton. Pontiac. 173.30*; IS.
Darrlka Capa. ChovrWtt. 173.110; I*. Grog
Sacks. Chavrotot. I71.N0; IS Morgan Shophard. Ford. 173.112.

n a p js t—
—scFtartwaf
Vtot » Wtww•• gWMVuy
3:M g js. - EC Syroatw ot W M Vlrgtoio

7p.m.—SUN. — mphiltotovaFlU

I i m i . - E C Bmton C o -go at A _ _ ^
t*:30p.ni. — IUt4 TanmAAMot Arkansas
ls m .-E E F N .F s n n — Nat Mrtra 0 a m

It. Data Jarratt. Ford. 171.0*1; H.
Richard Patty. Pontiac. ITl.asS; XX Slava
Grissom. Otdsmoblto. 173(31; 34. Tarry
Labonto. Otdsmoblto. 171.747; a Rick Most.
Chavrotot. 173.4*3; 31 Tod Musgravo. Pan
tloc. 173.3*1; V. Michaal Waitrlp. Pontiac.
ITl.ia; IS Jimmy Maon*. Pontiac. 171*03,
3*. Dava Madtr III. Ptrtloc. 171*30; » . Kyto
Patty. Pontiac. 171*4*.
11. Babby Mlllln. Bulck. 171*23; 33 Jack
Ponnlngton. Otdsmoblto. 171.340. a. Pancho
Carter. Ford. 171.330; 34 Rich Wilson.
Otdsmoblto. 171413; 13. Storting Marlin.
Oldsmablla. 171.171; 34. Davo Marcls.
Chavrotot. 171.11*; 17. Chad Uttto. Ford.
171.101; 1*. Rodnoy Cwnbt. Pontiac. 170.73*;
It. Jim Sautor. Fori 170404; 40
Horton. Chovratot. 170337.
41. Jim Sown. Pontiac, provisional.

ISaads Inpnronfhosasl
U mnitonATP WbrtoOtomptonsklp
At Frsnbtart. Qsrmany, No*. 17
Stofan Edbarg (I). Swadsn. dal. Ivan
Landl (3). CtachoslovaMa. 4-4 0-1; Andra
Agassi (4), La* Vagat. Nav.. dal. Boris
Bockar (1). Garmany. 47. *4
*3 mutton Virginia Sims Champlansklp*
At Naw Y a k . Nav. 17

11: » sm. - 1SFN. NPL GamaOoy
ll:*pm.-WCPX4NFLTaday
11:10p.m. -WESHX NFL Lhto
I pm. —Wf SMt ttow England PatrtoNat

But— BUN. IL)

1 pm. - WCPX s Datroit Lions at Non
YarSOtoNN.IL)
4pm. - WCFX 4 Tamga I

at SonFrmsctocasoars (L)
• pm. — EIPN. Ft
.(LI

astonston.

4 pm. -^WFTV t. McOanaWs Chant*

JimCaXvauntoatour)
Atlanta - Activated sataty Elbart
Shaltoy.
Miami - Flacad WR Fraidto Banks m
Injarad rasaraa; slgnai WR* Daaals
i - ActNaiad datsnsiva tackto
WPUL-AM I*
Loratuo Fraaman tram ln|urad raaarva;
placed dttonrtve llnaman Kart
ln|uradrasarva.
Tamga Bar Tarry AxHtany.
Wasbingtaa - Ratoaaad carnarback
ll:BS pm. - WBXSAM I27S Tha tear*
Brian Davis; activatedor— racalvar Stephan Pinal Sport* Overnight
Hobbsandcarnarbacktehnny Thamas

&lt;

Magic stretches win streak to
record three games behind Vincent
U n ite d F r i t s In to m a tte n s l

ORLANDO - Sam Vlnccnl
scored 26 points Saturday night
and Orlando used a 12-0 sec­
ond-half surge lo defeat the
Indiana Pacers 96-89 and tie the
Magic’s club record of three
consecutive victories.
In the fourth quarter, each
team scored Just 16 points,
Orlando hitting only 4 of 14
shots while the visitors con­
nected on only 4 of 22.
The Pacers’ offense was led by

Reggie Mller with 34 points and
Vem Fleming contributed 25.
Miller’s two foul shots with
2:04 remaining In the third
quarter put Indiana ahead 73-72
but the Magic scored the next
12. a spurt which was aided by
the Pacers’ going scoreless over
a 5:43 span.
The Magic’s run Included a
three-point play by Otla Smith
and Vincent's 3-polnter at the
third-qu arter b u zzer. J erry
Reynolds completed the surge at

9:17 o f the fourth quarter, hit
fadeaway providing an 84-71
advantage.
M id w ay th rou gh the ftna
quarter. Miller and Fleming 1«
the Pacers on a 10*2 run whlcl
pulled them within 86-83 will
3:54 remaining.
Calledge, who contributed 21
polnta and a gam e-high 11
rebounds, retaliated with a pal
o f inside baskets and a blockei
shot with 1:12 remaining, thei
Vincent added tw o foul shots.

*.14
71- si- •114
ao- as- •124
47- 40 •IIS
47-70 -137
* » **• -110
71•40 •11*
70- 4* ■11*
4* 70 -13*
41 71- 13*
*7 IS ­ •11*
43 IS- •13*

l a y **.

mwy.
MuC

Patience, preparation the common links between hunting and fishing
As I sat on my deer stand In
Georgia a couple of weekends
ago. 1 pondered the many simi­
larities between hunting and
fishing.
Both sports require a great
deal of patience if one is to be
consistently successful. Georgia
may have many deer, but It is
not uncommon to sit for hours
without even u glimpse of fur. It
is easy to get discouraged under
such conditions — especially
when you must sit perfectly still.
Good fishermen must have
this same perseverance — par­
ticularly on . those slow days
when a bite or two can make a
big difference between getting
skunked or having a decent trip
Hunting and fishing both
demand alertness. A twig snap­
ping. the sound of hooves on dry
leaves, a distant movement out

of the comer of your eye — all
can signal the presence of deer.
A swirl, a minnow kipping
urross the water — these subtle
clues could Indicate the presence
of a bass.
Good hunters and fishermen
are always on the lookout for the
slightest Indication of game or
fish, and they notice many
things that would go undetected
by less alert sportsmen.
Whether In the woods or on
the water. It is necessary to liave
keen instincts In order to score
successfully. Expert hunters
place their stands at critical
locations — usually near well
worn game trulls nr where natu­
ral terrain or vrgetation forms a
funnel or some type of structure.
A skillful angler Just doesn't
fish anywhere. He realizes that
!X) percent of the Osh are In 10

JIM
SHUPE

percent of the water, and he
makes It u point to expend his
efforts where the fish are con­
centrated.
Many of my good fishing
buddies are also excellent hunt­
ers. It is not by accident, but by
design. The same basic skills
that are required of an expert
angler are also necessary In the
w ( mh! s . Instincts that are suc­

cessful on the water also work in
the forests.

Steve Gard at the Ooteea
Bridge Flak Camp said that

SH U PE ’ft SCOOP

specks are getting heavier, with
many pushing the Impound.
Some excellent stringers have
come from the power plant area
or Lake Monroe. The aonth of
the old river channel is another
hot spot. Bream are hitting
crickets In the Marina lale area.
Sebastian Inlet Is still red hot
for reds and snook. Most of the
reds are still over the 27-lnch
length limit, but they are still
fun to catch. Most of the snook
are being taken east of the
bridge on one-ounce Jigs or
large swimming lures such as
Rebels or Kapalas. Live shrimp
or finger mullet Is hard to beat
for snook, reds and the large
llounder that are beginning to
make their annual appearance at
the Inlet.

Many hunters find It hard to
sit for hours on end while 20 feet
iip in the air In a deer stand. I
use an old fishing trick and take
my boat cushion up In the stand
with me — It certainly makes
things a lot easier on my posteri­
or and adds hours to my sitting
time.
PI8H1NO FO RECAST

This forecast will hinge heavi­
ly upon the marine forecast and
local wind conditions.
George from O o o rg i'B Balt
and T a c k le re|&gt;orts good bream
and speck action around the 1-4
b rid ge and the ra ilroa d trc a tle
Hass are good lu L a k e Monroe
and in the W eklva. Specks are
hitting In front of the p o w er
pla n t in L a k e Monroe

C a p ta in J a c k at Par
Canaveral said that offshor
fishing has been non-existent fc
the past two weeks due to hig
winds and heavy seas. Actio
Has been great Inside the Par
due to the fall Influx o f swarm
o f finger mullet. Snook, mai
grove snapper, flounder. Jac
crcvallc and blueflsh are a
fllllng up on the tasty tidbit!
Trout and red fish are rated a
good on the flats o f the P v *
and In dian riva rs.
In la t has been ver
rough for the past two w eek
and many anglers have opted I
iMh back In the river where It
more calm. Reds are really thlc
all the way back to Oak 1111
and sheepshead can be foun
around channel markers an
bridge pilings. Look for floundi
on the edges ofdropoffs.

*1

�Santoed Herald, Sanford. Florida — Sunday, November IS 1090 — M

Sprinkle Pagan lead Lake Brantley in 33-9 victory over Lyman
i iviau Wmvtponotni
ALTAM O NTE. SPRINOS David Sprinkle ruahed for 140
yards and two touchdown* and
Joe Pagan added S3 yard* and ■
touchdown' to lead the Lake
Brantley Patriot* to a 33-9 victo­
ry over the Lyman Greyhound*
S atu rd a y m orn in g at T om
Storey field.
Daryl Boat) and Robert Fennewald led an impressive de­
fensive effort for the PatHota that
allowed only 134 yards total
Bush. Sem inole C ou n ty 's
leading tackier, recorded 12 solo
tackles an d Pennew ald in ­
te rc e p te d tw o G re y h o u n d

Pagan scored for the Patriots
on their opening poaaesaion as
he scampered 24 .yards for the
touchdown to give the Patriots a
quick 7-0 lead.
Lake Brantley struck quickly
on their neat possession, scoring
in only taro ptays.
Sean Thompson burst through
the tine and ran 48 yards for the
touchdown to Increase the Patri­
ots lead to 144) near the end of
the first quarter.
Quick strike seemed to be the
pattern for Lake Brantley as they
scored on their third consecutive
Sprinkle capped a 2-play.
03-yard drive, as he rambled 47
yards for the touchdown giving

the Patriots a 2 0 0 lead only 13
minutes Into the game.
The pattern continued into the
third quarter after Eric Chilton
recovered a Lyman fumble for
the Patriots on the Greyhound
38-yard line.
Robert Seym ore connected
with Andy Boothe for a 38-yard
touchdown strike on flic first
play to Increase the lead to 27-0.
" w e had som e defensive
breakdowns early In the game
that killed us.’5 said Lyman
Coach BUI Scott. “W e Just made
too many-mistakes."
Lake BranUey added their fifth
touchdown In seven possessions
late In the third quarter on a
6-play 70-yard drive capped by
Sprinkle's aecond scoring run.

Ihls time from 35-yards to give
the Patriots a 3 3 0 lead going
into the fourth quarter.
The Oreybounds got on the
board early In the fourth quarter
when Lake Brantley attemped to
punt.
The snap Bailed over the punter
and through the end rone for a
safety.
Lyman turned It into a 9-point
play when the took the free kick
and drove 32 yards in three
ptays. capped by Bobby Wash­
ington's 25-yard scoring run to
cut the lead to339.
The Oreybounds could not get
any closer' because the Lake
Brantley defense did not allow a
first down for the rest of the
game and recorded two sacks to

LAX I B SAU TLIV M . LYMAN t

•
m

• •
• it

t- »
#- n

^ — 7—
Patting yards
Funk
Fumbk* lest
Panamas yard*

n il
n
5)1.4
SI
4)0

MO
Si
40
4)
$ 44

LB — Pagan 14nm (Hartman kick)
L B — TTumpmw 40 nm Wartman kkk &gt;
LB - IprinkM a run (kkk W M
LB — Baatha M pa*4 tram leymere
I Hartman kkk I

LS-SortaktaJSrun (kkk Mecka*&gt;
L — Safety (FannawaM tumbled via*
L -

rvntKimtkkU
*

■iwhet yard*

VO

f-t-M).

PASSING - Lyman. CHvalartd 14 4, If,
Lyon* M i , is, jackian M I . I; Laka
Branttay. Saymara M O.M.
RECEIVING -

L
Fkaf Msmt

RUSHING - Lyman. Waahlngtan 1*14.
Cation i l l . Gr*y*an H I Jacka n &gt;11 IM
M l Bauay M . Jankm* I t *). Lyon* 1 ( 141.
Claveland 7 ( tl); Lab* Brantloy. Sprinkle
H IM . Fagan f t ). Thampean &gt;11. Saymara
&gt;7. Ruaaatl M . Ptfro 1( 9). Fannawald

Lyman. Duncan I I*.

1 Ourtam MS. Caftan I f ; Labe Brantley.
DM.

la ms

preserve the victory.
"W e played real good the last
four game* this season." said
L ak e B ra n tle y C oach Fred

Almon. " I knew these young
kids would come around, but I
didn't know It would lake this
long."

minu*-6 yards on seven ptays
and forced a dimbfe. Included
were three sacks of Wiggins,
&gt;unable to get ridI ofthe
ball under Interne pressure from
the right aide of the Ram de­
fensive tine.
Lake Mary retook the lead
m id-way through the fourth
quarter on a 32-yard, seven play
drive after a fumble recovery by
Paul Clayton. Haney got the last
15 y ard s on three carries,
capped by a 1-yard plunge on
which he broke out of the grasp
of four Seminole defenders.
Seminole went ahead again a
mi n u t e la t e r w h en H en
e n ry
ry
Williams took a hand o ff from
Wlgglna. broke open and Juked a
Ram defender to his knees white
r a m b lin g 4 3 ya rd s fo r the
touchdown.
But the Ram s refused to quit
and took only two plays to go 68
yards and g o back on top.
Menello hit f i l l Kanasky on a
beautiful post pattern over the
middle for 51 yards. Haney then
ran around right end for 17
yards and the touchdown to give
Lake Mary the win.
"W e 'v e been preaching pro­
gram . p rogram , p rogram to
these kids all year.' asm Peters.
" I t ’s hard to be patient, but we
are getting there. T oday's win
was a total team effort. The
defense has been getting better
and better every week and we
feel we have a very good defense

the problem was but our defense
kept knocking each other off the
tackle. W e could have won the
game. Kerry played as well for
me today as he has In 3-4 weeks.
But mistakes hurt us again. At
the start o f the second half we
make a good play and Henry
(Williams) fumbles without even
getting hit. There wasn't any
reason for it. I can’ t explain It.
b u t I g u e s s it g o e s w ith
coaching."
Seminole will have to recover
In a hurry as It travels to
Orlando Monday to play in the
Class 4A-Dtstrict 7 playoff at EE
Stadium on the Evana High
School campus. Seminole will
have to beat both Edgewater and
Leesburg in four-play Kansas
tiebreakers If it la to return to the
state playoffs next Friday. Game
time is act for 4 p.m.

Lake Maryu
was ours. That put a
lot of pressure on ua but the hide
responded beauttftiOy."
Lake Mary running hack Chris
Haney set the tone for t__ ____
when he ripped throught the
oc lT itflO K QCSCfUE I

the first play
to the a
_____penalty i_______ J
to the 3. Haney bowled hi on the
next play. Norman Henkel’a
extra point putting *
up 7-0 with Just 1:10
Keny Wlgglna then started to
Mww the passing ability that has
made him one o f the best
q u a rte rb a c k s in S em in o le
County history aa he engineered
two scoring drives to give Semi­
nole thelead.
The Tribe tied the score late in
the first quarter with Wlgglna
irtth a

Joa Msnalio of Lake Mary comptetsd six of 15
passas for 118 yards to out dual Samlnole
quarterback Harry Wiggins as tha Rams upsat tha

Fighting Samlnolaa 24-21. Manallo's favorite
target was Bill Kanasky who caught four passes
for 88-yards.
'

Cross CountryIB
Ctaa* *A Mats Cism Cewdry Meat

' - the team champion, edging past
Tampa-Lcto, 73-79.
Com bining with Greenberg.
Bresnick ana Loflln for Lym an's
team score were the Davis sis­
ters. MUlle finished 31*1 with a
time o f 12:45 while Linda cam e
In 6 3 r d a t 1 3 :1 9 . C h e r l
Baumgamer. (83rd, 13:43) and
Rita Greenberg (84th. 13:43)
also represented Lyman.
"Everyone on the team ran
their best times o f the year
except for one girl, who was
sick/' said Flnke. "That's what
they're supposed to do at this
time o f the year. The other
teams ran what they had been
running. Our girls Just rose to
the occasion.
"W e didn't go up there with a
picnic attitude. The girls were
not intlm ltaded. T h ey w ere
focused. And they ran an out­
standing race. When you put
three girl* in front o f last w eek's
regional runner-up. you know
you had a good meet."
Doing the scoring for Lake
B rantley w ere A m y G in ette
(18th. 12:17). Joyce Tuilis (43rd.
12:54). Heather Anderson (44th.
12:56). J en n ife r F eld crm an
(48th. 13:00) and Kelly Elmore
(56th, 13:10). Other Patriots who
competed were Barbara Disalvatore (94th. 14:08) and Karen
B oeh ldO lst. 14:21).
For the Lake Howell SUvcr
Hawks, who participated in the
seventh stale meet over the last
eight years, Natalie Newberry
was 19th in 12:17. Combining
with her for Lake Howell's team
score were Mikl Palumbo (34th.
12:48). Tina Reed (81st 13:42).
Jennifer McHone (89th. 13:59)
and Victoria Dempsey (95th.
14:09).
Other Lake Howell finishers
w e r e C h a r lo t t e F r o e h llc h
(102nd. 14:26) and Linn Hald
(106th. 14:411.
The boys’ race feature a pair o f
Interesting contests, one be­
tween a pair o f teams and the
other between a pair of individu­
als. In (he team competition.
I.eonrd Just edged out Leto for
the championship.
On the personal level. Lake
Mary's Lewis finished ahead of
Boone's Erick Rasmussen. 15:44
to 15:45. At both the district and
reg io n a l m eets. Rasm ussen
finished ahead ofLcwts.
Com bining with L ew is for
Lake Mary's team score werr
Toby Ayers (31st. 16:37). Bob
Robertson (40th. 16:46). Tad
Burkhardt (62nd. 17:00) and
T ra v is Olson |92nd, 17:44).
Brian Benson (96th. 17:50) and
Steve Platt (KMth. 17:57) also
ran for the Rams.
Doing the scoring for Lake
Brantley were John Fcota (29th.

t

•I FI

I. Lamar Hardy. Pamacota-Wedngton. IS: II
1. Jam la Pain. Laka worth John I. Leonard.

•tauv.tr

15:24

I.VMTlanan.GibMntarvCasiBay ll : ) t
&gt;. Kxtakan Ward. T ilM in w Lincoln. lt:W

1 Js m I

KYI

Lyman. U iW

4 . LllLassckl, Bradantan Manatae. II.S1
l Jamltar Vlara. Ckarwatar, 11:11
1 Ms|«rl Schmldl. St. Fttartburg-Dlik
Hoi lilt*. It: 17

7 Brenda Alfaro, Card Gaktas. 11:17
I. Douqtana Jackten. Miami Norland. 11:14
». Jota IXion, Sarasota, I1:M
IS. Chrlttt* Mauon, Miami Beach, 11:9*.

3. Calvin Whitaker, Jacktanvllla-Plaichar.
IS M
4. Ryan McNally. Laka Worth-John I.
Leonard, IS:M
5. Lul* Pratt**. Miami Baach, il:M
*. Chrli Thome*. Laka Warth John I.
Leonard. 1S:M
7. Mika Andsnon, Plant City, 1S:14
* Ooarraro Degberto. Hldoah Miami Lake*.

IS:M
*■ O.J. Laid*. Laka Mary. IS:#*

10. Erkk Resmuuart, Bsona, IS.41

Tasai atisdlsu — I. Lyman its&lt; J.
Claarwatar 130; 1. Winter Park 111; 4.
Sarawta 154; S. Fart Walton Baach 174; «.
Laka BrasMay ttii 7. Ptmacoia Washington
Ilf; 1 Talkhasuaa-Lincoln IB ; *. Miami
Baach 714; 10. Card Gable* at; II. Orange
Part a*; 11. Miami-Norland U » ; II. Sami
nolaMl; 14. St. PvkrCrurg NorthaaU 771; IS.
Laka Hawaii m i 14. Cwal V &lt;ring* Ml.

Team* dandlng* - I. Laka Worm John I.
Leon ard. 71; 1. Tam pa-Lala 7t; 1 .
Pontacale-Washington Ml; 4. Tampa-Gaither
tsi; 1 Palm Bay 300; 1 Laka Mary 1 1 1 ; 7.
Mlddleburg llf; 1 Cowar City 7 »; ». Coral
Spring* 7)5; ML Jacktonvllta-Ufolfton. 14S; II.
ClaarwaHr 744. is. Laka Bradley SM» I I
Jacksonville Beach FOtchw M4; 14. Manatee
171; IS. Miami Baach 111: 14. Pert
Laudardda Boyd Andarson 14t.

16:32). Mike C a p c lli (59th.
16:58), Craig Streetman (61st,
16:59). W es liter (64th. 17:06)
and Dan Hillery (73rd. 17:17).

Also representing the Patriots
w ere Jeff Donncr (76th. 17:21)
and Hunter Kem per (103rd.
17:57).

HIGH-SCHOOL ATHLETICS *
The leading sports (1989-90)
0 O n i
Football
Baakatball
Baseball
Track and Flaw
(outdoor)
Wrestling
Soccer
Cross Country
Tannls
Golf
SarknnVng E Diving

the score with the extra point.
Seminole took the lead with a
5 0 -y a rd d r iv e on its n e x t
possession. Again it was the
c o m b in a tio n o f W ig g in s to
Chavers that accounted for the
score on another 6-yard pass
play.
The Rams then went on a
14-play. 78-yaid drive that ate
up the last 7:22 o f the half. The
drive was capped by Henkel's
19-yard field p a l on a fourth
and goal from the 2-yard line.
" A lot of people were surprised
th at w e d id n 't g o fo r th e
touchdown," said Peters. “ But
Seminole was giving us some
things defensively and I felt we
could bcore in the second half. If
they had stuffed the play and we
don't score, we probably would
have lost all momentum. I felt It
was Important that we go Into
the half with a score."
Lake Mary's defense rose to
the occasion In the third quarter
as t h e y h e ld S e m in o le to

Coach Em ory Blake o f Semi­
nole was disappointed but not
downcast after his teams' second
straight loss.
"W e're at the same point we
were last year with a 7-3 re­
cord," said Blake as his team
headed back onto the field for a
post-game workout. "N o w we've
got to get ready for the district
playoffs Monday.
“ We Just gave up to many long
plays today. I don't know what

Swimming—
Continued fr o m 18
from behind on the final
leg to give the Patriots the
c h a m p io n s h ip in th e 4 0 0
freestyle relay, the final event o f
the meet.
Lake Brantley also won the
200 freestyle relay.
J e n n ife r M oon and B eth
Rosenbluth finished fourth and
fifth, respectively, In the 100
backstroke for the Patriots.
Nicole Freda of Lyman was the
only other Seminole County In­
dividual to score in the girls'
finals, finishing fifth in the 100
freestyle. Lyman also took sixth
In the 200 freestyle relay.
Bridgewater set both o f his
records In convincing style. His
winning time o f 49.51 In the 100

213.454
220,777
133.SO*
136,939
122.99*
83,112

.+

A

Basketball
Track and Field
(outdoor)
WolisytifiJl
Soh ball (Fast Pilch)
Tannls
Soccer
Crosscountry
Swimming B Diving
Field Hockey
Golf
" ■- ’ •■ u-&gt;

3N .M E
306*10
293,466
203,040
126,076
111,711
&lt;M47*
64,7*0
50.237
40414
NCACBAPtaCS

See &amp; Bet The Best of Two Worlds!

Nason each grubbed six. Dexter
Vanzant led In assists with four.
The game also marked the
return of shooting guard Tony De
Jesus, who has been out with an
injured foot. De Jesus showed the
effects o f the layoff, scoring only
two points. But he did grab three
rebounds in his 13 minutes o f
action.

W ith h is tw o m ark s,
Bridgewater is now the only
Class 4 A double state-record
holder.
T h e o n ly oth er S e m in o le
County swimmers to place in the
finals were the Lake Mark 400
freestyle relay (fifth, 3:19.50)
and the L a k e B rantley 200
f r e e s t y l e r e la y ( s e v e n t h .
1:31.39).

I

Championship
Wrostling
SHE

3 MAIN EVENTS
20 MAN ROYAL RUMBLE
J A I-A L A I

THOROUGHBRED RACING

F IR S T G A M E 7 :1 5 R M .

POST TIME 12:30 RM.

(rughlty aicopl Sunday)

(datty except Monday)

SEE rT LIVE!

LARGE SCREEN TV S

W orld * Fastest Garnet

NoonMatinees
Mon.Thur.SeL
1P.M.onSunday!
Admissionfrom$1.

Payoff* at
Track Prices!
Racing Forma
A Program* on Seie.
Admission t l -

7-11

LM — Haney 3 run Otankal kkk)
S — Owwer* t p*M tram Wlggin* (Dmiton
kkk)

S — Chavar* 4 gate from

(Dev l*oo

kkk)
LM — Htnfc*M*FG
No Scaring
LM - Hanay I run Otankal kkk)
S— H. William* 4) rui (Davltan kkk)
LM — Hanty I) run (ftankai kkk)
F lrtldnm t
Ruihas-yard*
P88888
Fasting yard*
Funk
Fumbtas-tast
Panaltks yard*

LM
11
3*1*1
515*
IM
17*0
&gt;1
440

S
II
171*
51*0
109
140.0
&gt;3
5n

RJSHINO - Laka Mary. Nanay 17-IM.
Franck 5M. CaHtna &gt;«.-HaM *4l Mamlio
&gt;«•«; Simlwata. H. WMIIamt 15*7. McCtary
*! wl5 ! n G * - L aka'Mary. Mantlto 4 ISO.
I Mi Samtaata. Wlgglna* MS, 149.
RECEIVING - Laka Mary, Kanatky 4 M.
Hanty }-M ; SamInk*. Chavari 474. H.
William* }-14i Davlton MS, Murphy 1-15 T.
William* l -l t

Brought to you
By Kan Hummel
Tlw raaaan football official*
thnm Itag* ta Indkata panaftta* In
tsEay’a foolbaU la aM bacauaa of a
•malleoli***
coach
In
Ohio... Safer* 1*41, officiate blew o
hem when May a*w a penalty.. But
Coscti DA# r*
*

___j*i ____________
II often cauted player* to
•top In Iho middia of o ptay-JUao,
•poctaiara aomatfmaa couldn't
hsar Mo horn, and wouldn't know
a panelty we* ceded ml attar tho
play waa over... to . In a gam* in
1»«1. Booda &gt;ot afftclata |p tapedmontwitfi dropping a handkarchtal.
•» B a t far ponaMo^-Cawybody llkw
w
w vw
WW
m
n i
ad
Mo rIdoo
and aIta Wwaa
toon
adoptad— 8o Mo noil Umo you aoo
an oMctal Map a panady flag, you'll
*■-------H ad atartad becaua* el a

t

(IwafonlAvenue)
Biggett Show Ever In Sanford

tM U A M D O

l i t
FtmOMrtar

SPO UTS PANSI

C oatin atd from IB

403,4*4

7 S • 14 — 14

I lls SHI*

backstroke was more than two
seconds better cf the mark of
51.54 set in 1987 by SarasotaRlverview's Tripp! Schwenk. In
w in n in g th e 200 Individu al
medley In 1:51.47. he shave
nearly a second o ff o f the old
record o f 1:52.33, set by Merritt
Island's Edward Dailey In 1968.

M en

*47,737
517,271
413,561

LAKE MASV M SEMINOLE 11
Ltbabtary

6 MAN TAG TEAM WORLD TAG TEAM
CHAMPIONSHIP
ThoBlo
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,u
Cts
oLvM
EcTkhSecG
sio
alnH
au
.rdock,
ThoAnvilBThoRocfcor
! BugayMcGrow,Hr.WraatUnga,
Vlit
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"GoldenBoy”Gray
ThoDemo
WORLDJR. CHAMPIONSHIP
ThaDirtyWhltaBoy
A
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vs.
(cousinofHuMHogan)
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vs. ThoOutlaw
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1 1ii... 1i.i. ta|l*•1,aa161*4i hv»•l»i
il
1 1it..... lit, I.(ii*ill„a*ti"*4i ■’1ri IM
V|i*&gt;4111•
^'*•1. i
|.| \M
&lt;&lt;*tV|(1- 1||H 1a.

Whai art tha most points ever
scored In a Mason by any player In
N allon al
Football
League
history?...Tha all lima record waa
M l by Paul Hornung who scored
176 points for Graan Bay In
1060.. Dasptla all lha yaars lhai
have paaaad tinea than, no one has
•var topped Hornung * record
aaa

I bat you didn't know wo tuno a
gnat aatacNon el to B 61 Chawotat
Cara B Truck* at c Marine* price*.
Nta'io Mg Enough To Sanw You
and Small enough To Know You.

um

HWY. 17-92 SANFORD

321-7800

a u r u .s .
S A V IN G S B O N D S
for Iho current rota call ..
l - f O O -U S-B O N O S

�w
*-

I — Sanford Htrald, Sanford, Flortda — Sunday, November 14, II

x/

mm

Sanford chamber names directors

IN B R I E F
Bank plans staff reduction

n f f H O llB T T W m t f

OCALA — Mid-State F td e n l Savings Bank in n o u .n d
recently a staff reduction program that la expected to reduce
salary and benefit expenses by approximately $925,000 a year.
Mid-State Federal win Incur approximately $200,000 in
severance costa during the current quarter aa a result o f the
program.
Charles
Charles E. Harris, chairman o f the board o f Mid-State
Federal, said the staff reductions Included 18 executive and
staff positions that were scheduled to be phased out upon
completion o f the pending acquisition o f Mid-State Federal by
First Florida Banks. Inc.
H e said the staff reductions w ere not dependent upon the
acquisition, and would be completed even if the acquisition
were delayed or terminated.

SA N FO R D - T h e G reater
Sanford Chamber o f Com merce
has .a p p o in t e d a n e w ten
mem DCF tiocTu oi uuTciort lor a
3-year term, and scheduled their
installation banquet at the San­

ford Ctvtc Center for January 17.
Included among the Incoming
board are three additions. Mike
Good, Bill Simmons and Tom
S teven son . O th ers w ere r e ­
elected to the board Including
W .E . " D u k e " A d a m s o n .
Sylvester Chang. Mack N. Cleve­
land, Jr.. Bobby Douglas. Shirley
S ch ilke. R oger Stew art and

,Chuck Volk.
The new members will begin
official duties as o f the Dec. 11
meeting.
Nominations for Incoming of­
ficers will be the first order o f
business to be considered at
that meeting. The nominating
com m ittee Is proposing Jim
Young, the current Vice Presl-

_____ W K K M i Nations) Bank
as 1BB1 President, this year's
Treasurer Bobby Douglas from
Sun Bank as Vice President and
Bette Oram kow o f Oramkow
Funeral Horae aa Treasurer.
The Chamber now has a total
o f 38 board members serving
one to three year terms.

Longwood
chamber’s
set

Rotate oteeted to SunBank board
ORLANDO — Rotri Kelley Roberts, owner and president o f
RK T Constructors Inc., has been elected to the administrative
board of directors for SunBank N.A. In North Brevard County,
officials announced.
Roberta Is ow ner and president o f RK T Constructors Inc., a
state- certified general contracting Arm. She Is also half owner
and vice president o f Roy F. Roberts A Son Land Developers
Inc., a state-registered underground utility company.
SunBank N.A. la the largest bank In Central Florida with 64
offices in Orange. Seminole. Brevard. Lake and Osceola
counties. It currently has assets over $4.2 billion and deposits
o f more than $3.4 billion.

LONOWOOO — Outstanding
to be recognised
Nov. 28, during (he
raid s luncheon o f the
L ongwood/WInter Springs Area
o f Convive f l!C.
B ad ) year, the chamber presa Bualnrm o f the Year
recomtlxes two buali with the Rod Cable
th e Presid en t's
n s one of the first
o f the chamber, and
his name Is In
v •
be pres­
ented by the March of Dimes to
buatnesaea w ho participated in
the recent Jail and Ball event.

TowtrAirrMumtt international flights
MIAMI — Tow er A ir resumed scheduled flights recently from
Miami to Denmark. Norway and Sweden.
Service resumed with the departure o f Tower A ir Flight 42. a
nonstop flight to Copenhagen with continuing service to
Billuna. Denmark. In addition to the w eekly Thursday
departures to Denmark. Tower w ill offer weekly Friday nonstop
flights to Oslo. Norway, with continuing service to Gothenburg.
Sweden and weekly Saturday nonstop flights to Stockholm.

Quarterly nat gain reported
JACKSONVILLE - Blue Cfoss and Blue Shield o f Florida
reported a net gain o f $4.6 million for the third quarter of 1090,
increasing earnings for the first nine months o f the year to
$49.8 million.
Officials said that represented an $18.3 million improvement
over the first nine months o f 1969.
Total revenues increased to s l . l billion for the first nine
months o f 1990 compared to $964.6 million for the same
period a year earlier. Corporate assets rose to $647.7 million as
o f Sept. 30. compared to $490.7 million at Sept. 30.1989.
Blue Croas and Blue Shield o f Florida policyholders' equity
Increased to $177.8 million as o f Sept. 30. 1990, compared to
$129.1 million at Sept. 30.1989.

The Hungry and the Brave

First Mercantile opens office
LONGWOOD - First Mercan­
tile N ation a l Bank recen tly
opened Its new m ain office
building, designed In authentic
Williamsburg architecture, on
Highway 17-92 near State Road
434 in Longwood.
Chartered in November 1988.
First Mercantile Is an Indepen­
dent bank which has grown to
over $31 million In assets, de­
posits o f approximately $26 mil­
lion. and loans in excess o f $20
million.
The

m ain o ffice

hours o f

operation are Monday through
Thursday 9 a.m. — 4 p.m..
Friday 9 a.m. — 6 p.m.. and
S atu rd ay 9 a.m . — noon.
Drlve-lnd windows are open
Monday — Friday 8 a.m. — 6
p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m. —
noon. First Mercantile offers the
same hours at Its branch office
on Wcklva Springs Road.
Directors o f the bank are
Arnold H. Bicrman. M.D.. Larry
A. Dale. Dr. Hubert R. Earley.
Charles F. Emerson, Jr.. Gene
Josephs, K. I’ rcben Knudsen.

Emptoyera involved In the
Buaineaa Education Day will also
be recognised.
Th e Installation o f chamber
officers and board members for
1B01 w ill alao he held during the
luncheon meeting.
A ll business people are Invited
to the function. Reservations
and cotoporate tables are avail­
a b le b y c a llin g th e L o n g ­
wood/WInter Springs Chamber
o f Commerce at 831-9991 by no
later than Friday, Nov. 23.
The luncheon meeting will be
held from 11:30 a m , until 1
p.m.. at the Quality Inn • North.
State Road 434 at 1-4 In Long-

Howard B. Lefkowltz, G. Geof­
f r e y L o n g a t a f f . D a v id M.
Pome ranee, Steven B. Stone and
Dwalne L. Willett.
Officers are Longataff. Presi­
dent ft CEO: James S. Hall.
Executive Vice Presklent: Daniel
F. W i l l i a m s . V i c e P r e s ldcnt/Loans; A. Carolyn Craft.
V ic e P r e a lc c n t / L o a n A d ­
ministration: Beverly H. Coble.
Operations Officer/17-92 Office
Manager: and Gladya Mcaacroff,
Manager/Wcklva Springs Road
Office.

Eastern ruling prolongs agony, union leaders say
U n lfd Press Intamatlonal_______
MIAMI — Leaden o f Its East­
ern A irlin es'1 unions said the
carrier's reprieve In bankruptcy
court has bought it a little more
flying time but they doubt It will
be enough to keep the airline
alive.
" I think It's Just prolonging
the agony. It's like a death watch
going o n ," Charles Bryan, presi­
dent o f the International Associ­
ation o f Machinists, said.

The airline won a reprieve
from liquidation late Wednesday

when federal bankuplcy Judge
Burton Llflund Said It could
withdraw $15 million from an
escrow fund to meet operating
e x p e n s e s . T h e Ju dge suld
another $15 million could be
withdrawn Dec. 3 If the airline
meets operating projections.
E.J. Breen, a spokesman for
Eastern's division of the Air Line
Pilots Association, said the first
$15 million was already spoken
for to pay travel agents' com­
missions on tickets and to meet
the Nov. 15 payroll.
"T h a t money Is all gone."
Breen said. " I think they're

Pan Am,
United
both gain
Sourer: Too Sopor Orgonuauon

M AGJM m C

More than half of American adults have triad venison at one time or anothar.
and mors than one third have eaten pig's test. However, less than one
out of every to Americana has ever sat down to a meal of snake.

Consum er rightists oppose
streamlined meat inspection
By C M A 8 U S J . ABBOT f

UPI Farm Editor________________
WASHINGTON - Consumer
activists say If a proposal passes
to streamline the nation's meat
Inspection system, they may
urge Congress to move Inspec­
tion duties from the Agriculture
Department to another agency
m ore com m itted to public
health.
During a meeting called by the
National Academy o f Sciences, a
coalition of consumer groups
urged the Agriculture Depart­
ment to drop the Idea of proceed­
ing with a streamlined Inspec­
tion system for cattle. The
system has been under consid­
eration since 1984.
A panel of experts assembled
by the academy gave a qualified
endorsement to the new system
In a report last Sept. 17. They
suggested modifications to the
system. Including specific steps
to control hazards, and said It
should be used only In plants
with a demonstrated record of
quality control.
In addition, they urged fun­
damental changes In the meat
Inspection system so It would
detect microbial or chemical
contamination In meat.
The consumer advocates ac­
cused the Food Safety Inspection
Service of being loo willing to
q u I c k I y l m i&gt; I c ni e n t th e

streamlined system, rather than
doing the research to develop a
trustworthy system. They called
for withdrawal o f proposed rules
to Implement the system.
"U n le s s the dep artm en t
withdraws (the proposal) and
demonstrates It has now begun a
serious effort to meet the reco m m e n d a t t o n s o f (t h r e e
Academy of Sciences reports),
our Safe Food Coalition may feel
compelled to call on Congress to
remove meal and poultry In­
spection from the (department)
and place It In an agency that
has the commitment and the
staff to run a public health-based
program." said Carol Tucker
Foreman.
Foreman, an assistant agricul­
ture secretary during the Carter
administration, spoke on behalf
o f a coalition o f consumer
groups, public Interest groups
and labor unions.

U n lfd Press Intamatlonal_______
Pan A m Corp. outlined a $400
million deal that will give United
Airlines moat o f Pan American
W orld A irw ays' U.S.-London
routes and forge new cooperative
ties between the two carriers.
T h e a g r e e m e n t s ig n e d
Wednesday night — hours be­
fore a midnight deadline —
provides for reciprocal benefits
to members o f both airlines*
frequ en t-flyer p rogram s and
makes provisions for other Joint
marketing and rales efforts.

Renew Your Sanford Herald
Subscription How and Sam!
EFFECTIVE DECEM BER 9.1990

Under the agreement. United
w ill a c q u ir e a ll P a n A n t's
U.S.-London authorities except
for the London-Mlaml and London-DetfOU routes, phis lease­
hold rights and assets at San
F ran cisco In tern a tion al and
Washington Dulles airport, two
Boeing 747-200 aircraft and
parts, for $400 million.

Under streamlined inspection,
The agreement also calls for
which would be used only In coordination of schedules am)
large beef packing plants, the "c o d e - s h a rin g " on certain
government would operate two (ligh ts. Such shared flights
inspection stations on slaughter would carry flight numbers of
lines, compared to the three now both airlines, and both Pan Am
In place. Plant employees would and United could sell tickets and
have more responsibility for collect revenues for those (lights.
removing dressing defects.
The Inspection service says
One Industry analyst called
the changes would allow In­ the deal a “ very good fit" and
spectors to devote more time to said T h u rsd a y th a t U nited
looking for "disease conditions stands to gain much new busi­
ness over time.
with public health significance."

court-appointed trustee Martin
Shugrue took over In April.
Shugrue argued (hat the carri­
er ban a "reasonable prospect"
o f retching self-sufficiency by
February or March.
Llfland said he had heard no
credible argument for liquida­
tion and that there was a major
public Interest In preserving
E a s te r n 's 18,000 Jobs and
maintaining competition In the
airline Industry.
But the Judge agreed that
under bankruptcy proceedings.
Eastern's assets belonged to the
creditors.

Beit The Ikx!

B y J f t e K L I I A R

United alao agreed to guaran­
tee that up to $100 million worth
of Pan Am tickets would be
honored for travel on United If
Pan Am . which has been long
e x p e r ie n c in g fin a n c ia l d if­
ficulties. were to cease Its air
transportation operations.

going to get two weeks out ol It
and then probably shut U down.
"T h e y 'v e lost $1.6 billion
since March 4. 1989. and they
were In bad shape before that.
They need a major financial
Infusion and there's nobody out
there who's going to give It.
"M y feeling Is that the body ta
still twitching but the plug has
been pulled and Judge Llfland
was not in the mood to sign a
death certificate last night."
Unsecured creditors wanted
Eastern liquidated immediately
because It has failed to meet
fin a n cia l p ro jectio n s since

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Sanford Haratd, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novambar 11, 1EE0 — I

LagN Notjctt
IMTNC CM KIKT C M M T
OP T N I EIGHTEENTH

t-ttL/F
A M IR IC A N F I O N I I R
MORTGAOC lIR V fC E I. INC..

Legal Notices

Uqai N ottct
AGVtRTfSCMERTT

~13 ® S 5 S

T H E BOARD OF

INSPIRATIONS FOR HAIR and
Rtot stg bttond Id rpgiotor said
nama wtto « a Clark of li t
Circuit Court.
Ftorttak to

SSSSSS&amp;man"
ASSOCIATION, INC.,

WILLIAM F. CUNNINOHAAL
efue.efai.
FREDERICK p. BEMABRO
and KAR IN L. BCMBf RO,

CPM .

T»WM:

*t Foraaor a IMBt PNG wteraG to to*
(AM t panama m tot Circuit
Caarl af am ttpWaana* Judkiaf
Circuit. to an* ter laminate
County. FtorMto Civil ActNn
n *. ra m a C A u L / P . a* imCNrk wHI ttll to*
&gt;to satt County.
Lat m SUNLANO ■ I T AT IS
FIRST AOOITKM awardtog la
Na plat WWraaf at raeeriei m
Plat t a b if. Fegeef-toi Pubfte
Nu m A
R H M H

mjk
VI

| a a M |
i^ W I F F ^ H F

f a M ill I *
aW W I l| l

Fieri**,
at puilk tab. to Mr MfAatt and
......................
‘ at 1t:N
AWL. an Mr lllti Ray
bar, Iff*. at It* West Main Deer
at too Samlnali Caunty CaurfD A TID tote I4to dey *f too
(COURT M A L I
MARVANNC MORSE
Clark af to* Circuit Court
H twlnaN Caunty, FlarMa
ty : Jana E. Jaaank
Deputy Clark
PuMMi: November MLM. 1*1*
D IM M
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
O F TH E EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN AND FOR
f f M INOLI COUNTY, PL.
CASI NOi N U N U 4 H I
IN R I: THCMARRIAOCOP
OEBRA ANN FONTANA.
^
WIN/Patltlanar,

* * w . I sstH oeN b n
Mfowled in o
F torIda. dsecrtl
U* _l. I tartRHOOb UsVt l,
acrardtog to Ma plat tooraol as

js y a 'g g a a rs
at PtAHc Sato to

MM

Caunty, Florid* on SMB
M y of December m t katwaon
tIM A JM and2 M PM .
(U A L )
CLIRKOP THC
CIRCUIT COURT
By; Janal.Jaoowk
Aa Doputy Ctort
PMItoh: November )*.37. two
OEZ-1B7
'
NOT KB OP
PICT m « l « NAMB
to hereby given thot I
In buoamo at tB
PL
ORAUOHON AND ASSOCIATBS and that I Intend to
ragielar said nemo with tha
Clark at tha Circuit Caurt, SamCounty, Florida. In actrawftotoalr v w i p w n
the Fkttttoua Name Statutes.
ToWtt: Section sue* Florida
Oaarga W.tTcoeghan
■ 4 11. 10.77.
DEZ 17

O IN C L t l FONTANA.
Husband/Respendent
N O TICt OF ACTION
CONSTRUCT IVISERVICE
YOU ARC N O TIFIID mat an
actlan N r Oi«aatut«i at Marrlapa hat bean fiNd apainat you
and yaw art required N tarva a
capy at ypgr written drtenses. II
any. N II on Oiarlat 0. Da
Marca. I n 441 Oauplaa Av*.
Suita H i l l ] , A llam anta
SjumpA Florida on or kotara
Pacambar ijth. ItfO. and Ilia top
•ripInal aHIti ttia Clark af Itilt
Court althar botora service on
dlataty maraattar. otherwise a
drtautt will ba antarad apainat
you tor the raitat demanded in
OATED on Novambar tth,
Irat.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
ly i SharanDunn
Deputy Clark
Publish: Novambar II, II. U A
DacamkarLItN
DCZ-IS4 m* , „* ,,f
» |a nL«
PUBLIC NOTIFICATION
N O TICI OP PILINO
Tha applicant, Arbor Hoollh
Caro Company, a Delaware cor
porallon, whoso Board ot
Dlractors It Plar C. Rorra.
Robart C. Balias, Jr., Howard R.
Co*. Jr., Jamas R. Hoovor.
Thomas A. Jamas, and Rruca C.
Thompson, and In which P.C.
Berra. Cherry Tree Ventures II,
Greylock Vanturos Limited
Partnership, and RCS III. own
5% or moro ot tha stock, an­
nounces Its Infant to tile a
Certificate ot Need application
by December 7, iffo with tha
Department of Health and Ha
habllltatlve Services lor the
addition ot 11 bads to a nursing
homo ot 107 bods. Nr which tha
Department ha* noticed IN In­
tent to approve ICON No. 4lu4
and No. 4JV7), mulling In an
liObed community nursing
homo whkh will provide both
skilled and Intermediate care, to
be located on a site yet to be
determined In Seminole County.
Florida. Tha proposed cost ot
tho pra|oct will be up to
S4.000.0M. The protect It granted
Is (spected to became opera
ttonal during the second holt of
11*2.
Signed:
JOHN L. WHARTON
Rose, Sundst rom L Bentley
374* Blelrstone Pints Drive
Tallahassee. FL 13301
(Pea) 177 4771
Publish: November It, IL 1*10
DEZ 177
INTHR CIRCUIT COURT.
INANOFOR
SRMINOLR COUNTY,
FLORIDA
c a s k n o . saseto-CA-te-p
ELMERRUFUS SMITH.
LYDIA LOOAN. and
JEROME LOGAN.
PlalntltN.
v*.
JOE WATKINS and LINDA
SMITH, his wife, and
MORRIS ROUNDTREE.
N O TICI OF ACTION
THE STATE OP FLORIDA TO:
MORRIS ROUNDTREX
IAddress unknown I
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED that ELMER RUFUS
SMITH. LYDIA LOGAN and
JEROME LOGAN have filed a
Complaint to Forsc tote a Mort­
gage In tha Circuit Court ot
Seminole County, Florida, tor
reel property described as
fol knots*
Lot J . B la ck A . L . G.
STRINGFELLOW'S SUBDIVI­
SION. according to the plat
thereof ot recorded in Plat Book
1. Page n . ot the public records
ot Seminole County. Florida;
end you ore required to serve a
copy ot your written defenses. It
any. an FRANK C. WHIGHAM.
ESQUIRE, attorney tor Plain
11IN. whose address Is P. O. Bos
W0. Sanford. Florida. 12777
W0. on or before November 30.
ISS0. and Ilia tha original with
tha Clark of this Court althar
before service on Plaintiffs’
attorney or Immediately there
after; otherwise a default and
ultimata ludgment will be an
fared against you lor the relief
demanded In Ihe Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and ot
ficlal seal ot this Court this 14lh
day of October. A O 1*10.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark ot Ihe Circuit Court
By. Heather Brunner
Deputy Clark
‘ubllsh: (October 70 A Novem
Publish:
her 4 ll. IK ttoO
DEY Iff

NOTICI
NO TICI to her say given Rial
lha Board at Caunty Commie
ttonert ot Sominoto County.
Florida. Intends to hold • public
hoarlng to raneldor lha enactANORDIMANCt ABLATING
TO TRAFFIC OFFENSE REC
OROSi PROVIDING FOR THE
CLERK OP CIRCUIT COURT
TO PROVIDE CERTAIN REC
ORDS TO T H I FLORIDA DC
PA R TM EN T OF HIGHWAY
S A F E T Y A N D M O TO R
VEHICLES; PROVIDING FOR
CODIFICATION IN THE SEM
IN O L E C O U N T Y C O D E ;
PROVIDING FOR SEVCRA
RILITY; PROVIDING FOR AM
EFFECTIVE DATE,
at 1:30 p m., or *o span thereat
tor aa passible, ot Its regular
meeting on the 11th day ot
December, teeo, at lha Sominoto
County Servlets Building, not
Bast Pint Street. Ream W-117.
advised that. If ttwy Ok ids to
daclston made at this
w ill'd * a racard
purpesa. they may head to
insure that e verbatim record at
lha prapoadtogs to mads, which
record Includes the testimony
and evidence upon which tho
appeal toto bo bated.
MARYANNE MORSE
Ctorfc to lha Board ot
County Commissionersot
Sominoto Caunty. Florida
By; lllltoL. Roiansky
Deputy Clerk
Publish: November 11, 1too
D IM M
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T H I BIDNTBINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SBMINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASK N&amp; to S4N CA-I4-LJP
WESTWOOO MORTGAGE
CORPORATION.
PtoJntlft,
vs.
JAMESH. READ. JR..
“JANE” READ, Ms mouse. II
married. PATRICK WRIGHT, .
“JANS'' WRIGHT, Ms spouse It
married. HAROLD F.
SCHAFFER, MARGARET G.
SCHAFFER. Ms wile.
SPRINGWOOO VILLAGE
CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION OF
LONGWOOO. INC.. JOHN DOE
and JANE DOE.
AMENDED NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS H E H EIY GIVEN
pursuant to a Pinal Judgment of
Forocloouro dated September
U. ItoO. and an Ee Parte Order
Rescheduling Ferectoeurp Sato
entered In Cam No. Pf**44CA
14L/P ot tho Circuit Court of the
eighteenth Judicial Circuit In
and tor Saminoto County, Flori­
da w horeln W ES TW O O D
MORTGAGE CORPORATION
to too Plaintiff and JAMES H.
READ. JR.. "JANE" REAO,
his epouto. It m a rrie d ,
PATRICK WRIGHT. “JANE"
WRIGHT. hle tpoum It married.
H A R O LD F. S C H A F F E R .
MARGARET G. SCHAFFER,
his w ile , S P R IN G W O O O
VILLAGE CONDOMINIUM AS
SOCIATION OF LONGWOOO.
INC.. JOHN DOE and JANE
DOC. are too Defendants I will
toll to to* highest and bast
bidder tar cash at lha West
Front Ooor ot too Courthouse In
Seminole County. Florida at
11:00 a m. on too 10th day ot
December, ItoO. to* tallowing
described property as sot forth
In said Final Judgment:
U N I T N O . 117 0 O F
SP R IN G W O O O V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M ANO AN
UNDIVIDED l/lto INTEREST
IN THE LAND. COMMON EL­
E M E N T S A N O COMMON
EXPENSES APPURTENANT
TO SAID UNIT. ALL IN AC
COROANCE WITH ANO SUB
JECT TO THE COVENANTS.
C O N D IT IO N S . R E S T R IC
TIONS. TERMS ANO OTHER
PROVISIONS OF THAT DEC
LARATIOH OF CONDOMINI­
U M O F S P R IN G W O O O
VILLAGE. A CONDOMINIUM.
AS RECORDED IN OFFICIAL
RECOROS BOOK IJII. PAGE
1040. PUBLIC RECOROS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORI
DA.
WITNESS my hand and tha
teal ot this Court an November
0.1*10.
(SEAL)
CLERK OF CIRCUIT COURT
By: JaneE. Jasowx
Deputy Clerk
Publish November II. II. 1SS0
DEZ 177
___

rMNIMI: MwawtoerAll. it. 71.
KM
DEZM
toettce to herpby given toot I
M bvammo at Mt
J m Para Puli, PL
— •*— .Meta County. Ftertdn.
undw tog Fk fffteuo Name at
D 'A D O S T IH O P R IM IU M
DISCOUNT MEATS, and todt I
wtto BN CtortTot Sm *c Sk *N
Caurt. lonstouN County, FtorL
do. in accord
Provision* at
T»Wtt:
Ml IS A
*.*.1*0*
DtZ-WB

to Big
let* Building, Rgdm IB-117
(Third Flaw I, IN ) l a * Fir*
Stro*. Sanford, Ftortda. Tha

B V S T J’ U U ;
Ibarotwmdk
M d flA/N-M dktromant Agraamanl tor Traf­
fic itoMd Camp p p Mmdnoro
S U B M IT TA L TIM R / O A T E :
&gt;:BB PJbl. lac* (torn,
IP R M IL N N B M lM A IL TO i
t imtoetoCsrnti Purthmlna
P.O.Bm fit*
Fto*dR7*77S71l*
Ml
---------------------

I*
* to*
* to* P**weto| 0*, until ! : « P M . toe*
I*.
l**b. BM t tslfl be publicly

. ..1
IN I I .
mi _______
A
rmm p rn i«
The p e rm stomp duty M la to
•pan M ia will dm Ida whan

IP M M U N D MEk RMIL TOt
O s w O m Im
s
n r a i i i i n i i^ V n n p n « *n
r . ao,
■h t i n M M
PL 3&gt;7f&gt;HIP.
IF M L IV tN IN O OIO IN
F I N S O N . D E L IV E R YOt
Csuwty Servks* lutldtog. IN )
■ . F fr*

Casmfy Purchasing

NDttCBDP
Notk» to btruby glum dipt I
am engaged m t n lx iii at sn
H*natto PI.. DaDary. Vetuela
County, Florida, undo* too
Ficttttoua Nome at SUPERIOR
P A IN T IN G A PRESSURE
CLKANtNO. Md toot | inland Ip
Clerk at to* Ctrtuff Caurt. SumtooN Caunty. Ftortda. to ac­
ne* wtto to* r
T»WH: Suction
Statute! IM7.
Richard T
11 77 A
DEZ t «
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
O FTN E EIGHTEENTH
JUOtCIAL CIRCUIT.
IN ANO POD
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE N O ; OB-IMPCA-IPL/P
CLAUDE I.TA YLO R . Hand
BAON. TAYLOR.
SANORAROOO. SHARON
ROMAN and ROBKRT ROOO
NO TICI OP SALB
NOTICI IS HEREBY GIVEN
toot pursuant to a Final Judgmant at Foroctoour* dated Nevombarl t m and entered in
Cam Na. W-NseCA UL/P at
to* Clycult Caurt at to* llghtoento Judicial Circuit at Fieri
da. to and Nr Samhwto County,
wherein Claude I . Taylor II and
Em N. Taylor are PlalntltN and
Sandra ~
dants. I still mil to too hlghoat
and boot btddor tar caeh at too
Wmt Front door at too Sominoto
County Ceurihoum In Sanford
Florida* H:0Pa.m.m toe torn
day *1 December, m g. to*
tonmttog-dmcrlbPd property m
mt forth In tho sold Pinal
Judgment. I* wit:
Lai 17, PINE HEIGHTS, ac­
cardtog to too plat Mortal, at
retarded to Ptol &gt;a«k 1 page si,
Public Record* at Seminole
County. Ftortda.
DATED tolt am day of Novorrbtr. imo.
(Seal)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk of Court
By Cecelia V. Ekam
Deputy Clerk
Publish: November n, I I imo
DEZI77
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP T H I W IN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA.
INANOFOR
IIM INOLB COUNTY
C A IIN a fto S N
dENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION AS
CONSERVATOR OF
FRANKLIN SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION
PLAINTIFF,
— vs—
MICHAEL A. MEADOWS.
ETAL.
DEFENDANT!!).
NO TICI OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVI SERVICE
- PROPSRTY
TO:
KAREN T. MEADOWS
Residents unknown, II living.
Includtog any unknown spouse
el to* said Detondsnts. II either
has remarried end II eltoer or
beto st said Defendants are
heirs.
signets, creditors. I
trustees, and all other
claiming, by. through, under or
against tha named Defendant(i); end the sfertmen
ttonod named Detendenl(i) and
such el toe steremenllened un­
known Dsfsndents end such el
the sforemenllened unknown
Defendants a* may ba Infants.
t i l l lu r I*

YOU ABE HBREBV NOTI­
FIED tool an ectton has been
commenced to torn tom a martarty, lying and being and situat­
ed to SEMINOLE Caunty. Fieri
da. mere particularly described
LOT 17, ALAFAYA WOODS
PHASE I. UNIT A, ACCORD
INO TO THE MAP OR PLAT
THEREOF AS RICOROCD IN
FLAT BOOK II. PAGBS aa
THROUGH El INCLUSIVE. IN
THE PUBLIC RECOROS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORI­
DA.
mere commonly known as 111*
SHAFFER TRAIL. OVIEDO.
FLORI DA 17747.
This action hat been Hied
guired to serve a copy el your
written detonm. II any. to II on
SHAPIRO A FISHMAN. At­
torneys, whet* address is
BeyPori Plaja. 43d* Courtney
Campbell Causeway, Suit* 300.
Temp*. FL Him, on or before
November 30. 1*10 and file to*
original with to* clerk el tolt
Court either before service on
Plalntllfs attorney or Immedi
atofy there ettsr; otherwise *
default will be ento-td against
you tor to* relief demanded to
the Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and seel
of tola Court on to* 14th day el
October. Its*.
ISEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
Circuit and County Courts
By: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 30 B Novem
bar 4 II. is. imo
DEY 770.

