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Congress probes chief

□ Sports
Exciting second round action
SANFORD — In second round action of the
IfMH) Central Florida Classic at Seminole
Com m unity College. Winter Park stunned Lake
Mary. West Omngc rolled over foul plagued
Seminole. Oviedo stayed alive and Lyman won
Its first game of the season.

In anticipation of a New York
dent Reagan and was a prominent Times
report about the controversy.
Unite &lt; Prasa I n t e r n a t i o n a l _________
fund-raiser forGov. Hob Martinez.
Goudlc
said he sent his resignation
Rep. Thomas Sawyer. D-Ohlo.
MIAMI — A congressional sub­
to
the
White
House Monday.
committee Is Investigating allega­ said Ids subcom m ittee, w hich
"
|
felt
that
If this was a problem
tions of cronyism and financial oversees the Christopher Columbus iM-causc of me. I thought It may be
Improprieties bv a Miami man who Q u in c e n te n a ry J u b ile e C o m ­ |tetter If I Just left." Goudlc told The
heads the federal commission plan­ mission. IS investigating allegations Miami Herald.
ning the ftOOth anniversary celebra­ of "potential financial Improprieties.
Goudlc Insisted an audit would
tion of Columbus' voyage to the If not worse" alxiut Goudlc.
answer the questions and prove he
lie said Goudlc gave "an Inade­
did not use his appointment for
New World.
John N. Goudir was appointed to quate accounting” «f *he com ­ personal gain.
the commission In 1085 by Presi­ mission's finances.

The com m ission Is $600,000
behind In payments to Spain for
building re p ro d u c tio n s of Col­
umbus' ships, which will play a
central part In the celebration.
Goudlc blamed the snafu on a
contract dispute with Texaco, the
c o m m i s s i o n 's s o le p r i v a t e
benefactor. As a result. Texaco
stopped m a k in g c o n trib u tio n s
toward a $5 million pledge.
□ S e e Colum bus, Page S A

JACKSONVILLE - Two women, described
only as 28 and 38 years old. were questioned by
nollco In the highway slayings of at least elgitt
m e n *In Florida and Georgia Wednesday. Gut
were released after a search of their belongings.

Recycle
‘blues’
hit here

S ee Page 2A

■y J. MARX BARFIELD

O h , C h r is t m a s t ra a

See Page IB

□ Florida
Slaying probe continues

Herald stall writer

|B R I E F S

SANFORD — Here's whal to do with that big
blue bln that’s probably been tossed on your front
lawr b y now. or will bo by Friday afternoon.
Place the bln In your garage or by your back
door, nil them up with the stuff the city w ants to
recycle, not your regular garbage, and then pul
Ihcm by the curb on the day that s printed on the
stlckeronthcbin.
By the way. that same sticker has the city s
recycling Information telephone number, the same
S r residents have been railing at a rate of
about 100 a day wanting lo know where to store
,he bins and which day they wlU be Plck*d u£ “ ld
cltv recycling coordinator Ken Knickerbocker.
K m c k e r S c r said he has received up to 10
telephone*0caffs an hour since bln distrlbullon
began Monday.

Speeding to meet the press
HA1NBRIDGE. Ga. - Two Halnbrldge police
officers handed Florida Gov.-elect Lawton Chiles
a $70 speeding ticket after clocking him driving
80 m ph In a 50 m ph zone.
Authorities said Chiles had c o m e to the
southw est Georgia community to hunt quail
with Sen. Sam Nunn. D Ga.. a longtime friend.
Halnbrldge Police Chief Larry Fundcrburke
said the governor-elect and former senator was
h u rry in g back to Tallahassee for a news
conference Wednesday when the two ofTIcers
pulled him over for speeding.

□See Recycle. Page BA

’ Do your duty’
RIYADH. Saudi Arabia — Saudi women are
neglecting their families even though cheap
foreign labor has freed them from the burdens of
a jo b and housework, the kingdom s newly
nam ed guardian of virtue said.
"In other civilized societies we find that
w om en hold g.*xl Jobs, but this does not affect
their responsibilities towards their families, ur.
Abdul Aziz Bln Adbul Rahman Al-Sald said In a
newspaper Interview 1 uesday.
"H ut the woman here does not do any^of h «
duties. Unfortunately, she does not do her Job nt
h o m e or any other Job." he said.
I
Al-Sald. recently appointed general president
of the Organization lor the Promotion of Virtue
a n d Prevention of Vice, told the Arab dally Okaz
th at the Importance of women In society cannot
be underestim ated because they are responsible
for rearing children, particularly daughters.
F rom wire rep o rts

IN D E X
C la ss ifie d s.......... 4 1 ,BE .................................. *
C o m ic s .................... .......... ............................... ,
C ro ssw o rd ...............F s o p ls .............................
D ear Abby................. 3E F o lio s.......................*
D e a th s......................School Menu
..«•*
D r.

.................... ....................................1B'-

Edltorlal.....................4* Talavlsll«"
2A Weather....... ...........I
Florida
World .....................•
Horoscope

Warm and wonderful

Partly cloudy with a
high In the low to
m i d 8 0 s . W in d
southeast 10 mph.

F o r m ore w e a th e r,

Sanford airport
seeks growth
By J. MARK BARFIELD
H erald s ta f f w riter____________________________________ _

n ev eaa r r s u w s v j n e e j

SANFORD — Hoping lo keep economic develop­
ment efforts alive at Central Florida Regional
Airport, members of the Sanford Airport Authority
will ask local lawmakers next imxith lo seek to
maintain property lax exemptions for all busi­
nesses at lire alrjjort's Industrial park.
Airport officials fear laxlng non-avlatlon busi­
nesses at the nlrport could send ihcm flying and
deter new businesses from locating there until
regular (light service has begun, providing the
main attraction for the airport.
M
"It hurts our ability to generate revenue, said
Steve Cooke, airport director. "A couple of
non-avlatlon businesses have already come to us
and asked that we lower their rent to compensate
for the properly taxes. The authority dented both

"

J o n l B e c k h o rn and d a u g h te r
Kristi. 4 m onths, ol Sanford, shop
for a tree (above, clo ck w ise).
Dusty B e ckh orn . 4. h elp s h is
mother. Ernest Innman loads the
fam ily's tree into their car at his
stand on U S. Highway 17 92. next
to P e cks B B Q

M ost Christm as tree shoppers want
the real thing, roadside vendor says
B y V IC K I D e S O R M IE R

Herald staff writer

SANFORD — Don Tisdale sold (In- 75
Christm as trees lie had cut In North t arollua
and drove down lo Seminole County. He thinks
he could have sold more II hr had had ihcm.
Tisdale, who lives In Wade. N.C.. said he had
never sold Ills trees outside ol Ills home stale
before, but ihoiiglil he’d head for warmer
climes this year.
"I thought I’d spend Christmas at the
beach." he said.
Tisdale had originally planned to sell Ills
trees In Orlando, hut decided Instead to set lip
shop In Lake Marv on U S Highway 17 ‘*2 |ost

soulli of County Road -127. He said he thought
more people lived In Seminole County and
worked in Orange County, so he'd catch them
on the way home from work.
-I think people still want live trees tor
C hristm as." he said. "There's loo m uch plastic
In their lives. They want something real at tills
lime of year."
,
Tisdale who had o|H*ratcd Ills tree sale
business mil of the back of a truck for three
and a half days, was beading to Daytona Reach
to spend the money he had made on a few days
of "sun and fun In the sand.
He said almost all the money he made from
the tree sales was prollt because* his father
See T rees. Page 5 A

rCCooke said oik- of the companies that sought the
rent break was Codlsco. which leases seven
buildings and several land plots at the airport.
The Fifth District Court of Appeals ruled last
year that non-avlatlon businesses located at
municipal ulrports could be taxed because the
Florida Constitution docs not grant certain proper­
ly tax breaks lo cltk*s as II does to counties, schools
and the slate. If city-owned land is being used for a
non municipal or a non-avlatlon purpose it can tc
taxed, the DCAsald.
Hy comparison, because the Port of Sanford Is
county-owned, businesses there are exem pt from
property taxes, said county Property Appraiser Bill
SUAftcr learning of the ruling a n d studying it.
Sober c o n t a c t e d Cixikr this summer to obtain a list
of all leases at the alr|H»rl. After reviewing some
IH9 alriKirl leases. Cooke said Sillier determined
4 5 businesses would In- required to begin paying
□ See A irport. Page SA

2A

Top resignation stuns Soviets
^

SKnTAo.
'R0R*SH09
W fcLC O M C /

__________________ ___perestroika tvlllt
IIt* resist
til
with 111
little
resistance.
S h e v a rd n a d z e rec a lle d c o n ­
B y GERALD NADLER
j i t ’s not entirely clear servative attacks on him for "giving
United Press Internaliona,
yet what the situation away Eastern Europe" at July's
MOSCOW — Foreign Minister
2 8 t h Communist Party (' ingress
is in the Soviet Union. J
......
Eduard Shevardnadze, architect of
and at recent sessions of the
S u p r e m e S o v ie t or s ta n d in g
Mikhail Gorbachev's foreign |xiltey
that freed Eastern Europe and -Marlin Fitzwaler, U.S. spokesm an
parliament
" T h e re was not one person
ended the Cold W ar. resigned
Parliament to accept his resigna­
besides the chairman who could he
Thursday lo protest conservative
toiiud who would say this was
tion.
, tl.
.
attacks and warn of the danger of an
In any case, the pniitleal life ol
dishonorable. Jiis is not the way to
"Impending dictatorship "
Shevardnadze will In- long
lg
this is not tin- way things are
The resignation, announced by
natenko said He may occupy any
hi a civilized government."
Shevardnadze m a brief, emotional
other post."
speech to stunned delegates to the
Shevardnadze said.
In W a s h l n g t o n m Alilte House
Congress ol People's Deputies, took
He said the conservative backlash
press sccreiatv Marlin Fitzwaler
G orbachev by su rp rise , and a
was continuing almost unimpeded,
said there would Ik- no Immediate
mentioning a publication by the
spokesman for the president said
trom the administration eom m inl
rig h t-w in g R u ssian nationalist
Shevardnadze had been asked to
In-cause It's not entirely clc.u yet
movement I'amynt that said "down
stay on the |oh
wti.it the situation is in the Soviet
Shevardnadze aide and Foreign
with the clique of Gorlwchcv.
Union
Ministry spokesman Yit.dy t liiiikoi
"I say to you democrats. In ihc
S h ev ard n ad ze said he w as
said the decision to step down was
broadest sense ol the word, you ran
••deeply hurt" by the personal
nil he said "The reformers Red to
"final."
attacks Irom critics of his foreign
But presidential spokesman Vitals
the bushes "
polu \ More Impoi tantly be said
Shevardnadze said he feared the
Ignatenko said Shevardnadze In
conservative
reactionary" forces
recent upsurge ol criticism from the
dicatrd he would remain at the
In the country were In-tug allowed to
Foreign Ministry to provide a
See S oviet. Page BA
m ove a g a in s t th e I d e a ls ol
smooth transition and allow the

Top manager

discussion
continues

By J . MARK BARFIBLD

Herald stall writer
SANFORD - Day 2: Ron
Rabun Is still a prospective
co u n ty m an a g e r. He h a s n 't
turned down Seminole County's
job offer yet.
"Negotiations are proceeding at
the anticipated pace." acting
county manager Bob McMillan
said Wednesday afternoon. "I
don't anticipate any problems."
M cM illan said s a la r y d is ­
cussions with the Clearwater.
Fla. city manager have centered
In the "mid- to uppcr-90s" range
and other areas of discussion are
Ix-lng resolved. McMillan said he
expects an agreement will be
reached with Rabun after Jan. I
that he can present to commts
sinners at their Jan 8 meeting.
See M anager. Page BA

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Hm M, Sentortf, Florida - Thursday, December 20, 1M0

N E W S FROM THE REGION AND ACROSS THE STATE

Serial murder probe continues
'with

' rr o l t t d a 30-year prison
17-montb-afc) daughter to death was
Wednesday to seven years in prison after an
i court ruled the first sentence excessive.
Court Judge Harry Coe sentenced Naomi Lovett to
the 30-year penalty for third degree murder after her
conviction in 1900. ifawcver. an appeals court recently ordered
Lovett’s sentence reduced because the term handed down by
Lovett, who was 37 at the time of her daughter’s death, has
the last three years In prison. She could be released
More Chrtatmas under the state’s early release program.
In addition to the time served. Lovett may also receive time
flood behavior. The state Department of Corrections will
■Lovett should be freed.
ho maintains she Is Innocent, was convicted of
punching her daughter. DeAngelina, to death.

CMIm namtt ScniQQfl libor chl#f
TALLAHASSEE — Frank Scruggs, a Miami lawyer with
w9l head the Depart­
ment
of Labor and• "v*
Employment
• k - jp —~ - *Security
* |«JL *In the new
.-clem Lawton Chiles said Wednesday.
Scruggs, a Fort Lauderdale native with Ivy League academic
credentials, is a partner in the Miami law firm of Steele Hector
and Davie. the samejiotittcally connected Arm that contributed
U . Oov. Kenneth "Buddy" Ma
MacKay to the Chiles admlntstraChitea promlaed during a news conference that Scruggs will
phty a prominent rote in setting Isbor and economic policy for
the new admin letration. Labor secretaries have traditionally
you that Frank la going to be a key player In
Implementation of the policies of the governor's

Coupto aoeiiMd of abiiM will kMp son
OAINESVILLE — A couple belonging to a secretive religious
sect that cachews doctors has been allowed to keep custody of
thetr lS -y w o td so a .
The state Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services
wanted to place the boy In footer care after he nearly died of an
'. Eighth Judicial Circuit Judge Nath Doughtie ruled
m Myers
thatWUUaml
_ should be sent home to his parents.
An attorney for parents Charles and Marllee Myers told
Doughtie in a closed hearing Tuesday that her clients were
remorseftil for not seeking care. They have agreed to allow
madical care for thetr child in thetr home.
The Judge also ordered the state to monitor the boy’s

JACKSONVILLE - Police questioned two
women In the highway slayings of at least
eight men In Florida and Georgia Wednes­
day. but released them saying they were not
Involved In the killings.
The two women, who have not been
Identified but were described as 38 and 30
ars old. consented to a search of their
longings by police, said Jacksonville
police spokesman Gary Higgins.
"We found nothing. There wasn't any
evidence they were connected with the
murders," said police detective Asa Higgs.
An early morning Up that two women
matching the descriptions of two suspects
were staying in the hotel led police to the
women's room.
Higgins said the women cooperated com-

C

That’s a rap:
Galileo Earth
movie released
K Science Writer
A remarkable. (Irst-of-a-klnd
movie shot by the Galileo probe
as It raced past Earth earlier this
month shows the blue planet
spinning In the vast night of
apace, giving elated scientists a
taste of the view they can expect
of Jupiter In 1005.
C a p t u r e d b y G a l i l e o ’s
state-of-the-art solid-state cam­
eras. the movie showed the
blue-and-whlte Earth from a
vantage point below the planet,
a view that Included . lowy
while Antarctica and brownish
Australia that extended as far
north as Florida and the Persian
Gulf region.
As the cloud-streaked planet

GAINESVILLE — Hypnosis has helped police determine that
a woman who mysteriously disappeared for two days in July
t and returned withouther memory was abducted.
a'spokesman Spencer Mann would
Elizabeth Morris
jdentI Kill
not aay wbat University of Florida law stud
W/ V* *
ivrdebetoped some lit. w .nation about

United Press International

The results of the hypnosis are Important because there was
no evidence of a criminal action. Mann said.
Morris. S3, was reported missing July 14. Deputies found her
In the parking lot of the Oaks Mall west of Gainesville and
■y search of the woods around the mall.
lalwo-day
On July 10. Monts walked Into a Kentucky Fried Chicken
resturant In a confused state and asked for help.
Police said she did not know her name or where she was and
did not recognize friends, relatives or her three children.
Mann said she has regained almost all her memory, except
for the two dsys she was missing.

Contractor ptoacte guilty to cheating
TAMPA — A former supervisor for a defunct Lakeland
defense contractor has agreed to plead guilty to cheating on
artillery quality tests.
Harton C. Holdbrooka. 44. of Plant City agreed to plead guilty
Wednesday to concealing from the U.S. Army Information that
Soooer Defense of Florida was altering Ita test results.
Holdbrooka was In charge of Sooner's testing division before
the plant closed In the summer of 1000. The company filed for
protection from Us creditors In U.8. Bankruptcy Court, but It
i declared bankrupt In December 1068 after reorganization
attempts failed.
From United Proas International fteporte

POSTM ASTIBi

to T N I SANFOSO MESALO. P.O.
■as MU. b a h r i FL M77I.

(Daily a teadayl
Mae Delivery a Mail
I MewNM .................. Ilf J#
• MmMSo ........................ tM.M
1 Veer ............................ it s m

4 MV *% UlM
Isa la adSMea ts rah
Phase (Ml) m M i l .

tion Investigation, the N/
compiled a list of blacks
served In sales and i
positions In the county's
».! .4
largest department stores
then sent testers to the eight i
the bottom of the list.
Each of the two test
consisted of a black and a white
GAINESVILLE — Indif­
female and In each case the
ference from the white ma­
black female was more qualified
jority and forge cute In
far the Job. All testers used their
federal eld e re fo rcin g ’
own names when applying for
fOuUtUCTTl
l i y . l k M a BJ
M
ro
H B C ll IQ g n jg ijQ
work, but their names were
oo tbesnedvea to achieve
withheld from the complaint to
s o c ia l a n d e c o n o m ic
protect their Identity.
On. Dec. 7 the black testers
were discriminated against at
feel that they have
three stores owned by different
about ao h r ae t‘
companies, the complaint said.
wtlhng to go tn
Jane Doe. a black female law
blacka to acmeva w w » ,
student with extensive work
experience, applied for work that
morning at a Lord A Taylor store
In the International Mall. Later
Button. • University of
that morning. Jane Roe. a white
Florida political science
un d erg rad u ate w ith limited
work experience, also applied at
the store.
Doe was not hired and Roe was
department stores subject blacks
to subtle discrimination, un­ given a job on the spot.
In a second test at the store
reasonably high rates of Job
Monday afternoon Sarah Doe. a
turnover, or outright exclusion."
Lord A Taylor spokeswoman black undergraduate with Ultlc
Jann Walker was not available work experience, and Roe. a
white undergraduate with no
for comment.
In Ita employment discrimina­ experience, applied.

Minorities
see
on t rown
^

5 5 S,iey.TCr7rninrtfyir;:Ty7&gt;'i&gt;r‘t»^ ii.. 3itwr&gt;xnrrw.'&gt;-n‘v .-ciswm
•»&gt;■*. .*.■*/*-tv1 tfo n W a tE y «&lt;'.lr«&gt;;.-«Mhfvail

lunn rwMoiii I
Today...Partly cloudy with a
high In the low to mid 80s. Wind
southeast 10 mph.
Tonight and Friday...Partly
cloudy with patchy late night
and early morning fog. Low In FR ID A Y
the mid 60s. High In the lower to FtyC tdy 7 9 *9 9
mid 80a. Wind southeast 5 to 10
mph Thursday night.
E xtended forecast...P artly
cloudy Saturday and Sunday.
Increasing cloudiness with a
chance of showers Monday.
LAST
Lows In the mid and upper 60s.
Dn . I
Highs In the lower to mid 80s.

[

DeSy

at

$40 million
Hubble repair
plan proposed
ttl

tunlty to bring it back to its
original pre-launch expectations
Is certainly very pleasing to
everybody." Pine said. "It's look­
ing really good.”
The ptan was submitted to top
NASA officials this week as part
of planning the agency's budget
and a decision on whether to
proceed was expected by the
middle of January. Pine said.
The 91.S billion telescope was
expected to revolutionize hu­
manity's understanding of the
universe by using • highly
advanced optical system to peer
deep into the cosmos from Its
perch high above Earth's at­
mosphere.
But about two months after
the long-awaited telescope wss
placed Into orbit in April, scien­
tists were shocked to discover
the Instrum ent's supposedly
perfect prim ary m irror was
shaped Incorrectly, preventing
the telescope from focusing
properly.

THE W EATHEfl

(U m rsijss)
Thursday. December 20. 1000
VoL S3. No. 102
Ave..

rotated on Ita axis In the black
night of space, the glint of
sunlight on oceans and rivers
repeatedly flared Into view as
entire continents roiled by as If
onparade.
While ApoUo-era photographs
of the planet exhibit greater
•dance Editor
sharpness In tome Instances, the
Galileo movie marked the first
NASA has developed a 940
time humanity's home planet
plan to fix the Hubble
has been seen rotating on Its Space Telescope
by replacing
one Instrument on the orbiting
"The movie Is unique In the outpost and sacrificing another
sense it’s from a single point In to make room for a corrective
... space and you see the Earth device, officials said Wednesday.
rotating." said Michael Belton.
The repairs, which would be
Galileo imaging team leader. conducted during a spacewalk
"There have been no sequences by shuttle astronauts tn 1993,
of pictures that show the Earth should restore the telescope to at
In motion."
least 90 percent of Ita Intended
Galileo was launched Oct. 18. capacity, said deputy program
1989. from the shuttle Atlantis manager David Pine.
"The telescope today Is the
on a convoluted trajectory re­
quiring three grsvlty-asslst best optical telescope — by far
planetary flybys to boost the the best ultraviolet telescope —
spacecraft on to a 1995 en­ In the world, even with the
problems. Having the opopcounter with distant Jupiter.

MIAMI - The NAACP filed an
em ploym ent (discrim ination
complaint against a Lord A
T a y lo r d e p a r tm e n t s to re
Wednesday, claiming the up­
scale store Illegally eliminated
qualified Dade County blacks
from Ita payroll.
The 10-page class-actio n
complaint was filed by the local
NAACP branch with the Equal
E m p lo y m e n t O p p o rtu n ity
C om m issio n . It se e k s u n ­
specified damages and asks that
the EEOC Intlatate action to
ensure - Lord A Taylor cannot
continue to practice hiring dis­
crimination.
The NAACP said the com­
plaint was filed because of com­
plaints It received and because of
a test the association conducted
earlier this month.
"T he branch has received
num erous unsolicited com ­
plaints of discrimination against
major department stores, whose
track records for hiring blacks
has historically been far worse
than that of many far smaller
retail outlets,” It said.
"The NAACP's visual study,
as well as anecdotal Information
received by (he branch. Indicates
that many Dade County major

TALLAHASSEE - Offer­
ing rare praise for s bu­
reaucracy grappling with
•2 7 0 million In bi
ludget
cuts, a business coalition
said Wednesday that Im­
proved efficiency by state
agencies has saved taxpay­
ers 999 million.
W hat's more, reforms
currently being undertaken
could eventually save tax­
payers additional millions,
according to • report card
Issued by Partners In Pro­
ductivity. a Joint effort by
F lorida TaxW atch. the
business Council of 100
and the slate.
"We’re often lambasting
the Legislature at Florida
T axW atch.’’ T axW atch
President Dominic Calabro
fold a news conference.
"But here's a case where I
think they've done some
unusually good work."
Earlier this year, the co­
alition identified reforms
that II said could save the
taxpayers $727 million.

.

by
lac* MB M. Freach
PM. 1X771.

don't know.'
Police began searchingI for the two women
after they were spotted In Marion County
Jupiter man missing
Ivina the car of a Juptt*
since early June.
One of the women was described as
S-foot-3 with a heavy-set build. The other
h a s blond, shoulder-length hair and a tattoo
of a heart on her right upper arm.

NAACP accuses Lord &amp; Taylor
of discrimination at Dade store

State saved
$99 million,
group says

HRS spokeswoman Alwyn Cassil said the agency's Invotvement In the
! had nothing to do with the couple's
Involvement In that group.
UuAJBdkAtM
a hj of lui icn iUk nhai pn ar in
n y p n o t i i nIsa
t tIpa *a itm
n k
o ohv■

TALLAHASSEE - Ths dally
number Wsdnssitq)1In ths Florida
Lottery CASH Spams was M l.
□ Straight Play plumber* In asset
order* $290 on a BScant bat. S600
on Si.
□ Box 3 (numbers In any order*
MOtor a Meant bst, S1S0 on 11.
□ Bos • (numbers In any order):
140 tor a Meant bst, MOon It
□Straight Bos x $330 In ordsr
an, MOIn any ordsr on a $1 bat.
drawn,
□Straight Bos A $200 in ordsr
•an. $4011 pichsd In combination
on $1 bat
Ths winning numbars Wednesday In ths Florida Lottary Fantasy 5
wars$.4, IS.SOand91.

gun. Thetr cars were stolen
..._____The
and wrecked.
Thevictims'
victims'money also
been stolen and sometimes their clothes.
Marion County Sheriff's Department Sgt.
Robert Douglas said "somehow these
women. If they are women, are fettteg Us
men to let thetr guard down. Maybfc they i

N A S A seeks better view of universe

The couple Is affiliated with End Time Ministries, a group of
* hundred people who practice faith healing and reject

w o rn

in seversl counties have been
flooded srtth reports of sightings of a female
duo wanted for questioning In the'deaths.
The reports Include 35 sightings In
Volusia County
They have been
pouring tn ever since sketches of the
brunette and blonde were released by the
Marion County Sheriff’s Office three weeks
ago.
The men's bodies were found between
December 1009 and November of this year
along highways in north-central Florida and
Georgia.
The victims have all been middle-aged
men and were blue collar, workers. Most
apparently were Just passing through the
north Florida and south Georgia area on
business.
Each of the victims had been shot with a

- Florida 14 hour temperature*
an4 ramtail at I a m EST Thurtday
Ml La
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rrr:
0OLUMAR TA M A Min. 7:20
a.m.. 7:45 p.m.; MaJ. 1:10 a.m..
17 1:30 p.m. T ID M t D a y ts a a
■each: highs. 9:42 a.m.. 9:57
p^m.: lows. 3:03 a.m.. 3:50 p.m.;
Now S m yrna Beach: highs.
9:47 a.m.. 10.02 p.m.; lows. 3:08
a.m.. 3:55 p.m.; Cecea Beach:
highs. 10:02 a.m.. 10:17 p.m.;
lows. 3:23 a.m.. 4:10 p.m.

D ayteaa Beach: Waves are
1Vi feel and semi glassy. Current
ts slightly to thr south with a
water temperature of 66 degrees.
New Sm yrna Bsach: Waves are
flat with a current to the north
and a water temperature of 66
degrees.

Bt. A agastlne te Je p ite r Inlet
T o d a y ...W in d s o u t h to
southeast 10 kts. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Bay and Inland waters smooth.
Tonight ..Wind becoming east
to northeast 10 to 15 kts. Seas 2
to 4 ft. Bay and Inland waters a
light chop. A few showers.
Friday...Wind east 10 to 15
kts. Seas 3 to 5 fl. Bay and
Inland waters a light chop. A few
showers.

The high tem perature In
Sanford Wednesday
sdia: was 85
degrees and the overnight low
was 60 as reported by the
University of Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center. Celery Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
p e rio d , en d in g a t 9 a .m .
Thursday, totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 67 degrees and
Thursday's overnight low was
63. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ W idataB ay's hlgh...........S 4
□B arom etric pressure.3 0 .3 3
□R elative Humidity..lOO pet
□ V lads.......Seutheast 9 mph
□ B alnfall..... ............... * .0 la.
□Teday'a eaaaet.....8;33 p a .
□Tem arraw 'e auarlae....7 t l 4

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�Smford HsrsM, Ssntort, F to W -

W hite C h ristm as here only »'•«»«»
SANFORD — The following persona face a charge of driving
under the Influence In Seminole County:
•Jo h n Chandler Adams. 31. of Daytona Beach, was arrested at
1:57 a.m. Wednesday after his car failed to maintain a single
lane on Lake Mary Boulevard. Lake Mary.
• Pamela Jane Jaques. 25. 100 Sugar Maple Court. Sanford,
was arrested at 12:37 a.m. Wednesday after her car waa in an
accident on U.S. Highway 17*02 at County Road 427.

Child abti8« charged
SANFORD - City police here charged Bhrtn Wesley TyrrriL
26. 2815 Grove Drive. Sanford, with child abuse at Seminole
Centre, at about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. Tyrrell's estranged wtfe
was also arrested after allegedly battering a shop worker who
tried to shelter the Tyrrell's 4-year-old son.
Police were called to the parking tot near Pants USA, after a
man reported seeing Tyrrell allegedly spank a small boy.
According to the witness, Tyrrell allegedly began striking the
child with his fists. The boy ran. Another witness said she saw
the man grab the child by the throat and saw him allegedly hit
the boy up against a car. Police said four persons reported
witnessing the alleged Incident. Bond Is 82.000.
When witnesses Intervened to aid the boy. Sanford Police
Chief Steven Harriett said. Lisa Lynne Tyrrell. 26. of New
Salsberry. Ind.. identified as Elwln Tyrrell's estranged wife.
allegedly battered and threatenend to kill a woman who took
the boy Into a shop to protect him. Uaa Tyrrell was charged
with battery and disorderly Intoxication. At the county Jail she
was also charged on a warrant for obtaining property with a
worthless check. Bond is 81.000.

Hereto staff writer
SANFORD — A heavy, dense
fog d rap ed o v er S em in o le
County this morning was the
only hint that this might actual*
ly be the last full day before
By late morning the fog. which
had reduced vtslMlty to less than
a quarter of a mile in many
places, had burned off leaving a
not. summer-like day.
Though the winter solstice
occurs at 104)7 p.m. tomorrow
night, there Is no hope that are
will experience the scattered
snow flurries that were seen last
year at this time.
The winter solstice marks the
start o f winter and the day of the
year with the shortest amount of
daylight. There will be 10 hours
and 21 minutes between sun up
for today call for
temperatures In the low* to
mid-80s with southerly winds of
about 10 miles per hour. Little
change is expected over the next
few days.
According to Bob Osborne, of
the National Weather Service
office In Orlando, the tempera­
ture variations of one year to the
next are not cause for alarm.

It’s not global warming." he
± "They're predicting winter

will be here soon enough.”

Store offers strange mix of holiday gifts
Dallas Morning News
FRANKENMUTH. Mich. - With an
address like 25 Christmas Lane you expect
to find replicas of baby Jesus and Santa
Claus on the front tawn. But an 8*foot*7
Statue of Liberty?
Wally Bronner; owner of B ronner's
CHRISTmas Wonderland, is used to ques­
tions about the strange mix.
"Here In the U.S.. we have the freedom to
decorate in a religious expression." says
Bronner. a 63-year-old devout Lutheran. "I
see It as a tribute to the nation for the
freedom of religion. Some countries are not
allowed to have Christmas items."
There are other Incongruities for sale
inside the one-acre store, which houses
50.000 Items from 78 countries. Such as the
ornaments commemorating the fall of the
Berlin Wall and tl.e unification of East and
West Germany. Thanks, to a CNN story on
the store, thousands have been sold since
the;’ debuted the day before the Oct. 3 unity
celebration.
To mark the event. Bronner's has de­
signed an ornament with the wall. East
Berlin and Its dates of birth and death
etched on it. The unification ornament has a
white background and a yellow-and-black
map of Germany bound by a red ribbon.
The glass ornaments each sell for under 86.
Another hot seller Is an ornament for the
500th anniversary (In 1902) of Christopher
Columbus' discovery of America. Ten
thousand of those have been sold, primarily
through a catalog house that initiated the
Idea. Bronner says. The red, white and blue
ornament features Columbus' three ships —
the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Marla.
If these aren't what you had In mind for
your Christmas decor, there's much more to
choose from at Bronner's:
—6,000 styles of religious, traditional and
toyland ornaments.

folks In your life.
Each year, one million feet of lights are
sold. Including the Southwestern chili
lights. There are ornaments honoring Flori­
da. Illinois. Indiana. W isconsin and
Michigan.
If you’re looking for a theme for your tree,
SAJany
—
IS_ nronnar , iw w
there are 260 on display. Consider:
-w
—The Spirit of Liberty, complete with
Statue of Liberty and other red. white and
—500 types of Nativity scenes, from blue decorationa.
—The All-Sports tree for the sports fans in
miniature to life-sUe.
—200 kinds of nutcrackers, miniature to your family. It Includes bowling pins,
footballs and uniformed players.
llfe*lze.
—The Heavenly Hosts, with angels and
—000animated figures.
other residents of heaven.
—Bibles in 30 languages.
—Peach Prelude and Lavender &amp; Lace for
Bronner's. dubbed the world's largest
Christmas store, is one of Michigan's top those who are tired of red and green.
Prices at Bronner's range from a 25-cent
tourist attractions. It draws 2 million
visitors annually, and Its busiest day is no postcard to a 817.000 Hummel figurine.
surprise — the day after Thanksgiving. Still, Nearly half of the decorations sell for under .
the store is open 361 days a year, and 810 apiece, according to Bronner's fact
visitors come from all over the world. Aisles sheet.
There could be something for everybody
in this land of twinkling lights are becoming
so cramped that Bronner and his family and every mall at this growing development
have decided to double the size of the on the outskirts of Frankenmuth. about a
two-hour drive north of Detroit.
showroom to 100.000square feet.
There'a even an Israel exhibit with
- Before the expansion plans, two trade
organizations had designated Bronner's as Hanukkah Items as well as ornaments
the world's largest Christmas store. Bronner Inscribed in Hebrew for Christians in that
has no doubt that's true, since he sells his country.
If it's not there. Bronner's gladly will
decorations to 1,000 retailers. Bronner's
certainly. pays one of the biggest electric design on ornament for you. Artists on the
billa — 8500 a day to keep lOO.C000 premises annually personal'-re 50.000 or­
individual lights and animated whatnot naments. And about half of the glass
ornaments sold at Bronner's are designed
going.
Anything seems possible at Bronner's: a there. The custom ornaments are made by
36-Inch lighted Santa face, a 872.50 Beatrix glass blowers In Europe.
Among the custom designs are ornaments
Potter Christmas music box. a 82,950
life-size nutcracker, all kinds of Christmas for astronaut Nell Armstrong and Presidents
George Bush. Ronald Reagan. Jinimy Carter
china and even some holiday steins.
Among the ornaments, take your pick. and Gerald Ford. Hometowns of the famous
There are dinosaurs, mushrooms, onions. people usually order the ornaments for
Statues of Liberty and one for the Re- special events. Bronner says.
P.S. That Statue of Liberty will cost
ubllcan Party. There's even a yellow
appy-face ornament for the overly cheerful 82.000.

CHere in the U.S., we have
the freedom to decorate in a
religious expression. I see it
as a tribute to the nation. |

L ast y e a r, te m p e ra tu re s this morning la
dipped into the 20s and 30a for
n e a r l y a w e e k a r o u n d tional cooling following an
Christmas, causing power out­ exceptionally hot day yesterday.
ages as Floridians tried to cope
with the cold to which they were
unaccustomed. Some arena of
the county were without fall
LAW MAY H O #
power In their homes for several
days.
According to Osborne, the fog

"tfsaaas*

' ^ w a C b u tf £ u n ( * u

WATCHM

1/2 Price

Hardware

S
Mayors report increase in hunger, hom elessness
By DAVID ■. AN08A8ON
United Press International______
WASHINGTON - A survey of
mayors in 30 major cities re­
ported a rise in both hunger and
homelessness during the past
year and most expect the eco­
nomic recession — now hitting
most cities — to heighten the
problem, the U.S. Conference of
Mayors said.
At the same time, the city
officials also reported Wednes­
day that public sentiment is
turning against the homeless.
"More than three out of four of
the survey cities report that they
have experienced an economic
slowdown In recent months and

all but one of the cities which
reported It had not experienced
an economic slowdown ... anti­
cipated the recession will affect
the problems of hunger and
homelessness during the next
year." the report said.
Every one of the responding
cities said they expect the de­
m and for em erg en cy food
a s s is ta n c e a n d s h e lte r —
especially by homeless families
— to Increase during the next
year.
The mayors' survey confirms
a report issued last week by the
National Coalition for the Home­
less predicting that as the re­
cession deepens, many Ameri­
cans — especially those working

in low-wage Jobs — are at risk of
becoming homeless and the
problem could become critical if
the Bush administration falls to
respond.
"During the past year." the
mayors' survey said, "requests
for emergency shelter Increased
... by an average of 24 percent,
with four out of five of the cities
registering an Increase. 10 per­
cent reporting that the number
of requests remained the same
and another 10 percent report­
ing a decline."
Just under 75 percent of the
survey cities reported an in­
crease in the number of home­
less families needing emergency
shelter, ranging from an increase

“ ffl&amp; B W ,"

FROM ACE

of 60 percent In Phoenix. 40
percent in New Orleans, and 36
percent In Cleveland to 10 per­
cent In Norfolk. Va.. and 5
percent In San Antonio. Kansas
City. Mo.. Minneapolis i
Francisco reported declines In
the number of homeless.
In 70 percent of the cities,
shelters are forced to turn away
homeless families needing aid
bacausc the shelters lack re­
sources.
The city officials estimated
that overall 19 percent of the
requests for shelter by all home­
less people went unmet lust year
and 16 percent of the requests
by homeless families could not
Ik- met.

SAVE 20% OFF

Soft Deerskin For Dad
ChooM From slip on or tit shoo.
Brown or Bono Deerakln
Frot OKI Wrapping
-v
OKI CartHIcatas

It's been a little while since you passed away;
Our hearts still ache for youi each day.
mdable wtfe A Mother.
A depen
You were always there;
This toss of you
is so hard to bear...

\ w f f lk
/ n M
Slock

SHOE STORE

PROPANE TANKS
FILLED
I
EVERYDAY t‘,

Mrs. Wilaia Lee
Klig •Celenu

JUNE 1925-NOVEMBER 1990
To all our friends, comforters, and loved ones. Thanks for being
with us during our time of grief.
A special thank you to our church family. Allen Chapel A. M.E.
Church, the Rescue Church of God Church Family, the Order
of Eastern Star #134. and especially our dear friends for your
cards, flowers, prayers and caring. May the Joys and Blessings
of this Holy Season be yours...
\
The Coleman Family^
'

Hardware
OPEN SUN. M

\

205 e . 2s i h st .
3 2 1 -0 8 8 5

i

�4A — Sanford Nersfd, Sanford, Florida — Thursday,

30. 1900

W I L L I A M A. R U S H E R
____
lu in w w
300N. PKXNCHAVT. aANPOHO. FLA. 33771
A m Code 407-333-3011 or S31-0093

Know the facts about South Africa
South African President de Klerk and African
stalled around a s loaf as they can now. and the
curtain to about to rise on the second act of* T h e
End of Apartheid.” It will be very dtffcrent from
the first.

EDITORIALS

Mailbox magjc
The U A A n tal Service needs your help In
coping with the 800 million pieces of n u ll It
handles esch day. end the much targer
bllxzard of greeting cards that hit about this
time every year. This, the USPS promises,
will speed up mall delivery.
How can you help, you ask?
aiM First, stop
addressing letters in longhand. use
__ block
___
letters, please, black Ink only. Follow the
format shown tnthe Postal Service flyer you
got Inthe mad the other day. You didn't? Of
course that w&lt;l make the envelope containing
your perfum ed love letter look like a
sum m ons for Jury duty, but public needs

Just about everything that could be done to
please “world opinion” (meaning Western liberal
opinion) has now been done. Nelaon Mandela has
been freed from prison. Various remaining
vestiges of apartheid kflalatJon have been
scrapped, or soon wtn be. AH that remains (f) to
to devise some constitutional system under
which the peoples of South Africa can live
together peacefully and democratically.
I wouldn't blame any American newspaper
reader or TV viewer for assuming that, after
some negotiations over the details, there wtn be
a large public ceremony in which President de
Klerk will in effect sign aver the government to
Mr. Mandela and the ANC.
But I can also assure you that that to the least
likely of all conceivable things to happen. And
the reason for the widespread American
misconception on the subject is the truly
disgraceful performance of the vast majority of
the American media over m any years In

reporting the beta about South Africa. In more
than 40 years of ob­
serv in g A m erican
Jo u rn alism . 30 of
them from the Inside,
I have never known a
v _ .
worse exem pts of
s y s te m a tic , lo n g ­
standing m isrepre­
sentation.
An American who
has never been to
S o u th A frica can
hardly be bbkmed for
know ing U tile o r
nothing about its
(v a rio u s
complex problems.
remaining
He w ill a lm o s t
automatically make
VMtlQMOf
the major blunder of
ap*rth«id leg­
assuming that the
islation hava
“race question” In
South Africa to. like
•crapped, or
ours, basically a mat­
soon will be. J
ter of blacks vs.
whites.
But no reporter who has spent so much as a
week In South Africa can possibly be under any
such Illusion. He will know, at a minimum, that
South Africa's blacks are dtvided Into nine major

The Postal Service may want to go further,
however. If a new procedure now being tested
In Akron. Ohio, works. It would go like this:
You type up your Christmas card list and
send U to the post office, which photocopies it
and flies It away (so you can add or delete
nam es o f those who please you or make your
life a living hd l next year), then sends you a
set o f bar-coded mailing labels. These you
stick on your Chrlstms cards and — presto —
the post office's autom ated m all-sorting
m achines speed them to your cousins and old
roommates and creditors faster than you can
a a ^ ^ no pickup on Saturdays. Sundays or
Disbelief In this newest promise of better
service from the moot reviled Institution this
side of the IRS is not the only reason some
object to entering this brave new world. Civil
libertarians, always the spoilsport, claim this
may result In all sorts of unwanted parties —
the tax folks, the FBI, your political enemies
and any number of people selling things —
getting their hands on your private mailing
fist, with who knows-what consequences, all
for the sake o f a dubious efficiency.
A Postal Service spokeswoman says no
such unpkaaan/t.fhfmP WWhappen, that they
will not .sell...or otherw ise provide such
Information to outside parties. She also
concedes, however, that this la a policy, not a
law, and that change-of-addrea lists already
are sold to private parties. You read it here
first.

The new neo-neoism
W hite H ouse p o licy p lan n er J a m es
Pinkerton looked at the Intractable problem of
poverty and came up with the answer: the
New Paradigm.
Where the Democrats' Great Society and
War on Poverty ailed, the Republicans' New
Pardlgm Society would succeed.
Poor people would throw ofT the shackles of
an oppressive and costly government bureau­
cracy and empower themselves. With a boost
from self-help programs, they would lift
them selves up by the bootstraps. And. out of
gratitude, they would tote Republican.
It sounds wonderful. But haven't we heard
this before? It has the Hng of the Democratic
populism o f the '60s, with a conservative
twist.
Some of the ‘'empowerment'’ proposals are
intriguing. For instance, we like the concept
of giving poor people opportunities to
purchase or control their public housing. T he
child-care aid and eamed-lncome tax credits
approved this year will provide som e relief for
extremely poor families. But can Pinkerton's
model work for the entire welfare system?
Probobably not.
That Is why President B ush's budget
director, Richard Dorman, dism isses the New
Paradigm as a fashionable idea instead of a
pragmatic approach. He calls It "nco"
neoism."
Yea, the government should experiment
with different programs. But let's not pin our
anti-poverty e(Torts to one simplistic slogan.
Otherwiae.the "New Paradigm" could rapidly
degenerate Into the "Same Old Folly."

Berry's World

JACK ANDERSON

Would U.S use Its
arsenal in Gulf?

ELLE N G O O D M A N

Leaving the kids 'Hom e Alone’
BOSTON — There to a scene In "Home
Alone” when Kevin McCalllster stands before
the mirror In his parents* bathroom, slaps
som e after-shave lotion on his tender
eight-year-old akin, and lets out a howl. U
comes Just In time. One bracing shock of
reality, to remind us that Kevin Is not quite yet
the man of the house.
For the rest of this delicious movie, (he son of
the suburbs, the youngest child accidentally
left behind In hts family's frantic vacation‘exit.
Is nothing If not self-sufficient. He protects
himself. He protects his home. And In the
process. It seemed to this contented viewer
that Kevin McCalllster protects parents from
the worst of their anxieties.
"Home Alone" Is the surprise hit of this
season. The smart money In Hollywood never
figured It would reach the (op. They didn't
count on the longing for a family movie In
which the hero is a delight, the criminals are
comic and you don*, have to put your hands
over the kids’ eyes.
But It's also a hit because "Home Alone”
taps the most primal plot: the fears that kids
have about being abandoned and the fantasies
they have of being on their own.
Kevin Is the laical In a long line of dcsci ted
children. Before the McCalllsters took off for
Paris without their youngest son. an entire
anthology of children had learned to survive
wtlhoul parents. The lost boys of Peter Pan
who had fallen from their prams never to be
found again. The children of Disney, Dumbo
and Bambt. left molherleas in the world.
For a generation. Plppl Longstocklng
personified a child's fantasy of Independence.
Even Dorothy. mysteriously orphaned Into her
Aunt Em’s home and then wrenched away by
another natural disaster, fended for herself in
Oz.
There was never any need for a psychiatrist
to analyze this theme. At some point, children
become awarr of their dependency on adults
who aren’t ulway^ reliable. Parents can be
anything from absent-minded to abusive, fmm
benignly neglectful to untrustworthy. Even the
best of us can be busy or distracted. Even the
most secure childhood can be shattered by
death or divorce. This recognition stirs a
child’s longing to be strong.

c nm•!»** •&lt;
•7m so EMBARRASSED/ My d o cto r lu s t to ld
m s l'v g o tth s YUPPIE F L U !"'

tithes, most of which detest one another, and
that In addition to 5 million whites there are a
million “Astons” (Indians) and 3 million “col­
oureds" (a well-defined mixed-race community),
many a t whom would not consent to bteek rule
even If the blacks could unite.
None of this, however, has been conveyed to
Western readers and viewers by their media.
The surprtotng truth to that nothing — absolute­
ly nothing — has yet been agreed upon, or so
abtUtH
- puDiiciy
—- *—
S-.- cu0c1JM
at ■ma■i ■Ki.it
■ig cvc.fi
anas ocacrcdi oe
jgroueii sfli—
I Mandela.I concerning
1
the nature of the
Arturo government of South Africa. The ANC’*
position to clear: They want everything — now.
The white government has not revealed so much
as a clause of its counterproposal, but you can be
sure that It will have to take into account all of
the Interests described above, which the Western
media have so broody dtorogsrded.
Any attempt to do otherwise would result In
swift revolt by the Zulus and perhaps other
tribes a s well, probably in de facto alliance with
the largely black (but whlle-ofncered) South
African army, the entire right wing of the white
public, and major elements of the Aston and
colored populations. Mandela could probably
count on a majority of the Xhoaaa. some smaller
tribes, the leftist unionised blacks In the cities,
and the liberal fringes of white, Aston, and
colored opinion.

The theme has taken a harder twist lately as
we fear that family life Is coming loose at the
scams. Steven Spielberg's fractured families
had parents loo distracted to see even an
"E.T." tn their midst. In "Honey I Shrunk The
Kids." a harried father absent-mindedly put
hts children in lethal danger In their pwn tuck
yard. There was obvious symbolism In the
dialogue of the quartcr-lnch children lost In the

suburban grass: "We’re too small. He can’t
hear us."
But "Home Alone” does more than appeal to
the child’s need to believe In hto survival.
Nowadays parents need to believe It as well.
And that's what has
changed.
At t h e r i s k o f
turning comedy Into
sociology. Kevin to a
poster child for wor­
rie s a b o u t ‘‘selfcare.'* that
euphemism for no­
care. Well over two
million kids between
five a n d 13 a r e
"home alone" every
weekday afternoon.
Kevin's parents left
( Today’s
on v a c a t i o n , b u t
most have gone off to
working
w o rk . K e v in 's
parents,
neighborhood w«»
setup
e m p t i e d for
hotlines and
C hristm as, but
rules...over the
usually It's empty by
phone. J
9 a . m . T o d a y ’s
working parents,
anxious In their absenteeism, set up hotlines
and rules.,.over the phone. We talk about
childhood "resilience" and the value of their
"Independence" — and keep our fingers
crossed.
The movie’s upper-class family setting, a
houseful of expensive electronic gadgets,
stands in as a visual accusation often launched
against working families: that we are ne­
glecting children for luxuries. Kevin’s mother
Is not the only one who ssks herself In crisis.
"What kind of a mother am t?"
Onto this sociological backdrop, steps an
etght-year-old boy saying: "Hey. I'm not afraid
anymore." Kevin tr ’dng care of himself. Kevld
protecting himself, hts home and hearth from
criminals who are less threatening than comic.
If "Home Alone- Is every child's fantasy. U to
also every parent’s fantasy. It’s all there: the
universal and anxious wish that, in this
uncertain time, the kids will be all right. And
the hope for a happy ending.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters to tin- editor are welcome. All letters
must lx- signed, inrludr ihr address of the
writer and * daytime irlephone number,
(.etters should lx- on a s.ngle suhjn t and be
as brief as possible.. U tters arc stibjcct to
editing.

. WASHINGTON - The ag o n isin g In
America about when Saddam Hussein will
have a usable nuclear weapon must strike the
Iraqi, leader as Ironic. Hto own intelligence
people have told him that there are already
more than 400 nuclear weapons In the
Persian Gulf, and Saddam dkln't put them
there.
They all belong to
the U.S. Navy. Presi­
dent Bush has not
yet given w hat la
called “ nuclear re­
lease authority” to
hto commanders In
th e Gulf, so they
cannot use nuclear
w eap o n s without
consulting him . If
nuclear weapons are
fired, they will be
fired on the presi­
dent's say-so and no f s t ratagists
one rise’s. But Bush
agree that the
a lso has not re­
use of nuclear
nounced the use of
weapons In
nuclear wesjwns If
the Middle
the Gulf L'tslemste
East would be
turns to war. Instead.
a
disastrous
Bush has said that
decision. J
the United States will
hit Iraq, and hit It
hard. Implying everything America has in Us
arsenal. Reasonable military rirategtots agree
that the use of nuclear weapons in the Middle
East would be a disastrous decision. It would
rob the United States of the moral high
ground In future arguments against nuclear
proliferation to Third World countries. And
one nuclear explosion in the Persian Gulf
would Introduce a near-apocalyptic element
In a region that will always be a tlnderbox.
William Arkln. a military expert now with
Greenpeace, argues in the current Issue of
The Nation that If Bush expects to wave hto
nuclear capabllXy In front of Saddam's nose
as a deterrent. ‘This would be a disaster of
unimaginable proportions. It to unacceptable
for the United States to create even the
remotest possibility that nuclear weapons
will be used.”
And If the American nukes are not there as
a deterrent, "then we are foolish to have them
in the area In the first place." Arkln says. "By
•heir mere presence, we take grave risks with
a leader the president equates with Hitler.*'
From our sources we have assembled a
picture of the kind of nuclear punch Bush has
sent to (he region. Some of our sources
complain that rince It to standard operating
procedure to have nuclear weapons on
aircraft carriers, those should not be counted
In any debate about whether the United
States has gone too far. Yet a number of the
ships In the region were specifically dispat­
ched to the Persian Gulf for this crisis and the
Pentagon made the decision to leave the
nuclear weapons on them. Three aircraft
carriers ore already In the Gulf, and another
to on the way. Each has approximately 100
nuclear bombs on board. Of the bombs
already sitting on ships In the Gulf. 240 of
them are sir-chopped B-6Is with a yield
varying from 10 to 300 kllotons Ten kllotons
to equivalent to 10.000 tons of TNT. Just one
ton of TNT decimated the U.S. Marine
b am ck aln Lebanon In 1983.
There are at least 84 nudear Tomahawk
cruise missiles tn the Gulf on two battleships,
four destroyers, six cruisers and five attack
submarines. Miscellaneous nuclear weapons
and depth bombs on destroyers and frigates
In the Gulf’bring the total to more than 400.
When the aircraft carrier Ranger arrives. It
will bring another 100. If that Isn't overkill,
the United Slates has about 300 more nuclear
.bombs at U.S. bases tn Turkey, which
borders Iraq. What that means to Saddarrf
Hussein's strategy to a question only he can
answer. But the question that remains for
George Bush to this: Will he foreswear the use
of nuclear weapons or fire th a n If push comes
to above?

�Sanford HsraM, Sanford, Florida — Tborsdsy, Dscsm btr 20, 1900— BA

Sex-transm itted- d lse a se sce p id e m ic
J«Suss rt«ots&lt; to chil ran k s bcwd
8ANFORP —Seminole County Sheriffs Deputy Carol Jsques
baa w an elected to serve a two-year (enn on the deportment's
ctvu service b u rd .
In employee election's reaulta reported this week. Jsques. the
to * * « n an elected to the board, received 106 votes, flat.
Steven WaHher. who held Jaquea’ board seat and who sought
re-election, received 99 votes. Corrections officer Sam Jtunto
received 69 votes, according to board secretary Pat Chandler.
The board, which decides some employment matters tor the
sheriffs department. Is comprised of two members elected by
employees, two members appointed by the sheriff and one
member appointed by the board.

Four iMppokrtad to SIB
SANFORD — Four m em bers of th e Sanford Scenic
Improvement Board were rea ppointed to three-year terms by
the city rommterton this week. They are Anne A. Hayes, Jean
C. Skipper. Connie wmiama and Mary L. Atkina.

WASHINGTON - At leaat 390
million sexually transmitted in­
fections
-**■“* “ally and the growing epidemic Is
c re a tin g “ a public h e a lth
nightmare.” the World Health
Organisation reported Wednes­
day.
Young adults account far the
largest share of the 380 mitttoo
Infections, with the highest indefence reported among
Ages 30 through 34. WHO
Sexually trana — "
n s and diseases
And If sexual behavior fa not
modified and effective new pre­
vention and control progisim
are not Implemented tmmedlaiii-

Legislation aimed at weapons
I fN R I

Unlfad Press Infmattonal______
WASHINGTON - Congress
will be the key battleground over
a new city measure holding
assault-gun m e rc h an ts and
manufacturers responsible for
deaths or injuries caused by the
weapons, observers said.
The m easure, w hich w as
signed by o u tg o in g Mayor
Marion Barry, faces a review by
Congress before It can become
law. under the District of Col­
umbia's unique “ home rale”
charter.
Barry, who leaves office In two
weeks, signed the measure late
Monday, saying. "We don't need
these guns on the streets."
The legislation covers a variety
of saault weapons. Including the
Url, the Beretta and the Tec-9.
Shooting victims, or thetr fami­
lies. coiud recover damages from
the manufacturers or retailers.
The City Council approved the

In the wake of record
violence In the nation’s capital.
More than 46S people have been
slain In the city this year.
"We are real confident shout
our chances In court. We’re very
confident.” said Bemle Horn,
legislative director of Handgun
Control Inc., an anti-gun lobby.
“The question Is Congress.”
The politically active National
Rifle Association is expected to
lobby bard, asking Congress to
scuttle the measure.
"There’s nothing unconstitu­
tional about It,*’ Horn said
Wednesday. "There's no decent
legal argument against It. The
Congress Is a light. 1 think we
can win this fight, but It’s a big
fight."
Richard Gardiner, the National
Rifle Association’s legislative
director, said. "It's an absurd
bill. It flies In the face of every
notion of Justice that we've ever
known In our law, by holding
Innocent manufacturer* finan­

Treesa tree from Tisdale.
1A
"Just sold the last one.” he
owns a
tree lot In Wade and had given called to them as they got out of
him the trees to sell and to do thetr car.
Kerwln said it had been a
what he wanted with the money.
tradition
In his family to buy a
"I Just have to make sure 1
have enough to buy gas to get live tre e th e w eek before
Christmas and set It up In the
home "hesaid.
house, but not decorate It until
Tisdale said he asked his Christmas Eve after the children
customers why they chose to were In bed.
“ We'd wake up Christmas
buy a live tree when so many of
tbs Artificial trees looked realis­ morning and the lights and
Unset and everything would be
tic.
*% i
* on
tbs tree." he said, "Arid It’d
"Almost all of them told me smell and look Uke Christmas.”
that it Just ditto't seem like
The Smythcs said they would
Christmas unless you went to a look elsewhere for a live tree, but
tree lot. tied the thing to your car thought they might want to
roof and dragged it into the consider a fake tree Just to save
house to decorate It,” he said.
money In the future.
Lauren and Kerwln Smythc of
"Maybe a few more y ean with
Lake Mary arrived too late to get the real thing." Lauren said.
I
jt r t s z a a f e x v *

air j \. * ' « » . v T r . X w S # A r i f t A s 2 t '

S c o t t M. G re en . 3 9 . 22
Windsor Isle. Longwood. died
Tuesday at Florida Hospital.
Altamonte Sprigs. Born March
17. 1961, tn Orlando, he was a
lifelong resident of the area. He
was a production manager for a
picture framing company and a
member of the Congregation of
Libera] Judaism . He was a
member of the Central Florida
Hunter Jumpers Association.
Survivors Include parents.
Nancy and Gene, Longwood:
brother, Brett. Longwood.
Beth Shalom Memorial Cha­
pel. Orlando, in. charge of ar­
rangements.
Tommie E. Lawrence. 68, 717
E. Orange Ave., Longwood. died
Tuesday at Florida Hospital,
Altamonte Springs. Born Aug.
29. 1922. in New Hill. N.C., he
moved to Longwood from
Kcansburg. N.J.. tn 1968. He
was an electrician In the con­
struction Industry and a Baptist.
He was a memberof the VFW.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e wife.
Kathryn; d au gh te r. J a c k ie
Magazu. Norwdl. Mass.; sisters.
Mae Barber. New HID. Elite Price.
Cheraw. S C.: three gr an d ­
children; one great-grandchild.
Baldwin-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
Dorothy Ruth Pier, 66. 6300
State Road 46-W, Sanford, died
Tuesday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Aug. 25. 1924. In Heasvtlle. Ind..
she moved to Sanford from
Kokomo, Ind.. In 1988. She was
a production assem bly line
worker and a member of the
First Baptist Church of Kokomo.
Survivors -Include husband.
Jo se p h ; daughter. Roberta
Jackson. Arkadelphla. Ark.;
sons. James. Ranald and Steven,
all o f Kokomo. K e n n e t h .
Midland. Texas; b r o th e r s .
Eugene Lerch. Sanford. Charles
Lcrch. Wanatah, Ind.: sisters.
Lula Mae Jahnz. Kouts. Ind.. Ida
Allen. Wlnamac, Ind.. Agnes

C ota. W an atah ; 14
ch ild ren ; seven
grandchildren.
Gramko w Funeral
Sanford. In charge of
ments.

grand­
g reat­
Home.
arrange­

Jimmy Lee Raines, 62, of 258
Btu St.. Apt. 2, Miami, died Dec.
15 at Jackson Memorial Hospi­
tal, Miami. Born May 28. 1928,
In Culloden, Ga. he moved to
Mi ami tn 1964 from
Birmingham. Ala. He was a
track driver and a Baptist.
Survivors Include sisters.
M in n ie Lee C a l lo w a y .
B i r m i n g h a m . L i z z i e M.
Campbell. Lake Monroe. Rosa L.
Pennmon. Forsyth. Ga., Ora Lee
D a n i e l s , Ch ic ag o . E l m i r a
Daniels. Sanford; brothers. Jack
a n d N a t h a n i e l , b o t h of
Birmingham, Bobby. Boston.
Billy J.. Sanford.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
ford. in charge of arrangements.
LODKLL OOFFRAQUET
Lodell Goff Raquet. 77. 9701
Forest City Road. Altamonte
Springs, died Tuesday at his
residence. Bom Feb. 13. 1913, In
Indiana, he moved to Altamonte
Springs from there In 1984. He
was a retired machinist for
General Motors and a Protestant.
He was a lifetime member of the
National RUle Association and a
member of the National Muzzle
Loaders Rifle Aaoclatlon.
Survivors Indude wife. Sue
Ann: d a u g h t e r s . Cha rlotte
Jones. Greenfield. Ind., Sherri
Morris, Ind ian ap oli s: nine
grandchildren.
Baldwin-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Forest City, in charge of
arrangements.
BARRY BARL FOX
Barry Earl Fox. 24. Turilehlll
Tr.. Enterprise, died Dee. 18 at
South Seminole Community
Hospital. Longwood. Bom Jan.
19. 1966. In Miami, he moved to
Enterprise In 1979 from Ml.
Dora. He was a delivery man for
Bergen Brunswick Medical
Supply Company. Orlando, and
was a member of Deltona
Church of Christ. He was a

cially liable far the criminal acts
ofp n p ietn the district."
Gardiner said, 'I t doesn't have
a prayer constitutionally. The
courts are going to practically
laugh It out of court."
Richard Muchnick. legislative
director of the Coalition to Stop
Gun Violence, said, ” W e’ve
favored his legislation. 1 honestly
don’t know what's going to
happen In Congress — flighting
the NRA Is always going to be
difficult.”
If Congress snows the measure
to become taw. "Our attorneys
have told us It shouldn't have a
problem at all, constitutionally.
In the courts.” Muchnick said.
"Law professors also have told
us U should get through the
courts.”
Gun sales have been Illegal In
Washington since 1676. But
there is a steady (low of weapons
from neighboring Maryland and
Virginia.

ty. the resulting disease and
mortality rates will be even more
WHO Director OenDr. H iroshi N akajim a

lion cases stem from chlamydia,
A
.— —
J mf In
fa n iln n tin
h aitt can
nacteruu
injection
csiisc miemmy. xu sonic inner
etty area of the Untied States, 10
percent to 90 percent of sexually
WHO emphasised that dta- active teenage girls have the
pread by sex are not Infection.
harmless and can cause serious
Oenltal w arts account for
health problems, such as sterili­ about 30 million cases;
ty. blindness, brain damage, fV « , about 38 —uiwir
cancer and even death. In addi­ herpes, 30 mUion: syphllfis. 3.5
tion.
. there Is evidence the sores million: hepatitis B, 3.8 million:
Inflammation caused by chancroid. 3 million, and the
sexually transmitted Infections A ID S -cau sln g h u m a n lmboosts the risk of contracting the munodefleienev virus. 1 million.
"In many countries, sexually
Trichomoniasis, a parasitic transm itted infections have
infection, la the moat common b e c o m e a p u b l i c h e a l t h
nightmare,” JtoksJtma said to a
malting up about 130 million of statement.
the 380 million new cases that
Dr. Andre Meheus, head of
occur each year. About 80 mil­ WHO’s sexually transm itted

Soviet—

■

IA

Leaden of the "Soyuz” group
of deputies that has been csUtng
right would lead to the for a return to In n state control
return of a dictatorship In the In the Soviet Union said they
country, but he made It dear he were pleased that Shevardnadze
waa not attacking hta dose ally.
"This deed of his was un­
Gorbachev.
"No one knows what kind of seemly. but It was a step in the
dtcatstorshtp it will be and who right direction." said Col. Viktor
win come to power, who win be Atlanta, a founder of the con­
the dictator and what kind of
regime it wUI be.” Shevardnadze

-------- 1 program, noted that the
Infection ra te In in d u strial
countries to rising faster than
those reported In the 1900a and
1970s. In many Third World
nations, recent migration to cit­
ies often leads to new sexual
habits that Increase the risk of
such infections, he said.
"Sexually transmitted infec­
tions are not under control either
tnc ocretopea or inc ocvciopbig world.” Meheus said.
In addition to people falling to
take protective measures like
uatng condoms during sex. WHO
said the incidence o f some sex­
ually transmitted diseases ap­
pears to be increasing due to
development of microbe strains
that are resistant to antibiotic

servative group. “Shevardnadze
Is leaving a staking ship."
Moat officials and deputies
agreed, how ever, th a t
snevaraaose a fleem oo to quit
waa a blow to Soviet foreign
policy tn a u o m c n ev s government In general Some said they
hoped It would shock reformers
out of their complacency.

Recycle-

"(Therefore). I would like to
make the following announce­
m e n t I am resisting.” he aald.
"Don't dare make any reactions.
Don't try to dissuade me. Don't
scold me.
"Let this be my contribution if
you wish, my protest against the
impending dictatorship.
"I consider it my duty as a
man. as a citizen and as a
communist. I cannot reconcile
myself to all the events that are
occurring in our country, and all
the trials that are awaiting our
people
" faam
r nevertheless sure that a
dictatorship will not happen,
that our future ta one of democ­
racy, of freedom."
"We’Uhave to see after that."
The delegates to the fourth
Many grocery and discount
stores which used to sell live Congress of People’s Deputies
trees a t Christmas time no listened to the reatgnatlon
speech in stunned silence, then
longer do that.
rose at the end and gave him a
"I gueas It Just wasn't prof­ standing ovation.
itable enough." said Rosem ary,
a sales clerk at the Wal-Mart tn
Seminole Center on 17-92.
“Most people Just want to get
u
thetr gifts at the store, they want
to tromp through the d irt on a property taxes because they did
not provide an aviation service
lot for their tree.”
or product.
Live-cut trees sic selling for
Those businesses previously
about 68 to 67 per foot in the did not pay taxes because gener­
Sanford and Lake Mary area. A al interpretstiots of state taxa­
few nurseries, such os Rhodes tion laws held that they were
and Sons Christmas Tree Forest exempt because they were on
on U.S. Highway 17-92 In -Long- city airport property.
wood, are sclllitg potted trees for
Reaction to the request, which
about 635 apiece, regardless of will come before local lawmakers
the size.
In J a n u a r y , w a s o n e of
cautiousness by two House
members. Rep. Art Grlndle. RAltamonte Springs, said compa­
nies at the airport are already

IA
Knickerbocker aald m ost
callers want to know when the
program starts, what day thetr
bln will be emptied and what
materials are wanted. Some
people want to know where to
store thetr bln Knickerbocker
said. Moat of that Information
was given to residents either on
the sticker on the bin or tn the
pamphlet Included In It
"The day for thetr pickup ta
right there on the sticker on the
a id e of t h e b l n . " a a ld
Knickerbocker. "Right by our
telephone number."
Knickbocker raid after a tour
of neigh borhoocta this morning,
he found many residents have
left their bins fay the curb and
o th e rs are using them for
garbage.
The city aril begin weekly
pickup of recyclable materials

J a n . 7 a n d on f o l l o w i n g
weekdays indicated on each bin.
The city has begun the program
In cooperation wtUi other cities
and the county to help reduce
garbage flowing to the county
dump near Geneva by 30 per­
cent by 1996 understate law.
Items wanted by the city are
n e w s p a p e r s w ith all the
advertising inserts and "flyers"
pulled out and thrown in the
garbage; plastic beverage bottles
such as those used for milk,
water or soda; aluminum bever­
age cans such as those for soda
or beer, and a l colors o» glass.
Remove th e caps from the
plastic and glass bottle* before
placing them to the recycling
bins.
If you still have questions not
answered in the pamphlet In­
cluded with the fain or printed on
the sticker, coll Knickerbocker at
330-8878.

Airport

member of the Volunteer Fire
Department. Osteen.
S u r v i v o r s Include f os ter
parents. Dr. and Mrs. Harvey
Schefaky, Deltona; brothers,
David and Allen Flowers, both of
Osteen: foster brothers, Marc
Schefsky, Winter Park an d Brad
Schefaky of Daytona Beach;
foster slater; Lori Schefsky. En­
terprise; foster grandmother;
Mary Schefsky, Blanchester,
Ohio; faster grandfather. Walter
Stanton, Orange City; fiance.
Joyce Rafferty, Deltona.
Stephen R. BaldaufT Funeral
Home of Deltona in charge of
arrangements.
JOHN WILLIAM WEAVER
Johi. William Weaver. 86, 201
Collins Drive, Sanford, died
Tuesday at Deltona Health Care
Center. Born Aug. 19, 1904. in
Brewton, Ala., he moved to
Sanford from Warren, Mich., in
1970. He was retired from the
Seventh-day Adventist Church
Conference and atttended San­
ford Meadows Seventh-day
Adventist Church
Survivors Include wife. Mabel,
DeLand: sons. Floyd Bynum.
Orange City. Warren Bynum.
S a n f o r d , Wayne B y n u m .
Madison Height* Mich.; daugh­
ters. Shirley Dixon. Jackson.
Tenn.. Louise Brown, Orange
City; 12 grandchildren; 20
great-grandchiliken.
Brisaon Funeral Home. San­
ford. in charge of arrangements.

FOX. SASSY BAIL

Fun*f*l w v l m tar Mr. Barry Carl Fai.
24. l.*Entarprlaa. who dtad Twatday. Dac II.
al South Samlnota Community Hoopltal.
Longwood. will bo hold 4 pm. Thuradoy, Doc
». at Dottana Church at Chrltt. In l* u at
Itowort. contribution* may M mads to Ootaan
Flro Oopoi Imm it. ! • N. Slats a d all.
Ottaan. F L 12240.
Staphan R. BaMaud Funoral Homo. Do
Itana. In charpa ot orrargwnanti

paying low lease rates compared
to companies at private industri­
al parka, which should offset any
new tax payments.
"I don't have a closed mind to
It." Orindle said. "But 1 also
need to look at the price they’re
paying and what the competition
Is paying- I would thtnk the
average rate paid In the county
for industrial space ta anywhere
from 64 to 69 a square foot. I
need to ask myself, ’Is this of
benefit to the public?"’
Cooke said Oodlaco to paying
jr less
i
62 or
leas per square
foot for the
bullIdtngs they i : leasing.

"It Is something 1 would be
willing to look st." said Rep.
Frank Stone1.' 'R-Ovledo.' "But
there’s klqd 'of a Catch-32 here.
Local gorerhm enti kra-strapped
for money but“ you "w ant to
attract businesses to maintain
the viabtltty of the airport. I
would hate to ruin the opportu­
nity for that to develop."

Manager

F a g s IA
McMillan aald he met with
Rabun Wednesday morning be­
f o r e R a b u n r e t u r n e d to
C'-arw aterat noon.
Allhough commissioners en­
thusiastically and unanimously
chaos," said Washington. D.C.. agreed to offer Rabun the Job
lawyer Richard Ellas, who repre­
Tuesday, a county track record
sents a buslncsman allegedly of
tiro rejections from equally
stung by misdealing.
■ought-after candidates has left
Goudle’s competency came them waiting with about the
under question when the Florida same degree of anticipation as a
R eal E s t a t e C o m m l a a i o n groom whose bride la a bit late to
supended his license In 4909. the alter.

Colum bus
IA
The Herald wild'several con­
gressional sources and private
businessm en h ad accused
Goudte of unilaterally awarding
contracts to friends. Others said
he was Inept.
"It was a five-year Junket Into

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WEAVES. 20*414WILLIAM

Funoral tarukoa tv Mr. Jahn william
Woavor will bo I p m Friday Dac. 21 at Nw
Britton Funoral Horrw Chapat with Patter
John Foa officiating Interment to tallow In
highland Memory Gerdana. Form I City
Friondt may call Ttartday from 4 1 p m at
ttw tunerat homo.
Srttton Funeral Nona. Santard. m m i.
In charge of tervlcet

Sanford H erald
l

�f

d w

20. 1080

General sa y s troops w on’t
be ready to fight Jan. 15
ington and said they had been
flu n iill v—aJ r T f i i I\n \w m m x jn m
told by U.S. commanders that a
war with Iraq would last no more
th a n five days because or
American lo rrtt in ine re m a n
overwhelming U.S. air power.
Gulf will not be ready to fl^M far
W hen asked about the
at least a month after the U.N.
assessm ent given by Sens.
deadline for Iraqi withdrawal
Daniel Inouye. D- Hawaii, and
from Kuwait, ana Iraq taM Its
T ed S te v e n s , R -A laska.
C ltlfC M 10 MOCK lip Of! H f tt iT tf
Fltewater said. "Obviously our
oil In case of war.
commanders feel confident
The eecond la eomoMnd of
about their strength and abili­
U.S. troops In Saudi Arabia told
ties. but we would be moat
a group of eight journalist*,
reluctant io put days or minutes
in c l u d in g r c p f u c ii tM i T c o a t ■n c
on It."
Washington Post and The (few
On the diplomatic front,
York Tim es, th at Am erican
Fltxwater
reported no progress
forces might not he randy until
In trying to set dates for Iraqi
the middle of February.
Foreign Minister Tariq AiU to
Lt. Gen. Cahrtn A.H. Waller
visit Washington and Secretary
made the comments Wednesday
of State James Baker lo go to
a s Defense S ecretary Dick
Baghdad.
Cheney and Oen. Cohn Powefl.
Jordan's Crown Prince Hasaan
chairman of the Joint Chlefk of
told Amman Radio that he did
Staff, arrived In Saudi Arabia far
n o t think Saddam Hussein
briefings.
would withdraw from Kuwait
Tm like a football coach."
before a Jan. 15 U.N. deadline,
Waller said, “I want everythUig I
and that peace “will require a
can possibly get and have at my
aide of the field when I get r eady
___________ i an apparent bid miracle.”
to go into lue Super Bowl."
In an Interview with Turkish
to reinforce the defenses of the
In Washington. White Houae o c c u p i e d e m i r a t e a g a i n s t television aired by Cable News
spokesman Marlin Pltaw atcr UA-led attack, according to the Network. Saddam said Wednes­
played down the com m ents, a g e n c y , w h ic h s a i d some day there is "still a chance of
saying. "What he really aaid la 490.000 Iraqi troops were al­ peace Instead of war. ” He said a
they might not be as ready as ready stationed in Kuwait and d ip l o m a t i c s o lu ti o n m u s t
they would like to be ... far all southern Iraq.
address the Arab-Israell dispute
the contingencies."
Two senators who ju st re­ and the Palestinian question.
Waller, who ranks behind Oen. turned from a visit to Saudi Bush has refused to link the gulf
H. Norman S chw artkopf in Arabia m et with Bush in Wash­ crisis with any outside Issue.
Desert Shield, askl
major reinforcements ordered
Nov. 8 by President Bush were
atlU In transit from Europe and
the United States and would not
be ready to fight possibly until
the middle of February.
Bui Waller himself hinted the
tfoopa might be more prepared
than he was letting on. "One of
the last th in g l want to do la to
give Sa ddam Hussein what our
plana constat of."
ine irMfi on minmry provea
again tt was taking the threat
■cttouMy by asking people to
mock up with domestic heating
h id to confront shortages should
a winter war erupt In the Gulf.
Baghdad Radio said.
In another indication Iraq was
_ far war. Egypt’s MidNews Agency reported
that Iraqi armored columns,
tanks and artillery units were
b ein g w ith dr aw n from the
Syrian border and deployed in

Panama invasion protest set
Unttad Prats International
PANAMA CITY. Panama — Opposition g ro u p
called on the people of Panam a to return to the
streets Thursday on the one-year anniversary of
the U.8. Invasion to call far the removal of U.S.
troops from their country.
Twenty-one years of mitttarv rule came to an
end Dec. SO, IBM. when 25.000 U S. tro o p
swarmed Into Panama to oust dictator Manuel
Antonio Noriega. Although there
support far the Invasion a year
Panamanians appear to be souring on the U.S.
action.
Tbe Committee for the Rescue of Sovereignty, a
coalition of opposition groups, la sponsoring the
march which la designed to honor Panamanians
killed In the invasion, lo protest U.S. intervention
end to call (dr the removal of the 10.000 U.S.
tro o p baaed In Panama.
"Panama la an occupied country where true
p w u llM M I n ti e Yankee tm hiw y." aaid a
statement released by.th* committee. "On Dec.
20. We will demonstrate to tbe world ... that
Panama la alive , and th a t the national flag
vibrate* In the heart of Panamanian*."
Tbe tnvaaion caused more than t l billion in
damages, and left thousands homeless and more
thanoOO Panamanian* dead. Twenty-three U.S.
tro o p were killed in lighting.
While the overthrow of Noriega waa celebrated,
many Panamanian* are now disenchanted with

Ltqal NottCM
, ncm taM M oa

Nattce to Nea r
** &gt;
n engaged la s m s si u*

LbqbI NoUct»
RMNTIBNTN JUMCIAl
FLORIDA.

MAI* l u x u r y Wjj

FIDE RAX NATIONAL
MOSTOAM ASSOCIATION, s

sent*

wHS Ms I l l ratary t l Mata.
TsIUAn t t t . Ftortua. In scis !

cs.
Plaintiff.

LIU.VFtlNOll.etM..

Ts-WH;
Statute* 1SS7.
IF. T V s *

NSTtCt OF ACTION
TO; AAMRICAN STICL
FAUCI CO.. INC

DEA-MO
NOTKB OP
FICTITIOUS MAMA
PVBflMi m lOTTWf yinfi IMP! NOT
bfb
in buBimss •! Hwy
lM l M e t Fits WWW. I a n
m at County, Flertox WStr Nw
Fictitious Name e&lt; SCOT'S
scons. anS Nut wt InWnS Is
Secretory Of Sttlt. Tall
Flerldb, m
previsions et t v F lctltlsw
Naim Statute. Tt-WII:
M itt. F ItrU t S'etutoe l«S7.
jnipA c. Canwii
Scat M. Canaail
Publish:
O f A M*
A lter ION
H FORD IK
EI4AHF4174B
ism m
MFtntlscMr
lo tF w o H te u A iin
M /W
McCtnntll Tewing A Stcawry
WM lonOwd Ann.
v w t fl r n n
S A ll •■SIMS AT IStMFM
VWwONE HOUR
PRIOR TO SALE
Publish: Oecember M. 1MB
Of A Ml

■ u r u .f .
For the current rotecoll..
».

F A B antu
AHamento Iprbwx
TOO ARI NOTIFIIO Rat an
encem ksrlns th e tsllewlng
pragarty M l am mela County.
LM VI BtacS “G“. WASH­
INGTON OAKS SCCTION ONI.
auardtag to EM atoMboraef aa
i t eart o In Plat b eat U. F tfa t
7 * l Pubbe Recaeda M Semi
neto Caunty. F lsrlto Together
w ith : O ne O rfeen R a n g e
(M adrid. Ons Mecury H to
Comtort Fee
F
cldc).
by t o
a cagy at yeur
II any. la It an
SMITH 4 SIMMONS, F.A..
FMMW i aftornoyx m Weet
ACami S tra e l, S ella I lia .
FWrMa t o an

A iwi. t o

tataCewf

i toO arfeM

WITHASS my band ana tael
of RSt Court an to a U S Say M
(UAL)
MARYANNE MTU IE
Clark M t o ClrcMt Caerl
By: lla a to r E rw sar
OagMy Clark
PubfWi; MawmSar M b De­
cember X IX M tew
OCZSW

Ybur new employee
is just a
PHONE GAUL AW AY

President Guillermo Endara. who waa awom in
on a U.S. bawe as the invasion began.
Endara is widely viewed aa a weak leader. A
police rebellion two weeks ago had to be put
down by 500 U.S. tro o p while recent anligovemment rallies have been broken up by riot
police with tear gas and shotguns.
Panamanians are also bitter over the U.S.
response to the Invasion. For a number of
reasons, just $108 million of a $461 million U.S.
recovery aid package has been released. The U.S.
government has refused to compensate for
Panamanians killed or Injured in the fighting.
Opposition legislators sponsored a bill to have
Dec. 20 named a day of mourning but other
lawmakers said Dec. 20 should be a day of
celebration. To a pease both sides, Endara has
declared Dec. 20 a "National Day of Reflection."
Public offices will be closed.
"We must reflect on the causes that led to (the
tnvaaion) so that they are never repeated."
Foreign Minister Julio Linares said Wednesday.
Police say they expect thousands of Panama­
nians to demonstrate Thursday.
"We don’t’expect any problems." aaid Louis
Martins. Endara's foreign press secretary. He said
Endara would spend Thursday "rellecUng."
The committee will also hold a mass Thursday
morning at the Jardtn de Paz cemetery in
Panama City where 123 Invasion victims were
burled.

Ltflal Notices

Legal Notices

M I N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T N I liTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT INAND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASO NatM taa-CA-tif
AMIRI FIRST BANK. A
FIDIRAL SAVINGS BANK,
tormerty known#* AmerlPIrsl
FatoM Saving* t o Loan
Aaaaclat.sn.
Plain) Ift,

INTHK CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE ItTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA.
INANDFOR
SIMINOLICOURTV
CASENOta-SSM
OINIRAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
INVESTORS SAVINGS BANK
PLAINTIFF.

vx

RONALD J CVBULSKI.
ETAL..
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO;RONALOJCVBULSKI
RESIDI NCI ;UNKNOWN
LAST KNOWN
MAILING ADDRESS:
711 Bear Shadow Court
F L Jjn t
iTO: All aanana claiming
an Maraat by- Ntrawgfi. u n tok..or
a
■gMfW TTtoITwVWHI
YOU A RI HARIBV NOTI­
F IIO THAT an action la Itrjclaao a martgaga an the tallow­
ing to crlb ad proparty locatad
In Seminole County, Florida:
LM O. TIMBER RIOGE AT
SABAL POINT, UNIT I. ac­
ta Ilia plat thereat aa
in PIM Saak "74",
Pagaa 44 through 4X Public
Records M Sam Into County.
Florida. INCLUOING SPECIF
ICALLV. BUT NOT BY WAV
OF LIMITATION. THE FOL­
LOWING EQUIPMENT: FAN/
HOOOt DISPOSAL; MICRO
WAVRj
DISHW ASHER)
RANOE/OVCN: REFRIGER
ATOR. CENTRAL HEATS AIR
TOGETHER with all t o Im
np ar harasnar
praparty, and all
aaaamanta. rights, appurte­
nance*. rants, reyalMo*. minoraL all and gat rights and profits.
■■Par. watar rights and watar
Slack, and all lliluraa new or
here*tier a part M Ihe property.
Including replacements and ad
dMIont thereto
ha* boon tllod against you. and
you aro required h ssrvo a copy
M your written dstsnsas, II any,
to mis action, on POGER D.
BEAR M ANDERSON 4 RUSH.
Plaintiff whoso
Is 771 East Cantral
Saulavard. Orlando. Florida
SM I. t o Ilia Iha original with
Iha Clark el the above ltyled
Court on or bolero the lllh day
at January, itft. otherwise a
ludgm ent may be entered
against you tor Iha relief da
m a n to In the Complaint.
WITNESS MY HAND AND
SEAL OF SAID COURT on this
Ml day M Oocsmbpr. Itoo
(SEAL)
MAR YANNE MORSE
aa Clark o&lt;said Court
By: Heathsr Brunner
aa Deputy Clerk
Publish: Ooctmbar l IX JO. 17.
IfOB
DEA to

—ve—1

FREDERIC O. NEAL. ETAL.
OEFENDANTISI.
NOTICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
- PROPERTY
TO:
AMERICAN EASTERN
CORPORATION,
DISSOLVED
Residence unknown, II living.
Including any unknown spouse
ot Iha said Defendants. It either
has remarried t o II either or
both at said Defendants are
dead, their respective unknown
h airs, davlssss. g ra n le ts.
assignees, crsdltors. lienors,
and trustees, and all other
parsons claiming, by, through.
Datondantts); t o tha atoremanttonad named Dftsndanlls)
t o such ol tha alorpmanllonad
unknown Detondants t o such
M tha aloremintioned unknown
Oatandanti a t may ba Infants.
Incompetents sr othprwlpa not
sul|urls
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIED that an action has bsan
commancad to toractow a mort
gape on the following real prop­
erly. lying and being t o situat­
ed In SEMINOLE County. Fierida. mare particularly described
as lei tows:
LOT V , REGENC" GREEN.
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK Jl. RAGES St
THROUGH It, INCLUSIVE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA,
mars commonly known as 177S
REGENCY PLACE. HEATH­
ROW. FLORIDA 7774*.
This action has bean Iliad
against you t o you a rt re ­
quired to sarva a copy ot your
written defame. It any. to It on
SHAPIRO A FISHMAN, At
lornays. whpsa addrois Is
Bay Port Plaia. 0700 Courtney
Campbell Causeway. Suita TOO.
Tampa. FL 71407. on or baloro
January 4. tftl. t o file the
original with tha dark of this
Court timer btfore tervlca an
Plaintiffs attorney or Immedi­
ately more attar; otherwise *
doteult will ba pntorod against
you lor Iha rtllet dtmandod In
the Complaint
WITNESS my hand t o seal
el mis Court on itw lifts day ol
November. IM.
(SEALI
MARYANNE MORJE
Circuit and County Courts
By Heather Brumor
Deputy Clerk
Publish November 70 A De
cambers. 1X70. IMO
UEZ 7U

Legal WoWctt

Ltg«l Notlc—

Ltgal Notice

IN THE CIRCWtT COMWT
OF TNEIETN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OF FLORIOA.
U IN A W FOR
u

NOTH SEP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice If hereby given that I
am engaged to buabwaa at ZW
l Hwy. 17 1 f t CaaMtoirry.
I sm Inals Caunty. FtortOx under
th a P l c l l l l a v t N aina a l
ABSOLUTE SOFTWARE A
DATA SERVICES. M i tool I

FtCTTTNMNNAME
NeNca la haraby given that wa
are engaged to bus Inew at IT*
Fieri dene Or.. D atery. FL
WTtX Vatoeto County. Florida,
undw iw FUtlttsua Name at J *
T CUSTOM RENOVATIONS.
to regular

wM» Iha Ctork*ot toe Circuit
Court, l amtoato Candy. Flori­
da, in accordance with the
Pravistone ot the Fictitious
TeWTt; Section

al the Fictitious Name Statute.
Te-WH: Section M iff. Florida

c SEno. sataascAta-B/i
GENERAL JURtSOtCTION
AWiRAA

•ANCaOfTOMMORTOAOE
CORPORATIONFORMERLY

STOCKTOSS. WHATLEY.
OAVIN AND COMPANY
PLAINTIFF.

WILLIAM CRAY WWTf. JR.i
KATHY NELL WHITE
MCVEIGH; MARYANN
WHITE: ROV WHITE; WAROA
JEAN OARHER; UNITED
STATBIOF AMERICA
DEPARTMENTOF
TREASURY; ADVENTIST
HEALTH SYSTEM/SUNSILT.
INC, O/B/A FLORIDA
HOSPITAL: LAKE MARY
BOULEVARD CHIROPRACTIC
CLINIC INC: UNKNOWN
TENANT(S)
DEPENOANTIS).
NOTICE OP BALE
NOTICE is HEREBY GIVEN
Pursuant to an Ordw M Final

Jl^faMEMMkt OT rw$|OTHf
EHulMaiew, dw
tod
OTW
M

Havambar is. m i sntarad to
Civil Case Ne.tt-itoBCA-M-1/L
M *w ClrcMt C ato M the WTH
JudfciM ClrcMt to aad tor ISMINOLE C o u n ty , F la rld R ,
w h e r e in BANC BOSTON
MORTOAOE COBFONATION
FORM ERLY STOCRTON,
W HATLEY, DAVIN AND
COMPANY. P la in tiff a n d
WILLIAM 6EAV WHITE. J R .
K A T H V N E L L W H IT E
M C V E IO H . MARY ANN
WHITE. ROY WHITE. AND
WANOA JEAN GARNER are
. I will sell to Iha
MMiool and to st ildtor Nr cash.
A t THE WEST FRONT DOOR
OF THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
COURTHOUSE, SANFORD,
FLORIDA. February
as aat farm In said fin a l
Judgement, to wit:
LOT IX BLOCK F. COUNTRY
CLUE MANOR UNIT t AC­
CORDING TO T H I FLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
FLAT BOOK It. PAGE M l OF
THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SIMINOLI COUNTY. FLORI­
DA.
OATED at SANFORD, Ftorlm this tath any at December.
IFN.
MARYANN! MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE County,
Ey: JanaE.Jaaswtc
Deputy Clark
Publish: December 10. v . I*00
DBA-1SJ
AFFADAVIT
STATE OF FLORIDA
COUNTY OF SEMINOLE
BEFOOL ME. tha undwslgm
ad authority, personally ap­
peared JAMES A. SAWYER,
who being by me first duly
sworn, dapoeai and says:
It is tha Intention ol THE
KATHLEEN ANDERSON COM­
PREHENSIVE WORK CEN­
TER, INC., to angag* In a
business enterprise under the
llcttliouf name at SEMINOLE
WORK OPPORTUNITY PRO­
GRAM. at 7411 S. Orlande
Drive, Sanford. FL 17771. Tha
b u a ln a a a la a s h e l t e r e d
workshop.
Tha corporation owns Iha sola
Interest In the business en­
terprise.
Proof ol publication or this
Intention Is tiled herewith
Pursuant to the previsions ol
Section tk lH , F torIda Statute*.
James A. Sawyer, President
Sworn to and subacribad belore me mis Dthdeyef
S. Kirby Moncrlef
Notary Public
Slata of Florida al Larga
My Commission Expires:
August X 1*04
Publish: December 7 1 1»S0
DEA ISO
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 4M
E. Altamonte Drive. Suite 301
Altamonte Springs. Florida
77701. Seminole County, Florida,
under tha Fictitious Name al
BUFF MASTERX t o that I
Inland to register said name
with tha Clerh at the Circuit
Court, Seminole County. Flori­
da. In accerdanca with tha
provisions ot tha Fictitious
Name Statute. To-Wit: Section
MS.os. Florida Statutes l*S7.
William Beetotald
Publish: December70,1*00
DEA 170
IN THR CIRCUIT COURT
OP THI EIGHTH NTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASK NO.OO-4tn-CA!4L/P
FIRST UNION NATIONAL
BANK OF FLOR IDA. a national
banking etKci^ii_______
by merger with FLORIDA
NATIONAL BANK and
successor by merger with
ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK
OF FLORIDA.
Plaintiff.
va.
JERRY W.MILLARand
SHELIA 0. MILLAR. Ms wlto:
CLAUDE C LEWIS; PHYLLIS
g . McBr id e lew is ; m bna
AMERICA BANK. N.A.. l/k/a
MARYLAND BANK, N.A.;
SWEETWATEROAKS
HOMEOWNERS'
ASSOCIATION. INC.; and
STATE OF FLORIDA.
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
AND EMPLOYMENT
SECURITY.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that on Iha lath day at January,
tail, al 11:00 A M. at the West
Front door ol tha Courthouse ot
Svmlnola County, Santord. Flor­
ida. tha tmdtrtlenad Clark will
oltar tor sale Iha tallowing
described real property
L o l l * . B l a c k E.
SWEETWATER OAKS. SEC
TION X according to tha Plat
thereof as recorded In Plal Book
It. Pages I. I and X ol the
Public Records ot Seminole
County. Florid*
The 4tores*id sal* will ba
made pursuant to a Summary
Final Judgmant ol Foreclosure
entered In Civil No 104077
CAUL/P now pending In the
Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit in t o lor Sami
note County. Florida
OATED mu tJth day ol D*
cembor. 1*00
MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
BY JaneE Jasewic
Dfouty Clofh
Publish: December 7177. ISSO
OEA-IS4

MNyP.
PvRttoh: November I t A D e
camber x IX SI IfW
OEZI4S

Florida. In

John A. Abrahatto
Publish: Dice mbs r 70.1100
DBA-111 ’
UNITED ITATEI
DISTRICT COURT
Ml DOLE DISTRICT

M THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THEE MUTE RUTH
OP PLORIBA

. CASE Nfetbeibf CAM P
WEYERHAEUSER

COURT BOtWMKtoOrt-M
UNITED STATES
OP AMERICA
Plaintiff,
Lawrence Wtlllanwi Orlande
idkel Cantor. Inc
i John T. Harris.
l*»-

NOTICE OP SALE
IUI
m n
j—nfrwy g-p*OT
--^Fwircir
Wf toe*
inwv
DALE E. HARE It. at

at at..

NOTICE OP ACTION
TO; DALES. HARRIS and
INGE J. HARRIS. Ms setto
Atlanta. GA1
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an

OTTKOT Wr

OT IPOTT-

LOT 177. CRANES ROOST
VILLAS ACCOROINO TO THE
PLAT THEREOF. A l R E­
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK IX
PAGE 74 TO 77. OP THE
PUBLIC RICQROt OP t l MINOLB COUNTY. ELORIOA.
SUBJECT TO AN BASEMENT
FOR PARCOORSE OVER ALL
OP SAID LOT 177. LEU THE
N O R T H E R L Y 4 7 .P E R T
THEREOP.
baan tiled against you
•rerenutred toterveai
at yewr written dotonaoa. It i
to It, an Claudia L. Break,
Attorney tar Plaintiff, whoae
address Is Sulla 7M. IS7«
Madruga Avenue. Coral Gable*.
Florida. 77144 an ar batara
January IX teal and tile iha
original with Iha Clark at this
PtotoHH’a attorney ar immadtf thereafter: otherwise a
ult will ba entered against
tor iha retlet demanded In
thocamglatnt.
WITNESS my hand and Itw
tael at this Court this lllh day at
(SEAL!
MARYANNE MORSE
A* Clerk ot Iha Court
Ey Itoother Brunner
A* Deputy Clark
Publish: December IX 70. 77,
tfto A January Xl**l
OEA-M

IN TNE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
case no . fbi*aa-CA-i*-p
THE FIRST.PJL,
Plaintiff.
ERNEST LAUREANO, etal..
NOTICE OP SALE
Notice la hereby given that
pursuant to Itw Final Judgmant
at Fomctoeuro t o sale entered
In tha causa pending In the
Circuit Court In and tor Semi­
nole Cdunty, Florida, being Civil
Number M jeM-CA-14-P tha
undersigned Ctork will Mil tha
praparty situated In Seminole
County. Florida, dsscrlbad as:
Lott 1 t o I I Block F. PLAN
OP WINDBRMIRB. according
to Itw plat thareel aa recorded In
Plat Book I, Page III, Public
Record* al Seminole County.
Florida.
at public tala, to tha hlgheit
bidder tor cath at 11:00 A M. an
tha lath day at February. 1**1.
at tha Waat Front Door of the
Courlhoute In Seminole County
In Santord. Florida.
DATED this 11th day ot De­
cember, leso.
(SEAL)
Clark ot tha Circuit Court
By: JaneE. Jetrwlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December 20.77,1*W
DRA-tU

INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
OP TNE IETN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA.
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE NO. *0-1071
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CITICORP MORTGAGE, INC
FORMERLY CITICORP
HOMEOWNER’S SERVICES.
INC.
PLAINTIFF.
—vs—
LARRY E.MUSSEUMAN. JR.
AND SANDRA L.
MUSSELMAN. HIS WIFE;
SECURITY PACIFIC
MANUFACTURER FUNDING
DEFENDANT!!).
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to an Order el Final
Judgmant ot Foreclosure dated
December II. t t t l entered In
Civil Com No. SB-7071 ol the
C ircuit Court of iha tOTH
Judicial Circuit in and tor SEMIN O L I C ounty, F lo r id a ,
wherein CITICORP MORT­
GAGE. INC. FORMERLY
CITICORP HOMEOWNER'S
SERVICEX INC.. Plaintiff and
LARRY E. MUSSELMAN. JR.
AND SANDRA L. MUSSEL
MAN. HIS WIFE are defend
antis). I will sail to tha highest
and bast bidder tor cash. AT
THe WEST FRONT DOOR OF
THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
COURTHOUSE. SANFORD.
FLORIDA, at H OB am Jenu
ary 14, 1SSI. the tallowing da
scribed praparty a* Ml forth In
*4id Final Judgmant. to wit:
LOT 40. HOWELL ESTATES
1ND ADDITION. ACCORDING
TO THE PLAT THEREOF AS
RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK
11. PAGE X OF THE PUBLIC
RECORDS OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA
DATEO al SANFORD. Fieri
da. mi* lllh day ot December.
ISSB.
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE County.
Florida
By JaneE Ja*awic
Deputy Clark
Publish December JO. 27. lt*0
DEA ISO

pursuant fa a Final Judgmant
onttrod on November 7X t**l by
Iha O n s entitled Court In
Unllad Itotoe Marshal, ar ana of
will tail Iha praparty situaN In
l amtoato County. Florida, deLats 1*7, IM and Itw Sauht If
Nat al le t m BOOKI * TOWN.
to plat thereat re­
in Piet Beah A page 17ef
at lamtoato
County, Flarlda.
at public outcry to toe high**)
and beat bidder tor ceeh al 17
o'clock naan an January f. Hfl
at too West dMr at the Samtoelo
County Courthouse, Sanford,
Florida.
RICHARD L. COX. JR.
UNITED STATES MARSHAL
MIDDLE DISTRICT
OP FLORIDA
ROBERT W.GENZMAN
UNITED STATES ATTORNEY
MIDDLE DISTRICT
OP FLORIDA
Publish: December X IX 21 77.
tffB
DEA-4
IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
OP TEE EIGHTEENTH
JUMCIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
NO.M-nfSCA-14
DIVISION P
SUN BANK/SOUTH FLORIOA
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
Plaint IIt,
v*.
DOUGLAS R. MING and
MARTHA E. MING. Ms wlto.
JOSEPH L.AEEAMX and
FIRST NATIONAL
MORTGAGE COMPANY.
Defendants.
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgement at Foreclosure dated
Iha 17th day at December. 1**0,
and entered In Caaa No. fBUOTCAMol tha Circuit Court al tha
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit In
and tor Seminole Comfy. Fierida. wherein SUM BANK/SOUTH
FLORIDA NATIONAL ASSO­
CIATION I* Plaintiff, and
DOUGLAS R. MING and
MARTHA E. MING, his wild.
JOSEPH L. ABRAMS. AND
FIRST NATIONAL MORT­
GAGE COMPANY, are Defen
dents. I will toll to Itw hlghaal
and bast bidder ter ceeh at tha
Front Doer at the Seminal*
County Courthouee. at Sanford.
Ftor M l at 1I:BB o'clock AM.,
on the list day at January, If*1,
too (allowing described property
a* aal forth In said Final
Judgement, towrit:
Lets 4 S X LESS the South
47.4* toft. Black 1. 2nd Section.
DREAMWOLD, a* recorded In
Plat Book x Pag* 70. al the
Public Record* el Seminole
County, Florida.
DATEO this llto day al De­
cember. 1MB.
MARYANNE MORSE. Clark
Seminole County
Clrcull Court
BY; Jena E. Jasewic
Deputy Clark
Publish: December 20,27,1**0
DEA 114
IN TNE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNI ISTMJUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OP FLORIOA
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASINafB-n-CA-ML/P
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
EMPBANQUE CAPITAL
CORPORATION
PLAINTIFF.
VINCENT J.FIOEI. SINGLE.
KAREN E. PERRY. SINGLE,
RANDOLPH J. KRAMER,
ALLSTATE INSURANCE
COMPANY. SAL PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT. INC.. AND
SEMINOLE COUNTY. A
POLITICAL SUBDIVISION OF
THE STATE OF FLORIDA
DEFENDANT(S).
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to an Order et Final
Judgment at Foreclosure dated
December II. IfM. entered In
Civil Caw NO. M77CA ML/P
ol toe Circuit Court ol too 1BTH
Judicial Circuit to and tor SEM­
INOLE County. F la rld a .
wherein EMPBANQUE CAPI­
TAL CORPORATION. Plaintiff
and VINCENT J. FIDEI AND
KAREN I . PERRY A/K/A
KAREN E. FIDEI are defend
antis). I will Mil to tha highest
snd bast bidder tor cash. AT
THE WEST FRONT DOOR OF
THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
COURTHOUSE. SANFORO,
FLORIDA, at 11.00 am. Janu
ary 71. iff!, toe tallowing de­
scribed p.op*rty as sat forth to
•aid F l,.el Judgment, to wit:
LOTS tl AND IX ALONG
WITH THE NORTH to OF
VACATED ALLEY LYING
SOUTH OF LOTS 11 AND IX
BLOCK C. STEWART’S SUB
DIVISION. ACCORDING TO
THE PLAT THEREOF AS RE
CORDED IN FLAT BOOK X
PAGE *X OF THE PUBLIC
RECORDS OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA
DATEO at SANFORD. Ftorl
da. this llto day ot December.
ISM.
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE County.
Florida
By Jana E Jetewic
Deputy Clark
Publish. December 20.27, ISM
DEA 1S7

Ltqil N otlcf
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUTT,
FLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION NGt
M-VTBCA-taL/P
SHEARSON LEHMAN
HUTTON MORTOAOE
CORPORATION, a ll .
Plaintiff,
VS.
PEDRO EENEVIOES. etc.,
etal.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE is hereby given that
pursuant to toe Final Judgmant
ot Poroctooura and Sato entered
In toe causa pending m toe
Circuit Court at the UGH
TRENTH Judicial Circuit. In
and tar SEMINOLE County.
FtorldX Civil Action Number
M -I17I-CA-14-L/P tha un­
dersigned Clark will sell toe
p ro p e rty situ a te d In aaid
County, described aa:
LOT I. CLUSTER K. WILD
WOOD, A PLANNED UNIT
DEVELOPMENT, according to
toe Flat thereof, aa near Bad In
Plat Eaah tt. Pages 7. X f wtd N
at toe Public Records at Sami
nato County, Florida.
(BEBthar wlto all structurax
Imprevementx flxtunai appli­
ances and appurtenancee an
said land ar uaad In conjunction
therewith, at public sola, to toe
highest and beat bidder Nr cash
at II INS'clack A M .antof 74to
day at January, iMt. at toe
Wbst Front dMr ol toe SEMI­
NOLE County Courthouse. SanICOURT SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
Ry:Jano E. Jasewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December M. 77,1MO
DEAIM

IN THI CIRCUIT COURT
OP TNE ItTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA.
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CABENatf-WS-CAia-L
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CITICORPMORTGAGE.
INCORPORATED FORMERLY
CITICORP HOMEOWNERS
SFRVICEX INC.
PLAINTI*F,
—va—
LARRY E. BERKLEY,ETAL.
DEFENDANTS).
NOTICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
-PROPERTY
TO:
MARI ANNA MCMICHAEL
Residence unknown, It living.
Including any unknown tpeuaa
ot toe sold Defendants. If either
has remarried and 11 either or
both ol said Detondants are
•toad, their respective unknown
h a irs , devisees, g ra n ite s,
assignees, creditors. Manors,
and trustees, and all other
Person* claiming by, through,
under or against tha named
D e t e n d a n H e l i an d Ih a
a fo re m e n tio n e d nam ed
fe n d a n t's ) and such o t
aforem entioned unknown
fe n d a n ts a n d tu c k o l

D e­
lh «
De­
th a

aforementioned unkneem De­
fendants as may ba Infants,
sul lurit.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIPISO that an action ha* baan
commented to torectoe* a mart­
gaga on too following real prop­
arty, lying and being and situat­
ed In SEMINOLE County. Flori­
da. more particularly described
i e (n J L |^ a .

LOT *,' BLOCK *, WEATH
ERSFIELD, FIRST ADDITION.
PLAT BOOK 17. PAGES** AND
«7. OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, more commonly
known a s SSI CARLISLE
A V E N U E . ALTAMONTE
SPRINGS, FLORIDA777144001
This action has boon tiled
/gainst you and you are re­
quired to sarva a copy ol yo J.written dttonw, It any, t o II on
SHAPIRO a FISHMAN, At­
torneys, whose address I t
Bay Port Plate, a m Courtney
Campbell Causeway, Sulla TOP.
Tampa. FL 77*07. an ar be lore
January 77. iw i, and til* toe
original with Iha Clerk ol tola
Court either before service on
Plaintiff* attorney or Immedi­
ately there attar; atoarwlw a
default will be entered against
you tor toe rellel demanded In
tha Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and wal
ol tola Court on tha 17th day ot
December, lMO.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clrcull and County Courts
By: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clark
Publish: December 20. 27. 1M0
b January X 10. IMI
OEA-177
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. te-1774 CA l«F
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
OSCEOLA COUNTY. A
Federally Chartered Savings
And Loan Association,
Plaintiff,
and
BLA N D B ELL
DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATION. INC . now
known as TRAVIS
DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATION, a Texas

Corporation authorli*d to do
butlnott In the State ol
Florida, et al.
Detondants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: KEN BADRAN.TRUSTEE
YOU ARE NOTIFIEO that an
action ol foreclosure has been
Hied against you You ar* r*
toilred to serve a copy ol your
written detente*. It eny, to Itw
action on Plalntllt’i attorney
nhow name and address Is
BLAIR M JOHNSON. Post Of
lie* Box 7704**, winter Garden
Florida 14777 04*4 and III* ttw
Prlglml wlto the Clerk ol this
Court on or betore January 7X
IMI. timer before service on
Plaintiff* attorney gf imnwoi
fitly thereafter, olher.it* «
judgment win be entered to the
rellel demanded in the Foreclo
sure Complaint
WITNESS my hand and the
seal ol mis Court on December
it, t m
(Court Seal)
MARYAHNE MORSE
Clerk ot the Clrcull Court
BY Heather Brunrwr
As Deputy Clera
Publish December JO. jt. iwg
A January X 10. ISS1
OEA ire

I

i*

�B H IB IH IH B V SH IlH lH V p0V 3piV H H M N M iSttviiflEH H K &amp; vSH

A

Sanford Herald, Sanford,

New tax, spending battle looms
In 1987-M.
The JEC la comprised of 13 Democrats
and eight Republicans, drawn evenly from
the Houae and Senate. The chairmanship
afterdates between ranking House and
Senate members of the dominant party in
each body.
"An era of complacency about economic
policy during the '00a” is coming to an end
in the United States, said JEC chief
economist Steve Quick, who was tapped by
Sarbanes to become staff director of the
committee in January.
Domestically and internationally. Quick
sat'd, u is "time for another burst of
economic statesmanship." such as the
Initiatives that followed World War II.
International economic leadership "almost
has to come from the United States" since It
has the largest single economy and the U.S.
dollar la the leading currency, he said.
Congress chartered the JEC In 1946 amid
fears that post-Wortd War II demobilization
might trigger a depression unless U.S.
resources were redirected from warfare
toward economic growth.
The committee is required by law to
produce an annual report each spring that
often serves to counterbalance publication
later In the year of the president’s economic
report.
The JEC also la responsible for tracking
th e w orld’s planned or governmentcontrolled economies, with emphasis on
Europe, the Soviet Union and (he People's
Republic of China. JEC scrutiny of planned
economies often provides a forum for public
and private testimony by such U.S. agencies
as the CIA and the Defense Intelligence
Agency

Economist Murray Wrldcnbattm. who wai
chairman of the Council of Economlr
Advisers in the Reagan administration, said
the "growth with fairness" theme not only
Has the right buxzwords and oaks the right
■lueatlonB but should focus debate on
identifying growth policies that are not
regressive.
Wndenboum stressed It la difficult to
create policies that do not place a dis­
proportionate financial burden on lowIncome groups "because if you look at the
initial effect on Income redistribution, you
can show that any Investment incentive is
icg rfiiiv f,
(n hla unprecedented JEC chairman's
report a year ago. Hamilton surprised many
when he became one of the lin t members of
Congress to Insist that Increasing tax
revenues might be nercsaaiy to reduce the
federal budget deficit.
Despite Hamilton's effort to distance hla
report from the work of the full economic
committee, more partisan debate on eco­
nomic policy seems Inevitable In the next
congressional session.

United Press International

WASHINGTON - The White Hnuee has
signaled It la prepared for trench w.ufare in
Congress next year over tax and spending
Issues, while Democrats have begun forti­
fying their policy positions for what promtses to be Intensely partisan combat.
White House Chief of Staff John Sununu
told a National Preaa Club audience last
week that while the Bush administration
may have been "held hostage” by Congrras
and forced to accept a budget package that
included a “tax ransom," the president's
battle plan next year will be "Read My Lips.
Part I t "
Democrats are expected to return Sununu’a fire soon after Christmas, when Rep.
te e Hamilton, D-tnd, chairman of the Joint
economic Committee, is slated to release his
personal assessment of the health and
prospects of the U.S. economy.
The Democrat-controlled JEC plans to
play a central role in the debate.
Hamilton's theme will be "growth with
fairness," according to JEC staff members
The JEC staff is laying plana to xero in on
privy to an outline and a draft of the
document he will issue between Christmas potentially volatile issues, such as the gap
between Incomes of the richest and poorest
and New Year's.
JEC Staff Director Joseph Minartk said Americana. Investment and productivity In
the Hamilton theme Is rooted In a desire to key industries and defining the post-Cold
"have economic policies that make the War international economic order.
Soon after the release of Hamilton's report
economy more efficient but that do so
without attempting to provide selective later this month. Sen. Paul Sarbanes, D-Md..
Incentives for people on the basis of how a key figure In Foreign Relations Committee
m uch wealth . they have or how much hearings on economic sanctions and mili­
tary deployment against Iraq. Is expected to
Income they earn."
Minarlk a d d e d , " I n o t h e r words, regain the J E C c h a i r m a n s h i p from
Hamilton. Sarbanes chaired the committee
'trickle-down* doesn't work."

G N P up 1.4 percent
for third quarter
3V
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
gross nation product, the
output of goods and eervtaea.
increased 1.4 percent, or
614.B billion, in the third
quarter, the Commerce De­
partment sold Wednesday.
In its final report on third
quarter GNP. the goveraaseat
said the econom y firmed
during the third quarter from
a real GNP Increase of 0.4
percent, or 94.5 billion, in the
second quarter.
The GNP price index rose
4.2 percent in the quarter,
compared with a gain of 3.9
percent In the second quarter.
Increases were posted In
real personal comsumptlon
spending, which gained 918
billion during the quarter
after rising 91.5 billion in the
second quarter.
Non-residentlal fixed In­
vestments also rose, posting a
gain of 910.9 billion during
the quarter after
96.3 percent in the
quarter.
Residential fixed invest­
m ents decreased by 99.6
billion after slipping 99.5

Federal governm ent
of goods and aervim
the q u a rte r after gaining
912.9 luittmi ia the second
q u arter. N ational defense
purchases Increased by 91.7
MBton after rising 93.1 bUHou
In the previoue quarter.
Final sales for the quarter
Increased 1.9 percent, or
919.7 billion, during the
quarter after falling 0.7 per­
cen t or 97.3 Mlllon, In the
second quarter.
inventories sub­
tracted 94.9 billion from the
third-quarter change In real
GNP. the government said,
after adding 911.7 Uttion to
the second-quarter figures.
Businesses Increased in­
ventories by 94.7 bUIion dur­
ing the quarter after bolster­
ing inventories by 99.5 billion

M a n y S o v ie ts
a re a sh a m e d
o f fo o d a id

O PEN TIL
MIDNIGHT
UNTIL
D E C 23.

Knightjjddsf Nawspapara
MOSCOW - A c l a s s or
Moscow 13-year-olds was asked
th e other day whether they
thought International food aid
for the beleaguered Soviet Union
waa a good Idea.
Only one said yea: "We cannot
manage without U." The others
all thought It waa bad for the
economy, bad for morale, un­
necessary and humiliating.
Credits by the billion and food
by the ton are arriving In
Moacow to help the Soviet Union
through a bitter winter. But not
everyone thinks charity la a
great idea, or welcomes the food
with gratitude.
"It's a disgrace for Ruaela."
said Mikhail Gladlahev, chief
engineer at Refrigeration Plant
No. 14. He described the de­
m and for aid as "useless."
"It's the attitude of a depen­
dent. People will think. 'Why
ahould I work tf 1 am given
£ everything?’"
Of course, Soviet workers are
not famous for their good work
habits, even without charity. U
acems unlikely that relatively
small amounts of aid In such a
vast and troubled country will
further diminish efficiency.
The political and psychological
dimension of International chari­
ty weighs more heavily than the
modest Improvement in condi­
tions provided by donations of
cereal, powdered milk, apple
sauce, butter, meat and choco­
late.
"Aid has nothing to do with
economica. It has nothing to do
with whether this country is
going to survive." said Yuri
Chernlchenko. a writer who
leads the Peasants’ Party. "It's
like treating symptoms. Candy la
good, but a thrombosis Is a
thrombosis."
President Mikhail Gorbachev
h as resisted radical economic
r moves. Including the creation of
&lt;private property, advocated by
^opposition legislators such as
(Chemlchenko. Preoccupied with
{holding the country together,
lo rb a c h e v Is struggling to
rim pose a measure of familiar
imunlst discipline.
"They're still fighting each
ter to see who has the upper
ind. The food aid will be a part
f the power struggle," predicted
tndrel Kortunov. a political
Jyst In Moscow.
Gorbachev sought the aid at
month's Paris meeting of
Vorld leaders. He wants to
steel the Soviet Union's insingly fragile peace and to
seen domestically as the
rtet leader best able to deliver
i from his foreign allies.
[ Yet. there is Increasing talk of
need for a firm hand as the
m iry's economy. Infrastrucand system of government
itinues to disintegrate.
'People will survive, but with
it hardship." Kortunov said
[the coming winter. "They will
IIrritated, and they will put the
u on Gorbachev and the
Js who are In charge, and
will be more willing to seek
snghand.”
te country's food problems
tot be called famine. At this
it. referring to hunger would
stretching the truth.
lose who oppose charity
rve the country should conIrate — out of shame. If
Mng else — to solve Its own
"ems.

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�Rams, Tribe step aside
Lake Mary, Sem inole
bounced in C la s s ic

Apopka hammars OCS Rama
APOPKA — Three playen scored in double
figures for Apopka Wednesday night to lead the
Blue Darters to a 74-48 rout of the Orangewood
Christian Rams In the consolation game of the
Apopka Finest Four Christmas Classic.
Warren Sapp scored 18 points. Mourtce
Jen k in s added 17 and Thatcher Howard
contributed 11 for Apopka. 8-1.
Orangewood Christian. 8-5. was paced by
Daniel Parke, who connected on a school-record
six three-point attempts In scoring a game-high
33 points. Overall. Park was 12 for 26. David
Jacobs chipped in with nine points of 3-of-4
shooting, five rebounds, four steals and four
assists.
Next up for the Rams is Fort LauderdaleWestminster Academy, runners-up at last year’s
Class 1A stale tournam ent to champion
Wymore Tech. Orangewood Christian and
Westminster will play In the firs* game of Lake
Highland tournament next Thursday.

SyBBAHI

Hersld sports writer

SANFORD — Winter Park stunned Lake Mary. West
Orange rolled over foul plagued Seminole. Oviedo
stayed alive and Lyman won its first game of the season
In second round action of the 1990 Central Florida
Classic at Seminole Community College Wednesday

&amp;
There wasn't much Coech Oreo
Robinson (above) or Kerry Wiggins
(below) could do to keep 8enilnole
from losing to West Orange.

OHANSCWOOO CHRISTIAN (41)

Jacob* J &gt; • 4. HuWord 0 S I 0. SontH I V* &gt;. Anterton I 04 1.
Stowart I 1 1 5 Parte 115115 LordOSlO. Total*: I7S714S.

n&gt;Wllitam Brooks Upped in a miss at the buster as
Winter Park nipped Lake Mary 72-71. West Orange
continued to be impressive with a 75-33 triumph over
Seminole while Oviedo outacored Bishop Moore 73-88
and Lyman held on for a 32-29 victory over University.
Today at SCC’s Health and Physical Education
Center. Lake Mary plays Lyman at 4 p.m.. Seminole
faces Oviedo at 5:30 p.m.. West Orange squares ofT with
Lake Howell at 7 p.m. and Lake Brantley challenges
Winter Park at 8:30 p.m.
The final three games will be played Friday starting
at 5 p.m.
Lake Mary nailed 70-67 with 1:00 left In the game
but a three-point play by Matt MacDonald and a
beautiful steal at midcourt and layup by Mike Merthle

gave the Rams a 71-70 lead with 0.22 left.
After a time out. the Wildcats worked the ball to Riley
McKenzie, who missed a Jumper with 0:03 left. Both
teams tiled for the rebound but no one could control It
until Brooks tipped the ball at the basket. The ball sat
on the rim before falling through as the horn sounded.
Both teams got off to a slow start with the game tied
10-10 with 2:00 left In the ftrst quarter. That's when
things started to heat up. In the last 1:49 of the stanza,
the teams combined for 10 points with Winter Park
leading 17-13at the end of the first period.
The teams took turns at leading In the second
quarter, but at the intermission. It was still a four-point
Wildcat lead. 35-31.
Jason Hamelln of the Rams overcame a first-half
shooting slump to nail two straight 3-polnters to tie the
game at 37-37. The rest of the game saw one team, then
the other take the momentum. After three quarters.
Lake Mary led 56-54.
Brooks for the Wildcats and Merthle for the Rams had
the big fourth quarters for their respective teams as
Brooks scored nine points in the stanza and Merthle
scored six points and had several assists.
Brooks led Winter Park (6-3) with 19 points followed
by Chris Beauford (17) and McKenzie (13).
For Lake Mary (3-3). Hamelln and Mertlhe had 16
points each. John Roche 13 points and Alonzo
Brundldge 12.
Class le. Page 2B

APOPKA (74)

Cotton I 00 7, Dow* 3 SO 4, Scarborough 100 4. Thom** 77) 4
Jamot t 14 1. Soane* 1 M 1 Sags • St t l Hammock 1 »« 1.
Jonkln«714l7. Howard! 1 ' 11. Total*: S0IS74
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Apapte
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T V o o -o d n t
god* - U n lvo rtlty 1 (Santanol. Lym an 1 ( H tn lk l. Total
tout* - U n lvartlty 7. Lym an 4. Foutoa out - note. T o dm ka l* _ Univortlty.
lite ra l wtetltutton. R x o r d * - Lym an 1-4.

OSU Cowboy* dump Dolphin*
STILLWATER. Okla. - A final exam made
Oklahoma State's Johnny Pittman run a little
late Wednesday night, but he passed a big lest
once the game began.
Pittman had career highs with 22 points and
five blocks In leading the Cowboys to a 91-58
victory over Jacksonville. Oklahoma Slate
Improved to 7-1. Its best start since beginning
12-1 in 1982.
The Cowboys led by 17 at halftime-and
Jacksonville (4-4) got no closer than 13 after
that.
Reggie Law led Jacksonville with 22 points.
18 of those In the first half.

Deveaux pacts Tampa
TAMPA — Drexel Deveaux scored 3 6 p o i n t s to
lead The University of Tampa to a 1 1 4 -9 0
victory over St. M a r y ’s of Michigan Wednesday.
Bryan Williams scored 19 points for T a m p a .
3-2. Karel Dopw Ml added 17.
St. Mary’s was led by James Gillespie, who
scored 31 points, including being 4 for 7 from
the 3-polnt range.

St. Lao tops Balmont Abbay
ST. LEO — Tyrone Graves scored 25 points to
boost St. Leo to a 93-72 victory over Belmont
Abbey Wednesday night.
Eric Brooks scored 21 points for the St. Leo
Monarchs. 2-8. Errol Wooten led the Belmont
Abbey Crusaders. 7-5. with 14 points. Shane
Trull added 10.

BASKBTBALL
Heat Iotas ninth straight gam*
MIAMI — Patrick Ewing took control late in
the game, scoring nlhe straight points, to give
New York a 104-94 victory over the Miami Heat
Wednesday night and even John McLeod's
record as Knlckscoach at 4- 4.

The Heat closed to 88-84 with six minutes to
go In the game when Ewing went to work. He
started with a free throw, scored two field goals
underneath and then sank four straight free
throws and the Knlcks had a comfortable 98 89
edge with 2:54 left.
Miami was led by Sherman Douglas and Glen
Rice with 23 points each.

FOOTBALL
Jankovlch hsadsd north?
HEMPSTEAD. N.Y. — The New England
Patriots, facing massive rebuilding of their onund off-fleld images, are finalizing the hiring of
University of Miami Athletic Director Sain
Jankovlch as Director of Football Operations.
A Patriots spokesman said New England
owner Victor Klam. Jankovlch and current
General Manager Patrick Sullivan continued
meeting at Ktam's Manhattan town house but
that the deal has not been finalized.
New England has lost 12 straight games since
a controversy over players' sexual harassment
of a female sports writer. In addition, star
receivers Irving Fryar and Hart Lee Dykes were
Involved In a brawl at a Rhode Island nightclub.

CwmpUwdfr—iwrkw —

BASKBTBALL
□8:30 p in. - WKCF 68. Orlando Magic at
Houston Rockets. |L)
CompUU llsttne 4h N f d t l

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It. WrlgMSSSa BalNwm 1M a Rotor*5SS 11. Lowman SSI 10. Tabtcort 1
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■ISMOFMOORI (111

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—none. Tedwkalo —none. Retard*—Ovtode &gt;a ShteF **w a S-a

WIST ORANSI (71)
Hylton 01-11. Down* I 1 7 1. Smith 1*14 15. M V y O I 1 1. Rllko 4 11 10.
Sloan 188 a Raicot 11-4 5. Stew 4 51 ia McCaffrey 1115. Mafltewt • 88 a
CoillnoOOSa toll 11 i a Angry « I S 1. Total*: 1S1I 4475
SIMIMOLI tn t
Montgomery 0 SO a Redding I SS 1, Lomei 1 SS 4 J. Wlggifl* S M 1.
Benton I SS 1. Lowronco 0 SS 0. ON##l I SO 17. Hall 4 8 1 4 Washington 41-3
14 White I S I a Walker 1SO 1. Wiggins SOO10. Total*: a 54 SI.
WottOraaga
11 14 14 It - SI
Somtaeto
14 11 IS n - IS
Throe-point Hold goal* - Wott Orange 4 (Smith a Rllko). Total foul* —
Wot! Orange It, Seminole 77. Foutod out - Somlnoto. Hell. O'Neal,
fechnlca't —non*. Rocordt —W#*t Orange 51, Somlnoto 84.
LAKI MARY (71)
Hamelln 4 11 14 BrundWgo S 11 II. Brown 1 S I 4 Arrow 0 SS 4
MacOoteW 111 4 Merthle 111 14 Networthy I OS 5 Roche 4 1-1 15 Total*:
M0I17I.
WINTRR FARR (71)
Cortou OSS 5 Benton I SOI. Foy I SI 7, MtKanile S 54 15 Rubin J SI 4.
B**utord 7 55 17. Wilton 1 SS 7. Brook* 154 14.0'Brton 1 SS 4 Total*: II 514
LeteMary
II IS a 1 1 - 7 1
Winter Fork
17
IS 14 18 — 71
Thro*-point ItoW goal* - Lake Mery 1(HemeUn 1). Winter Park I
(Wilton). Total tool* - Lake Mary 14 Winter Park 14 Foutod out - Late
Mary. Brown. Winter Park. Wilton. Technical* - non*. Record* - Late
Mary 5 5 Winter Park 5 5

R a m s , H o r n e t s ro m p in o p e n e r s
ByTO N Y

Herald Sports Editor
LAKE MARY — Now with the formality of the
first round out of the way, things should start
getting Interesting In the bracket of the Burger
King Girls' Soccer Classic being played at Lake
Mary's Don T. Reynolds Stadium.
Both Bishop Moore and Fort Lauderdale's St.
Thomas Aquinas — the last two Class 3A state
champions — used strong second halves to
advance, the Bishop Moore Hornets turning a 1-0
halftime lead Into a 6-1 win over Melbourne while
St. Thomas scored three second-half goals to beat
Dr. Phillips 3-0.
Host Lake Mary cakewalked by overmatched
Melbourne-Eau Gallic 11-0 while TallahasseeLincoln bounced West Orange out of the
tournament with a 2-0 decision.
Today, Melbourne would have played West
Orange at 2 p.m.. but because Orange County
schools arc still In session and Orange County
docs not allow students to miss classes to play
sports. West Orange will have to forfeit.
The rest of today's schedule has Eau Gallic and
Dr. Phillips tangling at 4 p.m.. Bishop Moore
facing Lincoln at 6 p.m. and Lake Mary taking on
St. Thomas at 8 p.m.
Three games are also scheduled to be played
today at Lyman High School (sec related story).
For Lake Mary Coach Bill Elssele. the most
difficult part of the Rams' win over sartorially
sharp Eau Gallic was keeping the score respect­
able without stlfllingthc effort of his team.
"It’s tough to tell the young kids who don't get
to play much not to go forward and score.** said
Elssele. ’’We tried to work the ball and find the
open player. We were trying to be more creative
In our attack.'*
The Rams were all of that and accomplished
the feat with great efficiency. Eight different

players scored goals as Lake Mary launched 31
shots on goal. 23 of which either -went In or
required the Eau Gallie 'keeper to make a save.
"I'm very happy with our shooting." said
Elssele."
It took over 14 minutes for Lake Mary to get on
the board. Joy Gorman converting on a pass
from April Goas at 14:06 of the first half. After
that, the longest period of time between Ram
goals was 11:43.
Gorman finished with three goals while Jessica
Dibble scored twice, both goals coming in the
second half. Adrian Hemmerly. Darby Fielder.
Shayne Thomas. Jen Evans. Dana Mills and
Angela Cooley each scored one goal.
Jen Preston and Megan Coduto shared the
goalkeeping chores for Lake Mary, each playing a
half. Preston had to make two saves while
Coduto did not face a shot in the second half.
In Bishop Moore's win over Melbourne. Amy
Geltz and Stephanie Feulner each scored two
goals. Christine Bourne and Mandy Ross scored a
goal apiece. Stephanie Grlnger passed out a pair
of assists while Feulner had one assist. Cort
Vaileau and Sara Esllnger combined on the
shutout.
"The ladles are playing r e a l l y w e l l . " said
Bishop Moore Coarh Lany Betslngcr. "In the first
half. It was the typical stuff of playing in the
Burger King Jitters. But they got over It in the
second half and started playing a little bit
better."
For St. Thomas. Heidi Foster and Misti DIMeola
each scored a goal while Dr. Phillips contributed
an own goal. Theresa Lois assisted on Phillips'
goal.
Lincoln outshot West Orange 23-3 In the
nightcap. Angle Van Landlngham and Meghan
Boudreau scoring goals. Goalie Carly Reiter
made two saves to post the shutout. Each team
had four comer kicks.

itgiUBrJ
Shayne Thomas (right) was one of eight different
Lake Mary players who scored a goal In an 11-0
rout ol Melbourne-Eau Gallie Wednesday evening

’ H o u n d s , S ilv e r H aw ks join P a trio ts in q u arterfin als
By FMIL SMITH

Herald Correspondent
LONGWOOD — Tracy Shcr scored a goal and
an assist to lead the Lyman Greyhounds to a 3-0
victory' of the Boone Braves in the first round of
the Burger King Girls Soccer Classic Wednesday
evening ut Lyman High School.
In other games played at Lyi»an. Lake Howell
blew out Tainpa-Berklcy Prep 8-0 and Winter
Park topped Deltona 2-0.
Today at Lyman. Berkley Prep faces Boone at 4
p.m. tn an ellmatlon game while Lyman plays
Lake Howell at 6 p.m. and Lake Brantley tackles
Winter Park ut 8 p.m. tn winners' bracket games.
Three games will also be played at Lake Mary
High School this evening (see related story).
The Greyhounds Improve their record to 10-1-1
with a superb defensive efTort from Ctndy
Kirkconnell. Amy Meyers. Krtstlna Musante and
Jessica Martinson. The Braves only managed
three shots on goal during the contest and only
mounted one serious scoring opportunity.
"We had Meyers and Kirkconnell back In the

line-up together for the first time this season."
said Lyman Coach Jim Thompson. "They’ve
both been out with Injuries. Their presence really
helped make a difference.”
Lyman dominated the match at midfield due to
the excellent play of Sher. Danielle Garrett. Shcrt
McClellan and Amy Smith. The Greyhound
midfielders set up the offense time and time
again, winning almost every ball and taking It
away when they lost one.
The Greyhounds struck early, scoring on their
first shot on goal. Sher made an excellent
crossing pass from the left wing, connecting with
Smith In stride In the center of the penality box.
Smith one-ttmed It Into the net. giving the
Greyhounds the lead only 1:45 Into the contest.
Klrconnell scored from 25 yards out at the
10-mtnute mark when the Boone goalkeeper kick
a loose ball right to her and Kirkconnell promptly
booted a shot into the upper left com er of the net.
In the 20th minute. Shcr got to a loose bail In
Ihe box. maneuvered past Iwo lefenders and
scored lo make It a 3-0 contest.

Although the Greyhounds did not score for the
rest of the game, they continued to dominate the
m atch, c reatin g several other scoring op­
portunities that did not result In goals.
"Everybody got a chance to play and all of the
girls played very well." said Thompson.
In Ihe first game played al Lyman on
Wednesday. Michelle Harris scored a hat trick
and had an assist while Joanna Abbott scored
twice to power the Lake Howell Sliver Hawks
past the Berkley Preparatory School Buccaneers.
Monica Compton and Erica Urtckhcroff each
had a goal and an assist. Kim Baggett scored a
goal, and Jocllc Fries and Jessica Cardarelli each
assisted on a goal to add to the Silver Hawk
attack.
Lake Howell's defense was equally Impressive,
not allowing a shot on goal during Ihe match.
Brandye Batten and Christina Lawhorn each
scored a goal to lead the Winter Park Wildcats to
a 2-0 victory over the Deltona Wolves. The
Wildcats outshot the Wolves 25-1 and had six
cornerklck opportunities.

�M — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thursday, December 20, 1990

S T A T S &amp; STA N D IN G S
a f »-«) n a

|TOPAVS

]

•OVt’ BASKETBALL
Central Florida Claiale at
Seminate Community Colltfa:
Lake Mary vs. Lyman, 4 p.m.;
Seminole vs. Oviedo, 5:30 p.m.;
West Orange vs. Lake Howell, 7
.m.; W inter Park vs. Lake
rantley, 8:30 p.m.