Itm f ftSI
TH f BOARD OF
COUNTY CORWUSStOOff RS
SEMINOLE COUNTV,
F l o r id a
* latorg* tor PSMI -

NOTICE OF CLERK'S
•OT1CSGFBALB
NO TICI I I HEREBY GIVBN
that, pursuant to a Pinal

COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
THE COUNTY OF
SEMINOLE

_______ „ . . T u n n
IM1 l a * Fir* tore*
. Ftorfd0*77l

BE NICBIVED
______ BCNA IIW D&lt;
PANTJMNT. tm EAST FIRST
B TN IG T. THING FLOOR.
ROOM IB -Ill. BANPORD,
PLDRIHA. NO BATIN THAN
BAY OF MO DFf NINB AS
INOICATIO ANOVI. BIDS
N IC E IV IO AFTSN THAT
TIM E WILL NOT I t ACC I F T I O NO EXCEPTIONS
m u OE MAM. M M WILL
NOT M ACCEPTED DO I I
CEIVBDINDOOMfB-lt7.
NO FACSMHil ON TELEM IS S IO N S W IL L
AC­
C E P T !*
PON PURTMIN INFORMA
T IO N C O N T A C T : H A N D Y
V O O IN B IN . BUVEN, (4*71
M t-ItJ l EXTENSION 7111 BID
PACKAOCS ARE AVAILABLE
IN T H I PURCHASINO DE
PARTMENT AT NO CHARGE.
NOTE: ALL PROSPECTIVE
OPPERORS ARE HER EB Y
CAUTIONED NOT TO CON
TA C T ANY MEMOIR OP T H I
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD
OP COUNTY COMMISSION
IR S R IO A R O IN O T H I S !
PROJECTS. SUCH CONTACT
SHALL BE CAUSE P M DIS­
QUALIFICATION. A LL CON­
TA C TS MUST
CHAN­
N ELED THNOUOH T H I PUR
CHASING DEPARTMENT.
Tho Caunty reserves to* right
to reled any w Ml afters, with
or without cause, to waive
technical 11to*, or to accept to*
pftor whkh In Its bast judgerrwnt bp* serves too Interest *
to* County. Cm! * submltt* *

*ton* ce* * to* pftorer and
an to w
iP.Gatow. C.P.M.
Purchasing Director
Ceunty Service* Bulkhng
1101Eaet First Street
Sanford. Ftortda17771
Publleh: Nevsmber 1 1 1me
DEZ-140

NOTICI OP
FICTITIOUS K A M I
Notice Is hersby given to* we
ere engaged to buttoam * 1171
Hwy. 17*7. Longweed. Samtoato
County, Florida, under IN*
Fictitious Nam* * VINCE'S
PARTY HOUSE, and tool we
Intend to register said name
with too Clerk * to* Circuit
Court. Seminole Ceunty. Flori­
da. In accordance with the
Pravltione at the Fictitious
Name Statutes. To-Wit: Section
ass et Florida Statutes 1*77.
Lets A. Garotolo
Vincent Garofoto
Publish: October p 1 Novem­
ber 4 l i . i i tme
DEY 171

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I E IO H T IIN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANO P M
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
CASINO. td«T77-te
DIVISION L/P
NCNB NATIONAL BANK OF
F L M I DA. success* by merger
to Ellis Banket Northeast
Florida. N A..
PMntltHs).
vs.
JOHN K. VAN SCHELTEMA.
**.
Defendant!*).
AMENDED
NOTICI OF
FM IC LO SU N B SALE
N O TIC I IS HBREBV GIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment *
terecleeur* dated November 7,
Imo, and entered to Cam No.
SO0777 14 * toe Circuit Court *
lha E IG H T E E N T H Judicial
Circuit to and tor SEMINOLE
County. Florida wherein NCNB
NATIONAL BANK OF F L M IDA. suecesser by merger to
EIHs Bank * Northeast Florida.
N.A. le to* Plaintiff and JOHN
K. VAN SCHELTEMA. STATE
OF FL M IO A . DEPARTMENT
O F R E V E N U E . L IB E R T Y
NATIONAL BANK. SUN BANK
OF TAMPA BAY F/K/A SUN
BANK SUNCOAST NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION and GENERIC
SYSTEMS. INC. are the Deten
dants. I will mil to to* highest
and best bidder lor cash at toe
entrance el Ihe SEMINOLE
County Courthouse *1 11:00
a m., on to* 30th day * Decern
bar. imo. the following de­
scribed property a* set forth to
said Fin* Judgment:
Let 30, SPRINGS LAND
ING-UNIT TWO. according to
to* Plat Itwre* at recorded In
Plot Book 14 Page* 17. 11 and
1*. at the Public Record* ot
Seminole Ceunty. Florida.
ANO
Let I I . SPRINGS LAND
INC-UN IT TWO. according to
to* Plat thereof a* recorded In
Plat Booh 14 Page* 77. la. end
1*. * to* Public Record* of
Seminole Caunty. Florida.
WITNESS MY HAND wtd to*
teal ot this Court on November
IJ. imo
(SEAL)
HONORABLE
MARYANNE MORSE.
Clerk * the Circuit Court
By: JaneE Jatewlc
Deputy Clark
Publish November 1117.1HO
DEZ in

BIOS MUST BE RECEIVED
IN T H E PURCHASINO D E­
PARTMENT. IN I |. FIRST
S T N I l f - ROOM S!
SA N FO R D . FLO R ID A . NO
L A T I N TH A N l:SB F .M .,
L O C A L T I M E , O N D ID
OPENING DATE. BIOS RE
C l IV IO AFTER THAT TIME
W ILL NOT S I ACCEPTED. NO
E X C E P T I O N S W IL L E l
NO FACSIMILE M T E L E ­
GRAPHIC RIO SUBMISSIONS
W ILL DE ACCtPTIO.
M A R K O U T S I D E OP
ENVELOPE PC-.N0 - BLACK
SCOPE OP WORK:
Thp work consists * the
furnishtog * Ml IR p , motorists
and iRulpmant tor to* construe
flan of • water main and
*PP«
Ing sltm add tongRst:
ffSto*. Wltach
73AM to * * 4 inch
U M to* *4-Inch
SAM to* af IS todt
B ID BO N D (• % I R E •UIRVD; Eldt mu* Bo accampanlad Mtosr By a cashier's
Chech upon an Incerparatod
. .
I* Beard * County
Cam m lsilensra. Seminal*
Caunty. F torIds; w a Md
tory to too Caunty. tor n* torn
than five par cant (5%) * ton
to** amount * Ma hid a* pm
specific*tons.
PON PURTHIR INFORMA­
TIO N CO N TACT; Linda C.
Jan**, Contract* Analyst (M l)
331-1111 l i t . 7fi&gt;.
Sppdfkatton* will be avail^hftkt^R Maadau| P^^w^^wwss^^^^p aIw
me
im i and may b* sbtMnpd * toe
office of top cwNuttlng engineer.
P o st B u c k le y . Schuh 1
Jernlfon, Inc.. ISM Orange
A**.. Sutto m Wlnlm Perk. FL
7770*. (4P7) 447 7171 ?#ym*nt *
one hundred datlars Itito sei
will bp toguired tor pnsh s*i ne
re fu n d s w in e * m ad*.
SpocIflcaHtns/Ptans are avallabto tor review In m* Purchee
NOTE: ALL PROSPECTIVE
O FFERORS ARE HER EB Y
CAUTIONED NOT TO CON­
TACT ANY MEMBER OP THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD
OF COUNTY COMMISSION­
ER S R IG A R D IN O TH B
A R O V B PROPOSAL. A L L
C O N T A C T S M U S T BE
CHANNELED THROUOH THE
OFPICEOP PURCHASING.
Th* Caunty retarget to* right
to re|ec* any w Ml otters, with
Or without caum, to waive
technical Ities, or to accept to*
ettor whkh In Its be* ludgethe Ceunty. Cast * submittal *
ettonal ce* * to* oftoror end
shall not be passed an to or
borne by to* County.
David P.GMner.CPJW.
Purchasing Director
IN I E. Fir* She*
Sanford. FL 77771
Publish: November 11 imo
DEZ IIP
SALVAGE CAR AUCTION
December I I Iff*
l:00*M.
OAVEJONES
WRECKER SERVICE. INC.
71151 HWY. 17*3
FERN PARK. FL 17730
VEHICLES TO AUCTION
10CHEVROLET IJeOtAYIWllf
77DOOGE
NH1SC7BIS4US
44 PLYMOUTH

IP3BM44C1 ED11001*
41 OATSUN JNIPS0SSIBU4047XI
II CHEVROLET
IG1AT71K1BR44MM
O DATSUN JN1RS0SS1CU410145
TOOLOSMOBILE XM70ZI1444I
7tCHEVROLET IXTTDtW104731
00 PONTIAC
3F77VA7Se*IS
eeC h e v r o l e t iX407A43etjm
71CHEVROLET IM7SH7J100747
UM ERCURY
IMEBPMX4OK4I170S
770LDSM0BILEU77R7M14MS1
17CHEVROLET
jiiDFnKSFMione
M DOOGETRK SJP4WA4324S30
•1 CHEVROLET
IGAS4*SBA7304m
77 OLOSMOBILE
7W40L7X134704
70 FORD
fX*4T 104774
Publish: November 1110*0
DEX-170

hsdus-

■fR SR ataatod tor OoeSd P.
8 atom. C.P.M., PurchMng
Director tor too Sominoto
Comfy Deerd of Comfy C*m-

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Svminol*

Orlando •Wlntar Park

3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 ____________________8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DIPT. PWVATE PAHTY RATES
HOURS
........
M R M L -M R M L

*•

m b h m EN e • —
9 W M M R i H U

t y . •AAflLAii

U i w N T • • N rrg

Purthoetng Pepprfmirit. onttl
S.W PAL, toe* ffmo. Friday,
NeeemBer 70. imo Sis (I )
captoe art to Bp suBmlttod.
Ei

P O Ren 71ft
SentorG Ftortde JOTSIHf
IP DELIVERING PDDFGBAI
MPRRMNLGEUVSRTDf

todPtom.Neomrt-m
iN tB adP lrolllnff
Santord. Ftortoe17771
EXPREMfBNB OP M T E G
RET MNBT BE RECEIVED IN
T H E P U R C H A S IN G D E ­
PARTMENT, till EAST FIRST
STREET. S M FLOOR. DOOM
i m
stuoFoog f l d n i d a .
NO LATER THAN 1:0* FJSL,
LOCAL TIME, ON DAT OF BID
OFEMNG- EXPRESUOffl OP
IN T E R E S T R E C E IV E D
A FTE R T H A T TIM E W ILL
N O T E E A C C E P T E D . NO
E X C I F f I G N S W IL L GB

j k

P. 1 ^ 4 . . J
. X ls G W N

Ing may Include Herald Adrerhsae * to* to* * an i
when yew pet results. Fey enfy fee deye yeer ad runs * rote f
Use M l description he fortest results. Capy must toitew &lt;

Th* S an ford H erald
Classified Dept, will be
closed on Nov. 22nd
Thanksgiving Day!

CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
11

FACSMMLE OR TBLBO R A F N IC SU BM ISSIO N S
DE ACCEPTED
Undir too authority * Sec
tton* 107(b) and fW(b) (If * the
Clean Water A d and Im
(M CPN
Caunty It re
to develop a pretr**
nmnt program caver Ing all

wB H

N t N m f R t e ,M N ilh e N
IU nbM m g

, —. I I - —j ^ ms I n - —- 4- —
4«. . ^
.* 4
__
^
t iw ft D E T O
*wBe COwee (X s C O U ft T r V r p r o t l f p f

IP

■■■ g M ^ R
rr•

19
r i tOmjf FSQEr* dUNlI

to* C*unty,*lTh#nV S r* (- eb
lecfive It to dovetop an "EPA

IN M Y IA N P O G O NOME I
CMMcara tow'd. Infante syrv
CPRe^eeew bCedN ^N ef

(IWPP)''
systemt ewned by Semin**
County.
■COPE OP SERVICE i
I. Conduct an Induttrl* user
survey as rapulrsd by 4B CPR
M LHI) 111 (I - III) Including
ton chmactor and vMume *
pMIutants contrlbutod to th*
Caserty
1. Prepare a report at
technical intorm*ton on the
inciwRflt service areas, toik
Pbllufants analytes, p e n toreugh. intortorence. sludge
sampling program and
1 Review Mo County's draff
prefreslmenl *dlnpnc* and
tpcamnwnd changes necessary
to campty wtto EPA rpgulremenfs. Cmrdtnato SPA review
| ^ &amp; 4 a e e d le M jw
W» r W I I I V B T m TT Ir W I W I L E

Cart.WTCPM.............Jtl-F

Brunswick CerpprMWn It OP
tool* actapNag sppllcsrteni
fo r T a m p a r a r y
Asmmb' jrs/l samstresees. If

AKA

m c g Mm

wp will It* with Jeb Servks *
NHSC,
Attorney It
Study. Fin. Aid Avail. FREE
CATALOG. SCI.
FI. s e a
Civil Servke B
tiR.es hr. N* eip. Burn,
training, t kite...
FNgM
•arrtaee. Far Fra* Into, tend
•ell-addressed tfampod
tittolsp* to FAES. P.D Be*

On* Way tick* I* Leultvllle.
Kentucky. f -lT V I le t .

MMR0 TtIFTKUTS
Orlando to Boston. Della,
nensssp. Mato. Dec. lem to
J*nlnd-P7e 417 *07473

37— Nwratry A

(n O

pravtds tochnk* as**tnc* *

A , JkJ ijm k u f l u a
iPW^EtoFm FWEWIenpD

I
RETI w "WU

m

In I k .
Fee T^wE

1 Develop a monitoring pro­
gram whkh will m et the re­
quirement* * * CPR 4B7.0 and

4M.1t

V

1 Recommend Gc* discharge
limllaftans to Bf 'applied tor
Industrial wastMjpntrlbutod to
to# Caunty wGMweter he*
men! tystom bated an Ihe re­
sults * laeks I and I.
1 Prepare a report * pro­
gram Implementation pro
ceduret Including additional
staffing regulrsmsnts. induttrl* survey upd*lng. handling *
anc# and ontorcamsnl. Included
In tolt tosh will h* to* develop
me* * an "Intercement Re
■pane* Plan" at required by th*
CFR4*a.l(«) (SI (Mv).
7. Prepare a repart on
•stlmatod program emit In­
cludtog *guipm*nt. totting tervkm. tog* service*, technic*
regulrement*. Review financing
e*lene avMkbto and maka rec
emmendetlora toCaunty staff.
The attocted esnsuttant will bo
required to submit results * all
phases * to* werk to Caunty
statt tor review and coordinate
tubmlseton to EPA tor approval.
FOR FURTHER INFORMA
TION CONTACT: LINDA C.
JONES. CO N TR ACTS
A N A LY S T, &lt;4*71 711-1110.
E X TE N S IO N 7117. P S -lf l
PACKAGE IS AVAILABLE IN
T H E P U R C H A S IN G D E ­
PARTMENT AT NO CHARGE.
NOTE: ALL PROSPECTIVE
OPPBRORI ARB N IR B B V
CAUTIONED NOT TO CON­
TACT ANY MEMBER OP T N I
SBMINOLI COUNTY BOARD
OP COUNTY C044MISSI0NIR S R B O A R D IN G T H I S
PROJICT. SUCH CONTACT
SHALL I I CAUSE PON D l l
QUALIFICATION. ALL CON­
TA C TS M U ST B l C H A N N ILBD THROUGH T N I PUR­
CHASING DB PARTMENT.
The Ceunty reserves the right
to re|ect any or all otters, with
•r without cause, to waive
fechnlcsJlllet. or to accept toe
ettor which In Its best judge
ment beet serves to* Interest ot
Ihe Caunty. Cost * submittal at
this ettor Is considered *n op*r
•Itanal co* * to* offeror end
shall not b* passed on to or
born* by to* County.
David P. Gainer, C P M
Purchasing Director
IIOIE. First Street
Santord. FL1377)
Publish: November IS. imo
DEZ 101

NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING
R EOAROlMO TYPICAL ROADWAY SECTIONS
FOR SEMINOLA BOULEVARD
U.L Highway 17-01 to Lab* Ortv*
All Interested persons or* horsby advised tool toe Board ot County
Commissioners of Seminot* County. Florid*, will hold a Public
Hearing on to* 77to day ot Novambar, tfie. at 7:00 p.m. (or as toon
tooroofttr a* poaslbtol of to* Semlnol* County Services Building.
1)01 Ea*t First Straot. Room W-111. Santord. Florid*, pertaining to
to* adoption of a final fypIcM section tor Semlnol* Boutovtrd from
U. S. Highway 17 (1 to lake Drive In Semlnol* County. Consider41ion
will bo given to and public Input will be solicited a* to to* adoption of
to* final typical lection fordaMf'.
In adddlllon to public Input presented el the Public Hearing,
written statements will be accepted. Written statements or questions
regarding tola matter may be directed to
Jerry McCollum. P I . County Engineer
Department ot Engineering
174Bush Boulevard
Santord. Florid* 77771
1407) 333 2700. El tension 7471
Persons or* advised thot. It ttwy d*cid* to app*4l any oecition
mad* al this hoarlng, they will naod a record of to* proceeding*, and
tor such purpo**. they may mad to Insura that a verbatim record ot
to* proceedings I* mod*, which record Includes the testimony end
evidence upon which th* appeal Is to be based
HEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE. Clerk to the
Board of Cowity Commissioners
Semlnol* Comfy, Florid*
By Eve Reach
Deputy Clerk
Publish November IL IS. IffO
OEZ 14*

SMALL D UALITY HOMI L IK I
Daycare G Pr ts tbeel.

p r­

prepram I
If Petty
IIL k A 4 M -l.—
BcVtLto
DAYCARE In my I
ham*. Lat* * TLC. 7am 4pm
IdTCAD.....-----------------.731-41(1
L tg a l

osit U N I totally secured by
equipment, con make yew
M u i r a i t Ha h I i i m He
Inventtry. N* averhead.
47R.ee* very possible first
year. Limited ^anlngs avail­
able. Call Mr. Adams, dty or

N o t lc t t

7 T A T I OP PLORIDA
DEPARTMENT OP
IN V IR O N M IN TAL
RIGULATION
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
Th* Department announces
receipt * an application tor a
permit from to* City * Santord
to lay a reclaimed water
transmission line through
wetlends connected to toe St.
Johns River along Slat* Road
41 This prapBced prefect will be
located sn lha north tide * Slot*
Road 44 In Santord In Sections
31-71 Township If South, Rang*
11 East In Saminoto County.
Florid*
This application Is being pro­
cessed and Is available lor
public Inspection during nor mol
business hours, t 00 e.m. to 7:0*
p.m., Monday through Friday,
strap! legal holidays, at toe
Department ot Environmental
Regulation, l i l t Maguire
Boulevard. Suit* 171. Orlando.
Florida 33*001747
Publish: November 1^ ItoO D i l i

U M in t lt f la w f e N i
Established MLM Ca •Now In
S.E. l-MRRTSAdRL Mr. Curry
N O n C T Saatk Ebe N 1

Gras* m e n iirsf yaari Re
quirest WAMto storf 1
________ MPBUR-Md*_______
SICK B TIRED of your prassnt
Job? Kiss your boot "adtotl"
hove lOTs to
Cad to*
H-OetodaBaaffy,

(remit

If you don't own to* company
you're with, maybe ypu need a
new company! Now you ran
turn America's l*v* af sparfs
Into a successful business. Ws
give you oitonolvo training.
naltonM buying power, and
vast product *vMlability. CMt
Tlmbortln* Sparfs today. TMI
fra*. I - m 7474444

•pud $18,000?
Here's how it works: Give us about two da&gt;s a
month plus two weeks a year. Vxi ll be eligible
for up to $5,000 in education assistance with
the Monfjjomety Cl Hill. You can earn an adds
tiunal SIMMXI enlistment bonus. During the
course of your enlistment you'll also puli
down a minimum $11,(MM) in
F lorida
salary
See? Two and two equals
as much as SIH.OOU. And
there's much more, (na Dis­
cover America's most exciting
part time job. Call

S O T A 1 Feliciano
3 3 3 -3 3 1 7

Americans at
th e ir best

TMtTRABtofGM/r

GO mOMMCH SCHOOL
TO HIGH-TECH— FAST.
Satellites...
lasers... avionics
...m icrochips...
The Army deals
with all of them
and more. See if you qualify for the
training in one of more than 50 hightech skills. And the choice of a
specialty is yours.
Call:

SEMINOLE CENTRE,
3 *4 7 SOUTH OtLAHOO O t t W . SUIT! S M
SA NfO M , a

32773-S4I3

1447| 3 2 3 4 4 4 4

ARMY. IS A ll YOU CAN 88.

�*

W
‘'* ‘

Ji ni

liiiiir - U iii;

71-HM»

STENSTROM
R E A I T Y, I N C .
• % A m 3 4 d 1 (m *
Wte Kit ind ted
more property than
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/lahe Mary area.
IM M ACULATIVI fully radon*.
Brick fplc.. now carpal. III*.
CH/A. big yard. fence. Iran
Clip this ad................. U * . ;»
(MKI WATERFRONT IICONO
FLOOR 1/1 condo Elevator*,
(pic.. 1 master suites. all
appllancat. Sec ttii*.....H*.Ma

Call laH-IYaa: v

AFFORDABLE IFLIT V I Big
corner W aero lot. Workshop,
wall, sprinkler system. Look
into this on*........... . . M M '
IM IM tL t U l U

IwHord,

IDEAL LR. MART V I VILLA
IN Horan Cava Crossings.
F p lc.. ip a . graat room,
skylights and more Chock II
out.................... tw.mii

C/M/A.

H D R I-m i

UMOEPOOO - OH T7/W IN FR.

iR H L M ti.fra m m i.1
ORAHTFRORtRTIEtBtMm

family rm., security iy*l»m,
fenced yard....ttX.100

* * FAMOUSNNBMJ**
o QUALITY MOMEI*
Starting under MO.000 + LOT.
C o n v a n flo n a lt y b u ilt,
VA/FHA. Model apaa dally
from ll-f. iv i ml. B #1 Doland
M they. 01. behind Cltgo Stare
CAC HOMES, lotw ekintoa

US/wopa,—ag-uw/Moo*

ASSUMERONQUAUFYH
Sanford! 1 .1 0 0 i.l. i bdrm. H»
be. C/H/A, appl. u .000 dwn,
aeeuma, SiB/mo at-em eves

COTTARB m Ew BNMm (Wort
Fortlally furnlehod. M M
monthly. Include* utllltleo.
F i l l uaa at canaal Admit ■

321-0759

321-2720
322-2420

NUOB OAR1 turround this lovoly 1 bdrm homo with family
room, formal dining room,
sern po-ch. fenced yard, and
double carport. Only 157.M0
RAVENNA FARR ■ Nice 1
bedroom home I Eat In kltch
an. large corner lot. Good
location, easy term* I Juii
reduced II..................U l.m

L A R t EMMA CUtTOM Built I
A Rare Find! V I. Mat# kltch
on. screened pool. Groat rm.
w/flr«placa/Mcurlty system
RFoa. Call..........EMa Eptvey

m iM / W A M im

323-5774
QUIETMCJUI
) bdrm.. 1 both. NEW paint,
carport with fenced yard.
U4.000. MUST SEEI South
Park Ave area Call WAlttm ea rm -itM M T.__________
RESTOREODOLLHOUSE
lISMyrtle, hletortc Sanford.
Central H/A.................. in.NO
Tempi in Realty Inc. UO-MII

323*3200

i ACRES ■ Near Idyllwllde
Khoolt. can divide, i rented
unite, site. too. For dotalltcall
PORT OF SANFORO AREA •
Buty Orange Blvdl S K r n .
toned AG. It mile to I * cell
and entranca m i Can divide.
high and dry . 1WJ00_________
RESTORED OOLLHOUSE
IIS Myrtla, historic Sanford.
Central H/A................. let.K
TeeagMn Realty lm. M H W

Church on Elkcan. *7171
MW days. W e m MM eve*

yard. Call ASAFI » ■ TIM

D0UH0USE IN CMUtUOTA
Complataly renewed and
modem 1 bdrm. 1 balh horn*.
Central H/A. all new appli­
ances and llslurtt. large
fe n c e d l o l l P r i c e r e ­
duced!.......................S41.S00

Nrrllorv. Call a s m *

1 bdrm. 1 bath. t,M0 sq. ft.,
large living and dining area
with fireplace. Eetra room lor
olllce/hobby/lhlrd bedroom.
Wood deck, large trees, tennis
and pool privileges. SI05.000.
Call m-MMariissw*

1A 2lotiroomApartm«nts
Starting at SMS per monthI
Some w eekly's available
starting at SR) par week
aets-CaR..

...asmi

The P ru d e n tia l^
Florida Rutty
lOOKIKFOtANOMET
Pleas* lei me help.

SANFORD HERALD ADt**
The Rap fro m O aFalco
Advertising o f Heathrow
called her Sanford Herald
Classified Advertising Con­
sultant to stop her company's
ad from continuing an the
10-Day Special rale. Some
p o s itio n Y O U nood to
advertise at low cast and
achieve quick results? Try our
10. 14 A IS Day Special rates.
Lowest cost par lino tor cm
socullvo days' advertising.
Advertiser* ere free to cancel
as soon a* results or* reached
CLASSIFIED DEFT.

For Lake M ary facility
7: JOimSpm, Monday thersi
Friday. Call Metro Security Mi
Orlando....................M1-I7M

Call I eA Sms* MAUD*
Doc. M MTS lor two month* &lt;
IIMwfcty. Call 1MP14MPM.

y^sMlAi«vg*jyr _ The

V I. Sanford Place, WO.XO
4/1. Crystal Ridge, t ill. 100

il &lt;&gt;lli N/1, , i,il I

•« /,

V I Vfc Sanford, country 11 7 7 .MO

___________ W I S H _____________

K61STEAEOIHW3E
For our medically supervised,
high risk obesity treatment
program. Qualified candidate
must be a team player with
•reellent communication and
assessment skills; experience
In EKG and Phlebotomy lech
nlque* preferred. For consid
eralidn sand resume to; HMR

V m . targe home with C/H/A.
fireplace and lanced yard.
SUP par manth. Open Sunday
from tlnoon-lFM....A77M7g

(1 ) y ea r* aaparlanca In
museum col led tons, exhibit
construction and design, or
other professional museum
work. Apply by S:M PM.

--m
" *'Y" ' 1w&gt;io VOllignt
r T o■f■l l ' n
,I M W . Lake M a ry Btvd.,
LakaMary. FL ntea. ATTN:
Pregram DtrecSar.__________

I

I

ESTATE CO., INC

Flees* call far other iisnngtl

01-7337
H W yM W

W E ’RE B E IN G
RENOVATED!

2000lake Mary Btvd

NEW. R EM O O EL REPAIR

o Spacious. * Herda* I*.

HOME*. OFFICES. STORM
AR fypM m m NocRm . Rm /Ch

CELEBRITY CIPHER
l i t MONTH’S RENT
(till Oocomber 1st)
Bdrm. Apt*. Many aitras Ind.
storage spacei Quit*, cojy
community I Nice landscap­
ing. On-siM managers who
CAREII Starting aflllPme.

SANFORO COURT____» M 1

donning Wvli
Pool, tennis courts,
clubhouse, fishing lake;
Also convenient to
shopping &amp; schools!

liw H M n r tw
COMPLETE

F X G L I F .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "Y
M id w e st * s n s w o r lo M r . T .

Office Hours
M M o n . -Frl.
10-5 Saturday
Sunday By Appl.

t • BO'S MAINTENANCE * *
■es./Cemm. a Carpentry
a Plumbing oPatnllng
OElectrical Call ba »Q7l«7

Moving A Hauling

Tree removal clam

Pressure cleaning B 1

TiMAERLMCTregta

�{

♦4•

Vo i*1

• »T*s _ .
T

T

T

^ ^ T

V

T

Senlord Herald. Sanford, Florida — Sunday, November 10, 1080 — f t
K IT ’ N* C A R I.Y I.F ® by Larry Wright

mens

^ * * * # * * * &gt; * ,

I ROC t U Fully
MUST SEEK Eic.

Am . M l time rig. w/fl). U
mpgtow car, S lt.m M fl 7015

hamel &gt; Oray. S VMNw IKK
Ian Chaw Baa - Leak •likes)

, w i » y Ird l
_
lo^ia^s^l j rr i .i (flvV

Itoley. &gt; Mm. lertmL
»Ave.«% tonm*.

u n / M

(Time late tor tote, to nar
4 %. Fart Ave. M r i
.IH each 0 1 0 . Call

57*470.

B T S R IIA L B
i Bay/baR FaraM M A CM-

AUT o S Z T I c” ^ rentmlsslont
from 515; exchange redUkors
fromSW; Used tires from S5;
TV* mounting aval table.
»1S CeNry It. OT-MM
FOUR II In. * T i white letter
liras w/custom rims. Site tor
4*flCeR»f-7H »m M IS&gt;
• Itflfl DOOGE FARTS and 7*
CHEVY FARTS
CaNttl-CSt!

let. I » t . cane, n ,a
• F R B B I I B , F l f s lla n a
agrlfht. Run* gaae. Saif
•M M R tflR M H

UCATWnt!
r/ntght Mane *175
bad w/night ttane.
w/eeu&gt;l« mirror and
a chart at draaars n » . Large
ic o ta a —
HATMMAL FOR1ST I
tn.«m w m w»............ Owwr
B u rn er h m i w w
I A C M tv m m r. (M a ry •
j Orteeflto HelflbH. partially
a m t — ____■ M ta irm .
i *m i

4 chain, 1 w/armt
M la 11 people com
lartabty ( H I Hutch *IM. Lava
teat »
lane wood desk 125
Chair t i l Cuts fiasr lamp 1 1 0
------ -1heater 07S.CoM allar
•a dan, &lt;
i» m i

Insert ihM Mack!_____

nounKM!!

o m n
mm actMi m m* sr
Jehn't Rhterl M m la Hamm
OKI Ftotektegovaitokte.
U b *b torr Jtoi»T,toM ito
m octm

O hO p/ t f f

l - M K im M T tM A T M U e e

1 lie a iw 1 Bom caneamMi.

Z

I * . . urn*. All malianraa radical
praf, twni*, security guora
- * ‘ U 4 «M t ir
i ri. tmJ\

BR w/bem. Owe* term a
bam, eet-in kit. w/flMwraihpr
A Oltpaeal. Fermal Olnlng
Rm., Living Rm »&gt;/flreplace,
terne. parch w/lakevlew.
e arner en arl From ttt.fN la
t e a m b v o w w i b i i p -m m

1S7— M*MI«
ftlm a u a

•10* par month a a l M I
barm. Jbath Onto* wtte.
M U a R H M R
CARRAiai COVI, IAMF0RD.
I berm. 1 bath, vary clean.
‘ k m aba ar M% earn. By
aanar......................HI 4*14
A . O R AM B COOICTY ■ J/l
- Oaablavvie* an .*4 acre*
__ ..R7. '

K

Mrs. Roane of Sanford was
certainly Masted with the sale
at her complete Ungto bad tall
She laid It wtming I days at
having placed her ad. The sat
said and Mrs. R. slates the
money ’•will cent# In handy so
cteee la Christmas." You can
else have thaw same results,
give us a call and let us halpl
ra n n
• R I M SI1R bad. complete.
SIMM Can deliver. Please
caltl

K I N A &gt; 11 ■ W a t e r b e d
w/pedealal.Roia mi rror
headbd. w/malchlng bureau.
Was SIM NOW. SMS. m-117*.
LARRY’S MART. I l l Senlord
Ave Nee/Used turn, a sppl.
Rey/Sell/Tredt.........m -t m .
•MAAIC C H I P range. M ”
slide In electric. Never used
needsburner elements. SIS.
• ROLL-AWAY bed Smell site.
Ready ter yeur company.
•ti n . Will deliver &gt;124114.

£ C jm I a

n n .b y m rt.
Can. HZA, carpel Ihrawghaull

.CaR....

W CM1STWS SfCOAU

• SOFA three place sectional
Excellent condition. 575
__________ » M &gt; i i . __________
TR IFLI OHISSIR. chest el
drawers, head board. Quean
site mattress w/boa springs.
MM.CMprTVIfln.Sta.

_________ m -m s .__________
im o A m u M c u

OWROOAMT Iran dMotle tel.
TabN.4Chalrs.S4S.
C a M a e w r.
I l l —T tk v W o n /

lU d to /S ttfo

M X etlbeeraam .iM n

y a m • i b * * w n iv» bam.
i. m
.. IIIJ
I bam.

•114
.ro a ik / M i-m i

•AVI IMI HIM tftl MOMIII
WHY FAT RBTAlit 14X7*.
•aem. mxt*. liteat hop **

.

TAKf OMIfAflKMTS
- 1141 par marrih an a Ittl
■ l*X1*. Call La Roy:
no

. MM I I W L I WIPB M OBIL!
I ; HOMB • 1 berm, I bam.
v
central air .111414 .
i 1BORML 11
v
able I letup Part Av. Mobile
'
Fart, Sa»tor*.a*-*fl*1..4-*pw&gt;

T n y irp e d ijla l Its **
1 chairs. Its so. 4
SIJ.SO so. (I )
its. (It lata, wood
frame. US. 1 arm doth chair,
ML 4 twhrei daah chairs, mo
I pt W M W era*

If. O a t Investment! *150.000.
Owner moving- mutt tel 11
Call Mr. Awg. M -eti*

EUCmC COMPART
BaMaaaa. Lane; Buiieint and

i ? Inrenter i . Term*. UM.M
St:

FAULfl BKTHOiflORNK
V IM TU R I1FBOFBRTIIS

NA^n lllrtl(«»n».......

12I0T0TASRS
Lew mites, air, 5spd , Eac.
^onWtten^tJOiLjjjjjjJflWgflt

211— A n t l g w n /

JEWELRY

14 K. YILLOW BOLD
iCt./SSTONII.
GREAT CHRISTMAS GIFT 11
new o a o . h i w m

222— M iS C tilA MOWS

231— Cars

• BOV’ I I S " F reestyle II.
weight,' chrome bike. Very
good rendition, md . in-etas.
RUY.........SELL......... TBAOE
HUE Y’SCBOWN FAWN

AMC CONCOBOI I I . Eac.
running, great gat mI SMOdwn
SeWtemYs AbN Ranch...JM east
ltbt PONTIAC F IIR O • 5 spaed.
A/C, stereo.................. si.fts
Magk hate................. M H l t l
FAIRWAY MOTORS
"Hama al lies Dawn a Ride"
MSSU»l7-WLliiHilli..MM1W

a COBRA IS LTD Classic, 40
channel AM with mike gain
and RF gain &gt;70. HI-IMS.
■XIRCISB egatpmeet. I new
pieces, tee lor all three, one
arm and lag esarclaer. one
slipper, one everdte bike.
Ask for Erin 1JFM 7PM
I4SMM-4717. ______

215— B#« t» and
A c c t U f iw
COAIA It, 17 Fl. wim 05 Morse
p o w e r J o h n s o n and
Highlander Ire lltr. SHOO.
MflMtsrStS-lUJ__________

nmUS’ CAl CENTER
San S. Sanford Ave

CHEAP CASHDEALS!
'M Nissan Maslma........... Sites
n Subaru 4a4 Bral..........51,405
'TUeepiiiCTierokee........51105

ar. HewI Fuulka. Eacetlent
candlttonl Asking f 100 itt-HIS
WEOOINO DRESS site IM I
5500 obo; Ractkwr/Recbar,
beige 050 ............ IH-1W4
dWHEILCHAIR. folding adult
Mobile Id Good cond S7I DO
Hiasit.__________________ _
a WHEELCHAIR. Almost new.
re moveable swing our loot
reef. Cosl van new. selling
now lor 1100
IQSCotill no Dr. Senlord_______
MXIS AtOVE treend peel.
5150 M sedtons el Cypress
security fencing SO each plus
I I for each 4X4; Prefab
(IrepUct. 1150; 1714401

mcnnKuii

XT Wsfkreft Sporlbrldgt IMS.
4545. Radar, Lor an. VHF.
Riggers and MUCH MOREII
Asking Mt.500 Llghtkeese
it Yard and Yacht Sates.

A irn tu c u rT *
IM7 St. Trapai 4545. Gen., Air
Radar, Loran. Auto pitot, and
all me amenities
GRAB THIS ONE FOR ONLY
M7JSL LIM Nm i Baal Yard
and Y a c h t S a la t, la c .

217—O T A 9 A SBitt

C«B« al R. 12tk sb4 IjBfSi

5245 Daw*, SAOTmoA
’l l Chevy Celebrity..........flees
'11 Renault Wafen...........51,405
•so Bulck Skylark.............stress
'10 Chevy Citation............ I l.m

PONTIAC Firebird Formula
I f S f . L OA DE D 5 l i t r e ,
ascallenf condition. ONLY
1.000 ml. Slfl.N0. Can M4-M0L
e PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION a
■VIRYTUSSDAV 7:MPM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCT ION
Hwy. n , Daytona Beach
_________ saani-fliii_________
1177 PONTIAC Grand Frla.
Rutty but runt Ilka a scalded
dogHI*lfl.«fS0flJ__________
'71 OOOOI DART Slant 5.4 dr.
aulo. PS. PB. runs greet. Cash
only. 5745obo H I 17H_______
'• I M E R C U R Y T O P A I
automatic, stereo. LIKE NEW
51705 Call HI-MTfl

KMB THEWIB6S Of EAfilES
CHRISTIAN FLYING CIUI

ESTATE SALEM

Instrucflen. ministry and
fellowship. Call H I 174f

4111 Orange B lvd.. Lk.
Monroe. MO ft. west of Port of
Sanford Frl.. Sat.. Sun. A
Mon. Taels, lam., srgew.mtsc

House For Sale

[SALE!!
Klngtlis bad and couch alto
mite. Items. During (he wk.
call after 5PM. Weekends cell
stttrfkM ni-sas&gt;.

21f— WBiHtdtoBuy
WOOD F U B N I T U R I
W A N T !01 Any CONDITIONI
ANe keying aatlgees. H1-4SII

r

f

.rnd l H '

1 5 1

225— Trucks/
B u m /V

L i sbiflp.i1

i

MUlss
URAKNTLV N II D ID
"Fl. Mel’ -n, IS17 41" by
Arthur Francke. 444 1/11______

b m

t4M TOYOTA PICK UF
4
speed. A/C.................. t t . m
Magk Isurv........■ ..■ ■ ■ J m id
14*4 TOYOTA FICK UF - 5
■peed. A/C.................. *1.445
Mpgk tepra............. m esa*
ttefl FORD ■ canalMe Van
(Lang version I 14* * cyl. 1
speed, new paint and brakes,
carpeted, rum great I Ideal tor
comptoto restoration I Must
soil, »U fle firm. Ml 5757
14*5 FORD Van use. Eic.
cond . work van, wall main
tained. 5a.OOP mites. *4.450
F 5 a a *a ca h M F ,»S 7 H IM *
'7* DOOOC FICK UF - RUNS
GOOO. ItJMCASH.
_ _ _ C A L L m ia M ^ ^

•1VW RABBIT
■edytiM i took M id i AUteaTJ-C

7* DODGE VAN CUSTOMZED
IS FORD ESCORT O L aoM, Ob, Near*
•7 JEEP COMANCHEE rm urn m-a.
Mr, AM B », (port Feckege, Wwn Re Nmo Lana

M O E O SPECTRUM CL

234— Vatlklts

CALLMl_______ 121-4414

22f— A viation

Senford, (behind A Ok Tirol
Sunday and Monday. Sdark.
Furniture, loolt. van and
truck parts, liras and clothing.

Tkte to Ob, Auteewdh Uwwy In A Ceotewi

W tn tfd

89 PONTIAC LEMANS LE WMOaa

AAAVTOSALVAGE

A Che

Now keying complete cars A
trucks Ity welgM n.15 p/ioo
lbs -delivered, or 51 p/100
lbs-wo pick up. Eiomplo: ‘Ik
Cadillac (5.021 lbs. a 11.15
equals t i l l . 07). Onaraatead
Mghosl prices paid In KU*
araaf Cattlil sate ter i

H IG H W A Y
&lt;.

MAYFAIR SECTION OF SANFORD
203 SCOTT STREET

Large up to • feet field roller
and mower, x a 5154 or 57447HAnytlmai _ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

Living room with fr e place, drting room, eatin kitchen.
Large matter bedroom with drafting room and d o ta l
(tha kind of master suite one would find in a much more
expensive home).

221— Good Things
to Eat

Landscaped and located in a choice area with tree
covered lot. Back yard fenced

Prfcsd ‘ 115,000

o

322-8643 o r 830-6907

S A N ! O H I)

! I A

1 ‘ --v ' "■ ................ ... ..........
■-••'it •
T*G*,r •* In ' | ;l **44&gt;4' ♦«&gt; lH ’ *. .’Ft ** ■ *

CAR

AVIS

"I never thought / would,
bu y a used ca r."
T.D. Colorado
When youYd looking lor a late-modal, wall equipped, quality used car, youl enjoy
•hopping, haI lie-Ire*, at Avia Car Satet. Thera's no haggling aver price. You can look aa
tong aa you Ike, test drive any car you chooM, and have it inspected by your mechanic.
Stop In today!

1090 TOYOTA CAMRYS —
.
a o a
»rfch!o7u3»w'TCRUW6, AA "“l * Starting From I U , t t Y
1990 DODGE CARANANS SE
Starting From *

1990 OLDSMOBILE CIERAS
PS. PB. PL TIT. AUTO . AIR. AJ4/TWDOITAL STEREO
a MORE

10,999

Starting From

*9648

Starting From

*6999

1990 PONTIAC SUNBIRDS
1 OR. OH 4 OIL PS. PB, AIR. AMrfU OrOITAL STEREO
BUCKET SEATS A WORE
f is.

HOLIDAY CATBRINOI Pro
para, set up, serve 4 clean up
Yeur cholctl Oped heme
reeking. Eic. refs...... 145-4541

17

&gt;ui,. r j, . •r . . ri ik.. r .i,, , i i , . (

PI. pa. PW. PL, TIT. CRUISE. MR. AUTO .
AWFW DOITAL (TEREO A MORE

II

.

A l l .

| ........I .

j &lt;• -1 *• l

• .

1 i '
i&gt;.

A &gt; f
i.fh

•

1 • nr
r

*V II

• ,

■■ « ,
. 4, 1*

*
.

Me I n * 1* i f
f ■♦. t&gt; ,

si

* #• «

14%.

••air • |if“ lfl*&lt; Iniii pl.iii's »r** ii-4-« .• v.iil.if&gt;!•- t\ ,h t.,t I%ilI 1*

CASSELBERRY
331-3837

rm

14074 ■FRL • ••
S A T .f l.f l.f lL W . 13-*

.- f t eRi/fl* P y R f t M 9 ,

i tea. **** Flnandn* 5578 8. Hwy. 17-92
______________ -*eifl tonkn re*.
menu. Aidrheeaqueby ueed cars w e «
our dpfy rend fleaL Uany ortw meAee and
modea avnbbte M wnaxm p m Ns M counts ve ry to setepnoed cwt. Cera subpet

C AR
S A LE S

if l— Building

A B S O L U T E A U C T IO N

ALL S T I I L RUIL0IN01 at
dealer Invoke. U N to SLOW
ag.fl. Call 407 T*1 SMI collect
• MIRHORSD bl told closet
dmr. M In. Cold colored trim

Residential Condominiumsy Homes* and Lots
Selling By Order Of The United Stales Bankruptcy Court
Southern District O f Ohio, Eastern Division

hall er linen clotol. Paid its
asking SIS. Call M4-41ta

1V3— L a w

n

ft G o rd o n

IfS— MAchInory/Tooil
I. Moments or
Poulan Slop lor bam. works
good. Cell new Stt t t n
FAILODC Impulse nail gun,
SHO; Duo last nail gun, 1 1 0 0 ;
Fasioda staple gun. SIOO; 1/4
HP compressor, *100;
Call t0 *7*f 1140

CHRISTMAS GIFT

W ith The Purchase Of A New Home By Jim W alter
Just in lime for Christmas, with the
purchase of any of our standard
modela, Jim Walter Homes is offering
a F R E E $500 gift. For a limited time
only, when you order your new home
from us. take your choice ot one of the
following:

D O N’T BE

ARAMMAM
•WAMUABRYU * FREEZER

REAR-ENDED

* BASORELECTRICHARM
* OR, OURCHECKFOR$500CASH

• M F R W IU T M

Choose from our more than 20
models, built on your property Irom
the ground up. to almost any stage ol
completion Well build the shell, com­
pletely finished outside, unfinished
inside, to one that is 90s &gt; complete
You tell us where to slop then finish all
or part ol the inside yourself lo save
money

|BY HIGH IN S U R A N C E
C O S TS !

Ovflr20Modflts • 2 to 4 Bodiooms
1.2 A 2V%Baths • On* and Two
Story Modtls

TNT MSSI IttllMCf ifilNCT
NBHM Hd»41«B*0b1lHMk«^*

i

No

Absolute top tall ter salt |to
per cubic yard, IB cubic yards
_ o r m o r e ^ lM Z S ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ _

F o rfe it
l

V

toOQWSfTI#
SWdBwa gown and vail, LOTS
OF U C I . tlM S. Fiertect tar a
fall eaddingi l WflMflORO.
CaWaWtrtPM B t m

M a tT iA l*

furniture liicl. Mini Mind*,
carpeting, haat/air wind, un
Its. celling ton*. Beat. H U H

M1-47M

189— OHIc* fepp(i«$
/ Equlp/nanl

QmaUiy Iked Can At A Fair FHcm

ISM HONDA FRILUDE Sun
raaf. 5 spaed, red I U .m
Magk tow............. .... m *M &lt;
VO LKIW ABO N B U tl Nlco
shape, run* greefl 51,445
» « ■- a-----pM ig u

IF L

All i

1:

Miner's TV, J ilt Or lends Or
............ .... 300151
TVSATILITK Systems. Locally
rated. Celt lor tree
[_Freesurve^t ..UbHIS

Ken 'Rummel

224— Im M rt Cart
and Trucks

a S I CONO A I N I RATIONS a '
Year clothing sold ter cam
mtMMnanty! Call » » 4

WANTED!!

OOOO USID TV’S - SIS 4 up.
14X41-Ibaeraam, (M W

VahM l l j n i Trade tar rvere
- *»
■ - - * ■ &lt; s» .4,
HnRII WHlLmi 1WWr W1»*
Caw » n a a

H ta A trg a rt Btvd.,
J X t i la. •
Chairs. IllJ.flg. Mica Ilka
NEW. lanMre. CaR MHtofl.
IFtoYFB Pkaag l«T .Tafcta. 4 Cham, hukh A but

a CAM a FOR YOUR JOHN
CAR OR T R H C R II A R Y
CORO)T)ONI CALL ttHW 7
MTOF OMterW Feld ter |unk
car*, truck*. « wheal drive.
Any iliW N ili.....CaRI

/ A w tw riH

• V B L L O W LAB BAO O B •
|u||*U U
pg^M aid
ip W fV W i w n w t g j
t p * ' n ys
gm .
Ail shots. Laves children 11

• A N T IR M C w a t h t la n e ,
aecattmt caneiliari. I M P

C u R ^ U ^ ^ S w rfu T e n g in r

Cond.!

alaacal
_____________ i............s w i m
a R i m NS FRBB N e goad

n u n

243— Junk C&gt;r»

24T— R t C T M t i M M l
V t f H d t / C a m p f*

231-C ars

AUTO - HOME - BUSINESS
■

| M l • ! * • « B it « f 1 «

Lt

TUCKER ft BRANHAM, INC.
211 W. 1st St., Sanford, FL 32771

(407) 322-4451
"Serving Cvnir.il Florida"
Since 1925

Jim Walter oilers everyday LOW.
LOW prices and LOW.
” V.LOW.f
LOW, LOW
“
10ac. A PR mortgage financing
wiin
li
NO M ONEY DOWN lo quaWie3
property owners This adds up to
LOW. affordable monthly payments
on your new homo

HODOWHPAYMENT

10% A.P.R. Flud-Rate Financing
No “Points" No Closing Coils
lo Qualified Property Owners
Our oiler lor your choice ot one ol
these line gills is lor a limited time,
and applies only to our standard line
ol homes sold lor immediate construc­
tion. You will receive your choice ol
gills when your home goes under
construction. Jim Walter Homes. Inc.
must be authorized to begin construc­
tion within 60 days uf contract date
Ask about our CO M PLETIO N
ALLOWANCE ol up to S2000 toward
the purchase ol items ol permanent
improvement such as well, floor
covering, landscaping, etc
For any cash payment m3de at
the time you agree to purchase one ol
our standard model homes, we ll also
oiler an additional credit ol 15*'o ot the
amount paid, either down payment or
tutal price
(No other discounts and or promo­
tions apply)

lArtwuili depicl» actual home andmay
includeoptionsandpersonal items
providedby lb* customer and/oroptions
lhal arenot pail of our standardottering
Shrubsandlandscaping have been
added I
flm VWJtvrHomes Inc. 1990CuWQh* III(tryentbreed

Jim \±)aftm r H
TNi nationt

O M ES

bu4d**ol’orvycM M hum**

Call Toll F re o 1 -8 0 0 -4 -W ALT E R (1 -8 0 0 -4 9 2 *5 8 3 7 )
tor true tMixt

nr *'

•ir-.-li- Tiotrui («*filr&gt;»

DELANO, FL

O RLAN D O , FL

H w y. 92 East
(3W mile* East ol O oland)
2495 Inttm ational spflfldway Blvd.

4540 W . C o lo n ia l,
H w y . 50 W.

0pen70a,t4Weer &lt; H »v o lW I- 5*t 9* M SPU Wn iP U -il’U

135 PROPERTIES IN TH E O R L A N D O A R E A !

November 20th - 6:00 PM
Radisson Plaza Hotel
Orlando, Florida
This unprecedented absolute auction features 135 properties consisting of 21
residential condominiums, 34 single-family homes, and 57 residential homesites ■
the majority will sell at absolute auction, regardless of the price you set! Don't
miss this opportunity to purchase prime property in the greater Orlando area
including Lake, Orange, Seminole, and Volusia counties.

For More Information Call Or Come By
The Auction Headquarters Located At
Cardinal Industries
3706 S. Sanford Avenue - Sanford, FL
'(407) 321-0220
S in c e 1915

JvRHinC
n il c

«

America's Leading Real Estate Marketing Firm

�il

&gt;.

» m

y m

N

'V "

i i • »

Y f

r

* • • • j

[ | M

•! t t \ 1 9 9 \ \ i p * 9 9 * '

•

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l

»-« Mnwn, »r KKKM
i
— ^ — **
*
&lt;a
— t■■Inirl
©•TtOuj **
MlrM,
— a.
9UOO#y,
rWYtmotf
ID, «aan
1VW

Health/Fitness
IN

Woman nominated
for state position

B R IE F

LONOWOOO - “National Alzheimer Awareness Month"
during November. vtU be commemorated at South Seminole
Community Hospital with a mlnl-semlnar. "W hat's New In
Alxhetmer'a". The program, which Is open to the public
without charge will begin promptly at 10 a.m. til 12 p.m. Pat
Jimlson. founding director o f the Alxhetmer Resourre Center
which serves Central Florida, will be the seminar speaker.
Jimlson speaks throughout the state on the subject of
Alxhetmer's and other dementias and la a caregiver of her
husband, who la an Alxhetmer patient.
For more Information or to register for this free mini-seminar,
call Diane Oatman at South Seminole Community Hospital at
787*5009.

Blood bank nttds donors
SANFORD — Central Florida Blood Bank's Sanford Branch
needs Friday donors. The branch la located at 1302 East
Second 8t. and is openB a.m to 5 p.m. every Friday.
The branch needs donors to help support the demands on
the blood supply from their area, which Is especially Important
over weekends.
Central Florida Blood Bank Is a not-for-profit organization
with a mission to provide a safe and adequate blood supply for
the com m unities It serves. Support from the Sanford
community Is an Important link to the blood bank's success In
meeting the blood supply needs In Central Florida.
Sanford Branch operating hours: Monday. Wednesday A
Friday — 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.: Tuesday A Thursday — 11 a.m. to 7
p.m.

-

Herald staff writer
LONOW OOD Pam ela
Moaure. RD. LD. director of Food
and Nutrition Services at South
Seminole Community Hospital
has been nominated President­
elect o f the Florida Dietetic
Association o f 1991 -92.
The election la scheduled for
Jan.. 1991 with Installation In
June.
Mosurc. a 1985 recipient o f the
Florida Dietetic Association's
re c o g n iz e d Y o u n g D ietitia n
Award, served aa president o f
the association's East Central
Chapter during the 1986-87
lerm. She Is .presently FDA's
coordinator for the division o f
management practice.
She received her bachelor's
degree and completed clinical
practice at the University o f
Tennessee. Knoxville, and has
been working on postgraduate
c o u rse s to w a rd h er H ealth
Science Management degree at

pinpoint
gene that causes
WASHINGTON —

. ipski .ThuMfoy ifey
apparently Identified the

are found In the heart and
brain, the findings may pro­
vide InMghta Into other dls-

Reaej i r cher a at the
tal and Harvard Medical
School in Boaloa and the
|

D M l a t w w W i i
um
r t r m t « m i»o u rjn

o f hypevkafemte periodic pa­
ralysis that UUa exciting dis­
covery baa provided not only
o p e n s the d o o r to n ew
a p p ro ac h es to treatment
aim ed at rem ed y in g the
‘ defect but may also
‘ on other muscle
I to Involve
channel abnormalities." said
Dr. Lawrence Stem o f the
Muscular Dystrophy Associa­
tion.

they had traehad dawn
faalty Sana that can tea

the University o f Central Florida.
If elected. Moaure will serve
one year as president-elect and
the subsequent year as president
o f the association which has
3.000 members, state-wide.

la one of a
strange group o f Inherited
Illnesses that cause episodes
of paralysis that are tempo­
rary. but debilitating.
T h e defect a p p a re n tly
causes a malfunction In n
critical pathway called a "so-

Non*nglish speaking aanric«s improved
JACKSONVILLE - To reflect the changing needs o f Florida's
consumers. Blue Cross and Blue Shield o f Florida Is updating
Its policy on providing health Insurance coverage to non­
English speaking Individuals.
A case In Tampa Involving a Spanish speaking Individual
brought the need to update this policy to the company's
attention. With Florida's diverse population, the policy was no
longer appropriate.
"Our flrmt and foremost concern is for our Individual
customers to u r /.rstand the health Insurance policies they
purchase.” said 7 nomas E. Albright, senior vice president and
ch ief marketing executive at Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Florida. "Several of our policies require ongoing communica­
tions between the Insurance company and the Individual so
that the Individual can m aximize his/her benefits."
Blue Cross and Blue Shield o f Florida w ill develop programs
to assist Spanish speaking Individuals wishing to purchase
policies. The company w ill pattern Its services after the
Spanish language services already in place for Its group
customers. For example, the company will ofTer the services of
bilingual sales staff and customer service representatives as
well as develop materials in Spanish.

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Insured msmbtre recslvs refund
WASHINGTON. D.C. — More than 3 million members of the
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the AARP Group Hospital Plan are sharing In a premium
refund of approximately 9115 million.
Th e refund varies with the Individual's level of coverage.
Rebates range from 95 to 945 per Individual. The average
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Because the claim experience on the Group Hospital Plan has
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accumulated is being returned to the plan participants.

(of utual A customary charge* altar applicant*

dsductlMet

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Additional bsnsflts Include: Flat-lss prescriptions, discounts on sye
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1400S. Farit Av»., Sanford

T A l l
| )| i f O N A i S A N l

322-4762

-H)/

lllil)

TO D AY'

l)HI&gt;

&lt;&gt;*U A N D O

i l i a

1 H u ll ' l l ! )

-Ill//

Workplace prenatal promotion offared
ORLANDO — SunBank and the March o f Dimes are hosting
the Introduction o f a new prenatal health promotion program
for the workplace. The Corporate Breakfast Is scheduled for
Nov. 29 from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m.. In SunBank's Sun Room on the
Third Floor o f the Park Building in downtown Orlando.
Business and civic leaders are invited to learn about Babies and
You. a March o f Dimes service that has proven to be successful
across the country.

Bnrwfit planned for Alzhalmar cantar
W INTER PA R K — Holiday decorations, balloons, and
refreshments will help prepare everyone for the Season as they
shop for special handcrafted Jewelry by Fabric Finery and a
special showing of Secret Jewelers of Winter Park, who will
offer a gift o f jewelry from their showroom In a drawing to be
held on Dec. 9. This gala event will be a benefit for the
Alzheimer Resource Center. Inc.. Winter Park-Orlando. with a
portion of receipts going to the Center's work for Alzheimer's
disease victims. There will be an open invitation to the public
to visit the Alzheimer Resource Center at 250 Loch Lomond
Drive. Winter Park and select special gifts for friends.
Call 407/843-1910or 1-800-330-1910 for more Information.

i

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PHONE: (407) 329-2577

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SANFORD. FL 92771
PHONE: (407) 329-2577

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SANFORD. FI 92771
PHONE: (407) 929-2577

S p e c ia l

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LAKE MARY f W

Do you provide a unique
service people should know
about?
Have you changed location,
staff, or hours?
Are you holding seminars
or programs of public interest?
Then you need to advertise
on this page! Call a Herald dis­
play advertising consultant at
322-2611.

JJ96 Lake Emma Dr
Shopp«s ol
Lake Emma-HM

m

333-9416

r.

ROBERT T. WILLIAMS, M.D.
Williams, also a resident of
North Orlando District Medical
Sanford, it a graduate of the
Unhmiry ofMiami School of
Director. He it j graduate of South­
Mcslicinc in Miami, Florida anJ
western Unhxrtity College of
completed hi* internship at Ducal
Medkine in Cebu City. Philippine*
MedicJ Center in JacksonsHie.
anJ completed hi* pint-graduate
Florida. Dr. Wiliam*, a member
Imining at the Ka/uae L'nnmity
o f the Florida Medkal Association.
SledicjI Center in Kama* City.
Seminole County Medkal Society
Kama*. For six years, Dr. Coy hid
anJ American Academy of Family
a General Practise of Medicine.
Surgery and Obstetrics in Marysville. Physkians hat praetked with Centra
Carr since August 4 /MW. Prior to
Kama, prior to returning to hi*
hi* association with Centra Care.
home town of Orlando in IUM.
Dr. Williams praetked Family
Dr. Coy hat been with CentrJ Carr
since /MfiJ except hie run »rar» of
Medicine in Blakely. Georgia and
Emergency Medkine in Hialeah and
Famih medicine in DtUnd in W
Titusville, Fkeida.
and /&lt;*«.
JAMES F. COY, M.D.

Dr. C o * a DelanJresilient, u the

Dr.

When &gt;ou or \our family nerd medical attention, turn to the tiyn of quality
healthcare, the Sanford Centra Care Medical Center. Together, Dr. Coy
and Dr. William* bring over 10 yean ol experience. Thc»e highly trained
phyticiaiu will provide the Sanford, Lake M ary and Southwe«l Volutia
County rrtidcnlt convenient, quality healthcare (or the entire family...

W hen Your Health Can't Wait.

!*• JUtxawl
OttHvkl
■

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gvAMOkO

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OHLAMX) fe

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Vanled L'ciuri Can U n lu l Center
HOI 5. OrtenJu l»me 117-41&gt;
\L*da« - RnJeti 7w • 7 p m
Velarde. 4. SunJet; II a w - • 1 p-iu.

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WhenYour Heehti
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�S a n fo rd H e ra ld

N o v e m b e r 18, 1 9 9 0

SUNDAY
IN SID Ii
■ Com let, Pm * 4C

P e o p le
IN B R IE F

H i T a I a m I A Ia A

"B tlH§®wl#IOfef v l ^ v w V

■ Education, Pag# 6C

Th r— tel— of Thanksgiving

She’ll be home

hristmas

Habitat for Humanity
builds first house here

Anna nandan pewit cookies.

Chocolate chips for troops
Ladles o f the Fleet Reserve in Sanford recently
baked and shipped hom em ade cookies to
American troops serving in the Persian Gulf.
"Operation C ook ie" Is Intended to spread
holiday cheer from the kitchens In Central
Florida to the deserts o f the Middle East.

MIDWAY - Ella Mae Blue, burdened with
crippling arthritis, has been eeklng out an
existence on social security since retiring from
the mule teams and celery fields In Sanford.
A t 65. she owns a plot o f land, but the
80-year-old house In which she lives can no
longer be repaired. She risks falling through the
floor o f the termite and water damaged structure.
It has been difficult for her to make needed
repairs on her meager Income.
**l saved up all my little checks to do this.” she
says, pointing to the siding nailed to her house
Nalls will no longer hold the siding to
rotting structure.
Th e house’s main support beam has broken.
Seeping stormwater has caused walls to buckle
and leak.
" It 's done decayed. Termites ate It out. The
ro o fs poppln'." she explains.
But Blue, once concerned. Is thankful. She will
have a new home for Christmas.
Habitat For Humanity, a non-profit organiza­
tion dedicated to eliminating poverty housing
fiom the face of (nc earth, has chosen Blue as the
first recipient of a brand new house In Seminole
County.
T h e vo lu n tee r o rgan iza tio n w h ose
spokespersons are Jimmy and Rosalind Career. Is
one o f 200 affiliates in the nation, including four
In Volusia County and one In Orange County,
plus more than 40 In developing countries.
Pastor Don Nolt. who spearheads the effort In
Seminole County, says Habitat volunteers have
visited the backroads of this vibrant, affluent
county and found shacks never meant for
long-term living. He hopes to build 50 houses
annually until "all unacceptable housing In
Seminole Is wiped out.”
" I'd guess there are several thousand houses to
build In Seminole." he says.
Nolt's Involvement began over three years ago
when he retired as associate pastor o f St. Stephen
Lutheran Church after undergoing quadruple
bypass surgery and suffering damage to his
heart.
" I only have half a heart, now ." he says,
tapping his chest. " I wanted to make my time
count.”
□Saw Bwwss, Pags BC

Don Noll, (1) stakes th# ground (or Habitat for
Humanity's first homa In Midway. Assisting art

b la iB w i
McBride, Ella Mas Blow, w ho la the
recipient of the new home, and Jim Wells.
d iii

Undaunted by leukemia, Lake Mary lady is
thankful for
blessings in her life
ly U O ID O H N
Herald People Editor

Iran* Brown and Joan Matts, from R.S.V.P.

Donation mad#

LAKE MARY - Sarabecca Rosier
appears to have It all. She Is
beautiful, charming, and has a
husband. Joe. who loves her. She
has a daughter. Scarlett, almost 8.
who is a talented dancer. She has a
son. Jason. 11, a good student. She
sayc she maintains her positive
attitude by thinking about all the
things for which she Is thankful
Instead of dwelling on something for
w h ich she Is not. Rosier has
leukemia.
Rosier was a happy mom three
years ago. shuttling her children to
school, social events, and activities.
"Mom picked me up from pre­
school one day and she Just couldn't
breathe." Scarlett says. " I was
really scared.”
Rosier, who had no history of
a b n orm al health. Ignored the
warning. She resumed her dally

Irene Brown, director of the Sanford Christian
Sharing Center, recently accccpted donations of
baby clothes for the center from Retired Senior
Volunteer Program members.

Child advocata namad
The 1990 "Child Advocate o f the Year" award
was recently presented to Glnny McCtanahan.
R.N., Winter Park, by the Seminole County
Association for Counseling and Development.
McCtanahan was recognized for her outstand­
ing dedication to the profession and for
contributing much o f her free time to the
guidance counseling programs o f several Semi­
nole County schools.
.
"She regularly went above and beyond the
call of duty to help our children and their
families who needed It to get back on track."
noted Lake Brantley High School guidance
counselor. Regina Klaers.

Jason, Sarabecca and Scarlett Rosier

activities, chaulfcrlng Scarlett one
day to gymnastics and treating her
lo her favorite lunch at Dunkln
Donuts.
" I felt worse. It felt like my ribs
had been crushed, she explains.
She felt no better over the next
several days and was admitted to
the hospital for possible heurt pro­
blems.
" I said I didn't have tim e to go In
the hospital. It was on the eve of the
Holy Days and I was busy cooking
and getting ready for m y parents
visit." Rosier remembers.
After having lupus and heurt
disease ruled out. but with her
health deteriorating. Rosier was
airlifted lo Shands Hospital at the
University o f Florida In Gainesville,
where she underwent a bone mar­
row biopsy.
"That was the most painful thing.
It felt like m y body blew up. I saw
bright red drops o f blood like when
L )S «# L eu k em ia, Page SC

Law breakers grab seco nd c h a n c e for s u cce ssfu l life
ByUCYPO M U
Herald People Editor
SANFORD - When Linda was
placed under a two-year house
arrest for selling drugs, the
opportunity to take a course In
d e ve lo p in g successful livin g
skills appealed to her.
"It was a way to get out o f the
house one more night." she said.
Today, the woman who said
she was addicted to relationships
which contributed, at age 40. to
her problems with the law. is
w o rk in g toward becom ing a
cou n selor. Her relationships
with family, friends, and men
are healthier, she said, because
she has learned to manage her
own life.
Th e transformation was not
without much soul-searching
and guidance from Seminole
Community College Instructor
Valeric Harrison, who also owns
the company Images o f the Mind
and teaches the course In living
skills for the Slate of Florida
Department
o f Corrections.
lepartn
Corcc
orcctional Probation Super­

Valerie Harrison and Linda Mllla discuss course work for successful living.

visor Linda Mills said the state course Is letting go and moving
authorized (he course, and with on.
"T h e obligation you have from
only a set of guidelines from
Lake County and a list o f topics the post Is to use It and learn and
to b e c o v e r e d . I n c lu d in g let go o f all the garbage which
employment, substance abuse weighs you down." she said.
Christine agreed.
and education. Mills. Fay Brake,
"A ll I ever felt was guilt and
director of Leisure Programs for
SCC and Harrison hammered sham e." she said. Christine vol­
out the current curriculum , unteered for the program to "put
currently being taught for the structure and discipline back
where It belongs. In m y life."
fourth time.
Paul, too, volunteered for the
The 15-week program started
out as a voluntary one for course to shorten his sentence.
" I learned common sense and
offenders such as Linda. Paul,
Christine and Mike. It is now to step back and look at myself. I
think people cause most o f their
often court-ordered.
Mike is a youthful oiTender own problems und what we
who ended up In trouble "from a learned Is how to deal with those
sick relationship.” At first he problems and not to be too hard
"thought the class was a bunch on ourselves." he thoughtfully
said.
of Junk."
Taking control o f your life
"But then I started to grasp It.
It helped me forget the past. I sounds cuslcr than It often is.
planted both feet on the ground a c c o rd in g lo H a rrison . Un­
and realized the only thing in healthy behavior patterns devel­
front o f you Is your future. I oped when we are young carry
started to take control o f me intoudull life, she added.
"M y dad used to tell m e I was
Instead of letting others influ­
stupid." Linda said. " I learned
ence m e." he said.
Harrison said the basis of the L See S k ills . Page 5C

;Zr T■ O T H E

T

�1C

Sanlo'U He1 4*0 SonG'O. Florida

ut.du, NwiVitiIw' 16 IttOU

Only humans can keep river alive

ENGAGEM ENT

Kept wa nHug tnciidaol tin St
Johns. I'eier S I lao* i iv D\ M of
Oviedo, lotd incutb*ts ol lit*
Woman s Club ol Saliioiet. ai III*
h'oveiubet meeting. soon ul lit*
pa rtis ol lia SI Joints a llVVt II*
dial react
Dubb* d «rs ilte Nik o! America
lit* dOU-mll* live), tin lolige-V. of
Honda s iivcn&gt;. ts aiao Ua tttosi
abus* d Dcvclupmcn tuduso *
and agruiullur* an tin culprits
causing tit* m e t s ulltm.tu
death.
II.tb* ri» spot.* and allowed
slides in lit*’ abs* ncr ol tin
designated speaker. AUtu. Knit
ard f owler ile war mtiuilu. ■&gt;'
b&gt; Kay* Sii*i. tltatiinau ol tit*
tdub's ArU* Ln paitin* ni. who
subsHluU’d toi Winnie Scott
Cons* i vatioii Chau man
Human beings ter* respottsibi*
for tlx river's distress and only
humans • an keep H altv. f.x
tulolilialioii. cottia* I fiu n d s o'
ilte Si. Johns ICQ, lx&gt;.\ y;&gt;&lt;
ball lead *i27 72-95ti
1'lcsldenl Marty Colcgruv*
eonducUd lia: busUass session
and (alieri on oiliccra utyd d*
pan in* id chairmen lui loutlm

i

sun lo u* n*-in uu S
l.n* 1*
I istivai will b Held at ill* GO**'
fori«s* i iubitwtis**. *hi Highway
•in titan 10 a m to S pm No*
ihi and ltd I la orurlil is •*|» ll I*&gt;
Ih* pulrla **i no* Haig*
lit* clublious* was li'sttvclv
hicui.ii.il in in* atittiHin tin"
Colortuf hymlistt*'d leaves **m
lured ih* timing lain* s with
Uadiiion.il bill atiting* nivnis
i* nlUI'd oil III* la ad lain* mol aut.e mdii! prestdunf of Cilv Counci' &lt;1 arrodle fatuce atoryt«
mailt* 1 lluslissis wt l* Iw-n . Marie
Ctdusi
pinstdeni ■&gt;' kauroai* at on.* lau and jov
nu ll* Its alai Grata l ojh: *•
barium . lunerict 'ictiairntd ginwreo tur « taceni suiortty nwwti
* nailn.*n. and Ann (it
liose layn*
i.*»sii Ka liim1
Jatwrite 1*11. Jan* t inni*s ikiiv*1
Smilhaial 1i is11 * oi*w i

f ull &gt; ebtlVOl n soee.es:
i #i f
Holy ( toss l.p.s* opai Unite h
Kll/aUf 1 1 1 tiiiyd was iilfiut ti &lt;1
was a iwt liiv* ol .*. livi
ami
as a new member by Maty lulls
I* sin n v ai ih* annual tall
s* * oiid vice president. IW
piOsp**:liV4 m* mb* is unending t * shvai I p ) A si* an « sioaiu * I
iwtigaii: hum* is sitopp* d at lla
wi n
l al Gm ii v am) l.n.
1 uuiiUk Kitchen and ba*o
fit eg* I all'
Vard tjat* and traits nhoppAmong the various prop** is*&gt;
•Ichi
ions turkey ion. n* on w*&gt;Hi" clubs ag* nda duimg A*
venib* ■ and O* * &lt;mb* ! luciuil* a set veil as w&lt; 1} as s..p|» (n.r
Country Uarbtcut participating niglii
In Mak* Sauloid Sinn*
con­
About lia- turnout .rod i*
tributing to and helping with (lie rjmiis* la iiy Akeis, prcsineiu o’
St. l.n* i.t festival, hosting lit*
Hi*' i pi.-oop.u r liun iiworn* i,
Gulden Age Gam* s Hiidg*
and t hail man ol lia « vein said
s* salon providine Mueliiip
1Was v* I V pi* as* d I iiatl a In *t
slilUeis (ol gills. 4 lU IK. at glXMl tlclp
Ha* i&lt; ml.* Giris Kan* It. making
Man • Cuietlio* piosiOtriH ci* tin Woman : C hid of bantorn wt:
Assisi mg Hell) w» &gt;i lia li.
monetary contributions to tin
arc Faye Sth: ntonrr
GVM ijurr:.' spaasn
helif hau»:n
G
ias
I
lank
M*
ban*
boon.
ranch, and helping i&lt;&gt; dies,
I .Lit . bp**' .!*|C||I
Cliatrilta
t eddy beats .md ringing tails lot Milt l.l
and Cord*", iswr* n*
.**.innthe Salvation At my
ca1 "Wrtrd Veggies and f-uii
bufurity sisterp usttic
Club uu mb* is ai* I* minded o! ami th-urv laumi. lw-n 1awiso
\muni th' wetre: locrti* me
Wall) Philips Uelhy B um t. ...
"CelcUlam Hie Matin ini', tie
ill* club's Arts and l uill
imnignt
vvtth tier lu tin- tnertui.
I* Mick. Man* all*! Hill I Koch'
litem* ii ! ih- Hem higui. I‘I
f.silva l lo la- In Ki at ih*' Lie*
tur cxpininn! w w
Malarn.
meeting l ay** Sliei said cntri*- Joy* * and hull (.‘ row* Uryb AIM u.ipiei buncheuti held ha
Kiwain
fe
n
n
e
l
bin
Ctnbolincllbetg. thauli* and Bom
vnuav ‘no
1 re '1 ttitacunt
must be registered by 1 0 a.m
dieatti*
Nupules
Hed
Urmuu.
Covntti Cm! whet Ciiniriiiitii
Tu esday
G ee
4 , a i t h ■ Kabot n Mat) Jo Cue til am
tumiiu . Guitvtiri and Ctarvtu*
twins anti AI Gun holy Mildred Jm&gt;«* bttuttm mr lie- cniti
clubhoUs* Judging will las*
Wiiiitrn irtntt baiiiun: atietti,
nun* pi: '.(igrliie a
pia* &lt; by noon and wtimeis will and Jo* An Ia*ias |i* hn Paulllij
in Ilte event w re L;. Heltrm
Harriet
blegh-i
and
Guntur
Hie
unit*'
pat:krig1
(luitinuuh
*t&gt;
Lx announced *tl lie Widmsda
Gun Julie:
Allgcii Aueo* r.
Amt f.t hols was Hi* |ei ipa-r
em nllein ruierttunutniu and »•
in* cling
Charlott* Knowles
,\t'i
nl
Lh*
ti
&gt;0
gill
»
rt
lilt*
on
dotio
*
cttuig
oimr
prti'i
Kobcil.t Kos* antiuuneed an
Mow
iuu:1
France
Mitchcl
BJ&gt;! Cii
1 umn'i Kreslclen
ulira suede and ulna icatia-r bv hots' l ia* •
Nelli Cuieiimn. Martha Sleveti.*.
Jum Heim ten tn* upeitUi;
Ma
r i n , V uu c e v
fio ro lh *
crretnotii*" and timurte He
MeKeviioids and Jerl Lirh
loliuwitij im. lie Stive: Cirri'
Vick Ha!! Glcnu, bitiei'Mii
Citirret o p e n n o u s t
Mariete Ciausen V*t u Saul.
Ju&lt; and Latur,* tnirreti will fit
Amur'
LuKuHe aiu dnyc*
tuitions m tin-' .lath urtldirg
Summe'
umnvrisan Saturday Nov i4
Mariem
imiHct wi!lrimt*:r
n on'" tioiiB' a' tit* hum' of
tie guerip uni lutili'.'Ici! bnitrul
then vi tm hi- wile. Otu&gt; and
*1rtitiiUluv uni Muny Cnleprnvt
Mvriiir' (ii"-ri"
110 hretuwood
mi" He (Jrrte n! Hr* him*
Drivt
Th' lollowui!
itluntlfi' Girt*
AI iriend' u the couph are
wrrr umtmiiiri't! Sail', firm '•orrftali
tal! between tar
hpHUiii. Sti'tim Invrt Mnrvc*
lirmr- t
p.m. to help the
"I lil'ti: LSpslim Mnrgi Ki i r
...... * Hetiriii*' the occasion
Fmrnpitr Bun iamdnl:. Kitty
n tfena performance
C.urp'v I'rf’i-ep i JV'liL Delis
i ■ .mill
Kooda Nnhles
l‘a' luhnao'i lavumatr Alphs
•rid: Sapp ventured lo
"lau nrir1 Am Naekiti' HM '' ttv
" i ' ’ it'-sri.i night. Nov 13.
( aiunell
so|t purpose of uttetiding
Gurmg ihr vein ! tvoui Vvgi
&lt;
• .■'".••matier slurring Hie
elan Jair Hoitaii &lt; riferiainrd th*
Mikhail burytdinlkov
women H&lt; js-rfortried V'Venil
Xnv a ihos' (H*rturnilng hi
sensational h-ttte ol tllushm to
Md an f / CuOtna' piusei t .5 p'atd'omOut Ha'fit Ifellt*/* to Mac*
thi sfir'i witti the celebrated
th* rli liglu ol to* tmdh-ni *
fai/lhe mift. U-aI x f / a.-a'd***: ms pt* U/ftifcwd'J b*:1 lyfc
.* mi &lt; "
Kob Hesserer.
Highlight of the dm was ih*
imni'-tlv ■ Sanford Hob. win of
ap|M arum * o' :* delightful &lt;*tnr\
Jam and Robert Hesserer of
tillei Aniiett' Hrite* nl FiisHs
InHnhassi.
also formerly of
As hilksv as Hi* v * rim*- Annettr
‘"mined hn* tieett dancing proheld Hi* women spellbound with
fesshinallv fen several yearsIter sharp wp and sparkling
Incldental'x Juckte returned
corn met nnr\ lit* vibrant «Hri
Iasi week Irorr I Julius where she
she wnr* lasltlonerl ol »ti«-ti s
•odd shr shnjiped until she
or* kllis mail le d bet rnlutltil
■ vi ,1 ial.f
Iill! r ■o'
dlirm r C**v* inh*-r T i
II dO |Hrsonalftv
dropped In the interim, she
4
rJ
.* m io y p rn no &lt;harge, ai tin
broke h' t rigiu hand, hul says
l.iilieh'il as He Of I Ir-fitI Stotv
ta' Ui*i )y «U■
V » r « l l i Annual Tfianksgiviig
she. is doing great And that's
I* II* i ul Huthfi b) Sr-eretiirv ol
g ‘ 4i K ** a t 0
Giuiier ai ihe First Haptisi Stan Jlrn Soiltli Atm*‘He told
diti Me!
ik’jt V.* '
uf . ' i.o»* li nit*-hall hhx'k west nl s* v* tal familial stories lint with
H o l i d a y Bnzaar s e t
c Uli I‘iujj'41
i a1* Koa'f lH 92un4'J4
a dill* tent twist In one Inslntli e
Tile Sanford (iardeti Club will
vi;a
an.-w'ioi ll'/ln
W tie I fic r f o r I nod ni
wilt ii «li' tens talking to llel
bold
Hie Hnlhhiv Ha/am at the
iliip or both pleas* )oln mini on the it lepltom tin suti
elulihmis' on Friday. Nov. 30.
fyiiMfl uld.
|** I ol dieting stithtced Ainu it*
from Hi n tn to 7 p m.. and
h ■■s will be provided fur told tin legettditry mint that sin
h* it i
SiiHnduy l&gt;ee I from 10 u.m.
tv
win* nred tine rtiuirh illdo 1 diet on rjays that lie gin
will,
.go
Ijebi.
to 4 p in
a **,'*» ;« t ail alvi deliver llieaK with a I
I'uesdav llnirsdnv.
her I
I lie I ni r nnr will feature u
aM g'
o, *itof ins
Inditv ami tomorrow
She gett
variety *•! emits, baked goods,
v . -a- s.ml over 7r*u iiirnls i laird i orislil' rahle lauglitet
plants and oilier Itrms The
o n v i veil Iasi year, ami I Oiid hum tin itlghlv apprielallve
public Is welcome.
, • s ai* enjwclcd tills year No
I'lliWlI
■• ■■*»* * ■.ons .rn* needed.
W o m a n d o n 't c h e w Hie fat
Chela anjoys cruise
b lia rt I liauk;.y.^.i.y,
*&lt;• josi want lu share nut
i hatloHr Haleombi l atte wus
Susan K n f .u, &lt;f v
I iillmvlog th*- November meet­
• . ssgiving Susan said
th* gm si sp* nki t •( Inn tin
&lt;igl* shy Inv ii* any m.
ing eight members ol ihe
I'*' mor* Information, call
lle.tihtow Wnii" o s t lull mr I at
Wllddowcr Circle itf the Sanford
* vi i ) oile in shall Thuiiki
•. •:. / oi h 14 1457.
th*- Woman ( i lotiiil Hanloiil hn
Gardrn Club enjoyed Capt.
III*- Novnnl" l lia etltig I’lrsi
Hoy's .limglr CFalse diiwn the
dent Mml.mni li.issth ptrslilcd
St Johns Hlvet. aeon ding to
over tin' business sesslnii
Shirley Simas, eln le president
for lulu In on, tin vvlime11 were
Mrmbcm htuugld a brown Ivag
served a calned ine.il i not.lining lunch to the hireling and weir
WHO culnrlcs linill lei Ip* s In served rake, culler and ten h&gt;
Charlotte's recent uMlklHirtk The Florence Wrhrwrln. hostess
menu Im lmlrd mast clih kru tn
(Doris Dio(rich, retired Sanford
cherry sauce. Hatley pllaf. car*
rots and |susnl|is. spiced apple Herald Psopto sditor, Is a Herald
ring and bread pudding
columnist
Charlotte later s|&gt;oke oil low- ars«.Phoni
JI

Audiuy Myftoti G r e t n and M ic h a e l Ed*&lt;u d K o j y « n

Grtsfcn-Korgan
bANKQHl)
Ms Linda Green
atid Mr John Green. Sanford
.««* announcing the engagement
of llieh daughter, Audrey Myrcr
!i&gt; Michael Kdward Korean son
of Mrs
fan and Mr Mlki
Kurgan. Sanford.
Born m Sanford lire bride
&lt;*|c&lt; i It- Hit maternal gland
daughter of Mrs Virginia and
Mr WoJIey Bias*Hah of Lancing
TinincMMn* She ts (lie patcm.il
granddaughter of Mis Virginia
Marie and Mr John &lt; Green o(
Sanford
Miss Green is a IPUM graduate
ni ha mltiolr High School and
...i aeilvr In FBLA and JX"I
O Jf program Stir is pica*nUy

employed as &lt;lum pin'I" .Lasts
lam at tin flUon Chlmpiaitl*

Center
Mil flam i horn in Sanford is
tin maternal grandson of Mi
Clifford and Mr» Ha/cl Johiiaoii
and tin paierual grandson of Mi
E*1 and Mrs Ron nee Kurgan. all
of Sanford
Koigaii is a iiitm graduate of
Scinfliolr lilgll Set tool and a
I 990 graduate of Seminole
CotnmunHy C ollege He It*
e m p lo y e d as m e c h a n ic a l
engineer at Stone I'aekaglng
Sy stem
A wedding is piano* *1 lor
In i ember I 1UU0 at thr Lipsala
C o m m u n ity P r e s b y lc r la n
Chute h. Sanford

f n;n. lull Rotarlan o&lt; the Yea' Mai
Prrlt; Jamison PoUj is plimod f*&gt;i

a . . 1*: lie"
mife

C lub members honor their own with Rotarian
of Year and Paul Harris Fellowship awards
Vwluu I eiki Mu;y Ui;lai&gt; • tub
III) l l l t i i Ih | ( a lh iT t ' t l

huluiJu) infill

n il

vi i n i III

M Vk.f- (n lioiim

Hu li .■IWli Willi 111*' I'.illl 1Gill i’­
.uni i*.ll.lll.il 1ut lh* \ll .rr Awanl
anil i. J 11ll ll1iltl Ih* I'jimilmg n l
H" I.*, til • li.i|ill 1i 1III fNiiiV* inher b
IU/3
l l , lla li MJJJ&lt;
lil ti Kiiiary in
• lili .1,g*i lil 1!JOA lo piomul*
ft 11.)Wship aind liigli i lhli ai Imal
lie ns aland Mi (13 among in* n
Klntll ihos* Im;; iihlr hi glnimigb
Hut.n v I.*.a.*Is J J ixi*i i lull.- In
I *»«&gt; Gmls in* hiding a in wiy
i harun .l .liih in Irussta As
WI*IIII li iia v * * i. 11 t i li a 1 1 1 1
' lillllh d till' I allhs III III* hits!
iles.i Vtnild ihll.il * ti.is a* . i pi * d
i h* hi mk iminhi'i» inn
HI , |y Hot.ill.ills .iii.l g.a ft &gt;
■. I* l.ian . 1 1 liar 1 1 1 night with .in
* I* paid lian.pi* I dhilii i a I IIn
I ah * Mai * i 1A maiding f nil I
la liin ii'p i .v a i pinv ldtif by
snilgslr* as 1 rh la i'ailali II*i
I'lislih n i th io l '.n il d* * im .1
'In I ■* lil .1 ’to* II . * In I .lll.ii Hn
tiling • li Ipii I did uni la gin ill*
. ■ I( 1 .1.i i
I lilh i 11 a pi i I h
nstl.ills hr gin
w i wet i|i4il«41iki‘ lit ■Ml (I'M
il
ii“ k‘ i 1Uu, Ill y ii i li.iill 44
i*pm Oil nl
44 Mill* i 111
|ji p. * * luh hj UMISNIii ih* M'dgl
&gt; Inipt* r hill
*** !' li t
t.p..i. B.ill d l *lkc M.u * \lv4M i|
gl *133&gt; lisila 1-4kil&gt; |t nl go I T 0 ||l»
got lng* ll» 1 llNld llIII* a » ill i
i . iill 3*11d
On c "1 H&gt;i » l» »|*»* i&gt;|,i Hihli 1a
i*t* lamiaOft U it i aw*iiilril «i
r.iiti llilll: 1. i»UM&gt; fur Ills Mi
« nil l im id t ii
« in Mli 44414
"Ills* *1 .in .1is &lt;list * gold (■Ml 1*4
Ills |.lp* l
Alan Ii.....m l wit*
dUlitli w (|i&gt;si1 w ile Hi l l y*
m .inli d I i pmniio, his |a&gt; h* t

UAK k H A Hr
UOHG^GOU

lioul ami Ihi l.iii Mai h Ulyllp
who was named Kotiutan ol (h&lt;
V» .a lit IU7S wild tiled lii.m.uiii)
al l idelll a h W )t .iln ago litwd&gt; Man 1 aiicpltd I hr awanl
pnsihnmmisly for him
hi nil V/ys* i vptalm *1 a Haul
llaiils a llow i an la lu i iu d
Hum IIP * hih Horn a s(Minsni 01
li) pi isnpalJy doiiaiing to th*
* iinl.osl.ip fond Morn y finm
l l a I'lflow g o e s l l i l o I|i. I . n g i s l
• hol.n Jiip lund lit Hn win Id,
a* i ni ding In i .nil
ll.il i . fitly was manlnali d hy
. . ' .0 0 .1 1 1 . i n l pa .1 liiil.il l.ms ol
lla (o il mil . apt in * ii IIlls hoiiol
Ini Hrmitll Pile luinlson said
11a i &gt;*■ai linl la i ansi In • Jill*
4M * Ifil "III Ilf lllt.lill |s|i .1 M‘*|
I.*. ai^ ■ 1•* ilk .ilk M Mil* TJrt » l.ll
piuj. *1
|| ' 111 411» « if 11V lit* Milt
i. 1. ill, ImnHllpm I Hul III* la
tilu ii V*t It" ill" 1" i ""III "0
kiMM '*ni said
( &lt;"lu llip min lulliuiuuiH
i .... .im! M ii ih.r So * * ua 1vlkl
Mary ii puli after Jti vrat 5 Ml
in ii 1 1 1 ,
i ». 1 1 limit! i &lt; ■'in.'.ah
YtU* « tH4|r|i

Tr*ill (| IlMil III*

�dtnnfjs*

4'&gt;nfnh

Wm W

«*«/. "Af- .&gt;«#***- #,

fflhl

Special service marks holiday
• *» f r I r
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:r o&gt; VVddnofxli. Knermcr
‘l , a ' ** n o
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V i Ml
Mi u r ’ t,
V.fJ)
I) H'
A rent! Thi tceru rtUffton
• rrv r m
!e.!ti.*r to Man
"im t o Al i n
’a Ml
Clturfl am Mr gue# too.mnil (*■ Mi !&lt;■.
V/allaeGame rTh rommunit I to
Mtul n .iti mii Mir
nr
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T h r bnclo is th r d a u u h irr o!
.James a n d P atricia M tirphx
Y a k im a , W A a n d (he h n d r
Rriwm * parents arc Tlm o ih x
and .Janet Oonahoe. Sanford and
Van Stuart o( Sanford. Me i* the
grandson o l Lore n and Ruth
Unugherty. Sanford.

Given tn m a r T ta ^ e by TcmpJn
Horry, friend of the bride and
Hnx)in. I he bride chose foi her
sows a blush peach satin wed
illng Kown. Thr gown featured a
dropped waist and she wore
matching satin gloves. T h e
strapless bofllce was trimmed
with lace and the skirt featured
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DEAR ABBY: I just flnistud
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N o v e m b e r 18, 1 9 9 0

SUNDAY

IN B R IE F

She’ll be home for Christmas
Habitat for Humanity
builds first houss here

Chocolate chips for troops
Ladles o f the Fleet Reserve in Sanford recently
baked and shipped homemade cookies to
American troops serving In the Persian Gulf.
"Operation C ookie" Is intended to spread
holiday cheer from the kitchens in Central
Florida to the deserts o f the Middle East.

*01

MIDWAY - Ella Mae Blue, burdened with
crippling arthritis, has been eeklng out an
existence on social security since retiring from
the mule teams and celery fields In Sanford.
At 65. she owns a plot o f land, but the
0O-year-old house In which she Hves can no
longer be repaired. She risks falling through the
floor o f the termite and water damaged structure.
It has been difficult for her to make needed
repairs on her meager Income.
" I saved up all m y little checks to do this.” she
says, pointing to the aiding nailed to her house.
Nalls wifl no longer hold the siding to the
rotting structure.
The house's main support beam has broken.
Seeping stormwater has caused walb to buckle
and leak.
•*H*s done decayed. Termites ale It out. The
ro o fs poppln'," she explains.
But Blue, once concerned. Is thankful. She will
have a new home for Christmas.
Habitat For Humanity, a non-profit organiza­
tion dedicated to eliminating poverty housing
from the face o f the earth, has chosen Blue as the
first recipient o f a brand new house in Seminole
County.
T h e v o l u n t e e r o r g a n iz a tio n w h ose
spokespersons are Jim m y and Rosalind Carter, Is
one o f 200 affiliates in the nation, including four
in Volusia County and one In Orange County,
plus more than 40 in developing countries.
Pastor Don Nolt. who spearheads the effort In
Seminole County, says Habitat volunteers have
visited the backroada of this vibrant, affluent
county and found shacks never meant for
long-term living. He hopes to build BO houses
annually until "a ll unacceptable housing in
Seminole is wiped out."
‘ T d guess there are several thousand houses to
build In Seminole.” he says.
N oll's Involvement began over three years ago
when he retired as associate pastor o f St. Stephen
Lutheran Church after undergoing quadruple
bypass surgery and suffering damage to his
heart.
" I only have half a heart, now." he says,
tapping his chest. " I wanted to make my time
count."
.
„.

HE

Don Noll, ft) stakes the ground for Habitat for
Humanity's first home In Midway. Assisting are

Bill McBride, Ella Mas Blow, who Is ths
recipient of ths now homo, and Jim Wells.

Undaunted by leukemia, Lake Mary lady is
thankful for all the blessings in her life
LAKE MARY — Sarabecca Rosier
appears to have It all. She Is
beautiful, charming, and has a
husband. Joe. who loves her. She
has a daughter. Scarlett, almost 8.
who is a talented dancer. She has a
son. Jason. 11. a good student. She
sayc she maintains her positive
attitude by thinking about all the
things for which she is thankful
Instead of dwelling on something for
w h ic h she is not. Rosier has
leukemia.
Rosier was a happy mom three
years ago. shuttling her children to
school, social events, and activities.
"M om picked me up from pre­
school one day and she Just couldn't
breathe," Scarlett says. " I was
really scared.”
Rosier, who had no history of
a b n o rm a l h e a lth . Ignored the
warning. She resumed her dally

Donation mada
Irene Brown, director of the Sanford Christian
Sharing Center, recently acccepted donations of
baby clothes for the center from Retired Senior
Volunteer Program members.