GIRLS'SOCCER
Burger King Classic at Lake
Mary High School: MelbourneEau Gallie vs. Dr. Phillips, 4 p.m.;
Bishop Moore vs. TallahasseeLincoln, 8 p.m.; Lake Mary vs.
Fort Laudsrdale-St. Thom as
Aquinas, 8p.m.
at Lyman High School: Tam­
pa-Berkley Prep vs. Boone, 4
p.m.; Lyman vs. Lake Howell, 6
p.m.; Lake Brantley vs. Winter
Park, 8 p.m.

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Cleveland 54. LA Lekert 74
Detroit l t l Chicago A*
Wathlngtan 1IA Indiana 111 (OTI
New Verb 1*4. Mlaaei *4
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San Antonie 1*4. Denver 10*
Phoanle 111, Mlnneteta**
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Beaton at Charlotte. 7:Mp m
Utah at Atlanta. 7:M p.m.
Ortaadeat ttoxatoa. i ; M pm .
Portland at Goldtn State. 10 10 p m
Seattle at Sacramento. 10:10 p m.
Friday Garnet
Cleveland at New Jertey, 7.10pm
New York al Washington, I p m
PhtledtlpMeef Miami, 7:Mpm.
Atlanta at Detroit, I p.m.
Charlotte at Indiana. 7:Mp m.
LA Laken at Chicago, t pm .
Mitaraukoeat Delia*. 0:10 p.m.
San Antonio at Ptwtnla,»: M p.m.
Portland at LA Cllppart. 10:10pm.

Francisco

» M ik e M u n c h a k . H o u s to n ; S te v e
W isniew ski. Los Angeles R aiders
C a n to r — 1 Kent H u ll. B u lla lo . Don
M oseber. Los Angeles Raiders
K ic k e r — N ick Lowery. K a n sa sC lty
Detonse
E n d — &gt; Bruce Smith, B u lla lo , a Greg
Townsend. Los Angeles R aiders. JeH Cress.
M ia m i
Tackto — a M ichael Dean P erry . Cleve
land; R ay Childress. Houston.
O utitd e linebacker — a D e rric k Thomas,
Kansas C ity ; a Leslie O’Neal. San Diego.
C o rnelius Bennett, Buffalo
Inside lin eb acker — a-Jehn Of N r da W.
M ia m i; a Shan* Conlan. B u lla lo . D avid
Littto. P ittsb u rgh
Carnet back — a Rod Woodson. Pittsburgh
a A lb e rt Lew is. Kansas C ity; Kevin Ross.
K a n sa tC Ity .
Satoy — a Stove Atwater. Denver; a David
Fulcher, Cincinn ati. Dennis Sm ith, Denver
P un ter — R ohr stark, Indianapollt.
K k k re tu rn — Clarence V erdin. Indlenapo
lit.
Sp e cia l Team s — Stove Tasker, B u lla lo

Cmtor - t Jay Hllgenberg. Chicago. B ari
Oates. New York GianN
Kicker—Morten Andrnrn. New Or leant
In * — a Reggie Whit*. P hilad elp h ia;
e Chris Doleman. Minnesota. R ich a rd Dent.
Chicago
Tackto — a Jerom e Brown. P hiladelphia;
Jerry B a ll. Detroit
OeNMe linebacker — e Charles H aley. San
Francisco; l Lawrence Taylor, New York
G ianlt; P a l Sw ill mg. New Or leant
IntMe linebacker — a Pepper Johnton,
N ew Y o r k G ia n lt ; a M ik e S in g le ta r y .
Chicago: Vaughan Johnson. New O rlean s
Cernerback — ■ D arrell Green. Washing
Ion. i C a rl Lee. Minrwiota; W ayne H ePOn ,
Tamp*
y
Safety — 1 Joey Browner. M innesota;
1 Ronnie Lott. San Francisco; M a rk C arrier.
Chicago
Pentor — Sean Landeta. New Y o rk G iants
K k k return — Mel Gray. Detroit
Special teams — Reyna Thompson, New
Y ork Giants
AFC
Otlensa
Quarterback — ■ Warren Moon, Houston;
J im K e lly . Buffalo
Running back — « T hurm an Thomas.
Bullalo; 1 M arlon Butts. San Diego: Bobby
Humphrey. Denver. Bo Jackson. L os Angeles
Raiders
Wide receiver — * Andre Reed. B ullalo.
■ Anthony M ille r. Sen Diego, D rew H ill.
Houston; Ernest G lv ln v Houston.
Tight end — ■ Rodney Holman, Cincinnati;
F arrell Edmunds, M iam i
Tackle — &gt; Anthony M unoi. Cincinnati;
1 B ru c e A r m s tr o n g . N e w E n g la n d .
Richm ond Webb, Miam i.
Oeard — » B ruce Matthews. Houston

Quebec

NorrIt Division
W L T PH. OF OA
14 II ISO 131*1
70 * 4 44 III *0
17 1)4 M I M 174
10 114 7*10111*
*35 1 70 to 144
Smyth* O viston
Calgary
70 It 4 44 145 10*
L o t Angeles
17 10 51*113 10*
Vancouver
&gt;* 17131 I0M1O
Edmonton
13 14131 t* **
Winnipeg
10 30 7 37 170 13*
WednetdiT R esu lH
Toronto *. NY R *«l»rs I
Quebec I. Montreal 1 (O T )
Chicago 3. Washlrgton 7

Chicago
SI Louis
Detroit
Mlnnesote
Toronto

Thursday Oames

Buffalo at Boston. 7 35 p m

H artford at NY Islanders. 7 AS p m .
New Jersey al Philadelphia. 7 At p m
Minnesota at Plltdm rgh. 7 IS p m
Washington*!SI Louis.* 35 p m .
Winnipeg at Detroit. 7:15p m
Los Angelei al Calgary, t ;35 p m
Edm onton*! Vancouver. 10:35pm
Friday Games
No games scheduled

NHL STANDMM
W ales Cantortnc*
Patrick Christen
N L T P fl. O F OA
N Y R a o g a fi
30 17 5 45 141 113
P h ila d e lp h ia
1* 14 1 41 177 171
New J e n o y
171151*131 DO
W aiM n g ton
II M O M 11* t i l
P lttib u rg h
14 1* 115 144 131
N Y lila n d e r i
It t4 4 M *1 114
Adam? Dhritton
Boiton
i i i t s a l m io*
M ontreal
14 14 4 M 111 114
H artford
14 14 4 31 *7 II)
Buffalo
If 15 71*tO) i l l

111 711 N11S4
Campbell Centotence

ITWANtACTIONS

n m sta te
4 Ole*. Reyet
*40 1A M 120
I R icard o Uralde
14.40 (.10
} Said Andy
4 40
Q ( M l 17.40 P ISA) A N (S A ID 14.SO (A H JI
31.4* T (SS 1 I *14.44
1 1th game
4 Liam .Bob
4 40 I N 1.40
3 Irlgoyen. Mendl
1.40 140
I R ica rd o Chlmel*
l. M
Q ( M l K 4 * P ( S l l H A M T ( S S I ) U * .M
gO I4-* AaU-41 U A M
Mth game
4 Urguldl
17 M 14 40 4 40
I Liam
J 40 A M
1 Bob
140

a,— 1

i0L==-----------,a )
—
• : b 0 0 0
1 I0Y.3 |
• J0 0 0 0

Oakley S7 SS M. Venderweghe Al] l ] 7.
Ewing PH S t* 14. Jackton S10 1-1 II. G
Wilkin* A* SS II, Walker Al SO a, E. Wllklnt
11 S4 A Starkt S ll 00 10, Mu*ta1 4 4 11 10
Total* D-77)0-4104.
MIAMI (Ml
Long O lA O O . Thom peon0 1 0 0 0 . Salkaly
7 14 1 4 i s Dowglat 101* 1 1 11. Rica * 30 54
77. Edw ard* 14 A 0 A Burton S10 1 4 IS,
R a ttle r I I I I 7 D a v itO O A O t. C o le i M O O T .
Sundvold I S A A A A tkin* A 0 A 0 0. Total* 3*
10 IS IS *4.

New Verb
M V IS M - 1*4
Miami
i t m M M - *4
Three point goal*-Burton. Sundvold A
Fouled out—non* Total loult—New York 10,
Miami 35 Rebound»-Now York 4* {Oakley
1*1, Miami 14 ISalkaly 13). A ulttt-N ew
York 17 (Jackton 1*1, Mloml 17 (Douglat SI
Tachnlcais-nono. A—IS.0M.

X

THfcfc

i

lO A ll
j M a tin e e s

i — i Joe Montana. San Fran
cltco; Randall Cunnln^iam, Philadelphia
RoaaMgkoth - * Barry SanderI. Detroit;
a Neal Anderion, Chicago; Eomatl Byner,
Washington; Johnny Jchnton. Phoenle.
W ide receiver — ■ Je rry Rica. San Fran
c ltc o ; a A n d r t R lt o i. A tla n ta ; S terlin g
Sharp*. Green Bay; G ary C lark, Washington
T ig h t a n d — ■ K e it h J a c k t o n .
P hiladelphia; Stove Jordan. Minnesota.
T a c k le — a J im Lac hey, Washington;
a Ja c k ie Slater, L o t Angeles Ram s; Lom as
Brow n, O a lro i'.
O eard - a R andall M cO an lel. Minnesota;
a M a rk B o rti, Chicago: G uy M cIntyre, San

With 1:54 left In the game
Mark Busch hit a free throw to
give the Hornets a 68-67 lead.
Little did anyone know, but that
would be the Iasi point Bishop
Moore would score. Field goals
by Ian Forrest. Simon Harper
and Forresl Rogers and two free
(hrows by Mark Bcllhorn ac­
counted for an 8-0 run as the
Lions Improved to 3-5.
Harper paced a quartet lulu
double figures with 18 points.
Also In doubles were Rogers (12|.
W o o d a rd (11) a n d L eo n
Lowmanf 10).
For Bishop Moore (5-3) Andrew
Buckler scored 19 points and
Busch und Sheridan Washington
added 10 points each.
The Lyman-Unlverslty m at­
chup was one of (he strangest
gam es seen In a long lime.
Lyman held a 31-14 lead with
6:13 left In the game. The score
was still 31-14 with 3.03 lo play
when the Cougars went uu a
15 0 scoring spree and Irailed
only 3 1-29 wit h 0:43 remaining.
But Lyman killed the clock to
win Its first game In seven starts
this season.
Floyd Nelson was the only
G reyhound In double figures
with 13 points. Bueky I’urdoni
led the Cougars with a game
high 16 points.

- Control
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1 • Eity To Initall On Mott Can and ^
r Light Truck*
1 • Wort* OnFront orRear WhaglOrlv**. 9
| Automatic or Minual Tranamiuloni
X

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Circuitry
A
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For Long lit*
■ P SAVE 1
■ 10.00 9
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SPECIAL
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Heavy Duty
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BASKETBALL
130 p m
- W B Z S A M (1770). College
U C F a t Sem lord
1 3 0 p m . - W W NZ A M (740), N BA
Or lando M a g ic a l Houston Rockets
M ISC E LLA N E O U S
*: 10 p m. - WWNZ AM 1740). SportsTalk
* » p m. - W BZS A M 11170). The Business
o l Sports
110* p m - W B Z S A M (1770). The Sports
Final/Sp o rts Overnight

M A K E B E A U T I F U L C H R I S T M A S M U S I C WI T H S P A R K O M A T I C

1

ClassicContinued from IB
Seminole trailed defending
classic champion West Orange
23-21 with 3:25 left In the
scrond quarter. But the Tribe
w ent alm ost th re e m in u te s
without scoring. durlAg which
time the Warriors scored nine
points to lake a 32-21 advan­
tage. West Orange led 35-25 at
the break.
The Semlnolcs stayed within
striking distance, trailing 53-41
after three quarters. Hut a 22-12
fourth quarter scoring advantage
for the Warriors turned the game
Into a rout.
West Orange Improved lo 5-1
with the win. the only loss a
102-86 defeat ut the hands of
state-ranked Daytona BeachSeabreeze. Leading the way was
Q uentin Sm ith (25 points).
Jason Shaw 113 pnlnls) and
Dennis Kllkof 10 points).
For Seminole. (0-6) Wesley
O'Neal (12 points) and Shawn
Washington and Kerry Wiggins
110 points each) were In double
figures.
Oviedo again gave away a
sizeable halftime lead, 45-37,
and trailed 54-40 with 2:22 left
In the third quarter. But unlike
T uesday n ig h t's game with
W ilder Park, th e Lions re ­
grouped and came back.

BASKETBALL
7 30 p m
— E S P N , C o lle g e , Loyola
M arym oun l a l LSI). (L)
I 30 p m — 4*. NBA. O rlando e l Houston.
ID
II p m . - SC. College. San Jose SI., (L)
M idnight - E S P N . College. Tennessee al
N e w M e ik o . IL)
B O X IN G
* JO p m. — ESPN . Lightw eights. Greg
Haugen vs. B illy "T h e K k t'- Young, (LI
HOCKEY
7:30 p m. — SC. N H L New Je rse y Devils at
P hiladelphia F lye rs, (L)
T E N N IS
* p m . — SU N. F o ri/n Challenge. Michael
Chang vs. Pete Sampras

Discount
fluto Parts

N I W Y O R K (1*41

I Garay
1* 00I N 410
« F r la t
11.10 1.40
1 P ierre
1.00
Q (1-4) n . M P ( M l M .M T (1-4-1) 441.4* S
(M S 1 I4 4 A 4 *
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IM Ik e l UraMta
1*40 D M 10*0
5 Said-Bob
S OO 4 40
1 Irlgoyen Lacue
7.30
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Ninth oante
1 Irlgoyen Reyet
M OO 15.10 S N
S Liam Forurie
1*10 4 M
4 F r la i L k u *
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Q U 71 *7.40 P ( M l *1.M T (7 M l S47.M
itlh t e m e
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11.00 1.00 4 00
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A M 100
S Ll*m
IN
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11 JO M .M 1.00
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S R k a rd o L e c u e
30 40
Q (1 7) 47.40 P (7-1) I M J * T ( M l ) SSI.M
P k * 11041) ll. M Jackpt* S I M M

TVfftADIO

Radie

Baseball
Beslan — Signed Ire* agent pitcher
O arn y Darw in to a year contract
California - Signed Inlietder Donnie H ill
to I year contract
L a s Angelas - A n n o u n ce d p itch er
Fernando Valemuel* end inlietder M ickey
Hatcher accepted salary arbitration: desig
noted pitcher Darren Holmes tor assignment

0 ( M l to JO PISSI M*J* T ( S M I SH AM
5*v*nto|*m*

Oakland — Named R k k Burleson tutting
Instructor
P llt ib e r g k - Ottered a rb itra tio n to
catcher Don 5taught
San Plage — Sigred pitcher M ik e Dunne
to I year contract
Seattle - Signed be* agent pitcher Bill
Krueger to I year contract.
T e ia s — Signed diorlstop J e ll Kunkel to
1 year contract

N iik l- t o , *ftl

Z'“

Hurry, Sale Ends December 2 5 ,1 9 9 0 1

47TM i Oft* t (•

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�Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thursday. December 20, 1990 — M

People
IN BRIEF
Sing to benefit Eagles
The Fraternal Order of Eagles *4184. 2672 S. Orlando Ave..
Sanford, will host a benefit stng-along on Friday. December 21.
from 9 p.m. to l a.m. Public Is Invited.

Garden of the Month
Begonias encircling a birch
tree and coleus ringing the
maple tree are the points of
interest In the yard of the 0.
Bryants. Marigolds end azaleas
front the d w e l l i n g w hi le
llgustrum hedges border the
home. Pots of geranluns front
the driveway. The garden was
chosen by Mrs. L.M. Swain and
Mrs. J.R. Hoolshan of the
Mimosa Circle for the Garden
Club of Sanford.

Kids and paronta invitad
The City of Sanford Recreation Department will hold a
Christmas party at the Downlown Youth Center, first floor of
city hall, tonight. Dec. 20 from 6*8 p.m. All youth and parents
are Invited.

Singles will dine
On Monday. December 24. J u s t Friends, a Sanford
community singles group, will be m eeting for Christmas Eve
dinner at Bahama Joe's. All singles are Invited, and please
bring as many family and friends as you want.
Call 330-0715 to reserve a place with the Just Friends table.
Following the dinner, everyone Is Invited to attend the
Christmas Eve service at First Presbyterian Church of Sanford.
30 IS . Oak Ave.
Call 322-2662 for more Information.

Ilf

Call il you are dapreaaod

t

Christmas Is a time for Joy and celebration, laughter and
good cheer. It Is also a time for loneliness, depression and
aching hearts. You don't have to face It alone. Central Florida
Helpline Is there for you 24 hours a day every day of the week.
Call 740-7477 to get you through thlsdllTIcuh season.

v&gt;,

L iv e -in tired o f livin g lover’s lie

Colora will ba posted

DEAJt ABBY: I have been
going with a divorced man for
the last three years. For the first
year and a half he was living
with a girl, then she moved out
of the state. When she moved
out. I moved In and have been
staying at his house ever since.
My problem Is that he wants to
remain friends with his "ex."
which Is OK with me. but he lies
to her. When she calls and asks
If he's seeing anyone, he says,
"No." Once when I answered
thcr phone and she asked him
who I was. he said. "It's Ihc
maid."
I am sick of being hidden from
his "ex.” (He tells me not to
make any noise when he's on
the phone with her.) What can 1
do to stop him from hiding me
and lying to her':’

On Wednesday. December 26. the Winter Springs Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 6405 and Its Ladles Auxiliary will be
posting the colors at the Sanford Orlando Kennel Club at 7:30
p.m. on opening night.

Club helps needy
Oviedo Woman a Club members held a catered Christmas
luncheon on December 14.
Members have chosen a needy family in Ihc community to
support with food, clothing and baby Items. The single parent
family will be the recipient of these Items throughout the
coming year, not only at this holiday season.

NIW ARRIVALS
Central Florida Regional Hospital
December 3 — Carole D. and Kevin L. Arcaro. Deltona, baby
boy.
December 7 — Anita Brown. Sanford, baby boy: Elsie M. and
Jam es R. Johnson. Sanford, baby girl; Jennifer L. and Robert
L. Richardson. DcBary. baby girl.
December 8 — Cheryl L.. &amp; Rodney A. Turner. Sanford, baby
boy.
December 9 - Daphanle A. Melts Ac Dennis L. Flaudlng. Lake
Mary, baby girl: Natascha J. Ac George R. Adams. Sanford, baby
boy: Chrlstal At Jo h n Slm m crm an, Sanford, baby boy;
Shannon Davla. Sanford, baby boy.
December to — Mary J. Burlil and Kenneth A. Montonya.
Sanford, baby girl: Deborah Dennis and Chester R. Decker.
Sanford, baby girl; Linda F. Henderson. Altamonte Springs,
baby boy; Brenda B. and Dean D. Debose, Del Iona, baby boy.
December 11 — Virginia L. and Jam es J . Jacobsen. Sanford,
baby girl; Tina L. Hunter and Jo hnny J . Bellamy. Deltona,
baby girl.
December 12 — Felicia R. Brad well. Sanford, baby girl;
Sophie J. and Tony Hunt. Deltona, baby boy; Rachel L. Baity.
Sanford, baby boy: Melina V. McCloud. Sanford, baby girl.
December 13 — Dawn and Mark Knuuttlla. Deltona, baby
boy: Katina M. Lowery. Sanford, baby bov.

ADVICE

§

Floyd T fw a trti
ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

December 5 — Ellanne Jozenvlllc. Apopka, baby girl.
December 6 — Honey and Brett Blair. Ml. Dora, baby boy:
Donna and Richard Pearce. Longwood, baby girl.
December 7 — Sylvia and Scolt Lutz. Winter Park, baby girl.
Jane and Mark Barton. Sanford, baby boy.
December 8 — Moyla and David Clark. Geneva, baby girl.

DEAR ABBT: Two years ago. I
run Into an old acquaintance
from high school, and she In­
vited me to lunch. We started
having lunch together about
twice a month.
I enjoyed It at first, but soon
noticed that she did nothing but
complain. We arc both 42. which
she considers "over the hilt."
She Is married lo a lovely man.
h a s m oney und w onderful
children who have never given
h er any tro u b le, but s h e ’s
envious of all of her friends —
this one's new car and that one's
recent trip, although she wants
for nothing. She constantly

Overeaters to weigh in
A meeting on spirituality in relationships In Ovcreatcrs
Anonymous Is conducted on Thursdays at 7:45 p.m. In the
cafeteria at West Lake Hospital. Longwood. For Information,
call Charlie at 323-8070.

whines about growing "oid." I
had m any problem s In my
younger years, and I found
happiness late In life. I think 42
Isa wonderful age.
My problem: How do I get rid
of this woman? 1 have been very
patient, but 1 Just can't take her
negative, complaining altitude
any longer. After lunch with her,
I feci anything but good.

We

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'Sananl
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For the finest in vertical blinds and mini-blinds, call
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SANFORD VERTICALS
A Beautiful New Direction For Windows"_______
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For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, Dec. 14.

S a n ta
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DEFLATED
BACK-STREET GIRLFRIEND
DEAR DEFLATED: fou could
DEAR GIRLFRIEND: You
can’t stop him from hiding you avoid her by being “ busy and
or lying to his "ex." From your u n a v a ilab le for lu n c h , and
description, this m an Is an thereby cool the friendship. But
accomplished liar. While he was please consider being candid
living with o girl (for a year and a with her. You'd be doing her un
half) he was sneaking around enormous favor. The truth hurts
with you — and you cooperated. (for a Utile white), but In this
Now. you're living with him case It may help her to see
while he lies to his “ex" about herself as others see her. und
who you arc. ft would appear perhaps Inspire her to become u
that he prefers to keep you In the more positive, attractive person.
closet.
If you want to spend the rest of
DEAR ABBT: I really enjoyed
your life in the closet. It's your the letter In your column written
decision. I have no Idea what by the bandleader who listed the
else you have going for you. but lilies of the songs his band
ask yourself, would you be better played In honor of wedding
off with him or without him, and anniversaries.
act accordingly.

Florida Hospital Altamonte Springs

6 00

He asked for suggestions for cently married, the band played.
anniversaries over 50 years. "Lord, please help me make It
When two friends of mine who through Ihc night."
E.U IN OGILVIE. MINN.
are In their laic 70s were re­

Olllcas (3) $435 aa.
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lea Cream Sandwich

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4R — Sanford Hank), Sanford, Florida — Thursday, Dacambtr 20. 1900

L fr g a l N o t l c a i

VEHICLE AUCTION
nm m

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF T M II MtfTEENTM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE MTM JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
FLORIDA
CASE NO. SMXT-CA-M-L
FORD CONSUMER CREDIT
COMPANY,

MANIC
•1RENAULT

VF1CPX— H I Moot
MCHEVROLET 5QB70SLHS7M
TOFONT IAC
UPTfUTSeO
44 DATSUM JNIPSttMFMMXTS
tSOATSUM
WHLA1M11t77
ALTAMOMTI TOW) MO
117MARKBR ST.
ALT. SPOS
ASFOND SFABNOtnOXtlOIM
as FOND 1FTDFUY70NASISO
1734ORLANDO DNIVC
IATMtMA.NL
VIEW ONE HOUR FNION

me

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AAAIS7C411IS1

OCA-M)

STATE OF FLORIDA.
Case No. i to *SM CAI4L/P
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS
BANK form erly known a t
STA N D A RD FEO EN A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Piatmitf.
vs.
OARY ML HARSTAD. If llvkg.
* tu i.,* tri..
AMSNOSD
NOTICE OF ACTION
STATE OF FLORIDA
TO: GARY ML HARSTAD. If

NOT1CI TO CONTRACTORS
O F F K t OF TttlSTATC OF FLORIDA
OCFANTMINTOF TRANSPORTATMX _
OeLand. Florida X7X
Oecambor 7, m e
CONSTRUCTION AND RUUNTINANCIFNORRAMI
DfSTRICT-CONTRACTS
i trill No received In the deerietaln can Mronto ream of
Office. PoFoiliniiil of Treneportetien. m south
Ntevard. OoLandL FMrtde until ld:M AAA (DeLand
Local Time) an Thuredey, the torn r t January, ton I

STATS FROJICT
SFONSC TRAFFIC O F f RATIONAL
INork caneittt of
Ipa. ml

Iof traffic. FMrk Ml

af Iho ruguatt at lha Department of
Truteperteflon. &lt;Contract Me I W I) (WFI No. 111*0*71 (NO
ciiinttfdey*)
ORilOb S/MCIOLA/BR BVANOYSBMINOLl/VOL UffA/LAK1 /
SUMTIR/FLAOLSR/CITRUS/MARION COUNTIIS (OS FUNDS)
STATS FROJSCT JO t HIM MSI. DffTRICTWIDS OUtCK R(SFONSI TRAFFIC OFfRATNMAL IMPROVEMENTS.
concrete ripe, mitered and etctrine, curb and futrir.
greeting Irime and mebtrinenca af traffic. Work M ribeaarterm ed
on en ae-neodeO bael* af the roeuoef af the Dipli firiinl af
Trempertetrin. (Contract No. SUM ) IWFI NoO. 111*0*7) (Ml
colonderdoye)
•RIVARD COUNTY ( 0 FUNDS) STATS FROJICT JOR NO.
7M0M11I. SR S » IN COCOA BEACH.
Work ceneitte af traa removal and malnWnanc* of trottlc on SR SSS
from M.F. 11AM; Sykoo Crook ioulovord la M.F. 11.100. Aonano
River Bride* and from M.P. ISAM; Banana River Brldeo to M.P.
is Hi wart and drive. (Contract Me. S-SSTS) (WFI No. MN1H) (M
rd e n )
•RIVARD COUNTY ID FUNDS) STATI PROJ'CT JOB NO.
Tttao-flft. SR Mt IUS-1*1) IN TNI CITY MILBOURNI.
Work conUtte of troo removal, tree etump removal, pruning and
moktenonco Of traffic. On SR Ml (US-1*1). the Indian Rlvtr
Caueowoy; from M R. 10JM; Now Haven Avenue to M R I7.7M; and
of divided hlehway In Momaumo- (Centred No. E-SSTii (WRI No.
SttOlX) IMcalender day*!
ORANOI/LAKB COUNTIIS ( 0 FUNOS) STATS FROJICT JOS
NO WMMU1, ROAO NOS. OH, OSL IS. ON IM .
Work coral ell at routine mektonenc* at five (SI eeiitlnf
mlll|etkn eltee. Including replentke ef eericrid hardwood and
ehrub planting* at on* ef the eltee. k accordance with mitigation
permit requirement* tar e period Of throe ()) year*. (Contract No.
E-SS70I (WRI No. m o l Ml (WM calendar dove)
SUMTER COUNTY (O FUNOS) STATE PROJECT JOS NO.
INSOASIt SR 44 AT C-44A
Work comlete of level k g and reeurteclng eiletkg aephan
pavement. Including Type "S" aeghettk concrete, trettk rtrlpkg.
marking*, and moktononco of troftk. (Contract No. E-SMI) (WFI
No. MNOtl) (40corindorday*l
VOLUSIA COUNTY IO FUNOS) STATE PROJECT JOE NO
WOMfUL DE U N O OIITRICT OFFICE. FIFTH OfSTRICT.
Work conellte of routine tondecopo moktononco of rag* (arid
area* and ground* of F lend* Piper lm*nl ef Treragartetrin Dlttrlct
Office located at 71* South WoodUnd Boulovord k DeLand, Including
email machine mowing, hedge trimming, edging and litter removal(Contract No. E-SSM) (WFI No. MllllS) IMS calendar days)
NOTICE; IT IS STRONGLY SUGGESTED THAT AN ON-SITE
REVIEW BE MADE PRIOR TO • IDOINO ON THIS PROJECT.
VOLUSIA COUNTY (D FUNOS) STATE PROJECT JO t NO.
Tveeemee, SR SA (NOVA) FROM FLOMICMAVI. TO US-1
Work camlets of construction ri tour Mot (4*) wide paved
ehoutdere. Including mektonanca Of trettk. M*rinol bee*, n c a v a
lien and type At Aaphritk Concrete. (Contract No. B-157*) (WRI No.
S140H4) Ito calendar day*)
Rropoeol form* wilt net bo Issued after 10:10 AJW. (DeLand Local
Tima) January tth. 1*»1.
BIO BONO RBOUIBBMBNTS
In accordance with Section D7.I7, Florida Statute*, a Bid Bond In
lha amount of five percent (5%) of tho bid prlca shall bo required ter
*11bide In tic*** of tIMAM an Dtetrkf Contracts. Bid Bond* will not
bo required Mr bide whkh ore l*M ken I1MAMCentrocrir* must provtd* proof of ability to acquire o performance
and payment bond k on amount equal ri Iholr contract bid price to
the District Contract Administrator with their bid prapeoel. A* such
greet oil bid* must bo accompanied by a notarind letter hem o
bonding company, bank or other financial Institution stating that
they intend to Issue a bond In tho amount of your bid. should your
tlrm b* awarded It* prefect.
A bid guaranty a* specified under 1.1(1) of tho general
district contract •pocltkotrin*. herein, may substitute a* proof of
ability to obtain a performance and payment bend. This agptri* to
bid amount* over or under si ISAM.
Contractor* prequalltied under Deportment Rule 1413 need not
provide proof ol ability to acquire 0 performance and payment bond
at the time *1 submitting a bid.
Wags Rato*: Pursuant to tho Fair Labor Standard* Act. the
minimum wage role* tor the protect* included k IN* Notice than bo
A M per hour.
List ol bidders will not bo given out 73 hour* prior to the lotting.
Tho Stele ol Florida Deportment of Transportation, k accordance
with the Provision* to Tltri VI totha Civil Right* Act of IM* (70 Slot.
313) and the Regulations et tha Department of Commerce (11 C.FR.,
Part ll Issued pursuant to such Act. hereby notifies *11 bidders that It
will • HIrmeHvely Insure that minority business enterprise* will be
a Horded full opportunity to submit bide k response to this Invitation
and will not bo discriminated ogolgst on too grounds af race, color or
notional origin k consideretlon tor an award.
NOTICE TO ARRROXIMATE QUANTITY SUBSCRIBERS:
NONE FURNISHED WITH DISTRICT-CONTRACTS.
All work I* to bo dona k accordance with tha plan* and prolocl
specifications of the Slat* of Florida Deportment of Tran sports! Ion.
Unless otherwise notified by cert IHod mall, return receipt
requested, bid tabulations will bo posted In the downstairs
Conference Room ol the OeLand District Office. 71* South Woodland
Boulevard. OeLand. Florid* on the Iam day from ttw lotting date.
Upon posting. It will be tho Department's intent to aword to the low
bidder. Any bidder who feels ho Is adversely effected by the
0*p&gt; Intent's Intent to aword to the lew bidder must tile with the
Clerk ol Agency Proceedings. *01 Suwannee Street. Tallahassee.
Florid* 13X1. a written Notice of Protest within 73 hours ol posting ol
ttw bid tabulation*,
A protest filed prior to the notice ot Decision to Solicit Bid* or the
Intended decision to award a contract shall bo doomed abandoned
unless fi ne wad within tha time limits provided k 1ubsection (1).
Additionally, * format written protest setting forth a short end
plain statement ot the matters asserted by the protestor must be
tiled with tho Clerk et Agency Proceeding* within 10 day* af tha
Preliminary Nolle# ot Protost.
In accordance with Section IX 11(1). Florida Statute*, failure to
III* a protest within the time prescribed In Section 1X.53 (11. Florida
Statute*, shall constitute a waiver ot proceedings under Chapter IX.
Florida Statute*.
Orders tor these document* should bo directed to Mr. Jim Hilton.
Dlstrkt Contract Administrator. Department ol Traraportrtlon, 71*
South Woodland Boulevard. DeLand. Florida X7X. Telephone
Number 1*04) 71* MU There will be no charge tor contract
documents
The right Is reserved to re|*ct any or oil bids.
STATE OF FLORIDA
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Thomas F. Barry. Jr., P.E.
Olstrkt Secretary
D is tric t 1

Publish December 11. X. ISSO

DEA S3

C E LE B R IT Y CIPH ER

C4C*«r cryptogram* ara erNaiad from quotation* fry tamo
poofrU, patl and psaaoni faeft iaffar as lha u p w eland* kx

YOU ARE NOTIFIED that on
action to torse toss a mortgage
an mo tgltoartng preports k
f ern k its County. Florida:
Lot t. Mock C COUNTRY
CLUB HIIOMTS. UNIT 1, ac­
ts mo plat
k Pi** Book IX _
SO. k the Public Records of
I am koto County, Florida
ho* toon Arid against you and
PAUL A. ROGCtOand BONNIE
ML ROQQIO. his wlto. THE
U N IT E D S T A T E S OP
AMERICA. AND STATE OF
FLORIDA - DEFARTMENT
OF REVENUE, and you am
required to sows a copy ef your
wrt«toneetoft***.lf any. toll on:
JOSEPH M. PANIELLO,
ESQUIRE. Plrinttfr* attorney
Ml N. Franklin Street. Sulla
773*. Tampa. Florid* H itt
on or before m* 31th day of
January l**l. and 111* the origi­
nal with tho Clerk of mi* Court
either before sorvk* on Plain­
tiffs attorney or Immodlatoty
there*Her; otherwise a default
will b* entered agrirat you tor
the relief demanded In the
Complaint or Petition.
DATED on mis 17th day of
Oecambor. ISSO
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December M, 77, ItM
A January X IS, Iftl
DEA-173
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
■IBNTIRNTH JUOfCIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
SEMINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO SO-tnaCA
DIVISION 114
ME RITOR MORTGAGE
CORPORATION-EAST, a
Fenmylvanto corporation,
Plaintiff.
»*.
HARRYCARSON
MIDDLETON, of *1.,
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: HARRY CARSON
MIDDLETON
RESIDENCE: Unknown
LAST KNOWN
MAILING ADDRESS:
Itt Sweetwater Hill* Drive
Longwood. Florid*
TO: any unknown hairs, de­
visees. grant***, assign***,
lienors, creditors, trustees, or
ether claimants claiming by.
through end under HARRY
CARSON MIDDLETON
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that on
action to torectoeo ttw mortgage
encum bering the following
property In lomlnole County.
Florida:
Lot 1. Block C. SWEET­
WATER OAKS SECTION 0.
according to Iho Frit thereto a*
recorded In Plat Book It, pages
X end 11, Public Records of
Seminal* County, Florida, end
alto beginning ol the Northwest
corner of told Lot 7. sold
North##*! corner alio being the
Northwest corner to Let I. Black
C. el ta ld SWEETWATER
OAKS SECTION L thence run
South I t degree* 1*' X" Best
along the North line to said Let I
r distance to S.tt riel, thence
run South 01 degree* IT It"
W eil i t s . I t t feet te fh*
Southeast corner to said Let 7.
thence run North 00 degrees O'
07" East along ttw East line to
sold Lo* 7 a distance to m a l l
Nto to the Point ol Beginning,
he* been died by the Plaintiff
against you end ethers In fh*
above-styled cause end you are
required to serve a copy of your
written defense*. It any. to It on
SHARON L. SIMMONS. Plain­
tiff's attorney. 117 West Adorns
Street, Suite III*. Jacksonville.
Florida 17X7. on or bofor*
January 71 1*01, and III* the
original with the Clerk of this
Court either before service en
Plaintiff's attorney or Immedi­
ately thereafter: otherwise, a
default will be entered against
you tor tha relief demanded k
the complaint or petition.
WITNESS my hand and teal
ef this Court on this Itth day of
December, ISSO
ISEALI
MAR YANNE MORSE
Clerk otth* Circuit Court
By: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December X. 77. I*X
I January X 10. Ittl
DEA 171
MCCONNELLTOWING
3X0 SANFORD AVE.
SANFORD. FL »771
AUCTION
I3/7S/S0
7t Cadi 4dr
tO4*S*QX0137
04 Chevy Jdr
IGIAD*fP4E7inX4
7* Pontiac 3dr 3S4177E140X7
II Oatsun 3dr
JNIPB03SSUUM474I
SaN Regina af 11:01P.M.
View One Hour
P r io r to Ifettt

JH

B W

E

C H A T V

U C E U

T C H X T .

X C E U

PM A

J H

•

R A U

J H W ’ U

—

O E Y N V Z V W V
N H M .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "You have lo bo a little unreal lo
bo in Ihis business " — Ken Basinger.

Publish: December X. IHO
DEA 1*3
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In business at till
Celery Ay* , Sanford. Flat 13771,
Semkori County, Florid*, under
Iho F i c t i t i o u s N am e ol
HAWKINS PLUMBING, and
that we Intend to register sold
name with the Clerk to the
Circuit Court, Somlnori County.
Florid*. In accordance with the
Provisions of Iho Fictitious
Name Statutes. TeWlt Section
SSI 0* Florida Statutes
W D Hawkins
Publish December a. II. 30. ll.
Im
DEA 44

C LA S S IFIE D A D S
S e m in o le

*»:
Lot It. Bloch L TMr t. E.R.
TraMsrd’s Map of Sontordl accardkg to Mo pM thereof a t
racardtd In P itt Bsrii I. Pago*
M through ee of mg m* P uttk
Records of Somkori County.
Florida.
and Mot you are required to nie
It any.
wtm Iho Clerk of the
styled Court and to serve o copy
thereto on Lorry P. Studsr.
Akormon. Sontortttt B (Mton.
P.O. Bon »1. Orlando. Florid*
on or bolero theism day to
It you toll to do to.
by default may b* entered
against you tor the relief dp
mended In the Complaint.
WITNESS my hand am
this 17th Pay to December. ISSO.
(SEAL)
MAR YANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
l am koto County Florid*
BY: Ruth King
Deputy Clark
Publish: December X. 37. tf*0
AJanuary X M, l**l
DBA-MS

O r l a n d o - W in t e r P a r k

HOURS

.. .......iWjttfBwa...gtgfcn
BBC a few
C7B a few

M TW M Y • •

Prkoe above retteef e SMO tosh dritovnl for prempf peymeni. $&lt;he*»lkg may Include Mereid Ad»*rtt*er to the cost of on oddttrinal day. Cancel
when you got results. Poy only for days your od runt ot rot* eomod.
Use full description for fastest results. Copy must follow acceptable
MAMMCS
Noon Tho Day Setoff Publication
Sunday • 11 A.M. Saturday
Monday - I1:X AM. Saturday
A D JU STM EN TS A N D C R E D IT S: In ttw t v t n t Bf a n
o m s r In on b d , ffw S anfprd MbtbM will fed roipani lBla f a r
IfW first HwarllBR anfy »«E arsfy fg ffw extort «f ttw cm !
a f ffw t Inaorfldn. P to asa cfw ck your a d to r a c c u ra c y ffw
tif f f 8 i y n m m .

NOTICE OF ACTION
-PROPERTY
TO: C. RICHARD HALE and
KIM 0. HALE
Residence unknown
Lett known address:
1SX Grieves Court.
AIlaments Springs. F ler (da
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to toroclooo the tallowing
property In Somlnori County.
Florida:
The West v» to lef 1. Block B.
CLEAVES SUBDIVISION, ac­
cording to tho plat thereof as
recorded k Frit Book X Fag*
7]. to Ih* public record* ef
Seminal* County, F ler Ida
he* been tiled against you. and
you are required to serve a copy
to your written detonate. II any.
to it on the Plaintiff* attorney,
whose nemo end address Is:
IRVING G. LAWRENCE.
ESQUIRE
LAWRENCE A FAVNE. F.A.
*01 East Jackson Street
Temp*. Florida XM07
1111)333-7X1
en or bator* January IX Itil,
and flri the original with the
Clerk to k i t Court either before
service en F rik tltf 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 for the
relief demanded In the com
pialnlorptoltlen.
WITNESS my hand and the
teal to laid Court an December
I*. ISM.
(Court Seal)
MARVANNE MORSE.
CNrh Circuit Court
■y: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish: December X. 17, ItM
A January x 10,1MI
DEA-174

SCCURTTT OfTKiftS
For
Marv,
Mr«411Fraftfi. Full g M H t m .
METRO SECURITY N177W
TYPIST SMO wkly- *• ham*, tor
Ini* send SASE. Tropical
Type. Baa Itt OK Tavernier,
FL 33070_________________
t* III.SO p a r hour plus
benefits. Will Irak. Needed
now I l-W1-3M0....Agwd
MtttO/yrl READ BOOKS and
TV Script*. Fill tut simple
"llke/dan't Ilk*" term. EASVI
Fun, re ria k f at home, beach,
v a c a tlo n a . G u a ra n te e d
paycheck. 34 Hour Retarding
Reveal*. MI-374»SS Eat.
FEIF3B
_________

/tU M C M . POSITION
—- -— srrong
m
^Mrujpmw
lu ju u u
HfVf
and typing skills Computer
t aperrinco a plu*. Apply to:
IW Silver Lake R4.
Monday thru Friday
0:XAMand4:XPM
U .a t
must

71— H f e lf W l t f f e d
A REWARD M ottered tor In
tor mat ion feeding to Iho re­
turn of a br Indie and sshito.
twelve week aid BOXER pup.
Ftooo* coHi Ots* Daly m X tt___________________
LOSTI ELACR/WHITB. bird
dog-mis. Loch Arfe*r/OM Lk.
Mary RO/Xth St.
REWARD!

tBS

It COME A ROTMT
For Details: 1004413 4314
NOW FAR would you walk Mr a
Pastrami sandwich? HMR Wt.
Mgmt. Prepram x e a r a
M o n o TO r o u t LOT
For tala. 1 bdrm 3 both,
liv in g ro o m , k itc h e n
furnished. 13X000 Moved and
foundation 1333 0711

SMALL QUALITY HOME LIKE
D o g e a r* A P r a t c k a e l .
Opening*I Meals, laarnlng
program I Pri|
II Felly
He'd! LieJ sae:
.331-703$

n-M iB cailanaw
Round trip to LAX. leave
13/31. Return l/ l / t l . 1*04.
Round trip to Chicago OHer*.
dip. 13/tt return 13/17. SIX
♦S4443S/MIA171 after 7pm

MIUNCTICXiT
Orlande-Beaton, Round trip,
SIM oboMust sell......3*4 It X
CHRISTMAS T t f B KM S M I
Cut your aw*. St* each
333-Sltt

t
t
t

ACTION LOANS
Regardless ol credit) I 1X0 to
SX-OX Call I........a
EQUITY Laans, Purchaiat.
Rattaaacasl 1st. 3nd A 3rd
Mtgsl Good/bad credit I Fast
approvals! Ouardlan Mtg.
Carp.....Lie. MS*. Brahan
M44X1/I-M4N44XI

ASSISTANT PU M T IM M 6IR
Must have chauffeur license. S
day week Includes Saturday.
Escalrinl bantolft. Apply
atMoatordAv
• AVON * NOW HIRING
CHRISTMAS S I LUNG NOWI
Ear* Mara,I Stuff adaefsdp* at
t. Nacesfl SdtttA SE to:
letrlb.. Rh 77IJ34C
Carpus CkrtaW, TX 71417-1IX
■RANCN DEALER HIRING S13 par hour, wt Iraki
No tspar lance naadsd.
Dealer position available.

_I-H
J-M
A
7IH
__
CONSTRUCTIONAU TRAMS

MACHINIST
With assembly background.
Call 333**00 tor dstall*
MIOICAL

13-Holiday
Child Cart
U nit's Helpers I By hr. or day.
leave the kids hers I HRS 7S41.
1700 S. Park Aye. 313 7177

14— FlorlatB
DNIFTWOOO PLORISTt Manlien this ad and gto 1*% Off I
Wire sve e«cl

The nursing challenge ol the
’(Os Is In long term caret II
you are looking to get more
Involved end make a dllfaranct. you can loin our
nursing teem at;
0 Great benallti d Fris. hrt
a Tuition reimbursement
P Caring atmosphere
Call today far an interview
3221546__________LO.E./H
Ml Melrinvilri Avs., Satoard

• P r o d u c t io n
Employees with transportation
needed Immediately
A p p ly
1 0 1 8 -S . F r e n c h A v a ., S a n f o r d
5 A .M . S H A R P

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. INC.

t } — N— m » l o r M u t
LONBWOOP-U. Mary tta a L
NIc*. cNan. Cable, air. kltch#n erlvlleoes. |71/wk...031-H47
AIRPORT ELVD. A re a Furnished Roam In privet*.
hemal U V w k W -asn . 43pue7*4 W. Hb. 1 fum Rmt.. prlv. b*
w/show*r. mlcra/rafrig. SIX
wk. Slnori RmsSSAQO 333-3M*'
CLEAN ROOMS, kitchen A
riundrv laclllfri*. Cable TV.
Storting aftfl/wk...

SCOTTISH Trrrrir Pup*. AKC.
Champ. Bloedllnas. shots,
wormed. 3 rift. **47*7e««3
XMAS F U F P IIIII German
Shephard. 1 male. 4 female
AKC-RealCutrisll 334044*

TA—Crafts and
C o llfc tib lts
BJ'S RESALE COLLECTIBLES
open every Sunday til Xmas
lor In ’* Outside Salts! 35*1
S. Same, i Avs. 11X74**
ELEGANT IMPORTS! Gilts
and Horn* Decor! Personal
Usd shopping help. *04011*
HOUSEWIFE CRAFTS. Holiday
gilts GALORE 11 Calf Janet
..... - ..... .171-0411

17—Sportswar
FL SPORT WEAR: 311-S3M Jog
toft, sweet*, night thirfe an*
MERRY CHRISTMAS!!

15 -Pats

14— L u x u r y I t t m s

LABRADOR PUPS - AKC. SIM
each. Will held tor Christmas.
Call efter 1PM, 173-1*11
ROTTWEILER AKC PUPSI
Champ. Ilnat. quarsnlsvd
healthy and happy I till. I
wk*. fl/71 *04SHU*I______
ROTTWEILER PUPSI AKC.
aec. tompar/conlirm. Parents
on p ram lsas. All Sholsl
nog l u m n u

OET HER MIRK FOR XMASI
Whitt mink lacks! w/tnow-top
trim. Sits msd. Appraisal
*4.080. UleSl.OX........131*034
•WIRELESS REMOTE 4X4
TRUCK with 7.7 Nlcad bat
tery, ) hour charger and slew
chargor. All other batteries
Included. Also ha* road gear
lor high speed. Mad* by
Sears. Corns* wllh custom
carrying caie. SICO. 1744*41

Cs^llfctair}

SERVICE

rm Ara* •«#*•»»
SS!' *
\ t 'l t f«J} ,

I -A ( I'-uil &lt;!;rr Ni&lt;«

3 Lines

- l'—- r
.40
t

Buy/Sail 4 Ra
■ariafasd
IM NUW M INNff 111 1M1

\l I

at taw at

It'll I t ' l l

"OhaCrilTaOaHAir
Yawrt

545

IV M lu tl

prf fixjnlh
I

. ' (•! I

Pfeim iw

sssnssr
Ltcm ad B l e a n i ERIE
^ T I M A T lf ll^ lto *

NttMdhEfe Cawtradars
MARK M.cCABTV
MMHCi
.. . gan caw^
s*•dor •
feEWN aa
Comm. CGC04MWW-4EF*
NEW, feI MODEL. RE PAM
HOMES, OBFKBti STORES
A R fy p x ^ ^ ^ H

CARPENTER All kkds to I
repalrt. printing A ceramic
Richard Orax- R H B )
THE DOOR IPIC IA U ST
Esport carpentry - WIN I

• W a re h o u se

Immsdleri Kcesnsiittms

SANFORD Near SCO. Need r
roommate. 1 bdrm 1 bath apt*
occupancy.....m-1**1

1 5 -P ftB

MOLLY MA ID -Brio Rtogttt t o
ftke to yaurstot er sHIb asir
rift caritfriato. CaMItt-fatt
DEEARY E o ta r k l a tt ln g :
Xmas OMt Carttttcatokl ft* att
(New cosNmirsstoyt.tSI MM
HOLIDAY CATERING! Give
your tired wlto a break I Gilt
Certificates avail. X40HI
HOLIDAY Partratt Csrtttkatosl
A lasting gilt I Professional A
Esp- CaNSctot
tn ttlS
KUBA GIFT CERTIFICATES
Freddie's Dive Center
Classes..........333-MU........ Air

Local/Caribbean. Tatet/HR 1
M g j W jf t jT l b s t EuHdarsFoa

^ C a rB E d ry

• C o n s t r u c t io n

r—ulred. P&gt; na/*40 7774
LAKE HURT • &gt; Room mates
needed I 3/7 home, daumtowrv
area. UOO/montti payi silt

12— G i f t C f e r t l f i c a t n

JsSUSSL

• B o o k B in d e r s

with tain*. A ll a m a n llrit.
S77J/mo plus 1/1 util. R a f f

Start an (Veiling and reward­
ing career In real estate
Century 31 system training
starts Immediately. FREE lu­
llrial New or oiperrincod.
C b ln d l R e a l l y . L a b *
y/ la arird 30-031

-tca n cr

•P a i n t e r s

FEMALE shara ItoRary hem*

Tb*S a n fo rd H e ra ld

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

We have immediate
openings!

•

H w w tM S h f e ro

AOENTI

*1— M o n t y To L a n d

Jobs! Jobs!

t l—Aporfmont*/

*M«0S* MHMHHKI

* WAN’s * *

JURURITKXFT3

THE G R EA T A M E R I C A N
IN V E S T M E N T

AlOE/OfA - Will toko cere *
your rived ones! R urad nursing *kHri.

F/TI No weak sett. Pd. vac*haws. Call Mslly Mtld 7S7MS7

a DAILY WORK..DAILY PAY a
Cell Bob.........337-7X1 attar 3pm

Civil Sarvtaa B festal Jab*
li e .tl hr. No asp. Eaam,
training. A Into..........331 ilia

U.S.

.

323-5176

6000 NOftRERS RIIOUH

35—Training
* Education

WTO LOANS
SECURITY NATIONAL
1104133 OH

7S - E m p l o y i m m t
W w tf e d

Team, tub it.

3n-&lt;333«r3atttt

LK. MARV/Tlmec»*a Areal
Qualify childcare, l yr./Up.
Lunch, teg, pending....«t-SS17

*
S
S

IOORHKPORACHMI6CT
II yr rid trak k g com*any,
willing to Mach what It taka*.
It you quality- Dress tor sue
casal" "

MNTUISIUOUmMI

25— Spatial Hatka*

Child Cart

C. RICHARD HALE, KIM D
HALE. SHIRLEY A.
BENJAMIN. R. ALLEN
BENJAMIN AND SHARON
ROBERTSHEREERT.
TRUSTEESOF THE SHIRLEY
A. BENJAMIN REVOCABLE
TRUST

eery, dependsbiSly a mutt.
Will train I Good bonoflft.
Apply k person. Eeparrineal*
worth i t 1pm to Ipm or
Xpolnlmont. Msgnstono. IX
M. Cypres* Way. CstopMerry
nSM
e e eV O LToe*
TtMPOfeARV SERVICES

C L A SSIFIE D D E P T . PR IV A T E P A R T Y R A TES

27— N u r s t r y f t
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTH NTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL DIVISION
Cato Ns: S0-4I44CA14/t/L
GLENDALE FEOERAL BANK.
FSB f/b/a GLENDALE
FEDERAL SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION.
Priktltf.

Needed tor small plastic

332*2611_________ 831*9993

LAWRENCE GREEN. JR., of
M.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO THE FOLLOWING DE FRNOANTt, IF LIVING, AND
IF DEAD, ALL UNKNOWN
PARTIES CLAIMING RY.
TH R O U O H . UNDER OR
AOAINST TNI NAMED DE
FENOANTS. WHO ARB NOT
KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR
ALIVE. WMBTHBE SAID
UNKNOWN PARTIES CLAIM
AS H E IR S , O E V IS E E S .
GRANTEES, ASSIONBBS.
L IE N O N S, C EE D IT O R S.
T R U S T E E S . OR OTHER
CLAIMANTS AGAINST MID
DEFENDANTS NAMES AS
FOLLOWS:
TO: MARIE A. OOOM
ADDRESSUNKNOWN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIIO mat an action hat Boon
you to torscriM a
. i In m* Circuit Court of
' Judkiri Circuit, k and
Mr l ornkoto County. FMrtde. on

71-H &gt; lp1M feW lfe&lt;

?1— H t l » W R m n e

CalUImjOJJto*
ln i n |_ l e n r j «

ACCENT i i ^ N " x iKlfCNEN
T tR E I
RUBOetUMWafl type* of
torvlcel CFC4414N. TYT-OXI
CARLIN f t NOME DETAIL.

to Im-

daaaR ttfi.
HYDE'S PAINT A DRV WALL.
Sparlttltt In matching toe
~ ‘ IW w __ 74473M
Lk'O. and kaurad l
Itfaranca*. IS yr*. aap.
Li*tt»rii FL reridottl Cod
II---- — 5341114

Cammar./Rotld/l
JEANNIE'S NOUSEKIIPtMG
ratoaMOTJJ^
M RO
l itt
Sbarn
LOW prlcbl Free att

•" T j a a g "
A. FRALCV
All typo* ham* repair*. X
year* aeparlancal I *alar**
loeclal Nu a eor il 337 577*
ANY T T F I NOME I M ­
PROVEMENT! Fra* att. Coll
A SAVE. Ron.---------.Ht-3771
0 o AO'S MAINTENANCE o o
* Carpentry
* Electrical CaH M U47103
CARPENTRY, MASONARY
painting and til* work. Fra*
ettlmato*. L ltfd Cttl X M tti

C M U 3M 1M

uINCMOaocaMdmNoRt
t a a .

On**rild*a*NaRt
e its Avarago Six Houa*
e Mi Avarae* Si» Real
a Orlvaway* e Fool Dock*
a Eilerlor Fro-Fainting
e u t 'd . *k»ar*dbae4M b
PRESSURE CLEANING MAN.
haul* wath, pakting. Fra*
«*t.lCeHR*M rmXX

G.L ROOF INGA NMM 1
flat raaf repair *ur tpadattyl
Eapart carpentry work I
CALLlttmi-ANYTUkUtl
LEONHAED ROOFING - Quali­
fy reilttnllal service lor tout
Slat* Lie. CCC04XM3B I ttl

TSHO TT

IH 0 cifoNim#*
pruning, tortlllilrg, muichkg.
inaaefankrai. Radiy. 1X3544
h

E i c m Im

cutting, gafchlngand pruning.
SEA BREEN Lawn Mail and
Landscaping, tori! lawn carat
M u lch in g , te d d in g an d
criweuo*. ►REE att- R H R f
U w w S rv k a
COMPLETE
Traa ta n k * A

C S IH M O m U S U V IC fS
Paintm t Car pentry. Cabinet}
• Decks • Ltc'd • Ins’d

*"

Mama ef KIM ORIOINAL*. and
that wa Intend la raalitor tald
name wtlti the Clerk ef the
Circuit Court, Seminole County.
Florida. In actor dance with the
Rrevltlent at the Flctlliewe
Nome Statute*. T*WH: Section
ttS.*tFkridaStaihitotm7.
Kimberly Cone
Steve Corto
FuMkh: December 4. IX X. 77.

Legal Notices

iim

NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS KAMI
Work* It hereby given mat w*
or* *ng*g*d In bulk*** ■« H t
Sllvinoood Drive. Lot* Mary.
FL 13Jot. S*&lt;nIneO* County,

L«gal N o t lc tt

i t u V rii

L t f lil N o t lc tt

CRYSTAL CLEAR MASONRY!
G la tt black tp a c la llit* .
I n t / l a l la r r a d d a n tib l

—n—
ML
LOTI. )tt *1N*
(rimming*, aggl- ate. Small A
large truck. Chaaol 3441I tt
T tbr S f y i c a *
eCLHTREitSRVICE* '
-tbdMdy Daat It Aottort"
Tr)wnilngfRaxaytt......a n n o
BEST TIEE SERVICE!
:l Uc-. k t. Satl*. Guar
Fra* **». B l-lril
B*»f Price* riTaw nl"
COMPLETE Service! Pruning,
trimming, removal. Mump*!
Free att— l onaiY— .134&gt;01*
ECHOLS TRIE SERVICE
Fr*n**Hmato*l Fair Price*!
LK... Ira...Slump Grinding. Tool
ast-m f dtyw nfta
Let The Pr*4*n In I* do ir*
JOHN ALLEN LAWN A TRS E
Tie* removal cia a n up
P re tiu re cleaning. X I B N

MICRON'S Shnna
Vary raeeanttri ratotl Fra*

�Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida — TTiuraday, Dacambar 30, 19S0 — SB

Y3- R o h m kr Font

117— M a M le
ATTRACTIV■ &gt; RORM ATT!
Tarek, all tt. parking. Randy
tomtvgintoHiM/wfc .ttl-e**7
I A 1 ROOM EMdewcy Apts.
Fumlthad or not. a/c. from
m v g n i w e n c . CaN m - m i
tO , t kdrm . m a n In
Xmail IU rant dM an I t l
SaSSInc/tabtal SS4SMI
LR. JBNNIE APTSI 1 bdrm
o p ta . with C/H /A tram
SMO/mo. Inctudn watar A
aat. Cad Rrabar------ JSU fto
MARINER'S VK.LAPS
Lata Ada 1bdrm........ SMI mo
Ib d rm O W m a R u p ttM M t

privitogatl NkaSantardara*
m a m a r m w -ia n

S M IO iO • Large roam, con
v an lan t. q u lat la c a tla n ,
555/w eek...»-l)W /tear* ms*
SANTORO • Caw accn i all
la prtefl.. S7S/wi.

Laka Mary ns-aan
Callbatwaan 11AMSTM

gWgWMMg

ItllT IM

M

ROOM. US par

&lt;mk. M l trlardHt SI. Sm -

$229 MOK IN SKOAL
I badroom I both
a n d lb td riih I bamaveiieklt

W-Apanwwk
EiftVttlikfcAdl
■
9 IIraMVu

F u r n M u tf / (to u t

D R LA N O • O o ll- v ia w
lownkeutal 1 b*m. 14 bo.
gar at*, titan. M l W H tl
ONANA1 CITY, N»ar 14. J/J,
Fully Equip., xtadi/dry. Eiac.
homal STM-taa-tlMMI

W—Apart m«n1*
UirfurnMwd/ Ront

ICNTALS, RENTALS
Homo* In all si to*. slatting
tram SIM par month. »n Da
Ilona. No No to Nnant I
Global R*altyMa 44*1

SANTORO • t i l Park A*. I
I Badroom. Wkly or monthly 4
; dep Vary Keas »177*7»tS»r*

SALE OR LEASE!
Sanford, l/l. Nica yard. CHA.
• I f Rosalia Or. S4IS pr.
mo./MS,SOB III M l_______
Unfurnished ) beRoam 1 bath
hom o. Can. H/A, 1-cargaragal S4SI month. SAM w
curlty dtp. Call anytime, IRA
SHnsh tm R*a»y....... m-MM

Itlt Laka AAary klvd laniard

Call 321*0514

SMFOIIO!
1/1, big t*nc*d yard, noat
schools. 107 Bradshaw Dr.
Avail. att*r San. 1. L*om U50
par me. Call caitoct • War 1PM

tfACIOUS2M 2M AFTS
INNEDUTEOCCUPANCY
HaMOmBySanta’sliiatsl
1kmlaiwan 171ft!!

atkaai-aos_______________

SMALL 1 bdrm, C/H/A, nice
sacuritv. W .s*ernes Ftpssas
MINT IN Springs - 4 bdrms m

(37S TOTAL MOVC M COST

‘

OTIN MOW.-SAT., t-S
SUNDAY. I S
CLOSED CHRISTMAS IV ■
• CHRISTMAS DAY

oal*

1150. 1st A lest....

" Tl

CO RNS R 417 A 17/ f l Tra*
standing Mdg. Suit, tor co r tot.

in*, ca t t t m m m t y m - m *
■1 ottkasl Trim#
Hwy. 04 loci Rant ana/both I
Cor wkototeia ok I M b M V

T r i p k i / R on*
OUPLBX - Lg. 1 bdrm. Carport.
Inside utility rm ., C/H/A, no
pais, saoo/mo-1 n p . m -iaai
LAKE MANY, 1/1. nka a m .
W/W carptt. C/H/A. applloneat. Nncadvard P I 47St
SANFORD 1 Badroom. kit.
appll., carport, hook-ups.
Alr/H#et.MN »r. mo. SSMOM

HCAR TNC QUIET!!
Slnpla (lory studio. I A 1
BRrm. Apti Many extras Incl.
itoraga ipacal Qulat, coiy
community I Nlct landKap
log- Onsite managars who
CARE 11 Starting al Ult/mo
SAJtFOAO C O U N T 323-3301

121— C o n d o m in i u m
________ R e n t a ls ________

COSOO* 7 M 1 P M M
1 Bdrms.. 1 4 both townkousa.

K m d . patio Adult*. 13*1 In
d u d o s watar. C all Money
m -to lA M a w -T rl.lA M S T M
L A X B AW RY, Hlddwi Village.
1/1. a ll appliances, ll replace
Ha pals. «Aiepr.m o.aa».llO
S A N D A L W O O D V illa * . 1 / 1 ,
w/paai. wosh/dryor, SMO par
me., na dags. *71-0*71 hr. n w .
SANTORO • Tina Rldg* Club. 1
bdrm. 1 bath*. A ll appl. Incl.
wathar/dryar. Starting o l M M
N IN T A R A M A

l

M l V

G

K IH IN S

a

ram* Tl. Inc./Rrabar
S T R C I A L t StlS m a n tb l
NORTHLARC V ILLA O I.
Now 1 / 1 , a p p l l a n c t t ,
tiraplaca, pool, tom it. C all
IK li t lw a if 1-047-7115 Anyttma
■vat
114-1W S U 1 caltoct

"DfC T ltM C I” M SaRferV
1 badraomt 1 4 ba. C/H/A.
Ilrtplacal SMS/mo. sac. (top
Call nt-tltT/toav* ■
127—O W ic o R o w te te
■RAND NBW OTTICB RLDO
stasg. n. to ia sttg . N.
0C-1Z0NIN0I
MavatoSpactol..... .nsa/m o.
Ca ll .................... .......ai-atad
O T T I C R / R R T A I L I l units. 1,000
*4 It. *a . tais/m o. C o n bo
used to o alh arl...l» -n aT /m sN .
1 M U L L R R N T A L O T T IC R S
V ary m a sa n a ila . 11X14, P o r
(totalIs. c a ll now! R M i T l

141— H o m e i f o r S o to

TnusSm ui

Slatoly ] bdrm. 1 bath ] ito r y
home. O rig in ally b u lll In ITM.
but restored In I N I w ith new
plumbing, alactrlcal, In tla lla
lio n , flo o r c o v frln g . s o ffit
swing, t ic . ale. The a r( fi na l
charm It pratarvad. O ver 7000
sg. It. o l livin g a m set on a
generous wooded lot. V a ry
convenient but quiet
You w ill tov* III
P r ic e d to t a ll a l 1114.400

NIAL BSTATB

l ’ A K I M l

R E N T

T O D A Y

F O R
M

M S

O U R

O V E - I N

S P E C IA L

HOMES........... .S4S-4S.SM
MODEL OTB N11A......VA/THA
CACNOMBS,ioc m an-sooa
OOOD COEDIT hut LOW ON
CASH? Houses Available Now
to become your home.. 111*141
M.TMKMTE SPIIN6S
1 badroom, 1 bath, pool.
MI.SOO. Scburan Itoelty
_________ N l-O H -lltT _________

BATEMAN REALTY
lie. Rtal Eslat* Broker
lA N S a n to rd Av*

l .mil 2 H o d i o o m Apts Avdil.iblo
S t i i U i i K ) , i l S i ‘ )U 0 0

1£
j 05 W 2t)lh Si.. S lim lord

322 2090

321-47W ................ 321-2257
MOST FOR TOUR MONEY!
4 Bdrm .. fa m ily rm .. liv in g
rm .. new carpal, ternd. pool
w /tp a . w a lk to I d y ilw lld a
E la m . S e lla r w ill p a y a ll
closing costs Low. low down
M A K E O F F E R Asking 1*4.500

THE COURSON COMPANY
_________ m a m _________
D E L T O N A . 1/1. C H A . H on
q ua lllln g , assumable. Nice I
MSS. PI.S4f.kOO 574 55*0_____

The Prudential

Saltor w ill tost* bach prom ts*
to p u tt in to* occupanc y . O R
W .R a fto e M M M * ------------C T M

VI. with family, living, dtalng
rtns. fplc. tnctoaad parch,
lane* yard. Hug* tat, aif.ftB

LOOMING FOR 4 HOME?
Pleas* let m* help.

f V

H

o

^

F ro m T h e S ta ff

•Clubhouse with Fireplace
•Indoor Racquetball
•Weight Room
•Pool &amp; JacuTzi
•Washer/Dryer Connections
•Garden Windows
•Fireplaces
1 Bodroom from $450
2 B e d ro o m fro m $ 5 4 0
U lS W. te m ln o ie Blvd.
Wwy. 17-92. Sanlord

U 3S IMAM S 2 J M I
1/ 1, living, dining, fam ily
ream s, fenced y a rd , naw
paint, carpet and tlto. fft .W i

0V CI001J 5 AQKS
Custom built 4 bdrm. 1 balk.

ON LAKE MONROE

W a te r A se w e r a t la t.
Nww--------------------- ILOMII

321- 2720
322- 2420

3 / 2 CUSTOM MM.T
C eram ic Ilia, L a v a la rt.
Ilrap laca, 1 car g a ra g e .
Pool/tennis avail.........ft1.lt*
KLTOHA
Last than tUM dawn 11/1 with
10114 ternd parch.., MLWi
$33M M R U IBCLCUMIM
Pinacratt. VI, living dining,
------

**«Y

in. tiraplaca. accas* to

Lake
Milts, an 1/3 acr*.------*77JW

yw t

rwce. m i

LRSS TRAN 1 Y R O N I I T
Canalfrant w/accaa* to Laka*
Clear A Ada I Scmd. parch,
tot* *1 ceramic til*. Tarmit A
...R B I7

RAVINSBROORI BaauHtUaaecuHva 4 bdrm. 1.1 bt., p«M.
an I act- aft Markham ktoadt
Rd. SMt antr. par ape. Ill*
llliatJHi...RS43
COUNTRY LIVINO a t li t
Tlneall Only I ml to l-A
Raamy 4/1 an * acres. Lais at
cedar, tonetd paalwrvs. Horse
tovart will leva Nils I-------•■■AT urn*
Hm* kuyar. small family ar
In v a tla r. O v a rtiia d lat.
beautiful traatl S3l.Nt.Rk7V
MACNIFICINT V I an I acral
tSat* scmd. parch, bua-torm
paai. haalad a p t. lavish
Isndsctolng, tancad backyard,
■ar. tydaml INABtA..... R a t

Includes Scrtan
Special Rato Fkianclng
_____Call 3P*77»
T r w U ll
Terry Cbakal b H W or Bggars A Riyaetoa RR M H M I

GOVfRtMUNTOHMS
VI block, lire damage, tll.TM

Hi. spacious and Ihrltty, Ua.700

berry, axe lac., min. Nam 1-4
17/47 A Hwy 43*. 1.744 t-f..
11.0*44 if . let. Paved sac.
toncad tier agtl IIU.oaa.CCSl
Sgtvay/McKaaaa tO-N**
O TIN A SPACIOUS Newer

ham* In Winter Park off Park
Av*. Many a s tr a l Winter
Park echaato. Listed af I70.M0
under ag*ralsal I MNLto*
CaJIC. Preach Ofiaa*-----RP47

323*3200

VI, Hidden Laka. 1711 square
feel, Super Buy 11*43,to*
MRTRQ R IA L
RRTATR C O ., INC.

h&amp; S S 5
REYES 1 1 IH TNI SOUTH

Pitas* call tor ether listtags!

&gt;31-7337
LARI MART
IS* E Stella Rd- 1/1, 1 car
gar eg*. I.4S0 tq. ft. *15.00*
a n . r . Realty, snaaaa

Lavety Lack Arbor tocaftonl 1
bdrm. 1 bath, large earner tot.
daap wall, living, dmlng. dsn.
laundry roam, naw root.
SMJRL aesumabto. 3137487
U K (MIS, SAMfORO

RAVENNA PARK • NIC* 3
badroom homal Eat-In kltch
*n. large comer lot. Coed
location, easy terms I Just
reduced 11................... *54.MO
LOVELY 1 bdrm. 14 bath
horn*, large comer lot, tormal
dining rm.. many treat I Esc.
tlertor horn*. 111)0 down *
c c Call gulckl

FO# SALE
BYOWNER
1 bdrm. 1 balk, l.tot sq ft.,
large living and dining area
with 11replace Extra ream tor
olllca/hebby/thlrd badroom
Wood deck, large trees, tennis
and pool privilege*. 11*5000
C *N m 40l«rttH *4*
WISE MIN
STILL SBBK HIM

715 Myrtle, historic laniard.

E X C H A N O E OR S I L L fo u r
p r e ftr ty kecefed enywNdfe t
litv etfo rt Meeify, U » W 4

STAIRS RROKRTT
M ANAGEM ENT A R E A LT Y
____ 115 7131/m 4 A M

THIS W E EK S

BONO MONBV whan avail
able. Also, government rages
and bank foreclosures
1 B O R M . I S A T N
BBAUTITULLY LANDSCAPBD. screened porch
leading to nice sited pool.
Privacy Is priority 1.....544.VOO

GARAGE SALE
Frl and S a l. Dec 11 A n
14PM TV** Palmetto A v * .

VISIT SEMINOLA PAM
AND SNAP FLEA MARKET
OPEN EVERY SATURDAY
AND SUNDAY t» * t
SEMIteOLA BLVD (behind
(tog Track. Casselberry

2592 SAMfORO AV. SAMORO
F r l A Sat 1 1 P M Couch. 1
chairs, bad frame, dishes, ate

2131 SANFORD AV. SAMORO
E n lt r Iro m P a lm e tto A v .
Friday only I t o p m ) pm I
Xmas Y a rd Salal E veryth in g
m u ll go I Books, toys, ntc
n a c s.c o p la rA tra ln s tt.a tC l
O rta! Dual so i l g Pur chases

3 FAMILY SAU
Toys, crafts, dishes, household
item s 14" 10 tp bike, TV.
V CR, r e c lln e r w / v lb r a to r
Friday and Saturday. VI Mi
W llke n sC lr Sanford. I U d M t

U 2 0 COUNTY RD 427
Thur, A F rid ay l« til 7 Color
TV s, tools, table lamps, m ite

500 SATSUMA DR. SANFORD
Frl 4 Sat t til 7 Desk, stereo
system, games - household1

PRICIB STARTIHO AT M JM
S Badruam 1 Bam condemM
umt. All iggllancas. vertical
Wind* fhraughauf. clukhaus*.
paal.ttnni*. security guard
CALL...331-4*70

PI. I
1 5 7 -M o M k
H tiiiM /to k
SIM par manth an ■ m a 1
bdrm. 1 bath
CaN Lea.
i . or as m ■ c o u trrv - t n
Daubtawld* an .M acres
----- W.
OtTBBN • 1 bdrm. I ba. an
4 -acre! Lat* of shads, him.,
C/H/A, very private. Needs
TLCIPT7JM.......i n - n n evae
NIC! 3 M rm . 14 bath, r,
rafrlg-, naw carpal, carptrt I
BEAUTIFUL naw 14*111 bdrms
14 baths, rang*, relrlg ,
vaulted calling, cawarad petto,
*14.SMI I
■utot retiree park, S*
DeBary, --------------------SAVB la t l NBW I ftl NOMBSI
WHY P A Y RBTAILV I4X7L
saK7t,fitM a:

TAREOKI fAYMUTS

S147 par msnm *n a Iffl
14X70. Call URay:
1A3— W a k r f r o w t
P ro p or t y / t o k

111 1 acra +/- Oak Hammock
parcel* 1 Ad|scant to River I
High A dry. hors** OK. Buy
nowAaaea...
’ iMalWaadll
i l l — A p p ik n c o s
/ F u rn ttu rp

AMTUKOMRlflCa
HOLIDAY aiPTSPBCIALSI
SHUT SBTS/NBATBRS ttf.H
D t4 H 5 Msw-Set., 144am
• BABY BBD/Crlb wim 1 mat
tress pads, j sheet* and mat­
ching rutfl*. Mattras* naw
g M fd O ja n tto i
BJ'S RILALB
■to Buy/iaD Tamttor* 4 Cat3541L
Ava,3357S*a
a COLON TV » In. Excellent

CRAFTSAATIC Queen Bad. Naw
cond. pd.SlOM; t* » . OBO
Wad. gown 7/a pd 11100. S300
Truck tool ban 174. tM dll)
aOINING ROOM labia and
mlsc. chairs. *45 OBO
d DOUBLE D R E IIIR . Twin
badm*trass and baa springs.
SIM. 333*74*______________
d o u b l e B ID , d i n e t t e s e t
wim 4 chairs. Ilka naw. Firs!
I l l ) lakes ail, 335140*_______
* DRY IB , gas. Seen Kenmor*
White, Ilka naw I tM. MI lTta
LARRY'S MART. I l l Sanford
Av*. Mew/Used turn. A appl
Auy/SeU/Trad*........ 3314131.

ONLY 3 MONTHS REWi
Days, m i m Eve*, n w i l l
AA Cames. lac

Q n tu ifc ,

CARA6C SALEH
Kids Items, toys, turn and
clothes! Intanl 1 y rt 111
KriderRd. Frl and Sat 14

WITH TOUR OWN SatoWto
pop w atch NBO.
ISPN, CNN, gad

2 STORY BEAifTYI
Spaciowt 4 bdrm. 14 bath
Formal Lly. rm. A Din. rm .
lam. rm. w/fpk. Beautiful
decor: mirror well accents,
naw custom window covering
Tranquil backyard setting 4
llowerlng landscaping Irom
XT wood deck I Great value *1
1111.0001 Owaar.........375*41*

1»

—A c r t o g o -

Uft/fato

* LNs Of BniU m i lets *
SANFORD
RasIdenBel tram S7.U0S. terms
Commercial tram HO.OtO. term,
NP REALTY, 2 M M M
OSTBEN. I acres, weeded.
SJO.OOO GENEVA. } acres
573OH BreugbSen Naalty
444*114

■attre castSsat*. 1 complete
reams I Living room suite,
badroom suite, glass dinette
set&lt;4 chairs, all contemporary
style. 11.7*5Must seal
CaM 311-4*33 ask ter Tern
tPONTAALE DISHWASHER.
Kenmor* Front loading Good
condition. 575 M H M _______
• RATAAH AAR STOOL3 1.
iwe............................m stag
•RIFRIOERATOR-lt.t
Cu FI.. Whirlpool. Irosltree.
Goad cond 570 Evenings
OI-4WI___________________
■ EPRIOBRATOR. Kenmor*.
14.1 In Baig*. tide by Sid*,
etc. cond Ice'weter In door
5500 OBO. QUEEN SUED
maltrass/sprlngs.
Stearns/Fotler. *&gt;c cond.
lirm, iioo, TV/Micrewave
stand 150. Pteesa call 131 *54*
* SOFA - 7 t t , rarersibi* tapes
try Cushions, gold Very good
condition I 5100 C a llH U H I
elOFA A LOVE SEAT Imat
chlngl. Extra nice and clean
Sioe. H i sage
a SOFA Conlemperery llorai
design In shades of orange
only L30 111 7)74

LBS||BBBBBIBMI»

flit
emit* cawtrai. A/C.
Only lia tJ I par month I
CaNMr.pRgwa.3Pmi
IS** FORMULA TIRIBIROt
III! If yau'ra paying

ll W M C N H M

II
E B j^ N S M ta T trS
IBM AT or Ctang. Naw in
sf Camgtoto wtm IMS A*

W —tprtiNN
TOY lI wJ lr

ttandbrakBL t » Call H3-14IS
• RRRRCISI BRH. lUt* nawT
OraatChristma* G m iltH
_________ MI-SMS_________
• SR IIN B AND NOWIND
Inarcltar, Sears Lltesty ter
XC. Lto* naw I Cast g a t. Sell
tor itgg. At»*r 1PM.» a u
191— B p i M k f
ALL SYBIL BUILDINBS at
daator Invak*. L M to IAMB
SAW. Call 4*7-741-43*1 caltoct
• DATN ROOM CaBlnat, na
mlmar, wasdan frant. Ilk*
latowatoL Caat t i t Wilt sacritkaMAMS-HW___________
a i m ' s WINDOW, TRIHII

199— P i t s P S u p p l k t

PANDORA BUNNY • Whlto
hafd til X-mpst

tarry

RESTO RE D D O LLHO U SR

Central H/A......... ......... Sft.fR
Tecglln Realty lac, *144*1*

GAIAfiCSAU
Toys. Snapper riding lawn
mower I Household Hams III
Maplawaad Dr. Ildyllwildal
Frl and Sal SAM 1PM

i/ I

COCK IR SPANtRL, Pup* and
Mato, 5IW. Rad. butt A whlto

t

CaRBMVBMe

t i

■ acapt tax, tog. htto. ate

I P —T B k v H k w /

IN fR B r,

Co-Op/to k

spa. 1 car garagt. I174.SM

C sH M G ftfB tft REALTOR
(4*tf W 4 W ar m - u ta

Sanford Are to TVth St than
on* black west Antiques
hors* drawn vehicles, lg doll
house, loots old and naw.
furniture, riothar, 4 Mlsc I

REGATTA
S nO R E S

VACANT risldtoiWal tof. Oaad

S

*

TMl IP PAYMUT1

Rtokrkk

SA LR /LIA SB /IN V R STI I

S acr* salat*I i n . SSM ag. tl..
custom built. SH7.SM

o f R e g a lia S h o re s

Luxury Apt. Living

TITTBRtoaer* hamaslto In De­
ltona. Ptna*. Oaks. Haras*
OR. earner parcal. Taka

CAUAMYIMH

V I , llv-dto- lamcaryarf.c/li/*........ .

F lo rid a R e a lty

S

LARI MARVI *♦ atraa sanad
A-1 wtft gwaiity built a bdrm
1 4 bato aN brick hemal i
a.t. *1 living

U 3 S THAN H I M

H tA L T O H .................. 11174*0
NBW

A

Ml Cheat*
mto/Oranta
VoiusWLak* Caunttoal

I HRRtl S ___
— j w/temd. p a l. -- -----p a lla . fa m ily re a m
w/flraglaca A If. kitchen
Bee. cand. Only..SS7.71A.RA3i
CaRJaaasts-Wtotwi wwaaaa

447-SSM................. ........Ma To*

CALL BART
G

LBSSTNAai
WITH NBW Til
•OStOMONIY.TNA.VA
OR COMVBNTIONAL LOANSI
I t e g n llfy

105— D u p it x -

MUST CHAHTMAS TO ALL1

wr 1-4A SR MW.
to spat tor yuur
Call to tea Ihls a

117— C w n m e r c t a l
________ BttrtRh________

r

1 0 3 - HOUSOS
U iH u n tlih td / R ont

1 4 1 - H e m e a l e f S a le

141-

HNDHXt
m i f n i n

• W ASH! R-WHIR LTOOL.
It Whlto. Can help

TWO-ACRI PLUS hamaslto
Heavily
OK. Ta
sea call u* new) I
TRRBR NfCB RISIOINTIAL
.MMLOfNO U V l. Eaay ac­
ta SR MW A 17/41. All
'tar an*............ SIAM

I

SECURITY NATIONAL

S
n n

•Star DOWN OOfVRS*
N C V T U N S IIItU lM

b u il d in g |g f . O u ltf
— “ ‘ ' but c5*m to eei.............J i u a t

Now eftlco/Whso. tag ft. to
1.4*5 It. Bays with or jm/o
ottlcat storting at tMt/Nto*
Hwy. 17/n A SR4J7

S

•WALL UNIT, S Tt. X * TL, 1

NICELY T H U D residential

AAA BUSIRBSS CBNTBR ■

SANTORO! Tor.vrtMMm. UN
'A up plus Ota- w d r t f a No
w H m a n or i n n h
D Lara* I
SANTORO
laundry,, C/H/A. HU/mo or
SllVwk
SllVwfc. No Osposlt 13) *7*1
SANFORD Hug* 1 bdrm . cion
lo dow ntow n. C o m p ltlt
privacy I SIM par wnh p ill
«oo security, c a m tm * *
SANTORO - 1 bdrm., excellent
location, comp lot* privacy I
MS par m ak plus UM security
Ml.— ..........................m - t w

Ll
Will.

•BAVTITUL 7-acrw hamaslto In
Lab* Jtttap
aeoBnp era*.
a w . Call
sail naw
naw to
n
ta g fb l* a c r e a g e . Nee.
(aal.......................... J7SJMII

IIS — l e i w f r t a l
R tt r tR l s ________

TIRRD OP TflNANT Hoado c k n t CaN S rs d

NtARUL
balk, turn., apali.
rm 11375/mo Raa

REALTY, I N C .
•Si O e M f Jket,

SM B U N TM C EI

appll., mint Minds,
C/H/A, UM/manti— MMtSt
SANTORO • Largo 1 or ] bdrm.
Tram SMS/mo or IMS/wk. No
dapatit, Tael. CHA MM*U
SANTORO, Naor 14. Claw and
Quiet. 1/1 Matl Saal rani
070 Socially W l s a - tn t
SANTORO • Nka w*al Largatt
I bdrm. In lawn I Small, pilot
compJan! Matt So ft . tor your
monayl p7l.fiS0d*p « tH « n
STUDIO Agtl us/wk. I Bdrm,
170/wk. Both In canvanlpnl
aJ« callan t^M A Iin /m aM g a
um s

STENSTROM

1 S o ms., now carpet. Tretsr
I portw at gwlat IHMtylo. MTS
mo. Incl. watar, garb., yard
I or m - m t

ITS par M ak plus SMI security
mchtaa* utwtta*. C R O B I
ATTRACTIVI t BOOM ANTI
(Mat, an *f perking lltg/wk.
Include* utilities CaNniAKI
TURRISNIO Apit I Nice A
titan, ulilllto* Incl.. walk Ip
dswntowninyanF/toeva ana.
SANTORO • I bdrm. Efficiency
with prlvala bath. WO work
plus SIM tacurlty Includes
xiiiitiati can..............a r n w
O N I BIDROOM . u tilitie s
furnished. cio n to shopping
a m Call attar STM. 174-m i
b tfara STM call lll- H H

1 0 1 -H o

M l MMarWMTTt_________

SlSO^mo CaNm wsi

114— R m I E s t a t e

I

oto!7VTllMUB*#trilfu/r»*7

UH/|

balk, nka arao. ofl tl. prklng
ttoprw*.,H)0ioc.l
JNRN

SANTORO ■ I bdrm.. camptoto

a SOT A-Danish Weed tram*

otTBBN 1 bdrm. I bath on 5

DORCHLSTtH APTS

raan i Consider

HaryMT,

STATS por wk.
srm -ix a
S lM df.
RBNBVA, Country
ntry o r a a t 1
1 .1 s

131- C o n

111—1
/

i/I

u u n H om i
a i MaanaBd Av.. to i tw i
M ir. whty, nwnaar
s u b i m i i .....M iaatm i-aaai
sanford m a la
Hark A*l L f rm., tale.,
aorchl &gt;*5wk. utllpd,.n*-l*31
EOORL prtoatobaRil
iWan. CaBto. UVwk a*wa to
utilities. n s taw, b a n nwg
historic

Ja i

K I T 'N * C A R L Y L E # hjr l e r r y W r ig lM

P
R
I
I
OOBBRMAN/ROTTWBILBR
MIX I Ta gsad ham*. 7 mo*
•Id tomato. All Uat* except
rabtoL IWbhlva Fails)

CNurtFwuKiat
•avw... ................. si
.J I N
A EtoawxpTO
p m AIww
ita FIRIIr
f

irijs

Details M t-P T im
aat. TJIT3C______________
CLASSITINDCRt

Sava tins* I Lat us match yaur
rapuast wfih aur computer! ted
Hat at vatweta*.

FKF

tn is u

OUTSIOB ORLANOO
FAIRWAY MOTORS
“ N M M a fttM D M M R B

MM US 17-45

Except too. Mr . title, etc
TONTIAC ORAM AM • l«B7,
auto, air, 4 dear, tiara*- Rati­
fy nH». muat saal
Only tlM it par manth I
Celt Mr. Paywa, » m i
a PUBLIC AUTOAUCTION •
■VERY TUESDAY 7: MTM
DAYTONA AUTOAUCTION

5MMH1
TMIV9MIKNTS
lacapt tow, tof. ftn*. ate
PONTIAC MM • 4 dear
air, Ittraw. cruise, tiff,
windows I Only StTtJS/mtl
CaMMr. Paywa, » l t t t
M AUDI MM SC Turb*.
auSa.. beautiful candHanl
SACRfTfCBf
233— A v k P t r t s

P LHASA A P ta very leveble,
friendly, mato. Whlto cator.
Needs a tovabto ham*. AKC
rag. ITS. Accaaarto* Included.
CsNsn stapi 333-41**
MINI DACHSHUND • Black A
4 VVMto&gt;
praawtl Parents an areml 1
*1
5175.335-47*4 eve* A
PURIBR1D BRADLR Papal
lat Quality rabPit dags. 175.
BomNav. ism. 33MMI
RRTRIBVBRPUPS-SM
Aval table naw tor Chrlstmaal

/i
PAUTO PARTS • Dada*
Chevy Nava II i m CHI

SKOALS!
Engine*. Tranamlsslsns. Radlatprs, etc. Vahlclas-yeu
make run 1331-*H*_________
• M ICN ILIN Radial Tire,
■rand Newt ite/iss HR HO
Metric, tit* PuafMt. Std
MS-1*37

214—Import Cart

299

W u r i H f A p p p rti

a SRCONO BRNR RATIONS a
Yaur clathing aald tar cammlsalananty I Call...... 3545474

211-Antkuos/
f a H a f llk lB B

•NANO OPINING D IC 171 J
A J COUNTRY CORNBRI Ml
N a p a t l , O sfaan . Used
l o r a l t a r a l A a llg g a t,
haaNaadacra4Ss.OPBNI4-4
2 1 9 — W w k M *» t o y

i Cans..*

MAh

.331-114*
I N R R D F i l l W OOD
PALLETS. M la a M to. 4
way's. BHNpick ep......Ml-KM
WOOD P U R N I T U R B
WANT EDI Aay CONDITION)
Ate*buyingenttquex. M l4 S 1 1

221—Good Things
to Eat
U-PICK NAVIL ORA NOBS.
14/bushel. Hwy. as E. Sanlord.
I blk. E. el Bear dal I Av*. next
ta Auto Auction. 4-Spm______
222— M u siC l I
M tr c h a n d iM

CONN ORGAN ■ Medium sir*,
good condition. *410 (I need
the tpacal Cell 1717141

PIANOFORSALE
Wanted: Nespantibi* party to
taka an small monthly pay
ments on piano. Sea locally.
Call Manager at *0*435 IS11

223—AAisctilahoove
a ANSCO CAMBRA • 11mm.
auto focus. Coma* with Its
own easel Nice Christmas
g ittitio ..................... sssua*
* ASSORTS 0

R i c o a o t i All

to r*Id C a ll3354*31

NIN YEAR’S E K
PARTY KITS
Only al Central Systems 7470
IroquolsAy, San lord..1)41*4*
B U Y ..........S I L L . ..........T R A D E

HUB Y'S CROWN PAWN
_________ 375*74*_________
* DOG HOUSE. Large shlngia
root. Built up. treated wood
Door Can deliver IAS *41*711
PEASAPHONE. Panasonic, i
line Intargratad. telephone
system KX THU- Originally
ISO Sailing at 5U 40 Call
batora SAM or evenings alter
4PM Keep trying. 375554*
OFINBWOOO. All Oak 150 par
curd ) cord* Ya- pick up
Call now I 544 54*3
a GOWN, pink Sli* S US Call
Evenings 337 1470__________
SrtM C ta is tM Gift 19m !
MEMBERSHIP. Tlmecuen
Golf and Country Club, by
Individual al discounted price
tor information Call:
POLO RECORD Collection.
Approximately 140 7* RPM
records. Incl big bands. |ari.
classical. Hawaiin. Jolton.
Sousa, rleiteti, Andrews Sit
tars, ate All tor ISO w a n
TANNING BID Brand Newt
Great Christmas gilt’ Will
hold 57500 *54 1*11________
• WINDOW Brown tinted
thermo pan*. Haw I 540 OBO
_______ 37* 571*_____
X MAS tree. * tt. 140, Gill
baskets and crafts antique
venliqu* vanity. 175 single
mattress sat. 150 313 5*57
M OALLOM plastic and Heel
drums, tdsel tor tree terming
Steal OK tor BBQ1373 7744

____________r
ucks
tdTrucfc
!t*l TOYOTA STARLIT!
tad., ac. *■«. g es mi. U.tot
i t a a t r o o p i r l s tx a r
Burgundy A capper. Law, tow
mltoa.......................Ill,SMI I

ktopsc torn............. Ml nil

HM TOYOTA TICXUPt Extra
ctoan special I............... U to t
IWI TROOPER LS PHI Whlto A
g ra y l- te n * . Law, lew
mil**........................III. tot it
.... .........J O H N
RBNAULT Bacaral VL 7 dr.,
ac, s spd/M mpg. am/h ■cat.,
tl.7*twk*OP331t
235— T r a c k s /

■v s m /V r m
TARE I lf FAYMCITS
E xcapt tax, tag, tittw, ate
CHIVY PICR UP • ltot,
power stearing, power brakes.
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Mr. L. C. al Enterprise sold
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Now buying complete cart A
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may farm (thromboals). Clots In
the superficial veins are unusual
and rarefy cause hann: A ^ t n
may iw ru ana Dccomc icnorr
ana hard, but no serious com­
plication win ensue.
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and tunai where It can lead to
tissue damage and. In some
casea. d e a th . Deep veno us
thrombosis la common In the
legs, where It causes pain and
swelling. The afliction Is related
to a host of factors. Including
varic ose vei ns, p r e g n a n c y
(because the enlarging uterus
Impedes venous blood Row),
birth control pits, pelvic infec­
tion and prolonged Immobility
(which slows blood circulation).
The diagnosis Is confirmed by
Doppler ultrasound, a test of the
veins using electrom agnetic
waves.
Prevention Involves leg eleva­
tion (to assist venous circula­
ti on) , m o d e r a t e e x e r c i s e ,
avoidance of prolonged standing
(and sitting with legs crossed),
t r e a t m e n t of I n f e c t io n (If
needed), elastic support hose (for
v a r i c o s e v ei ns ) , a l t e r n a t e
methods of birth control and
rapid mobilization after surgery,
to mentions few.
Treatment consists of a n ­
ticoagulant drugs (such as
Coumadin) and surgery (to re­
move dilated veins that re­
peatedly become thrombosed).
B e c a u se . prevention and
treatm ent m ust be Individu­
alised. depending on the cause. I
urge patients with deep venous

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WHAT HAPPDCPj SAM\
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» y J s mas Jacsh y
After North’s artificial pre­
em ptive opening. East-w est
failed to reach their vulnerable
small slam. South doubled two
spades, the premise being that
North would paaa only when his
true suit was spades. When
North showed that his suit was
hearts. South bid four clubs to
show the ace In that suit as well
as length. West now asked for
aces. North bid five clubs to get
In the opponents’ way, and
East’s double was Intended to
show one ace. Unfortunately
West misinterpreted the mean­
ing of the double and passed.
This type of thing happens all
the time, even in the semifinal
round of World Team Champi­
onships. The defense functioned
perfectly. Down six. In the re­
v ise d s c o rin g s c h e m e for
tournaments, gave East-West
1400. a small loss, since their

By Bornlcs Beds Osol
TOUR BIRTHDAY
D s c .2 I.1 9 9 0
Financial Indicators should be
trending upwards In the year
ahead and Improved material
conditions are likely, provided
you capitalize on opportunities.
BAOrTTARIUB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Today you might expect
more from persons than their
capabilities warrant and end up
getting angry because they can't
deliver. Strive to be tolerant. Get
a Jump on life by understanding
the Influences which are gov­
erning you In the year ahead.
Send for your Astro^iraph pre­
dictions today by mailing 91.25
to Astro- Graph, c/o this news­
paper. P.O. Box 91428. Cleve­
land. OH 44101-3428. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Upon occasion you are somelimes overly generous with the
wrong people while Ignoring the
deserving. It looks like this
might be one of those days, so be
careful.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Fcb. 19)
This Is a good day to reevaluate
your objectives, because you
ANNIE
PMCRJSE WHAT IT'S
UKE WHERE 1 AM, W
WOULDN'T REMEM9EI
AffYtdAV...

J WOULD,
AMrTY/...

teammates at the other table
were minus 1430. their oppo­
nents having reached the small
slam In spades. Unfortunately.
In the stress of competition,
everyone mis- scored the result.
The score card Indicated that
declarer had taken six tricks,
and the total entered was only
1100. Later, before the final
match began and within the
prescribed time for correction,
all contestants realized that the
actual result should have been
1400. Despite the fact that the
German team, the ostensible
winners of the match, agreed
that they actually had been aet
1400. the appeals committee, on
the grounds that the score card
manifestly Indicated that six
tricks had been taken, let the
result stand. This strange de­
cision will long be criticized.
(Cl 1990. NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

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debted to you might not comply
to your demands for repayment
today If you attempt to pressure
him/her. In order to get that U&gt;
which you're entitled, you must
be tactful.
LRO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today,
you might have to make a hard
decision that affects someone
else as well as yourself. If you do
not consider his/her Interests, a
problem could erupt.
VOtOO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Persons over whom you have
au th o rity will emulate the
example you set today. If they
rcelve you to be Indifferent or
zy. t h e y ' l l m i r r o r y o u r
behavior.
LIBRA (Sept. 234)ct. 23) You
might not be too proficient today
at managing your resources or
those of others. You won't be
chastised for your losaes. but be
prepared to take some heat for
your other mistakes.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Guard against Inclinations today
to overreact when you have to
c o n t e n d with u n e x p e c t e d
frustrations. There Is a possibili­
ty you might blow small Infrac­
tions out of proportion.
bv Leonard Starr
-600P9Y, A m t I601LY,
KAft.I’ASOSUpJ ME
for tA M T H iy *
WM m
f TOO,
matters...
amity/
(O ^IM U S T S O
j
nov...

achieve a goal that won't gratify
you once It Is attained.
PI8CKS (Feb. 20-March 20) If
something disturbs you today
you are likely to suffer In silence
Instead of bringing It out Into the
open where It can be resolved.
Don't hold things In.
AR1SS (March 21-Aprtl 19) Be
extremely selective today re­
garding your choice of compa­
nions. If you're careless, you
might associate with a person
who may do something un­
derhanded and you could be
accused of complicity.
TAURU9 (April 20-May 20)
You’re an Independent thinker
who likes to set his/her own
goals, but today this assignment
might be entrusted to an Indi­
vidual whose alms are not In
harmony with yours.
ORMmi (May 21-June 20)
You might have problems
working with co- workers today,
especially If you are critical of
their efforts and overly Insistent
upon doing things your way.
Strive to be considerate.
CANCSR (June 21-July 22)
Someone who Is presently In;

MEMORY//

♦
♦
♦
♦

K

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N EW S D IG E S T

* -*•*

w as?®

INSIDE_______________
□ S p o rts

Winter sports gets underway
SAN FO R D — Hoy's and girl's soccer, boy's
and girl's basketball and wrestling all lx-gln litis
week with winter high school prep sjxirts season
getting underway.
See Page I B

□ P e o p le

Buy fresh for Christmas
This year for Christmas, why not visit a
Christmas tret farm and pick your own tree
from those growing right in the ground? A fresh
tree has good color and holds Its needles well
See Page 3 B

Eslinger named sheriff
By BUSAN LO O IN
Herald stall writer
SANFORD - MaJ. Donald Eslinger
will become Semlnoie County shcrlfT
when ailing Sheriff John Polk retires
Dee. 31. Gov. Hoh Martinez made
the appointment of Eslinger official
this morning in Tallahassee.
On Nov. 18. Martinez approved
Polk's recommendation that EsIInger complete the final two years of
Polk's sixth four-year term as sher­
iff. Polk, who Is suffering from
congestive heart disease and who is
ruled out as a candidate for a heart

transplant, told the Sanford Herald
he would not retire early without a
key role In Martinez' choice of his
successor.
M a rtin ez' legal counsel Pele
Dunbar told the Herald Martinez
made the appointment official this
morning.
“ I haven't been notified yet."
Eslinger said at about 10 a.m. "It's
good news. I can't comment until I
have It official |from Martinez or
Polk)."
"Don will make a fine sheriff."
Polk said this morning from his
hospital room In Altamonte Springs.

Iraq mobilizes children for war
Secretary of State Jam es Haker urged U.S.
allies represented on the U.N. Security Connell
to endorse military sanctions against Baghdad
and Ira q re p o rte d ly began m o b iliz in g
schoolchildren and peasants In preparation for
war.
See Page 7 A

S A N F O R D - T h e Sem inole
County schooi district has budgeted
$246,733 to remodel, renovate or
construct pre-kindergarten facilities
for handicapped students al Heath­
row Elementary. Partin Elementary
and Lake Mary Elementary schixtls.

BRIEFS

Classrooms are Ix-lng constructed
al Heathrow Elementary, which Is
being built on Markham Wixxls in
Inike Mary, and Partin Elementary,
which Is Ix-lng built In Oviedo. A
portable elasstoom will he hulll by
the district and placed at Lake Mary
Elementary. 132 S. Country Club
Road. Like Mary.

Jackpot hits $15 million
T A L L A H A S S E E - Notxxly matched all six
winning numbers In this week's Florida lottery
drawing so the Jackpot rolled over to an
estimated $15 million for next week. lottery
officials said Sunday.
The winning numbers in Saturday's drawing
were G. IO. 22.26.27 and 28.
Although nnlxidy won the grand prize.
300,729 tickets qualified for smaller prizes.
Payouts were:
• :»02 matched five of six to win $3.231.50.
• 15.845 matched four of six to win $90.
• 284.57G matched three of six to win $4.50.
The $15 million estimate Is based on a single
winner, paid in 20 annual Installments.

Richard Wells, assistant superin­
tendent for facilities, said construc­
tion of the permanent classrooms
will lx- "in the ballpark" of $70,000
apiece, while 11 will cost approxi­
mately $20,000 lo build the |xtrlahle classroom.

Chiles plans p eo p le’s inaugural

Bush on the road again
W A SH IN GTON — George Hush, perhaps the
most well-traveled president In history. Ison the
road again.
Hush. Just hock from an eight-day trek to
Europe .ml the Middle East Ih.h focused on Ihc
Persian Gulf crisis, heads south today for a twoday meeting with Mexican President Carlos
Salinas de Gortarl that’s expected to he
dominated by talk of free trade.
The president was scheduled to lly to
Montcrn y. an Industrial city 420 miles north ol
Mexico City. He and Salinas were to hold talks
later In the day In ihc Mexican leader's home In
the nearby town of Agualcgas.
Hush Is return to Wasltlnglon late Tuesday.
After a couple of days behind I he desk In the
Oval Office and a refill of his suitcases, he will lx*
up. up and away again
The president is to depart this Sunday for a
seven-day trip to South America, which will
Include stops in Brazil. Uruguay. Argentla. Chile
and Venezuela.

County chamber names
Seminole senior tops
Herald stall writer
SANFOR D — Shannon
Latimer, president of (he senior
i lass .it Seminole High Schtxil
and the school's Homecoming
Queen, has added another ac­
colade to her collection.
Latim er. 17. was recently
named Student ol ihc Year by the
Grealer SemPml* County ChrMi­
lter of Commerce
The chamber grants the award
lo ihe youngster they consider to
Im- "the single most outstanding
gr.uwaling senior" In the county.
Latimer, who In addition lo her
other activities Is also editor of
S a lm a g u n d i, ih c s c h o o l's
award-winning yearbook, has
been president of her class each
ol her four years in high schixtl.
She Is the daughter of Janiee
aud Clarence Latimer II of San­
ford
The settlor is planning to at­

B r ld g s .................
Classified*........
C o m i c s ...............
C r o s s w o r d .........
Dear Ab b y.........
Deaths.................
D r. Oott..............
Editorial............
Florid a ................

H o ro s c o p e ......
Mowias..............
N a tio n ...............
P a o p la ..............
P o lic e ............... ..........3A
School Menu..
... 1 B,2B
T a la v ls lo n .......
W f i l h i r ........... ..........2A
W o r l d ...............

Sunny, warm fall day
Partly cloudy with a
high m the low mis
W ind southeast al
5- It) mph

F o r m ore w e a th e r, see P ag e 2A

The elassrtxuns will expand the
student capacity of each schixtl by
about 15. according to Dailey.
Plans had originally railed for the
portable classroom to lx- built at
Woodlands Elem entary School,
1420 E.E. Williams Road. Longwood.
According to Don Rlecl. district
director of exceptional student edu­
cation. said the Lake Mary site was
chosen Ix-cause it Is "In a br**cr
transportation corridor" than the
Longwrxxl site and that the more
ccntral Lake Mary location was a
Ix-tler choice.
"T h e re 's nothing particularly
wrong with Woodlands site." Rlerl
said. "Lake Mary won out simply for
Us geographical lix-alion."

"That's give or take $10,000."
Wells said.

The classrcxims will lx- built at
new schools as they are constructed
as exceptional education students
are mainstreamed Into all sc-hixils.

According to Dr. Marion Dailey,
assistant superintendent for in ­
structional services, an additional

Heathrow and Partin Elementary
Schools arc expected In he com­
pleted wit tilt) a year.

M illions d e sig n a te d
for local p ro je ct loans

Shannon Latimer

By NICK RF1IFAUF
Herald stall writer

tend the University of Florida amt
to major In Journalism. She Is a
member of the school's newspa­
per stalf and writes a weekly
column for the Sanford Herald.
"S h e 's an outstanding stu­
d e n t." said principal Wayne
Epps. "She always makes us
proud."
Epps said Latimer has been
active In all aspects of the school.
I n e I u d lu g p la y i n g on the
basketball 'cam three ol her four
years In high school.
Latim er decided to devote
herself more fully lo her studies
In during her senior year and did
not try out for the team this year.
The Greater Semlnoie County
Chamber of Commerce cited her
dedication to her school as well
as her high academic standing as
Its reasons for selecting Latimer
as (he lop student of the year.
She is ranked In the top five
students In her graduating class.

From staff and wlra reports

INDEX

$25,000 will lx- spent at each school
lor I lie special equipment needed for
exceptional education classrooms.

By VICKI OaBORMIBR
Herald stall writer

By VICKI DaBORMIKR

Don Eslinger

Programs expanded
for special students

Head of tha class

□ N a tio n

TALLA H ASSEE Lawton Chiles's folksy
approach to campaigning Is being carried
forward to fils Inaugural bash.
Gone will lx- tiic fleets of limousines and
rampant glitz that attended Ikib Martinez'
arrival In Tallahassee four years ago. Chiles
might even forego the formal dress once
considered proper form for these affairs.
Chiles's aides plan to send out at least 50.000
Invitations to tils Inaugural festivities, an
extraordinarily large number, according to Tom
Staed. the hotel executive planning the parties.
Additionally, he is limiting contributions to
h‘s Inauguration fund to $100 per person — the
same limit that prevailed during his campaign.
Slaed told T h e St. Petersburg Times for Friday
editions.

"I called Talluliasscr. He has been
confirmed. I feel I gave 110 |&gt;crccnt
(as sheriff) hut due In my health I
couldn't continue to give 110 per­
cent. There ronx*s a time In your life
when IPs lime to retire." Polk said.
He added that he would nol have
resigned for an appointment to have
been made, hut Instead retired
Ix-cause of his health. Polk said In­
fects good today.
"This Is a very gtxxl appoint­
ment." Polk said. He (Eslinger)
knows Ihc department...I'm happy
with It. I'm sure lie'll make a few
□ See Sheriff. Page SA

SANFORD - There could lx- over
$13 million entiling to Sanford and
Longwixx! next year through federal
and slate revenue for financial
assistance In wastewater programs.
Florida's Department of Environ­
mental Regulation has published a
list of lls priority project ree. mmcndatlous on the ilisirlhiiiltm ol
an expected $74.6 million in new
funding available for fiscal year
1991 for revolving fund loans.
Projects must he Included on the
DER's revolving loan priority list
before any loans from the stale's
revolving fund can tx- grained
The amount available lor this new
fiscal year Includes $12 million lit
state funds w hich have been
appropriated, and a n ' estimated
$62.6 million In federal limits which
have not yet Ixcn appropriated.
The published list Is estimated on
the expected appropriations. A Itnol
list ol loan amounts will he available
after the total figures are an­
nounced.
The loans, to elites and counties
In Florida, will he granted on a

revolving loan priority list.
If everything on the list goes
through and priorities are high
enough. Sanlord would receive
$-1791 million lot treatment, reuse
and oult.ill lacllltlcs and $2,982
million for Inlluetil transmission
facilities, for a grand intal of
$7,773,000
The city of Longwixxl's Herns on
the priority list includes $2,087
million lor collection and Influent
iransmtssi &gt;tt laelllttes Additionally,
then- is $| 154 million lor a collec­
tion system Longw ood's total
amount that would tie available Is
$5.8 million
Acting Cliv Administrator Don
Terry said tlie- city bail c.xpciicd to
gel on the list with three projects.
The other projects have relatively
low priorities Inti would he available
It oliici mimicIpalttlcs and counties
did not apply lor those projects
which arc on the list, hi- said
Tin- almost $4 H million avallahle
lor S ilt ilord's treatment, reuse and
outfall facilities was high on the
prlorliv list, standing .u numtx-r 8
In .i list ol over 100 projects. The
oilier Sanford loan Is quite low on
tin- priority standings

Soil contamination found at civic center
By NICK P F E I F A U F

Herald stall writer

don't expect this to be as
bad as the police department
tank seems to be. j

SANFORD — During removal ol an abandoned
I.ono gallon loci storage tank Irom the grounds
ol the Sanford Civic Center, soil contamination
wax discovered th.tt may result In the city paying
more money lor the removal than hud originally
been expected
flic tank, installed when tin- civic center was
limit h a s not Ix-co used since some lime In 1982
due to iltc conversion ol the heating system at (lie
l.iclhts to natural g a s It is located just ott North
Sanlord Avenue, near the kitchen entrance ol the
building

remedial action and have a contamination
assessment performed by qualtllcd professionals
similar to the work currently under way at tin
site ol another tank at tlit- Sanford police
headquarters on French Avenue

l iidefgrouud storage tank regulations require
the city to return «•the tank hut as the work tx-guu
It was discovered ili.it there was some soil anil
(Hisstlilv groimdwatci eotiiamiuatlon around the
tank
Regulations require the ettv to take immediate

Janunal and Associates, currently doing tin
testing lit the area surrounding the pullet
headquarters, has estimated the cost lor prepara
lion of required studies and rc|xirts plus testing
lor eotiiam iuatlon might run as h i g h as
$21,867.50.

-Bill S im nons, city engineer

Iliat S ihe h ig h end. said Hill Simmons, city
director ol engineering and planning "We re
h o p in g the situation won’t tx- as had as it is near
tile police Station and dial the Dual llgtirc will be
well below that amount
Simmons said the
police station work is already al approximately
$30,000. excluding the cost of tin eventual
cleanunol com.militated soil
Likewise, the cost tor the civic &lt;enter lank dix-s
not Include eventual cleanup ol am so il lound to
be contaminated and the amount tor that cannot
even be estimated until the extent ol the problem
is determined Then is even a |Missihillty the
contamination may not lx- tar ranging, which
would reduce thi cost ol Imth the study and
cleanup
I don't expect tills to be as bad as the |Millce
department tank seems to b&lt; Simmons said
I lie matter w ill be brought iq&gt; lor discussion
tonight at the &lt;it v i .......................... ting Ix-giimlng
at 7 p m m ihc •oiuiiussion i handlers ol Sanford
i itx Hall 3(Hi N Park Avc

�2A

Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida — Monday. November 26, 1990

A cowboy grips his saddle.

A day at the rodeo
The n th memorial roping for Juan Rodriquez at Kathy and Shorty
Behrens' ranch drew contestants from across the United States
Team roping events were held throughout the weekend at the
Sanford ranch, located off Oregon Avenue

Photos by Kelly Jordan

Adam Smith. 23. of Apopka, drives cattle Into a corral.

Jason Hayward, 16, of Wildwood, practices before competition.

Cowboy Marcell Smith, ol Apopka, gets a nudge o! affection Horn his
h o rs e

Slim.
•.‘I

A competitor readies his lasso as he approaches his target.

Hurling a lasso over his head Is Ray Rodriquez, of
Chicago, son of Juan Rodriquez, the cowboy for

Beck, K.jeble, 19, of Lakeland, and Ed Behrens, of Sanford, compete Friday in team roping

LOTTERY

H "

T a l i a h ASSEE - The daily
iiDint’!■&lt; Sunday in Ihe Florida
Loltt i, CASH 3 game was 6-4-3.

LOCAL FORECAST
Today...Partly cloudy with .i
high in llie low H(K. W ind
southeast at 5-lOm ph
Tonight...Curtly cloudy will) a
low in the low l&lt;&gt; mid 60s and a
light southeast wind.
Tom orrow Partly sunny and
InTouitiig breezy. high in the
low to mid 80s. Wind southeast
imreaslng in 15 m 20 mph
E x te n d e d fnreeasi ..P a r t ly
etoudv and breezy Wednesday
and T hursday Lows in I lie
upper IKK lo lower 70s H ighs m
the low lo mid Hiis Mostly
elmidv Friday with highs near
HO and lows m the low in mid

S u n to r d H e ra ld
I t)'

z

hs 111 1*0)

November 26 1990
Vol 63 No 61

Publnh'd Daily jnd Sunday extpt
Saturday by Ih r Sanford Herald
Inr 100 N Frrni.l1 A rt . Sanlord.
Fla ji//t
Sr-tond Clan Portage Paid at Sanlord
(lo r.da 11/11
H O StM A S TIH Sand addrerr thanqer
to THE SANFOMD HERALD PO
Hot H U Sanlord F t 111/1
Sutmription Ratal
1Daily &amp; Sunday)
Homa Dalivary &amp; Mail

) Month*

II* SO

a Month.
I tear

tj« 00
1/100

Phone

non 111 latl

whom the 11th annual memorial event was held
last weekend.

EXTENDED 0 UTLOOK
•

r t -

MONDAY
P ty C ld y 7 2 -5 6

City
Apa1at haul a
Da i tonaBeach
Ft LaudHtMvh
FortMr*f*
Games* &gt;ii«
Homestead
JACfcMitdiile
Key West
l akeiand
Miami
Penwioia
Sarasota
Tallahassee
Tampa
Verg Beach
'A Pjf'TtOrach

Ht
71
71
84
•4
74
84
76
at
81
8J
77
;•

Lo Pet
48 0 00
34 0 jo
000
67 0 00
31 u 00
6t 000
43 0 00
10 0 00
6 J 000
64 0 00
47 0 00
se 0 00
77 16 0 JO
•1 S« 0 00
92 64) 0 00
•4
0 00

&amp;

-------------- -

TU ESD A Y
P tly C ld y 7 3 -5 7

W EDNESDAY
S u n n y 7 4 -5 5

Omp?rafuret indicate previous day '

------------- 1
TH U R S D A Y
P tly C ld y 7 5 -5 6

F R ID A Y
P tlyC ld y 7 6 -5 7

high and Overnight Iqvv to! a m EST
City A Forecast
Hi Lo Prc
Albany.N V rn
62 13
Albuquerque cdy
61 *3
Anchorage cdy
16 H j;
Atlanta cdy
73 47
AtlanticCity cdy
69 36
Baltimore cdy
6« 44
B irm in g h a m cdy

TIDES

MOON PHASES

tiO s

F L O R ID A T E M P S

** \J

NATIONAL TEMPS

NEW
D ec. 1 7

c

M ONSDAY:
SO LUN A R T A B L E : Mm I l :55
a i n . . -------------p.m.: MaJ. 5:40
a ill.. t&gt;:0 5 p ill T I D E S :
Daytona Beach: highs. 1:35
a.in I nti p.m lows. 7:4t&gt;a.m .
H 17 p in . New Sm yrna Beach:
F IR S T
hl^hs. 1.40 a m .. 2 01 p.m,;
Date. 25 lows. 7 51 a.m . 8:22 p in.:
Cocoa Bzach: highs. 155 a.in..
2 Hi p.m lows, 8 (Hi a.ill.. 8:37
p.m.

B E A C H C O N D IT IO N S
Daytona Beach: Waves are I

B O A T IN G
St. Augustine to Ju p ite r Inlet

Inni and glassy C u rre n i is
slightly to the unrth with a water
temperature ol 70 degree** New
Sm yrna Beach: Waves are I ' j
h i I and glass\ l intent is tn the
smith wuli a water temperature

Tonight Wind southeast 10
knots Seas 2 le d
lt.iv and
inland waters a Itghl chop
ITimorrow W ind southeast
15 kim is Seas 3 to T feci. Hay
and inland waters a moderate

ol 7 0 d e g re e s

elltip

STATISTICS
T h e h ig li tem perature In
Sanlord Sunday was 78 degrees
and the overnight low was 50 as
reported by the University uf
Florida Agricultural Resell reh
and Edueation Center. Celerv
Avenue.
Recorded rainl.dl for the
weekend, ending at !l . 1 in.
Mon lay. tnlalled 0 7 tnehes
The temperature ai ;i a in
today was 65 degrees and
Monday's overnight low was 59.
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
liiternalion.il Airport.

Ollier Weather Service data
Sunday's high.....................
Barom etric pressure.3 0 .23
Relative H u m id ity....97 pet
W in d s.............................. calm
R ainfall ................................ in
Toda y's sunset.....5:29 p.m .
Tom orrow 's sunrise....6:57

Boston rn
Chicago rn
Cincinnati cdy
Cleveland cdy
Columbia S C cdy
Dallas F Worthed*
Oenver m
Des.Vcines rn
Detroit rn
Duluth in
F AlrbanLicdy
Hartford rn
Honolulu clr
Houston rn
Indtanapol^ cdy
Jachson Miss rn
KansasCd* rn
Law tqavclr
Lo%Angeie»clr
•NUmpnurn
St Paul »n

NeaOfreanYedr
Nea VorLCity cdy
Omaha m
Pn.iatj*?ipnfa cdy
Phoen * clr
P ttvburgh cdy
StLoun rn
VaitLalitClty cdy
SanAnfonro cdy
SanOiego. clr

SanFrancino cdy

Seattle rn
nqtwi D C eg,

Aicfiit
'■'tlnuts,

A

m ngfor 0*1 cdy

n n
63 41

30
66

SI

52 32
ia

‘f
11
49

37
31

so j;
16 17
12 00
61 34

*0 6t
a1 n
63
7J
69
7)
71
n

40
63
4*?
54
36
64

76
63
51
63
«l
55
74
62
dO
70
38
47
73
72

66
44
J2
42
39
33
38
4)
70
57
47
U
43
34

78 20

65 19

10

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida — Monday, November 26, 1990 — 3 A

POLICE BRIEFS
Accused shoplifter resists police
SANFORD — A woman accused In shoplifting two dresses
hum Ross Dress For Less. San ford. Friday allegedly struggled
with a store security officer who detained her for Sanford
I M iller.

In addition to retail theft Tonya Hairston, 18. 131 Drew Avc..
Sanford, is charged with resisting a merchant. She was
arrested at the store.

Gun threat reported

Mall financing deal on schedule
■ y NICK P fB IP A U P
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — Work on setting up the lax
Incrrmrnt financing for I lie proposed Semi*
nofe Tnwnc Center mall project is moving
ahead right on schedule with the next step
to be taken by the city Monday afternoon.
According to a timetable set up by the city
some time track. Nov. 26 Is the dale set for
the rreatlon of the development agency by
the eily commission, and the Item Is

scheduled lo come up lor discussion during
the workshop meeting at 5 p.m.
Once the T IF plan is In place and Imiiu L.
have Ireeti validated and sold, hopefully by
March of next year, the money available Tor
potential public Improvements in the
western area of the eily will In* far ranging.
Hems that could he Included In the
Improvements to the area that will even­
tually see the creation of the Seminole
Towne Center mall, include a new exit ramp
on Interstate 4 complete with signal lights.

Improvements to State Road 46 near the
mall, the expansion of Rinehart Road to four
lanes, the relocation and expansion of
Oregon Avenue, water system improve­
ments and additional Impruvments to
various roads In that particular area.
The workshop meeting will begin at 5
p.m. In the City Manager’s meeting room,
followed at 7 p.m. by the regular meeting of
the city commission in the commission
chambers in Sanford's City Hall

SANFORD — City poller report charging Anthony John
Presto. 2H. I«KI Persimmon Avc.. Sanford, with aggravated
assault with a llrearm and possession of a concealed gun.

Longwood
commission
meets tonight

Presto was stopp'd In his car and arrested on First Street at
Persimmon Avenue. Sanford, at about 10:08 p.m. Saturday. A
couple had reported to police Presto had allegedly pointed a
handgun nl them as they walked past Sullivan’s Auto on
Pcrslintnlon Avenue. Th e couple alleged Presto had told them
not lo walk In the parking lot. before he drove away from the
scene. Police said they recovered a handgun from a holster
under Presto's shirt.

H y NICK P f W A U P
Herald staff writer

Police officer threatened with knife
SANFORD — A man who allegedly threatened a Sanford
Itoller officer with a butcher knife until the officer drew his
service pistol at about 5:13 p in. Sunday, has been arrested.
Reginald Under Hlocker. 40. 309 Park Ave.. Sanford, allgedly
bit a parked ear with a iMitlle on Magnolia Avenue, before being
confronted by (xillec on E. Fourth Street at Magnolia Avenue.
Miocker Is charged with aggravated assault on a police officer,
two counts of aggravated assault mid criminal mischief.

Bumper theft curbed
SANFORD — A Sanford police officer who slopped a man
from allegedly stealing a bumper from a car at 801 Rosalia
Drive. Sanford, reported charging the man with grand theft.
Ruben N. Mlake. 1H. 107 Scott Drive. Sanford, was arrested al
the theft scene at 1:06 a.m. Sunday.

Motel manager detains intruder
SANFORD — The manager of the Slumbcrland Motel, 2611
S. Orlando Drive, Sanford, detained for police a man who
allegedly broke Into a room at the motel at about midnight
Sunday. Sanford police saiu the room was not rented nnd the
manager found the room door open during a cheek.
The manager confronted an Intruder und held him for police.
Scan C. Murray. 19, 207 Sanora Hlvd.. Sanford, has been
charged with burglary In (heease.

Seminole County DUI arrests
SANFORD — The following persons face a charge of driving
under the influence of alcohol (DUI) In Seminole County:
• .lack Joseph Lee. 32. ol Sarford, was arresled at 2:43 a m.
Monday on 12th Street at Park Avenue, Sanford, ufter his ear
ran a stop sign.
• Raul Perez. 42. 1251 Morton St.. Lake Monroe, was arrested
at Ills ear failed to maintain a single lane. The arrest was made
on State Road 46. at County Road 15. Sanford.

Early m orning fog
As the result of a high pressure ridge across
Central Florida, which is expected to last
through the middle of the week, heavy dew and
fog will continue Irom Gainesville to Lake
Okeechobee and lo the east and west coasts.

according to officials at the National Weather
Service al Orlando International Airport. Above,
fog blankets First Street near the Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce building shortly
alter 7 a.m. today.

Furloughed w orker files legal com plaint
By NICK F P IIP A U P
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — RejxTcusslons are still being fell
from lust July's belt-tlgbtcnlng decision tn reduce
the Sanford's city work force by 15 employees.
This time It Is a complaint filed with the Equal
Etr. -'nyment Opportunity Commission by former
employee Hetty J . Robinson.
Robinson, a clerk typist with the city, was
advised o n Ju ly 3 that she would 1m- terminated
as of Sept. 30. On July 9. she was released from
her Job but plaeed ott an abscnt-wlthpay status,
with her salary, life insurance and medical
benefits continuing through the end of Sep­
tember.
According lo a city policy in connection with

the work force reduction. Robinson was subject to
recall hy the city through Sept. 30.
The city notified Robinson Sept. 18 that a
position for Secretary II was open and offered to
litre her for that job classification. In Ills letter to
her. T im McCauley, city personnel director,
wrote. "As an adversely affected employee due lo
the recent reduction In force and In accordance
with Civil Service Rules you are hereby offered
tills |H&gt;sltton effective as Slated above."
McCauley’s letter gave her seven calendar days
tn which to respond.
In a letter dated Oet. 3. Robinson declined the
position.
City Attorney William Colbert submitted the
city’s written response to the charges on Oct. 22.

E x p lo s iv e s fo u n d on M ia m i-b o u n d flig h t
ByLESLIK WIMIS
United Press International
NEW YO RK - Police Sunday
enrted off 100 p o u n d s of
explosives slashed In the belly of
a Miami-bound Jel. and later
arrested a suspect who said be
bad planned lo sell the cache In
Puerto Rico, authorities said.
Th e M-80 explosives were
slashed In four 25-|Hiund boxes
found In the luggage area on Pan
Am Fligbl 402 ami were discov­
ered as the plane was being
readied for lakcnff at John F.
Kennedy International Alr|&gt;ort In
Queens, said Port Authority
Police Officer Philip Montuort.
Police later learned that Jose
M o lln a -N Ic v e s . 52. of Rio

Grande. Puerto Rico, had iKiught
the explosives in Chinatown for
eventual sale In San Ju a n .
Monluorl said.
A worker loading the aircraft
noticed the boxes at 8:15 a.m.
and alerted authorities, the of­
ficer said.
Port Authority Police Officer
Kevin Devlin said Mollna-Nleves
was arrested at the airport. The
suspect was traveling with Ills
wife and daughter, a girl about
10 years old. and the family
apparently planned to board
Flight 402.
The flight eventually departed
w ith o u t in c id e n t and the
explosives were transported to
Hodmen's Neck In the Ilronx for
detonation. Devlin said.

"H e doesn’ t speak m u ch
English. He told us through an
interpreter that he puchased a
quantity of explosive devices In
Chinatown and was bringing
them back to Puerto Rico lo
resell." Devlin said.
“ The slulT was found when the
baggage handler accidentally
ripped a Ik &gt;\ open and found
these Items." he said. "He notifi­
ed Pan Am security who notified
us."

V &gt;\h II H |R|

LONGW OOD - A number of
Items carried over from last
week's city commission meeting
agenda will come up for dis­
c u s s io n to n ig h t d u r in g a
workshop meeting scheduled for
7 p.m.
One of the most Important
items to be discussed tonight Is
one that drew considerable reac­
tion from the audience at last
Monday’s meeting, the call for
the city to return tax money lo
the citizens. The people say If
the new commission doesn’t
want to continue with the plans
for downtown redevelopment
and a new city hall complex for
w h ic h a la x Increase was
brought about, the city should
give the money back.
At last week’s meeting, former
Commissioner .Jeff Morton pres­
ented the commission with a
petition signed by 132 people,
calling for an ordinance that
would refund the lax Increase If
the commission slopped work on
the redevelopment. Mayor Hank
Hardy said he didn't believe
su c h an Im p o rta n t m a tte r
should be considered until the
city has had lime to discuss it at
a work session.
Another of the major Items lo
be discussed will be the recon­
sideration of a conditional use
request for the Plus III lounge.
T h e workshop m eeting Is
scheduled to begin at 7 p.m.
to n ig h t. In the com m ission
chambers at City Hall. 175 W.
Warren Ave., Longwood.
|&lt; V. H I| I \| I 1

Dcvdn said Port Authority
|M)llee had notified the FHI and
other federal authorities, but
ledcrul proseuclors bad decided
mil to prosecute Mollna-Nleves.
"A p p a re n tly they (federal
authorities) don't believe Ills
Intent was lo do damage lo the
alrcraft." Devlin said.
The suspect was turned over
to city police and Mollna-Nleves
was expected to be arraigned
later in the day. Devlin said.

M

Twist

OPEN EVERY DAY 10AM TO MIDNIGHT

Genetic tests cast
doubts on panthers
llnltad Press Intbsrnstlonal

MIAMI — A new genetic study
shows most of the endangered
panthers In the Everglades are
not pure bred Florida panthers
at all, but hybrids that may not
be entitled to protection under
the Endangered Species Act.
No m ore than 13 of the
estimated 30 to 50 panthers In
the wild are pure bred, said
Melody Roelke. a veterinarian
willt the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. T h e rest are more
closely related lo the South
American puma.
Scientists at the National
Cancer Institute compared the
genetic codes in the panthers’
cells and found two distinct
families.
One. In the Dig Cypress Na­
tional Preserve, was founded by
pure Florida panthers. The
other, in Everglades National
Park, apparently descended
Irom South American pumas sci
free In the 1950s.
The two families have been
breeding together and their off­
spring .ire libyrld mixtures of
(Milliter and puma

Panthers and pumas are sub
s|H'cics ol i lit- cougar or moun­
tain lion Genetic evidence sug
gesis they shored a common
atieester 250.000 years ago
when the species evolved into a
North American and a South
American type
The genetic mixing probably
b e g a n I n t li e 19 5 0 s at
Everglades Wonder Garden, a
roadside attraelioif in Puma
Gorda whose owners kepi a
female panther and tired her to

cats they believed were also
panthers.
Detween 1957 und 1967.
seven Punta Gorda eats were
released Inlo Everglades Na­
tional Park al I he request of
scientists who thought the eats
were pure bred and wanted to
restore the parks' vanished pan­
ther population.
In 19H6, biologists noticed that
the Everglades Park cats lacked
two distinctive Florida panther
traits — a kinked tall and a
cowlick along (he spine.
To find out why. they appealed
to the cancer lab. which has
done genetic studies of rare
animals hoping lo learn more
ubout Inherited diseases.
Scientists used blood and tis­
sue samples to compare the
Florida panthers lo cougar sub­
species from Chile. Oregon. Te x ­
as. Arizona. Colorado and Utah.
T h e te s ts s h o w e d t h e
Everglades cats matched the
South American puma but the
Mlg Cypress eats did not.
Hybridization, or breeding be­
tween distant relatives of the
same animal species. Is usually
considered good Ih-cuusc It Is
nature’s way of revitalizing a
group ol animals In danger ol
dying out.
Hut the federal Enganderrd
Species Act doesn’t protect
hybrid animats. That means the
tats carrying the Smith Ameri­
can pinna genes may be at risk
of losing their leg.d protection.
Since the Endangered Species
Act is also a eructal means of
protecting wilderness lands
where the panthers roam, the
lands are also at risk

51 PASTABILITIES
Lunch from $4.25
Dinner from $6.75
We have 51 menu Heins lo choose Irom between
lunch and dinner irom Allredn to Zucchini, Antipasto
lo Zuppe. Arrabbiai,i to /ill and more m between like
chit ken. veal, seafood and saudwii lies Every dish is
prepared to order minutes before it gets to your table
Come on m and try us 51 times, we ll take you Irom A
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PASTA L W E R S
A C A SU A L I [A L L A N RESTAURANT

D o n 't M iss O u t O n A S in g le Day of t h e
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H e r a l d

Call O u r C ir c u la tio n D ept. T o d a y
To O r d e r H om e D e le v e ry

322-2611

^

S P A t.H i I t IC O N p o i PI I 11 &lt;) P t.P P l.K O M

^

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3:
mt

4A — Sanford HorsM, Sanford, Florida — Monday,

as. im o

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;

Sanfbrd Herald

VINCENT CARROLL

, ’Eat your veggies’,

IM F IS I-M I
300 N. FRENCH A V E.. SANFORD. F L A . 32771
Area Code 407-323-2611 or 6319903
Warm P. Par*, i
' ‘ W. Masts, lascvtfva KdNar
SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 Months................ ................ S I9.SO
a Months.........................
S39.oo
1 Year .......................................... 878.00

EDITORIALS

Keating connection
W hen S en . Alan C ranston's p olitical career
la over, th e California D em ocrat could turn
h is atten tion to creative w riting. T h at w ay. h e
cou ld devote h is tim e to prom oting th e Action
tnat h is sh ad y d ealin gs w ith ssvtngM uM M oan
m agnate C harles K eating w ere n oth in g m ore
than routine con stitu en t aertvee.
C ranston la under in vestigation by th e
S en a te E th ics C om m ittee for M s role In th e
L incoln S avin gs A Loan collap se, w hich w ill
co st th e federal governm ent m ore than $ 2
b illion . D ocum enta subpoenaed b y th e eth lca
p an el show that Cranston an d four o f hla
co llea g u es w ent to extraordin ary len gth s on
K eatin g's b eh alf to stave o ff federal re­
gulators. K eating, w h o b e e s fraud charges for
h is role in th e bankruptcy of th e Irvine-baaed
thrift, w as In th e p rocess o f plundering It In
1967 w hen federal bank exam iners w ere
about ^ d o a e lL .
B ecause o f th e Intercession o f th e so-called
K atlng F ive — Cranston and S e n s. D en n is
D eC oncini, D-Artc., John M cCain. R-Arix..
Joh n G lenn. D-Ohto. and Don R legle. D-Mlch.
— th e thrift rem ained open for another 18
m o n th s. D ue to th at in ex cu sa b le d elay,
taxp ayers w ll fork over an additional $ 1 .3
b u llio n to repay d ep o sito rs a n d u n load
L incoln’s bad investm en ts.
K eating w as uncom m only candid during
o n e celeb rated m om en t, s a y in g th at h e
certain ly exp ected som ething in return for th e
$ 1 .4 m illion h e and hla associates contributed
to th e five sen ators. Since C ranston received
nearly $1 m illion, m ore w as expected from
him . And tw o confidential m em oranda from
C ranston's top fund-raiser. J o y Jacob sen ,
sh ow th e senator delivered.
T h e first m em o, in January 1 9 8 7 . said th at
a s on e o fJ h cjS to a to r'a biggest contributors.
.K eating cou ld .^rightfully expect" preferential
treatment?"In M arch, K eating m ad e h is first
$ 1 0 0 .0 0 0 ^gopgU on to a voter registration
group fa v o r e d b y Cranston. T he follow ing
m onth , C ranston and the other four senators
m et w ith E dw in Gray, then chairm an pf
Federal H om e Loan Bank Board, on behalf o f
K eating. Gray later testified th at Cranston
w as particularly agitated about the pressure
federal regulators w ere putting on K eating.

After Gray was replaced as board chairman
by M. Danny Wall. Jacobsen informed
Cranston In a Sept. 6. 1987 memo that she
had arranged another meeting with KeaUng.
She added that, given the "g&lt;}od news to
KeaUng.” a request for a $250,000 contribu­
tion would be In order. On Sept. 24. KeaUng
met with Cranston and then with Wall. In
early November. Cranston asked for and
received from one of Keating's assistants
$250,000. which was part of the $850,000 the
senator ultimately received from KeaUng for
various voter registration drives. Six days
later, Cranston telephoned Wall In discuss the
"personality problems" between the San
Francisco-based examiners and Lincoln of­
ficials. Whereupon Wall took the examiners
off the cose and personally supervised the
Investigation from Washington.
Cranston's "constituent service" continued
throughout 1988. On Feb. 9. the senator and
his son new to Phoenix and stayed at
Keating's home. During the visit Cranston
received from his host two corporate checks
totaling $500,000.
The Cranston-Keating connection Is a
classic glimpse of the coiy relationship
between special Interests and members of
Congress. The paper trail left by the senator’s
fund-raiser spells out In vivid detail how cash
was used to buy Influence. California voters
should not forget that the man they elected to
represent them In the Senate Is for hire If the
price Is right.

Berry's W orld

"How much lor the whole shobana?"

this year’s elections, It's that they e a Jt trust
Jim ln y Cricket. You remember, of course.
Jim m y's preposterous promise: " If your heart la
In your dream. / No request Is too extreme."
F it chance. Cricket. Some requests are Indeed
too extreme.

When you hype a referendum that wifi coat
trillions, for example, you'd better offer at least a
hint o f proof that the benefits Justify the
. Don’t Just foist a dying child on
oi T V
to lecture shocked viewers shout .the
need to prevent environmentally Induced canana expet
expect them to meekly vote for
whatever ballot measure you've anointed.
(d id n 't Invent that example of the dying child.
Such a commer cial waa part of the campaign for
California's Big Oreen initiative, which went
down b y an u n expected tanddide. Among other
th in p . Big Green would have banned perhaps
two-thirds of aO pesticides — tndudtng any that
cause cancer In rodent testa — regardless of how
scientists Interpret the risk.
Maybe B ig G ree n ’s supporters
thoui
ipporters thought
pesticides had been sufficiently demonised that
voters would pay any price to escape them.
Instead, a majority kept tbetr heads: They
weighed the costs end uncertainties of the plan.

then wisely dispatched the troublemaker.
The y might have been even more hostile to Big
Green had they hesrd of developing sclcntlAc
a t t it u d e s to w a rd
pesticides. Although
the news has yet to
filter down to most
consumers, s grow­
ing number of scien­
tists arc willing to
say that we face no
r is k at a ll, o r a
laughably tow risk,
from pesticide resi­
due on fruits and
v e g e t a b le s . F o r
example. Dr. Robert
Scheuplein of the
}3igG r»#n
Food and Drug Ad­
would have
ministration has said
bsnnsd twohe doesn ’t "honestly
thirds o f all
believe anyone has
psstlcidss re­
ever died or Ingesting
gardless of
pesticide residue on
frt«-w
4 **
how scientists
food.
Interpret risk. J
Meanwhile, scien­
tific skepticism
toward animal teats Is also growing. An editorial

JACK ANDERSON

m1

1
1
1
1
1
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V

In the Sept. 21 toaue of Science magazine
outlines land endorses) the case against stuffing
rodents with chemicals to determine which
cause cancer. U points out that moat pesticide*
occur naturally, produced by plants as defenses
against predators and parasites. In Tact, the
editorial say*, scientists estimate that “ plant
footto contain 5.000 to 10.000 natural pesticides
and break-down products. ... Compared to the
amount of synthetic pesticides we consume, we
eat about 10,000 times more of the plam
pesticides.''
Now here's the kk k e r It turns out that
naturally occurring chemicals tend to cause
cancer In rodenta Just about as often as
manufactured chemicals. We can't ban nature's
pesticide*, of course, but we shouldn't want to.
either, since the reason they (and most
manufactured chemicals) probably cause cancer
In rodents has more to do with the size of the test
doses than the chemicals themselves. As
microbiologist Bruce Ames pucklshly advises.
"D o what your mother told you: All things in
moderation, and eat your vegetables."
Diets rich In fruits and vegetables "tend to
reduce human cancer." Science reminds us. So
stop worrying about whether that bounty on
your dinner table contains pesticides.

Beware Mexico
as trade partner

1
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y

1

ISSUES T H A T HIT HOME

Feds going after toxic villains
United Press Intsmstlonsi
W A SH IN G TO N - When Attorney General
Dick Thornburgh and Assistant Attorney
General Richard Stewart traveled to the Soviet
Union last fall, they aaw firsthand bow the best
Intentions can go awry when It comes to the
environment.
"We saw that the Soviet Union has some of
the strongest environmental standards In (he
world," Stewart recalled. “ Some of them arc
far more stringent than ours. B u t." he
emphasized, "the environment's In terrible
shape. W hy? No enforcement. And we're
making sure nothing like that happens here."
Stewart Is In charge, of the Justice Depart­
ment's Environment and Natural Resources
Division, which last week announced It has
had another record year going after toxic
wrongdoers.
A record 134 Indlc'menU were returned and
the department achieved a 95 percent convic­
tion rate for environmental prosecutions. The
criminal Indictments In the past year repre­
sented a 33 percent Increase from the year
before. Since the environmental division was
created eight years ago. It has won 517 pleas
and convictions and secured more than 856
million In criminal fines.
"Th e section more than pays for Itself."
Thornburgh said. "II returns over two dollars
In lines and restitution for every criminal
'enforcement dollar spent."
But behind the numbers, prosecutors say. Is
a general feeling that corporate America Is
getting "the message.'
"Crim inal sanctions are among the most
effective deterrents against those who would
violate our nation's environmental laws." says
E n v iro n m e n ta l Protection A ge n cy A d ­
ministrator William Reilly.
"O u r record over two years now shows that
the Bush administration la committed to
vigorous environmental enforcement." he said.
"That commitment Includes a promise nnd a
warning: those who violate environmental taws
can count on the federal government calling
them to account." Adds Stewart: “ Mllllondollar fines are no longer a rare event. They're
becom ing very com m on and corporate
America Is getting the message."
The Justice Department believes business is
paying attention because environmental
misdeeds often land company presidents in the
slammer. During the p u t year. 78 percent of
the federal indictments were against corpora­
tions and their top officers, and more than half
of those convicted were given Jail time.
"Criminal sanctions against business and
Individuals drive home the fact that violators
will pay, and puy dearly, for breaking
environmental law s." Thornburgh said.
Stewart said a byproduct of his department's

crackdown on environmental crimes Is a
deluge of speaking requests by business
groups. "The reality Is for many corporate
managers, they know that under the current
sentencing guidelines a first-time violation will
mean you go tojall." Stewart said. "A nd fo- a
professional manag
er. that Is a real
f The section
deterrent. The In ­
vitations we getv to
more than
speak to explain our,,
pays for it sell.
policies are so volu­
It returns over
minous that I know
two dollars In
the message Is get­
fines and re­
ting across."
stitution for
But Stewart said
every
crim inal
despite the passage
enforcement
of new laws to pro­
dollar spent. J
tect the e n v iro n ­
m e n t . e n f o r c in g
-CMcfc
them is becoming in­
Ti rwnourgn
ltA m k n u k
creasingly difficult.
* In the early days a
lot of the violations were clear. The midnight
dumper wastotally outside the system. We still
have some of those cases." Stewart said. "But
Increasingly, as regulations get more complex,
the violators gel more sophisticated and seek
to bypass the system or cheat at the margins
by falsifying ... submissions to government.
The coses are more complex and difficult as a
result."
Environmental groups, meanwhile, say It's
too early lo heap praise upon the Justice
Department for Its environmental protection
effort.
"Th e y didn't have to do a lot to Increase the
prosecutions." said David Goeller. spokesman
for Environmental Action. 'T h e Reagan ad­
ministration was not exactly a high-water
m a rk for environm ental prosecu tion s."
Goeller added. "We commend this administra­
tion. but they still have a long way to go.”
Paced with such criticism. Stewart prefers to
characterize his department's environmental
prosecutions as "a continuous Increase In
effort."
“ The Reagan administration really got this
ball rolling and started the environment climes
effort.” Stewart says. ” 1 thlqk we've built on
that, and we've expanded It."
To that end. Stewart's division now has 25
full-time lawyers working onenvtronmenlal
crimes, the most since the division was
created. In addition, ahost of FBI and EPA
investigators and U.S. attorneys contribute to
the .effort. The department also has won a
billion dollars In sanctions and recoveries
overt he past year, the second-straight billion
dollar year.
"We re not slighting the civil side." Stewart
said. "W e are pursuing the civil side with
equal vigor.'*

W A S H IN G TO N - As Persian Gulf oil
becomes lea* attractive, some American oil
companies are thinking about Mexico as a
friendlier supplier. But those oil companies
had better think twice. If the experience of
taro Texas oil men la any indicator.
BUI Flanigan and David Black of Houston
have spent the last five years tied up In
la w s u its b e ca u s e
they tried to buy oil
from Mexico for their
oil company. Arriba
L t d . T h e le s s o n
learned from the ex­
perience. according
to Black, la that If the
United States wants
a free trade re la ­
tionship with Mexico.
"There's got to be a
serious houseclean­
ing first." Flanigan
and Black's ordeal Is
s u m m e d u p In a
racketeering lawsuit
f Arriba finally
they filed this year In
sued the un­
Houston against oil
ion for breach
men In Mexico. It Is a _ o f contract,__
b ill of p articu lars
but the Mex­
against the stateicans never
owned Mexican oil
showed
up. J
in d u s try a n d a
warning to anyone
who wants to deal with Mexico, in 1984. the
two men signed a contract with the Com­
mission of Contracts of the Mexican Petro­
leum Workers’ Union to buy 6 million barrels
of Mexican oil. Th e Texans say they were led
to believe that the agents for the union also
represented Petroleos Mexlcanos. or Pemex.
the government-owned ol) monopoly.
Black and Flanigan put up a 82.5 million
letter of credit that the Mexicans could draw
on If they delivered the oil. But the oil never
came. Arriba's lawsuit says the union began
demanding money In advance before Pemex
would deliver, but Arriba refused.
Arriba finally sued the union. In a Texas
court, for breach of contract, but the
Mexicans never showed up. When the Judge
awarded Arriba $92 million by default, the
union finally agreed to deal. Union repre­
sentatives offered a better contract than the
first one — a l G y ear Joint venture Involving
Pemex oil rigs. And Arriba waived the 892
million settlement. But by I960, when Pemex
still had not delivered any all. Arriba went
back to court In Houston and got the
Judgment reinstated, this time for 8273
million total. T h e union has not paid,
claiming the Texas court has no Jurisdiction
over it. Not willing to roll over and play dead.
A r r ib a has filed the c o m p re h e n s iv e
racketeering suit against Pemex. the union
and the union's Commission of Contracts
claiming that the three perpetrated fraud by
having the union act ac an agent for Pemex to
sign deals that Pemex later disavows any
knowledge of. An attorney for Pemex told our
associate Dean Boyd that Pemex is not
accountable far the actions of the union or the
commission. Pemex has filed a motion to
have the racketeering suit dismissed.
Flanigan and Black are still proponents of a
free-trade pact between the United States and
Mexico, but they think American businesses
should be warned about the downside of
dealing with Mexican businesses, especially
those owned by the government. A nd.
FMnlgan said. American businesses need a
"legal framework" where they can go for
recourse If they are cheated.
Carlos GU. a Mexican history professor at
the University of Washington, told us that
most U.S. business people "don't know the
extent" ol official corruption In Mexico, “ nor
are they aware of what U really means for
them."
Last year we reported on Mexican Presld
Carlos Salinas de Gortarl’s attempts
eliminate rampant corruption In the
industry and the union, but there Isn’t mi
evidence of change. A recent headline li
Mexican newspaper said of the oil worki
union. Fraud. Job selling. Company store:
everything's still the same."

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�Sanford HsraM. Sanford, Florida — Monday, Novembar 29. 1N0 — M

LOCAL
AppNeaMoraaccsptsdlorKingpanda

]

Creative Mind helps solve problems

SANFORD - Applications are now being accepted to enter
Soata and other units m the Dr. Martin Luther King J r . Day
Parade In Sanford Jan. 21.
Applications must be returned to First Shiloh Missionary
Baptist Church. 700 Elm Ave.. Sanford, before Dec. 14.
For more Information, call Sheryl Jones at 323-5489.

KANSAS C ITY . Mo. - The
Creative Mind, billed by Its
owners as the nation's first
self-improvem ent store, dis­
penses a little help on solving a

MADDtoholdvigil

from stress reduction to losing
weight.
The store opened In 1906 In
suburban Kansas C ity. Since
then, store owners Bernard and
Nancy Sullivan have sold fran­
chises In Si. Louis and Albany.
N.Y.. and opened a second store
on Kansas City’s Country Club

W IN TE R PARK — Th e Central Florida chapter of Mothers
Against Drunk Driving will hold a memorial service In honor of
people killed and injured by drunk drivers.
The service will be Dec. 3 at S p.m. at the Wlnlcr Park Civic
Center. 1050 W. Morse Btvd.. Winter Park.
The event Is free, and candles will be provided.
For more Information, call 422-MADO.

VA in Florida chaogoa itftphono numbtr
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs office In Florida has
hanged Its toll-free*
changed
toll-free telephone number for benefit Information.
The new num ber Is11-800-827-2204.
1

Hamstrung Amtricans sank
and to Vlatnam embargo
Asian Investors. "For those In­
terested In long-term projects, I
suggest they make exploratory
SINGAPORE — Entrepreneurs trips and get everything ready so
see Vietnam as the next boom
they can Jum p right In when the
area In Asia, but a U.S. embargo embargo ends."
against •trade with Hanoi Is
Despite the ban. a Vietnamese
keeping Americans on the side­ government report obtained by
lines whL'e Aslan and European Japan's Kyodo News Service
Investors move Into the promis­ lists the United States as the
ing market.
IBth-largest Investor In Vietnam
Many U.S. businessmen argue with contracts worth 81.94 mil­
that the ban has outlived Its lion. T h e Vietnamese State
usefulness and Is penalising Commission for Cooperation and
Americans In the face of foreign Investment said the unidentified
U . S . c o m p a n ie s e n t e r e d
competition.
"W e iield a seminar on the partnerships with other Western
opportunities and pitfalls In nations for oil exploration rights.
Vietnam and the turnout was
"It's Just not that easy." said a
excellent." said Donne Petlto.
U.S. political analyst of the
executive director of the 800- Vietnamese claim, "since the
m em ber A m erican Business companies are not named and
C o u n c il In S in ga p o re . “ O f there's no explanation how the
course, we also had to stress Vietnamese arrived at their cal­
businessmen cannot trade or culations."
invest there as long as the U .S
Reeling from a halving of
ban Ison."
Soviet aid. Vietnam Is anxious to
The embargo was slapped on d o b u s i n e s s w i t h n o n ­
.Vietnam after the communist communist Aslan and European
victory against American and countries. The official Viet: .win
South Vietnamese forces In News Agency reports 193 Joint
1975.
ventures with non-communist
Violators of the trade ban face
rtners worth 81.31 billion
fines of up to 81 million. The
vc been approved since eco­
longstanding restrictions not nomic reforms began In 1987.
only ban trade by U.S. compa- The dismay of the Americans
, nles but also deny credit from prevented from cashing In on
the International Monetary Fund Vietnam's open-door policy has
reached the White House. Eight
and the World Bank.
In July, the U.S, Treasury U.S. senators. Including the
D e p a r t m e n t I m p o s e d a chairman of the Senate Foreign
8100-a-day celling on spending Relations - Com m ittee, have
by Americans visiting Vietnam.
written to President Bush urging
Although there are no formal an end to the 13-year-old ban.
tics between Washington and
“ T h e U n ite d States has
Hanoi, relations have warmed become Increasingly Isolated In
fo llo w in g V ie tn a m 's tro o p Its maintenance of the economic
withdrawal from Cambodia last embargo." said the letter drafted
year and Its cooperation with a by Sen. Richard Lugar. "Euro­
U.N.-backed plan to end the 12- pean and Aslan businesses arc
year-old Cambodian civil war.
now enjoying unilateral advan­
Encouraging to potential In­ tages."
vestors is Vietnam's new will­
European oil companies have
ingness to allow a permanent clinched deals to develop of­
U.S team In Hanoi to coordinate fshore deposits and official def­
search efforts for the remains of erence to the United States
soldiers killed in the Vietnam position has not stopped Japan's
War and to account for Am eri­ tra d e w it h V ie tn a m fro m
cans still listed os missing In reaching 8540 million for the
action.
first eight months of 1990.
Optimists predict diplomatic
Japanese trading houses and
tics will be established and the French banks are setting up In
trade embargo lifted In a year. Hanoi and Ho Chi Mlnh City,
Petlto figures two years Is more previously called Saigon. Hong
likely.
Kong companies have poured
"There might not be much left about 8120 million Into Vietnam
by that time." she said, referring In the last two years In hotels
to the zeal of European and and factories.
R y M fTN V I
United Press International

QUAY CAU8ET
Quay Causey. 81. 814 Palm
Valley Drive. Oviedo, died Sat­
urd ay at W inte r Park Care
Center. Bom Sept. 23. 1909. In
Mitchell County. Ga.. she moved
to Oviedo from Atlanta In 1985.
She was a homemaker and a
member of Aloma United Meth­
odist Church.
Survivors Include husband.
Charles B.: daughter. Shirley
Fowler; brother. Joe Rucker,
Baconton. G a .; three grand­
c h ild r e n : fo u r g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
C o x -P a r k e r C a re y H a n d
Funeral Home. Lake Mary. In
charge of arrangements.
F R A N C E S M a c A R TH U R
Frances MacArthur Harper.
69. 1310 Casa Park C ircle.
Wl.iter Springs, died Sunday at
Plnar Terrace Munor Nursing
Home. Orlando. Bom Aug. 27.
1921. In Lafayette. Ga.. she
moved to Winter Springs from
England In 1962. She was a
retired carpet saleswoman and
an Episcopalian. She was a
member of Tuskawllla Wives
Club. Winter Springs.
Survivors Include daughters.
Jane Dtlatush. Winter Springs.
Sally Moody. Cindy Anderson,
b o th of O r la n d o : s is t e rs .
Charlene Wade. Morristown.
T e n n ., E v e ly n Z clg e . C o llegedale. Ten n .. Johnnie U n ­
derwood. Chattanooga. Tenn..
Hazel McCamcy. Dalton. Ga.: six
grandchildren.

B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fun eral
Home. Goldenrod. In charge of
arrangements.
ROSE P A LM ER
Rose Palmer. 95. 756 Mahoga­
ny Drive. Casselberry, died Sat­
urday at Florida Hospital. Alta­
monte Springs. Born March 25.
1895. In England, she moved to
Casselberry from there In 1961.
She was a homemaker and a
m e m b e r of the C h u rc h of
England.
Survivors Include daughters.
Mavis Treat. Casselberry, Gladys
F r a n k l i n . O r la n d o . J o a n
Loosemore. Gwen Nightingale,
both of England; sister. Ada
Brooks. England; 13 g ra n d -,
c h i l d r e n : 17 g r e a t ­
g ra n d c h ild re n ; seven
great-great-grandchildren.
G a rd e n Chapel H om e for
Funerals. Longwnod. In eharge
of arrangements

SANDRA LEE TURNER
Sandra Lee Turner. 4 5 . 511
C ape C o d L n .. A lta m o n te
Springs, died Thursday ut Flori­
da Hospital. Orlando. She was
b o r n J u n e 1 3 . 1 9 4 5 . in
Kalamuztxi. Mich., and moved lo
Altamonte Springs from lake­
la nd In 1 9 7 5 . She w as a
telemarketing operator for a
carpet cleaning services.
Survivors tin lode daughters,
Angela Sanborn and Katherine,
tmlh of Saiilord.
Hearon Cremation Service of
Central Florida. Wlnlcr Park. In
charge of arrangements.

Bernard Sullivan, a practicing
psychologist, said some of the
Impetus for The Creative Mind
came from his patients’ needs.
"I didn't have anywhere to
send the people I see for such
things aa relaxation tapes, antl-anxlety or stress reduction
tapes, or for other kinds of
re s o u rc e s ," sa id S u lliv a n .
"There are a lot of different
kinds of books that are for
p e r s o n a l g r o w t h — s e lfimprovement things they don't
s t o c k In y o u r e v e r y d a y
bookstore."
The Sullivans saw a need for
materials on personal growth —
how to improve your memory or
lose weight, for example — aa
well as "m ore psychological
types of Information like dealing
with depression and loss and
divorce and children and more
children," he said.
Nancy Sullivan, a nurse. Is
writing her thesis for a master's
degree In psychology. She has
been credited w ith m aking
Bernard's Ideas become reality.
In the November I9 6 0 Issue of
Success magazine, she described
The Creative Mind's customers
as "...up w a rdly mobile type
folks."

"Instead of struggling to make
the mnrtgatfr payment, they are
struggling to grow to their foil
p o t e n t i a l — to b e a e lf i nc M o m cunom en inciuoc
people from the healing pro­
fessions — physicians, social
and psychotherapists, aa wed as
folks who want to grow and
E x e c u t i v e s a n d s a le s
person nel visit the side of the
store devoted to H '^r* * * »ryt
m a n a g e m e n t , w h ile “ the
average customer" goes to the
other to look for resources that
could help them meet serious
chsHcgrs such as weight loss or
Th e first Kansas City-area
stare. In Overland Park. Kan.. Is
expected to post 1980
more than 8600.000 . Th e
ond. tn a high-traffic ares.
In mid-October and al­
ias racked up sales of
about 840.000 a month. Rusty
The franchise fee for a Creative
Mind store Is 819.500. Fran­
chisees also pay about 8160.000
to stock the store.
Among the stores' top sellers
are materials on alcoholism and
recovery. T h e next most re­
quested topics Include stress
reduction, weight loss, and quit­
ting smoking, he said, "and the
business section Is the other real
Sullivan said he does not think
there Is danger people with
serious problems would decide
that reading a self-improvement
book of listening to a tape Is a
cure-all.
"Actually, people can do that
with books, but It can have
either effect." be said. "It can
either open their eyes or allow
them to keep on shutting them If
they're Intent on shutting."

The economic downturn has
not dampened but actually has
whetted some people's appetite
for self Improvement, he said.

mance when they're under the
gun."
Sullivan, who said people often
are surprised that Th e Creative
"We are the kind of store Mind got Its start In the Midwest,
people go to when they hit some said similar stores are cropping
kind of obstacle or hard times." up across the country. Most are
he said. "We have a lot of things different from the Creative Mind,
on starting your own business he said, "the ooes we've checked
and a transition section If they out have more of a New Age
need to know how to do In­ bookstore flavor."
He added. "We don't sell any
terviews well or get a Job resume
out. or cope with a sagging magic things or any of the New
Age-type resources. Ours are
company's performance.
m o s t ly p r e t t y s c ie n t if ic ,
In hard times, this is the kind health-oriented things. We don't
of store people turn to to help ■ell Shirley McLalne's kind of
them deal with problems, to help channeling books and those kind
them m aximize their perfor­ of things."

Drug patents a bitter pill
for Argentina companies
■ y M M N .1
Undid Press Intamstlonal_______
BUENOS A IR ES - U.S. Trade
Ambassador Carla Hills was un­
usually adam ant when she
urged Argentina to protect Intel­
lectual property or face being
blackballed on the international
investment circuit.
"M y entreprenuers ask me
where to Invest." HUIs said at a
news conference during a recent
visit to Buenos Aires. "A n d
Intellectual property protection
Is a strong magnet to high
technology and Investment.”
Hills thus Inaugurated a de­
bate In Argentina over whether
President Carlos Menem's gov­
ernment should sign an agree­
ment for the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade to enforce
Intellectual property protection
worldwide, especially regarding
patented drugs.
The G A T T deadline Is set for
early December.

On one side, some government
officials and representatives of
multinational drag companies
■ay patent protection Is ethical
and. In the long run. better for
Argentina's economy and devel­
opment. Opponents argue that It
legalizes monopolies and may
drive already high drug prices
out of consumers' reach.

W hat's for lunohf
Tuesday, Nov. 27
Ovsn bsksdchlcksn
Whipped potatoes
Buttered baby carrots
Roll
Milk

Sheriff
1A
changes,
but nothing radical right away."
In his letter submitting his
retirement and appointee re­
quest. Polk, alter 22 years as
sheriff, cited Ms (ailing health
and his confidence ln Esllnger ss
his reasons for retiring.
"I know of no other Individual
who would be satisfactory." Polk
wrote tn the letter dispatched
Nov. 20 to the governor.
" I'm very honored he re­
commended me. It’s very flat­
tering he has confidence In m y
ability," Esllnger said of Polk.
'T h e sheriff is an Institution ln
the county — not only In law
enforcement, but politically as
well.”
Esllnger was to have become
Polk's undershcrlff ln January.
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 111 to receive a needed
heart transplant, and they re­
commended Polk retire.
Esllnger. 33. has been acting
admistrator for the department
during Polk's many recent hos­
pitalizations. Polk’s latest hospi­
talization In Altamonte Springs
began Nov. 7.
Esllnger has served Polk 12
ye a rs. P olk a n n o u n c e d In
August that In January Esllnger
was to become his undershcrlff.
A couple of months ago Polk
promoted Esllnger from the rank
of lieutenant to major. Since
August. Esllnger has acted as a
key admlnstratlve aide to Polk.
He Is slated to attend the FBI
National Academy for 11 weeks
beginning In April.
F o r three y e a rs p rio r lo
becoming undershertff desig­
nate. Esllnger was chief of the
C it y C o u n ty In v e s tig a tiv e
Bureau, the countywide drug
task force. Esllnger developed
that unit, comprised of sheriff's
deputies, and city police from
Sanford. Lake Mary. Longwood.
Casselberry. Altamonte Springs,
and Oviedo. Into a top flight drag

fighting team . He has also
worked as a road patrolman and
s u p e rv is o r, and as a n In ­
in 1989 the Greater Seminole
County Chamber of Commerce
named Esllnger Public Safety
Officer o f the Year for hla
leadership of CCIB and work
drugs tn the community
on several levels. Including
public
Ha has r eceived
other similar awards.
A Sanford resident. Esllnger
began hla career with the de­
partment as a dispatcher. Even
during hla one year as a dispat­
cher. Esllnger became a member
of the SW T team and worked
with the undercover drug unit of
the department. For taro years
he was assigned ss on agent for
the U .S . D ru g Enforcement
AdmlnistaUcn.
Although he Is a Republican.
Esllnger 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 ln
support of Polk. Polk switched
from the Democratic to Re­
p u b lic a n P arty to su pp o rt
Martinez ln the 1986 election.
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
Sanlord print shop.
He Is dean of Florida's sher­
iff's. During Polk's tenure the
county saw phenomenal growth,
with the sheriff's department
and county Jail staff Increasing
from 35 to 500. The department
operates w ith a 824 million
annual budget.
The retiring sheriff has served
the state as well as the county,
on state law enforcement and
corrections boards. Polk was
Instrumental, through the Flori­
da Sheriff's Association. In
making moat Florida sheriffs
departments self-insured. He
tw ice tra ve le d to L o n d o n .
England to develop that program
as chairman of the association.

r
BLOOD PRESSURE
S C R E E N IN G
Thursday, Nov. 2P 9 am-noon
In cooptration with. . .
Paragon Horn# Haalth Cara
MUWOrt Ssvttt

"Bringing Health Caro Home"

IN H O Msn Er MEDICAL
•ssi-esss

Polk lobbied tn state and na­
tional arenas for law enforce­
ment causes.
Polk's health has declined
since last year's open heart
surgery performed st Duke U n i­
versity Medical Center In North
Carolina. He underwent his first
successful double bypass sur­
gery In Gainesville In 1970. In
1968, he suffered his only heart
attack.
. The November surgery and
congestive heart disease re­
turned Polk to the hospital
numerous times (his post year,
with fluid ln his chest cavity,
damaged ribs, and medications
problems. He Is a long-time
diabetic. After extensive evalua­
tion In September, doctors at
Shanda Hospital In Gainesville
told Polk he la not a candidate
for a 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.

GITS

YOU ARE STILL
MY SON

c '■
St

J a re d A la n M o rg a n
A u f. 1, 1989 - Nov. 28. 1989
Tim s slowly moves ahead.
People have surely changed.
What once seemed a full and
happy life. Just doesn’t (eel the
same.
You made us all so happy,
your brother, so very proud.
But now people tend to shy away.
Lord. I don’t know how.
Your name Is rarely ntenlioned.
by friends, or even family.
I guess It’s hard for them lo know.
Just whal you mean to me.
And even though vou’re not In
m y world, to share your very
special needs. I think of you
nlghl and day. O h . how beautiful
you must be.
I see you in m y dreams,
your face, so clear lo me.
You look just like your brother,
and maybe, a bit like me.
I know your tim e on this earth,
for me. is all but done
And now the day I wail for.
Is when we can be as one
Bui till lhal day arrives,
and my lime here Is done.
I just need them all lo know.
JA R E D . Y O U A R E STILL
MY SOM
I L O V E YOU.

DAD

That's right. With a Farm
Bureau Auto Insurance
Policy and a Homeowner's
(HO.3 or XL.9) Policy, we'll
give you 10% off your
auto insurance. It's that
simple)
10% off your auto policy!

Dennis-Haines
Agency
4195 N. Hw y. 17-92
Sanford
322-2221
365-6316
kHelping You
Is What
Wc Do

W

HwM A

•tUftttA

--------- FARM
BUREAU
INSUR* nU

&gt;

*«V4AM|

ACMCA ta*w • st • Sfo* -a* *«VRAMI CCM8MW
Kk/tMiN i
m i a . «M v . u m i c r~f ~rr

UVMIhlUM »«*. MUSitf XiLilMl CQMfoN

k i/ M t M s a w » as*., t •

nvlO m

I &lt;0088

�Florida citrus growers
eye Japanese market
tu re
M IA M I Florida
producers have bounced buck
from last season's *
freeze and are f B r t n g ahead to
1091 and ISOX srbe
w ill elim inate Its Im po rt
quotas on fresh and con­
centrated orangeJuice.
Producers such as Trap*
Ic a n a P r o d u c ts I n c . o f
Bradenton. Fla., are position­
ing themselves to market
Juice In Ja p a n once the

s a y t h e r e a re n o
on how large the
for orange
in the
they describe the

Fbr the year
her 19S7. U A
1.6
worth ta.8
in
m illio n .
1 9 6 9 . those
exports had risen to 11.1
m illion gallons valued at
H U m "* —

Th e value of those exports
Tropicana. the nation’s No. la expected to grow eignift2 orange Juice company, an­ c a n tly in c o m in g years,
nounced a Joint venture In beginning In 1991, when
Tokyo earlier this year with quotas on single-strength
Kirin Brewery Co. to m
Juke are lifted.
Juice in Japan.
"W e certainly think that
Other producers
when the quotas are reduced
forged alliances, mostly with on that prwhict. we will be
Japanese trading companies, able to ship significan t vo
to se cure access to the um es in to th e m a rk e t.
market, said Bobby McKown.
executive vice pcrMdent of
Th e dom—
m arhi 1 for
Florida Citrus Mutual, a Flori­ re a d y -to -s e rv e j u ic e has
da growers group.
in recent
Although a rod
Tropicana declined to aay markets a pasteurised Juke
how much Juice the company under the name Pure Pre­
expects to sell, others said the m ium . is the market leader,
Japanese
with a 3S percent
vide sign
for Juice producers in Florida
Th e alliance bt t weeu Tropana elsewhere, especially
a subsidiary of ~
Co., and K irin r
Brazil, the world’s leading
srata the first fruit of the
producer.
"W e think we win do weQ in company's recently formed
that markei. One of the big in te rn a tio n a l d iv is io n , a
qu^suo
marks k whether
Florida emi be a big player In
"T h e new dtvfoion. Trop­
that market or whether Brazil icana In te rn a tio n a l, was
w ill." said Dan Gunter, execu­ formed In 1909 to Implement
tive director of the Florida e x p a n s io n I n t o fo re ig n
Department of Citrus.
markets, and this joint ven­
"Most of the expectations ture with Kirin Is the first
are that Brazil will supply a step.” said Ian Devine,
t najor
a &gt; portion
^*
.of. that market,
and Florida will su
Under the agreement. Tropniche." he added. VWe are icana will supply a variety of
gazing into a crystal^bhll \julce and fruit beverage prosomewhat. because we hfrvR ducts for the chilled and
no experience.”
~ non-refrigerated m arkets,
Th e U.8. Agriculture De- beginning next spring. Devine
partment estimates Florida said. Kirin will be
will harvest 166 million boxes
of oranges this season, a BO
■pokfsman for T ro p percent Improvement over
i' s major U.P. competitor.
last season, when the bitter Coca-Cola Foods of Houston,
Christmas freeze cut produc­ declined to comment on Its
tion to 110.2 million boxes.
p la n s for th e J a p a n e s e
F lo rid a produces about market Coca- Cola Foods, a
two-thirds .of the U.S. orange _ _
T h e Coca-Cola
crop and rtito- tenth* of Its'' Co.;
Minute Maid
grapefruit crop.
fruit Jukes.
The quick recovery of FieriFlorida growers are less
da’s orange croper
coincides excited about the relaxation of
loiig- awaited dto- Japanese quotas on fresh
with the Tougmantling of citrus quotaa In oranges, in p a rt because
Japan, which represents the California citrus to considered
fruit of a 1968 trade agree­ a better product to ship and
ment.
also because 92 percent of
Japanese quotas on fresh Florida’s crop to processed.
oranges and single-strength
An agriculture official also
orange Juice trill be lifted noted that U.S. growers have
April 1. although tariffs on foiled to fill Japan’s expand­
those products trill remain in ing quota on fresh oranges.
force, and Juke importers trill
"Th e sate of fresh oranges to
be subject to other restric­ going very w e ll, b ut we
tions. U.S. agriculture officials haven't filled the quota." the
official said. She attributed
Th e quota on concentrated the short foil of aales to the 40
orange Juice trill expand to percent tariff Japan imposes
40.000 metric tons in 1991 on fresh oranges in season,
from 33,000 tons this year, from December to May.
before being Ufted altogether
B y com parison. Florida
In April111992.
1992.
grapefruit growers have done
Although spokesmen for the well in Japan ia nd other
U.S. Department of Agricul- foreign markets.

The time came .o replace the
(lag at Memorial Park on the
Lake Monroe waterfront laal
week. Above, Sanford public
works employees Tim Gracey (I)
. and Tom Martin carry the old flag
from the flagpole, located at the
north end of Park Avenue. At left
Gracey and Martin stretch out
the..new*, flag, just before the
wind unfurls It.
.u 1 ...... 111.

Shoppers warned about debt
United Press International_______
W ASH IN G TO N - Americans
are already carrying over $200
billion In credit card debt, and
many risk pushing themselves
over the financial edge during
these recession-shadowed holi­
days. a national consumer group
warns.
"During the 1960s, lenders
changed from loan-order takers
to aggressive marketers of cred­
it.” says Elgle Holstein, director
of Bankcard Holders of America,
a consumer credit protection
group. "A nd consumers threw
caution to the wind by taking on
more and more debt."
The current American credit
c a r d d e b t , a c c o r d in g to
B ankcard Holders. Is $200
billion at an average 19.5 per­
cent Interest, compared with $80
billion In 1960.
" H o u s e h o ld budgets arc
threatened by high credit card
debt, a fact usually disguised
because most credit card Issuers
require their cardholders to pay
each month only 3 or 4 percent
of the total amount they owe."
Holstein said. "High interest
rules combined with low mini­
m um monthly payments means
It can take years lo pay off a
credit card completely."
The already staggering debt,
combined with a poor economy
a
n
d t
h
e
■’pend-now and worry about itlater attitude often adopted by
holiday shoppers could spell
financial disaster, the group
warns.
"D uring tough financial times.

f it can take years
to pay off a credit
card com pletely^
nvwWIVV
consumers need to understand
sportant things about
three Important
debt." Holstein si
"First, the value of their assets
falls dramatically.'* he said.
"Second, their ability to sell
those assets to meet debt obliga­
tions also decreases. And third,
the burden of their debt stays
the same or. if they foil behind In
their loan payments, actually
Increases."
Bankcard Holders offers the
following Ups to survive the peak
holiday spending season without
c a u s in g d is a s te r for y o u r
pocketbook and credit rating.
— Draw up a holiday gift
budget and stick to It. Many
merchants are offering tantaliz­
ing markdowna to spur slump­
ing sales, but you can go broke
"saving" money.

imatoaaal

NEW BRUNSW ICK. N .J. America's newest museum, the
EUto Island Immigrant Museum,
to meeting one of society's oldest
needs by telling epics, says a
Rutgers U n ive rsity historian
who helped plan the project.
"Folk societies have storytell­
ers who oass on the hlstorv of

IN T N I c i r c u i t c o v e r,
■ ISN TIEN TH JUOfCIAL
CIRCUIT, M A N S FOX
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PREDATE DIVISION
FHBNti FSRW-CP
IN R l: (S T A T IO N
(T H iL V . SAMUIL.

— Pay off outstanding credit
card bills as soon as possible.
Holiday credit cards bills come
due In 1991 when allowable tax
deductions for credit card inter­
est payments will drop from 10
NOTICE OP
percent to zero.
ADMINISTRATION
— Shop for a new credit card
Ttw admlntolrattan qf Md eelato
with lower interest rale. A cash of IT H I L V. SAMUIL. S r
advance on a new Jow-lnterest
ceased. FIN Numbdt FSOFCP.
card can be used to pay off I* pendtog In Nw Circuit Csurt
Nr Seminal* County, Florid*.
holiday charges with a highProbate DIvMen. ttw iSSrin of
interest card.
which It Seminal* Csunty
— When shopping In depart­ CeurMaum. NO. Draws? C.
SsntsrS. Florida H771. TW&gt;
ment stores, use bankcards,
si Ms
such as ' Visa. Mastercard or
American Express. Instead of the
are eat form below
store card. Most reatil cards
carry a higher Interest rate than
i wtM IMs Csurt,
bankcards, often 20 to 21 per­ WITHIN T H R U MONTHS ON
T H I FIRST PUBLICATION OF
cent.
THISNOTICI:
— Beware of deferred-payment
III al
purchase plans, skip-payment
(II any skfactlan by an Inter
offers and unrequested boosts In
credit lines, all common during
mattodRurt*challenge* Ms valid
t at Ms will. Ms vusHtlcsHsm
llysll
the holidays. In most cases.
o&lt; MS
Interest wUI be adding up during
vanus. or lurttSktMn aI Ms
the deferred payment period. In Csurt.
ALL CLAIMS AND O OJIC
uncertain economic times. If you
TIONS NOT SO N IL ID WILL
can't afford to pay cash for li
■ IF O R IV IR IA R R ID .
now. you may not be able lu j
PuStlcoMsn si Mlt Notice
began on November M. IttS.
afford It all In three months.

Ellis Island museum open
Uatoad Ft

L9fl«l N o tlc ti

their people by word of mouth."
said Virginia Yans-McLaughlin.
a professor of Immigrant history
who served as an unpaid con­
sultant on the project to restore
the Immigration center as a
museum.
The facility opened In 1892
and closed 62 years later, having
served 17 million new Ameri­
cans.

1

Legal Notice

L«gal Notices
NOTICE ON
FICTITIOUS NAM I
Notice It haraby given Mol I
am engages In buolnsoo at 104}
Millar RS.. AltamanN Spring*.
Soml neW County. Florida. under
MS FtetttNuo Name ot JAR
V E R T IC A L S . IN C . S/b/a
VERTICAL WORLD. anS Mat I
Intend to rogltter taM name
wtM Ms Clark al Ms Circuit
Court. SembteN County, Fieri
de. In accordance wlM Ms
Nrevltleno at ttte Fictitious
Name Statute*. TeWIt: Section
M1SF Florida Statute* t«S7.
Janet KaM
NubilUt: November IF, M S
December 1 W. IftO
O EZlW
NOTICE ON
.
FICTITIOUS NAM I
Notice It hereby given Mat I
am engaged In bueineu at list
l unehlaa Tree Etvd-. Longaood.
Nig. a m . SomlnoN County.
Florida. under Me Fktltleu*
Name at C R O N IN COM
M U N IC A T IO N S CO N SUL
TANTS. and Mat I Intend to
CNrk at Me Circuit Court. Sam
InaN County. Florida. In ec
cordonre wtM Me Nrovltlene at
ttto Fktltleu* Nemo Statute*.
Ta-WIt: Section 445 00 Florida
Statute* 1FS7.
William J. Cronin IV
NubiMi: Nevombar It. It. M
A Oocombar 1 IFFO
DEZ 141

JOAN V BEYERMAN
Personal Representative
m Blalrmcr* IMS. Wsti
Orange Nark. FL W )
TERRANCE A. JONES. ISO
Attorney Nr Nertonei
Roumanian vo
P.0 Boa OBI
m FoarlSgo Cantor Orlvo.
SmN 144
Or ongo Fork. FL M047 ONI
MARYANNE MORSE.
CNrk. Circuit Court
•V: Patricia Thatctwr
OSNUTVCLERK
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Publish November M A Os

NOTICE ON
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice it hereby given Mat wo
are engiged In bueineu at *51
E. AltamanN D r. Altamonte
Springe. Seminole County. Ptor
Ida. under Me Fktltlou* Noma
at OIFTS FROM NATURE, and
Mat wa Intend N rogltter told
name wtM ttw Clark at ttw
Circuit Court. Seminole County.
Florida. In accordance wlM ttw
Provident al the Flctlllout
Name Statute*. TaWII Section
a4S0t Florida Statute* IF57
Deugla* Slanbary
JaneChandWr
ombar I}. If. M

DEZ tlf

DEZ 14]

r i taw

1

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAMI
Nolle* I* hereby given Mai I
am engaged In butltwu at PO
Boa I m . Longwood. SaminoW,
County. Florida, under ttw
Fictitious Nam* el ABOUT
MARKETING 4 ASSOCIATES,
and that I intend to rogltter tald
nemo wlM Me Clerk el ttw
Circuit Court, SomlnoN County.
Florida. M accordance wlM ttw
Provision* ot ttw Flctlllout
Nemo Statute*. To Wit. Section
■45 OF Florida Statute* l»S7.
Debareh Brook*
Publltf): November M A D *
camber J. 10.17. IFFO
DEZ ns

NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIO US NAME
S TA TU TE
TO WHOM IT MAY

CONCERN:
Notk* N hereby given Mel ttw
undersigned. pursuant to ttw
"Flclllleu* Nome Statute"
Chapter *45O'. Florida SletuN*.
Intend* N register Me following
Flclllleu* Nem* with the
Division at Corporation* el ttw
Deportment *1 State, for ttw
Slat* el Florida and wlM ttw
Clerk 1 Mo Circuit Court. In and
for Seminole County. Florida,
all upon receipt ot proof el Me
Publication ot Mi* Netke. to
w it
A M E R I C A N
DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIE!
under which ttw following .*
engaged or will be* engaged in
bueineu al 150* Haight* Lana.
Langweed. Seminole County.
Flor Want SO
Ttw undersigned I* Ms Owner
and Interested party to such
fictitious name and will be doing
butltwu under said IktlUou*
name: F lo rid a Printing
Equipment and Supply Co . ISO*
Height* Lane. Longwood. Flort

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H I IIO H T E IN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO: *0-m s CA 14E/L
SHIRLEY FRIINDand
RICHARD FRIEND.
Plaintiff*.

v»

GUSSIE LEE COMER, at at..
Defondant*.
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE BALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment el
Foreclosure deled November If.
IFFO and entered In Ce*e No.
FOlfU CA 14E/L Ot Mo Circuit
Court el the 11th Judicial
Circuit. In and for Seminole
County, Florida, wherein
SHIRLEY FRIEND and RICH­
ARD FRIEND era Me Plaintiff*
and GUSSIE LEE COMER, at
al. are ttw Defondant*. I will Mil
to lh» highest bidder lor cash at
ttw west front deer el ttw
Seminole County CourttwuM In
Sanford. Florida, on ttw FM day
Of January, Itfl. ttw following
described property a* set lorth
In tald IL-al Judgment, lying
and being situate In Saminote
County. Florida, towlt:
Lot 1 end J. Block a of PINE
LEVEL. SANFORD. FLORIDA,
according to Me Plat thereof, a*
recorded In Plat Book A at Pag*
M end 17 of Me Public Record*
of SeminofoCounty. Florida
DATED Mi* ItM day ol No
vember. IFFO
Clerk of Me Circuit Court
By: JenoE. Jasewk
Deputy CNrk
Publish November M A D *

camber ]. IFFO
DEZ 714

dentso

Dated No.ember la. IFW
Florida Printing Equipment
and Supply Co
By Mitten Mercado.
President
Publish November M A D *
camberLIS 17. iffo
DEZ SM

I

�Sanford Hortfd, Sanford, Florida - Monday, November 38, t f l 8 0 - T A

Iraq sets for war; UN weighs force
rta d lv b egan m o b ilisin g

upged UA allies represented

Kuwait.
The Iraqi callup appeared to be In
response to Prrskk.it Bush's recent an­
nouncement he win send 300,000 more
U.S. troops to Saudi Arabia to Join 230,000
already deployed, by far the largest part of
a multinational farce that numbers nearly

tQ t Of 15 Aft HOW M n g

conaertptad to rainforca the
fwflUlAT tn n y.p

000,000.

galtona rearlallmi Ha I
Two tanks with the capacity to hold 400,000 gallons of Jet
fuel erupted tn flam es Sunday morning at Stapleton
imcmauonai /u p o n , cauatng untneo to oeisy mgnta a s tney

lam es from spreading. But 13 hours after the the
wind suddenly kicked up and the 300-foot high
d to two adjacent800.000-gallon tanks,
t have sufficient resources t o ... do the job." Pm
Meyer aaML "AD we can do now la to try and
la left and let what is burning bum out."

mdhary and economic tntsflatlona.
“The children under the age of 18 are

The mobilisation at more Iraqi reservists
also appeared aimed at combatting any
U.N. Security Council vote endorsing mili­
tary far against Iraq for its Invasion of
Kuwait. The U.N. has passed several
resolutions tmpostrg economic boycotts

Last week, Iraq said it would send
390,000-plus more troops to Kuwait to

fibu
n o las
w u c u if l u i j i u i y u u 10 itm vo iCc i n f

aBAsngaadaaAash
rTuunisin

regular 'army, so that soldiers will be
avadabte far combat mtsatons.*' the un*
named spokesman was quoted aa saying.
Older Iraqis are already subfect to the
draft In Iraq, which has faced a manpower
shortage since the 190C-8S Iran-traq war.
There was no official confirmation of the
report but the country's ruling Revotutlo p a r y C om m and C ou n cil ordared

over the U.S.-dominated m ultinational
farce staUoned tn the gulf area, principally
In Saudi Arabia.
The multinational farce, including some
Arab nations, began deploying after Iraq
Invaded and then annexed oil-rich Kuwait
on Aug. 3. Despite the farce and despite
intense diplomatic negoltatlng since the
invasion. Saddam refuses to pull out of

i nunsciicai B u p c n o n iy

Arab radio stations quoted Secretary of
State Jam es Baker during a visit to Bogota.
Colombia, aa saying (he 15-member Securi­
ty Council would vote Thursday on military
sanctions.
The stations said Baker hoped as many of
the Security Council members as possible
would authorise force If that became

BuytNQ~.SdlJM)
V M iM T to m ? ? ?
MEW YORK — A young Marine
who was home far Thanksgiving
and set to leave far Saudi Arabia
th is w eek waa killed by a

auto) off the highway, they were
struck by an unidentified vehicle
that fled." police spokesman
Scott Bloch said.
J o s e p h P a r r is s a i d hla
grandson had b een In the
BttS

Saturday,

Dunphy aaid. "It's Just standing In an area and burning. It Isn't
the wall of flame we had yesterday."
Dunphy aaid the near-hurricane farce winds of Saturday,
"laid doom overnight There was not much advancement In
the fire overnight

fffffltly

CaU Mdwffd Ecfcsnfc

"ff5oUt

■is m onths In Europe. The
B uiM ju asao eald hie grandson
dale, 19. waa struck early Sun­ waa always trying to lend ■ hand
day and pronouced dead at the to people who needed help.
scene, police aaid. A Mend at V "He waa that typs of person."
M artfdalc'a waa injured and tn Parris aaid. "He waa a very
intelligent boy, and he liked the

D r if t w o o d V i l l j r y
broken. Bloch aaid. The Marine,
stationed at Camp LeJeune.
M.C.. was on hla way to catch a
flight back to camp after the
Thanksgiving holiday when the
incident occurred, Parris said.

Vashington state rivers returning to banks
p f lu u

r a in f f i r P A f t
l a i l l IW IU O O

&gt;8iaentS to f160

Interstate 90 over Lake Washington. A helicopter pilot flying
overhead aaid the bridge "sank

water." Southern aaid. "The
reason the concrete bridge floats
la It la hollow. Thom cells filled

recent m em ory m a y hi
c la im e d a fir a t v l c t l
Firefighters mid a couple i
ivail highway
am e trapped

SEATTLE - Flooded rtvera In
•stern W ashington receded
bnday after a weekend of
faked home*, a runaway barge
Bd a s u n k e n bridge that
Slowed weeks of heavy rain.
Flood warnings remained in
Rect for the Cedar and White
■era as show ers continued
Sough the night, but freezing
•e ls near 1,000 feet helped
m b the rivers back toward

I I T K

I . F w s ffc

A ir e M B a if o r f f

x s iu t o - O w n e r s in s u r a n c e
life. Hawn. t ar.

Oar asaw t t u MaH.

The floating bridge — ached- • •*. tvs,
uled to be reopened tn 1993 to •
Ihere was a chance o f rain serve one of the largest traffic * W UT
today east of Seattle, where corridors in Washington state — # # # . ,
b w ont flooding occurred, but started to break up about 9 a.m.,
e rivers were expected to •aid Bill Southern, a spokesman • • • •
turn to flood stage by the for the Washington Department„ * f ) g |
ernoon. the National Weather o f T r a n s p o r t a t i o n . T w o J
*
workmen escaped unharmed, he •
•
The moat dramatic image of aaid.
*£5»ow
le weekend waa the sinking of
"It appears that some of the •g B S *
ic old floating bridge that takes portion at the bridge filled with i v T .

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�dA - Sanford Harald. Sanford, Florida — Monday. Novambaf » . 1990

Thugs Intimldata Ivory Coast opposition
ABIDJAN* Ivory Coast — Paid thugs attacked and harassed
opposition party supporters In the Ivory Coast's first
multi-party legislative election, opposition leaders claimed.
As voters went to the polls Sunday to elect representatives to
a national assembly, the main opposition party - the Ivorian
Popular Front — claimed the ruling Democratic Party of
President Felix Houphouet- Bolgny used as many as 750 people
to break-up opposition meetings and rallies nationwide.
An opposition rally Saturday In the Yopougon suburb of the
Ivory Coast's main city Abidjan, was broken-up wlien ruling
party supporters drove at the marchers In a car. the opposition
party claimed. One person was seriously hurt.

Contenders woo Contonrativo MPa
LONDON — The three rontendera to succeed Margaret
Thatcher as prime minister are working hard to woo
uncommitted Conservative members of Parliament through
newspaper and television Interviews.
The candidates each portray themselves as the one best able
to unite the party after Its most rancourous feud In decades,
one which forced Thatchrr to announce her resignation last
week.

Gtrman railway workars to vota to atrlka
BERLIN - More than 360.000 railway workers In the five
new eastern German states voted to launch a general strike
Monday to demand wage hikes and Job security, officials said.

About 97 percent of the railway employees of the former East
German state railway - the Deutsche Relchabahn - voted
Sunday In support of the strike action, a union spokesman

Mild

*

Union representatives said the strike would begin affecting
passenger and freight services Monday, but they would not
comment on the total scope of planned action.
The union spokesman said trains transporting essential
consumer goods would be exempt from the strike.

War criminal Bavtola has cancar
PARIS — Nail war criminal Klaus Barbie has survived
appendicitis and a delicate hernia operation since extradition to
France, but a disclosure the "Butcher of Lyon" has cancer
could lead to his release from prison, his attorney said.
Verges Is launching a campaign for the release of the elderly
war criminal.

FromUnited Prats Intomatforwl Reports

Walesa faces
Mazowieckl in
Polish runoff
■y PATRICIA KOSA
United Prsss International_______
W A R SA W . Poland Poles
voted Sunday in the nation's
first general presidential elec­
tions. with Solidarity leader
Lech Walesa expected to win the
six-way presidential race and
face a runoff in two weeks with
his closest rival.
It was the first time Poles
elected their own president.
Poland's five previous presidents
were elected by the National
Assembly or Parliament.
The two leading contenders.
Walesa and Prime M inister
Tadeusz Mazowieckl. both cast
their ballots with the firm belief
that each would win.
"If I did not believe I would
win. I would not have run."
Mazowieckl. a former adviser to
Walesa, said as he emerged from
a downtown Warsaw polling
station.
" I voted for the one who will
w in ." union leader Walesa said
In the n o rthern seaport of
Gdansk after casting his ballot
a c c o m p a n ie d b y h is w ife
Danuta.
Polling stations opened at 6
a.m. and were to close at 8 p.m.
for some 27.5 million eligible
voters. The winner needs more
than 50 percent of those voting
to avoid a runoff on Dec. 9
between the two top vote- get­
ters.
Initial turnout was reported
light, but grew In the afternoon
with long lines reported at some
polling stations.
A total of 22.341 polling sta­
tions were set up around the
country, plus another 177 sta­
tions for Poles abroad and 295
on Polish ships.
Gen. Wojclech Jaruzelskl. the
current president and former
Communist Party leader best
known among Poles as the man
who declared martial law on
Dec. 13. 1981. declined to an­
swer who he voted for as his
replacement.

&amp;

Crucial local
elections spur
high turnout
■ y PCTKR S. Q f t U N
United Prsss International_______
PRAGUE. Czechoslovakia —
Election officials Sunday re­
ported moderate to high voter
turnout In local elections consid­
ered crucial to Czechoslovakia's
continuing transition to multi­
party democracy.
Some 75 percent of eligible
voters turned out for elections to
local offtce In the Czech republic
regions of Moravia and Bohemia
Saturday, officials said. Initial
reports Indicated a 39 percent
turnout In the eastern republic
of Slovakia In balloting Friday
and Saturday.
T h e Communist Party and
Civic Forum, the pro-democracy
umbrella group that led last
year’s "Velvet Revolution" to
overthrow four decades of com­
munist rule, were expected to do
well.

Attack kills four
Israelis, wounds
23 near Egypt
Units# Prase International
JE R U S A LE M - A gunman,
who apparently was an Egyptian
» soldier, crossed the border Into
Israel Sunday and opened fire on
passing vehicles, killing four
Israelis. Including three soldiers,
and wounding at least 23 others,
the army said.
The Incident, about 6 miles
from the resort city of Eilat, wus
the third attack along Israel's
borders In a 24-hour period. Also
Sunday, a suicide bomber, car­
rying a hag full of explosives,
k ille d herself and s lig h tly
wounded two soldiers In Israel's
self-declared "security zone” In
southern Lebanon, the army
spokesman said.
In Cairo. Egyjx's Minister of
Slate for Foreign Affairs Boutros
Ghall expressed regret.

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rates guaranteed until D ecem ber 31,
1990 w hen you o p en an Investors
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�..................

. . . . . .

.......

•

November 26, 1990

MONDAY

S a n fo rd Herald

.

I

IN

Winter sports crank up

B R IEF
M—
1Cn-

SAC Jambora*Tuttday

]

Preps turn their attention
to pins, goals and dunks

SA N FO R D - The Seminole A thkllc Confer­
ence Boy'* Basketball Jamboree will be held
Tuesday, Nov. 27. at Seminole's BUI Fleming
Memorial Gymnasium starting at 6:15 p.m.
A ll tickets will cost 12 and FACA and FHSAA
cards wUl be honored.
Each of the seven conference schools will play
two eight-minute quarters each with a six
minute warm up period between each quarter.
T h e schedule (time and teams):
6:15 p.m.. Lake Brantley vs. DeLand
6:35 p.m.. Lyman vs. Oviedo
6:55 p.m.. Lake Mary vs. Seminole
7:15 p.m.. Lake Branlley vs. Lake Howell
7:35 p.m.. Lake Mary vs. DeLand
7:55 p.m.. Seminole vs. Oviedo
8:15 p.m., Lyman vs. Lake Howell

The girls soccer and basketball
seasons started last week and the
boys soccer teams held their jam ­
boree this past Saturday. The boy's
basketball will hold (heir Jamboree

Also undefeated are the Lake
Mary Rama (1-0-2. 1-0-1 In the SAC)
and the Lyman Greyhounds (2-01.
1-0-1 In the conference). Seminole la
right behind with a 2-1 record
overall. 1-1 In the SAC conference.

CROSS COUNTRY
Alpha-Omasa dominates

Tuesday at Seminole High School
before officially sta rlin g their
seasons Saturday, the aame day
that wrestling officially begins.

In girls’ basketball. Lake Mary
(runnera-up to DeLand In 4ADistrict 9 a year ago) opened Its
season by finishing second lo Blsh-

O R LA N D O - The Alpha-Om ep 10-and-Under
(Bantam Division) running team dominated the
com petition at the T A C Regional Qualifyer at
the University of Central Florida Saturday.
Alpha-Omega, coached by Craig Wise, took
tome &gt;
eight of the top 10 positions. Including the
home
pp six pi
places. In the 3.000-meter race.
top
T h e top 15 finishers In each age group
qualified for the T A C Junior Olympic Nationals
at Tranquility Park In Omaha. Nebraska.
T h e finishing position and their times were: 1.
Charlene Foster. 11:31.8. 2. Joann Nealy.
11:55.1. 3. Dara Wise. 12:37.9. 4. Jennifer
CapellL 12:51.1. 5. Jenny Byrd. 12:55.5. 6.
Daflna Wise. 13:30.9. 9. Tiffany Gibson. 15:09.4
a n d 1 0 . R e b e c c a J a c k s o n . 1 6 :0 7 .•

OOLP
March of Dimas Claaaic sat
LON GW OO D - The eighth annual March of
Dimes Golf Classic will be played at Alaqua
Country Club on Friday, Nov. 30. The event will
begin with a shotgun start at noon.
PG A pro Donnie Hammond will serve as
honorary chairman for the four-man scramble
event. A 8200 entry fee Is required per player.
There will be a hole-ln-one contest In addition
to other prises. A buffet and awards pres­
entation will follow the tournament. •
For more Information, or to enter, contact’
Virginia Grey at 8494)790.

CLINICS
Rollins Christmas camps
W IN TE R PARK - The Center for Lifelong
Education at Rollins College wlU offer:

le i — 1 — Dacambsr 26

to 29,1990.
Instructor: Rollins Soccer coach. Dave Fall
Datea/TImea: Wednesday. Dec. 26 to Satur­
day. Dec. 29. ages 7 to 17. 9 a.m. to noon
(students grouped according to age and ability)
Location: All sessions at Sandspur Field.
Fairbanks and Park avenues. Winter Park
Cost: 970

C hristm as Baasb a ll School — December
a e t o s i , i9 « o .
Instructor: Rollins baseball coach, Boyd Coffle
Datea/TImes: Wednesday and Friday, 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 4 p.m. Thursday.
Saturday and Monday. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Location: Alfond Stadium. Orange and Denn­
ing avenues. Winter Park
Cost: 980
Class sizes are limited. Call (407) 646-2632 Tor
registration Information.

COLL101 HOOPS

1

OSU whips Bethunt-Cookman
COLUM BUS. Ohio — Jim Jackson scored 19
points. Jamaal Brown added 17 and five other
Ohio Slate players were In double figures
Sunday night, helping No. 11 Ohio State open
the regular season with a 111-72 romp over
Bethune-Cookman.
Th e Buckeyes, using full-court pressure de­
fense to force numerous Wildcat turnovers and
hitting 14 of their first 15 shots from the field,
scored 19 unanswered points to balloon a 17-10
lead to 36-10 with 12:15 leu In the first half.
Another 18-4 spurt gave Ohio State a 54-14
bulge with 8:47 still remaining (o play.
All 15 Ohio State players saw action In the
first half. 11 of them scoring as the Buckeyes led
65-36 at the Intermission.
Bethune-Cookman. which fell to 0-2. cut the
Ohio State margin to 68- 43 early In the second
half, but the Buckeyes again pulled away to lead
by as many as 43 points late in the game.
U-C was led by Reggie Cunningham with 21
points and Clifford Kcea with 18.

FOOTBALL
[19 p.m. — W KTV 0. Buffalo Bills at Houston
Oilers. (I.)

C m iatete listing an Pag* tg

B gSM R M R TN

H*raM aporta wrttgr
SANFORD Th e winter high
school prep sports season gets Into
full awing this week with boy's and
g ir l's soccer, b o y's and g irl's
basketball and wrestling all seeing
action.

Pee Wee Lions
can’t get out
mi hole
of early

In girls soccer, there are still three
undefeated teams In the county.
headed by the defending Class 4A
state champion Lake Brantley Pa­
triots. who are off to a 3-0 start. 1-0
In the Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence. T h e Patriot* have only
allowed one goal In lhe three games.

op Moore In the Lady Sunshine
Tournament played at Lake Mary
High School over the weekend. The
Rama will play Daytona BeachMainland at home Tuesday night.

face Oviedo and new coach Ed;
Bolton ul 6:35 p.m. before defending
conference co-cham plons Lake;
Mary and Seminole will play at 6:55
p.m.

Seminole, the defending SAC.
3A-D1 strict 6 and 3A-Regton III
champion*, will open U* season
Tuesday night when the Tribe
travels to Port Orange to take on the
H a w k s of Sp ruce Creek H ig h
School. Th e Fighting Semi notes will
ly at Leesburg on Thursday
fore returning to Sanford for their
first home game against DaytonaSeabreeze Friday.

Lake Bruntley will return to
challenge Lake liowell at 7:15 p.m..!
take Mary will square off with;
DeLand al 7:35 p.tn. and Seminole!
will lake on Oviedo at 7:55 p.m..
Lyman and Lake Howell will conelude things at 8 :15 p.m.

E

Lake Mary will open Its wrestling
season under new head coach.
Richard Bachelor when it travels toWinter Park for a meet on Saturday.

Th e boys basketball jamboree at
Seminole on Tuesday will feature
the seven Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence schools playing two quarters
each.

Bachelor takes over a program that
tuts won seven consecutive confer­
ence. district and regional champi­
onship*.

Lake Brantley will Up things off
against defending district champion
DeLand at 6:15 p.m.. Lym an will

Also opening the season Saturday
will be the Lake Brantley Patriots,
who will travrl to DeLand to take on
the Bulldogs.

On th« nan

F T . M EYERS The Pee Wee
Lions of the Oviedo Youth Football
League won the second half of their
game with the LaBdle Longhorns In
the Royal Palm Claaaic at Bishop
Vcrot High School Saturday.
But the Longhorns won the first
half by more points than the Lions
won the second half In taking a
38-13 victory over Oviedo.
Oviedo dropped to 8-2-1 with the
loss while•LaBellca
LaBcDe advanced to 9-2.
Th e Lions will play their third
annual "Burger Bowl" at Oviedo
High School's Jo h n Courier Field
Saturday. The game Involves the six
Lions coaches dividing the players
Into two 15-player teams, then
playing a regulation game. The
game la scheduled for 11 a.m.
Saturday unless there's a high
school girls' soccer game.
LaBelle scored on a nine-yard run
In the first quarter and tacked on
three second-quarter touchdowns to
lake a 30-0 halfUme lead. The
second quarter runs were of 10. 21
and 1 yards. They also kicked three
extra points to account for the
scores.
Th e three second quarter scores
by the Longhorns were set up by a
blocked punt and two fumbled
kickoffs by Oviedo.
"W e Just didn't wake up until the
second half." said Lions coach
Eddie Norton. "W e played very well
In the second half, but we were
behind 304) before we knew what
hit us."
O v ie d o s c o re d b o th of Its
touchdowns' In the third quarter.
Th e Llona took the second half
kickoff and drove the length field.
Donnie Markey capped the drive
with a 6-yard run. Demetrus Scott
tacked on the extra point.
T h e Lions' other score came on
the final play of the third quarter
when Andy Neufeld hit Scott with a
53-yard scoring strike. The extra
point try failed.
LoBclle's final score came late In
the fourth quarter against Oviedo's
th ird -strin g defense. Th e same
running back carried the ball on all
but four plays for the Longhorns
and scored all five touchdowns.
A highlight of the game for the
Lions was wearing yellow stripes on
their helmets In honor of John
Caldwell, whose sons Chris and

Lak* Howall'a Marqurit* Smith
(No. 22, right) and LaM Mary's
Chris Hanay (No. 21, batow) wart
I ha laadlno ruahsra and acorara
In Samlnola County this aaaaon.
In poatsaaaon play laat waak,
Smith and Hanay cappad thalr
outstanding taasont with starling
efforts. In the Rotary Bowl played
Thanksgiving Day, Hanay ran for
121 yards and two touchdowns.
Smith rushed for 158 yards and
two touchdowns In the 5A-Region
II championship game playad
Saturday aftamoon.
■H

When on assignment. Herald
photographers shoot pictures
that va ry In angle, pose orcontent, not all of which are
published Immediately. From
time to time, the newspaper
takes a second look at those
sports scenes from around Semi­
nole County.

□ l * i P«* W*«. Pag* 2 B

Loss by ’Noles, Silver Hawks leaves sudden void
Suddenly, everybody's gone.
Within 24 hoursc. the high school
football season came to an unex­
pected end. the Seminole High
School Fighting Scmlnolcs and
Lake Howell High School Silver
Hawks suffering upset losses in
their respective regional champion­
ship games.
It's a good thing that I'm not a
betting man because If 1 were. I’d be
a homeless betting man right now.
Tha t's how surv I was that the
Scmlnolcs and Silver Hawks would
s t ill be p la y in g th is co in in g
weekend. In fact, the eoncensus
here was that Seminole and Lake
Howell would at least reach the
semifinals.
It's an odd feeling when some­
thing you so expect to happen. Itke
the Tribe and Hawks advancing In
the playoffs, doesn't happen. You
feel robbed, but nothing was actual­
ly taken. You're ungry. but there's
no-one lo be angry’ with.
Th e frustration, the sense of loss

can be slightly disorienting. Some­
thing's not right and. as a result,
your world Is a bit out of kilter. And
until you accept the loss. It all
seems somehow unreal.
Sadly for the Scmlnolcs. Hawks
and their fans, tlu-lr frustration Is
compounded because the losses
they suffered weren't definitive. By
that I mean very few. If any.
associated with either team aclualli
believe they were beaten by a heller
squad.
Of course, the only standard for

FOR THE BEST COVERAGE OF SPORTS IN YOUR AREA, REA

v * * * * .&lt;

comparison that matters is the final
score. In that respect, the Tarpon
Springs Spongers and Lake CityColumbia Golden Tigers were bctlcr
than the Scmlnolcs and Hawks,
respectively.
Still, when you brruk the games
down play by play, you see how
close Seminole and Lake Howell
were to advancing to the final eight
In their respective classes.
If you do break (he games down
play by play (like I've done ever
since Mooklc Wilson's ground bull
went under Bill Buckner's gluve in
1986). you’d tend to believe the
outcome of the games turned on a
single play. But both Seminole
Coach E m o ry Blake and Luke
Howell's Mike Blscrglia will Icll you
that their teams never should have
been In a situation where a single
play beat them.
Reportedly, the air of expectation
surrounded the players und fans ol
the both Seminole and Lake Howell,
as If at any moment, they would all

eollecllvrly awaken from this bad
dream. Hut the wake-up call never
came.
Oil an Ind ivid u al level, the
weekend saw the end of two
brilliant high school careers — Lake
Howell's Marquette Smith and Sem­
inole's K e rry W iggins. In the
mythical annals ol Seminole County
prep loolball. they are among the
runksof the all-time greals.
Both went out III style, doing wlial
they do best. Siuilli was the leading
rusher III (he Lake lluwcll-Columbla
game, scoring two touchdowns.
Wiggins passed lor 118 yards and a
touchdown, rushing for a second
score.
Finally, we couldn't close tills
chapter without a quick glimpse
ahead. Seminole should only have
to reload on offense with Vuslion.
Tyrone and Willie Williams. And
l.ukr Howell, with Ken Times.
I rrvnr l*rycr. Sheldon Walker and
Judd Tracy all i( turning, should lxexceptionally strong on defense.
|k.L

QH3HZ2!222iMilj

�I — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Monday, November 26, 10QU

m

S TA TS &amp; STANDINGS
ima tfAinmm

*-*

R I M H
M 1 JD 84.081 iv*
t l . i t ] )V*
tlJ H t
4 8 J«o w
s tjn o w

M r* York
M io Jorsoy

’
•

ll.D t l'i
I T JOB*
51.0111
0 1 .» 0

Atlanta at Tampa Bey. tV m .
Philadelphia at Buttela. I p m .
Cmclrwwtl at PlttoburgN, 1p m .
LA Ram* at Cleveland I p m .
Detroll el Chicago 1p.m.
LA Raidai eal Denver. 4 a m .
indianepeii* el PheanlA 4 p.m.
New OrtMna at OaRm. 4 p.m.
Moulton at Seattle, 4p.m.
NY Jet* et San DtpRA 4 p.m.
Preen Bey at Mtone*e*A I p.m.

8

MMarartPtvtotoa
W L Pc*. O S
7 2 7007 t .538 11*
o * m i
S i 411IW
4 * 333 0
318 . D I P ,
111 083 7
Doner
Poctttc Ohrtoioa
11 H M .&gt; •Pomona
8 5 813a
8 4 4 8 * a i,
8
3 443)
L A Liters
l a ci t o r *
8 8 Jte S to
4 ) .40*0
■;.,lteWto
1 t .180 to
Sacramento
San Antonio
- 4*
1,'rlOVPBI
: ;UtoP
Polio*
Mkotowto

g lO l

n r .,
. 00 ?

NUteeutuM 187. New Vert *7
WaMtofton 1*7. litotono ML O T
Qtoltolto l A M t o 1112
teuton 115 Cto*etoto m
PMIadetphto IM Atlanta 151
Utah 85 Dol to* 74
Chicago ill. Oonuer loi
U ls t e r * ItAOHoato *1
No* J o m r I IT. G M mi Stott 11)

I 5

»v M

m

of H t H M . Co

M M
1
B I S

m

, » :»

ORLANDO (ft)
Andwsen *-10 45 a . CotM g* M l 1-5 la.
Alto M H t , Vincent 0-10 08 14 Reynaldo
:&gt;510 04 A Scott 37 M A Wright 018 5-7 1],
&lt;3. Smirn MO OS A S U t t 1-5 M A Tumor 14
?: S-0 4, AcrnOOl-2 1. Talelt 10141008*1.
S ;O A CLIPPER* t ilt )
&gt;SS
Kimble
*
4
KKnfc l l l l l M. C.Smltti 514 50 it ,
!:.:^anlomln 7-10 05 M. Grant 7-11 00 lot
. ' : ;I*arlen4 1
38 88 A Morning 57 1 1 A Garrick
]
5111, Vaught 50 50 15, Martin 55 80 a
■ ‘ :Pannl»t*r 1-15 A A Butler 1-1 M l . Boll 1-101 '■&gt;1. Total* of 1111-811t.
J Ortoad*
11 3) V 3 0 - t l
; LA capper*
v 91 n i t — as*
Three point tool* — Scott. Fouled out —
'• None. Total Null - Orlando 11 LA Clipper*
I M. Rebound* - Orlande 15 (0 Smith 7). LA
Clipper* M (Beniamin Tl). Ataitt*— Orlande
:&gt; 15 (Vincent T). LA Clipper* i t (Garland t ).
Technical tout* - LA Clipper* lllepel de* Jen**, Cattedpe. A — lOOtl.
L -.|

D
Boat
Rhode Itlond 111. Keene SI. 14
C. Michigan UA Oakland M
Minnesota?*. Robert M errill!
OMo SI. til, ie thene Ceaheue 71

TeiaeTechtl. Nevada Rene**
Siena I It. Col-Irvine MB
South Carolina 71, Alooho-Anchorage St
UCLA t v Virginia. Monday night
Loyola Marymaunt Ml. Cham made l i t
Toledetl. Northeastern 75
Santa Clare 7A Iowa St. 0}
Syracuee n . Indiana, night
Amarlcen-PR *5 N. Iowa 75
Bucknell 185 5t. Louis *3
IIUnoisH. BucknallOI
Murray St. II, Nebraska it
North Caatl Ti
Cleveland SI. tt. Wright SI. t l I10T)
Princeton 42, Coot! Carolina 1*

(All Hama 1ST)
Awarlcja Caetoraati
Ent
W L T Pci. PF PA
* I I . *001*8 no
Buttele
* II4 I8 2 R 1 R
Miami
5 * 8.455 17* 330
Indlanaeoil*
A Y J*t*
4 8 8.313 If* 257
^ h tw England
1 108 0*0144 303
Contra1
4 5 8.543 23*242
J N Cincinnati
; ? Pittsburgh
t 58.545 1*8 181
Houston
5 5 8 .500 22* 1*2
3 ( 1 . IR 1*4 300
t.;; Cleveland
Watt
t *.
Kama* City
7 4 8 434 34* 173
7 40 43(207 174
LA Roldor*
5 *8.45520*314
laallto
5 7 8 .417114 203
XlSanDlogo
3 1 0 .300 237 280
• ;:Oanv*r
National Gontarenca
East
W L T Pet. PF PA
10 10 *0*23* 141
;NY Glontt
7 4 8 434 282 272
: Philadelphia
4 )1.543 247 11]
: Washington
5 7 8.417 174 343
Dallas
Photnli
318 371 172 378
Caatrsl
* 3 8 .818 23* 1(0
!Chicago
&lt;■1'Green Boy
4 ) 8.543 220 277
5 4 0 413 23* 222
Minnesota
411.313 IR 2*4
Tamp* Bay
4 78 3*4 239 284
Detroit
west
10 18 *0* 770 17*
San Francisco
14 8 4311(8 202
Now Orisons
4 78 .904 247 2*f
LA Roms
3 * 0 771141 203
Atlanta

I-.-

f:
s:j:

M ia D u p e r s pat* tra m M a rin a
(Shnenoutch kkfcl. 1: !4
M ia-- P r u it t 11 pa»* tra m M arine
IS teyonevk hk kkLM V

-1

First down*
Ruths* rare*
Pattina rorto
Sacks* yore* tot!
)rO town off.
4th town off.
Paste*
Pirt*
Punt return* yard*
KO retumo-yarto
Fumbtoi )e«t
Penotltot-yorte
Time ol pcniesilon
8

h
k

Mto
20
39-tli
24)
84
It-144*4
848
102*4
318.)
1-1*

in
08
028
33:55

a*
18
w -ioi
IAS
14
011-558
880
17-R-I
0358
on
Oil*
88
7 »
38:85

R UJM1H o t C ' Im 'm '34*A Strodtor*
8- 15 Llm drkk 2-4. Marine MmlmM I ) .
Cleveland Metcalf 57k Mach 1»7t, Gainer

PAISINO-Mlaitil Marine 14 2**24).
Ctovetond-Kaear I7R2-H1.
RECEIVING-Mtand-Pruitt 01*. Martin
231. Dupe* *74. &gt;duetto* 10. ttonnto l )A
Llmbrtck 1-5 Jomon OR. ItrotoW* M5
ClavelandMack o-I*. Matcott *38, Slaughter
135 Longhorn* M l, Brtnnen 0-85 Newmm*

in.

SACK5 MlamtTurmr to.
INTERCEPTIONOMIoml-Oliver 111,
Glenn t-St.
Mttmd fieM goal* Miami, Btoyonovkh
4*. Cleveland. Kaurtc V.
Tampa tey
Orson Bay
Notearing.

8 8 7 8- M
* 2 IB 2 - M
First Qmrtor

GB Sharps 4 pass from Dll-mag (Jack*
kick). 7:45
TB-FO Christ)* 3514:48
•'
ThWtesrtor
GB Haddlx 2 pom tram DUweg Mack*
kick), 3:28
1
GSFG Jacke 2510:48
Td-HIII 11 pat* Irom Testaverde
(Chrlttlekick). 14:87
FourthQuarter
GB FG Jeckelll 14
A 15477
First town*
Rushesyarto
Patting yard*
Soctedyarto lost
3rd town off.
*th down off.
Pttidt
Punt*
Punt ratums-yorto
KO retums-yarto
Fumble*-loot
Penall let-yard*
Tim* et peuesston

TS
If
1801
Ml
2S
0-M-3A*
1*1*
254*8
0-38.1
17
5-78
51
048
R:10

••
10
11-104
IR
1-11
O U -M B
8-1-8A0
1)230
348.1
048
370
31
888
32:04

RUSHING-Tompe Bay Cobb 1054 G.
Anderton 37, Tetlevarde I A Green Bey
Thom [non l» S t, HoddU 1833. Fontenot 1 3A
Wood tide | -if , Ollweg 4-5, Query 1-5.
Workman 1-4
P A S S IN G -T a m p a B a y T a s le v e r d e
314*0- M l. Green Bay Ollweg I3 R G - It*.
RECEIVING-Tam po Bay-Hill 7-**. Hall
571. Cobb 54A C . Anderton 5 IA Carrier 1 R ,
J. Anderton 1 4 Drewery I-1A Croon BaySharp* 05*. Weal 1 07. Haddla 311. Wecdtldi
71. Query 1 10. Workman 1A Fontonot 1-7.
SACKS Tampa Bay Randla 17. Mott I S.
Groan Bay-Brown 1-14 Potterton 1*.
IN TE R C E P T IONS None.
Mined Held goal*: Groan Bay, Jocko 55

ICOLLEOB FOOTBALL
NEW YO R K - The United Prett In­
ternational Board ol Coochot Top 23 col leg*
football rating*, with record and tint place
vote* In parentheses. total point* (bated on IS
paint* (or tin t place. 14 lor second, ate.), and
Iail weak'* ranking.
711
I. Color ado (1*1110-111
1. Miami (1) (5 1 )
OM
411
1. Georgia Tech ( ! ) 1*811
308
4. (lit) BYU 111 (1811
14*
4 I li a )T « o * (1) ( t i t
0. Notre Dama (8 1 )
7. Wellington (8 1 )
8. Fhwida Stole (8 2 )
418 (
* Ptnn Slats (83)
303 18
10 Tonnatto* (7 2 3)
304 13
11. Clomson (81)
302 13
11 Michigan (89)
171 II
IJ. Mississippi (8 2)
111 17
14. Nebraska (8 3)
*8 0
15 Iowa 1831
SI II
47 1*
14 Louisville 181 II
17 lavas AAM (81 II
41 R
18. Southern Cal (8 911
32 14
MM
If. Illinois (8 91
20 Auburn (7 1 11
1)11
21 Michigan State (7 51)
tl R
R . Ohio Slat* ( 7 ) 1 )
12 17
1 nr
19 IlletS Mississippi(13)
71 (IN ) Virginia (8 II
*14

Sen Diego St
Pocthc
TC U
SenJeMSt
NewMteke

ydttdydopg
S3) 3S11) 38*8 3* 4*8 0
■* M i 18*4*7 47 44* 7
432 25* 7170127 170 }
n s M l 104*5148 M A I
SNR* 7R 88M RA*
4*4 34*1* R4t 18 1*11
111 15*18 H R 241843
M l l i t I 5 R M R 1*1.0
MO I I I M MM R MAO
H 8 R 7 R 1 R 1 18140.4

B * t t M Move
8 JB 7M 8IJ
B I B ft* 5 7.1
I I BBM il 0A7
MM
1*4
It 72 1IIS 13*0
8 M m 104
N IB DM I A I
11 OB 10*8 * A I
MOT MI7 8 A t
NO* 817 8 A t
M Ot 882 I AI

m

TeM
• May* yd* avg M ydeag
11 882 *Mf 7.1 *0 5752
BYU
18 111 5*54 *855 5*5 4
SonDtegeSt
M 818 5118 A* 54 555 0
Virginia
It *84 Silt A* 55 M l 0
1* 775 «M7 A* « t **A7
11*08 530***4*481.2
11871 511*18 51 0*1.1
Partite
IIS H M M A I4 7 M U
11 OM 5820 51 43 434 *
PreMoSI
La Tech
tlC M 4*48 5* 38 448 8

pent* evg ret ret avg
BYU
Bawling
Ing Green
Green.
HCarol me
Oklehema
WiitlllNiiBl
TvanHY’mi tl
#•

MlsaiseJpgt

50 444 11178 41.1
0 455 It 110 40.0
0740.117 3M 40.1
78455 40 X N lt.1
4141*1* 111 |*. 1
48 44 8 38 544 3*0
74 40 * 1* 147 M l
41*8.4 14 1718.1
57 0.1 M RS 37.t
5418.7 11 0 1 7 *

*
t
8 0
•
e
p
HoutNn
to 44* 44.*
BrighamYoung
tl
483 42.8
SonOtago31
to 491
49.1
442 40.2
It
Virginia
1* m
a*
FMrttolt
413 37.)
II
Nabrmk*
Miami
18 321
n.t
Oklahoma
It
481
34.5
tef■&gt;jtinjiijm
3
*
4
TVWHi^nn
tl
158
II
3*1 137
lOWB
3*1 15.7
It
TwnttlN
RwtMngDrNns*
e car yd*
113*2 733
Washington
"W IrtB
2.1 5 71.7
II)**
78*
Ctomtsn
3.1 • 251
JMmaI
1*253 253
1.1 4 7A)
FNrIds
1*242 71*
SanJaaaSt
II 410 ft*
3.2 • 82.3
34 8 *43
11401 I0«
PennSt
18170 *50
20 4 *3.1
Alabama
3.211 (8.0
114*1 M88
•YU
2J &gt;. It.)
113(3)015
lews
2.8 3 **.?
II 1*318*7
Cant Mich
Ft emp tat yrit M r«tnf
778 114 11 IR I 4 80*4
m 118 15 1401 0 83.48
147 118 17 1318 4 81.74
1*81)8 It 1501 181.01
144 100 15 I3R S87A5
Miami (O)
30(14814 15*7 5*7.81
Clemten
3 0 123 13 &gt;737 7 8* 30
Teaaa
Tenrwuoe
110 153 R M U 12 8* 0*
17(1411*1041 4*1.80
Louisville
540144 11110* S81.R
F r o m St
Total Datrnea
g piayt yd* avg M ydtpg
11*78 238* 3 J 10 2IA*
Clomten
11708 2*4*5512 2234
Bail St
10 *4* 138* 3.5 10 720.4
114*1151*58 8 2RO
Can Mich
1**4*13(15811 £ 4 7
II737M33 3* 1)15*.)
Leuitvlllo
11 714 Ml* 4.0 14 303.5
Nebraska
11 7*5 38M AO 3* 270.0
Miami (0 )
11 771 385* AO 17177.0
Nor Car 54
11 7*130*14 0 17 178.)
Penn SI
KMtftSA
• Pl* avg
Control Michigan
11 »* A t
Clam tan
II IM f.f
Ball St
II 111 11.0
Alalmma
Florida
18110 » A
Southern Mitt
11 141 tl.S
Looitviito
n i d n.8
Nabrotka
II 147 11.4
Wothlngton
II t » 154
PannSt
11133 14.1
Central Michigan
Boll SI

tonou.o

Hudian, Okie SI
Btantamy. Colorado
Lewlv Teio* AAM
Lewtv Waehmgton
MeywAlhor, Army
Duckett. Mich SI
Grant. Utah St
Cabb.Rke
Camay, San Jaaa SI
RabinMn.No.lll

•tl ydtavgto ypg
178 1041 5.8 10 148.5
M l 14M5.7 17 1480
MO 15411.8 I ) 140.1
118 1178)4 8 127.8
15111515.0 8 115.1
148 137* 5.5 10 1151
MO 1170 5.3 8 114 0
M l 111)4.7 ID 110.5
MO 1148 4111115)
1*111M4.4 1* 1114

•tt emp tot yd* M pit
Urglnla
1411*4 812*1111*0 7
SMoare. Vlt
Detmer. BYU
517 D* 14 *•*« M 15* 7
McGwire, San Otogo St 1** 230 4)51015 1514
334M l *M78M 147.1
Ickhm a. Miami
13* (8 4 1173 1* 145.3
Wildaa. Florida St
371 33)1*4414 47 1454
KlIngNr. Haulton
IM M8 I I 1*01 It 1*14
438 34) 14 R1I 31 11*1
Kopp. Pacific
100 110 4 1814 I IM S
Mirer, Notre Dame
142 204 111*28 R 118.1
Martini, San Joea SI
{Rating formula: IM point* squat*
average partormanc* tor all major college
patters (ram tt*5 through 1878.)
Total Ottom*
alt yd* avf ypg
Kllngler, Houtlon
015 448* 77 448*
Detmer, BYU
3814**7 1.1417.0
481R7* 11 3*4 0
Kapp. PecJlic
McGwire.San Diego SI
43* 3141 7.* 334.5
3*4 N M 74 3*0.1
Erkhton. Miami
4131*1) 7.1 M 5.7
Martini. San iota St

871MS.M

P.BL _
Parkv Moutton
Lewtv Arliona
Vincent, Akron
Carpenter, Miami 10)
KSmlth. Teaa* AAM
Perry, Penn SI
Welch. Baylor
Jackten, Akron
Beckley. Florid* St
Mmdei. Kama* SI
Blellntkl. Bowling Orton

10 7124 1 .78
11 7 I R I 44
1171818 44
117104140
II 7 14*2 44
I I 7 IM t 44
117 M t 44
117 18*44
M 8 1 W 1 40
188150148
M 8 01848

Shaia, Bawling Groan
Greenfield, Pittsburgh
58 814
Gardockl, Cllmeon
Hertrag. W ttt Virginia
McAItttar. IMrth Card In
WllUomv A rIn n a St
Rawathemo. Wbol M kh
W aHvTeaM
AAcCtoughen.
Bryant. Wothlngton
Graham. Ohio St
Jamev Mite St
WOiborn*. Michigan
Beckley, Florida St
Coghill, Wok* Foret)
Tumor. Indian*
Carter, Tonne****
Smith. Sou Ml**

n

ui

M
78
32
M
41
)A

051
49.)
49.4
42.8
41.8
414

M
yUt M avg
33 *24 7 14 4
3* SM 1 110
R
R7
I 148
23 J 4 I 1 I U
11 0)5 • 1A2
M M
H U

t* 27)

I 141

R
M

32)
Ml

m

mi

I 1)4
* 1)0
1 15]

Carter, Tormosase
IS 4SS 1 M 3
Howard. Michigan
14 473 t 18J
Hughs*. Nebraska
18 523 1 38.1
OM 1 18.8
Washington. Now Maalco St R
Hastings, Georgia
t ) 971 1 255
24 471 I 212
Jones. Duka
Stagjll. Miami (O )
1* 482 I R .»
Whit*. California
34 028 1 352
S4 828 1 218
Johnson. East Coro
Pointer, Utah St
20 708 f ISO
Field Geek
IgaiB P*«
Doyle. Alabama
M i l MB I.N
Poliak, Tetat
34 M .8M 1.M
Gwattnay, Nor Carol
R I I .778 1.81
Gardockl, Clem ton
14 18 .781 1.73
Wright. Tempi*
15 18 .7*8 1.73
Shudok. Iowa St
R 18 .704 1.73
Burk*. Tonne n og
M 18 AI8 1.73
Vm W yl. Auburn
R 17 .773 1.78
R t l .738 1.78
Hanna. Toledo
48 If .811 104
Roblnten, Nor III
Cravtr. Frttno SI
Anderton. Moutton
Trekot. Son Diego St
Poliak. Tetat
Btontomy, Coio
Burk*. Tennattog
Loo, Florida SI

! waived by the chib but
resigned last week after Miami
was hit by a aeries of Injuries at
wide receiver. Marino paused the
30.000-yard barrier with a 13yard pass to Jim Jensen In the
second quarter.

« 7 7781 AS 252.8

VStIBB

181* 8 0 188 18.1
18 0 M 17 181 111
18 0 51 10 88 8.8
18 015 M 85 I J
II 17 8 0 W » J
II 841 18 100 8.1
1815 8 • *8 8.1
18 8 47 10 88 A f
Lowiv Tetat AAM
II 10 0 0 M A7
All-Purpew Renaan
ruth roc kr yd* ydpg
Mllburn. Slantord
71* OR 801 3R3 3850
Conley .Son Jaaa St
G40 3M 57* n i l M l.7
Weathrtpeon Hauaton M31 4*0 331 17M 1744
Btontomy, Colorado I0M II* 51 1*18 105-3
T77*' 145
Lawlv Wothlngton
0 1424 1424
White, Cal Itorn la
•|R 028 RIO 1184
4 48 1014 1427 114*
Qeanv Oregon St
Row*. San Diego SI
4 12*8 2*3 1578 157.8
337 701 487 17)4 134 *
Itmall. NofraOama
Johnson. E . Carolina 3*0 M 1840 1481 155.8
k r — kkkrefuma. total peaft and klckgffi

C LEV ELA N D - The Miami
Dolphins come Into every came
hoping lo control the boll with
their running game.
When that falls, they have a
pretty food backup phut. They
let Dan Marino throw.
That plan served the Dolphins
well prior to I9B0 and tl worked
again Sunday, w ith M arino
throwing for 245 yard* and two
touchdowns to lead Miami to a
30-13 victory over the Cleveland
Brown*.
Miami improved to 9-2 while
the Browns loat their sixth
straight and fell to 2-9. Cleve­
land did not sellout at home for
the first time since the 1909
opener, and loot its fifth straight
at home.
Marino's performance gave
him 30.099 yards for hit career,
making him the 11th paaoer in
N FL history to exceed 30,000
yards. He did It tn 114 games. 17
games faster than any
quarterback In history.
" I felt our guys were doing a
good Job gelling open." said
Marino, who completed 16 of 29
paaaes and was not Intercepted.
“ We weren't running the ball aa
well as we'd like to so we had to
throw the ball."
Marino completed scoring
passes of 5 yards to Mark Duper
and 35 yards to James Pruitt.

‘It's something 1 feel real good
Marino said of pawing
the 30,000 yard mark. " I had a
lot of guys help me do 11. But the
Im portent thing Is that we won
today."
Th e other Miami scores came
on a 31-yard Interception return
b y K e r r y O le n n . S a m m le
Smith's 4-yard run. and a 40yard Pete Stoyanovtch field goal.
Cleveland scored on field goals of
36 and 42 yards by Je rry Kaurtc
and a 2-yard run by Kevin Mack.
Smith rushed 24 times for 96
yards and Duper caught four
paaaes for 74 yards.
Th e Dolphins. 13-10 loser* to
the Lo* Angeles Raiders last
Monday night, started one game
behind Bunak) In the A F C East.
The BUI*. 9-1. play at Houston
Monday night.
"W e had to come out of here
9-2 after the devastating loss to
the Raiders," Miami Coach Don
Shuts said. "Th e drat half was
near perfect. Dan was outstand­
ing ruim lng the offense, making
the big throws when he had to
make them. He had an excellent
day overall."

Backup, Packers hand
Bucs sixth straight loss
Rams. Green Bay Is tied with
Washington for third In the race
for three NFC wild-card spots.
The Buccaneers. 4-8. lost their
sixth straight.
"W e didn't play good enough
defense to beat the No. 1 high
school team In the state of
Florida o r Wisconsin." Tampa
Bay Coach Ray Perkins said. "T o
be perfectly honest with you,
we're Just not a ve ry good
football team. In fact, we're a
poor football team."
DUweg completed 13 of 22
passes for 199 yards. Including
touchdown poises of 4 yards to
Sterling Sharpe and 2 yards to
Michael Haddlx. Chrla Jacke
added two 25-yard field goals for
Green Bay. Majkowksl did not
play because of a bruised
shoulder suffered last week.
"I had a lot of confidence In
Anthony's ability," Green Bay
Coach Llndy Infante said. "Our
boll club rallied around him and
got the Job done. He prepared
himself well and his reads were
good.”
Tampa Bay’s touchdown came
on an 11-yard pass from Vlnny
Testaverde to Bruce HUI. Steve
Christie's 33-yard field goal ac­
counted for the only first-half
points for the Buccaneers.
Testaverde completed 25 of 49
passes for 281 yards.

M IL W A U K E E A n th o n y
Dilwrg accomplished what the
Green Bay Packers asked of him
Sunday.
Filling in for Injured starter
Don Majkowskl. DUweg threw
two touchdown paaaea to lift the
Packers to a 20-10 triumph over
Ta m p a Bay for their th ird
straight victory.
For his reward, he will be
benched again as soon as Ma­
jkowskl returns.
"I've probably spent eight of
my 10 years playing football on
the bench." said DUweg. who
threw one pass last season as a
rookie. " I ’ve been there before
and I understand the position.
I'm not saying 1 like. tt. by no
means. I enjoy ptaytng the game
and I'm really not content being
a backup.
"But I also know that when
you're In that position, you can’t
pout, because If you go In there
and throw three interceptions
when your num ber's called,
that's not going to do anything
lo help you get a starting Job In
this league."
The Packers. 6-5. mived over
.500 for the first time since the
1
season opener when DUweg
started
In Green Bay's 36-24
1
'
victory
over the Los Angeles

(A il Times 1ST)
Wales Cen4eraace
Patrick Dvtsioe
W L T Ft*. OP OA
NYRong*r*
I ) 0 5 35 l « »
Philadelphia
15 W 1 31 *1 10
13 18 1 R 8* 7*
N re Jersey
Washington
1) 1)038 80 84
11 10 3 34 8* M
Pittsburgh
8 1) 1 18 04 *4
N Y Islanders
Adams Division
Boston
11 7 4 30 70 n
1110127 77 77 '
Montreal
8 10 4 R 03 n
Hartford
&lt;
C o a tla M d frw n I B
Buffalo
• 80 R n 4* •
3 1*3 n 00118
Quebec
Nick play for Oviedo. Mr.
Campbell Can torewc*
Narrlt Dtvttton
Caldwell la stationed aboard a
W L T P tv OF
Navy cruiser In the Persian Gulf.
17 713* *8
Chicago
Offensively. Scott and Neufeld
I ) 41 33 II 01
SI. Loud
lO IO S R 84 *8 accounted for 173 yards of total
Detroit
515 5 1) 40 *1
Minnatot*
4 31 1 8 70 133 offense. Scott gaining 109 yards
and Neufeld 74. Marxey chipped
Smyth* Dtvttton
10 3 3 34 IM 70 In with 44 rushing yards on
Lo* Angela*
14 8 1 30 107 II
Calgary
eight carries. Norton cited the
Vancouver
11 I I I 33 75 M
8 15) 30 88 *3 offensive line of tackles Jeremy
Winnipeg
• 131 14 58 0* Frost and Chris Caldwell, guards
Edmonton
Saturday Ratottt
G re g M iller and B ria n
N.V. Ranger* 2. N.Y. Itlondw t)
Brlnkerhoff and centers Nick
Winnipeg 11, Quebec 4
Boston A Hartford 1
Caldwell and Matt Tucker for
Lot Angola* A Montreal 1
Pltttburgh 3. Washington 1. O T
Edmonton A Toronto I
Chicago A Calgary)
Now Jo n ty A Minnesota 1
Vancouver 5 St Louis 3
luiutiv G*mr»
Philadelphia A N Y Islander* I
Montreal A Winnipeg 3
Lot Angela* A Quebec 4

Pee Wee-

outstanding blocking In the sec­
ond half.
Defensively, Oviedo forced
three fumbles but were only able
two recover one of the loose
balls. Neufeld had the big de­
fensive day with 13 tackles, a
fumble recovery and a
quarterback sack.
Also contributing defensively
were Joe Macak (10 tackles).
Josh Greer (eight tackles) and
Scott. Roger Halliburton and
Chris Sanders (six tackles each).
Sanders also forced a fumble and
sacked the quarterback.

Buffalo el N Y Rongon. 7:15 p.m.
Philadelphia at NY l%i*tdon.7:l)p.m .
Edmonton at Pittsburgh. 7:35 p.m.
Lot Angolas at Detroit. 7:15 p.m.
Toronto at SI. L o u lA l:llp m.
Minnesota at Vancouver, 10.35 p.m.

"Once the (ruck hit me 1 didn't
bother to get up. I just layed
there and watched."
&amp; Chicago Bears Coach MUtt
Dltka altar his team was overrun
by the Minnesota Vikings, 41-13.

O R LAN D O

J A /-A L A /
FIRST GAME
7:15 P.M.

THOROUGHBRED
RACING
POST TIME 12:30 P.M.

(daily except Sunday)

(dally except Monday)

Smith, Benjamin lead Clippers’ rout of Magic

v-*: U n i t e d F r t i i I n t e r n a t i o n a l
»* it t*
L O S A N G E L E S — C h u rlc * S m i t h s c u n -tl
21 p o in ts a n d U c -iu ill l k -n j a n i l n u d d i-d 1H
**»* a n d K r u b t * d a m m s o h -MIi ’ I i 1 8 r r l x m n d s
P S u n d a y n ig h t t o lead (h e L o s A n g e le s
C lip p e r s to a 1 1 9 -0 1 ro u t o f t h e O r la n d o
i -;:
M a g ic .
j*::
T h e C lip p e r s .
w in n e r s ol" t h r e e ol th e ir
i :j Ia s i fu u r g a m e s , a ls o gut 10 p o i n t s f ro m
• : ro o k ie Ik&gt; K l m h l e a n d a s e a s o n -h ig h 15
p o in t s a n d 15 r e b o u n d s fro m L o y V a u g h t .
T e r r y C a t lc d g e le d O r la n d o w i t h 16 p o in ts
a n d S a in V i n c e n t a d d e d 14 t o p a c e (h e
M a g ic . 3 -1 0 . w h i c h s u ffe re d It s f o u rth

b

Bcaryde
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R40 5.81* 1*0.0
n m 4 * ii m o
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IMS SO 41 18*3
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1*41 45 M M7.5
M il 1.411 237 4
MM 4.514 233 3
17Y3 4714 231*

I — 18
7— M

CN Mack 3 run (Kaurtc k k k ),8 :tl
A-TARS

Cleveland at New York. 7:Mp m
Phlladtehtool New Jersey.':*P-m Gulden tlaOe m Washington. 7 :»p .m .
Detroit et Atlanta. 7:Mp.m.
Phoanl* et Portland. a p.tn.
Indiana at Milwaukee. I :M p m.
LACMppart at Houston. I:M p m.
OrNaaect De*v*r.*:Mp.m.
loo AaNnll ot M I N . Mp-in.
NUnnoMta at Sacramento. N: M p m.

t&lt;

By MM NCAA
Park, Rea., Nev. 15

NVGiantsalSanFrenctsca.8p.nl.

Portland 111, San Antonio 183
UtC Uppin llf.O rtoatoH

O f f M M A IM M

MBMM 1.7 MBS
Ml MM 04 MAS

B M IM M Im

Mia Smith 4 run (kick M M ) . 7:51
M le -G le n n n Interception return
(Stoyonevichklckl. i ll*
C leFO Kaurlc 1411:55
•nurd Beerier
C N -F O K a u rk 0 .4 85
Mia FGStoyanmrkh4B, 14:48

Detroit tOASocrmento 81

Good. HoutNn
Boyce, BYU
Wycheck. Maryland
Row*. SM (Meg* St
MeCarded. U H L V
Arey, San Diego *(
McCaffrey. Stanford
Dewtey, FNrtdeSt

Burtato at Houston. tw m .
Seeder, Osc.2
Kenya*CMyMNnetnWend. I p.m.

an­
t i.m
t*

.U C L A
If l|Mini*
Mi YAm l f In M i
Benefit. Fresno Si

Slaughter, La Te d i

Pittsburgh 14 NY Jet* 7
Pheenle 54 New Iwplend IQ
KansaeCIty 27, LA Raiders 24
LA R e m M . Sen F rencNca 17
Seattle 11. SanOtopeM(OT)

m i

CNcap*

15 (IN ) Son Jem St. ( 0 ) 0
in
H (He) Orepte (51)
Tnr
m mm faaaad
Other* re c e ivin g vote*: B a y lo r .
LeuHUne Tech. Virginia Tech.
The national changian will receive a

New Ortaone IA Atlanta T
Mmneeota 41. CMcaga II
Indtonapetts 5A Cincinnati IB
Miami to. O m toad 12
Philadelphia II. NY Giant* 11

30,000
Marino p
as Dolphins top Browns

straight loss. The Magle have dropped all
eight of Ihclr road gutnes. They haven't won
away from home since defeating (he New
. Irrsey Nets on April 22. 1990,
Los Angeles, which never Iralled. raced to
a 61-40 hallt line advantage as Uenjamln led
the Los Angeles attack with 15 points and
Smith added 10.
The Clippers stretched their lead 71-45 til
the start of third quarter with Smith scoring
6 (minis In a 10-5 run to pud (heir cushion to
26 with 9:08 left.
The Clippers took an 88-67 lead into (he
fourth quarter and U ballooned to as many
as 35. 118-83. on a laytn by rookie Cedric
Hall with 1 48 left

Kimble, who started at small forward In
place of the Injured Ken Norman, scored
three quick baskets and the Clippers limited
the Magic In one field goal In lue first 4:43 of
the game while building a 12 2 margin.
They held a 27-15 advantage after the
opening quarter as Gary Grunt and Kimble
each scored 6 points and licn|amln added 5.
Orlando fell limber behind -is tin- Clippers
continued in run at the start of the second
quarter. Benjamin scored 8 points and
guard Winston Garland added 4 during an
18-5 run. Benjamin* basket with 7:26 left
cap|&gt;rd the spurt and put the Clippers ahead
45-20

LARGE
SCREEN
TV'S

SEE IT LIVE!
World's Fastest
Game!

Noon Matinees
Payoffs a t Track
Mon. Thur. Sat
Prices! Racing
1 P.M. on Sunday
Forms &amp; Pro*
I ,«I,,*I« I| . I J &lt; !
Admission
grams
on Sale.
17-92 St 436
from$1.
Admission $1.
Information • 407-331-9191
i

h

i i i i i ij

�{to

Switord Htrald. Sanford, Florida — Monday, November 36, I960 — I

■
9“V

h4k

*r*•-- . *,
F
‘ -

Buy a live Christmas tree

■- ■

IN B R I E F

-------------------------------------------

Programs M t at library
Seminole County Public Library ayatem
ptg*
gnuna to be held the week of December I
North Branch. 190 N. Palmetto Are., flaotard. will feature
Toddler Stortea at 10:15 a.m. and Plcaehool Stories at 11a.m.
on Tueaday. December 4. Preachool Stortea will be told at 3:30
p.m. Wedneaday, December 5.
Northweat Branch, 900 Greenway Bhfd., Lake Mary, wilt tell
Preachool Stortea at 10 and 10:49 a.m. Tueaday, December 4.
Adult “ Microwave Cooking for the Hobdays" will be held at 7
p.m .. Wedneaday, December 9. Toddler Stories wilt be told at
10:10 and 10:45 a.m., Thursday, December S. Th e Middle
School film "Nosey Dobson" will be shown at 3:45 p.m.,
December 0. T h e film “Caddie Woodlawn" will be shown at 3
p.m., Saturday. Decembers.
West Branch. 345 Hunt C lu b Bird., N.. Longwood. will
feature Bedtime Stories at 7 p.m .. Tueaday. Decem ber 4.,
Preachool Stories at 10:30 and 11:15 a.m . Wedneaday.
December 5. and Toddler Stories at 10:15 and 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Decembers.

aar* *anaa ' “

r?TT'

Celebrate Health Cars Week
This week the nation paya tribute to the thousands of nuraes.
therapists, homemaker-home health aides, physicians and
others who dedicate their lives to meeting the health care
needs or all Americana. Proclaimed by an Act of Congress and
by President George Bush. National Home Health Care Week
provides the opportunity to focus national attention on the
issues and caregivers of home care.
The Visiting Nurse Association, a non-profit community
based home health care agency, was founded 39 years ago and
has been providing high quality professional home health care
services to Orlando and the Central Florida area. Employing
over 400 nurses, therapists, homemakers, home health aides,
social workers, and other caregivers, the V N A offers compre­
hensive home care from the most basic assistance to
sophisticated htrh tech nursing treatments.

*7 ^ r i *7 ’ m

BnSBunN aR k&amp; isa -

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 323-7671 during evening
h o u rs.

Overeaters to hava slap study
A step study of Overeaters Anonymous la 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 clsssaa
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 la $25 per 10-week session. For more
Information, call 331-5267. Th e club meeting la held from 8-9
p.m.. at the fire station.
The Old Hickory Stampers hold classes 7-8 p.m. each
Monday at the Knights of Columbus Hall on S. Park Avenue.
Sanford. Cost Is 92.50 per class. For more Information, call
349-9529.

Hslp for gsmblsrs offered
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 236-9306.

Casselberry Klwanls to meet
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.

Bridge club to meet, play
Sanford Duplicate Bridge C lub meets at noon each Tuesday
at the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E. First St..
Sanford.

Sanford Lions to gather
Sanford Lions Club meets at noon each Tueaday at the
Holiday Inn. Interstate 4 and State Rood 46 In Sanford.

6 )0

’ 00

&lt;i 00

6 30

t 00

n Letter* from
Dear Abby readers of all ages
and all walks of life are flooding
the Saudi Arabian desert!
I am a technical sergeant In
the U.S. A ir Force, serving my
country proudly In Operation
Desert Shield. The support and
patriotism conveyed In those
letters to overwhelming. Some
letters are from veterans who tell
us to stand tall and be proud.
Some letters are from families
who Just want to say they care.
All or them thank us for the Job
we are doing.
We appreciate all the mall and
packages, but the letters that
■end a tingle down the spine and
bring a tear lo the toughest of ua
are from America's children.
The y tell us ihctr names and
thank us for keeping America
safe. They tell ua they hope
there will not be a war, but If
there to, they trust us to "get It
right." They draw pictures of
flowers and trees so we won’t
forget what trees and flowers
look like.
Abby. please let your readers
know that their mall to getting
here, but as diligent as we are.
we doubt that all of It can be
Individually answered. We apol­
ogize for that, but please convey
this message:
“ Our love right bock at ya.
Am erlcal Y o u r letters have
wanned our hearts and made life
a little more tolerable for so
many of us In this desolate
desert. A n d to answer the
children, we hope there Isn’t a
shooting war. but be assured.lf
there Is, we will get II right. God
bless America!"

T. SOT. DAN 6HUUFF
Tt I teach govern­
ment and economics at Grant
High School In Van Nuys. Calif.
This Is a belated thank-you for
one of your columns. I've been
using It for years to explain the
difference between communism.

) )0
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CELESTE
WHITE
where the cut has been made.
After n cut to made, the tree
produces asp within an hour
which can prevent the tree from
taking up crater. T h is to why you
rccut the tree before you put It In
the home.
T h e tree you select should
have good green color, be full
and bushy with a good shape. It
depends on how big you want
your tree, but to look for a nice,
full tree In the shape you want.
Some people want It for a comer
so It can have a side that will not
be seen. Some want it for a
h a llw a y , so th e y choose a
slender one that will not stick

* — —*
rtflii il&gt; &gt; 1*1
out. *Moat
people w
want
the big* s t . fattest tree they can find.
Once you find the tree that you
want. It to Important to care for It
properly so It will tost through
the holidays, if you buy the tree
several days before you are
going to Bet It up. store It
outside. Remit the trunk at a
diagonal about an Inch above
the original cut and place It In a
container of crater In a cool,
shady place.
When you are ready to set It
up, saw the trunk again this
time leveling It off. A fresh tree
can drink up to a half gallon of
w ater a d a y so It la very
important to put It In a container
. that holds that much water or to
water It frequently.

Ihtoicon- Uo

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1*1)
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7lUi~fannut) ftomU1■'|IMfcfonwlun
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For safety’s sake, check all
Christmas tree lights for loose
connections or worn wires. The
tree should be In a place that to
away from fireplaces, radiators,

t t M O Io llM M

one.. ■••rwiwr;
C*npii I t *o tow t o IW a

HAIRFdRMULA I

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Open 7 Days
socialism, capitalism and a few
other “ lama." My students love
It.
V A N N U TS
Thanks for
your thank-you. I'll run It again
for others to enjoy. Here It Is:
D E A R A B IT : A flrend gave
me these definitions of the
various forms of government,
and I thought you m ight want to
share them with your readers:
COMMUNISM: You have two
cows. The government takes
both of them and gives you part
of the milk.
SOCIALISM : You have two
cows. The government takes one
and gives It to your neighbor.
FASCISM: You have two cows.
T h e government takes both
cows and sclb you the milk.
NAZISM: You have two cows.
T h e government takes both
cows, then shoots you.
B U R E A U C R A C Y : You have
two cows. The government takes
both of them, shoots one, mllka
the other, then pours the milk
down the drain.
CAPITALISM : You have two
cows. You sell one of them and
buy a bull.
A b b y , whal happens In a
democracy?
M M . J . McC.
D E A N M M M eC.i In a de­
m ocracy. everyone has two
cows, then a vote la taken, and
whatever the majority decides to
do. you do. and that’s not bull!
D E A N ABBY: O ur son. age 32.
Is marrying a woman who Is 23.
It’s his second marriage and her
first, and I know she's planning
a big church wedding.
We are reluctant to send
Invitations to our friends and
relatives who attended our son's
first wedding and sent lovely
gifts.
Would It be proper to enclose a
little note with the Invitations lo
those who have already given
him one wedding gift saying that
noglft is expected?
* PO N D ERIN G PA R E N T S
D R A B PA R E N T S: Please re­
sist enclosing a little note with
the wedding Invitations. Consid­
er (he bride. It's her first wed­
ding. and she shouldn't be
deprived of gifts because It's her
husband's second trip lo the
altar.

il* '

_

MTVtlito toil

WE D O W I N D O W S

No appointments
necessary.
Let us be your
FULL TIME, Full
Service Salon.

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Country Club Square

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^ADJACENT TO SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE

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n lavla m ia n « i l ta U tt la b ti
alrducto
and televtatona. Never
use candles or open flames on or
near the tree, and never leave
home with the tree lights on.
Local Christmas tree forms In
S e m in o le C o u n t y o p e n e d
Thanksgiving weekend.
W illia m s C h ris tm a s T re e
Firm . 4700 Pads Rd. (25th St.).
Sanford. F L 322-2962.
J A L Christmas Tree Farm.
890 Palm Way, Sanford, F L
322-0511, open every day from
9:00 A.M. until dusk.
Btosen Christmas Tree Farm,
775 Pine W ay. Sanford. F L
321-0606. open every day from
8:00 A.M. until dusk.
All Seminole County Coopera­
tive Extension Service Programs
are open to all regardless of race,
color, sex or national origin.

Letters from home
bring good cheer

*nW?1R 0 giggru dig

6 00

A great family activity during
the holiday season la purchasing
a Christmas tree. Th is year, for
lots of fun. w hy not visit a
Christmas tree' bum and pick
your own tree from those grow­
ing right In the ground?
Moat people prefer a live
Cbristmaf tree. Usually, we go to
a place that sells trees that nave
been grown right here In Semi­
nole County! By purchasing
your tree right on the form, you
are guaranteed of getting the
freshest tree possible.
A fresh tree has good color and
holds Its needles well. O u r
weather usually causes trees to
wilt quickly and then drop their
needles. How well the tree sur­
vives depends on the type of tree
and when It was cut. A freshly
cut tree will look better and last
longer.
There are several ways to
determine a tree's freshness.
First you can bend the needles.
If the tree Is fresh, the needles
will be supple and bend easily.
Fed the bottom of the trunk

!C C o m *i

Mm rj______

PROBLEM TAKING CARE
OF BUSINESS
CHILD

I n y llQ l l l ' o vm i l "

tMM

to n

toot U
_
M f n r, |&lt;«op*
|iito*Oo»o i m ' i w s to &gt; o i} * s

For 24-hour listings, sso LEISURE msgszins of Fridsy, Nov. 23.

UOVI t t ANDOl

»'

ti

i.'.' f.‘In

SIBLING HIVARLnVjjj i
NUNS ON THE RUN

EMeflt*ai».nfi.4i«i»i.niwfi»lB

�4R — Sanford Hattod, Sanford. Florida — Monday, NovamOat » , 1980
L «g * l

L 8 f l8 t

N o tle ts

7 1 -H o t p W o n f X l

N o H c t

CLASSIFIED ADS
v*.

»

LAWRENCE GREEN. JR .,

toto.
N O T K E OP A C T U M
TO T H E FOLLOWING O f
F E N O A N T1 IF LIV ING, AND
IF DEAD, A L L UNKNOWN
P A R T IE S C L A IM IN G I V ,
T H R O U G H . U N D E R OR
AGAINST TH E N AM ED DE­
FENDANTS. WHO A R E NOT
KNOWN TO E l D E A D OR
A L I V E . W H I T H E R S A ID
UNKNOWN P A R TU S CLAIM
AS H E IR S . D E V IS E E S ,
O R A N T IE S . a s s i g n e e s .
L IE N O R S . C R E D IT O R S .
T R U S T IE S , OR O T H E R
CLAIMANTS AGAINST SAID
D E F E N D A N T S N A M ES AS
FOLLOWS:
TO : B ILLY B. MOORE
ADORESS UNKNOWN
ZELM A L OWNEY */k/a
KIMOWNBY
ADORESS UNKNOWN
YOU ARB HER EBY NOTI
F IE O that an aeften ha* b**n
fllod againtt you to taricto** a
mwtgag* In lh« Circuit Court to
lha
Judicial Circuit. In and
ter laminate County. Florida, an

To-Wit: Sactten itoto Florida

Statute* I0J7.
JachLayna
LanaLayn*

Publish: Nauambar 11 1*. to
fcOacamba r i wfd

DEZ-144
NO TICE OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME

Notice I* hereby gtven mat I
J T County ^ lid. 437,
Sam mate C anty. F terIda,
th* Fictltlau* Name* af M I X IT E L S . M B X IM A R K E T IN O ,
that I intend to ragtetor atod
nemo* with th* Clark af toa
Circuit Court, laminate ClWtey.
Florid*, In accMdanca with th*
prawliiana af th* Fictltlau*
Name Statute*. TaW H: Sactten
**S0t F larId* Statute* n o .
Th* Carperoften lateratted to
to * bu*ln*M tnterprlM I* aa
Imeco. Inc
Jtom G. Rembeugh. Jr.
Vka Pr* il amt/Sacretery
Publish: Mommbof to b D r

* W in te r

P a rk

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Clark to me Circuit Court. Samf. Ftertda. In acT»W H :
T H E R EAP!N O AND TH E
B B A fW R M lN IS T R IE l IN C
Ftmtim: N wambar' N A D e

o itm

* ' 7‘ " "

ty:

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
O F T N E E lO H T E R im t
J U m C U L C IR C UIT
FLORIDA.

CASE RUtototoCA-M I/ L

DtVISKM
CASE NO. W toto CA-to-F
F E O E R A L NOME LOAN
M ONTOAGE CORN.,

Plaintiff
v*.
M IC H A L L M IC IL L L o fu a .,
at to..

msm__

d B C O S bB E . P H # N i M k i r
H W CP , I* pm rnm ta M b
C ircu it Court ta rfc m lh o ta
C o u n ty , F lo r id * . Prebate

Lai II. Slack A Tter 1 K.R.
Trafterd-t Map to Santard, ac
carding te lha plat fharoto at
n c tfd id in Plat Saak I, Papa*
to through m to th* Public
Rtcard* to Samlnto* C b to f.
Florida.
and that yau art required fa flla
your written dstaneei. If any,
wtm m* Clark to m* abovatfylad Court and te oorva a capy
fharoto an Larry P. SP“*“
Abarman, Santerflff A I t
P.O. Baa S I . Orlande. FI____
I an *r balora tha 7m day to

camber 11*. IT, m »
D E Z -m

ELW INR.ANNIS.
a ting* man.

O rla n d o

3 3 2 -2 6 1 1

torn

teltom:

SHEOAH HIOH LANDS II
HOMEOWNERS'
ASSOCIATION. INC., a P ter Ida
nan-praflt carper atien,
Plaintiff,

S o m in o l*

. . . . m buoteato at Mi
s*. B 9 “
County. F lar Ida.
Fktltteu* Nam* to LIVING
W A TE R C A TH E D R A L HOME OF CALVARY CHA­
PEL, and b n * w* inland Id

DAYCARE M my HMdan Lakae
Late to T L C 7am «pm
....... ...........Wt-aio

tatoMto Couwta O HrtoM H.

1 yrJMp.
11— P r iv a t e

BVUM^E^
mwigig In
in m*
itw pMOHiDlM
w &lt;i i^ ib ini,

WITNESS my fund and m *I
mi* lit day to November. t*to.
(SEAL)
CLERK OF THE
C IR C UIT COURT
lemlnoteCeurrty Florida
BY: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
PuMWi: November 1 11 I*. M.

w nO O B N M *

IN T H B CIRCUIT COURT
IN A R O FO R
SEMI N O L i COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. to ««»C A -t4 L / P
JOSE PH E. HART and
JA N E T &gt;. HART, hi* wit*.
Pltontllf*

v*.
DONALD D. PENROOand
R O IIN K. PE NROO. Ms wlte,
PENROO NURSERY, INC., and
L I N D A D I L L f O N .
N O TICE OF SALE
NO TICE IS H I E I B Y G IV E N
that on lha 70th day of Decem­
ber, itw . at it;** am . at th*
W rit Front Dear, at th* Sami-,
note County Ceurthouoe. Senlord. F lor Ido, lha uwdortlgnod
Clerk will otter tor ini* the
following described reel proper
ty:
Lett It. to and II, LESS tho
Wait 10 teat thereof, and I
South 140.14 test of Lot* 11 and
I I E U R E K A HAMMOCK, ac
cording to tho ptot Itwroot a*
recorded In Flat Baab I, Paga
101. at tho Public Record* to
Seminole County, F lo rid a ,
together with oil penenal prop­
erty secured by th* lien to th*
Plaintiff* mar* particularly
deterlbed In tha complaint tiled
In thlt action.
Tho aforeuld tale will ba
mad* pursuant to 0 Summary
Final J odQmant snto-ed In Caea
No. t o lO a C A IlL/P now pond
ing In tho Circuit Court to the
E IG H TE E N TH Judicial Circuit,
in and tor SEMINOLE County.
Florid*.
D A TE D this If*) day to No­
vember. m e.
MAR YANNE MORSE
Clerk of th* Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florid*
BY: Jana E. Jatowic
Deputy Clerk
Pvbllth: November M A De­
cember 1 1t*0
O EZ JM

’ O W I A

H

V C O V
a o i i D

j c o

O W I N Z N J I
w

c

o

i

Determents
H O T IC t OF ACTIO N
T O : Irving L. Kack and
Martha L. Kack, hi* wit*
LAST KNOWN R ESIDENCE:
UNKNOWN
YOU ARE N O TIF IE D that an
action I*

Cm!

inate County. Florida:
Lai t l FOXWOOO PHASE
I I I . a cc a rd liw .tb to*

In Ptot
XL Paga 14 Public Record! to
Saminate County, Florida,
ha* boon tiled anoint! you and
tot* **rv* a espy

RPV

11**?&gt;

to Pw Plaintiff-! attorney, who**
name I* GEORGE C. K E L LE Y ,
and addm* I* P O . E m tin,
Apopka. FL, 3370*1133. an or
balers the tilt day to Decern

ber. Itoo; end Ilia lha original
with lha Clark to Nil* court
either baler* Mrvka an Plain
tiff*
iu

WITNESS my hand and to
llclal tool to thlt court an
November It, Itw
(S E A L)
M ARYANNS MORSE
Clerk of Circuit Court
BY: Patricia F. Heath
Publish: November tt, u a
December X 10, ItoO
O E Z -ltl

H O

u ,

A N L N Z O ' V

d

CH ESTER R. ELLISON.
IRVING L, KECK and
M AR TH A L. KECK, hi* wlte.
and DO YLE OIRONER and
M AR Y OIRDNER. Ms wlte.

J I I R i O I J

Z M D A

eBAL FRIDAY#
Brilliant taFortwsIty te j*a
your flair: for divers 11led
duties) Learn computer! Busy
efflcol Bonofltst
AAA EMPLOYMENT
7W W .INBlf.m d1M

SUHMfilRIMlSIOM
L tq a l

M A De

(SEAL)
MARYANNS MORSE
A* C lark ot the Court
By Join Brlllant
A* Deputy Clark
PubUtfi: November I*. M A
December 1 to. two
O E Z ltl
IR TN E CIR C UIT COURT
IN A R O FO R
SIM IROAS CO U N TY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. te -U ITC A U P
JU N E R. CULLS ETO N , on
unremarr led widow.
PltontlH

w

a W I
r

v

■ J C I A Z .
w

—

.

.

P R EV IO U S S O LU TIO N : 'Golf i» the most tun you can
have without taking your cloth#* off." — C hi CM
Rodriguez.