Child advocate namod
The 1990 "Child Advocate o f the Yea r" award
was recently presented to Glnny McClanahan,
R.N.. Winter Park, by the Seminole County
Association for Counseling and Development.
McClanahan was recognized for her outstand­
ing dedication to the profession and for
contributing much of her free time to the
guidance counseling programs o f several Semi­
nole County schools.
.
"She regularly went above and beyond the
call of duty to help our children and their
families who needed it to get back on track."
noted Lake Brantley High School guidance
counselor. Regina Klaers.

activities, chauffering Scarlett one
day to gymnastics and treating her
to her favorite lunch at Dunkin
Donuts.
"I felt worse. It felt like my riba
had been crushed, she explains.
She felt no better over the next
several days and was admitted to
the hospital for possible heart pro­
blems.
"I said I didn't have time to go in
the hospital. It was on the eve of the
Holy Days and I was busy cooking
and getting ready for my parents
visit." Rosier remembers.
After having lupus and heart
disease ruled out. but with her
health deteriorating. Rosier was
airlifted to Shands Hospital at the
University of Florida In Gainesville,
where she underwent a bone mar­
row biopsy.
“ That was the most painful thing.
It felt like my body blew up. 1 saw
bright red drops o f blood like when

□Sea Leukemia. Page 5C

Law breakers g ra b se co nd ch a n ce for su cce ssfu l life
visor Linda Mills said the state course is letting go and moving
Herald Paoola Editor
authorized the course, and with on.
"T h e obligation you have from
*
p
------------------ only a set o f guidelines from
SANFORD - When Linda was
Lake County and a list of topics the past is to use it and leant and
placed under a two-year house
to b e c o v e r e d . I n c l u d i n g let go of all the garbage which
arrest for selling drugs, the
employment, substance abuse weighs you down." she said.
Christine agreed.
opportunity to take a course in and education. Mills, Fay Brake,
"A ll I ever felt was guilt and
d evelop in g successful l ivi ng
director o f Leisure Programs for
skills appealed to her.
SCC and Harrison hammered shame." she said. Christine vol­
" It w a s a way to get out o f the out the current curriculum , unteered for the program to "put
house one more night." she said.
currently being taught for the structure and discipline back
where it belongs. In my life."
Today, the woman who said
fourth time,
Puul. too. volunteered for the
the was addicted to relationships * The 15-week program started
which contributed, at age 40. to out as a voluntary one for course to shorten his sentence.
" I learned common sense and
her problems with the law. is offenders such as Linda. Paul,
w orkin g tow ard becom ing a Christine and Mike. It is now to step back and look at myself. I
think people cause most o f their
counselor. H er relation sh ip s often court-ordered,
with family, friends, and men
Mike is a youthful offender own problems and what we
are healthier, site said, because
who en d:d up In trouble "from a learned Is how to deal with those
the has learned to manage her sick relationship." At first he problems and not to be too hard
own life.
"thought the class was u bunch on ourselves." he thoughtfully
said.
The transformation was not ofju n k ."
Taking control o f your life
without m uch soul-searching
"But then I started to grasp It.
and guidance from Seminole
It helped me forget the past. I sounds easier than It often Is.
Community College Instructor
planted both feet on the ground a cco rd in g to H arrison. U n­
Valerie Harrison, who also owns and realized the only thing In healthy behavior patterns devel­
the company Images of the Mind
front o f you Is your future. I oped when we are young carry
and teaches the course In living
started to take control o f me Into adult life, she added.
My dad used to tell me I was
skills for the State o f Florida
Instead o f letting others Infillstupid." Linda said. " I learned
Department o f Corrections.
cnee m e." he said.
Corectlonal Probation SuperHarrison said the basis of the (~8ce Skills, Page 5C

■vUCVDOM M

F O R A L L T H E P E O P L E N E W S IN Y O U R A R E A , S U B S C R IB E T O T H E

�SC — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday. November 18, 19S0

O nly hum ans can

ureen-Korgan
S AN FO RD - Ma. Linda Green
and Mr. John Green. Sanford,
are announcing the engagement
of their daughter. Audrey Myree.
to Michael Edward Korgan. aon
of Mrs. Jan and Mr. M ike
Korgan, Sanford.
Bom in Sanford, the brideelect la the maternal grand­
daughter o f Mrs. Virginia and
Mr. Walley Blaachak o f Lancing.
Tennessee. She Is the paternal
granddaughter o f Mrs. Virginia
Marie and Mr. John C. Green o f
Sanford.
Miss Green Is a 1090 graduate
of Seminole High School and
was active In FBLA and DCTOJT program. She la presently

em ployed as chiropractic assis­
tant at the Blxon Chiropractic
Center.
Her fiance, bom In Sanford, is
the maternal grandson o f Mr.
Clifford and Mrs. Hazel Johnson,
and the paternal grandson of Mr.
Ed and Mrs. Florence Korgan. all
o f Sanford.
Korgan Is a 1986 graduate o f
Seminole High School and a
1990 gra d u a te o f S em in ole
C o m m u n i t y C o lle g e . He Is
e m p lo y e d as m e c h a n ic a l
engineer at Stone Packaging
System.
A w edd in g is planned for
December 1. 1990 at the Upsala
C om m un ity Presbyterian
Church, Sanford.

Representing Friends o f the SI.
Johns. Peter S. Haberly. DVM. o f
Dvledo, told members of the
Woman's Club o f Sanford, at the
November meeting, some o f the
perils o f the St. Johns, a river In
distress.
Dubbed as the Nile of America,
DORIS
the 300-mllc river, the longest o f
DIETRICH
Florida's rivers. Is also the mast
abused. Development, industry
and agriculture are the culprits
causing the river's ultim ate
sale, to benefit the St. Lucia
death.
Festival, will be held at the Lake
Haberly spoke and showed
F o n t*! Clubhouse, on Highway
slides In the absence of the
46. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.. Nov.
designated speaker. Adm. Rich­ 29 and 30. T h e benefit Is open to
ard Fowler. He was Introduced
the public at no charge.
by Faye Slier, chairman o f the
The clubhouse was festively
d u b 's Arts Department, who
decorated In the autumn motif.
substituted for Winnie Scott.
Colorful, burnished leaves cen­
Conservation Chairman.
tered the dining tables with
Human beings are responsible
traditional fall arrangem ents
for the river's distress and only
featured on the head table and
Juris Helms, president o f City Council, (Ifc Annette Bruce, ctorytetfer,
humans can keep It alive. For
mantel. Hostesses were: Betty
information, contact Friends o f Steffens and Grace Parks, co- Marlene Clausen, president of Laureate Alpha Tau and Joyce
Sam met, luncheon chairman, gathered for a recent sorority masting.
the St. Johns, P.O. Box 996.
chairmen: and Ann Brtsson.
Sanford 32772-956.
Rose Payne. Lesale Pauline.
President Marty C olegrovc
Janette Pell. Jane Philips. Bettye
conducted the business session
Smith and Trtsh Colbert.
and called on officers apd de­
partment chairmen for routine
F all F asthrel a i u c c m i
reports.
Holy Cross Episcopal Church
Elizabeth Boyd was Inducted
as a new member by Mary Tillls. ■ was a beehive o f activity and
second vice president. T w o festivity at th e annual Fall
prospective members attending Festival Day. A steady stream of
bargain hunters shopped at Ihe
were: Pat Guerry and Lu cy
Country Kitchen and Bake Sale.
Fitzgerald.
Among the various projects on Yard Sale and crafts Shoppe. A
the club's agenda during No­ delicious turkey luncheon was
vember and December Include: a served as well as supper that
Country Barbecue, participating night.
In "Make Sanford Shine." con­
About the turnout and re­
tributing to and helping with the sponse. Betty Akers, president of
St. Lucia Festival, hosting the the Episcopal Churchwom en
G old en A g e G a m e s B r i d g e and chairman o f the event said
session, p ro v id in g s to c k in g " I was very pleased. I had a lot of
stuffers for girls. 4 to 18. at good help."
Hacienda Girls Ranch, making
Sanford, with
Marty Colegrove,
Assisting Betty were: Ba Ba
monetary contributions to the
Siler, program
Peter Haberly.
ranch, and helping to dress Dcas. Frank Mebanc, Donna
chairman.
Teddy bears and ringing bells for Murray. Patty Speer, Vivienne
and Gordon Sweeney. Jeanne
the Salvation Army.
cal "Weird Veggies and Fruits.”
Club members are reminded or and Henry Tam m . Len Paw Ison. Sorority sitters gathsr
Among the weird foods she
"Celebrate
the
Magic1
'
was
the
Wally
Philips,
Bcthy
Bush.
Ethel
the c lu b 's A rts and C ra fts
brought with her to Ihe meeting
Festival to be held at the Dec. 5 Perrick. Marie and Phil Roche. theme of the Beta Sigma Pill
and explained were: Malanga,
Joyce
and
Bob
Crowe.
Bob
All-Chapter
Luncheon
held
Sat­
meeting. Faye Slier said entries
Klwano. Fennel. Bok Choy,
must be registered by 10 a.m. Sonnenbcrg. Bcauflc and Sonny urday. Nov. 10. at Timacuan
Jlcama. Nopales. Red Banana,
Country
Club
when
Chairman
Raborn,
M
ary
Jo
Cochrane.
T u e s d a y , D e c . 4. a t t h e
Bonlato. Daikon and Chayote.
clubhouse. Judging will take Doris and A1 Duxbury. Mildred Joyce Sam met and her com­
Women from Sanford attend
place by noon and winners will and Joe Nicholas. Helen Pauling. mittee put together an excep­
Ing
the event were: Ltz Hclfrich
tional package — delicious food,
be announced at the Wednesday Harriet Sleglcr and Donna Blue.
’ Ann Echols was the recipient excellent entertainment and ex­ Gina Jones. Angela Adcock
meeting.
Charlotte Knowles, Ann
Roberta Rose announced an o f the 150 gift certificate donated citing door prizes.
Howland. Frances M itchell,
BSP City Council President
ultra suede and ultra leather by Lois' Place.

:

■1

From left: Rotarlan of Ihe Year, Harry Terry, receives hla award from
Pete Jamison. Pete Is pinned for a Harris fellowship by his wife,

Miriam. Ty Dedman presents a posthumous Harris fellow to Mack
Blythe's wife, Mazel. Ty Is awarded fits pin by hla wife, Bettye.

Club members honor their own with Rotarian
off Year and Paul Harris Fellowship awards
When Lake Mary Rotary Club
members gathered on a recent
Saturday night. It was to honor
their own with the Paul Harris
and Rotarian of the Year Awards
and to celebrate the founding of
the local chapter on November 8,
1973.
Harris founded Rotary In
Chicago. In 1905, to promote
fellowship and high ethical busi­
ness standards among men.
From those bumble beginnings.
Rotary boasts 22.000 clubs In
160 lands. Including a newly
chartered club in Russia. As
w o me n have e nt e r e d and
climbed the ranks In the busi­
ness world. Rotary has accepted
them as members, too.
Sixty Rotarlans and guests
celebrated Charter Night with an
elegant banquet dinner at the
Lake Mary CIA Building. Enter­
tai nment was provided by
songstress Trtcla Panarcllo.
President Brent Cart! deemed
the event a success because the
young chapter did not begin Ihe
way Rotary Club chapt ers
usually begin.
*‘We were unique from the
glt-go. Usually a chapter Is a
spin-off of a larger one. The
larger club sponsors the fledgl­
ing chapter, but we weren't
sponsored. Lake Mary was a
grass roots buneh of guys who
got together and here we are."
Carli said
One of the chapter'* founders.
Pete Jamison, was awarded a '
Paul Harris Fellow for his In­
volvement. Pete's wife. Miriam
airixed an award, a gold pin. lo
nis lapel.
Also honored were Ty Dedm an, whose w ife. Bett ye
assisted by pinning his Jacket

LACY
DOMEN
front, and the late Mack Blythe,
who was named Rotarian of the
Year In 1975 and died in an auto
accident a few years ago. His
wife. Muzcl. accepted the award
posthumously for him.
Scott Wyse explained a Paul
Harris fellow can be received
from the club, from a sponsor or
by personally donating to Ihe
scholarship fund. Money from
the Fellow goes Into the largest
scholarship fund In the world,
according to Carli.
Harry Terry was nominated by
a committee of past Rotarlans of
the Year and captured this honor
for 1990-91. Pete Jamison said
Harry won not because he came
up with one brilliant Idea nor
because he headed one special
project.
"H e was't necessarily the one
to be the frontrunner, but he ts
always the one to count on."
Jamison said.

Martha said she and Tim had
always wanted to take a cruise,
and now that they are both
retired, he from Seaboard
Systems where he worked as an
engineer, and she as an elemen­
tary guidance counselor from
Forest City Elementary School.

dinner, November 22. 11:30
a.m. to 2 p.m.. no charge, at the
Seventh Annual Thanksgiving
Dinner at Ihe First Baptist
Church, one-half block west of
State Road 19-92 on 434.
" W h e t h e r f o r f o o d or
fellowship or both, please Join
us." Susan said.
Martha said future plans In­
Rides will be provided, for
clude trips lo SelTner to visit those who need one. Church
with daughter Debbie Hudson, members can also deliver meals
her husband Chuck, and grand­ to shut-ins.
children Jessica. 14. Sarah. 12.
Susan said over 750 meals
and Meghan, 10.
were served last year, and 1.000
guests are expected this year. No
reservations are needed.
SBart Thanksgiving
"W e Just want to share our
Susan Reel and Mar sha Thanksgiving." Susan said.
For more Information, call
Oglesby Invite anyone and
everyone to share Thanksgiving 339-3817 or 834-1457.

June Helms led Ihe opening
ceremonies and inducted the
following Inlo the Silver Circle:
Vicki Hall. Glenda Emerson.
Marlene Clausen. Vcrtts Sauls.
A m orrl LuRosu and Joyce
Summci.
Marlene Clausen welcomed
the guests and Inducted Laurel
Tromblay and Marty Colegrove
Into the Order of the Rose.
The following Valentine Girls
were announced: Sally Gray. XI
Epsilon Sigma: Joyce Harvey. XI
Theta Epsilon: Marge Eakln.
Preceptor Beta lambda: Kitty
Corley. Preceptor Delta Delta:
Pat Johnson. Laureate Alpha
Tau: and Ann Nackino. BSP City
Council.
During the social hour. Magi­
cian Jalr Bonalr entertained the
women. 'He performed several
sensational feats of illusion lo
the delight of his audience.
Highlight of the day was the
appearance nf a delightful story
teller. Annette Bruce of Eustls.
As folksy as they come. Annette
held the women spellbound with
her sharp wit and sparkling
commentary. The vibrant skirt
she wore, fashioned of men's
neckties, matched her colorful
personality.
Labeled as the Official Story
Teller of Florida by Secretary of
Stale Jim Smith. Annette mid
several familiar stories but with
u different twist. In one Instance
when she was talking to her
aunt on the telephone, the sub­
ject of dieting surfaced. Annette
told the legendary aunt that she
didn't diet "on days that begin
with a T — Tuesday. Thursday,
today and tomorrow." She gen­
erated considerable laughter
from the highly appreciative
crowd.

Woman don't chew the let
Charlotte Balcombc Lane was
the guest speaker when the
Heathrow Women's Club met at
the Woman s Club of Sanlord for
the November meeting. Presi­
dent Marianne Basslte presided
over Ihe business session.
For luncheon, the women were
served a catered meal containing
880 calories from recipes In
Charlotte's recent cookbook. The
menu included roast chicken in
cherry sauce, barley pllaf. car­
rots und parsnips, spiced apple
ring and bread pudding.
Charlotte later spoke on low-

Nellie Coleman. Martha Stevens.
Martha Y a n c e y . Dorot hy
McRcynolds and Jcrl Llrk.

Garrett opan housa
Joe and Laura Garrett will be
honored on their 45th wedding
T
anniversary. Saturday. Nov. 24.
4ut open house ot the home or
id
their son and his wife. Otto and
od
Myrlam Garrett. 110 Brentwood
Drive.
All friends of the couple arc
cordially to call between the
hours of 2-5 p.m. to help the
Garretts celebrate the occasion.

Trio attanda parformanca
Jackie Caolo. Fonda Nobles
und Linda Sapp ventured to
Tnmpa Tuesday night. Nov. 13.
for the sole purpose of attending
the performance starring the
eminent Mikhail Baryshnikov.
Among those performing In
the show with the celebrated
dancer was Rob Hesse re r,
formerly of Sanford. Rob. son or
Jane and Robert Besscrer of
Tallahassee, also formerly of
Sanford, has been dancing pro­
fessionally for several years.
Incidentally. Jackie returned
last week from Dallas where she
said she shopped until she
dropped. In the Interim, she
broke her right hand, but says
she-is doing great. And that's
Jackie!

Holiday Bazaar aat
The Sanford Garden Club will
hold Ihe Holiday Bazaar ut the
clubhouse on Friday. Nov. 30.
horn 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.. and
Saturday. Dec. I. from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
The bazaar will feature a
variety of crafts, baked goods,
plants and other Items. The
public ts welcome.

Circla anjoys crulaa
Following the November meet­
ing. eight members o f the
Wlldflowcr Circle of the Sanford
Garden Club enjoyed Capt.
Hoy's Jungle Cruise down the
St. Johns River, according to
Shirley Simas, circle president.
Members brought a brown bag
lunch to the meeting and were
served cake, coffee and tea by
Florence Wehrweln. hostess.
(Doris District), retired Sanford
Herald Psopls editor, is a Herald
columnist covering Ihe Sanford
area. Phone: 322-4625.)

NEW ARRIVALS

Cruising into rstirsmsnt

Central Florida Regional Hospital

Tim and Martha Stevens. Lake
Mary, report after 26 years of
marriage, everything Is smooth
sailing.
The couple sailed Inlo the
C aribbean sunset recen tly,
cruising from Port Canaveral for
four nights In Nassau. Paradise
Beach and Salt Cay.

October 26 — Heather DePalma A Lawrence Chubb, baby
boy: Stephanie D. Turner f t
Kelvin L. Brown, baby boy.
October 27 — Ereclma V. ft
Kogcllo Ramon, baby girl: Mary
A. A Jeffrey P. Mtclkc, baby boy;
Diane J. Sumhrulo f t Roger L.
MrDonnough. baby girl.

October 28 — Melissa
Robert F. Hodge, baby girl.
October 29 — Monica A
Arias, baby girl: Nancy A
Rachow. baby girl.
November 2 — Ginger

C. &amp;
Juan
Murk

L. ft
Douglas G. Nelson. Deltona,
baby boy: Carol J. A John W.
Maxey. Sr.. Sanford, baby gtrl.

*
M

I

�Sanford Htrald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Kovsmbsr It, 1M0 — M

Special service marks holiday
T h e Martin L u t h e r K i n g
Steering Committee will hold tts
Pre-Thanksgiving Worship Serv­
ice on Wednesday. November
21. at 7:30 p.m. at Allen Chapel
A M E C h u r c h . 1203 O l i v e
Avenue. This special religious
service will Feature the Mass
Choir o f Allen Chapel AME
Church and Ihe guest speaker
w ill be the Rev. J. Wallace
Gaines. The community Is In­
v i t e d to a t t e n d this preThanksglvlng worship service.
Rev. J. Wallace Gaines was
bom in Port Smith. Arkansas.
He received his elementary edu­
cation in Dea Moines, Iowa, and
his Bachelor o f Fine Arts Degree
from Drake University where he
was comm issioned a second
Lieutenant, honor cade status. In
the U.S. Air Force. For three
years In succession. Rev. Gaines
was voted the most outstanding
junior officer, honorably dis­
charged at the rank of captain.
He continued his graduate
studies at the University o f
Virginia Law School, the College
o f William and Mary Law School.
Oklahoma City University In
pursuit of his Joint Law and
Master o f Business Administra­
tion degrees.
Rev. Gaines was called Into the
ministry and preached his trial
sermon on Palm Sunday, 1977.
In July o f that year, he served

Th e Martin Luther King
commemorative banquet tickets
will go on sale. Wednesday
evening at the pre-Thankaglvlng
Service at Allen Chapel. Tickets
are 97.90. children: $15 for
adults. T ick ets will also be
a vailab le from the Steerin g
C o m m i t t e e m e m b e r s . Mrs.
Shirley Allen is Banquet Chair­
man.

IN*. J. Watte* Oairw*
his first pastorate assignment at
Ihe St. Paul Baptist Church.
Wcwoka. Oklahoma. In January
1979. he was called as the senior
pastor o f the Antioch Baptist
Church. Waterloo. Iowa.
In S ep tem b er 1984. Rev.
Gaines was called to begin de­
veloping a new church based on
the word of God rather than
tradition In Ihe Waterloo area,
the Peace Baptist Church, of
which he named and founded.
There he assembled Ihe great
P eace B ap tist C h u rch
Evangelical Ensemble, one of Ihe
nation's great gospel choirs. *
He, has been active In social
concerns o f the needy, organlz-

tng clothing drives for children's
homes, free Thanksgiving din­
ners and Christmas dinners for
the less fortunate.
He has served as guest pre­
acher In various cities Including
Seattle, Boston. Dallas, New
York City, and Chicago.
Presen tly, he Is fast-track
m a n a g e r trainee. Southland
Corporation. Orlando.
C a llin g ch o ir m am bara
C a l l i n g all c h u r c h c h o i r
m em bers, concerned singers
w ho wish to become members of
the Martin Luther King celebra­
tion choir. Rehearsals are held
beginning Nov. 20. 7 p.m. at the
St. Paul M issionary B apllsl
Church. Ninth Street and Pine
Avenue. All concerned choir
members and all churches are
Invited to be a part o f this
community choir which Is under
th e direction o f Mrs. Mary
Whitehurst and Mrs. Gloria
Williams.

W lr v T v v r iliiV t T O

1*1 9 9 %

The Class Reunion Committee
o f the Classes o f 1950-59 will
meet today at 6 p.m. at the Elks
H om e. S e v e n t h St r eet and
Cypress Avenue. All concerned
people and classmates o f those
years are Invited to come and
help with the completion o f Ihe
plans o f the reunion to be held
during the Christmas holidays.
Richard Evans. Chairman.

Women's Oty a tuceots
The Hickory Avenue Church
o f God's Annual Women's Day
in October was Indeed a great
su ccess. D ea co n es s Bertha
Philllpe Brown was given Ihe
honor o f being awarded Patron
and Ad Winner. She solicited the
most funds for the Women’s Day
observance. First place In Group
Tw o was the honor she received.
She was presented a trophy for
each area and a trip for a
weekend vacation at the Marriott

Patron and AO mrtnnor D**eonot * Berth* Brown

When U ’s time fo r THE HOLIDAYS,

RENT it

All people are victims
of drug abuse problem
MART: I'm certainly
not in favor o f people using
drugs or selling drugs to kids,
but I think the government and
media are making too big a deal
o f the drug abuse problem today.
Most people don't abuse drugs,
even though they might have a
drink now and then, and don't
have anything to do with people
who do use drugs. So why do we
have to be bombarded with all
this talk about a problem that
only affects a small percentage
o f the pouplatlon.

SANFORD CITIZEN
DEAR CITIZEN: I can't tell

Mr. and Mr*. John Erie Stuart

John Eric Stuart marries
in New Mexico ceremony
CLOVIS. NM — Karen Diane
Murphy and John Eric Stuart
arc announcing their marriage
today. The wedding was an
event of August 4. 1990, 11
a m., at Cannon Air Force Base
Chapel. Clovis. NM. Chaplain
Frank Sherman. Major. USAF
performed the double ring cere­
mony.
The bride Is the daughter of
James and Patricia Murphy.
Yakimu. WA and the bride­
groom's parents are Timothy
and Janet Donahoe. Sanford and
Van Stuart of Sanford. He Is the
grandson of Loren and Ruth
Dougherty. Sanford.
Given In marriage by Tcmpler
Horry, friend of the bride and
groom, the bride chose for her
vows » blush peach satin wed­
ding gown. The gown featured u
dropped waist and she wore
matching satin gloves. The
strapless bodice was trimmed
with luce and the skirl featured
peach lace tiers with a high-low
iiemllnc. The bride’s hairpiece
was u matching satin bow
trimmed with simulated pearl
sprays and Iridescents. She wore
a pearl and Irldlsccnt necklace
and matching pearl earrings.

you how much I wish I could
agree with your letter, but let me
point uut to you some of the
ways our lives are Impacted by
drug use and abuse even If we've
never had a drug-related pro­
blem or have had no personal
contact wltff someone who has
had a problem with alcohol or
any other drug. You have been
victimized by the drug abuse
problem If you have experienced
any of these things:

She carried a cascading bouquet
1. paid federal or local taxes
of white and peach silk roses and
2. gone to school, or have had
carnations Interspersed with silk
lillles of the valley featuring long children In school
3. driven or ridden in a car
peuch satin ribbon streamers.
4. been a victim or a crime
Cheryl Mlcscn attended the
bride us Maid of Honor. She wore against your person or property
5. used or purchased health
a strapless peach satin, sleeve­
less g o wn with u basque cure Insurance.
waistline. The sirecl-lcnglh skirt
These are Just some of the
featured mutehlng satin tiers.
Her hairpiece was a pearl spray more impersonal ways we are all
with Iridescents and she wore a victims of the drug problem In
pearl and Irldlsccnt necklace. America, hut from this very
She curried a nosegay of white incomplete list, you can see why
and (teach silk roses and carna­ It Is probably Impossible to live
tions Interspersed with silk in America today without being
baby's breath featuring short personally Impacted by the pro­
blem of drug abuse In our
peach sutlu ribbon streamers.
Alan Thibodeaux of Altamonte society. And. finally, while this
Springs served the Krooni as
Best Mun.
A reception followed the cere­
mony ut the home of Tctnpicr
and Barbara Horry. Clovis. NM.
Af t er a we ddi ng trip to
Rebecca and James Bates.
Yakima. WA. the newlyweds arc Sanford, announce the birth of
making their home In Clovis. their son, Benjamin David, on
NM. T h e br i de g r o o m Is u No v e mb e r 2 at Physician s
sergeant In the U.S. Air Force Birthing Center, Longwood.
and the bride Is Sr. Airman. Maternal grandparents arc Rob­
USAF. They are bolh assigned to ert and June Smith. Sanford.
the 2040th Communications Pat er nal gra n d p aren ts are
Squadron. Cannon Air Force Jam es and Henrietta Bales.
Base. NM.
Winter Park.

D EAR ABB Y: I Just finished
reading the letter from "Happy
ut Lust In Oklahom a." the
H5• y c a r •o I d w o m a n w h o
changed her eating and health
habits ut age 80. Wlmt an
inspiring letter!
I am 31 and happily married
to a wonderful guy. We have a
preschool-age son. Like "Happy
In Oklahom a." I have also
doubled my weight and ant very
uncomfortable with my shape.
After reading that letter. I am
cneouraged to try harder. My
m oods dirtr.ted my rul i ng
habits. Whenever 1 felt bored,
lonely, sad or unhappy. I d eat.
Every Monday. 1 would begin a
new dirt, then I'd fall off it and
trv again. Abby. that lady's
Inspiring letter has changed my
llle forever. No more starving
mysel f, ovcrexercisln g and
beginning again for me. 1 will
begin right now to change mv

line has been used In many
contexts, it is also true here: " If
you arc not a part o f the
solution, you are a part o f the
problem."

FOR RESERVATIONS

C a ll

(Mary Balk hoMa a master's
degree In counseling and la a
eartlliad Addiction Fr*v*ntion
profatzkmal and counselor with
th* Drug Prevention Office of th*
Stmlnol* County School District.
Writ* to bar In cart of tho Harald
at 300 N. French Am ., Sanford,
32771.)

323-0910
S:or« Hour*:
Monday •Saturday
7 00 AM - S JO PM

W»remor»l

ADVICE
f

t
A BI G A I L
V A N BUREN

had habits.
I cut her teller out of my
newspaper and plan to keep it
handy for rclnforrcmcnt when
I’m tempted to "cheat." May
God bl ess i bi s wo nder f ul
Oklahoma lady. Thunk you.
Abby. for running her letter
CHANGING FOR GOOD AT 3 1
D E A R C H A N Q I N O : Many

other rradrrs were inspired by
thut letter. And for those who
m i s s e d It. h e r e a r e t h r
hie blights

"M y advice to people who
want to do what 1 did Re­
member, you didn't g&lt; fat
overnight. Ease- Into your new
huhlts. Never talk about what
you arc doing. Just do It! Let
others discover that you are
losing weight.
"First, cut down the size of yur
servings, then limit your meals
to healthy foods such as fruits,
vegetables, cereals, lean meat
and non-fat milk. Drink at leusl
10 glasses ol liquid a day (most
of It should be- water) When you
cut out the fats and sweets, you
will lie- surprlse-d at how good the
other foods taste. Even a baked
potato can be great. Sturt
t-xerelsing. Begin slowly, then
gradually Increase thr time, but
do it so regularly that It becomes
a habit.
"Meideratlun ts the key to
success. Substitute common
sense- for bud habits.

i fu s t

Rt WOtR-

1711 Ortondo Or.
U-S. 17-W
StMMOk PL 17771

FIRST CHRISTM AS
...A T I m e T o CelEbRATE

IN t Ne Sanford Herald
It's a very special time
for the whole family!
Celebrate your child's
first Christmas in this
newspaper. Send a
photo of your child or
grandchild along with a
special message and well
publish it in our Sunday
paper on December 23.

NEW ARRIVAL

In m atters of health and heart,
it’s never too late to c h a n g e

for 19 years In adult services.
Other winners were 2nd Place:
Lula Newkirk and 3rd Place:
Dorothy Brown. Congratulations
tool! of the winners.

In Daytona Beach.
Mrs. Brown Is the wife o f
Deacon Anthony Brown and she
Is a member of the church choir.
She has been employed at HRS

D o a d lin o : D R C tm b o r 18th

C o st: $13.00

Fill out coupon an d m ail to the
• e e H M U M H k e iR
^

v is a /m c

Accepted

&lt;t .
. . . ___ .
(fo have photo relumed.

,

please provide a itamped.
»*f ^dressed envelope.)

S A N F O R D HERALD, C lassified D e p t.
P .O . Box 1657, S a n fo rd , Florida 32772
322-2611
I----------------------“
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B A B Y S F IR S T C H R IS TM A S

Baby's Name___
lirih D a le _______

Parents________
Grandparent*__
Telephone ______
Amount Inclosed.
M essage________

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- Sanford Hfaid. Mnford, Florida — Sunday, Nottmbm 18, IMP

BLONDIE

By CMc Ymrv

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Nov. IS. 1MO

U U IJ

Those lucky financial breaks
fo r which y o u 'v e w alled so
patiently could be coming your
w ay In the year ahead. This
might well be Scorpio's turn for
fancy cars, homes and shopping

By Cbartot M. Sctwli

PEANUTS

*&gt;/ —

. xi f O

^

___________________ by Howto SctuwMor

EEK A MEEK

/ 1 c a n -th in k w

(Oct. 24-Nov. 23)
You could be rather fortunate in
your financial alfkirs today, but
not where partners are Involved.
Lady wants you to try to build
your resources on' your own.
Scorpio, treat y ou rself to a
birthday gift. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead by mailing t l.2 5 to
Astro-Graph, d o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. OH
44101*3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Today what is best for you
might not necessarily be best for
som eone with whom y o u 're
closely involved. It will be belter
for ail concerned to make your
decisions logically, not em o­
tionally.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Follow your instincts and
hunches today, because they
could provide you with con­
structive insights in your com ­
mercial attaint. U's these divi­
dends that’ll supply you with the
edge.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Make definite plans for a fun
day, starting with the compa­
nions with whom you want to
share It. Select friends whose
wit. humor and Interests are on
the samb wavelength as yours.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20)
It's Important today that you
establish meaningful objectives
for yourself, because you can be
outstanding at anything you
undertake. These days don't
come along often, so make the
most o f it.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Depart from your usual routines
today and do something dif­
ferent. If it is out-of-doors and
enables you to move around
mentally and physically, with a
touch of adventure attached, uil
the better.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A
Joint venture in which you're
I nvol ved that has financial
overtones Is proceeding In the
right direction, but if your
expectations are too high, you

YOUR BIRTHDAY
N*v. IB, 1BR0

ARLO ANO JANIS

by Jtmmy Johnson

by Bob Thovos

FRANK AND ERNEST

Factors that are presently
screened from view will com e
Into play in the year ahead In
helping you advance personal
interests, especially those which
are o f a material rather than an
esthetic nature.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Advice from a well-intentioned
friend will not be on par with
you r own thinking today in
matters that pertain to your
reputation or material security.
Heed your own counsel. Send for
y ou r Astro-Graph predictions
today. Mall t l . 2 5 to AstroGraph, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
B ox 91 42 8, C l e v e l a n d, OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Several elusive and hard to
see people you've been trying (o
contact regarding a matter o f
Importance should be available
today. Stick with It until you
open the lines o f communica­
tion.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) That which you do on your

j j i

tOUaSMIgM
lU M p H

may be disappointed.
GEMINI (M ay 21-June 20)
Verbal or written contracts in
which you enter today have good
chances o f succeeding, provided
your Intent is in harmony with
the Intent o f your counterpart.
Don't be greedy.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You may have to work very hard
for what you hope to get today,
but strong motivation will go a
lon g w ay tow ards lessening
discomfort. Focus your mind
only on your objective.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A new
contact made In a social situa­
tion today could prove to be
beneficial for you. even though

you're not likely to recognize the
worth o f this relationship Imme­
diately.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Once you make a commitment
today, see It through to Its
completion, even If the going
gets a bit lough. You can
successfully finish what you
start If you're tenacious.
LIRRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Plans o f importance to you may
be changed today due to situa­
tions over which you have no
control. These revisions, howev­
er. could turn out much luckier
for you than your own concept.
(0 1 9 9 0 . NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

own today la not likely to be as
rewarding for you as aomething
that w ill be prearranged by
another on your behalf. Stick
with your beat bet.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
T w o friends who aren't getting
along too well might Indirectly
contribute to your social pro­
minence. Each will use you as
their Intermediary in delicate
dealings with others.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Perseverance and fortitude could
begin paying off for you starting
today In an endeavor you've
been working on that drew little
encouragement from others.
ARUM (March 21-Aprll 19) If
you fed a bit luckier than usual
today. U's probably predicated
upon some solid Justification.
However, thinking positive goes
a long way toward tuning you In.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Something to which you’ve been
dedicated lately may take a big
turn for the better today owing
to favorable outside factors. CapI t a l l z c on p r e v a i l i n g
circumstances.
QEM1NI (May 21-June 20)
You could be exceptionally lucky

In partnership arrangements for
social or commercial purposes
today, especially In situations
where your ally Is a member of
the opposite gender.
CANCBR (June 2 1J u ly 22)
The tried, true and traditional
tactics are the ones that'll bring
you the best results today in
your financial affairs. Departures
from tested procedures will be
less effective.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll
be more successful today If you
make It obvious to people with
whom you're associated that the
g o o d t h i ng s y o u w a n t for
yourself, you also want for them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today you might get a new.
positive perspective on a situa­
tion you have thus far viewed
rather negatively. Now you'll be
able to see opportunities where
you previously saw opposition.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
are presently in a rather fortu­
nate cycle where good things
you have going for you tend to
get better. However. If you take
your luck for granted, you might
regret It later.

WIN A T BRIDGE
facing a singleton? Care was
required In the play. West led a
Basic bridge is taught as a club. If declarer ever made the
simple and logical game, rela­ mistake o f leading a second club,
tively gimmick-free. As students he would com e up short In his
progress and become more expe­ quest for 12 tricks. The winning
rienced. they adopt a few bid­ play Is to wtn the club, cash the
ding gadgets to improve their A-K of diamonds, then cash the
results. Some of these gadgets ace and king o f spades. After
com e to the fore In today's that, declarer can crossruiT for
bidding. Three spades was an 12 tricks. At trick 13. he will lose
artificial response to two no- a spade to a long trump In
trump, promising length in both West's hand. This particular use
minors, plus values to play at o f three spades as a response to
least a game. So South duly bid two no-trump is an adjunct of
h is four-card club suit. By J a c o b y t r a n s f e r b id s. T h e
partnership agreement. North's method can be played only by
bid o f four hearts now showed a partnership agreement, and of
singleton heart and implied In­ course the opponents are en­
terest In getting higher than five titled to be Informed of this
dubs. So South Just went right special agreement.
to slam. What could he hold ( 0 1 9 9 0 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
better than A-x-x-x o f hearts TERPRISE ASSN.

NORTH
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by Leonard Starr

ANNIE
BUGS BUNNY

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday,

House
N o l t f o u n d e d the
Neighborhood Association
Bringing Home Repairs to Se­
niors which provided free home
repair to elderly poor In the
nty. After volunteering for
‘ county.
the Meals
On “Wheels
pitrogram,
Is O
“
which provl
rides hot micals for
senior shutlns. Nolt realised the
great need many seniors on fixed
Incomes have for home repairs.
"W e painted and patched and
sewed and cleaned and talked
and listened 'til w e can do
nothing else but continue to
paint and patch a n d h e says.
When Nolt realised Blue's little

house could no longer be pat­
ched. he sought help In building
a new one.
Noll considered an affiliation
with Habitat International and
met with Victor Koepke In De­
land. He discovered the group
was doing Just whal his group
wanted to do: help neighbors to
a better life.
Noll has been busy collecting
donations, materials and money,
from varied sources. He needs
• 1.600 for each o f the 12
building days until Christmas It
will take to complete the frame
structure.

foundation Is In place.
Blue cannot help with the
actual building, as many Habitat
home recipients have done, but
site will serve as monitor o f
communications, fielding phone
calls and relaying messages, to
do her part Cor Habitat's growth.
She Is excited.
"It means everything to me. If
It wasn't for Pastor. I guess I'd be
gone through the floor by n ow ."
she says.

The trench for the concrete

Th e man with the big half-aheart w ould never let
that
happen.
" I have the best Job In the
w orld." he says.

□ C — tlaw ad Irani Page 1C
She did not see Scarlett for
you sec stars seven months because o f an
from the pain." she says.
outbreak o f chicken pox at her
Rosier was diagnosed with
school. J a so n 's grad es fell
AML. a leukemia which strikes because he w as so Worried about
his mother.
young people and Is very swift,
very deadly.
She lost her hair from the
"T h e white blood cells rat up treatment. It will not grow back.
the red ones like Pac Man." she
"One In 250.000 don't get
says. " I was more dead than
their hair back. I'm the one. I
alive within days."
wish I had those odds for the
Roster's ordeal Included en- lottery,'* she says.
during a bone marrow
transplant and living In a sterile
Rosier occupied one o f ten
e n v i r o n m e n t , b e c a u s e the b e d s for A M L p a t i e n t s at
operation destroys the Immune Shands. She became close
system.
, friends with another AML pa­
"It look mine 140 days to kick tient. Maria.
back In." she says.
" I was so excited for Marla

when her hair grew back. W e
thought we m ight be o k a y ."
Rosier says.
Rosier Is the only one o f the 10
AML patients who Is still alive.
"A re you cured for g ood ?"
Jason asks.
"T h e y don't kn ow ." Rosier
a n s w e r s h o n e s t l y as sh e
explains she,'Is In post bone
marrow remission and her pro­
gnosis looks good.
"W e hope sot" Jason adds.
"W e 're very glad to have you.
m om ," Scarlett says as she hugs
Rosier.
'T m very glad to be here."
Rosier, teary-eyed, says as she
squeezes her children to her.

Leukemia

SUNDAY'S TELEVISION

Syndicated columnist George Will has
‘ always been a booster of American Ideals. He
chronicles the effects of those Ideals In this
country and Internationally In his latest
collection o f cohimms,
"Suddenly: The
American Idea Abroad and at Home 19861990.".
WUI sees what he defines as the American
Idea — political and econom ic diversity
protected by limited government — behind the
momentous changes in the world during the
last half of the decade. "In the late 1980s, In
the Soviet Union and Its satellites, history
exuberantly took a bop. skip and a Jump and
the world was suddenly belter." he writes In
the book's forward.

(Kaspf. 109 FP-*
Garfield move over. Cat cartoons are going
upscale.
The collection of 101 cal comics from 65
years of The New Yorker m afM lnr may be
drawn with a bit more finesse than past forays
into feline humor, but the Jokes are basically
the same: the antics of arrogant cats and the
trials o f doting owners, dum b dogs and
beleaguered birds and mice.
Some of the beat comics are tboee without
In Warren Miller's world, a cat tags along
with a group o f birdwatchers replete with a
miniature set of binoculars. Miscna Richter's
moonlit scene of a tall castle silently lowering
Its drawbridge to let out a solitary cat for a
night of regal hunting.

But in the second section o f the collection.
WUI finds that the report la not so encouraging
at home.-with the American Idea not faring as
well. The conservative sees America In “ flight
from the rigors o f governance and from the

T H IS W U K 'S B U T
FICTION

MAflB PAPBRRACRB

1. l.a n g lk s t — Dick Francis (last week No. 4
— 4.899 copies ordered)
2. Tha witching Haar — Anne Rice (2 —
2,591)
3. B u r d e a a fF r a a f— Scott Turow (2,426)
4. Under Beige — Stephen Coonts (S —

1. D o w n — V.C. Andrews (2 — 12.248)
2. Ronoownbli D oubt — Phftp Friedman (1
-3 .9 2 0 )
3. Tho Q ua ethmur— Stephen King (2.928)
4. ft — StephenXJng (2,857)
5. D raw in g o f tho T h e ** — Stephen King
(2.857)
6. Tho Varoptro Lonta t — Anne Rice
12.260)
7. D a fg y — DanleDe Bteete ( 3 - 1,874)
8. W «b ataff*a N o w W o rld D iction ary
(1.676)
9. D m t k O m O m -J o e Weber (IA S S )
10. D oth H a lf-S te p h e n King ( 9 - 1.548)

2 .211 )
5. Ptalas af Passage — Jean Auel (3 —
2145
6. Lady Bees— Jackie Collins (1 - 1.860)
7 . 'Memoriae af Midnight — Sidney
Sheldon (1.206)
8. Buffalo Girls — Larry McMurtry (10 —
1.108)
9. la Praia* of t*e Btepoaathar — Mario
Vargas Llosa (1.014)
10. Rabbit at Rost - John Updike (959)

itTlOBrnwulWy

W K i i

m

grandeur of politics."
W ill’s usual wtt and finely crafted turn of
phrase la evident throughout this enjoyable
book, which concludes with columns on tilings
that matter moat to the author: his children,
h la pet peeves, and of course, baseball.

n o iS i

S

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E S ywt **t I'Wi ft"4 war, i» fwwta

5

iitw e ifw ta i

i. Icuamei H f l B

U"_ S te rn a Imw-Tv g

NON-FICTION
1. Millie's Bsob — Millie, as told to Barbara
Bush 12 -5 .0 3 2 )
2. Tha Civil Wan Aa Olaatratad History
— Geoffrey Ward (1 - 4.776)
3. F leetw ood — Mick Fleetwood (3 — 3.920)
4. A Life on tho Road — Charles Kuralt
(3.264)
5. Tha Book of J — David Rosenberg and
Howard Bloom |3.140)
6-. Oet to tho Heart — Barbara Mandrel)
12.988)
7. Dr. Dean Ornish's Program far a
Healthy Heart — Dean Ornish (4 — 2.130)

W ynd (3 ” 3 ” Tho Bnoswft M a ry a f In a ra P alm ar Laura Palmer (1 — 3,067)
4. Tha A a lh a rlle liv e C alvin m i M i l es

— BIU Watteraon (2.789)
5. T ropi n o f Pan SOT — Henry Miller (7 1.691)
r o g R a -jil— .
H IM U T 6

8. How to Satisfy a Woman Every Tima —

55555K5

Naura Hayden (1,816)
9. Tha Content of ear Character — Shelby
Steele (1.761)
10. Ton Just Daa't Understand —
Deborah Tannen (1,534)

Rankings baaed on orders to Ingram Book
Co. from more than 7.000 bookstores na­
tionwide.

B gM am pm i
H jy n n w

The following new books are now available
at the Seminole County Public Library:

_ Dr. Robert
Hemfelt (Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1990).

Tom IHflM IW 5HOI W o

******

HHNi

iy w 4 P»tfon »i Ogiuo B J L iU j j .

****»»

m w y A l* lq * wyw c r w m r y t tl"»l

Ifafrrai a

. . . &gt; , lim t o n g !

—
t d

FICTION
T b s A ssassin — Thomas Gifford (Bantam.
1990).
B ad Lack — Anthony Bruno (Delacorte
Press, 1990).
T b s Pin al c tn b — Geoffrey W olff (Alfred A.
Knopf. 1990).
P la y in g tb s D ossas — William D. Pease
(Viking. 1990).
T lg a n a — Guy Gavrtcl Kay (Penguin Books.
1990).

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NON-FICTION
M a yb s Ton K n ow M y K id — Mary Cahill
Fowler (Birch Lane Press Books. 1990).

(Harper ft Row Publishers, 1990).
R a a a a r a h P l a d l a g s a a B a s a b la g a f
A W o o d Bnhntanena — National Institute on
Drug Abuse (U.S. Dept, o f Health and Human
Services. 1990).
These books are now available at the
library's north branch In Sanford, northwest
branch In Lake Mary, west branch In Longwood, east branch In Oviedo and central
branch In Casselberry.

Skills

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g B S E R i M i it t M r m :* *

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Trask* Aetata Alaabai A Dug Bled
Jen ra sy — Akstatr Scott (Atlantic Monthly
Press, 1990).

TlWi D,^ 0 » M n ~
(1M0. CanWyl Qo«o* m.^T

m W i'W iG S IT ,

For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, Nov. 16

Just because he said I was
stupid, doesn't mean It's true."
"flo w did you know what my
dad used to say to m e ? "
Christine answered.
Harrison said part of letting go
of the emotional baggage Is to
stop blaming others for pro­
blems. She uses positive state­
ments and encourages her stu­
dents to see themselves In an "I
can be better" situation Instead
of telling themselves "I can't do
it because".
"W e udd respect and respon­
sibility to each student's vocabu­
lary." Harrison said.
Harrison said gaining selfrespect is also not easy. Often
the public feels lawbreakers
cannot be rehabilitated which
adds to feelings of low self­
esteem for a person who has
made a mistake.
She Is tough on her students,
setting stringent guidelines for
assignments. She loses almost
half o f them, when they are not
ready to face the stark reality of
themselves.
"Th e students who participate
are really wonderful, great peo­
ple." Harrison said.
The ones who make It through
are thankful for the experience.
" I no longer look at myself and
feel pain." Linda said
Christine who is training for a
new profession In computers
said. " T h e course was the
beginning building block for the
foundation of my future It Is
where I learned to lx- responsible
to and lor mysell and to take
chargc ol my destiny, t would
not be doing whal I ant doing
today had 1 not begun taking
s te p s w it h

Valerie ” s h e said

Mike has set career goals and
now chooses his friends wisely.
"Misery loves company, but
I'm not miserable anymore," he
said.
Puul is now working In com­
munity service and volunteers
his time for homebound persons.
He Is rebuilding a once dlsfunctlonal relatlonshl
"I learned to fiy.'
fly
he simply
said.

NAVY SEALS
ROBO COP U

VERTICAL
• FREE in home estimates
• Large selection to
choose from
• Prom pt Friendly Service
Quality Workmanship
W e Do Replacement Slats
Custom Valances

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m ini-blinds, call

SANFORD VERTICALS
“A Beautiful New Direction For Windows"

73asa&amp;Sa&amp;-

fwFaeoi

�M - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida — Sunday, November 18. 1000

Education
IN B R I E F
Lake Mary L8AC to maat ’
LAKE MARY - The Lake Mary High School Local School
Advisory Committee will be meeting tomorrow. Nov. 19. at 7
p.m. in the school's media center.
Lake Mary High School la located.at 655 Longwood-Lake
Mary Rd. In Lake Mary.
The meeting Is open to any parent of a Lake Mary student.
Volunteer* are needied on a number of LSAC sub-committees.

SAT prep court# to atari
LAKE MARY — A preparation course to help students get
ready to take the SAT will begin tomorrow at 5 p.m.
The class will meet once a week until January 24. Time will
be given off for the winter holidays.
For more information or to register for the class, call Evon
Lisle at 330-0179.

Tarrifle Tuesdays for Paronts
SANFORD — The Parent Resource Center at Seminole
Community College will be working In cooperation with the
Ascension Lutheran Church In Casselberry on a project they
call Terrific Tuesdays.
The program offers arts, crafts, music, songs and games for
parents and their children to do together. It w ill meet at the
church. 351 Ascension Dr. In Casselberry.
The coat of participation In the group Is SI per child per week
for members of the Parent Resource Center IPRC). A PRC
membership costa S25 per year.
To register, call the center at Seminole Community College
at 323-1450. ext. 575 or call 321 -4682.

Locals participate In Wofford Scholars
SPARTANBURG S.C. - Heather C. Pegrarn. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William H. Pegrarn o f Sanford and Sharman Regina
Mooney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.C. Mooney o f Longwood,
recently participated In the 41st annual Wofford Scholars
Program at Wofford College.
Pegrarn Is a student at Seminole High School and Mooney Is
a student at Lyman High School.
To complete, students must rank In the top 10 percent o f
their class and have a minimum S A T score o f 1050 or an S A T
■core of 24. They must also be active In extra-curricular school
and community activities.
The two students Interviewed with various members o f the
Wofford faculty and student body In a contest to cam
scholarships.

Homecoming festivites
finished for Ram court
HlQh school correspondent
LAKE MARY - The 1990
H o m e c o m i n g K i n g and
Q u e e n , s e n io r s Mike
Merthle and Aahlyn Slone,
w e r e cr owne d before a
crowd o f students and de­
spite a growing rainstorm
Friday afternoon. Nov. 9. at
the Homecoming festivities
dwindled to their close for
this year.
The Homecoming Court
was presented at 1:30 p.m.
after a shortened school day
fo r th e s t u d e n t s . T h e
members were carried by
c o n v e r t i b l e B M W s and
Mercedes around the track
as raindrops began to fall.
Representing the Juniors
were Anush Collins. Angle
Roberson. Beth Moore. Matt
Greene. Vicki Douglas and
Mike McKenna.
.
Se ni or representatives
were Katie Gilliam, Colby
Berger. Jenn Moore. Chris
Haney. Amy Rayburn.

M arcus C o b b e. Laura
R au ch . K e v i n Mlllonlg.
Merthle and Sloan.
A s 1989 Q u e e n y tl l*
Douglas crowned Sloan and
p rin c ip a l Don Sm ith
crowned Merthle. the rain
cam e down In torrents,
causing a mass exodus from
t h e s t a d i u m by t h o s e
without the shelter of um­
brellas. As the royal couple
JroVe around the field one
last time, senior chorus
members Shelly Gllckson
and Corey Harrelson sang
the seniors' song. "For Just
a Moment." from the movie
St. Elmo's Fire.
The Rams went on to v ln
the football gam e against
Lyman In a tough battle
that made aa hero out of
Haney. Although the event
was mosquito-free, the rain
made It an somewhat un­
pleasant experience.
Said Merthle o f his honor:
"It felt great to be named
Homecoming King. I never
expected to win. I couldn't
stop smiling all nlghtl"

Students
teachers
a pan of the activity. Many
High school correspondent
“ I found out It Is not
always easy." said senior
Bobby Jones.
Bobby and other students
had the chance to observe
and perform the duties o f
teachers, administrators,
and office personnel.
Jones took on the dutues
o f Mr. Gene Williams, the
Dean o f Students. He got a
behind-the-scenes looks at
the school's discipline of­
fice.
As part or American Edu­
cation Week, the students
signed up to be student
teachers
and admluislrators for the day.
A m e r ic a n Education
Week was Nov. 12 through
Nov. 16. Student-Teacher
Day was held on Wednes­
day. Nov. 14. It was only
one o f the activities done to
celebrate the event.
Dressing for the role was

tried to dress like the teach­
ers or adm inistrator for
whom they were substitut­
ing.
Th e teachers for-a-day
also had the responsibility
to know about their tempo­
rary Jobs. I f going over
notes, student teachers had
to be familiar with the
information In the notes.
Some had to come up with
their own lesson plans.
" I decided to assign a
c r e a t i v e e s s a y , " s ai d
Akelshalon Toom er. who
taught for English teacher.
Mrs. Maxine Bodlford.
Student participants re­
ceived certificates and a
better understanding o f the
workings and dealings of
Seminole High School.
" I had fun working in the
office and learning the
phone system; It gets busy
In the office." said Patty
Clark, senior, who worked
with the receptionist Mrs.
Sherry Herron.

Star Lab a hit with the kids
■y VICKI DalQWSMIW
Herald ataff writer

On Thursday at Midway Elamantary School, first grads tsachsr
Batty KuyksndaJI prasantad principal Laroy Hampton with a
certificate of appraclation for his work with the students at the
school. The presentation was a part of the school's American
Education Weak activities.