NOTICE OF SNIBIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that by virtue to that r*rtaln
Writ to E » 'ubon Issued out to
and under thoTeel to th* Circuit
Court to Orange County, Florl
da, upon p line) judgement
rendered In lha atarmald court
on tho llth day to Augvtt A.O.
ItoO. In that certain cat# en­
titled. Jack B. Nichols. P.A.,
P le in t llt . — v i — .'o m a t
William*. Defendant, which
aforesaid Writ to Elocution was
delivered tern*** Sheriff to
Seminole County, Florida, and I
have levied upon tho tallowing
described property owned by
James William*, said property
being located In Stmlnale
County. Florida, more particu­
larly described as follow*:
All right, till* and Interest to
th* defendant In th* following
described property, to wit: Th*
South MO chain*! to th* North
7.01 chains ot tho West 1111
chaIni to lha SW te ot lha NW te
at Section 17. Township n South.
Rpngo 1} East, Seminole
County, Florid* (lets road right
to way)
and lha undersigned at Sheriff
to Seminole Cocnty, Florida,
will at li sa AM. on tho Iflh
day to November. A.D. t*»0,
otter tor sate and sell to lha
highest bidder, tor cash in hand,
sub|act to any and all ailtllng
liens, at the Front (WestI Door
at tea steps to tea Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford.
Florida, tha above described
real property.
That said sate is being made
to satisfy tha terms to said Writ
to Execution
John E Polk, Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
To bo pub11shod November 1 11.
If. It. with tho sate on Novem
bor 17. ItN
DEZ SI

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am engaged in business at 111 S.
W ym ore Rd.. Alternant*
Springs. FL 11711. Seminal*
County, Florida, under the
F Ic IH Io u t Nam* Ot ABS
SYSTEMS and that I Intend to
register said name with th*
Clark ot the Circuit Court. Sam
Inote County. Florid*, in ac­
cordance with ih* Provisions to
the Fictitious Nam* Statutes.
To Wit Section *110* Florida
Statute* 1*17
Jim Bell
Publish November 1. II. I*. J*.
two
DEZ n

muat hay* 7 year*
and goad driving racard.
AveragaW lgW dayA^

Fed Km*. Good marking con­
dition*. Ettp’d desired..... ROC

U U l

Type to praparhi1te ba diepoaad to lnclwdt*.^Vjt I* not
limited to: blcyctef. radio*,
tool*, afflc* equipment and
tohar ir.ltcailarwou* Item*. Da•crlpftan to Item* I* available
tar liwpactten In lha Public
Work* Complex. MB W. Fulton
Auanu*. or tho Santerd Ptoic#
Departm ent, 111 French
Avenue. Santerd. Florida.
All Interacted p*r**n* making
claim* againtt told property
mu*t ihow proto ot ownership pr
mull b* obte to Identify pny
marking* prior te domination
to tuch property. Claim mint bo
modi to lha Polite Department
on or before December 10. ItoO.
CITY OP SANFORD
/*/Walter Shear In
Purchasing Agent
Publish: November it A De­
cember 1 ItoO
DEZ-210

cower

AG Canter*. Tauaraa. PL
Barn U M te MM pm wook
Raadibtf Book* at ham*. Call
MtAfTllaMEto.BaM
Bara Msnay I Staff wmotepa* af
I land BASE tat
■an tnna -c
Carpu* CbrtetL TK 7 t q 7 -l»

If yau tall te do t*. Judgment
by default may ba entered
apalnto yeu tar m* rettef da-

ADV B R TItB M B N T
NOTICE IS HER EBY G IVEN
Rial Ih* City a* Santard. Florida
'n accordance with Florida Slat*
Statu** Chapter 70s Inland* an

itrictian* and Eaoamahta *1
SHEOAH. a Centamlnlum, Sacnon Two. n eardad in Official
Records too* m , Rasa* M la
133. Public Racarda af lamina*
County, Florida, and Mid SaM *
IH * toa iforaiold OaclaratMn.
retarded In Official Racarda
Book *71 Fagos 40 * *31
Public Record* at Semina*
County. Florid*. * (a a * r with
an undlvldad Intaratl In and to
III* Common E lament* a*
•■amplified. ratarrad to and aat
lonti in tafd Declaration and
laid E x h ib it''I".
Th* above tala I* mad*
purmant to th* Final Judgment
of Foraciaaur* and Sa* entered
in lha aba »a anMtted causa.
IN WITNESS W HEREOF. I

M m m m tt
IfM 1* STM |
work. NO SELLINOII Must
havo roliabte

Itorto Park A i w a . t o t o A

ms
DSZ-47
no* County, F terId*, mar* p a r
Hcuterly «an rl&gt;ad a* teltewa. la
wit:
C O N D O M IN IU M R E S I ­
DENCE NO. I7,*ccardtagtote*

OEIVE BY

Ml TH E CIRCUIT COURT, BM M TIR N TN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, t l M M OLS COUNTY.
FLORIDA C A M NOitDAWACA-ttO
‘ IN RE: FORFEITURE OF TH E FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
PROPERTY: I UN B A N UNITED STATES CURRENCY
NOTICE
OF FORFEITURE PDOCBEOMMB
TO: Donald R. Brawn. li.HBH.
Bted.. #3. Winter Fort. F t 3BTW,
. ShatbyL. Borrow. HHOSowyqcR
Orlando. FLNB17, Mateew R. Crab. to*
Samaran N. Circle. Winter Park. FL
S717, Steven H. Lyhn A JamaaE.
Msksrawskl.tol Leman Btaad Court.
Alternant* Spring*. PL S 7 U
and oil other s stow elate* an teterato in te* teflonteg property: a)
NOAM US currency, whkh wo* wtaod on or afcout the Mth dey to
Sogtembor. iw g d td riw r Oteraste* W terkodWorakouoo Ina tedan
State Road Mb CoiMRirry. Iwntedte County, Ftertda. ter and M ug
ha'd by tha lamina la County Shari ft s Oapsrtmonf, Florida. ote* will
apgaar batera Hw HONORABLE NEWMAN 0 . BROCK, an Srd day
at January. MTt at l:M FJM. te raMi U N ter tea purpata to lUteg a
Patttlan ter Rute te Maw Cauaa and tar Flnai Order al Fartoitura
na* ba tertetted
tertettod to tea m
u*a
why tea dwertead preparty dwutd net
b to
af ar
sate by tha Martft af l aminate Caunty. Ftertda. vgan praduc.ng dim
araaf teat tea tama wa* uoad te Sominoto County. Ftertda. te
vtetalten of the law* of Rm (fate af Ftertda dMltog with canteaBand
and tohar ertmteto aftanaMfurtuanf te Flarlda Statute* tB3.7il-.7Bi.
YOU DO ROT N EE D TO A F H JU L I HEREBY C ER TIFY Rial tell
Nattca and Ha acownpNtykM BteadtoM are being oanmd gunuant te
F terId* Statute*m.7gv.* 4 tete Hot iey to November, im .
NORMAN R. WOLFINOER. STATE ATTORNEY
BYi ANNE E. R1CHARDS-RUTBERO, A. LA..
Florida Bar Nn. 3B7M1, MB Baal Flrtf
Street, laniard. Florida 3(771
Publish: November ta b December! IW*

N o t ic f

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
It hereby glwtn that I
te buatawa at 717
N. Hwy 177*1 Suite W7. Winter
Springs' FL 3J7W. laminate
Caunty, Florida, under the
Fictltlau* Nam* *1 JU S T
FLOORS and that I Intend te
aMlaba# I M w
uu w
w
liftb tte
n
iwfiBrai
nOni*
W
ITT*
ITW
Clerk af th* Circuit Court. SamCaunty. Florid*, te #cica with Itea Provision# to
th* Plctittou* Nam* Statutes.
To-Wit: Sactten au.o* Pterld*
Statute* 1*0.
Phlllg A. Hart
Publish: Novombar L tl. If. 14
INB
DEZ 71
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Ntoka te hereby given that I
I te builnii* at 1131
Aloha CL. Winter Sgrtng*. FL
137BL l amteat* Caunty. Fterlda.
under lha Fictltlau* Nam* to
TH E TYPINO PRO and Mat I
Intend fa ragl**ar u U na^ne
wtta the Clerk af Me Circuit
Court, l aminate Caunty, Ptarld*. in accordance with Ih*
Provision* at th* Ptetlltau*
Name Statutes. To Wit: Sactten
a tLit Pterld* Statute* 1*57.
Halite J J . Milter
L I I It. 3L
DRZ-74

DEZ 337

IN E E : F O . F %
^ ^ " ? S ^
O C K R I.E D
FROFERTY: ID ONE IN I DOOOE VAN. VEHICLE IDEte
TIFICAT'.ON NUMBER: 7Bdtt31IHOKZM7M_____
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE FROCEIOINOS
TO: Mtchato E. HamBten. liaiManf tod
Drive. Ctoumbu*. OH 43B37
__ _________ .
‘ te tea taltawtng pregorty: a)
One IN I Dodge Van. VIN __
•Fridoy s” garbing
or about thoTst day M Octebar, 1* N to *r
tot tecatad to W Eteaf State Road *3L AIN
____
___
Caunty. Fterlde, by and keteg Raid by Me ABemani* I g r l w N M N
Degortmsnt, laminate County, F la rM t
M F ^ r batera tea
HONORABLE NEW MAN D. BROCK, w. O rd day to Janudry, m i to

I :W PJW te ream S3* ter Me g u ra w M Rltee a F t o ^ lw E u t e t e
Show Caurn and ter Final O rtw af FarteMa* wf&gt;y » a dmertead

to^mto* C o m C * F i « 3 a .y stettotJ T to m T tew * V ’‘S Itete af
FtorMA tfMliMi wHVi c m trite ii 8n8: 8Mw ctIm Im M t 8 w m
pursuant teFlorldaStetute* NLTBt-.IBL YOU 0 0 MOT N IR O TO
A F F I A E . I HERBOY C E R T IF Y Mat Ml* Nolle* and Ite
accwnganyteg glaadtim ara bated tarvad gunuant te Ftertda
Slat ‘ W TO 7*i-.7*4 MU Itel doy e lite'■em bar.INB.
-ORMAN R. W OLFINOER. S TA TE A TTO R N E Y
BY: ANNE E . RICHAROARUTBBRG. A .L A .,
F lartda Bar Na. 10«B1. IBB Rato F V*»
Street. Santerd, Ftertda 3M71
rM AD a ca m ha rl IW t

^
DEZ 31*

§M/r
GO raOMHKN SCHOOL
TOMGIHIOI-MSl
Satellites...
lasers... avionics
...m scrochips...
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:
M 47

ARMl HALL YOUCAM
I

71— H E lp W w n t » d

a HMOS* R0RNMHM1

P7TI Na w*Mi*di. Pd. vacattesw. Cad Mslty Maid T*f-aw7
• AVON a NOW N IU N G
CHRISTMAS SELLING NOWI

T# (4*7HR
Pp
BRANCH ORALSR HIRING
•11gar hour, te*train I
geeltwn available

I-41MM7HI
For Homo Improvement Co
Eacal tent oarnlng potential!
C a l l ....... .................
o a a V O L Ta w *
TEBAPORAEY SERVICES
________ Cah 174*1*4________

wCM'ldLTN’tAM ’t*
HEALTH FORCE need* you
now I Slattlnt all aroatl
PtantytoworklCaHUB-m*
* CONTROL ELECTRICIAN *
SMB Wkl Your flair ter repair
land* thl* rare opportunity 1
Vary well esiabilshad shopI
AAA EMPLOYMENT
IW W .^S t.m -1 1 7 *

COM
Short ardor, port lima.
10:30am - 1:Jtpm. Expert
ancad. Call Ball* at Jii J*3l

F/T. Requires lifting teMI and
hay plus store dutlO4.-30Mgi7
e DAILY WORK..DAILY PAY *
Coll Bob........ m -TSli otter 1pm
Both skilled and unskilled
workers needed In your aroe.
111.100 to *77.000 plus banaflte.
For a list to currant |obs and
application to apply from
ham*, call I tOO340004} Eat.
AI3I______________________

★ MOUNDM M *

National Marketing Arm has
new officeI Part lime or full
time position* available I Call
SAM-It AM. M P.

"nm ncK SPonir

Th* Rag at a Lk. Mary
pharmacy called her Sanford
Herald Class!had Consultant
to slog her company's ads
tram continuing on their
scheduled 10Day Special rata.
Th* response ha* bean super I
Soma position YOU rood to
advertise at low cost and
achieve quick results? Try our
10. 14 A 30-Day Special rate*.
Lowest cast per line lor con­
secutive days' advertising.
Advertisers ara tree to cancel
a* soon as result* ar* reached

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
m -M II

�/

,

, • , &gt; \ ‘ s •»

&lt;■&gt;-

K I T 'N * C A 1 L V L C # bjr LafVjr Wriafet

n —H » k Wanted

22t— Aviation

M NfO i#

JOMTHEWINGSOPEARUS
CHRISTIAN FITINR CUM

AVHACTtvf

Inatructlpn, ministry and
taftaavahip. CaMtn-1740

M l — Cars

IM /dn ar w / » t l y . . ...»• ;

NISSAN Saatral *BL Ac. 5 apd.
treat runnlng/get ml.tlSB dwn
leMtvie-a Aeea React
LB BARON CaavertIMa
TU R B O I Automatic, power
window a. cruiao. redt M.BM
R tjl^^iaiaM .———
XU-4244
BUICR E LE C TR A - -7*. Air.
p/w, p/a. Rum real good. A
Classic ltl.t5D_______ 171-7007
C H E W NOVA -'70. 4 dr. aadon.
4 c y l- a/c. Look* good! Run*
OOOdl A* 1st 1450____ JH-7007
FAIRW AY MOTORS
"Hoaaa ot a m Oaten A Ride"
K M US 17-fl Laaga**d„171-l7W

N E M -t
t f t f lf t f K i

14X00-1
11X40 • 1

II-so

141—HBM M tlirSNlR

UHCOUITDHHCAR
tfSO. High mltoega. runs good,
never wracked. WO. Call

Jadr/Rkb___ ...._____ J7I5K*
a PUBLIC A U TO AUCTION a
E V E R Y TU ES D A Y 7I1*PM
D AYTO N A A U TO AUCTIO N
Hwy. fl. Daytons Baach

in. CraaPng*. pooll wi.tw
4/1 Camsfbarry, past WU7S

______aas-Mnni______

, FHA.VA

1/1, SaHord. t it MB

H U BUICR R E G A L 1 dr. 1ft]
Good Condition. 3214144
(Para) mas-4145________

'l l ME RC URY TOPAZ

M M M D ■ I bdrm.. can p llll
^teliT^ICy. eldest 5^1 ^5^tal^l4^ta^^lI
OM par week plus U N aacurlfy
Include* ufllllto*. CoB » n w

autamatk. atarao. LIK E NEW
HTfSCaR MI-1474___________
•V CUTLASS CIENA A/C. PS.
PB. AM /FM and caaaatt*
54.000 milt*. E reel lent cortdl
tlpn 155,500 Call 72t 2007

T h e P m d M n tia l(&amp;

333— A u t o P a r t s

IfJorM M R M lty

/ A c c e s s o r ie s
l la epan Dec 1.
Nap la u n it and caaMar u
parlanca. Sanford/Longwood
a ra a C a d O w rla a a m n a w i

A U TO M A TIC
franamlaslnns
from S75i exchange radtafert
from 170, Uaad lira* from |5&gt;
Tire mounting available,
t - l t Calory 51,721-4474

HCtmoM isT/rm jT
Par dec to r '&lt; atllca. 4to
daya/wk. Mutt hava aicallant
typing akllla A paraonallty lor
w/poaptol Eiparlanca
a
but will train guailAod
parton. Ta apply, call biheaan

ST. JOHNS/HR H I

SAM-IPMaMyll....... . n t l W

1/1, living, dining, (amity
reoma, fenced yard, new
paint, carpal andtits, taa.tss

U x r M D Large 1 M rm . pool.
laundry. C/H/A, UU/m c or
IU5/wk. Sata/qutat. m i t o l '

SALESPt KO I
tall jewelry now thru Dac.
Nth. tJ .ll par hour manager,
S4.10 par hour employee*. Call
now •wMfcand*alio I
________ iMOTieeaei________
a R ETA IL tA L E ta
M at and groat paopia with a
amllal Your paopia personali­
ty land* this wpartpol I
AAA EM PLOYM EN T

security. Call.
SANFORD • I M rm .. aicallant
location. compk..* privacy!
M5 par weak plus tMO security
CaM.
m naa

t t —Apartm ents
Unfurnished / Rent

Naw.NRiM.miita

SALESK K
Sky'a fha Limit I Naad provan
track record. Strong clour.
E ical lanl opportunity I

1 bdrm. condo, all appllancaa
Including waahar/dryar. 1150
par month. Sandlawcod Villa*.

l-m -mt

★ SALESHEP#

_______ Cattgtniei________
SANFORD • f i t Park Ay. 1
Bedroom. Wkly or monthly
dap. Very R o e t.m -lW attar *|

Vartlcal*. mini blind*. ate.
Commlaalon and bonua. Oraat
territory, C a lin in * *

^ la w W ito

SECURITY OfFKIRS
Tor Laka Mary. Eiparlanca
or will train. Full A Part time.
M ETR O SEC U R ITY..... Mi m a

2000 lake Mary Blvd

For Laka M ary facility.
7:Xam-Spm. Monday thru
Friday. Call Metro Security In

d Spacious. Affordable.
Homelike

d 1 Bedroom 1 Bath

..............anna*
STOCKROOM

0 Beat Buy For Your Rental t
* Include*. Water, Sewerage,
Traah Pick Up. Peat
Control. Pool and Ta m il I

Know ledge ot electronic com.
ponanta. Computer eiper lance
helpful. Dependability a muat.
Good benefit*. Apply In
peraa*. fAM -iPM . Magnalano
Maoriag Aid. IN N. Cypreaa
A».. CaaaoNarry........ .77*-7422
TR A C TO R TR A ILER
DRIVERS • at atata carrier
baaed In North Carolina. New
Conventional TtOO K V a . Call
Sandra. 0104010*_________
UP TO t i l hour proceaalng mall,
weekly check guaranteed.
Free detail*, writ*. SO. tNtO
Central, auit* 2J7SFL. Chino.
CA71710___________________

C«K331-0914
HEARTIMEQUIET!
Single alary studio. t A 1
Bdrm. Apt*. Many aitraa Incl.
itoraga apace I Quit*, coiy
community I NIC* landtcap
Ing. On-all* manager* who
CAR E11 Starting at t i l t mo.
SAN FOB D CPU B T ........ M7-2701
M AR IN I R'SVILLAQ E
Lake Ada I bdrm......... SMS mo
lbdrm *7»* m ob up2X7*47*
N E W 1 b ed room I bath
townhouaa. Quiet hlatorkal
area. SUP month......... 077*7

VCRREPAIR TECH

OSTEEN479 IMYTONN RD

Eap. required. Part lima
petition In video tier*, lleilble
hour*. Call Slav*. N a i m

. 1 bdrm apt. with large rooma.
acraanad porch, yard tJSO/mo
ptuadapoait................. B H I 7 I

WJUTlfSS NANTCD
Apply between 11PM and
aPM. Bikini Boach. 1417 S.
Orlando O r, Sanford No
phono collegiaaao.__________

DORCHESTER APTS
Laka Mary 7174*22
Call between II AM JPM

Narato«o Norton/Orton
I t 111.50 par hour plut
banoflta. Will train. Needed
nowl l-N M BM
a WOODWORKER*
Saw your way to aucceaa herel
Parmanont spatI Hurry!
AAA EM PLOYM EN T

$229 MOVE IN SPECIAL
I bedroom t bath
and 1 bedroom 1 batn available
SANFORD Spaclou* 1 bdrm.,
040 month plua dtp US oil
tor prompt peyorl No pet*.
watar/patlncl............ H U T U
SANFORD •Largo I bdrm. pool,
laundry. C/H/A. S34S/mo or
Stas/wk. Sate/qulot» PM]

73— Employment
Wanted

SANFORD * NICE AREA
Huge 1 bdrm.. ancloaad aun
room, aat in kitchen. C.H/A.
Light A Brlghtl The Betti
*171/mo.. 1110 tec..... .tea 1471
STUOIO Apt I US/wk 1 Bdrm.
STO/wk. Both In convenient
location*.... » - 11*7/mei t *po

M OUSECLEANINOI Sanford.
Lk. Mary Longwd. area*.
Eic. rata. Own tranap..l45-e»41
W ILL clean your horn* or oft'eo.
Lao.dry A Ironing alto, he*
aonabia rate*. npOTt/mag

A

p

a

*Villo&amp;

A pM tm td*

SECURITYRCCCPTMMIST

G

c n l v a

i u

R E N T

a k d l n s

m

c

m

s

T O D A Y

S BDRM. S BATH V IL LA •
fireplace, pool, lamia court*.
ASM par month pi ul aacur Ity.
Ceil P K d a Ja r I P 1405
gees MOVE IN-no quality, move
In. Rant to buy, S room*, tflt
Summorlln Atm. 0% 1411 4774.

IRS— DuplexT r ip k x /lte n t
D UPLEX • 1 Bdrm. w'carport.
full kltchon, DISCOUNTED
sifsii Call................... n t -e m
DU PLRXI Laka Mary area, two
bedroom*, both. CHA. adult*
prat Pleat* call......... J D t i T l
D UPLEX - lb d rm . 1 bam, hwga
tent ed backyard, nk* area.
*47*/manth. Call-------- J P M M
D U P LEX •Lg. 1 bdrm. Carport.
Inatda utility rm .. C/H/A. no
pat*, aaoa/mo. + d m . H 7 M O

M O V E - I N

O U R
S P E C IA L !

IIS — In d u stria l
______ Rentals______
AAA 0U5INE1S C E N TE R Now offlca/Wha*. SOB ft. to
l.«e* ft. Boy* with or w/o
oltlcaa atortlng at US0Jmo
Hwy. 17/T24SR427
CaM.

15 0 b W

25lh Si.. S a n f o r d

322-2090

m
5T

3/2 CUSTOMRUILT
C era m ic tit*. Levelora.
Ilreplac*. I car garaga.
Pooi/tamla avail.........MUOO

I V I with
it ■ 14 acmd parch..4S4JM

S33N DOM IRQ,CLOSIM
Plnacraat. V I. living, dining,
family rm.. aacvrlfy lyatam,
fancad ytrd Ul.tOO

BUILO INO IMS At. Caraar 07
A 17/fit Oraat tar aH typoaot
. 2277*57/ltl-444-5444
FRENCH AYE.. SANFORD 1M M aq. ft. Far aat* or la***I
I I) LOOS aq It. metal bldg*. 1
bldg. Inaulatad w/ac facing
French Av. 2nd bldg Inaulatad
no ac. lacing lath St. Lent*
•aparatoly or all. Call

gg*-m-ifii

121—Condominium
Rentals
1 B e d r o o m . I h bath
townhouaa, acraanad patio.
7104 S. Park Av*., Adult*.
SltS, Include* water.
CaU Nancy m -M U
Monday-Friday. SAM SPM
SANFORD • Pina Ridge Club, 1
bdrm. 1 bath*. All appl. Incl.
waaftar/dryor. Starting at S4M
REWTARAMA
417-5504............................ No Fee
i FI. Inc./1

SANFORO/LME MART
W a t a r t r o n t . lo u n t o ln .
*crtanod porch, wothar.
dryer. Icemaker, 1475.
Viaten Beatty Sank**, lac.
CaM 747-4*47_________
1 bedroom, l bath. SUO man
thly. Contury It , All Aaaoricoa

117—O ffice Rentals
BRAND NEW O FF ICE BLDO
* M * q f « .to U M iq ft.
OC-1ZONINOI
Move In Special ......... 125*/m*.
O F F IC E / N E T A IL I1 unit*. 1.000
aq. tt. **.. *435/mo Can be
uaad together I ...11* IW/mag.
1 SMALL R IN T A L OFFICES
Very reaaonable 11X1* For
detail a call nowl masts

1/1 tlrapiaca, accea* la Laka
MJllAon l/lacra......... 177,JOB

44 CH EVY Vi TO N PICK UP Rebuilt 2*2 Cu. In angina.
Good a lt- brake*, ahocki,
radiator. U joint* Neadt body
WOT* **00 Call 14*2271

337—T ra ctors and
■ T ra ik rs ______

323-5774

333—WUsceHnimous

O M TM W I
1 bdrm - 1 hath. NEW paint,
carport with fenced yard.
M4JM. M UST SEEI South
Part Ava. area. CaM N 4 N 1
4*Mar tea i
COUNTRY Cl*b &lt;
t b*
NEW HOMES....
MOOBLOPIN11-4......VA/PNA
c b c h o m e s , tac. i o* o n *400

MTEMAN REALTY
Lie. Rsal Ktlata Brabar
1440 Sanford Ava.

1214790............ 321-2297

KOMm CREWPRESENTS

1 bdrm, t

A COLLECTION OF
N O ilO A T CRAFTS A B IF T S

BU T_____ t f LI_____ TRADE

bath Deltona

tar S42S tai ta buy with low
dawn......CaM aawl

CALI BART

113— T « k v t e k n /

R EAL ESTATE
REALTOR..................... M - N H

l/i

THEOAKS, SANTORO

PISNER
W all tpeakart.

Excallant

*
iip «L O B O .»-T ia a
TV SATE L ITE Syetoam. LacaMy

S T E N S T R O M

REALTY, I NC.
6m 34d 1f*m •
Vto list and sdl
mote property tlian
Anyone in the Greater
Sjn/ord lake M iry are*.
JU ST RSDOMSI 1/lVi. nka
area, fpic., atorog* bldg.,
workahojp, hardwood Hoar*,
l a n e * . C h o c k It o u t .
Now...........................Mt.MOH
OLDER HISTORIC laiory 1/1.
Nlca tplc.. open potto. CH/A.
Warranty. StarterA don’t pea*
ttala by. Only................. I4 t.m

t H a t t t t t
2. 1 aad 4 badrasm hawaa*
•vaUabta with BONO MOM I V
. A T ■.]% iptaretl llxadl Also
aval table, government rage'*
and b*M tarectoauretl
Can j
Day*. 7121214 lee*, m - 7271

H U R T'S CROfTN FAWN
111-4744
C H R ISTM A S TR E E FARM .
47N W. 15fh St.
---------.7271*41.
aacrftary
1 dMk chNr*. lg- Pino
pang MAto. 1 flla cabinet*.
lawtag machine......... 04-5175
O Q U E E N SIZE Badtgrtad.
Soars. Ilka now. SM. Ptaoa*
call-.......... - ..............12750*7

2 3 « — V e h i c le s
_________ W a n t e d
WE PAY TOP'*** lor wrecked
cars/lruckal WE SELL guar
anteed u*ed pari*. AA A U TO
SALVAOEafI PaBery,
I

341— Recreational
V th lc le s / Campers
CAMPER I f Spirit, A/C. go*
tlov* and turnac*. toilet. ••
Sleep** GoodCond 711 775*
TR A V E L TR A IL E R 1777 Car
rlog* 12 II, rear double bed.
fully equipped A quality
coach *5,300 407 574 2511

a Umd

Ae. Free
lergt
wttht thraglMca. Extra ream tar
ottke/hobby/third bodroom .
Wood dock, largo (root, term! a
and pool prfvltagt* SIOS.OOO
o n &gt;27a*ia m m-saa*

| CAR TR A IL E R ! With rampal
Heavy duty metal. *&lt;c con
dltlon 044)0. Call........... 221*444

M T. DEC 1______ 0AM4PM
SUN. DEC 1_____ tliJbSPM
IW E-lfTH ST. SANFORD
OFF SANFORDAVI

RENTTOOM

FOR SALE

117— Sport! ftp Poods
a BICYCLE •Huffy W In. BMX
style. Never uaadI Brand
nowl Ideal Chriahnaagift, sss

( U ) Good condition. SI.15
Each. H I-W O ______________
0 W HEELCHAIR, Almoal new.

real. Coal IMS new, tall'ng
new tar SIM.
OBJ Catallno Or, Sardord.

3 4 3 -Ju n k Cars
aCASHe FOR YOUR JUNK
CAR OR T R U C K I I A N Y
CONOITIONI CALL 721-7*57
U T0 7 OellartI Petd lor |unk
car*, trucki, 4 wheel drive
Any cendltton.......Call i n t m

M R R M R KNIFE
* SHOW I SALE *
B U Y -----------M U - --------- T R A O I
O R L A N O O IX F O C E N T IR
SAT. D E C 1________ tAM-4 PM
SUN. D E C 1---------------.SAM SPM
NO M UT1NR PERtOOf
INPOi R M

Ken RummeI
-L T TO KNOW

1RV—O ffk o Swppiks
Q n t u i^ ,

Q u ality Ibed C a n At A Fair Price
No Application Refused

153—AcrONROLott/Sak

BUY HERE
HERE

!• • •

ASSUME NO eU A LIFV I NEAT
1/1 villa. Araa pool. tvmlA
1 car garage, warranty. Good
location. Now |u*t........ ssa.too

Approx. Si acre* noidid In
Seminole County tuttabta tar
building imall airport.

SUPER V l h STARTER. Cor
nor lot, workahop, itoraga
bldg. Lk. Mary achooia. War
rarity. Thia could be It...1*0.000
S T A R T E R S / R E T I RES. IN ­
VESTORS! 1/1 cottage toned
commercial Ideal for ettlcea.
Clip ttala ad. Now only.. Sia.tOO
(I4K) REDUCSOI LIK E NEW
Lk. Mary 1/1. Cuatam atraa.
Jacuttl In maatar bath On U
acre Now priced at.... llia.000

322-2420
321-2720
U U Park Dr.. Saatard
*41W. Lab* Mary BJ.. Lk. Mary

141—Horn— lo r S alt
DUILMR1STEC HOMES
Include* Screened Pool
Spoclal Hat* Financing
_________ Call M l 0771_________
OREAMWOLD SURD. A rm * .
1 bdrm*- I bath. City w/A pvd
at. Nlca areal AH.400 By
appl. 140 MM daye/W -m s
B. OR AN OB COUNTY 1/1 en
44 aerev large barn.. .1*4.000
W. Malktawakl. Raaltar
m -T t u

335—T ru c k s /
B uses/V ans

2 STORY W/INBROUND POOL
4 bd rm - 2 bath*. family rm.,
country kltchan. acm. parch.
B covered patta. Over a w « q
tt. Saltar matlvatad-.....S4f.tr*
CUSTOM B U IL T - 1 bedroom. I
bath homo. Family roam with
brkh fireplace. Can. H/A.
Call quick I

117—Com m ercial
Rentals

t cind 2 D e d to o m Aptb AvdiUfble
S tc if liiK j d l S J t»0 u u

OVEIOO1JS ACRES

Cuatam built 4 bdrm. 1 bath,
llraplace, acraanad goal and
•pa. 1car garag*. 1174,too

EXCELLENTLOCATIM
Beautiful I bdrm, carport,
utility room. U2S par month
Avail. Dec, H d. B2X7H
L A K E M A R Y . 1/1 n lc a
ar*a,w/w carpal, C/H/A. ap­
pliance*. fenced yard. BH-kN*

CALL.......................... Mt teea

F O R

VO HONDA PR ELUOEI Sun
root, low mito*..............tio.esf
Moata 141V.................... 277-4144
HUN DAI Exeat OLI ’t7 New
tlraa. battery, a/c. Rum/taok*
goodlSXOao..............M t-TK I
V* ISUZU TROOPER I Air con
dllinnlng, a-wheel drive. 74.044
Magk la m ..— ..............727-4244
1W7 NISSAN PICKUP TR U C K !
E ictllenl shepo, air.......U.707
Magic (MHO.__ ...______ 727-4244
VO TO Y O TA 4 RUNNERI Air.
automatic tram. EFI.. ttO.fOO
Magk im iv ................. ...ill 42*4

LESSTHMSURR DOIH

R E TA IL

G

334— Im p o rt Cars
and T ru th s

5 acre ad atal i/ L 1100 aq ft..

cuatam built. OlT.fOO

RENEW AREA Cl HOME
1/1. Living rm . family rm ,
w/w carpal. Lg corner loti
It.... 147,100 Ht-Hta

STAIRSRMRERTY
M ANAG EM ENTR REALTY
111 7722/131*474

OCALA N ATIO N AL P O R IS TI
Wooded tat*. River accea*.
U.fS0 each Mb Ntaaay Daeml
pl.4imanMily.............. Owner
(**4) n*-4»7f*r &lt;1*4)427-K M
PONT OP SANFORD AR EA •
Duly Orange Blvdl S acre*,
tonod AG. V) mil* to 14 exit
and entrance m l Can divide.
high and d ry ............... W.soo
T aw»*IU» Reetty Inc, *10*41*

1SS— Condominiums

Co-Op/Sik
PINE RIDRE CUJt
PR ICES S TAR T INO A T H U M
2 Bedroom 1 Bolh condom Ini
urn*. All appliance*, vertkal
blind* throughout, clubheuaa.
pool, tanni*. aacurlty guard
CALL...222-447*
Laadarama PI. Inc./Broker

SANFOW/UL MART CONDO
Prka Reduced! Large Matter
BR w/bath Guaet bdrm *
bath, aal In kit. w/dltbwaihar
* diipoaal. Formal Dining
R m , Living Rm w/flraplac*
Scrnd. parch w/takavlaw.
wether dryer I From 1*0,100 to
t44.no. B Y O W N IR I. n r -M U

A A akrkls
A L L S T E E L BUILOINOS at
dealer Invoke. M R ta W.000
eg ft Call N T 1*1011 cel tact
OCeewot Stack* r X f ’ X la”
rww. S ter H OB. Approx. dS

til 4 quantaI ttael
building*. Brand new - never
erected. 25X20. 20X40. 40X40.
50X100. Will Mil tar balance
LColl Jim, 0000771007

IM i

IBOO

-

LO W AS

2 0 0 0 0 D O »N

LO W AS

PER W EE K

N O

‘35

C K1M T?

B A P -C R IP L T ?

1P3— Law n N Garden
ONE DOB TRIMMflR

N O INTEREST

•hope, taw yooraoM.SH Coll

115—M achiw ary/Tools
A IR C*mor***or-4MP,K gel
tank. *2*0 Englna Stand *40
E toe. tender/grinder 140
___________ HM M B ___________
PASLOOE Impulio noil gun.
5250; Duo 1**1 nail gun. 1100.
Patlodt ttapl* gun. 1100; 1/4
HP compratior. SNO;
_______ CallSO* 7W 11*0
#5 FOOT Floslbta SbaH. all
malal. Jacob* chuck and
grinding wheel holder 125

majea

79 DODGE VAN CUSTOMIZED
At

87 FORO ESCORT GL u t , *». H»n.
Reek Uke N rq WMta, RM OeO* tawtiw

88 GEO SPECTRUM CL
IN# toNr. AMeoteO*. Liuury In A Cwnpecl

*1288
*3388
*4888

89 P O N T IA C L E M A N S L E w m . o r.
J C 1 N Q
Mtaege0 CheapFdcelHweNto. Leeke4 Rune Greet J I O O

•7 CHEVY EUROSPORT
4 Or-1 Tern. Ceeeem. IQJXta Orlginel take

88 Ford F150XLT
y q taaa- Tew tone. Cueiew Intadw

*5988
*5988

H I G H W A Y 17-92, S A N F O R D , F L A .
I 1 J rnilu Nottti ut Ldku Md/y Blvd )
t,i-&gt;y lu itml lium jiiywftt-ie ill Cenliel Ra

U n lbqdW tay

P H u m u i i o/) 1 / 1 / « o u oi ( 4u / )

�0

TTTTTTTTTTTrrr

T f7

f " r f f f (" * t (

l — Sanford Herald. Sanforo. Flortde - Monday. November 26, 1900

by CMc Y «M |

•LOMOIK

Curing vs. caring:
Setting some limits
Here’s a lampoon of you In the
hospital. After prodding, su b ­
bing. purging and bleeding you.
the healers randomly put tubes
In every bodily orifice, expose
you to dally daytime television,
a lte rn a te ly starve y o u and
force-feed you Jd lo-O . and then
have the nerve to show up with a

Some doctors (a minority. I
grant) are beginning to re-thlnk
and redefine their roles as high
priests. After being told for years
their Job Is to cure Illness, they
are Anally accepting that —
except In a few Instances — a
cure Is merely an Ideal, a
shimmering mirage on the des­
ert of disease. Antibiotics will
cure Infection, surgery will re­
turn an accident victim more or
less to normal, intravenous
fluids will reverse dehydration
and help an III child regain
health. B ut. by a nd large,
doctors don’t cure. Fortunately,
they often make people feel more
comfortable — sometimes, how­
ever. at e norm ous cost In
money, pain and emotional up­
heaval.
. ,
I’m not exaggerating. Take a
look at hospital patients. More
and more are suffering from the
Incurable diseases of aging:
stroke, heart attack, senility,
emphysema, cancer. Young pa­
tients flock to emergency rooms
hoping to have their Incurable
diseases — such as virus Infec­
tions. drug abuse, aches, pains
and sprains — cured.
Doctors can give care for these
diseases, but not cure. In truth,
most diseases cure themselves.
Or they pretty much run their
courses and. with time, get
worse. Pra ct it i on er s can
postpone death and Improve the
quality of life, but medicine
cannot ul t i mat e l y mast er
nature.
Physicians who fall to discrim­
inate between cure and care
commit mayhem: they are at the
root of the current epidemic of
Medi cal A t t e n t i o n that Is
sweeping the count r y. T h is
outbreak of optim ism Is Ir­
resistible for doctors who go to
great lengths searching hope­
fully for a treatable disease. So
they go overboard, ordering one
lest after another, to prove to
themselves and to patients' fami­
lies that an effort Is being made,
e v e n If t h e p h y s i c i a n s
themselves don't really believe
In a cure.

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big smile, a suntan and lassled '
white loafers to say: “ Feeling
better? Maybe we should run a
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spades, an opening heart lead
gave the defenders two heart
tricks and a ruff. (The club ace
was the setting trick.) At tables
where East timidly stayed out of
the bidding, many of the South
players who reached four spades
had the benefit cf a friendly Jack
of clubs opening lead. They
made the game easily. If South
had been more cautious, merely
exploring game possibilities after
the one-heart overcall, surely
North would have rejected any
game Invitation, discounting the
value of his heart king after the
opposing bidding. But the safest
and best results would be ob­
t ai ned b y fo u r c a r d - m a j o r
openers. One spade by North
would be raised to four by South,
and East would be stymied on
opening lead.
(01990. NEWSPAPER EN­
TER PR ISE ASSN.

When you feel your cards
Justify an overcall. It Is custom­
ary to bid your longer suit first.
Partner will usually assume that,
the first suit you bid Is as long as
or longer than any subsequent
suit you Introduce Into the
auction. However. In pairs
competition, where your result Is
weighed against what has oc­
curred at many other tables,
there are other practical con-sid-er-atlons. Look at the action
taken by today's East. After
North opened one diamond. East
felt compelled to compete. His
longer suit was clubs, but bid­
ding clubs would drive him to
the two- level Immediately, with
not too strong a five-card suit.
So East elected Instead to make
a quiet one-heart bid. The re­
sult? When South reached four

by Bob Ttwves

O

34 Mfkwoy

B y Jam e s Jacoby

FRANK AND ERNEST

1 Defeats (tl)
t Two wards of

87

P ETER
G O T T .M .D .

Th is Is one of those days when
B y Bernice Bede Oool
you're better at hammering your
Y O U * B IR T H D A Y
own thumb than the nail.
Now. 2 7 .1 9 0 0
FI8 C K S (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your social scope of Interests
will expand considerably In the Your financial prospects look
year ahead. New activities, extremely encouraging today,
sports, hobbles and people will provided your expectations arc
not predicated upon chance.
occupy your leisure hours.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec. Success requires a positive game
21) Select activities today that plan.
arc Inexpensive, as well as
A R IB S (March 21-Aprll 19)
enjoyable. Fun pursuits with a Conditions in general should be
large price tag will give you much to your liking today, yet
spender's remorse later when you will still have to guard
you tally up the costs. Know against erratic behavior. Don't
where to look lor romance and let Impulses govern your ratio­
you'll find It. The Astro-Graph nality.
Matchmaker Instantly reveals
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
which signs arc romantically When others do favors for you
perfect lor you. Mall 42 to today, don't frel you are under
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­ obligation to reciprocate In­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. stantly. You'll have ample time
01144101-3428.
to express your gratitude at a
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan. later date.
19) If you arc selfishly motivated
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20)
today, the results aren't apt to
Friends
will be Interwoven Into
amount to much. Conversely,
when the concerns of others various facets of your life today.
have parity with your own. It's In most cases they will prove
helpful adjuncts, but In two
to everyone's benefit.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) situations they might be coun
If you have to contend with terproductlvc.
C A N C E R (June 21-July 22)
frustrations today. It's not likely
to be the handiwork of others. Guard against Inclinations to

NORTH

U-it-M

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fKISt
♦AJl

♦ 73
EAST

WEST
♦ 73

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0 Q I 7342
♦ J 10 2

♦ A Q 11 4

♦ 100 3
SOOTH
♦ KJI432
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♦ K 03

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer North
Sm U
1♦
4♦

West

NwH
1♦
24

Pass
All pass
Opening lead: V 10

East
IV
Pass

oversell today. There a possibili­
ty you might continue pitching
after you've already gotten your
prospect's nod of approval and
put the sale In Jeopardy.
L E O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) It
might be a bit difficult for you to
put your priorities In proper
order today. Fun Involvements
could be at the top of your list
with responsibilities and duties
at the bottom.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It’s
best not to let your heart rule
your head when conducting
business toduy. The results you
desire can be realized only
through realistic negotiations.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Minor setbacks or disappoint­
ments should not be viewed
disproportionately today. Realis­
tically speaking, they'll have
little Influence over the outcome
of events.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Y o u r speci al t a l e n t s a n d
expertise arc not nominal at­
tributes. Keep this uppermost In
your mind today If someone Is
negotiating for your services.
( 0 1 99 0 . NEWSPAPER E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

Leonard Starr
...M E ’5 TK 7 1 N G O U T
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S C A R IN G U P FO R

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NEW S D IG EST

Maneuvering under way for 1992 county commission races
fourth four-year term. District 4 won't Ik- decided
until Nov. 0 when Incumbent Republican Snntlrn
Glenn faces Democratic political newcomer Larry

B yJ. MARK BARPIILO
Herald staff writer

□ Sports
Church league remains close
SANFOR D — In ’’A " League action of the
Sanford Church Softball Leagues. Calvary
Christian won Its llrst game of the season with a
triumph over First Baptist Geneva, St. Stephen
Catholic held uff Church of God of Prophecy and
First United Methodist w as victorious over
Maranatha Pentecostal.
In the " B " League. Sanford Christian ham*
mered First Nazarene. Neighborhood Alliance
pounded Church o f God and Holy Cross
Lutheran clipped Grace Christian.

SANFORD — Even though the I990 political
season won't Ih- over for another month, already
names are being bandied nlxmi as |Misstble
enntenders for the Seminole County commission
In 1992.
; '
1992 Is the year throe seats on the commission
will Ik- up for election. Districts 1. 3 and 5. The
District 2 commissioner was decided Oct. 2 by
Republicans, who ra-rlrrlrd Bob Sturm to a

Furlong.
District I Is now held by first-term commission­
er Pal Warren, former county administration
office m anager and aide to her District I
predecessor Barbara Christensen. District 5 Is
also held by a first-term commissioner. Jennifer
Kelley.
District 3 Is held by established party leader
Fred Strcctman. now serving Ills second term.

Many of the people mentioned by party Insider,
as iMisslldr District 3 candidates In 1992 hinge
their com m ission a sp iratio n s on whet In r
Strcctman will seek re-election.
After the "Uloody Tuesday" or Oct. 24. I9h9
when county manager Ken Hooper and the two
deputy county managers resigned after Hooper
from favor of Warren, Kelley and Glenn, an Irate
Stiectmun announced Ids plans to consider
resigning from ofTIce. lie Inter backed olf the
statement, saying he had no Immediate plans to

r Bee Maneuvering, Page 2A

tsc.ua ido.090
U 7.07* *097(7

Ace flyers
due here
on Sunday

— a-.— .—

By NICK PPIIPAUP

Tho American Dream In 8amlnota County
bMBtf bab lAiitfy »f tour
MedianheuMhetd Interne Mr land*y*1Mix
Madias purchaee prtat *1aerating homaain
Orlande am, Including Btsdnala County
Aratage tepefied vdui ot sow alsglo lamdy
Some ceniVucnon

□ P so p ls
Strawberry planting time

1M0

1M«

n ;u
SIMM

3J.iM
IU K 0

W e are rapidly approaching the proper time to
plant strawberries in our area. Their taste
appeal and attractive appearance, arc well
suited to Florida conditions nnd arc relatively
easy to grow. Bee P a g * SB

SANFORD - Throe members or
the N n vy's fntned Blue Angels
precision flight team are scheduled
to Ite performing a limited routine In
the skies over Sanford at approxi­
mately 5:30 Sunday afternoon as
part of an aviation rarcer day al
Comair Aviation Academy.
While the five Iwur program Is
open to the general public, Comair
oftlclals say tire main emphasis of
the day Is to allracl and Inform
prospective aviation sludcnls as
well as Individuals who are already
Involved In aviation.
Following their In-dlglit aerobatic
demonstration, the Blue Angels will
be available to meet with students

□ F lo rid a
Playing with firs
Shuttle commander Richard ,,Dlck" Richards
started an experiment aboard the shuttle
Discovery to help space engineers learn more
about how fires bu m In a gravity-free environ­
ment and how to extinguish them quickly
should the need arise.
Bm P « | « s a

JB M W

dream 1 fades

Jackpot Jumps to $16 million
T A L LA H A SS F E — Nobody matched all sir:
winning numbers In this week's Florida Lotto
drawing, so the jackpot rolled over to an
estimated $16 million for next week, lottery
officials said.
The winning numbers In Saturday night's
drawing were 4. 17. 19.20.24 and 44.
Although nobody won the grand prise, more
than 351.000 tickets qualified for smaller pities,
payouts were:
□ 2 5 8 tickets matched five of six to win
$4,271.50.
□ 17.042 tickets matched four of six to win
$94.50.
□334.322 tickets matched three of six to win
$4.50.
The $16 million estimate for next week's
jackpot Is based on a single winner, paid In 20
annual Installments.

S cort It astronaut’s discovery
C A PE C A N A V E R A L — After reviewing a set of
Instructions and a news summary faxed to his
crcwmates aboard the shuttle Discovery on their
first full day In space Sunday, moklc astronaut
Bruce Melnick had a question.
"W e noticed we got all of the most Important
football scores but we noticed that the most
Important one was missing.'' said Melnick. 40,
the Brat astronaut chosen from the Coast Guard.
"A n d that was the Coast Guard Academy's
homecoming gome. W e wondered. 'W hat the
score w as on that?'"
"W e 'll check for you ." responded astronaut
Marsha Ivins from Mission Control Houston.
She broke the bad news a short time later.
"G ot a note far Bruce here." Ivins said. "T h r
score was Wesleyan 14. Coast Cuard 13. Sorry."
"T h a t's why you didn't give It to me In the
first place." said Melnick. a Coast Guard
commander who was selected us part of the
astronaut class In 1987. “ Thanks."
In an Interview before Saturday's blastofT on a
mission to dispatch the Ulysses probe on a
five-year mission to the sun. Melnick said: "I
take a lot of pride In having been selected as thr
first Coast Guard astronaut."

Pram staff and s irs repasts

Herald staff writer

Byd. MARK BARPIKLO
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — Seminole County slumltl relax zoning
restrictions and provide financial Incentives to
encourage more affordable housing to be built.
Thnt's the eoncluslon of a special task force
appointed by county commissioners to find ways of
m akin g hom es m ore a ffo rd ab le to first-tim e
homebuyers and low-income residents. Now. many
of tire people who can't afford to buy u home lit
Seminole County either buy homes In Deltona and
commute to Seminole and Orange counties or rent
apartments.
"W e're not talking about the stereotypical slums
kind of affordable housing." suld task force chairman
Lynn Lawrence. "W e 're talking nboul something for
some of the finest people we have In the county that
can't afford to buy a home here. I'm talking alMiut
our policemen and teachers and firemen."
The county's Program Review Committee will
review the tusk forac findings and recommendations
during the next month. The PRC and tusk force will
make their flnul rc|xirl to county commissioners In
December.
The task force's research found Ihe m uiii Ik t of
low-Incomc residents In Seminole County continued

An Average Home
Whereitcotli thoMill
Wherellcodalhamot!
Slato
Price
Slat*
Price
Iowa
*41,003
Hawaii
822I.II3
Oklahoma 40.013
Maeeochueette 17M31
NorthDakota S1.404
California
18*.710
SouthDakota 13.311
Connecticut 188,744
Arkantat
*2,131
NowJettey 1*0,302
Idaho
(4.134
Rhode1aland 131.718
Montana
SJ.434
NowYork
138.481
Kama*
80.104
NewMampehlre 121,727
Wo*tVirginia M.14I
Maryland
108,181
Louiean* 57.2*7
Vaunont
10US3

TSKSSci
to grow throughout the 1980s although their
ix-rccntugc in rclnllnn to hlglirr Income groups
decreased slightly.
The number of low-income households In the
county Increased nearly 40 (H-reent between 1980

See Incentives, Page 5A

□Bee Blue Angels, Page 5A

Budget war
politics shift
battleground
By BUD MBWMAN
United Prase International
W A S H IN G T O N The budget
baltlc moved to the Senate following
House passage early Monday of a
Democratlc-crnricd budget plan that
gives u House committee power to
ease Medicare cuts hy $18 billion
and alter a previously defeated
plan's tax trackage.
The 250-164 mostly party-llnc
volc came al ubout 2:30 a.m. alter
two fiours o f som etim es hitter
partisan debate. The Senate was
expected to con sider the new
budget plan later Momluy. along
with a temporary spending hill that
would end the two-duy shutdown &lt;&gt;l
most federal agencies and servlr-t-s.
The House (tussed the stop-gup
funding bill al ubout 3:45 a.m. BUT
Monday alter approving the budget
□ S e a Bn dgat, P age B A

Music industry reeling from Florida rap cases
By WILL DUNHAM
United Press International
W A S H IN G T O N When Elvis
Presley swiveled his hips on nutlonul television, some Americans
gasped. When John Lennon sug­
gested Ihe Beatles were bigger tlruu
Jesu s Christ, som e A m erican s
burned records by Ihe Fab Four,
The music Industry bus hud Its
shore of controversies over the
years, with assorted ullcgutlnns of

offensive antics, lyrics amt lifestyles
of Mime recording slurs. But the
musicians. both naughty and not.
and liaise who Mild Iht-lr records
traditionally have been Insulated
from legal consequences stemming
from the music iim -11.
The tune has changed as a result
of legal actions In Florida.
In Furl Lauderdale, a jury con­
victed a record store* owner on
misdemeanor obscenity charges for
se llln g an allium by lilt* c on ­

troversial rap group 2 Live Crew,
whose album. "A s Nasty as Thry
W a n n a B e . " hud be e n ru le d
"obscene” by a federal court Judge
In June.
The cases have M-nt shock waves
through the music Industry, with
accusations of cciiM irslilp and pre­
dict Inns id a chilling circd on those
wlai write. |M-rfnnii and sell music.
"It's a mid stale of allairs when
you can In - arrested for selling a
s o n g . " suld D a n a K o rn b liith .

s|Mikcswomun lor National A hmn-Iu
lion of Recording McrchuiidlM-rs.
the trade group representing some
600 record distributors.
"Retailers will hove to take a
second look al wliul they ore
carrying, out of Icar." Kumhiulli
suld. adding Ihnt miiiic M-urcd re­
cord store o w n e rs might " g u
through their shelves and slail
pulling albums dial may fall iimlci
obscenity slnliilucs."

[ Bee Rap, Page 2A

Lake Mary arts
festival attracts
record turnout
By LACV DOMKN
Herald People Editor

B a a rA M f............... $B
Psatks......................IA
Or.B stt....................$B
BdBertal ................... 4A
PlarMa..................... SA

Pallas....................... SA
la k ssl — saw............ $A
Starts..................1B.SB
T slsvlslsw.................$B
WsetSsr....................«A

Partly tunny and braazy
Partly sunny with a
20 percent chance of
u flern oon sh o w e rs
and thunderstorins.
Illghs near 90 with
un easterly wind ut
15-20 niph.

P «r mars wastkar, saa Pats BA

HEATHROW — Tired hul pleased volunteers for
the Fourth Animal Lake Mury-llcuthrow Festival ot
lilt* Arts continued to disassemble llic site at I. A L
Acres Rum-h (Ills morning after
more than
100.000 urt lovers trekkrd through the grounds
Saturday and Sunday, according to Chairman of
Volunteers. Don Stcrdly.
"I'm still recovering." Steedly suld.
Over 450 volunteers on 26 committees worked
for up to one year to make the event a success.
"It couldn't have hup|H-ucd without tin- volun­
teers." Steedly said.
Stredly's wife. Toni, said the volunteers' en­
thusiasm was contagious.
"It was u labor of love tor all of us. Ii was
fantastic." she said.
Muuy of the |M-oplc pitching ill to help were high
m IuniI and college students. Steedly said. The
Icsilvul raises money lor student scholarships In
Ihe arts.

Baa Peatlval. Page SA

SU B SCR IB E T O T H E S A N F O R D H ER A LD

MeralOrselo » ! Kelly Jordan

Qralchan Whlta. Sanford, admiral aarringi by Ann Robinion, a pollar from Wintar Park.

�BA — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Monday, October 8, 1990

ManeuveringC ontiaae d front Page I A
retire from
the seal — but still leaving the
possibility open.
"I have decided 1will not retire
today," Streel man said Thurs­
day. “A lot or It had to do with
what happened at around 7:30
or 8 o’clock Tuesday."
That was the time fellow
commissioner and Streetman
friend Sturm had secured a
defeat over challenger Dick Fees,
supported by a camp that In­
cluded many party outsiders.
As far as seeking the seat
again In 1092. Streetman says
he "h a s n ’t given It much
thought."
But there are some people that
have given some thought to
seeking a District 3 seat that was
vacated by Streetman. Dick Van
Welde. a long-time party faithful,
says he would consider running
for the District 3 commission
seat If Streetman didn’t seek
re-election. Van Der Welde, of
Longwood. moved to Sanford in
1088 to wage an unsuccessful
Republican District 8 run-off bid
against Kelley.
While Van Der Welde doesn’t
rule out another move to San­
ford to challenge Kelley again,
he says he would have to "think
about that real hard."
Another name that has been
mentioned is Dick Harris, presi­
dent of the Weldva Homeowners
Association. Harris has been
active In the party’s county
executive committee and has
been appointed to serve on
several county committees.
"1992 is a long way away."
Harris says. "If Fred chooses to
run again I would be happy to
support him. If not, then that
changes a great deal. Whether I
would decide to run depends on
things at the time. But I have
definitely thought about It "
Altam onte Springs Mayor
Dudley Bates has been men­
tioned as a passible contender
for the District 3 seat, but Bates
says It is unlikely he would seek
the seat.
"t have just been elected to
another three-year term which
would take me to 1993.” Bates
says. "1 would seriously doubt (
would
early to seek
A fourth possible candidate for
the District 3 seat la Otagsr
Bowman, who Is chairman of the
c o u n ty 's P rogram R eview
Committee and naa served on
other county committees.

but-found
sthfct dfelsAced
herself from party regulars,
Bowman says she it "consldering" a District 3
bid even if Streetman
re-election.
In District 8, Ait Devto says be
to considering a rematch spinet
Jennifer Kelley. During hfe stint
as a Democrat, Devto edged out
Kelley in District 5 by six votes.

—4 .. _

-

“

N E W S F R O M THE R E G I O N A N D A C R O S S THE S T A T E
but lost countywide by a 85 to
35 margin. Davis has since
returned to the Republican party
and says he Is considering a
primary challenge to Kelley.
One other name has been
mentioned as a possible District
5 candidate is Ken Wright. A
resident of Sanford, Wright ran a
brief District 5 campaign In 1967
but dropped out before the first
primary. Wright moat recently
served as campaign manager to
Dick Fess. who lost to Sturm
Oct. 2.
”1 haven’t given any thought
to U," Wright says. "I jure came
off (the Feis) campaign and I'm
just glad it's over. Jennifer Is
doing a good job so I don't have
any immediate plana to seek
that office.*'
In District 1, former county
manager Ken Hooper is moot
often rayned as a Pat Warren
challenger. The rift between the
two extends back several years.
In 1987. Hooper supported a
proposal by form er deputy
county manager Montye Beemer
to eliminate Warren's position.
Warren was promptly hired by
Christensen to serve has her
administrative side until Warren
announced plans to seek the
commission seat being vacated
by Christensen.
After Warren was elected, she
sought a review of the county's
legal actions and a reduction of
county legal staff. When aha
expressed dissatisfaction with
then County Attorney Nikki
Clayton's report. Clayton re­
signed and one other vacant
assistant attorney’s ,
eliminated.
The county wtU expand the
legal staff by two attorney! to
catch up with the backlog of

wuiji cmico

ay

crew: Playing with fire
United Prats International
An experiment aboard the shuttle Discov­
ery will help space engineers learn more
about how fires bum In a gravity-free
environment and how to extinguish them
quickly should the need arise, scientists say.
Shuttle commander Richard "Dick'' Rich­
ards started the experiment Sunday, using
two cameras to film burning material inside
a 2-foot-long chamber to show Earth-bound
scientists how flames move and develop in
the absence of gravity.
Television views showed a small Are
inside the apparatus for about 70 seconds
before It sputtered out. The fire did not
appew to hum steadily but Instead ap­
peared to flash irregularly, brightening and
dimming before finally dying.
Robert Altenklrch, dean of engineering at
Mississippi Stale University and principal
investigator for the Solid Surface Combus­
tion Experiment said before launch that
learning more about
fires behave in

apace can lead to Improved safety.
"The object la to figure out the reasons
why the flame moves, then to use that
information, ultimately, to design a safe
spacecraft environment with respect to Area
from the point of view of materials refection
and how you would extinguish a‘ fire," he
aaid.
The thought of a Are aboard any space­
craft seems a bad Idea but Richards aaid in a
pre-flight Interview he had no qualms about
the experiment.
“It's a very tight container." he .said.
“This to a seven-second controlled fire. As
far as I'm concerned. It's a non-problem on
board the orbtter."
Richards waa aboard the shuttle Columbia
during an August 1989 Department of
Defense flight in which a short circuit In a
cable to the shuttle's teleprinter Ignited a
small Are.
The crew reported seeing sparks, and
smoke was recorded by a cabin smoke
detector, but the smoke was not sufficient
enough to trigger fire alarms In the orbIter.
NASA said.

If anything. 1 endorse this sort of thing
hrfmi— we can never learn enough about
Oif safety on board the orblter. he said of
the experiment aboard Plscom y . " We have
taken steps to learn from that lesion*
Altenklrch said the experim ent js
extremely safe.
"The chemical reaction is contained
within that chamber.” he M id. "The
amount of fuel being burned to generally no
more than a match ... The amount of fuel to
so small you could stick your hand on that
chamber and you'd never know the
experiment had occurred."
The flame of a burning candle In Earth's
gravity has a characteristic shape because
air flows upward from beneath It, sweeping
away burning products end bringing
oxygen to the flame.
"if you remove that flow by removing
gravity, the first question to. ’Will the flame
continue to exist or extinguish?* and 'What
wilt Its shape and characteristics be?"’
Altenklrch said. "The propogatton charac­
teristics are different in the absence of
gravity.'’

Twachtmann
won’t ftalgn
from DER job
TAMPA — Dale Twachtmann
said too much has been made of
his nomination re assistant sec­
retary of the 11.8. Army and he
docs not plan to resign as
Florida's chief environments!
regulator — unless he gets the
federal appointment.
But leading environmentalists,
who have bedeviled
Twachtmann for the past three
years, read for mate Into the
fetter Oov. Bob Martinet sent
President Bush In tote August.
They said the letter recom­
mending TW d Rm aaa for the
Army poet
indication
Merthtes pit
apiece the
secretary of the Department of
Environmental Regulation if he
wins re-efection next month.
"1 think he's going to
there one way ufo
David Oluckman, a
lobbyist who represents several
environmental fo u p s. told The
Tamps Tribune.
In the fetter, it***** public lest
week. Martlnes told Bush that
Twachtmann to well-qualified to
replace Robert W. Page, who to
retiring on Oct 16.'

» cuniiflwi^Q

positions and the Inrreaaing
wortdoid.
Then, will) the encouragement
of Warren and Kelley, ~
suggested to Hooper Me
management was no
wanted and
along with
A _______
In a in the bad blood
but he is
to pOillM
____ i consider ch a tlen i
/wren. Hooper says he has also
_
at property for a
home In Geneva
ggQgy ahOUM bS
then decide to run for of
Another possible W arren
c h a l l e n g e r le D a v e

be tout making

F D A , p o lic e

. .
--c
hot state end county- ____
reapportionment will reshape
legislative and rnmmtoMnn i ll

o x o n t

m a c h in e

m e y ^ b e

triSsT

"I h
House race, but that &lt;
redtotrictlng."
*1
the county &lt;
that depen
WeUJuM hare lot

s a y

u n s a fe

FORT LAUDRRDALE-Police
.jive h v rrh ri an invastly lion
iif a comoanv that makes an
unapproved and potentially
dangerous "oto n e therapy
machine used to treat patients
end other
The machine and the com­
pany that aella It, AngloAm erican Research o f Fort
tderdale, were alien
csUgstton by federal »»»***•
gration authorities, the U.8.
Food end Drug Administration
and the state Department of
Profeeional Regulation, the Fori
Lauderdale Bun-Sentinel re­
ported Sunday.
Fort-Lauderdale police joined
the investigation after talking to
people who had undsrgooe the

There appeara to be a national
trend toward cracking down on
storea atocklng "o b s c e n e "
album s_pdfe* In more ****** a
dosen states reportedly are
— miMg against the sale of auch
record!, th e outcome of an
appeal of the Florida case could
set the tone for the rest of the
country and Industry groups are
h o p in g the co n v ic tio n le
overturned to nip the trend in
the bud.

TALLAHASSBf - The dally
number Sunday In the Florida
Lottery CASH I pme wet886.
Today...Partly sunny and
breesy with a 20 percent chance
of mainly afternoon showers end
ihiindentwme High near 90
with the wind Sam the east at
15-20 awh.
Tcntgfti,.^arihr cloudy with a

SSu
m -: i»»:y y r
*»■ *
-

.......... * I,i
. —
.a
I UUkJVVww*«»|WVjr CtOUo y M M

breesy with a 20 percent chance
of afternoon thowrra and thun­
derstorms. High In the upper SOe
to tower 90s with an satorriy
wind at 18-20 mph.

(umet-an
Monday. October A 1M0
Vol. U . No. M

ns. Mm.
W

POtTMASTiai

£*•

w t im m

wv wr BOB

Waves are
r w! —

SSS

SSTSm m

mmam
*•

iM im n m a

tun of Si

in
_____ M 4 f o t « 3 r S

Currentto to theoorth.
a water temperature of 82
Wnsjnto

i M ill

foti.

‘

n

m

tow to add 70s aad an easterly
wind at 10-15 mph.

w h a n into
LS

9,10

SW TM U R Ti
sm .,k 9 5 p .m ,iM | | .a d 0 i.R i.,
3:30 p.m
Bsaaht highs. 4:53 «. • x s
: Iowa, 11:32 *-n
11:56
m.i Raw Sm yrna
____
* * • • ■ * ■ « P•,,,•,
lows. 11:37 are., 12:01 p.m.:
Co m o BoashtMgha. 5:13 are.,
BG9 pre.: Iowa. 11:52 are..
tau ap re .

- Tto high temperature In

sod the overnight_____________
reperted by the University of
Florida A g to ttu n l Research
and Efonwtfon Cotter. Celery
________
"R ecorded rainfall for the
s?
n*nnH endina at 9 are. Mon*
g w , iotalis d .il of an inch.
f f o temperature at 10 are.
today was 77 degrees and
Sunday s oversight low was 71.
— m m h u h by the Mstfrnel
___
* aswaettototi faptoet la lsl
Weather lenrtce si the Orlando SaSSCn
— al l oraft e d ilsstt
International Airport.
UMOrwmyc
Today...wind last around 20 _OthreWaatherSsrvteedato:__ £ • £ * *
kti, fiCMM 5 lO T ft. BftV and lJ M M W Y H p U toitotitMtsttoW n ^ ^ i
inland waters choppy. Widely □ fM S m a lr t a p M ia o r t M IT
S
t s
acattcred showers «nd a few
thunderstorms.
Tonight and Tueaday-wind
w taok ts. Seas 5 to 7 ft. bay
_ (
inlftflid waler c-Sboodv» flLrjht*
lan d towwrre red * \ew than-

SS S E

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�Fats ersek sold to CCIB
MIDWAY - Reglml B ry u l. SI, SISO Olm ch M„
was charged with sale lb counterfeit cocaine, after
making sale of fake cocaine to a City Coisnty Investigative
Bureau agent on State Road 46, Midway, at about ltl4 p.m.
Thursday.
Arrested on the
on
In
Oviedo at 7:48 p.m. Thursday, was Betty Jean HOL 38. of 1030
W. State Rood 434. Oviedo.

SANFORD — A false lead eariy
m U u fmlimed lit liivst sas* • masm.
todoy foiled to turn up a m m peeted gunman In the Saturday
night
shooting death
of Oil
her
night shooting
death of
Qliber
Reginald Bha
M ice Lt. Mike Rotundo said.
Thomas Penn, a 41-year-old
Mack man. who stands 8 feet. 10

Indies, aftd weighs .166 pounds, and killed. The women fled from identify, for her own safety,
is the object ° f a manhunt.
the car without being injured.
w itn e sse s reportedly re*
Rotundo said police allege
Penn allegedly lied east on cognised Penn as the gunman,
recently
p ^ n drove up to 1602 W. 13th 13th IStreet
in a red* Pontiac “Rotundo said he
'
L5,H' W
{Rn^t. at about 8:18 p.m. Satur- Firebird.
released from prison and re^ ___
__ _a
_____ ,,
/.Hinted tot_____
&gt;d.
v and
„ rir
d fired
nred
four______
shots___
from
„ _____
.
day
"
. . . .a
t»»
Rotundo
u
l n ^ n .into
Shaw
Rotu™Jo said
.•**? Shaw
8h* w
*P*
.... _
.____ u .
handgun
Into
s car when
whers s
Sha
an tw ttM w women.
J
&amp;
S
M
t i We've
S t &amp; been
S iB
girlfriend. He was apparently out of prison.
deal.
Shaw,
of
2808
Oeorgla
Ave..
slain
In
a
dispute
over
the
Ing
w
l
t
h
h
l
m
for
y
e
a
rs.'
-------- --------------- - -----.
^
______ _
Sanford, waa struck by gunfire sroman, whom police decline to Rotundo said.

PyT*»&gt;

if CCIB

•smtnols County DUI arreata
SANFORD — The fottowtngpersona
under the Influence of
sicohot (PUt) In Seminole County:
MalcohoTtOUninB
•Franklin Whittier Chaw Jr.. 54. 3503 MeUonvtUa Ave.

promotion
mB

SS S mBBr 1
temPBBIBTl wniff

was arrested at» : 10 p.m. Thursday
vtolai
itmgtnc
right-of-way. in Sanford at about 9: IS p.m. Thu
•Teksfocd Od Floret, 29. of Apopka, was arrested at fa47 p.m.
Saturday after his car
Boulevard. Lake Mary.
•Richard FrankUn Raybon. 32. of DeBary, eras arrested it
lOtBO p.m. Sunday after Jtla car was tn an accident on 18th
Street at U.S. Highway 17*82. Sanford.

Suspect oauptrt In window
LAKE MARY — City police here report arriving at 406
Dorchester Square. Lake Mary, In time to grab a man who was
halftray ihrmurti a broken kitchen window.
Police said Jeffrey Michale King. 22.842 Country Club Road.
og at two residents who were trying to
block hts entry to the house. He waa allegedly using a 18-tnch
piece of glass from the broken widow as a weapon. King hod
been laaused a warning not to trespass at that location laat
December.
He was arrested there at 12:48 Am. Sunday on charges of
armed burglary to an occupied dwelling, aggravated assault,
trespassing and loitering
ig iand pro
•
'
■
•

Chopper pilot helps trick stolen car

SANFORD — Dr. Betgiunlne Newman, who serves as the
county's physician, aided Seminole County sheriff's deputies
by helping them track down a fleeing ear. as f'
his private helicopter above Interstate 4.
Deputies began a pursuit of the car that fled from an
attempted traffic atop In rural Altamonte Springs at about 4
pm . Saturday.
The chase moved to the latentats, where the
traveled at 100 mph and a pursuing deputy lost sight o f the
car. Newman, who waa ftytng above the roadway waa (fitted
by the deputy, who followed Newman's lead off the Interstate
at flute Road 46. west of Sanford. There the deputy blocked
tbe path of the fleeing car and the driver ran Into nearby woods
and was captured.
David Lee Presley Jr.. IS, of AahvtUs. N.C., was charged with
auto theft. fleriM M pM w w w gsU n g arrest without violence
and uae of a m o W J H i^ R w S m ie e io o ofa teiony.

■soy nospnaucso svvsr pemo smiow
ALTAMONTE 6PRIN08 -

A Lake Mary

child, police reports i
104. Lake
Stephen James Wesder. 18. 800 Bird Bay.
Mary, was charged with aggravated child abuse by Altamonte

The oity Scsnic improvemsnt Board Award for
Octobsr was fllven to First Frssbytertsn Church,
st iOak
m
w Avenirs
n n n w and
*na Third
■mm 8trsot,
w ran, Sanford.
sauviu. At
Ml ths
in*
award carsmooy rsosntty worn (I to f) Ray taoa,
chairman of tht SIB
‘

iklppor, 616 mombor, ftsv. Richard Dsntslak,
pastor, Martha Yanoay, SIB chairman; Eliza
Prlngto, *616
rung**,
■ mSmbSfj NlOCy LarbiQ, ChUfCh
soerstary; and Connis witHama, 6iB rosmbsf.

slated to retire early next year.
*T m looking forw ard to
working far the sheriff and the
people of Seminole County in
this capacity/* b lin fe r said. His
promotion, made Thursday, has
brought a salary increase from
about 138.000 to 868.000 per

Hsrakl staff writer
&gt; -

A defective

agunman.
Mullins reported that about
ltaa a.m. Sunday he confronted
Lamar Mills. 34. of 1771 Bur­
row* Lane. Sanford, as Mills
allegedly pointed a double*

r_- t* ’. ^

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I

• • • • • • • * * • • • • SSSOS

Attention1
RIWARD

flp r t n ^ s g fe ^

K W h

car. the child vomited again
pWyfh the child. Tits child i
Hospital for injuries.

Mullins reported Mills'pointed
w shotgun at him. from his
tM drri Dosttion. and Mullins
mid the hanimer of the gun
. .

'»

t*ncer' P*"
B s J m

P lfM
, r f

-,(i • ? -

m s m s n v rm
V’ '
r

r

]

.

mi
RVZ ' '
BE

Cassslbtrry celebrates birthday

reluctant to
it* v of
;:

STlO.

signers of the city’s
1840. t L I

tecarpSSl U*tr property as araaMty "tax-ftee

proclaiming
3 Ken Mrlm
of Oct. 6 through
Dmniann presented him with a
key to the city and a real one to the
of city hall. There is only one city

&amp;

S S n ^ n ^ ^ h a ii^ e d ia S g S r .

“TirfeV

■ N W t e g M M g g

.,%v;

*

.,i.V&gt;. -

�4 * — Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida — Monday, Oefobar S, 1990

Power and puzzles to the
BAN LEANDRO, Calif. — "Vole yea on no,”
■ay* the aallrlcal radio commercial far Proposi­
tion Zero, a fictitious initiative on California's
November ballot. “8dy no to agitprop from big
on. M|| business and big-mouth political consul
Mil*

, .

.

EDITORIALS

Americans hod rk iiw to be concerned
recently when Comptroller General Charles
Dowaher told the House Banking Committee:
"N ot since It waa born In the Oreat
Depression has the federal system of deposit
insurance for commercial banka Based such a
period of danger as It (now) does."
Bowshcr added that the failure of a single
major bank or the onset of a recession could
major
deplete the Ffederal Deposit Insurance Cor*
portion's 912 billion hind. The FDIC guaran­
tee* $2 trillion In Insured deposits na­
tionwide. Following this gloomy assessment,
the Congreastnal Budget Office predicted that
no fewer that 800 banka win Call during the
next three yean.
These grim warning conjured up images of
taxpayers having to shoulder another
enormous financial burden as hundreds of
banka Call. Taxpayers already are stuck with
spending more &gt;" in
taUUon to ***** out
failed Miring and fofln hpMlyifwif,
It la tempting to draw paraUda between the

Conjured up by a radio talk show host, the
Propoaitiot)
Won Zero spoof Is a parody of the wildly
conflicting claims for and against the dosena of
ballot Initiative* that race the state's voters In
"*"1/ CIvCiHKI jfCflFe
But the advertlaement deftly
humor to
make a eertoua political statement. "Say no to
the tactics of distortion, lies, innuendo and
personal attack,'' It proclaim*. "Protect your
constitutional right to have no opinion and keep
It to yourself."
The message la clear: 8ome Californians are
overwhelmed by — IT not disenchanted with the proliferation of complicated ballot measures
that are promoted or denigrated through
■ImpUatic slogans and deceptive advertising.
Ballot Initiatives and referenda are hardly
unique to California. Plebiscites on issues are
lawful In approximately half of the 60 states, n
recent years, voter* from Florida to Arisons and
Maine to Washington have been laced with
decMona at the polls on AIDS, abortion, auto
t belts, catfish promotion, state lotteries, strip

mining. Judicial procedures, handgun sales, hog
farm ownership, historic landmarks
and acom
land
of other Issues.
.ne process more
routinely rolled upon
— or more widely
publicised outside
the state — than In
California, where It
waa initially pro*
mated early In this
cen tu ry by O ov.
Hiram Johnson, a
populist Republican.
Although he and
others viewed cttlxen
lawmaking aa an an­
tidote to the Influ-

f AsthoIssues

booomomoro
the state legislature
complex, ao
by wealthy corpora­
do the ballot
tions and powerful
propositions, p
Ileal machines, a
Angeles Times
analysis notes that
the process has un
dergone profound changes in the ensuing

K

"The system seems to have slipped away from
the dtlsena It waa Intended to serve into the
hands of the very kind of apedal Interests II waa
meant to contain. Merely qualifying a measure
for the ballot can cost as much aa 9700,000 and
consume more time than most cttlsen groups
can muster,
"Taking their place la a whole new Industry of
consultants, professional petition circulators,
pollsters and media gurus who have been lured
away from traditional campaigns by •peclal
interests willing to spend whatever It takes to
fend off these measures."
promote or I________
There are other problem*. Aa the issues
become more complex, ao do the ballot propoai
r, if any, voter* have the time to
ttona — but few,
reed them, much less the specialised knowledge
required lo analyte and understand them.
For example, the aeml-technical text of Just
one of the Initiatives on next month's ballot —
the "Big Green" omnibus environmental pro­
tection measure — Is almost 16,000 words long
and nils more than 36 slngle-speced typewritten

p «l* «

Sophisticated opponents of such ballot pro­
position* understand that merely advocating
their refection engenders negative responses
among voters — ao they fashion their own
alternatives.

JACK ANDERSON

O O O

IF

MU/

x

w e n s

Keeping an eye
on prescriptives

JMne

CUfeV
flmlMualsi'
m wjj
m K I m n m n ra rni lai iiiB
g IJTI'C
.we ij fSCaTW
umc fin
d glim
fflC n
DlTJfJVCTalB

KawiHwg industry. But ifa l temptation
be resisted, because It la baaed on the Arise
premise that these financial Inatttutkma are in
eeeentlaUy the earns aorry shape, in reality,
mere ixt iifmncanc q m ib u c n m iw
AmerkaVi bants tad the M L ifiduetry.
Tio begin with, banka made 929 billion l
year, while the BftL Industry kvt more than
•lBbUUon.
also be noted that hundreds oS
during a period
the government gave thrifts a free hi
hand to
maxe naxy uiveatmenca unoer me cover of
federally guaranteed deposit Insurance.
Hmia, on the other hf” . are subject to
much tighter, regulatory restrictions. And the
rulee have beoomr even toupmr In the wajpe
of thafhrlft blowout. ....
........
Moreover. flftU ’ are *structured « n y dlf*
ferently from banka. As ctooaty held Institu­
tion* . many failed aavtnm and loans wars
undsrcapttallmd and thsrdbre vulnerable to
iw^tfag ly im uwipiftMM iD an gai. That la
*iof which

and the markets to
This la the first line of
With aone
9200 billian In equity capital hanks have
■ the kind of ******
da of thrifts.
i 'I mean the banking industry Is
without nroblems. During the last decade, the
•aatHNwlf decline In the ofi p*+**h, the term
belt and the Third World baa caused ecoree of
bank fatiuraa. Add a recoiling real edtate
market rwgtanal raceaalona. declining hank
Hfinn (or bust*
mmA the industry muVif ba In for even
Deaplta th
opportunity to
they cauoyad not so longago. But in order lo
do aoTjhay must 5 7 adapt to a highly
competitive and rapidly changing environof the Federal
_________ „______ I
_;.$hia |
center when he eald a euoceeaful
a
higher level of capital To
u£
reforms arc
are required to
hanking y eUlP Without SSfllfklng

■V

lo o v e r-p re sc rlb e
addictive drugs If
they know the Hate
la cou n tin g. And
Staik
he
aavegl billion a year
In M adloald pay*
manta now going to
u nn ocaaaary pro*

DA V I D S. B R O D E R

W98
WASHINGTON — Lawrence F. O’Brien, who
died laat week of cancer, waa many things: a
key figure in John F. Kennedy’s Irish Man*."
an architect of Lyndon B. Johnaon’a Oreat
Society legislation, a Cabinet member, the
target of the Watergate break-ln that even*
tuany coot Richard M. Nixon the prealdency
and; later In life, a moat successful commis­
sioner of the National Baaketball Aaan.
But above all eiae, Larry O'Brien waa a
Democrat — a politician devoted to the nurture
of hie party. To salute him and his work la to
defend what is now moat denigrated in
American pom fra; the principle that parties
matter, even more than personal ambitions or
thepoMcy dashes of the moment.
The son of immigrants from County Cork
who ran a rooming bouse and restaurant In
SprWgfltltl. Maas., ne waa different from the
others In the Kennedy circle — and not just
baoouaa he had no enthusiasm lor touch
football. O'Brien had been actively Involved In
Democratic poUtlca before JFK rtwn* along and
he otayed involved long after he waagane.
Devoted oa he waa to President Kennedy and
to hts brother. Robert Kennedy. It waa
perfectly In character far O’Brien to give
generously of hie talents to Prcatdsnt Johnson
and* to Hubert H. Humphrey, whan they

f The patientrights
advocates are
not as small
pndpowarlasa

aabssts"

la IBSS, the Uitfohn Co.
.951 to the PhobU Sodety,
oup received that year from
fifttp. The gou p now goes
i — the Anxiety Disorders

We naked U p jo h n now m uch the
Iwrmeceuttrel company gave to patient*
gbta mourn lorf year. A epnheamen for the

for K ennedy and
Johnson rested on

recently

lytor mare than 1.000
mlroiled substances,
market for prescription
It takes a kill unit of the

•*»,

\

i

�B K S w h h H k B h S iI

Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida — Monday, October B, m o — SA

( J

t

7

*

S *. '

ye
*• * ,

• 'i, L * J
•iv‘ S s ta fis
: * r; *'-**.■ .

4,

CITE to hold funcMglng walk
ORLANDO — The Center for Independence Training and
Education for the Blind (CITE) will hold a fundraising walk Oct.
27 beginning at 9 a.m. at the Cheyenne Saloon at Church
Street Station.
Michelle Muro. WCPX news anchor, will be the grand
marshal., Registration Tor the walk, sponsored by Wendy’s.
Pepsi Cola and Universal Studios Florida, will begin at
Cheyenne Saloon at B a.m., and the walk will begin at 10 a.m.
Coat for participants Is $5 for adults and $5 for children under
age 12.
For more Information, call CITE at $06-3177 or 785-0004.

Salvation Armv will offer aaalatanoa

$PWf WWWwlI 'W IIIIV W ill WwBBWFV
SANFORD — Applications for families needing Christmas
assistance from the Salvation Army will be taken Nov. 12
through Nov. 16. Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to noon
and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Salvation Army. 700 W. 24th St.,
Sanford.
Applicants must bring with them Identification for each
member of the household and proofof all expenses.
For more Information, call 322-2642.

and 1909, although
the percentage of tow-tncome
residents to higher-income resi­
dents decreased horn about 40
percent of all residents to about
35 percent.
The number of residents In the
prime first-time homebuyer age
groups of 25 to 34 years also
age brackets during the decade.
In 196a that age group repre­
sented 23 percent of all age
groups In the county. By 1969,
they had decreased to about 22
percent.
. The task force concluded the
^statistic gave evidence flrst-Ume
[ homebuyers may be moving out
Mf the county to bby homes.
I And the task force found the
femployment trend tn Seminole
[County waa tow ards more
.lower-paid service Jobs. Between
11990 and I999i the number of
people working In service Jobs
MlthFMhA^. 199 n
v. am
| comhahi.
p.r.
**il,
P ^ W W l g .t e r • p a I d
kanufkctortng Jobs, which Inrased only 36 percent.
While the number of low*

resale coot of a home In the
C e n tra l F lo rid a a re a w as
$50,530. By 1969, the price had
escalated to 980.0M. Using
1969 dollars, the I960 house
would have cast $67,101, 40
percent less than the median
coat of a resold home In I960.

plan. But the money
measure was Identical to the one
Bush vetoed on Saturday, and
Republicans warned Bush would
veto the Mil a#Un because It
lacked a provision he demanded.
Rep. Dean Oallo. R-N J . , who
supported a bipartisan plan de­
feated by the House early Friday,
said on the floor early Monday
that President Bush may oppose
the new pemocratlc*crafted
budaetolan.
"W e just got word that the
president la not In favor of the
way thla has been handled."
Oauoaald.
" W e 'll be revlelw lng the
package today and awaiting the
Senate vote. " assistant White
House press secretary Douglas
Davidson aald early Monday.
Debate on the budget plan
opened with House Budget
Com m ittee Chairm an Leon
Panetta, D-Calif.. telling col*
leagues. "W e are tonight a

government In crisis, and U Is
extremely Important that we
move forward with this budget
resolution. ... We can no longer
engage In Just partisanship or
games."
The new budget plan would
still cut the huge deftdt by about
$40 button In fiscal year 1091,
which began Oct l. and by $500
billion over five years. But It
would significantly reduce the
Medicare cut and give the tax*
writing House Way* and Means
Committee, which Is controlled
by Democrats, broad latitude to
devise the tax component.
The new plan, according to
s e v e r a l D e m o c ra tic con*
greasmen. would cut Medicare
spending by $42 billion over five
years Instead of by the $60
billion Medicare would have
been cut In a bipartisan budget
plan negotiated by President
Bush ana congressional jeaders
but rejected by the House early

more money by building bigger

As a result, the task force

"A builder of a $60,000 to
$90,000 home Is not going to
make the same margin (of net
profit) than the builder of a

m'

By comparison, the task force
determined a home would have
to cast about $62,000 or leas for
a family of four earning about
$25,000 annually to afford
monthly principal, Interest, tax­
es and Insurance payments.
And the coat of new home
construction also continued to
Increase. In I960, the average
reported value of new home
construction, leas the coat of
land, was $37,079. By I960, the
contructlon coat had more than
doubled to $89,767. again,
excluding the cast of land, srhlch
can add $25,000 or more to the
overall home coat.
A lthough the county at­
tempted to encourage more af­
fordable home construction in
1977 by creating two sorting
classifications that allowed
flu small lots, few
homes were built under that
sotting. Task farce members
decided a am al-ht sorting dis­
trict coupled with other cost-

A U C S A V M JN O
veteran of World W ar II and a
A lice A p p lin g, 97, 1109 member of the Sanford Moose
Cyprras Ave.. Sanford, died Oct. Lodge and Greater Sanford
5 at her residence. Born June rhembtirofCi'tiiftitimti
15.1993. In Macon County. Oa..
S u rv iv o rs In clu d e w ife ,
she moved to Sanford to 1923 Bonnie. Mount Dory eons, i d,
(ram Arabia. Oa. She waa a Orlando. James. Pennsylvania
homemaker and a member of and Mike of Lakeland* daughter.
Eton Hope Mlmionary Baptist Jackie Johns, OroveUndt nine
Church. Sanford. She was a grandchildren.
member of Uty White Lodge *71
Brisson Funeral Home, Ban*
and Pallbearers Society•3T
ford, to charge ofarrangements,
Survivors indiale sons, Robert
L ^ i S ^ d s u g h t e r e , SuMe NANCY ■ .P O Q U A
Mae DeBose. Sanford
Nancy H. Puglia. 76, 261
WOaon-EIcbelberfer Mortuary South Embrey. Casselberry, died
Inc., Sanford, In charge of ar- Friday at her w Mdenrc. Bom
nrnaemmts.
Sept.ll. 1614, to Mount Vernon.
NY?, she moved to Camrlhrrry
I I 7 I R L I T W O L F S from East Rutherford. N J.. to
OOCOUM I
1962. She waa a homemaker
Beverley Wolfe Chictering, 65. and a Catholic.
1761 Stanley S t. Longwood.
■ Survivors Include^ husband,
died Sant 29 to tier residence. John* sons. John. Casselberry
Bom *£v. 29. 1924. to San and Joseph, of Orlande* doughAntonio. Texas, she moved to tors. Mary Jean Rodrigue*.
Longwood horn Dayton, Ohio, to Streator. III.. Nancy Ann. Cas1965. She waa and ekmentary aelberry t brothers. Carm an
North ^Arlington, N J .i three
iialdw ln*Falrchlld Funeral

Budget

120-foot city lota, allowing more
homes to be built on the same
amount of land. They also recom m ended w aivin g som e
county building fee* and site
development requirements to
further Induce developers to
build affordable homes.

Miller, president of Suda Inc.
which specialises In building
965,000 and up homes, said a
net profit margin on a 660,000
home might be 5 percent or less,
compared to a 10 to 15 percent
net profit on a home costing
6200.000 or more. Although
Miller mid competition and a
But to return, the developers g S S »lir e lt o u s t a g n u ^ liv e
must agree to build affordable
u p p e ? ^ homes to be
homes by signing commitments
^
competitive prices,
with the county.
reducing profits.
The task force also recommended the county participate
In affordable housing development through down payment
ssetstinrr programs arid even
providing some Mte development
for affordable subdivisions.
But w hethc^M M M M Pe.tdr
tions will a O m ^ ^ R t in t g c
affordable housing to be eonstructed Is uncertain.
Task force member Bill Miller,
past president of the Home
Builders Association of MidFlorida, admits throughout the
last 10 years, builders made

M M M tT a T A T L O M
Robert O. Taylor. 61. IS Lotus
Lake Drive. iS sarltirrry. died
Saturday at Florida Hospital,
Orlando. Bern July 31, 19ft, to
Jerioo9prtogs.Mo,.hemovedto
Casselberry from Hingham,
Maes., to 1970. He was a general
p ain tin g contractor and a
member of the First Baptist
Church of Longwood. He i m a
m em b e r o f th e H in gh am
Masonic Lodge and A llepo
Ty t e o f t h esgto e, Beaton.
Burvtvora include wife, Norma
V.: daughters. Sally Hattaway,
Sandra Thompson, both of
Winter Sprtopt three grand*
children* one great-grandchild.
Oatoea Funeral Home. Longwood, to charge of arrange-

at his residence. Bom
1914, to Coiaorkle,
Wmt^Ctoxsackte.m

T u T 1947.

Baldwtn-Palreh lid Funeral
husband.
y cto* &gt;’ to W alter A.t son. William R..
charge or arrangements.
O rlan do* brotn era. E rnest
Albright. Saratoga
Y.j four grandSprings, N.Y.t
c h i l d r en* e i g h t g r e a t C o x -P a rk e r C a re y H and
Funeral Home. Winter Park, to

But MUIer said the task force’s
recommendations should attract
more butkfers to the affordable
market,
"W e are trying to help people
accomplish the American goal.
which Is to to n your own
home," Miller said. "There Is
extensive inttrest in the In­
dustry to buikl affordable bouning, but there has been a very
strong deterrent towards that by
Infrastructure Mid development
coats and the high land easts. I
think thla will help."

Sorrento* sisters, Janie Mat­
thews and Sula Davis, both of
Sanfrod* nine grandchildren*
nlnegrrat-grendchlidren.
Brisson Funeral Home. San­
ford, In charge ofarrangements.
S. T. W illiam s, 83, 2420
Center S t, Sanford, died O ct 6
at Central Florida Regional HoeUal. Sanford. Bora Nov. 2.
936, in Colquitt. Oa., he moved
to Sanford to 1953 from Donnerson. Oa. He was an employee
of the City of Sanford sanitation
department and attended Jerry
Avenue Full Ooapel Church of
Ood to Christ Sanford.
Survivors include wife. Mary,
Sanford* daughter, Loretha. Or­
lando* eon. Lean Lowry, San­
ford* mother. Amanda, Sanford*
father. Stetson Sr.. Colquitt*
■latere. Mirth* L. Gordon. English
Town. N J.. Persia. Bainbridge.
O a.. Shirley. Rosa Btubba.
Nadellne Nelson and Qlorfa

S

Graham, Toronto,
Jean
Gibson. Albany. Oa.* brothers.
J.C., English Town. John D..
Colquitt, Bobby and Stetson Jr.»
both of Albany.
Sunrise Funeral Home. Ban-

"W e did all this for the kids.
We feel we re putting our money
back Into the the young people
of the community with the
s u c c c m of thla festival.'’ Steedly
C h d M M the fin ance
Committee. JoAnne Lucas, wttf
results for the festive’s financial
report Deserving high school
and college students will benefit
from the proceeds through
scholarship awards.
"The festival can be the dif­
ference between a talented atuRetches of rain did Utile to
dam pen sp irits yeatsrday.
Steeoiy said wttsls and com*
mtttee persons felt the crowd,
eattmatrd at over 50.000 Satur­
day. waa even larger Sunday.

a problem. It was frustmti ft

EfeAtfl

is tents are packed and
unde are raked, plans are
Ing made for next year’s

Hurt year wUl be our fifth
te n tsd u rin g Jt hethreel l ttf e annlvemiry.” Vice Chattman
patches of rain Sunday. But they Larry Lucas*mto. 'i t w « be an
keot an comma.” Steedly said.
encapsulation of the first four
^Although traffic at times yes- yearn* so much m t so well done,
terday waa backed up past W ere already working on It
Longwood-Lake Mary Road west Lucas said.

Blue Angels
not only
providing
A number of the nation’s
nugor commercial f ^ i — com*

—
P—
W I C I Ih—
Q»—u—*
U m w I Mnrihmast
W w U l w f U l■I ■
l l■l■j

Eastern end Data Airlines will
have Information booths set up.
as well as displays of their
aircraft to be flown to for the
event
The thrust of Sunday after­
noon’s f —f — 1 la to prwrwir
aviation as a career, whether It
be m ilitary, commercial or
private.
The career day event will be
held from I to 6 p.m., near the
Comair Aviation Academ y's
(light school area, on Flight Une
Avenue at the foot of Carrier
Ave.. at the Central Florida
Regional Airport

Church. Apopka. He waa a
member of the Davis Lodge
Oeaevat son. Gary M. Oaraer.
Apopka. Etandla Brooks. Denver.
Anthony Brummltt. Orlando.
Jeffery Brummltt Altamonte
Springe* daughters. Andrea
brother. William Oladdm Jr..
Apopka; sisters. Carolyn MeBaht New York. Jean Marie
H eocksday. New York* 19

rV e like the feeling mot we
can terve you our ww. And you'll
appreciate that penonaUzed
service when you turn to in at a
difficult time.

�NkW ORLEANS - Although
he failed to unseat Sen. J.
Behnett Johnston. D-La.. former
Ku Khik Man leader David Duke
b u t Du k e s ai d his
stronger-than-expected showing
strengthened his political credT
butty.
Johnston, who had 54 percent
of the vote In Saturday s declion, attributed the 44 percent
that Duke, a renegade Re-

■ threat to Ole suit to challenge
the disallowance of absentee
ballots cast for Republican state
Sen. Ben Bagert. who withdrew
onThuradav.
Duke said he was “trying to be
m gracious In defeat as I can"
but blamed the lass on a "poUtl« d deal" that led to Bagert
quitting the race so Johnston
could win.
Bagert said he withdrew to

his racist history and links to
neo-Nazi groups.
Duke claimed 00 percent of
the white vote and a higher
percentage of the black vote that
any statewide Republican can­
didate In Louisiana's history.
“Now people across the state
know that I can win.” he said.
“My credibility right now In the
state of Louisiana Is higher than

a s

l u c r f r D C fn .

John*on 'predicted that Duke
could never win a statewide
election but said Louisiana's
Image eras not helped by the
large number of votes cast for
the former national lOan leader.

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�MONDAY

S a n f o r d H e r a ld

Church leagues tighten
IMtfy lu g u ti forming
SANFORD — The Salvation Army of Sanford
is taking registrations for Its second year of
Bkldy Basketball.
Leagues are being formed for 8-and-Under.
lO-and-Under and 12-and-Under for both boys
and girls.
Players may now register at the Salvation
Arm y Corpa-Community Center Monday
through Friday from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Registration will close Friday. Oct 19. ‘Teams
will be chosen by drawing on Monday. Oct. 22.
with play to begin on Wednesday. Oct 31.
Cost to register will be 94 for Community
Center members and $8 for nan-members. All
games will be ptsyed at the Salvation Army
Oymnaslum located at 700 W. 24th Street.
Also needed are adult volunteers to handle the
coaching, refereeing, time and score keeping.
For more Information, call Henry MUIsap.

SANFORD - The Sanford Church Softball Leagues
continue to get closer and closer aa. with one week left
In the first half, nine of the 13 teams are still within one
and a half games of the lead.
In "A " League action at Chase Park Saturday.
Calvary Christian won Its first game of the season with
a 5*4 triumph over First Baptist Oeneva. St. Stephen
Catholic held off Church of Qod of Prophecy 10-9 and
First United Methodist split a doubleheader, hanging
onto a 10-9 victory over Maranatha Pentacostal before
dropping a 13*4 decision to Central Baptist.
In the "B " League. Sanford Christian hammered First
Naxarene 13*1, Neighborhood Alliance pounded Church
of Qod 13*1 and Holy Cross Lutheran clipped Grace
Christian 9*3.

Locals
excel at
Showdown

Local kicker helps Lehigh
BETHLEHEM. FA. — Junior place-kicker Erik
Bird of Casselberry and Lake Howell High
School converted all six extra point attempts
during Lehigh University's 4241 triumph over
Columbia.
He missed on field goal attempts of 40 and 45
yards but has hit two out of four field goal
chances on the season. He Is perfect on all 14 of
his extra point attempts.
,
The Engineers are off to a great start aa they
are 3-1 overall with a 1-0 record in the Patriot
League.

(No. 1fo vary Iona to Todd, a Junior dsN
the sf forts of thO U kT tumbles'for. touch
an. Already thls-oasaon, kickoff return team,

Scnfoid to host soccer try outs
SOLON. OH. — The East-West Soccer Am­
bassadors, a nationally renowned amateur
athletic organisation which selects
players
between the a p s of I I and 19 from across the
U M to represent their country In interna­
tional soccer competition, will be bedding
cUnk/try outs for Interested players.
CUnlc/tiy outs will be held at the following
locations?
Jacksonville Youth Soccer Club on Friday.
Oct. 26 horn 5-7 p.m.
Sanford's Lake Sylvan Park on Saturday. Oct.
27 horn 11 a.m.-lp.m.
Tampa University on Saturday, Oct. 27 from
44p.m .
The College of Boca Raton on Sunday, Oct. 28
from lla.rn.-lp.rn .
Coral Gables High School on Sunday. Oct. 28
from 4-0 pro.
Players are arired to bring their own ball and a
•IB application fee. East-West will provide an
entertaining dime, evaluation and an East-West
Ambassadors t-shirt for each participating
player. For more Information, please contact

When on assignment. Herald
photographers shoot pictures
that vary In angle, pose or
content, not all of which are
published immediately. From
time to time, the newspaper
takes a second look at those
sports scenes from around Semi­
nole County.

No surprises in exciting first hslf of football season
Time files when you're having
fUn.
It seems like the school year Just
storied and we're already halfway
through the varsity football season.
And the most surprising thing
about the season so far. other than
i-ak«» Howell's season■ooenina unset
loss to Winter Park. Is that nothing
really surprising has happened.
Everything has gone pretty much
according to plan.
For starters. Seminole and Lake
Howell are dominating their oppo­
nents (with the one noted excep­
tion). And both are ranked in the
top 10 of their respective stale polls.

will probably determine the Semi­
nole Athletic Conference title on
Thursday. Oct. II. at Seminole's
Thomas E. Whlgham Stadium.
After the two leaders, the other
four achoois In the county are In a
pack led by Lake Mary. .
The Rama, led by seniors Chris
Haney and Joe Menello. are playing
.500 through their first four games,
a marked Improvement over their
0 4 start last season. So far. Lake

of Lake Brantley. Haney. Oviedo's
Dana Alien and Seminole's Bruce
McClary.
By contrail. Seminole has three of
Ihe top 10 receivers in terms of
y ard ag e. Tony C h av ers and
Williams arc first and second while
JoJo Murphy Is ninth. Oviedo also'
has three In the top 10 with Harper
(fifth). Lowman (seventh) and Alex­
ander (10th).
It's been an exciting, tf predict­
able. first half, ir we're lucky, the
second half will be more of the
same.

F OR THE B E S T C O V E R A G E OF S P O R T S IN Y O U R A R E A , READ THE S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A I L Y

�--------- T

S TA TS &amp; STANDINGS
^

----- ~ ------- — = -------------

w p w m w w w w

in the past b e c *u « Miami, 4-1.
u mnning more this m ot . But

MIAMI - It w u (he good old the
*«"&lt; % .
d m all over again for the Miami gaining only 72 yards.
Dolphins.
enter Duper and Marino. After
Veterans Dan Marino and opening the second half with an
M ark D u p e r rescu ed the
play drive covering go

S&amp;b&amp;SUSSS iT.

yards to rally Mlamljo ■ 20- 16 lunno let fly with the 09-y,ni
vtetsry over the New Yorii Jets.
touchdown paes to Duper.
The Jets led 194)at halftime.
-■ _.2_ ^ ■
M arino has not had the
"Mark made some meat catspectacular year he has er\)oyed chcsforus. Marino said.

IRVING, Texas - The Dallas
Cowboys won a game Sunday
and It could be argued that It's
their first win since Jimmy
Johnson took over from Tom
Landry IS months ago.
I V 4

M is

In the Cowboya other two
Victories— over Washington last

a a -n a . i h i

seven kills and atx service points
for the Rams While Uaa Gable
(IB-3, 154). KMfemmrc Oarmis had 10 assists and severn service
(184. IB-10). Eau Oallle (15-2, points.
The Orange wood Christian
1B4) and Surds(15-12.15-1).
r varsity aieo won. beating
It's always good to play
t Dora Bible 1541, 15-8 to
people who don't normally play
during the regular season," said Improve Its record to ?•!.
In the Central Florida Athletic
lAKHsno. "It was a very well run
Conference, the OC8 Rama are
lA A ts ia s a a M a t ri
tournament.
According to Luciano. Lewis Ued lor third. Trinity Prep la In
had an excellent tournament on first with a 5-1’conference mark
offense and defense while Abbott while Lake Highland Prep is
and Lowe both set and served second at 4*2. Orangewood
Christian and Melbourne Central
Now 174. Lake Howell will Catholic are both 3-2 while
host Lake Mary on Tuesday Orlando-Luther to M and Loch
night In a battle between two of Lowe Prep la 0 4 .
the three co-leaders (Oviedo Is
the third) In the Seminole
Athletic Conference standings.
The Junior vanity match Is
■cluMhihd for 6 p.m. with the Roberts
r| f*H second in
vanity set to follow at 7 p.m.
the FAME rules forms event.
■ ------ ._________ .
«___
"It eras the Oral match for both
w w n a n
w in n in g
posley and M c C ray ." said
. MAITLAND — U s Hufford had Men?fee. “We are very pleased
sight kills, five dinks and five with the sweep,"
rentes points |o help lead the
In the Mini-Mitre Division.
Orangewood Christian School rVIllie PoaJcy was fourth lit
Rams to a 13-12. 7-IB. 15-11 ffigh
‘ tin g and In
‘ th
* e **'
Mites
Division. Mcko Roberts had a
food meet, finishing third In the
FAME rules farms event.
Also, placing for Menefee's
Academy waa Kenny Kaiser, the
No. 1-ranked martial artist In the
men's' tnterme&amp;ata dres In the
stale of Florida, whotook second
In the FAME rules forms event.
V
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O in fe a a ilfr e m ll
Bacon and Rusedl Holloman had
.
two hMs each. Holloman and
taking on Holy Alvin Campbell each hit a douC r o a t a l 2&gt;t B p .m . a n d
Mo.
.
Neighborhood Alttaore d o i ng
Pint Methodwt couldn't hold
tho days play a p tnfe Nasarene the momentum Into the second
at8 4 0 pm .
,
gam e aa C e n tra l B aptist
Calvary came from behind pounded the bfel far 20 hits to
with two runs In the bottom o f win Us second straight game. A
the seventh Muring 10win its Drat five-run second Inhfag broke a
gams d f t|w season. Calvin
1-1 Ue .and Methodist never
O iln e s' sacrifice fly scored threatened thereafter.
Wayne Combs with the winning
Contributing to the Central
rim.
offense were John Lamer. Dave
Ooasba led the Calyaiy attack More and Roy Templeton with
with (brio Mts. Including two three hits each. GetUng two hiu
douMao. while Gaines. Ron were Mike McCoy. James Beaky
Haner. Haas Munos, Me Oin- and Steve Templeton. More and
and Eddte South had two IMnHaUand Jr. had doubles.
4fe wore Paul Greer. Tom
and. Mark Thorne and
of the fifth tnntriM
M r safe lo 3
w d T of Oed of

Fwamn.

Iw lo n i to tee 8&gt;r&gt;iot&gt;
Retired Senior Volunteer Profrai
night trip to Saraaota, October 25 ar
Cultural points of Interest iftdudl
harbor cruise are on the agenda.

Burke and Mark Whitley hod one
double each white Jones drove
‘n three runs.
Sanford Christian started
owty but came up with three

conditions and are relatively easy to grow.
And now we are rapidly approaching the
proper time to plant strawberries In our
area.
The strawberry plant Is perennial by

Strawberries are sensiuve to climatic
conditions Uke day length and temperature
and It la important to select varieties
adapted to Florida conditions. Varieties like
DOVER and FLORIDA BELLE yield large

— the opposition made some
major mistakes In order to let
Dallas off the hook. .
This time, however, Dallas
won fair and square.' driving 73
yards In the fourth quarter for
the deciding score and then
door on Tampa
the Buccaneers.
Bay to
1410.

e

ra re rh

s th ro u g h N o ve m b e r

month. Plants set out In mid-October should
produce ripe fruit by Christmas. Berry
production and harvesting continue
throughout the reet of the whiter and
through spring. As the weather gets warmer

rr ,2,S K M » ! 2

have been formed, fertilised and well
moistened, cover each wlthn sheet of m ml
black plastic. Place soil In the edges of the
plastic to hold H In place. Then cut silts In
the plastic where the plants are to be
inserted. Space the plants 12 Inches apart In
the rows.
Always start with certified, disease free
plants which are available at your favorite
garden center. Keep them moist before

plants at the end of the

Aft association to m tit
The Seminole County Art Association meets the second
Monday of each month at 7 p m. at the Cultural Aria Center In
Sanford. For Information. 323-4036.

Nurses to moot monthly
The Licensed Practical Nurses Association of Florida. toCj,
meets the second Monday of the month at 6i30 p m. at ATS
Health Services. 1801 Lee Rd.. Winter Park. For Information
call 290-4321.

exoosed. Additional Inf
obtained by calling the /
^
requesting Bulletin \
thThoridteHarns Oar

W lft roody to wash that man right out of i M

p

Ovor— tors to have stop study
A step study of Overeaten Anonynwua la conductedI «m
Mondays at 7&gt;30 p.m. at West Labe mapttM. BtetsRoed 434.
Longwood. For more Information, call Chartte at 3234070.

have changed the Ufe of one of

______ _ '

NaraoNoa Aitonymou* to m a t
Narcotics Anonymous tnetts Monday at • p.m. at the House
ofOoodwlll. 317 Oak Ave., Sanford.

Posts to talk vsrss

'
and sun
Are over, complete, exhausted,
dons)
I've fed the young as well as
the old.
I've cooled the warm. I've
vanned the cold.
The wounded and weeping I

went out si 7 n.m. and &lt;

flAVC COtlBOiCG■

The tender and touchy f_havc

- Vtrat Florida Porta meet si 10 s.m. every Monday it Vhe
Deland Public Ubnuy. Interested poets am welcome.

!
uoie,
o|hL

wife a steak dinner. And for
those who haven't seen that
poem, here it Is. crediting Its
author. Sylvia Lewis Kinney

JSJ ji ,0rOURPLAC* AT THE LAKE
o tbff , June Is past, so Is July.

havcrearedUwtold.
I have bit my tongue till It waa
controlled.
IVebfoUed the steak.1 have

until now. What

And the grocer thinks I am
made of gold.
.(t h e .oth er b l l l f , I havo

that No fatter
man talk with tk
the gn t'spsrea

P4f e d frankly. friends, I am
ready to fold'

r a S I d 'I e B k
but fence they

have said. I never thought I'd bo
writing a letter to Dear Abbv. but
I must confess. I don't know
where to turn.
O ur 17-year-otd son has
become Interested In n girl.
We've always wanted trim to
have girlfriends, but this one
might not be good for him. A
weak ago Saturday, on thfer Bret
date, they went to a movie (We
let him use the family car.) He
came home at 7:4B- Sunday

W0M|

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Monday, October S. 1090

71-HtlsW jSlgSi

CLASSIFIED ADS

Seminole
322*2611

Orlando * Winter Park
831*9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT. PRIVATE PARTY RATES
HOURS
14 eeneieefhe mm... SSCeSee
M t AJL*M I PJL » iiiw jN i jj—
fj**jje«

will train. CaeiniHaMI HII

* UMMOffYATTMOMT*
P r k n obova rallact a SI .SO cm h diuount tar prompt poymonl. SchodulIng m ar Inctuda Harold Adrartliar ui tha cat! at on oddMlonol doy. Cancel
whan you fa t m u lt i. Pay only tor d o yi your od runt at rata aomod.

Experience wa»h/dry/fold
lem ■ W pm Frl. thru Man.
Apply: EenilM le Centra
Laaadramil w iOrtandoOr
tanlard IWal Mart Plata I

DCAOUNIS
Noon Tha Day Batoro Fublkotlon
Sundoy • It A.M . Saturday
Mondoy .11:10 A.M . Saturday

ADJUSTMENTS AND CRIDITSt III the event of an
error In an Mr Hie Sanford Herald will be responsible lor
ilpnS
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first day H nttte.
Supertar... SM-SMS
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Flarlda Notary AyaaclatUin

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Sanford Herald. Sanford. F lo rid a -M o n d a y. October 8, 1M 0 - A B

K IT'N 'C A 8LYLER by Lany Wriabt
Mtaaf lea. tag. Ittte, ek.
V PLYMOUTH MORItC
Automatic, air. iteree I
Onlylui.M per monthl
Call Mr. Payne. MMItt

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DSAM M L OOVTt Would you
provide Information on
aathma and aathmatlc bron­
chi!*?
t g a &amp; Ij
M A E KBAOM li Aathma Is a
chronic p ulm onary disease
marhad by periodic constriction

PETER
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chlal mucus accretion, which
obstructs the release of stale air.

with the variety of drugs now
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Epinephrine infections may be
necessary. In severe attacks,
intravenous theophylline plus
In the prreenre of infection
(asthmatic bronchitis), antibiot­
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Asthma can frequently be

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�</text>
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                    <text>TH U R S D A Y

wurmri
NEWS DIGEST
Sanford woman to groat Bush
TALLAHASSEE - Florida Mother* Again*!
D runk D riven (MADD) state president Beth
Bridges, of Sanford, is one of a delegation of 10
MADD m em bers slated a s official greeter* of

Mm

•

_ _____

■
j
lfl

Mali lands
Belk Lindsey, Parisian
also OK Sanford location
Je rry O ershm an. president of
Melvin Simon ft Associates. Inc.,
told Mayor Bettye 8 m "h and other
city o m clals th a t D illard 's, an
A rkansas-based fam ily operated
retail chain, has agreed to operate a
200.000 square Toot departm ent
store at the new m all.
“ W e're thrilled to have such o
hlgn quality retailor com m it to
Sem inole Towne C enter." Simon
Vice President Thom as J . Schneider
said In a press release Issued Just
b e fo re th e p r e s s c o n fe re n c e .

es said tom Tallahassee th is m orning
I be joined by Sanford MADD m em ber
w art and about eight others to welcome
i he steps off Air Force One a t 3:45 p.m .
■aid she doesn't know why the state
delegation w as Selected to greet the
presiden t, except th e group is well respected.
Bush Is visiting Tallahassee to support Oov. Bob
Mar t Hies In his cam paign for re-election against
D em ocratic candklate Lawton Chiles.
See story on B ush's cam paign trip. Pag* BA

.j
-

,. v j- L y-'
Mlks Murphy (I to r). of Melvin Blmon and A ssociates public relations, T\pni
Schnsklsr, Melvin Blmon vice president and Jerry Oershman, Blmon
president arrive at the Sanford airport this momlnnfl before a press
conference at city hall.

U.S. checks
report citizen

Changes keep team on track
8T. CLOUD — Sem inole High School girts
vsftsybsll coach. Beth Corao. decided tom e
iffim ges had to be m ade after w atching her team
drop three gomes in the preseason jam boree.
□

^

F to rM s

InvMtleatora (truggta for eluoo
QAINCBVtLLE — T he apartm ents w here five
University of Florida students were killed are
th e m ost difficult crim e scenes investigated,
according to Dr. Michael W est of H attiesburg.
Mtsa., a fo re n slc dentist who has investigated
crim es for 13 years and specialises In searching

U.S. diplom ats In Iraq an d K uw ait today
Investigated a report th at Iraqi troops shot and
wounded an Am erican m an In Kuwait aa Iraq
pursued an international diplom atic cam paign and
considered giving President Bush the chance to
appear on Iraqi television.
.
The reported shooting Incident was expected to
raise tension a t a Ume w hen Iraq la pushing a
diplom atic cam paign, w ith envoys In the Bovle)
Union and China, and another m ission planned for
Iran.
“ We do not have full details (about the shooting)
y et." one W estern diplom at In th e Persian Outf

ic o rre c tty
PLYMOUTH. Maas. - Mayflower II. a replica
o f th e ship th at carried the Pilgrim s to Plym outh
Rock, se t sail in open w aters for the first tim e in
nearly 30 year*.
,
W ith Its crew dressed in Pfgrtm costum es.
Mayflower 11 ventured o ut in open water* from
th i sta ts pier In Plym outh around 9 s.m .
As p art of t te Festival of Balls, the vessel,
accom panied by a flotilla of 75 boats, sailed out
in C apeC od Bay before returning to Plym outh.
•aidafficialB at PUmoth Plantation, the m useum
th a t ow ns Mayflower It.
In 1967. th e vessel duplicated It* nam esake's
voyage, cro asli* th e A tlantic In BB days.
However, th e crew of the replica chose a m ore
soutbsriy route th an th at of th e oriental vessel
— n ot Inappropriate, a s the Pilgrim* hod
planned to settle in Virginia before storm y
w inds and navigational errors steered the first
Mayflower tow ard M assachusetts.
Idore th an 11 m illion people have visited the
Mayflower n since It docked at Plym outh.

Baatofball baffl* MrappaS
DUON, Prance — A confrontation betw een
U A and Iraqi troops — on the basketball court
T bs u a . and Iraqi m ilitary team s had been
a s ls c ts i In a random A ravina to fee* each other
In th e Aral round of th e Joan of Arc world
m rtm rr basketball cham pion ships, which open
PtttttytADM on.
B ut, In th e wake of B aghdad's Aug. 2 Invasion
of K uw ait Iraq 's squad has w ithdraw n, aa have
M m foam Saudi A rabia and Senegal. Despite
UUttal four* th e tournam ent m ight have to be
eanoslad. ixganlstrs now say enough team s will
^ /n S v T jS n m S . president of the organising
aauuuM tas. aald he believed a U.S.-Iraq contest
could have been played w ithout Incident.
dsM U atha tension betw een the two nations.

thunderstorm s. High
in th e m id 90 s with
an easterly wind at
5-10 m ph.

muklj |
« iw wn mm '
veysd aald they hcMeve th at

nr rrMnffiInm

HANFORD — Mail Call, an organisation head­
quartered In C hristm as. Fla., la looking for people
In Sanford, Lake Mary and Bemlnol* County to join
them In a m assive C hristm as letter-w riting cam ­
paign to U.8. service m en and women here In the
United S tates aa w dl aa all over the world.
Mall Call la a nonprofit, nationw ide, m em ­
bership-supported m ilitary m orale m all program .
The concept actually began In early 1973 but

Lake Mary to review tougher tree ordinance
Heraldstaffwriter_________
la k e m ary "Oood fences
m ake good neighbors." poet Robert
Frost said.
But fences are not alw ays the beat
neighbors to tire*, •recording to
Lake Mary city planners.
The d ty com m ission tonight will
consider changing the city arbor
ordinance to discourage the rem oval
of trees solely to accom m odate
construction of fences or walls.
Until now. residents of Lake Mary
have been allowed to remove certain

Associate City Planner Mark Reggentin said. “ It Is our hope th at
hum now on. when citiaens plan to
construct a wall on their property,
they'll be able to come up w ith one
that la of the m eandering type. It
will not only save m any or our
valuable trees, but It will probably
look nicer In m any cases."
This doesn't m ean there will be
iys. “The City Council find* It Is in
the best public interest and welfare an absolute ban. W hen a wall or
lo enact regulations controlling the fence perm it la, requested In the
rem oval of trees In th is city ao as to futuie and trees m ay Interfere, the
retain as m any trees as possible, rem oval will be considered on a
consistent w ith the economic en­ case-by-caae basis.
joym ent of private property."

f|t w||| not only save many of our valuable
ffMa. but It will probably look nloer In many
M

’

trees on their property w ithin 20
feet of a structure, without the
necessity of obtaining a perm lf.
'V the am endm ent la approved
tonight, the term "stru ctu re" will
no longer Include walla and fences.
The proposed ordinance revision

Fees forced runoff election despite
losing hie Lake Mary home territory
SANFORD - Form er Lake Mary m ayor Dick Feta,
who will face D istrict 2 Incum bent Bob Sturm In a n Oct.
2 run-off. lost In all three Lake Mary area precincts to
Sturm In T uesday's prim ary election, precinct reports
rekftacd W ednesday show. .
Although Sturm failed to gam er over 50 percent of
the vote In the th ite precincts, he sill! led both Fees and
his third Republican challenger Robert "Bob" Desmond
in Lake Mary Precincts 10. 28 and BA. Sturm collected
47.6 percent of the total vote to Fesa'a 35.9 percent and
D esm ond's 16.5 percent.
Precinct reports were released by the Sem inole
County Supervisor of Elections office W ednesday for
T uesday's prim aries.
Reports also show District 4 challenger Robert "B ud'
Feather edged out incum bent Sandra Qtenn In several
southeast Sem inole County p red n ets where residents
have been angered over Glenn * support far Increased
developm ent.
In slatew ide race*. Bob M arline* and Lawton Chiles
won all 95 precincts In Sem inole County. Srm ittoir
County Republicans gave M artlnes m ore votes in each

Democrats
close ranks
for Chiles
TALLAHASSEE - Oov. Bob
M artln es prom ised an agresalve cam paign a g ain st
e m o c ra t L aw to n C h lle a
W ednesday aa Florida Demo­
cra ts closed ranks behind their
new ly an n o in ted stan d ard bearer In the governor's race.
M artlnes fogowed hi* easy
victory over a group of little
know n opponents In T ues­
d ay 's Republican prim ary by
b a r n s to r m in g th e s ta t e ,
challenging Chiles to debate
him and criticising the Demo­
crats for avoiding the Issues In
their own prim ary.

K

Dick Fesa, left, Bob Sturm, and Bob Desmond during •
primary campaign appearance.
p rcd n rt than they gave his four challengers combined,
reports show. Dem ocratic vole m argins were m uch
closer In m any precincts am ong voicraJor Chiles and
challenger Bill Nelson, although Chile* led In all
□ B ee F ees, P age BA

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c o n tin u o u s
operation o f th e project d tfn 't
s ta r t u n til 1 9 7 6 . " B y la s t
Christm as,* said Lee Spencer,
national director, "th e num ber
of u n its, ahlpa an d locations
receiving bundfes o f m ad ini creased to th e 1.000 m erit far
I th e (hat Horn." B paaeer m id
I letters forwa rded through Mall
Call m ade last C hristm as "Just a
little b righter far about 180000

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Include a note o r letter n t h It
tegtog Shout th eir hom e town,
fawrity. ehutv / anything about
w hich th ey w anted to w rite.
T hen we aM ttd everyone to drop
th eir carde in th e boa. w ith a
q u arter to handle postage."
W h ite s a id h e r c h u r c h .
Sanlaado M ethodttt C hurch In
Longwood. ended u s sending
p o s s ib ly a s m a n y a s 5 0 0

GAINESVILLE •— A forensic dentlat who
has investigated crim es for 13 years and
apedalU ea in aearching for clues says the
apartm ents w here ftvd U niversity of Florida
student* were killed are th e m oat difficult
crim e scenes he has Investigated,
Dr. Mlchuel Weal of H attiesburg. Mlaa..
has pioneered th e use o f ultraviolet, photography to m atch Itoigerprlats and to m atch
dental m odels w ith Mte m aths left on
hum an flesh, a technique used to help
convict .e rld killer TtedA indy.
"T his Is the moat difficult crim e scene I've
ever aeen." W est said W ednesday. "W e
h a v e b e e n a b le to tu r n u p n e v e ra l
fingerprints, but the odds are these are
prints of people who lived In th e facility.

There were no prin ts la areas ire believe the
p a p e rtm o r to have touched "
W est "deputy m em ad M u m n er In Forrest
County. Mlaa., used an ultraviolet scanner

S s m rs rK rs s
- - .... i

etty of Florida, was charged Tuesday lu a
IBM sex attack In Indlw Tw ver County. He
was
“P
c h a r ts Ur olvtng an attack an h is grand-

‘
and one young m an b to d jg e a rln g T huredry "w n ifag fan the
four
young wom en and
ere louna
foundstabbcd
were
stabbed Its death early last week. B revard .C o u n ty D e te n tio n C an te r In
The U tter did leave bMi
body fluids. D etectives i
ror hie client on th e a g g a va tad aeeauii
th e bite m arhs faund t-n
female victim ch arfe
the attack on H um phray's grandtoflndam w poci
_____ . ..
o were awaitHum phrey has been Jailed since Aug. 30
l.lT S S S te V y T S S
o d eterm in e on that charge. His bond w as rataed to $1
w hether body fluids fan
it one of Uw million when QaJnesvIlle police Identified
netlc m aterial him aa a suspect In th e stu d en t slayings,
crim e scenes m atched Ui
lin e suspect. But at a briefing W ednesday, police said
in Mood draw n Bom
Edw
ard Lewis Humphrey,
_______________
they had no new Utfarmatlon th a t could leau
['
* an a t the Univer- to an arrest In th e stu d en t killings.
H um phrey. 18, a 'fteahm

m
W* •

"I faund out about Mail
II, g o t th e a d d re ss, th e n
u p In churck. We

irrn rrm e n
The Dem ocratic P arty 's hopes
Send th e etam p to: Mall Call. j ^ S S
S
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Box 817, C hristm as, PL 33708.
fro m R e p u b lic a n s r e s te d
W e d n e sd a y w ith a fo rm e r
—
Vietnam POW. e D aytona Beech
investor an a a uaineavuie siMen ob* torney.
i iMPs not.
sNccotop4-l8Jh®d
far th e Brat goal of th e election season
th a
a praUnti*
few far an
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racaa for Florida Senate control

Is tide som ething new ?
Jam es o f Detand an d R e p ic u ff
sold Reggirithii "T his la S tearns o f Ocala.

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a ll o r tk e lr c o n g r e a a lo n a l
prim aries, allowing caodidatca
an d p arty lead en .aBh* to tu rn
th e ir arim thm to th e task of

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around m aybe ftvc districts, m aybe a couple i
and the results of th e prim ary m those
indicate w ell have a fight on our hands all the
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hae «*bot a t gaining coatrol of th e P loridi Senate,

cotufOB,

p a rty io m t-

««i f »i i J w t w i ^ o ik o t '

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sta te 8dn.
It a not aa sim ple a s tt looked earlier th is year." Marlene W oodson-Howard in her
b challenge
one OOP official who aahad th at his nam e not of Oov. Bob M o rtm a in
be used. "W e've pretty m uch built o ur hopes torisl

....,

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s S F im I look grounds shuttle Iraq
unknow n, leaving th e future of
m ission
In Umbo.
"If we went through, opened
u p the aft (engine room) and
m agically found
problem
sn d a w rec te d I t you would still
be H lrffti an th e order o f three
four davs a t the m inim um
(b efo re a n o th e r la u n c h a ttem pt)." said shuttle program
director Robert Crtppen. "B ut I
d o n 't believe th a t's maUetle.
The m ission w as originally

A irp o rt T h u rsd a y from th e

to

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EDITORIALS

I n o tf lw f it

JACK

ANDERSON

Research fraud
goes unchecked

vri'R.

D A V I D

S

Voters

Q R O D E R

�SANFORD — County planners
recom m ended approval of the
seco n d n o rlh w e a l S em in o le
CDuaty.mall W ednesday.
Voting 4*2, m em bers o f the
Sem inole County Planning and
S o ilin g C om m ission reco m ­
m ended county com m issioners
approve the 1.3 m illion-squarefoot H eathrow Town C enter.
P ftZ c o m m is s io n e rs F ra n k
Shelton and Jo h n Tracy opposed

m all will Include a D illard's
dep artm ent store, giving the
Sanford m all an Im portant edge
over th e H eathrow m all by
having the first tenant.
..W h e n c o m p l e t e d b y t h e
m id - 1 9 9 0 s. H e a th ro w T ow n
C enter w ith Its accom panying

v ^ n r y ss ^

i is

* » ■ * * ■ ■ * ■ *#%»■

opened to the tu b lk .
But county planners hedged
on a recom m endation by the
Berntnotc Towne C enter devel­
o p e r s M e lv i n S t m o n a n d
Associates enounced today their

and ihsntasfons are continuing
w ith four additional departm ent
atone chains. Including Bears
and Ma tson Blanche.
C a rd Ecker. o f O ary Bttner
P u b lic R e la tio n s , a a td
" Partitenna la not 100 percent
definite, b u t there la a m y
a tro n g p o s s ib ility ." She

to Birm ingham , Ala., Is an "upecale departm ent a n te . somew hat like Lord $ Taylor.”
Sem inole Towne C enter la a
jo in t venture of Mehrto Simon
A ssociates of Indianapolis, and
A m e r i c a n P io n e e r F e d e ra l
s a v in g s B an k a n d N orm an
Roaaman. W hen com pleted, th e

County.

I comm issiona county reco m m e n d a tlo n to h a v e a
V 'fk-and-rtde tot on th e devel-

, v

—

—

- -

otherw ise.
The erring W tef. however. Is
tnnaM tont w ith w n m o t often

S
,c “ Council
‘?
" WMary
" S KlmI itu
S Jtcl 'S
E S tcn
K itw
J S .? " “
PUTnnlng
tin t Lake
. Rctm
Boulevard be widened to four
Nearly $ 0 percent Incorrectly
lan es from M arkham W oods •n w rtre d a q u estio n ask in g
Road to V 3 . Highway 17-92 and w hat p e rc e n ts# of Am wtcan
w om en h a v e h a d a n a l I n ­
tercourse, w hich la estim ated to
be balween 30 percent and 40
percent) she said.
expected to have approxim ately
ISO epedatty stores on th e 300
acre site. O ther facilities are
expected In Include a -400 room
hotel, a 400,000 aouarq foot
office building. 00,000 square
foe* o f offteehhowroom space
•»&lt;! JB 8 .0 0 0 sq u a re feet of
peripheral retail developm ent.

State U niversity
In 1972. he w ent
M ty jaf N orthern

brothers. David L., U.S. Army.
W est O e r m a n y , S ta v e s J ..
jb m bujku Ftnaas slaters . Diana
Idartrodonolo, U ndo F ., both of

cam paign on Issue*?' Including
widened to six lanes betw een 1-4 crim e, drugs, education and thow
a n d R in e h a rt R oad. T ow ne e n v iro n m e n t. M a rtin e t sa id

M arth a J a r r a r d . A lta m o n te
David Lootex. 88. 381 Long- froc
Springes th ree jtrandchU dren: wood Ave.. Altam onte Springs, a t
four great-gnuidcbbdren.
died Sunday a t M anor Care, Qlte
B ald w ln -F alrch lid F u n e ra l W inter P ark . Born D ec. 12, th e
Home, Forest CKy. in chm ge o f 1$02. In AbbevUk. 8.C ., he m e n t During hto a cadem ic caarrangw nante
m oved to Altam onte Sprtnffe In re e r. he co-authored several
m w w a h ja m m m .
1980. He w as a deacon and m athem atics articles and comrerm be r o f th e Apostolic C hurch pu ter actence text books. At the
n . h « 7 . f c ! ! ! . ‘d
of Jesu s.
tim e of hla death, he w as an
■tn h iiin rim rv rr * To
Survivor* indude daughters, ow nerfoperato r o f a buatoeas In
E ula Mae D ra in . T ttusvU k. Sanford. H eW aaaC athoU canda
v a?L ^ S 2 2 * £ £
M ontes Sm ith. Fort Lauderdale, W ortd W a r n veteran o f th e U A
J i m 7 ? l 9 S L t a ^ ! S p f e £ ? ?.lta *■» •* * * * •
Navy.
■

chiles* h ealth . Including th e
fan n er ILS. aenaior'sT fout with
depression and ongoing use b r |
th e medlcatVm P rorar.
"I believe th e record Indicated
he haa had som e heart problem s,
back problem s and stress pro­
blem s.” M artinet told reporters
In Miami. "T he public Is aw are
ofthat.*'
M eanwhile, Chiles followed his
crushing prim ary defeat of U.S. i
Rep. Bin Nelson by gathering !
D em ocratic leaders in a u n ity J
rally on th e steps of the s ta te .
Capitol, and began folding ek-.:
m ents o f his vanquished riv a l's''
cam paign organisation Into his
crusade against Martinez.
"W e know If we have thepeople on our aide, th at we don’t
nave to have all of the m oney on
o ur aide,” Chiles, who haa lm -’
posed a $100 m axim um o tf
contributions to h is cam paign;1

o r d ia p h ra g m s a n d o n ly
w ater baaed lubricants should be
used.
R etnisch ch aracterized th e
survey as supplem enting rath er
t h a n u p d a tin g th e g r o u n d ­
breaking aex research of Dr.
Alfred Kinsey In th e late 1940a
and aald It showed m any dan-

Only 21 percent were aw are
th a n ab o u t one o u t o f four
A m erican m en have had a aexu al ex perience w ith a n o th e r

w as a h o m e m a k e r a n d a
m em ber o f M arkham W oods
P re e b y ie rla p p b y r c h , L ake
■oLmni'

steR

PmPWlifwIiml
■rmmOBVIlrVZVli Wf
S te a l-g ra n d c h ild re n ! se v e n

Worst wrvtcM ter Mr*. Os-

H a s M a n m a r i l*. el

(Member's Olgneturs)
o ____ day o l _____

real dent o f Dehona ataoa 1984. w
m oving from DeKafe. m . He w as *
n pm baaor in th e C om puter ■
■ e l e n e a D e p a r t m e n t a t si

Konatry
Low W eight

jLwL. g

i

�m urder rates, m any Med to

Bush says drugs st
top concern l n W l

1si»S
i
fl.I

election, experts said.
i If the Liberal governm ent of
'.Prem ier David Peterson tolls to
-.the New Dem ocratic Party tn th e
p ro v in cial ele c tio n , a t polio
-suggest It will, the new left-wing
•governm ent w on’t p resen t a
'political or f f u iw sig th reat to
| the United S tates, th e eaperta
jaay.
- “O ntario Is going to be a good

favored c
Investors
vtnees.
Dave I
the Tort
Buslnees
th e NDP
th e Arne
nlty will
P*«ypol
"Anyb

nd *
lean
proit of
■U.8.
rhde
im e.
unit*
how
Utv.

aald previous NDP provincial
go v ern m en ts In B ritish Colu m b l a . B a s k a tc b e w a n a n d

com m unities a n d Investor*.*’
W laem ansaid,
'
Aa far th e election ram aalgn.
W isem an said. T h e U b tn is
m isc a lc u la te d a n d th e NOP
u p p e d th e right pulse*.”
O n ta r io P r e m ie r D av id
P e te rso n , rid in g a w ave o f
i ins Hums It s f i n a l and party
p o p u la r ity s h a r e d by an
—wmwkmm f im iw WU» fw» j a m
ago. seem ed a su re bet to term

a- reel-good,
happy.,T c m
c a p ita lise o

S lM M tT .

vasts.

�1990

THURSDAY

Sanford Herald
.

Calvin leads
Rams over
Winter Park

Sem i notes
rally past

for « » 11*1B. 15*13,18*13 victory
to open 1U M io n 1*0. T his

wot

Greyhounds open with win; Rams whip Bulldogs
■
■
S — W iw m
___________
___
__________
H »«W O qO
*****.
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HeUein also ***** four dinks and three saves
Combined w ith the w on opening wto
whlle s e rv in g se v en p o i n ts to h e lp th e
Tuesday over Bishop Moore, th e R sm sarr e i
O reyhounds open the season with a Victory.
3-0 s ta r t T onight L ate May p u ts th at pa
jSJuSnTioa re U
e r Jia
n Peisa
had 30
during
m a r k r o th e U t e ^ t o t r a ^ to S e m i n f a .
setter
i fo—
.
—assists
-----------------the m atch for Lym an and severed four poins In
the first gMiie.
In W ednesday's Junior varsity prelim inary.
L ate Howell defeated Lyman 15-3.18*10.
Lym an wlU retu rn to action on Monday,
traveling to Oviedo for another SAC encounter.
The Junior v a n ity ' will play a t 6 p m . with the
varsity scheduled to sta rt a t 7 p.m .
L A S S H A S T V*. D e LA

DeLAND - The two-time SA Cc
Mary Rama rom ped over the Del
18*3. 18*1 on W ednesday a t

Dolphins Ink
ex-Hurrlcane
form idable figure of Ivan Lendl waa obliterated from his
im m ediate future, Jo h n McEnroe punctuated his return
to big-tim e tennis W ednesday night w ith a straight-sets
victory over David W heaton a t th e UA. Open.
M iV ninr a second round ioeer a t th e Open the
pnvtoua tw o y e a n , used a dell touch a t the net and a
solid serve to crush W heaton 6 -1.6- 4 . 6 4 to reach the
sem ifinals far the Ural tim e since 1065.
Pete Sam pras, one of the new wave of prom inent
young Americano, delivered 34 aces to rem ove Lendl
fta m tte p ic tu re .* 4 .7 * 1 7 * 4 1 ,* 6 .4 4 .6 -2 . „
Aa • f in i h in S aturday's srm lflnals, McEnroe wlU
te s t th e 11th sssdsd B p r p s w ith an opportunity to
teeo m s th e Amt unaeeded m an to reach the Open final
stocs J a n Nodes in 1971. An unseeded ptayer never has

foiled to reach the AnaL Durto
crosm three tim es.
" It's disappointing. of co u n t
or later." Lendl aetoL '1 wish I
happened today. ‘
"I know ail the reasons R hi
haven't played well th is year.

* * 7 h a v n V w o n h m since '64 and I haven't been in a
G rand Siam final for five years, so It would be a big
thrtH to be tot the final again." said the 31-year-old New
Yorker, a four-tim e O pm cham pion. "I w ent through
som e difficult tim es th e last few m onths losing
m atches, and I haven't played well here the last couple
of years.
* T « not going to be playing th at m any m ore here, so
I'm cached about my opportunities."
T his m arks the first tim e in nine years Lendl has

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 F f D H E R A L D D A I L Y

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w ould be w orth about M »
mdlM nover three yeonThe agreem ent cam e a day
after he reportedly gav* bla
agent an ultim atum to get him a
contract by W edaeaday or be
dtamlaaed.
Taylor Joined the tea m i■} an
afternoon practice and will be
fftd y fbr the O lu tti' o p ftiff

■'FaTwot,"

T aylor aald .
•‘There'* not a bunch more I can

U^ y to ? h w m ade the Pro Bowl
every —aeon tn the league and

mSSS

hero an a w m .j

L3&gt;ppl on my
M i ' t h u win

cowdW mdtg. I
g w ja r h tc h D
H c r n tf d g g i I
P h tU d e jp h ja d
cam gi w m w ale
f e n w IjflW M

grooMeooandCh
A d lM M a g l

C o ta m a i ml i

t a n hae d

sfi
i training
I by Eric
open with

.-v f*

o r. tp e c ta c o r

— ■ ■.!■ J t-*

�Hm IQUD h i p IMV vw«
"Tve had a lot of tim e Ip

r e c e n t v i c t o r y woo a t

HM foster,

nom o fifo. n

WASHINGTON - T he Na*
t tonal Football League decided
not to punish Denver Broncos
tight end Clarettee Kay tor re*
peatedly violating the league’s
!£

bipcticc

r c | u u i n | i » r i i i i D(w n n

Mm (from laftt I
to Yaarich (No. 23),
am Low* (waartm
Horn (No. 27). *

jtPA RTS
MASTER

said h is chent and th e NFL m ade
a deal — TagUabue would not
punish Kay u th e Bronco tight
end would prom ise not to do the
Interview w ith WJLA.
T V TV m u o n r e p o r ts t v
le a z u e 'e c m

sM slm l KiV w m

*

^ T tr m M e r a S d J i o t e * from
m
v M tt sakl w as a letter from
.T ftlWFL
^ .
then* Com m ission er Pete Roteile
S M &amp; 'S a X 'T S T E
tolU jf«A nH tlin«»m uch.
viewing the case. WJLA-TV re*
The drug program 's records
ported W ednesday.
showed th at a urine specim en of
WJLA, w hich reported In Jan* Kay’s taken Ju ly 17. IBM . sat
uary the alleged m ishandling of
’ ** ’
drug testing specim ens and vio­
lations of the program ’s vow of
WJLA report said
eopfidSPUglit:

use and w as convicted in Ju o e of
d r iv i n g w h ile I m p a ire d by
alcohol.
U nder the league's drug abuee

Aug* 11. MM
negative, th e
week later, tl
aent to aao th et

an. interview w ith WJLA con* to Kay In IBM , WJLA said th e
cem ing his alleged substance form er com m issioner teid the
abuse, th e statio n said. T he seven-year NFL prot "You are
station reported it told Kay it now In Step Two o f th e league’s
would show him th e confidential throe-step program . O nly m y
drug report the lcague had on d lsa a tira c tto n w ith t h e ad*
Kay. who said be had yet lo see m tntatm tlve handling of certain
the evidence.
m atters relating to your recent
Kay. of Seneca. 8.C., told th e positive testing h as led m e to
Hague of hie intention to do the refrain from rem oving you tor a
invervtew. WJLA said, bu t Kay m inim um of 30 days,
canceled 45 m inutes before th e
T h is to your last w arning and
Interview waa to start.
your last chance." ..

day th e sale o f its properties in
an American subsidiary of a
Ja p a n e se d evelopm ent com ­
pany.
. ___
Real estate experts estimated
8 U &amp; to t e w otthjm tw een
P ro p n tim !T F o rT w o S .

jSm,

11

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fOIMT THAT KIP OUt TO M I,
ANP l'LL TSACM MM TO
MMP M f OWN 0U9M655!

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tawoUleyoutfl the
(June ll^ Ju ly 32)
• n r n m be peytaf
I—tlen tey o u U x to^
U * S certain whet
nvcyo th e type of

areUUbrgsp

'i : •"•■7/

�w rse will be conducted a t
* r 10 to encourage m
and raise m oney to light d

T he nrat m eeting of Uw Sem inote County Ret
Association to Septem ber 11 a t th e Tlm acuan Oi
Chib S anta Pc Room a t 2 p.m .
Lunch wlU be nerved a t 1 p.m . If you are

anyone th at you will not be t en ding out
canto In the future. Sending holiday greet*
Inge to optional, not mandatory. But :lf
anyone asks In subsequent years — which' I
doubt wlU happen — be honest and nay, 'jit
Just becam e too expensive.”
v,
toaato
U w i «reS

sv n y u w n |. &gt;
knato hnaM» A nm

SulffcSig «
S r* * .. *" RS*
iNted by law . You could atoo caU on th e
P™ c«e.
hat s what I d do.
£ 2 * 5 3 ___ _ _ .
. . .
DBAS A M T l Bach year I have sent out
Nrtatmaa n r d s to fttonds andtom lly. W ith
* 00*
“ *d
"* * * a y .
‘. . y d d Uhc to Inform
w yone th at this trill be the last year th at I
til send out cards.
How do I tactfully id l them ? Should I

ncetved Instruction fit drill and
c e r e m o n ie s , w e a p o n s, m ap
re a d in g , ta c tic s, m ilita ry
courtesy, m ilitary justice, first
aid am i Army history and tradl*
U Wright is the son of U nda C.

f lB
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m
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Mi " MB
— .

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dim m ed th eir grief, a s her grave w as
neglected and void of flowers. ”
i
Jb b y . neglected graves w e not a h n y o thej
result of dim m ed grief.” Some people's
loved ones live great distances aw ay, sonic
m in poor health them selves, and others do
not visit graves because they fear they will
collapse in tears a t the grave site — even
after m any years. (I know T've been there.)
incidentally, my own m other to gone, anti
tim e has not "dim m ed” my grief. Tgave her
flowers while she lived.
____________ J

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O rla n d o • W in to r Pari
M l . 9993 ^

OASSIPHO K P T. PRIVATE PARTY RATES

1RMOOUNTIRi a M Mat

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322*2611

M ^ o tS

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tAVIMOt AND UMM AMOCt
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MOM, M AMO PAUL H
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�</text>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, September 06, 1990; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                    <text>Tim e ’s up for county
Legislators offer no
aid for county deficit

IN S ID E
□

S ports

Spongers sop up Seminoles
l \KI'o\ M'UINt'.s
l In 1.11 |min si'iings
sjm&gt;
ih;i i ' &lt;.mu .ixxav x
xuli .miiuii h tinish 2 I Ji t
\ll 11 1|XIIMI IIII I iL'Ill IIIt Si II11IIIill s 111 i l.lllll 11"
i lass lA Ki mmi IV nili .ii S|itumn hrM I itdax
Srr Page III

□

P eop le

B y J. M A R K B A R F IE L D

Herald stall writer
S.XMiiKIl
Si hi imli ( 11111 itx 1 mimnssniiicrs
x
xill Iii "H lln II nxx11 ill 11 xlliu I" solve ill' ll Slim
llllllmtl &gt;
l&lt;III p IX
Xn Ini .ll lawmakers s.ix
ll IhiM
ii Is IIP 1" si lllll’ lAll'lP M
l.it ill'' GrowIII
M.m.iH' iiu iP A1 1 xx.is ji.issi i| lix*■ vrars ago .mil
Im.il governments MmnglP M
u x i iiulil xxi .ikmi P
.mil siillni II inI lint li.ixr Ininuiplx xxPit II sunt
K'p \11 t ■
! til'll* K All.llllniil) Springs Aim Ils

In M.lllll till XMgoing III have Indeal With II
I III 1 rllllllX Herds In lllsl .itlilM'ss 1 xrtX'lllllltt
M
1.1t IS all 1iptM
lit In till III Itnxx III I'll' milling In
lisr sail I Ki p I rank Slum l&lt;&lt;h •«■«!«»
&lt;nuiitx 1'iitiiHiissiiint is xxi'ti' stunned IM davs
ago xxIll'll lln X X
X
I re mill tin 1 rilllltv Ian s a SU
M
Hillltnu ili'lH'll during till m M llv* vents In
iinpinx' 1 mnitx si rxii i s Ami tli.it rlclti It llgurc
.Inl urn imluilf iiitlatlnH xxlinh ruulil drive lln
HPal 11li111 * In$I2&lt;
&gt;tiillllnti ur ........
|in M
i in 11 xx.is 1 ri alr il fix a mxx si.in mil Mial
tcmilres iiillllllt s .lllll 1 M
il's in pmxidi aiti ipi.il*
|ixils nl si ix iris wit llltl tin next fix«• years Im
, urn nl 1 •siil&lt;tits Alter •uncut residents .im
.11 1 nil 111 imla1*'P SI IXIi IS must In H
Mleast'll
stcailllx Inr in x
x pi nplr moving to tin enimtx .1

Kirby expresses strong ideas
SANF&lt;»KI&gt;
II.nil.it.i Ixirhx piiurip.il nl tin
I Iminis Si |
Ii hil nl I (mil i ll.ls snllir strung
,ilnnit i iIih .itnhi .mil sin s uni .ill.ml iii Irl
pruplt kltuxx iIiihiI tin ill Sin InIlexes lli.il
sluili III' slnmlil mil In .till i\
%
•il in l.nl 11 li.llill* ss
iit |Ill'll ll.li KH
I I•111Ii11 Hsi" in n inH
U11Hsllu.llHMI
Sec Pnge 1C

□

By SU SANLO O EN
H e ra ld s ta ff w rite r

SANFt )KI&gt;
* rlintnals rlmi 1
lake a lliiltd.ix
I hr 1 hrislnias seasuti Is .1 linn
x
xlien in.ilix iTinusi' In prex mi
shoppers With lln- shopping
season in lull swing area laxx
i liliireim nl nlln ers said M
n x in
heeling Up I'llnrls III help ki • p
shoppers limn In mg xn111111/1 &lt;1
All hough prill* •' .IM nil .ilert
xvttIi tmreused patrols at high
•rime an as ami ai peak times
s.mlnrd Poll*. &lt;ImI Steven ll.li
rlr-tl said eltl/ells neerl in In
aware and In Ink* pit e.nit mils
agamsi 1 rimiuals
Thex neeil a li.lsl* si usi nl
awareness 1 Imt Mils lime nl xc.it
Slime .IM llllll* Vlllnerahle In
■ell.till people will! |IM
'X nil
shoppers Harriett said I'enph
tiave mure xsihiahles 111 M
u ir ears
and houses
Harriett advises
shoppers In team up .lllll In tint
simp alnlle I Uls should Im
parked in lighted alias .nnl
Imk* il even X
XIll'll nt * upn *1
s gi
Mill Morris a prnpei i\
&lt; limes inxesiigatui Im Mu Si nn

Rapist charged in theft
|AMP \
I .ivvrnn • v*iui&gt;|i inn H
i- m.iii xxlin
||.ilnri| inilnrlrlv Im r.ipliiti .1 • .illliii iii.i ncnugri
.Itnl h.Hking nil In I .inns ll.ls tin II living III III*
l.lllip.l .lit.I V
%
till Ills Slslfl si In l PIM
M III' till**
III III IlitllllX ill.IIC ll V
\till sll llllig I s &gt; I'l'
limn .i Mmnl.i sum his s, ........I .nn si this \t .n
till prttX ill! It
Sec Page 2 A

B R IE FS
Santas picket mall
Iw n pn ip li in s.mi i

• I.ins Slips |t|l ki ll'll I sl|ltnlli.lH llllll.till simp

pine hi.ill I i tdax m e t " l In Mlilll iii.m.ie tin tP
1 1.Utils 1Il.ll ••IP " t S.IIII.I■~ * U*' iii.uli .1
suee* si ixe *1 .IllllielP 1*1 .III •III pluxri
lln two •at tnd
I'S 1 ill)
X
X ml' d‘ hlx &lt;
III &lt;it h
&lt;1 aust III ell
In mnlesl 1 !i III.Ill

Wmk
'xltill- Nhuh tea*1
to prut'1 si III lllg
llleg. dlx s,.n(f hi u1 nthI Ilk*
’ lllplnx ' 1 ll S' III 1 .1 Mall

\•«l k
1 ll \

He* alist ul III. alli gallon ■In mall plans III
Int-.ik its i mui.n i x
xlilt &lt;M
il Si \Ii Mnsn in m
pn.vnli S.iiP.i Mis t l.ms I insi% tin sniixx in.in
Kill lolptl tin Ki •! Nosed K
&lt; llllll t I .Hill •In ' Ini
M
n hnlul.ix shopping i it'll•

See C ounty. Page 5A

Buyers bew are: P olice
warn h o lid ay sh o p p ers

Signs of th e tu n e

F lo rid a

W K Sl s|.\K&lt; \ M

pi M
XISIIPI kllllXXII as I lllll III Mill X
I lllll srrx 11 1 s tor I HIMill I* slilt'llls .111 pm
xllfril tin III x
x ilevi Inpllulil max In' .11Iiixx*rI
under ill*' lax
x hi .ii*'.is nl M
u rriutPX xxPli
llinileipinte set vires lln •hiiiiix *an M
* lilt* tin
li'Xi'l ill sr tVtl *s P XXlll ptnxnl* In I* sill* Ills lillt
lln slal* will mil allow pn*P si 1 xIi • amt •*•••
xxillitmlM si.p* nxmin-s .uni till* •mnmtiiipl's
111.1i tall to ppivldi inlitlilttill 1 sipx1*rs
Ku.ul 1 iinsirin Mun makes up tin latit' si sli.p*
*a tin *omit x s *t* In 11 t uiintx "III* nils s.ix 111*■
x II
mi*l I** iw'Uin S12 a millnm ill mail p'tijcils
lllll till* III* HIM l|XI Xl Ills U
| sll Ip I'lnxxlll X
X
’tl* I*
mails ,ii* 1 until sti'il Sin* * ill* *hiiiPx
i xxill U
nix
have alNiltl S.'M
i t lllilllnn In lln pin|** is .Iiiulil* 1

Herald Photo by Tommy Vtnctnt
Ti. Midway Element.tr&gt; Si Pool chorus enlertatns students and (acuity at a
ii- out school assembly The presentation was part ot an American Education
Week celebration

—

He’s just ‘ plane’ crazy
i ||
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Couple's offer
speeds holiday
mail to troops

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si liuul in Mi'llmum* I nlorion.m ix link died earli* 1
this \i,n Marion s Inolhei is M
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a tug
sniplip.ixx x
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simx m*ds ,1 slight 1 miei iiiiii I lie iiMlileu name ul
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Morris said \entries
shmlhl also tl* linked Houses
should hax* III o* I opted app* ar
am*' In arhlllimi in mart puliol
llepillles spn l.lI le.Oils lit proper
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By VICKI DeSOnMIER
H e ra ld s ta ll

B y J u lia n
S te n s tro m
-

lup Ilnur nl the mx
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Munson It xx.is Miissnn Sunn l"lk' wren 1 olirerileil
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xiiugslers In p'ax M
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when Well asuli Imm I.inning r.nlr....ling nnl
doxvutnxvu hilsiuessi S dll' ellX seemerl I" I'xnlx*
around has. hall And when 11 xxasii 1 has. hall P xxas
Seminole High Sellout looltialt
A eoiiple nl xx.* ks ago x
x* gut .1 eatl limn xmlx
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xhu s.ml tin

nter

SANFOHH
tin holldavs
1 an lie a itillu nil tune Inr lux* *1
lilies sepal.lied lix III* Mim .it nl
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I el teis can lake
until
III.in Ihtee weeks In
travel m e.ii'li direeltnn
A ) Ai hui n wl m xxuiks at
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he said
ll
lakes them a lung tune in get 11
all distributed pmpirlx
I'lie
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tilings mil In llluse Minnie
anas
Arliuril said postage mi a
lirsl ■ lass h in r mailed in an
\l’&lt;&gt; nl FI’* ) Is 2 -&gt; 1-fills III*

See Mull. Page 5A

Se e Y a r n s . Page 5 A

P ilgrim s’ parade against drug use during S anford festival

F r o m s ta ll a n d M ire re p o rts

By NICK PF E I F A UF
H e ra ld s tu tt w rite r

IN D E X

s, \\l I &gt;KI&gt;
Hong and Susan
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F l o r i d a ..................... . 2 A W o r l d ....................... 6 A

Becoming clear and warm

•■I

1‘llgt tills sax it" I " dings

Mn

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F o r m o r e w e a t h e r , see P a g e 2A

Sre Pi l gri ms. Page 5A

Shane Britton gets soaked by wet sponges at a crack house booth at the festival

�W fM

•A-Sanford

i, Ftortda — Sunday. November 2ft, 1M 0

N E W S F R O M T H E R E G IO N A N D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E
■

Convicted rapist arrested for theft
Florida man dtea In T « x m crash

T A M P A — The man who gained notoriety
for raping a California teenager and hacking
off her arms has been charged with stealing
a 64 hat from a Florida store, his second
arrest this year for petty theft.
Lawrence Blngteton. 63. has been living In
the Tam pa area with his sister since 1988.
following his controversial release from a
California prison where he waa serving a
14-year sentence for the 1976 rape and
mutllattdn o f a 19-year-old girl.
S in g le to n Id e n tified h im s e lf aa B ill
Johnson to Hillsborough County sheriffs
deputies called lo the scene Friday after
em ployees at a Wal- Mart Store In the town
o f Seffner detained Singleton for allegedly
smuggling a hat out o f the store.
It was Singleton's second arrest In eight
months on petty theft charges.

TATU M . Texaa • Federal invcstlgstora have Joined Rusk
County officers In melting the cause o f a total helicopter crash
In East Texas.
Witnesses said the small Gyro-copter, piloted by 61-year-old
Audle Qene McDowell o f Bell. Florida, crashed Into a pasture
from an altitude o f about 190 feet.
Th e Friday accident happened near the home of the victim 's
brother • Lawrence McDowell, o f Tatum, Texas, and w ul
witnessed b y several relatives, officer* said.
Constable J.D. McGuire listed mechanical failure as the
probable cause.

DAVIE — About 900 volunteers prepared 900 Thanksgiving
Day dinners at an area btngo hall for the needy, but only 30
people showed up to partake, workers said.
Th e volunteers began looking for someone w ho needed extra
food, giving dinners to Faith Farm and a Broward County Boy
Scout troop. However, late Thursday, the group still had about
100 dinners left.
Volunteer Lee Carrato said the small toumout was the fault
o f hall ow ner Fred Boraer, who sponsored the dinner but tolled

TA M P A — Some 170 years
ago. Richard Meade loaned Un­
cle Sam 65 million to buy a
choice piece o f real estate called
Florida. Now one o f hla heirs la
suggesting the nation pay the
money back.
The collateral on the debt,
notea G eorge Oordon Meade
Easby. a Philadelphia eoclallle
who waa knighted by the Dutch
government for hla charity work,
waa Florida Itself.
Easby Isn't sure he would ever
try to foreclose and become
Florida's landlord, but “ that's
something to think about." he
told Th e Tampa Tribune for
Friday's editions.
However. Easby does figure

ST. PETERSBURG — A new rule limiting the estates o f some
veterans w ho have been declared Incompetent will affect about
900 Florida residents, officials aald.
Under the new Department o f Veterans Affairs provisions,
which went Into effect Nov. 1. Incompetent veterans with no
dependents w ill not be allowed to have an estate worth more
than 629.000.
tf they do, the department could limit their compensation to
no m ote than 600 a month until the veterans have drained
their savings to leas than 610.000.
One o f those Impacted by the rule change la David Wright.
H e waa diagnosed aa a paranoid schisophrenic shortly after
returning from Vietnam. Veterans officials classified him as
100 percent disabled.
His father. Fred Wright, decided to let his son move In with
him to save m oney. David Wright did, eventually saving more
than 660.000. Now. he may lose it under the new rules.
Governmen t officials said veterans, such as Wright, were
saving lame amounts o f money, then dying and leaving the
m oney to M ends and distant relatives.
Officials said thoae people were not Intended to be
compensated and they want to mrke sure the money U spent
on the veterans and no one else.

TA M PA — A national alumni group from Florida AAM
University w ill proceed with a proposed boycott o f several
Tampa area hotels, during the annual Florida Classic football
game, members said.
The hotels drew the wrath of alumni members when they
tried to require Classic tons to pay cash, make advance
deposits and stay a minimum o f two nights.
Th e hotels have since made concessions to the group, but
orgsnirera said It's too late to inform participants of the policy
changes. Hotel representatives Informed the group of the
adjustm enu Nov. 16.
Organizers said they plan tu *o through with the boycott
because they want the hotels to take their concerns seriously.
Th e Florida CTssslc la an annual match between the
predominantly black colleges of Florida AAM University and
Bethune Cookman.

1

Singleton — who served eight y e a n of his
14-year sentence tor raping the hitchhiker,
chopping o ff her arms ana leaving her for
dead in a ditch — waa paroled from prison
In San Quentin. Calif.. In 1967.
His release sparked a storm o f protest in
that stale when authorities tried to find a
town where he could serve his one-year
parole.
The former merchant seaman and twotime divorcee decided to return to Florida.

the government owes his family
Ihe 65 million principle plus
Interest.
Easby said the U.S. govern­
ment owes his family 6300.000
per year in simple interest since
1819. or about 656 mltllan,
According lo Gary Mormlno. a
■ or history at the Uni­
versity o f South Florida. Spain
ceded Florida to the United
Slates not for cash, but to
unburden Itself o f responsibility
for paying 65 million In damages
fr o m I n d ia n r a id s a n d
skirmishes.
Spain was obliged under a
1795 treaty to prever* Florida
Indians from damaging property
oulslde the territory. But Indian
unrest was too widespread to be
contained by ihe Spanish. The

Indians raised havok. and Spain
waa culpable.
W h e n Ih e U n ite d S t a le s
assum ed ow n ersh ip . It also
assumed the debt under the
treaty that sealed the transac­
tio n . T h a t d o c u m e n t, said
Morm lno. p rovid ed that the
U n ite d S ta t e s c o u ld Issu e
“ stock'' If It lacked the cash lo
pay o ff the claims.
Easby claims his ancestor —
who waa the tether o f Civil War
Gen. George Gordon Meade —
bought Up all the stock but was
n e v e r r e p a id . T h e s to c k
purchased by Meade carried 6
percent annual Interest.
In his late 60s. and with no
close heirs. Easby said he would
share any payoff w ith some
distant cousins.

Wlntsr blackouts could leave state shivering
in the dark If another deep freeze descends

Hotels boycotted during football gams

-*» *-whHkwj^

released him at the scene after he signed
misdemeanor citation and agreed to aj
In court in Plant City on Jan. 2.
In September, the Tampa native wasl
released from the Hillsborough County Jail I
after serving two months o f a six-month I
sentence for trying to shoplift a 1 101
disposable camera from a Brandon drug
store In April.

Socialite stakes claim to Florida

iiHHHiipticvn v i i v n n i m i i i i i iifn iiM

t*-*&gt;*&lt;i*Jd

On Friday, a store security guard told
deputies he saw Singleton pick up a while
hat In the men's department and head for
the cash register with his shopping cart.
Singleton paid for some diapers, but had
allegedly rotted up the hat and stuffed It
between his purchase and the shopping cart
handle. He allegedly left the store without
paying for Ihc hat and was stopped. The
Tampa Tribune reported Saturday.
Singleton insisted to deputies that his
name waa really Johnson. He also gave
them the name and telephone number for a
woman whom he Insisted woutd verify his
Identity.
Investigators said the woman turned out
lo be his stsler and she Identified him as
Singleton. He was subsequently cited for
petty theft and resisting arrest without
violence for giving a false name.
Deputies did not take Singleton to (all and

TA M PA — The rolling blackouts that left much
o f Florida shivering In Ihe dark last Christmas
could be repeated this winter If another deep
freeze hits, according to a spokesman for the
Tampa Electric Co.
Last year's problems were caused by unusually
cold weather and the fact that a number of power
stations were out for servicing. Hut even with all
Its plants on line. TECO could not meet the
dem and If sim ilar cold w eather hits, said
spokesman Mike Mahoney.
' " I f the same kind o f weather like lust ycur were
to. come through, yes. there could still be an
emergency where rolling blackouts were neces­
sary." Mahoney said.

Borgo naddor ripo open gas plpallrw
NEW YO RK — A gsa pipeline running along the floor of the
Arthur Kill ruptured Saturday in a barge accident, sending a
funnel o f water Into the air and forcing authorities to close the
busy waterway, the Coast Guard said.
Petty Officer Howard Holmes, a Coast Guard spokesman,
said the barge, owned by the Bouchard Co., was carrying some
sort o f petroleum product.
T h e tugboat waa identified aa the Captain Dan. a vessel
owned by the Dan Ocean Towing, of Tampa, Fla., he said.
Natural gas spewed from the pipeline, owned by Texas
Eastern Corp.. and caused a funnel o f water to rise 15 feet
above the surface o f the water, said Holmes.
“ T h e force ol it was pretty strong.” the officer said.
Th e 18-lnch pipeline, which runs parallel to the Suten Inland
shore, waa tipped open about 3:30 a.m. as a tugboat pushed
the barge through shallow water about one mile south of the
Goethala Bridge. Holmes said.
T h e Coast Guard closed the waterway to marine traffic from
Pralla Island to the Goethala Bridge aa crews worked to contain
the teak, bringing It under control about 9 a.m.. he said.
Fire department officials were at the scene to monitor the
“ explosive poasibUttes," the officer said, adding that it was not
known how m uch gas leaked from (he pipe.

Tw o TECO generators were down during last
Christmas' freeze. Even If they were running,
demand was over 3.200 megawatts, which
exceeded the system ’ s generating capacity,
Mahoney said.
Last winter's problems were blamed on the
shutting down o f plants for routine maintenance
plus unexpected malfunctions. All the plants are
expected to up and running by mid-December,
the utility official said.
But even b o , the system could not meet demand
levels seen during last year’s freeze. That would
mean more outages If the weather repeats Itself.
But because o f reforms Imposed after last year's
problems, the outages would be shorter and more
evenly distributed. Mahoney said.

Deputy made
bomb threats,
Is arrested
T A
M P A A
Hillsborough sheriff's dep­
uty with an addiction to
painkillers haa been ar­
rested for making bomb
threats to pharmacies so he
could steal drugs when the
stores were evacuated.
Raym ond Leo Novltts.
40. was fired Friday after
nine years as a deputy
w h e n h e a d m it t e d to
telephoning 17 threats In
24 days to feed hla drug
habit, said sheriff's Col. H.
Cal Henderson.
Novltla told Investigators
he becam e addicted to
painkillers, particularly the
synthetic codeine Lortab,
after an operation to re­
move hla appendix In July.
He had been on lightduty status until Oct. 20.
when he returned to patrol
d u t y in e a s t e r n
Hillsborough. The first o f a
rash o f bomb threats at
Brandon-area drug stores
started Oct. 31. Henderson
said.
“ He was very remorseful.
It's a sad situation, but It
shows It can happen to
anyone," Henderson said.
NovlUs haa been under
s u r v e illa n c e sin ce la st
w eek .

Tallahassee tradition: snubbing governors
United Praia International_____
TALLAH ASSEE - The Demo­
crats who control Ihe Florida
Legislature showed Gov.-elect
Lawton Chiles last week that
when It com es to snubbing
governors, they can rise above
partisanship.
L e g is la tiv e lea d e rs expect
much better relations with Dem­
ocrat C hiles than w ere ever
enjoyed by Bob Martinez, a
Republican who spent most o f
the past four years feuding with
the Democrat-dominated House
and Senate.
B ut w h e n C h ile s u rg e d
lawmakers to delay a special
session on ethics reform so that
his pet Issue o f campaign financ­

From Unltotf F ra u International Reports

ing reform could be considered
at Ihe same time, they vc —
politely ignored him.
Chiles, who served in the state
Senate 20 years ago. acknowl­
edged to reporters later that
while governors have priorities,
so does the Legislature, und the
two are not always the same.
“ The Legislature Is always
going to work Us own will, and I
think the governor works his
own w ill." Chiles said.
" I t 's easier (dealin g with
Chiles), but we're not going to
Just roll over for anybody, be
they Republican or Democrat,”
said T.K. Wetherell. the new
House speaker. “ The House
never has. and I don’t expect
them to."
The House und Senate clearly

felt obliged to make the ethics
bill a priority. A number of
lawmakers are currently under
Investigation for failure to report
acceptance o f expensive lob­
byist-paid trips. The appearance
that lawmakers profited by their
public positions dogged Incum­
bents during the campaigns.
"T h is Is one we needed to get
behind us." Sen. Tom Brown.
D-Port Orange, said during de­
bate on the ethics bill he helped
draft.
The measure imposed a 5100
limit on gifts from lobbyists,
clarified that trips are he same
as gifts If someone else pays for
them, und banned public of­
ficials from soliciting gifts.
W e Y lh e r c ll an d G w en
Margolls. the new Senate presi­

dent. did toughen the bill after
C h iles com p lain ed an early
version was too weak. And they
promised speedy consideration
o f campaign finance reforms
sought by Chiles.
It was an Improvement over
relations with Martinez, whom
lawmakers claimed was too de­
tached from negotiations over
the details o f state taxes and
spending. Often when Martinez
did get Involved. It was to quash
House-Senate deals, as when the
lawmakers proposed a tax on
soft drinks last spring.
Margolls. who served as ap­
propriations chairwoman for the
past two years, said she dis­
cussed state spending with
Martinez no more than twice
during that period.

TH E W E A TH E R
TALLAHASSEE_ Tha winning
numbsrs drawn Saturday night In
tha Pick 6 LOTTOJackpot wars
6, 1C, 27, 26, &gt;2 and 26.
Tha dally number drawn
Saturday Intha Florida Lottery
Cash 3 game was 1 *2 *2.
Tha winning numbers from
Fridays Fantasy 9 drawing warn

|LOCAL pooacA ST

■XTBMOSO OUTLOOK

Tonight...Fair with a chance o f
patchy fog In the morning. Lows
in the 60s with a southerly wind
at 5* 10 mph.
E xten ded fo re c a s t...P a rtly
cloudy with the lows In the lower
60s Monday warming to near 70
on Wednesday. Highs near 80.

1.6,12.21

1 7&amp;

Today...M ostly sunny with
highs in the low 80s and a
southerly wind at 5 to 10 mph.

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MONDAY
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THURSDAY
FRIDAY
MyCMy 76*16 MyCMy 76*67

STA TISTIC S

Sunday, November 25, 1900
Vol. S3. No. SO

FIs. ZX771.

WEDNESDAY
Bunny 74*66

r

BSACN CONDITIONS
D ayton a Beach: Waves are I
foot and glassy. Current Is sta­
tionary with a water tempera­
ture o f 69 degrees. N ew Sm yrna
Beach: W aves are 2 feet amt
semi glassy. Current Is to the
north, with a water temperature
o f 61) degrees.

SUN D A Y :
•OLUNAJt T A B L E i Min. 11:10
a.m.. 11:40 p.m.; MaJ. 5:00 a.m..
5:25 p.m. T ID E S : D a y to n a
Beach: highs. 12:39 a.m.. 1:02
p.m.: lows. 6:39 a.m., 7:22 p.nt.:
N ew S m y rn a Beach: highs.
12:44 a.m.. 1:07 p.m.: lows. 6:44
a.m.. 7:27 p.m : Cocoa Beach:
highs. 12:59 a.m.. 1:22 p.m.;
lows. 6:59 a.m.. 7:42 p.m.

BOATING
S t . A n g u » tin e t o J n p l t e r I n le t
Today...Wind becoming south
to southwest 10 knots. Seas 2
feel. Hay and Inland waters a
light chop.

The temperature at 5 p.m.
Saturday was 71 degrees and
Friday's overnight low was 61.
us recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
C S a tu rd a y's h igh ...............78
u B arom etric preaanrc.30.0h
R e la tiv e H u m id ity ....84 pet
□ W in d s .............. N o rth 6 mph
□ R a in fa ll.......................0 2 la .
□ T o d a y 's anaaat.....9 :2 9 p.m .
T o m o rro w 's su n rise..6:565

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T o n ig h t ...W in d so u th to
southeast 5 lo 10.knots. Seas 2
feel or less. Hay and Inland
waters smooth

I t « r i m ull.

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■ P H H

Sanford Harold. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, November 29 tf$0 — SA

Average home value
rises m Lake Mary
Nudt IntnKltr discovered under tod
SANFORD — City police who ream lad to ■ burglary scene at
36 Rock Cove Court. SanJbrd. aald they found a nude Intruder
under a bed there at about 3:40 a.m. Saturday.
That brought a charge o f burglary to an occupied dwelling
Tor Ricky Lee Murphy. 32. 306 Red Coach C ourt Sanford. The
ow n erofth e dwelling aald Murphy did not have hla perm laalon

A rvttl made In auto burglary
SANFORD - Michael John Nowak. 19. 3033 Hartwell Ave..
Sanford haa been charged with burglary to a vehicle and grand
theft In connection with a Sanford police caae.
Police reported fingerprints found on the burglarised car at
Franklin Anna Apartments, Florida Avenue, after the Nov. 12
burglanr helped lead to the arrest Friday o f Nowak at hla house.
Jj* *■ c" * r* w* wtth burglary. Items with a combined value of
•690. Including tools were stolen from the car, police said.

Seminole County DUI arrests
SANFORD — The following persona lace a charge o f driving
under the Influence o f alcohol! DUT) In Seminole County:
•Jam es Edward Pleasant, 18.3413 Summerlin A ve.. Sanford,
was arrested at 12:17 a.m. Saturday after his car w as In an
accident on U.S. Highway 17-92. near Sanford.
•R aym ond Albert fteers. 38. 677 Morning Dove Circle. Lake
Mary, w as arrested at 11:26 p.m. Friday after driving
erratically on County Road 437 near County Hom e Road.
Sanford. He la also charged with reckless driving.
•M ark A. Simmons, 38, 3106 N. Lake Drive. Sanford, was
arrested at 11:32 p.m. Friday after hla car waa clocked
traveling 70 mph on U.S. Highway 17-92. south o f Sanford.

C u t T re e s

...lor CHRISTMAS

steadtty In the six figure bracket
for most o f 1990.
LAKE M A R Y - The value o f
the average home being built in
• l a o J o b etween September and
October o f this year, according to
etty records, m om ot m e new
construction la centered In the
Country C lub Oaks and Tim acuan areaa o f the city.
According to figures released
earlier this month, nine new
single fondly raktentlal buUdtng
permits w ere taken out during
October In Lake Mary ranging In
value from 894,000 to $170,900.
T h e average value of the homes
is 8123,1ML
In September. 11 permits were
tak en out fo r single fa m ily
homes with an average value o f
•106,062. Individual new hom e
values ranged from $70,000 to
•115.000during that month.
Although the number o f new
residential unit budding permit
a p p lic a tio n s haa flu ctu a ted
through last summer, a v e n g e
new home values have remained

Lake Mary also reported 10
building permits taken out dur­
in g O ctob er for co m m ercial
twUMlnf
Including all permit fees paid
for all types o f budding permits.
Including residential and com­
mercial. as w e f as those for
im p r o v e m e n t s on e a la t ln g
homes and budnessese during
October a lon e Increased the
city's coffers fay just under 830
thousand.
In comparison, October figures
for the C ity o f Sanford allowed
seven single family residential
budding permits taken out. for
an average value o f •43.267.
T h e preced in g m onth, there
were three permits, averaging
•62,006.
For the ftrat 10 m onths o f '
1990, Sanford haa reported a
total o f 111 budding permits
issued, w ith the dollar value of
the average home at $64,330.
The total fees received by
Sanford fo r all permits Issued
during October came to $33,460.

The Franklin Global Opportunity Income Fund
seeks the highest returns available aroundthe
world froma portfolio of foreign and domestic
corporate and government securities.
Ibu could benefit from:

Four farm workers die in Lake County collision;
28 lives lost in accidents during holiday period
TALLAHASSEE — Twenty-eight people
have died on the state's roadways over the
holiday counting period. Including four farm
workers killed In an accident near Eustis,
Florida Highway Patrol officers said Satur­
day.
State officials had predicted that 42 people
would loae their lives during the official
holiday traffic fatality counting period that
began at 6 p.m. Wednesday and enda at
midnight Sunday. Last year. 41 people died.
At 1:40 p.m. EST Saturday, the last
reported fatality had occurred In Orange
County at 2:30 a.m. when Alberta A.
Bancosce. 54. lost control o f her car on State
Road 600 and slammed Into a concrete
structure, killing her Instantly.
The Friday Lake County accident Involv­
ing the farm workers was the most deadly
single crash. Seven others were also Injured
In that wreck.
Investigators said foggy conditions con­

tributed to the accident. A van carrying the
farm workers waa sldeawlped at an In­
tersection by a sand truck that ripped away
a huge piece of metal from the van's tear
and sent the vehicle careening for several
hundred yards, spilling Its occupants.
The farmworkers w ere from the Simmons
Labor Cam p In Putnam County.
A cam p spokesman indentlfled the dead
aa Marlon Lovelace. Robert Odum. Curtis
Cannon and Alphonao Marshall. State
troopers were withholding confirmation of
names rending notification o f next o f kin.
The driver of the tractor-trailer rig was
Identified as Steven W illiam Cota. 30. o f east
Lake County. He said he was unable to stop
In time when he saw the flashing red light
and stop sign.
The Orlando Sentinel reported Saturday
that the camp, owned b y Willie Lee 'Buddy*
Simmons, was being Investigated by the
U.S. Labor Department over wages and
transportation safety Issues.
Authorities said the van's seating —

planks on concrete blocks — violated federal
standards requiring colldiy attached seat­
ing. Additionally.- federal officials said
Simmons lacked the necessary permits to
transport workers.
Several pedestrians also have been killed.
Including a 80-year-old man struck b y a car
as he attempted to cross a Dade County
street and a 30-year-old woman — also from
Dade County — who died from injuries
sustained when she stepped Into the
roadway aa she got out o f a broken down
car.
Th e 35th recorded death o f the holiday
weekend was a 42-year-old Lee County
woman who died Friday on her birthday
afer she lost control o f her car and It
overturned, throwing her Into the roadway.
Other accidents claimed the lives o f an
unborn baby girl and her 18- year-old
mother, a 16-year-old youth, a 4-year-old
Scbrlng boy. and an 11-year-old Ormond
Beach girl.

Cancer Society offers gift for golfers
iviaespm nuip
Harold staff wrltar
SANFORD - The American
Cancer Society la offering the
perfect holiday gift for the golfer
in the family, a card that will
waive green fees at 225 golf
courses throughout the state o f
Florida.
For a minimum donation o f
S25 per card, this gift certificate
will allow 450 rounds o f g o lf
with free green fees at 225
courses, including unlim ited
play at 95 of them. Golf carts are

Cell us today
for a free
prospectus!

required at the courses, and are area. ss w ell as support for
‘ research program s cu rrently
not Included In the offer.
Fourteen o f the courses are underway.
The golf card la available at
l o c a t e d in t h e Orange/Semlnole/Osceola County the American Cancer Society
area, w ith an additional 13 office. 200 W. First Street, San­
courses In Volusia County and ford. In the Sun Bank building
seven In Brevard County. The Monday through Friday from 9
rest Include courses throughout a.m. until noon, and from 1 until
the state.
3 p.m.
The golfer gift card ts an
While the minimum amount la
$25 per card, the society hopes annua) offering of the American
the donation will be larger. The Cancer Society's Sanford/Lake
donation enables the American Mary unit.
For further Information, call
Cancer Society to provide many
services to cancer patients and Maggie Elliott at the society
their families in the two-clty office at 322-0849.

Do You Like Wasteful Spending
o f Taxpayers Money?
My opponent voted to pay Lake Mary $2.2 million of
taxpayers money, to take Sanford's reclaimed water 750,000 gallons per day for 25 years - and paid
$500,000 to pipe the water to Lake Mary.
JUT

^L ass MJuSlI

jJLa

wJEmmaSl

If iKatlvfU W O W I i l y f f I n 9 WrQTwfj TUQj w ill

PUBLIC NOTICE
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
BLOCK GRANT PROGRAM

IS THIS'SEASONED* EXPERIENCE?
It is giving taxpayer's money away. No wonder the city is
in a "Crunch". This check is a copy of the first payment to
Lake Mary.

SEMINOLE COUNTY HAS ADOPTED TH E FOLLOW ING STANDARDS FOR
THE PURPOSE O F ASSU R IN G TH A T R ESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES
REHABILITATED W ITH COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG)
FUNDS ARE RENTED TO LOW OR MODERATE INCOME PERSONS AT
AFFORDABLE RENTS.
1. ALL SINGLE UNIT STRUCTURES M UST BE OCCUPIED BY LOW OR
MODERATE INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, ALL DUPLEX STRUCTURES MUST
HAVE AT LEAST ONE OF THEIR DW ELLING UNITS OCCUPIED BY A LOW
AND MODERATE INCOM E HOUSEHOLD. AND ALL STRUCTURES WITH
MORE THAN TWO DW ELLING UNITS MUST HAVE AT LEAST 51 % OF THEIR
DW ELLIN G U N ITS O C C U PIED BY LOW OR M ODERATE INCO M E
HOUSEHOLDS.
! 2. LOW AND MODERATE INCOM E HOUSEHOLD, OR LOWER INCOME
HOUSEHOLD, MEANS A HOUSEHOLD HAVING AN INCOME NO T GREATER
I THAN TH E SECTION 8 LOWER INCOME LIM ITS ESTABLISHED BY THE U.S.
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AND AVAILABLE
FROM THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT SECTION OF THE SEMINOLE
COUNTY PLANNING OFFICE UPON REQUEST. GENERALLY, THOSE
HOUSEHOLDS EARNING 80% OR LESS O F THE ORLANDO METROPOLITAN
STATISTICAL AREA’S M ED IA N FA M ILY IN C O M E, ADJUSTED FOR
HOUSEHOLD SIZE, ARE CONSIDERED LOWER INCOM E HOUSEHOLDS.
3. AFFORDABLE RENTS ARE RENTS W H IC H DO NOT EXCEED 35% OF
GROSS HOUSEHALD IN C O M E OF T H E LOWER INCOM E RENTEROCCUPANT OF THE CDBG-ASSISTED DWELLING UNIT.

_____________________________ k - ___________________________________________
I I . j . SAVIMOS BONDS
THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT

FQf H I

City o f Sanford, Florida
71 i*

027488
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Another check of the same amount will be paid to Lake
Mary when they pull the switch to turn on the water - this
is public record at Sanford City Hall.

THINK ABOUT IT, SANFORD!
VO TE DECEMBER 4

MARTHA YANCEY
Sln&gt; ( t a r s

l b o o t S a n fo r d ...a n d

) on!

*

�«A — Sanlont HsrSW, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novambar 29, 1980

Editorials/ Opinions
R e p o rt cards can harm se lf esteem
out o f school, drug and alcohol addictions,
teenage pregnancy and other delinquent acts.
Poor M lf-esteem Is the comm on variable
permeating the personality structure o f all of
these children. Children with poor self esteem
may feel that they have never been accepted,
respected or belonged to the "In group” at
school. School may nave been a great source of
pain and humiliation. Their behaviors at school,
which have been the source o f problems with
teachers and other school personnel, repa-ent
defensive activities to protect whatever shred of
"e g o ” they had left.

Ackn ow ledging that m any, m any yocn g
Floridians were experiencing failure In kin­
dergarten and first grade, legislation waa passed
targeted to rectify this situation. It waa re­
co gn ised that failu re at the initiation o f
children’s school life might cause Incalculable
damage to their self-esteem.
Self-esteem are feelings an Individual has
about his value and worth. It Is a self-evaluation
that reflects his sense o f acceptance, belonging
and accomplishment aa an Individual.

E D IT O R IA L S

Hell in Guatemala
Prod ded b y c u ts in U S. e c o n o m k an d
m ilita ry aid and th e threat o f m o re to c o m e
Just a m o n th b e fo r e n a tio n a l e le c tio n s ,
G u atem alan a u th orities h a v e a rre sted fiv e
soldiers in co n n ec tio n w ith the m u rd e r last
Ju n e o f an A m e ric a n Innkeeper w h o liv e d in
Guatem ala. T h e U .S . E m b assy sa y s It is
"s a tis fie d ” w ith th e action taken so far.
T h e re 's little rea son It sh ou ld be. g iv e n
G u atem ala's a p p a llin g h u m an -righ ts record
and th e u nlikely p ro s p e ct o f rea l Justice b e in g
ren dered In a c o u n try that has se en s o little o f
It.
A s in m ost o f C e n tra ) A m e rica . It's a lo n g
w ay from arrest t o co n vic tio n w h e n It co m es
to hum an-rights a b u s e s b y a n y o n e w ea rin g a
u niform : No G yatp m a lan a rm y o ffic e r e v e r
has been co n victed o f a n y o f thou sands o f
political killings In G u atem ala. I f It happ en s
now. It w ill b t o n ly o u t o f fear o f lo s in g U .S.
aid. A s one em b ittered G u atem alan politician
put It: " T h e y kin o n e g rin g o a n d th e w h o le
w orld m oves, but th e y U ll G u atem a lan s e v e r y
d ay and nothing h a p p e n s ."
F or 36 years? sin c e a U .S.-engineered cou p
o u s t e d an e le c t e d le ft is t g o v e r n m e n t .
G uatem ala has b e e n run eith er d ire ctly b y
m ilita ry dictators o r. a s now. b y civ ilia n s w ith
n o e ffe c tiv e p o w e r. D u rin g th o se y ea rs,
hum an-rights g ro u p s estim ate, m o re than
100.000 persons h a v e disappeared — p re­
su m ably also killed — a t the hands o f secu rity
forces, which h a v e u sed a leftist in su rgen cy
as a n excuse to m u rd er vltu ra lly a n y o n e
su sp ected o f b e in g a n ti-re g im e o r e v e n
prom otin g social p ro g ra m s seen a s th rea ten ­
in g to an en tren ched oligarchy. T h e v ic tim s
Include thousands o f Indians w h o a e pcrsecution borders on gen o cid e.
U.S. m ilitary a id . cut o ff d u rin g th e C arter
adm inistration, w a s resu m ed -b y th e R ea g a n
adm inistration In 1986 after th e elecU on o f a
c iv ilia n president and a sharp d r o p In political
m urders. But rec en tly the lev el o f violen ce,
In c lu d in g the m u rd ers o f a n u m b e r o f
candidates for office, has escalated so m uch
that the Bush adm lnlstrtlon has cu t non*
letha) m ilitary aid from $7 m illion to $3 .3
m illion . Unless th e re 's a m a jo r Im p rovem en t
In G u atem ala's h u m a n righ ts perform an ce,
an y a m ou n t Is too m u ch .
W a sln gton 's tou g h new line recogn izes the
fact th at V in d o C erezo , the civ ilia n president
e le cted In 1985 a fter 17 years o f dictatorship,
Is pow erless to c o n tro l the m ilita ry 's abuses.
M oreover, the fie ld o f can d idates In n e x t
m o n th 's presidential election Is such an
a p p a llin g collection o f right-w ingers — m ili­
ta ry officers and corru p t politicians — that
w h o e v e r w ins Is lik e ly to do little If a n y th in g
to stop the b loodsh ed In the m ost violencep la gu ed country In th e Am ericas.
M ost U.S. aid. m o re than $ 1 0 0 m illion a
yea r, is In the fo rm o f econ om ic assistance
th a t's badly n eeded In a cou n try w h ere 70
p ercen t o f the p e o p le live in p o verty . Su bject
to s tr in g e n t c o n tr o ls , that a id o u g h t o
co n tin u e. A s fo r m ilita ry a id. th e U nited
S ta te s m ust n o t a c c e p t th e p ro m is e o f
yet-to-be-seen Justice In the k illin g o f on e
A m e r ic a n as e v id e n c e that G u a te m a la ’ s
m u rd erou s m ilita ry is so m eh ow reform in g
Itself. C u t It off.

Berry's World

Th e sallency o f self-esteem to the learning
process has been documented. Research con­
ducted on the east coast and the midwest found

homogeneously grouped because It was er­
roneously believed that children with simitar
abilities learned best when grouped together.

that approxim ately 00 percent o f children
entering first grade rated high in self-esteem i the
percentage dropped drastically to 30 percent by

Slavln in 1087 reported that tracking In
elementary school had little benefit for student
achievement. This conclusion was also sup­
ported by Paul S. George. University o f Florida.

third grade and only five percent by high school.
Children’s self-esteem declined aa they traveled
through the school system.
Research also revealed that no single event
shatter* a child's self-esteem as much as a poor
report card. This is easy to understand since the
child feels he is doubly in trouble with the
significant others In hts world, his parents and
his teacher.
T r a d it io n a lly ,

c h ild r e n

have

been

He Indicated that "th e effect o f tracking on
Individual and classroom groups effectively is
powerfully negative, especially for students In
low tracks."
Children know when they are In the low track.
Year after year In the low track produces great
damage to self esteem and leads to self defeating
behaviors.
These behaviors are exhibited by: dropping

F o r t u n a t e l y , S e m i n o l e C o u n t y Is
heterogeneously grouping children at the ele­
mentary level. In addition, the newly adopted
Language Arts Program stresses cooperative
learning, which la more conducive to building
positive self-esteem than a com pet el Ivc learning
environment.
Building self-esteem Is the responsibility of
parents and educators. Self-esteem la that
quality that makes a person willing to take risk,
to accept his Imperfections and still consider
himself worthwhile, and to confidently persevere
In the face o f obstacles. School success can be
more accurately predicted by determining how a
child feels about himself than from his In­
telligence quotient.

JACK ANDERSON

Europe snubbing
our tourist dollars

THEKOTM6 GANG?
VEAH.THEVRE STILL
WONG OUT-‘COURSE
TUlOOf TWEM QUIT,
ANDTHEOTHER1WEE
ARE AUFUU.VBORED.

LETTERS
Thanks for recognition
A s one o f the founders, several times past
Chairman, and currently member ex officio of
the Sem inole County Veterans Advisory
Council, I wish to extend m y wannest and
most sincere congratulations to The Sanford
Herald for the outstanding coverage provided
regarding Vertcan’s Day. celebrated locally on
12 November. Your thoughtfulness In In­
terviewing Bud Tobin in his “ W sr Room ." and
obtaining candid Interviews with two naval
veterans. Al Tounzen and Dana Roach afforded
readers a rare opportunity to understand the
personal feelings of men who served in several
wars.
In Navy parley. BRAVO ZULU!!
In spite of your efforts, participation o f nearly
twenty veterans organizations, and three units
from the U.S. Naval Training Center, there
w a s. u n fo r tu n a te ly , a tre m e n d o u s
lack...people, particularly our youngsters In
school. Recognizing that budgets and holidays
are tight. It nevertheless occurs to me that as a
course in practical freedom and democracy, al
the very least field trips could and should be
scheduled to Memorial and Veterans Day.
Without these two holidays. In all probability,
we would be unable to celebrate or recognize
any others.
What bctlcr opportunity la offered to and for
our young women and men In school to view
and hear veterans representing all wars since
and including The Great War. the War to end
all wars. WWU. Korea. Vietnam. Granada.
Panama, and PUEBLO...certainly U is our
responsibility as adults to continue our Interest
and education responsive to the millions of
dead and wounded who participated In the
wards mentioned above. It is even a greater
responsibility w e en joy to educate our
youngsters. Unfortunately, they too. In all
probability, will someday be veterans. Let
these "to be" veterans, the most important
resource the United States has, team some­
thing o f their hertiage from the women and
men who served so well, preserving that
heritage.
Our grade, middle, and high school students
sh ou ld be a fford ed the op p o rtu n ity to
participate in these most Important holidays.
And once the opportunity IS afforded, we
adults should ensure that the opportunity IS
prevailed upon.
John B. Clark
.
Lake Mary

Longwood was *dupad’
"Oh whut tangled webs we w eave." What
say ye now Longwood? Reality set In like a
blow to the back o f the head to many, when it
dawned on them, they had been duped and arc

now faced with digging themselves out o f a
political and financial quagmire! So willing
were they, to listen to the inexperienced,
uninformed challengers, who touted the city
should pay as you go. they sat In stunned
silence, amtd the shouts, at last night's city
commission meeting as their fair haired boys
IPaul Lovcstrand. and Gary Hcfter) attempted
to back-track on their campaign promises.
Who's goling to ball them out...obviously not
the man with a "p la n ." since the Hardy
majority took care o f that when they ousted
City Administrator. Mike Abels, last Friday. As
the old saying goes* "P a y me now. or pay me
later, but soorcr or later yu’rc going to pay!"
Guess what folks, despite warnings by many.
Including myself, you elected two, who. along
with Hank Hardy, are going to try and keep the
ve ry tax m oney you opposed. Is there
something w rorg with this picture? You aren't
getting redevelopment, you aren’t getting your
utility problem corrected, and you apparently
aren't going to gel your money, back either.
Gary Hcfter attempted to lay the blame on
the past commission by claiming. "W e have to
use this (redevelopment tax) to ball us out of
w hat the previou s com m ission d id " —
WRONG! That may have worked In the past,
but not this time. Evidently he didn't bother
doing his homework, or he would have known
the ongoing utility problem was literally bom
out o f lack o f planning and foresight several
years ago! Therefore, his lame attempt to point
at the past commission won't hold water (no
un Intended). But. if he feels he must point.
e nerd only to look to his right for one o f the
culprits. It might behoove him to oak Mr.
Hardy (the longest sitting commissioner), what
he did to correct the problem — Zip! Logic,
coupled with com m on, sense, dictates you
don't simply treat symptoms — you seek
cures, and you don't send In a ditch digger to
do brain surgery. Unless o f cL'-rsc. you’re In
Longwood.

S

Gee guys, (particularly you. Hank), what’s all
this garbage about being surprised by the
utility problem, where have you been the past
several years, didn’ t you bother reading the
newspapers, or the proposed budget, and what
do you suppose Dr.Abels and the majority of
the past commission was trying to correct,
despite your continued Interference? Could It
be good buddy Jim m y Ross's "pay as you go"
system, you've so dearly rmbraced?
At any rale folks, here's yo^r opportunity io
put your money where your mouth is — Just
squeeze It In right next to your feet!
Have fun!
Carolyn Ending
Longwood

WASHINGTON - Th e dwindling value of
th e d o lla r Is k e ep in g m any dedicated
Europhlles at home, but not Just because the
dollar buys so much less In Europe than It did
in the good old day*. True, the hapless buck,
com bined with some European Inflation,
means that a cup o f coffee that cost 75 cents
tw o years ago Is now $ 1.50. and the modest
hotel room that went
for $50 Is now $70 or
more. But what has
sa d d en ed som e
A m e rica n s and Ir­
ritated others Is not
their reduced buying
power, but the “ snub
fa ctor” when they
p r o d u c e d o lla r s ,
traveler’s checks or
A m e r ic a n - b a te d
credit cards.
Some restaurants,
s to r e s and h o te ls
have put a surcharge fs o m e de­
on American credit
dicated Amer­
cards. Others refuse
ican skiers are
o u t r i g h t to t a k e
putting the
them , fearing that
bucks back in
U .S . fin a n c ia l In ­
the United
s t i t u t i o n s a re s o
States.g
shaky that payments
might suddenly
cease. Tellers In some banks are patronizing
when dollars or U.S. traveler’s checks are
presented for exchange. "You must feel
a w fu l." they say. "T h e rate Is down today."
By contrast, the banks are all smiles when
Germans or Japanese appear with their
strong currencies. Europeans say that the
"u g ly Americans'* o ' years past created a
clim ate in which today's Americans arc
getting the backlash. The widespread con­
tempt for the dollar Is having an effect. Some
dedicated American skiers, who used to make
regular trips to the slopes o f Europe, are
putting the bucks back in the United States.
In Colorado and Utah. Americana are not
treated like impoverished immigrants. And
they w ill swear the snow is better anyway.
If American tourists stay away because
they feel snubbed, some Western European
tourists are also staying away because their
Interests are being drawn elsewhere.
Young Western Europeans. In the past,
used their vacations to tour their own region.
Now the fad Is to sec what has been behind
the Iron Curtain for years — Eastern Europe
and the Soviet Union. Their sturdy francs,
deutschmarks and llres get them farther
afield than ever, ^ but the main draw Is
curiosity.
For years they have heard the communist
nations boast about their workers* paradise.
Now the young people are going In legions to
find out for themselves, encouraged by travel
a g e n t s In M o sco w . P ra g u e , W a rsa w .
Budapest, and even Bucharest and Sophia.
Those returning tell o f optimistic people but
grim, cold realities.

‘Pswns’ deserve visitors
T h e A m e rica n r e la tiv e s o f Sadd am
H u ssein ’ s hostages are agonizing over
whether to accept his Invitation for them to
visit their captive loved ones for the holidays.
The State Department compounded their
agony by advising against the visits, saying
the relatives were lust pawns in Saddam's
public relations plan. It isn’ t fair to place that
burden on the backs o f those who already are
carrying more than their share o f heartache
over the Persian Gulf crisis.
The relatives should visit the hostages and
let Saddam make o f It what he will. The world
knows better.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
L o ite rs to tlit- c d lln r an- w elcom e. A ll lo ite rs
m u s i tx* signed. In e lu d c the address &lt;&gt;l I lie*
w r ite r a n d .» d a y tim e telephone n u m b e r.
1.o tte rs sh o u ld tx- o n a s in g le subjei t a m i lxas b r ie f as |XMSlblt*. L e tte rs are sunjeet to
e d itin g .

�i

V

Sanford HuM, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novsmbf 2S. HOP — SA

Yams
r w P i f i 1A
form er U niversity o f Florida
footall coach who later coached
the Sanford semi-pro Black Chits
in the late 193(&gt;i was the late
Sanford attorney and municipal
fudge, S.A.B. Wilkinson. The
o ld e s t o f t h e s ix O d h a m
brothers. Billy, and I organized
the Black Cats and we were able
to get the Judge to consent to
coach the team.
Speaking o f the Judge, as he
was always called, there are
many old timers who remember
that for a couple o f years he
supervised a w eekly boxing
p rogra m
fo r k id s a n d
teen agers.
A bunch o f us

you asters found a door open Into
an abandoned warehouse on the
northeast comer o f Ehn and
Fourth Street. We found the
electricity was still on. A couple
o f our guys got Into an argu­
ment. W e found some rope, set
up a boxing ring, and let'em
battle It out. The loser said he’d
be bock next week to fight i
The following week a hill
appeared. When the bout #aa
over more challenges were made
and more fights ensued.
One evening Judge Wilkinson
walked by (he lived only three
blocka away) and heard all the
noise. He came In. took charge
and supervised the weekly box­

ing programs for quite some
tim e . S t a n d in g ro o m o n ly
crowds o f kids, teenagers and
adults were on hand week after
week.
1 recall one o f the moot out­
standing bouts ever. One night
one o f the Odham boys. Warren,
a hefty youngster challenged a
kid named V oile W illiams Jr.
E v e r y b o d y c o n s id e r e d It a
m is m a tc h a n d e x p e c t e d
Williams would be maimed for
life. At the opening bed. however. Williams cam e out throwing
punches with both flats that all
Odham could d o was wait for
W illiam s to stop to get his
breath. But W illiam s didn’t stop.

F o r th ree ro u n d s W illia m s
mauled Odham. I don't thnk
Odham ever threw a punch as be
tried to protect himself. Williams
won a rousing unanimous de­
cision. He retired undefeated.
The Williams boy w e’re talk­
in g about la n ow V o ile A.
WUIIams Jr., retired attorney,
leg
is la to r and circu it court
legist)

turned down the "Green Penny"
1A
In 1908 when commissioners
•87 million pledged to spend It for road
will be needed for the road- beautification. The penny would
bulldlng program.
raise about 81.3 million annu­
The remainder o f the deficit ally for the county, according to
am ount w ill be needed fo r Information provided by the
drainage and other county
Dunty iserv­ state Advisory Council on In­
ices that w ill have to be up- tergovernmental Relations.
graded to meet the provisions o f
Both Grtndlc and Stone said
the state requirements.
they’d be willing to support a
County officials will know by provision to allow commission­
Dec. 10 how much money will ers to impose the penny gsa tax
be needed for each o f the next with a "super m ajority" vote o f
five years. Until then, only the the commission, meaning at
totals ore known. County staff Is least four o f five county commis­
currently preparing a year-by­ sioners would have to approve
year needs analysis and poten­ the tax.
tial revenue sources to meet
Commissioners also can ask
those needs.
voters to approve a balf-cent or
Although commissioner Fred penny sales tax Increase for up
Streetman said the state may to 13 years for purchases less
relax the requirements as the than 85.000. Recently sought by
state’s econom y levels, both Sheriff John Polk, the "Copper
Seminole County lawmakers say Penny" failed miserably In the
they would not support such polls earlier this month when
changes to the landmark 1985 Polk sought the revenues for a
growth management taw.
Jail expansion and new ad­
" I ’ m opposed to softening ministration building.
growth management and con­
Voters also soundly defeated
currency in genera).’ ’ Grtndlc the same sales tax in 1967 when
said. "Although there may be co m m ission ers proposed to
room for some minor adjust­ spend revenues for the Seminole
ment. I don’ t see a need for County Expressway and several
major changes ,;ow ."
other road projects.
" I ’m not amenable to gutting
The sales tax. with the cum­
concurrency." Stone said.
bersome title "L ocal Govern­
County officials have few op­ ment Infrastructure Surtax."
tions available to them. Property can be used for a variety of
taxes currently raise about $8 governm ent needs. Including
million per year, but are paid by road construction. Tax revenues
everyone. Portions of the deficit must be shared with the cities
will be created to provide serv­ unless they agree to allow the
ices to unincorporated residents.
county to use all the money.
The county has one penny o f
Countywide, a penny sales tax
gasoline tax available but that Is estimated to generate about
requires voter approval. Voters •34.7 million during 1991. ac­

cording to AC IR Information. If
shared am ong the cities and
county, the county would collect
about 815.6 m illion during 1991
and the balance o f about 89
million would be shared among
the cities.
Although efforts to pass the
sales tax nave failed twice. Stone
says voters w ill approve it Is
commissioners show them the
need Is true.
" I f you approach It correctly,
you can pass things." Stone
said.

ices knd road maintenance. As a
charter county, commtaslonere
can Impose a tax on utility
sendees such as electricity, tele­
phone and water provided to
unincorporated residents.
The amount the county can
raise from the tgx was not
available from the Seminole
County Office o f Management
and Budget th is week. But
Sarasota and Volusia counties,
counties similar in size to Semi­
nole County, each raised about
80 million in utility taxes in
1988, officials from those coun­
ties said.
.
v
Grindle and Stone said they &gt; •
were also unwlDlng to grant
counties other new revenues
such a transportation utility fee
proposed by a W inter Park
SytoByJwSan
engineer earlier this year. Chuck Sslh Britton gats wst at • festival booth.
Burdick, a former engineer with
th e firm B oyer-S In glelon ft
Associates, proposed the fees in
help counties and cities to raise C s a tia s s d from P a g e 1A
for the party In the hand bit;
the money needed for deficient
dressed in a Pilgrim cos­ passed out to pu blicize the
r o a d s a n d t r a n s p o r t a t io n
event. " I f w e care enough to
tume and carrying a bullhorn,
systems.
break the back o f our drug
opened up the various games
Burdick said a monthly fee of and urged people to get Involved
problems, then w e as a commu­
85 to 610 for each resident In In the activities.
nity must get Involved. Please
Central Florida could raise the
rem em ber that Just like the
6338 million or more needed to
"I'm a bit disappointed over
Pilgrims of old made sacrifices
Improve roads and transit for the turnout," Cline said. "W hen
for the freedom they received,
Seminole, Orange and Osceola we did this around Valentine's
w e need freedom today from
Counties. Orlando is currently Day we had over 300 people.”
dru g abuse. W e need their
considering the fee to help pay Attendance at the gathering,
courage and sacrificial efforts to
for road maintenance.
get It."
however, numbered well over
While Grindle and Stone say 200 and as the afternoon wore
such a concept remains an on. more passers-by were stop­
Cline, who was responsible for
option. It Is one they are not
ping to Join In the celebration.
building all the booths, games
w illing to consider until the
The party also featured free and the float, was pleased at
county has exhausted all other
hot
dogs and soft drinks, with y esterd a y ’ s large turnout o f
fund-raising opportunities al­
candy being awarded for such children between the ages o f 7
ready granted by lawmakers.
games as throwing a wet sponge and 15. the ages where strong
at a person In the window o f a Impressions and habits arc first
formulated. He hoped they will
“ c r a c k h o u s e , " b u r s t in g
rem em ber the theme o f the
•
balloons,
and
the
"Dunk-aice. H e said he might "have to
event, and Join In saying no to
say something" If someone tried Pusher" water war game.
drugs.
Cline
summed
up
the
reason
to do that.

County

Mail

Coatlaaad from Fags 1A

same
amount as It would be to mall It
I within the United States.
At Wrap N* Mall, a packaging
shipping store at 2504-S.
rnch Ave.. Sanford, manager
|Prank L e w is and his w ife
idra. who owns the store, said
Ey wanted to make things a
Jttle easier for their customers
f with loved ones "over there.” At
.the store, customers can fax
(letters to their loved ones.

"And we wanted to let the
soldiers over there know that
w e’re behind them." he said.
So far. he said, they’ve only
had three or four takers on the
offer, but he expected the num­
bers would rise as Chlstmas gets
closer.
“ It’ll get over there today." he
said noting, however, that there
could be no guarantees made as
to the swiftness with which the
military would distribute the
letters, especially to their remote
posts.

But on a suggestion from
S tre e tm a n a n a o th e r com mtsaonen the state should allow
counties to increase taxes by
four to five cents. Stone had this
warning: " I f the people turn
down a penny gas tax. It’s kind
o f hard for m e to approve a new
gas tax when the voters said
no.
Grin die agrees. He said he
does not think the county needs
additional gasoline taxes to meet
road money shortfalls. Grtndlc is
preparing legislation that would
create a 8500.000 test program
In Central Florida that would
allow people to rent vans from
the state for 81 annually in
return for pledges to transport at
le a s t p e o p le t o w o rk each
workday.
In short. Grtndlc said he’d
ra th e r bu y p e o p le va n s to
carpool and reduce traffic on
roads than to give counties more
money to widen those roads.
The county has one other
untapped revenue source that
might assist with providing serv­

"I'm sure M's a lot faster than
the m all." he said.
He said the few customers who
have come in to take advantage
o f the o ffe r sin ce the sign
advertising It went up on the
com er o f French Avenue and
25th Street last week, have
transmitted short one- or twopage letters to the Middle East.
He said they haven't had to
put any limits on the number of
pages people m ay send because
the customers have not tried to
take advantage o f the free aervY

»

LINDA ELLIS
Mark L. Beer. 68, 363 Palm
V a lle y D riv e . O v ie d o , d ied
Thursday at his residence. Bom
Jan. 17. 1922. In West Virginia,
he moved to Central Florida
from Elkins. W.Va.. in 1978. He
was a retired sales supervisor for
Flav-O-RIch Dairies Inc., Or­
lando. and a Protestant. He was
a Navy veteran o f World War II.
Survivors Include wife. Rita F.;
daughter. Tam a Lee Kltzmlller.
Paradise. Calif.; brother, Rex W.,
Orlando: sister. Pauline Ibson,
Nashville. Tenn.: two grand­
children.
C o x -P a rk e r C a rey H and
Funeral Home. Winter Park, in
charge of arrangements.

GEORGE W.CURCIO
George W. Curclo. 66. 515
Polaris Loop. Casselberry, died
Wednesday at Florida Hospital,
Altamonte Springs. Bom Aug. 6,
1924. In Brooklyn. N.Y.. he
moved to Casselberry from Long
Island. N.Y., In 1972. He was a
retired Insurance agent for John
Hancock Insurance Co. and a
Catholic. He was a member and
past officer o f the VFW.
Survivors Include wife. Antlonette M.; son. George, Or­
lando; daughter. Janet Ruiz.
Winter Park: sisters. Josephine
Sanlora. Tess Perry’. Phllomena
Segge. all o f New Jersey.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

Linda Ellis. 67. 315 Tall Pine
Lane. Sanford, died Friday at
Florida Hospital. Orlando. Bom
April 19, 1923. In New York, she
moved to Sanford from there In
1966. She was a homemaker
and a Methodist.
Survivors Include husband.
George; son, Thomas Lembo,
Fort Worth. Texas: brothers.
Joseph Glannataslo. Nlchalas
Glannataslo. John Glannataslo,
Daniel Glannataslo. all of Staten
Island. N.Y.: sisters. Maryann
Morris, Sanford, Connie Becker.
P h lla m ln a G la m b ron l. Ann
Venturo, all o f Staten Island;
four grandchildren.
B ald w ln -F a lrch ild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge o f arrangements.

EMILY 6. HOYLE

With lave and appreciation to all. for kindness shown
during our bereavement. Warmest Thanks.

'Y o u c o u ld n ’t h a v e b e e n n ic er"
Loving Wife. Sallye Melds Bentley and Family

g i*

Pilgrims---------

He had some suggestions for
those w ho planned to send
Chlstmas photos.
"W e don’t recommend they
try to send photos." he said.
"T h e y end up pretty bad, like If
y o u c o p i e d It on a c o p y
machine."
The Lewises have another Mall
N' Wrap store In Oviedo which Is
providing a similar service.

' .

Survivors Include daughtera.
Barbara Harper, o f Lake Mary,
and Sue Franklin, or Morgan­
town, N.C.: sister. Chelsla Flet­
cher. o f Sanford; and four grand­
children.
G ra m k o w F u n e r a l H om e.
Sanford. In charge o f arrange­
ments.

and a member o f Church of
Good Shepherd.
Survivors lnclu&lt;^ daughters,
June Boyle. Honolulu. Joy, A l­
tamonte Springs: two grand­
children.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge o f arrangements.

WILLIAM A. JKMMOTT
William A. Jemmott. 83. 460
Oak Haven Drive. Altamonte
Springs, died W ednesday at
Mayflower Health Center. Winter
Park. Bom May 17. 1907. in
B a rb a d os. W e s t In d ie s , he
moved to Altam onte Springs
from Jamaica. W est Indies, In
1973. He was a retired banker

Ul*'-&gt;■?r,*ifebwK*it*i
HOT L I, SM U TS.

Shoppers—
they plan
beverages.

C oa tla a a d fro m P ago 8A
Harriett said d riven also need
to be cautious as traffic Increases
during the holidays and more
drunk drivers are on the roads.
Party goers, he said, should plan
their rides home In advance and
should have a designated driver,
or alternative transportation If

to drink alcoholic

Harriett said his officers will be
r e s c h e d u le d to m ak e m ore
manpower available during peak
crime and traffic hazard times.
The public is asked to report
su sp ected dru n k d riv e rs to
police.

“STOCK
REDUCTION
SALE"
ALL O F F IC E
FU R N ITU R E
2 0 *6 0 % O F F!
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lio d M a ts

OFFICE SPACE
FOR LEASE

117 UMONOLIA AVE, SANFORD

FOR INFORMATION CALL

(07) ns-sns oauspotzoTum m

322-5642__________

Grtvttldt turwrsl h t v Ic i i (or Mr*. Emil/
S. Hoy I*. U. at Laka Mary, who dlod
Saturday, will bo 1 o'clock Tuatday oflornoen
at Laka Mary Camatory. with Rrv. Jama* V.
bating Frlands
Frh
Coomb* officiating
may call at
Gramkow Funoral Horn* Monday from J to *
anddtolp.m.
Arrangomonlt by Gramkow Funorol
Homo. Sonlord.

/f

E m ily S. H oy le. 63, 166
Humphrey Road. Lake Mary,
died Saturday at South Seminole
Com m unuty Hospital. Longwood. Bom Feb. 2. 1927. In
Harland County. Ky.. she moved
to Lake Mary from there In 1961.
She was a homemaker and a
member o f the First Pentecostal
Church of Longwood.

Sweet, auiet J2ife
rBUssed rest from all storms and strife,
food's own peace now fills his soul

Jnfortunately. Warren Odham
killed In an accident near
Cocoa Beach some years ago.
W e’re planning a story about
Volte and his brother Charles. In
the not too distant future. You’D
be surprised at some o f the
heights these two reached.

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I
•

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S A N F O U l), U O K I D A

D E C E M B E R 1* 1990

"L ig h t U p Sanford"
6 P M , 1st S i. &amp; P ark Ave.
Join us as we “Light Up Sanford" to create a warm
welcome for (he Yulctide season and the St. Lucia Festival
Lighting of tree, Mayor Bettye Smith
Introduction of "Miss Santa Lucia" candidates
Crowning of "Miss Santa Lucia"
Music by Joe Ponzillo
Entertainment by "Park Avenue Puppeteers"
Start a tradition by placing a candle in each of your
windows starting December 1, the day of the "Historical
Tour of Homes" in Sanford. Electric candle $1.25 Ea.
For information: 323-9178 or 322-1425
Funded by Seminole County Tourist Development Council

�•A — Sanford Herald. Sanford. F lorida - Sunday. November 25. 1990

NATIONAL r
BRIEFS

Iraq’s ‘nuclear ambitions’

'- v j

Bush warns Iraq may
soon be nuclear power
By JIM ANDKRtON

A m e riC a re s s e n d s fo o d to S o v ie t U n io n

United Press International_______________ __________

NEW CANAAN. Conn. - American** will airlift more Hum
340.000 pound* ol rood and medicines lit I In- Soviet Union lo
case shortages In orphanage* and hospital* during the
Christmas holiday. I he private relief group said Friday.
The first two flights will leave Conneelleul lor Moscow on
Dec. 23 and Dee. 26. with a third planned for late January to
aid children, the 111 anti the elderly during the harsh Russian
winter.
The Soviet government ha* said II had no plan* to release
emergency food reserves Itccanse It docs rati believe shortages
are severe enough.

WASHINGTON - President Hush's warning
that an Iraqi nuclear weapon may Ire only months
away Is not supported by recent assessments front
e.\|M-rts Inside and outside o f the U.S. government.
Although he said no one can know when Iraq
will liecome it nuclear |&gt;owcr. Hush told a military
audience In Saudi Arabia on Thanksgiving Day
that those who estimate the time needed In It ruts
of years "m ay be seriously underestimating the
reality o f that situation."
Hush thus made clear this week what he had
warned about two weeks ago when he talked of
"Incalculable eonseepienees" II Saddam Hussein
were not stopped.
I.e-onard S|K*ctornf the Carnegie Endowment for
Peace. In Ills recent bonk "Nuclear Ambitions.”
say*. "Iraq has lie-gun a program to hullel a
uranium enrichme nt plant anel lo acquire enmpouents hir nuclear arms, ste-ps which e-oulel pe-rmll
it to manufacture nuclear wcu|inus within thenext five to It) years."
A government expert, speaking on the- e-ondlllem

W ild fire d e s tro y s 14 h o m e s
HOUI.DKU. Colo. — A resident dragging a burning mattress
out of hi* rural home early Saturday sparked a wind-whipped
lire that rated out of control across more than 2.IXH) acres,
destroying I » homes ami forcing the evacuation i.f residents
from a 2-squari* mile area.
From United Press International Reports

of anonymity, lakes a more pessimistic view.
"Whether U Is one or twei or five ye-ars off. Iraq Is
on the course feir producing nuclear weapons."
Recent evidence Inis come lo light that Iraq this
ye ar tried, anel railed, to gel the kind o f electronic
switches anel capacitors rcqulrcel fe»r the precise
timing for a uranium Iximli.
Hed a more primitive weapon, a plutonium
iMunh similar to the U.S. weapon drerpped on
Hiroshima In 1945. dues not require the same
kind of precise timing mechanisms and could In­
put together relatively eptlekly. Hut experts say It
would Ik- chancy and maybe even suicidal for Iraq
teisel off such a wca|x&gt;n wltheiut te*stlng It first .
Oncer a lest was detected by the* United Slate**
and other nuclear |xiwrrs. Including Israel, they
could launch a eptlek attack em Iraq's nuclear
Installations. Saddam, however, has moved some
nf those facilities Intel air raid-proof underground
bunkers.
Iraq Inis slightly more than 25 pounds of
e nriched uranium lucl. enough to make one small
Ixiinh. Hut the Iraqi government, whlrli has
signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Inis
recently given |MTfiil»slon for International Inspccilon or Its nuclear facilities. Including the site
whe re the uranium fuel Is store-el.
That Is se en as a sign that lrue| Is tied using that
French-supplied enriched fuel tor a weapon, at
le ast nett yet.

Before You Buy, Shop
(£juraCtiuij QtvJLlLW

Court asked to rule on homeless right to beg
By O H IO HBRDBR 8 0 N
United Press International_______
WASHINGTON A * many
Americans take pause tills time
of year to give thank* for what
they have. New York vagrants
are asking the nation's highest
court to grant them one special
wish: the right to beg In the
city's subway system.
A group of the city's |xx»rc*l
residents. In a class-action suit,
claim 1989 regulations pro­
hibiting panhandling tint allow­
ing other forms of charitable
s o lic ita tio n In the m a ssive
subwav system violates their
First Amendment right lo free
speech and their 14th Amend­
ment guarantee to equal protec­
tion.
The Suprem e Court could
announce as early a* Monday
whether It will review the case or
let the ban on begging stand.
Twenty-five stales have st.it •
nit s restricting begging Home­
less rights advocates contend the
subway ease is another govern­
ment effort to deny a growing
national problem.
The New York City Transit
Authority says the ban was

f T h e First Amendment does not permit
th e g o v e r n m e n ta l s u p p r e s s i o n of u n ­
welcome news or repugnant ideas,. J
-N ational Coalition tor the H om eless spokesperson
implemented to Improve safety
for the 3.5 million people who
pay to use the 468-station subwav system dally, noting that Its
own study showed most rider*
had lieeii intimidated Into giving
money lo Iwggar*.
Others claim II similar sorts e.f
speech are permitted In the
suhway system. Ix-gglng cannot
be indiscriminately banned
The transit agency, backed by
the state ol New York, "singled
out b e g g in g ’ for d isfa vored
treatment because of I heir con­
viction that a stranger’s request
tor money Im herscll Is tuber
e n t ly t h r e a te n in g and In ­
timidating. while a strangers
request lot money lor someone
else Is not." wrote the Legal
Action Center lor the Homeless.
« ounscl lor ihe panhandlers.
"In (the transit agency's) view
the words ‘ give to m e' are
alarming but the words 'give to

my charity' are innocuous.” the
group wrote In It* appeal lo the
high court. "It 1* difficult to
Imagine a clearer example of a
r e g u la t io n t hat a c c o r d s
'preferential treatment' lo the
expression ol view s on d is­

part leular subject."
Th e National Coalition for tin*
Homeless, which says that In
New York alone more than
2 5 0 .0 0 0 adu lt* su ffer Irom
chronic hunger, claims If the
regulations are allowed to stand,
it would open the way for state*
and locales to ban liegglng In a
wider range of circumstance*.

204 S. Park Ave., Sanford

322-6509

OMNUI.MCIC

Walcn Batten** * Engraving

Swiss clash
with press,
diplomats
GENEVA — Swiss securi­
ty officials on duly for
President Hush's visit Fri­
day verbally abused White
House chief o f stair John
Sununu and "sh oved a
m achine g u n " Into the
stomach o f a U.S. diplomat
In un effort let prevent him
from boarding Air Force
One. While House
s p e&gt; k c s tn a n M a r t i n
Fllzwater said.
“ I have never seen that
kind of brutal and vicious
treatment by a security
feirce." salel Fit /.water.

BANKRUPTCY
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ATTORNEY AT LAW

Staia104-iff muandAw. 339*2022
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•You
otn adi trmmwrfflAn rfo» m * ©o ragAfd.na
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SATURDAY, D ECEM BER 1 A T 11:00 AM
R EA L E S TA TE

"T h e First Amendment docs
not permit the governmental
suppression of unwelcome news
or repugnant Ideas." the group
told the high court.

Business Insurance?
( )iu * iiu im *

n; i \ s

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it b est

4 bdrm/2 bath pool homo in Sonora Subdivision Appro* 1.800 sq I t . largo
living &amp; dining .oom, 2 car garage Now root and paint An oicollont buy in a
family neighborhood with its own rocroational facilities

TONY KISS I INSURANCE
l* h .

Real Estate oflorod by Stirling International Realty. Inc . Marvin E Perry
Auctioneer. To*as Valley Auctioneers License • 125/255 (407) 333-1900.
sales agent Dwayne Ruby 321 6802

3 2 2 -0 2 8 5

Term aolSala 10% downondayolsalo Balance at closing, up to 30 days Irom
sate dato lo close Tide insurance by seller Roal Estato to bo sold lo tho last
and highest bidder over mortgage and closing Call lor brochure and more
information 1983 23- Tioga motor homo to also bo sold

2 5 7 5 S. F ro n c h A vcs, S a n f o r d

cA u to - O n 'tiers h isura net •
I iti

II.uni

t ,ir l l i n i n m

lin t n.inu * .!» » it .ill

ELECT

McCLANAHAN
CITY COMMISSIONER
DISTRICT 3

-..'I.Trn-.-ivjV

6*

1 W |i j

\

t-

"We know him Best
And He's Our Choice!
7
P0 POL AOVERlStWENT

,

yh

tr

�N ovem ber 2 5 , 1 9 9 0

G rilla’s last-second kick advances Knights in playoffs
IN

B R IE F

YOUTH BASKETBALL
Boy* I O ld* registration
SANFORD - Boys &amp; Girls Club basketball
registration Is underway until the end of
November al the West Sanford branch for youth
ages 8 to 15.
Leagues will be broken up Into age categories
o f 8-9 for Instructional. 10-12 for Juniors and
13-15 for Intermediates. Groups are based upon
age youth will be as o f March 1. 1991.
Practice begins the end of November. The first
games are played In mid-December with the
season continuing Into February. Every team
member gels a chance to 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 o f age. to the Club to
sign up.
For more Information, call the West Sanford
Boys A Girls Club at 330-2456 or stop by (heir
clubhouse locuted at 919 S. Persimmon Avc. In
Sanford.

Sanford signups
SAf'FORD — The Sanford Recreation De­
partment Is accepting registrations for youth
basketball for the following leugues:
Junior League: ages 12 and 13. no one who
turns 14 on or before March 15. 1991 Iseloglble.
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 at the Downtown Youth
Center, lower level o f City Hall. Participants are
encouraged to register as early as possible td
ensure being placed on a team early enough to
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 Supervisor, ut 330-5697.

SAILINQ
Registration for Red Lobster
ORLANDO — Registration Is now open for the
1990 Red Lobster Cup Regatta, the nation's
la rgest Inland regatta, which will b e held N o v .
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, wnlch closes at 9:30 a.m.
Saturday. Dec. 1. Is $37 for single-handed
entries and $40 for crewed boats.
For additional Information, call John H.
Gardiner at 425-0585 or 423-0468.

lCOLLBOB FOOTBALL
Hurricanes hammer Syracuse
MIAMI — Tackle Russell Maryland and the
rest o f the Cotton Bowl-bound Miami defense
shut down Syracuse Saturday to give the No. 2
Hurricanes a 33-7 victory, their 38th straight
victory In the Orange Bowl.
Maryland, an Outland Trophy candidate, had
two sacks, a forced fumble and six tackles to
lead the defense. Syracuse managed only a
4-yard touchdown run by quarterback Marvin
Graves with 3:52 left In the game.
Miami scored on quarterback Craig Erickson's
15-yard scramble and 4- yard pass to Wesley
Carroll and a 4-yard run by Steve McGuire.
Carlos Huerta added two 33-yard field goals
along with a 52-yardcr and a 26- yardcr.
Huerta also broke the NCAA record o f 135
straight extra points with his first PA T and now
holds the record at 138.

QOLP
Germany wins World Cup title
ORLANDO — Bernhard Longer and Torsten
Clcdcon gave Germany Its first team victory In
any sport by winning Saturday the World Cup
golf title by three strokes over England.
Lunger, the 1985 U.S. Masters champion,
fired a 3-undcr-par 69 In the final round, while
Gledeon shot a 72 ut the Grund Cypress Golf
Club. Both golfers finished at 10-under-par 278.
and compiled a team score of 20-under 556.
three strokes better than the teams from
England and Ireland (559s).
Lancer, playing In the World Cup for the first
time since 1980. said the victory "w ill have u
major Impact on golf In Germany. We need
more golf courses for the game to grow. This
could be a major step toward building them.”
Payne Stewart of the United States, the only
player to break 70 all four days, captured the
International Trophy for Individual honors.
Stewurt fired a 66 Saturday to finish with 271.

C estflM frem wire and staff raports-________

FOOTBALL

□ 1 p.m. - WCPX 6. Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs.
Green Bay Packers ut Milwaukee. |L)____________

ComptaU llettnf on Fa»a 2 B _____________.

YOUNQSTOWN. Ohio - Franco Grtlla kicked a
34-yard field goal as time ran out and Mark
Glacone rushed a school record 191 yards
Saturday to lift the University o f Central Florida
to a 20-17 win over previously undefeated
Youngstown State In an NCAA Division l-AA
playoff game.
UCF. with a 9-3 record and a five-game win
streak, hosts William A Mary next Saturday In

the quarterfinals. Youngstown State bowed out
at 11 1.
Youngstown's Jeff Wilkins tied the game at
17-17 on a 41-yard field goal, his third o f the day.
at 9:09 of the fourth quarter.
The Knights started a game-winning drive on
Its 12-yard line with 3:33 left, marching 71 yards
In 10 plays to set up Grilla's second field goal of
the game. The winning drive was highlighted by
a pair of passes from Ron Johnson — a 31-yarder
to Sean Beckton. followed by a 14-yarder to John

Osborne at the Youngstown State 23.
After three running plays gained six yards.
UCF called time out with 3 seconds left for
Grilla's kick.
.
__
Glacone. who scored on a 14-yard run. broke
his own Central Florida single game rushing
record o f 177 yards. He also has amassed 1,037
rushing yards this season, becoming the school's
first player to crack the 1,000-yard milestone.
W illie English scored on a 4-yard run for the
Knights, while Tamron Smith had a one-yard run
for Youngstown’s only TD. •

Tribe, Silver Hawks upset
’Noles foiled
by Spongers
Herald sports writer
TARPO N SPRINGS — The Semi­
nole High School football team must
have felt like Rod Serllng had been
resurrected to write the script for
this game.
In a gam e In which every break
seemed to go Tarpon Springs' way.
the Spongers came away with a
miracle-finish 24-20 victory over the
Fighting Semlnoles to claim the
Class 4A-Reglon IV title at Sponger
Field Friday night.
R a in , s tra n ge , ra re ly c a lled
penalties, dropped passes, dropped
Interceptions and assorted other
quandrtes kept the Fighting Seml­
noles from repeating as regional
champion.
The winning score for Tarpon
Springs came on a fourth-and-9
situation with 1:34 to play.
With Seminole leading 20-17.
Sponger kicker Kevin Reid lined up
for a 42-yard field goal attempt that
would tie the gam e and force
overtime.
But the center snapped the ball
directly to Reid, who tried to hit Jim
Harrison, who had gotten behind
the Seminole defense. The throw
was short and It appeared Seminole
-defen sive back D errick T a y lo r
would make the game-cllnchlnfl
liile r c c e p tlo n .

But

5he

w et

b a ll

slipped through his fingers and Into
Harrison's hands, who stumbled the
final lO yards Into the end zone for
the winning score.
"W e had everything covered."
said Seminole coach Emory Blake.
"W e were expecting a fake. We said
let them kick the field goal and get
lo overtime, but we missed the
Interception and they get the win.
But you can't blame everyttng on
the last play. W e had several
chances to shut them down on the
last scries but we Just couldn’t
make the big play."
The catch by Harrison was the
culmination ol a night o f frustration
□ B «a Sam iaolaa. F ags 4B

Lake Howall's Marquette Smith (No. 22. left) rushed
for a game-high 158 yards and two touchdowns while

s,x*e&gt;*a*s
Thomas Demps (No. 25, tight) blocked a field goal, a
punt and hod a sock Saturday afternoon.

Turnovers, penalties stop Lake Howell
By TONY DeSOAMIBA
Herald Spoils Editor
WINTER PARK — As people milled about Lake
Howell High School's Richard L. Evans Field
following Lake Clty-Columbia's stunning 21-18 upset
of the host Sliver Hawks In the 5A-Reglon II playoff
game Saturday, the comment most often heard was
"It was a great game.”

If you were Columbia Coach Joe Montgomery, the
Tigers or one o f their many fans who made the trip to
watch the game, it was all o f that.
If you were Just a high school football (an who
squeezed his or her way Into Evans Field toweatch
the game. It was certainly that.
But If you're the Lake Howell Silver Hawks, who
gave up the football five times, were burned by two
□ B oa S ilv e r H awks. Fags 4B

B ishop M oore
holds o ff Rifrns

H ornets get by
H aw ks in OT

By FMH. SMITH

By ROBBIB STOCK

Herald Correspondent

Herald Correspondent
W INTER PARK — Judging from the reactions
of Larry Betslngcr and Gcrhardt Tauschcr.
neither Bishop Moore nor Lake Howell lost the
championship game o f the Lake Howell Thanks­
giving Turkey Shootout.
And In one sense, neither team did lose.
Although the Hornets slipped by with a 10
overtime win to take the title for the second
consecutive year, the Silver Hawks found out Just
how strong their defense was against one of
Central Florida's premiere offenses.
"T h e girls really played w ell." said Tauschcr
about his team's effort In the tourney final. "The
game was beneficial for both teams. Bishop
Moore fought hard. They really looked good.
They pluyed an excellent game.”
Amy Geltz blocked one penalty kick und
watched another bounce off the right post as the
Hornets Improved to 5-0-1. They have yet to be
scored upon this season. Jill Gcitx provided the
final penalty kick for Bishop Moore.
In the 80-mlnute contest which preceded the
penalty kicks, both teams used ferocious defense
□ S e a S occer. Fags SB

LAKE MARY — Jennifer Crawford and Kim
Coll each scored 16 points to lead the Bishop
Moore Hornets to a 47-40 victory over the Lake
Mary Rams Saturday afternoon for the chaminship of the Lady Sunshine Classic girls
sketball tournament played at Lake Mary High
School.
.
The key to victory for the Hornets was at the

K

□ B o a B asketb all. F ags SB
BIIHOVMOORS (47)
4* 4. Garde #1 41 0. Coll *12 4 5 &gt;4. May* 4 7 * 0 * .
Crewtord S I) * * I*. O’Malley &lt;21 242, Heron 00 I I I. Konnody 01
S I 0. Mentall S I *0 0. Tocco SO 0 1 0. Dubrtl 0 0 SOS. Tot.li 1417
171*47.
L A R I MARV (40)
M errleS *) I II. Merrick I I S I 0. Grey 0 101 0. Cltarall# 0002 0.
Meg S * S « II. Hull 1 1 0 0 *. Scrubbt 01 4* 4. M*t!lunli04 I I I.
Judd S I 0*0. AleeenderSIOOO. Fltchl 00000 Tolalt 15 42* U40.^

Michelle Cook hod Lake Howell's best scoring
opportunity during regulation of the champion­
ship game of the Thanksgiving Turkey Shootout.

LeSe M in
* * II II — 4*
Three-Point Goal* - Blthop Moor* 1 (Coll 1). Lake Mary 2 (Hull
1). Tola! Fault - Blthop Moore I*. Lake Mary 1* Fouled Oul Garda. Morrlt. R.bound - Blthop Moore » (Crawlord 11. Lake
Mary 24 IMau II A u itlt - Blthop Moor# 1 (Coll II. laka Marv 1
(Maallunl* I. Cltarall* I) Racordt - Blthop Moor, l A Laka Mary

1-1.

Ford, Nason help Raiders stop losing streak at four
»

From s ta ff rapsrts_________________
SANFORD - Dcnnard Ford and
Brian Nason combined for 42 points
as the Seminole Community College
men's basketball team broke a
four-game losing streak with an
87-76 triumph over visiting Col­
umbia Slate Community College of
Columbia. Tennessee at the Health
and Physical Education Center Sat­
urday night.
The win raised the Raiders season
record to 2-4 and Columbia State
fell to 4-4. SCC will play at home
again Wednesday night when thev

N YOUR

;

i

.

host tuc tough Laniers of Manatee
Community College al 7:30 p.m. at
the Health and Physical Education
Center.
Ford came off the bench to score
15 first-half points as the Raiders
broke from a 30 29 udvuntagc to
take a 45-35 halftime advantage. He
also led SCC wllh 12 rebounds and
seven assists.
"It was ^cxxl lo sec Dcnnard
surface again." said SCC coach Bill
Payne. "H e had not played well
since the alumni game. It was also
good lo see us hold them to only 76
points. If we ean keep our oppo­

AREA, REA

___a
_ i—
ka *
7Aa tu
m
fVtt t
r\ r
ln
nents
In a
the
70s.
wea n
ought
to
do

pretty w ell."
Nason hit four three-pointers
(three In the second half) on his way
lo lying Ford for game high honors
with 21 (mints. Also having big
nights for the Raiders were John
Mackey 114 points, eight rebounds)
and Sanford's Robert Moore (17
points. 7 for lO shooting, eight
rebounds).
Columbia State fought back lo tie
the game al 63-63 on a three-pointer
by Titus Gilbert, but SCC went lo
Moore and Nason down the stretch
to claim the win.

COLUMBIA STATI CC ITOil (7*1
Gilbarl 1 4 0 0 I. Collint 0 0 0 0 0. D Johnton 7 14
I 1 15. Conner 0 1 0 0 0. Crall *14 I I I*. Word 7 «
4 S It. Scalot 0 500 0. E Johnton 4 140 0 ». Moora
5 ) 0010. Laa07000 Total! 54 724 »74
ICM INOLI CC (071
Whittington OI 0 0 0. Ford *15 2* II. Variant
}| 01 A Guampl# 00 00 0. Mackty *11 I I I*.
Naton 7 15 2 111. Radiak 2 2 00*. Robinton t 200
2. Moora MO I 417 Totalt 54*5101417.
Haltttm* - SCC 4). Columbia St 5) Thrao point
aoait - Columbia St 2 I) (Gilbert I A E Johnton
77 Scalot 0 41. SCC 5 I) (Naton 4 II. Mackey 21.
Ford Oil. Total Foult - Columbia SI IS. SCC 10
Fouled Oul — SCC. Radiak Technical! - non#
Raboundt — Columbia St 1110 Johnton I). SCC
jT l F o r f II. Moor, . Mackay I) Aul.lt Columbia SI 22 (Collint 101. SCC 17 (Ford 7)
Racordt —Columbia St 4 4. SCC 1 4

‘x r »*»*/«* » •.
(O r

�_

M — Sanford Harafd, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novambar 29, 1990

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
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i t ia w l w w a

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1741 WOO 441
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et8 R t f i B 8 ? p t n n « i.7 o r n * - ia i e o S T
IMfOOM
4 0too Bob
1741 3.11 140
ILiam-Lacwa
101 140
ISekSBrock
140
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741.Mi 00(1-04 00) M . 7*
7 Uraid*
H O I 7.40 400
I Liam
S M 400
7 Eduardo
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04740; SIF1-7-4) TOLU
A - 1400; H - 1101411
M B A

tT A M M M B

Atlantic Olvtoton
w
Boston
Philadelphia
New York
Miami
New Jersey
Washington

Pet. aa
1 1 *1 1 • 4447 IVl
*14*5 3
4 7.3*41
3t.Ut*V&gt;
H .lW tV s

l

Ceetrri Dtvtotow
Detroit
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Chicago
Cherloti*
Indiana
Atlanta

111111 3 .730 Vy
7S.M31V-I
44 JMlVk
4 7.4414
S4 .155 4
4 7 344 3

\bosfern Conference
Midwest Dfvtston
W L Pet. OB
Sen Antonio
7 2 .771Houston
4 4 MOlto
Dalles
S 5 JMJVy
Utah
J 4 .4331
Minnesota
4 7 .144 4
Orlande
1 • .1711
Denver
1 10 .Ml 7
Pacific DNtotan
Portland
I* 0 1000Golden State
• 4 4471
Phoenli
* 4 400 4
LA Lakers
S 1 .M S
1 * .«SSSV»
LA Clippers
Seettto
4 5 .444 51*
Sacramento
111001
Friday Retorts
Bur tan 11I Sacramento 101
Philadelphia 111. Clavaland 101
Miami 11F Cbartari* 111
Indiana 11I. Hourtan III
Datrall 97. WaiMng ton 40
Chica*o IM. LA Clippers *7
San Antonia 107, Dal la* M4
Utah 17. SaatttotO
New Jersey H4.Phoenli 114
Portland 1*3. Golden Slata III
Milwaukee 107, Now York *7
Indiana al Warningtan. nlghl
Ttiirtitfi at fiUrml. night
Bortan at Clavaland. nlghl

Alabama. Auburn or AU»rl44l** l v». Indl
ma
0k . I*

Al I * * 01*41
Brigham Yaung n Tara* A IM
DM .lt

Arhanm It. *1. Appalachian Its*
Clamt*n 41 Baltlmar* Cal toga 73
UNCAeheriito n. Av*r*tt 74

M ill
Michigan Hal* « Southern Cal
Ok . 31

Ball It. M Warhlngton-Mlraeurl sa
Buttar B. Wottarn III 79
Caw R***rv* W*. John Carroll 101
Ciefral Ma44itdi(140.HannMalLaOr*nd117
OaParibA Hertford 73
K . Michigan 4*1. II. Mary'S (Mich.) 71
Iv a n tv llto fl Miami (Ohio) n
John Brawn 01 Lw 01
LayolaOilcago 01W. Michigan 01
toabmUlOO. Illinon 71
Tay tor 47, Houghton so
WltOehhe* m . Carroll 01
Wlttanborg 117, ThemwMore**
T*mwA4M1*LS*mH*uttan07

A ll
Tatar vt

ttan* n . Nevada 71
u

m

Alabama. Auburn or M ltlltllp p l v*.
Michigan
lan. 1
MMI *0 Fa
M Ta
Ctomron vt. Illlnait
Jan. 1
Georgia T*ch vr. Nabraaha
Jan. 1

U IC 140, CMcag* SI.**
Wyoming to. Manhail 41OT

i M

At To
Cailtamla vt Wyamlng

m

m

b

a

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Farm It. 31. PlltWurgh 17
Tam* I* 1*. Bortan Cal toga 10
Mittit*l**l II. M!ttto*i**l It. *
Tanrtaraw a . Kantucky M
Virginia Tach 10. Virginia 13.
Wah* Fartri 00. Vanderbilt n
111Inair 31 Narthwartam n
Indiana HPurdua 14
Michigan 14. Ohio SI. 13
Michigan St. M. Wltcontln *
Minnesota)!. law* 14

AITaowa. Arte.
Alabama, Auburn or Tenner*** vt.
leuttvllto
Jan. I
At
Iowa vr. Weehlngtm.
At Miami
Colorado vt. Natr* Pam*
A t)
Auburn. M ltlltll* *! or Ti
Virginia

1,1

Arkansas 41. S. Mrttiodlit I f
T a a w ll Baylor 13
Tarot AIM M.TCU 10
Arliana it, Arliana St. 17
BYU 41 Utah St. 10

W L T Pet. PF FA
WCAA Otvtolon IA A PtayaWo
Middto Tannarw* St. M Jacktan St. 7
BMW St. 10. Northern Iowa 3
Nevada 17. Narthaarl Louitiana 14
Furmanai I attorn Kantucky 17
UMv. M Central FtorIda M. Vi
10.17
William 1 Mary 3 1 M wiachuwttr 0
Georgia Southern II. Cltadft 0
Idaho 41. Southwwt Miaaaurl St. 31
Tobadttormlnad
Haw the UPI Tap U farad thlt waakand:
1. Colorado (10-1-1) completed regular
n. Neat game: Jan. 1in Orange Bowl.
1 OMaml (7-1) gtayadISytacw*M
«.-{
A Brigham Young (111) dato*tod Utah
State *310. Mart gome: Dec. l at Hawaii.
I. Tatar (91) defeated Baylor n i l Neat
game: Dec l vr Tatar AIM .
0. Nabrarka (91) tort to Oklahoma 41-10
on Friday. Neat gam*. Jan. IlnCItrur Bowl.
7. Werhlngton (91) complatod regular
eaaten. Neat gam*: Jan. I In Raw Bawl.
1 Notr* Dam* (01) played Southam Cal
at night. Neitgama: Jan. I InOrange Bowl.
f. Florida State 131) did net play. Neat
game: Dec. I vr. Florida.
10. Pann Slate (91) defeated Plttrburgh
n 17. Neil game: Dec. I f In Blockbuttor
Bowl.
II. Iowa (93) tort to Mlnnerota 3114.
Neit game: Jan. 11n Row Bowl.
11. Tennarew 17 41) defeated Kentucky
al- JO Neitgama: To be determined.
13. Clemton (9*1 completed regular
season Neil game: Jan. 1 In Hall ot Fame
Bowl.
|
14. Virginia (93) tort to Virginia Tech
3911 Neitgama: Jan. 11nSugar Bowl.
IS Michigan (93) defeated Ohio State
1911. Neitgama: Jan. I In Gator Bawl.
1*. Southern Cal (911) played Notr*
Dam* at night. Neit game: Dec. 31 In
Hancock Bowl.
17. (tie) M lrtitrlppl (9 1 ) defeated
Mlrtltrippi Stale I l f . Neit game: To b*
‘*"**1jnUTt?i) Ohio State (7 F1) tort to
Michigan 1913 Neit game: Dec. 17 In
vt.
If. Leultvllle (91-1) completed r*g&lt; 'ar
raaton. Neitgama: Jan. I In Fieri* Bowl.
30. Illlnolt (91) defeated Northwertom
J* 13. Neit gam* Jan. I In Hall ot Fame
It Auburn 17 11) did not play. Neit
game: Doc. I vt. Alabama at Birmingham.
Ala.
22. Ttiar AAM (911) detoatod Teiat
Chrlttlen id 10. Neit game: Ok . IM Tatar
23. (tie) San Jot* State (911) completed
regular raaton N eil game: Ok . * In RaJtin
» . (tie) Michigan State 17 31) defeated
Wltcontln lay Neit game: Dk . 31 In
Henewk Bowl
11 Baylor (991) tort to Teiat m i In
regular Maton finale
College Bowl Matchupt
D ec*
At F r tM . CilU
Central Michigan vt. San Jow State
Dk . IS
Indepeadenca Bowt
At Shreveport, La.
Louitiana Tech vt Maryland
Ok . H

ais.wsaiiii

Buffalo
NVJati
tinm Sf^OVw
m--«--- *
fvBW

IIIJ B B IW
4 4 * 4(9 1411W
4 7 *4 *4 H i m
I V * .N* 11* 171

CaatrM

Cincinnati

•4 * m tn m
s s * jw a a m
SS * J (* 174174
4*t IS) 17*

LA Raldt rr
KanrwCIty
SanLtogo

7 S•
4 4*
14*
44*
3 7•

.7** 1(3 147
40*I I* 14*
4SSH4 If*
4M 1*41(4
4M134144

W LY
h »*
44*
410
17*

Pet. PP PA
raw *m ito
4 W 311 30*
441147 &gt;11
.417 174 ID

(knw) n *ot. C Tim Orunhard (thumb) to
weiMmaOto. NT Bin Maw (knw). NT Dan
Baiww..^..w icnNivi
(w ^ ^ t w f MwFaFAg •*• r
BslAup
m n ib
RB N tp tliw McCathan (thumb), S Eddto
Anderean (thigh) ar* preBeBM.
m u m (F t ) al CLIVE LAMM ( M l Oolphlne RB Tany Paige (knw) N waitlan
aM*. RB Marc Lawn (knw). LB John
Ottordehl (too) are prebabi* ... Browne CB
Stephan Bragg* (Ng). RB Leroy Hoard
law k). CB Frank MianlWald (hari) ar*
*uwtien*BN. OE Bab Baukaeeakl (arm). RB
Karin Mack (toai). DC Anthony Ptoaaant
(thautder). T I John Talley (neck), WR
Wekilir SlieghNr ( moulder) are prehakie.
FITTSBURBN (91) at NEW YORK JETS
(91) - Stoatorr T I Eric Green (Wautdar) N
awihmWto. O John Rtonelra (bkek), S
Thawiw Everett (dwddw) ar*
Jett O Daw taw atom cautd rii
Height (»w ), who to dwbttot. T t Mark Bayw
(ankle). RB Blair Thwnw (ankle). O Trover
Matkh (abdominal) ar* guwtlenWto. S
Brian WaeMngton (Iwt) It *r*B*N*.
SEATTLE (94) al SAN D tIBO (94) Seehawk* S Vann McEkoy (wrist) to prW e
M o... Charger* S Vend* Glenn (knw), T L w
Geaw (knw). LB Juntor Saau (ankle arm ) ,
OB Billy J w Tolliver (knw), DC L w
WlHlamt (cheat) ar* waaniitM li.
BUFFALO (91) al HOUSTON (F I) w
Mwday atght - Bile CB Kirby J
(knw) to guaettenaMa. WR A n * *
(ankle) to prWehto .. Oltor* OT Daug
hnwiTflfe
IfrvwtJ m *
l*V
(•rain), LB Eugene Seat* (knw). t
(etoaw) ar* an bakli.
Doan Stalnkuhtar
i

Dailw
Chicago
Green Bay
Minnareta
Tamp* Bay
Detroit

*1 0 ,1(0 741 139
I S * .10* 300 3)7

44* fW31*3**
47* 4M 177174
47* .344153374

San Francisco
Naw Or leant
LA Ram*
Atlanta

100*14*01111S1
4 *0 40*10*191
3 7 0 JOOltflOl
170 JO*US 171
Sunday, Nav. 11
Atlanta at New Or leant. I p.m.
Chicago M Mlnnerota. 1p.m.
Indlanapoili at Cincinnati. I p.m.
Miami M Oevilaed. I pjn.
NY Giant*at Philadelphia. 1p.m.
Tampa Bay vt. Or*** Bay at Mttwaubaa.
1p.m.
Plttrburgh at NY Jett. 4p.m.
New England at Phaanli, 4p.m.
Kenrol City at LA Raider*. 4p.m.
LA Ram* al San Francltca. 4 p.m.
Seattle at San Dtoga. 0 p.m.
Monday, Nau.M
Buffalo at Hourton. f p.m.
Sunday. Dk .1
Kanew City at New E n g lW I p.m.
Miami at Waobtngten. 1pjn.
Attanta at Tamp* Bay, 1p j c
Philadelphia at Buffalo. 1p.m.
Cincinnati at Plttrburgh. 1p.m.
LA Ram* at Cleveland 1p m
Detroit at Chicago, 1p.m
LA Raider* at Denver. 4 p m.
Indi anw»H » at Phwnli. 4p.m.
New Orleant at Della*. 4 pm.
Houetonat Seattle, 4p.m.
NY Jet* at San Die**, 4 p.m.
Green Bay *1 Mlnnerota. 1p.m.
Menday. Dk . 3
NY Giants at Ion Francltca. f p m.

D
AFC I
INOIANAPOtlS (94) at CINCINNATI
(94) - Catt* CB John Bay tor (hamstring),
OE Donnell Thampeen (tael) ar* question
abl*. WR Clarence Verdin (teat), LB Fredd
Young (hip). CB Chrlt Goad* (thumb). WR
Jetei* Hettor (hip). NT Tany Slraguea (knw)
•r* probable ... Bengal* r b Haretd Green
(thoutder). WR K w ife Smith (hamstring)
are guoettonabt*. T Bruce Reimer* (flu). LB
Jamw Francis (hip) we probable.
RAMSAS CITY (941 at LOS ANOBLES
RAIDERS (7-3) - Chiett LB Tracy Rogert

W L T Ptr. « P OA
IS 4 S 31 102 47
14 10 I I f W 79
I ) 11*3* 14 ( I
13 W I 31 14 71
10 M333 *1 *4

NY Ringsrt
Phlladslphla
Wishing tan
New Jersey
Pittsburgh
NY Islanders

Adams Otvtsten
12 7 4 M 73 M
11 *119 7) 7*
• 1421 40 M
• *421 71 M
3 17 4 10 59 104
(Mmgb*ll Centorenw
N*rrlt Britton
W L T PH. OF OA
Chicago
M 7114 04 97
St. Louli
IS *111 7* S*
Detroit
10 14131 ■4 N
Minnesota
SMS 19 41 M
Toronto
4101 1 49 111
Smyth* Britton
LwAngtto*
IS S i l l 91 44
Cofgory
M *130 194 7*
VancowvK
11 13 0 31 73 *1
Winnipeg
• M i l * 75 IS
Edmonton
S tl 3 13 94 41
Friday Rewltt
Philadelphia A Toronto I
Hertford A Boston]
Buffalo X Edmonton 1, OT
Detroit X St. Louis]
Washington 7. Pittsburgh 3
Minnesota A Vancouver 4
teterdey Btsulft
NY Rangers X NY Islanders 1
Winnipeg at Quebec night
Boston at Harttord. night
Lw Angeles at Montreal, night
Washington al Pittsburgh, night
Edmonton at Twonto. night
Chicago at Calgary, night
Naw Jersey al Minnesota, night
Vancouver at SI. Louis, night
Svafey O ifim
NY IslandersetPhiledilphia. 7.05 pm
Winnipeg *• Montreal. 7:05 pm.
Lw Angetoe at Quebec 7:31 p.m.

Breton
Mentreel
Harttord
Buffalo
QuebK

Buttaio at NY Rang**. 7:U p.m.

Kansas City
Baltimore
Wichita

Bettor* Otvtsiw
W L Pet. OB
t I Wf 41.541)
34.4144

3 M AIN EVENTS
20 M AN ROYAL RUMBLE

V

.

THOROUGHBRED RACING

FIRST GAME 7:15 RM.

POST TIME 12:30 RM.

(nQftffy escapt Sunday)

(duty txcept Monday)

SEE TT LIVE!
W o rtd ’B

LARGE SCREEN TV’S

6 M A N T A G T E A M
T lw Black Scorpion, C o t Murdock.
I T lw O r**t Mute v a
Bu g s y McGrow, Mr. W r*eiling I ,
“ OoM w i B o y " Gray

.. .*■I..... i... iiiill...... ..........i..,ii
17-92 814 M
iBlornmiOR— 407-331-9191

Payolta at
Track Pricdsl
R acing F o m a
A Program * on Said.
Adm ission t i .

I'ltt'i
11. •;« i
iii

T A G

T E A M

C H A M P IO N S H IP

Tha Anvil A T lw R o d w r
VA

Tha Demolition To

Ths Dirty Whits Boy

Awoaoma Eddto flohftn
(coueln ot Hulk Hogan)
v a TN* O u t

A

A

W O R L D

WORLD JR. CHAIM»IONSHIP

Fastest Game!

Noon Matinaes
M o a Ttiur. Sat
1 P.M. on Sunday!
Adm ission from SI.

At SrtwdA Nee. 3t

IF K ID

(T w tltoam e)
B.Lngr, Grmny. (IA M B
T.GWs. Grmny, ItlAM *

717147 49-171
79714973-771

R.B«H.EhBMA

49714973-179
49997973—IW

v t.

M Mind WM*

I In

w

u

iti * 1.1ri3i i.- ii J

b b

(With pintail totoil and money won. &gt;
I. Porker Bohn III. FroohoM. N.J., 111 (I
gome). 177JW: 1 Kelly Coffman. Topeka.
Kan.. 4W (2 gomes). 114JW; X Marshall
Hetman. ModtorA O r*. 3*2 11 games), ta.
OW; A Pete Me CorDie. Kety. Ttios. (all). 2
gemot. S4JM; X Bob Benoit. Topoko. Kan.,
(W OBom ol.l
F LAYOFF RESULTS - MeCordie dot.
Benoit. 257-1W: Holman dot. McCordlc. 119
1*4: Coffman dot. Hoknon. 109114; end. In
the title match. Bohn dot. Coffman. 2I92W.

Albany (CBA) — Signed forward Jett
Senders; retooted forward Tim Price.
La Crest* (CBA) - Signed forward
Richie Johnaon; waived guard Stove Mit­
chell.
Miami — Sutpended reaalog beck

ill l&lt;t . .‘ T I -|||l
n s i m i-.i w 11 « iiii, c

X

. M

M

M &lt;

COURBE FOOTBALL
_
M A iA -S C N M r*0 *m *M U S C
N**n - WCPX « . F Hr Ida F m i b * n
VtFTV*. UCFOurtHmoTodm
t l : » p m .-W F T V E BWBy BwNBUhwv
7 p m -S U N .T u ta n **tL w M W » SHto -t
• :j* pm. - SC Hurrkan FaatBMt
Dwmto Erick***
•p m . - SC Saracawat Miami
NFL FOOTBALL
Naan-ESPN. Gama Day
•»
Naan —WCPX A Thto tolhaNFL
..
I I : * pm .—WCPX A NFL Taday
t l : * p m . —W ESH XNFLUw
•(
t pm. - WCPX A Tampa Bay Buccanaarg
vt. Groan Bay Packers at Mtheaukw. (L )
1 pm. - WISH X Miami DatpMm
Ctovelend Browns. ID
4 pm. - WISH X Kanew City Chiefs W
Lw Angetw Reidars. (L)
• pm. - ESPN. Seettto Seehewks at Se^
Diego Chargers. (L )
• CFL
4 p.m. — SC Gray Cu^Chemptomhtp
^
3 * pm. - WFTV f. Skin* Gem*. Bee*
Nine Play. IL)
.]
*)
•I
BASKETBALL
9:3* pm. - WB2SAM (7X7*). NBA. Sad
Antonie Spurs at Portland TreitoUfOrt
1* 30 pm . - WWNZ-ZM (74*). NBJL
Orlando Magic e M j* An^ttos CUppers
1
Noon —WSZF AM (07*), PtfMl
Neon - WWftt-AM (7 «). NFL 7
Neon - WDBO AM ISM), WPUL-AMf
(itea), w h ig AM ( I M ) . N FL Tamp* Ray
Buccaneers vs. Green Bey Pecker* **,
IS:IB pm. - WWW AM (74*). WNSI a W
(14M). WNDB AM (H3S). Miami Defphin*
Cleveland Orewno
1:49 pm. - WB2FAM (111*). Xante* Cits
Chiefs at Lw Angetoe Re Mars
MISCELLANEOUS
•)
11:04 pm. - WBZS AM 111)*). The Sports
Final Sports Overnight
.9

•P O R T S P A R *)
I

YOU
DIDN'T
Brought to you
By Kan Rummai
Htre'i a quiz for you on currant No­
tional Football Laagua quarterbecks...Sk It you can nemo the col­
lege ot each ot thaw NFL querterbacks: Boomer Ealaoon, flenddi Cun­
ningham. Buddy BMtltr and Phil
Simms . Hera are the eniwer*: Esla•on
(Maryland)...Cunningham
(Nevada.Lea Vegw).. Bm(*f (North•M l Louisiane).. And. Simms (MoreItoW btate).
Here’s an oddity... (very Sammw
IM * and 1(10 ww
Raid — by
- k » ■ city
“IT -T h e 1MB Otywww were In MwWo Ctty-Tho 1*72 Olympic t wan In
Munich...Tha 1*7* Olympics war* In

'• this for a football oddity
...There w w once • college loolbell
game In which one men ww the head
coach FOR BOTH TEAMS AT THE
SAME TIME...T.L Bayne ww the heed
coach lor Tulene 1IQ3...Thet year,
LSU'a coach w w unable to work tha
Iwt game of the year against Tulene,
end Bayne volunteered lo coach LSU
for the game egeintt Tulene...He
wound up w the coach lor both
teeme...Tulene won, 340.

•BB
I Bat you didn't knew wa hum a
greet aotactlow at BB A *1 ChavreWt
Care A Truck* at itoarenaa price*.
RtoTa m$ tim rah U ten s Yon end
l e d Enough To Know You.

Now Jersey — At signed forward Alan
Stewart and dotontomon Tommy Albelln to
Utko ot the American Hockey League hr
conditioning.

TV/VtA D IO
AUTO RACING
1:10p.m. - ESPN. NHRA Top Fuel Clottic

HWY. 17*92 SANFORD
a a i- T t o o

BIG G U N &amp; KNIFE
SHOW &amp;
SALE

SELL- TRA

SATURDAY, DEC. 1st
9 a.m. • 6 p.m.
SUNDAY, DEC. 2nd
9 a.m. • 5 p.m.

Bring your Sellln' or tradin' goods with you

.l/ o / r M a t c h e s
I ,. .il l, I- v ■ i,i

t
l ( . -M l %. .1 | I. k. I - i
\ i*i*« i vs a t - 11 i k ■
i ,ii

o

-

“ • " '“ ■ " 'Y S m u i
I p.m. - ESPN. Caftog*. Maui Clawk;
“
0.IL1

NO WAITING PERIOD

Mr. Wrsstlino I

M a n \

U K * 797379 4 ) - r 4
SU M 73497973—M3
-141
734J-4979—174
49794973-1*1

O.Fhrty. IrinA
R.RIWty. IrtnA

" ( S 'I S i .

ORLANDO
EXPO CENTER

SANFORD CIVIC CENTER

Biggest Show Ever In Sanford

JA t-A U U

Ctovelandat Kanew City
Tacoma at St. Lauia
WtaMta at San Dtoga

BUY -

(S * W m S Avonsso)

ORLANDO

lO tyA D W toetO T
Baltlmar* A St. LeuieLOT
San Dteg»y. Clavetend!

S1MJM ABC Fad Clessk

(AB Thaw 1ST)

C h a m p io n s h ip
W rs s tlin g
SIMMY NOV21 1PM

Arliana y*. Syracuse

7 1 .7 W 4 3 444 JW
414441V*
47 4141H

Ta
Da
St.Lmdt

P.Stwrt. UntdSlts.15.0W
RFC(
0971-73 77—HI
JJMdl.UntdSlti.lSJW
LOS A N S E L IS BAMS ( F I ) at BAN
-M 4
FRANCISCO (194) - Ram* WR Harwy M.Ocmn. ArgntA 1X047
497347 73—M*
Elierd (hamstring) to gwthanabto ... start S L.Crbntt, ArgntA 1X047
4* 7i-7973—1W
Daw Waymar sterts tar Chat Braaka (knw).
-144
whaltaut. DE Larry Hobart* (Wauldar). BB P.Snr, Attrt. 1X447
4971-7971—H#
Tam Rothman (etoaw). WR John Toy tor BJne. Attrt. 1X447
79794949—1W
(knw)araprababto.
Mt
N E W V O R H B IA N T S ( I S - # ) a t J.Rvr, Spn. 1SJ47
4947-7374—H I
FNILAOELPNIA (94) - Gients T John MAJImonot. Spam. 1X447
49737379-1*4
(Hiatt (tog) to guatttonabto... Eegtot O Mike
n*
Sched I thautder). DT Mika Oolle (rtoe) ar* D.Brr, C nAlJM
49797973—1*1
prababto. O Ron Salt (wkto) toguaattonafela.
R.Oban. CnA fJ *B
73497471—W*
CttKASO (F t) at MINNESOTA (94) -S71
Bear* CBt Danrwil WWftord ar Maurlc* ChngCh Yn. Chne Tp. IX
71-73-79 79—1*3
Dauglett will ttart tor Lemuel Stlnean LngttlChn, Chne Tp. 7JW
74797949—3W
(knao-lnlurad raterve). WR Ran Marrto
171
(knw). LB Jim Marrltwy (tog). QB Jim C.Elpru. M ic 7JM
7371797*-3*3
Herbaugh (hamttrtng-right thautder) ar* CP1l.M ic.7JW
73797149—H*
prabtol* ... Viking* RB Alfred Andersen
- 571
Ite m tor Rick Fermey (knw). etoa I* out. RB S.Trmc, ScttnA 7JW
49794973—7*1
Allan Rica (grainI to prebWto.
G.Bmd Jr.. Scttnd. 7JW
4471-7479—1W
TAMPA RAT (91) M BREEN BAY ( F I ) at
Mtowabag — Buctanwn DE John Carman
(knw). G John BruMn (wck) ar* gwitton
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aM* ... PaJw n QE Oen Melkewtkl (right P.Stwrt. U.A.S7SJW
1
thautdir) I* guwttonebto. FS Chuck Cecil A.
Smsn. Dnmrk, W.C34
47-47-7949—173
(thautder). LB Brian Nebto (catt), O Ran O.Fhrty. IrtnA 3SJW
79737943—174
Heitolrem (grain), T Alon Vaingred (tog),
IWsnm.Wto.35JW
H4949 79-174
OE Matt Brack ( thauMkr) ere prakaBto.
B.
Lngr. Grmny. 17JS*71714749-771
ATLANTA (97) at NEW ORLEANS (94) T.Odn. Grmny, 17.SB0
797149 71-171
Feicent RB Krilh Jew* (thigh), T Mika
i (catt) ar* prWtolt „ Saint* LB Jamw
(ankle) to out. BB Rwbon Moyas.
VtortdCpaoTi
OE Ranald* Turnbull cautd ttart tar Delian
Hilliard (knw), OE Wtoyn* Martin (lag), who
(F a r m
ar* dwbtful. FS Gw* Atkin* (thigh) to Mika Rfid. US.
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71-47-49—JW
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NEW BNBLANO II-*) *t PHOENIX (94)
Maaohr
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Jpn
— Patriots LB Johnny RamWrf (knw) to out
Yuklo Nagch, Jpn
71-7149—1W
C Paul Fairchild (neck), OB Stove Gropan
HoorntohOtk, Jpn
497979—IM
(wck). CB Maurice Hurt! (knw). S Roland
*47973—3M
Lorry Noton. U.S.
Jamw (groin), WR Sammy Martin (knw),
Hldakl Koto, Jopon
797449—JW
OE Garin Varlt (knw) ar* quwttonabto. G
714949-1*9
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Owl* Gambol (knw), WR Cadrk Jones
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(groin). WR Irving Fryer (tog) ar* probabli
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73-7949-11*
start tor Johnny Johnson (ankle), who It
7947 73-110
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doubtful. NT Jim Wahtor (shoulder) i*
guottlonebto. WR J.T. Smith (ankle) It

&gt;•* 4MUaM4

Cantral

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'

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Philadelphia

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44 4W 4ri

it.M.i

INFO. 904-258-5653

I

�Sanford Horakf, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novombor 29, 1M0 — M

Sim ple strategies i t s
best when on the water
Som e people m ight think that
i m a boring, u nim aginative
fisherman. It Pm p a n g offshore.
I ca tch liv e b a it and head
straight for BA or Pelican Plata. I
w i l l fis h t h e a e t w o r e e f s
exclusively, while other anglers
•earch Car and w ide for the pot o f
gold at the end o f the rainbow.
Other anglera also may think
that I’ m not too bright, for I win
rah for hours on end without a
strike. These people shake their
heads and look at m e w ith
sympathy, reasoning that I’ ve
beep out In the sun too long or
perhaps that I'm just not smart
enough to do something else.
, Even I have to admit that I’m
simple minded In m y approach
ocean angling. I know what
w ork* and I stick with H. I never
forget the basics.
Pishing does not have to be
co m p lica ted . A ft e r all, h o w
•mart la a flsh? Many anglers,
however, overlook the obvious tn
their search for aurrrss Perhaps
they get caught up In the chase,
or m aybe they get mesmerised
with all o f the technology .
flah are attributed supernatural
powers of thought and rea so n . .

• «
I like to cut through the glitter
and get to the heart of the
matter. Boats, lorans, depth re­
corders and radios are nice, but
they are simply tools — a means
to an end. If the goal la to catch
flah. then these Items are utili­
tarian in purpose and not an end
tn themselves.
No. 1 — T ry to follow m y
sim ple thought process. T h e
pcean is big and flah concentrate
iv e r reef areas for food and
•belter. W hy bounce all over the
Ocean when I already know
♦ h e re the flah will be?
• No. a — Furthermore, flah that
prowl offshore reefa love to dine
on live bait. W h y try something
&lt;lae when live bait la the best?
[ No. 3 — Just a s the Marines
; want a few good men." 1 only
want a few good flah. Reef flah
are big, and I don’t need a strike
every 30 minutes In order to
have a very successful trip.
These three simplistic realiza­
tions have made me a very
consistent offshore angler, and I
v e r y r a r e ly re tu rn to p o rt
Without at least a few quality
flah.
; T h in k abou t you r a n g lin g
stra te gie s. A re you m a k in g
things too complicated? Every­
day living la complicated enough
Without c om pl ica tin g y o u r
leisure time.

M A J O R B R A N D T IR E S AT
K M A R T 'S EVERYDAY LOW P R IC E S

JIM
SHUPE

Have confidence I n '
a fisherman and stick to what
works for you. You will catch
more flah In the long run.

rw m iO H M M M t
W it h th e u p c o m in g lo n g
weekend, fishermen should get
s i least one or two days o f nice
weather.
George from
M d T a o fc lo s a k
______
hitting tn front o f the
lo u L a h e r
spots for i

around the newly
S teve Oard at
B rid g e VMS Cara# said that
specks are the hot Kern. Some
gpod stringers are coming from
the a w U o f the o ld rtvsr
and tn front o f the
Bream and catfish
are biting around M arin a late,
while baas are scattered.
S tb a a rta s Imlet to hot for
flounder, redflah and snook. It
will be packed this weekend, so
be prepared to fight the crowds
for fishing space. Live Anger
mullet bounced along the bot­
tom w ill take all three species. A
one-ounce Jig to the best all
•round lure. Biueftsh, ladyftoh
and jack crevallc will also be
present In good numbers.
C a p t a i n J a c k at P a r t

jg w w n r

M o u n t i n g i n c l ud e d - road hazard war r ant y' avai l abl i

a ttlD G E S T O n E

to neutralize any scoring
chances. Lake Howell held A m y
Qeltz. who holds the state record
tyr most goals tn one season, to
just five shots and no breakaway
o p p o r tu n itie s . T h e H o rn e ts
totaled only 10 shots in the
gm e.
'S w e e p e r M ic h e lle H a r r is
played a large role in lim iting
f l c l U 'i productivity, as did de­
fenders Monica Compton. Teresa
ftfaltardl and Jessica Cardare 111.
jin the game, only 18 shots
vie re t a k e n . S l i v e r H a w k
gbal keeper Kellie Cash Ion came
up with six saves while Corie
Vallcau saved three o f the Lake
Howell's eight shots.
IBoth teams had shots come
uflthln Inches o f scoring during
the game. Midway through the
first half. Michelle Cook headed a
K a rris c o r n e r , klpk Into the
crossbar. A w ild scramble in
front o f the goal ensued, but
Vallcau pounced on the ball.
B ishop M oore Just m issed
scoring with the three minutes
left in the contest when Stepha­
nie Grlnger'a bullet from IS
yards out nailed the crossbar.
In overtime. Harris. Compton
and Beverly Dickinson all con-

t:
foul line,
where they hit 17 out o f 29
attempts while the Rams could
only manage eight out o f 18
attempts.
; ••! told the girls that w e can't
foul so much.” said Lake Mary
Coach Anna Van Landlngham.
"Because It keeps the other team
tn the ball gam e or can give
them control o f the gam e."
Coll hit two shots In the last
3:00 o f the first quarter Includ­
ing a three-pointer to give Bish­
op Moore a 13-8 lead at the end
o f the first quarter.
T h e Hornets were able to
extend their lead In the second
quarter behind the strong play of
Crawford and Joey Maylc. Each
scored four points In the quarter
and Maylc collected a pair of
offensive rebounds during a 10-3
run during the last 4:15 o f the
second q u a rte r to g iv e the
ilom cts a 27-17 lead at halftime.
Crawford took charge early In
the third quarter with a pair of
buckets and five rebounds to
extend the lead to 34-21.
"T h e y beat us on the boards

l

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H u g e b l ue f l a h a n d giant
aheepahead should soon start
making their winter appearance
at M a n Imlet. The tip of the
e a r t h la t tice has traditionally
to rn U»a bsst, spot for sure
action. Some nice flounder are
being taken from the aeath
Jetties on finger mullet.

verted from the penalty spot for
Lake Howell. Am y Geltz, GrInger. Stephanie Fuclncr and Jill
Geltz knocked In shots for the
Hornets.
For Betsinger. the well-played
meant as much as the win.
" It was tremendous game."
said Betsinger. “ Coach Taushcer
has to be proud o f hto kids. This
team (Lake Howell) looks like the
best one In years. They are one
o f the best teams around. We
had some opportunities but they
•hut them down quickly.
“ You get at a loss for words
watching good play from both
sides. This to an example of why
Central Florida to the best area
for soccer In the state."
Despite having 11 free kicks In
the firs t half. Lake H ow ell
mustered only three shots. But
they started strong In the second
half, the tost of which rocketed
off the foot o f Harris, whose
3 0 -y a rd shot bounced past
Valleau but slid Just wide o f the
goal.
T h e Silver Hawks had an
excellent opportunity later In the
half when Leslie King gathered
In a rebound off Joanna Abbott's
shot, but her attempt sailed Just
high.

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77t

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C en tu ra §50 G old,
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Motorvator 65,
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Motorvator 45,
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Cachings

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la mm*iy cm,
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1 Salt Price
Front-ond alignment

2

Basketball—
Cmatlaasd froas IB

!a

B in ilH H M iH lM

C a s a v a r a l has little to report
with offshore action as high seas
have kept boats in port. Bottom
fishing will .be excellent for
grouper and snapper as these
flah make their annual pilgrim­
age Into shallower waters.
Inside the P a rt, mangrove
snapper, blueflsh. snook. Jack
crevalle and flounder are hitting
with regularity. Reds and trout
are active on the d a t a of the

Soccer
Gamtlaaad fr a a IB

r a d

* 5 Q

Sale Price
2-w hool d isc or drum
b rako s p e c ia l for

lor m any cars. Save.
all night long." said Van Landin g h a m . " W e n eed to g et
tougher on the boards against
good teams like Bishop Moore."
Tera Hurr burled a pair o f
three-pointers and Melissa Mau
scored four of her team-high 12
points as the Rams tried to
mount a comeback. Cymonda
Scrubbs hit a pair o f free throws
at the end erf the third quarter to
bring Lake Mary to within 38-29
going Into the fourth quarter.
But Bishop Moore extended its
lead to 47-33 with 1:30 remain­
ing before the Rams got rn
track.
Lake Mary went on a 7-0 run
to finish the game. LaShawn
Merrick making three steals in
the final minute. But the Rams
ran out o f time and Bishop
Moore held on to win 47-40.
"W e 'v e got to learn to be
constotant from one night to the
next. Today we didn't start
p la yin g basketball until the
fourth quarter." said Van Land­
lngham. "W e got to come out
from the start playing tough
Instead of showing up at the
fourth quarter."