Pine Crest Honor Roll
KINDERGARTEN: Kendrle Adam*. Klrttan
Banka. Kyi* Barrier, Lloyd Bavarly, Jackla
Banntr. Krlilophtr Brtodon. Matthew
Brawn. Cyndall Bryant. Byron Carr, Curtlt
Cagbum. Lydia Callejo. Brlttnaa Cook. Saras
Coultar, Laura Dyau. La*lay Earl and Taj ay
Evan*.
Shan* Farrall, Erin Flaming, John
Oackanback Rally Carman. Klmmy
Garman, Nlchela Hallman. Sara Hamrick.
Timmy Hgdlck. Danny Hugh**. Tanlahla
Huntar. Dalvln Ingram, Sandrla Inman,
Rannla Jalterd*. Tylar Join*. Aihlay Johnson
and Loytorlo Jonat.
Jannltar Karra*. Mlchall* Lock*. Jannlfar
Mangum, Myrna Marrero. BroSa Martin.
Haathar McCatkay. Pamala Morrlion, Sutan
Palmar. Whltnay Partial. Victoria Parry.
Magan Plckrtn. Jaton Palookl. Jack Pooia.
Maureen Prla»t, Ryan Quinn. Nall Robartton.
Chrlttlna Rack. Haathar Roacoa. Shawnika
Rayaiy and Kirk Ruuall
Ravanda Scott. Amanda Sada. Babble
Skatat. Bobby Smother*. Doug Snydar,
Laura Ipancar. Jama* Spray. Laanord Sttta.
Wlllla Strlngar. Chrlity Sullivan. D«nny
Tannar, Stephanie Thorn#*. Amanda Valno.
Latraw Watdm. Wabb Walton, Buddy Wabb.
Danlal Whltad. Jathua Wilkin*. Adam
Wratchlard and Coray Young.
FIRST GPA0E: Wayna Appling. Amy
Armltaga. Jannltar Beetled. Anna Baattlad.
Krltlan Baatitad. Nikki Bacon. Rana Banka.
Adrian Bono*. Jama* Barm*. Tanya Barrio*.
Anna Bavarly. Alicia Bohannon. Tristan
Brataar. Brandon Bryant. Sandra Burkay.
Sabrina Doshnar. Mlchaal Oonay and Mat
IhawDuabury.
Sharyl Fauvor. Kavln Fallon. Slacay Flat
char, Vanll Fantanai. Krlstan Faata.
Zabranda Fraanay. Aihlay Franch. Trlnalca
Gain**. Adam Goldman. Ambar Grlltln.
David Hamilton. Jarmilar Hay*. Barbara
Hat*. Allan Hill, Jarmilar Hokamb. Nlkl
Heaack and Al*cta Huntar.
Lakachla Jacktan. Braeka Kaallng.
Haathar Mooting. Oantal Kaltay. Emma Kay.
Rabacca LaRot*. Rabacca Lambart. China
Lowranca. Craig Ladbattar. Aorron Laval*.
Tony Llttla*. David Markla. Katira Moora.
Xavlar Narvaai and Kandi Otborn
Jada Poplin. Ilabel Quinn. Haalhor Reyma.
Aihlay Robartton. Rabart Roatch. Hilary
Slliby. Tarrla Smith. Marlon Oalo Spain.
Joshua Spark&gt;. Synthya Sianlay, Andraa
Slona. Vamon Taylor. Jomat Tlllinghott.
Tomoro Trullllo. Krlttln Waovar. Connor
Williams, Jason Williams. Liquonnla
Wlllltord. Jomat Winttrt and Tisha Wor lay
SECOND GRADE: Outlin Annalt. Latasha
Badgar. Haathar Ballay. Andra* Baatty.
Tamaca Ball. Amanda Blair. Tony Bohannon.
Krlstan Bradbury. Mary Bradlay. Bradley
Brodarkt. Mkhala Brooks. Christina Brawn.
Brltnaa Burgats. Chris Calhoun. Tomlllla
Chariot. Christina ChacatUy and Vlnctnt
Couto
Aihlay Davis. Calara Davis. Jackla Oavis.
Bntnia DaShan*. Maghann Oohorty. Nicholas
Oonay. Darrlck Eason. Ntthan Ehlart.

Roaamary Falk. Mkhaal Flaming, jarmilar
Gallaghar, Janalla Gray. Jamla Grlma*.
Staphanla Hicks. Travis Hlmat and Jaromy
Holloway.
Shaun Johnson. Klmbarly Juno, Lana
Laad|all. Kyla Lablt. Slacay Lambart. Dustin
Lawson. Laura Lawlt. Vanasta Llggont. Bath
Lindsay. Bradlay Locka. Brian Mack. Nicola
Martin. Amanda McLain. Shi von Me Lamb.
Wattar Minis. Jamal* Mltchall. Matthaw
Nalton. Shan* Nation and Bath Ann Nutt.
Justin Parshall. Jarmilar Pool*. Jostle*
Pooia. Vanasta PrlvaH. Tylor Rankin. Chris
Rsad. Sarah Reck. Cadrtc Sanders. Jlrl
Smalkal, Nlchoiat Smith. Shaana Stanley.
Eric Stognar, Matlssa Strickland. Kelly
Thompson. Jacarrs Tillman. Vonotte
Tokari. Wallis Wotson. Bradford Walborn.
Christina Woodtoy. Curtlt Woodworth and
Chamackla Young.
THIRD GRAOE: Brsntony Ammarman. Ban
Baker. David Bekar. Bryan Barrier. Tracy
Backwlth, Nation Bavarly, Mlstyn Bridge*.
M acKaml* Carroll. Jessica Chacaftky,
Nkoia Coak, Jacalyn Couto. Barbara Crouaa,
Theresa Darrow. Tablth* DaLay, Jenna
Clllott. Cynthia Farrall. Shaana Gracay.
Travis Griffin. Mlchall* Gulllan. Mohtan
Habibi. Catharln* Hicks. Jill Hoban and
Gaatfroy Holland.
•
Hector Intent*. Haathar Johnson. Soon
Kaltay. Brandatyrm* Knight. Angela Lum.
Jacob Moya. Karri* Murray. Matthew Mur
ray. Jots* Olivo. Tiffany Parsons. Nlkathla
Pottus. Kimberly Playar. Garth Robartton.
Coray Ret*. Krystal Sanders. Klmbarlt*
Strickland. Amy Thames. Daniel Vlano.
Jannltar Vestal. William Wlkos. Chamlar
Williams and LoTatha Wynn
FOURTH GRADE: Theresa Blalchnar.
Adam Brldgsi. Kerry Brown, Jshn Bryant.
Stpahanl* Cato. Amanda Caha. Hunter Oavis.
Charles dtLera. Brtnna Doherty. Rabacca
Donay. Devon Drury. Katly Faster. Mkhalla
Fas. Haathar Hardin. Erk Holland and
AUrtlaal^ohntfn. Chrltlaphar Llbarto.
Jarrott Maiockl. Nlchoiat Mailoy. Rkky
Mandat. Audrey May*. Lor In* Nuattla.
Joshua Parshall. Jattlca Pool*. Lionna
Proant*. Jami* Robinson. Chris Stogiwr.
Tanya Sian*. Mal l s t a Towt rs. Sam
Vanaman. Bath Walker and Mails** Witt*.
FIFTH GRADE: Billy Appling. Rabacca
Benton. Joann* Bo*. LastI* Bradbury. Share*
Bradford. Jattlca Butters. Daneid Cadman.
Haathar Collins. Chris Crudtn. Johnathan
Dennis. Jessica Elliott. Brook* Francis.
Jannltar Grimes. Oanlsa Hall, Matt
Hershberger. Tracy Hetcem, Andraa Hays,
Patrkk Halms, Tikatha Hinas tnd Melissa
Hogan.
Shannon Jackson. Brian Johnson. Sondro
Janos. Gregory Llggont. Chari* May.
Jaramiah Mitctwll. Stpahanl* Murray, Blllt*
Jo Mutter. Shan* Nawman. Trsvor Oliva.
Danis* Parker, Jamas Parsons. Shawnda
Pollard. Tlttany Price. Emily Richard*.
Katl* Roatchlotn. Crystal Rogtrt. Harry
Sandtrs. Oabr* Tamplaten. Mkhalla Van
dsrnoot. Chris Wllkarton. Jessica Wilson and
Brett Witt*

SANFORD - The large silver
igloo bobs lightly back and forth
‘ as two dozen youngsters scurry
o u t i n t o the l i g h t o f t h e
luncroom at Stenstrom Elemen­
tary School as students at other
schools have done In their own
lunchrooms.
They squint until their eyes
adjust to the light outside the
Star Lab. an Inflatable planetar­
ium. purchased by the school
district for about 1 10.000 a
couple o f years ago.
It Is making the round from
one school to another. With the
em phasis on the Integrated
learning curriculum, teachers
from all subject areas are able to
bring the study o f astronomy to
their charges.
A language arts class studying
the books of Laura Ingalls Wilder
learned about the Indian legends
of the stars In their unit o f life on
the prairie.
"Oh. It's loads of fun for the
kids." said Ruth Meyers, a fifth
grade teacher who was using the
Star Lab that day to teach her
students about the mythological
Greek figures for which many of
the constellations arc named.
The students had gathered
across the room to put their
shoes back on their feet before
heading for the food line.

Signs of the times

" I t was Just like a carnival
ride." one of them called out to
another.
Mey er s s mi le d knowingly,
"B u t they learned something In
the m eantime."
According to Bettte PalmerSpratt. the sch ool district's
coordinator o f science Instruc­
tion. the Star Lab can be used by
students at any grade level from
K i n d e r g a r t e n t hr oug h high
school, but that It Is most
popular at the elementary level.
"T h e younger kids really love
the Star Lab." she said. "T h ey
forget they're learning."
Inside the Inflatable shell, the
night sky Is projected onto the
black background. A pump
circulates air In the unit with a
l o u d h u m m i n g n o i s e not
normally associated with such
a clear view o f the stars.
"T h e y don't even notice the
so u n d ." Meyers said o f her
students.
In addition to projecting the
night sky os it looks at various
times during the year, the Star
Lab Is also equipped to give
students a view o f the continents
as they would appear from the
center of the earth and a study of
the geological plates that make
up the earth.
" I t gives the kids a new
perspective to see the earth from
Inside the globe." Meyers said.

HeraMPSetefegTaouny Vlneani

Kellen Williams, 12, president ol the sixth grade class and Greg
Flynn, 13, secretary ot the seventh grade class, hold up some
of the posters made by their fellow students to salute bus
drivers for a job well done.

Seminole County School Board
W h a t’s fo r lu n o h t
Monday, Nov. 19
Tasty steak nuggets
Scalloped potatoes
Baby carrots
Roll
Milk

Roll
Milk
Wednesday, Nov. 21
Manager's Choice
Thursday, Nov. 22
No School. Thanksgiving Holi­
day.

Tuesday, Nov. 20
Italian spaghetti with meat
Friday Nov. 23
sauce
No School. Thanksgiving Holi­
Tossed salad
day.
Chilled pineapple chunks

Gathering up gifts for
Rams in Desert Shield
L AKE MARY — Operation
Desert Shlld has touched the
lives o f a good portion o f Ameri­
cans In a personal way.
" A lot of people know someone
who has been shipped over
there." said Fran Kemp, the fine
arts department head at Lake
Mary High School who helped
organize a gift drive to send
Christmas presents to Lake Mary
High School graduates and other
local residents who ure stationed
In the Saudi Arabian desert.
Right now there are about 15
soldiers on their list, but trans­
fers and additions cause the list
to change constantly.
"W e hope to send packages for
Valentine's Day and Easter If
they're still there then.” Kemp
said.
Students from the school's art
cla sses gathered up books,
non-perishable food, games,
snacks and toiletries. They
packaged them In brightly col­
or ed pa ck a g es , both store
bought tiags and hand painted
l&gt;a|M-r lied up with neon ribbons.
"This Is part of the school's
tlu-ine of Rams care." Kemp
said.
Frank Schwartz, an occupa­
tional sprcfallsi who helped the

The Lake Mary fine arts depart­
ment packs Christmas gifts for
Operation Desert Shield.
fine urts department organize
the event said that the students
at Lake Mary High School have
taken an projects to help the
community, the environment
and the world.
" The y' ve done things from
this to cleaning up the highway
In front of the school to collect­
ing food for the hungry." he
said.

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                    <text>TH URSDAY

D e c e m b e r 1*3, 1 9 9 0

N E W S D IG E S T

Chiles likely to choose HRS chief from department staff
By MICMAIL WOUN8
United Press International

□ Sports
Night play resumes
Roger Beathard. coordinator of Physical Edu­
cation for the Seminole County School Board
and executive secretary of the Seminole Athletic
Conference. Informed high school principals und
athletic directors they may resume scheduling
outdoor sports events at night.

3 0 C en ts

TALLAHASSEE - Gov.-elect
Lawton Chllrs said Wednesday that
he will likely promote from within
when the time comes to replace
Greg Coler as secretary of the
Department of Health and Re­
habilitative Services.
But the new secretary will be an

Interim caretaker only, whose job It
will be lo steer the huge agency
through Impending budget cuts and
begin the task of shifting programs
and power to local officials. Chllrs
said.
Coler resigned Tuesday, effective
Jan. 7. the day before Chiles
assumes office.
Chiles told reporters he plans to
take his time finding a permanent

replacement. He said he wants
someone who agrees with his plan
to shift more of HRS’s power and
responsibilities to the local level.
••(We're) trying to get a secretary
who's going to think like we do,
who's not going to be trying to
consolidate or build the empire, but
Is going to be trying to sec how we
decentralize, how we give away
power, and that's going to take

some time." Chiles said.
In an Impromptu news confer­
ence. Chiles declined to name any
potential replacements for Coler or
to say how long an Interim chief
might serve.
He did say he Is considering
elevating one of Coler's lieutenants
to the top Job at HRS. at least as
Interim agency chief. But he did not
□B h HUB, Pag* BA

Young
to lead
chamber

8 m P a g* IB

□ Florida
Store owner fined
FORT LAUDERDALE — A record store owner
was ordered to pay $1,000 to an elementary
school for the performing arts after being
convicted of selling an obscene album by the rap
group 2 Live Crew.
B **P a g *8A

By NICK PPBIPAUP

B R IB P 8

Herald staff w riter

Former legislator dies In crash
LAKE CITY — Former state legislator Wayne
Hollingsworth was killed Wednesday when the
truck he was driving crashed Into an overpass
bridge support, the Florida Highway Patrol said
Thursday.
The accident occurred around 6:25 p.m. EST
on Interstate 75 about 3 miles west of Lake City,
FHP spokesman Lt. George Wehrll said. Holl­
ingsworth. 52. died on Impact when his 1983
Bronco hit a concrete bridge pillar.
According to the accident report filed by
Investigators. Hollingsworth was traveling south
on 1-75. overtaking a Longwood man driving a
1986 Isuzu pickup truck, when the accident
occurred. Wehrll said Hollingsworth drove Into'
the grassy center strip, swerved back onto the
highway and hit the left side of the other
vehicle.
Hollingsworth then crossed the highway and
hit a concrete post supporting the State Road
247 overpass, wehrll said.
The driver of the other vehicle. Delbert Kyqer.
49. of Longwood. was not Injured. Wehrll said.
There U no Indication that alcohol waa Involved.
An autopay has been scheduled.
Hollingsworth, a Democrat and native of Lake
City, served In the Florida House of Repre­
sentatives from 1970 to 1972. then was
re-elected to the House In 1976. He served In the
House until 1986, when he was rlected to the
Senate.
He lost his rc-clcctlnn bid In 1988 to Sherry
Walker, D-Waukccnah.

From wire reports

C la s s ifie s ........ 68(7 ■ Msvlss.......................
Com les....................... 48 Nation.......................
Crossw ord.................48 Peepl*......................
Door AMy..................IB Polios.......................
D eaths......................8A School Menu............
Dr. O stt.....................48 Sports....................1Editorial..................... 4A Television...............
Florida........................2A W eather...................
Morosoopo................. 48 World.......................

Sunny and warmer

A ssistant Fire Chief Ron Neel w atches
firefighters In the tower truck pour tons of water

Fire investigators scour rubble
to determine origin and losses
By NICK PPBIPAUP
Herald staff writer
----

-

SANFORD — While the State Fire Marshal's
office has not announced an official estimate of
damugc In the fire that leveled most of the
western side of (he 300 block of Sanford Avenue,
losses could run well beyond S 150.000.
The fire was first reported at 11:38 p.m.
Tuesday night. By this morning, whlsps of
smoke were still rising from several piles of
rubble.
Seminole County Property Appraiser BUI
Subcr said the property and building value for
the two sections of Al's Army Navy Surplus Store
are m the books at 878.552. But Subcr added.
"This Is only for the land and the structure. By
the time you figure In the Inventory and other
Items In the building. It could easily be more
than double that figure."
The estimate however, ts only for that portion
of the stores occupied by the urmy nuvy surplus.
The adjoining buildings to the south, including a
struct lire only recently taken over by the Amvets
post 17 were also destroyed.
Meanwhile. Officials of the State Fire Marshal's

For mors weather, sea Papa 2A

office had no commrnt this morning ns an
Investigation Into the cause of the blaze
continued.
Assistant Sanford Fire Chief Ron Neel said.
"The Investigators go Into this looking for the
cause to sec If It was accidental, suspicious or
arson. He said arson lias not been overruled as
yet. but neither has the possibility of accidental
Ignition been discarded.
Stale fire officials broughl In a small bobcat
unit yesterday afternoon. Work was still un­
derway today In removing the rubble from
among those portions of the walls that were still
stundlng. Most of the rubble consisted of sheet
inetal from the roof area although there were also
piles of what could have once been merchandise,
now reduced lo black piles of debris.
Neel said there Is a possibility an official
damage estimate could lie announced by the
Stale Fire Marshal's office sometime today, but It
will depend on the progress of the continuing
Investigation Into the fire.
"We've turned the Investigation over to them,"
Neel said, "and Ihey arc the only people who can
give any official word on either the cause or the
loss figure."

M osquito scare
com es to close
B yJ. MARK BARPIBID
Herald staff writer

SANFORO — Seminole County residents should
consider themselves lucky they rode out the worst
outbreak of St. Louis encephalitis In more than 13
years with few cases and no deaths.
"Considering what they had In Orange County
we came through quite well." said Dewey
□ See Mosquito, Page SA
Schools OK nlQht actlvftioa, aa* Pag* IB.

Im pact fees for county revenue rejected
By J. MARK BARPI1LD

Mostly sunny with a
high In the low to
mid 70s and a light
wind.

onto the remains of businesses destroyed In
yesterday’s fire along Sanford Avenue downtown.

SANFORD — Jim Young Is the the new president
of the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
Also elected during a meeting this week at
chamber headquarters downtown were Bobby
Douglas as vice president, and Bette Grmmkow as
treasurer.
Executive Director
David Farr explained
that the membership
e le c ts the b o ard of
directors, and the board
elects the new officers.
Young. Douglas and
Gramkow took over
their new posts during
the meeting.
Young said the motto
for this coming years
will be "The Greater
Sanford C ham ber of
Commerce, Your Com­
petitive Edge."
The new president
said. "When businesses
do well. It promotes the
growth of other busi­
nesses tn the urea. Each
feeds off the other."
A full slate of special seminars, meetings and
projects will be undertaken during 1991, with
"Leadership Sanford" beginning In January under
□ S ee Young, Page BA

Herald staff writer

SANFORD - With Seminole
County fuc'ng a nearly $200 million
deficit, this Is not *hc time for

commissioners to delay requiring
new residents to pay for the addi­
tional services needed for them,
says county commissioner Larry
Furlong.
But Furlong failed to gain more
than one supporter from the five-

member commission Tuesday for
an Impact fee for parks and recre­
ation and gained no support for a
proposal to match law enforcement
andjull space lo the population.
"I would hate to lie on record
voting against Impact fees then Irv

to explain to voters a 8200 million
shortfall." Furlong said. "Given the
projected shortfall In revenues In
the comprehensive plan, there ts
more than an urgency for us to
address this. The county has not
□ S e e Fees, Page BA

Civil War breaks out among kids at museum
By VICKI DeSORMIBR
Herald staff writer

SANFORD — Under the towering oaks outside
the Student Museum. 301 W. Seventh St..
Sanford, civil war broke out this morning.
With assistance and direction from the
Americun Legacy League. 140 eighth graders
from Tuskawtlla Middle School In Oviedo,
learned about the American Civil War by
becoming a part of it
"This Is a wonderful learning experience for
the students." said Adrienne Jones, a resource
teacher at the museum.
Jones said the museum sponsored the Civil
War reenactment for the first time last year.
They sent an open Invitation to all middle
schools and accepted the first application they
received.
"Last year we had Rock Lake eighth graders
up here." she said. "The students loved It."
Rock Lake Middle School Is located In
Longwood.
This year, the call for the event had barely
gone out when Tuskawtlla Jumped at the
opportunity.
"I think tills Is going to lit- a very (xipular
tradition In the future." Jones said.
The American Legacy League uses artifacts,
clothing, written data and crafts to help the
youngsters "get a feel" for history.
S e e W ar. P age SA

HatoM CSola Oy Tommy VIncool

At the Civil War re enactment this morning were
(I to r ) Debi Farmer; Terry Herring. Owen
M cC a rron . assistant superinlendent lor ad-

m in istra tive se rvic e s for S e m in o le C o u n ty
schools, Martha Graveley; Jeff Grzelak; George
Farm er; John H iggin s; and Jack Michael.

�N E W S FROM T H E REGION AND A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

FORT LAUDERDALE - A record store
owner convicted of selling an obscene
aiuum by the rap group 2 Live Crew was
ordered Wednesday to pay $1,000 to an

Amtrak may vtvto CMeago Rnt
TAMPA — Amtrak haa plane to revive a Chteago-Jacksoovtllc
passenger train.
The route would link Florida's major due* wtth the Mldweet
and Western states by rati for the first time In 11 years.
The main hurdle la the coat of setting up the route. Amtrak
haa a budget of $133 million for 1001. but the rail service
predicts capital expenses aa high aa $239 minion to revive the
route.
Amtrak officials said that money win have to come from
governments In states and cities along the route.
Once the moot popular way for tourists to reach the Sunshine
State, passenger trains are today among the least common

County J u t e Piul
■aid he wanted to make the punishment fit
the crime. He could have sentenced store
owner Charles Freeman to up to one year in
Jail.
I.Mtead. Bachman Imposed the maximum
fine allowed on the misdemeanor obscenity

Train lines have dwindled so dramatically that many small
■ndiwedim iw tsedeWie* h a w hoarded up
■****"*»*
Only one long-distance naaseager train now serves'Florida,
running back and forth from Boston. New York and
Washington. CaUfomlana have to change trams In Washing­
ton's Union Station tn order to reach Tampa or Miami.

v o u n I r a n i p ra o n ra ip o n ira ra iy

*

TALLAHASSCB - The state of Florida and not a
court la now responsible for overseeing the state's
medical programs lor the first time atnce 1901.
The shift comas aa a result of a court order

the last nu$or hurdles to resolving the marathon lawsuit
Involving
notice that medical
care la the
JeyVafl.
I, said the order
that the
* in
Black’s ruling, however, doesn't settle the class-action
lawsuit. The suit was filed tn 1973 by inmate Michael Costello.
The original lawsuit sought to alleviate prlaon crowding at
improve food, fire safety, health care and mental-heath care.
The order said the Correctional Medical Authority c
wen handled
court-appointed doctors.

Columbus calibration In Joopsrdy
TALLAHASSEE - Budget problems and a worsening
economy threaten Florida's celebration of the SOOth anniversa­
ry of Christopher Columbus's Journey to the New World.
Faced with a revenue shortfall of more than $1 billion,
officials have frozen money earmarked to finance Florida's
Columbus Hemispheric Commission.
The organisation was formed four years ago to promote
Florida's 1993 Columbus Jubilee. Because of the funding
freest, the commission haa scrapped plans to hire a full-time
executive director and staff.
The state also has halted production of a special auto license
plate commemorating Columbus.

MirgoHa app rm e Senate rilses
TALLAHASSEE - Senate President Owen alargolis has
approved merit raises of up to 5 percent for all Senate
employees, despite preparations by state officials to lay off
workers because ofa budget crisis.
The raises will go into effect Jan. 1. MargoUs. a Democrat
sy OCBpttt
from North Miami, approved the pay Increase Tuesday
&lt;V
ncement that the Senate
senate would be
ne adoing some
an earlier announcement
belt-tightening.
State agencies axe facing severe cuts because of a I 2 n
million budget shortfall. MargoUs announced Monday that the
Senate would cut $300.000 from Its 138 million operating
budget.
'
MargoUs said by approving the 5 percent raises in the middle
of the budget year, the actual raise amounts to only 3.5
percent. But It comes on top of a 3 percent raise, state
employees got In July.
Rob Anderson, a spokesman for Oov.-elect Lawton Chiles,
■aid he did not know about the raises and would look Into
them.

From United Prats International R aporta________________

□Straight Play (numbers In exact
order): 8290 on a SOcenl bet. 8900
on 11.
□Box 3 (numbers In any order):
880 for a 50cent bet. 8160 on 81.
□Box 6 (numbers In any order):
840fora50cent bet. 880 on It .
□ Straight Box 3: 8330 In order
drawn, 8S0 in any order on a 81 bet.
□ Straight Box 6: 8290 In order
drawn, 840 If picked in combination
on*1 bet.

(USAS SIWI
Thursday, December 13,1900
Vol. 83. No. 98

riv ttero n

PsMst

PO S TM A S TIB : Into l U r S I
to T H I SAMPOSD H IS A L D . P.O.
■ea iM i. Sestord. PL a m .

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( Daily S Swtoay)
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WASHINGTON - Florida Is
among 10 states producing more
than half of the nation’s 1908
amlaalona of carbon dtoxldr —
the chief “greenhouse” gaa —
and utilities were the biggest
contributors, a consumer group
rrponca w cu n cta ij,
The non-profit consumer or­
ganisation Ctttxen Action re­
leased the study In an attempt to
Influence the upcoming debate
In Congress over future energy
needs. The Bush administration
la expected to weigh tn early
next year w ith It* proposed
National Energy Strategy.
“Aa the world's largest carbon
dioxide polluter, aa the world's
largest oil consuming nation and
the world's biggest debtor, we
have a responsibility to take
action" to reduce carbon dioxide
e m l a a t o n a . s a i d E d w in
Rothachild. CltU en Action’s
energy policy director.
Carbon dioxide la released
when power plants, factories and
motor vehicles bum oil. natural
gaa and cool. Increasing con­
centrations of the gaa In the
atmosphere are believed to con­
t r i b u t e to t h e s o - c a lle d
greenhouse effect, which many
■dentists fear may cause a
warming trend.
Studies have predicted that
failure to lower carbon dioxide
emissions over the next 40 years

could result tn radical ctenate
changes that could raiae aea
levels, disrupt agriculture and
destroy forests.
“Moat artentlata agree that
huge Increases In man-made
carbon dioxide poee a dire threat
to the w orld's climate and
economy." Rothachild said.
The report found power plants
produced 38.3 percent of the
nation's carbon dioxide, c a n
accounted for 39.3 percent and
a't.
v cm
factories 33.9 percent. Homes
and commercial operations ac­
10.5
counted for the remaining 11.4
percent.
The top 10 carbon dioxide
3.9
emission producing states were
Texas. California. Pennsylvania.
O h io . I n d i a n a . I l l i n o i s ,
l oulatana. New York. Michigan
and Florida.
T o ta l c a r b o n d io x id e
emissions Increased 14.3 per­
cent. to 4.81 billion tons, be­
tween 1983 and 1988. with the
largest Iqcreaae of 15.8 percent
NIA Graphics
In tailpipe emlaatona. according
the report. "The Heat is On:
A m eric a's C arbon D ioxide owned Tennessee Valley Author­
Polluters."
ity. followed by Georgia Power
Some of the heaviest con­ Co.. Texas Utilities Electric Co..
centrations of carbon dioxide Detroit Edison Co.. Pennsylvania
emlaatona come from electric Electric Co.. Houston Lighting &amp;
utility companies In the South Power Co.. Duke Power Co. In
and Midwest, the report said.
North Carolina. Pacific Power A
Ten utilities accounted for 23 Light Co.. Alabama Power Co.
percent of the total carbon diox­ and Ohio Power Co.
ide emlaatona generated by the
The report recommended fed­
electric utility sector. The largest eral policy changes that would
single emitter was the federally lower carbon dioxide emissions.

GAINESVILLE - The development of
aophistocatcd diagnostic tools to pinpoint
tumors in the brain means life-saving
surgery is now possible for man's best
friend.
Magnetic resonance Imaging, or MR!,
which has come Into widespread use over
the past decade as a sophisticated way of
■canning the body for disease, la being
used successfully at the University of
Florida College of Veterinary Medicine to
help veterinarians verify the presence of
brain tumors In dogs.
T h e a d v a n c e d te c h n o lo y h e lp s
veterinarians pinpoint the tumor’a loca­
tion and determine what type of treatment
Js needed.
Because of funding for neurological
research from the Aldlna Scalfe Oates
Memorial Fund, brain surgery In dogs Is
becoming more and more common at UP.
“We probably see 20 to 30 affected dogs
a year, of which 10 to 13 will undergo
surgery." said Robert Goring, a UF
veterinary neurologist who performs the
surgery.

TAMPA — State agriculture officials want limlta on Mexican
trade because they believe free trade will hurt Florida's citrus
and winter vegetable Industry.
The state Department of Agriculture haa asked federal trade
officials to Investigate the effects of a U.S.-Mexico free trade
agreement on Florida's main agricultural crops.
The state agency also asked that Florida's $1.5 billion winter
vegetable industry be exempt from current negotiations. The
talas are aimed at reaching a trade accord between the two
nations by 1993.
Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Connor said a free trade
agreement could be disastrous to Florida's produce and citrus
Industry.

T A LL A HA S S EE • Ths dally
number Wednesday In (he Florida
Lottery CASH 3 game wee M 7 .

B yB TB YW I

Whole town
could loco
indictment
ZOLFO SPRINGS - The Uny
lain let of Zotfb Springs la girti­
ng up for an indictment that
trnkt charge the entire town
vith pollution.
"Obviously the whole town
:an't be jiu t In tall." town
ittomey Eugene E. "Bucky"
Valdron lamented, "but this
v'ould result In substantial
penalties on the town."
Waldron said he haa been
s u m m o n e d to a " p r e indictment" conference Friday
morning at the UB. Attorney's
office tn Tampa. He said he
expects to be told the town could
face charges of Intentional envi­
ronmental violations at its lone
sewer plant. The hamlet could
be Indicted aa a corporation, he
■aid.
Problems at the sewer plant
have prom pted the Hardee
County town of 1,850 residents
to ban new residential and
commercial construction since
1989. The plant can’t handle the
extra sewage, engineers say.
The 83 mllbon plant, built
with federal Farmer's Home
Administration grants and loans,
began operating In 1987. Within
a year, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture began looking Into
Its operation.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert
Munk declined to comment, aa
federal law prohibits his dis­
cussing grand Jury matters.

Fldo may be saved by technological advances

Mexican trad* limlta urgad

lo tter y

artists such as Andrew Dice Clay, whose
work haa not been banned.
Before the sentencing. Freeman said. “I
expect the worse."
After the bearing, a tearful Freeman said
he respected the Judge s decision, but would
appeal both the conviction and (he sen­
tence.
• However, he said. "If I win the case, m
donate the money anyway because there are
a lot of people who want to donate to me.
Walker la a fine elementary achool "
Walker Elementary Principal Lucy Thom­
a s said the Judge's decision i

Utilities emit most
greenhouse gas’
United F iats International

In

— &gt;1.000. But fie ordered that the
tcy go to Fort Lauderdale's Walker
Elementary School, which recently lost
much of Its musical equipment In a theft.
The public elemen tary school specialises In
teaching the performing arts.
Freeman, the owner of E.C. Records, waa
con victed in an October trial of selling
obacene material, a copy of the 3 Live Crew
album "As Nasty aa They Wanna Be."
Freeman admitted selling the recording to
an undercover detective aftef a federal Judge
declared It waa obacene. But he argued that
the album waa no worse than thoae by other

CWe probably see 20 to
30 affected dogs a year, of
which 10 to 12 will undergo
surgery.!
-Robert Goring, UF veterinary
neurologist
MR1 combines a magnetic field 3.000 to
30.000 times greater than the Earth's
natural magnetic pull with radio waves
and a computer in order to generate clear
pictures of Internal org an s. Crosssectional views of tissues in any direction
or plane of the body can be produced.
MR1 to safer than X-ray Imaging and
more sensitive than CAT scans, physi­
cians and veterinarians said.
"MR1 differs from the CAT-acan in that
it uses a very large magnet, rather than
X-radlstkon. to create Images that allow us
to look anywhere within the skull.”
Goring said. "If the dog has a brain tumor
and you take an ordinary X-ray picture.

you won’t sec the tumor unless there's
some mineralization associated with It.
While the CAT-scan can begin to pick up
these tumors, the MR1 can show us the
specific location of the tumor In a
three-dimensional cross-section."
Cheryl Chrtsman. another veterinary
neurologist, said MR1 enables surgeons to
----------in
determine whether a tumor
la Ina location
_ ___________irglcally.
that _
can
be reached su
"If the tumor la very large, haa spread to
other areas, or looks like U’s In an area we
can’t get to. (veterinary surgeons) won't
perform the operation." Chrtsman said.
Brain tumors In dogs are uncommon,
b u t n o t r a r e , a c c o r d i n g to UF
veterinarians. Symptoms may Include
circling, lack of Interest In food or In
surroundings, Inability to maintain
balance and seizures. As with humans,
such tumors usually are detected In older
animals.
Dogs who undergo brain surgery at UF
are usually hospitalized for at least three
weeks, depending on the level of com­
plications. The surgery can be expensive,
ranging between 8800 and 81,500.

THE W EATHER
Today...Mostly sunny with a
high In the low to mid 70s. Light
wind.
Tonight...Mostly fair, low In
the low to mid 50s. Light wind.
R |C M » 71» 8 8
Friday...Mostly sunny. High tn
the low to mid 70a. Wind
northeast 5 mph.
Ito ito W M s a s
E xtended fo recast...P artly
cloudy and mild S a tu rd a y
through Monday. Lows In the
mid 50a to lower 60s and highs
In the low and mid 80a Saturday
through Monday.

City S P tm a ti
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Anchor ae* Cy
Athavlllamc
Atlanta pc
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■itmarck ty
S a*tan pc
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riitfrtfiri. rcr*.
0OLUNAR TABLE! Min. l:50
a.m.. 2:05 p.m.; MaJ. 7:55 a.m..
8:15 p.m. TIDB8: D a y ts a a
Beach: highs, 5:C3 a.m.. 5:23
p.m.: lows. 11:26 .a.m.. 11:21
p.m.: Naw B a y ra a B aach:
highs. 5:13 a.m.. 5:28 p.m.:
FIRST
Dm . $0 lows. 11:31 a.m.. 11:26 p.m.:
Cacaa Beach: highs. 5:28 a.m..
5:43 p.m.: lows. 11:46 a.m.
.

as i s
41 S «
44 A M
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1* OH

41
41
41
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to
41

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AM
AM
AH

si ooo
SI AH
SI A H

Waves arc
1-2 feet and glassy. Current Is
slightly to the south with a water
temperature of 64 degrees. New
Sm yrna Beach: Waves arc 2 feel
and glassy. Current Is to the
south, with u water temperature
of 64 degrees.

'

• t . A agostlae to Ju p ite r Is le t
Today...Wind variable 5 to 10
kts. Seas 2 ft or less. Bay and
Inland waters smooth.
T onight...W ind becom ing
north 5 to 10 kts. Seas 2 ft or
less except higher In the gulf
stream. Bay and inland waters
smooth.
F rid a y ...W in d n o r th to
northeast 5 to 10 kts.

T he high tem perature In
Sanford Wednesday was 74
degrees and the overnight low
was 42 as reported by the
University of Florida Agricultural Research and Education
Center. Celery Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
p e rio d , ending a t 9 a.m .
Thursday, totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature ut 9 a.m.
today was 58 d rg rees and
Thursday's overnight low was
49. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
(T h u rs d a y 's high................88
[1B arom etric pressure.SO .24
□ R elativ e H uaridlty....64 pet
(W in d s .............. N orth 8 m ph
( R ainfall.......................... 0 In.
11T oday’■ su n set..... 8:30 p.m.
□ Tom orrow 's aunrtae....7ilO

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�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, December 13. 1900

SANTORO —Seminole County
co m m laa lo n era gav e near*
unanim ous approval o f the
maaatve DU Properties commer­
cial development at Red Bug
Lake Road and the future Semi­
nole County Expressway, but
not without securing a pledge
from d ev elo p ers to d o n ate
SS1.300 to the schools.
Voting 4-1. with commissioner
Pst Warren opposing, commis­

Arrest mad* in batfwy, robbwy
SANFORD — A man. who atlrardty punched a man In the
fnce while iwo others held and robbed him. has been arrested
by Sanford police.
Thallus Jerome Inman. 18. 1016 Olive Ave.. Sanford, la
charged with strong arm robbery and grand theft. Police allege
Inman drove off In the victim's car after the robbery on 13th
Street. The robbers also took 920 from the victim. The car was
abandoned on 14th Street, police mid. Inman was arrested on
13th Street at Olive Avenue at about 4 p.m. Wednesday.

n

When complete, the development will have 513 apartments.
1.3 mlHlon square fret of of­
fice-showroom facilities. 1 mil­
lion square fact at offices, shout

347.000 square feet or commerd a ' buildings and 290 hotel
rooms.
The apartments are expected
to produce between 143 and 296
students to overcrowded area
schools. Commissioner Larry
Furlong suggested DLI officials
contribute at least 971,000 to
the school board to help pay for
space and teachers and supplies
far those students.

LONGWOOD - An un­
identified woman from
L o n g w o o d Is b e in g
awarded almost 94.900 by
the Florida Bar's Clients'
Security Fund, because her
a t to r n e y , S te p h e n H.
Broody, of Fort Lauderdale,
m isappropriated money
held In trust for her. ac­
cording to a release from
the Bor.
T h e Clients’ Security
Fund, established In 1967.
provides monetary relief to
members of the public who
suffer financial lorn by the
m is a p p ro p ria tio n , e m ­
b e z z le m e n t o r o t h e r
wrongful taking or con­
version of their funds or
property by s member of
the Florida Bar. the release

Longwood doctor suspended

SANFORD — Seminole County sheriff's deputies, who
arrested a man on s strong arm robbery charge tn rural
Sanford early today, also charged him with possession of
cocaine.
Deputies said they found four pieces of crack cocaine when
they arrested Jeffery Corded Butler. 38, 3751 W. 18th S t.
Sanford. The Initial robbery charge stems from a 1:49 a.m.
Incident today during which Butler allegedly stole 940 from a
m an an 19th Street In rural Sanford. Butler was arrested at
3390 18th St., at 3:38a.m. today.

Wnnrini March iN d i to Hk

sioners approved construction
ptana far the 497-acre development north of Red Bug Lake
Road and west of the proposed
Seminole County Expressway,
now slated far construction next

Longwood
woman wins
lawyer relief

medicine suspended by the state
Deportment of Professional Regulatton.
Department Secretary Larry
Gonzales. In a release announc-

M m lt

CASSELBERRY — City County Investigative Bureau agents
with a warrant, who searched s CoastIhrrry house Wednesday
night, report arresting three on drug charges.
Agents said they found cocaine, marijuana and drug
paraphernalia in the search at 517 Lake Kathryn Circle.
Residents Robert Cary Jones. 46. and Cathy Sheila Carter, 33.
were arrested along with Dean Howard Blair. 36. of Orlando.
Jones was charged with possession of cocaine to distribute.

use of alcohol or drugs, or as s
result of a mental or physical
condition.
Gonzales reported In the release that on Sept. 10. Nauman

On Nov. 31. Nauman did
attend a court-ordered appearance before Dr. Neville Marks, a
psychiatrist, according to the
release.

Judge upholds controversial alcohol tax
TALLAHASSEE — Florida's controversial tax
on alcoholic beverages served In bars and
restaurants has been upheld by a Leon County
circuit Judge, but the decision Is expected to be
appealed.
Circuit Judge George Reynolds ruled Tuesday
that the law does not discriminate against

businesses that serve wine, beer and mixed drinks
onpremises.
*T think there Is a rational basis for It,*! Reynolds
told lawyers for the state and a group of
restaurants and bars that filed suit last summer to
have the tax declared unconstitutional.
Meanwhile, legislation to repeal the taw was
being proposed by lawmakers who cited vehement
opposition to the new tax.

m '

Broudy was suspended
from the practice of law by
a court order effective Oct.
23. the release said. In all,
th e fund p a id a lm o s t
943.000 to seven of his
former clients.

14-year-old
executive
pushes toys
WASHINGTON - The whiz
kid has a heart.
At 14, Mary Rodas rides a
limousine to work and already

"T’ *&lt;

V fe d o n t

w ell suggest easy ways to

want to put
J

correct them.

words in

W hile weVe there,

your mouth,

we’ll also tell you if you

but most likely the answer

qualify ft* cash incentives

is “yes"

from FPL on otlier energy-

Even a house that

saving improvements—

seems to be energy-efficient

things Uke

probably has hidden cracks

window

f

and gaps where air could be
escaping, driving up your
a n tin g or heating costs,
FPU* free, no-obligation
Home Energy Survey is

J!

designed to find those

J;

openings.

!h

:

;

high*efficiency water

lic.Uing systems.
4 The

Call us ft)r an

m kxrt

you call ft&gt;r

survey live

appointment, and we'll send

i

over a

m k h k t

you'll start saving c ix rg y

If you’re looking

trained energy specialist to iaspcct your home
from attic to baseboards to look ft* leaks.
\

ftir a way to help hold down your electric Nil, this is tlie
perfect opening.

We ll also check to see if insulation
V

for your w ater heater or a more

Cj II MumUy-trSLiy 7 jnt-nt*Uiit|tlit

efficient air conditioner can help
If we do unccner problems.

W ERE HERE TO HELP

Friday, Dsc. 14

Manager's choice

in FPI G*oup compin,

I

�R IM B W P

« * — Sanford HoraM, Sanford, Florida —Thursday.

13. 11

Editorials/ O p in io n s
1“
reg

Sanford Herald
—
(USSS4SMM)
300 N. FRENCH AVI.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-2011 or 831-9089

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 Month*...................................SI0.90
6 Month*.....................................$39.00
lY w r ........................................ S7S.00

EDITORIALS

Cowabunga, dude

■

Now heading Into th eir th ird C hristm as
seaso n , th e T eenage M utant Ninja Turtles
definitely ap p ear to hie m ore th a n ai fad.
I
S ix y e a rs a fo . th e y w ere m ere doodUnfa in
a n u n d erg ro u n d co m ic book, b u t today, the
H eroes on a Half-shell have th e ir own movie,
cartoon, rock ban d a n d records, p lu s a variety
of toys. A nd they a r e o n T -shirts, plastic cups,
to o th b ru sh es, u n d erwear, p o sters — alm ost
a n y th in g you con m a rk e t to I
Nlinja T u r tle s m ig h t b e reach in g
The N
su p e rs ta r sta tu s w ith real b a tin g power. To
a tta in su p erstard o m am o n g superheroes, you
hav e to d o m ore th a n appeal to kids* tastes.
You need a good origin m yth.
S u p e rm a n , th e u n c o n te ste d c h a m p of
superheroes. Is th e b est exam ple. T he origin
of S uperm an is so com pelling th a t everybody
know s It. The doom ed p lan et K rypton w as
ab o u t to be blown to b its w hen a scientist put
h is only son Into a rocket an d sen t him
h u rtlin g through sp ace to E arth . T he infant
w as found by J o n a th a n an d M artha Kent,
w ho discovered th a t he possessed incredible
pow ers. To best h id e those am axlng abilities
w hen he grew u p , Clark K ent becam e a
Journalist.
B ut th e Ninja T u rtles ou td o Superm an.
T hey w ere four tin y pet tu rtles dropped int
th e sew er by a little boy. T h en , someone
spilled som ething called retrom utagen ooze
Into th e sew er an d th e tu rtle s m utated Into
half-hum an creatu res. The T u rtles learned
m a rtia l a r ts from a m u ta te d h it. who,
d e p e n d in g o n w h e th e r y o u b elieve th e
cartoon o r th e m ovie, w as a d isgraced karate
m aster expelled from his Ja p a n e se dojo and
forced to live In th e New York sew ers, or was
th e k arate m aster’s p e t rat. A nyw ay, he. too.
got caught In th e ooze an d tu rn ed into a
half-rat. half-man crea tu re n a m e d Splinter,
because of h is ability to sp lin ter b o ard s w ith a
karate chop.
Of course, th ere's m ore to public appeal
than that. Superm an first b ecam e popular a t
th e beginning of World W ar U. w hen the
world seemed a d ark place a n d the Man of
S teel fighting far tru th . Ju stice an d the
A m erican Way was Just w hat th e hom e front
needed.
T he Ninja T urtles are cu rren t. They are
w isecracking teen-agers who w ould rath e r be
eatin g pizza, spouting surf slan g and playing
video games.
es. But they are loyal to their
m aster. Splinter, w ho keeps th e m in line with
discipline to fight evil,
1. A lthough they would
ra th e r goof off. th e Turtles ta k e their public
responsibility seriously.
S uperm an they're not. B ut then, today's
kids w ouldn't go for the battle cry of "T ruth.
Justice an d the American Way!" This Is 1990,
an d every 4-year-old knows. "Cowabunga.
dude!"

S o o t h in g a w a y s tre s s
Forget deep breathing. Forget mediation.
Those searching for th at ex tra edge In stress
relief will w ant to Jog on over to the nearest
m ind salon, the latest advance In cosmic
consciousness to originate from — where else
— California. It is to yoga w h at the Culslnart
Is to th e chopping block.
At first glance, th e mind salon looks like a
h ealth club, all bright lights an d high-tech
equipm ent. But Instead of N autilus machines,
th ere are notation tanks, dark an d silent, and
"d elta lounges" th a t m assage th e m ind with
trickling-fountaln so u n d s and soothing colors.
E arphones sim ulate rushlng-surf noises, and
goggles w ith pulsating lights bring the brain
w aves Into equilibrium .
"By the turn of the century, people will
--------,J ‘have done without
w"Tideonder '----how they
could
th e m ." one prom oter says o f these New Age
m ood-altering m achines, the fancies of which
sell through catalogs for a s m u c h as (69.000.
W hat some A m ericans apparently can 't do
w ithout Is expensive fixes for problem s that
could be solved a t little or no cost. Instead of
becom ing a sucker for hucksters of altered
states, why not take a walk in the park?
Listen to Bach. P et the dog. Then put your
m ind to w ays of m aking work less stressful In
th e first place.
On second thought, scrap th a t last piece of
advice. The stress of pondering the origins of
stress is enough to send one to a m ind salon.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letter* lit the i-iillor are welcome. All letter* must
Ik- signed. Include the address of the writer and a
daytime telephone number Letters should be on
a tdnghlc subject and be a* brief a* possible..
Letter* are subject to editing.

BEN W A T T E N B E R G

Report card for the Persian Golf
Nov. 14: Yes. 4B percent: No. 42 percent.
Nov. 28: Yes. 59 percent; No. 31 percent.
A Dec. 6-7 Newsweek survey shims a similar
tre n d , w ith a 56
percent — 33 percent
m a jo rity favoring

Herewith a report card on who. and what. Is
making sense regarding the Gulf crisis. Also,
predictions:
The Democrats (as a group) have fallen from
an early B+ to a C. Once again, they are seen as
the pussycat party. The demise of the Soviet
Union was supposed to save them, it
that Democrats would no longer have to worry
about being soft on defense. But: There they go
again. Ted Kennedy won't even aay use force If
sanctions don't work.
(Exempted: Sen. Charles Robb and Reps. Les
Aapta and Steven Solsrz — who have been
tough, and right.)
The press corps (as a group) has fallen from B
to a C*. They mindlessly puffed story about
how the American people turned against the use
of force, and turned against the president's
policies. Prof. Everett C. Ladd, director of the
Roper Center, says "that never happened, not
even close, not a glimmer...."
But we shouldn't be surprised. Since Vietnam,
this la the 17th time the presales have bought
the yawner that the anti-war movement was
about to aweep the nation.
Here are serious numbers, from Tlme/CNN:
0. Do you think the liberation of Kuwait Is
worth flailing tot?__________________________

A m e r i c a n

“ e n g a g e m e n t In
combat If Iraq ref­
uses to leave Kuwait
and restore Its former
government."
At the outset It was
"The Bsttle of the
C olum nists." How
are the seers doing?
Pat Buchanan and
Robert Novak get a
D-f. (I am generous.)
Early on. they both
6 At th s outsat
Indicated that Jews
In America, hawks
it w as T h s
and doves alike, were
Battle of tha
pushing America to
Colum nists.’ J
war because It would
help Israel. Today.
Jewish doves sound
like other doves. Jewish hawks sound like other

hawks. And Buchanan and Novak haven’t

The we-need-a-druft argument of columnist
Mark Shields gets a C-. If we didn't need a draft
when confronting a nuclear-tipped, expansionist
superpower, we don’t need one now. Nor Is our
military a bunch of poor minority kids. Our
pilots, who wdl likely bear the brunt of any
fighting, are highly educated professionals.
The Bush Administration has gone from an
A+ to a still-solid B + .
Why are they saying that the American use of
force means ground war? Such combat could
Involve substantial casualties. If Saddam does
not yield, heavy air strikes are the strategy of
choice, certainly now with the hostages out of
harm's way. Let's find out If air strikes work.
Normally, the military should make the
tactical Judgments. But this goes to the heart of
American geopolitical credibility. Now and later.
If America la able to make a major military
statement with relatively few casualties, and If
potential adversaries know and fear that, then
we sic more likely to prevail, without using
force. That Mthe game's name.
With a solid superpower In place, a New World
Ordef will emerge, with a reasonable chance to
yield real peace. Olve peace a chance.

JACK

ANDERSON

Does Congress live
in a glass nouse?