Tntuit Angla Alignment
4 Whoal Alignment

» 7' +

many U.S. cars. Imports
a n d light trucks extra.

•J9 97
•3997

iatni motQMic p od , •■"a

Aolow As.

4 Carryoutfa
Sale Price

9 7

^ 3 9 7 Ca rryout | a •

A U s i l * Price

O a t-M a tlc Strut'

Arrestor m uftlor; many
cars, light trucks.
Arroster Stus’ ..............

for Many Cm riitf'i

Many GM* At La* Ai
Many foid I Ai lew At

CdriyOu* Id

'3997 IA
'44 97 IA

Aiiynrr.wril r*c.mv-fri**tM many
intia*
a*ak)Ge .n uorei

Tho la it multln you will buy lor

your cor*

W ir es

iniKjiia-o-, A*oiiab&lt;o

mVa&gt;« »ni», Saute#

tii*, ind ,*ry&gt;ct in ,t,rt, aith U (» * l «ni,

On Sale Mon., Nov. 26 Thru Sat., Dec. 1
'•i I l y n y i n M

Stttl*

hui

JQ ^Ptom i to
S o m e s • Value
Satutaction
i »« i

lk tS c w **c P lA (i

C&gt;1990 K mart* Corporation
ORLANDO
EtHN

AREA

MARK

DELAND

U b / 02 9 t U 9 o

SANFORD

LEtbUURG

/ 34 U I J 3

A L T A M O R TE S P R I N G S

OttM, M (Mr,

I I 9 0 -12 9 b 9 2 5 2 7 7 1 9 0 1

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29U o 94H

7U/ O b -H

KISSIM M EE U 4 b - 1 2 bb
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323 9 4 b 2

WINTER PARK
CLERMONT

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-Li«u»4 awMly

b 7 1 1 /b«&gt;

394-2731

�'

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— ...

Hurts too much to laugh and too Mg to ery
That’* |u«t about tho way tha Lafca HowtO Stlvar HawU fatt attar
dropping an 2MB daelaton to ttw Laka Ctty-Cotumbia Ttgors in

whm Retd nailed a 40-yard field
goal. The big play of the 49-yard
drive waa a S3 yard nut on a

Silver Hawke

«-*■
lo o , at mlm D K tg n i* **T
• i nka«
cy m
cuun -.

trolled the ball like they wanted
to."
The teama traded touchdowna
tn the aacond half. Columbk
parlayed a Lake HowtO fumbled
in to J aek aorT a aeeond
that made the aeon
31*10 in the third quarter. In the
fourth quarter, Smith aprtnted
e e y a r d # for h is second
touchdown, then vaulted Into
the end aone far the two-potnt

•aid Montgomery when

Ttem aa u a i . JaraM N M a * . Tim a* M -4 ).

PASSING - L A i City CNwwSIr. 0 .
Jaduan t+ t, ■ ; las* H*m M. Ttemoa i n ,
II.

hla old atom ping ground*
"Truthfully, yea. It does make It
sweeter."
The Tlgera, who were out*
rushed by Lake Howell 2S4-3S3
and out-passed S I*30. took
advantage of four Silver Hawk
fumble* and an interception of a
Ryan Thomas pass to keep Lake

a sack far Lake Howell as well aa
being In on a ale of tackles.
S k c ld o n W alker forced a

aicuviNO - urn QtfCatawOta o

wish them (Tarpon Springs) all
the luck.
" I honestly feel we had the
best team but UUngs Just didn’t
work out. but we came and
represented Sanford well and
that’s what la Important.”

Fwttei I S ; Late Hm»H. M. SmlSt I S
M K K W M r a Gotten Ml.

a

y

J .S

F j
N0TICI 0P
FICTITIOUS KAMI

;

NUka Is tertey flv«n ttttf te
&lt;• anaaste in teunaw at Suits
N4 t e l

S R. 04. Long,

a te . FL JVM, Samlnat^

This is a great opportunity for you to enjoy the same great results as
our regular classified customers at no cost to you. Just follow these
Vistructions.
1.
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3.
4.
5.

Ads w ill be scheduled to run for 10 days.
Price of item must be stated In the ad and be $100 or less.
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.
6. 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. C lassified Managements decision on copy acceptability w ill
be final.

MAL.TO: Sanford Haratd Clmiflod Ad*
P.O. Box 1S57
Sanford, FL 32772-1467
•ONLY ONE ITEM

•MUST INCLUDE PMCI

TH E HEART
O FFI8R ID A

"Serving Seminole and Southwest Volusia Counties"
000 N. Frsnch Ava., Sanford
322-2*11
-y m

■SKJHP

\

t

intlute* ttw (Milmany ate tvldonca upon which tha appeal It to b*
te a te par Satfton Mt OiM. FlarMa Statutot
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
■V; FREDSTNE■ TMAN.CHAIRMAN
ATTEST; M A R Y A N M NO RM

DISTRICT; f t
PuNItli Novamter tt. If*

\

I
DEZ II*

i

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, November 2S, tWO — M

IN

B R IE F

Institutions ponder Quebec separation
unnsu r i t i s inisrnsnofMi

FrM M m ln a rM t at Stetson
DKLAND — David L. Cross, director of the Stetson University
Small Dualncaa Development Center (8BDC). will conduct a
free aemlnar for the proapeettve business owner. Baatc aspects
for planning and starting a sm all business will be covered.
Topics wlU Include characteristics at an entrepreneur, licenses,
taxes, legal forms. Insurance and developing a business plan.
“ How T o Start Your Small Buatness" wlT) be presented from
B a m . to noon Friday at Stetson Unlveslty. SBDC Office. 349 E.
Michigan Ave.. DeLand.
“ How to Obtain a Small Business Loan" w ill be presented
Dec. 7. from 9-11:30 a m . at the SBDC Office.
Topics covered w ill Include, how to deal with your banker,
what a bank Is looking for and the different types o f loans
available.
Reservations are requested. For more Information call
904-023-7335.

Winter Park Chamber announeM festival
W INTER PARK — The Cultural Affairs and Beautification
Committees o f the Winter Park Chamber o f Commerce are
presenting “ Holiday Festival In The Park " on Saturday
follow ing the J a ycee's 26th Annual Christmas Parade
beginning about 10 a.m. The Festival will begin at noon In
Winter Park’s Central Park and w ill Include music, dancing,
carolers, the annual giant Christmas card competition awards
ceremony and a tree lighting ceremony at dusk with Bob
Opsahl.
Park Avenue's merchants decked out In their holiday finery
Invite you to visit their stores and partake In their hospitality.
Come Join In the festivities and share with us this wonderful
holiday season.
For more Information please contact the Winter Park
Chamber at 644-8281.

Stmlnar on 88Q form prtMnted
CASSELBERRY - The Space Coast Council o f the Nat’l
Association o f Investers Corp. w ill be offering a aemlnar on
“ Adding Judgment T o The SSG Form” on Saturday from 9
a.m. till noon at the Casselberry Library. Though NAIC
members and non-members fam iliar with the Stock Selection
Guide wlU derive most benefit from this presentation, there will
be new Ideas and challenges for everyone.
The forum leader wUI be Julian Becker who holds an MBA
from Florida Atlantic and has spent 30 years analyzing s Uk.4.
Fees for this event ar 44 for NAIC members and $5 for
non-members. Also 85 at the door.
T o register or for additional Information please call 629-1972
In the Orlando area, and 727-0359 In Brevard County.

Coditco namss smployss of tho month
SANFORD — Lila Ranch has been named November's
Employee o f the Month from Codsico. Inc.. 601 Codlsco Way.
Sanford. Lila Ranch was cited for her commitment to customer
satisfaction, attitude and work performance. Lila Ranch has
been employed with the company for one year and four months
and serves in the position or accounts payable clerk. Coastline
employs over 500 people In Its 26 locations from Atlanta to
Miami.

Scholarship daadllno approaches
ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS - University o f Central Florida
Business and Finance majors havie until Dec. lO. to apply for a
•500 scholarship being sponsored by Contemporary Mortgage
Services, Inc. o f Altamonte Springs.
Contemporary Mortgage Services, one o f Central Florida's
largest mortgage brokers. Is offering the scholarship to a UCF
student or transferee who has completed 60 semester hours,
has a minimum 2.5 G PA and Is pursuing a degree in Business
or Finance.
Scholarship applications may be obtained at UCF's Office o f
Student Financial Aid. or by calling Contemporary Mortgage at
834-3377. The scholarship must be used to defray tuition costs
for.the Spring 1991 semester.
All applications must be received by Dec. 10. Contemporary
Mortgage Services Is located at 498 Palm Springs Drive, *320.
Altamonte Springs. FL 32701.

Cordova now marketing manager
Mercedes-Benz o f North America has named four managers
to help oversee the activities In Its newly-created Southern
business region, which stretches from North Carolina to Florida
to Arizona.
MBNA Is realigning Its core operations to better rescind to
dealer and customer needs as well as regional market
differences. The new organizational structure, scheduled to be
fully operational by year's end. realigns the territories o f the
company's field organization and decentralizes key operation
functions currently performed In M BNA's headquarters here.
Named marketing manager of the Southern Region is Dennis
Cordova o f Altamonte Springs. Cordova, who previously was
an account executive with advertising agency McCaffrey and
McCall in Jacksonville, will be responsible for all advertising
and sales promotion, sales training and product planning. He
has worked on automotive accounts for several advertising
agencies in the past. Cordova has a B.S. from the University of
New Mexico In Albuquerque, where he was born and raised.
MBNA's regional office will be located in Jacksonville.

M llltr Enterprise* acquires installations
CRESCENT C ITY - Daniel L. Miller, vice president of
gasoline operations for Miller Enterprises. Inc., announced the
acquisition of 23 commissioned gasoline Installations from
Carse Oil Company.
The units are located at Handy Way Food Store sites In
Central and North Central Florida. Handy Way Food Stores Is a
division o f Miller Enterprises. Inc. which operates 140
convenience stores and nine Millers Supermarkets.
Most o f the newly acquired units w ill be branded Unocal 76.
With the addition o f these units. Miller estimates the total
annual volume o f Miller Enterprises and related entitles will be
75 million gallons annually.
With the newly acquired units. Miller Enterprises will
directly operate 98 percent of all the gasoline units operating at
Handy Way Food Stores.

Accardi R txall awardad top drug atom
ORANGE CITY — Th e Accardi Rcxall Drug St-’ re, located at
923 S. Volusia Ave. in Orange City, was recognized us an
“ Independent super star" of 1990 In the Oct. 22 Issue of Drug
Topics Magazine for their exceptional merchandizing work.
This award was given to the top drug stores In the country.

Smith raceiva* G.R.I. daaignation
SANFORD — At the lost Realtors monthly luncheon of the
Seminole Board o f Realtors recently at Holiday Inn o f
Altamonte Springs. Walter M. Smith. Sanford, native and local
realtor with Quinn Reulty. was awarded the nationally
recognized designation o f Graduate. Realtor Institute (G.R.I.).
The presentation was the culmination o f his successful
completion of three week-long Realtor Institute educational
courses, sponsored by Florida Association of Reultors. in
Orlando. Surastoa und Tampa. This training gives Smtlh more
In-depth real estate training in better serve his clients in
residential counseling, listings, service and sales.

I

OTTAWA

— Canada's Finance Depart­
ment and central bank already are gearing
up for Quebec’s possible secession, includ­
ing monetary union between English and
French-speaking Canada, a leading Quebec
economist said Friday.
Pierre Fortin, economics professor at the
University o f Quebec in Montreal, said in a
telephone Interview the Finance Deport­
ment was calculating Quebec'a share o f the
national debt, estimated to be 8400 billion,
while the Bank o f Canada waa considering a
future monetary union.
“ They are doing their homework. Com­
petent managers should be prepared to face
the worst scenario." Fortin said.
Fortin estimated Quebec would be re­
sponsible for 23 percent or 24 percent o f the
national debt, but would get credit for Its
share o f about 8120 billion worth o f federal
buildings and other assets scattered across

® T h s y are d o in g th e ir
homework. Competent man­
agers should be prepared to
face the worst scenario, j
-M in t Fortin
the country.
“ There Is a stunning ignorance outside
Quebec o f what la happening." Fortin said,
adding that nearly 65 percent o f Quebecers
now favor sovereignty. "Th ere's a big train
com ing and the momentum o f that train is
very strong." he said.
A spokesman for the Department o f
Finance In Ottawa said he was unaware or
any special project concerning Quebec's
possible autonomy but did not rule out the
possibility the government was working on
It.
A spokesperson for the Bank o f Canada

"T h e only thing I can tell you la the
bank keeps up on different points o f view ."
A commission sponsored fay the Quebec
government, which Is to report next spring
on the province's political and constitutional
future. Is expected to call for sweeping
changes
changes in Quebec's relationship w ith
Canada.
Fortin said the commission, which Is
conducting public hearings throughout the
province. Is hearing mainly from those w ho
want the province to separate or believe It
should be far more automonous.
He said the commission probably would
urge Quebec to negotiate autonom y over the
environment. Justice, communications, ed­
ucation. health and culture. "T h ese are very
profound changes." he said.
Quebec, which rejected separation In a
historic 1961 referendum, has been recon­
sidering the question since the defeat In
June of the so- called Meech Lake accord.

Make a wish
come true
at Quincy’s
SANFORD — Quincy's Family
Steakhouae and K-S2 FM are
working together this holiday
season to bring Christmas Joy to
u n d e rp riv ile g e d ch ild ren In
Sanford. Last year this program
w as a huge success with over
20,000gifts being given.
—
A "W ishing T r e e " * a g B p ,
Quincy's will be decorated with
ornaments with names and gift
suggestions for undeprtvileged
ch ild ren In the area. G ifts
brought to Q uincy's w ill b e '
distributed by the Health and
Rehabilitative Services In time
for Christmas.
A ll 213 Quincy's restsurants
throughout the Southeast are
sponsoring the "W ishing T ree"
program with a local charity In
each market. Customers can
bring .a gift for an underprivi­
leged child through Dec. 17 to
any Quincy's. Every participat­
in g customer w ill receive a
thank you coupon.
“ Quincy's Wishing Tree’ will
provide gifts to thousands o f
children who otherwise would
not have a gift from Santa.” said
BUI Burton, division leader at
Quincy’s operations; "Wfe fcait't
think o f a better way. to celebrate
the holiday season than helping
b rin g smiles to children on
Christmas m orning."
In addition to supplying the
Christmas W ishing Tree and
special gift tag ornaments, the
company has developed other
on-site point o f purchase materi­
als to generate awareness for
this holiday project with the
theme “ Quincy's Wishing Tree
- You Can Make a Child's Wish
Com e True.”

Employee
theft above
shoplifters
CHICAGO - Retailers looking
to cut their theft losses would do
well to leave the customers alone
and keep a wary eye on their
own employees, according to a
new survey.
Employee theft accounts for
seven times more revenue loss
for retailers than shoplifting,
said the annual loss-prevention
survey by Ernst &amp; Young, re­
leased Friday.
T h e survey. “ An Ounce of
Prevention." showed retailers
reported S2.2 billion in 1989
theft losses, an average o f S21
million for the 160 companies
responding and an Increase of 10
percent compared to 1988.
" T h e average recovery per
e m p lo y e e a p preh en ded was
SI .350, compared to an average
o f just S196 recovered from each
customer taken Into custody,
even though 93 percent o f those
apprehended were customers,'*
said Gerald Smith, who heads
th e fir m 's r e ta il g ro u p In
Chicago.
Smith said It's not Just a "front
door-back d o o r" problem as
employees learn how to manipu­
late the sales system to steal
both motiey and merchandise.
The survey said 45 percent o f
thefts were detected at the
point-of-sale, the cash register.
Common methods o f employee
theft Included ringing up a sale
and then voiding It. doing a
phony return and undercharging
friends for merchandise. About
10 percent of the thefts were
reported In (he stock area.
"A t a time like this with retail
sales slowing down. It's more
Important than ever for retailers
to find ways to save money."
Smith said. "B y reducing losses
caused by thefts, retailers can
help offset sluggish sales.

a*«**»J

Cham lM f w g teo m tt Exxon
The Greater Bwtford Chamber of Commerce
recently welcomed the now Exxon station on
tho comer of 17-82 and Lake Mary Boulevard to
the area with a ribbon cutting ceremony.* In
attendance wane Mayor Bettye Smith, Margaret

Wlrth, Nathan Silverman, manager, Don Croat
of Exxon Corporation, Ned Yancey, 8harl
Brodle, Jeff Tomecek, Dsbbls Kwasmam of
Whisper 104, Kitty West, Susan Casey, Gall
McDaniel, the Exxon Tiger and Twinky tho Kid.

R ig T h ro e a u to m a k e rs id le p la n ts

to trim unsold cars and trucks
DETROIT - The Big Three
automakers said recently they
will temporarily Idle at least a
dozen plants this w eek and
beyond to trim bloated stocks o f
unsold cars and trucks, affecting
more than 36.000 workers.
In d u s t r y le a d e r G e n e r a l
Motors Corp. plans to temporari­
ly Idle at least six U.S. plants
th is w eek b eca u se o f high
supplies o f unsold cars and vans.

Nearly 19.000 workers will be
affected.
GM plants to be temporarily
s h u tte r e d In c lu d e o n e s In
Wentzvllle. Mo.: Lansing. Mich.
IA and B plants); Lordstown.
Ohio (van plant): Kansas City.
Kan. (Fairfax): and Van Nuys,
Calif.
Second-ranked Ford Motor Co.
waa slated to idle several U.S.
assembly plants for two weeks
starting Monday because of a
shortage o f dealer orders, af­
fecting 12.700 workers.

Am ong them la Its Wayne.
Mich., plant that produces the
all-new Escort subcompact car.
Ford has pinned high hopes on
the Escort to h elp It meet
government fuel-economy laws.
C h rysler Corp. announced
plans to Idle Its Jeep plant In
Toledo for one w eek starting
Monday because o f high inven­
tories. The m ove w ill affect
about 4,700 hourly people, a
company spokesman said.

Beat The liix!

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^ M A IL TO: Sanford Herald • P.0. Box 1657 • Sanford, FL 32772-1657

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ml

�Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida — Sunday, November 29. 1900

m-owptax*

T riple*/R ut

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o l*

O rla n d o • W in te r F

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT. PRIVATE PARTY RATES
hours
........... ....

mmssgm
AM IM OfO

NOTICE OP
FOaiCLOSURBSALI
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
pursuant fa • Final judgmanf at
so 0737' 14 ot ttia Circuit Court at
tha EIGHTEENTH Judicial
Circuit In and t v SEMINOLE
County. Florida wlwrsfn NCNB
NATIONAL BANK OF FLORI­
DA. successor By margar la
Ellis Bank at North* Bar FWrMa.
K VAN SCHELTEMA. STATE
OF FLORIDA. DEPARTMENT
OF R E VE 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. art No Oatandants. I will Mil to tha highest
and bast btddor tar cash at ttw
antranca at Itw SEMINOLE
County CourtkauM at 11:pp
a m., on No JON day at Oacam

BUSINESS C E N TE R

If JOB spstrt 3 «B0&lt;a looiufll
tor i job, *it&amp; our Mp you

Natwtw^ BlaM

said Final Judgmanf:
Lot M. SPRINOS LAND­
ING UNIT TWO. according la
it&lt;a Plat N oroot as rscardad in
Plat Book JA Papas 77. SB. and
It- of ttw Public Records at
SamInolaCounty. Florida
AND
Lot J1. SPRINGS LAND­
ING UNIT TWO. accord!no la
tha Plat thoroaf at rscardad In
Plat Book Is. Papas II. SB. and
It. ot tha Public Bacardi at
Samlnole County. Florida.
WITNESS MY HAND and ttw
Mai of this Caurt an Novambar
ll. ltto
(SEAL)
HONORABLE
MARYANNS MORSE.
Clark of tha Circuit Caurt
By: Jana E. Jasawlc
Deputy Clark
Publish: Novambar 11. Illt t O

DEMIS

ns**3 *'.n

ssh n in ttir PMMt

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that are
are mgagad In business at IB1
O Brian R d . Fern Park. PL
nno. Samlnole County. Florida,
under tha Fictitious Name ot
INSPIRATIONS FOR HAIR and
mol we intend to reglstor said
name with tha Clark of ttw
Circuit Court. SemlnaW County.
Florida. In accardanca with ttw
Provisions ot ttw Flctltlawa
Hama Statutes. To Wit: Section
MS ot Florida Statute* m i.
Marla L. Rlccard
TaulC. Rlccard
Publish: Novambar a 11. IB. IS.

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Notice Is hereby given that ttw
board ot Adlustmont ot ttw City
ol Sanford will hold a regular
maallng on Novambar JO. tffO.
In the City Hall Commlsalon
Chambers at ll:»a .m . In order
&gt;o consider a request for
.arience In tha Zoning Ordi­
nance as It partalns to Sida Yard
iCornar) varlanca raqulramants
in an SR I district on:
Lot I Block I San Sam Knolls
First Add P i II PC AS aa
racordad In Sanlord. Samlnole
County. Florida
Bamg more specifically de­
scribed as located: IMS Patrick
Place
Planned use ot tha preparty Is
to construct a carport.
W M Philips, Chairman
Boar d of Adlustmont
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
o parson decides to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any matter considered at ttw
above meetlnp or haarlnp,
he/she will need a verbatim
record of ttw proceodlnps In­
cluding the testimony and evi­
dence. which record la net
provided by the City ot Sanford
I FS 7*4 OIOSI
Publish: November IS. IS. IMO
DEZ 101

B O A

B O A

SANFORD Largo I bdrtn. peal,
laundry. C/H/A. BJBS/ma or
sns/wk. Sata/pui • m a ts i

SAIIRMO, MOOCHLARI'
3 single family homes tor rant
All aval labia Immediately I
From tits par month

security

..m-net

ARIAL WPItSIl

2000 lake Mary Blvd
• Specious. Afterdob**.
Homelike

3S— Traininf
* Education
*CaA'i*Lffri+M&gt;i*
H E A LTH FORCE need* you
nowl Stalling all araasl
Ptanty at warkICaNSJB m s

C T R C A O X P D .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “Hollywood I* a hog* carousal,
with only a law brass ring*." — Harry Anderson.

t

C jf

Stately J bdrm. J bath J story
homo. Originally built In Ifjg.
but restored In t*P7 with now
plumbing, electrical, Install*
llan. floor covering, soffit
siding, etc. etc. The origin*I
dwrm la preaorved. Over JOBB

S atellites...
lasers...avionics

T he Army deals
with all of them
and more. See if you qualify for the
training in one of more than 50 hightech skills. And th e choice of a
sjiecialty is yours.

Municipal Fir* Sataty Inspac
Hon Cortlflcotton. Cortllkato
at Campllanca tram an
tpyrovad State at Florida
M in im u m S t a n d a r d *
Flrstlphtlng coutm. and hava
ttw knowladga- skills A ablll
ties of a Fire Inspactor I A II
and Fir* Investigator II as
llslad an National Fir* Pro.
toctlon Association INFPA)
Standards Numbers ipjt and
1033. Standards tar Profosslonal Quallllcallon tor
Flro Inspoctloh. Flro In­
vestigator A Flro Prevention
Education. Pot**** A main
tain a valid Florida Drlvar's
Llcansa. Prefer a minimum ol
two ID year* saparisnes In
tire Investigation
Closing Datsi Dec. s. ItfO SPM
SEMI NOLI COUNTY
PERSONNEL OFF 1CI
SECOND STREET ANNEX
IJB1 E. SECOND ST.
SANFORD. FLORIDA j j n i
APPLICATIONS
OIVEN ANO ACCEPTED
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
1:1* AM TO l:M PM
______ ElO/M/P/H/V

IM M M tM N

Larga family room. C/H/A.
toncod. U » month plus sac
HALL REALTY...........JJJ-SH*
•Sts MOVE IN no quality, move

n-Emptoyment
Wanted

KttSivW

We have immediate
openings!
• Painters
• Book Binders
• Construction
• Warehouse
• Production
Employees with transportation
needed Immediately

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. INC
*
\

t

i

�(

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novambar 25, 19fti — TN

141— Hm im s for Sate

K IT *N* CAR LYLE® Ry Larry Wright

/r “

V I. Crossings, pool I»4I. I »
LESS THAN MJM DOWN

a/S, Caooolbar ry, pool. W0.I71

^ M W rn M C M

STENSTROM

OR CONVENTIONAL LOANS'
Asxumabto no-qualify loans in
thaw araaal Chant hemes
tram lam Inoto/Orange
Vatualo/Laha Counties I

PMas* call Mr oltior llsllngst

We list and sHI
more property Hun
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/lafce Mary area.

mmmtMmcm
V l. II* Us- lam roams, appl.
m m

' "

HOIK

PQSSNU lEMf/PMQMSt
V I. with family. living, dining
rms. fplc. anclotad porch,
tone* yard. Hugo lat. Ht.soo

ST. J0M? MO U HOMO!
S aero attetol V I. not sq ft.,
cMiombwm.my.fas

1/1, living, dining, family
rooms, lancad yard, naw
palnl, carpal and III* irt.fOO

Custom bulll 4 bdrm 1 bath,
fireplace. scroanad pool and
•* * .] car geragt. 1174.400

Caramlc III* . Lavalors.
Ilrtplac*. 1 car garag*.
Pool/tonnls avail....... Of1.000

HCWLT RIMOOf LID ab*m.

(laRI LR. MART POOLSIDI
4/1. COUNTRY LIVING ON
l&lt;i acras Wall kopt Im
p rottlv* homo. P ottlb l*
tradol................... tiaa.m il

0CIT0M
Last man C M down) V I aim
IS 1 14sernd porch.. .154.MO

(MR) TIRRIFIC LR. MART
VI. 3.111 s.l. All lh* liras
Supar tIM. Easy accost M all
major roods. Coll now.ltai.aaf

SUM DOWN IKE CLOSIM
Plnacrast. V I, living, ». nlng,
family rm.. sacurlty sylttm,
toncodyard ...141.400

Florida R u tt y

MOO FAOLA A R IA CUSTOM
V I on w acr*. Family rm .
Ipk.. Myar. dining rm. aal In
hit. Mor*. Spot last.....snr.ooo

INVITINO I POOL) in . NIC*
arc# Naor but. shopping.
Soma rati nica oolros. Chech
out mis on*. Now........ Ua.roo

3/2CUSTOM BUILT

ThePrudential®
LOOKING F0M M0MC?

&lt; I4 K ) C O N T E M P O R A R Y
CUSTOM V I on S gorgoout
•eras roar si. Johns A l a
Amanitlas gatorat Now lull
siar.m ii

OfflOO 1.29 SUES

1117337

(M R ) S U M * 1/1 S-ACRE
tslafo. Alt lira s, tractor
motor. Hors** OK. OuIsland
Ing offaring. |*a now 1114.000

(MR) HIOOIN L A R I VI. Wall
landscaped comar Ml. naw
carpal A CHA. Lika now. Musi
M*ll. Naw only.......

UMEMMt
LESSTNMSMM BOM

322-2420

CMUUMTA POOL HOME
1/1. Ilrapiaca. accass to Last
Mills, on 1/1 acr*........17MOO

M
i-—
-—
|
a
|fn
H
ia
|
m*p,
la
rM
lli
Iff
l rW

i ani
1 M R . Laundry A family rms.
Corrwr Mil H I M ..... H I AH !

NEWHOMES.......... MHMH
MOOELOPEN 11-4.... VA/FMA
c A CHOMES, f e J M S j M
1 bedroom, i bath. FL. Room
SacMdad ora*...1 i a m
Sahara* R*ally...R*atMr
an e n o w

BATEMAN REALTY
Uc. Real EstaM Brohar
1*40 Sanford Av*.

12147H............. 321-2237
* wSMFORO* *
1ST TIME BUYER tPIC IA LI
Noel at a pint SBR. brkk
home (over I,MS s.l.) I*avail
tor only 154,400 Easy qualify
Mr • va% Bond money. Only
*1.400dawn. Ult/monthl I
Call BraiMw Orton Hamas
N S M Ia m -

BUILDER? SPEC NOWS
Includes Screened Pool
Spoclal RaM Financing
_________Cairni aria________
DREAMWOLD SURD. 1 rms,
1 bdrmi i bam. City w/s. pvd.
tl. Nice area I M a ra By
•apt-, u a e w d a y v in -n is

321-2720
IMSParh Dr.. Santord
aai W. Lob* Mary •!.. U . Mary

ASSUMABLE H* Qualifying.
Loch Arbor area 1 bdrmt 1
bm*. Family rm. A Dining.
Lg*. corner Ml. heavily Iroad
Call EMMor WaN
ui-am/m-isas............ rcm

1, 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartm onlt from $ 3 7 0 f M O .

I l l MONTH’S RENT
(till D ecem ber l it )

Pool, tennis courts,
clubhouse, fishing lake;
Also convenient to shopping &amp; schools!

cincva

A

G

akdlims

p a k im ln ts

RENT TODAY
FOR OUR
M O VE-IN SPECIAL
1 iiiid 2 B c U r o o m A p t s

A v u iU ib le

S ttirtiiu ) .it :&gt; 1st) 00

1505 W 25lh SI . Setnforcl

322 2 0 9 0

x

Oaks *4 Santord. 4 bdrmt. IV*
ba. Reduced Illl.fM/mafc*
otter.......n trra / tu A tM tii

RAVENNA PARK - Nice 1
bedroom homo) Eat In kltch
location, oasy terms I Just
roducodll.................. U4.m
LOVELY 1 bdrm. IV* bath
homo, largo corner let, formal
dining rm., many troot I Etc.
•tartar home. SUM down +
c c Call quick I *41.000

157— Mobil#
Names/Sale
l i l t per month on a IW0 1
bdrm. 1bath daubMwkM.
CeKLaa, 44441*47**
CARRAMI COVE. SANFORD
I bdrm. I bath, vary clean
14,445 ebe or 10% down. By
......... H I 4*14
E. ORANGE COUNTY • I I
Daublawid* an .4* acras
.......W.MaRcwwtkl
.......................... ....... B U M

LON COST UVING!

FRE CHRISTMAS SPECIALS

COUNTRY LIV IN O at Iti
Flnostl Only • ml M 1-4.
Roomy 4/1 on A acrai Loft ol
coder, lancad pastures. Hors*
tovari will leva "-It I *250.000
AAcKannat IM-tlTS........... RHJt
S A L E / L IA S E / IN V E S T I I
bdrm. I ba. Condo. Rants tor
*400 mo. All appliances, ternd.
porch, convanlent to shops.
transportation.....*10.000. Call
Walt *r Jim..j u -n e t....... r a ii
I* Nicely Weeded Acral I m i
s.l. hors* barn, older mobile
homes, small house. Artesian
wall, near area of proposed
baitway I AAak* Offer!....RAAll
EMI* Iplvay m n * * / m a w *
BEOIN H IRE! 1 bdrm. 1 bam
home w/ternd, pool, covarad
p a t i o , f a m i l y room
w/tlraplaca A lg. kllchon.
Eac. cond Only .147,750.RA20
Call Jaaa 727-1244/17**714 eve*
HANDYMAN SPECIAL! V I
Ready Mr finishing Inttd*.
Lumbar available
Close to
shop*, bus. schools. Owner
may llnanca. Hurry 1121.000
•III Harvey u n t i l ............. S*i

rto*04rac ««Airo*a

l a

DELTONA
Non Qualifying mortgage. 1
bdrm., 1 both. I(s years old.
All apgllancotl EicalMnt
condition. La*** w/apMon M
bey. Cod aayHnso. m v m

STUBS PROPERTY

Kenes

e

*N0M4IIAUFYING*

i t Large Master
BR w/beth. Guest bdrm A
bath, aat In kit. w/dttTrwether
A disposal. Formal Dining
Rm.. Living Rm w/tlraplaca.
Sernd. porch w/lak*vi*w.
washer dryer I Fran MV.MO M
s*4.ra . A TO W N E R i..m -M is

MANAGEMENT* REALTY

323-3200

R

1 bdrm*. 1 baths. Groat roam,
vaulted calling*, 1 car garag*.
Dig KfT, qMKtl m(fl™WriOOo.
Naw te r ra Call 1144471 avos

THE HIOHT FLACEI Carafro*
living In this lovely 1 bdrm.
I 'v ba Condo. Compls'o
w/comm. pool A tennis to ml.
10 I a. Only 1111,000..RFI7. Call
Jeon mwsa/avai i i h w

LAKE AAARYI 1+ acres lortad
A I wim quality bull! 4 bdrm.
I d bam all brick homal Over
2700 S.l. ol living tpac*.
EacallantKhoolsll IttlOOO
Satan Ua S11-1M............RC-17

10 5 Saturday
Sunday By Appt

CfrOp/Sale

1 bdrm.. 1 bam. NEW paint,
carport with fanead yard.
114.000 MUST SEEI South
Park Av*. area. CkU 444141*n4 or *e*&gt;taoa*i.__________

ASTOR, Silver Olan A Lb.
Oaargal Crult* from this lev*
ly SI. Johns Nlvar Canal front
homaw/dock. Salter financing
avail.lltt.ra.RPit. Call I MM
sptvty m -n M /m -o** eras

O ffice Hours
9-6 Mon. • Frl.

141— Hamas far Sato

E X C E LLE N T Cam m trclal
Invatlmanl on ir/gj. 11% ROI
on 1 0 , 000 * s . l . prop
w/long term tenants. Good
long Mrmdaval, potantlall
Wall *r Satan at JU-H0A....CFM

CUSTOM BUILTI V I on lg*.
woadod lal. lern d. peal,
summer kitchen, sac. system,
sprinklers, formal dlnlngl
*144.400.... RW1S. Can EMM
Iplvay U H M / U H M tva*

. . .
REYES #1 IN THE SOUTH

EXTRA FIRM Quaantli* bad.
*M; rattan S ttar shaft. *M
Goad condlllas. Call H IM O
K I N O I I I I Watarbad
w / p *d a s la l,R e t* m lrrar
w/matching bureau.
------------Was SIMP ROW, I
LARRY’ S MART. Ilk Santord
Av*. Naw/Utad fum. A applAwy/SaR/Trada------ » 4 1 B .
LIVINO Ream Fandtar* - Eac.
condition. Include* sol#
r Priced 104*112751770
* MAGIC C H IP rang*.
slid* In atactrk. Neve r used
needs burner aMmants. 171.
___________ 71*4777___________
SIG N ATURE R alrlfa ratar.
Alm end. trosl-fra * w lc*
maker, great condition.
_______ 1700 Call 777-15*1_______
a tO F A. thro* place sectional
EactlMnt condition. 171.
___________77M7II.___________
• SOFA, contamperary Moral
design in shedrt of orange,
good condition only M0.
___________ 177-7774___________

PONTOON Beat and traitor.
14** JT w/45 HP Mart. EMc.
till, towhrs. OT-MM_________

USED APPLIANCES

Nka furnished mebiM homes
from 44.500 - H A W tor brand
nawI Quiet, wall maintained,
owner managed ratlraa park.
S. DaBary. Call 52517*7
MOBILE NOME • M ft. by M ft?
Can. H/A. carpal throughout!
Nka I S3.MO CaR...... n t-aitl
MOBILE HOME, IL .'k . good
condition Central heal and
A/C. franl/raar awning*.
*4J0&gt; Call 3*4 5771___________

STONE ISLANOI Bulldar’t own
homo, a bdrm. 1.5 baths. 1.104
s.l. w/all m* amanliiai Sava
a bundlol Bring all offartl... 1111.000.....RAIS Call
AAcKaunas__ 214-0171

215— Beets end
Acmsortos

Bay/So4l*l

ALTAMONTESPRINGS

KEYES BEST BUYS

WE R€ BEING
RENOVATED!

G

(S T A T S CO., INC.

*% flst 346 1fm •

liSSTNM H IM DUNN

carport, c/h/a........

3/1, Sanford, 114.400

REALT Y, I N C .

111— Appliances

323-5774
QUIET MEA1I

m-mvnum
THE0MS, SANF0R0

14X4*1 bedroom, lt.lW

FOB SALE

14X44 2bedroom. 14.000

CaAmdraarmra*
* * * * * * * * *

1. I and'* bodrooni (tweet
•vailaPtewMb RONOAAONIV
AT I M toterastfleadt Also
availabM. govommonf repo's
and bonk Mracloturotl
Call J
Days, m -rn * Evas, m m i
AA Cans**, lac.

O n tu iX 0

1 53-A crM flELots/Sak
ACRtAW WANTED
Appro*. M acras naadsd in
SamlnoM County sultabl* Mr
building small airport
Scbarsn Realty ...RaalMr
___________B I-IW
D IAAR YI SummarhavonI .4
acr*. Beautiful Mil Traatl
H U N ORANT PBOPMM4M
LAKEFRONT - DaBary, owner
financing, low down. H A W
Larry Harman, Broker IM IB *
OCALA NATIONAL FORE IT I
Wooded lot* River access.
15.150 each. No Moaay Dowol
171.41monthly
......Owner

(**«» m-M7*ar (fa*) in-mm
OSTEEN

10 acre* wim access M the SI.
John's Rlvorl Mobil* homos
OKI Financing availabM.
Labe Mery Beady. H M U *
PORT OF SANFORO A R IA
Busy Orange Blvdl 1 acres,
lonod AG. tk mIM M 1-4 till
and anIrene* m l Can divide.
high and dry............... tsa.SOO
Tsmpba Realty lac. *5*-441S

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/Sale
FINE AIDGICLUI
PRICES STARTINO AT H I JM
2 Bedroom t Bam condomlnl
urns. All appliances, vortical
blinds throughout, clubhouse,
pool, tennis, sacurlty guard
CALL...771*470
rente FI. IM./Broker

If.

1R3— Tttovistofi /

RMMe/$tereo
PISNRR Start* System. 100
Watt speaker*. Eacallant
CondiIMnl M50. OGO M2-7IS*
OOOO USED TV'S 125A up
Miner's TV. l*l*0rlando Or
................ 277(057
TV SATELITI Systems. Locally
■w**d/ipe« tad- M7 Mapaslta
Av. Fraasarvayl.......730-1575

117— SpoftiiH 0eo&lt;$
• BICYCLE - Huffy » In. BMX
style. Haver used! Brand
naw I Ideal Chr Istmas gl ft, IM
Call 7ll-4454

BI6 CUN 1 KNIFE
* SH0N1 SALE ★
BUY......... SILL.-------TRADE
ORLANDOEXPOCINTIR
SAT. OEC. I......... .... fAM-4 PM
SUN. O lv.1 .........—..4AAA-4FM

NO WAITING PERI00I
INFO. 4*475*5447

IBP— Office Supplies
/ Equipment
I ROMS. ttngk
1 act * l ianaI chabs. *45 *a. *
i chairs, 1IJ.M a*. (I )
. fil. ( I ) Safe, wood
frame, 145. t arm dash chair.
*42. 4 swivel dash chairs. *40
an..... *70-4*77*r 274-47U avas

191— Building
AAeteriels

IIX4* - 1 bedroom Ifo both.
1 bdrm. 1 bath, i r a sq. ft.,
large living and dtaln* area
wim Ilrapiaca. Eotra room tor
oflko/hobby/mird bedroom
Wood dock, largo treat, tonnlt
and pool prlvIMgo*. 1105.000

•WROUGHT Iran
Tabta, 4 Chairs. VR
Call 25*4117,

14X4*
J bedroom. Ifo bom.
tiu o o
14X4* • 2 bedroom.

ALL STEEL BUILDINGS at
(Staler invoica. 1A00 to 50.000
to. ft. Call 407 74t B it cal Met
•Cimant Block s r X I " X 14"
now. 3 for *100. Approx. 45
btocfct..................

REPOSSESSED

2 bath.

sum
SAVE M l NEW IN I HOMES!
WHY PAY X ITAILT 14X7*.

ta rn . HX7% tra m »**-i7*f

TARE OVER PAYMENTS
1147 par month on a m i
14X70. Call LaRoy:

________E W N j ________
IMI t a » Skylark wttb n o * FL
I l i a wim paaaAng. All naw
turnllur* Ind. Mini blinds,
carpeting, haal/alr wind, unIts. calling Ians. Baaa. 22t-f7«l
It** CATALINAI &gt;4144. V I.
ShlngMd reel, masonlfo sid­
ing. vaulted callings. Taka
aver paymtt, S2M/m*i Move
fo year arapartyl Call..5*41***
1 BDRMS. l] wide, vary raason
able I Set up Park Av. Mobile
Park. Santord .m -ra i-M p m

IM -B u s t m ss

• FofSjto
IR^aN^^N/Pbiw^ww Rraiasiaobi
H T T fu u iiR n i M i u i n m
Nawly r*mod*lad. 10.000 sq.
ft. Good Invostmontl UM.OOO.
Owner moving, mutt sal 11
Call Mr. Ang, 2M 4W*

ELECTRIC COMPANY
Business. Land, Building and
Inventory. Terms. *300.000
PAULA BETH OSBORNE
VENTURI I PROPERTIES
221-47*4

INI— Appliances

/ FurwHuft
A MATURED N0C1D CO.
SamlaeM Ptoia Cats* Marry
HOLIDAY BIFT SPICIALSI
SHEET SITS/HIATIRS D t.lt
024-4225. Man-Sal-14-4pm
* BaewttM Wtng-back Chair.
Duncan Fyt* legs- LI. Ian
w/*mbrod*ry, small llowars.
Ilk* naw I MUST SELLI
1100......................... 222-1*44
BJ'S RESALE
W* buy/1*11 Furniture A Cal
lectiblat. Including Kstafoi
I5W1. Santord Av*.. m-74*«

Must sail 4 quonsal staol
buildings. Brand naw • never
•vactaO. 15X70. 0X4*. 40X40.
20X 100. Will tall Mr balance
L Call Jim. MO(711007

193— Lewn A Garden
FARM RC1NC STRIPPED
Absolut* top soil Mr taM. 110
par cubic yard, II cubic yards
or more. 777 0751____________
• HEDGE TRIMMER
shape. Mw years old. IIS. Call
127-4774

195— M achinery/Tools
AIR Cemprttser-4HP,20 gal.
lank, MM. Engine Stand *40.
E Me. sandar/grlnder 140
• Chain Saws, 2, HomellM w
Poulan 1100 Mr both, works
good Call new 744-1041
PASLODE Impulse nail gun,
MM- Duo Iasi nail gun, 1100;
Petlodt staple gun, 1100; V4
HP comprasur. I KM.
_______ Call 404 7047140_______
*1 TOOT FNalkM theft, all
metal. Jacobs chuck and
grinding wheel holdtr. Ml.
775 4114

199— Pets * Supplies

S i 'M M

R IG A T T A

323-2628 SHORES
Pn/eaaene Owned a Managed by
_ , .
FMI Pmataa

k

On Laka M on ro*

PtKEDTOStUJ!

231— Cars

V VMttcratt Iportbrtoga hAL
4545, Radar, Loran. VHF.
Rtgrars and MUCH
Ml
MOREII
Asking j y r a .
Yacht iotas.
14 FT. JOHNSON flborgiat* - II
HP Evtnrudt. aMctrk. galva
nliad traitor, accatertot. Good
condition. 11,745777 43*4

* 3 f WEUCRAFT*
l t d SI. Trapat 4541 Gan., Air
Radar, Laran. Auto pitot, and
all th* amanitlas.
GRAB THIS ONE FOR ONLY
S47JSA Llpdhaata Beat Yard
and Y ach t S a las, lac.
***/7t7d**7.

NISSAN Iaa4ral T l Ac. S tpd .
great runnlng/gas ml.SlMdwn
SatNvan’ t Aata Ranch..-»*-4434
H*e L I BARON Cawnrtthl.
TURBOI Automatic, power
windows, cruise, rod! S4.4M
...............77747*4
BUICK ELECT*A - T*. Air.
p/w, p/s. Runt real good. A
classic I M.45A..........J ll- N li
CHEW NOVA -74. 4dr. tadan
4 eyl., a/c. Looks good I Runt
II AtlsIM M ------ n i 7W7
FAIRWAY MOTORS
"H m m *1114* Dawn A RIG*"
M US 17-41 Li mawid-TH-TTa

URCOUITUWWCAR
217— Oarage tales
MOVING SALE!
IS Vrt. at This G That
IM MAIN ST. GENEVA
Friday, Sat. A Sunday. A4pm.
Sam* antiguat. kitetwn war*.
deep treat*, furniture 11______

1411RASTRER PEACE
PORT OF MNPORD
Wrapping paper and accassories, gift Items, orna
mants, cheese, sausage and
candy 1........................ 7714454

t r a High mltooga, runs good,
never wrecked. *400 Call
Jady/Bkb..... ..............711-5404
• PUBLIC A U TO AUCTION •
■ V E R Y TUESD AY h M FM
D A Y T04M AU TO AUCTION
Hwy. 47, OayMaa Btach
_________ to *75*4711________
1474 RUICK REGAL. 1 dr. 1445
Good Condition. 117-0114
(D o ts ) or 777-4145___________
'S I M E R C U R Y T O F A 2
automatic, stereo LIK E N EW
lifts Call m -U IO ___________
77 CUTLASS CIERA A/C. PS.
PB. AM /FM and cessatt*.
54.000 miles. E i cel tonI condi
tlonl *5,500 Call 771 m i

233—
Auto Parts
/Acce$Eorie$

219— Wanted to Buy
•O O D FU R N ITU R E
WANTIDI Aay CONDITION!
AM* haytag a jjjw g . MMMI
KOKOMO
..m -n w
I N E E D F R E E WOOD
PALLETS. 44 to 1 44 Ml, 4
way’ s. WHIpkhap.....MI-1415
U P R IG H T PIANO! Lava light.
Alto Blko bulll tor 1. Call
anytime!.................... 775-ItM

MUTTED't
Largo up to I Mat ttold roller
and mower. 7715154 or 574
4721 Anytime.
W A N TE D - PALM TR EES. *10
tt. Coll Billy's Palm Treatl
44* 74* 7744

221—Good Things
to Eat
HOLIDAY CATERING! P r*
par*, tel up. serve a clean up.
Your cholcal Good bom*
Ext. rtfs...... 74**141

222— Musical
Mtrchandis*
HAMMOND ORGAN! Rythym
A Percussion. 1410. Good
Condition. 777 7X77__________

A U TO M A TIC
transmissions
(ram 175; exchange radiators
tram MO; Used liras tram 15;
Tlr* mounting availabM.
1714 Catery It, 711-4474

234—
Im port Cars
and Trucks
FR ELU D EI Sun
roof, tow mIM*............. 110.4*4
Magic Imre.......... ......... 777-47*4
HUN DAI Excel OLI 77. Naw
liras, battery, a/c. Runs/looks
gaodlM.AM................171-7407
'44 ISU2 U TROOPER! Air con
dtttonlng, 4 wheal drive. 14.144
...............777-4744
14(7 NISSAN PICKUP TRUCKI
Excellent thapa, air.......*2.4*7
Matte l*W*— ................. 777-4744
'M TOYOTA 4 RUNNIRI Air.
automatic trans. EFI....110.4*2
....... - ..... 227-4744

235-Trucks/
Busts/Vans
44 CHEVY Vt TON PICK UP
Rebuilt IM Cu. in. engine.
Good alt., brakes, shocks,
radiator, U joints. Needs body
^o rk ra O C a n M JH T^ ^ ^

237—Tractors and
TrallErs ____

THOMAS ORGAR!
Good tor family or small
church I Exc.cand...... 271-1741

CAR TR A ILE R ! With ramps'
Heavy duty metal. *«e. con
dlHon Stop Call...........171 4444

223—Miscellaneous

23R—VahlctGs

A COLLECTION OF
AA AUTO SALVAGE
HO LID A Y CRAFTS A G IFTS
Now buying complete cart A
1A T . D E C I----------------4AM-5PM
trucks by weight 17 75 p/ioo
SUN. DEC I............. 12:M-SPM
lbs delivered, or 11.75 p/10O
TUB. I4T HIT. SAN FOX D
lbs
we pick up. Example *74
OFF SANFOXDAVE
Cadillac ( 5.015 lb*, x M IS
BUY......... SELL........ TXADI
equals 111207). Guaranteed
HUEY’ S CKOWN PAWN
highest prices paw to this
___________ 2711744__________
areal Call i l l u se tor qaate
CHR ISTM AS TR E E FARM ,
Open wk ends. 47*0 W. 21th SI.
261—Recreational
‘
17174*7.
Vehicles
/ Campers
OAR AO E Opener, secretary
desk, 2 desk chairs, lg. ping
CAMPEX I f Spirit. A/C. gat
pong table, 2 Ilia cabinet*.
•toy# and furnace, toilet
towing machine.........424-1175
itoept 4. Good Cond. 7115114
a Q U E E N 1I2 E Bedspread.
CLASS A I T
powerful engine,
Sears, like new. 110. Please
rear double, forward queen.
call............................. 177 5*47
A/H. full time rig. w/ll. 21
* Used Landscape Timbers.
m pq.towcar.H4r a 444 MIS
( 22) Good condition 1115
TR A VEL TR A IL E R 1471 Car
Each. 27*1254______________
rlaga. 22 II, rear double bed.
OW HEELCHAIR. Almost new.
fully equipped. A quality
removeable swing our tool
coach. 15.500 407 174 1113
rest. Cost *400 new. selling
now lor 1100
243—JunlTCars
OM Catalina Dr, Santord._______
•CASH* FOR VOUX JUNK
*1 DRUMS with tt gal. fuel oil
CAN O X T N U C K tl AN Y
A connect.onl 140 (both) Or
COHOITIONI CA LL H I 1417
tall separate............... 277-4444
I1TOP Dallartt Paid lor |unk
11X 11 ABOVE are** peal, good
cars, trucks, 4 wheel drive
condition. Illltr, liner and all.
Any rendition.......Call 171-1440
210; Call 71544(1

Ken RummeI
G t T T O &lt;■ N O W

207— Swap Corner

* »: 4 7 . •

14*1 MOBILE HOME • 14x45
Value 14.0001 Trade Mr racra
at tonal vahlcla, boat, ale.
Call 7777744

Q u a lity Used C ara A t A F a ir P r ic e

209— W earing Apparel

N o A p p lic a tio n R e fu s e d

a SECOND GENERATIONS*
Your clothing sold tor com
mission only) Call 174 2474 *
Country Club Iguara Cantor
MIN A Airport Stvd.. Santord

BUY HERE
PAY HERE

le e e

le e e

DON’T BE
REAR-ENDED
BY HIGH INSURANCE
COSTS!
T

H

/

TONY RWSSt INSURANCE AttWT
•AltattM
Q7m
|AC4OtaCIMTI*O#HO*-a«
AUTO • HOME - BUSINESS
||7* muteINMC*l«|tM

MAYFAIRSECTIONOFSANFORD
203SCOTTSTREET

Living room snth tirupiace. dining room, oat in lutchon
Large manor bedroom with (besting room and closet
(tho kind ol mastor suite one would find in a much more
uiponuve home)

M»t omu

ANTHONY J MUSS*

Its 9]GGAGl*

LOWAS^200^^ DOW
N
LOWAS *35 PERW
EEK
N O CREDIT? BAD CREDIT?

WE CAN HELP!

Landscaped and loealud in a choice oioa with troo
coveted lot Back yard fenced

Priced *115,000

79 DODGE VAN CUSTOMIZED
A Lie* Walk

87 FORD ESCORT GL Ame.iur.ttoen.
Reel. Like Ik*. Whiu. M O t h Intone,

88 GEO SPECTRUM CL
Thtoto Mr, Atdemsc. luxury In A Cempect

*1288
*3388
*4888

8 9 P O N T I A C L E M A N S L E w m ce.
S C I O O
tatoege CtwxpPnce? itotehle. Leekt A Rwvx Great

4

TUCKER &amp; BRANHAM. INC.
211 W 1*1 S i . Sanford, FL 32771

(407) 322-4451

2335 W. Sem inole Bird.

Instruction, ministry and
toltowshlp. Call 7777744

NO INTEREST

HAPPY HOUDAYS FROM THE STAFF OF
REGATTA SHORES

1 Bedroom from $450
2 Bedrooms from $540

JOfRTNIWIRCSOFIAfiUS
CHRISTIAN FIT1NGCUM

FREE CATS
Wntor must find goad homo*
Mr her cats at tncal Many art
part Ha mate I ......... 744-1114
RETRIEVER PUP*
Black.
AvailabM now lor Chrlslmotl
Call 777 *471

On Beautiful Lake Monroe
• Clubhouse With Fireplace
• Indoor Racquetball
• Weight Room
• Pool &amp; Jacuzzi
• Washer/Dryer Connections
• Garden Windows
• Fireplaces

229— Avia tien

■'Serving Crnintl Flurul.i"
.Since nrjc’i

J IO O

87 CHEVY EUROSPORT
4 0x, 2 Tone. Ceeeeax, JO.DCO Otiqmei kktoe

86 Ford F150XLT
V-4, Auto , 7we tone. Cuetom Mxrier

*5988
*5988

HIGHWAY 17-92, SANFORD, FLA.
{ 1 2 mils North ol Ldho Maty Btvd )
E d i y to Itdrt f / o i n d o y w h o i u In C e n t r a l Fla

322-8643 or 830-6907

P h o n e { 4 0 7 } 32t-7UO O or ( 4 0 7 ) 6 2 8 - 9 7 7 9

�M

•fill'

* «

• I

1 t t

I I •

— Sanford H erald. Sanford, Florida — Sunday, November 25, 1990

Health/Fitness
Virus linked to autoimmune disease

IN B R IE F

UPI Science Writer

Coping w ith holiday bluas
ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS — Coping with the holidays after the
death of a loved one Is extremely difficult. Sally Kopke. M.S.
Bereavement Counselor, will share suggestions on how to
handle the anticipations, the obligations, and the traditions.
The bereaved In the community are Invited to attend and be
part of a candlelight service which will close the program.
The candlelight service la Wednesday. Nov. 28. 1990 at
Fellowship Hall (New England entrance). 225 S. Intcrlachcn
Avenue. Winter Park. Florida. 7 p.m.
The program Is sponsored by Baldwln-Falrchlld Cemeteries
and Funeral Homes.

SK run s lattd for Doctmbor
DAYTONA BEACH - Phi Thela Kappa will hosl a 5K run at
the west campus of Daytona Beach Community College on Dec.
8. at 3 p.m. Th e race begins at 3 p.m. with registration from
2-2:45 p.m. Pre-registration entry lee Is $7 — $8 for students.
Registration will then be *8 the day of the event. There will be
an awards ceremony following the race. Awards are to be given
to the top 3 male and female overall, as well ns awards to thr
top 3 In 15 age categories.
T-shlrls will be glvrn lo the first 100 entrants.

Solf-ostoom seminar sat for January
LONGWOOD — "There Is no clearer Indication of a child’s
potential for happiness and success than high self-esteem."
according to Dennis H. Jones, Ph.D.. West Lake Hospital
Administrator.
The hospital Is bringing Up With Youth, the nation's leading
self-esteem program for young people, ages 10-15. lo Orlando
On Saturday. Jan. 12.
The program consists o f a five hour seminar In which
children learn the essentials of building high selfesteem :
Components o f the program Include recognizing the Im­
portance and uniqueness o f the self: techniques for con­
centrating on positive concepts; Ihe Joys of giving and
receiving; a "h o w to say no In drugs" segment: and an
Introduction to goal setting.
The entire program Is seasoned with humor, music, role
plays and a slide presentation o f the day's events.
For further Information and registration details, call West
Lake Hospital at 262-2230 or 1-800-221-4223.

W ASH ING TO N Scientists
said they have found a new virus
that appears to be a cousin of I he
AIDS virus In people stricken by
an autoim m une disease, but
other researchers urged caution
In linking such disorders to
viruses.
A team from Tulane Universi­
ty School o f Medicine In New
Orleans. Baylor College o f Medi­
cine In Houston and Cambridge
Biotech Corp. In Rockville. Md..
said recently It detected the new
virus In patients with Sjogren's
syndrome, a so-called autoim­

m une disorder that creates
severe dryness o f the eyes and
mouth.
Autoimmune diseases occur
when a person's Immune syrtem
malfunctions and starts attack­
ing the body's own tissues as If
they were harmful microbes or
viruses.
The new virus, called human
Intraclslcrnal A-lype retroviral
p a r tic le o r H IA P . and th e
A ID S - c a u s In g h u m a n I m ­
m u n o d e fic ie n c y viru s both
belong to a family of viruses
called retroviruses, researchers
said. Retroviruses, like other
v ir u s e s , ca n n o t r e p ro d u c e
without Infecting cells. Bui un-

Poison Information Center
issues advisory on GHB
TA M PA - Th e Florida Poison
In fo rm a tio n C e n te r at T h e
Tam pa General Hospital Issued
an advisory on n substance sold
In health food stores that may
cause adverse respiratory pro­
blems.
T h e s u b s ta n c e , gam m a
hydroxy butyrate (GHB). Is used
as a body-building drug and a
psychedelic. Th e Center said five
cases of GHB exposure had been
reported. The Food and Drug
A d m in istra tio n (FD A) Is In­
vestigating these cases as well as
others that have been reported
in San Francisco.
G H B . a w h ite c r y s ta llin e
powder. Is also known as sodium
oxybate.
“ G H B has b een u sed In

Europe as an anesthetic agent."
said Sven Normann. Pharm. D..
administrative director of the
Poison In fo rm a tio n C en ter.
"Other possible reactions In­
clude abnormal muscle m ove­
ments. nausea and vomiting,
bradycardia (slow heart rale),
seizures and depressed respira­
tions."

welcome. But It Is necessary to
use extreme caution when link­
ing human autoimmune disease
to specific viruses or you may
needlessly alarm patients and
their families." Fox said.
The Tulane researchers first
su spected an A ID S -llke re­
trovirus may play a role In
autoimmune diseases when It
found about one-third of people
with Sjogren's syndrome. Juve­
n ile r h e u m a to id a r th r itis ,
scleroderm a and system atic
lupus erythematosus tested pos­
itive on certain tests for the HIV
virus even though they were not
actually Infected with HIV. It
waa theorized such patients
were producing antibodies to
light a retrovirus that was re­
lated. but not Identical, to HIV.
Fox said his team could not
duplicate those results In three
attempts.
Now. In a study published In
the Journal Science. Ihe Tulane
team reports It has Isolated a
new retrovirus in laboratorygrown white blood cells exposed
to salivary gland tissue from
Sjogren's syndrome patients.

like other viruses, retroviruses
are made o f RNA rather than
DNA. and have the power to
permanently Insert thetr genetic
Information Into a host's cell.
Dr. Robert Gallo, the National
Cancer Institute researcher cred­
ited with co-discovery of the
AIDS virus, called the findings
an
"Interesting" preliminary
report.
"But there Is no evidence that
this particle Is Indeed the cause
o f this particular disease." Gallo
said.
Gallo said that although such
particles do Indicate retroviral
Infection, they have never been
found before In humans and
have not been proven to cause
disease In mice or other animals
where they are often found.
Dr. Robert Fox. an autoim­
mune disease expert at Scrlpps
Clinic and Research Foundation
In La Jolla. Calif., also noted
previous findings suggesting a
viral cause o f multiple sclerosis
and chronic fatigue syndrome
have fallen by the wayside.
"A n y clue Into the underlying
etiology (cause) o f disease Is

Normann said thr adverse
effects may In* enhanced by
central nervous system d e ­
pressants. such as narcotics,
sedatives and ethanol (alcohol).
Of the five persons who devel­
oped problems after Ingesting
GHB. three were treated at
Tampa General.

Turkey sandmchM art Ightwoights com parad to a paskomi on rya. Each has only a
quarter o i N
calories (280
versus 1120)and is very lowm
1st so Ys a tot hsaHhier kx you.

Rec. department offers aerobic classes
SANFORD — An Aerobic Class Is offered by the Sanford
Recreation Department, located at the Downtown Youth Center
(lower level of City Hall). 300 N. Park Avc. Classes are presently
In session. Th ey arc held on Monday. Wednesday. Friday and
Saturday from 10 to 11 a.m. and on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Cost Is 82 per class. Exercise mats will be furnished for each
participant.
For more Information, please call the Recreation OfTlce at
330-5697.

Free screening offered
WINTER PA R K - The Winter Park Memorial Hospital
Auxiliary will sponsor free blood pressure tests and skin cancer
screening on Dec. S. Th e screenings are from 2 to 5 p.m . at
W inter I’orW M em orial Hospital medical library uudltorlum.

Cost Is free. For more Information call 646-7090.

We’re about to upset your
idea of a balanced diet

MOST INJURIES TREATED WITH
L I T T L E OR NO C O S T TO YOU!

OPEN

M.-F. 9-6

322-4762

• D A YS

SAT. 9-12

On the scale, four turkey sandwiches weigh more than one pastrami on rye.
But when it cornea to calories, the scale tipa the other way. Because one
pastrami sandwich, with iu high fat content, haa 1120 calories • almost four
times aa msny as in one turkey sandwich. Therein lies the essence o f the HMR
W eight Management Program. That by learning the skills neccesssry, you
can balance food calorics m d exweiae calorics to manage your weight for life.

HM R

would like to announce theopening of their
officeat City Centre, 130W. Lake Mary BlvdMSuite217,
Lake Mary. For more informationcall HMR Programof
Central Florida Regional Hospital • 324-2274.

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SANFORO, FI 32771
PHONE: (407) 323-2577

317 N. MANGOU3TINE AVE.
SANFORD. FL 32771
PHONE: (407) 323-2577
317 N. MANGOUSTINE AVE.
SANFORD. FL 32771
PHONE: (407) 323-2577

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This speciai offer good at Sanford
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OF C1NT4AI HOmOA. MC

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2479 S Park Ave
(25th St 4 Park)

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LAKE M ARY
3395 Lake Emma Or
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Lake Emma *183

333-9416

UCHAEL SliCELSIU, EO.

Specializing in Total Joint Replacement
F o r J u rttw r d e ta ils a n d
F ree In fo rm a tio n C a ll

^ G r a n d Opening
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Special

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Centra Care Announces Y^ur
Neighbofhood Family Doctors,

TRI-COUNTY

B ite s

■sSs

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mat rum

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
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 .

J A M E S F. C O Y , M .D .

ROBERT T. WILLIAMS, M.D.

D r. Coy, a D eland resident, it the
H o rth O rlan d o D is tric t M edical
D irector. H e is a graduate o f S outh­
western L 'n n rn iry College o f
M e Jkin e in Cebu C ity, P hilipp in e s
and com pleted h is post-graduate
tra in in g a t th e Kansas U niversity
M edical C enter in Kansas C it,,
Kansas. F or six years. D r. C oy had
a G eneral Practice o f M edicine.
Surgery and O bstetrics in M a rysville ,
Kansas p rio r to re tu rn in g to his
home town o f O rla n Jo in I9HS.
D r. Coy has been w ith C entra C a rt
since P M f except k it tw o i n n o f
Fam ily m edicine in D eland in /SV7
and I'M *

D r. W ilia m s , also a resident o f
Sanford, is a graduate o f the
U n ive rsity o f M ia m i S chool o f
M ed icine in M ia m i. F lorid a and
com pleted h is in te rn sh ip at D uval
M e d ica l Center in Jacksonville.
F lo rid a . D r. W ilia m s , a m em ber
o f the F lo tilla M edical A ssociation.
S em inole C o u n ty M edical Society
and A m erican AcaJem y o f Fam ily
P hysiciani has practiced w ith Centra
C a rt since A ugust 4 I9HI. P rio r to
h it association w ith Centra Care.
D r. W ilia m s practiced F am ily
M ed icine in B la ktly, Georgia and
Emergency M edicine in H ialeah and
T itu s v ille , F lorida.

W hen you o r yo u r (am ity need medical a tte ntio n , tu rn to the sign o i qu ality
healthcare, the Sanford C entra Care M edical Center. Together. D r. Coy
and D r. W illia m s b ring over 10 years o 1 eapericnce. These highly trained
physicians w ill provide the Sanford, Lake M ary and Southwest Volusia
C o u n ty residents convenient, q u a lity he J ih c a rc lo r the entire fa m ily ...
W h e n Y o u r H e a lth C a n 't W ait.

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■ Comics, Psgt 4C
■ Television, Pago SC
■ Education, Pago SC

il

students excel

IN BRIEF

i

Principal believes
students shouldn’t
be allowed to fail

C alib ratin g

92 yaars

E v a Smith, long-time Sanford resident, cele­
brated her 92nd birthday recently, at her
La k evtew Nursing Home residence. Family
m em bers visited and held a small party In her
honor.

Director announced
J o a n S. H a n s e n . Ig ff
Lon gw ood . has been
appointed Director of
l
the Retired Senior Vol­
u n te e r P rogra m o f
J
O range County by the
Vaf
F lo r id a S en ior P ro^ C g 5 ? iM
gram s. Inc.
J
\ tW f
H a n s e n , w ho prer
v lo u s ly directed the
•. A
R S V P p rogra m s o f
• A
Sem ln ole and Martin
fjjj;
________
will direct
^
.
Counties.
the project which has Joan Hanoon
over 900 senior volunteers serving at 115 vohuv
leer stations.
T h e primary objective of RSVP Is to provide a
variety of meaningful volunteer oportunltles for
retired persons 60 or older to participate more
fully In the life o f the community through
significant volunteer se ndee- - *
-• - • - j .

Barbara Kirby hus some strong
Idea* about education and she's nol afraid to let
people know about them.
Kirby, principal of the Grooms School o f Choice
since Ita Inception In September 1980. believes
that studemts should not be allowed to full
regardless o f their background or socio-economic
situation.
" I believe It Is the Job of the schools to help
students excel.” Kirby said.
The daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. Horace Collins of
Sanford. Kirby graduated In 1966 from Grooms
which was then a segregated bluck high school.
"Sanford Is still home for m e." she said. She
and her son William, a student at Hamilton
Elementary School, are both lifelong residents or
the city.
Kirby gradutated from Knoxville (Tennessee)
College In 1970 with a bachelors degree In
psychology. She had Intended to pursue a career
as a counselor, but the Job market was tight
when she began looking for a position In her
chosen field upon graduation.
“ It was September o f 1970 and I was still
working In the credit department at J.C.
Penney's when a neighbor told me ubout n
teaching position that was open at Altamonte
Elementary,” she recalled.
She said she applied for the Job that morning

■€

.............

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Crooma Sctsool of Cholca Prlnapal M a r a Khby

Local Army man upholds 44 years of tradition,
walks 100 miles to honor American soldiers
NIJMEGEN. Netherlands — A col­
orful smorgasbord of brightly hued
banners wave triumphantly In the
morning breeze, some with horizontal
or vertical stripes o f red. white or blue:
others adorned with white, red. or
green crosses. One has a huge maple
leaf In the center.
Each Dag Is held high by a member
of the military team accompanying It.
Mnrchlng briskly down cobblestone
streets bordered by green bushy vege­
tation. crowds o f onlookers wearing
clothes as colorful us the banners
cheer the gathering of soldiers. Dozens
of golden haired children dart In­
termittently between marchers to get
handshakes and souvenirs. This scene
was repeated countless times during
the 74!h annual Nijmegen Murchcs
held In this small town In Holland.
U.S. A rm y Specialist Jelfrey P.
Lavullcr. son o f Paul and Elaine
Lavatlee. 1057 Weaver Drive. Oviedo,
walked in the murch. Each unit
inurclics 25 miles per day for four duys
to complete 100 miles. This Is the 44th
yeur of participation by U.S. urmed
forces.
T h ou gh c iv ilia n s In itiated the
in a rch es In 1909. the fo u r-d a y
wulkathon also honors Amcrtcun
soldiers of the 82nd Airborne Division
and 1st Airborne British soldiers who
fought to secure bridges occupied by
Nazi soldiers during World Wur II.
Americans volunteered to work or
march In Nijmegen this year.

voiu niM rf in action.

H elping neighbors
W h en an elderly Lake Mary resident's home
fell In disrepair recently, city officials were
forced to Inform her o f safety code violations.
In the spirit o f the holidays, employees o f
Llberatorc Roofing volunteered their expertise
and repaired the hom e before fines accrued.

U.S. Army Spaclaliat Jallray lavallao praparaa for patrol

"M y company picked m e to
here because they knew I could
said the 20-ycar-old military
m an s ta tio n e d . » t H a n »u *

PC

march
do It."
police­
W est

Germany.

The marches were Initiated by the
Royal Netherlands League for Physical
Culture to encourage Dutch people to
participate In physlrul activity. U.S.
Arm y and Atr Force volunteers went
through rigorous training In prepara­
tion for the grueling wulkathon.
"D uring the past three months, my
unit suffered both physical and mental
pain. W e started with 26 people, doing
10 kilometers a day. That seemed like
u lifetime, with blisters and uddlng
weight to backpacks. W c lost about
seven people. Training for this wus an
'cxpcrlcncc-andu-hulf.' but I’m glad I
made the team ." Lavnllcc said.
Tile Americans were Joined In the
inarch by soldiers from countries such
as; the Netherlands. France. Italy.
Sweden. Belgium. Norwuy. Denmark.
Switzerland. Poland. Chile. United
Kingdom. Cunndu. Luxembourg. anil
Spain. The wnlkuthon wus combined
with u festlvul Nijmegen hosts each
year. An estimated two million visitors
enjoyed inarching, musical bands, and
shopping for souvenirs.
Friendly rivulrlcs developed between
the soldiers as they marched and
chanted: keeping m orale and en­
thusiasm high throughout the four
days.
" T o stay motlvuled I think ubout a
lot o f things while marching, such us
going buck to the Slules. It keeps my
mind ulf the nulti." said Luvullcc.

G randdaughter and grandpa base relationship on respect
_____

_____

■

-I

"

l y LACY DO M IN
Herald People Editor

~~

SANFORD - T o complete u
class project. Uoxsun Striae, a
filth grader In Kdru Russl’s class
at rinecresl Elementary School,
wanted to know what things
were like 40 years ago. So she
wrote a letter to the smartest
man she knows, her grandfa­
ther. I le wus around bark then.
Tom Yost wrote luirk to Rexsail, answering her questions.
Some tilings have changed In
40 years, ami some tilings have
not. both Roxsun and Yost agree.
Yost says Ills loudest memory
ol boyhood Is "see in g baby
chickens iK 'ln g hatched from
eggs lor the hi si time ever."
Boxs.ui has a fond memory ol
glilhood.

H w *U ri-o lo try I k , Domex

Tom Y ost and hla granddaughtar, Roxaan Slrlna, dlacuaa important mattera

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

"M y fondest memory Is of
Iniys." stir glggl. d and said
Yost, who Isa consumer credit
counselor and a political science
Instructor at Valencia Comimmltv College answered Boxsan's

.ti.aatln n tilwtnl II f:iv n rllt

lor class treasurer and won. Her
mom. Kris, helped her with her
campaign.
"But next lime I'm going to
usk you to I k - my campaign
manager." she told Yost as she
hugged him.
Itnxsan said Y o s t's letter
opened up u dimension «»l her
grandfather’s life which she
would like to continue to share
with him. Just as she shares her
thoughts with him about beluga
kid in the 90 s.
“ I think It would I k * horrible If
I didn't have him ." she said.
Hnxsun said she could think of
one other horrible thing.
" I would have died It he had
du nked." she said.“ It would
have cost m e."
Kuxsau's dad. Bull'll, pay* her
$ I for each A she receives.
Rossi awarded Yost an A lor
Ills eltort and Uoxsun says, she
also received an A.
• Maybe my dad w ill pay
grandpa $ 1. too." she mused.

S U B S C R IB E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D
\

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! — Sanford H«rald. Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novambar IS. 1990

‘Superwoman’ is 90 years young
M rs . H e r b e r t A . ( N l t a )
Moreland celebrated her 90th
birthday on Nov. 21 with those
she loved at her h om e on
Palmetto Avenue when she was
h o n o red b y h e r d a u g h te r ,
Shirley Cox. o f Austin, Texas.
During the afternoon, from 3
to 5. members o f Nlta's Sunday
school class at the First Baptist
Church and also members of her
H ib is cu s C ir c le o f S a n fo rd
Garden Club called at a recep­
tion to wish the honor guest
many more happy returns. The
guests w ere served birthday
cake and punch.
T h at e v e n in g , th e fa m ily
gathered at the home to cele­
b ra te th e h a p p y o c c a s io n .
Assisting Shirley was Camille
M o r e la n d , w id o w o f th e
honoree's other child, the late
Herbert A. "S p eed " Moreland Jr.
There are seven grandchildren
and four great grandchildren.
Born In Tlfton. Oa. on Nov. 21.
1000, Nlta met her husband In
Jacksonville where they were
m arried In June. 1024 and
moved to Sanford shortly af­
terward. She has spent her
lifetime as a homemaker and
volunteer. She Is still active In
her church and garden club.
Also. Nlta Is stll driving and Is
considered a "superwom an."
W h en S h ir le y a n d h er
husband. Ralph Cox. were sta­
tioned in Puerto Rico. Nlta went
there annually where she spent
several months during the six
years the Coxes lived there.
Shirley and Ralph return to
S a n fo rd ab ou t e v e r y th ree
months and Nlta has accom­
panied them back to Austin on
numerous occasions.

First birthday marfcsd
Chelsea Nicole Smith eyed the
beautifully em bossed birthday

Joyed it when she got. Into the
cake." Terri said.
Chelsea is very special to her
grandparents. She la the only
girl grandchild on both sides.
Terri added. "S h e's like IT - the
number one honcho right now.”

DORIS
DIETRICH

cake with ex trem e caution.
Should she or shouldn't she?
Quite frankly, the petite cele­
brant had never tasted cake and
It was. well, like "yu ck !"
But It didn't take long before
charming Chelsea got the drift
and sm eared the cake and
frosting on her face and In her
hair with the airs of a seasoned
p r o at a b ir t h d a y p a r ty
celebrating her first birthday.
Nov. 19.
The first birthday gala, held on
Nov. 17 and given by Chelsea's
parents. Terri and Cary Smith,
was held at the Regatta Shores
C lubhouse. G uests Included
Chelsea's playmates from her
neighborhood and the maternal
grandparents. Irene and Randall
Grant, and paternal
grandparents. Mayor Bcttye and
Dr. Bob Smith.
A festive party atmosphere
was dominant at the clubhouse.
C o lo r fu l b a llo o n s d r ift e d
overhead while table decorations
featured a variety o f party favors
and beautifully wrapped gifts.
T h e celebration may have
been double because T e rri's
birthday was Nov. IB. "Chelsea
Is my very best little birthday
present." Terri said.
O p e n in g th e g ift s w a s a
highlight o f the party, but the
cake-smearing ceremony stole
the show. "She's (Chelsea’s) a
little show-off. Everybody en-

Students presented awards by Lake Mary Optimist
Club are: front row, Katie Gilliam, Laura Ragucci,
Jenni Drury and Erin Cain. Back row: Optimist

fiddle, but happily, she is getting
there. Alta girl. Emy.

The General Henry S. Sanford
Library Museum will hold open
house Saturday. Dec. 0, from 1
to 4 p.m. The public Is Invited.
During this lim e recent gifts to
the museum wttl be on exhibit.
329 M t b R tx cti i
The gifts Include: The Vincent
The elegant Sanford W om an's
Club took on a new Image Nov. Collection, an extensive display
17 when cowboys and cowgirls o f photographs and memorabilia
took over for the club's Annual o f S a n fo r d , lo a n ed to th e
Country Barbecue. About 325 museum by Donald Vincent.
Also. Julian Stenstrom tus
hungry patrons were served a
d e licio u s m ea l o f b a r b e c u e 1 d o n a ted to th e m useum a
chicken and pork complete with O e r m a n a c c o r d ia n w h ic h
belonged to his grandfather, Nels
all the flxln's.
Julius Stenstrom. who brought
Chairman Audrey
rey Roush, Aral
It to America from Sweden.
vice president, and her commit
Among the other gifts the
tee did an excellent Job o f
museum has received are Chase
p la n n in g a n d s e r v in g th e
and Co. citrus labels from the
country fare.
Chase fam ily and numerous
The doors w ere open at 4:30 family photos from Paul Blggers
p.m.. and according to Marty and Roy Mixon.
Colegrove. club president. "T h e
crowd stayed very steady — a
Artists to party
constant, steady crowd."
Sanford-Seminole Art Associa­
tio n w i ll hotd th e an n u al
I j i f f iif w V t VO M v i i v i v
Christmas party. Monday. Dec.
Bill and Lois (Chapman) Tyre,
10, at the American Legion
both graduates o f Seminole High building. 2874 Sanford Ave. A
School, are now making their prime rib dinner wll be served
home back In Sanford. Th e and there will also be a gift
Tyres moved here recently from exchange and entertainment.
Lake Toxaay. NC. Welcome Is
For Inform ation, call Faye
the word.
Siler, 322-5684.

Emy Bill on tha maod

Cooking for fun

Emy BUI Is much better. The
votunteer and civic leader was
injured In a fall at a political
gathering on Sept. 20. After
being hospitalized , she was
transferred to a convalescent
center for three weeks. Emy Is
now back at her home. 216
Woodmere Blvd.
We don't say that she's fit as a

By now, everybody knows that
W.E. "D u k e" Adamson, presi­
dent o f Rich Plan, has a passion
for the finest pf foods. On any
given day. an outsider Is apt to
catch Duke In his ch efs hat and
apron trying and testing new
recipes that have crossed his
desk.
But cooking Is not all Ihc

Pres lent Charlotte Kelger, Mark Murray, Joe
Menello, Jarrod Graziano, Dan Carrizlosa and Vice
president Rick Howe.

NHs Mors!and cuts hsr 90th birthday csfcs.
gourmet cook and connoisseur Is
up to. Family recipes from allFlorida have been complied Into
a charming cookbook. "Family
Favorites."
F o r I n f o r m a t i o n on th e
cookbook and how to receive
one. call 322-3663.
Bon appetil!

Coming up
Tw o events coming up this
week Include: The ultra suede
and ultra leather sale to benefit
the St. Lucia Festival will be
held on Nov. 29 and 30. from 10

Local teachers and students ware honored for
excellence. They are, front row from left: Scott
Hltlnaky, Dean Markovich, Tara Short. Back row:

a.m. to 5 p.m.. at the Lake
Forrest Clubhouse on Hwy. 46.
T h e public Is welcome at no
admission charge.
The Sanford Garden Club will
hold the annual Holiday Bazaar
on Friday, Nov. 30, from 10a.m.
to 7 p.m.. and Saturday. Dec. 1,
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The
public Is Invited at no admission
charge.

(Doris Districh, retired Sanford

r f f r i f c r f u p i g B u n o ii iIsta ■ n f f i f u

columnist covering the Sanford
area Phone: 322-4W&amp;.)

Evon Lisle, Katia Rivera, Cookie Paul. Ernie
Cavallaro, Patricia Vick, Elizabeth McIntosh and
Rotary President Brent Caril.

Many local students, teachers strive to m ake a difference
On November 13,the Optimist
Club o f Lake Mary heldA tne
the 2nd
A n n u a l A p p r e c ia tio n and
Awards Banquet In Lake Mary.
A gathering o f nearly 80 people
were treated to a very enter­
taining evening.
Each year, the Optimist Club
personally Interviews students
n om tn ated from G reenw ood
Lakes Middle School and Lake
Mary High School In four sepa­
rate cateogries o f exceptional
achievement: Leadership. Aca­
demics. Music and Athletics.
The nominations are made by
the faculty and administration at
each school and the award
winners are chosen through the
Optimist Club Interviews.
"W e feel it Is so Important to
r e c o g n iz e the o u ts ta n d in g

qualities that our young people
possess. T h is Is e s p e c ia lly
needed because o f the negative
publicity about today's young
people.” stated Rick Howe o f the
Lake Mary Optim ists In his
opening remarks Tuesday night.
LM H S P rin cip a l. Mr. Don
Smith, was in attendance and
reiterated the need and benefits
o f recognizing the "poatltlve role
m odels' among our communi­
ty ’s youth.
This year's winners were:
Lake Mary High School: Lead­
ership — Katie Gilliam; Academ­
ics — Dan Carrizlosa; Music —
Mark Murray: Athletics — Joe
Menello.
G reen w o od Lakes M id dle:
Leadership — Jarrod Graziano;

LAK 1M AR V
LONQWOOO

LACY
DOMEN
A c a d e m ic s — Jen n i D rury;
Music — Erin Cain: Athletics —
Laura Ragucci.
In addition to recognizing the
outstanding youth In the com ­
m u n ity . th e O p tim ist C lu b
honored the businesses that
helped support the numerous
projects conducted by the Lake
Mary Optimists.

The outstanding buslne
w e r e : A A A T r o p h ie s and
Baseball Cards; Go Direct; Inc.:
Lake Mary Florist; Sandefur
Properties; Shoney's Restaurant;
Tru-Dlmcnsiona Printing.

Families adopted and fad
T h is year, the Lake Mary
Optimist Club adopted three
fa m ilies In the Lake MarySanford area to provide a com­
plete Thanksgiving feast with all
the trim m ings. These needy
families would not have had a
Thanksgiving meal without the
Optimists* efforts. In conjunction
with Seminole County Social
Work Services, this Is the second
year they have adopted families.
Last year the Optimists bought
and delivered presents and food
for Christmas toother families In
need.
" T h is Is one o f our most
rewarding projects o f the year,
said Rick Howe, project
i ‘
chair­
man. "Y o u Just can't realize how
much this little bit w e do seems
to mean to these wonderful
families," he added.
Th e Optimists plan to repeat
th e C h r is t m a s " A d o p t - A Fam lly" project again this year
and hope to Include even more
families.
Optimists meet each Tuesday
evening at 7 p.m. at Shoney's
Restaurant. H ighw ay 17-92.
Sanford. The public Is welcome.
F o r m o r e In fo rm a tio n ca ll
Charlotte Keigerat 332-7750.
Along with n
helping families at
Christmas, the Optimists have
placed a Toys For Tots barrel In
Shoney's. Donations o f new toys
arc appreciated.

C r a f t y la d ie s
Members of the Longwood Civic League
Woman's Club participated in Ihe Annual Fall
Bazaar recently. Showing country crafts, from

left are: Louise Bulfaloe, Kathy Jackson and
Eida Nichols.

Buy • real trea
lt*s r e a lly tim e to s ta rt
dreaming of a green Christmas.

which Includes a fragrant, tradltional real tree!
The Optimist Club of Lake
Mary will be holding Its annual
Christmas tree
*
. .fund
. .raiser
sale
starting November 26 and con­
tinuing through December 22.
The lot Is located at the Shoppes
o f Lake Mary Shopping Center at
th e c o r n e r o f L a k e M a r y
Boulevard and Country Club
Road. All proceeds arc raised to
benefit the community and the
young people o f the community.
During the four week period o f
the tree lot. there will be various
youth groups vaitlng the lot to
entertain the public. Anyone
Interested In ordering a special
type or size tree, may contact
Kevin Greene at 322-8787,

School, student Katia Rivera and «
her ti ocher Evon Lisle.

Haathrow to light up

Santa Claus will be In Heath­
row November 28 at 6 p.m. to
throw the switch to light more
than 20,000 twinkling white
lights lining the Heathrow de­
velopment’s grand entrance off
Interstate 4 and Lake Mary
Boulevard.
Joining Santa at the second
annual "L igh t Up the Night"
ceremony will be David Guy.
president o f Arvida's Central
F lo r id a D iv is io n , w h ic h Is
sponsoring the holiday event.
Santa w ill arrive at 5:15 p.m.
on a tire truck. Children will be
Invited to clim b onto Santa’s lap
and tell him thetr fondest holi­
day gift wishes.
In addition to refreshments,
Rotary makaa a dlffaranca
which w ill be supplied courtesy
L a k e M a r y R o ta r y C lu b o f Heathrow Country Club and
members are staying very busy Publix Super Markets, there will
making our community a pleas­ be drawings for gifts contributed
ant place to live. They have by the Heathrow merchants. On
adopted Rinehart Road as an display w ill be four vintage
ongoing clean-up project, and Model A cars courtesy o f the
have, fo r the second tim e, Greater Orlando Model A Club.
honored local students w h o The free event Is open to the
show outstanding leadership public and parking w ill be avail­
and scholastic potential.
able at the Shops o f Heatlirow.
Ernie Cavallaro is In charge o f For m ore Inform ation about
the program which also honors Santa's visit to Heathrow, call
teachers for their outstanding 333-1000.
contributions. Selections o f both
student and teacher are made by
each principal for Rotary, ac­ Woman artists hold tala
cording to Ernie.
The W om en Artists' Group
Honored this month from will hold Its first boutique sale,
Wilson Elementary School are: December 1. from 1 to 5 p.m. at
Student Scott Hlltnsky and his the Sunshine Artists building.
teacher Linda 'Cookie* Paul: 1700 Sunset Dr., Longwood.
from Lake Mary Elem entary Hand crafted Items and paint­
School, student Dean Markovich ings by the students and teach­
ant his teacher Patricia Vick; ers of the group will be on sale.
from Greenwood Lakes Middle New members are welcome to
School, student Tara Short and participate.
For more Information, contact
her teacher Elizabeth McIntosh;
and from L a k e Mary H igh Joan Wahl at 323-6349.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sundry, November 25,1880 — M

Migrant education council holds quarterly meeting
through
com m unity awareness,
participants honored

-

with a program of Joy and love
expressed to those attending.
Happy Thanksgiving from Sweet
Harmony, Eartha Melton.
Matron and all the members of
the Lodge for 1990. Among
those sharing the dinner ana
having a grand time were: Doris
Johnson, Fannie Lawrance.
Willie Mae Johnson and Louise
Russel. Sweet Harmony can be
seen throughout the year doing
good and helping those In need.

S em in ole C ou n ty C h a p te r
I/Mlgrmnt Dtafrk-t Parent Adviaory Council held Its meeting with
Idyllwtlde being the host school.
Students, teachers and parents
o f the migrant education pro­
gram gather quarterly for a
MARVA
special program and present to
Kappa Stgnta Omega Chapter
HAW KINS o f Alpha Kappa Alpha, honored
the parents and com m u nity
what the m igrant education
mature citizens at a luncheon
program la toward the Improve­
Nov. 17th at noon, at the
ment of the children tn this
Sanford Chamber of Commerce
migrant program. For media Building
program.
The pledge to the (lag was support of the Chapter I pro­
The program of praise and
given by the Midway roadrun- gram. my thanks for the privi­
thanksgiving was rendered by a
nets. The PAC cheer was led by lege to serve such a dedicated,
th e M id w a y r o a d r u n n e r s . much needed and Involved pro­ musical group. The citizens en­
Schools throughout the school gram that touches the lives of joyed an afternoon of fun, Joy
district m ade presentations. the kids whose needs education­ and thanksgiving and dined on
turkey and all of the special
"Peter and his Tu rkey" was ally arc great.
foods that makes Thanksgiving
presented by All Souls School;
very special. Attendees Included:
"Migrant Rap", Early Interven­
Sweet Harmony Order o f East­ Mrs. Roberta Ward. Mrs. Ruth
tion under the direction ol C yn­
thia O liver; " A m e r ic a " and ern Star treated the residents o f Livingston. Mrs. Smith. Chair­
man Frances Seaky, and De"Th is Land is m y Land" by the Redding Gardens senior citizens
Midway Recorder Band. A lso to a pre-Thanksgtving dinner lores Anderson.
resented: "Tribute to Am erica"
y M idw ay and " A D ram a
Ohf,.
Special" by Midway Live.
Congratulations to Midway El­
ementary School and Its migrant
program: they were chosen to
have the computer lab setup at
their school and they won the
most persons In attendance at
this district meeting with 65
persons. This program review
IB
and update was given by Dr.
Sammle Tomblin and Mr. Robert
Letdner. There are over 13,000
kids In reading classes In seven
public schools and one private
school here In Seminole County.
The special presentation to
Mrs. Eliza Pringle was made by
Dr. Tomblin. Mrs. Pringle has
volunteered her services to the
migrant school program. She
worked most successfully with
the needs assessment program.
Mrs. Pringle, a retired Seminole
County teacher, can be seen
doing much volunteer work In
this community, especially with
the children o f the community,
as children have always been
her life’s work and concern. She
Is helping to Improve and make
life better for our youth.
It was my pleasure to share
the evening o f appreciation from
the Seminole County Chapter I Shown dining are: Doris Johnson, Fannie Lawrance, Willie Mao

E

Midway Elamantary migrant students expressing
their fesHnpe through art anp writing are from left:

Mprchetl Madison, Marcaris Hernandez,
Hwnpton, and Clyde Steven.

¥

All Souls School students who participated In "Pator and his
Turkey" ara from loft: Mallssa Bamsr, Crystal Raoadala, Stacy
Leppta, Patsy Lapplar, Lao Moors, SantIna Carton la, Magan Qorty.

Caregivers need a little TLC themselves
DEAR ABBYi This is for "T h e
Lonesom e C a r e ta k e r," w h o
cared for her husband who had
Alzheimer's disease for 14 years.
She is to be commended for her
loyalty and devotion.
It is all too common for one
person to bear the burden o f
caring for an ailing spouse,
parent or loved one with little
help from other family members.
We have a fairly new help
group in Gadsden. Ala. W e
ca reg ivers m eet w ith o th e r
caregivers, exchanging Informa­
tion and finding comfort In the
company of others who share
the same kind o f loneliness and
problems. We have a gentleman
In our group who has taken care
of his wife for 16 years. (She
suffers from Alzheimer's.)
We call our group
which stands for "W om en In the
Middle." Anyone wanting Infor­
mation on how to start a W.I.M.
group In h!s or her area should
send a stamped, self-addressed
envelope to: W om en In the
Middle Inc.. P.O. Box 2811,
Gadsden. Ala. 35903.
This group Is not exclusively
for women — It’s a support
group for the entire family. W e
call ourselves "wom en” In the
middle because carcglving — the
never-ending laundry, cooking,
cleaning and nurturing that go
along with caring for those who
are unable to care for themselves
— has traditionally been the role
o f women. Please print this.
Abby, and spread (he word.
CAROL J. HAMILTON,
COLLINSVILLE. ALA.
DEAR CAROLt Your letter

A O VICB

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

Thank you for alerting other
caregivers that there la strength
as well as comfort and camara­
derie In organizing.
Tt I have been a
church pastor for many years,
during which time 1 have ofllclated at hundreds o f weddings
and attended almost as many
wedding receptions. Some of
these weddings are for non­
church members who suddenly
need a minister to marry them. 1
counsel them, rehearse them,
conduct the cerem onies and
remain for the pictures. So often,
as they leaVe the church, they
say. "B y the way. Reverend,
we’d tovc to have you and your
wife come to our reception."
Abby, m y wife and 1 agreed
long ago to attend only recep­
tions to which we had received
forma] Invitations. I always de­
cline such last-minute invita­
tions graciously. I wonder why
so many couples extend these
verbal invitations to a wedding
reception that had been planned
months In advance? If we were
sincerely wanted, why were we
not sent an Invitation In the mall
like all the other folks who were
properly invited in that fashion?

could not have been more tim e­
ANONYMOUS PASTOR
ly. Congress has officially desig­
DRAR
PASTOR; I have heard
nated Nov. 24-30 as National
from brides over the years who
Caregivers Week.

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have said. “ W e'd really like to
have our pastor and his wife
attend our wedding reception,
but we hcstltate to mail them a
form al Invitation because It
might look like we're fishing for
a wedding gift."
However, having seen both
sides o f this sticky wicket. I am
still o f the opinion that the
clergyperson officiating at wed­
dings should be sent formal
Invitations.

DRAR ARRYt I am speaking
on behalf of police dispatchers
who respond to 911 calls.
So many people are not clear
about when to call 911. In a
nutshell, they should call only
when there Is an immediate
threat to human life or property.
Do not call because a dog Is
barking and you can't sleep.
Do not call If your cat Is In a
tree and you can’t get It down.
Do not call If you notice sparks
come out o f your television. If
you smell something burning in
either the apartment above you.
below you, on either side o f you
(but you arc sure It's not In your
apartment), do not call 911. Call
the Fire Department!
If you arc witnessing a crime
— call Immediately. If you wait
20 minutes to call because you
were on your way home when
you saw It happen, we probably
won't be able to do anything
except take a report, if you had
called Immediately, we might
have been able to catch the bifid
guy.
Also, when you call 911,
expect to answer some ques­
tions. They are Important or we
wouldn’t ask them. Callers think
all they have to do Is say. "Send
police," and we will rush over.

Unfortunately, that la not the
case. Only on T V do they get a
call and send the police out in
five seconds. Also, we could get
s patrol car out faster tf the caller
would stop cussing, yelling and
Insulting us.
W e try to be professional,
courteous and fast, but the
abuse we get Is unbelievable.
W e dispatchers work various
shifts. W e are open 24 hours
around the clock, and somebody
has to w o rk w eek en d s and
holidays, so we all lake our
turns.
Thanks. Abby. for printing
this. I've seen everything from
soup to nuts In your column, so
this should make It. Just sign
this...
“ 911"
DEAR ARRY: 1have a married
daughter who has two children. I
also have a son. He Is not
m a r r ie d . H ow s h o u ld th e
amount 1 spend for Christmas
gifts be figured?
For example, tf I spend 8100
per person for Christmas, my
daughter’s family will get a total
o f 8400. Should 1 g iv e m y
unmarried son 8100 — or the
same I give my daughter's fami­
ly. which Is 8400?
1 want to be fair, but 1 don't
think m y son should be cheated
because he's not married. What
do you think?

PEELINO GUILTY
Df WARREN. MICH.
DEAR FRBL1NO GUILTY:
Your son Is not being cheated. If
you plan on giving 8100 to each
person, your daughter's family Is
com prised o f four people —
hence 8400 Is appropriate.
Since your son has no w ife and
family, your gift of 8100 to him
Is fair. You have no reason to feel
guilty.

mERLE noRmnn*
★ SANFORD ★

EUROPEAN FACIALS
By Matis o f Paris
November Special Only
_______
Men &amp; Women
Hair,
Tan,
15th ST. &amp; 17-92
Nails
Pedicures
Waxing
Ear Piercing

323-6505

Dr. Ssmmis Tomblin presents an award to Eliza Prlnglt, laft, and
Marva Hawkins.

r n1ai~nT idy~mVclean;
HURKTIDO

IT NOWI

Beat the H oliday Ruth Special

15X OFF thru PEC. 14th
|

l

■

* WE DO VUUM JVI •

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■ J^?1Z ■ ■ ■ , _

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■ » -----» t _ » -----« - U - i
M O n tu g r O r u m u I

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12 daposit, paid at pboiograpfty. Each additional lubtad photographed
Prica includes1 S2dapoart.
phes, paid al photograph*.
Poaat and advartlsad
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package pri________
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Offar Bogina Wad., Nov. 28 • 5 Days Only
Studio Days and Hours: Wad., Nov. 28 • Sun., Doc. 2
Dally: 10 AM-7 PM Sunday: Studio opana with stora and
closes ons hour bsfors stora closing.
Studio Locations: SANFORD • LAKE MARY
▼ P’odutn

ye# you tw « r port

L a s t C h a n c e B e f o r e C h r is t m a s !

iMSPCAwais*

�4C — Suilord Herald, Sanford. Florida — Sunday, November 25.1090

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The key to your success in the
year ahead is to first lay sturdy
foundations. I f you do. your
projections look encouraging: If
not, the results are a toss up at
best.
B A G tTT A R IU B (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you’ ve taken lim e to
formulate a constructive plan to
achieve an objective today, stick
to it. Last minute departures
from your scheme could create
an environment for failure.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) In a situation in which
you're involved, but lack contra',
don't attempt to Impose your
ideas on those In authority.
You're better advised today to
listen and say little.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Today If you participate in an
activity with a friend who is a bit
a freeloader, try to establish
the financial ground rules ahead
o f time. This wOl avoid misun­
derstandings later.
PISC E S (Feb. 20-March 20) In
order for a Joint endeavor to be
successful today, both you and

J L IIJ M I J U . J ULJLIL1
J H U t l M U i'J .j U i H J
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hopeful should not be first tested
on negative Mends today. It isn't
likely they'll see o r understand
the strengths o f your concepts.
LSO (July 23-Aug. 22) Com ­
mercial involvements must be
handled in a businesslike fash­
ion today, even if the transaction
Is w lui an old friend. Leave no
margin for a misunderstanding.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Carefully weigh and evaluate
you r alternatives today, but
don't ovenuuilyze things to the
point o f total indeclalveness to
where you suffer from paralysis
from overanalyds.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 29)
Clever Ideas you get early Ira the
day m ight not be completed,
because o f Inclinations that
cause you to cater to too many
diverse Interests Finish what
you start.
■CORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Usually you're a pretty good
shopper, but unfortunately to­
day you'll evaluate everything
b y Its p ric e tag. Y ou m ay
e r r o n e o u s l y c o n c lu d e th e
cheaper the cost, the better the
bargain.
(0 1 9 9 0 . N E W S PA PE R EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

the other party must be on the
s a m e w a v e le n g t h . I f y o u r
thoughts aren't in sync, the
results will reflect It.
AR1BS (March 21-AprU 19)
Individuals In minor roles could
play havoc with you r plana
today If you're not careful. If
possible try to deal directly with
the decision makers Instead o f
people who lack authority.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
You should do reasonably well in
commercial involvements today
if you ere conservative. It's beat
to avoid anything that looks like
a gamble, even a you feel It ia a
safe, calculated risk.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Partnership arrangements have
both pros and cons today. It’likely you'll accomplish your
Intentions, but there could also
be some tense tim es in the
proceedings.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You could be the object o f a
friend's generosity today, but
when it is your turn to help
someone else, you might not be
as liberal as your benefactor.
D on't suffer from a loss o f
memory.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're
likely to be amicable and easygo­
in g to d a y In d e v e lo p m e n ts
where there is an absence of
financial overtones. However. In
situations where money is an
Issue. It could be another story.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
U sually you resent it when
companions try to make de­
cisions for you, yet unfortu­
nately. today you m ight delegate
this authority to someone who Is
the least qualified to counsel
you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) De­
tails have their Importance to­
day. but they should not be
permitted to dominate the big
picture. There is an indication
your progress will be impeded If
you get hung upon incidentals.
■CORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You tend to deal effectively and
logically with most matters to­
day. Th e exception, However,
could be the management of
your resources. In this area you
m ig h t m a k e c o s t ly , s m a ll
mistakes.
(0 1 9 9 0 . N E W SPAPE R EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

THAT A

f f if A M A f T

WOOLF YOU GO
OUT WITH ME.
KIMAtY? z f

.

•A O IT T A R 1 U B (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 1 ) D isa g reem e n ts in you t
household with which you're
u s u a l l y a b l e to c o p e
saaUaCsctorlly might be more
difficult to deal with today. Don’t
lose your temper. Sagittarius,
treat yourself to a birthday gift.
Send for your AatroOraph pre­
dictions for the year ahead by
mailing $1.29 to AstroOraph.
do this newspaper. P.O. Box
01428. Cleveland. OH 441013428. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) I f you are delegated as the
conveyer o f critical Information
today which you have to pass on
to another, be doubly certain the
o th e r party thorou ghly un­
derstands the message.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
fln
brk«aTtt H
uai stingy
ailn ffu Iai
uni IF 1
11.
Don
be
In your
In­
volvements with friends today,
but. by the same token, don't be
fo o lis h ly ex tra va ga n t. Y ou r
purse will appreciate you more if
you play things down the mid­
dle.
W C I I (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your ability to assess situations
accurately today might not be
up to par and there is a chance
you could involve yourself In
developments where the odds
are against you going in.
AUBS (March 21-April 19) An
o p p o r tu n ity o f an unusual
nature may unexpectedly pres­
ent itself today. You'll be aware
It has value, but you might not
know how to deal with it ef­
fectively.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be
careful at this time you do not
Impulsively Invest too much in a
new endeavor or product. What
Interest you now could turn out
to be .nerely a passing fancy.
OBMOn (May 21-June 20) In
challenging developments today
you're IlkeTy to break out fast In
front o f the pack, but should the
opposition get suffer, there's a
possibility you'D slack o ff
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Ideas about w hich you feel

'.i j j. i.-i ,*jik n il iu u

Today w e see another deal in
w h ich th e g re a t ch am pion
Chagas got Into the bidding.
This time he was hampered by
p l a y i n g In a f i r s t - t i me
partnership, albeit with one of
the top women players from the
United States. When South bid
three diamonds. Chsgas, sitting
North, simply Jumped to six.
What were his other choices?
Perhaps he could have Jumped
to four no-trump, asking for
aces. Or he might have bid four
d ia m o n d s . In m ost e x p e r t
partnerships, four diam onds
would be absolutely forcing,
setting the trump suit and In­
viting further exploratory cuebids on the way to slam. But the
other tide o f this coin la that,
lacking a discussion o f this

treatment. It might look as If
North was showing only a dou­
bleton diamond for support. In
which case South might pass
four diamonds. Chagas took no
chances, but he did miss a cold
seven-diamond contract. Sitting
North. 1 bid four diamonds.
South bid only five diamonds,
and I went on to six. So that was
still another way to miss the
laydown grand slam.
In re­
trospect. since my partner and I
w e r e p la y in g o ld -fa s h io n e d
Blackwood. I could have asked
for aces and then asked for
kings. Knowing that South held
two kings, I could have gambled
on the grand slam, at the worst
needing the queen o f diamonds
to fall If South held six diamonds
missing the queen.
(0 1 9 9 0 . N E W SPA PE R EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

NORTH
ii-it-M
4 A Q* S
• A S4 3 2
4 A K9
• 3
WEST
• 914
•Q J I7 «
• 10 7
• J 109

EAST
♦ J 10 3 2
• K 10
433
♦17 854

SOUTH
• K7
ft
4Q J0S42
• A K Q2
Vulnerable: East-Weat
Dealer. East
ta tt
14
2♦
94

Wttl

North

Pass
14
Pass 2 4
Pass • 4
Opening lead: • 9

Eoit
Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

b / L eon ard Starr
BUGS B U N N Y

THAWS,DAFFY, FOR SUPERVISING
KT CRASH DET AND EXERCISE
PROGRAM YOU SAVED ME FROM
THE ROASTING RAN
v
THINK
NOTHING
OF IT,
TOM

V

SEE YOU AROUND'
I THINK ILL GO
GOBBLE AWHILE /

THAT'S
TURKEY

TALK"

THAT'S WHAT
M E THINKS

...IT’S LIKE THAT |T
GIANT CAACK
AN
IN TH’ WALL
CRl
WAS NEVER
I Trif
THCfte, PUNJAp/fc^

OH- SO TH’ CRACK COME. YOU
IS OONE NOW
MUST HAVE
THAT TWPCMOH'e I y o u r o in n b c ,
GONE? HE, 19...
LITTLE
IS GONE, ISN'T
A t MSSY.

THAT'S THfCt PUNJAB,
HASN’TANSWERED
'
OH, hn)h/.„ MA&gt;0£ ^

AMJTT5 M O S T KHOwS
WHAT H APP£NePX&amp; '

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Sanford HaraW. Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Novambar 29, 1N 0 — SC

Driving after smoking
dope very dangerous

Airman PhtIBp M. RucfT has
radualed Gram the U S . A ir
Force heating systems course at
Sheppard Air Irotce Base, Texas.
During the course, students
w ere taught to operate and
maintain heating systems from
apace heaters to steam and
water heating. They also
e a r n e d c r e d it s to w a r d a n
associate degree through the
Community College o f the Air
Force.
RuefT Is the son o f Joseph A.
and Pamela F. RuefT o f Long*

D B A S M A R T I b It safe for a
person to d rive after he's
smoked dope, even If he hasn't
smoked for an hour before?
When m y boyfriend and 1 are
watching T V at m y apartment,
we like to share a Joint or two.
W e never smoke right before
he goes home because are
don’ t want him to smell like
marijuana If he shuld get
stopped, but I still worry about
him getting Into an accident
and getting hurt.
Of LOVE
D B A S 01 LO V E ) You have
every reason to be worried If
the man you love is smoking
marijuana and then driving. It
d o e s n 't m a tte r that y o u r
boyfriend may not feel high
when he leaves your apart­
ment. since the effect o f mari­
juana m ay last for several
hou rs arter th e h igh has
passed. Marijuana delays a
person's response to sights
and sounds, so It takes a driver
longer to react to a dangerous
situation. T h e greater the
demands o f the driving situa­
tion. the less able he will be to

C

The airman is a 1808 graduate
o f Seminole Community College.
Airman Michael J. Mingo has
graduated horn the U.S. A ir
Force medical material specialist
course at Sheppard Air Force
e, Texas.
During the courae. students
were taught the procedures nec­
essary to operate an Air Force
medical supply account. They
earned credits toward an
associate degree through the
Community College o f the A ir
Force.
He la the son o f Alma J. Mingo
^o f 1707 W. 13th Street. Sanford.
The airman is a 1967 graduate
ts f Seminole High School.

hrt Patrick MMtt
Arm y Pvt. Patrick T. Mike, a
section repairer, has arfor duty at Mlesau Arm y
I Depot. West Germany.
Mike is the son o f Patricia A.

6 00

ft 10 I
TV I

lie p »M »lE .M )

r espond q ui ckl y and
appropriately. A dditionally,
the combined use o f marijuana
and alcohol is even m ore
hazardous than using either
akme. It la Irresponsible and
Illegal to drive under the
Influence o f any drug, and ir
your boyfriend continues to do
so. the consequences can be
both dangerous and deadly.
(Mary M l Im M b a i
b i
ba

w ith tha Drag Prsvantlaa
OMoa at Mw Saathwb Caanty

L a k en h ea th , L a k c n h e a th ,
England.
He Is s physical therapist.
Stout Is the son o f Cecil H. and
Mary B. Stout o f Carrollton.
Ohio. Hta wife. Cheryl Ann. Is
the daughter of Lewis S. and
Barbara A. Lawson o f Oviedo.

A ir Force Capt. H. Daniel Stout
has arrived for duty at RAF

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— 9.0081

h t — Philip Friedman (2

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2. D a w n - V . C . Andrews (1 - 3 .0 4 9 )
3. W a l s a a s t a T w in P e a k s — Scott
Knkkelbtne (2.362)
4. P a a th C a n O a t — Joe Weber (9 — 1.736)
5. D a d d y - Danielle Steele (7 - 1.733)
6. Prtaea a f M idnight — Laura Klnssle

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(1.443)
9.

t a E n aw 1 1
— Robert Fulgham (1.468)
w ith Wahraa — Michael Blake
&gt;a

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10.

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SUne(1.271)
1. H aw H id e aa th a B lack — Lynn
Goldsmith 1.218)
2. Tha f l l a g t r Traa — Oswald Wynd (2 —
6.733)
3. L a ta R ig h t w ith D a vid L a tta rm a n —
David Letterm and — 6.178)
4. A l l I Haadad to K n o w I L aarnad Cram
M y C at - Suxy Becker (4.926)
9. Tha B iV M H aM to a f H g h l y E ffe c t iv e
P e o p le — Stephen Covey ( 6 — 4.628)
8. C ed ep en d eat Ha M ara — Melody Beattie
(4.709)
7. B radshaw an th a Faasily — John
Bradshaw (3.448)
8. T h e T-P actor P a t O ram C a n n ier —
Martin Kathahn (10 — 3.229)
9. Th a A a th a rtto tlv e C a llv a and Hobbe s
— BUI Wat tenon (4 - 2.693)
10. T r aplc o f Csme a r — Henry Miller (5 —
2.139)
Rankings baaed on orders to Ingram Book
Co. from more than 7.000 bookstores na­
tionwide.

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Eddlngs (2.926)
5. M a a s r f e a a f M id n ig h t — Sidney
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6. J u ra s s ic Park — Michael Critchen
(2.140)
7. l a Praia# a f th a ita p m s th a r — Mario
Vargas Llosa (9 - 1 ,6 4 6 )
8. L a d y Bass— Jackie Collins (6 - 1.199)
9. P a s s ta a lta — A.S. Byatt (1.040)
10. P a r Past M id n ig h t - Stephen King
(1.024)

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2 .1 M g a h t — Dick Francis (1 — 3,869)
3. Maim s t f Paaaaga — Jean Auel (5 —
3.708)

— Geoffrey Ward (2 - 6 .1 6 6 )
3. Oat ta tha Start — Barbara Mandrel! (6
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4. Flaatwaad — Mick Fleetwood (3 — 3,200)
9. Pawarahlft- Alvin Toffler (2.819)
6. Tha Book af J — David Rosenberg and
Howard Bloom (S — 2.726)
7. Claaar to tha Light — Melvin Morse
(2.626)
8. M illie 's Bask — Millie, as told to Barbara
Bush (1 - 2 .2 2 9 )
9. Iron John— Robert Bly (1.788)
10. U I E v e r Oat Back to Oaargla — Lewis
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The novel Is centered on a professional
storyteller. Rashid Khalifa, known to hta
admirers as "T h e Ocean o f Notions" but to his
detractors as "T h e Shah o f Blah." and his son,

9t the HsrsM at SM PL

and Bobby I* Robinson o f 90S
Bay Ave.. Sanford
He Is a 1989 graduate o f
Seminole High School, Sanford.

n » M « im m a IM A H E ggaftfivag*

Th ere w ill be. for those fam iliar with
harrowing, unhappy days o f Salman Rushdie
since the publication o f “ The Satanic Verses"
and the Ayatollah Khomcnhl's death threat, a
kind o f pathos In this novel o f a story teller
whose lost his gift o f gab.
A nd w h ile that pathos rem alna as a
flickering shadow in the background. Rushdie
Is such a wonderfully delightful teller o f tall
taka that "H aroun" em erges as a triumph, the
perfect follow-up to "T h e Satanic Verses.”
On Ua most basic level, "Haroun” is a child's
story. Rushdie says he began It aa a bedtime
story for his son but its subtext Is all about the
the nature — and necessity — of storytelling In
a world, like the city o f Allfbay In the story,
that la "s o ruinously sad It had forgotten Us

Haroun.
A s they must In all stories, things go awry
for Rashid when his wife runs off with a
neighbor, a plnched-up little clerk, and hta son
has a crisis o f faith In hia father, asking him.
"W h a t's the use of stories that aren't even
tru e?"
T h e twin crises strip Rashid o f his storytell­
ing ability.
But then, as they must In all stories, the
crises also launch Rashid and Haroun on a
series o f adventures, propelled by Haroun'i
effort to retrieve his father s special gift, and it
b on these adventures that Rushdie’s imagina­
tion soars to childlike heights — to the earth's
Invisible second moon, the magnificent city o f
Gup and an epic battle between the forces of
light and dark.
"Haroun and the Sea o f Stories" Is a
masterwork. one of those books that should be
an Instant classic — delightful and thoughtful,
a book for both children and adults, pulled off
w ith verve and cunning. It's the perfect answer
to all the dour ayatollahs — In Iran and
America — who would silence the tellers o f

* wl Mstrtst Writ* to her In

Cnpt. DanM Stout

’ 00

Rushdie return is a triumph

,'M Fray*-

Tteikaad Gaa

[Cbthb'l fce^Mpry Ilarih

For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, Nov. 23.

tc
and Specialist
in E d u c a tio n d e g r e e fr o m
Stetson University.
She taught hr five years at
A lta m o n te E le m en ta ry and
another eight at Lake Orients
Elementary School, also In A l­
tamonte Sprinpi before submit­
ting her qualifications for the Job
she currently holds.
" I love teaching and working
with you th." mud Kirby, who
added that she would not trade
her Job for anything. She said
she has turned down a market­
ing Job with IBM to continue
working with youngsters.
When she la not at work. Kirby
Is active with the youth at St.
Paul Missionary Baptist Church
In Sanford.
Kirby said that not all students
at Crooms School of Choice are
discipline problems. As a matter
o f fact, only about 10 percent of
the student body fits that dis­
cretion.
' Most o f the students, 140 of
them to be exact, arc alternative
education students. Som e are
teen parents. Only 20 are actual
discipline problems who were
recommended by the board aa
an alternative to expulsion," she
explained.
The majority o f the students
are "average or better." It Is
Kirby's particular forte to help
those students work up to their
potential.
"W e give them alternative
ways o f learning." said Kirby
who said that emphasis Is placed
on hands-on learning, a tech­
nique regularly abandoned after
elementary school.
Kirby was appointed by Edu­
ca tion C o m m issio n er B etty
Castor to the Teen Parent Task
Force to study the special pro­
blems o f educating teen parents.
She Is currently the secretary
of the Seminole Association of
School Administrators.
She Is a member o f the board
of directors of the Seminole
County Red Cross.
Kirby said the Sanford com­
munity has been very supportive
of her efforts at Crooms. The
s c h o o l h a s n in e b u s in e s s
partners who work with them on
various projects, donating time
as well as money to their cause.
"Th ere Is not one business
(hat I have approached who has
not c o in e th rou gh fo r the
school." she said.

M0HT1.Y
me smc

PROBLEM

NONTIY
n o***
TA K IN G C AK E

S a n f o r d H e r a k f

Is a proud msmbsr of tha “Wslcoms
Wagon” Family In Ssmlnolo 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
i

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

t a M • i 4

�PPP)

— - $anfonl H fkl, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Norembf » , 1W0

Education
High school report

IN B R IE F
KOvnwnnOT iw m i
LAKE MARY - The L a te Mary High School Booster Club
will be Belling potnaeltUa for Christ m u to raise money for the
various orotects at the sehool.
V TbechibtooSfertng ala Inch red or white flow er, for 96 n c h
or large hanging baaketa for 929 each.
The boaster d u b supports all aspects of student life, from
building the school's stadium and concession stands to
contributing m oney to the chorus, the band and the
Marionettes for travel to performances to support o f Project
Graduation and teacher appreciation programs.
Mary High School Is located at 655 Longwood-Lake
Marv Rd. In Lake Mary.
For more Information, contact any member o f the bonder
club or call the school at 323-2110.

I•

1 I

.r a g S g jg L

Special pops eonesrt planned
SANFORD — The Seminole Community College Community
Symphonic Band wUI present a special pops concert for the
cooperative education employers and advisory committee
members who have supported the school during the last year.
The concert will be on Tuesday Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. In the SCC
concert hall.
..
^
Reservations must be made by tomorrow. Nov. 26 and may
be made by calling 32 M 4 50. extension 548.

Loch Lowe announces honor roll
LAKE MARY — T w o students were named to the President's
Honor Roll at Loch Lowe Preparatory School In L a te Mary for
having earned straight A 's during the first grading period.
Douglas Brooks and Jennler Pahla were the schools top
students.
. . . .
. . .
a
Twenty other students were honored for having only A s and
B s on their first report card. Those students were Justin
Bigelow. Anthony Ellis. Sand! Gotro. Angelea Htonls. Katie
Holsapple. Brandon Howarth. Matthew Iverson. Patti Kelley.
R*Klrr»l Anast! *C w ey Bond. Thierry Bovert. Christina Della
Valle. Mlcah Detnblnsky. Vincent Eagle. Gref Forsberg. Tom
flora. Kiah King. Jennifer Rtcketson and Martle Williams.

Patriots In Mecy'e parado
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS — Heidi Wlepktng and Athena

J S S X S S S u o f the Lake Brantley High School dtmeeteam
performed In the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade as part ol
{he 400 representatives of the National Cheerleading Associa­
tion’s Superstar dance team.
....__ .
.
Smith Is the captain of the school a dance team. Wlepklng Is
her co-captaln.

Ceramic workshop at DBCC
DAYTONA BEACH - James L. Tanner, a nationally
acclaimed artist will lead a lecture and workshop on ceramic
sculpture at Daytona Beach Community College on Wednes­
day. Nov. 28 at 7:30 p.m.
The lecture will be in the Theater Center o f the school s
Daytona campus. It Is free and open to the public.
For more Information, call Stephen Marsh at (904) 255-8131.
ext. 3313.

J
Rams finish this month
while looking to the next
High school corrsspondont
LAKE MARY — Novcmber has been an exciting
month for U k e Mary High
School •
After winning Seminole's
Homecoming game 24-21
with a nail-biting last four
minutes of play, the Rams
accepted an Invltatjon to
play In the Thanksgiving
Day Rotary Bowl against Dr.
Phillips High School played
at Lyman.
T h r i l l e d s t u d e n ls llk e
Junior Emily Adams, whose
older brother Sean plays
center on the team. 'T m
really happy for the team."
she com m en ted. " T h e y
played a good game against
Seminole and they worked
hard for the win."
Lust week, nearly every
first period class In the
school planned and orga­
nized a service "m jcct for
D ecem ber. Students and

SANFORD — T h e OED tests, leading to the Florida high
school equlvllancy diploma, w ill be ofTered at Seminole
Community College on Dec. 10.11 and 12.
Eligibility for taking the tests must be completed by Friday.
Nov. 30.
The GED test orientation will be held on Wednesday Ik * . 5
at 11 a.m. and on Thursday. Dec. 6 at 4 and 5 p.m. Students
who are qualified to take the GED are encouraged, but not
required to take the orientation class on how to pass the test.
For more Information on the free GED study program, call
SCC at 323-1450 and ask for the GED office.

Annapolis protestor to spaak at Stetson
DeLAND — U.S. Naval Academy professor Jack Sweetman
will deliver the Phi Beta Kappa lecture at his alma mater.
Stetson University on Monday. Nov. 29 at 7:30 p.m. In the
Carlton Union Building's Stetson Room.
The title of the lecture Is ' Power Projection 1914: American
Intervention In Mexico."
Sweetman. an O rlm do native. Is the author o f "American
Naval History: An Illustrated Chronology of the U.S. Navy and
Marine Corps. 1775 to the Present" and two other books. He
luts two additional books forthcoming. In 1988 he received the
Alfred Tliayer Mahan Award for Literary Achievement.
His address Is free and open to the public.

FACTS announce* fundralsar
SANFORD — FACTS (the Foundation for Advancement of
our Community Through Schools) and Shoncy's Restaurants
are co-sponsoring a three month fundraising event.
Shoncy's customers can turn In their restaurant receipts to
any Seminole County school and FACTS will receive a
donation o f ten cents on the dollar from Shoncy's. The money
raised will be used for classroom mini-grants, teacher
recruitment and retention programs, student and support
personnel recognition, employees o f the year programs and
other educational enhancements.

Eye safety at Idyllwilde
SANFORD — The Florida Eye Clinic will be teaching an eye
safely program at Idyllwlldc Elementary School on Thursday.
Nov. 28 at 9 a.m.
Idyllwlldc Is located at 430 Vllhen Rd. In Sanford.
The program, which has been given at several other
elementary schools In the area, educates children about eye
care and safety through music, discussion and slide pres­
entations.
In addition. Stuff the Magic Dragon, the official mascot of the
Orlando Magic basketball team, will be on hand for the
festivities.
There will be prizes and treats for the students.

Big plans for Laks Mary Elamantary PTA
LAKE MARY - Starting Monday. Dec. 3 students at Lake
Mary Elementary School will be able to shop at Santa's Secret
Workshop, sponsored by the school's IT A .
The school Is located at 132 S. Country Club Rd. In U k e
Mary.
On Friday. Dec. 7. Santa will be on hand from 5 to 8:30 p.m.
to greet young shoppers who are at the I T A spaghetti dinner.
Tickets for the dinner are $4.50 for adults and $2 for children.
Ynungslrrs under three will be admitted free.
No reservations are required for the dinner, which will be
served buffet style.
For more Information ubout the I T A events call the school at
322 5218.

I

I

I
I

Clubs are also planning
projects during the season.
Th e National Honor Society
chapter has organized a toy
drive for migrant families
and sent a package and
holiday greeting cards to
the Middle East. Interact Is
collecting canned food and
will help entertain termi­
n a l l y III c h i l d r e n at
C h ristm as and Student
Government will go carol­
ing at nursing homes.

High school correspondent
SANFORD T h e r e 's
more construction going on
at Seminole High School.
On November 5. the BUI
F le m m in g G y m n a s iu m
began a facelift: old wooden
bleachers were exchanged
for automatic ones.
Th e new bleachers m ate
the gymnasium look bigger
and at the same tim e look
better.
Construction on the gym
ended November 18th. Just
In time to have comfortable
seats for basketball season.
The new bleachers wUI be
there for the first home
basketball game when the
varsity girls play
Daytona-Seabreese: gam e
time. 7:30 p.m.
While the campus gained
an added plus, students
r e c e i v e d an H o n o r s *
B reakfast on N o v e m b e r
20th. T h e b re a k fa st

honored those students who
earned no grade lower than
a " B " for the past grading
period. Students on the
principal’s list, no grade
lower than an " A ” In any
class, received certificates
for their accomplishments.
Students also got Into the
holiday spirit by aiding In
the Park on Park activities.
Th ose w ho signed up
helped w ith gam es and
encouraged a drug-free hol­
iday weekend.
National Honor Society
members collected canned
fo o d s N o v e m b e r 2nd
through the 5th to aid
needy families.
Students carried spirit
from Homecoming week to
the week before Thanksgiv­
ing. The giving and happi­
ness was alive despite a loss
to Late Mary during the
Homecoming game.

Students offer their help
to needy school bus driver
■y VICKI DsSOiMiiew
Herald staff writer_______________

QED lasts and prap

teachers decided what pro­
ject they wanted, such as
sponsoring needy families,
donating to the Missing
Children's Center, writing
to the soldiers In the Middle
East and cleaning up the
school's adopted road. This
program was designed by
the administration to keep
the whole school working
on the "Rams C are" theme,
w h ich seem s e s p e cia lly
I m p o r t a n t d u r i n g the
holdlday season.

Gym addtions and excitment
build on Seminole campus

OVIEDO — The students at
Tuskawllla Middle School. 1801
Tuskawllla Rd. In Oviedo, have
presented a check for more than
$700 to Grace Tlnch-r, a Semi­
nole County school bus driver.
They have donated the money to
help defray some of her family
medical expenses.
T ln c h c r ’ s daughter, Helen
Dodge Eastrldge. was pregnant
with her first chl'd when she was
killed In an automobile accident
In September. The child died
eight days later.
Eastrldge. a graduate o f Seminrjc High School, was attempt­
ing to drive herself to the
hospital, when she lost con­
sciousness due to severe hemmorhaglng and drove o ff the
road.
Doctors were able to deliver
her son. James Eastrldge Jr.,
but because his oxygen supply
had been cut off for nearly 20
minutes, there was little brain
function.
The Eaatrldgcs had no medical
In su ra n ce to help pay the
thousands o f dollars of neonatal
care Incurred at Ihp Arnold
Palmer Hospial for Children and
Women In • Orlando where the
child was transported after the
accident which occured in San­
ford.
About $500 of the $722 which
the students gave to Tlncher was
raised by the 19 members of
Joyce Joseph’s Lions Interna­

tional-sponsored Quest class.
T h e class, similar to one
t aught at L a k e v l e w M iddle
School In Sanford, teaches de­
cision making and self-esteem
building skills to adolescents.
"O ne of the ways we help
them to build their self esteem Is
to gel them Involved In a service
project in the school or In the
community." Joseph said.
J o s e p h s a i d that the
youngsters had been looking for
a cause to take up os a class In
the puges of the newspapers, but
had been unable to narrow their
selections down.
"T h ey had three or four." she
said, "but when 1 came to them
with this directive that the
district office had sent to the
teachers and administrators,
this Is the one they wanted."
Joseph said the students felt
they wanted to help Tlncher
because of the Intense personal
tragedy she hat. suffered. None
o f th e s t u d e n ts kn e w her
personally, according to Joseph.
Tlncher's bus route takes her
to Seminole High School.
The students raised money
f r o m t he t e a c h e r s , a d ­
ministrators and other students
at the school.

What's for lunehT
Mvr&gt;Qf|| lfwv» iV
Hamburger on a uun
French fries
Sllcad applet
Cookie
Milk
Tuesday. Nov. 27
Oven baked chicken
Whipped potatoes
Buttered baby carrots
Roll
Milk
Wednesday, Nov. 2$
Fish nuggets
Cheese grits
Tasty spinach

Thursday, Nov. 29
Lasagna
Fresh tossed salad
Chilled sliced peaches
Roll
Milk
Friday Nov. SO
Macaroni and cheese with ham
Buttered green beans
Fresh fruit
Roll
Milk

T h e remaining money was
raised by a student govern­
ment-sponsored dance.

r Loch Low e
Preparatory School

H o n o r roll, first nine weeks
, „ .

.

• Coeducational. Non-Sectarian. Grades K to 12.
• Personalized Instruction with classes limited to 15.
• Unique programming for achievers and underachievers;
average, above average and gifted students.
• Sports. Activities and Clubs.
• Beautiful 25 Acre Lakeside Campus.

Am rcn Baker. Rusty Boatright. Daniel Bohannon. .James
Bohannon. Julie Bridges. Leslie Charles. Brandy Lee Ellis.
Rebecca Fort son. Vanessa George. Christina Hardin. Kla
Jackson. Nicholas Kloke. Lacey Laird. Mitchell Lazarus.
Matthew Neal. Katie Nichols. Desiree Prince. Leon Reed.
Michael Richter. Shawna Synder. Jonathon Stanek. Brandon
Stevens. Amanda Stripling. William Trautman. Matthew
Twtllcagcr. Melinda Twym an. Vryonlsr Ward.

P.O. MX N M N • LAKE MARY. VL m

4th Grads
Bryan
Sharpe.

Cherry turnover
Roll
Milk

"T h ey went ull out." Joseph
s a id . " T h e y we nt from
classroom to classroom with
envelopes. They made signs
asking people to bring money.
They collected change at lunch."

Hamilton Elementary School
SrdGrade

School Board

Saminola

(4 9 7 ) 331-

App. Benjamin Chllsolm. Julia Higgins. Deanna

5th Grads
Tony Brooks. Christy Cullum. Takermah Powell. Megan
Racine. Spencer Schmitt. Tasha Smith. Teneslui Wells. Lisa
Whitlow.

I

IUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS
for the current rate coll... I •

I

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                    <text>N o v e m b e r 23,

FRIDAY

1990

25 C e n f s

Sanford Herald
83rd Year, No. 79 -

N E W S D IG ES T

Differences overlooked in leadership choice
Haraidstaffwrltar
SANFORD — A Seminole County commission
often marked by differences during the last two
years came cIo m f together Tuesday by unani­
mously selecting commissioner Fred Streetman
as the chairman for the next year.
Streetman last served as chairman In 1988, but
a new voting block bouyed by newly-elecled
commissioners Jennifer Kelley and Pat Warren
selected former commissioner Sandra Glerin as
their chairman In 1088 and 1089.
Although Streetman had expressed a willing­
ness to serve as chairman for the next term.

□ Florida
Florida caiafara f Thanksgiving
O ver 1.000 homeless were fed at the Miami
Rescue Mission, which cooked 2.000 pounds o f
turkey and 1.000 pounds o f dressing for Its
guests, who were served by volunteers. From
shelters, to churches, to dining tables In homes
the state. Florida residents gave thanks
Thursday.

□ Nation
Oil produeara raaliaa billlona
N E W YORK — A s a result of oil prices
doubling since Iraq's Aug. 2 Invasion o f Kuwait.
M iA tu East oil producer* w ill realize a windfall
o f about $44 billion In extra revenue this year.

Sanford, Florida

P o lic e
c h a rg e s
c le a r e d

newly-elected commissioner Larry Furlong said
on hia election night he favored commissioner
Bob Sturm for chairman. Sturm, the com ­
mission's longest-serving mem ber, was more
closely aligned with his own view s on environ­
mental protection and growth management than
any other commissioner. Furlong said.
But Tuesday. Furlong's nomination o f Sturm
was blocked by Sturm himself. Before Furlong
could m ake hia m otion. Sturm nom inated
Streetman as commission chairman. Warren
quickly supported the recommendation and with
no o th e r nam es b e fo r e th e c o m m is s io n .
Streetman was elected unanimously.
Furlong said he planned to nominate Sturm but

S h o p p in g

decided against the action after Sturm himself
offered up Street man's name.
“ It didn't make much sense to nominate
someone who nominated someone else." Furlong
said.
Sturm said he had heard Furlong might
nominate him but he believed Streetman would
be the beat choice to bring commissioner*
together. Sturm said he did not desire the
chairmanship as Streetman did.
“ I have found I can accomplish even more by
not being chairman." Sturm aald.
"Fred Is good at brlhglng coalitions together."
Kelley said.

f r o n a y

S ta te ’s attorney probe
fin d s no w ro n g d o in g

BssFageTt
HaraM staff writer

HI World

ramalna hospitalized
ALTAM O N TE SPRINGS - Sheriff John Polk
spent Thanksgiving Day In an Altamonte
Springs hospital. .where he has been since Nov.
7. Pout had hoped to be home In Sanford
yesterday,' but Dr. Benlamlne Newman said he
la m ore secure and comJortablr In the hospital.
Newm an said Thursday was a good day for
Polk, w ho after 22 years as sheriff, on Tuesday
forw arded his letter o f retirement to the
governor, effective Dec. 31. Polk’s health la
falling because o f heart disease, and Newman
said he has sees no near end to Polk'a
hospltilixation.

Shooting victim hospitalized
SANFORD - Joe Miller. 28. a Sanford man
wounded by two gunshots to the back In
Sanford Thursday night, remained In the critical
care unit o f Central Florida Regional Hospital
this morning.
Sanford Polks Chief Steven Harriett
police have no account o f the shooting, which
occurred at 12:30 a.m. Thursday after a dance
at the Sanford Civic Center on Sanford Avenue.
Miller found hia w ay from (he shooting site to
Park Avenue In front o f the county courthouse.
A p o lic e o fficer found him and he was
transported to the hospital. Harriett said police
are Investigating several possible suspects In the

LAKE MARY — An Investigation Into allegrd
misconduct by members o f the Lake Mary Police
Department has ended with a clean bill o f health
ana a vindicated police chief.
Th e allegations, reportedly made Sept. 26 on a
local radio broadcast during the political cam­
paigning period, charged misconduct by Lake
M ary's police chief Charles Lauderdale. ' who
actually holds the title o f director o f public safety.
The charges centered on an alleged cover-up of a
DUI case Involving one o f the city’s residents.
Within days of the broadcast, both Lauderdale
and Lake Mary City Manager John Litton had
requested an Investigation be undertaken by the
state attom ey'aofllce.
Lauderdale had requested Litton to look-into "a
complete Investigation as to the (acta surrounding
the Incidents In which the understated and/or any
other members o f this department are alleged to
have conducted themselves contrary to law and/or
policy."
Litton wrote to State Attorney Norman Wolflnger
about the allegations. "Because of the potential
adverse Impact to the City and law enforcement In
general. I request that you assign an Investigator
Im m ediately." he wrote. "Y o u may rest assured
that you will have the full cooperation o f the City.
Its police department, and the undersigned."
Lttton's request was sent to Wolflnger Oct. 1.
A s If to grant one additional Item lor which (o be
thankful before the State Attorney's ofTlce closed
□ $ • • P o lice, Paga BA

Shoppprs flock to S om lnofp Can fro shortly

D o o rs flin g o p e n fo r early s h o p p e rs
By VICKI I
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — Just like indigestion and turkey
sandwiches on the day after Thanksgiving,
shopping Isa tradition for many people.
"Actually. It's been pretty slow so far this
morning." said Theresa Smith, a sales clerk at
the Wal-Mart on U.S. Highway 17-92 In Sanford,
about a half an hour nftcr the store opened at 7
a.m. "Th ey're Just starting to drizzle !n.”
More than 100 people were pushing carts
around the store, filling them with clothes, toys
and other Christmas gifts.
Danna-Mac McDonnough. o f Sanford, said she
"had to get her Christmas shopping done
today."
She said she hates shopping, but she finds It
too difficult to pass up the deals that one can get

at the sales going on at many o f the stores
today. She added, however, she was shopping
ulckly to avoid the bigger crowds later In the
ay. .
.
" I wouldn’t want to be here la t e when all of
them (the pre-holiday shoppers* start coming
In.” she said.
Kelly Snlznlk. of Deltona, a self-proclaimed
"serious shopper." said she was up at 4 this
morning preparing for a three-day shopping
spree which began at Wal-Mart when the doors
opened this morning.
" I made lunches and dinners for my husband
and daughter for the next three days and stuck
them In the freezer." she said. "I don't Intend to
be home until the stores close every night."
Snizntk. who says she will go to sales In stores
as far away as Kissimmee and Jacksonville, said
Cl

3

Lakeview students Duke it out for college opportunity
By VICKI DsBOftMIBR
Herald staff writer
SANFORD — Thirty-one seventh
grad ers from L a k eview Middle
School will compete with students
from around the southeastern Unit­
ed States for a chance to attend
college classes at Duke University In
the summer o f 1991.
Lakeview Middle School Is located
at 21 Lakeview Drive. Sanford.
The Talent Identification Program
(TIP), sponsored by Duke. olTcrs the
y o u n g s t e r s e d u c a t io n a l o p ­
portunities normally i.ot afforded to
seventh graders, according to Fred
Bumett. an nsslstanl principal at
Lakeview.

fThese are the very top of their classes.
They’re very good at taking tests, f
-Fred Bumatt, assistant principal
The 31 Lakeview students chosen
to go on to the next step of the
competition were those who scored
In the top three percent o f those
taking the standardized tests in the
sixth grade.
"These are the very top of their
classes.” Burnett said. "Th ey're
very goou at taking tests."
The students will now be given
the opportunity to take I he SAT
(Scholastic Aptitude Test) or the

A C T (American College Testl with
high school students this fall.
" It ’s a strictly voluntary thing."
Humett said. " I don't know how
many of these kids will choose to do
that next step. It's up to the parents
now ."
The tests, taken by high school
Juniors and seniors as a way of
predicting future scholastic success,
are usually not something experi­
enced by seventh graders.

From sUff reports

"Just the opportunity to get such
an early look at the test Is a
worthwhile experience In Itself,"
Burnett said.
Barbara Brown, a teacher In the
gifted program at Lakeview. teaches
a class In strategies for passing the
tests to those who Intend to go on In
the program.
According to Burnett, there has
been a high level o f Interest by the
students who ure chosen to compete
In taking the tests.
"These youngsters arc always
looking for a challenge. I think." he
said.
The students from Lakeview who
□Baa B tadants, Paga BA

U.S. observes
Thanksgiving
with diversity
Am ericana celebrated their
360th Thanksgiving with colorful
parades and traditional turkey
dinner* — along with a few dozen
lucky birds who were spared
their usual place at the table fay a
group o f sympathetic anim al
rights activists.

chanct of rain
Variable cloudiness
with a slight 20 per­
cent chance o f af­
ternoon showers and
a p o s s ib le t h u n ­
derstorm. High near
80 w ith the wind
becoming southwest
5 to lOmph.

For moro weather, see Fate 1A

The Rescue Outreach Mission of Sanford servedturkey dinners to the needy Thursday. Volunteers (I to

r) Pandora Carter, Margaret Richardson, Sylvia Drake
and Meta Brooks prepare the plates.

S U B S C R IB E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S

In SanJord. the Rescue Out*
reach Mlaaton o f Sanford. 1701
W. 13th Street, served dinner to
the county's hungry and home­
less. The mission was assisted by
the Salvation Army, who also
delivered Thanksgiving meals to
local shut-ins.
Far from home. President Bush
and the first lady spent the
holiday with (he hundreds o f
thousands o f U.S. troops sta­
tioned In Saudi Arabia, sharing
□ B e e D ive rsity , Page BA

n?

�3 * — Sanford

celebrates Thanksgiving

1

his parents came to him. They dined out for
Thanksgiving dinner.
(days ere just another day for
"These holidays
m e now.” he seld.
Francesca Htvner, whose husband ts also
a part o f Operation Desert Shield, w on't tell
her 3-year-old son they are celebrating a
holiday.
" I won't even tell him It to Thankaglvlng."
she said. "It would be too hard on me. too
hard on him.
The parenta o f the five college students
slain by the mysterious Gainesville killer
also coped with the first holiday season
following the deaths o f their children.
For Jim and Ada Larson o f Deerfield
Beach, whose daughter Sonja was slain in
Gainesville, their Thankaglvlng Day fare
featured their daughter’s favorites, such as
date nut pudding.
The&lt;
lonm iliJiigl
be thankful said Ada Larson to that Sonja to
" In heaven. If there's anything to
thankful for. that's all I can think o f."
There was sad news from the Florida
Highway Patrol aa well. By noon, officials
■aid six people had died on the state's
roadways since the atari o f the long holiday
weekend at 6 p.m. Wednesday.
The lin t fatal accident was In Fort Pierce
and claimed three lives, including that o f an

Coupl* chargtd In child w*Mar*e*t*
HARRISBURG. Penn. — A Florida couple who operated a
Pennsylvania foster care agency has been charged In that state
with endangering the welfare o f children.
Robert Sweeney and his wife, Tina Brush Sweeny, who now
live In Gainesville, face charges Including endangering
children, theft by deception and operating a corrupt organixalion.
Robert Sweeney now works as a psychologist at a Florida
state prison.
Pennsylvania Attorney General Ernie Preate said In one case
the couple allegedly put 11 Infants and small children In a
dilapidated building where they w ere found living In
unsanitary conditions.
in another ease, a child welfare worker found children living
In a foster home with no toothbrushes or combs, no toys and
exposed electrical wiring.
The couple had a 9339.000 contract with the City of
Philadelphia to find foster homes for dozens o f children.

Two ticket* match Fantasy 5
TALLAH ASSEE — T w o players matched all five winning
numbers In the Fantasy 5 drawing to earn a cash prtxe of
*318.559 each. Lottery Secretary Rebecca Paul said Thursday.
Paul said the first-prise cash payout totals more than 91
million. The winning tickets were sold In EUenton and Petrine.
In addition to the tw o top prise winners. 870 players
matched four numbers to win 9339. while 30,700 others
selected three correct numbers to win 95 each.
The winning numbers for Wednesday's drawing were 3. 11.
22.34 and 39.

Man killed In crash la identified
MIAMI — A Miami Lakes man who ran a flight school has
been Identified aa the victim In a single-engine plane crash on
Elliot Key earlier this week, officials said.
Yasuo Hatsusakl. 51. was killed when his Cessna 173
nose-dived into a clump o f mangrove trees on the southern tip
o f the key on Tuesday.
»nvestigatora have not determined what caused the crash.
"This case is going to be very difficult because w e don't have
any witnesses." said Jorge Prellezo. a National Transportation
Safety Board spokesman.

School board approves contract
MIAMI — T h e Dade County School,Board has approved a .
$150,000 annual contract for newly appointed Superintendent
Octavio Vlsledo.
*
it Is the same amount Vlsiedo's predecessor, the late Paul
Bell, earned.
At Vlsiedo's request, the board approved a contract provision
that guarantess him a high-ranking administrative position if
board members decide to terminate his 44-month contract
because they are displeased with his performance. Vlsledo
requested the clause because his Is 10 years short of being
entitled to full retirement benefits from the school system.
Should the board want to remove Vlsledo. he may take a
year's salary and be dismissed from the system or accept a
deputy superintendent's post through the end o f the fiscal
year.

Hughes Supply earning* down
(ifiLANDO — Hughes Supply Inc. said Wednesday it earned
*967.000.-or 33 cents a share, in the third quarter, down from
$2.3 million, or 47 cents a share, for the same period a /ear'
ago. Net Income for the 1090 quarter Included an after-tax gain
from the sale o f the company's manufacturing operations o f
*617.000, or IS cents a share, the company said. Sales rose to
*143.2 million from 9138.8 million a year ago. For the nine
months ended Oct. 31, the company earned 94.1 million, or 93
cents a share, compared with 96.3 million, or 91.30a share, for
the same period a year ago. Sales rose to 9430.3 million from
*398.9 m illion a year ago. The company attributed the rlae.ln
revenues to newly acquired operations, new sales outlets and
Increased market share. However, the company said sales from
outlets opened more than a year declined as a result of the
slump in construction activity. The company also said Its
increased market share came at the expense of profit margins.
Hughe' Supply repurchased an additional 153.000 shares of
common slock during the quarter, bring total purchases since
Feb. 1 to about 500,000 shares.

Two Manudo members arrested
MIAMI — T w o members o f the Puerto Rican singing group
Mcnudo were in custody In south Florida Friday after being
arrested on marijuana possession charges at the Miami
international Airport.
Sergio Gonzalez. 18. and a 16-year-old unidentified member
of the group were arrested by U.S. Customs officials at about 7
p.m. Thursday after a narcotics dog detected 45 grams o f
marijuana on Gonzalez and 38 grams on the other youth.
From United P r*ss International Reports

LOTTERY
TA L L A H A S S E E - The daily
number Thursday in the Florida
Lottery CASH 3 same was007.
□ Straight Play (numbars in exact
order): 3250 on a 50-cent bat, 3500
on 31.
{) Box 3 (numbers in any order):
360 lor ■ 50-cent bet, 3160 on 31.
[ 1Box 6 (numbers tn iny order):
340 for s 50-cent bet, 380 on *t.
i Straight Box 3: 3330 in order
drawn, 360 In any order onaS1 bet.
L Straight Box 6: 3290 in order
-drawn, 340 if picked in combination
n 31 bet.

t

(U S PS U I I H )

Friday, November 23. 1990
Vol. 63. No 79 ’
' Published Deity end Sunday. e x e a t
Seturdey by The Senferd Herald.
Inc., MO N. French Avo., Senferd.
Fie. u r n .
Second C le » P oite«e Peed et Senferd,
Florida » r n
POSTMASTER: Send addroti cheep**
to THE SANFORD HERALD. P.O.
Bo* usr. Sanford. FL UITI.
Subscription Rates
(Daily A Sunday)
Home Delivery A Mail
) Months
Slf.SS
t Months
SU M
l Veer
WHO
Phone ISOM M l 7411.

TH E

Prices skyrocket in Tam pa for Super Bowl week
TA M P A — Premium prices
w ill reign In T a m p * during
Super B ow l X X V and those
charged w ith making sure the
gam e and the broadcast go
sm oothly are already experien­
cing a form o f sticker shock,
officials say.
Super Bowl planners acknowl­
edge prices are too high, but aay
there la little they can do to
counter the effect o f the law of
supply and demand.

Feelings vary
to Martinez '
as drug czar
TALLAH ASSEE - Pres­
ident Bush's staff leaked
p r o p o s e d ii frill n i l K iri o i

o u tg o in g G o v . B ob
Martinez for d ra g esar to
test congressional reaction,
a n e w s p a p e r re p o rte d
Thursday.
So far. there has been
little congressional criti­
cism. w ith support for the
M a r t in s s a p p o in tm e n t
com ing from Florida Dem­
ocratic Sen. Bob Graham
and Chiles, who first pro­
posed creation o f a d r u g
czar when he served in the
Senate.
However, Rep. Charles
Rangel. D-New York, w ho
leads th e H ouse S elect
C om m ittee on N arcotics
Abuse and Control, has
ex p ressed opposition to
Martinez's selection.
Rangel aald it appeared
B u sh w a s c o n s id e r in g
Martinez simply because
the lam e-duck govern or
"n eed s a job .” and the
drug czar post, which pays
9105.000 a year, to vacant
" I f Rangel to the extent o f
th e o p p o s it io n , th e n
Martinez ought to sail on
through." according to the
source.

Lisa Ganienm uller. a CBS
marketing representative, has
been trying to obtain buses to
ferry the network's employees
and sponsors about the city
during the Super Bowl.
" I can’ t And a bus for leas than
91,300," she aald. " I don't want
to pay that much Just on princi­
ple. Why should you pay 91,300
for a bus? "
But charter-bus operators In­
sist that to the price the market
will bear during the Super Bowl.

Contributing to the high price
were the rising cost o f diesel fuel
and extra costs such aa bringing
tn additional alr-condltlone&lt;f
multiseat cruisers from across
the eastern United States to
a c c o m m o d a te an e s tim a te d
50,000 people needing m ass
transportation on gam e day.
operators said.
There isn't much chagrined
officials w ith the Super Bowl
Task F orce o r the N ational
Football League can do to con­

LAST

MIAMI - Flurid* Mheur fempereturas
endreJnfeltsf 7am. EOT Friday:
CHy
HI L* Rale
Ap*)*ctiical*
ra s* .at
Crtsfvitw
77 S4 S JS
Oeytenu Beech
77 M Ira.
Fori Lewderdel*
7* 41 0.0i
- II u O S
Fort Myers
Gelnesvlif*
77 44 a.M
iecksonvill*
I I 14 0.0S
Key West
7* 71
Mieml
77 41
Or lends
77 41 „
Pansecoie
74 U Ire
Ser *Mt* Bredwiten
TV 4S O OP

TAM PA — Local officials try­
ing to keep the Tampa Bay area
fro m tu rn in g in to a n o th e r
smog-filled Los Angeles are con­
sidering banding together In a
six-county pollution control au­
thority.
The Idea was raised last week
by Roger Steward. Hillsborough
County's top environmental offldaL- during a meeting, with
county commloalonera from his
county plus Pinellas, Pasco.
Hernando. Polk and Manatee
The meeting organized by a
local business group was about
t o b r e a k up w it h o u t a n y
agreem ent on how to work
together when Steward raised
his suggestion.
" I Just like to suggest things
that no other people are talking
a b o u t" said Stewart, who is
e x e c u t iv e d ir e c t o r o f th e
H illsb orou gh E n viron m en tal
Protection Commission.
Pollution control is currently
left to individual counties.
Stewart said that by banding
together, the less populated
counties would gain air pollution
control technology they cannot
afford on their own. And because
air pollution doesn’t stay within
county lines, consistent e n -'
forcement could reduce pollution
tn the entire region.
Hillsborough officials said re­
gional cooperation la the only
way the bay area will be able to
comply with the Clean A ir Act

71 10 0 00
U IV 0 00
71 «
.17

p.m.; lows, 4:40 am .. 5:43' p.m.;
p m.;
highs.
" • . M m *
11:30 a m .. 11:53 p.m.: Iow a
4:54 a m .. 5:47 p.m.; Caeaa
B aaeki highs. 11:44 a m .. 13:06
p.m.: Iowa 5:00 a m .. 6.-03 p.m.

I MACH OOHBCTMMan IHATBHI
W aves are
1-3 feet and gtoaey. Current to
slightly to the north with a water
temperature o f 60 degrees. R aw
S m y rn a la a c k t Waves are 3-3
feet and semi glassy. Current to
to the north, w ith a w ater
temperature o f 68 degrees.

trol prices during the week. The
gam e to expected to bring In
millions o f dollars to the Tampa
economy.
" I t ’s a little bft crazy," mid
Bret Votoin. director o f sales and
m arketing fo r Orlando-based
M e a n Transportation Group,
which has booted 135 buses for
the bowl game and to charging
an average 91.500 a day for a
four-day minimum contract.
"M oat people are pretty hesi­
tant when they learn the price.”
he said.

Bay region pollution agency proposed

signed Into law Thursday by
President Bush.
Hillsborough has a compre­
hensive air pollution enforce­
ment program that Includes
road-side a u tom obile Inspec­
tions. Under Stewart’s proposal,
the county would eliminate that
enforcement altogether and turn
It over to the regional authority.
"I'm all for It. I’m going to

.1 »

FLOAfOA

Teiieheuet

On a happier note, workers at the Miami
Metro Zoo prepared special Thanaghrtng
Day dinners for the animals. While there
was no turkey on the menu, the elephants
w ere treated to pumpkins, while the rhinos
received sweet potatoes.

W EA TH ER

Today...V ariable cloudineee
with a alight 30 percent chance
o f afternoon ahowera and a
possible thunderstorm. H igh
near 80 with the wind becoming
southwest 5 to lOmph.
Tonight...Partly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of showers.
Low near 60 and a light wind.
Tomorrow...Variable cloudi­
ness with a 30 percent chance at
showers. High In the mid and
upper 70s with a variable wind
at 5 to lOmph.
Extended forecast...Fair Sun­
day with the highs In the low to
mid 70s and lows In the upper
40s to lower 50a Partly cloudy
Monday with a warming trend.
—

Temp*
Vera Beech
Was) Pelm Beech

Highway patrol
that 43 people w ill die In traffic accidents in
the state between 6 p.m. Wednesday and
midnight Sunday, when the long holiday
weekend ends.

? '

I t A a g a s tln * ta J a p ite r t a ls t
Today...Wind southeast 10 kta
becoming southwest 10 kts af­
ternoon. Seas I to 3 ft. Bay and
Inland w aters a light chop.
Widely scattered showers.
T o n i g h t . . . W i n d w e s t to
southwest 5 to 10 kta Seas less
than 3 ft. Bay and inland waters
smooth. Widely scattered show-

international Airport.
Other Weather Service data□ T h u r s d a y 's high------------ 77
□r
' *
-94 p et
□

□Rainfall
□ Tsday's
□“

5:39
'# smarts*

pursue It." said Hillsborough
Commissioner Jan Platt. She
sa id she plana to m ention
Stewart's idea to the Tampa Bay
Regional Planning Council in
hopes that the council will help
further the concept.
T h e area has exceeded federal
ozone limits since 1977. The
leading contributor to the prob l e m is b e l i e v e d t o b e
automobiles.

�Sanford M#mW, Sanford. Florida -

Mmi A06U0#d of gunpliy
SANFORD — City police report charging Cornelius Lopez
Sapp. 10, 3409 Grange A re.. Sanford, with with weapons
charges Including theft o f the gun he allegedly fired during a
Wednesday night fight.
Police said a man. w ho had fought with another behind 78
WWlam Clark Court at about 9:40 p.m.. accused Sapp of
Intervening and allegedly pointing ra''|
firing a shot.
Pouce aaid they recovered a handj
Tram under a car.
where the victim reported Sapp had all
tly thrown the gun.
Th e gun had been reported stolen in
nge County, police

nVCRHKV IKNVfl IIIHII WOVfMTI I ilVCR
MIDWAY — A man. w ho aUegerfly ripped a gold necklace
from the neck o f a woman as she fought with two other women
tn Midway at about 6 p.m. Thursday, has been arrested.
Th e victim told deputies that tfleey O'Neal. 19. 3180 Sipes
Ave., Midway, after allegedly robbing her outside the Last Stop
bar on Sipes Avenue, went into a house. She alleged he was
armed with a shotgun when he came out and fired a shot Into
the air. O 'Neal was arretted at 8:40 p.m. Thursday at the Last

Thret charged In bottto throwing
LAKE M ARY — A motorist told Lake Mary police a bottle
thrown from a passing car on Interstate 4. east o f Lake Mary
Boulevard, struck his windshield at about 1 a.m. Friday. The
man described the car and Its occupants.
Police stopped suspects on Interstate 4 at State Rood 40, and
arrested three persona on o charge o f throwing a deadly missile
at a vehicle.
Arrested w ere Yvonne Marie Boots. 24: Kim Lee Boots, 35;
and James Lee Boots Jr., 37, allofDeltona.

Seminole County DUI arrests
SANFORD — The following person fores a charge o f driving
under the influence of alcohol (DUI) In Seminole County:
•G aetano Mianulll. 02. 1903 W. Fourth St.. Sanford, was
arrested after an accident on Fifth Street. Lake Mary. He was
also charged with driving with a suspended license.

Friday, November 23. 1 M 0 -8 A

Organizations
soak approval
for aethrltias
SANFORD Judging from
Items up for dlacuaaton during
Monday night's Sanford City
Commission meeting, there win
be many events and activities
during the upcoming months.
Central Florida Services for the
Disadvantaged, Inc., has re­
quested that foes be dropped for
use o f the Sanford C ivic Center,
for a special p r o y m to be held
Christmas Day. Th e organisa­
tion feeds the underprivileged
people o f the area a Christmas
dinner. Last year they fed over
400 people at the ctric center in
a amlUar Christmas function.
A ll Souls Catholic Church is
asking the city for use o f Park on
Park, as part o f Its MartU Oraa 91
carnival, scheduled for Feb. 8
through Feb. 10. T h e church has
‘ a w aiver o f the
city ordinance on
an closing
d o sin g time
for the park, -seeking to extend
the use time u n ti 10 p.m.
Th e First Baptist Church o f
Sanford has myuested the clos­
ing o f Son Juan Avenue between
Seminole Boulevard and First
Street for the kickoff o f its third
annual youth rally March 9. The
church has also requested that
Fort Mellon Park be reserved for
the event on that day.
The commission w ill meet In a
s p e c ia l w o r k s h o p s e s s io n
beginning at 5 p.m. In the d ty
m an ager's con feren ce room,
followed by the regular meeting
in the commission chambers at
7 p.m.. Nov. 26.

Mtw eat on 19m Nook
This female Jaguarundi It a new addition to the
Central Florida Zoological Park In Sanford. The

cat
zoo.

•Uniqus Fountain* tomm Om tv •**)
•Uen Decor •Pod •Ptanw•PtanCs•Tim *
•FW taf Mulcfi*And Much Mud) Mom

SALE BHDS SUNDAY!

OPEN 7 DAYS
HRS: 0 - B. SUN. 0:30 •4:30
LAYAWAY •VISA •MC

.
#
1%

Ta lla ha ssee C h ristm as
feast w as first in U.S.
TALLAH ASSEE It’s
doubtful the band o f explorers
who gathered beneath the trees
on a winter day 451 years ago to
celebrate the Feast o f the Nativi­
ty attached m uch historical
significance to what they were
doing.
Yet that religious ceremony on
the brow o f a gentle hill not far
from the m odem state Capitol of
Florida wss the first celebration

to

Ited States.
A n d the Florida Park’ Service
ants everyone to- know about
i "Since thla la a recent discov­
ery. Tallahassee has not yet
been Immortalized In history
hooka. We want to create an
annual celebration to recognize
Tallahassee as the host o f North
America's first Christmas. " said
Sandra Cook o f the park service.
"D iscovery o f 16th century
Spanish artifacts solved the
hotly debsted historical Issue of
where our first Christmas was
c e l e b r a t e d . " s a id J e r a l d
Milanich. curator In archaeology
at the Florida Museum o f Natu­
ral History.
" F l o r i d a ' s c a p it a l c i t y ,
Tallahassee. Is without a doubt
the place of humble prestige."
Historians long suspected the
first Christmas was celebrated
by members o f Hernando De
Soto's expedition o f discovery,
w h ic h spent th e w in te r o f
1539-40 at the Apalachee Indian
capital o f Anhalca. site o f the
m odem Florida capital.
But the ex a c t site w as a
mystery until three years ago.
when excavations for a new
development turned up copper
coins and remnants of Spanish
arms and armor.
T h e band o f 500 to 700

explorers — Including a number
o f captive nailves. the other
Indian residents having fled the
Europeans — was accompanied
by 12 priests. Including mem­
bers o f religious orders who
intended to convert the Indians,
said Michael Gannon, head of
the Institute for Early Contact
Period Studies at the University
of Florida.
T h e S p an ia rd s ce leb ra ted
maaa every day and. other than
attending to a special liturgy for
the Feast or the Nativity, proba­
bly gave little thought to the
precedent they were setting, he
said.
"W e're probably making more
o f .it than, they would have."
Gannon bald. "A t that point' in'
time, it was Christmas Day to
them, and they probably did not
say. 'Hey. this Is the first one
ever tn this new land."'
Roman Catholics of that period
at any rate attached more Im­
portance to the Feast o f the
Epipliany 12 days later, he said.
"Attending mass each day.
and certainly attending on a
Sunday or holy day. was os
intimate a part o f daily life as
eating and drinking." Gannon
said.
The explorers built no church,
and w ou ld have celeb rated
Christmas under the open say.
Congregants — meaning all
members or the expedition not
guarding the compound against
Indian reprisal raids — would
have participated by kissing the
foot of a statue of the baby
Jesus.
"T h ey very likely followed the
Spanish Catholic customs of the
lime, which means that they
sang high mass," said Gannon.
"It no doubt was a very Joyous
occasion for the entire party."
I n fo r m a t io n a b o u t th e
Christmas celebration is avail­
able by calling the Florida Park
Service at 19041-488-3648.

O FF!

OFF!

Southern Bell fires workers
after internal investigation
MIAMI — Southern Bell said
W e d n e s d a y It fir e d f i v e
employees In Orlando and West
Palm Beach after an Internal
Investigation turned up evidence
that customers were charged for
services they never authorized.
About 40,000 Southern Bell
c u s to m e rs w ill sh are In a
$600,000 refund from the tele­
phone company as a result o f the
probe, the company said.
T h e Investigation began after
customers complained they were
charged for services they never
ordered, the company said.
Three Orlando employees were
Bred last month as a result o f the
probe, and two other employees
In West Palm Beach were fired
earlier thla week, said Southern
Bell spokesman Spero Canton.
Canton said that, as a result of
the employees' actions, customera who subscribed to either
Southern B ell's wire m ainte­
nance plan or Its trouble isola­
tion service were charged for
both services.
T h e customers paid an addi­
tional $1 or $1.50 a month as a
result, he said. In some cases.

the wrongdoing may have gone
undetected for up to three years.
"Our records show that some
o f this may have taken place In
1987 and 1988," Canton said.
Canton could not say whether
the employees violated any laws.
However, the results o f the
probe have been turned over to
federal and state prosecutors, he
said. Canton said the company
believes the employees acted
Independently o f each other.
T h e probe Is ongoing, al­
though Southern Bell said it
believes the wrongdoing was
confined to offices In Orlando
and West Palm Beach.'
Canton also said Southern Bell
has modified its procedures so
that a ll sales referrals are
verified with customers.
Customers eligible for the re­
fund reside in cities served by
the company's offices In Orlando
and West Palm Beach.
O r la n d o a re a c u s to m e r s
should receive refunds In their
December bills. The company Is
In the process of Identifying
wronged customers in the West
Palm Beach area. Canton said.
The refunds will range from
about 87 to $35. the company
said.

•Xand K Band Audta Alarm
•AnWalia Orcwtry

939000a

EARLYBIRD
SPECIAL:

A

5

*

•ksnssr
•AC/OCW/Car Adaptor
•Carper*

93231001

EARLYBIRD
SPECIAL:

93520271

EARLY BIRD
SPECIAL:

N o w y o u v e th o u g h t o f ever/thlr
HOURS: Saturday: 7AM - 10PM •Sunday: 10AM -6PM •Monday: 10AM

�4A — Sanforu Herald, Sanford, Florida — Friday. Novsntotr 23, 1980

Editorials/ Opinions
*f t ,, „ + m
n

s a m b n ll f le f l u d

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 33771
Area Code 407-323-2611 or 831-9993 •
Wayna D. Dayla,
W, “ ' “
SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 M onth*.................................. 919. SO
6 Month*................................ 939.00
1 Year ......................................979.00

E D ITO R IA L S

W asted opportunity
A p ro m is in g effort to en force th e n a tio n 's
im m ig ra tio n la w s w as killed in th e H ou se o f
R e p re s e n ta tiv e s b y a coalition o f L a tin o
la w m a k ers w h o d o n 't seem to w a n t th o se
la w s en forced.
A hou se m ajo rity threatened to b lo c k a
s w e e p in g b ill to Increase Im m ig ra tion . T h e
L a tin o s ob jected to a provision th a t w o u ld
h o v e esta b lish ed a p ilo t project to d e v e lo p a
secu re d r iv e r ’s license In three sta te s t o b e
ch o se n later. T h e d riv e r's license w o u ld h a ve
In c lu d e d s o m e s o rt o f c o u n t e r fe lt - p r o o f
m ark in g, su ch as a fin gerprint, a n d e v e n ­
tu a lly co u ld h a v e b een used as d e fin itiv e
p r o o f o f a p e rso n 's Im m igration status.

ROBERT WALTERS

Vehicles can run on gas, naturally
CONCORD. Cattf. - At first glance, the pm
pum p appears sim ilar to those m otorists
routinely encounter at sendee stations every­
where. But a close Inspection reveals that the
volume o f fuel sold Is rea su red In therms rather
than gallons and the nozzle looks like It should
be on a garden hose.
Th at's because the pump, In front o f a Pacific
Oas A Electric Co. maintenance facility In this
San Francisco suburb, doesn't dispense gasoline.
Instead, it supplies compressed natural gas or
CNG — a much cleaner, cheaper and more
plentiful fuel — to specially retrofitted care,
trucks and other vehicles.
But those retrofits (which cost 93.000 to
93,900 per vehicle) may not be necessary much
longer. Th e Oeneral Motors Corp. la committed
to producing, during the 1991 model year, at
least 1,000 OMC Sierra three- quarter-ton pickup
trucks with V-S engines modified to operate on
CNO as thetr fuel.
Encouraging OM to recently enter the field was
a consortium o f nine utility companies that sell
natural gaa In Texas, Colorado and California as
well as the Texaa Oeneral Land Office, a Mate
agency. They contributed 9935,000 to help
finance the project.
Now under consideration is a vastly expanded
program under which OM would begin produc­

tion In 1994 o f a far
larger (but Mill un­
determined) number
o f trucks, vans and
buses. To finance the
e n g in e e rin g costa.
OM would contribute
934 million and the
natural gas Industry
would put up 910
million.
Some operators of
tru ck fle e ts c a n 't
w a it fo r th o s e
veh icles, h ow ever.
T h e United Parcel
f S o fiw o p tra S e rv ice Is a lread y
t e a t I n g CNO
tors o f truck
technology on 30 of
ffo «t9 can't
Ita distinctive brown
w ait for thoa#
delivery trucks — 20
vehicles. £
In Los Angeles and
10 In New York.
S im ila r conversion* are to be
made In Dallas and Houston. If the tests are aa
successful, aa expected, UPS says up to h a lf o f Us
national fleet o f more than 100.000 vehicles
could be switched from gasoline to CNO.

JA C K ANDERSON

L a Uln
noo icon greasm en argu ed lo u d ly th a t th e
p ilo t p roject w as th e urat step to w a rd a
Ideen
tification
n ly w h e n th e
n ationrial
al Id
n tifica
tio n card. O nly
b ill's au thor. Sen. A la n S im pson . R - W y o „
a g re e d to d r o p the d r iv e r 's license p ro v isio n
d id the L a tin o la w m a k ers relent.

Anti-Semitism still
prevalent in Poland

C ou n terfeit-p roo f d o cu m en ts a re Im p e ra tiv e
to en force e m p lo y e r sanction s, w h ic h w e r e a t
th e heart o f provision s to d is co u ra g e Illegal.
Im m ig ra tio n u nder th e Im m ig ra tion R e fo rm
a n d C on trol A c t o f 1966. R igh t n ow , th e r e are
17 d ifferen t d o cu m en ts th at a llo w im m ig r a n ts
to w o rk a n d live here. A ll a re e a s ily fo rg ed .
A m o n g th ose re c o g n is in g the n eed fo r secu re
d o cu m e n ts a re th e fed era l G en era l A c c o u n t­
in g O ffice, th e C a r n e g ie E n d o w m e n t fo r
In tern a tion al Peace a n d T h e Rand C arp .
A secu re d riv e r's licen se w ou ld n o t b e a
n e w n a t io n a l ID c a r d , b e c a u s e a lm o s t
e v e ry o n e a lre a d y ca rries a d riv e r's licen se.
C on gression al critics o f th e secu re d r iv e r 's
license p ro je c t said it w ou ld le a d t o p o lice
stopping p e o p le o n th e street a n d d e m a n d in g
to see Id en tification papers. A c tu a lly , a g e n ts
from the Bender P a tro l and th e Im m ig r a tio n
and N atu ralisation S ervice a lre a d y h a v e th e
p o w e r to stop and question — w ith o u t a
w arran t — anybody they believe to b e an
alien.
Most nations. Including M exico, a lrea d y
requ ire national identification cards fo r all
residents. In the United States, w e h a ve
s o m e th in g no other country has; a F ou rth
A m e n d m e n t protecting us from u n reason able
searches and seizures. A s long as w e h a ve
that guaranteed right, w e need n ot fear that
ou r civ il liberties w ill be taken a w a y b y a
d o cu m e n t that sim p ly states w h eth er w e are
a llow ed to w ork legally In this cou n try.
T h e d riv e r's license proposal w a s a good
o n e an d should be revived In the next
C ongress.

LETTER S TO EDITOR
Leil i t s to the editor ure welcome. All letters must
signed. Include the address of the writer and a
daytime telephone number. Letters should be on a
single subject and Ik- as brief us possible.. Letters
an-subject to editing.
Ik -

Berry's W orld

"Are you trying to prepare us tor use ot the
MILITARY OPTION?"

In Pennsylvania. Ohio, Texas and Indiana,
some school districts already rely upon CNO*
fueled buses to transport student*. Similarly, the
vehicle fleets owned by the Miami International
Airport, the Scottsdale. Arlz. municipal govern­
ment and various other operators are powe red
by CNO.
The technology to hardly new. Natural gaa
from the Po River Valley has been used to fuel
Italian buses, trucks and c a n since the mid1930a. Today. Italy leads the world with 300,000
o f the more than 700. 000 CNO vehicle*
operating In ahnoM 40 nations.
Other countries near the top o f that Itot Include
the Soviet Union with 300,000. New Zealand
with 110.000, United States w ith 50.000,
Canada with 30.000and Argentina with 19,000.
CNO has numerous attributes that make It a
logical fuel for the future. Unlike crude oil,
natural gaa la plentiful both domcMtcalty and
internationally. Recoverable reserves In this
country exceed 1 quadrillion cubic feet —
enough to supply the nation well past the middle
of the next century.
Specifically, emission* are reduced 97 to 99
percent for carbon monoxide. 90 percent for
volatile organic compounds. 40 to 70 percent for
nitrogen oxides and 39 percent for carbon
dioxide.

ELLEN GOODM AN

Iraq isn’t Rockwell’s vision
The Kuwaiti royal family ensconced In the T alf
Sheraton and the American foot soldiers dug
Into the surrounding desert.
There to. It appears, unified world opinion
that WE should slop Saddam Hussein. Along
with the Saudis, it Is our show, our 980 million
or more a day. our men and women. Just as
we expect our work­
ing class to do our
fig h tin g . It seem s
that th e w o rld
expects our country
to do Its policing.
A fte r h a lf-a century o f war and
cold war. o f mllltaiy
actions and buildups.
I am afraid that con­
flict has become our
s p e c ia lt y . Jap an
makes cars. France
makes fashion. Korea
m akes television s.
W e m ake wars.
( All these
Wars-R-Us.
signs tell us
1 do not say this as
that w e are at
a pacifist, although I
war again, j
have grave m isgiv­
ings about this Des­
ert Shield adventure.
There are just ware
causes. T h e world has reasons to stop
aggression.

B O STO N — T h e President w ill spend
Thanksgiving in the desert. So will Americans,
some 140.000 o f them. They will spend theh
day aa part o f a unit tnatead o f a family.
There w ill be letter* from home. There will
be reports for the television cameras. Some o f
the soldiers will even unwrap the holiday gift
baskets being sold that are full o f bubble gum
and Cracker Jacks and JuJyfrulU, aa If the
soldiers were kids at camp.
All these signs tell us that we are at war
again. Not war in the tense o f fighting and
dying. Not yet. We are at war in the sense o f
families separated, daily lives disrupted, men
and women transported suddenly to foreign
places to wait in loneliness and fear for what
will happen next.
This Is not new to us. The Thanksgiving
Image most imprinted in our national memo­
ries was done when we were at war. It waa
1943 when Norman Rockwell painted hla
fa m ily d in n er to illu s tra te R o o s e v e lt's
"Freedom from W ant."
But that Thanksgiving Americans knew
what we were doing abroad. That year, home
was really the home front. During World War
II. our self-image was ot a peaceful people
driven to combat. W e were the Yankees, the
0.1. Joes, the brave and disorderly freedom
fighters, the rank amateurs o f Hollywood films
who could nevertheless, when push came to
shove, fight back.
What has changed most in this half-century?
Today, when the President talks about defen­
ding "ou r way of life " we don't visualize four
freedoms, but great tankers o f oil. At home, we
are not called on to ration gas. but expected to
use l( at will. There is no Pearl Harbor to
remember.
What has changed most? Today, our troops
are volunteers, professionals. Out o f every 100
recruits, ten sign on " to serve thetr country."
39 for college money. 26 for a Job or Job
training. Ask (hem what they are doing in
Saudi Arabia un Thursday and most will say
they are doing their Job. These are people with
a difficult duly, a bad deal, but not a cause.
Finally, what has changed most? Americans
arc no longer seen os the world's liberators.
Indeed, we may be becoming its mercenaries.
In this "unified," "International" "a llied "
effort, the world has deplored Hussein, but we
have deployed the troops. The British have
offered (he fiercest fighting words. But only
16.000 soldiers. Th e Kuwaitis have given us
Ihe rcuson to fight. But only 3.000 fighting
men. The Japanese allotted 92 billion with
strings attached. But no soldiers.
W e arc In this “ together." Some 140,000
American troops and some 450 Canadians.

But we have come to assume the Job as
international cop. and the rest o f the world has
come to depend on us aa good cop and rail
against us as bad cop. W e have sadly staked
our last, lingering claim to be Number One on
the battlefield.
If Hussein Is "another Hiller." If Iraq to close
to having a nuclear weapon, then It Is not only
our cause for alarm. If w e are merely alarmists,
there is no reason to go It alone.
W.ten the world looks casually to America
for a low-cost protection, an International
security system, it 1a time to prick the balloon
of that fantasy. Th is to not how we see
ourselves. W e are not the world's mercenaries.
In that famous Thanksgiving poster of
another home ffont. another era. Rockwell
celebrated America's freedoms. The faces
around that tabic exude the case o f a people
confident o f their moral stand. But that
confidence to hard to find this holiday. In the
desert, we are threatening to squander not
only our people and our wealth, but the truly
American "w ay o f life."
(C ) IM O N E W S P A P E R E N T E R P R IS E ASSN

r

AUSCHW l
Poland — The horror o f the
H o l o c a u s t , ao e v i d e n t h e r e a t t h e
crematorium-cum-muaeum. has not touched
Ihe Polish soul. Even though 95 percent o f
those who died here were Jews, the word
"J e w " does not appear on the death camp
signs. Instead, they say, "H ere four million
people suffered and died at the hands o f Nail
murderers.
J ew s vehem ently
opposed a Carmelite
convent built against
the wall o f Auschwitz
hi 1969. fearing It
was another attempt
to Christianize the
place and erase the
mem ory o f the Jews
who died here.
Poland was once a
h a ve n fo r J ew s.
S o m e 3 :5 m illio n
lived there at the
beginning o f World
W ar II. Today, there
are leas than 7,000 —
moat o f them elderly
C Polan d w as
s u r v i v o r s o f th e
o n c e a haven
H o lo c a u s t . T h e ir
fo r Jew s. J
average age to 70.
Jew ish leaders are
considering a final
evacuation o f those
who remain, for their own safety.
Poland to Mill not a safe place for Jews to
be. Jewish cemeteries, long neglected, are
b ein g defaced w ith swastikas. Obscene
slogans appear on the walls o f Warsaw's
Jewish State Theater: "Jew s to the ovens."
Polish Catholic priest. Father Stantolaw
Musial, to one o f the church's top experts on
Jewtoh-Poltoh relations. He was candid and
critical when we m et with him recently near
Krakow. " It waa a terrible thing." he said.
"Im a g in e 10 percent o f the population
murdered overnight In America. And yet
here, there to no feeling of a void today. I can
tell you there has been no sorrow. It to
because we lived not together, but side by
side;"
Although It was the Germans who did the
killing, and although many IfoUsh Catholic
priests paid with their own Uvea when they
stood up for the Jews. Musial suggested that
Poland still needs a moral cleansing from its
anti-Semitic roots and the Holocaust.
For centuries, Father Musial admitted.
Catholic officials fostered outrageous stories
about Jews. The most common said that
Jew s kidnapped and killed Catholic children
to use their blood In unleavened bread. A
huge painting called "In fan tld da" still hangs
In the 17th century church In San domic rz
d epictin g Jews dism em bering Christian
babies.
Between the two world ware, Ihe Polish
Catholic Church stoked anti- Semlttom with
right-wing rhetoric. One pastoral letter by the
primate o f Poland called Jews, "the advance
guard o f a godless life, o f the Bolshevik
m ovem ent." T h e letter also called Jew s
embezzlers, usurers and white slavers.
In the 1960a the Polish communist gov­
ernment sponsored an anti- Semitic cam ­
paign blaming Jews for the Ills o f the country
and purging them from government Jobs.
Father Musial to not surprised to see
antl-Semittom whipped up in the current
presidential campaign, which will culminate
In an election Sunday, Nov. 25. "It is very
easy to say Jews are the hidden force who
have the hidden plans that have ruined this
country." he said.
Presidential candidate Lech Walesa to not
anti-Semitic, but hto campaign has attracted
anti-Semites who see hto campaign as a
rallying cry far the nation to become purely
Polish and Catholic.
If there Isn't a Jew that Poles can bkunc for
the woes o f their country. anti-Semites will
Invent "secret Jews'* who hide their heritage
so they can get into positions of power.
Nobel Prize winner Czeslaw Milosz, a Polish
poet, has noted that the Polish spirit o f heroic
patriotism "cannot be separated from its less
attractive features. A certain ethnocentric
Poland, closed upon itself, hostile to any
'otherness,* to a historical fact.'*

�i
iH H H n H H M R P M M H S w lM N B R w

Sanford Hsraid, Sanford. Florida — Friday. Novambar 23, 1M0

Shoppers

Diversity

f U C. Hardware

o n g k ld R o w to

FOR THE HOLIDAYS
A i ten minutes to eight. Laura

" I loot m y Job tn August, but I
atlU need to get Christmas pres­
en ts." he said. " I figured rd
better com e today i f I wanted to
get the good buys."

|

F3

grouping aoHdwi etnb#r
vial tin g dlgn itla rfcs b y
" T h e y 'l l b e the ju e a t a o f
honor, eatd Blanche Kent, man*
a fa r o f th e Fhnn Sanctuary,
which m m h
the "Adopt*#*
T u r k e y '^ cam paign that has

tradition in our family for the
w om en to g o ahopplng the
morning after Thanksgiving. W e
go for a couple o f hours and

feet or
they’re

I
I

LAKE MARY

At
V I

Police
for the four-day holiday
w e e k e n d , p h on e c a lls w e re
placed by Wolflnger'a office to
L a u d e rd a le and L itto n la te
Wednesday afternoon.

r

t

According to Lauderdale, the
phone calls gave the initial word
that the state attorney's office
had found no wrongdoing In the
c ity 's police department. Th e
decision Is to be verified by a
letter, which had not been re­
ceived as o f this morning.
Lauderdale, meanwhile, waa
at his desk early this morning,
preparing a m em o to be issued
in conjunction w ith one from
C ity Manager Litton, regarding
the conclusion o f the InvesUga-

I

n

'

i

investigation.'’ Lauderdale said.
“ I’m telling them that the State
Attorney has completed his In­
vestigation and that the case
agent has found no substance to
the allegations."
He added that he Is going to
’ ’ thank the members o f the
Department o f Public Safety for
their support during this experi­
ence.’ ’
R e g a rd in g his departm en t
Lauderdale said. "In this posi­
tion. I know we, have to tolerate a
certain degree of criticism, but
are w ill not stand for any ac­
cusations made against the in­
tegrity o f this department or any
members o f our families.”

.

Sophia Casper. 67. 960 Or­
ients Ave.. Altamonte Springs,
died Tuesday at Florida Hospi­
tal. Altamonte Springs. She was
b om June 27. 1903, in Germany
and waa a homemaker.
S u rvivo r In d u d ea brother.
Fred Wolpert. New York.
Beacon Cremation Services o f
Central Florida. Winter Park. In
charge o f arrangements. .

F.; daughters. Phyllis and Kim.
both o f F ern P a rk . M arcia
Hundley, Mount Holly. N.C..
Karen Dunkln. Snellvtlle. Ga..
Brenda Peacock. Oviedo, Fran
Riggins, Longwood, RoUie Bea
Nelson. Lake Mary. Shawndra
Farmer. Atlanta: son. Edgar Lee
Jr.. Monticello. Ga.; 23 grand­
children.
B a ld w in -F a irch ild Fu n eral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge o f arrangements.

Rose Lee Duckett. 83.1117 W.
11th St.. Sanford, died Nov. 17
at her residence. Bom Dec. 10.
1906, in Bowling Green, she
moved to Sanford In 1030 from
G r a y m o n t. G a . She w aa a
homemaker and a member of
Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church.
Sanford.
Survivors Indude daughters,
W lllk Mae D. Yeardy, Miami.
Mildred Ashley. East Orange.
N .J .; b r o t h e r . J o h n n ie K.
Bargeman. Detroit. Mich.; six
g ra n d c h ild re n ; th ree g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
WUaon-Elchelberger Mortuary
Inc.. Sanford. In charge o f ar­
rangements.

Virginia D. Moore, 86. 306 E.
21st St., Sanford, died Thursday
at Lakevlew Nursing Center.
Sanford. Bom March 21, 1904.
in Hart County. Ga&gt;, she moved
to S a n fo r d in 1 9 2 6 fr o m
Royston. Ga. She was a home­
maker and a member o f First
Baptist Church, Sanford.
Survivors include husband.
Henry C., Sanford; sons, Louie
and William, bath o f Sanford.
C la rk . O ra n g e C ity ; s e v e n
g r a n d c h ild r e n : o n e g r e a t ­
grandchild.
Brtaaon Funeral Home. San­
ford. in chrge o f arrangements.

Edgar Lee Lyons Sr.. 68. 1095
Lake Irene Road. Casselberry,
died Tuesday at Winter Park
Memorial Haopital. Bom Feb. 25,
1922. In Ccredo. W. Va.. he
moved to Casselberry from there
In 1927. He was a deputy chief
for the Supply Department of
Patrick A ir Force Base and a
member o f Community United
Methodist Church. He waa a
veteran o f the U.S. Arm y Air
Corps, a charter member o f the
A e r o s p a c e P io n e e rs a n d a
member o f American Legion
Post 183, Fern Park.
Survivors include wife. Mary

b l t K w n n
_
^
_
Oswtmwsd fr o m r a g s
wtO be competing
program are:
T a m e ra B annon
Bradshaw. Oscar Car
S h an n on C rea m er
D o w n e r . D a v id E d w a r d s ,
Theresa Erickson. Rebecca GUI.
A n g e la O o ld e n . C a t h e r in e
Hawkins. Carty Jackson. Daniel
Julian. Theresa Koepfler. Peter
Malys, Oabe McDonnough. Kim
Ondaah. L a u ra P la cq u a d io ,
Kevin Prebends. Ben Richards,
Matt R ose, Daniel Schnack.
Ruaaell S c h n e id e r. W e n d e l
Shafford, Jason Shipley, Steven
Smart!, Brittany. Soderstrom.
Zuong V on g. J e ff W hitaker.
Jaaon Wiclim an and Chlstopher
Wilber.
___
_
W
Bafara Ym Buy, Step

:\ IK
i R

t

Lauderdale mid he expected
there will be a d ty memo issued
on the matter by the beginning
o f next week.

i

Floyd Jones Jester. 76. 102
Oakley Court. Longwood. died
Tuesday at his residence. Bom
Jan. 30, 1914. in Chlncoteague.
V a „ he moved to Longwood from
Miami in 1976. He retired from
the U.S. Coast Guam and waa a
Protestant. He was a veteran of
World War II. past administrator
o f accounts payable at the Uni­
versity o f Miami, a member of
the VFW o f Coral Galbea and the
Coast Guard Retired Officers'
Association.
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e w if e .
Cecelia; sons, Robert F., Deltona.
Edward T.. Longwood; brother.
Maurice F.. Homosaasa; sisters.
Elizabeth LangrialT. Homosaasa.
Marcia Cinque. Holiday; five
g r a n d c h ild r e n ; fo u r g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B a ld w in -F a trch lld Fun eral
Home. Forest City, in charge of
arrangements. .

8 0 m illio n v i e w e r s a c r o s s
America.
Foley’s 41st Annual Thanksgivin g Day Parade rolled down
the streets o f Houston, w ith
comedian Jerry Lew is serving ss
g ra n d m arshal. T h e parade.
televised to 35 miUton people tn
60 cities, featured eight giant
h e liu m b a llo o n fig u r e s . 11
m arching barnfe, I S Ooats and
blanket loose n from St. Paul.
Minn.
In Plymouth. Mass., where It all
began tn 1631. descendants o f
the Pilgrim s and later tmmlgrants took part ki the traditional
dinner sponsored b y the Chamber o f Commerce after a Pilgrim 's
Progress inarch in costume from
Plym outh Rock to First Parish
Church. The dinner for 1,400 at
Memorial Hall required two tons
o f turkeys and four seating*.
T h e poor were treated to free

Juno 34. 1904. tn Philadelphia,
she moved to Sanford from there
in 1026. She w a a .a .r e t ir e d
homemaker and a member o f
T e m p le Is r a e l. S h e w a a a
m em ber o f Hadaaaah, Central
Florida Regional Hospital A u x­
iliary and the O lder o f the Easter
Star.
Survivors Indude daughters.
Audrey Turkel a id Judy, both o f
Maitland; slater. Ann Hoffman.
Philadelphia; five grandchildren.
Beth Shalom Memorial Cha­
pel, Orlando, in charge o f ar­
rangements.

Eugenio E. Vidal. 83. 509
T u la n e D r iv e , A lta m o n t e
Springs, died Thursday at Flori­
da Hospital. Altamonte SpringsB om Sept. 6, 1907, In Havana,
Cub#, be moved to Altamonte
Springs from Boston In 1973. He
w as a retired certified public
accountant for the John Han­
cock Life Insurance Co., Boston,
and a member o f the Church o f
the Annunciation.
S u r v i v o r s I n c lu d e w i f e ,
M ercedes; daughters. M irth s
Rodrigues and Aide Abreu. both
Dr. MUchell Shapiro, SO. 109 o f A ltam on te Springs; three
G r e e n le a f Lane. A lta m o n te grandchildren.
Springs, died Tuesday at his
B a lb w in -F a lrch lld F u n era l
residence. Bom May 19. 1940. In Home, Altamonte Springs, in
Baltimore, he moved to Alta­ charge o f a n an ^m en ts.
monte Springs from there In
1946. He was the founder o f The
Florida Eye Clinic and a member
o f Tem ple Israel. He was a board
member o f the Holocaust Re­
source Center and a member o f
the Jewish War Veterans, Post
759.
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e w ife ,
Marilyn. Winter Park; mother.
Sylvia. Altamonte Springs; sons.
Eric and Brad, both o f Winter
Park; brother. William, Portland.
Ore.
Beth Shalom Memorial Cha­
pel, Orlando, In charge of ar­
rangements.

Driltwooil Village

B E T T Y A . TO LL
Betty A. T o ll 86. 207 Sum­
m e r lin A v e .. S a n fo rd , d ie d
Tuesday at Central Ftorlda Re-

wftn Lee* 3

Catering F o r The Holidays
C all Lee's
1905 8. French A r e , Sanford

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ROSARIOMODEL SMITH
Rosario Mlgud Smith. 79, 973
Wlldflower Way. Longwood. died
Tuesday In Lake Mary. Bom
June 23. 1011. In Uruguay, she
moved to Longwood from Fort
Lauderdale In 1985. She was a
travel assistance secretary and a
Catholic. She waa an American
Red Cross Volunteer.
Survivors indude daughter.
Sheila Sawyer. Lake Mary; sis­
ter. Mercedes Lcssa. Brazil; three
grandchildren.
Beacon Cremation Service o f
Central Florida. Winter Park, in
charge o f arrangements.

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i — Sanlord Harald. Sanford. Florida — Friday, November 23. 1900

P e r s i a n

Q u iff n o k a b o o k

Bush announcss 'sacrat wtapon*
DHAHRAN. Saudi Arabia — President Bush told American
troops stationed In the Persian Gulf Thursday that he has a
secret weapon for use If "push comes to sh ove" — Roaeanne
Barr.
Bush visited American military personnel In Saudi Arabia to
give his personal thanks on Thanksgiving Day. Standing before
the camouflage-clad troops, with his wife Barbara, also dressed
In camouflage, beside him. Bush said. “ You’ll be glad to know
that If It goes on too long, we have a secret weapon In reserve. If
push comes to shove, w e’ re going to get Roaeanne Barr to go to
Iraq and sing the national anthem. Baghdad Betty, eat your
heart out.”
Television personality Barr received almost unanimously bad
reviews after she sang the national anthem before a major
league baseball game.

DtMrt Thanksgiving lacks 'ting'
EASTERN SAUDI ARABIA — In mess tents across Saudi
Arabia, tables were covered with Thanksgiving Day table­
cloths. placem an with pilgrim scenes and napkins with
gobblers. Everything was decorated like home, but to the
troops there was no replacing home.
“ It's not like momma used to m ake." Airman Corey Carter o f
Cleveland said Thursday while eating his Thanksgiving ration
o f roasted turkey, potatoes, stuffing and vegetables.

Bush spends holiday with troops
UPI Whits House Reporter
DHAHRAN. Saudi Arabia —
President Bush told American
troops they will be stationed In
the Persian G ulf until Saddam
Hussein Is out o f Kuwait and
warned that every day Saddam
la closer to "h is gual o f a nuclear
weapons arsenal.”
Bush, spending Thanksgiving
Day with U.S. forces stationed In
the volatile gulf, told military
personnel In the area In three
separate speeches that they are
there to send a message to "any
would-be Saddam Husseins that
th e w orld w ill not tolerate
tyrants.”
In hla final speech. Bush told
some 1,900 U.S. Marines. Navy
Sea Bees and British "Desert
R a ts " gathered in the sand
under a mid-afternoon sun. "W e
want every single troop home.
W e want every Brit to be able to
go home os soon as possible. W e

,i Great Britain to double number
of troops deployed in Mid- East
3 0 ,0 0 0 t r o o p s w a s m a d e
Thursday m orning at the same
C a b in e t m e e t in g at w h ic h
LONDON — Britain will send Thatcher announced her resig­
14.000 addition al troops to nation.
Saudi Arabia, almost doubling
B ritain w ill also send 43
the size o f Its force already lined Challenger tanks, bringing Its
up against Iraq. Defense Secre­ total to 120 tanka.
"It la now over 3 W months
tary Tom King said.
since Iraq Invaded Kuwait and
T h e p la n n e d d e p lo y m e n t
follows repeated demands by has continued to defy the United
Prime Minister Margaret That­ Nations demand to withdraw,”
cher and King that Iraq to leave King told the House o f Commons
Kuwait or be expelled by mili­ later In the day. Iraq overran
Kuwait Aug. 2 In a land- and-otl
tary force.
After a U.S. decision to add dispute.
230.000 troops to the gulf, the
"Sanctions have left Iraq in­
British m ove announced
c r e a s in g ly Is o la te d ... but
Thursday was Intended to add Saddam Hussein' shows no sign
credibility to the threat to force yet o f com plying with the U.N.
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein re s o lu tio n s a n d en d in g his
out o f Kuwait.
b a r b a r ic t r e a t m e n t o f th e
" It 's to show we mean busi­ Kuwaiti people and the hostages
he has detained Illegally."
n e s s . " a D e fe n s e M in is try
spokesman said.
" I f he's foolish, crazy enough
Th e decision to raise the Brit­ to stay In spite o f the very
ish commitment to more than s u b s ta n tia l m ilit a r y fo rc e s

Unltsd Press Intsmstlonsl______

(against him), the co» ict will be
sh ort. It w ill be extrem ely
painful for Iraqis, and ... the
extra resources give us the best
chance o f minimizing the cauaallies on our side,” King said at a
news conference.
King said Britain wishes to
resolve the crisis by peaceful
means but must make Saddam
r e c o g n iz e that th ere Is no
alternative to withdrawing.
Deploym ent o f the troops,
which will be drawn from Bri­
tain's 4th Brigade In Germany,
will begin this weekend, the
defense spokesman said, and
w ill not be com pleted until
January, which is the earliest an
offensive against Iraqi forces by
the m ultinational force was
expected by military experts.
Britain is currently spending
about 927.3 million per week on
the gu lf defensive elTort. The
additional troops are expected to
bring that total to 946.8 million.

Le Pen returns to France with hostages
PARIS
Extrem e right-wing leader Jean-Marie
l-e Pen returned home from Iraq with 55 freed
hostages ana accused unnamed Western govern­
ments of "wanting to keep hostages In Iraq In
order to start a war.” '
Le Pen. accompanied by several European
Parliament members belonging to right-wing
parties who went to Baghdad with him. landed In
the eastern French city of Mulhousc Thursday
aboard a special Boeing 727 Iraqi Airways jet.
The rightist leader refused lo elaborate on his
charge that some Western governments wanted
the hostages to remain In Baghdad as an excuse to
start a war.
But he again urged France to withdraw Its
troops from Saudi Arabia as soon as possible
because "American interests, and not French or
European interests, are involved."
The 55 hostages who returned with Le Pen are
citizens of 10 European countries, among them 21
British nationals. 14 Italians, seven Germans.

three Irish and two Belgians.
T w o Dutch citizens, three Danish nationals, two
Greeks and a Swiss were also freed and returned
with Le Pen.
The 14 Italian hostages immediately boarded a
special Italian Air Force plane waiting at the
Mulhousc airport for the flight home, authorities
said.
" I do not share Mr. Le Pen's Ideas, but 1
recognlre his good w ork ," one British hostage.
James Stewart McDonald. 44, told reporters at the
Mulhouse airport. " I am very happy, I had a
marvelous return voyage."
Le Pen originally intended to land In Strasbourg,
the home o f the European Parliam ent, to
emphasize (he European nature o f him visit. But
French authorities reportedly refused his plane
landing rights In the city.
Bruno Mcgret. second only to Le Pen In the
extreme right-wing National Front Party, said that
" I f the governm ent had effectively refused
Strasbourg. It Is so Le Pen will not appear as a
rn'm of peace."

Beat The to !
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I MAIL TO: Sanford Herald • P.0. Box 1657 • Sanford, FL 32772-1957

L.

Tro o p s : B ush had nothing new to tell us
Dener said that despite the lack o f .new
Information. Bush’s very presence gave soldiers a
boost. Other soldiers who heard the president
speak expressed similar opinions.
"H e didn't stay In the United States and he did
... rotate among the troops." said Sgt. Linda
Kamos. She said her Air Force comrades were glad
to sec the president, but still had concerns about
the lack of rotation, which would have allowed
certain units lo head home after a given stretch of
time and replaced by a new unit.
Several people In various branches of the
military echoed Ramos’ concern.
"T h e thought o f rotation kept us gplng for
awhile.” said Army Sgl. Michael Joca or Decatur.
III., who noted the postponement o f rotation In
Operation Desert Shield.

ly R .

United Press International
EASTERN SAUD I ARABIA - Desert weary U.S.
and British troops listening to President Bush In
Saudi Arabia said their commander-ln- chief
"didn't say anything n ew " but he did boost their
morale.
The message Bush delivered to the troops
Thursday was not new: Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's forces must leave occupied Kuwait
because one conquered country "is one loo
m any."
"H e told us our objectives and why we're here
and it’s all the stuff we’ve heard since the time
w e’ve got h e re ," said Air Force Sgl. Kevin Dener,
deployed from Langley Air Force Bose In Virginia.

PUBLIC AUCTION

Envoys ask
for Iraq’s
withdrawal

ivo ry Saturday Night 7 PM
Rttofl Op«i M y tes. - Sot. 9

B EIJIN G S oviet
Foreign Minister Eduard
S h e v a r d n a d z e and h is
Chinese counterpart. Qian
Qlchcn, ended an unex­
pected m eeting In western
China Friday with a renew­
ed d e m a n d th at I r a q i
troops w ithdraw Immedi­
ately from Kuwait.
China’s official Xinhua
news agency said the two
sides "found a similarity o f
view s" on m any Issues
regarding the Gulf crisis
b u t d e c l i n e d to s a y
whether Qian committed
China to support of a U.N.
Security Council resolution
authorizing m ilitary force
to oust Iraq.
The two en voys met for
90 minutes In Urumql, the
capital o f C hina's remote
western X in jia n g region
bordering th e Soviet re­
public of Kazakhstan.
China's Foreign Ministry
would not elaborate on the
discussions, but Xinhua
carried a b rie f dispatch
reporting the Sino-Sovlct
demand for an Iraqi pullout
from Kuwait.

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His remarks were greeted with
enthusiastic ch eers and one
soldier was heard to say. "Well,
let us d o ll.”
Bush also warned about a
Saddam armed w ith nuclear
weapons.

Deadline: December Ifltti
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here on some exercise. This Is a
real world sttualion. And wc'rc
nni walking away until our
mission Is done, until the In­
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may well be where you come
In."

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want every single A m erican
home.
"And this I promise." Bush
added. "N o American w ill be
kept in the g u lf a single day
longer than neeessary. but we
won't pull punches. We are nut

j

�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida — Friday, November 23, 1N0 — M

Thatcher altered British history

&lt;.-rsr

Vying to _____"

____ - -

v fu v fiV V I n v i i i u i N
Michael Headline, who haa ■talked Prime Min later Margaret
Thatcher for fhre yean. la the man ahe least wanta to sureeed
her.
The threat that he might heat her In a showdown Tuesday
finally persuaded her to step aside so that one o f her Cabinet
members — Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd or Chancellor o f
the Exchequer John Major — could move Into 10 Downing
Street instead o f the man nicknamed Tanan.
Headline, 57. haa waged an undeclared campaign against
Thatcher since he resigned as defense secretary In 1966 In a
dispute over her leadership style.

LONDON — Margaret That­
ch er. B rlta ln ’ a first wom an
prim e m inister and longestruling leader o f the 20th centu­
ry. changed the course of British
government and rekindled her
country’s International prestige.
The steel will that earned ner
the nickname "Iron Lady" made
for a remarkable 41-year politi­
cal career and an era In British
history, but In the end cost her
the support o f her party.
S e r io u s ly w o u n d e d by a
challenge to her 15-year leader­
ship o f the Conservative Party
thla w e e k fro m M ichael
Headline. Thatcher made a soli­
ta ry d e cla lon a t 7:30 a.m .
Thursday to resign the post she
has held for 11 Vk years.

Douglas Hurd
Douglas Hurd, a tall man o f patrician bearing and a booming
voice, was bred for service to the Conservative Party and his
country.
His career as a diplomat started In Beijing In 1954 and he also
£served at the United Nations and the British Embassy In Rome.
When he was appointed foreign secretary last year, he said he
|had achieved th peak o f his political ambitions and denied he
' would ever seek the prem iership.
Hurd echoed Thatcher’s flinty determination to race down
[ Iraqi President Saddam Hussein In the Persian Gulf, but In
i contrast was seen as a pragmatist on Europe, favoring moves to
! Join the European Community on monetary union.

The grocer’s daughter who
becam e a w orld leader a g ­
gravated party members with
her abrasive leadership style:
She refused to heed the advice o f
Cabinet members and took a
churlish stand against European
e c o n o m ic In t e g r a t io n th at
became a political liability.
She once summarised her at­
titude toward her Cabinet — " I
d o n 't m ind how much m y
ministers talk — as long as they
do what I say.” In holding firm
on her economic policies she
once declared. "T h e lady's not
for turning."

i John Major
Before the onset of the last big political fight o f Thatcher's
career, Chancellor o f the Exchequer John Major was widely seen
as her choice to cany on tl&gt;e '’Thatcherism" revolution when
she retired voluntarily, perhaps after the next general election In
mid-1902.
The resignation o f Geoffrey Howe as deputy prime minister
spilt over European
Nov. 1. which brought the .party’s
m
integration Into the open, disrupted the timetable.
W hile some analysts said Major m ay receive the votes o f
pro-Thatcher members o f Parliament, London bookies gave him
the longest odds for replacing her.

'olish papers
link candidate
rlth terrorists
W A R S A W . Poland - T h e
Polish media barged Into the
p o litic a l cam paign w ith an
explosive attack on dark-horse
Independent presidential can­
d id a te S ta n lsla w T y m lu sk i,
: suggesting he dodged military
service because o f mental dis­
orders and has links to terrorists
In Libya.
Tym ln skl, 42. a holder o f
Peruvian and Canadian pass­
ports, had a 21- point following
In the latest government survey
o f support for Sunday's election,
O v e r ta k in g P rim e M in is te r
Tadeuax Mazowleckl with 17
points. Solidarity leader Lech
Waksw was first with 27.
; B oth the M azow teckl and
W alesa cam ps have reacted
.sharply to the development.
’ -During a rally Wednesday In the
•southeastern city o f Lublin.
iWalesa said he would leave
; Poland if Tymlnskl won Sun­
d a y ’s election.
• And a high-ranking minister to
JMazowteckl resigned to devote
this full-time efforts to the wan­
ting days o f the campaign.
• Walesa, who once boasted he
•would take 60 percent o f the
Ivote. warned In Gdansk that he
.might not participate In a run-off
that would be needed If no
candidate obtains a majority
Sunday.
"Such a victory Is too little for
what I want to d a I need broader
support,” Walesa said.
He also said he would not go
‘ into the opposition "becauae I
would be too strong and I would
topple the government and pres­
ident In one month."
Instead, he said, he would
start a business or go Ashing.
T h e in d ep en d en t W arsaw
dally Zycle Warszawy, quoting
an u n s p e c i f i e d
" c r e d ib le
source,” said Tym lnskl was
exempted from military service
In 1960 becauae he was men­
ia lly 111.

Th e strong-w illed C on ­
servative Party chief led Britain
to victory over Argentina In the
1962 Palklands War. And ahe
fought for the deployment o f
U.S. missiles In Europe, a move
that paved the w ay for a possible
U .S .-S o v ie t a rm s red u ction
agreement.

W orldw ide reaction to
Margaret Thatcher'a resig­
nation reflected admiration
for her fleree determination
and s tu n n in g a c h ie v e ­
m en ts. t e m p e r e d by
widespread sentiment thst
It wsa time for her to go
In resigns! ton, as at the
peak at her powers, the
British prime minister left
nobody speechless. The
’ ’Iron Lady” haa long been
d escrib ed a s stu bborn ,
ex a s p era tin g a n d often
amusing, but never boring.
"O n a personal note. Til
miss her becauae I value
h e r c o u n s e l a n d the
wisdom that com es from
ner long experience t * i Co*
ident Bush said Thursday
In Saudi Arabia while vis­
iting American troops.
"S h e has been an out­
standing prime minister for
the United Kingdom and
an outstanding friend o f
the United States,"

On the domestic front. Th at­
cher governments carried out a
sweeping denationalisation o f
Industry and services, curbed
the power o f left- wtng labor
unions and used prudent public
spending to tame inflation.

Thatcher was the first prime
minister to win a third consecu­
tive term since the 19th century
and on Jan. 3. 1967. became
Britain's longest continuously
serving prime minister thla cen­
tury. her eight years and 244
days In office surpassing the
previous record o f Lord Asquith
from 1906 to 1916.
In the national election held
Ju n e 11. 1987. T h a tc h e r 's
Conservative Party scored Its
second-largest parliam entary
majority since World W ar (1.
Her first eight years as prime
minister, she claimed, "m ade
Britain great again."

The mother o f taro was first
elected to Downing Street during
the 1979 "w in ter o f discontent.”
when under a Labor Party gov­
ernment. unions unleashed a
wave o f strikes that left garbage
uncollected and the dead un­
buried.
The admitted workaholic soon
embarked on her policy o f what
she called "popular capitalism"
and what others refered to as
"Thatcherism ." She became a
close friend o f Ronald Reagan
and met Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev as the most senior
Western European leader.
But the social cost o f the
Thatcher policies was high and
her style was considered by
some Britons to be domineering
and uncaring.

m
H I

Thatcher move
draws world’s
relief, respect

Ronald Reagan, w as far
closer to Thatcher.

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\ SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador
•— Rebels fired mortars Into two
: major military bases on the third
;day o f their latest offensive that
haa left at least 64 people dead
and 155 wounded, the armed
.[forces said.
‘ "W e are going to continue
Iwlth our military campaign and
;the objective la to destroy the
^m ilitarism Im posed by the
armed forces.” the rebels said In
■a Wednesday night broadcast on
^clandestine Radio Farabundo
1Marti.
•
I Five soldiers were killed late
^Wednesday In a guerrilla mortar
attack on the Third Infantry
-Brigade In San Miguel. 71 miles
least o f the capital, boosting
larmy casualties In the wave of
a tta c k s to 29 dead and 75
[wounded, the armed forces said
Thursday.
I " It wasn't much of an attack,"
J&gt;ase commander Clro Lopez
Jtoque said In a telephone In­
terview. "Th ere were no dam­
ages to the Installations but a
'group o f soldiers were sleeping
under some trees and that Is
where one o f the grenades fell."

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�•A — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Friday. November 23. 1990

Coup quieted, calm
returns in homeland
■ y ST AM I
United Press International

.

UMTATA. South Africa - De­
fense forces In the nominally
Independent black homeland of
the Transkel lifted roadblocks
and calm relumed to the capital
Friday, a day after a failed coup
a tte m p t le ft IH d e a d and
plunked Pretoria's relations with
Its troublesome offsprink to a
new low.
Two more Transkel soldiers
loyal to homeland ruler MaJ.
U rn . B an tu H olom isa died
ovrrnlkht. pushlnk the death toll
io six loyalists and 12 rebels.
Inrludlnk coup Iradrr Cralk Dull,
a former lieutenant colonel who
l.iunehed the coup bid before
dawn Thursday.
Soldiers o f the Transkel De­
fense Force patrolled the streets
of the dusty capital o f Umtatn.
some 430 miles southeast of
Johannesburk. slnkly and In
|xdrs Friday, hut calm appeared
to have returned to the city.
Noadblocks pul up after the
Putsch tiegan were lifted.
Dull, formerly Holomisa's sec­
ond-in-command. and as many
as 30 other men. allekedly Ineludlnk about six whites, at­
tacked the main army base on
Umtata's outskirts shortly after
3 a.m. Thursday. Fulllnk to gain
control, they seized the 11th
lloor olflccs o f Holomisa's rullnk
m ilitary council In the city
center and refused orders to
surrender.
In a barrage o f automatic
weapons fire and rifle krenade
b la s ts , H o lo m is a 's tr o o p s
stormed the government build­
ing lo oust Dull and his men to
end the 12-hour coup bid.
Some controversy surrounded
the circum stances o f Dull's
d e a th . T h e South A fr ic a n
Broadcasting Corp. reported Dull
was "apparently murdered while
being takrn lo a place o f deten­
tion" but Holomisa said early
Friday Dull had died o f wounds
sustained during the day.
South African radio also reIHirtcd at least five whites had
t&gt;een arrested In connection with
the plot. Holomisa refused Fri­
day morning to either confirm or
deny the arrests but called a
press conference to display the
captured weapons of the rebels.
Holomisa, a strong supporter
of the African National Congress
w h o s e iz e d p o w e r In the'
homeland In u bloodless coup on
Dec. 30. 1987, has consistently
a n g e r e d S o u th A fr ic a . In
particular Foreign Minister R.F.
i*lk Botha, and Thursday lm-

T A X INCREASE JAN UAR Y 1

South African
miners killed
by collapse
JOHANNESBURG. South
Africa — Tons o f collapsing
r o c k k i l l e d f i v e g o ld
miners. Injured five others
and left two missing in a
shaft more than a mite
beneath the earth's sur­
face. authorities said Fri­
day.
A small tremor shook
loose several Ions o f rock
Thursday in a shaft 8.200
feet below the surface of
the Doornfontcln mine, u
spokesw om an fo r m ine
owner Goldfields o f South
Africa Ltd. said.
"It's possible the death
toll will rise to seven... the
two missing men might
turn opt to be dead bill
w e ’ re c o n t i n u i n g th e
search." she said. Th e In­
jured were In a satisfactory
condition.
S ou th A fr ic a 's w orst
mine disaster of the year.
In September, killed 19
miners and Injured 22 at
the Vaal Reefs gold mine
southwest o f Johannesburg
when a gas explosion tore
through a shaft.
The black National Union
of Mineworkcrs estimates
more than 68.000 miners
have died and one million
have been disabled In mine
accidents since 1900 In
South Africa, the world's
biggest gold producer.
In 1989. the NUM says.
735 workers* died, a total It
expects to be eclipsed this
y e a r . T h e u n io n h a s
calculated a miner who
works underground fur 20
years risks one chance In
30 of being killed und has a
50 percent chance o f being
disabled.
t

5 .9 9 met
C S .0 f1 2 -J U .il

U S H K IT K
in 1S.1t sin

d e n ie d

BEIJING — The central gov­
ernment has launched a na­
tionwide drive against provincial
protectionism, a widespread and
growing pructlce blamed for
hindering China's economic de­
velopment. the official press re|K&gt;rtcd Friday.
'I he State Council. China's
cabinet. Issued u decree Nov. 10
taking aim al "regional market
b lo c k a d e s " that hinder the
movement of goods across pro­
vincial borders, the state-run
China Dally suld.
The six-point decree asserts
the right of enterprises In any of
Chinn's 29 provinces und ad­
ministrative regions lo sell their
goods In uny other province and
also guarantees that manufac­
turers have access to raw mate­
rials from any Chinese region.
It bans unfair local taxation of
provincial lni|&gt;orts. preferential
lending rates that favor local
producers und the establishment

CS. OF I-SUM

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H o lo m is a . 35 . bu s b een
sharply critical o f Pretoria's
homelands policy In general and
accused w h ite businessm en
operating In the Transkel of
corruption. His support for the
ANC also hus complicated his
relations with the South Afrlcun
government.

GIN

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of border checkpoints, ull of
which have been used to curtail
the free movement of goods from
one province to another.
The Stale Council decree was
the first concrete effort to com­
bat the growing practice o f locul
protectionism, which has been
widely denounced In the staterun media as a barrier to the
orderly and efficient develop­
ment of national markets In
China.
The problem has been fueled
by glaring Inequities In China’s
centrally controlled socialist
pricing system.
Prices o f raw materials In
China are kept artificially low
through h ea vy g o ve rn m en t
subsidies, allowing producers of
finished goods to reap hundsome
proflts.
Provincial officials have been
erecting trade barriers to keep
lucrative finished-goods produc­
tion with locul enterprises, even
If similar or better goods could
be purchused more cheaply
elsewhere.

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China takes aim at local
economic protectionism
United F ra n International

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the coup.
S ou th A fr lc u
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Ryzhkov says he will resign
if Gorbachev plan approved
United Frsti Interwttewl
MOSCOW — Prime Minister
Nikolai Ryzhkov said Friday he
a n d the e n tir e C o u n c il o f
Ministers w llf rrslgn If the Soviet
Parliament approves President
Mikhail G orbachev's plan to
reorganizeJhe government.
The reorganization plan, given
preliminary approval six days
ago and being deflated for final
approval In the Parliament Fri­
day. gives Gorbachev expanded
|Htwers and practically elim i­
nates the need for a prime
minister, although It does not
specifically eliminate the office.
" I f the sttggeslIons o f the
president are approved, the
Council of Ministers und I. as Its
head, will automatically resign."
Ryzhkov told the independent
Soviet news agency Interfax
Friday.
R yzh k ov's resignation has
ts-f-n demanded hv the powerful

Russian republic leader Boris
Yeltsin and others who blame
him for slowing economic re­
forms und allowing the Soviet
Union to slip Into crisis after
crisis, but Gorbachev had pre­
viously rejected the demands
and stood behind Ryzhkov.
The prime minister said he
was surprised by the proposal ai
a Parliament session last Satur­
day to significantly consolidate
Gorbachev's power by placing
government ministries directly
under the president's control.
"T h e question o f reorganiza­
tion of the system of governing
and the resignation of the gov­
ernment was discussed before,
but we thought It would happen
only after the new union treaty
was completed, that is when the
Ideas o f the republics were
defined p re cise ly ." Ryzhkov
said. "The suggestions ol the
president last Saturday were
quite unexpected for m e."

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�FRIDAY

Sanford Herald

November
r

S p orts
IN B R IE F

ihigh school HdSSfl
Lady Sunshine starts today
LAKE MARY - The 1900 Lady Sunshine
Basketball Tournament will be haeld today and
Saturday at Lake Mary High School.
In the past the tournament haa been a split
high schoot-college affair with the high schools
playing In the afternoon and the collefe’a at
night. But thla year the c o le f e organisers
decided not to bring In any teama. Because o f
this the tournament will look to expand Its high
school field for next year.
This years’ field Includes the hoot
Mary
Rams, the Bishop Moore Hornets, the Lyman
Greyhounds and the Spruce Creek Hawks.
Today at 8 p.m. Lyman w ill open the
tournament vs. Bishop Moore and at 8 p.m.
Lake Mary will take on Spruce Creek.
T h e Consolation and the Championship
gam es w ill be played at 1 and 3 p.m..
respectively. Saturday.
Lake Mary conch Anna Van Landlngham is
expecting to have a good yea r with five
returnees and six newcomers.
‘ 'W e have a lot o f girls who arc mentally tough
and play hard.” said Van Landlngham. "W e will
have more depth this year and all o f the girls
w ill see a lot o f playing time.”
Th e five returners from last years district
runners-up are — Karen Morris. Melissa Mau.
Marti Cltarella. Rrglna Alexander and Pam
Fisc hi. The newcomers are LaShawn Merrick.
Tara Huff. Stacey Gray. Dawn Judd. Cymonda
Scrubbs and Lisa Maallunls.
admlsson for the tournament w ill be $3 for
adults and 12 for students.

ICOLL8Q 8 HOOP8
Raldsra return horns
SANFORD — T h e Seminole Com m unity
College men's basketball team hopes a return to
the familiar surroundings of the Health and
Physical Education Center will get them back on
the winning track as It plays host to Columbia
State College of Tennessee Saturday night at
7:30 p.m.
T h e Raiders will be playing at home for the
first time In two weeks during which they lost
three straight gam es and saw their record fall to
1*4.
SCC has been In a horrible shooting slump but
showed signs o f com ing around In a 78-70 loss
»

Tw B n S V Iw n P V M r M B B P t w O T H l M K K 8 J , U 1 1 Tit i i

, Robinson and Sanford's Robert Moore nave been
' the offensive sparks for the Raiders thla season.
Also seeing a lot o f playing time for SCC have
been sophomore's Dexter Vaniant. Ernest Jones
and Lym an's C raig Radxak and freshman
Dennard Ford.
Also seeing action will be Lym an's Mike
Whittington and Bishop Moore's John Guemple.
Tony DeJesus today today with an Injury.

AUTO RACING
Cracker 200 Saturday
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Bobby GUI. the
recent Florida Governor's Cup Champion, has
officially entered tlie thirteenth annual "Florida
C ra c k er" 300 La te Model Cham pionship,
scheduled for thla Saturday. Nov. 24. at New
Smyrna Speedway.
Tonight Orlando's SpecdWortd w ill host the
50-lap "Florida Cracker 300" Tune-up which
pays 81.000 to win.
Several o f the former wlnneis such as David
Rogers. Bruce Lawrence. Jack Cook and Daniel
Keene are expected to be competing In the 200.
A ll Pro’s BUI Blgley, Mike C6pe. a NASCAR All
American Challenge Scries regular and 1990
W inston Racing Series Eastern Seaboard
Champion Dave Pletcher, are also entered, along
with Tim Nooner. BUI Posey. Edward Howell
and Ted Hodgdon.
A ll the regular supporting divisions. Including
the Limited Late Models. Sportsman, Florida
Modlflzds, Bombers and Mini Stocks w ill ■»—» be
featured.
F o r m ore In form ation , p lease call the
speedway at (904) 427-4139.

2 3, 1 9 9 0

-v .

S

T r i b e , H a w k s in p la y o ffs
Seminole at
Tarpon Springs
i f —

AM W W W
««---»-*----*-----»
»—
ntfiw iponi
wnitr

TARPON SPRINGS - They took
the long w ay to get here but the
Seminole High Fighting Semtnoles
are where thqr feel they belong aa
they take on the Tarpon Springs
Spongers In the Class 4A-Regkm IV
playoff g
ja m e at Tarpon Springs
tat 7:30 o.m.
Fe felt all along that we had the
best team.” said Seminole' coach
Emory Blake after Monday's district

playoff win. "W e haven't played up
to our potential this year but w e atiil
think we are the beat team.”
This win be the second year In a
row that the two teams have met for
the region title. Last year. Seminole
defeated Tarpon Springs 14-7 at
Sanford.
Seminole looked nothing short o f
sensational In winning the threeteam 4A-Dtetrict 7 playoff at Evans
High School's Double E Stadium
this past Monday. If the Tribe plays
tonight like theyt did Monday, this
game might be academic.
Seminole only got three plays on
offense but It turned them Into 17
points. The defense faced nine

Lake Howell
hosts Columbia
^ — — » - w a ii, ■

M l r i O o p O f li EO llO f

W INTER PARK -

H err we are

TS-,•the second year In a row. the
Lake HoweU Silver Hawks and Lake
CltyColum bta Tigers w ill play for
the SA-Regfon tl football champion­
ship. This year, the gam e will be
played at Lake Howell's newlychrtotened Dick Evans Field. Kickoff
Is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Saturday.
Lake Howell returns to defend Its
regional championship a slightly

different team than a year ago.
Sure, the 9-1 S ilver Hawks
again led by Sanford Herald Player
o f the Year Marquette Smith and a
bruising defense. But the Hawks
have made some adjustments on
offense to best utilise the skills o f
quarterback R ya n Thom as and
running back Pat Jorgensen.
According to Lake Howell Coach
Mike Btoceglla. the Tigers have also
had to make som e changes from a
year ago.
. "Just like us. they had some key
players graduate." said Btoceglla. "
They've been replaced by
good players. T h e y have great
overall team speed.
□l

Rams’ rally
falls short
in Rotary
By I

Hsrald Correspondent
LO N G W O O D - A l Gilreath
rushed for 78 yards and caught a
67-yard touchdown paaa to lead the
Dr. Phillips Panthers to a 21-19
victory over the Lake Mary Rams
Thankgiving morning In the 17th
annual Rotary Bowl at Lyman High
School.
Lake Mary ended Its season with a
5-6 record that Included a regularseason ending upset win over Semi­
nole.
"These guys have a lot o f heart.
You co u ld n 't carry our hearts
through our locker room door." said
Lake Mary Coach Doug Peters."We
been outalxed and outgunned all
season long, but we believed in
ourselves and have come a long
w ay."
The Rama took a 7-0 lead late In
the first quarter, taking a short punt
and driving 30 yards In six plays
Joe Menelio capped the drive by
sneaking over from one yard o u t
. But the Panthers came right bock
on a 38-yard scoring pass from
B ra n ifr B o n a ve n tu re to D erek
Worthington on the first play o f the
second quarter to tie the game at
7-7.
Lake Mary had a chance to take
the lead late In the second quarter
when the Rams drove 73 yards to
the Dr. Phillips 17-yard line. But
Maurice McMIUlan recovered a Ram
fumble and the scare remained tied
a 7-7 going Into halftime.
The Panthers opened the second
half with a nine-play, 67-yard drive
capped by Bonaventure's 1-yard
scoring plunge to give Dr. Phillips a
14-7 lead.
After a Lake Mary punt, the
Panthers Increased their advantage
as Bonaventure connected with
Gilreath for 67 yards and a 21-7
lead with 4:25 remaining In the
third quarter.
Chris Haney then took charge for
the Rams.
Haney rushed seven times for 35
o f his game-high 121 yards on Lake
Mary's next possession. He scored

laka Mary cams up just short of
com pleting a thrilling fourthquarter rally Thursday, dropping a
two-point dtcialon to tha Dr.
Phllllpa Panthars in tha 17th
annual Rotary Bowl. Tha Rama
wara lad by thalr offensive player
o f tha gams. Chris Hanay (No. 21,
lafl), and Mika McKanna (No. 86,
batow), thalr dafanslva player of
tha gams.

T rib e g e ts
a kick fro m
D avison

boys soeem
Jimborto this Saturday

Herald Sports Editor

LA KE MARY - T h e 1990 Boys High School
Soccer season kicks off Saturday at Lake Mary
High School's Don T. Reynolds Stadium with
the Seminole Athletic Conference Jamboree.
Admission will be 82 for students and 83 for
adults.
Th e schedule has Seminole opening the days
play against Ddtona at 1 p.m.. O viedo playing
DeLand at 1:50 p.m.. Lake Brantley facing Lake
Howell at 2:40 p m . and Lake Mary squaring off
with Lyman at 3:30 p.m.

C O LLEG E F O O TB A LL
□ 2 :3 0 p.m. - W CPX 6. Nebraska at Oklahoma.
IL)
C O LLEG E B A S K E T B A L L
□ 9 p.m. — ESPN. N IT Championship. Arizona
versus Arkansas. (L)
unoar me guidance pr coach boo Moon, Seminole High
School senior Geordie Davison (No. 21) has developed
into one of Central Florida's bast placekickers. Tonight,

when Seminole ptaye ma Tarpon Springe spongers for
the 4A-Dlstrtci IV MwwptoMoMp, Bavtaon hopes to have
an opponunlty to win the game with a kick.

When the defense forced a turn­
over against E d g ew a ler In the
Kansas tiebreaker Monday evening,
giving Seminole High School the
opportunity to grab the victory.
S e m in o le Coach E m o r y Blake
wasted no lime.
.
Rather than run an offensive play
and risk disaster. Blake went Im­
mediately to placeklcker Geordie
Davison.
After a timeout called by Semi­
nole, Davison showed why Blake
has that kind of confidence In him.
calmly nailing a 27-yard field goal
that beat Edgcwatcr 10-7.
" I hoped that Coach Blake would
give m e the opportu nity." said
Davison, who also doubles as a wide
receiver for the Tribe. "I'v e been
ready all day for this."
It's that attitude, the desire to be
In the middle of the action when the
game Is on Ihc line, that makes
Davison sjuch a dangerous weapon
for Seminole. During the regular
season game against Edgcwatcr.
Davison kicked a school-record
54-yard field goal. He ulso kicked a
40-yarder that g a m e and wus
perfect on both extra points, helping
□ 8 c « K ick. Page 2B

�a t — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Friday, November 23, 1N0

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
with 10:18 l
fourth quarter.

Clast 4A-Reglon IV playoff, 7:30
p.m.
GIRLS BOCCER

34-yard paae p la y from Meneflo
to t r i e V a n D yne o n a
fourth-and-6 p la y that | m the

at Bishop Moors, Orlando
Blshap Moore vs. Apapha, S
am .

Haney aeon
out
it on fourth dow n to clone the
t a p to 31*19 w ith only :30
remaining. Lake Mary tried for
tw o points but MeneBo's paae
waa broken u p In the end ton e
and the comeback foil short.
H aney a n d O ilre a th w e r e
named aa the offensive players o f
the game for their respective
schools. M ike McKenna w as
named defensive player o f the
gam e for Lake Mary while De­
metrius Davis earned the honor

Land O’Lakos vs. Bishop
Moors, noon.
Apopka vs. Land OXakas, 3
p.m.
\
SATURDAY
G IR L* BASKETBALL
Lady Sun shins Toumamsnt at
Lake Mary
Consolation gams. 1 p.m.
Champion sf^ggsm s. 3 p.m.

Seminole to a 30-7 wtn.
Par the Besson, he's 8 for B on
field goals. On extra points, he's
only missed tw o.
" I coached a lot o f g o o d
kickers when I w a s In Mteml. but
h e's the beet." sold Bob Moon,
the kicking conch for
High School. " T h e key for him
w as to control hla emotions. He
waa very em otional. Now h e ’s
confident that he can m ake
everything."

Lsks City-Cofumhls a! Laks
Ho w s l l . C l a s s 5A* Rs gi on II
playoff, 1:30 p.m.
BOYSSOCCER
SAC Jsmborss at Laks Mary
Ssminols vs. OtNona. 1 p.m.
Ovlsdo vs. DsLand. 1:90 p.m.
Laks Brsntlsy vs. Lsks HowsIL
2:40 p.m.
Lsks Mary vs. Lyman. 3:30 p.m.
GIRLS SOCCER
Turksy Shoot-out
at Ward FIs Id, Winter Park
Lsks Howsll Jv vs. Winter Park
Jv. 0 am.
Fifth ptaca gams. 11 am.
Third placs gams. 1 p.m.
Championship gams. 3 p.m.

Davison says that Moon ta
responsible fo r his em otional
growth.
"H e knows h ow to calm me
d o w n and r e la x m e . " maid
D avison. " H e 's like a beat
friend."
For all o f his coaching. Moon
said that It w as Davison w ho
figured out th e cause o f his
mini-slump ea rly In the season
when he misse d those taro extra
points.
" H e and T o n y C h a v e r s
(D avison's h o ld er) w orked It
o u t , " M id M o on . " W e had
Oeordie kicking from a one-inch
tec. Then w e moved up to a
two-inch tee, w hich la allowed by
the rules, to g iv e Oeordie every
advantage. But that's when he
missed those tw o extra points.

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O eord ie figu red out that
went to the higher tee,
when
we hadn't changed tBe way
T o n y w as holding the ball,
which was leaning toward the
holder. Aa a result. Oeordie waa
hitting the Inside at the ball and
pushing It to the right. He hasn't

they employ to help Davison
concentrate on the ball while
place kicking has contributed to
hla aucccaa as a receiver for the
Setnlitotes. This season, he has
13 catches for 195 yards and two
touchdown*.
"H la ability to focus on the ball
has really helped his receiving,"
■aid Moon.
W h en Sem inole travels to
Pinellas County this evening to
play the Tarpon Springs
Spongers In the 4A-Region IV
playoff game. Davison and Moon
hope that Davison has a chance
to m ake a difference with a kick.
" I waa hoping that It (Mon­
day’s Kansas tiebreaker) would
come down to m y making a
k ic k ." said Davison. "T h a t's
what Coach Moon and I have
been wanting all year, a chance,
to win a game with a kick."

Seminoles----------------------------

FlttkaanM

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for Dr. Phillips.

4am.—K. ton CoIioiWm MartMon
San Francises
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MiasMa* CMvMm S, 1p.m.
MY GlantiMPhllMUphla, 1pm.
Tampa lay &lt;1 Snaa Bay M MSmatkaa,

Blake la not taking the Spongers
lightly.
'T a rp o n Springs has a very
d team and a good running
k ." said Blake. "W e need to
cut down on the turnovers and
penalties that have plagued us

K
against fcdgewater, quarterback
Kerry W iggins gave the ball to
so p h om ore r e c e iv e r T y r o n e
Williams on an inside reverse
and he danced Into the end zone
untouched. O eord ie D avison
boomed the ex tra point.
Seminole g o t the ball back
later after a fumble and went
Immediately fo r the win. sending
In Davison to k ick a 27-yard field
goal.
And against Leesburg, runn­
in g back H e n r y W i l l i a m s ,
Tyrone's older brother, took a
pitch from W iggins and raced
a r o u n d r i g h t end f o r t h e
touchdown, u sing i block from

la m .

PlltifcurghM NY JMo. 4p.m.
MawEnglandat Phmnlk. 4p.m.
Kama* City at LA h U n , 4p m.
LA RamsMSanFranctics, 4p.m.
SaattMpi tan OMg* BpJw.
Miteiy.Moa.20
Buffalo at Houalon, 0p.m.

_ - .
,
But despite playing so weU.

Offensively, the Fighting Sem­
inole offense la keyed by W ig­
gins. who has thrown for over
1,300 yards and 11 touchdowns.
He has been equitable with hla
passes, having thrown to eight
different receivers, six o f them
h a v in g caught touchdown
Hla main targets have been
wide receivers Murphy, Davison.
Henry Williams and tight end
Tony Chavers. Also expected to
help out is Tyrone WUUams, who
has only been up for two games
after starring fo r the Junior
varsity.
T h e prom otion o f T y ro n e
Williams cleared the way for his
brother Henry to go back to the
running back spot he had played
the last two years. The move
gives the Fighting Seminoles a
back w ith breakaway speed
which will put even mare pre­
ssure on the Spongers.
Also in the back field are the
leading rusher this season, run­
ning back Bruce McClary. who
ended the season fifth In the
county with 434 yards. The full
back la Tim Hampton, who has
rushed for 113 yards and caught
three touchdown passes
Defensively. Brown and White
are the heart and sole o f the
Fighting Seminoles. but It has
been a team effort all season that
ted th e team to Its second
straight 7-3 season.

Bolton

Ptuladalphla
Now

York

Waihington

Haw Jariay

Silver Hawks
C ontinu ed fro m IB
“ T h ey're a pretty well-balanced team.
You'd have lo compare them to a Mainland
In-eaiise they not and throw really well.
Defensively, Ihey're like DeLand. They have
great overall team speed. They gel around
the fool ball and really eame after you."
ilisceglla said (hat Colombia's defense
Itousls a pair o f great linebackers. The
T igers also have outstanding defensive
backs and defensive ends.
Actually. It pounds &gt;1Bw'tbs'*Btrnktete
County (cam Colombia Is most like on
dele use would be Lake Howell, which also
has a pair of great linebackers In Ken
Spearman and Ken Times, outstanding
defensive backs In Frank Sales. Joe Smith

and Greg Rigby as well aa outstanding
defensive ends Thom as Dempa and Trevor
l*ryce.
Columbia, which Is led by farmer Oviedo
coach Joe Montgomery. Iiasn't scored quite
as many points as It how in past campaigns.
But as Biaceglla pointed out. a teaiff doesn't
go 9-1 and wtn Its district for the third
consecutive year without doing something
right.
T h e Silver Hawks enter the gam e having
WteTdllte 'te
(heir teat 37
going back to the last five gomes o f 1988.
Biaceglla said that the Hawks, who had last
week off. appeared emotionally ready during
practices earlier In the week.
"A fte r having a w eek off, they're all fired

UlLFp

MHU AMm.v^4aw.

n*

take their helmets off In practice, it was so
intense. W e didn't want lo get any one
Injured."
When asked If he or Montgomery might
do something new to try and surprise the
other team on Saturday. Biaceglla said that
a few new wrinkles would almost be
manadatory.
'T in sure you'll sec that (new plays) on
both sides/' asfd n w rr^ ls "W e scouted
them In prtson on two occasions end we
exchanged four games films. I'm sure he's
seen us play evryonc. The game films he's
requested are from games against schools
where be dbeaq't ham persons* firteodi at
the schools." '

THOROUGHBRED RACING
FIR ST G A M E 715 RM.
(n V X fy s a c e p t

SEErruvEi

Sudsy)

POST TIME 12:30 RM.
(dtey oicapi Monday)

LARGE SCREEN TV 8

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■■■■
Sanford HsrakJ. Sanford. Florida — Friday, Novsmbsr 23, 1990 — i

People
IN B R IE F
Adopt • M o to r cltizon
Seminole County Better Living for Seniors Is again planning
to make Christmas a Joyous occasion for the older residents of
Seminole County who regularly receive a Meals-on-Wheets
lunch or attend one o f the seven congregate sites throughout
the county.
Karen Mowery. the director for Volunteer Services. Is
arranging for volunteers to deliver home cooked dinners and
present to over 250 seniors on Christmas Day. Many o f them
live alone and do not have family In the area, so without a visit
from these volunteers, Christmas would be a pretty lonely
time.
The non-profit agency looks to the community for help In
supporting this project. Anyone Interested In participating can
be a Senior's Santa by adopting a senior for 925. This
contribution will guarantee the holiday dinner and gifts
delivered by Santa's helpers as well as an invitation for the
adoptee to attend the Better Living for Senior's Christmas
Patty on December 14. Contributions can be sent to Seminole
County Better Living for Seniors. 636 Florida Central Parkway.
Longwood. 32750, Attention: Adopt a Senior.
For more Information, call 831-4357.

JiuamA
hai# Kstafsaaikssa
—a
Vdwmwv nvwj M
inpr
ineiaranon or

officers lunchson rtcsntly.
Shown M l to ifgM m k Lucia
Weaver, treasurer; HoMan Lutz,
sac rat ary; Helen Kaminsky,
pnaldant and Mary Schmitt,
outgoing praaldant, who la
iK em rtg a com ge from

iiv

■tatting offtear Bteabatft Dsrr.

Cateh ttw spirit
A month-long Christmas fsttval o f sights and sounds will get
under w ay In Mount Dora Sunday. December 2.
Five m iles o f tiny, white lights strung In the town square.
Donnelly Park, w ill be turned on my Mayor Bob Wilson
following a one-hour concert by a brass quintet from the
Orlando Musicians Association that starts at 5:30 p.m.
Santa Claus will make an appearance at 6:45 p.m.
People are Invited to arrive at the downwtown park on Old
Highway 441 starling at 4:30 p.m. Bring a picnic basket so an
old-fashioned afternoon In the park can be enjoyed.
Parking Is free.

Narcotics Anonymous to mast
Narcotics Anonymous meets Friday at 11 p.m. at the House
o f Goodwill. 3170 ak Ave.. Sanford.

Rocky Horror will show once

l£l-'
ORLANDO - TH E ATR IX will
it Th e Rocky Horror Show
present
o n e ni g h t o n l y at the
fo r on
Beactuun Theatre on Dec. 6.
This production la the first ever
to be presented In Central Flori.da o f the original play that
Inspired the International sensa­
tion of Th e Rocky Horror Picture
Show.

Th e Rocky Horror Show pre­
miered In London on June 16.
1B73 to a warm reception with
audiences and critics. The show.

&gt; - • S_ _ m
_* s______ a __
by Richard O'Brien, la based on
B-Horror movies and Rock A
Roll. The show went on to be
named ''Best Muscial of 1073"
by the London Evening Stan­
dard. The show made Its Ameri­
can debut to sold-out audiences
at the Roxy Theatre on March
24. 1074. The crescendo o f
enthusiasm and devotion o f fans
has built over the past 15 y e a n
and Rocky Horror has become
the ultimate cult experience.
The production will be under
the direction o f Michael La Fleur

assials
anl si u —
———*--—
---with *t*L
Theatrtx,
whose
Impressive
credits include the New York
Revival o f "Dam es at S e a " and
directing for the world famous
Burt Reynolds Jupiter Theatre.
Tickets w ill be 615 for general
•rating, and 620 for VIP Balcony
■rating. Tickets will be available
t h r o u g h T l c k e l M a s t e r and
through A.R.E.A.. the Beacham
Theatre. Th e Big Bang. City
Lights, and the Spotted Zebra.
A ll p r o c e e d s w i l l b e n e f i t
A.R.E.A. — AIDS Resource. Ed­
ucation. and Assistance.

Old cars put In limelight
Th e 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
W endy's on U.S. Highway 17-02. Sanford. Non-members are
welcom e to bring their old cars or browse. For more
Information, call Herbert Partridge at 322-3687.

Nar-Anon to offer help
.

Nar-Anon, a self-help group for relatives and friends o f
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 860-6364.

Alanon members to congregate

*

Alanon will meet st S p .m .. Sunday at Christ Unltnj
Methodist Church, at County Road 427 and Tucker Drive,
Sanford.

Overeaten to weigh In
O vereaten Anonymous meets at 7:30 p.m. each Sunday at
the Casselberry Senior Center. 200 Triplet Lake Drive,
Casselberry. Call the center at 696-5188 for more Information.

Poete to talk verse
F ln t Florida Poets meet at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets arc welcome.

Sanford Rotariane to meet
Rotary Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

Planning in advanca
C o m m i t t e e m e m b e r s from the Lake
Mary-Heathrow Festival of the Arts know It’s
never too early to make plans. The group met

recently to set the October date (or next year's
ev :nt and begin formulating strategy lor a fifth
success.

Loss of child is life’s painful m ystery
DEAN ABBY: I was bothered
by the following, which I re­
cently read In your column:
"C o n fid en tial to G rievin g In
Arizona: My heart goes out to
you. ‘ I can think of nothing more
unnatural, nothing that leaves
God with more explaining to do.
than the loss o f a child.' (Jean
Harris)"
A b b y . w h a t rig h t d o wc
m ortals have to demand an
explanation from God?
I offer the following from your
column In which you respond to
a s im ila r situ a tion . It was
' published 12 years ago.and I
think It’s much better than ‘.he
quote by Jean Harris:
"D B A S ABBT: My Sunday
school teacher says that God Is
everywhere. Please pul this let­
ter In the paper and maybe he
will see It. Dear God: W hy did
you let m y brother die? When he
waa hit by the car. my mother
• prayed to you to let him live but
; you wouldn't. My little brother
■ was only 2 years old. and he
couldn't have sinned so bad that
f you had to punish him that way.
{ Everyone says you arc good and
; can do anything you want to do.
r You could have saved my little

ADVICI

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

brother, but you let him die. You
broke my mother's heart. How
can I love you?

PETBR"
"DEAR PETEB: Your ques­
tion Is one that has troubled
religious men for thousands of
years. One great thinker wrote a
book about It. It Is called 'Job'
and Is part o f the Bible. It says
that (he suffering of innocent
people Is something we cannot
understand. But this much is
sure: Death Is not a punishment.
It Is one o f life's mysteries.
Speak lo your minister. Peter.
C om m u n icate w ith G od by
praying, and he will help you In
your search for wisdom and
go o d n ess and m ake you r
mommy happy again."
Abby. I saved that because It

w as s u c h a b e a u tifu l and
sensitive answer to that young
boy who was hurting. Trust your
Instincts and continue In that
way to use your (lath. You are so
widely read, and your Influence
so great, that I believe you can
m a k e a d if fe r e n c e in b u r
country. In essence, yours Is a
real ministry. God bless you. I'll
sign m y name, but If you use
this, sign me...

FSAR OF THE LORD.
O IL C IT Y , P A .

DEAR ABBY: We tell our little
ones not to talk to strangers and
not to take candy from strang­
ers. But how many o f us explain
to them what a stranger Is?
I asked my little 5-ycar-old
n eigh b or what she thought
strangers look like, und she said.
“ They wear a mask, and grab
you like they do on television!"
Another child I know Invited a
man to come Into the house
while her mother was In the
shower. Fortunately, he did not
accept the Invitation. When her
mother got after her about It, she

S m i w l lii'iiiTiilimis

( n i l :rj i .y / 7!

NKW ARRIVALS
: Florida Hospital, Altamonte Springs
November 11 — David and
Jamie Borge. Apopka, baby boy:
Chad and Kimberly Middleton.
Apopka, baby girl: Kimberly and
Jam es Abbott, DcBary. baby
boy; A m y and Michael Tlndel.
Altamonte Springs, twin baby
girls.
November 12 — Madeline Fell
and David Horn. Longwood.
baby girl.
November 13 — Calhv and

Stephen Negrich. Casselberry,
baby boy; Cynthia and Slevcn
Davies. Altamonte Springs, baby
boy: Sonia and Michael Green.
Apopka, baby boy: Kimberly and
Robin Parker. Apopka, baby girl:
Dolores M. Cintron. Altamonte
Springs, baby boy.
November 14 — Wendy and
M ic h a e l D r o z , A lt a m o n t e
Springs, baby bey.

tion. a “ stranger" Is a person
who Is unknown or with whom
one Is unacquainted.
I t ’ s s u ffic ie n t to Instruct
children never to talk to people
they do not know. And to accept
no candy or rides from anyone
without first ob ta in in g
permission from their parent or
caretaker.
(Probisms? Writs to Dsar Abby.
For a personal, unpublished
reply, sand ■ sslf-sddrsstsd,
stamped envelops to Deer Abby,
P.0. Box 69440, Lot Angeles,
Calif. 90066. All correspondence
Is confidential.)
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PROBLEM TAKING CARE
OF BUSINESS
CHILD

“ Florida’6 own N«wcom«r
service" — dedicated lo
wtlcomlng now residents.
Florida Owned
Florida Menac'd
It is our desire to make you
leel welcome and to
acquaint you with our city.
II you are new In (he area, or
know ol a family who Is, a
phone call will bring a prompt
visit from our representative.
She has brochures, civic infor­
mation, maps; and to help with
your shopping needs, cards of
introduction and gilts from local
merchants.
Local merchants are also
encouraged to inquire about
(he availability ol our services.
Harriet Deas —
Sanford
322-3206

Diane
Lake Mary
323-1034

H O T 8 *

Lt. John Dunbar Is about
to discover the frontier...
within himself.
MOHTLV
7: tO • *30

LA KE MARY - An art
exhibition, featuring the
m u lti-m ed ia artw ork o f
well-known Chicago artist
J on Reich has been sched­
uled for the Saturday after
Thanksgiving. N ovem ber
24. at "Furniture and More
G allery." Shoppes o f Lake
Mary. Lake Mary
B o u leva rd . L a k e Mary.
Robert Hcrtan. owner o f
this eclectic furniture and
Interior decoratlngfdeslgn
firm , located next to the
Lake Mary Cinema, will
exhibit Reich’s work, along
with that o f several local
artists, from 2 until 4:30
p.m.
Artwork representing all
types o f media which has
been donated by artists
from throughout Central
F lo rid a , as w e ll as by
artists from outside the
state, will be on display.
A m o n g these artists Is
Reich, nationally known
both for his unusually real­
istic. and yet Imaginative,
pencil d ra w in g of land­
scapes. seascapes, animals
and the human body.
Reich works In a wide
spectru m o f m edia, Ine lu d in g pencils,
w atercolora, chalk, oils,
btockprtnts. scrlgraph s.
lithographs and sculpture.
He. along with the other
artists, will be available for
discussion o f their work.
The 610 tlcket/dontlon to
the Art Auction can be
used toward the purchase
o f artwork being displayed.

IWelcome
Newcomer!

said she knew the man was OK
because "the man had a clip­
board In his hands."

JEANETTE HANlfA.
UNION CITY. MICH.
DEAR JEANETTE: By defini­

Exhibit will
feaure artist
John Reich

%

KEVIN COSTNER

Qfaida1 \ Qwelikg Sauce
Home Office
904-734-603!

BB£"

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___________________

»»*AB

Presbyterian

Mpd n M

9710 M m k in Wcwda Hoad
LU a Mary
pnon* M l 4190
Or Don T Oa Ba.oita
Putof
tv day School All Agai t l l i n
CNrrth
tO V im
Nuryary Prowdad
Youth Group Sunday
700 O'*
P u l or &gt; Btbtt Study
Suntan
7 00 pm
WOC - 94S i n Firjt Tuaiday ol
(«• month and tuning 7 V 2nd
Tuatday of Ihd month
Monthly Family Night Suppvr

blow through b n branchea.

We Pao can n u n nourtohmant tor our aoul aa wa worship God in Hit houM each
SMbaVL Visit Hkn and invito Him Into your heart GotTa love win brighten each day. and win
W ngtoon you vdien the cold wtnda ol advarsly art Ihrattonng.

Eastern
Orthodox

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l i t Wakhra Spring* Lana.
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Nan Samuat * D. Muaay Putor
Church Sao+cu 9 ® and 1100 am
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(AMagaal
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(Congragallonal •Chnalian

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lo cal

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Santont HmM. Sanford, Florida — Frtdajr,

23. 1 K 0 - M

■P

IN BRIEF

^ v* ,
-

Annual‘BreakfastWHhSanta*sot

NtW OfffC#TS

SANFORD — The First Presbyterian Churcl
Center. 301 Oak Ave.. Sanford, will host Its annua.
nrtth Santa" fundraiser. Saturday. Dec. i . from 7:30-10:30a.m.
Tickets are 33 per peraon or 310 per family ticket, h r more

Church of tfto NoHvtty, Lite

Information please call (407)331-1963

Jtwi«h community ceietootat Chamifcah
SANFORD. — Beth brael/Sanford Jewish Community Is
having a Chanukah h t Luck on Sunday. Dec. 0, from noon to
3 p m. For more details please call Betty at 331-6333.

Tlsi# ot Prates*at Central Baptist

Officers of tfto nowfy
PWBSjFp

w VnP

wiff nvoOT

SANFORD - Dr. John Sul­
livan. executive director o f the
Florida Baptist Convention In
Jacksonville, aril) be the guest
speaker at Central Baptist
Church. 3101 W. First St..
S a n fo r d , from N ov. 38
through Dec. 3.
The theme for the event la
"T im e o f Praise” with serv­
ices being held at 7 p.m. each
evening.
Great music, will be under
the direction o f Jay Stuckey,
minister o f music at First
Baptist Church o f South Daytona.

MwMixotta

■wVJVTI

iso

111

ku

Kiy

Father Jamoa Baibort
C.PP.8., pastor, at an Inau­
gural luncheon recently.
The officers are: Dorn Da
•arno, presid en t; Ed
Panarello, vice-president;
Sal Quill, secretary; and
Connie Tymfnskl, treasurer,
aM of Like Mary. The group
■ momn on

the second and fourth
at 10 ajn. in
At each
ing the Social Action,
CathoNc Action and Outwill preea prelected echedule of
Imum
uISIaw

.

Local playwright begins production

Christmas Fill Bazaar announced
SANFORD — Ladies-A-Glow o f Calvary Christian Center. 4th
4k Laurel, will be having their bazaar. Saturday. Dec. 1. from 9
a m . to 4 p.m.
There will be a plant sale, country store, bake sale, sweet
shop and a Christmas and country craft store. Lunch will be
served from noon to 3 p.m. for 33. The public Is cordially
invited.
For more Information call 321-0150.

Episcopal church presents festival
SANFORD — Holy Cross Episcopal Church on Park Avenue
In Sanford will present a Medieval Festival o f Advent lessons
and carols on Sunday. Dec. 2. at 4:30 p.m. A New Year feast
will follow In the parish hall.
This unique service begins the Advent season o f preparation
for Christmas. It revives the Joyful music and customs o f the
early church for the celebration o f the church today. The public
Is welcome.

nightly at 7:30 p.m. with some
o f the best new stage talent.
ORLANDO - "Halteluja Don't
Mean H appy" m ay put Centra)
Florida In the hallmark of Mack
theatre when It opens at El
Bethel Tem ple. 3000 Bntton
Blvd., Nov. 30. Dec. 1.8.
T h e m a d e -fo r-B r o a d w a y
m u s ic a l c o m e d y p re m ie re s

'Hallelujah' celebrates the aes­
thetic tradition of black theatre
with upbeat, original tunes,
flamboyant, choreography, and
real-life drama.
The playwright. Sybil Mitchell
of Altamonte Spring*, take* a
h ila rio u s look at the black

In this present day.
Director of the parody. Vicki
Felder, or Orlando, enjoys a
n um ber of acting and dtrtctlnj
roles to her credit. Including the
le a d In Valencia Community
C o l l e g e ' s p r o d u c t i o n of
"F e n ce s." and a part In Spike
L e e 's film "Senior W eek."
Original scores were created

ch u rch

and p rod u ced by com po se r / m u s l c l a n . O t to O o m c i .
formerly of New York City.
Ticket donations are 310. and
proceeds will benefit the Onesimua Drug Rehab Center and
Ezekiel's Mission on Pairamore
Street.
F or Information, call 648-

1975.

Bishops seek balance
in Colum bus festivities
ops adopted a 40-page pastoral
letter. "H e rita g e and Hope:
Evangelization In Am erica." that
In the com ing two years the both looks bock to the origins of
nation will be swallowed up In the Old and New World en­
pageants, celebrations and other counter and forward to the
festivities m arking the 500th continuing task o f spreading the
a n n i v e r s a r y o f C h r is t op h er gospel In the Americas.
It seeks to give a balanced
C o l u m b u s ' s a r r i v a l In the
reading o f the Columbian legacy.
Americas in 1492.
But a number o f groups are
I t w ill also be a time o f uncomfortable with the whole
controversy ana
and conflict,
coniuci. hlatorl
n w m - notion
Rur
ton o f celebrating the Euro*
cal finger-pointing andjyd|8Mitq£j^'£jt{, n conquest o f the Americas,
r e n d e r in g as h istoria n s.
theologians, pundits and j l » t
"T h e only thing Columbus
ColutnM
plain citizens seek to assess the really discovered was that he
legacy of the encounter o f the was lost." according to George
Tinker, an Osage Indian who
Old War and the New.
teaches at the UlfT School of
Smack In (he middle o f the Theology In Denver, Colo.
debate will be the close connec­
In May. the National Council of
tion between colonialism and
Christianity, the conquistadors Churches passed a resolution
a n d the m ission aries — all arguing that “ for the Indigenous
neatly symbolized In the person peoples o f North America, it
brought slavery, genocide, eco­
o f Coinutnbus.
nomic exploitation and a deep
T h e nation's Roman Catholic
level o f Institutional racism and
bishops are trying to strike a
moral decadence.”
balance as they map their own
plans to celebrate the 500 years
"T h e church, with few excep­
o f the Catholic Christianity t i o n s . a c c o m p a n i e d a n d
Columbus bruught to the New l e g i t i m i z e d this c o n q u e s t e
W orld and evangelizing efforts o f exploitation," the 32-member
the missionaries from Catholic Protestant and Orthodox ecu­
Spain who spread across both menical agency said.
North and South America In the
The Catholic statement gener­
w ake of Columbus's discovery.
ally acknowledged the NCC
During their annual fall meet­ point, but also presented another
in g In mid-November, the bish- view.

t i Religion Writer

Lutherans cslsbrats last Sunday
SANFORD — Lutheran Church o f the Redeemer. 2S2S Oak
Ave., will celebrate the last Sunday In the church year with
services at 10:30 a.m. The fourth series o f ReView/ReNew blble
study continues at 9 a.m. Sunday morning. Special choir
practice Is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Nov. 27. The Lutheran
Women’s Missionary League will have a Christmas boutique
and bake sale during the Fellowship Coffee Immediately after
morning services.

Msthodists sat Dacamhtr schsdula___ __
CASSELBERRY — Community United Methodist Church.
4921 S. U.S. Hwy 17-92. CaaaeiberTy. will hold Its annual
Hanging of the Green Service. Sunday. Dec. 2. at 7 p.m.
Featured will be the Cherub Choir, the Kids o f Praise, Master
Design (teens), and the Youth Orchestra.
"T h e Joys o f Christmas,” a production with the Chancel
Choir, orchestra, and cast will also be presented. Performances
are Dec. 8 .9 at 7 p.m. each evening.
A Christmas Eve Communion A Candlelight Services will be
offered, Dec. 24 at 6 p.m. A 7:30 p.m.
For Information on December events, call 831-3777.

Gospel sing slafsd for tonight
SANFORD — The City o f Sanford Fire Department's
Firemen's Benefit Fund. Inc. will feature Its Annua) Gospel
Sing on Friday at the Sanford Civic Center from 7 p.m. to
midnight.
The featured acts for the annual event will Include the
Singing Americans. The Florida Bpys Quartet, and first time
appearances by Th e Buxtons and The Brashears.
Proceeds from the benefit are used to help pay hospital and
doctor bills for the members o f the benefit fund.
Tickets are 35 and may be purchased from the fire stations at
1303 S. French Ave.. or 3770 Orlando Dr.. Sanford. Retired
Flrechlef William C. Galley, acting emcee for the program, will
deliver tickets to patrons by calling 322-2250.

It's a tough decision
Myrtl* Ashley, o f 8anford, looks over baksd goods and Items for
sal* at a rscsnt Market Day held by the St. James A.M.E. Church
on ths comer o f 9th end Cypress Avenue, Sen ford.

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
ASSCMSLV or 000
Frasdom A iu m b iy ol God, 1519 W. 5th SI., Sanford
K n Lilt Atsambly. 100 Kannal Road
Wakiva Aiiam biy ol God. U75 Dtion R d , Longwood

BAPTIST
Antioch Baptist Church. Oviado
Calvary Baptist Church. Cryalal Lake k 3rd. Laka Mary
C**k*lberry Baptlal Church, 7/0 Saminola Blvd.
CantraJ Bapllat Church, 3101 W. 1*1 SI.
Chuluota First Baptist
Clearwater Missionary Baptist Church, South***! Hd
Country*id« Baptist Church, Country Club Road. Lass Mary
Fir*t Baptist Church, SIS Park Av*.
First Baptist Church ol Altamonte Springs. Hi 43S Altamonte Springs
First Baptist Church ot Forest City
First Baptist Church ot Oanava
First Baptist Church, Markham Woods
First Baptist Church of Life* Monro*
First Baptist Church ol Longwood, M l East SR 434
First Baptist Church ot Oviado
First Baptist Church ot Sanlsndo Springs
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church, not W 13th St
Forest Baptist Church ol Oslaan
Fountain Head Baptist Church. Oviado
Mop* Baptist Church. Forest City Community Cantor. Forest City
Independence Baptist Mis*. Civic Laagu* B ld g . Longwood
Jordan Missionary Bapllst Church, SiO Upsata Rd
lighthouse Baptist Church. 865 Longwood - Laka Mary Road
Lakavlaw Baptist Church. tM Lakavlaw A v * . Laka Mary
Macedonia Mission Baptist Church. Oak Hill R d . Oslaan
Missionary Baptist Church, North Rd . Enterprise
Morning Glory Baptist Church, Oanava Hwy
Ml Moriah Prtmiiiv* Baptist. 1101 Locust A v * . Santont
Mt. Oliva Missionary Baptist Church, Sanlsndo Spring* Rd.. Lcngwood
Ml Sinai Missionary Baptist Church. 1800 Jerry Av*
Mt Zion Missionary Baptlal. Sip** Ave
New Bathal Missionary Church. 9(h SI k Hickory Av*
New Mt Calvary Missionary Baptist 1109 W t Jth Si
Na* Salam Primitive Baplisl Church. 1509 W 12th St
Naw Testament Baplisl Church. Oualialy Inn. North Longwood
Haw Ml Zion Baptist Church. 1720 Paar Av*
Naw Lit* Fallow ship. 4991 E Lake Drive. Casselberry, FI 32708
Northsrd* Baptist Church. Chuluola
People s Baptist Church. 1201 W First Street. Sanlord
Pmacrast Baptist Church. 1t9 W Airport Blvd
Prslri* Laka Baptist. Hidg# Rd . F*m Park
Progress Missionary Bapl.sl Church. Midway
Second Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church Wasl Santont
Smyrna Bapllst Church, 250 Ovartrook D r . Casselberry
starlight Baptist Church. 1(0 Bahama Rd
81 Jamaa Missionary Baptist Church. St Rd 419. Otlsan
St Luka Missionary Baptist Church ol Cam*ran City, toe
St Paul Baptist Church. 913 Pm* Av*
St Matthews Baptist Church. Canaan Hgts
St John's Missionary Baptist C h u rc h 920 Cypres* *
Sprv»gheld Missionary Baptist. 12m A Cadav
Svnland Baptist Church. 2626 Painvsito

Tempi* Baptist Church. Palm Springs Rd , Allamonl* Springs
Victory Baptist Church, OM Ortanoo Rd. M Master As*.
Waatvtaw Baptist Church. 4100 Paoit Road (4SAI
William Chapa! Missionary Baptlal Church. Mark k William SI .
Allamonl# Springs
Zion Hop* Baptist Church, 712 Orange Av*.
CATHOLIC
All Soul* Catholic Church, 902 Osk A m , Sanlord
Church ol the Nativity. Laka Mary
Our Lake ol Ih* Laka* Catholic Church. 1310 Mkalmlllan, Dal Iona
St. Ann's Catholl r Church. Dogwood Trail. OaBary
Si. Augustine Catholic Church, Sunset Dr. near Button R d . Casselberry
St. Clara Catholic Community maata at Oslaan Civic Canter
81. Mary Magadalana Catholic Church. Maitland A v a .
Altamonte Spring*
CHRISTIAN
First Christian Church. 1807 a Sanlord Av*.
First Christian Church ot Longwood.!400 E E Ullamson Rd, Longwood
Grace Christian Church, Masting at Saminol* YMCA. 886 Longwood Laka
Mary Rd , Laka Mary
Lakavlaw Chnstlan Church, Bear Lake R d . at Jamison
Northsld* Chnstlan Church. Florida Haven Or., Maitland
Sanlord Christian Church. 132 W Airport Blvd
South Saminol* Christian Church, 300 W SR. 434. Oviado
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
First Church ol Christ Scientist. 979 Markham Wood* R d . Longwood
CHURCH O F CHRIST
Church ol Chhsi, 1512 B. Park Ava
Church ot Christ at Laka Elian, U.S. 17-92, N. Catsaibarry
Church ot Christ. 800 Palm Springs D r . Ailamonta Springs
Church o! Christ. Oanava
Church ol Christ. Longwood
Church ol Christ. W 171h St
Northaida Church ot Christ. Fla. Haven Dr . Maitland
South Saminola Church ol Christ. 54 *0 Lake How all Rd
CHUACH O F OOO
Church ot God. 503 Hickory
Church ol God. 803 W 22nd St
Church at Qod. Oviado
Church ot God Hollnai*, Lake Monro*
Church ol God Mission, Enterprise
Church ol God. 1402 W I8lh SI
Church ot God to Christ. Oviado
Churcn ot God ol Prophecy. 2509 S Elm Ava
Church ot Ood ot Prophecy. 1708 S Persimmon Av*
Church ot Ood ot Prophecy. 498 S Central. Oviado
Church ol Ood (7th Day), OwlIona Community Canter. Daltons ilia c
Room)
Rescue Church ot God. 1700 W. t Jth 81. Sanford
True Church ol God. 2700 Ridgawood A v a . Sanlord
CO N O UO ATKH 4AL
Congregational Christian Churcn. 2401 S Park A v * . Sanlord
EASTERN ORTHODOX
Eastern Orthodoa Church. St Gaorg*. 2001 Dylan Way. Maitland
Eastern Orihodoa Church. St Slaran's ol 0 C A 1896 Laka Emma Road.