ELLEN GOODM AN

Who’s that girl?
‘M ulti-M adonna’: Pick a self, any self
BOSTON — It’s past midnight. The football
game la over. The local news Is over. Forrest
Sawyer la asking the news Junkies who are still
awake to watch "NlghUlne": "Has Madonna
finally gone too far?"
On the big
bi screen, the same screen where
secretaries of state and terrorists get to say
whether they have gone too far. comes a
Madonna I've never seen. Conservative black
Jacket with a collar up to her chin. Power
shoulder pads. Gold buttons. Proper little gold
earrings. Sleek hair pulled back. Right hand
grasping the appropriately serious prop: a pen.
Except for the slim band of dark roots
beneath the platinum, except for the voice —
early "Working Girl" — she might pass for the
CEO of some Wall St. firm. Or she might pass
for someone trying to pass for the CEO. That Is
the thing abut Madonna. Look for her Identity
and you find another Image to add to the
Rolodex of Madonnas.
"Nlghtllne" was doing what MTV had
refused to do. ahowlng her video. "Justify My
love." And Madonna had come dressed to
justify her video by saying: It was 1) artistic
and 2) better than the other horrors that grace
MTV without such fuss. "Why Is U okay." she
•aid, “for 10-year-olds to see someone's body
being ripped to shreds?"
To this viewer who refuses to get Into the
debate about which Is worse, sex or violence
on TV — lousy choices — the Madonna video
was definitely an R but not quite an X. it was
dearly fantasy and clearly not the sort of thing
you want the kids to find when they're
channel-surfing after the Peter Pan tape.
But tonight It's not the black-and-white video
Madonna fantasies that fascinate me. It's the
contrast with the black-dressed and blondecolfled Madonna.
Madonna the executive is speaking about
Madonna the artist. Madonna of the sutcllltr
feed Is talking about Madonna of the hotel bed.
There are other variations on the theme of
Madonna, more incarnations In the life of
Madonna, more colors to the chameleon.
The woman before me has earned $90
million In four years from the subsidiaries of
her own talent: Boy Toy. Siren and Slutco. The
woman has revamped her image every two
years like an engine: Material Girl to Bloiulc
Ambltion. And sti.i she has Icon status among
those who see her as the bad girl, the sexually
assertive woman, the powerful playmogul Ask
for the real Madonna and she would stand up a
pantheon of her selves.
Says Dr. Lynne Layton, who leaches popular
culture at Harvard: "She npcaks to many

women who' feel pushed Into one aspect of
their femininity — 'Don't soli your dress,
always be nice.' Madonna has many different
versions of femininity and seems comfortable
with all of them."
When Madonna first brought her underwear
and ambition to the stage. It was said that the
multiple Madonna appealed to adolescent girls
because they try on Identities like lipstick.
Years later, she still appeals to young women
feeling the stress of expectations. Women who
try to be all things to
all people: sexy but
dressed for success,
m a te rn a l b u t In ­
dependent.
But what bothers
me In all this Is a
belief that she offers
the wrong answers to
the questions, or the
crisis, of Identity.
E specially fem ale
identity.
e &amp;if k
If th e w o rk of
growing up la finding
a center, integrating
the parts. Madonna
C M a d o n n a o f­
spotlights the frag­
fe rs c o s tu m e s
ments and calls them
an d c a lls them
a whole. If the busi­
the real th in g. £
ness of adulthood Is
finding yourself, she
c r e a te s us m any
selves us there are
rooms In her video
hotel. If we must evolve as grownups, she
switches Instead, like a quick-change artist
between acts. And If there is a search among
Americans for authenticity. Madonna offers
costumes and calls them the real thing.
Multi-Madonna is the survivor of a rough
childhood, of religious guilt and a bad
marriage. She has purposely become a female
with the nerve to be "bad" and the will to be
powerful. She Is. In short, sexy and hardnosed. brassy and vulnerable. S and M. victor
and victim, dressed In bra und black dress.
But the fight against being "pigeonholed"
can also be an excuse for confusion. The star of
tilts show ufter all makes little attempt to
reconcile the contradictions of her life and
psyche. She Insists Instead thut all the
fragments of u self be accepted.
In the end. watching the Madonnas pass
before us over the years. Is a bit like watching
the three faces of Eve...as a role model. That's
not an answer for women.

WASHINGTON - Sen. Daniel K. Inouye.
D-Hawaii, summed up the hypocrisy of
Congress last week when he said that
buslness-as-usual is on trial before the Senate
Ethics Committee.
The "Keating Five" are the only senators
sitting In the dock. But If every member of
Congress who ever did favors for a campaign
donor waa a n tin g
a l o n g a ld e th e m ,
there would be no
one left to alt In
Judgment.
"I believe what Is
on trial here la not
the five colleagues of
mine, but the U.S.
Senate, and for that
matter, the Congress
of the United States,”
Inouye testified be­
fo re th e E th ic s
C o m m ittee. H ie wae
less a plea for reform
than a call for the
committee to come
down from Ita Ivory C W h a t s d if­
to w er. Hla w ords
fe re n ce a
should ring true for
b
a ilo u t m a k e s. J
o n e m an In th a t
to w e r, co m m ittee
member Sen. David
H. Pryor. D-Ark.
Pryor Is supposed to paaa Judgment on
whether hla colleagues erred when they went
to bat for the out-of-control savings and loon
Industry and Charles Keating, a generous
campaign contributor. Yet Pryor, too. went to
bat for the SAL Industry and waa so proud of
It at the time that he touted hla action to the
media. What a difference a bailout makes.
Like many other senators. Pryor had SAL
problems In hla state In the mid-1980s. The
Federal Home Loon Bank Board and Its
chairman Edwin Gray were trying to pull the
thrifts out of the fast lane. In Arkansas. 27 of
the state's 37 thrifts were feeling the screws
and they didn't like It a bit.
They complained to Pryor and. on Oct. 3.
1986, he wrote a high- pressure letter to Gray
accusing the Bank Board of having "a
deliberate system of harassment against
many Institutions In this state.”
Then, to make sure Gray knew he meant
business. Pryor put a legislative "hold" on a
bill that Gray needed to recapitalize the SAL
deposit Insurance fund. Pryor, with no clue of
the financial calamity that was to come, even
made his letter public when he wrote It. He
was standing up for hla constituents and
proud of It. Gray was desperate for the
recapitalization bill, and Pryor was one of the
senators keeping Gray on a tight leash by
holding up the bill. Gray has testified that he
had to kowtow to senators to assure the
passage of the bill. Apparently Pryor has
found the elusive line between himself and
the others, because he decided he was still
eligible to pass Judgment on the Keating Five.
When our associate Ttm Warner asked for
Pryor’s explanation of the facts, he got a
quick and well-rehearsed reply. Pryor's de­
fense Is that the hold he put on the
recapitalization legislation waa merely sym­
bolic. But Gray had no way of knowing how
far Pryor would
aid go to stifle the much-needed
bill. Before the Ethics Committee sat down to
Judge the Keating Five, Pryor says he showed
his 1986 letter to the committee leadership,
which said It wasn't a reason for Pryor to step
down from the committee.
And Pryor claims hla letter did not name
any specific thrift, nor was It linked to
campaign contributions. That may be Pryor’s
biggest stroke of luck. In the three years
before he wrote the letter, he had received
almost $20,000 In campaign contributions
from the SAL Industry. Including at least
$10,900 from Arkansas thrifts and their
operators. But Pryor’s letter to Gray did not
mention any particular thrift. In that he
differs from the Keating Five, who openly
took up Keating's cause. That difference must
be little consolation to one of the Keating
Five. Sen. John McCain. R-Ariz. He made
mistakes, but at least he never lifted a finger
to stop the desperately needed recapitaliza­
tion.

�Sanford Harald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday, Dacambar 13. 1900- « A

MosquitoDeLoach. aaalatanl diretor of the
county public h ealth u n it.
“We're really happy no one
Wednesday, health director
Dr. Jorge Deju wrote county and
school otTUrfifli .iighi-ttmc actlvltlea could reaume aa long aa the
nee to uae precauOvernight camping la atill
waged far at leaat another
Ddu wrote. School
offlciala lilted their ban on
night-time aporta activites yeatenhty.
Seminole County commtoslonera approved spending up to
10.000 more thta week to spray
areas where the disease-carrying
mosquitoes are still fauna. A
to tal of *45,000 h as been
appropriated far the county's
anti-mosquito effort since the
(bat cases of encephalitis were
reported in the state this sum­
mer.
Deju cited the lack of the
potentially fatal disease in
monitoring chickens stationed
throughout the county during
the last two tests. Also, reduc­
tions In the numbers of the
disease-carrying mosquitoes.
Culm nigripstpus. were cited ss
reasons precautions could be
relaxed. Deju recom mended
people who choose to be outside
at night should still wear longsleeved shirts and trousers and
: a moaqutto repellant.
Only four cases of encephalitis

B e ssie O a y lo r B ell, 8 3 ,
F atrv lew A ve„ A lta m o n te
Springs, died Tuesday at Or­
lando Regional Medical Center.
Born Oct. 4.1907. In Charleston.
W.Va., she moved to Altamonte
Springs from Dunbar. W.Va.. In
1979. She as a homemaker and
a member of the First Baptist
Church of Dunbar, she attended
S t. S te p h e n P r e s b y te r ia n
Church. Orlando. She was a
ember of the Eastern Star
1bar Chapter 133.
Survivors include son. Archie
A. Oaylor. Altamonte Springs;
sisters, Goldie Reece, Tress Ie
Edens, Helen Harper, all of
C harleston. Hazel Withrow.
Huntington. W.Va., Ruth Dixon.
Winter Park; brothers. Hubert
Facemyre, Charleston. Doyle
Facem yre, L eesburg: th re e
g ra n d c h ild re n : four g re a ti
grandchildren.
Baldw ln-Falrchlld F uneral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
Rose R. Brown. 78. 123
Teriwood St.. Fern Park, died
Tuesday at Winter Park Memo­
rial Hospital. Born April 7. 1912.
In Baltimore County, Md.. she
moved to Fern Park from there
In 1976. She was a registered
nurse and a Lutheran. She waa a
member of the Nurse's Alumni
Association at Lutheran Hospi­
tal. Baltimore.
Survivors Include son. John R.
Jr., Columbus, Ohio; daughters,
Jennifer Hollister. Stellacoom.
Wash., Judy R. Brobst. Col­
um bia. S.C.; sisters. Lydia
Callahan. Relaterstown. Md..
Heddle Kloetzll, Baltim ore;
b r o t h e r . K a rl R e l c h l l n .
Westminster. Md.: four grand­
children.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

Fe e s
w ere rep o rted In Sem inole
County and no deaths. In nearby
Orange County. 21 cases were
reported and at least one death
was attributed to the dtseane.
Statewide, at least' 161 cases
were confirmed and six deaths
were reported.
DeLoach said the bout has led
local health officials to do more
studies into the disease and
mosquito collection. DeLoach
said as a precaution, disease
testing may continue through
the printer.

■ga 1A
addr
growth adequately for a long,
fang time.”
Furlong also failed to gain
support la s t month from the
to begin j
Uons to adopt a library fee tor
new homes, although commis­
sioners Tuesday authorised
county staff to review how much
effart will be needed to prepare
such a fee far adoption.
New home fees far libraries
and parks have been endorsed
by the League of Women Voters
of Seminole County.
The staff background study for
Y o u n g
the library fee waa opposed
1A
Tuesday by commissioner Pat
the chalr- Warren, who mid she objected
manshlpof Brent Adamson.
staff working on the library fee
T hat particular project In­ when her requests for staff
volves a series of educational stu d ie s have been rejected
sem inars designed to Inform because of a tack of staff time
young business leaders at the available for the work. Warren
problems, needs and Issues that cited her request for staff to work
face businesses and citizens of towards a planning agreement
the focal area.
with Oviedo.
"Sixty-five percent of our
County staff have been work­
m e m b e rs have b u s in e s s e s ing on agreements with Sanford
employing 10 persons or less." and Altamonte Springs and have
Young said, "and we Intend to yet to com plete those two
have a major focus on continu­ agreements. The negotiations
ing those program s that will with the two cities have resulted
provide assistance for the small in agreements far water and
Dullnesses.
and
O utgoing presid en t. Tony
Rusal waa given a standing
o v a tio n for h is m n n y a c ­
complishments during his past H R S
year in office.
1A
mention any names.
"The department's got to con­
tinue to run." Chiles sold. "It's
got a major pari of the budget.
It's going to have to take some
Hospital. Altamonte Springs. major cuts. So we'll operate with
Born July 8. 1942, In Kingsport, an acting (agency head) for a
Tenn., she moved to Altamonte white."
State agencies are bracing for
Springs from Orlando In 1986.
She was a teacher a t Palmetto •270 million In budget cuts
Elementary School In Orange because the economic slump Is
County and a member of Grace slowing receipts from sales taxes
and corporate taxes. Chiles and
Brethren Church. Maitland.
Survivors Include husband. the Cabinet are expected to
Jam es L.; son, Scott D.. Alta­ approve the cuts shortly after
monte Springs; daughter. Tanya the new governor assumes of­
Goodman. Altamonte Springs, fice.
parents, Robert end Edna Pat­
Gov. Bob Martinez brought
terson. Kingsport; sister. Pat Coler In from Illinois, where he
Dawson, Kingsport; brother, headed the Department of Public
Aid and before that the Depart­
Roger Patterson. Atlanta.
B aldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral ment of Children and Family
Home, Altamonte Springs. In Services, to streamline HRS.
charge of arrangements.
' Coler has overseen the con­
traction of a massive computer
system to consolidate HRS pro­
COL. OEOROE V. HUMES
Col. George V. Kllmcs. 96. 500 grams. including the 24-hour
Village Place. Longwood, died abuse hotline.
But he has also been criticized
Tuesday at South Seminole
C om m unity H sopttal. Long- for giving agency contracts.to
wood. Born Jan. 21. 1894. In hia friends and his uae of'state
Prague, Czechoslovakia, he a u to m o b ile s '. N e ith e r th e
moved to Longwood from Palm L egislature nor th e Ethics
Beach In 1974. He waa a retired Commission found any vio­
business executive and a Pre­ lations of state law. however.
Colcr’a tenure was also marred
sbyterian. He was an Army
veteran of World War I and by a aeries of child abuse deaths.
World War II. He was past Including th at of Lakeland
president and district governor toddler Bradley McGee, killed by
o f R o ta r y I n t e r n a t i o n a l , his stepfather while supposedly
under HRS supervision.
Birmingham. Ala.
Survivors Include daughter.
Ann K. Blackman. Longwood:
tw o g ran d so n s, one greatgrandson.
C o x -P a rk e r C a r e y H and
Funeral Home. Winter Park, in
charge of arrangements.

OMEN "ERO" MITCHELL
Oren "Bro" Mitchell. 68. 2021
J o n e s Ave.. S a n fo rd , died
Wednesday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Bom
July 12. 1922. In Sylvester. Ga..
he moved to Sanford 50 years
ago from Daytona Beach. He was
a retired farm contractor and a
m e m b e r o f N ew B e t h e l
M issionary B aptist C hurch.
Sanford.
Survivors Include wife, Annie
HELEN B. BURCH
J..
Sanford; sons. Gregory, Or­
Helen B. Burch. 71, 17 Ha­
cienda Village. Winter Springs, lando. Reginald Lee. New Or­
died Saturday at South Seminole leans; daughters. Martha Blue,
Jean Wynn. Olivia Lynn
Community Hospital. Longood. Ella
Williams,
Altemcse, all of
Born March 25. 1919. In Utica. S a n f o r dand
,
A
w d r a M a r ie
N.Y., she moved to W inter Montgomery. Oviedo:
Springs from Orchard Park. Jam es. Baltimore: 20 brother.
grandN.Y.. in 1973. She was a retired
nursing assistant and a member c h i l d r e n ; s i x g r e a t of the Winter Springs VFW grandchildren.
Sunrise Funeral Home, San­
Auxiliary 5405.
ford.
in charge of arrangements.
Survivors Include husband.
Francis J.; son. Jay F.. Winter FRANK J. UNGVAHY
Springs; daughter. Jennifer B.
F ra n k J . U n g v a ry . 78.
Morse. Syracuse. N.Y.; sister, Trallwood
Drive. Altamonte
Ruth Fletcher, ftortamouth. R.I.;
Springs,
died
Monday at Florida
•two grandchildren.
Hospital. Altamonte Springs.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral B o r n D e c . 2 3 19 1 1 , In
Home. Orlando, In charge of Woodbridgc.
N.J.. he moved to
arrangements.
Altamonte Springs from Fort
Lauderdale In 1984. He was a
WILLIE JAMES DTKE8
WUle Jam es Dykes. 2955 retired supervisor with the New
T rum an St.. Sanford, died Jersey post office and u member
the Catholic Church of th'e
Wednesday at Central Florida of
Annunciation. He was a member
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Bom of
the Knights of Columbus.
Feb. 27. 1919. In Dooly County.
Survivors
Include wife. Ethel
. Ga.. he moved to Sanford three M.; daughter.
Judy Coleman,
weeks ago from Vienna. Ga. He New Brunswick.
son.
was a retired farm laborer and a Jlm m e, A ltam onteN .J.;
Springs;
Baptist.
Survivors Include sister. Nuoni three grandchildren.
B aldw ln-Falrchlld F uneraf
Smith. Ft. Lauderdale: nephews. Home,
Forest City, in charge of
' Johnny Amos, Johnny Cain ami arrangements.
Walter Cain, all of Sanford;
nieces, Shellie A. Watson. Celia
fu n b u a l
.Davis. Debra Byrd and Emma
Jean Arnold, all of Sanford.
• Sunrise Funeral Home. San- ANTHONY "SAV" HICKS
Fgnaral MfvlCM lor Mr Anthony "Roy"
1ford. In charge of anangemets.
HICki 17. ol Sonlord. «ho dwd Thurtdoy. will
JOAN FULKERSON
J o a n F u lk e rs o n . 4 8 .
Westchester Drive. Altamonte
Springs, died Tuesday at Florida

bo II o m. Soturdoy ot Ml Slnol MluJonory
Boptitl Church. Lonlord. &lt;*lth dry Mylot
otflclotlng Friondi moy coll ol Iho lunorol
homofromOfpm Fridoy
Sunni* Funorol Homo. Sontord. in chorpo
ol orronqomonH

I k In

r Ii

L

It waa a year ago, December
13. 1969. that you left us. We
miss you ana we love you.

m en u have not been I
Only cotnmtaalnnrr Bob Sturm
supported Furlong's cell for the
county to prepare a parka and
recreation impact fee. Although
a t current county standaras,
there w ill..be. adequate, park
through the end of the
another 1.431 acreaa will be
needed by the year 2000.
Furlong said a fee placed on
new homes could help pay for
new land or to build recreation
be proposed the county develop
w t we lof roeir cofitsocrmuon.
Sturm sold the county should
have a committee review the
proposal or to Mre a consultant
to prepare It to assure the fee
w o u ld w ith h o ld a n y le g a l
Warren oppoaed hiring a
consultant but suggested county
management consultant Roger
Netawender could advfoe the
county on the fee. Cammtaafoner
Fred Streetmon sold he oppoaed
‘the suggestion not on tta merit
but because he dkin't know how
much staff time and county
finances might be Involved with
the proposal.
The proposal to develop the fee
failed on a 3-2 vote with only
Furlong and S tu m supporting
It.
But no other commissioners
w ouldn't consider F urlong's
request to Include taw enforce­
m ent and Jolt needs In the
comprehensive plan and to de­
velop an Impact fee to pay far
those needs.
"I don't aee how you can plan
for government services and not
In clu d e law e n fo rc e m e n t."

Furlong said. "The most basic
service government offers Is cops
and courts.*'
Commissioners allowed the
proposal to die without a vote.
CoRimtRsfaner Jennifer Kelley
said she didn't believe the
commission could adopt growth
plans based, on the sheriff, who
they do not control. Commis­
sioners do pay for sheriff's re­
quests out of property taxes and
can reject the sheriff's fiscal
requests. The sheriff can appeal
their derision to the governor
and Cabinet.
Voters turned down a one-

O tJS T M A S ORGAN C O N O IU M IT T

■Featuring

DENNIS AWE

W ar

DK . n t h • M O M l
SANTORO CIVIC CtNTZR
4 0 1 L SUMNOU BCVD.

te g *

Jones said a few of the stu­
dents will be "recruited" to wear
authentic clothing and read
biographies of a person who
might nave worn the clothing.
“For the gins, we have every­
thing from a milk maid’s outfit
to a formal ball gown." she said.
"The buys will lave uniforms to
wear."
Jones said last year's group
told h er th a t they enjoyed
wearing the clothes more than
anything else.
Jones believes the youngsters
learn when they become a part
of the action.
The students learned about
weapons used In fighting as well
as the marching formations and
etiquette of war. They studied
crafts such as beading and
tanning.
The event ended with a mesa
call that brought the students
together for a meal In the
m useum ’s auditorium before
they returned to the twentieth
century.

year. one-cent sales tax proposal
which would have expanded the
Jail, built a new sheriff's ad­
ministration budding and profacilities for the cities.
Jail officials say the current Jail
will now become overcrowded
. before H can be expanded.
Seminole County taxpayers
received the largest property tax
Increase In 10 years this year In
port to help pay for 17 new
positions for the sheriff's office
needed for Increased demand for
services. Sheriff John Polk had
sought 43 new positions to stay
ahead of service demands.

-

f

■

•Donl mbs sasing *Mr. Shownmanship" - Dsnnts Aws. Dannie has
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and has appsarsd on th s T o d ay Show*. T onight S h o w and in
V sgaa at ths M G M Grand, C a sto r's R aise s and tti* Sahara.

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------------------------------- | I
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205 e . 25t h st . |
321-0885

�Hartfd, Untefd, Hoiidz-Tbunday. Oacwntow 13. 1

Education Secretary
Cavazos resigns post
■y JANET RAM
Unltad Prats Internaltonal
WASHINGTON - President
Bush has accepted the longrumored resignation of Educa­
tion Secretary Lauro Cavazos, as
critics contended hts state stew­
ardship foiled to help tkmh make
good on his pledge to be the
“education president.”
Bush made the announcement
at a Cabinet meeting Wednes­
day. The resignation la effective
Saturday, after Cavazos gives a
commencement address to West
Virginia University.
Cavazos, the first Hispanic
American to be named to the
Cabinet, did not give a reason for
the resignation. Undersecretary
Ted Sanders was named acting
secretary until a successor is
nominated.
Cavazos. 63. was first ap­
pointed by President Reagan In
August 1088 to succeed William
Bennett and was held over by
Bush. Cavazos had been presi­
dent of Texas Tech University
when he Joined the Reagan
administration.
"With deep regfet I accept
your letter of resignation.'
said In a letter. “For more than
two years, and under two presi­
dents. you have distinguished
yourself through your devotion
to Improving the education of
our nation's children."
But during his tenure, critics
complained lie did not use his
office as a "bully pulpit" to
e n co u ra g e e d u ca tio n a l Im­
provement and that student
achievement actually got worse.
Even Cavazos called the most
recent Nation's Report Card,
using 1988 data, "a compen­
dium of disappointment." It
found that most students cannot

Bush aids Soviets, sett summit date
WASHINGTON - Prcaktent Bu*h, declaring the Soviet Union
| ‘ tough time*.” announced Wednesday an aaatotance
that will provide up to 81 billion In agriculture export
o eaae Moacow'a food shortage.
huh . also announced Wednesday that he will meet with
Soviet President Mikhail Oorbachev In Moscow FA. 1 M 3 t o
•Mn a Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, known as START.
wfSeh win drastically reduce Ihe auperpower arsenals of long
w S S rril made the announcement In the Rose Garden
with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze and
Secretary of State Jam es Baker at his side.

BfadSen eeetogteVe m u id w solved
MO OB JANEIRO — One of two ranchers accused of killing
an
In 1088, triggering International concern about the
tattoo of the Amazon rain forest, confeaaed to the crime as his
aWaaaft Aon K a O l n

___ ________^ _ ___ ______
_
_rT. ipocr
rrT____ "011100“ Mendes because the man accused his rather
and codefendant. Darly Alves da Silva. 56. of destroying the
"It isn't the first time that Darcl has confessed to the crime;
he did the same thing during the police Investigations but later
I It.
official,
asked
11 , “ a
gg vcourt
vua a w
siiu isu • who
w
" to remain
- unnamed, told
United Press International In a telephone Interview.

More of the same in Denmark
COPENHAGEN. Denmark — Denmark's Conservative Prime
Minister Poul Schluter began regrouping Thursday after voters
punished his party In general elections but changed little In the
complicated block politics of the legislature.
Deaotte mator gains for the opposition Social Democrats and
»
most other parties, the electorate handed back a
largely unchanged balance of socialist and non socialist blocks
S C r - s U grouped In six non-soclallst parties and 84
votes held by the two socialist parties, the most likely outcome
of Wednesday's election was a reshuffled non-soclallst coalition
under Schluter's leadership.
From United Proas International Rtporta

Civil rights
strategy
announced
WASHINGTON - A top
Education Department of­
ficial said scholarships for
minorities may be violating
civil rights laws, placing In
Jeopardy scholarships at
historically black coT
and other Institutions.
Michael Williams, i----tant education secretary for
civil rights, who was con­
firmed m June 1000. said
Wednesday at a news con­
ference departmental com­
pliance decisions made as
recently
1080 were
w ro n g , b a a e d o n th e
agency's theory.
" T h e Office of Civil
R ights h a s n o t hod s
Bound, consistent, legally
reasonable position and
policy to deal with this
tam r " Williams said as he
announced a national en­
forcement strategy.
Scholarships designated
for a particular race or
minority violate civil righto
laws If the university re­
ceives federal financial aid.
Williams said.
"The determining factor
la race." said Williams.

TrimYourTree
With Holiday
Safety

analyze what they read, cannot
handle moderately challenging
m ath problems and have a
limited understanding of Ameri­
can history.
The resignation was not en­
tirely unexpected, as Bush has
been forced In the past year to
defend Cavazos from critics who
contended he was not doing
enough to advance administra­
supporter of Saddam's hard-line tion goals In education.
stance. The dismissal was the
second Important shake- up of
R ^brv Y tm B m y, A s p
the Iraqi military in as many
months.
(^ 'v a C tn iy Q tw iti\x

Small cracks In wiring for Christmas tree
lights, unfilled light sockets, overloaded
electrical outlets, or a dried-out live tree
can be dangerous. Please take time to
check for possible problems.

New defense minister named by Iraq
.

.

-

.

protected the southern Iraqi port
of Basra from waves of Iranian
A young war hero has been troops In 10&amp;2. Toamma has
put In charge of Iraq's armed also built formidable, three-line
ta re s , a move that diplomats defenses around southern Iraq.
One Arab diplomat in Cairo
a d ! a show of strength by
Interpreted
the move Wednes­
Saddam Hussein, while the.
Algerian president launched a day as a show of strength from
crucial Arab mediation effort to Saddam, who the same day
ordered landlords In Baghdad to
end the crisis.
asHHsm replaced an elderly set up air-raid shelters in case of
&lt;»n «&gt;)
Ocn. Abdul Jabar Shanahal with attack.'
l T w o u n s Afcbs»..*bo %
V T h e e n v o y s a id th e n e w d e ­
built the solid defenses that fense m in is te r is c o n s id e r e d a

.

# «« . _a_a____ S_______ ___•

‘ M48. PwkAvs.
"Replacing Shanshal with a
hard-liner and war hero like
Toamma Is Saddam's way of
telling (he Americana his mili­
tary means business," on* Arab
envoy tn Cairo told United Press
International.

WSTCH SOTTiWaS - u o u v w a

-rr4a ■ A w

_ ix _

Join the Celebration
Registration Now Underway

Ttimyourtree with safety tor
a happier holiday thisyear!

NOTICE OF

P U B L IC H E A R IN G
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
L O C A L P L A N N IN G A G E N C Y
T h e C ity of Lake M ary’s Local Planning Agency will hold a
meeting on D ecem ber 18, 1990, at 6:00 p.m., or as soon
thereafter as possible, at Lake Mary City Hall, 100 W . Lake
Mary Boulevard to consider updates to the Com prehensive
Plan as follows:
1. Review Capital Im provem ents Element
T h e purpose of this hearing Is to make recommendations
on the proposed docum ents and receive comments from the
public.
Interested parties m ay appear and be heard regarding the
proposed elem ents and/or written com m ents may be filed
with the C ity Clerk at 100 W . Lake Mary Boulevard, Lake
Mary, Florida. C o p ie s of the elements may be inspected at
C ity Hall, M onday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.
N O T E : P E R S O N S A R E A D V IS E D T H A T A T A P E D R E C O R D
O F T H IS M E E T IN G IS M A D E BY T H E C IT Y FOR ITS C O N ­
V E N IE N C E . T H IS R E C O R D M A Y N O T C O N S T IT U T E A N
A D E Q U A T E R E C O R D FO R T H E P U R P O S E S O F A P P E A L
FR O M A D E C IS IO N M A D E B Y T H E C IT Y . A N Y P E R S O N
W IS H IN G T O E N S U R E T H A T A N A D E Q U A T E R E C O R D O F
T H E P R O C E E D IN G S IS M A IN T A IN E D F O R A P P E L L A T E
P U R P O S E S IS A D V IS E D T O M A K E T H E N E C E S S A R Y

SEMINOLE COMMUNITY CO LLEG E
(407) 323-1450
S a n fo rd

100 W tldon B oulevard, S an fo rd , FL 32773-5199
u r EQUAL
n m ACCESSEQUAL
a/-/-F&lt;M.FOUAL OPPORTUNITY COMMUNtTY
AN
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
COUEOE

___
(407) 043-7001
O ffo n ao

A R R A N G E M E N T S A T H IS O R H ER O W N EX P E N S E .
D A TE D : D E C E M B E R 11, 1990

I

�Sports

INSIDE:

B
Tu rn the lights back on
■Com ics, Page 4B
■ People, Page SB
■ Classified, Page 6B

athletic events would be played In chickens kept by the county.
St. Louis encephalitis Is a danger­
Ihr daylight following the recom­
m endation of Dr. Jorge Deju. ous and potentially fatal virus to the
director of Ihe Seminole County elderly and Infants. Healthy adults
generally aren’t serious affected.
health department.
When Dr. Deju made his recom­
At Seminole County high schools,
the athletic departments arc self­ mendation to reschedule events,
supporting. When games were re­ county principals and athletic
scheduled lo he played during Ihe directors convened In n special
day. attendance figures dropped meeting to vole on the recommen­
dation. Tonight. In a hoard of
significantly and hurt gale rerclpts.
The rcavsu for Ihe change was the directors meeting of Ihe Seminole
outbreak of St. Louis encephalitis Athletic Conference, an Item of
carried by night-flying mosquitos. discussion will In* Ihe rescheduling
Seminole County was one of the last of conference games.
to reschedule high school evening
"When I spoke with the prin­
activities but followed suit afler the cipals. one or two were considering
health department noted thr signifi­ changing games this Friday." said
cant and rapid Increase of Incidents Bealhard. "All I know for sure Is
of the dlsrasr In the sentinel flock of □Bee Lights, Page 2B

County gets OK to resume
nighttime athletic events

COLLEGE HOOPS
Georgetown hammers St. Leo
LANDOVEK. Mil. — Dlkcmbc Muiomho scored
22 points. grabtxd 14 rebounds atul blocked nix
shots to load No. 5 Georgetown to a 75-45
victory Wednesday night over St. Leo.
Georgetown. 0-0. was without standout center
Alonzo Mourning, who Is nursing a minor fool
Injury. The 7-f(tol-2 Mntnmbo played 38 of the
game’s 40 minutes, substantially more than Ills
average amount of court time.
Charles Harrison tallied 14 points and Lamant
Morgan added 10 for Georgetown. Tyrone
Graves led St. Leo. 0-8. with 14 points. Krtr
brooks added 10.

secretary of the Seminole Athletic
Conference, informed the schools of
the decision.
That strange sound you heard
"We’ve been told that wc can now
some lime Wednesday afternoon begin scheduling nighttime activi­
wus the collective sigh of relief from ties." said Heal hard In u telephone
Seminole County high school prin­ Interview Wednesday evening. "I
cipals and athletic directors when called all the principals and gave
they found nut that they may them that news this afternoon."
resume scheduling outdoor sports
C o u n t y h ig h s c h o o l a d ­
events at night.
ministrators have lieen walling pa­
Boger Brat hard. coordinator of tiently but anxiously for that piece
Physical Education for the Seminole of good news since Oct. 19. when II
County School Board and executive was decided that evening outdoor
■y TONY DoSOftMIM
Herald Sports Editor

BASKETBALL

Robinson sees pluses
in Sem inole’s 0-4 start

Heat sutlers fifth straight loss
MIAMI — Dominique Wilkins scored 28 points
and collected 17 rebounds Wednesday to send
Atlanta to a 118-03 victory over the Miami Ilea'
and give the Hawks their fourth win In their last
five games.
Wilkins bit 10 of 17 shots from the floor and
was helped by 22 points by Kevin Wilkins.
Sherman Douglas and and Glen Klee scored
10 earh to lead the Miami. 5-14. as the Heat
dropped Its fifth straight game.
Wilkins hit a 3-polntcr with 8:24 left In the
first quarter to give Atlanta a 13-12 lead it never
relinquished. That sent the Hawks. 8-11. on a
16-2 run as they built a 20-14 lead on Kevin
Willis two foul shots and drive to the basket wlh
4:43 left In the |&gt;erto(L

FOOTBALL

From staff reports______________
SANFORD — Even though his
leant had lost Its fourth game of the
season without a win earlier In Ihe
evening. Seminole High School
h o y s' b a s k e tb a ll coach G reg
Robinson sllll was upbeat Wednes­
day nlgnt.
"We're coming.” said Robinson
after the Scminolcs had dropped a
69-63 decision to the visiting Jones
Tigers. "We're the best 0-4 team
around. I couldn't he upset with the
kids after the way they played
tonight."
Seminole dug Itself a 15-4 hole In
the first quarter Wednesday night,
but came back to outscore Jones
20-11 In the second quarter to pull
within Iwo points. 26-24. at the
Intermission.
Jones came out In the third frame
and outscored the Tribe 22-16. hut
again Seminole responded, pulling
even with the Tigers with Just under
a minute left In the game.
"The kids did a good Job." said
Robinson. "It wus a tie game with
48 M-cond» to go and we hud the

□

Dolphins sign McKinnon
MIAMI — The Miami Dolphin? Wednesday
signed former Chicago Hears wide receiver
Dennis McKinnon to replace Scott Sebwedes
who was placed on Injured reserve with a
dislocated shoulder.
McKinnon, who was waived by Dallas earlier
this year, had been signed by the Dolphins Nov.
10 hut was released three days later.
The Dolphins also moved linebacker Harry
Krauss and cornerback Mike McGruder front
Injured reserve to the practice squad.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL- ]

b a ll. H u t

Maryland is UPl’s top lineman
MIAMI - Last spring was an agonizing lime
for Kussell Maryland.
The University of Miami defensive tackle had
graduated with a degree In psychology and was
trying to decide whether to turn pro by joining
the supplem ental draft or return to the
Hurricanes fora fifth year.
With some urging from Coach Dennis
Erickson, he decided he had something more to
prove In college and came tock for Ids filth year.
Apparently, he made the right move, and
Wednesday he was named Lineman of the Year
by United Press International.
It was Ills second postseason award. Last
week Itt Los Angeles, the 0- foot-2. 273-pounder
from Chicago won the Gotland Trophy as the
nation's top lineman.

Poor outside shooting has hampered Seminole High School In Its 0-4 start
this season. On Wednesday night. Shawn Robinson (No. 44) made one ol
Seminole’s few successful outside shots in a three-point loss lo Jones.

a

hud

M in t a n d

Riley to stay at FAMU
TALLAHASSEE - Ken Kllcy will remain
fontlKill coach at Florida AAM after withdrawing
trout consideration lor the head coaching )ob at
Southern Methodist University.
•Tm going to try and make this program the
lx-st 1 |&gt;osstblv can." said Kllcy. who played
college lo ot ball at ANM. Tin happy where I am
That’s never liven a problem."
Kllcy was considered u linalisi for lhe (oh
Is-ing vacated by Forrest Gregg, but he decided
Wednesday to remain with the Division I AA
Battlers.
"I | u s t tell that there are some obligations I
have here • the coaches, the players, my
lamilv." Bilcv said
C o m p iled fro m w lro a n d sta ff r o p o r ts .

____ ___________ ____

|

BASKETBALL
‘t 30 p m — WKt'F 158. Orlando Magic at
Phoenix Suns. Il.l

DcI.AND — In a game that Coach
Larry McCorklc said was "as perfect
a game as I've seen played since I've
been here." Ihe Lake Mary Rams
blanked Ihe host DeLand Bulldogs
3-0 In a Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence boys' soccer game played al
Spec Martin Stadium.
John Kodak. Justin Walker and
John Ztssman each scored a firsthalf goal and goalie Jason Rcddttt
made three saves to lead the Rams.
4- 1 overall and 3-0 in the SAC.
DeLand dropped to 1-2-1. 0-2 In the
conference.
"We've turned It around a lot In
Just a week." said McCorklc. "We
played really pwirly against Semi­
nole last Wednesday. We were down
2 0 and had to come back to won
4-2. Three of our goals were scored
off long throw-ins.
"Today was the day for us to play
for a state championship. It was as
perfect a game as I've wen played
since I've been here."
Kodak put the Rams up 1-0 when
he took a pass front Erie Davis and
cracked a 30-yard shot. David
Yurtek sel up Walker for Lake
Mary's second goal before Steve
Held! assisted Ztssman on his goal.
Lake Mary outshot DeLand 20-4
and had a 3-1 edge in comer kicks
Rcddltl made three saves before
giving way to Kevin Tvll with about
10 minutes to play. DeLand's goalie
made 10 saves.
"Right now. we're a Just a leant
with a lot of solid players who are all
playing well as a team.” said
McCorklc. "All of the goals we
scored today were really nice
"Our defense really played well
Jason did a nice |ob reading Ihe
gamc He didn't have to make any
dtlltcult saves "
Redditt was assisted by the play
of defenders Josh Arnold. Scott
Lyon. Mario Travlos and sweeper
See Rams. Page 3B

M im * l i l t . W llllam i 4 0 2 I]. Alklnt 4 4 4 Jl.
Boalman 4 I 2 11. Alien I 0 0 3. Chaatham } 4 10 18.
Thorn** I &gt;0 J. Andrtw* ] I J J Total* 2J It 254*

SEMINOLE Itl)
Redding 1 1 2 4. Hall I 0 0 2. J Wlggmt 2 1 2 5 .
O Naal 4 2 2 10. K Wlogln* H 2 4 24. Wathlngton )
0 04. W h itt52 2 12 Total* 274 1441
Jana*
IS 11 21 21 - 4*
Samlnal*
4 24 t t 11 - 41
Thra* point tlald goal* — Jona* 7 (Alkln* 1.
Boatman 1. Allan 1). Sammoia 0 Total tool* —
Jona* IS. Sam lnola 21 Fouled out — Hall
(Samlnola) Technical* — Non# Record* — Jona*
4 I, SamlnolaO 4,

three-pointers among his 12 points.
Monte W illiam s and S cduris
Cheatham added 12 and 10 (Mints,
respectively.
By c o m p a r is o n . S e m in o le
pounded Jones Inside behind the
play of Kerry Wiggins la game-high
24 points). Carlo While (12 points)
and Wesley O'Nell (10 points).
’’We rebounded real w ell.”
Robinson said. "Carlo. Kerry and
Wesley did an outstanding Job
Inside. If our outside shooting
comes around, we'll be ok."
Robinson attributed some of the
Scmlnoles' early woes to youth and
Inexperience.
" W c lost a tot of good p l a y e r * to
g r a d u a tio n lust y c u r .” said
Robinson, whose team dropped a
three-point decision at Spruce Creek
on Tuesday night. "We just have to
learn what to do In pressure situa­
tions and how to handle them."
Seminole will attempt to end Its
four-game skid In a road game at
Lake Brantley on Friday night.

No. 4 Hawks
pull out win
over Tribe
By FHIL SMITH
Herald Correspondent___________

F ro m sta ff r s p o r t s ________________

WASHINGTON — Athletic directors from
Syracuse. Pittsburgh. Boston College and Miami
met Wednesday with Ulg East Commissioner
Mike Tranghcse over the formation of a football
conference.
Big East spokesman John Paquette saltl by
telephone from conference headquarters in
Providence. ILL. the league will make a
statement of ’’substance" Thursday.
The all-day m eeting brought together
Tranghcse and athletic directors Etl Hozlk ol
Pitt. Sam Jaukovlch of Miami. Jake Croulhauicl
of Miami and Hill Flynn of Boston College.
Paquette said Tuesday that conference of­
ficials did not exjM-et a formal announcement on
loothall membership until January.

C o m p lato lis tin g on P a g a 2B

to o k

Lake M a ry
‘p e rfe c t’ in
3-0 v ic to ry

Big East discusses football

I B E S T --------B E TS O N T V

wr

they got the Itall back. Tony Atkins
made five freee throws In Anal 48
seconds for them and that was
difference In the game.”
Atkins led a long-range assault of
Seminole, canning a trio of threepoint field goals on Ills way to
scoring a team-high 21 points.
Andrew Boatman also had three

JONES 14?)

W

^■ 1 w m ~

/ ¥ (
t

t

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H

John Zissman (No 7) scored Lake Mary's third goal in a win over DeLand
Wednesday evening The Rams will return to action Friday, hosting the Lake
Howell Silver Hawks in a 3 30 p m game at Don T Reynolds Stadium

WINTER PARK - The No. 4
ranked Lake Howell Silver Hawks
lefltalned unbeaten as they edged
the Seminole Fighting Scminolcs
2-1 Wednesday afternoon In a
Seminole Athletic Conference toys'
soccer match at Lake Howell High
School's Richard L. Evans Field.
Lake Howell, now 4-0-2. had
several opportunities lo score in the
early minutes of the match. Charlie
DeGralf had a shot that lilt the left
(msI only 90 seconds Into the game.
Ted Lane had two shots from
point-blank range, one going over
the crossbar and the other saved by
Seminole goalkeeper Jon Williams. •
The Silver Hawks went on top 1-0
midway Into the first hull when
DcGraff look a pass from Chris
Brown, played Ihe toll lo himself In
the air twice and rocketed a shot
Into Ihe net.
The score remained 10 until the
55th minute, when a Seminole
defender headed a hall In Ihe wrong
direction and II eventually tonneed
Into Ills own goal, giving Ihe Stiver
Hawks a 2-0 lead.
"My kids gave a great tlfori
today." said Seminole Coach Carlos
Mcrllno. "Even when we fell behind
See Lake Howell. Page 3B

Defense d o m in a te s in L y m a n -O v ie d o draw
F ro m s ta ff r s p o r ts

_____ _________ _______________

OVIEDO — Defenders -Jell Ondcrko ol Lyman and
Noel Reul of Oviedo dominated Ihe game from their
backline position, leading their respective sides to a l I
tie in a Seminole Athletic Conference toys so o rr
match played at Oviedo High School's John Courier
Stadium
Lyman Is now 4 I 2 overall. 10-2 in SAt play, while
Oviedo Is 1-3 1.0-2 I In the conference
Both goals were stored In Ihe tirst half. Rod Menlus
giving Oviedo a I •() lead when he -wored ms loiirth goal
of the season 10 minutes Into the match. Craig
Rurbusch getting the assist Frank Clppollu tied the

game 15 minutes later for Lyman Allen Newsome had
Ihe assist on Clp|&gt;nlla'sgoal.
After that. It was up to Ondcrko. Reid and the test ol
the defenses.
Wc had the better of the action during the lust halt .'J
said Oviedo Coach Dave Jcckanoskl "The last 15
minutes of the match, they dominated us. largely due io
the play of Ondcrko. their stopper back
"They were driving on us late, hut they rrully didn t
have a quality chance The rest of the game was very
even."
Lyman had a 15 11 edge over Oviedo in shots on goal
and t(*»k seven corner kicks to the Lions three
See Tie. Page 30

�'s

&gt;

0

I — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thursday, Dacambor 13, t|

S T A T S &amp; STA N D IN G S
IT O P A V
]
GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
Laka Brantley at famlnola.
Junior varsity at 6 p.m., varsity at
7:30 p.m.
Laka Hawaii at Lafca Mary.
Junior varsity at 6:30 p.m„ varsity
at 6 p.m.
Lyman at Daltona. Ju n io r
varsity at B p.m., varsity at 7:30
p.m.
Oviedo at DaLand. Junior
varsity at 5:45 p.m., varsity at
7:30 p.m.
Melbourne Contra! CeMieBo at
Orangasroad Christian. Junior
varsity at 4:30 p.m., varsity at 6
p.m.
BOYS'BASKCTSAU
Varsity
Melbourne Contra! Catholic at
Orangawoad Christian, 7:30 p.m.
Evans st Ssmtnels, 4:15 p.m.
Laks Msry si Lsks Hawaii, 7
p.m.
DsLsnd si Ovtdde, 8:30 p.m.
GIRLS* SOCCER
Stminols at Laks Sraotlsy,
3:30 p.m.
Laks Mary at Laks Howell, 3:30
p.m.
OaLand at Oviedo, 3:30 p.m.
Lyman at Daytona Beach-Seabreeze, 4:30 p.m.
BOYS’SOCCER
Junior varsity
Laka Brantlay at Samlnola,
3:30 p.m.
Laka Howall at Laka Mary, 3:30
p.m.
Lyman at Oviado, 3:30 p.m.

17 ( » l 2
711 JM S V i
7 12 3*5*
S IS .7N«V|
S M .7 N *

M tM
MImwaaI s
DBftVBT
ttto sa i

PetHK ntvIUee
Perftond
LA lakers
Pheenle
GeMen Stole
LA CNppars
Seattle
1 ureraewto

1( 1.( S l ­
it 7 A ll 7
11 7 A ll 7
17 ■ AM 7
MW J M (
* 17.321II
3 IS .1*7 IS

*tit. Milwaukee H I
Son An4on4o tl, Char M M II
Houston m PklMMpMa M6
LA Cljpp if i MB, CUaotond M
Dalle* 111. LA L o h m (7 (OT|
Soatttatt. IndlanatO

&lt;0— 4(4 PMMdMpMo. tiM p-m .
Sen Antonio at CHsoland. 7:35p.m.
Detroit at Boater. I p.m.
Houston at Waahlntton. I p. m.
LA Clipper! at O d o m . » : * p m.
Dal tat at Portland. 10:30 p.m.

A TL A N TA ( t i l l
WllklM 1617 54 M. Willi* 7 10 ( I » .
Koncok 4-7 0 0 1. River* 51154 1*. WObb 512
21 11. Battle M l *4 It. Molar* 1-4 I I 3.
Moncrlot 51 0-0 0, McCormick 1-4 50 4.
RoMnoon 2 1 5 0 4. Forroll 50 55 0. WlUon 55
550. Totot* 44-111517115
M IAM I (t l)
Lang 57 54 IX Thompten M 11 S.
Soikety 5 13 1-4 (A Dougloo 51* 5 1 1 5 Rico
5 M 5 5 15 Burton 511 54 11. Devil 1-3 11 X
Ko*eHr2 5 66 5 Coles 4 ( 6 0 (. SundveM 66
600, AUlrtsO I 111. Totals 46C31730(3.
11 M 17 54 - 115

a 17 it w - ti

(Point gaol*-Atlanta 511 (Wilkin* 5 5
Battle t l, Rlvor* 11. Wets 51). Miami 14
(Cole* 15 Burton 51. Rko 51). Fowled
out None. Rebound* Atlanta 47 (Wilkin* 14).
Miami as iSeikely I). At$*stoAtlanta 17
(Wabb It), Miami M (Dougla* ID . Total
foul* Atlanta It. Miami IS. Technics!OougLa*.A-lS.OM.

At

IS M M I

latt

First i s ms
3 Eg** Elorri
1 (M 13 M ( M
4 Pinion
Aquino
17.40 7.30
I More*I W*yn*
4.00
0 ( H ) JJ.40 P ( M ) 117JO T (5 6 4 ) 1443.00
fcCflMf i m u
3 Elorri
1 (0 l.M 1.10
1 Aquino
5.40 1.40
7 R*mon
140
0 (M l M.40 P &lt;M&gt; 107.K T 111-7) 2S54*
D D IM IA N
TMrBgeme
l Pierr# W*yn*
U K 25.M 4 40
SMarctl Brock
S.M l.M
0 Zugat* Munor
4.H
0 (1-5) M.M P ( M ) (M O T (1 -M ) IK 7 .K
FeertKgeme
IPiorro
10 M 5 M 4.00
1 C «U
7.40 4.M
2 Brack
1(0
Q (1-1) M.40 P (1-1) (3.(0 T (1-1-1) I It JO t
(1-11-Ail) MO. M
(in k (OHM
4 Garay Brock
11.00 (J O 3.K
7 Marcel Lorents
I .H 1.K
iLlam -JM S
SJHI
Q 11-4) 14*0 P (O il I1AST U M I N M O 1•
liatttOM *
2 Pinion Ramon
I3 N (AO l.M
iP rla tG u o n a o i''1
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5 Liam Brock
3.H
0 1 1 1 ) n .M p i h i M.a» m i l l 140.at
Seventh gem*
7Zugata
11.M J 20 l.M
3 Egea
7 00 4.10
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3.20
Q (1-7) M.M P (7-2) N . 10 T (7-1-4) S41.M I
171-4-All) M7.M.
■•ghtogam*
7 Charola Bob
D M M.M 4 40
4 Liam-Angol
II M 4(0
1 Said Chimala
3 00
Q &lt;4-7141.N P (7-4) 111JO T 17-4-1) H I M
Nlntkgam*
11rigoyan Andy
2010 4.M 3.40
3 Durango Brock
4 10 l.M
1 Pardo Chlmtla
l.M
0 &lt;M l M.40 P (1-11 IM.40 T (1-1-1) U M O
Iftkgame
7 Uralda
70 00 11.40 S.M

11rlgoyen

*00 S.M

SArrarota
4.M
Q (1-7) M.M P (7-1) 114.40 T (7-1-)) 101t.M
llthgame
8 Durango Arra/Ota
1(0 3.40 1.40
4 Liam Bob
l.M l.M
2 Said Andy
l.M
0 (4 I) 37.04 P ((-4) U3.40 T 1001) 104.4*
Pk * Dal 4) I7.M Jackpot tltjo t
Utfcgeme
4 Durango Uralda
14 40 7 40 O H
4 Olaa Bob
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7.40
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7.40
0 (4 0 41.(4 P (4-0 (.40(0-All) t.M (A IM )
14.44 T (401) 413.40
DM tamo
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4 40 SM 3 M
) Charola Arraral*
0 00 (40
7 Urquidl Chimala
4.40
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0 0 1 4 1 (7 All) U .M (0 ( 0 A IM ))*. 4*
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A-***; M - 1*3.114

NBA STANDINOS
Eattarn ConUranca
Atlantic Drvnian
W L Pci. OB
17 4 1 1 0 ttoitun
14 7 444 3
)' hi lad* (phi a
I II 411 I
Haw Jariay
■ 11 411 ■
Nan York
W .i-inmg Ion
4 14 MO 10»l
I 14 .141 11
Miami
Central Oivtuen
11 7 442 —
Milraaulaa
14 2 447 D
Datroil
W I 400 2
Chicaqo
10 II 474 41j
Clavaland
0 12 400 SU
Charlotte
1 11 421 ID
Atlanta
I 14 144 7
Indiana
Western Conftranca

Midwait Dtviitoo

San Anionio
Ulan

W L Pet. SB
12 S 704 II 7 410 &gt;1

IS Nabrpaka (7-1) datoatod Wisconsin
7551; piays Frtdey Seturdey In Amorltus
Classic.

Mew Jersey at Atlanta. 7: M p.m.
Now York at Minnesota, I p.m.
Denver st Utah, (:M p . m.
OrtoodootPtn u l4.tiM p.iii.
Saotita at GeMen StaM. W : » p.m.
Portland et Sacramento. 14:34p.m.

Ij a i -

Pittsburgh 161) plays Saturday V*
17. AIM—o (12) p&gt;ays Saturday al
NorthCarolina.
15 Michigan Stato (t-i) play* Thursday
al Cincinnati; plays Saturday y*. Nevada-Las
Vogaaa*AuburnHilts. M4ch.
It. (Ho) laelh Carolina (Ml dttooted
ChorNstan Southern (5)1; datoatod Furman
tm
It. (Ho) SduHwrw Mtsotoalppl (M)
Saturday\s. NwlhsoatLautolano.
IV IHo) Now Meike SUto (51)
Saturdoy *5 NowMmrtco.
II. (Ho) Goerfid Tod) 161) play* Saha
day at Tampto.
73. ' " l Tiwnaaoea Slate (61) piays
Saturday a( GoorgaMaoan.
15 OtPaU 161) toat Ip LauitvliH t*7s.
ptoyaSaturday v*. UCLA.
to .

*4---«pcbswttR
Rprrtt,

1

Connecticut IS. Now Hampshire a
Ooamon ID . Lockhovon 114
Gannon 75 Mor cytturtl M
Maine &gt;7, Dr* net 41
Now York Taeti M. Otd Wetfeury 71
Radford 107. C. Connecticut IM
Salon Hell II. Vlllaneva 77
Syracuta tl. CanltluiD
Vly Forgo Chr. It. Vly Forgo Mil. (S
Westbrook (1, Unity 71
Ytthiva 75 SUNV-Marltlmo M
Campbell 74, Howard 71
Char Niton 40. BluefMId St. TV
Claflln IS. S. Caroline St. *4
SoargoMwn is. I*. Lao (S
LouitvIlN ( 5 DaPOul 75
NW Loultiono M. Wiley St
Now Or lean* ( I . Oregon St. ( 4 IO T)
SW Louisiana It. Appalachian St. 14
X IFurman 52
South Carolina tx
Ball St. *5 Valparaiso M
Bethel TX Carlton S3
E . Illinois t l. Wit. Milwaukee St
I . Michigan »7 , Cleveland St. IS
B erahk *1.1— * WeeNyen «
Ham line ( 5 MacaNstar 4*
Hiram 7f. OTMfboln 77
Mankato St. 41. SW Minnesota 44 1
Michigan 102. Chicago SI. 71
Missouri 74. Bradley *0
Muskingum 45 Ohio Northarn 44
Ohio St. (0. Wright St, (0
SW Mlsiourl St 45. Mo. Kan. City SI
Southern Cal IPS. Notre Dam* (S
Walsh III, DykoSO
Wit. Eau Claire (4. Mt. Scenario 71
Wooeter M. Tilton 4t
Tas San Antonio I0X T op -Arlington S3
Texas ASM 70, T a u t Southern*!
Tul»a 72. Kama* St. (I
Arliona SI. (2, Brigham Young 74
Chico SI. *7. SI. Mary's (CelK.) *4
Long Beach SI. ML Northridgt SI. 73
Montana 155 U.S. International M
Texe*Christian TX N. Arliona SI
Wyoming ( X Colorads 40
ST. L f 0140)
Sladar 0-10-0 0, G ra n t *24 1-3 15 Cophar
14 50 1. Brook* 57 50 10, Ruler I S 66.
C Alessandro I I 50 X CookNy 51 55 0.
Michalskl 14 55 2, Gandy 55 111. Zaltthlk
4 4 5 0 5 Smith 56 550. Sorter 11551. Totals
M401S4S.
OEOROETOW N (21)
Churchman 2 7 1 1 X Thampaen *16 1-11.
Mutombo 7-11 516 » . Broom 5V 66 5
Harrison 510 13 )5 Simms 1-1601. Morgan
*7 11 15 Kaily 13 1-11, Stoudamlro 1-4 60 3.
F Nury 60600. Totals I t St 15M7S.
Haitllma Gaorgatown 41, St. Lao 21. 3 point
goals St Loo M S I O'Alessandro I t , Graves
MO. Roller 6 X Michalskl 61). Gaorgatown
*11 (Brawn I X Harrison I X Morgen 15
S to u d a m lro 0 -2 ). Fowled o u t-N ono.
Rebounds St. Lao 10 (Slodor, Cophar ( ) ,
Gaorgatown 41 (Mutombo 14). Assists St. Loo
II (Graves 41. Gaorgatown 20 I Brown t).
Total louls-St. Lao It, Georgetown t.
Attendance 1070.
UPI T e p tl
How the UPI Top 25 has farad this weak:
I. Nevada La* Vega* (16) piays Satur­
day v*. Michigan SlaN at Auburn Hill*. Mich.
1. Arkansas Id-1) defeated South
Alabama 101 tl.
1. Syracuse lo t) defeated Canislus t l 03;
play* Saturday v*. Long Beach SUN.
4. Arliona (7-1) I* U N all woafc.
5 Gaorgatown 1(0) defeated SI. Lae
7S4S; play* Saturday v*. Tenet El Paso.
( . UCLA (4 01 Mays Saturday al OePaul.
7. Indiana (7 11 playi Saturday vt,
Wattorn Michigan
■ Duka 1(1) I* IdI# Ml weak,
t. Ohio Stale ISO) datoatod Wrighl Stato
45 40; piays Saturday al American.
10. North Carolina (51) datoatod Kan
lucky I* I I ; pUy* Saturday v*. Alabama
11 Georgia 1511 lost to Vandarbill 7574
In overtime; piays Friday at Miami
12 Louisiana Slate (4 I) Is idle all weak
I ) Oklahoma 171) datoatod Coppin Stato
St 7t. plays Saturday vt. Loyola Mary
mount
14 St John-i 17 01 datoatod Brooklyn
S7 47; plays Saturday vs Howard
'J. Connecticut (S I) defeated New
Hampshire (112

APCI
CINCINNATI (74) 5* L A R N d m (5 4 ) Bang*Is S Solwtwn Wlketfs atorts tor Richey
01— (tog), who is ewt. Q d Boomer l alaaan
(groin) and RB Craig Taylor Iankle) are
gueattanMto. RB James Jwwa (Pm i Mar).
RB lefcay Vto— Irtoal. RB HaraM Croon
(showMar) and S Davto Pwtdwr (tack) are
prMatto.... Ra— s report noiwwMwtos.
HOUSTON (751 at KANSAS C ITY 155) Odors OE Ot—
btontwomary lankto) l*
quottknebto RB Alton Ptnbttt (grain). D T
Doug Smith (Back) and T 0 — StoMiuhlor
(atoms) — prMakto.... CMato RB Chrtsttan
Okay* (ahouldar). CR Atoort Lavrta (ankto).
RB Berry Word (ahouldar). S Doran Cherry
(knee) and WR Prod Janet (ankle) are
euoattonobto. CB Kevin R— (knee). L t Roto
McOovom (thigh) and L B Derrick Thome*
(knee) or* probable.
IR W A RA P OilS (55) a l N T Jell (5 5 ) ColN DE Jon Hand (knee) la doubtful. N T
Honey Arm str ong Iknao) la auaaltonabto.
LB Chip Banka (nock) It prM M to,... JM s LR
Troy John—
ceuM start N r Joe Kelly
Ikneel, who la doubtful Q Mike Height (too)
and T Brad Minor (hamstrlngl — guettlonobN. RB Blolr Thome* (heal) and OL Trevor
Metkh (ebdemenl aropratoMto.
SAN O llf tO (67) at DENY I B ( H I ) Charger* N T Tony Savage (knar in|wed
roaorve) Is out. WR Quinn tarty could start
tor Nato Nwts (wrist), who to dsubttui. S
Latter Lyto* (knot). N T Let Millar (back)
and WR Walter Wllaon (thigh) art queattonable. C Prank Com(ah (cheat) la prabobto....
Branca* C B S Kevin Clark Ikneeankto) la
doubtful. T E Or— M M ley (ankto). T Kan
Lontor (knao) end O Jim Jurtga (bock) are
quotlNnobie. T Dove Wldoll (areln). L B Karl
Macktonbura (knot). S Stove Ahwotor (knao),
OB John Ehwey (right etoaw), RB Stove
(shouldw). LB Anttwny Thompson
(thumb). S D— It Smith IwrNO and L B
M art Muntord lotoma) are prMMto.
NPCBonaoa
OBBBN B A Y (6 7 ) a* PHILAD ELPHIA
(76) — Packer* QR Anthony Ddwag starts
lor Don Majkowskl (right dwutdar). who It
out os I* D E Blalto Whstor (knao). WR
Chariot Wilson Iknee), WR Storllng Sharp*
(ribs). LB Tony Bennett (infcN) and L B
Bumall Oent (ankto) aro prakMto.... Eagles
RB Heath Sherman (bock) N doubtful. S
Terry Hoago (back). G Ren Sett lanktol. O
Mika Sched (tot). OB Randall Cunningham
(thigh). RB Keith Byars (knot) and D T Mika
GolN lotoow-rtos) aro quosHonMto.
PN O ER IX ( M l at DALLAS 167) —
Cardinals RB Johnny John—
Unkto) l«
quasttonabN. ... Cowboys CE Itsiac Holt
(back) and D T Denny Noonan (grain) ore
quosiNnabN. DE Jim JeHcaet (hand) Is
M INNESOTA 1611M TAM PA BAY ( H I —
Vikings WR Hoi— Janos (No) It probable
_ ------... Puccanoar* — art no new
—
WviaPw-me* faav
CMICAbO (to-l) ■ BflYIQtY
“■
(M
w T l is dn— h ir
Boors O T Dan HampHn (towos)
I* doubtful,
CB Donnell W M tord tankH) la questionable.
CB Vast** Jock—
(log), WR Ran Morris
1chest) and O E Tim Ryan Hog) era probable.
... Lions LB D— la Gib— (archI N out. C B
Bruc* AH— dor Iheal) Is doubtful T Lomas
Broom (ribs) and WR Mol Gray (thouMar)
or* questionable- S William WhIH (riba) and
WR Aubrey Matthews (shoulder) ore prabebH.
SAN FRANCISCO ( I H ) ot LA Ram* (5 5 )
on Monday night — atom S Johnny J o c k starts tor Chat Brooks (knao). viha Is out. S
Dave Way mor could start lor R— to Lott
(knao). who I* doubtful. N T Miches I Carter
(knot) and PB Harry Sydney (ankle) aro
Rams T E Damon* Johnson
(hamstring) and PB Buford McGee (knap)
BUFFALO-AFC (11 1) ot N T biant*-NFC
(11-1) M Saturday - Bill CB Kirby Jack—
(hamstring). CB Dave Pool (knee) are
tontbio. LB Shane Canton (knao). L B
Geraor (ankto) aro p rM M N .... Giants
roport no now ln|urto*.
W A S N IN O T O N -H F C (B i t at N E W
B R B LA N O -A F C ( M l ) as Saterday Radktlns G Ruio Grimm (shouidar), L B
Wilber Marshall (hip) are prababla. ...
Patriots LB Vincent Brown (ankto). T Sian
Clayton (ankto). QB Tom Hod— (flngar,
right hand), aro questionable. T Bruce
Armstrong (ankle). L B Hie Jerostchuk
(hand). LB Ed Reynolds Iankto) are probe
bN.
ATLAN TA-N FC (514) (I C L IV E U M O AFC ( H I ) - Falcon* CB Roland Mitchell
(tog) Is doubtful. DE Mika Gann (toot), LB
John Rode (hip) pro probabto...Browns o r
Bob Bucikewskl could slarf tor Chris Pike
(kneal, who Is doubtful. CB Mark Harper
(hamstring), TE John TalHy (knee). CB
Frank Mlnnlltold (heel) are questionable
WR Webstar Slaughter &lt;kn*a&gt;. CB Stephen
Braggs (thigh), RB Kavln Mock (too) aro
P ITTS B U R H A F C &lt;7 *1 Of N EW O R .
L IA N 6 NFC 155) SNaNrs WR Louis
Llppt (bock). RB Berry Foster tankH) nr*
quasttonabto. T Tunch llhln (back). G Carlton
Hoaelrlg (ankle). RB Tim Wortoy (shoulder)
era prebMto. Saint* T E John Tk* (knao) is
doubtful. RB Dollon Hilliard (knee) l*
questionable T Kevin Havefdlnk (knee), CB
Tot Cook (thigh) are prabebH.

NY Ranger*
Philadelphia
New Jersey
Washington
Pittsburgh
NY Islanders
Boston
Montreal
Hertford
BulUN

W L T F t i . OF OA
14 I I S 41 DO 103
14 141M II* 11]
14 114 34 114 107

I* 1103* 111 100
12 1*122 120 111

10 14 122 74 10*
Adams Division
17 14 4 15 103 N
14 14 3 35 10S 103
13 14 4 30 4* *4
10 13 7 37 (1 (*
7 11*20 40 137
Campbell Conference

W L T PH. BP BA
11 10244111 M
17 t d B I H n
14 I I 4 H I M IN
* 1 7 (1 4 (1144
• 14 117 M I N

CMC—
SI. Lewis

SmyflbBO^yWsr
14 10 4 44 114 141
* I* I S 17 121 tS
n i s s i t f t NO
I I IS I M t l M
*17 7

is m m

IS. Hartford!
Toronto 5 Montreal 1
Edmonton 5 Vancouver 4
(AH TH— 1 S T)
Hartford al BotSpn, 7:U p.m.
Quebec of Dotrad. 7:Hp.m.
NY Itlandtriaf PhlUdalphU. 7 . « p.m.
Niw Jeraay at Pittsburgh. 7;3S p.m.
Wtonlpog at Chicago. »:M p .m .
MMnosela a) S). Lauto. 1:15 p.m.
CMgary of Lo* Angola*. W:3S p.m.
Pittsburgh al Buffalo. 7:JS p m .
NY Ranger* ot Vancouver. 10:14 p m.

To th t victors g o tho sp o ils
-

..I

W L Pat. GB
Kansas City

IS S * 4 7 ■ 7.433 3
* 15 .375 4N
A l l ISIS

WkhIU
Weetont Ofvfs—
Tacoma
St. Louis
Dal toe
SanDHgp

II S 4M —
* 4 .S3*2N
7 ( .43(4
7 *.4N 4

No game* scheduled

At HtonltR, Bosmowy, Doc. 11
Brad Gilbert, Oakland. Call)., dal. Jonas
Sven*— . Sweden, 7-4. 63, 6 4 ; D ivld
Wheaton. Lake Minnetonka. Minn., del.
Yarmkk N— . Franca. 74 (7-7). 67 (57). 6
1; I— Lendl CiechoaHvekto. del. Christian
Beipstram. Sweden. 4 5 4 5 ,- Aaron Krkk.-Nln, U.S. def. Andres Garnet, Ecuador, 5X
65

iTM R BABTfBfM

I

— Signed pitcher Floyd Ban
idtNr to a 1 year contract.
PHtaborgb — Named John Sirlgnano
minor- league and scouting assistant.
St. Laois — Nomad Dave Blalaa manager
ot SI. Petersburg al the Florida S U N League
(A l.
Sow ON go — Traded catcher Mark
Parent to T o u t for third baseman Scott
Seattle — N om a d J i m Skoalon
coordinator ot mlnor-Hegu* Instruction;
named Dan WoeIhon minor Hague pitching
Instructor and Regm Han— minor N r jua
catching Instructor.
Basketball
Cedar Rpplds (CBA) — Signed canter
Ban GlIHryi placed forward Tony Martin In
Injured*
i as i m i Stato — Nomad Roochol
aaJD
h u h MRBblmBiUp- eia■« ■*—
B
wlDwMivlIwVy®
»
M oryUnd tndatlnltaly suspandad
Carla Holme* tram women’s baskat
— Named Barry Gallup
ch.
Tram America AthHtk Centortnco —
Announced resignation ol sports Information
director Stove Argo.
Football
Atlanta — signed quarterback Gilbert
Renlroe. cornarback Rlckoy Royal and
linebacker William Klrksoy to the practice
squad; placed dak.ir'vo bock William Evars
and llnafaackqr DonnN Salum on ln|ur*d
reserve, waived quarterback Todd Hammal.
LA Raiders — Added otfenilv* tackle
Tim Rottor to proctico squad.
Miami — Signed wsda racoivar D— is
MaKinnont placed wide racoivar Stott
Schsrodtt on Inturod rotorvo; ihlltad
llnabnckor Barry Kraou and Mike McOrvPer
tows tojorad raservo N proctico squad.
— Announced resignation
of attentive coordinator CharIH Sumner.
FMtodafphto — Cla'mad oltonsivo tackN
Louis Chatk on woivors tram Dallas; itHated wide racoivar Ant— y Edward*.
— Sign
Signed wide receiver
Kltrkk Taylor; placed note tackN Tony
Savaga on Injured reserve.
Washington — Released salaty Rico
Labbe tram practice squad; signed guard
Tim Moiley and assigned him to practice

Hockey
Terotdo — Reached agreement on 1 year
contract w ith dofansaman Aleeandtr
Godynuih.

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Flnal/Sports Overnight

Lights
Continued from ID
tli.it thf llurgcr King tktci-rr lournamcnl
Im-inu lumtrd by Lake Mary High School will
I n - able to play games al night."
Lake Mary Couch Hill KKselo had been
holding oil oil tlnall/lng the schedule of tills
year's llurger King lournaineiil III ! i o |k *s
dial they would be able to play games at
iiighi The tournament Is scheduled to begin
next Wednesday.
Hculhurd agreed that (he SAC IxKird ol
directors, which Is made of (hr principals
and athletic directors ol (he seven member
schools, may choose In go hack to |&gt;l.tying

(he games where and when as originally
scheduled.
"The scheduling of conference games Is
done well In advance." said Ucathard. who
i(K&gt;k over the role of executive secretary of
the conference this fall. "That would have
hap|K*ned last spring. It muy Ik*uii easy job
reverting buck to the original schedules.
"I was mid by one ur (wo principals dial
nothing would happen unlll after the New
Year. To make changes in nlfelals and
trans|Kirtallon by Friday would be dlffleull."
According to Lake Mary High ScIumiI boys'
soccer roach Larry MeCorkle, (he Idea of
moving the Hams' Krlduv home match wlilt

W lnncrw of tho Sanford RecrGBtlon Dopartm Gnt'B fall m on’G
alowpltch b o (tball leagues w art praaGntad thdlr trophlaa.
R aca lvln g tha aw ards from R ocky Eiltngaw orth, San fo rd
Recreation Superintendent, were C h ris Dapore (above) of
W ednesday night cham p H.D. Realty and Penny Pennington
(below) from T hursday night w inner* First Baptist Church.

Lake Howell back to a 7:30 p.m. slarl had
been Investigated.
"We (houghl about II and suggested It lo
Lake Huwcll. but we couldn't get things
changed quickly enough," said MeCorkle.
Deatharcf also stressed dial Dr. Deju
strongly recommends that all who plan to
attend or participate In evening uctivtltes
c o n tin u e in p ra c tic e p re c a u tio n a ry
measures such as using insect rcpcll.mi and
wearing long sleeves and long (tants
"T ests on the chicken lloeks arc negative
hut lhe heal III department ts Mill catching
some eticrplialllts-earrylug muMpnins in
traps." said Ucathard.

Americans charge into
Grand Slam quarterfinals;
second set tie-break. Wheffon
...
won the match on his trard
MUNICH. Germany — Brad match point.
-?
Gilbert, David Wheaton and
Both Gilbert and Wheaton ;&gt;re
Aaron Krlckslcln led an Ameri­ assured of earning a t least
can charge Wednesday and *300.000. with the winner to
gained the quarterfinals of the receive $2 million.
86 million Grand Slam Cup.
“I thought of the money only \
Gilbert, included among the shortly before match point,"
16-man field as a replacement Gilbert said.
for (he injured Andre Agassi,
Krlckstcln progressed to the
overcam e sixth-seed Jo n a s second round with a comfortable
Svmsson of Sweden. 2-6, 6-3. win over a disappointing Gomez.
6-4, Wheaton defeated Yannick The French Open champion
Noah of France, 7-6 (7-2), 6-7 from Ecuador appeared to have
(5-7), 6-3, an d K rlck stcln trouble maintaining concentra­
dow ned A n d res G om ez of tion. He commuted 18 unforced
Ecuador 6-3.6-4.
errors In the first set alone.
In addition Ivan Lendl, who
Lendl, who broke Bergstrom’s
resides In Greenwich, Conn., serve In the opening game of
was the day's most comfortable both seta, won the last nine
winner. 6-4. 6-0 over Christian games to take the match.
Bergstrom of Sweden.
On Thursday. Michael Chang
Wheaton was able to survive of the United States meets Henri
primarily because of the ef­ Leconte of France, and U.S.
fectiveness of his serve-and- Open champion Pete Sampras
volley game. There were no plays G oran Ivanesevlc of
breaks of serve In the opening Yugoslavia. Friday's matches pit
two sets.
Gilbert against Krlckstcln and
Noah fended off two set points Wheaton against Lendl.
In the first set before losing the
The first-round losers collected
tie-break, then drew even In the $100,000.
UwWad P ress Internet!—al

Buffalo’s Smith claims to be
N FL’s best defensive player
U nltaN P ra se In te rn a tio n a l

EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. Buffalo Bills end Bruce Smith,
three sacks away from an NFL
record. Saturday will be gunning
for New York Giants quarterback
Phil Simms' body —and outside
linebacker Lawrence Tuylor’s
reputation.
Sm ith, who gave an Im­
mediate "Noooo" when asked if
he gets enough attention, said he
wants to prove as much In front
of Taylor when BufTalu faces
New York at Giants Stadium.
"Believe me. it will be a
terrible Injustice If I wasn't
recognized to that extent as the
best defensive player In the
league." Smith said Wednesday
during a telephone hook-up to
New York.
"Over the past 10 years.
(Taylor's) been the most domi­
nant player in hie league. I Just
think I've taken it up a notch."
Tile Giants and Hills arc both
11-2. with New York ulready
having clinched the NFC East
and Buffalo a game ahead of
Miami In the AFC East.
"In BufTalu. we only have one
newspaper and they're against
us." Smith said. "They'd rather
see us lose than win. I don't
think I've gotten the recognition
I deserve. I don't think It's fair
hut It keep* you hungry. I lake II
as a personal challenge lo gel
better every week.”
I’llv Simms With four sacks in
the first half against Indianapolis
last week. Smith took over the

NFL le a d w ith 19. M ark
Gastlncau recorded 22 for the
New York Jets In 1986, the most
In a season since the NFL kept
such records. Sm ith's 19 is
fifth-best, only 1 Vi behind
Taylor's career-high In 1986.
"The most Important thing Is
winning." Smith said. "The ^rcond thing Is slopping the run.
From that, the sack record will
come. If It's meant to be. It shrill
happen. If not. I'll be very
disappointed."
Playing against the run has
become a point of pride /or
Smith. And his Improvement In
that area Is largely the reason
why he thinks he has become
the NFL's best defensive playe/.
Smith Is also quick to credit
linebackers Cornelius Bennett
and Darryl Talley, as well as Ihe
rest of his linemates. the Sec­
ondary and the offense (the
league's highest-scoring unit).'
"My personal play." he said,
returning to familiar territory.
" I'v e been playing defense
against the run better than ever
before in my career. I take pride
In playing against the run as I
lake pride against the pass.
"Over 13 games on film! I
haven't seen a better defensive
player In the league. Now tftat
I've reached that status. I want
credit for It. I'm not bchig
over-confident or cocky."
Later. Taylor walked on the
field for practice and was told hLs
name came up In Smith's con­
versation.
"That s good." Taylor said,
smiling. "That’s real good."

T

�Already thinned by graduation,
injuries, grades
• OVIEDO — In his 23 years of coaching. Dave
^Jeckanoskl says he has never seen anything like

;!
;l
i;
|j
jj
!}

Jeckanoskl. coach of the Oviedo High School
.hoys' varsity soccer team, has already had five
players go down this year wllh either serious
injuries or academic problems.
Under Ideal circumstances, that would be
considered a disastrous amount. But this year's
Oviedo squad la trying to come back from losing
10 seniors off of last year's side.
"We graduated 10 players last year, but we
•thought are had things under control." said
Jeckanoskl.
; The most ^dismaying of the losses Is that of
jmphomore Brad Franz, not only for what he’s
^already contributed to the team but what
•sidelined him. On Monday. Franz underwent
'open heart surgery to remove a growth on a
“valve.
"Brad has never played a game In his life." said
Jeckanoskl. "He’s on the bench when we’re
playing Bishop Moore In the Rotrry Cup. It's our
second game of the day. we're trailing 2-1 and our
guys are dead on their feet. My assistant coach
tells me we've got to do something, so I send In
Brad.
"He does some nice things and ends up scoring

the game-tying goal. The game goes to overtime
and we end up winning on penalty kicks. His
family goes home and there’s message from
Brad’s cardiologist on the answering machine
telling Brad not to play soccer, not to touch a
ball."
Jeckanoskl said that the surgery went well and
Franz Is doing line.
"We're hoping that he’ll be able to come back
and play next year,” he said.
Almost as frightening are the Injuries suffered
by caption Jeff Carlson and midfielder David
Underwood. Carlson suffered a severely broken
leg. fracturing both the tibia and fibula. In an
Indoor match while Underwood had a blood
vessel rupture In his leg after getting kicked In
the thigh.
Jeckanoskl said that Underwood may be back
In a month while the earliest Carlson might be
back would be February. Doctors Inserted a plate
to help mend Carlson’s broken bones.
Out for the year Is backup goalkeeper Trent
nHartsfleld
—
who Injured his knee over the
Thanksgiving weekend and had to have re­
constructive surgery.
While what caused the loss of Franz. Carlson.
Underwood and Hartsfleld are frightening, the
case of Rob Gelsler Is frustrating. A first-team
All-Conference selection last year, Gelsler has
been sidelined by academic problems.

After having to coma from behind last Wednesday
to defeat Seminole 4-2, the Lake Mery Rams

Rams
''Greyhound gballe Marcus Dewberry made
saves while Lion ’keeper Ryan Pass registered
For Jeckanoskl. the tie with Lyman was a
najor moral victory for his team, which lost 10
tlayers to graduation last year and has seen six
nore key players be lost due to serious Injuries or
icademlc fallings this year.

"Lyman is a heck of a team." said Jeckanoskl.
"They're one of the best teams In Central Florida.
And we went out and played with them. It was a
great game. Both goals were beautiful."
Oviedo returns to action Friday night, traveling
to DeLand for another conference contest. Lyman
will host Gainesville In a tripleheader on
Saturday, the freshmen playing at 1 p.m.'. the
Junior varsity at 2:30 p.m. and the varsity at 4
p.m.

two or three guys who 1 know
should be playing fulltime. The
other 18 are all capable of Ailing
the other eight starting spots.
We've had problems gaining any
c o n siste n c y because w e're
playing so many people."
Against DeLand on Wednes­
day. all 22 players on the Lake
Mary roster saw extended play­
ing time. McCorkle said that the
last 20 minutes of the first half

Scott Clavtns.
According to McCorkle. the
Rams have an unusual amount
of depth this year, which has
proven to be a mixed blessing.
"I’ve had teams th a t went to
the final four that were more
talented but only had 11 or 12
good players." explained Mc­
Corkle. "On this team . I have

were played primarily by the
Rams’ "second" team.
In Wednesday's Junior varsity
game. John Martin scored the
game-winning goal In the 72nd
minute to lift Lake Mary to a 2-1
win.
The Ram Junior varsity plays
again today, h o stin g Lake
Howell at 3:30 p.m.
Lake
Mary varsity will host Lake
Howell on Friday afternoon.

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State _

|Telephone
Goalie Jon Williams made several key saves to keep Seminole In Its
game with undefeated Lake Howell on Wednesday afternoon. Lake
Howell came Into the game ranked No. 4 In the Class 4A state poll.

c / f
A U Tr ’

C o n t in u e d fro m I B

.[

2-0. they never gave
up. They worked hard and had a
.chance to tie Ihe game.”
The Tribe, now 1-2-0. then
started pressing forward In at­
tempt to get back Into the
match. Gcordle Davison look a
pass from Travis Groover and
scored to cut the margin in half
with 19:38 remaining.
Seminole cbntlnued to put
if 'pressure on the Lake Howell goal
--'•but could not get the equalizer.
&gt; .With time running out. the Tribe
had a comer kick opportunity
/ that Davidson headed Just over

r *

the crossbar at the buzzer.
*‘We had several opportunities
to take control of the match and
couldn't get the %ill Into the
net." said Lake Howell Coach
Anatole Popovich. "Close games
like this can go cither way and
sometimes u lucky break can
decide Ihe game."
Friday afternoon. Seminole
will try lo rebound when the
Tribe hosts the Lake Umntlcy
Patriots. Lake Howell will try lo
run their unbented streak to
seven when the Silver Hawks
travel to Lake Mary to face the
Rams.

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�Santortf Herald. Sanford, Florida — Thursday, Oectmber 13, 1990

Consult neurologist
about dizziness
D I S K DM. O O T T t My
husband has been suffering for a
year with lightheadedness and
dlulnesa. He’s undergone a CAT
scan, heart catheterisation and
every teat Imaginable, all with
negative finding. He waa In an
auto accident several y ean ago
and received a laceration of the
forehead where the pain centers
from. Do you have any sugges­
tion*?

■ 11T L « M IL 1 Y

riT A ifc ifc jn

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J IIL IIJ IH IIJ
J llU U L IlIk l

Injuries can lead to a chronic
neurological disorder called
"poal-concuadfon syndrome." a
poorly understood constellation
of symptoms. Including poor
memory, headaches,
lightheadedness, trouble con­
c e n tr a tin g and o ccasio n al
m e n ta l v a g u e n e s s . P o stconcussion syndrome Is not
diagnosed by any medical lest:
r a t t i e r . It Is a " c l i n i c a l
diagnosis," depending on how
the patient looks, behaves and
thinks.
If he hasn't already seen one,
your husband should be exam­
ined by a neurologist.

S to m o .M c w

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n e rv e s , th e re b y re lie v in g
PETER
symptoms and saving the pa­
G
O TT.M .D
tient an operation, which la more
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Initial enthusiasm for these
Injections has waned In recent s h o c k ) to th e c o m p o u n d
years because some patients Therefore, fewer doctors are us
developed anaphylaxis (allergic

;

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told the cushions between the
vertebra of my qrinal column are
worn. A friend read of a pro­
cedure In which a substance Is
Introduced Into the area to
relieve pressure and pain. Do
you know of any such pro­
cedure?
DMAS M I I M b The method
you njentlon. chymopapain In­
jections. is sometimes used to
treat herniated discs In the back.
When these dues slip out of
place, their semi-soft centers
press against spinal nerves,
causing pain and numbness.
Traditionally, patients who do
not respond to conservative
treatm ent (such as rest and
physical therapy) have been
considered surgical candidates.
Approved by the Food and
Drug Administration In 1982.
chymopapain (an enzyme re­
sembling meat lendertzer) can
be Injected Into the herniated
disc. The enzyme digests the
material that compresses the

1

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By Jam as Jacoby
The mark of an expert declarer
Is hta taking precautions against
unusual distributional breaks
whenever possible. Lynn Dcas
demonstrated this expertise in
her play of four hearts. As far as
the bidding was concerned. Dcas
held a minimum hand, which
blossomed when partner sup­
ported hearts. Jumping to game
Is good practice when your
major suit has been supported
and you hold a void In a
side-suit. In any event U can be
difficult to discover whether
partner's values arc useful, so
why give the defenders any
Information? Declarer shed a
diamond on the ace of clubs and
immediately led a spade back to
her Jack, cashed the spade ace
und played a third spade. East

won the king and returned a
club, ruffed by declarer. It now
looks automatic to play the heart
ace and a heart, but Lynn Deas
played a low heart out of her
hand Instead. Nothing would
matter If hearts split 2-2 or 3-1.
but the disastrous 4-0 spilt could
be protected against. East won
the heart Jack and played still
another club. Declarer ruffed
again. She next cashed the king
and ace of diamonds, ruffed a
diamond small as East followed,
and then played her last spade,
ruffing with dummy's nine of
hearts. East took the queen, but
had to lead away from the K-7 of
hearts Into declarer's A-8. For
declarer, well done.

By Bernice Bede Osol
TOUB BIRTHDAY
Dec. 1 3 ,1 9 9 0
A rise In status could be In the
ofTlng for you In the year ahead.
There will be Important ele­
ments Involved to faring this
about, such as what you know
and who you know.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Yesterday your hunches
were re table allies, but this
might not be the case today.
View situations pragmatically,
especially where money Ls con­
cerned. Trying to patch up a
broken romance? The AstroGraph Matchmaker can help you
to understand what to do to
make the relationship work. Mall
92 to Matchmaker. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. Oil 441013428.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) Think twice today before
getting yourself Involved In u
Joint venture with a person who
can afford to take losses you
can't If It goes wrong.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
If you are presently Involved In
something where you fed you
need outside advice. It's best to
go to more than Just o i k - person

for counsel. Several heads are
better than one.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Today you arc likely to be
extremely Imaginative and have
very good Ideas, but when It
comes time to Implement them,
you might be aWcled by the "I'll
do It later" syndrome.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Miscalculations In your dealings
with others early In the day can
be rectified to a considerable
degree. Things won't be like
new, but you won't leave too
many dents in the fender.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Unlike yesterday, do not rush to
Judgment In evaluating a critical
matter. In order to make an
accurate assessment you need
time today to weigh all the
alternatives.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Don't let your ego get In the way
today and cause you to pretend
you know how to do something
you don't. Others will take you
at face value and may assign you
a task you can't handle.
CANCER (June 21 .July 22)
Today's activities might offer
you a pleasurable reprieve from
your ordinary routines. Be

(0 1 9 9 0 . NEWSPAPER EN
TERPRISEASSN.

NORTH
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EAST
9 K 51
9 JC QJ 7
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SOUTH
• AJI4
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♦-*•
Vulnerable East-West
Dealer. South
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IP
49

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N u tt
Pax
19
All pus

Exit
Pus

Opening lead: + J

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H

f u r t f W G f T iTAtf/e

u /iiw e
eiFMEHTAKy o

i(v s c h o o l ,

THAT A lfA N
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.

» THERE ANVTHING
(N THE PAPER ABOUT,
VOOR S C R A TC H IN G j

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T+4A vB f

tl- IJ

THERE
SHOULD
-

D*

J

SCRATCH

IScRATtX
[SCRATCH

1HIRE ARE ^ O H , RIGHT/WOL

BOr. IT SURE WAS NICE OF T H A T \
GEWE TO CHANGE YOU BACK PROM
A DONKEY INTO A PUCX AGAIN
„
IT CERTAINLY'TOOK
HlM LONG ENOUGH*

NOW,DAFFY IN SURE HE AASNT
PURRJSCLY TIMING TO WJMIUATE
YOU.. IT JUST HAPPENED 70 TAKE
HIM 4 2 TRIES BEFORE HE ______ GOT IT RIGHT. THATS ALL ) ______

PERSONALLY, T THOUGHT YOU
LOOKED BEST A S A GIBBON

SHUT
UP

1HC DEMON
ANNIE 7 - . «

PONT Y* KHOk/ WHAT

THAT IS, AMITY?

MART THJNG5 IT'S NO Wt£AT
I PONT KNOW. I THING T'SCE, SO

l wAsourTE h m Y’HAVfW’
Y'hAv w t
M ts s e o
ANYTHING.

careful, however, when having a
good time you don't forget what
(Us coating.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Condi­
tions are rather unusual today la
th a t y o u 'll handle difficult
assignments easily but might
goof up easy assignments you
usually manage In stride.
VIBOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You're likely to be In a gregari­
ous mood today and enjoy
lengthy co nversations with
others. Be on guard, however,
you don't say anything you
won't want repeated.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Ma­
j o r a c c o m p lis h m e n ts arc
achievable today, provided you
keep your expectations within
reasonable bounds. The line
between optimism and selfdelusion Is very thin.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Lady Luck might be looking the
other way when you try to get
her attention today. In order to
be successful, you're going lo
have to rely upon your own
resourcefulness and persever­
ance.
( 0 1 9 9 0 . NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

...AN’lOOx/pVHJAd 16
NOWATTACK/ft*,*/*—;

�i
ar*-j
i

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ P B flH H i I *I

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thundsy. Dacambar 13, 1900 — M

People
IN B R I E F
Slnglss to moot
Lake Mary Singles will host a Christmas party Saturday
night at Lakcvlew Baptist Church, 126 W. Lakevtew. Lake
Mary. Bring a covered dish and a white elephant gift. Party
■tarts at 6:30 p.m.
You need not be a member of the church to attend.
Call Pat Jenkins at 321-0210 or 322-3503 for more
Information.

Radio data forming
Registration for amateur radio classes beginning In January
are now being accepted by the Lake Monroe Amateur Radio
Society.
For details contact Karl Lambert at 695-6764.

Adoptasoldlar
During the month of December, the Seminole Sunrise
Klwanls Club of Sanford Is offering the opportunity for
Individuals or groups to send citrus to our land based armed
forces In Saudi Arabia.
You can send oranges to an Individual serviceman or In a
patriotic effort send a parcel of fruit lo the armed forces, which
will be handed out lo all servicemen.
Prices range from 619 to $39.
For more Information, call Jerry Posey at 322-4352, ext 151,
Bob Rathel at 322-8991. or Bruce McKlbbln at 322-0331.

Stuff It having holiday party
Stuff, the official mascot of the Orlando Maalc, la having a
holiday party for the children of all the organizations that
participate In the Stud's Kids program. The party will be held
at Commander Ragtimes In the Church Street Station
exchange today. December 13. from 5:30 to 7 p.m.

Saniors stay homa through holidays
Lake Mary Seniors gathered Tuesday for the last time this
season. Activities will resume January 8 at the center, 158 N.
Country Club Road.
Daphne Baumback. member of the Merry Angels of Florida
and collector of a thousand angels discussed the history of her
collection and displayed some of her favorite angels.
For additional Information about Lake Mary Seniors, call Alta
Ombres at 322-1438.

02V\V
Entertaining seniors
Rasldsnta of Howeil Placs, Sanford, hava baan Involved In many
antartalnlng acthdtiaa racantly. laft: Esthar Wlchman memorizes
har lines as Mrs. Burley in the pity “Never Too Old for

Christmas." Right: John Buby, Taflahaai aa, puts on# of hla
performing poodles through a range of activities during a show
at the retirement center.

Sexual abuse of children common
Ovsrsaters to weigh In
A meeting on spirituality In relationships in Overeaters
Anonymous is conducted on Thursdays at 7:45 p.m. in the
cafeteria at West Lake Hospital. Long wood. For information,
call Charlie at 323-8070.

East-West Klwanls to gather
East-West Sanford Klwanls Club meets Thursday at 6 p.m. at
Friendship Lodge. Seventh and Locust.

Sweet Adelines to rehearse
Sound of Sunshine Sweet Adelines women's barbershop
singing group rehearses every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Prairie
Lake Baptist Church. 415 Ridge Road. Fern Park.

Narcotics Anonymous to meet
Narcotics Anonymous meets Friday at 11 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Avc.. Sanford.

Retired transit workers to gather
The New York Retired Transit Workers meet at Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Trlplpt Lake Drive, the first Saturday of
each month at 1:30 p.m.

t When I married
Roy (not his real name). I had
two daughters, ages 9 and 5.
from a previous marriage. Roy
began to sexually molest the
older one. It was almost two
years before she told me about
It. She told because she was
afraid that her younger slater
was In danger of being molested,
too.
Abby. this was a terrible shock
to me. I knew things tike this
happened to children, but 1
never believed It could happen In
my family.
1 am now divorced from Roy,
and my children are doing well
after much counseling. Allhough
Roy was Indicted by a grand
Jury, he Jumped ball before going
to trial and has been missing for
’almost a year. It upsets me to
know that he Is out there

%
t}

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

somewhere, probably with a new
Identity, and he may be sexually
ab u sing other unsuspecting
children. I am writing this lo
alert others lo this possible
danger. It's far more common
than most people suspect.
MOM: Thank you for
sharing your experience so that I
can once again tell my readers
that their best insurance against

Old cars put In limelight
The Celery City Cruisers, an antique and classic automobile
club in Seminole County, sponsors a display of old cars each
Saturday from 7-10 p.m. In the Wal-Mart parking lot behind
Wendy's on U.S. Highway 17-92. Sanford. Non-members are
welcome to bring their old cars or browse. For more
Information, call Herbert Partridge at 322-3687.

Ner-Anon to offer help
Nar-Anon. a self-help group for relatives and frienda of
addicts, meets at 8 p.m.'Wednesdays and Saturdays at West
Lake Hospital. State Road 434. Longwood. and on Fridays, at 8
p.m., at Grove Counseling Center. Third Street and Oak
Avenue. Sanford. For more Information, call 869-6364.

THURSDAY'S PRJIII

^

Ctntral Florida
Raglonal Hospital
November 10 — Jacqueline
an d Jeffrey Cobb. W inter
Springs, baby boy.
November 11 — Jane and
Marwan Nasser. Lake Mary,
baby boy.
November 21 — Tracy S.
Nelson. Sanford, baby boy.
November 22 — Adrenla Glllis
&amp; Marcus Randolph. Altamonte
Springs, baby boy; Mary S.

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For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, Dec. 7.

McClemons A Erblc R- Keys Jr..
Sanford, baby boy: Lushlenda R.
Butts A Jam es E. Jackson.
Sanford, baby boy: Penny M. A
Joseph R. Hewlett. Osteen, baby
boy.
November 25 — Tammy L.
Stone and Gary L. Beebe. San­
ford. baby boy: Tracey Redding
and A. Todd Revels. Sanford,
baby boy.
November 26 — Marguerite C.
A David A. Terwlllcger. Sanford,
baby boy; Jessica II. and Danny
McDaniel. Sanford, baby girl.
November 27 — Awllda Torres
and Carlos T. Gonzalez. Longwood. baby girl.
November 28 — Denise M. A
Christopher W. Wlgelsworth.
Sanford, baby boy: Tessa M.
Cabanas and Gerald L. Edwards.
Geneva, baby boy: Deborah and
Norman Kelley. Winter Springs,
baby girl.
November 29 — Elva D. and
Luis M. Ccron. Winter Garden,
baby girl.
November 30 — Judith L. and
Randall A. Myers. DcBary. baby
boy: A ngelea T h crk lld scn .
Geneva, baby boy.

child molestation la to educate
their children early. They should
be taught that their bodies a r e .
private, and if somebody tries to
touch their bodies, they should
tell their parents immediately.
Children must be assured that
If anyone makes them promise
not to tell anyone, that la one
promise It la all right to break.
r« Would It be
appropriate to send a Christmas
card to an old boyfriend 1
haven't spoken to in eight yean?
We pre both married, and even
though I love my huaband. 1 still
have feelings for this man.
I want him to know that I Mill
think of him. and I don't want
him to forget me. Even though
he never told me he loved me.
we were loven for nearly a year.
I would Include a recent picture
of myself and also an update of
what I've been doing since he
last saw me. 1 would send It to
hla oPrice so as not to arouse any
questions from his wife.
Thanks for any advice you can
give me.

m . n
BAR BRUNO. CALIF.
IRS.
Since you
wrote me. the manslaughter
charge against the father has
been dropped, but that doesn't
change the point of your letter.
Although It may seem cruel to
further punish a parent who has
suffered the misfortune of losing
a child, perhaps this kind of
example will cause other parents
to think.
Parents are responsible for the
safety of their children, and It Is
the responsibility of parents to
see that their child la seatbelted
— no m atter how much the child
protests. The rule should be:
Until the child is secured, the
key. in the ignition will not be
turned on.
M U R ABBY: A neighbor of
mine entertains constantly. In
fact, that’s about all she does.
My problem: I do not enjoy
g o in g th e r e b e c a u s e h e r
husband looks at me in a way
that makes me feel very uncom­
fortable.
If I decline, she Is offended and
demands an explanation. Then I
am put on the spot, because I do
not want to tell her the real
reason. How should I handle
this?

DEAR FOND MIMMUMi Do
yourself and your old boyfriend a
favor and resist the urge to
re-establish communication with
him. No good can come of
rekindling this old flame. Be
OR T t t W OTi Tell
content with your "fond memo­ her you have "other plans." It
ries." What was. was.
could mean you are planning lo
stay home and wash your hair,
n I Just saw an or you have already made plana
article In the newspaper here to go elsewhere, or you plan lo
and had to write to you. It was catch up on your reading or
about a 49-year-old man who watch your favorite TV program.
was speeding In his car when he The "other plana" excuse could,
lost control of the vehicle. The cover a multitude of truths.
car flipped over twice, and his
6-ycar old son who was riding
with him was killed. Because the
child was not wearing a seatbelt, lA O JA C tM T TO ItM M OLI Cf— i T I COLLIOl II
|« 801 I? V
• « • • • • Til
the father is being prosecuted
FRRteRR III
[ ■ S T - ’ ■ W ill B i C
and. if found guilty, he could
serve a year In prison.
mm
I know that your column I L ' » » N
reaches so many people, and I w 2
• -• f ilB g &amp; s s n f ||
this could be an Important
reminder to get across lo parents If to B jim
of young children. It could be a
11fr saver.

Florida Hospital
November 21 — Aland, and
Lyn Henderson. Luke Mary,
baby boy: Teresa and Stuart
Zals. Lake Mary, baby girl:
Michelle llynbcs. Sorrento, baby
girl.
November 23 — LaNell and
Alexander Azrona. Sanford,
baby girl.
November 24 — Tara and
Ralph Rainey. Casselberry, buby
girl. Lisa and Kenneth Starr.
Winter Springs, buby boy.
November 25 — Mary and
Timothy McFuddcn. Heathrow,
baby Imy: Laura and Alex Hill.
Altamonte Springs, baby girl:
Julie and William Jordan. Win­
dermere. baby boy: Judllli and
Erie Wi l l i ams . Al t a mo n t e
Springs, buby girl: Mlehclc and
Daniil Cone. Winter Park. !&gt;uby
girl..

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SANFORD VERTICALS
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T M ja g a a h S g y

1 8 2 1 -3 6 0 1

�♦I ’

Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, OecefnDer IS, 1«I0

CLASSIFIED ADS

Sominola

Orlando •Wintar P

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEFT. PWVATE PARTY RATES
hours
;♦ .......S ' ?
SOS par emek piv*l3IBtacurity
mciudw utilities. Cea a m o e
U N F O R D ■ I bdrm. C ffklency
with private bam. M eeek
pi ut (M e security Include*

Nka, clean. Cable. air. bitch
an privilege*. s;t/wh-B3l-3iq

piin v, utilities. n H W I m .

Evening hour*. ei|
preferred. Nice ‘I
i i ih o b Inn, Shapgii

P e c iS B t a t e e m iin

Office lecalea at 71* Sewm Woode d Beutovwd m Peiana, tot luRng
•mail machine mewing, (wage trimming, edging and Uttar ramevaf.
(Contract No. I i w ) (WPl Me. h w i ) ( H I calendar d m )
NO TICE: IT IS STRONOLY S U O M S TE O T H A T AN O f e llT f
R EVIEW BE M A D E PRIOR T O BIDOINOON THIS PROJECT.
VOLUSIA C O U N TY ( 0 FUNDS) STATE PR OJECT N R HO.
7tte*-MM.SRM (N O V A ) PROM P L O M K N A V t. T O WB-I.
Work caneitla at canetructian at Her teat (ar) wtda paved
shouldor*. Including malntenancd at traffic, cpltanal bam, eaceva
tlon and type S-l Aeghaltk Cancrete. (Centred No. 11171) (WPI Na.
ittotw i l I t calendar dapa)
Prepmil torma will net ha leaned after n . » A M 1Poland Ideal
Time) January tfh. Iff).
RID BOND R IO U IR IM IN T S
In accordance with Section n 7 .U , FHrtde Statutes. a Bid Bend In
the amount at live parcant IIH ) at me bid poke ehaR bn rggetred N r
all bide in eacaee of HJO.tN an OtatricfCentract*. Bid Bmde will net
be required tor bids which era k m Ihan SHAME.
Contractora muat grevlde greet at abiuty teacgutreamrNrtnence
and payment band In an amaunt ague! t» (hair cantract N d price N
the D iitrid Contract Administrator with their bid prepeeal. At auch
proof all btde muat be eccompanlad by a nelerlwd Uttar tram a

41— Monty ToLond
U . MARY/Dm ecuen Areal
Quality childcare, t yr./Up.

O U IT V leant, Percbetet.
RlRneettil tat. 2nd I 3rd
Mtgal Cood/bad credlll Fast
approvalal Oeardlan Mtg.
Carp.....Lk. Mtg. Rrahara
M jM jt / I jM T jM M j

We pey your tuition.
• ••
We oiler:
•The Pineal Training -In The
"Office" And The "Field"
aOpportunltlea In Residential
And Commercial Real
Ealale
•Tremendous Commission
And Aword Plana
•BB
Wed.. Dec. ltlh. 7:00 CM
limited Seating)
SM3 Park Dr.. Sanford
Contact: AlChlodl
Cantvry ll/CModi Realty
Ceil New -m -t m

71— HoIpWontod

IPLOYMENT

firm be awarded the project.
A bid guaranty ee specified under 1.10) at the general
district contract spaclfkatlane. herein, may lubatttuN at greet el
ability to oblmn.a performance and ga rment bend. TMe epptlei te
bid amounts over or under 01MJ0A
Contfactors prequaiinod under O ^eiliiw nl Rule i*-*3 m t m l
provide proof of ability to acgulra a parlormanca and payimnl band
el the time a4 submitting a Md.
Wage Hates: Pursuant .I*.Iba Petr Labar Stonawdt Act, tha
minimum wage rates lor the protects Included In mts Notice than ba

Iced thopplng help M Mtlt

323-5176
U P TO SIS hour processing mall,
weekly check guaranteed.
Free details, write. SO. IM10
Central, tulle 144 SFL, Chino,
CAstne____________________

Defendant (st.
NOT ICE OP SALE
Hence It hereby given that
pursuant te a Pinal Judgment
entered on Nevumaer ZX iftt by
Me d e v * entitled Court m mo

S380p4f hoof.

list ol bidden will not be given out 71hours prior la Rn lotting.
The State of Florida Deportment at Trenmertetkn. In accordance
with the Provisions Of TUN VI at the Civil Righto Act at NB4 (I I Stet.
153) end the Regulation of Itw Dogorlmenl of Commerce (ISC P .R ..
Pori i ) issued pursuant to such Act. hereby netlflm ell blddwa that It
will affirmatively Insure (hat minority buolnmo w N rprlm i will be
afforded full opportunity to submit bide In rmpenm le IMe Invttetkn
and will not be diocriminoted egelwel on the rounds at race. ceNr or
national origin In consideretkn tor on award.
N O TICE T O A P P R O X IM A TE Q U A N TITY SUBSCRIBERS'
NONE FURNISHED W ITH DISTRICT-CONTRACTS.
All work it to be dene in accardance with the Mane and prelect
specifications of the State of Pier Ida Department at Trenmertetkn.

ohoMo cMjm. ffM undflftinEd
United SMOte Marshal, er one of
Me duly autherimd deputies,
will Mil Me property situate in
SemMek Ceunty, Florida, da

13— Holiday
Child Cart

MIPIfIRKUVfIT
Sanford arte. 7 days par
week. Approilmakly lehrs
CailOaryat................... m i t t l

ASSISTANT FLMT MANMCR
Must have chaulfaur license. S
day week Includes Saturday.
Eecellent benefits. Apply
SjabemeiTSaaNewAu

requested, bid lobulations will be peeled In Me deansfelrs
Conference Room of tho Deland District Office. 7ft Saudi WeadUnd
Boulevard. Deland. Ftarida on the I4M day from Me tatting data,
upon posting, if win be the Pepsi hunt's intent te award te dm lew
bidder Any bidder who Male he Is adversely oftactad by-m s
Departmerits Intent ta award to Mo taw bidder mud Me with Me
Clerk of Agency Proceedings. MS Suwannee itrw t. Tellehetam.
Florida m o t, a written Notice ol Protest wtthln 73hoursMpeeftngef

It— Luxury Hams
Pert lime leading lo full lime.
Slerl H SO per hour. Apply In
person, IM Commerce Way,
see.ete/yrl r e a d b o o k s and
TV Scripts. Fill out slmpla
"llka/don‘1 Ilka" form. KASYI
Fun. relazlng at home, beach,
v a c a tio n s . O u o ra n to o d
paycheck la Hour Recording
Reveals 101 17S JfJJ E it .
FEIP1B

R O T T W E IL E R AKC PUPSI
Champ. Ilnas. quaranlaad
healthy and happy I m i . •
wks. 11/31 *04111-1141________
SCOTTISH Terrier Pope. AKC.
Champ. Bloodline!, shots,
wormod. 3 loll. H 4 747440

While mink |eckel w/inow tap
trim. Slie mad. Appraisal
M.000. Sale S3-000.......m a x
P W IR B IB S S R EM O TE 4X4
TBUCK with 7.1 Nlcad bat
lory. I hour charger and slow
charger. All other batteries
Included. Also has road gear
lor high spood. Made by
Sears. Comes with custom
carry IngcesrStOD. 1744041

iicfs&gt;kt iVtvcr&lt;1y &gt;f _ The

tft| britf fiftuiittwH.

a protest (Had pner ta me nafka el Decision to SeUcNBM t(TM e
intended decision ta aword a contract shall be Warned abendenad
unless renewed within me lime llm ili provided In (nhwcttaa It).
Additionally, a formal written protatt soltmg term a shart and
plain stotamant ol the matters assarted by me proSeetor muet bp
tiled with the Clerk el Agency Proceedings within M days at me
Preliminary Notice of Pretest.
In accordance with Section 13013(11. Fler id*. Statute*. loilurs te
tile e protest within the time prescribed In Section I X O (II. Florida
Statutes, shall constitute e waiver of prsceedings under Chapter ta,
Fiortde Statutes.
Orders tor these documents should be directed te Mr. Jim Hilton.
District Contract Administrator. Ooportmont oI Transportation, f it
South Woodland Boulevard. Da Land. Florida XX73A T slophww
Number tewi Tie sell There will bo no charge N r contract
documents
The right Is reserved to relect any or all bids.
STATE OF FLORIDA
D E P A R TM I N T OF TRANSPORTATION
Thome* P. lo rry , Jr* P .l.

BRANCH DEALER HIRINO
t i l per hour, wo trolnl
Nonpar knee needed
Dealer position ovoilabk.

per TlOiilh

______ n iuet-tm

H E A LTH F O R M needs you
now! Stalling oil areas!
Plenty ol work I Cell 43»I114

LAW YER'S

.»- -—*- - ■
uifirktlocrtvarp
Districts
DR A W

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEAR IN#
The Seminole County Planning and Zoning Commleelen will held a
public hearing in Room W-IZ3 Ol Itw County lorvkes Building.
Sonford. Florida, on January 3. IMI al 7:M P M . or a* soon
thereetter os posslbta. ta consider mo tallowing:
A PUBLIC H EAR IN O FOR C H A N B IO P ZONINORHBUIATIONS
l H E R B E R T P. S T E L L IN B . M.O. Rsssos krgas A-l.
Agriceiturt to EP. RssldsaHal Fritsislsoel. Tea Parcel d . m
Section is li M Further described a* • ta acre parcel tocetod an the
east side ol Lake Howell Road, norm of Moedew Avenue.
1 TER R Y F U T R I L L — Resent heal C-l, RotoN Coasasorctol eod
A l . Agrkuttvro to PCD. PIf e d Cemmarctol Dtotokt. Lai (A . Plat
Book i. Pega to. in SecHon 3X1X31. Further described at a » T a I to
pat tei. loc*ted on the south side el SR 4A east at Upeato Read
Those in *Itendance will be heard and wrttton cemmente may be
filed with the Lend Management Department. N e a rb y may ba
eve-iebie by calling h i 11JO. E i tension 7444.
NOTE Persons are advised met II they wish to eepeei any
decision made at this meeting, may will need a recard al Itw
proceedings, end tor such purpose, they may need to enaure that a
verbatim record of tho proceedings Is made, whkh recard tadutoe
the testimony end evidence upon which me appeal It to bo baaed, per
Section let 0104. Flos Ida Statute*
BOAROOF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLO RIDA
BY H E R BH AR O IN .D IR EC TO R
LA N O M AN A C EM EN T
_ mK
Publish December II. Ited
DEAt

tg g iiA U

HYDE'S P A IN T • M V W ALL.
Specialist to matching too

7 A A Public Racer do al Semi
note County. Florida. Together
w i t h : O ne O rb e n R ange
letoctrk). One Ntocury Heed
(electric), One Cam tart Fee
Furnace (electric),
has bean Mad by me Plaintiff

^P 4 7 Jt£

J iW n jrD jc jritf^

We have immediate
openings!
•Painters
•Book Binders
•Construction
•Warehouse
•Production

C L M T R E tilR V tC B

SEA B R E E N Lawn Mall, and
landscaping. total lawn care)
M u lc h in g , te d d in g and
clean U p s FREE esl 111 tree

Em ployees with transportation
needed Immediately

-

U O M Q

I T I t N

T A .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Th a joy of music ohould navgc
bo mterrupied by a commercial — Leonard Bamatam.

8 I A &gt; 4 1481

Publish December 13. jo. ItOO

Apply
1018 S. French Ave., Sanford
5 A.M. SHARP
L A B O R W O R L D U .S .A . IN C

La w n S t r v k a

Pimtint CMpeotry. Cobnuts
4 Decks, lic’d.. uts'd*
3J9-31M

CO M PLETE Service I Pruning,
trimming, removal, stump*I
Freeest.
ECHOLS T B I E SERVICE
Freaestimetasl Feu-Prices I
l k .I n s . ..Slump Grindtog. Teel
333-333*geyartoto

HNAUINMWIATRI

t

�/

Hanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thursday, Dec am bar 13, 1890 — T S

K IT N’ CARLYLES by Larry Wrffht

tfetl Hf*&gt; m i H&amp;W
Hfcti

M h .C / M / A .u n t

M ain

jm

g w

W W I I I YOU H 1 U . ..................
IU I1 M C W M

I M l BATH t m

AMO

• HEAR: MOW TO U C A N
HBM M I

m o u s in 'im

• SPEAK ■QMSCHLY TO
DESERVE ONE P M YOU

▼■ur cMRttaf (bM N
m 1(4N a t t y I CaM------JB4S474
I . GRANGE COUNTY - 1/1

Dowblowldo on .** aero*

......W.l

2 1 1 -1

OSTEEN • 1 bdrm. t ba. an
‘sacral Left of (had!

______ *oec iti t
A J COUNTRY COMBER I Ml
Hwy 411. O tH d A . U ((d

C/H/A. vary privet*

TLCIB37JM....... M i n i

127—Offtae Rentels

SAVE (M l NEW 1441 N O M Etl
WHY P A T RETAIL? 14X7*.
44AM. 94X71, (l?AM MB-I7M
a tfWbi NKA. MX

Mn. I . R. *4 LawgwaM called
hw I X K Meretd Cieeelftod
CMeulNnt la tu p her #d frem
centlnwtng an the IB-Dey
Ipactol. Alludtag N Hw lest
respeni* I t her Sanford
HeraM claeetltod M l Mrs « .
M M "We really M r m •fed I t r Something YOU iwed
M adrertlw el lew cott end
achieve gelcfc resulti? Tryaur
Mi U A lhDay Special relee.
lean t ceet per line ler can
ttCwTIW M f l

M w fitllftg.

Advoi fleer* ere free te cancel

141—HomestorSato

SMALL 2 bdrm. C/H/A. nke
(ocurlhr. m a w / M -N M * * *

tm n rummm m
1 bdrm*. 1V» both C/H/A.
doenANncad. (443/mo
W -fSH H A i
I U C R O O K ID P IN * O R ..
SanNrd. 1 Adrm., t bafh. (MB
pr.mo.Sec.B3M.m-M3*

105-DuplexTripItK / Bant
I Me Man H I N i l
Call Between 11AM 3PM

DUPLEX •Lg. 1 bdrm. Carport
Inside utility rm ., C/H/A/no
pets, (40B. mo. + d*a..m-M4S

1229 MOVE M SPECIAL
I (1 Broom t bath
and IbedK o m l bath tvM labf
SANFORD ■ Spacious I bdrm.,
S3* month plus drp (23 oil
(or prompt payer I No pets.
woter/gaslncl.............HM741
both, nke area. oH »t. prklng.
on w wk, (isoiec. m e m
SANFORD 1 ROB ML Spacious.
Adults, no pets All elect.

«H/moUp.MMd*pHMIt*
S A N F O R D A R I A , One
bedroom, water furnished.
very clean M t n R __________
A N FORD •Moving In spectat.
lit month rent tree. Lg. 1 or 2
bWm pool/laundry.m om
SANFORD - Modern 1 kdrmt.
dupNs. appll., mini blinds.
C/H/A, (1(0/month.... M M tM

STUDIO Aptl (45/wt. 1 Bdrm.
BTB/wk. Both In convenlant
tRCAtlona..... UP-lfW/maaaati

2-STORY APARTMENT
1 bdrmt. I bath tewnhouM.
tOtl S. Oak . Av. Sanford.
tWS/mo. MM sec— — MO1111

REARDUfUX
At M l) Kentucky Ave, OFF E.
St. Rd 4B. ) bdrm. 1 both. U7)
per mnnth. Call lO-aMI
SANFORO I Bedroom, kit.
appll.. carperl, hook ups.
Air/Hoet.(4d0 pr. me. m a m m
1 BDRM.. central H/A. Sanford
area. UOB par month plus
deposit. BMPTWer MM7T7

107-M oM le
Homos / Rent
OENEVA. Country areal 1
bdrm, I bath. UM/plus sac

113— Industrial
Rentals
AAA B U IIH E B I CENTER New ottlce/Whse. M0 ft. to
1,4(3 ft. Bays with or wto
offices starting at SMO/me
Hern. 17/U A IR 417
________Catl-.UP-eMd_______

11i — Reel Eatete
M a n a f m trt

N EAR LK. M O N R O ! I lbdrm I
, bath. Mm., appll.. Indoor util.
• rm l (I71/mo. Realtor m o t U
-RIVERFRONT One bdrm. cot
• toga. Partly turn. Utilities
' Inc , adults no pets. M34470

T IR E D O F T R N A N T Hm *
aches? CaM Grant Priperttoi
ler (asl larvlce.......... see-tasi

Unfurnlshod/Rent
WINTER SPRINGS • 4 bdrmt.
1Vi he. Nice area near schools.
(33*. HI, last.......HO-(13*eves

Gl M l

117— Commercial
Rentals
CORNER 477 • 17/fl Free­
standing Mdg. Suit, tor car let.
In*, ca 0tcin-Mt7/UM4*-MM
LOMOWOOO • 3 offices 1 Prime
Hwy. 434 loci Rent one/both I
Cer wholesale ok t U P 14U

GAUDI

VA

MS

A l ’AKIM I M S
RENT

TO D A Y

FOR

OUR

M O V E -IN
I .It Ml

SPECIAL

h i ' l l l D O I I l Apts A V , l l l , l t ) l l ‘
*»t.irtni(| .It i&gt;1st) 00

l r)05 W I’ bth St . Saiiiford

322 2 0 90

MOOf LOPENII-4----- VA/FHA
CA C N 0 M I«,la * .

Holi&lt;

r&lt; &gt; .

•Clubhousa with Flrtplac*
•Indoor Racquetball
•Waight Room
•Pool ft Jacuzzi
Washar/Dryar Connections

Assumable no quality loans In
these areas! Choose homes
from SamlnoN/Orange
Volusla/Leke Counties!

ZERO deemI (43*/mo. Like
new I Cempl. redone I 1/1.

LESS THAN S U N DOWN
INCUNHNG CLOSING COSTS

ri-g(»M ll

3/1, liv din- lam- rooms, appl.
carport, c/h/a...............(41.300

1 bedroom, 3 bath, pool,
Ml JM . Sdkwen RteNy
_________ 0(7-MI-1347_________

POOL HOME
POSSIBLE IfASE/PtMCHASE

SANTA’S M0VE-M SPECIAL)
4 BR. brick home N r only
II.M I down. BSBWmo. Priced
reduced! IW.MB. Far detail*

1/3. with lamlly, living, dining
rm (. tplc. enclosed porch,
fenco yard. Huge lot, (44.300

M*-W1 ar M4-37M

ST. JOHN’S AND LK MONROE

DELTONA. 1/3, CHA. Non
•Milling. itio m iW , Nlcol
Wd.PI.M».MAW*-UM
■ I CHA NO I OR B ILL yew

3 aero estate I 4/3. 1300 tq I I .
custom built. (337.300

LANE MARY
USS THAN S2.SN DOWN

IneeiN w Realty. 43( 3M4

1/1. living, dining, lamlly
rooms, fenced yard, new
paint, carpel and tile. (44,(00

Tarry O ekel R M ia er Egta riA Reyneldt RE MM44I

0VEID01.29 ACRES

HOMES

Custom built 4 bdrm. 2 bath,
fireplace, screened pool and
spa. 3 car garage. 1174,400

17 rt. Very Spcolou*. U7.000
3/1 vy. Handyman ipeclall
UI.400

3/2 CUSTOM BUILT
C e ra m ic tile . L e v e lo rt.
lireplace, 3 car garage.
Pool/termIaavail......... 141.100

3/3, over 1(00 tq It...........3*L.uu
E S T A T E CO ., INC.
call for other litling*,

1317337

ThePrudential ®
Florida Baafty
LOOMINGFONAHONEY
Pleas* let m# haip

CsNMGmai&amp;IULTOR
&lt;4*711----------

DELTONA

.

Lest than UM 0 down 11/3 with
101 24 sernd porch. ..(34.300

■ER IN NBREI 3 bdrm. 2 bath
home w/semd. pool, covered
p a l l o , f a m i l y room
w/flreptaco A lg. kllchan.
Exc. cond. Orly.147.710.RA3O
Cat) Jean H &gt;H *t/l 7*4714 eves
COMMERCIAL Prep, corner lot
w/muttipN tenants. Good long
term Investment, tOO\ leased
Seller will Nate back premise
to guarantee occupancy Call
W. Cette* ID -D M ............. C F U
BALI/LCASB/INVESTI I
bdrm. I ba Condo. Rent* tor
(400 mo. All appliances, sernd.
perch, convenlant to shops.
tramperlatten......00.000. Call
W*N or Jtm...n3-n*e....... r a h
Neal Office Warehouse. Cassel
berry, axe. toe., min. from I 4,
17/43 A Hwy 4M. 1.744 (.1..
11.000 f e.f. tot. Paved tec
fenced itoragel (113.000 CCS)
Iptvey/Mc Kenna H J H M
L E U THAN 1 YR ONI 3/3
Canalfronf w/accest to Lakes
Clear A Adal Sernd porch,
tots of ceremk file. Tennis A
Comm, pool IAL0M.........REIT
Me Keane's h j nee/na t i l l

M AO NIFICENT 4/3 on I acre!
13*40 sernd. porch, tree form
ioo I. heated tpe. lavish
{andscaplng.
fenced backyard,
ipr system! (1*3.000
RC3I
McKennas U4M7 3/H3 1700
C O U N T R Y L IV IN G al Its
Flnestl Only S ml to I 4
Roomy a/) on a acre* Loll of
coder, fenced pastures Horse
lovers will love Ihisl U23.000
McKennas 114 (173............ RHJ»
OWNER SAVE 1ELLI This Lk
Mary )/ } Is in showroom
condition Largo m atter
w/Roman tub Gourmet eet in
kit Blinds Ihru out
RBM
Call Dolly J » Doa, eves 111 7134
LK . E M M A L A K C F R O N T I
Custom 1 bdrm 2 bath. 1 car
garage Plenty ol room lor
boa I parking Sernd pool I
Asking 1174.100
RPrl
(it** m no*, eve* 131 a m
ASSUMABLE VA S.3N Custom 1
bdrm. 1 ha. near wooded golf
course Quiet neighborhood
Verynke Best value in ereal
Call Welt/Elsie i l l IMS
RCM

323-3200

Keqes

*l0fMi* '*C dlai(&amp;n|

IE YES d I IN THF SOUTH

O STEEN ■ l i
with bam ......

Cleared.
M a .m ii

L A K I M A R Y ■33 ecretl High A
dry I Good term*. Owner leys
submit all otters. Asking It.*
(*4* Santord Are.

3 2 U 7 H ......... 121-1257
1.1 A C R B 'I Gorgeous oak
hammock! ui.OOO. Seller II
Hanging. Caldwell Beaker
Ideal. Call l dear? I-c tu
\l 1
M
M 111 If 1
K V iV\
Kf M \ s 1 \ 1\

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

'% Om JtW tfun.
B E A U T IF U L L Y T R K I O IIACRES In Lk. Mary area.
Lois at potential. Ideal lor
country ostato or farm..173.000
F IV E A C R ES , Mullet Leke
Perk eree. Surveyed. Zoning
permits hortts. Beautiful
site.............................M0.000II

53300 DOWN INCI CLOSING

CHULU0TAPOOLHOME

SHADY; VACANT LOT ZONE6
OC 1 ON BUSY CELER Y Ave.
M (t. frontage Good Invest
ment opportunity. Only $11,000

Plnecrest. 1/3. living, dining,
lamlly rm .. security system,
fenced yard....U3.(00

2/1, firepfgce. access to Lake
Mill (.on 1/3acre..........(77.300

KEYESBEST BUYS
L A R I MARVI 1+ acres nned
A-1 with quality bull! 4 bdrm.
I D bath ail brick homal Over
2700 t.f. of living spice.
Excellent schools 11 S1U.OOO
Satan Lae m-HOO............ RC-17

01 N IV A • 3 nice ecreel With
•ell. Term*.............. U4.400! I

T E N A C R E H O M ES ITE IN
L A K E Jessup arse. Well,
survey. Horses OK..... (171000

------------

OR E A T Utfto Meuse) Great
lime Price) Per let I lor 1st
time buyer, small lamlly or
Investor. O v e r t l t e d lot.
beeutlfui trees! UI.400 RB74
Ale Kernses n a u 7 )/ iu JIM

From The Staff
of Regatta Shores

LESS TH A N S U M DOWN
W ITH NEW FINANCING
RONO M O N E T, FNA, VA
OR CO NVENTIO NAL LOANS I

R IW L Y R *M O O ELID 4bdn o.
1 b*RL Laundry * family rm*.
Canwr INI (E M M .......M IAM I

'

141-Homes tor Sale
N O R TH 1 IM IN O L E . Owner
mult M ill 4 bdrm., 3 bath,
pool home. Lg. living rm. and
formal dining room. New roof,
2 cer garage. Just Hated and
priced to Milt ULIOO Stirling
lirternattanal Realty m - I M .

141—HemettorSeto

g 4 jN * R W R R ji

TRUCEEES Special I ) Bdrm.
trailer. Rm.to park truck.
Claaa to Interstate.
Ml-tiei

101— H o u s m
Furnished/ Rent

102—Housts

TARE OVER PAYMENTS

A T T R A C T I V E NEW HOM E
SITE. Idoel lor single family
home. City water avalable
Check this out............. (10.000
T H R E E L O T S IN P R IM E
OROWTH area. Suitable for
commercial or light Industrial
use................................ 173.000

L A K I MANY
1(4 Estelle Rd 1/1. 2 car
garage. 1.440 sq. ft. MS.OOO
A.N.R. Realty. *7794*4

B U IL O ir S SPEC HOMES
Includes Screened Pool
Special Ral* Financing
Call H I 1771

ONLY SCSO DOWN!!
NO CLOSING COSTS'
410 E. 3rd S t. Sanford Nice 3
bdrm 1 bath horn* on shaded
tot. Priced for quick sale al
(43.430 or (Inane* (43.000 lor 70
yrs. at 1413.32/mo . 11% APR
I Sublet! to credit approval)
For Into, call 1 1001*4411*
*pm A wkands........ IMB-aif 13)(

Prtstipovs Afu/R) Or m i
Oaks ol Sanlord. a bdrmt 2's
b* Reduced (Ill.fOO/make
otter........111 7104/11144* 44*1

i m

u

i j m

m

HUGE OAKS surround this love
ly 1 bdrm home with family
room, formal dining room,
tern porch, fenced yard, and
double carport Only
(31.100
R A V E N N A PARK - Nice 1
bedroom home! Eal in kltch
•n. large corner lot Good
location, easy terms! Ju il
reduced'!
(34.400

323-5774
SALE BY OWNER
LOVELY'2 ROHM. 2 BATH
1033 Bungalow with fireplace
Renovated Inside and outside!
Landscaped Owner Annousl
IM l Magnolia Ave.

MASOei............. -.... 774(11)
STAIRS PROPERTY
M AN AG EM EN T A R E A L TY
_______ m -r n i/ m a a i*

SUrttr/Ritirtnwnt Hem*
Lovely Loch Arbor kxelionl 2
bdrm I bath, large corner lot.
deep well, living dining den.
laundry room, new root
MS.OOO. astumable 173 I Mil

F IV E AC R ES on SI Johns
Boaters 1 Ushermen need to
see this parcel. Tractor A
bush hog Included......MS.OOO

CAU. ANYTIME

322-2420

1147 per month an a 1(41
14X70. Call LeRey:
___________

R M B W

_____________

3 BDRM*. 12 wMN. very reaeenabiel Sat up Park Av. Mobile
Park. S*ntord..3t3-W1..4-lpw&gt;
) BEDROOM. 1bath. CHA. *Md
condition. MUET BELLI IS M .
___________ » H R __________

________
-ME-ltM
PRIVATE INOIYIOSMU. wants
to buy wpah/drypr/rpfrtg. Na

1*3— We terfrout
Property/Sato

WANTED •PALM TREES. AW
ft. Call Silly's Palm T r M l

WgfciM ttwl 3.9k m i

WOOD P U R N I T U R t
WANTED! Any CONOtTMNI

_________ m -7 4 » w * _________

1)0 bvHdabto ft. an rlverl
Private eatament la property.
Just I ml. from Sanford, Laka
Co. (Mel Superb location N r a
dreamhoma. Dramatically
reduced! Now |ut»....lll«iaMII
fMBMaadliMMM7______

ill—Appitonces
/ Furniture
AWATEhRcOWORlOCa

13*3 Park Dr., Senlerd
*41W. Lake Mary Bl.. Lk, Mary

O S T E E N . 3 acres, wooded.
(30.000 O EN EV A . 3 acres
U3.000 Breughten Realty
___________ ***(33*__________

04-4113. Men-let., 144*Wt
BJ'S RESALE

We Buy/(ell PemNoro A Calk__ I- -X I . —
ivLime*, imiuDHif
■ im n

3143 llanferd Ave., M3-74t*
CRAFTMATIC Queen Bed. New
cond. pd.13000; (430. OBO.
Wed gown 7/1 pd. It W ; O H

• DRY I R . gas. Sain Kanmore.
While, Ilkanewl (43. MM TM
• G OLD STAR VCR with re­
mote. excellent cenditloni
SIM. (404)
7TS-14M
LARRY'S MART. US Sanford
Av*. Now/UMd (urn. A appl.
Buy/Sail/Trad*........W t t
•M APLE DININO Table, w/4
chain. 140 Call after 4PM
H U M * ____________________
* BATAAN BAR STOOLS. 1.
(100........................... H141M
* R EFR IO IR A TO R . Kenmore,
compact 3.S cu. foot. Manual
defrost. Like now I (30.

__________ m-7VM ■________

e iO FAC sntem porery floral
design In tha#* of orange
only 330 IH -tliL .,

7 bdrm. 2 bath. 1 000 tq II .
large bring end dmmg area
with fireplace E lira room tor
ollice hobby third bedroom
Wood dr'k, large trees, lenms
and pool privileges (IOS.OOO
C a ll])) (411or 111)14*

1U— Tetoviston/
Radio / Stereo
S T E R E O . Panatonlc. dual
casMfle and compac disci
Like Nowl (300060-..317-aM4
W ITH YOUR OWN U la fliN
J y iltm , yeu watek HBO,
Cinemax. ESPN. CNN. and
aver IM ether channels N r
lest than U2/ma. Call 1M-H73

187— Sporting Goods
• BICYCLE • 10 m Freewheel.
Handbrakes. UO Cell m 1411
SURFBOARDS, wel tulle and
accttsoriee. good condition
H I *410 lv. msq_____________

ALL S T E E L BUILDINGS al
dealer Invoice. 1.000 to 30,000
sg II Call 407 141 1741 tolletl
O B A TH ROOM Cabin*!, no
mirror, wooden front, like
Ialousiet Cost (14 Will tacrl
lice 170 H I-IM l____________

* * * * * * * * *
1, 1 and * bedroom homes
e v a ila b lt
A ls o B O N D
MONEY when available
Ca II Jentt Mjnsfttld

o«iy%. i n 1214 g b t. m n/t
A A Cjrnwi. Inc

O nk%

ESTATE SALE
ling it#m% gold watchwt,
mltc ( f i i f l r y .... .........M l l t f f

HILLS OF LAKE MART!
Pool table, household, m in i
cioFfm bdCiy it*mi .»r d Much
V o»F( F f
Sal* «fHf 5ur
Pin# Vhstdow Lain*

JJf

Im n BupITaid Silo Pitcn!
Wa’er neater bullet stow
tilde e Pads couches, sola *
Retr.e-. er euos •Call 117 *S tl

locally.
Call

M il

223— AAHcaitoMDU*
• A Q U A R IU M , (a t-u p . 31
OaHaw.BM.m-MM_________
ART LMBITED EDtTIONSt by
Fr act. Coheleach. Netman.
and othaei. FYkadwaNwMw
rptMl » Windsor Ida. Long-

Swing, walker, cartast.
hlghchplr. atari gamaJM14M
BUY----------SELL______ TRADE
HUEY'S CROWN PAWN
C H R ISTM A S T R E E P A E M .
Opan wk.ends. 47W W. 33th St.

VISIT SEMINOLA PAIR
ANDSWAPFLEAMARKET
OPEN E V E R T SATURDAY
AND SUNDAY V I » ( (
SEMINOLA BLVO I Behind
Deg Track. Casselberry

OSTEEN
1 Family Ffi. and Swl 301
Carpiwlff H2 bW

159 Pinetrut Dt, Sinlord
0«r 1%c'QlKrv boo* \ toolt and
mice Friday and Saturday
itiFling 1AM
_

7413 S ORANGE AV Sanfoid
Satvto.tr • JO ] M Jlamillesl

Little bit el evecrthingl

7544 ClAIRMONT AVE
Oil 21m b, Seminole HS
Friday. Sal A Sun lots of

223—

Auto Fart*

/Atcmarto*
• A U TO PART* - Ooage AapwT
CTwvyNava II1M B.CNI
___________ 331A IM __________
A U TO M A TIC
trantm lulant
tram (73: t acNanga radiators
tram (M i Usa* tlrea from (3;
Tlrs mounting aval lable
lit* C b N r r W .m -4*34
• M I C N E L I N R adial Tire ,
Brand Npwl 130/1*3 HR 3M
Metric, fit* Puagaot. (40
m -M s t

224— Im port Cars
end Truck*
1 M T O Y O T A S T A R L IT ! 3
•pd.. ac. n c . gat ml. M.ttt
............... .m a w
is g g T R O O P E R LS l a d
Burgundy A copper. Law, low

mlloa.......................JIL3MII
................ m a w

IN I TOYOTA PICKUP* Extra
clat I.................U . W

NO CART • SVa HP,
chitds. I n .

M E R C E D il tm so.
mil** feed cond. china Mu*.

MEMBERSHIP, Tlmacuan
Galf and Country Club, by
Individual at discounted price
tor InformetlenCaN M»aBM
•OAKLEY IL A D IE . Iridium.
Includes cete. I naaa pNcai
end neck string. SacrltlcatM.
m -siM
• O L D R EC O R D Callactlpn.
Apprpx. IN . 71 NPM record!.
Incl. big bands. |au. classical,
h a w a lln , Jo lso n , Sousa.
Hellett. Andrews Sisters, ect.
All tor 13b. (B H 3 H _________

STAN0AND POOL TABU
W/equipment I Slate bottom.
Eac. Presentl U 0 0 ......M &gt; m i
SUZUKI O w l tkard. (a. caw a
adaptor, SIM. Half-Eagle,
I3MD, V F . SIM. M m Ys Sethe
tports 100. dey/dete. *190 W
Celt Oevt., never tlredl W/box
A paper. BIN. Call....... » H R
TANNINO RED - Brand New I
Great Chrlitm ei gift I Will
hold. 11300 (M-I1IB__________
• W IN D O W . B ro w n tinted
thermo pane. New 1(40. OBO
___________1N-171B___________

9 FT. Tint
Artificial Christmas treat
Good Condition I Paid (300.
Sailing at (DO
................... J32-BM1

231— Cer*
*

AUTO LOANS

I

SECURITY NATIONAL

(

i no i n oia*

IIMBOBO........... — .333-Mil
RENAULT Eacarei m 3 d r .
ac. 3 spd/N mpg. am/fm cae.
'

IIU

IME TROOPER LS 4x41 Whit* a
g r e y l - f e n e . L o w , low
..............I12.M II
................ m a w

223— T ru ck*/
B u s t * / Van*
P33A '19. ono owner, exc work
truck. I sets lire* on road and
oft roadi (1300 N7a*aii74

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NOMONEY OMN
E xc*pt tax, lag. Iltlo. etc
C H IV Y PICK UP 13*3. auto,
air, stereo, wheels. GREAT
BUY al ONLY (1 ft 70/mo
Call Mr. Payne. 3131113

. lSUFOtOTIUCK
111 Custom Windsor, mint
cond. 11. M0 171 111) after 1
U M D s to e C irm f l
33.0M miles, 4 cylinder, fully
loaded. PB. PS. A/C. (7.433
firm, i l l tall, ask lor Tom
71 C H IV Y 374 Ton Pick up. mud
i an roar. Good condition
».............................. 333W33

232— Vehicles
Wanted
AAAUTO SALVAGE

I S I S t ( l t l ( ( t ( t ( t

i
(

(

( ( ( » ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( $ ( ( (

1*44 DOWN DrIvesI « Cutlass
Suprtma BR. 1dr. V t loadedI
SuCItvaa's Auto Ranch....na-awa
It*t FORMULA FIRBBIROI
Loaded! 11 II you're paying
attanllonl.— .................(f.Wt
Magte Isate.................. » R N
'71 M AVERICK - I owner, a dr.,
auto.. * cyl . radio, air. good
cond Price xig*fU kle.MH4*4
IN f FIR EB IR D ! 400. 4 Spd
Holley 4 barrel carb. Runt
good I WOO/best otter I m -I C T

CHEAP' Ft'/U.S. SEIZED
(4 V W ...................................S30
(7Mercedes..................... U00
(1 Mercedes
1100
*3 Mustang......................... (30
Choose trom thousands start
mg US la Hour Recording
Reveals Details SOI m m *
e«t FJIF3C________________

S

£

Appcmfmtnf oniyl Coli«cf
«*ntiqy»i oldcfoch. %tff

PIANO PON SAU
Wanted: Eekp-nalbH party to

199—Pets A Supplies

THIS WEEK S

Fn and Sat 9 4 1U Stimmlt
Avt , Lk Ma. y

CONN OR4AN - Madlum tin.
good condition. (430 (I need
the ipacel Call 1327143

__________ ____ ________ )l

CALL BART

CARPORT SALE

222— M w stcil

Truck tool boa STB. (M RUS

• ANGORA RUNNY • While
lemale. will hold III X mas!
IM Call Lawanna HS144)
OVER NINE ACRES
C A T .F R E E to good adult home
N ic e ly wooded tra ct on
Long haired, spade, dtclawed.
Maylown Rd Ten miles east
; _________C a im i IHa________
ol Osteen Priced inly (14, too
a
F
R
E
E
w ith aw ner term s
DO BERM AN/R OTTW EILER
MIXI To good home 7 mos
old lemale All shots e&gt;cept
rabies I Weklva Falls)
R EA L ESTATE
________isaam-Tsaa_______
R EA LTO R .................. H17SH
FREE KITTEN S
For
ST JOHN'S Hlvert ] acres!
Christmas Call evenings
Huge oaksl *144.000 Sailer
___________n »1141__________
financing
Caldwell Ranker
MINI DACHSHUND • Black A
Meat. Call H d n H W I
Tan. s mos Great Christmas
3 ACRES
Near Idyllwllde
presantl Parents on pfemltesl
schools, can divide 1 rented
(173 121-4744 ovesAwkeads
units t lee.too For details call
Trmpiin Realty Inc. »J*-**I(
M IN I P O O D LES
Male A
female. 7 mot Whlto All
shot*, cut* I (M ee...... I ll MM
135— Condominiums
R ETR IEVER PUPS ISO
Co-Op / Sale
Aval lable now lor Christmas I
________ Call 111 stn________
S A N O A L W O O D V illa s l/ l
a S IA M E S E CA T. g o nllo .
Csnde Salel (73 000 or will
playful, housebroken. FREE I
lease option rent (313 Lowest
to a good home 111 1111
prices m area!............(a* 3111

Household iNrrvn Tools. #ppU
Anttiu furmturt much mo#tf

e e U PtCK NAVELElll &gt;4(1
C IL E R Y AY.. UM PORD
*RIMP CONTAINERS! I
U-PICR N AVEL O R A M E l.
ta^udwt, Hwy. M B. Sanford,
t Mk. E. M Eiardall Av*. naxl
to Autp Auction. m-t71)

a DIN I NO ROOM table and
mlsc. chairs, (43. OBO
123-4144

THE0AAS, SANFORO

FOR SALE
BY OWNER

22T— Om M T M n |»
to ta l

SentlaoN Plea* CetteDerry
HOLIDAY OIPT1PECIALSI
SHEET BETS/HBATie* U4.43

191— Building
Materiel*

321-2720

2 1 f — W e w te M *&gt; B o y

I N E E D F R E E WOOD
PALLETS, m M ■ m M, 4
p M R t------M1-t4M

TINE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONET DOWN
E .cept taa. lag. tllle. elc
PONTIAC L IM A N S
ISM.
auto, air, stereo, sport model!
M UST SEE
Only 10.000
miles and ONLY (let Itm o
Call Mr Payne. H I 1111

Now buying complete cars A
trucks by weight u 13 p/100
lbs delivered, or ( I 73 p/100
lbs we pick up E sample 7*
Cadillac (3.013 Ibt ■ U13
equals IH 3 071. Guaranteed
highest prkes paid In M t
area I Cell *4* seee ler quels

229— Motorcycles
and Bike*
M O P E D • R o id m e t t e r .
practically new! Runt greell
(330! C e lle d m i* * * ________
• MOPED. Vttpa/Piagglo. Low
mileage Good condition (tt
Call.............................. 330-1171
*03 K AW AM K I M l. CEE I Re
cenfly overhauled, good con
dltlon. (430111) (OMbet, &gt;«pm

241— Recreation! I
Vehicle*/Cam per*
'70 DODGE CMneeh, Esc con
dltlon, tell contained. w-'aCOO
onan m 3341 belovt 1PM

243— Junk Car*
eCASHe FOR VOUR JUNK
C A R OR T R U C K t t A N T
CONDITION! CALL 113 M37
((T O P Dollar It Pn.d tor |unk
c a r s , tru c k s. 4 w heel drive

Any ceadihen

Call 111 S**t

ESTA TE
SALE
SATURDAY MORNING

BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
PHONE 322-4179
A N TIQ U ES
OLD C LO C K S
ST ERLI NG I TEMS

COL LEC T I BL ES
GO L D W A T C H E S
MISC. J EWELRY

�■ ■ — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thursday, December 13, 1990

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Loqal Notices

NOTICK TO
T N I PUBLIC:
Nolle* It hereby gly*n that th*
Board ol Ad|uttm*nl ol 111* City
at Santord will hold a regular
moating on Dacambar 7*. 1f*0.
In th* City Hall Com m itt Ion
Chambart at II JO am In ordtr
to contl dar a raquatl lor
variant* In th* Zoning Ordl
none* at It pertaini to Sid* Yard
variant* requirement* In an
SR IAA district on:
Lot J t M ay lair Section F lrtl
Addition PB I I PC *0 at r*
cor dad In Santord. Sam Ino I*
County. Florida
Balng mor* tpaclllcally da
ttrlbod at located 1000 Scott
Avanu*
Plannad ut* ol lha property It
te add a garage to an aaltllng
tingle tamlly dwelling
W M. Philip*. Chairman
Board of Ad|uttm*nt
ADVICE T O THE PUBLIC II
a perton dec Ida* lo appeal a
dtcltlon mad* with retpact to
any matter contldtred at th*
above meeting or hearing,
ha/the may need a verbatim
record of th* proceeding* In
eluding the tettlmony and evl
dance, which record It not
provided by th* City ol Santord
IFS tttO IM I
Publlah: December 11.11. itto

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT*
OF T H E IITN JUD ICIAL
C IR C U IT IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE N0.5AMMCA-I4-P
AM ERIFIRST BANK. A
FE D E R A L SAVINGS BANK,
lor merly known** AmeelFInt
Fedtral Savings and Loan
Association.
Plaintiff.

IN TN E CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E E IG H TE E N TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA
IN AN O FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
O EN ERA L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO. N A Ttl CA 14 P
WEYERHAEUSER
MORTGAGE COMPANY.
Plaintiff

RONALD JCYBULSK I.
ETAL..
Detendamt
N O TICE OF ACTION
TO R ON ALD JCYBULS KI
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
LAST KNOWN
M AILIN G ADDRESS:
717 Bear Shadow Court
Longwood. FL1777*
AND TO : All persons claiming
an Interest by. through, under or
against th* aloratald Defendant
YOU ARE HER EB Y NOTI
FIE D T H A T an action to tor*
clot* a mortgage on th* follow
Ing described property locatad
In Sam look County, Florida:
Lot 41. TIMBER RIDGE AT
SABAL POINT, U N IT I. ac­
cording to th* plat thereof at
recorded In Plat Book "7a",
Pi get aa through at. Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida INCLUDING SPECIF
ICALLY. BUT NOT BY WAY
OF LIM ITATIO N . TH E FOL
LOWING EQUIPM EN T FAN/
HOOD; DISPOSAL; M ICR&amp;
WAVE;
DISHWASHER.
RANGE/OVEN. R E F RI GER
ATOR; CEN TR AL H E A T A AIR
TO G E TH E R with all Ih* Im
provemen It new or hereafter
erected on th* property, and all
aatamantt, rights, appurt*
nances, rant*, royaltlet. miner
al. oil and gat rights and profits,
water, water rights and water
stock, and all futures now or
hereafter a part ot th* property.
Including replacements and ad
dltlont thereto
hat been filed against you. and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written defenses. II any.
to this action, on ROGER D
BEAR of ANDERSON A RUSH.
Attorneys for Plaintiff, whose
address It 177 East Central
Boulevard. Orlando. Florida
17101, end fll* th* original with
th* Clark of th* above styled
Court on or before th* nth day
of January IN I; otherwise a
ludgmant may b* entered
against you tor Ih* reiki da
mended In th* Complaint.
WITNESS MY HAND AND
SEAL OF SAIO COURT on this
4th day of December, lNO
(SEAL)
MARYANNEMORSE
at Clark ol sad Court
By Heather Brunner
as Deputy Clark
Publish: Oecambar 4. 11. 70. 77.
IN0
OEA 10

DALE B HARRIS, at u*. at al..

IN T N I C IR C U IT COURT
O F T N I IIT N JUD ICIAL
C IR C U ITO F FLORIDA.
IN A N O F O R
S IM IN O L I CO UN TY
CASE NO. *4~*S4*
O I N I R A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
INVESTORS SAVINGS BANK
PLAI NTI FF.
— vt—
FREDERI CD.NEAL. E T A L
D EFEN D A N TlS l
NO TICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
- PROPERTY
TO :
AM ERICAN EASTER N
CORPORATION.
DISSOLVED
Ratldtnc* imknewn. if iking.
Including any unknown spouse
ot th* tald Defendants, if either
hat remarried and If either or
both of tald Defendants art
dead, thalr respective unknown
h a l r t . davit***, grant***,
assignee*, creditors, iknors.
and trust***, and all other
perton* claiming, by. through.

deai;

N O TIC E OF
"
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In butlnett at 7*50
Bailey Ave . Santord. FL. Semi
noN County. Florida, under th*
Flclltlout Nam* ol M O B ILE
LUBE, and that I Intend to
ragltter tald name with th*
Clarli ol th* Circuit Court. Sem
InoN County. Florida. In *c
cordanca with th* Provltlont ot
th* Fictitious Nam* Statute*.
To Wit: Section *45 Of Florida
Slalutat l*S7.
Paul A. Lord
Publish: November 77. 7* A
Decamber 4. II. 1**0
DEZ TO*

The sounds of the season have rung out across
the county this week. Above, the Sanford
Middle School band performed at Sun Bank In
downtown Sanford, under the direction of Jack
Bacon. At right, soloist Krystal Merthle, 13.
accompanied the band. Below, the All Souls
School choir performed at Sem inole Centre
earlier this week.

N O TIC E OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Nolle* It hereby glvan that w*
are engaged In butinats at IQ]
Longhorn Rd.. Winter Park.
177*7. Seminole County, Florida,
under th* Flclltlout Nam* ot
AUTO A TR U C K REPAIR, and
that we Intend to ragltter tald
name with th* Clark ol th*
Circuit Court. Semlnok County.
Florida. In accordance with th*
Provltlont ol tho Fk tlllo u t
Nam* Statutes. To Wll Section
M l 0* Florida Statutes 1*57.
BUILDING SERVICE INC
Torot V. Khachalourlon
Publish: November 77. 7* A
December1.1], leeo
DEZ 107

HeraM Photee by Tematy Vincent

N O TIC E OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am engaged In butlnett at 1571
Celery Ave . Santord. Fla 17771.
Seminole County, Florida, under
th * F i c t i t i o u s N a m * ot
HAWKI NS P LU M B IN G , and
that w* Inland to ragltter tald
name with th* Clark ol th*
Circuit Court, Semlnok County.
Florida. In accordance with th*
Provltlont ol Ih* Fictitious
Nam* Statutes. To Wll Section
145 0* Florida Statute*
W 0 Hawkins
Publlth: December 0. I], 70. 77.
!**0

DEA *4

Sinatra turns 75
NEW YORK — Francis Albert Sinatra celebrat­
ed his 75th birthday Wednesday by doing what
he does best — singing on stage, alone in the
spotlight
Ol' Blue Eyes' sold out Diamond Jubilee
Concert at the Meaduwlands' Byrne Arena. East
Rutherford. N.J.. was only a few miles from
Hoboken, where he was born Dec. 12. 1915.
Sinatra, accustomed to doing It his way,
planned the performance down to the minutest
detail and rehearsed It with a warm-up concert at
the arena Tuesday.

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

NOTICE OF
FICTITIO US NAME
Nolle* is hereby glvan Itut I
am engaged In business al *41 S
Lak* Sterling CL. Casselberry.
F L 11707. Semlnok County,
Florida, under th* Fictitious
N a m * ol D I V E R S I F I E D
SAFET Y PRODUCTS, and that
I Intend to regular said name
with th* Secretary of Slat*.
Tallahassa*. Florida. In ac
cordanca with th* Provisions ol
th* Fictitious Nam* Statute*.
To Wit: Section 445 09 Florida
Statutu*1*57
Allan L Spencer
Publish: December II. IWO
OEA 107

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hertby glvan that I
am angagad In business at 701
Garden Lana, Longwood. FL
17750. Semlnok County, Florida,
under th* Fictitious Nam* ot
J A C K R I D I L L A AND SON
CONSTRUCTION, and mat I
Inland to rtglsltr said name
with Ih* Secretary ol Slat*.
Tallahassa*. Florida. In ac
cordanr* with th* Provisions ol
Iho Flclltlout Namo Statutes.
ToWII; Section 145 OS Florida
Statuks 1*57
John Thomas Rldllla
Publish December II. IW0
DEA 10a

vt

NOTICE OF
FIC TITIO U S NAME
Nolle* It hereby glvan that I
am engaged In business at 1771
John Lord St.. Sanford. FL
17771. Seminole County. Florida,
under th* Fictitious Nam* of
I N T E R S T A T E T REE SERV
ICE. and that I Intend to ragls
tar tald name with th* Sacra
tary of Slat*. Tallahassee. Flor
Ida. In accordance with th*
Provltlont of th* Fictitious
Nam* Statutes. To Wll: Section
MS 0* Florida Statuks 1*57.
Jam** A. Sutter
Publlth December II. IW0
OEA 105

vs

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: DALE B. HARRISand
INGF J. HARRIS, hit wlf*
IN Grogan* Landing
Atlanta. GA K150
YOU ARE N O TIFIED that an
action for Foreclosure of Mort
gag* on th* following described
LOT 117, CRANES ROOST
VILLAS. ACCORDING T O TH E
P L A T T H E R E O F . AS RE
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK H .
PAGE 74 T O 77. OF T H E
PUBLIC RECOROS OF SEMI
NOLE C O U N TY. F LORI DA.
SUBJECT T O AN EAS EM EN T
FOR PARCOURSE OVER ALL
OF SAID LO T 117. LESS T HE
N O R T H E R L Y 47 F E E T
THEREO F.
has been filed against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ot your written defenses, if any,
to It, on Claudia L Brook.
Attorney tor Plaintiff, whose
address It Sulfa 100. 1570
Madruga Avonu*. Coral Gable*.
Florida. 11144 on or before
January II. IN I and til* Ih*
original with th* Clark ol this
Court either betor* service on
Plaintiff* attorney or Immadl
ataly thereafter, otherwise a
default will b* entered against
you tor th* relkt demanded In
th* complaint.
WITNESS my hand and Ih*
teal ot this Court this 11th day of
ISEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
At Clark ol th* Court
By Heather Brunner
At Deputy Clark
Publlth. December II. TO. 77.
IN0 A January], IN I
DEA IM

NOTICE OF
FICTITIO US NAME
Notice It hereby glvan that w*
ar* engaged In business at tit
Sllvtrwood Drive. Lake Mary,
F L 11744. Samlnol* County.
Florida, under th* Fictitious
Nam* of KIM ORIGINALS, and
that w* Intend to regular said
name with th* Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Semlnok County,
Florida. In accordance with th*
Provisions of th* Fictitious
Nam* Slatutat. To WII: Section
145 0* Florida Statutes 1*17.
Kimberly Corso
Sieve Cor so
Publish December 4. II. 70. 77.
1N0
DEA 4]

"u e n M o n c v o w u i.
ACCORDING TO TH E PLAT
T H E R E O F AS RECORDED IN
P L A T BOOK 11. PAGES 5*
T H R O U G H 41. I NC L USI V E
P U B LIC RECOROS OF SEMI
N OLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
mor* commonly known as 1775
R E G E N C Y PLACE. HEAT H
ROW. FLOR I DA 177M.
This action hat been llkd
against you and you are r*
qulrad to tarv* a copy of your
written dtfanta. If any. to It on
SHAPI RO A FISHM AN . At
tornoyt. whose address it
Bay Port Plata. 4100 Courtney
Campbell Causeway. Suit* 100.
Tampa. FL 11*07, on or before
January 4. IN I. and fils th*
original with th* clerk of (hit
Court either before service on
Plaintiff* attorney or Immadl
ataly there after; otherwise a
default will b* entered against
you tor th* rtlkf demanded In
th* Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and seal
ol thl* Court on th* 77th day of
November. I**0
(SEAL)
ALAR YANNE MORSE
Circuit and County Courts
By: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: November 7* A De­
cember 4.1X70. 1**0
DEZ 151

NOTICE
SEMINOLE COUNTY EXPRESSWAY AUTHO R ITY
Pleas* be advised that there will not be a Semlnok County
E iprtssway Authority meeting tor December.
Th* nait regularly scheduled Authority meeting will be January
71. IN ).
Gerald N Brlnton. Eiacutlv* Director
Seminole County E uprattway Authority
1101 East First Street. Room N70*
Sanford. Florida 17771
Publlth: Oecambar 11. IffO
DEA 100

FIRST CHRISTMAS
. . . A T iM E T O C E lE b R A T E
iN

t

He

Sanford Herald
It's a very special time
for the whole familyl
Celebrate your child's
first Christmas In this
newspaper. Send a
photo of your child or
grandchild along with a
special message and we'll
publish it in our Sunday
paper on December 23.

Say "Charge It"
Deadline: D ece m ber 18th

VISA

Defendant!*); and the store
mentioned named Defendant! t)
and tuch of the aforementioned
unknown Dt tendonft and tuch
of tho aforementioned unknown
Do tendonft at may be Infants.
Incompetent* ar otherwise not
tul|urlt
YOU ARE H E R E B Y NOTI
F I E D that an action hat been
commenced to foreclose a mort
gage on the following real prop
arty, lying and being and sltuat
od In SEMINOLE Courty. Flor I
da. mere particularly described

Fill out coupon and mail...to the
._

Cost: $13.00
.

SANFORD HERALD, Classified Dapt.
P.O. Box 1657, Sanford, Florida 32772
322-2611

VISA/M C A c c e p te d

(lohave photo returned,
pleaso provide a stamped.
seJf addressed envelope)

BABY'S f7r St "c HRISTMAS
Baby » N a m e

Now it is easier than ever to
place your classified advertising
or to pay for your Herald
subscription. Call us today at
322-2611 and say “Charge It” !

Sanford Herald

Birth D a ta

Paronli
Grandparonfs
Tolophono
A m o u n t En clo se d

Mouage

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