Longwood, FL 32750
Eastern Orthodoa Church, SI John Orihodoa. 2743 Country Club Road.
Sanford
EPISCOPAL
Ail Calntt Episcopal Church, E. OaBary Av*, Enterprise
Christ Episcopal Church. Longwood
Episcopal Church ol Ih* Naw Covenant, 973 Tuakawllla Road, Winter
Spring*
Holy Cross Episcopal. Park A m . at 4lh St., Sanlord
St. Patera Episcopal Church. 700 Rinehart Road. Laka Mary
81 Richard's Church. 5191 laka Howell R d. Winter Park
Th* Church ot the Good Shephard. Maitland, 331 Lake A m
tNTBROCNOMNATtONAL
Calvary Christian Canter, 900 W. 4th SI.. Sanlord
JEWISH
Bath Am Synagogue mealing at Comar ol Sand Laka and County Lin*
Hoed- W it! '1-4
Tempi* Shalom. 1786 Elkcam Blvd.. Daltons
LUTHERAN
Ascension Lutheran Church, Ovarbrook 0*.. Casselberry
Good Shephard United Lutheran. 2917 S. Orlando Or.
Holy Crass Lutheran Church ol Laka Alary. 790 Bun OriM . Laka Mary
Lord Of Ul* Lutheran Church. 398 Tuakawllla Rd . Wintsr Spring*
Lutheran Church ol Prgvtdanc*. Daltons
Lutheran Church ol Ih* Rsdssmsr. 2S23 O ik Avenue
Massrah Lutheran Church, Golden Day* Or A Hwy 17 92. Caaaaibarry
SI. Lukas Lutheran Church. Rt. 429, Siavi*
St Slaprian Lutheran Church. 434 |u*t West ol 1-4, Longwood
MTTMOOIST
Bamatt United Memorial Church. E OaBary A m . Enterprise
Bear Laka United Methodist Church
Bathal A.U E. Church. Canaan Hgts
Caaaaibarry Community United Methodist Church. Hwy 1792 Ptnay
Ffitfgi Rd , CstseJberry
Christ Untied Methodist Church. Tucker D r. Sunland Estates
DaBavy Community Methodist Church. W High banka R d . OaBary
Flrtt United Ma'hoditt Church. 419 Park Am
First Methodist Church ol Oviado
First Unilad Mtthoditl Church ol Oanava
Grace Unilad Methodist Churcn. 499 N Country Club Rd . Lake Mary
Grant Chapat A M E Church, Oviado
OakgroM Mathodisl Church, Oviado
Oslaan Malhodrtl Church. Cor ot Carpwnltr A Murray S t . Oslaan
Paoit Wesleyan Mathodisl. 5880 Wtytid* D r. Sanlord
Pioneer Mathodisl Church. tIO N Poplar Av* . Sanlord
Sanlsndo United Mathodisl Church. SR 434 and 1-4. Longwood
SI Janas A M E . 9lh M Cypraaa
61 Luke M B Church ot Camaron City. Inc . Baardai o't S R 46 E
SI Mary’s A M E Church. St Rt 415. Osttan
St Paul's Mathodisl Church.Ottaan R d. Enterprise
Strafford Memorial Churcn, 8 Denary
NAZAAENE
First Church ol the Naxaran*. 2581 Sanlord Av*
Geneva Churcn ol th* Naraan*. S R 48. Oanava
Lake Mary Church ol th* Neurone, 171 E C rytta Lake Av* . Las* Mary
Longwood Church of the Naraan*. Wayman t Jataup A v * . Longwood

Markham Woods Church of th* Nararen*. SR 46,3rt Milaa Waal ol 1-4
at th* Wakiva Rivar
PAgbSVTERMN
Deltona Presbyterian Church, Holland Bird t Austin Av*., Daftona
First Presbyterian Church ot Lake Mary
First Presbyterian Church, Oak A m A 3rd St.
First,Frasbytwrikn Church ot DsBery, E Highland
SI Andrews Prasbytartan Church, 9913 Baar Laka Rd
81. Mark* Presbyterian Church. 1021 Palm Springs Rd . Altsmont* Spga
Tuscawilla Presbyterian Church. 3800 Waal State Rd. *29, Oviado Fib
Upsets Community Praabylarian Church. Upsata Rd
Westminister Praabylarian Church. Rad Bug R d , Caaaaibarry
•XVfNTH O AT ADVENTIST
Forest Lake Seventh Day Adventist Churcn. Hwy. 439. Forast City
Mara Hitt Seventh Day Adventist Church. 801 E 2nd S I , Sanlord
Sanford’ Seventh Day Advanllst Church, 5419 N. Highway 427
Samnih Day Advantlsl Church, Maitland A t * , Allamonl* Springs
W lnltr Snrtngs Seventh Day Advanllif Church. 90 8 Moss Rd
OTHER CHURCHES
All Fattn Chapel, Camp Saminol*. Wakiva Park. Rd
Allan’* A M E Church. OIIM A 12th
Baardai I Avanu* Holm#** Chapat. Beardail A m
Chuluota Community Church
Church ol Jasu* Christ ol Latter Day Saint*. 2315 Psrk A m
Family Church Christian Can tar. tSS4 Saminol* Blvd. C**S*ib*rry
First Born Church ol Ih* Living God. Midway
First Churcn ot Chnst. Scientist, Elksm Blvd and Vsnus S t , Dalton*
First Psnlscostai Church ol Longwood
First Pentecostal Church ol Santont
Full Gospat Church ol God to Christ. 1828 Jerry A m . Sanford
Full Gospat Tabamact*. 2724 Country Club Road
G'*c* Bible Church. 2844 B Sanford Av*
Holy Trtnty Church at God in Christ, 1514 Men gout Una A m .
Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witness. Lake Monro* Unit, 1562 W Third SI
Lake Monro* Chapat. Orange Blvd . Lake Monro*
Ml. O h v * Holiness Church. Oak Hill Rd . Oslaan
Neighborhood Alliance Church. 301 Markham Wood* Road. Longwood
Pentecostal Open Bibia Tabamact*. Ridgawood Av* . O il 25th op josit*
SaminoT# High School
Praia# and Power Churcn I I I W Wilbur Av* . laka Mary
Rolling Hills Moravian Church. SR 43*. Longwood
Sanlord Alliance Church 1401 S Park Av*
Sanlord Bible Chu'ch. 2480 Sanlord Avs
Second Church Ol Th* Living Ood. 3428 Baardail Ava . Sanlord
The Full Gotp*l Church ol Our Lord Jasut Christ. Washington S t . Ca
naan Crty
Th# Salvation Army. TOO W 24th St
Triumph. The Church ol th* Naw Ag* 1008 W 6th St
Unilad Church at Chnst. Altsmont* Community Cnepat. Altsmont*
Springs
Unilad Churcn of Christ Christian Fellowship 260 N Country Club Rd .
Lata Mary
l / C S S Spiritual Car fr« 125 A South Volusia Ava Corner of Grama ana
Volusia Av* Orange City
Winter Spring* Community Evangaittal Congregational, 219 Wad* S I .
Winter Springs

�Does drug testing
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In addition, the menstrual
c y c l e a l t e r s the e f f e c t s o f
c lo n ld ln e (C a ta p re s ) for
h yperten sion and ph enytoln
(D ila n t in ) for s e iz u r e s .
Furthermore, oral contraceptives
often cause an Increase In serum
ch olesterol, yet no one haa
st udi ed the e f fi c a c y o f a d ­
ministering cholesterol-lowering
drugs with birth control pills. In
fact, except for extrapolation
from studies using males, no one
la sure whether medicine* In­
duced excess blood cholesterol Is
a health hazard for women on
oral contraceptives.
T o make matters more con­
fusing. researchers have discov­
ered that hlgh-oenslty lipopro­
teins (the "g o o d " cholesterol)
seem s e l e c t iv e l y to protect
women from heart disease; but

THAT'S PRETTY STRONG
LANGUAGE. ISN'T IT ?

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H a ve th e m ed i c i ne * y o u r HDL I* frequently lowered In
doctor prescribe* for you been w o m e n o n l o w - f a l d i e t * ,
thoroughly tested In people o f Therefore, women w ho limit
similar age, sex and race? No. cholesterol consumption may.
according to the Congressional unlike men. be actually placing
Caucus on W om en 's Issues, themselves at risk.
Almost all pharmaceutical research haa used, and la stUI
using, middle aged white men.
t OsM
as SaWasMs
W o m e n , b la c k s . H isp a n lca .
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AitMu’i
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groups to citizens at large. Does is Dossal m M
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sSM sm sas
consequences? Yes, the Con* . .
_ g»*fcs
gresslonal Caucus vehemently
— l»* «f
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responded.
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T o begin with. In women, the H
M Nsssayts
menstrual cycle can aubstan*
ttwdsJ
19 S S L
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depressant medkine: A constantM P f S l L *
MNwsssstsr
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first hair o f the menstrual cycle
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but too low during the last half.
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A SuPtfT-FfiCtP

C A &amp; FY S W F
HAS TAKEN
OF MX g o p x j
I r l A V f f II

B y B era tes B eds O eel
Y O U R B IR IR D A Y
N ev . 3 4 , 1BBO
In the year ahead you may
finally be able to take a long
distance Journey you've been
contemplating. It could be one o f
the most memorable trips o f
your life, laced with many pleasurable adventures.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Basically you have a healthy
curiosity and your Inquiring
mind could be extremely Inqulattive today. You'll accurately
evaluate new Information and
file away worthy Ideas for future
reference. Know where to look
for romance and you'll find It.
T h e Astro-Graph Matchmaker
Instantly reveals which signs are
rom antically perfect for you.
Mail 92 to Matchmaker, do this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428,
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Today you may find a new
w ay to make or save you money
on something you have to do
rather frequently. It might not
be a large amount, but over time
tt will represent a substantial
sum.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Friends will be Impressed, as

well as flattered, when you credit
them with things they've said In
the past that are applicable to
today's events,
PISC E S (Feb. 20-March 20)
An Impressive goal may cornmand your Interests today and
you’ll go after It In an effective,
quiet fashion that will enable
you to achieve your purpose
without calling attention to
yourself,
A B B S (March 21-April 19) It's
Important you associate today
with people whose Ideas you
respect. Information o f value to
both parties will be exchanged In
a convivial environment,
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
You're very good today at being
able to utilize the Ideas or
suggestions of others to greater
advantages than they Initially
Your contribution
could be small, but dynamic.
Q B M D fl (May 21 June 20) Do
not discount your mate's Ideas
today on Issues of mutual conccm . He/shc will be looking at
m atters from a d ifferen t
perspective and might be able to
see or understand things you
don't.
C A N C SR (June 21-July 22)
Assignments that require con-

centratlon and brain pow er
should be your cup o f tea today.
You can be exceptionally productive If you're fortunate to
work with one as clever as
yourself.
LB O (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
greatest asset today la your
ability to transform your Involvemcnts Into fun affairs, even
those which have serious undertones.
V1ROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your mind readily responds to
new Ideas today that can im­
prove living conditions In your
habitat. Don't be reluctant to toy
with changes that II please you
as well as others.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You're likely to be rather restless
today and you could get a trifle
edgy If you don't do things that
keep you active. Sports, shop­
ping or visiting friends could fill
the prescription.
•C O R P IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You're a shrewd shopper today
and finding bargains could be
easier than usual. If you can't
get out o f the house, you might
enjoy browsing through mail
order catalogues.
( 0 1 9 0 0 . N E W S P A P E R ENTERPR1SE ASSN.

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Sanford HeraW, Sanford, Florida — Friday, Novgmbar 23, 1880 — 79

U.N. sanctions hurt Iraqi1people
C A IR O , E g y p t — T h r e e
months alter It was im posed, the
U.N. econoofle em ba r g o against
Iraq la causing m o re a cvere
shortages, price hikes a n d oil
revenue losses than th e S-year
Iran-Iraq war.
But economists aay th e y atIt)
do not know when th e patience
o f th e Ira q i p e o p le w i l l be
exhausted o r whether dem ands
Win erupt for a policy ch a n g e b y
the Baghdad governm en t, w hich
drew the sanctions b y in vadin g
Kuwait on Aug. 3.
S o far. the trade e m b a rg o
Imposed Aug. B has aucceaafuny
preven ted raw m aterials, ma­
chinery and spare p a rts from
reaching Iraq w hde alm ost com*
pletely halting the O P E C na­
tion 's lucrative oil exports.
OH exporta accounted fa r m ore
than 95 percent o f Ira q 's foreign
exchange earnings b efo re the
em bargo. But the m u ltinational
naval blockade and th e closin g
o f the o il pipelin es th rou gh
Tu rk ey and Saudi A ra b ia have
brought oil shipments to a near
Iraq still la exportin g o il for
-free to Jordan, a cco rd in g to
'Jordanian governm ent sources,
w ho said the oil la necessary to
prevent the Jordanian eco n om y
from complete collapse. A m m an
: has explained Its position to the
U.N. sanctions com m ittee, they
T h e Jordanian so u rces de­
clined to give figures o n how
much Iraqi crude la flo w in g to
Jordan.
One Bahrain-baaed G u lf Arab
banker told United P ress In­
ternational In a teleph on e In­
terview that Iraqi foreign debts
o f up to (8 0 billion can no longer

O il UKDorts a c ­
counted for more
then 96 percent of
Iraq's foreign
exchange eernlnge
before the embargo.
b e serviced and th e country
e x p e c t e d to lo s e about ( 1 5
b illio n a y e a r In o il aalea.
B aghdad w a a p u m p in g some 3.2
m in io n barrets o f cr^de a day
b efore Its Aug. 3 Invasion o f
K u w ait.
T h e lack o f spare parts and
m ach in ery has brou gh t work on
m a n y Iraqi construction sites to
a h alt a n d all m a jo r d evelopm ent
p l a n n i n g I n v o l v i n g fo r e ig n
p a rtn ers has been suspended
B a n k ets believe th e moat Im ­
portant o f these "e m b a rg o casu­
a lt ie s " w as an agreem ent to
d evelo p the Rum aUa North oil
field, th e first su ch deal w ith a
fo reig n consortium led by O c­
cid en ta l petroleum Corp. o f Loo
A n g e le s In co n ju n ctio n w ith
G e r m a n . G r e e k a n d U .S .
en gin eerin g Arms.
Ir a q 's oil m in istry had hoped
Rum aUa North w ou ld produce
so m e 300. 000 barrels a day b y
1993.
In addition, a c tiv ity in several
m a jo r sectors o f th e econom y.
In clu din g the all-im portant oil
I n d u s t r y , a l r e a d y is b e in g
sev e re ly curtailed b y shortages
o f ra w m aterials a n d spare parts.
In clu din g solenoids, fuses, ball
bearin gs and pipes.
C a iro Radio said the sanctions
h ave reduced Ira q i industrial
ca p a city b y 40 percent.
S o m e W e s te rn e c o n o m is ts
con ten d that w ith in a few weeks

the lack o f spare parts wUI create
a serious problem for th e w ater
and p o w e r Indu atrlea,
petrochem ical production and
public utUltle*.
A s a measure o f the sanctions'
Impact . Iraq announced Oct. 19
the rationing o f gasoline and
lubricants. T h en Oil M inister
haam Abd a r Rahim ash Chalabi
captained that the "o n ly reas o n "
for this rationing w as to ensure
Iraq had enough additive* and
chemicals to produce gaaoitnc
and lubricants for " a s lo n g as
p ossib le."'
tsut Iraqi irc s to rm o w x it m
Hussein, apparently fearing a
public backlash In h is tigh tly
controlled country since gasoline
rationing n ever had been In­
troduced even during the G u lf
war. fired Chalabi nine days
later and ended the rationing.
Baghdad Radio said experts
had told Saddam that stocks o f
additive* w ere much larger than
previously believed and could be
produced locally.
Although Iraq has maintained
that it still has large stockpiles o f
food. Baghdad last w eek an­
nounced a 2 0 percent reduction
in m onthly rations for sugar and
wheat.

_________________________ !____________________________
“ -**—
— 1 ■
■
N E W YORK — M iddle East oil produ cers will
realize a windfall o f a b o u t (4 4 billion in extra
revenue this year from th e rise In oil p rices diulng
the Persian Gulf crista, a n Industry new sletter
reported this week.
OPEC Listener, an Authoritative m o n ito r o f the
13-nation Organization o f Petroleum E xporting
C o u n tries, said an " a n a ly s is a h o w s O PEC
countries w ill enjoy about a ( 4 4 billion w ind fall In
estim ated full-year 1990 oil Incom e o ver 1969."
A s a result o f oU p ric e * doubling sin ce Iraq's
Aug. 2 Invasion o f K u w a it, the New York-based
publication estimated 1990 oil revenues o f the
OPEC nations at approxim ately (1 4 8 billion.
It estimated Saudi A ra b ia 's revenues w ill rise
•1 6 billion, or 68 percent, o v e r 1969 to n early (4 0
billion for 1990.
In late October, the go vern o r o f the U n ited Arab
Em irates' centra) bank estim ated O P E C 's Persian
G u lf producers were sp en d in g at an annua) rate o f
(1 8 billion to support the U.S.-led multinational
force assembled In Saudi A rabia and o th er nations

u n n fo m i f inTvmwpona ,
BE IRU T. Leban on — T h e Christian hard line
Lebanese Forces m ilitia, yie ld in g to govern ­
m en t pressure, said H w ill relinquish its
strongholds In th e capital, p a vin g the w ay for
Lebanese so ld ier* to establish a o U U liM c e
unified Beirut.
" W e have com pleted final touches on Ihe
G reater Beirut (security) plan and an obstacles
h ave been re m o v e d ." L F spokesman George
A b d el Maasth told United Press International
o n Thu rsday.
A b d e l M a a slh e x p e c te d th e m ilitia to
w ith draw Its forces and h ea vy weapons from
the Christian neighborhood o f Aahraflyeh and
the seaside L F headquarters in Karam lna by
e a rly Friday.
T h e L F decision cam e a fter a night-long
m eetin g at the tem porary presidential head­
qu arters In th e m ainly Moslem sector o f west
Beirut am on g President E llas Hrawi. arm y
com m an der E m ile Lahoud and a Christian

Ltgal Notfc—

QUALITY BOORKIEPINO
l l BVic l . ana mat

In addition, the ex o d u s o f
hundreds o f thousands o f foreign
workers from Iraq sin ce the
invasion o f Kuw ait also has
hammered the Iraqi econ om y In
a way that Saddam m ay not
have foreseen.

dark af Ma armH Caurt, 6
CauMy. PiarMs, hi
M tam n a l

Many w orkers from o th er A rab
countries. South Asia and the
Far East performed skilled or
semi-skilled Jobs In the oU In­
dustry. pow er stations and other
Industrial installations. W ithout
these foreign workers, Iraq now
la facing a serious shortage o f
manpower.

pan e l o s
fic t trial

O PEC is realizing $44 billion windfall
from Persian Gulf crisis, report says
O P E C nations may take
in $148 billion this year

Christian militia official reports pact

'"M d til Malik al-Hamar. the I M E ^ m K l L
n a tk u u m a k ln g up the G ulf Cooperation Council
w ou ld rise 43 percent to (6 0 billion In 1990.
T h e g c c consists o f Saudi Arabia. Kuw ait, the
U A E . Qatar- Bahrain and Oman. A ll except
Bahrain and O m an also belong to the OPEC cartel.
T h e Pentagon in Washington has said that the
G u lf nations, prim arily Saudi Arabia. Kuw aiti
governm ent in e x ile and the U A E have com m itted
( 6 billion to support the multinational force
through the en d o f 1990.
Japan had com m itted 62 billion in support
through March, Germany had prom ised 91.Oft
billion to defray 1BB0 expenses o f the m ultina­
tion al force and Korea has pledged (9 5 m illion, a
Pentagon spokesm an said.
U.S. governm ent officials said the GCC nations
h a v e pledged another 16 billion to help nations
auch as Egypt. Jordan and Turkey, w hich are
suffering econom ically from the U.N. em bargo o f
K u w ait and Iraq Imposed In the wake o f the
Invasion.
Sen. Bill B radley, D-N.J.. recently said the
decision to send additional U.S. troop* to Saudi
A ra b ia will nearly double the cost o f m aintaining
the U.S. force In the Middle East to (3 0 billion In
th e current fiscal year.

Encounter with arm-twisting lobbyist
was turning point for representative

Ta-WH:
Statute* tap.
Jen* f . Ivon*

M. ZL »
ID M m S M M
D IM M

WASHINGTON M averick
Rep. Andy Jacobs, the Indianap­
olis Democrat, was not speaking
figuratively when he recalled the
time a lobbyist actually twisted
his arm.
It was In 1974. when Jacobs
received “ s rush of contribu­
tions" from special Interests
after being named to the power­
ful Ways and Means Committee.
“ This guy actually laid his
hands on me." Jacobs recalled.
"H e was literally twisting my
arm. I decided then and there
that no bastard waa ever going
to do that to me again."
Since then. Ihe 58-year-old
12-term congressman has ac­
cepted no contributions from
special Interests.
"T h a t’s the only way to guar­
antee that you're not going to be
influenced by lobbyists." Jacobs
said in an Interview by telephone
from his district office back
home In Indiana.
Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, the
K eatin g Five senators w ere
lighting for their honor In a
hearing before the Senate Ethics
Committee.
They are accused o f Interven­
ing Improperly with federal re­
gulators on behalf o f former
savings and loan owner Charles
Keating, who contributed 81.4
million to Ihe senators.
The beleaguered solons might
h a v e p ro fite d by s t u d y in g
Jacobs' political career.
In his most recent re-election
campaign, he spent a measly
•8 .6 0 0 , compared w ith the
•400.000 congressional average.
Jacobs is an admirer o f the
l ate H ou se S p e a k e r S a m
Rayburn, the plain-spoken T ex­
an who minced not a word in
telling lobbyists how the cow ate

Ik

Take the money end retire?
fttombtrt of Congrats who havt
th+ mot unspnt campaignfundi

Rennie FVppo, D-Ale.
Chilian, ft-Tatm.
Robert Meteul. D-CeM.
W m 1 0 $ MQOvTlVVPHg

Thomee Foley, D-Wash.

tmmm DnxxnnvKi, n -w e n .
BM Archer, R-Ttxae
Sam Gibbons, D-Fla.
Under congressional rules, members of the House ol Representatives who
were In office by Jen. 8, 1960. can take their unspent campaign funds with
them when they retire — as long as they leave office by January 1983. Some
184 members of Ihe House could possibly leave office with such money. Of
them. Rep. Stephen Solerz could be the richest — if he leaves office In time.
(he cabbage.
" I can't be bought.” Mr. Sam
would tell the fellows with the
deep pockets.
Rayburn Is something of a role
model for Jacobs, widely re­
garded as a skinflint with the
taxpayers' money.
C ongressional salaries will
Jump to 8125.000 next year, but
Jacobs refuses to accept more
than 875,000. He declines all
Junkets and House stamping
privileges.
Jacobs Introduced a resolution
last year that would have made
It a crim e for m em bers o f
Congress to receive payment for
speeches. The measure Irked
o t h e r l a w m a k e r s and. u n ­
surprisingly. died In committee.
Wounded while serving In the
Marine Corps during the Korean

War. He works Fridays and
Mondays In his office In Indian­
apolis. When in Washington, he
sleeps on a sofa In his office In
the Rayburn Building or stays
with friends.
" I describe myself politically
as a parsimonious progressive."
Jacobs said. "I'm not a con­
servative because I wouldn't
spend as much as they do."
Jacobs Is still enjoying his
re-election victory back home In
Indiana so he has not closely
followed the Keating Five hear­
ing before the ethics panel.
But the testimony did remind
him of the tim e a lobbyist
actually twisted his arm . a
political epiphany for Jacobs
that he crcdila with
"really
raising my consciousness."

NOTKIOP
PICTITMMNAMI
NUMs N karoby given M all
am anfsioS In kiNlnMi a —
W. Cry*— Or . SonterS. PI*..

N O TK IOP
PICTITIOUS NAME

Iks Plctttteu* Norn* a IN­
TERNATIONAL EMPLOY­
MENT D IIIC T O K IIS. on#
m a I MNnS N restate *a s
name wHk — Cter* a Ikt
Circuit Caurt. laminate County.
PtertSo. In auotSonco wtM M*
Pruvltlono a tko Ptetltlou*
Ham* Slskrte*. TaWH: Soctten
M X PlarMa StSutu top.
Wtlllom J.McCtnn
Publish: NoromSor XX. X A

notsinNorT Tf T*T

Notice is hereby given that *•
1 1n buolnoio a *N

Ltgal Nottet
V INIC LIS AUCTION
IS/IWWSttl
*1 CHIVY CORVAIR

rat

I I I. LonjwooS. Somlnol*
Count*. PlorlSo. undsr the
Fictitious Nam* si THE
PERMA PILL CORPORATION.
______ wIM tko Cterfc of Ik*
Circuit Caurt, l emlnsN Caunty.
PNrMs, In OccorSauce wtM Ik*
Provltteno a Ik* Ptetltlou*
Nam* Statute*. To-Wit: Soctten
MAH PNrMs Statute* l«S7.
TAILORED POAM
OP FLORIDA. INC.

IHO

HANKS T i l l IIR V IC I. arte
M U I interte is n p u s r tate
nsma write Ms dark a Iks
Circuit Caurt, l aminate Caunty,
PiarMs In at car - tea MM Ma
Provision* a tka Plctltiau*
TaWit: tactten
JumM.1caddy
M. n . x

NOTKIOP
PICT ITIOUS M U M

V INtCLI AUCTION

X, V, M. XX.
Iff*
Diz-at

NOTICI OP
FICTITIOUS KAMI

77MERCURY
THtSHSim*
■1MAZDA
1BDS717B04AMN
aiAuiCi'
aAAXTRjcwoat*
7*TOYOTA
« PONTIAC
7IHONOA
7* MERCURY
TW MUiau
ALTAMONTI T0W1N0
117MARKtR ST
ALT. SPCS.
SALI BIOINS
ATtaiMA-M.
VIEW I HOUR
PRIOR TO SALI
Publlak: Novombor XX. 1—
DIZXI#

NQTICI OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nates l* hereby given Mot I
am *ny*a*S in bualrw** at l«7
Troon Trot*. Winter Spring*.
PL XS70S. Somlnot* County,
FterISO. urtete tko Ptetltlou*
Name U UTILITIES RIDUC
TION CONSULTANTS, atte Ikrt
I Interte to roottier tots nemo
wtM — Cterfc a tko Circuit
Caurt, SomlnoN County. FterlSo, In occorSane* wltk tko
Provtalon* of tko Plctttteu*
Noma statute*. To-Wtt: Soctlon
a u a t PterM* statute* i*».
Marvin D. Kelly
Publish: Novombor f. It. XX.
XA IMS
O f Z-IIS

IbSUte 1
la9 tw»—7 s|lTw1
J i^ t lk*l
tWIIC*
IIMi II

am tnfOfoS In auolnom i t i s t
Matty Ays.. SanterOL PL XX771,
l imlnite Caunty, PtertSa. under
Ma Ptetltlou* Nam* of ANOt'S
COUNTXY CAAPTS an* MU I
wtM Mo Cterfc a Mo Circuit
Caurt, laminate Caunty. FNriOo. In sccarSsnca wltk tko
Pruvilteni a tko Plctttteu*
Hama Statute*. TaWlt: Soctlon
au.M Ptorts* Statute* l*S7.
After** Dytu

Publish: Nouimfcor *. f, 14, n,

INS
OIZ-M
IH TH I CIRCUIT COU IT .

OP TNI IIAMTIINTM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INAMOVOa
SiatINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASI MXi WOO-CAW-P
IN X I : Tko Uarrlos* a

Wit*.
R A N D Y L ll PUCKSTT,
NQTICI OP ACTION
TO: RANOV L l l PUCKITT
4111EATON DRIVE
SANTA P I. T X m w
YOU A l l H I I I I Y NOTI­
FIED MU a Potttten ter Ota
solution a Marriage Kao Soon
tlteS against you. arte Mot you
arc required I* aorvo a easy a
your Reason** or Pteasing to
tks Potttten uson Mo Wit*’*
otternay. A.A. McCtenokon. Jr.,
M* South Pork Awonus — Suite
I. Santera. PtertSa 1X77!, arte
tlte tko ortatnol Reason** ar
Pteadteg In Ma otftca a M*
Clark a tko Circuit Court, on or
before tks MM Soy a Decern
tor. ttto, It you Ml to So so. a
Default Judgment will ba taban
against you Nr Ik* relief da
manSoS In Mo Potttten.
DATED M SonterS. Seminot*
Caunty. PtertSa. tkia itm Soy of
rwvwtnireT#a
tgen
Tr*.
(SEAL)
MARYANN! IteORSI
CLERKOP THE
CIRCUITCOURT
BY: Sharon Outwi
Publish: November XX. X A
rX.IAtfte
OEZ 111

DlZ-tll

n /tm

gliW i IfaBf W

ara *na*a»* kt fcuaUww at XX*
I. US-17PL Suite Mas Catdrtbsrry. PL 11717, laminate
County, PlarMa. untetf tka
Pktttteua Mama a UNITID
SUUCIIPTION AOINCV arte
Is rsUUw m W
Ma Clark a Mo
Circuit Court, tomlnote County.
PterMo. In occor— tea wtM Mo
Provltteno a tks Plctltteuo
Homo Statute*. To-Wit: loetton
a n a PtertSa Statute* 1* 0 .
Sylvie LaAuo

CINCIRIAGAILPUCKITT.
UPI Chief Correspondent_________

Ltgil N ofjct

PuMIM: Novombor *, l*. XX JA

Mates la W S i gtvon MU I

FPWTlvR119

Ltggl Notlctt

M/awwaitajN.
44 PORDEXP

IPAROMTEWtWaW

tMNWattaJB.

71BUICK RIVIERA
WETIHRSUt
Footer*'Auto Clinic

ENaw.lROM

, Pte. HTTP

INTNICIICUtTCOURT
FOR SIMINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROOATI DIVISION
PR* Number IM »C P
IN H I: ESTATE OP
WILLIAM R. TURNER
NOTICE OP
ADMINISTBATION
Tko admlnlteratten a
a William R. Tumor,
PIN Number S0K0CP, I* pend
Inf In Ik* Circuit Court tor
Somlnol* County. PlorlSo,
Pn kili Olvtston. tko oSSroao a
wklck I*: Somlnot* County
Court—
. Seniors. PL 1X771.
Tks nsms* anS adSroMs* a Ik*
partona I rosroaantatlvo'a at
tornay oru art forth below.
All lntor*ltoS portent ar*
roqulrod to AN wIM IM* Caurt.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OP
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (I) all cklmt
atolnat the ottato and (X) any
ob (act ion by an Interfiled
parson on whom tkia notice It
lervod MU eholteng** th* valid­
ity U tka will. Mo quollfkeltent
a Ms porimil rosrooontetlv*.
venue, or |url*dktten a Me
Court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO PILED WILL
■EPOREVSE BARRED.
Publication al nil* Notlc* ho*
befun on November 14. two
Par tonal Roprooontatlvo:
BeydK. Tumor
«XSI Fountain Eteou Bird.
Apt. A NO
Miami. PL 8171
Attorney tor Portonol
Raya anntotivo:
Steven L Laurence
XOtNOofc Avenue
Seniors. PL 1X771
Tolopkono: 4#7 XXX 1114
MARYANN! MORSE.
Cterb. Circuit Caurt
BY: Patricia Thatcher
DEPUTYCLERK
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
PLORIOA
Publlak: November It.XX. IS—
DEZ 1*1

NOTICIOP
FICTITIOUS NAME
I* horoby ft von Mot —

__

w buoinote a 1X7

S. Park A**.. Suit* MS 1enterA
SomlnoN County. PterIS*, under
Iho P te tltlo u * N s m * *1
JACKIE'S BOUTIQUE FASH­
ION SHOP, and rna — Intend
to roglsNr **M nsms write Iks
Clorfc a Ms Circuit (X.rt. SamInal* Caunty, Florida, in *ccardoms write th* Provtolon* a
tko Fkttttuu* Nam* Statute*.
To-Wit: Soctten 4*1.0* PterM*
Statute* l*S7.
Eugtrw Cooper
Cluster* Cooper
Publlth: November t, l*. IX,
XO. ltd

OEZ-IU
CITY OP
LOWaWOOO. PLORIOA
NOTICIOP
PUBLIC HBARINO
TO CONSIDER ADOPTION
OP PROPOSE DOR 01NANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE It H E R IE Y GIVEN
by th* City of Lime I ll* . FieriSo. Mot Mo City Comm listen
will hoM a puNIc hearing to
conelder onoclmont ol Ordi­
nance No. ISM. entitled:
AN OHOINANCE OP THE
CITY OP LONOWOOO. PLOR
IDA. V A C A T I N G AND
ABANDONING A L L THAT
P A R T OP W I S T L A K E
AVENUE LYINO W IS T OP
LOTS 7 THROUGH 11. RLOCK
■; AND THAT PART OP WIST
LAKE AVENUE LYING WIST
OP MARVIN AVENUE. SOUTH
LONGWOOO. ACCORDING TO
THE PLAT THEREOF AS EECORDED IN PLAT BOOK A
PAGE 14. OP THE PUBLIC
RECORDS OP S I M IN O L I
COUNTY, P L O R IO A i AND
ALL THAT PART OP MARVIN
AVENUE LYINO SOUTH OP
LOT 17, SLO C K R. AND
NORTH OP LOT 1. BLOCK C.
SOUTH LONOWOOO. AC­
CORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK A PAGE JA OP
THE PUBLIC RECORDS OP
SEMINOLE COUNTY. PLOR I
DA. PROVIDINO FOR CON
PLICTS. SEVERABILITY ANO
EFFECTIVE DATE.
Said ordinance wo* placed on
first reading an Novombor it,
IM , and th* City Commission
will comMo- tamo tor (Inal
plin g s * . adoption otter Ik*
public hearing, which will be
hold In Ik* City Hall, IIS Weil
Warren Av*.. Longwrood. Ftorl
do. on Monday. Ik* Jrd day at
December, IHO A.O.. portlet
may appear and bo hoard with
reaped to Ik* propoood Ordl
none*. This hearing may b*
continued from tlm* to lima
until llnol action ls token by Ikt
City Commission.
A copy of Ik* propoood Ordl
nonce I* posted ol the City Hall,
Longwood. Florid*, and coplet
or* on lite with Hw Cterfc at Ik*
City and some may ba Inspected
by Me public.
A taped record ol this moating
I* mad* by the City tor It*
convenience This record may
not constitute an ado quoto re
cord tor purpoao* of appeal tram
a decision mod* by tka Com
mission wltk respect to th*
tortgoing matter. Any parson
wishing la ensure that an ode
quote record of tka proceedings
It maintained tor appellate pur
poets It advised to mofc* Ik*
necessary arrangements *1 hit
or her own upon**.
Opted this R i* day i
bar. A D IHO
CITY O F LO NGW O O O
Donald L Tarry
City Cterfc
Publish November 71. IHO
DEZ 110

ift lM

DlZ-ltJ

NOTKIOP
FICTITIOUS KAMI
I* horoby a*vqn Mb* I

0IZ111

am ana— — a Main*** aa m
m
McClain Lam
l. PL

AOacsmkarM
D IM M

m ilitia delegation.
Official sources said the co n feree * agreed to a
security plan to dem ilitarize Beirut fo llow in g
negotiations that lasted until daw n.
Th e sources said the Im plem entation o f the
accord w ill start Im m ediately after day-lon g
"In dependence D a y " celebrations and w ill be
completed ea rly Friday.
Th e nation celebrated Independence D a y as
the Lebanese a rm y held a m ilita ry parade In
the Syrian-policed west Beirut and w arplan e*
and helicopters repeatedly roared o ver Ih e c ity .
Lebanon ga in ed Independence from F ran ce
in 1943 b u t sin ce then a n in depen den t
peaceful Chrlstlan-Moslem co-existence has
remained fragile.
Defense M in ister Albert M ansour said the
establishment o f a unified Beirut will b e the
go vern m en ts " g ift for all Lebanese on In ­
dependence D a y ."
Hrawi'a govern m en t had act Nov. 19 aa a
deadline for the withdrawal o f a ll m ilitias and
deploym ent o f th e Lebanese a rm y to m aintain
law-and- order In unified Beirut.

Prgnck A' ' Sontord?** ** ***
County, pierido, under tko
Ptetltlou* Nome a* BIO Dip,
and tko* I intend to rqgi*a*r totd
namo wtM Mo dark a* Me
Circuit Court. IwUnoto County.
Florida, In accordance wrtM —
Provision* •* tko Plctltiau*
Nat— Siah-teA To wit: Section
l#Aa» Ptert— statute* IW7.
VtngAoNtk
PuMIM
IA ZA X
A Oocombor 7,
OEZ 14]
NOTKIOP
P ICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* horoby gluon Plat I
am engaged te to—
a at P.O.
WM7I. Labe Mary. PL
X77*A t omlhoto County. Ptortda.
under Ma Pktlttou* Name *1
CRENICR S ENTERPRISES,
and Mat I Intend to rogtetor taM
name wIM Ma dark at th*
Circuit Court. Somlnol* Caunty.
Florida, in accordance with Mo
Provision* *t Ik* Plctltiau*
Noma Statutes. TaWlt: Section
tola* Ptortda statute* m r.
Ate|*ndro Crenter
Pubtltk: November IA XX. X
fc December 7. IHO
DCZ-107
ADVERTISEMENT
FORBIDS
tor Mo rurniakint at all
motorlata, equipment, and

maval at

itoo-contalnlns

Mo Orawing* and Spoctftcotlons
Prp R O J E cV T R^lrmaViH*'al
Aibasteo-Cantalnlng Material
tram BulMteg n — Auditorium
ot Lyman Htek Sckoot. 1141
South Caunty Road 417, Lonfwood. Florid*X77X
Bid* will bo received by Ike

Denor* togtnttltllvt, I* l^to
attantton at Mr. J. Alton Nettie*
until &gt; « p m. Neal time an
Drawing* tnd Spaclllcatten*
at Me otltco ot tko Engineer.
Law Engineering. 7*1* South
land Rtvd.. Suite ItA Orlando.
documonto may ba
at Ma ofttc* at Law
a* "Englnaor", upon payment *1
a nonrefundable payment ot
twonty-llvo dtolert par tot. Any
Bid submitted will ba Irrovoca
bte tor a parted at si sty day*
otter tko time and dot* ot
aponlng at Bid*.
Tko successful Bidder will ba
required to tumteh Performance
and P. ymonl Bonds In Mo full
■mount ot Mo Contract Sum. All
Blddor* mutt b* licensed
Atbosfos Abatement Contractor* (In accordance wrtM
P S. 4SLX1-4SS-XM) In Mo Slate
ot Florida.
Tka bidder’s noma. Ileant*
number and Hearts* aspiration
data, and that port ol tlte
classification applying to Mo
Bid must bo placed on th*
envelop* containing tko Con
tractor's Bid. *nd th* onyqlogo
shall bo plainly marked "Pro­
posal lor th* Removal *1
Asbettot Containing Material*
from Building 11 — Auditorium
ot Lyman High School.''
The donor reserve* Ik* right
to r*|oc1 any and all Eld* and to
waive Irregularities, technical
III**, and Intormoiittea In Mo
Bidding. Ttw Donor Intend* to
award Mo Contract bated upon
Iho lowest gualltted. responsi
bte. Eld recolved
Eld* may bo submitted In
parson or by moll and shall bo In
duplicate and addressed to:
Attn: Mr. J. Alien Nettles
The School Board ol
Somlnol*
County
IIII Moitonvllte Avenue
Sanlord. Florida M771
Bid* must bo received prior to
]:#S p m locat tlm*. Oocombor
4. IHO
Publish: November II. IHO
OEZ 714

C E LE B R ITY CIPHER

Cataenly Cana, uyetogram* ar* uaaMO hum wartahuns &lt;n famou*
paopw. past and praam*
[a m lanar *&gt; tea cunar stands lor
anotnar lo a n •C M I aauwa C

D 1 I S K C I I V
O I

H M

C W V D
to M C
—

W L

X

I X 0 2 I L M I ,
Z U B K
J O X L L

X
O W

U H L . '

D X O O X

X U V M O L Z U .

PHEVIOUS SO LUTION : "On Thanksgiving Day all ovar
America. f*m»ha* wt down lo dinner al the same moment
- halt lima." - T. Ur key UcOtth

�Sanford Haratd, Sanford, Florida — Friday, Novambar 23, 1000

CLASSIFIED ADS

Seminole
322-2611

Orlando • W inter Park
831-9993

:

—

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HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM THE STAFF OF
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Karate. 1.2A IBOnrm * Toanteu
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1 N — Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Friday, November 23. 1990
' •}

-

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i

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October 7,9 1990

KSKS

50 Cen

SUNDAY

Sanford Herald
63rd Yaar, No. 38 — Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST
□ •port*
Stmlnolt remains undsfsatsd

Sales tax hike referendum for jail not a cinch
SANFORD — The "Copper Penny" one-year,
onc-cent local sales tax slated for the November
ballot here, apparently faces an uphill battle for
approval In light of recent voter rejections of
school and road beautification taxes.
Seminole County Jail Admlnstrator Duane

TITUSVILLE - Tim Hampton lead the state s
Class 4-A sixth-ranked Semlnoles to a 27-13
victory against the eighth-ranked War Eagles In
what promised to be one of the most exciting
games of the season

□ People
Relationships can be addlctlvo
SANFORD — After attending Valerie Har­
rison's class In Relationships: Addiction or Love
at Seminole Community College. Bobble
Parlanl, of Sanford, a businesswoman, wife and
mother, now deals with the many facets of her
life In an orderly and comfortable fashion.

Columbus Day closings
SANFORD — Although Monday Is Columbus
Day. a federal holiday, most Institutions will be
In operation, with the exception of banks and
the post ofTlce.
Seminole County schools will all be In
operation as usual and garbage pick-ups will
operate on their normal schedule In Seminole
County.
All local governmental operations will be open
as usual.

Rutledge, who hopes to sec a 400-bcd. dormstyle, minimum and moderate security expansion
of the county Jail paid for with about 65 million of
the proposed lax. said Seminole County voters
may feel overburdend by new county property
taxes, along with state and proposed federal tax
Increases. However, he said, the Copper Penny,
which the stnte projects would gross $24 million
In pay for law enforcement capital outluy projects

Lake Mary-Heathrow
event to end today
B yU keV D O M N

Herald People Editor
HEATHROW - An estimated 50.000 pcoplp
mined out yesterday for the first day of the
two-day annual Lake Mary-Heathrow Festival of
the Arts.
The brilliant Florida sun seemed to pale In
comparison to the orllllnnt palrtte of colors used by
277 artists who displayed their wures at the fourth
annual event. The show will continue through
today at the L &amp; L Acres Ranch across from the
Heathrow community. '
Festival Vice Chairman Larry Lucas strolled the
grounds SAturday observing the cfTorts of over 300
volunteers, many of whom worked for a year to
make the event a success.
"In the four years we've done this. I've never had
□ B a a A rts , P ag a a A

s ta te b u d g e t
c u ts n o w du e

LINCOLN. RJ. — Members of the Klrkbrae
Country Club ribbed student p ilot' Peter
Oantxhom for not yelling "fore" as he landrd
his disabled Cessna 150 on the third hole of the

TALLAHASSEE — Gov. Bob Martinez and the
Cabinet will vote this week on $262 million In
budget cuts needed to offset lagging tax collcc*
•
......■».* . _
*** *
•
That means funding for such program s as an
acclaimed Juvenile Justice Initiative and day care
for poor children are on the state's financial
chopping block.
The slate's take from sales and corporate taxes
arc $544 million behind the projections upon
which the $27 billion budget was baaed.
The Impending cuts could have been much
deeper, but on Friday, officials found $215 million
In agency savings accounts and called In an $81
million loan to the Department of Transportation
to help ofTset (he losses.
The budget crunch will still mean more crowded
classrooms In some counties and the elimination of
some summer classes at state universities. The
outlook also remains grim for 24 auditors targeted
for layoffs at the Department of Health and
Rehabilitative Services.

31 Friday, told police he was flying at an
altitude o f 8.600 feet at about 9 a.m . w hen the
engine o f the Oeaana 150 began to sputter. He
tried to gain altitude, but the engine died at
about 3.700 feet \
"T h e engine quit on m e," he said. "U started
running rough then slowly. It didn't deliver the
power It should have."
Oantxhom told police he saw North Central
State Airport, located on the Llncoln-Sm ithfield
line, a few m iles In the distance but knew he
c o u ld n ot g e t th e re b e c a u se o f s tro n g
headwinds.

Fish makss Grandma a crook
IND IAN APO LIS — A 9 W in ch largem outh
baas that w as a few Incites under the lim it, has
netted n o th in g b u t tro u b le fo r a g re a t­
grandm other angler.
Beatrice B. Thom as, 64. already has m ade two
trips to court and now has a crim inal record, a
police m ug shot and at least $130 to pay In fines
and coots.
" I think It's absurd a person would have to go
through all this for having an Itty-bitty fish ."
Thom as said.
Thom as said she has fished far 30 years and It
Is her first brush w ith the law In her life.
"E ven the Judge appeared to be stunned by
th is," she said.
The trouble began June 33 when a conserva­
tion officer caught Thom as with the undersize
fish at Eagle Creek Park.
At a hearing Oct. 17. Jacobs w as advised her
o f her legal rights and advised to hire a lawyer.
After that hearing. Thom as w as booked —
photographed, fingerprinted, the works.
' But Mick Jensen, supervisor o f cases In
Municipal Court for the prosecutor, said the law
Is the law.
"T h e legislature has decided Its a m isde­
m eanor." he said. "W e treat all m isdem eanors
the sam e. I understand tlie practicalities o f her
situation. It's not our position to pick and
choose what crim es to prosecute.

□ B a a S ta te , P age 6 A

House sustains
President’s veto
8ars K. Myers ties a yellow ribbon on a
lamppost at Magnolia Mail, similar to those to
be displayed on 8anford's main thoroughfares

*»rt{y

Cloudy

in honor of local military personnel serving in
the Persian Qulf.

Yellow ribbons to adorn streets
In tribute to U.S. armed forces
■a MMlB ■ p i i p i i i p
Harold staff writer

of American armed (orccs currently serving In
the Persian Gulf.
„ , „, „
„
The Idea was brought to Sanford by Sara K.
Myers who first saw such ribbons displayed on
SANFORD — By this time next week, the
lamp posts throughout the entire city of
main thoroughfares of the city should be
festooned with bright yellow ribbons In honor

Shuttle crew
launches
solar probe

Partly sunny with a
30 percent chance of
afternoon showers
and thunderstorms.
Illghs near BO with
an easterly wind at
15-30 mph.

! 18«e J a il fa a , P age BA

attend festival

Golf course serves as runway

4

In the county and In each city here. Is “ for the
protection and wril-bcing o f Seminole County
residents residents. Wc need this extra Jail space.
If It’s approved wc can put the question (of Jail
expansion! behind us until about 1008."
Rutledge said.
When Seminole County Sheriff John Polk
promised the lax to the county commission this

CAPE CANAVERAL - En­
ding a five-month launch
drought, the shuttle Discov­
ery's crew rocketed Into orbit
Saturday and fired the Euro­
pean Ulysses probe on an
unprecedented $750 million
voyage over the uncharted
poles of the sunThe small 807-pound Ul­
ysses probe, boiled to the top
o f a massive 43.000-pound
three-stage booster, was gently
ejected from Its erudle In
Discovery’s cargo tiay on time
at 1:48 p.m. EDT. six hours
C B a a B fcattls. P a g * $ A

1

WASHINGTON — The House voted Saturday to
sustain President Bush's veto of a temporary
seven-day spending bill, handing hint a key
political victory and ensuring that all but csarntlal
government services will remain shut down.
Also Saturday. House negotiators trying to craft
a new budget plnn to rrplacc the bipartisan
paekuge defealrd by the House on Friday reported
making "good progress." They said It was possible
they would have a new budget plan ready for
congressional action on Sunday.
That new package was ex|*ected to have a
significantly smaller Medleure cut. a different tax
C S ee F e d eral. P age 8 A

Pioneer festival deemed a success
SANFORD — The opening day of
the Pioneer Days 'N Ways and
Crafts Festival sponsored by the
Seminole County Historical Society
proved to be u huge success.
The pioneer festival continues
through today with exhibits open
from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. The
Seminole County Historical Society
headquarters Is locatrd at 300 Bush
Hlvd.. across from Flea World, on
Highway I7-B2.
Craftsmen and artisans Irom
throughout Central Florida were on
hand Saturday to demonstrate the
methods used by their forefathers In
such crafts as soap and quilt
m a k in g , hand c r a ft s and
woodworking. Some crafts, not nec­
essarily of I lie early years, were
Baa F e stiv a l. P a g * 5 A

Th a A m azing Prlncsss Zubbldia, Dr. Kincaid polish thok crystal b ill.

S U B S C R IB E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E .C a ll:

�2A — Sanford Herald. Sanlord, Florida — Sunday, October 7, 1990

L a k n M a r y -H a a t h r o w

y

F e s t iv a l o f th e A r t s

-v-A Cy.

Theory suggests encephalitis worsening
TAMPA — Florida's outbreak of St. Louis encephalitis could
gel worse If a new theory linking the mosquito-borne disease to
certain weather patterns pans out.
State public health officials confirmed two new cases Friday
In Palm Bench and Polk Counties. There were also two
additional presumed cases, In Orange and St. Lucie counties.
Hi-searchers at the University o f Florida's medical en­
tomology laboratory at Vcro Beach say they have evidence that
such oullm-aks follow heavy rains that follow periods of
drought In areas where the virus is active.
Hatns that Interrupted dry spells In the Tampa Bay area and
south Florida last week could fit the pattern, said Jonathan
Day. one of the UF researchers.
"The real critical period Is going to be the middle of next
week." Day told The Tampa Trubunc for Saturday editions.
Encephalitis Is an Indentation of the brain that can cause-,
fever, sore throat, headaches, confusion and muscle weak*
nesses. Severe cases can result In convulsions and death.
There is no cure.

Undercover cope ueed blackface
NAPI.ES — A successful undercover drug operation has
turned Into a public relations disaster for while police officers
who donned blackface to pose as crack dealers In this affluent
retirement haven.
Officials of the mostly while police and sheriff's departments
say they wen* only trying to meet the expectations of the
mostly while buyers who cruised the predominantly black
Hivcr Park neighborhood looking for crack cocaine.
But residents say the police crackdown, while well Intended,
perpetuated racist assumptions about drug dealers.
Community leader Fran Haugabrook said the olflcers*
philosophy appeared to be. "This Is what a drug pusher would
look like. In oilier words, a drug dealer Is black."
"It's a mockery, man." said James Whittaker, a 30-year-old
alrplnne mechanic who described the night he spotted
something strange about a man who appeared to be dealing
drugs on the street.

Klaus downgraded to tropical atorvn
MIAMI — Strong winds from the southwest sapped Hurricane
Klaus's strength and weakrnd It to a tropical atorm Saturday,
bill the deadly system continued to drill with 70-mph winds
toward the northwest.
Meanwhile, gritty Hurricane Josephine — Ihe system that
has survived in the Atlantic for more than two weeks — was
downgraded lo a tropical storm with 70-mph winds, having
lost her organization while moving at speeds o f 31 mph.
^JjM M M jcrs &gt;rcdlclcd Ihe system would dissipate within 24
The strong southwesterly winds shearing oil the top o f Klaus'
system also kept its heavy rains away from the Leeward
Islands nnd the Lesser Antilles, which on Thursday had
received us much as 10 Inches o f rain causing flooding that
claimed six lives and left two people missing.

Arms broker tuts weapons dealer
MIAMI — A south Florida arms broker who says he arranged
deals between the Iraqi government and a Chilean weapons
manufacturer In the 1980a has filed ault against the arms
dealer for not paying him a commission.

&amp;£z&amp;

Cardoeii hasn't paid more than $30 million owed to Beydoun
fur engineering ihe sale o f thousands o f clusteiMbombs to Irag.
From Unltad P t h i International Report*

25 artists win $15,000
HEATH HOW - Judges for the
Fourth Annual Lake Mary*
Heathrow Festival of the Arts
awarded $13,000 In prize money
yesterday to 25 artists.
Chairman of the Artist’s Com*
m itlc c . T e rr le Schnrr. an*
nounred the winners.
Winner of the two-dimensional
I test ol Show was Carol Napoli
for her mixed media painting.
She wus awarded § 1.500.
Lisa Messersmlth won $1,500
for her sculpture In the three*
d im en sion al Best o f Show
category.
W i n n e r s In t h e $ 1 ,0 0 0
I’arliters In Scholarships awards
are: Larry Cahull. Hollins Col*
lege: Margaret Steward. Semi*
nole C o m m u n i t y C o l l e g e :
Duncan McClellan, Seminole

County School Board: J. Napoli.
Stetson University and A. Mit­
chell Long. University o f Central
Florida.
Awards of Distinction. $500
each, went to: Peggy Banks-Otto.
Orcgory Jones. Sue Archer,
Leon Theodore. Kathryn Wilson,
Roddy Reed, Karin Zimmerman.
Don Bagwell, Mark Melfert, and
Chuck Huddleston.
Awards of Merit. $250 each,
went to: Anita Wooten. Elinor
Splitter. Susie Stovall, Bob and
Ann Crystal, Kcbecca Sexton
Larson, Henry E. Poe, Margot
Gray and Grant Ward.
Judges for the event were
Nancy Dlllcn. Brevard Commu­
nity College: John O'Connor.
University of Florida and Dan
Gunderson. Stetson University.

LOTT8RY

0 3 5 ,9 . I B . 3 4 and S S .

CUSPS 411 7(0)

Sunday, October 7, 1990

Today...Partly sunny with a 20
percent chance o f Isolated af­
ternoon thunderstorms. High In
the upper 80s lo low 90s. Wind
from Ihe east at 15-20 mph.
Tonlght...Moatly fair with a
low In the low to mid 70a. Wind
from the east at 10 mph.
Tomorrow...Dully sunny with
a 20 percent chance o f afternoon
thunderstorms. High in the up­
per 80s to low Wh.
E xtended o u tloo k ...P a rtly
sunny days Monday through
Wednesday and generally fair
nights with a chance o f late
ufternoon thunderstorms.

Secend Clan Pottage Paid st l aniard.
Florida ll&gt; n
P O ITM A STE K i I
In T H I SANFOSD N tB A L D . P O.
Sai 1(17, laniard. F L 11711.
Swhtcnplien Raise
I Dally S Sunday)
Homo Delivery A Mall
1 M onth,
t M onth,
I Year

Continued from Page 1A
the privilege
to walk the show and look at
everything up close. It's the
finest festival I've ever seen."
Lucas said.
Lucas estimated attendance,
which is figured from parking
receipts, at over 50,000 by
mid-afternoon yesterday. Total
two-day attendance had been
projected to be over 70,000.
Festival-goers were treated to a
varied display of fine, decorative
and wearable art. ranging from
Impressionistic oils and silver
Jewelry to rag rugs and polished
wood urns.
Lon gw ood artist Jenn ifer
Bclllnghaus said her pottery was
selling well. She said she was
Impressed with Ihe people roll­
ing the show.
"T h e y brought us coffee,
donuts and bananas early this
m orn in g." the said. "M any
featlval organizers don't care
about the artists, but they have
been wonderful."
Lake Mary artists Donald and
Bettye Reagan were pleated to
havepartlclpatcd In the show.

I lf . I I
s it.e e
I 7S-SS

phone teen m m ii .

Crowds st ths festival w$r$ #$tlmat$tf to raaeh 100,000 this weekend.
Lewis said festival artists had
donated between one and 75
pieces for the Kldzshoppc. with a
portion o f proceeds to benefit the
scholarship program.
Twenty-six Seminole County
schools exhibited about BOO
pieces of student art. according
to J o h n B l a i r , s t u d e n t
coordinator o f Fine Aria for the
school system.
Blair said many talented
u t it u attend Seminole County
schools.
"Thu lot wouldn't
fine art that comes
students." he said.
High school students' works
were Judged and awarded rib­
bons.

-• " T r i e p e o p le n a m i n g

done a wonderful Job,” Bettye, a
painter for 18 years, said.Children clad In garbage-bag
ap ro n s pai nted mural s In
Crcaldc School of A rt's
workshops. Chairman for Ihe
children’s art acltlvifles, Renee
Lewis, said the mural painting
was a first for the festival.
" W e ’ v e a l w a y s had the
workshops, but painting on site
la new this year," Lewis said.
Crealdc will display the works
In Its gallery. Lewis hopes to
have the murals displayed on
the walls of businesses and city
hall In Lake Mary.
Ktdzahoppc proprietors were
volunteers Rep. Art and Phyllis
Grlndlc. A steady stream of
children filled the Kldzshoppc
tent, where parents were nol
Invited, lo purchase examples of
artists' work for $10 or less.
Grindle said he diplomatically
tried to keep parents out o f the
tent so children could exercise
their own Judgment In making
selections. He said no buying
trends emerged.
"T h ey were buying every­
thing." he said.

F R ID A Y
FthrC M y M - T I

Lake Howell senior John
Purdy was awarded first place:
Lake Mary High School sopho­
more Melissa Metarko, second
place: Lake Mary High School
senior Shelley Charron. third
plact^

Honorable m entions were
aw arded to: Gar y Borden,
Oviedo High School; Daniel
Ojeda, Lake Howell High School:
and Jason Cline Lake Mary High
School.
Tommy Entcnza. chairman of
concessions, said the food avail­
able at the festival was more
health conscious this year.
Promotional items chairman.
Dennis Prebenda, said l-shlris,
which feature the featlval poster
by a r t i s t C l a y S t e p h e n s
emblazoned on the front, were
sold cut in size extra-large by
Saturday afternoon.

Artist Unas nuimar, usuary. noias one 01 me pnotogrtphs she it
wiling at the festival for Jom Mork, Sanford, to Inepect.

o

» &lt;

*

ij

SATUROAY
F H yC id y 84-71
•ni

Oct. I f C

Vol 83. No 38
Publtthed Daily and Sunday, aacss*
Saturday Sy The laniard Herald.
Inc.. Me N. French A w ., laniard.
Fla. 11771.

Stop right there, Rudol Implores. /
estimated 50,000 people.drove lo Ihe festlv
by 3 p.m. Saturday.

Arts

■K T U R R D O IfflfO K

17. IB . SO, 3 4 and 4 4 .

he winning numbers Friday In
Florida Lottery Fantasy 5 game

Turn right hare. Drtva all the way down to
tha and. Rudol dances In the heal at Ihe
Lake Mary-Heathrow Festival of the Arts.

Dennis Rudol, Seminole County 8heriffa
Department, directs drivers to comecloser as
he handles parking at L / L Acres Ranch.

THE W EATH ER

TALLAHASSEE - T h e winning
numbers drawn Saturday night In
the Pic 6 LOTTO Jackpot wars 4 ,

The daily number Saturday In Ihe
Florida Lottery C A S H 3 game was
977

igfc „ I I, - »
*
n e iiN • n *N S vy n v a f m ra

SU N D AY
Stum p 8 8 -7 0

M O ND AY
FNVOMY 8 t - 7 t

fc fc

SUNDAY!
SOLUMA S TABLEt Mln. 8:05
LAST
O f t . 11 a.m.. 8:35 p.m.; MaJ. 1:55 a.m..
2:25 p.m. TID ES! D a y ts a a
De arth highs, 4.-02 a.m.. 4:51
p.m.; lows. 10:37 a.m.. 11:00
R.m.; N b w Omyraa Daach:
FIR S T
tgha. 4:07 a.m.. 4:56 p.m.:
O ct. i f
Iowa, 10:42 a.m.. 11.-05 p.m.:
CBBBD I s e chi highs. 4:22 a.m..
5:11 p.m.: Iowa. 10:57 a.m.

TU E SD A Y
Ctew dy 01.70.

S T A T IS T IC S
The temperature at 5 p.m.
Saturday was 88 degrees and
Saturday's overnight low was
73. us recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
! I s t s r l t f '■ h igh .............. $ 9

MIAMI - Florida U hour tempereturo*
end rolntall at ( p m. COT Saturday

( Barometric praMnra.S0.03

«y

□ B a U U v a Humidity....4 7 pet

II

71 tSO

C rettvlew

*1 IS M l

Dayton* Beech
Fori Leuderdeto
ForlMyert

S7 74 IJS
74 SSI

JechtanvIUe
Key Well
Saretete Bradenton
Tillahetiee
Temps
Vere Beech
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14
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*1 74 MS
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_______ ________ Waves are
2-3 feet and clxippy. Current la
lo the south with a water
temperature of 82 degrees. N sw
Omyraa Beach) Waves are 2-3
feel and semi choppy. Current Is
to Hu* north, with a water
temperature ol 82 degrees.

St. Aafastiaa Is J s ^ iU r Intel
Today...wind east 15 lo 20 kts.
Seas 4 to 6 ft. Bay and Inland
waters rhoppy. Widely seatlercd
showers.
Tonight...wind northeast to
east 15 to 20 kts. Seas 4 to 6 ft.
Bay and Inland waters choppy.
Widely scattered showers.

CWlnda •*#*•»*••*&gt;**•*East 18 mph
E a l a f a l l ......... ....................... O I n .

' Today's Sanaat

7:05 p.m.

T o m o rro w 's su arteo ....7 i2 2

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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Oclobtr 7, 1990 — SA

Arms! made (n forgery c a m
Man accustd In Imprlaonmant
SANFORD — Sanford police charged Edmon Jones. 26. 1788
S. Bell St.. Sanford, with false imprisonment and aggravated
battery, after an 18-year-old woman accused him of impris­
oning her at his house and beating her.
The woman told police Jones forced her to his house at 3:30
a.m. Thursday. There, she said. In a bedroom Jones beat her
with a coat hanger wrapped In a towel and and punched her In
the face.
Jones was arrested at home at 12:36 p.m. Thursday.

Arrast made In rock throwing
SANFORD — A man who allegedly threw a rock at the
occupied car of Wendy Greco on 13lh Street. Sanford, at about
midnight Sept. 27. when warning Greco not to return to that
area, has been arrested.
Sanford police at about midnight Thursday charged Ossie
Lee Faison. 18. 99 Castle Brewer Court. Snnford. with throwing
a deadly missile Into an occupied vehicle. He was arrested on
13th Street.

Throo accused In crack salt
SANFORD — Three men allegedly Involved In a single 820
sale o f crack cocaine to an undercover City County
Investigative Bureau agent on Cypress Avenue at Sixth Street.
Sanford, have been arrested.
Charged with sale and delivery of cocaine are LcRoy Hardy,
18, 4861 Gilbert St.. Lake Monroe: Loren Baker. 38. 701 E.
Eighth St., Sanford: and Robert Smith. 28, 26 Butler Boston
Court, Oviedo. Agents allege one suspect took money from
them, got cocaine from a second man and then handed over
the agent's 820 bill to the third suspect. A stash of cocaine was
also recovered from the ground near the suspects, the arrest
reports said.

Police car kaya atolan
SANFORD — A man. who reportedly offered to sell cocaine to
an undercover Sanford policeman. Is accused or stealing the
policeman's car keys and trying to sell the back to him for 810.
The man didn't get away with the keys, and police drug
agents grabbed and arrested him as he tried to leave the police
car at about 9:30 p.m. Thursday on Seventh Street at Cypresa
Avenue.
Joseph Rutledge. 27. 39 Seminole Gardens. Sanford, was
charged with robbery In the case.

SANFORD — A man accused o f stealing a check from the
account of a women June 6, with the check being forged and
cashed at a Sanford bank by another man. has been arrested
by Sanford police.
Thomas Brian Johnson, 29. 1228 Randolph St.. Sanford, was
charged with forgery, dealing In stolen property and theft at
the police station at 9:40 a.m. Thursday.

Burglar caught running from achool
SANFORD — Police here responded to a reported burglary In
progress at Crooms School, 220 W. 13th Street. Sanford, and
caught a man seen running from the area.
Footprints at the burglarized school reportedly matched
those or the man and that led to a burglary charge for Daniel
Bradshaw, 29, of 144 Academy Avc.. Sanford. He was arrestee!
at the achool at about 3 a.m. Friday.

Thraa accused In station burglaries
SANFORD — Three men have been arrested here on burglary
and theft charges In connection to burglaries to the offices of
two Sanford gasoline stations Thursday.
The men were caught on Lake Mary Boulevard. Sanford, at
about 3:15 p.m., following the burglaries to the Texaco on
French Avenue and the Chevron Station on Orlando Drive,
earlier In the day. lottery tickets valued at 8604 were stolen
from the Texaco and 8240 cash was stolen from the Chevron
station. Sanford police report. Arrested were: Walter Lee
Johnson. 43. of Aubumdale: John McWright. 44. o f Lakeland;
and Anthony James. 39. of Orlando.

Hsrald staff writer
LO NG W O O D - T h e c ity
commission has -efused to un­
dertake a formal review o f DUI
charges against commissioner
Hank Hardy. Hardy was arrested
early last Wednesday morning In
Altamonte Springs and charged
with driving under the Influence
o f alcohol.
Hardy was vlsably nervous as
the question was brought up for
discussion before an almost
packed house at Longwood City
Hall on Friday.
C ity A tto rn e y Frank
Kruppenbacher said he had been
requested to discuss the matter.
"W e must rem em ber," he
aald, 'That Commissioner Hardy
la atlll Innocent until he pleads
guilty or la Judged to be guilty In
court. I recommend the com­
mission take no action at this
time." He added, "Commlaaloner Hardy can alt on the com­
mission and he can continue to
vote."

lion dead, due to a lack of a
second.
Anderson replied that when he
was elected, he promised to
represent th j people, and " I ’m
not going to alt here and keep
my mouth shut on Ihla Issue."
Although several members of
Ihc audience attempted lo be
heard. Mayor Farach. reinforced
by Attorney Kruppenbacher.
Informed the audience that the
matter was not up for public
hearing.
Commissioner Adrienne Perry

SANFORD — Lake Oem. Just
ofT 24th Street In the Wynnwood
Park area, may finally be cleared
of the aquatic growth that has
been the subject o f residents'
complaints for several months.
Several possibilities toward
the clean-up will be discussed
during the city commission work
session prior to Monday's regu­
lar commission meeting.
The lake, according to city

Attention!
‘100 REWARD

m m m s

sjfTjoaqri^

nmmmyqon pnm r a n nran non ■*
____

pur lank now, look In on slower

SANFORD — Jerome La Barron Moore. 22. 2561 Cuffer
Drive, Midway, was charged with sale and delivery of cocaine
after allegedly selling 820 worth of crack to a City County
Investigative Bureau agent on Pine Street, Sanford, at 1:52
p.m. Thursday.

Mora local
nows, so#
Pago 6A 7A 8A

i

f rod's
SHOI
REFAIR* SANFORD
I
8M
U t flM ’ H m I
S m c Ii I

I M -1 4 H

mm'mwE"

InOCRAL IAW MAY HILff •
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our onro &gt;m w voun m vitnv

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r STOP COLLfCTON TMSEATS
■ w K M O U M U M MOUNT SUITS

FRMISCTURM•MOOR,SATURDAYS

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WE’VE

CHANGED
If you missed our exciting
Grand Rs-Oponlng stop by and
sea our completely remodeled
store and find something you
lovul
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x A u to -O w n e r n In s u r a n c e
1100S. French A v e .^ T O

Life. Home, Car. Ru%ia*«». One name u n it all.

NOtACt KARL
T O BENEFIT

HIS FIRST ALBUM

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For mora Information contact
H O B A cg r A m
w h i m
WILL 81NO AT PARTIES • WED0INO8
• CHURCHES • BAR-8-OUE8 • CIVIC
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847-4FUN

FACTORY
J * # T L E A R A M 1 SALE
' j l l l

Spas &amp;

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M U S T B E S O L D !!!

When they arrived, police re­
ported they found the glass from
door o f the store had been
shattered with a brick.

Mathis was charged with bur­
glary and he was taken to the
Seminole County Jail where he
r held on 81.000 bond.

0 % tfO «U

%

17-88 lata, Mary MU.

You a re cordially Invited to attend a Charity Ball aboard the " Grand Rom ance"
Riverboat on Friday. October 26, with boarding at 7D O p.m ., until I I : 00 p.m.
Retired Surgeon General C, Everett Koop haa Identified AIDS aahlatory'a greatest
potential killer. H e haa aald that the AID S epidemic will not be contained until
each o f ua la motivated to action by the death o f a loved one. The Alda diacaac haa
taken a beloved m em ber o f our community. ThomaaE. Whtgham. Tom waa a highly
reapcctcd m em ber o f the Seminole County community, a Seminole High School foot­
ball atar. Student Body President. Optlmtat Club Prealdent. a partner In Sem inole
County'a largeat ta w A rm , husband to Sally and father to Tom. Jr. and Bert. In 1963.
he received nine unite o f blood due to ulcerative colltta. The blood Tom received waa
Infected with the AIDS vlrua that led to htarleath on October 18,1988, at the age o f 35.
Tom 'a laat wlah waa that aomethlng be done ao that o th ers would not aulfer the
aame fate. Upon hla death. Tom ’a frlenda and family Joined together to form the
Thomaa E. Whtgham A I M SuperChallenge to fund an AIDS research Chair at the
Unlveralty o f Miami.
We would like to Invite you to the Second Annual Sanford Charity Ball which
will benefit thla effort. Join ua on Friday. October 26. at 7.-00 p.m. aboard the "Grand
Rom ance" Riverboat. Heavy bora d ’oeuvrea a n d wine will be served . Entertainment
will be provided by "D estin y " and on the boat by Kaylle Lytle, Mike Mendoza and
the Shy Ouya. For tlcketa, which are 8100.00 per person, please call 321-8280 or
423-0116.
We hope to a re you at thla gala eventl
Sincerely.

Sanford police responded to an
alarm at Faust's Pharmacy. 407
E. First St., at at 4:40 a.m..
according to police reports.

Police reported finding u man
m o v i n g around Inside the
pharmacy and placed him under
arrest. He was Identified aa
Danny Mathis. 19. 1602 W. I5lh
St.. Sanford.

7F

M en 's S o l s s A H sols
HJOOff FsrMonWOf November

f w i f f i no end Insight

Arrest made In cocaine sale

aald she fell uncomfortable with
the situation. "I think we should
have higher goals," she aald.
"and I will not allow Commis­
sioner Hardy’s bigoted remarks
lo cause problems In this city."
Amid audience applause for
Commissioner Perry's remarks.
Farach banged the gavel and
declared the meeting adjourned.
The next regularly scheduled
meeting of the Longwood City
Commission la scheduled for
Monday, Oct. 15 beginning at 7
p.m.

officials, Is actually a land de­
pression or an old sinkhole
which collects surface runofT
water and therefore has no
method of recharging Itself. The
waters become stegnant without
any flow.
One reason why the aquatic
growth hasn't been cleaned out
yet Is that the city docs not have
the equipment needed. Basically
a large dragline machine would
have to be leased to remove
thousands of yards or silt that
has built up over the years.

if.
oo off
(Pint Tws f u l l Of The Month)

ItopaS lOeSSkSdUSMIW MMMM

The rest of the commissioners
sat in alienee, until finally Mayor
Gene Farach declared the mo-

SANFORD — A Sanford man
was arrested early Saturday
morning when he was found
inside of a closed, downtown
pharmacy.

Hsrald staff writer

Winn Obdo Piers

SANFORD — A passenger In a car stopped by a City County
Investigative Bureau agent, after the passenger threw a beer
can from the car on Sipes Avenue, Sanford, was arrested, after
the agent reportedly saw the man put a bag o f cocaine Into his
mouth.
Anthony Oary Rowe. 19. of P.O. Box 285 South St.. Sanford,
was charged with possession of cocaine at 1:30 p.m. Thursday.

At the beginning o f com ­
mlaalon discussion, Commis­
sioner Rex Anderson read a
prepared motion and asked for
support. He said he had been
deluged with calls regarding the
matter of "racial remarks” re­
portedly made by Hardy to a
black police offtcer at the time of
his arrest. "I move.” Anderson
said, "to have the City Attorney
look Into the matter and report
back to the Commission at our
next meeting. October 15."
Deputy Mayor J eff Morton
su ggested the com m laalon
"should wait until after Hardy's
hearing, bn Oct. 18.'*

Man charged
with burglary
of pharmacy

B y MIOK PFB IPA U P

Cocaine hidden In mouth

Request for DU I probe dies
B y N IC K PFB IPA U P

Lake Gem cleanup
topic of city meeting

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Som a of tho outstanding corporate sponsors ara:
Conklin, Portor, Holm es
Alkon Printing
Doan, Ringers, Morgan &amp; Lawton, P.A.
Dora Landscaping, Co.
"Q rand Rom ance"
Martinez, Dalton S Provencher, P.A.
Orange Bank
O y ltr Bros. Company/Environmental Caro Inc.
A O y ltr Construction Co.
Q tra ld 8. Rutbsrg
Bandefur Properties A Sanford M otor Co., Inc.
M ayor Bsttys Smith and Dr. Robert J . Sm ith, M.D.
Southern Bell Telephone Co.
IM g m
Stenstrom, McIntosh. Julian, Colbert,
W hlgham A Sim m ons, P.A.
United Telephone Co. of Florida
U. S. Lawns, Inc.

�Democratic process can start early
VoltoHne and Jane W arring.
Computerised voting w aa program m ed by Jan
Buchanan, m edia specialist She w as amtated by
Urtda BtschoiT. Miriam Jam toon assisted with
the entire electoral process.

Oct. a w as the second prim ary
* in Semtnole County. It w aa also
election
election day at W Uaon Elem entary
president
S
Xc h- o o l. T w e n ty -fiv e c a n d id a te s a n d an
equivalen t n um ber o f cam paign m an agers
worked diligently to persuade other fourth and
fifth grade students to vote.

a.

The theme lor the cam paign w aa “ Voting) O u r
Privilege and R esponsibility." O n Monday. Oct.
speeches. They extolled the virtues o f being
Am ericans. They talked about w hat It m eans to
live tn a country where officials are elected.

EDITORIALS

T e rry R abun , p rin c ip a l, an n oun ced the
winner. Mary Lou Calabrese w aa elected presl*
dentsndScott H illnaU . vice president.

rather than living under a dictatorship. Each
presented his/her rationale for the necessity o f
v o tin g . T h e y c le a r ly d e t a ile d th e ir re*
T h e r e g u la t o r m o o t lik e ly
A m e r ic a 's b a n k in g sy ste m to
BeMtanan, th e flin ty c h a irm a n o f
D e p o sit In su ra n c e C o rp o ra tio n .
c a n d o r a b o u t the
e a rn e d h im th e rat
b u t p ro m p te d th e 1

t o r e fo r m
L . W illia m
th e F e d e ra l
H to b ru ta l

16

On Oct.
w hile only
percent e l the
111.663 eligible voters In Sem inole County
voted, every student In fourth and Itfth grades
voted. T h eir only exception s w ere absent
■tudents and those whooe religious beliefs
precluded their voting.

Tuesday afternoon, shortly before school
closed, all presidential candidates, campaign
m anagers and twenty-eight student council
m em bers were hooted to a post ejection party by
the PTA. The m em bers o f the P T A In charge of
these festivities were Linda Johnson and Diana
Praysler along with other P T A m em bers.

■ponafbUKIes a s cttUens to vote. They cited
historical b e ta relative to the difference one vote

Listening to twenty*flve fifth grade students

A ll of the students assem bled pledge to take
their responsibility for voting seriously and to
vote In regular elections w hen they become
eighteen. Am erica w ill be In good hands when
these children com e o f age. Sem inole County
w ill no longer be drow ning tn the sea of voter
apathy.

VINCENT CARROLL

Plastic talk Is
political lingo
blem has been identified. You've got an
"ethical d isability" that may require a few
long sessions on the couch to d e a r up.
'T h ro u g h an
disability, a * ** * o f
■kill In seeing ethical Issues, ha (Bush)
naively violated m oral standards," Intoned a
professor o f bustoess at the recent federal
n e a rin g o n B u s h 's ---------------------------------role a s director o f
Silverado B an k in g.
Savin gs and Loan.
"P erson s with this
K
h a n d ic a p a re n ot
^ B
w ell-equipped to be
d lr e c t o r a (o f a
■
savings an d lo a n )."
KB
I
f
th e U n iv e r s it y o f
'f t
M
C o lo r a d o s c h o la r
s a g e ly testifie d -

p re d ic ts, to re serv e s w ill b e a t th e lo w e s t le v e l
sin ce th e F D IC w a s e stab h e h e d d u r in g th e
G reat D e p re ssio n .
.
S etd m a n atoo w o u ld restru c tu re th e w a y
c o m m e rc ia l b a n k a d o b u a to em , to o rd e r to
m a k e th em m o te com petitive.
H e ea y a b a n k a sh o u ld o ffe r b o th h ig h -risk
a n d lo w fla k in v H t f fw t f o p p fft v H * ! * * tn ttm tr
cu stom er s. T h o se w h o a v a il them a alv e a o f
s a fe v e n tu re s s u c h a a m o r t g a g e lo a n s .

anyone

m is u n *
that "th e
h an d icap d o ss not

fsu ch eloar

ELLEN GOODM AN

On a country not feeling so well
M id h a va t h a sa lu ta ry
fe d e ra l go ve rn m e n t a

"D o n 't you think i f i
for m ff" I am m kad.
A n d e v e ry w h e re
w o m e n In t h e i r

they often

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Let lets to the editor arr.w rfeam c. A ll fetters
m ust he signed, include the address o f the
writer an d a daytime telephone num ber.
Letters sh ould far nn a single subject an d be
as brief a s puasibfe.. Letters are subject to

�. ------

•• f

lAttifiwMfMEBKSAySMRRftHMBBRBBiHwaf

. .

P R O JEC TED INMATE POPULATION
?

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Darlington. South Carolina.
"U w as a beautiful sigh t." she said, "a n d I
thought, why couldn't Sanford do som ething
like that to honor our men and wom en serving
In the m ilitary forces over there?"

N o r ia m ft tt

awnim m s a iv . i m l o .

Myers has now enlisted the support o f m any
civic and cultural organisations In the arcs.
Including the Am erican Legion. V F W , Pre­
ceptor D elta D elta, S en ior C ltiten s an d
Sanford Business and W aterfront Associa­
tions. Many private Individuals have also
volunteered their assistance. including three
women who have sons serving In the Q ulf:
Ella Ashcraft. Louise Jones and Susie KillIngsworth.
Plans call for a workshop m eeting Monday,
beginning at 10 a.m , at the Am erican Legion,
3874 S. Sanford Ave. The all-day session la
expected to produce 1,000 o f the bright yellow
ribbons, to be m ade out o f plastic m alarial
sim ilar to that used In trash bags.
O n Oct. 10. beginning at 8 p.m .« also at the
Am erican Legion, there w ill be another
workshop for volunteers, high school arran trations and other groups w ho m ay w tM to
assist the m em bers o f the Am erican Legion In
putting up the bow s. George M ayberry w ill be
in charge o f that activity.
The hanging o f the ribbons w ill begin
13. Bow s w ill be placed on
g the lakcfoont from Central
Hospital to the eastern end o f
rardt and on light poles along
lakefront, a s w ell a s through the m iddle o f the
city alon g P in t Steet, from Persim m on
Avenue to the G reater Sanford Cham ber of
Commerce building at Sanford Avenue.
Local sorority organisations have volun­
teered to help m aintain the ribbons once they
are up. until such time aa U.S. arm ed forces
return from overseas.
T h e n w ill be a cerem ony dedicating the
thousand yellow ribbons on Sunday, Oct. 14
at a time an d location still to be announced.

IM S

o f the burden placed on them
increasing population. Rutledge sal
also that If the Jail isn 't expande
years Sem inole County prisoners win be relea sed
from Jail prem aturely because o f state restrictions
on crowding, and projected population and crim e
rate Increases.
Polk told the Sem inole County C om m ission his
operation s h ave ou tgrow n th e dilap id ated.
400,800 square-foot, form er U .8. N avy barracks,
which serves aa M s office at the Central Florida
Regional Airport com plex. The county leases that
building from the Sanford Airport Authority for
•00,580 per year, with annual Increases over the
next two years under the existing contract

IMS

KM

MOO

the question o f Sem inole County, which also for a
fee n ow h ouses ab o u t 89 O ran ge C ounty
prisoners, becom ing m ore involved In the prison
business Is s moot point. Rutledge said.
Sanford Police C hief Steven Harriett said the
tax w o u ld raise abou t $8 m illion for h is
department, with each city also receiving a
percentage o f the gross based on population
figures. Those hinds, he said can 't be used to pay
off existing debts, but m u st-be used for new.
cspttal outlay projects not covered In general
budgets.
Harriett said Sanford's share w ould be used to
expand the police station and to rehirtUsh the
existing budding, which w aa occupied at capacity

service. Harriett aakL
"T h e city and the departm ent have grown
MfmiM fliiuy. w c H ire people wm n n § on u p oc
people, and a parking problem ." Harriett said.
‘ W e've got to com a to grips w ith It eventually
and the m oney la never there to do It."
The sheriff, Harriett la id , la In a sim ilar
situation with workspace. "H e 's been operating
out o f a converted N avy barracks. You have to
adm ire him for doing that aa tong aa he baa. But
there cw ne a time for a ch an ge."
building to be located on county-owned prop
The tax. n»»«itfd to one-cant par
for one
along w ith the Jail expa nsion which w
year on purchases u p to •0,000,1a a b t r w ay to
Include 100 beds for work release prisoner*
come up with money to Improve an d maintain
proposed by a county crim inal Justice board,
effective law enforcem ent and correction services
dorm w ould alao h ow persons in dru g reha
county wide, Harriett said.
"It 's a adapts w ay for the county to raise
n w o ea runo* q u icu y i m nunjr* m e re is no
long-terai debt to pay off. Everything la paid o ff
up front and within on e y e a r." Harriett said. The
financial burden, he said, alt * shifts from
property owners to a ll who m ake purchases in the
W hen toe coUnty commission
county, including Jail Inm ates an a tourists.
voted to put the tax up for a vote on the Nov. 6
general election.ballot. Com m issioner Pat W arren
Rutledge — ih if the adtM hig Jail apace o f 813
said voters m ust know that the sales tax w ill only
moatmum security beds isn ’t increased withinfor iw n m fd fa rtlllk i S he stressed that
the next IS m onths to two years, the county w ill
m aintenance an d operational coats w ill be iprcru oy use m k c io retestr some prisoner**
on-going and w ill have to be paid for with general
tax revenues over the y e a n , and w ould bring an
Increase In property taxes.
In ( M l , and 384 beds In IM S , to the current
Rutledge aald the new dorrakU l w ill only
count o f S IS in M SB. w aa paid for by a sim ilar
require an operational staff o f 10 people. The
tax collected h e n In 1888.
existing, m axim um security ja il has a staff o f
The currant dally Jail population la about 690,

W

M ASVAUW I M O ttl

s t fs S &amp; L u * "
County. The n o t a n Sem inole County

atrated the u se o f o ld style
flywheel engine equipm ent used
to operate w ashing m achines,

S atu rd ay m o rn in g, d u rin g
special ceremonies, the Lornm a n e family, operators o f the

9 6 , 880 7 C om m u n ity W a y .
S a n fo rd , d ie d T h u ra d a y a t

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g ra n d m o th e r. S a lly H o d g e
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fath er, S tew art B ark er, N c s
Berlin. S .Y .; paternal grandfa
ther, G ary Lee Sr.. BrookaviHe.
O ra m k o w F u n e ra l H o m e

Th* Family Of

ALVIN BAKER,
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conflict them through tending
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to ■ cftmax • year-tang cetebrat ie d o f th e c e n t e n n ia l o f
Etaashnwer’a birth In Denison.
Texas, on Oct, 14. I860.
The c e le b r a t io n of
Btaeflhow er'a birth day he
apew u p in Abdene, Ran. — haa

or ■&gt; inc p n n a n ii wno p m ia c a
o v e r • b o o m in g (to m e u y
■noosing) poet-war prosperity
and the CoM W ar. which pitted
the two wartim e allies — the
Soviet Union and the United
States — against one another at
great economic costa to both
nations,
Historians and other commen-

ft Is a tom -up m to how the
S4th pm eldtnl o f the United
f twtiw la beet rem em bered to&lt;hqn m the general o f the Aided
troops w ho led the W J e y Inm elon o f Norm andy and the
overthrow o f Fasctat Ocrm any.

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notes
lartty'

every polltlctan then and now
(a n a ) c a n n o t b e d ls m ls s rd
ligh tly."
"It derived." Dlgglna argues
"from the sense of dignity ami
trust he brought to the W hitr
House end to his well-earned
reputation as a m ilitary hero."
8tdl, Dlgglna writes. "H e w as a
curious kind o f hero, not an
event* m ak in g leader but a
respected leader w ho got things
don e."
And that, after all. Is what
Am ericans usually expects or
their generals. If not their presi­
dents.
T h e c e l e b r a t i o n or
Elsenhower's centennial really
got under w ay with a two-hour
joint session o f Congress In
March presided over by Rep.
Tom Foley. D-W aah.

as. 1965.

hla 33rd birth day. He w as
captured several days later.
W hile Pentagon officials have speculated
that Shelton probably died In Laos in the
mid-1960s, his Is the last rem aining name
on the Southeast A d a PO W lp t and his wife
continued to receive h is m onthly activeduty paychecks.
But w n T sh etto a w as never appeased by
official asanrenrrs that efforts w ere made In
earnest to find her h usban d's whereabouts.

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EQUIPMENT

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therearehours intheday

�•A — Sanloid Herald, Sanluid. Florida

Sunday. October 7. 1990

Longwood referendum
may be deemed illegal
• i f NICK P P IIF A U P

Herald stall writer
I.O N ltW O O !) - Tin- t ii v
commission m il Friday allotnoon In n special called meeting
to hear City Attorney Frank
Kiuppcnhachcr's opinion o f an
amendment to the city rhartrr.
that would. In elTeel. prohllilt I lit*
city Ironi spending money on
any pro|eet tliai extends beyond
one llseal year.
The pro|Hisal as written says:
"Unless authorized by the voters
at a duly held referendum. the
City Commission shall uni spend
or allow to be spent, any hinds
derived Irom any soitree lor ihe
pnr|Mise of ennslruellon ol any
eapllal liuprovemeiii or lease or
purchase ol real properly, the
payment ol which extends
beyond the end of any fiscal
year.”
K ruppenbaeher called It.
"Poorly written, vague and am­
biguous." lie said. "The current
city charter, (section 0.10 n|
allows methods of financing
through the Issuance ol Imiids.
for capital Improvement."
He saltl (lie pro|M&gt;scd Item,
labeled 0.10 |b) “ would prohibit
what you already have In 0.10
(a) but doesn't cancel It."
The attorney also addressed
certain sections of the Stale
Constitution and Florida statutes
that allow the city to enter Into

All ages enjoy
festivities at
Salvation Arm y

agreements and lliianelng that
extend beyond one year.
As an example ot the problems
this could promote, lie suggested
a possible sinkhole or a load
badly In need of repairs In a
residential area wlieic properly
owners might Is* assessed lor
tcpalrs. Fills would, under the
proposal, leipilre hcmcnwucis to
pay the entire bill Immediately
rather than lie allowed to make
payments over several year's
time.
"T o pass Hits amendment." he
raid. "Is to strip the oily,
through you (Ihe commission! ol
every way of financing eapllal
Improvements you might have.
It's Illegal. It conflicts with the
Stale Constitution, and It's In
eotnpieheuslble to see such a
thing in the Itttto's."
The citizens however, have
mandated that tile city present
the ipiestlon during a special
relerenduiu.

■ y NICK R f ■ IF A U F

SANFORD - It was carnival
time Saturday at the Salvation
Army headquarters. 700 W.
24th Street. Several hundred
|K*ople turned out for the event.
Although most of the games
and Items for sale were designed
for the children, a number of
imrents and other adults also
enjoyed taking part In the
various events.
One event that drew consider­
able attention took place at
noon, with a dunking booth set
up Just outside the doors of the
facility. When the announce­
ment was made Indoors that
Captain Cary K. Hergcn. com­
manding olDeer of Ihe Sanford
Salvation Army was going to be
In the IxKith. adults and children
lined up to take a chance at
dunking him.

" I f the amendment is dob a led ." said Kruppenbaeher.
"there's nothing to worry about.
Hill II it passes, you'll have to lie
It up In court and tiv to prove
that It's not legal."
Commlsslonei Adrienne Pony
summed Ihe pioblem up. "What
we have Is leallv I wo tpiesllons."
she said. "Whclhei the people
luvor redevelopment, and the
method ol financing." p

'

Herald staff writer

The very first softball thrown
produced Immediate results, and
Capt. Bergen received a rather
wet Initiation Into the dunking
Ixtoth waters.
Games of skill and chance.
Including un old fashioned llsli
(Hind were set up Inside. Food
was also available.
Htratd Photo by K ilty Jordan

Hridnctto Hubbard. Santord, dressed in her clown
costumo, paints n design on the hand ot Felicia

t

Oliver, ol Santord, during the carnival at The
Salvation Army.

.Judging from the faces of the
children. It was a fun day they
will long reincmlier.

�o

Class 4A top 10 blowout

IN B R I E F

J

Sem inoles
dom inate
Astronaut

Magic to algn autographs
ORLANDO — Orlando Magic personalities will
greet fans and sign autographs at the team's
second annual "Meet the Magic" party at
Church Street Station on October 0, 1990. The
Magic players, cocaches. The Magic Olrls. Stuff
and Curly neal will be on hand at the event,
which Is open to the general public from 6:30
p.m. until 8 p.m. A private party for magic
season ticket holders will Immediately precede
the public session.
"This Is the best opportunity that Magic fans
have to meet their favorite player. Come on out
to Church Street and expect to have a good
tim e." said Magic President and General
Manager Pat Williams.
T h e M agic celebrities will be located
throughout the Church Street Station Complex
at designated autograph signing stations. Maps
will be provided to everyone In attendance as
they enter the complex.

Harakf Corraapondant
TITUSVILLE - Tim H am pti*
caught two o f his three touchdown:
passes lying on Ills buck in the c h i
tone to lead Seminole County to SK
"it wasn't that d ose" 27-13 victory
over Titusville Astronaut Friday
afternoon at Dnu Field.
The game matched the slate:*
Class 4-A sixth-ranked Semlnoka
against the eighth-ranked Wif*
Eagles In what promised to be oMh
of the closest and most exciting
games o f the season. Well, It wish
exciting at least.
'**
Hampton put Seminole on u i
board first with a convention.
unaf
10-yard catch and run early In the
second quarter. The play capped a
13-play drive for the Seminoles.
With Just two seconds left In the
half. Hampton caught his second
scoring pass, a 33-yard lob from
quarterback Kerry Wiggins. The
real story o f the catch, though, was
how. not how long. At least two
players Upped the hall: half a dozen
had a chance to catch It.
.
" f ran Into the crowd and tipped
the b a ll." explained Hampton.

COLLMB FOOTBALL

mm

Florida stops Tlgsrs
GAINESVILLE — Shane Matthews fired three
touchdown passes for the third consecutive
week and Florida's special teams continued to
excel Saturday night In leading the unbeaten
Gators to a 34-8 rout of Louisiana State.
The Oaten. S-O, Improved to 3-0 in the
Southeastern Conference but are Ineligible for
the SBC title or a bowl appearance due to NCAA
sanctions. LSU. unable to cross the goal-line
against the nation's No. 3 defense, fell to 3 2
overall and 1-2 In the conference.
Florida’s first three TD drives covered a total
o f 40 yards. Dexter McNabb’a 8-yard scoring run
Immediately followed a fumble recovery and
Matthews' 10-yard TD pass to Ktrk Kirkpatrick
came after a blocked punt. A fumbl. by
beleaguered punter Brian Griffith led to a
13-yard scoring pass to E m t c Mills a n d n 2 0 -2
advantage.
Kirkpatrick's 42-yard catch highlighted Flori­
da's first legitimate scoring drive, a 73-yard
march capped by Mills* 7-yard reception at 3:38
o f the (Inal quarter. Brrict Rhett. who rushed for
106 yards, burst 49 yards to set up Willie
McClendon's 10-yard score with 4:48 remainIte outgaining the Gators 148-121. LSU
. u«wcu.ao&gt;8 at the half due to thro*.turnover*
*■and poor special teams play.

Miami upsata -2 F8U
MIAMI — No. 8 Miami started running the ball
against No. 2 Florida State In order to open up
the passing game. The Hurricanes had so much
fun doing It they decided not to stop.
Two Miami runners ran for more than 140
yards Saturday, leading the Hurricanes to a
31-22 victory over the Semlnolcs.
"Our coaches pounded In us all week we had
to establish the running game to win." said
Leonard Conley, who ran for 144 yards In 18
carries and two touchdowns. "W e ran so well In
the first half we Just kept running and punched
It down their throat."
Conley's numbers were a personal high, but
Stpve McGuire's was higher. The sophomore
crashed up the middle for 176 yards In 31
attempts and one touchdown despite an attack
o f the cramps In the second quarter.
"Th e offensive line was knocking them off the
ball and that made It easy for m e." McGuire
Florida State fell behind 24-0 In the first half,
but rallied within 24-16 with 11:30 left on Amp
Lee's 2-yard run.

S a m in o ls's Kerry W ig g in s (N o . 2) throw fo r throe tou ch d ow n s an d ru sh ed fo r

The difference In the contest were
extra
points or. to be more precise.
Herald Sports Editor
Oviedo's problems In converting
LAKE MARY - As Doug Peter* them and Lake Mary's success.
and his stair go about the business Oviedo failed on a pair o f two-point
of rebuilding the Lake Mary High tries before Erik Lombard kicked a
School football program, there's the o ne- po int er . For Lak e Mary.
necessary learning process Peters Norman Henklc was good on (wo
must go through to know what his kicks while Joe Mcncllo completed a
players can. couldandwill do.
; pass to Mike Werner for a two-point
In the Rams' 22-19 win over the conversion.
Oviedo Lions Friday night In a • H a n e y s c o r e d a l l t h r o e
BA-Dlstrtct 4 and Seminole Athletic touchdowns for Lake Mary on run*
Conference clash at Lake Mary'a o f 1. 3 and 19 yards. Scoring for
Don T. Reynolds Stadium. Peters Oviedo were Alexander (1-yard run).
Drew Jackson (6-yard run) and
learned a little more.
"This Is the kind or game you Dana Allen (8-yard run).
Going Into the game. Peters
want to build a program-on." said
hadn't
planned on Haney carrying
Peters. "A lot o f learns could have
quit during this stretch (where the the ball that often (not to mention
catchlpg a pair o f passes and
Rams p laye d Lake Brantl ey.
Apopka. Lake Howell and Oviedo). punting twice). That's Just the way
But they didn't quit. We kept telling that It worked out.
"When you have a guy like Haney
them they’re a good football team
get hoi. you're going to go to him."
and they believed us."
On Friday night. Lake Mary (2-2 said Peters. "That's one of the
overall. 2-1 In the district and SAC) things t learned from (Harry) Nelaon
and Oviedo (2-3 overall. 1-3 In the (the Lake Mary head coach before
district and 1-2 In (he conference) Peters). Haney s that kind or guy.
squared ofT In a duel of running anyway. He wants the ball.
"I'm still trying to figure out the
backs. Both the Rams, with Chris
Haney rushing 32 times for IBS character o f this team. We think we
yards, and the Lions, led by Ervin can throw the ball, wc have two
Alexander's 40 yards on IB carries, pretty good running backs and wc
□
scored three touchdowns.
’ •

SANFORD — The first annual Sanford Of­
ficials Service Fall Classic will be held October
26-28 and la open to all registered Men's "C "

Harakf Corraapondant

□ 8 p.m. — ALC8. Game 2. Oakland Athletics at
Boston Red Sox. (L)
□ 1 p m . - WESH 2. New York Jefs at Miami
Dolphins. (L)
□ 1 p.m. — WCPX 6. Tampa Bay Buccaneers at
Dallas Cowboys. (L)

*

*

B y TO N V D a S O M IIM

Umpires to oflor tourney
tournament will be an ASA double
elimination affair and will be held at Chase and
Plnehurat fields.
First place will recieve a sponsor trophy and
Individual bat bags: second place will retrieve a
sponsor trophy and Individual trophies: third
place will retrieve a sponsor trophy and the MVP
award will be aplr o f deals.
Registration la limited to the first 20 teams
and all teams must have a roster from a city
league. Cost to enter Is 8100 plus two (2) ASA
restricted flight (red stitch) softballs.
Deadline for entries Is October 28 with
drawings for pairings at 5 p.m. on October 28.
For mare Information, contact Rocky Ellingsworth o f the Sanford Recreation Depart­
ment at (407) 330-8607.

-

Extra points crucial in
Rams’ win over Oviedo

Smith leads
Hawk romp

SOFTBALL

C l*

W INTER PARK - Marquette
Smith rushed for a career-high 340
yards as Lake Howell celebrated Its
homecoming with a 38-0 thrashing
o f Lyman In a high school football
game at Lake Howell High School
Friday night.
Lake Howell gained 483 yards on
the ground and the defense, led by
Ken Times, Frank Sales, Thomas
Demps and Ken Spearman, held
Lyman to 190 total yards as the
Silver Hawka Improved to 4-1
□I

Lake Mary kapt calling Chris Hansy's (No. 22) number on Friday and Hansy
responded, carrying trie bail 32 times for 186 yards and three touchdowns.
He also caught s pair of pssses for 21 yards and punted twice.

Mainland
dumps Pats
S f l _____ ______ _______

Harakf Corraapondant

KsnTlmss

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Tracey
Shropshire paaaed for 292 yards
and three touchdowns to lead the
Mainland Buccaneer* to a 40-3
victory over the Lake Brantley
Patriots Friday evening at Tom
Storey Field.
A ll th re e o f S h r o p s h ir e 's
touchdown passes went to Reggie
Wright, who finished the night with
179 yards on four catches.
The Patriots (0-8. 0-4 In BADistrict 41 defense held the Bucca□

mm

Local runners do well at Oviedo and FSU meets
OVIEDO — Placing four girts In Hie lop 10. (he
Lake Howell Silver Hawka finished second al
Oviedo Invitational cross country meet Saturday
morning at Oviedo High School.
The Silver Hawks scored 43 points while team
champion Deltona came In with 40.
Leading Lake Howell was Natalie Newberry,
who came In third with a time of 13.08. Mikl
Palumbo was fifth at 13:20 followed by Jennie
Mcllone (8th. 1409) and Tori Dempsey (9th.
14:09). Charlotte Frochllch completed Lake
Howell's team score by finishing 18th(l4:4l).
Also finishing for the Silver Hawks were Julie
Logan (22nd. 18:13) and Linn Hold |23rd. 18:13).
"It wasn't what I would have liked to have
seen." said Lake Howell Coach Tom Ham-

monlrec. "They made some mistakes during the
race and they're aware o f them. If you're going lo
make them, now's the lime lo make them."
Hammontree said that there was a combina­
tion of emotional factors that probably took their
toll on the Silver Hawks.
"You have the factor o f the team really doing
well last week, really coming o f age.” explained
liammonlree. "Now they now Ihey can run and
be competitive. Also, this weekend was our
homecoming and lhal lakes a lot out of you with
all the different things going on.
"You lake thr good with the bad. There were
some positives. Last week. Deltona beat us by 10
points and this week, they only beat us by three
points. And wc were without our No. 3 runner
(Tina Reed, who Is out sick)."
Lake Howell's girts also made a strong showing

In the Junior varsity race, taking the team title
with a score of 29 points. Christine McEvoy was
third with a time of 18:33 to lead the six Silver
Hawks who finished In the top 10.
Next Saturday. Oct. 13. the S lim Hawka will
run In the University o f Florida Invitational.
.
B BC IN V IT A T IO N A L A T T A L L A B A B B N N

.

D.J. Lewis o f Lake Mary led a strong
contingent o f Seminole County runner* with a
fourth place overall finish al the FSU Invitational
Saturday morning.
Lewis finished second among Class 4A runner*
In the meet that featured over SO boys team* and
380 runners. Also finishing In the top 20 boys
runner* from Seminole were Kevin Pagrtt frotp
Lyman with an eighth and John Feola of LaW*
Brantley. IBth.
*.-!•

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 I L Y

�STATS

&amp; STANDINGS

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Sanford HsraW, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, October ?, isso — i

Lak« Mary
i i

_
„
« „
,------ -__
o u T e fo u r o o d rt .'tr v ln s to find
S iY tk S i S S O i Z I " " 'w
W h o tw o rk e d w a s Haney rim -

the

Lions w ere

In the gam e's first 13 minutes, R am s w ould have been 3 for A ,
Alexander rushed 10 times for but Menetto w as intercepted 'at
I3 y ard aan d atau ch d w n
the goal line by Kyle Lam m s *
Alexander la going to be a um e expired In the t o * half. *J
• Dod nm ntng back ," said Oviedo
U nderstandably. Peters and
Coach Jack Blanton. "H e ’s only B la n t o n h a d d iffe r e n t In _________
terpeetattona o f how the outOviedo turned a pair o f Lake com e.
M a n m istakes Into a pair offtrst
"W e had 43 Chris H aneys w t
h a lf touchdowns w hile a big th ere to n ig h t." Said P eters,
return M to the Ltona’ " T h a t 's t h e w a y I f e d l.
third score. Lake Mary w ould
Everybody cam e through. O ur
respond im mediately, scaring on offensive line did the jo b and our
the next aeries after O
viedo's defense roee to the
Oviedo's
first and third touchdowns. T he
when they had to."
with :

rJ -

T h e y gave u s the pass, ” **td
&gt;
B la n t o n o f O v l i d o 'a r u n - &gt;
J--------Tied attack against Lake ■ : i
"W e -Just couldn't cat*- ' .
plete any. W e dkki't tackle weft. : • /
either. W e dltoi't do anything
?

SUtl, th eir w as Ham pton under
the ball In the end aone, once
again on hla bock to m ake the
catch.
In the total minute and a h alf
o f the gam e, the hpsts r a c e d
twice to m ake the Anal num ber*
respectable. The scores cortaid-

traveling to Lake

perm itted the W a r E agles a
six yards rushing on 30

la a visit from 4A-Dletrtct 7
opponent E dgew ater at 7.-30
p.m . next Friday night.

T S S tttX TS Tw fiS oTiV
• 47

nr
U rn Mar*

* a .t

i

s4W
i-J a

0 -1
UM - Hwsrin*&gt;»ue&gt;ususi

O - JM kM lrw bw W M I

u i — Hour * r** (WWW p m hp*
Mm MbI

~ -----' *
o
aw
M n------------------o i U wawstasi

FrWW afternoon against the Titusville-Astronaut W ar e agtss.tw o of

th m while on Ms back In the end rone,

Wntawdu

tM — Hour Wrw&gt; tMwSU Md»

gw*»

N e w *w

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«u

runouiuw

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H* ^ e * is iS T ir * * . wissiri.

h *a sw w
foTutMiTfu*" H H " ,r* w
A ^ c S u ? * &gt; M .im * r
M

h i i u w c m i k b i.

u

n r t r ffiu T m t ^ n
' !

Mary on Friday, completing 11 o f
i ranted thtm time# to M a t Oviedo

Pint

the district) without a first dow n
an their opening possession but
o n t h e ir n e x t o o s s s s s lo n ,
Shropshire hit W right Car 61

zSSJl
r S -.
" S *

a
B ody in the secon d, quarter
D avid Jones Idoched a Lake
Brantley punt and W alter D lg p
re tu rn e d It 3 4 y a rd s fo r a
touchdown.
Mike W right plunged
for the two-point con vet

-

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111 1=1
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m

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everybody

Ur Kill (in
JaiAlai
w e re : I . T h o m a s M a y e s.
Jacksonvitte-Ralnc*; 3. Calvin

P

contest wftl start at 7:30 p.m.

Tom m y Ham pton, C arlo

R ost teUlna o f all. Astronaut
could run but 13 offensive plays
from scrim m age to the tost nan.

iMUnat

■_

Coach Km ory Blake, a de­
m a n d in g p e r f e c t io n is t ,
expressed hla displeasure In no
uncertain term s to hla team
their late gam e de­
fensive
"W e ’r e 'a better b a lld u b than
w e showed to n lp it." said Blake.
" I accept the w in, but next
w eek's practices are going to be
S a M w on't be * a ^ fle d °” f P°* en'
D esp ? t e t h e l a t e g a m e
m istake*, the Sem inole* w ere

W eir w lS £

spook with

�Pfwrttar
— ----------------------tO — Sem inole Com fla g s Is ju st beginning
n g celebration o f a
mtmv o f oBfvteo to III®
County. Five
rberatd com m erce and
have joined farce* to
5 Bchoot on that ocole Com m unity Col*
aheaya had a very
rtatfonshlp w ith the

e d t r w t o r o f tostituahcanwnt. aald. "It Is a

10 are available lo r 6250.
"8 C C w ill benefit from the
m oney rak ed at Uila event." said
Baber, w ho added thm the exact
plana far the money had not yet
oocfi niwIlM d.
According to Baber. Seminole

SSSn

«|)oyed the support o f the buslaem , d v l c and Industrial com*
munJty.
"W ith various program s w n tn
conjunction w ith tfw private

have pr epared ou r atudenta for
the n e e d * o f the S em in o le
County em ploym ent market.*'
The cham bers o f commerce o f
the Seminole County communi­
ties w ill also honor Dr. Carl 8.
W eldon, president of 8CC.
"D r. W eldon h as alw ays been
committed to seeing that the
students from SC C are equipped
to work In the county and that
they have the skills that local

a

kata Par the event.
be bald at the Sanford
S — folds Com m unity

——* . mansi hmm! "

More than a quarter million
students have graduated from
Seminote Com m unity College tn

The ooi
topped

Longwood firms recognized by chamber

tcntgroarth.

z o n in g j
•T A X .'*
The new Taxp
1-POO-TAX'1040;

signed to m ore d e a rly establish
areas com patible for the various
types o f industry and business
m oving into the rapidly grow ing

“*5S£
wS»

Pot-

the Ptan.
M fg m
rsu tgscto f
t d ia o o m
th e item
with little

for the developm ent o f higher
Intensity com m ercial use* such
a s large retail outlets a s w ell as
businesses that generate a large

Jobless rate
hits 5.7-tens

to 6 .7

porcan t tn

» &gt; w it

what type o f industry

amrW
aaji *'
m
nCdglC
»*—
T.1 nB
" nfl

The two new aonlng
Uonsare M -2A an dC -J.
M*SA aonlng w ill be for the
development an d maintenance
o f heavy com m ercial, industrial,
m an u fa c tu rin g , w a re h o u sin g

W ith

the exception i

U .S . H tghw qy 17*#6 c
southeastern aids o f th e e

•xplorgf bu

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

your Waleoma Wagon rapmantatlva
an§waryourquaattona about tba ana and
pmaaotyou with tma Qttta.
Lei

If You Uve In One Of These Areas,

m a co m p a n y
d the survey.

�irteafayajA1
.!

Lun a Aasodatkm o f Central Florida and area
hoepttab. la a free com m unity program designed for people
2 ™ * breathing problem s, their fam ilies and M ends. The
m e e tin g provide Information, Instruction, practical skills and
e u re fa e for easier breathing and more active living.
M eetlnm w ill be held as follows! Oct. IS , Beanfall Senior
Center. Room 2B. at 3 p.m . Speaker; C asa Collna Pain
M anageniait Services! Oct. 33. Physicians Pbuta Building (nest
to South Sem inole Com m unity Hospital) Room 103 hum 1-3
p.m . Speaker! Ronald Brown, M.C.: Oct. 24. W inter Park
2 ® °***® * Hospital W ellness Center at 3 p.m . Speaker: Lillian
Btadtwood. RRT: Oct. 31., Central Florida Regional Hospital.
Medical Plata Bldg.. Suite 209, at 10 a.m . Speaker! Dr. Meade.

M e n tal llln e e a A w a re n e e e
W eek wtl! b e held bom Oct. 7*13
In Central Florida. It to part o f a
n ation w id e p u b lic cam paign
focusin g on the facts abou t
m ental Illnesses. Local efforts
are supported by the Mental
tUneaa Aw areness W eek Coall*

Orlando, hooted by the UnlversJty Behavioral Center. 981*7000.
Oct. 9 — 7-0 30 p.m . Political
Forum at the Radlooon Hotel.
Orlando, hosted by Florida Hasp lta l C en ter for P sy ch iatry .
807*1800.
Oct. 10 — 7 p.m ., Bating

release.
T h e following program s are
free and open to the public:
Oct, 8 — 8 a.m . to 9:30 p.m . a
klchoff breakfast at H arley Hotel,

Patients Perspective". Charter
H o sp ita l. O rla n d o . 800*877*
8883.
Oct. 13 — 6 :3 0 4 p.m. Candle*
lig h t C erem ony to con clu de

aw aren ess week. Orange C o. lando. boated b
A dm lniatration B u ildin g. Or* for the Mentally
.__________________________________________
I
I
I
X
I *

S o i Y )&amp;
u t .
l )

OfODl
M F 9 d

W

j I A

\A /tth O

h O

ft||f|A|||i|ka||(fa|| la igtiklbAikA MfomAaimfafaJ
w|9iffwiivWi
iiincnvon ■nnounoMi
ALTAM O N TE SPR ING S — "Superw om an Syndrom e" Is the
tt|Nc o f the nest Lunchtim e Program for W om en on O cL 10 at
noon In the Chatlos Conference Center at Florida Hospital. 801

avt ^oaVBIAOdtCv gJrlVCi
. M u c a to r and corporate training consultant Jane Merchant.
M .M .N.A.. w ill be the guest speaker.
The program Is a free com m unity service o f the Center for
W om en's Medicine at Florida Hsoptta).

Bring your lunch and a flrtendi dessert and a beverage will be

provided.

For m ore Information, o rto register, call 787-3318.

HsartsavweiouiMastforAHamonls
ALT A M O N T E SPR INO S — CPR for C ltitens Is offering a
Hem taaver course a t Florida Hospital Altam onte on Oct? 9,
foam 6:30 to 10 p.m . The d o ss w ill be heid in roam s 103 and

"■

Our Interett It In your b ettor health

A#~ * *

MarMsa a Paitto, M A* RAJtA
17 at 9:30 a.m ., according to a
press release.
The fan. fast-paced program Is
designed to educate children
a b o u t e y e c a re a n d sa fe ty
through m usic, discussion, and
ftfitff. Assisting p n a m n host*
e s s . S u s a n flo d o b a -L e w ls .
iHfu tn * g f com m unity relations

) Annotate** ThsAuodation Of
M lavt B. OMwsla, H O ., W U U t
u m n e a , m n m o m ®w uu 0 1 i t q i u t k i
• P c lk m . A im n f a M M m g e ^ a r M la t t lc a

rOWM0000O
LOSS CLINICS „0*^,1
NLYATTHMtLOCA'

THE FOOT
IT ^ I l

M w it.

K
k
J
i
F
V m* Ii il
11
L 1'
V *i.

55
M M i

Do you provide a unique
service people should know
about?
Have you changed location,
staff, or hours?
Are you holding sem inars
or program s o f public interest?
Then you need to advertise
cm this pagel C all a Herald dis­
play advertising consultant at

322*2611.

�y

'

.Mtiii'r r.fiir u i'iit fit lifrYVivm

8anlord Herald, Sanford. Florida — Sunday, October 7. 1090

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT,
EIG H TEEN TH JUDICIAL
CIR CUr,. IN AND FOR
1FMIMOLECOUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASEN0.SMM1CA It
OtVIHONi F
J.l. KISLAKMORTGAGE
SERVICR CORPORATION
PUIntlll.
at el..
Defendanti.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: EUGENE J. MORROW.
JR.
Reddence: Unknown
Lad known mailing addret*:
SOI Brittany Circle
Cattalbarry, Florida 11707
003
NINA K. MORROW
Red dence: Unknown
Lad known mailing addrest:
I I I Brittany Circle
Cattelherry, Florida n m
grant***. etdgneet, lienor*,
creditor*. trudee*. or ether
claimant* claiming by, through
and undor EUGENE J. MOR
ROW. JR. and/or NINA K.
MORROW
Red donco Unknown
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to terecleee the mortgage
encumbering I he following
property Wi SemWrote County,

NOTICE O f
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I
#m engaged in budnet* at roj
Brlarwood Dr., Winter Spring*.
Seminole County, Florida, under
the Fictiliout Nam* at JOHN'S
CLEANING SERVICE, and that
t Intend to regltler (aid name
with the Clerk ol the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Fieri
da. In accordance with the
Provident ol the Flctlttou*
Nam* Statute*. To Wit- Section
MS OF Florida Statute* ISS7.
John M. Barbate
PtfilNh: September I*. M, X A
October 7. two
DCX IS7
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given that I
am ingegeJ in butmet* at lie
Nantucket Court I M , Alt*
monte Spring*, Seminole
County. Florida, under the
Fktltlou* Nome at EXCEL RE
CORD SERVICES, and that I
intend to regltler told name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court. SemWrote County, Fierida. In accordance with the
Prevltlon* of the Flctlttou*
Nome Statute*. To Wit: Section
ses.se Florid* statute* test.
JudyH.Canltkl
Publlth: October 1. 14. *1, M.

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
7SS Coachllght Dr.. Fern Park,
Fla. ttm . SamlnoN County,
Florida, under the Flctttleua
Nam* at SIOI'S TROPICAL
TREASURES, and that I Intend
to regltler told name with the
Clerk at the Circuit Court. SamWrote County, Florida. Wi accweenco wim mo rrovnnPi Of
the Flctlttou* Name Statute*.
Tew it: Section * U W Florida
Statute* ISS7.
S(grid StupeIman
PuMlah: October ?. a It. M.

Orlando - Winter Park

322 2611

Computer *«i
gutred. Mud I

8 3 1 &gt;9*993

C L A S S IF IE D D E P T . P R IV A T E P A R T Y R A T E S
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M 1 W M T • •Naaa

OfADlINtt
Noun The Do* Before Publication
Sunday ■ It A.M. Saturday
Monday •11:30 A.M. Saturdoy

ADJUSTMINT! AND CMDITSi In ttw event gf an
errar In an *U, Hte laniard HeraMwill barttpattsMM*far
Nw first Imartlan Billy an4 anty ft tfw txSgttf at tNa cast
•f Mat (martian. Pleata check ywur at tar accuracy tha
first Any It ram.

FICTITIOUS NAME
Noltco I* hereby given Wret wo
are engaged In budnoM el SIM
N. County Rd. 07, laniard. FL
am. Simlnete County. Florid*,
under the Flctttleua Nam* of
SPORTS COLLECTABLES, and

41— C w w t r y C r y p t t

SonterdFL 31773
U l^ la w A
w e ----------niantuni
iwtmey

your written detente*, ll any, to
It on SMITH A SIMMONS. P.A.,
PleWtttr* attorney, lit Wetl
Adam* Street, Suit* III* .
Jackienvtlle, Florida a m . on
or before November I, two. and
file the origin*! with the Clerk ot
thl* Court either betare tervke
on PloWitttr* attorney or Imme-

Cell Dow T *»«g«rn

Jeb LtdWrg Servtce.. ATS

default will be entered ogoUttl
you tor the relief demanded In
the cempleWrt or potlllen.
WITNESS my hand end tael
ol ttrt* Court an thl* t?th day el
September 1*10.
ISEALI
. MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk el die Circuit Court
Byi RuthKWrg
Deputy Clerk
PublMh: September 30 A Octo
ber7.IAtl.ISW
DEXM1

ticket*. Ort
'AY TIC K E TS

OHw rtunltttt

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
P L M IflA
CIRCUIT CIVIL N a

AMERIofrMWrr&amp;AGE

SE RVICINO, INC. l/k/e FIRST
FAMILY MORTGAGE
CORPORATION OF FLORIOA.
Plaintiff,

^nvedmen^Rejutred^

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
iw ik w

n nerewy given vnoi ww

Board df Adludment e&lt; the City
cf Sontord will hotoNBl
.. .
meeting on Octebor itn f m n n
th* City Hall Cemmlatlen
Chom&gt;/«*t lltSSdjn. In order
t* centlder * r*gue»t ter
yerlence In Me eenwio Ordlnence aa It pertain* tePartdng

CORDED IN PLAT BOOK 37
PAGES M A OF. PUBLIC RECOROS OP S R M IN O L E
COUNTY. FLORIOA.
at public eel*. M M* Mghed and
beet bidder. Her coth. ot tho
W**t Front Door, Sominoto
County Ceurthoue*. Senlerd.
SemtneN County, Florida. at
I L-SB AA L ^ m the id day at

Frt., meet*. . Jyllwiidf
■eedsertiii-^MAM ir

wm#lm
•w^N W
EXP’b.SAlESPtRSON

0117. Opon |4 Hour*.

HON. MAR VANNE MORSE
CLBRKOP THE
CIRCUIT COURT
■yi JaneE. Jaeewta
PuMhB: October 7,14. twg
DBY47
140TICE
i CITY OP L BNBBfOORi FLORIDA. NOTICE BP PUBLIC

A^A7,ONT°O.^7*NO^%T^ . « 0 r ^ «

City ot Longwoed. Fbride, that lb* City CMnmltalen wtR hetf a
public Iwarwig Wt the City Cemmlatlen Chamber!. ITS W. Warren

/ lIi'H
k
f l ir?TTT
m / ]
.

/ IT f 1 f J I # ]

tUrjcrt _
It t f r r t y

SemMeN County. Pbride, wen
receipt el proof at the pubhalien of Bdt notice, the Wrtttbw
nemo, town:

undw ■
T° YOTA&gt;^ 0 , ,
in butlneee at ISIS lE rth
Mli^MN I I J I I ww^ w^ w^ *---I - - a - e» -

ten be abteWwd from the attic* of the City Oerh. At the
intereti*d peril** may appear and be heard wHh reap*
propoeed erdWionce. A cape *1 the prwaeed erdWwwo N |
the City Hell. Lengwaod. Florida. and capb* art an Me
Clerk et the City end may be liwpectedbytCpubWc. Allpb
eddied met ll they decide la appeal any docI*bn mad
hearing. they will need a vorhotwn record cfBwprerooding
*ucti pgrpoMt. they will need I* Wwur* that a verbatim i
mode, which record to Wicludo the tedWneny end Ovtde
which the oppeol I* mod*
U L . Terry. (
Publilh October 7,14. II and SA ISM

X U U V
O H A P T
PREVIOUS S O LU IIO N ' The lyric*
banal that U you aim* a apart ol mb
a poet " — Paul Swnon

-a

W. - - U -

vutle* Wonwdietely evolleMr.

�it .......... .

..............

Sanford Htrald. Banlord, Florida — Sunday, Octobor 7, 1990 —

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proof rm.. fpk. Lpo lot. N*w
on Market 11104.100 RS40
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thtpplnp. A mutt wol 1110.000
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aounUxmmoaaotMachamlngRN brick famuty,
juat minutai from Sou to 415.1 W * S badtnom,
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almoat 1,000 aq. I t o f living apace far you to
tt\joy. COM E BY * F U LFILL
.
^
YOUR FANTASY TODAY!

$84,000

S/y.HMdmLata.....
VHt.SuaarHamal.
W tentariPiaca

______________

euona
akes
R C A t T Y. I NC
401DeltonaBlvd.
(407) 574-0656
FJ4. (904) 799-1499 b t (904) 9694800

K a O O H M M O M ^ ^ M O O O W M O M | i|

�H A N y

B^B55n5r

OMIH

MFO

AUCTION

C o -O p / S a le

Saturday! Oct. 20 at 2 p.m.
M il tla|lism Ct, WkiMf SprtfiM, FI.

(Tuakawtlla Foreet - From Bad BugHd
Left Tuakawllla Rd. Latt Eaola Btvd.)
Brick A Cadar 3 Badroom/2 Bath Split Plan Home.
Featuring: Creel Room With Brick Plraploce. Cathedral
Catling*. A Skylight*. Kltchan Complala With Cardan
Window. Pantry, A Braakfaat Araa. Sondack With Spa.
Fattead Yard.
____ ____
AUCTION HELD ON SITE.
•
Tarma Of Sala: AS Dapoalt Day Of Bala From Hlgheat
Blddar. Balanca On Or Satora Oacembar A, 1900. This
Bala Subject To Aallar Confirmation. For Information
Call: 1-000-161-3090.

£ a s d a s a iS s L

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AUCTION WORLD, USA, INC.
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�INSIDK:
■ Comics, Pans 4C
■ Talavlsion, Page SC
■ Education, Page 6C

IN BRIEF

Is it love or addiction?
■ y JOAN KINO
Herald correspondent

Women singers honored
At a recent meeting of the region, Sound of
Sunshine Chorus received the annual Chapter
Achievement Award. This prestigious honor Is
given to the chorus displaying (he most notable
growth in the past years. Criteria Include
number of new members, charitable contribu­
tions. financial support o f the chorus director,
public performances, number o f registered
quartets, educational opportunities Including
coaching sessions from outside sources and
participation In regional events.
The Sound o f Sunshine Chorus met and
exceeded those standards with (he recruitment
of 20 new members; performances at Epcot. the
Retired Atr Force Sergeants Convention, Lake
Sumter Community College, the Annual Show
at Lake Brantley High School; and winning the
Second Place medal at the Regional Competition
In April. Of o f the quartets In the chapter. "Heat
W ave." received the Fourth Place medal at the
April competition.
Sound of Sunshine Is a women's barbershop
chorus, a chapter of Harmony International.
J.OF.vJdllch la an organisation.with OYsrJJQ.Opo
Tiber*t w
work
orld-w ide. T h e Central F lorida grou p
meeta every Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. at
the Northland Community Church on Dog
Track Road. Alt ladles who enjoy singing are
tone
Invited to visit and perhaps Join. Phc
699-0177.

■mz:

SANFORD - Bobble Purlnnl of Sanftml Is a
businesswoman, wife atid mother who deals with
the many fnccls or her life In un orderly nud
comfortable fashion. However. II wasn't nlwuys
that way admitted Parian!.
"I had a real problem with relationships,
especially with my husband uud children. First I
had to recognize the problem before I could do
anything about It." she said.
Parianl's attitude toward relationships tuny
sound familiar to many people who can't live
with nor live without their spouses.
Parianl spoke or the way tier relationships used
to be and the changes she made for the better
after she attended Valerie Harrison's class In
Relationships: Addiction or Love. The class Is a
Leisure Program course for personal develop­
ment and growth at Seminole Community
College.
"I needed to take the relationship course at
SCC because I didn't know how to deal with my
husband's altitude." Parianl said. "M y husband.
Fred, is a retired 30-year Navy man who was
very set In his ways. There was one way only, his
way. Wc played gumrs against each other, had
power struggles and I was constantly on a guilt
trip."
Parianl said the power plays were especially
damaging to tier relationship with Fred.
" I f he angered me. I'd run up the charge cards
with pruchascs." she said. 'Fred Is a late riser. I
get up early and It was easy to be noisy In the
morning thereby disturbing his sleep. Our
relationship wasn't very pleasant os wc worked
against each other constantly." Purtanl admitted.
Parianl remembered the bad times with a look
of sadness that slowly turned into smiles as she
related the discoveries that helped change her
relationship with Fred Into a happy, peaceful
marriage.
"The course In relationship?- Is Ihc best one I've
ever attended. I've taken several of Harrison s
coursers. Relationships Is the first one
should take because we all den) with (
dilVerent people. It teaches you to free your m
to make better decisions." Parianl said.
She said the first thing she learned was the
difference between a healthy and addictive
relationship.
"A relationship Is a choice, you can live with it.
It's not a must thing. Addiction Is a must. I must
have It or thinking dial you can't live without the
other person.” she explained.
Parianl said she learned not to fear releasing an
addiction.
. .--—“ If you're unhappy Inii relationship, you need
to discover why. The learning process can bring
people together or help them lo realise that they
need not atay in a bad relationship, but they owe
It to themselves to find out that they can make
choices," she said.

La— , ra g * BC

• IV I v n

*

mj

n in f

B o b b ie Parian l w a s ad d le tad to a relationship.

Valaria Hat

C ustom ers have kept w aitress
on her toes for over 33 years
■ y JOAN KINO
Herald correspondent

Tho OMM

Let’s all go to the hop!
SANFORD — The third aunuul Rsagas— Hep.
an educational fund raising event to ocnefll the
Central Florida Zoological Park. Is under way In
over one hundred Central Florida day care
centers. Thousunds of pre-school children arc
learning uboul Ihc wonders o f Ihr animal
klt\gdom while counting Ihelr hop* for Ihc Zoo.
As the Kuuguzoo Hop hops on. some of the
Zoo's resident hoppers may br able lo share some
o f llie finer points of flopping with the children.
Our bopping cx|x-rts are Ihc Dumu wallabies.
Wullublcs ure memtirrs o f llir kangaroo family.
Kangaroos urc probably the best known ol llte
Australian marsupials, or pouched muinmuls.
Marsupials are most prevalent In South America
and Australia. Only one marsupial lives In North
America, the opossum.
Marsupluls are considered u primitive group of
mammals. We call them primitive beeuusc the
oung are not held within the mother very long
efore being born In u near embryonic stute. Once
bom, the baby mnkes Its way to the mother's
pouch and attaches to a nlpplcMo (eed. A uewltom
walluhy Is u I m h ii the s iz e of your flngei tip. The

K

.

OR.
Z00F0RU8
baby wallaby, culled a Joey, remulns In the pouch
for the next eight to nine months. It Is often
dlfflrull to determine If a mother Is carrying «
Joey until It makes a bulge in her pouch.
Dama wallabies, also known as Tammars or
Scrub wallabies, are much smaller than
kangaroos. They are usually about 18 lo 24
Inches tall and weight about 15 pounds.
Wallabies have subtle color variations. Thrlr lor
Is brownlsh-grny with a reddish color on the
shoulders; there Is u faint stripe down the luck.
I ■— Wallaby. P afsB C

SANFORD - Nonun Carter,
a Sanford resident since 1957.
Is a very pleasant woman with
beautiful, shining brown eyes
that twinkle when she speaks
of her family, her clientele
and I hr people for whom she
has worked nn a waitress for
33 years.
She spent ni ne y e a r s
working lor Jim Spencer who
owned a Sanford landmark
seafood restaurant which
closed In the 1B70' b. She has
been at the Lake Monroe Inn
since 1967.
Curler good-naturedly
laughs when recalling u pre­
vious story In which Iter
co-workers Jokingly told this
newspaper she had been with
the Inn since 1926.
She says. "It wus fun and
we had a good laugh. My
customers uud I had a good
lime with tliul one. We all
thought I looked good for an
88-year-old waitress.”
The truth Is Carter will be
65 In December but she
doesn’t Intend to rrllre.
“ If you're happy, why not
stuy?" she asks.
Carter says that people ask
her why she stays In one
place so long.
"W ell. I've always been
Itappy here uud Dale Is such a
good Iniss . lie's n fine man.
When he Isnight the Inn five
years ago lie kept all the same
help o n ." Dulc Uustalson
previously owned The Horn
on French Avenue.
Carter says she also stays
because of her customers.
"I have the best customers
I I I the world. Some people
have been regulars since I've
lieen here.” she says.
Carter wus ihouglillul when
asked If jx-oplr and the way
ilicy order laid changed much

Photo by Joan King

Norm a Carter w ill aaat you now.

In 33 years.
"There an1 no changes. My
customers ure still the same
wondertul jK-ople. The young
ones ure Just us swell us the
older ones. People seek me
out amt sit ut my siuilon. It's
Just like having my own
business. I build up my clien­
tele and they come b a c k lo r
me to serve them. The other

gills don't stay long enough to
do that.'' slieeonliilca. *
Caller says that she will
stay and serve her customers
as long as she Is needed.
"I never watch the time.
The kitchen Is o |m-ii us long us
people are eating amt I slay
unlll the Iasi diner leaves.”
she says
Well, except on Friday ami
Saturday nights when she
serves drinks in ihc lag dining
roombcgiunlngat Op in
"Those are hand nights
wi t h l i v e in l i s l e . " she
explains.
Curler arrives lor work ut 2
pm. lor the Inn's I pm .
0 |M M IIIIg .

"I prep the veggies for ihc
salad liar. I work 5 days a
week."
See Norma, Page BC

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 S A N F O R D H E R A L D

�tc — 8«nford

HtfBld, Sanford. Florida — 8und«y, Octobar 7,

1800

A fter 50 years together, they
w ould do it all over again
Their 50-ycar m arriage has
been a bleating and a w ay o f life
for Lillie R. and Reginald E.
Soderblom w ho were m arried In
Sanford on Sept. 38.1040.
W ould they do It all over
again?
“ A bso lu tely ," the vivacious
Lillie said. "T h ere's no doubt In
m y m ind."
Following their m arriage, the
couple lived In Sanford until
1059 w hen his railroad jo b took
them to T am p a w here they
rem ained until 1980. After Re­
g in a ld 's retirem ent from the
Atlantic Coastline Railroad as a
locomotive engineer In May o f
that year.the fam ily moved back
to Sanford w here they have lived
since.
T h e S o d erb lo m s have tw o
c h ild ren . T h e ir son . D on ald
Soderblom . m akes his home In
W inter Springs with his wife.
Kathy: son, Donald Soderblom .
Jr.: a daughter. Am y Soderblom .
and tw o stepdaughters, Jody
and Janel Jensen. The couple's
daughter Linda St. C lair and her
husband, Ron, an d daughter
Laura, live In Tam pa.
The golden w edding anniver­
sary called for a gala celebration
Sept. 39 at the O arden C lu b o f
Sanford Inc. when about 115
friends and relatives called du r­
ing the appointed hours, 4 to 8
p.m.
H o s t e d b y th e c o u p le 's
children, the party w as "abaolutely gorgeou s.'' LUlle said. She
added "W e had an abaolutely
fantaatlc party."
L illie rec e iv ed th e g u e sts
w earing a lovely m uted rose
chiffon dress fashioned w ith long
sleeves and a flow ing, hill
sign or pale pink
A sw irled design
se q u in s e n h an ced th e rig h t
shoulder an d left hip o f the
dress. She w ore m atching pink
earrings and a w rist corsage.
Reginald w ore a yellow rose­
bu d boutonniere h M h m k p is'; i
his business suit.
The clubhouse w as decorated
with a m yriad o f potted plants,
rlduaf ta t*
Indlvldti
with teal-colored tablecloths and
w ere centered w ith glittered
cham pagne glasses filled w ith
confetti. A n arran gem en t o f
yellow roses centered the m ain

M b t ^ a ta e r e t l^
the large serving table wMch
featured an assortm ent o f party
foods In an attractive setting.
A separate table held the large
white sheet cake, decorated In
gold, which w as designed In a
sloping pattern and w as deco­
rated with a m iniature couple In
their senior years.
The couple’s son. Donald, led
the cham pagne toast to h is
parents and asked M en ds and

The food w as delicious and the
service w as exceptional.

D O RIS
DIETRICH

r e la t i v e s to c o m m e n t on
personal anecdotes they shared
with the honored couple.
They could have danced all
n ig h t Entertainment w as pro­
vided by Om ni W orld Produc­
tions. Lillie and Reginald led the
group In dancing and music
In clu d ed favo rites from the
1940son.
Friends and relatives Included
Reginald's form er railroad crew
m em bers and relatives from
Illinois and Florida.
Today, the Soderblom s stay
active w l.h fam ily and friends.
' "W e have a fantastic fam ily and
som e lovely friends," LUlle said.
She takes pride that she has
spent her life being a hom em ak­
er and mother. "M y h usband's
daddy w as from Sweden and he
believed the wife should stay
hom e an d take care o f the
children. W e have had a good,
full life together." she said.
L illie h as a few w ord s o f
w isdom to pass along for m aking
a m arriage successful. She said
w hen they w ere m arried In
1940. divorce w as alm ost un­
heard of. "Y ou m ade It w ork ,"
she said, "Y o u have got to work
together, trust, forgive and love.
D on't hold grudges. Sit down
an d talk. No m arriage la a bed o f

This event attracts a lot o f the
sam e patrons an nually. T w o
couples w ho usually show up
together are Dr. and Mrs. Ken­
neth (Annette) W in g and Lacle
and Sully Flem ing. T h is year
w as no different for the two
couples w ho seem ed to be en ­
joyin g bingo also.
And. oh, the friendly
w as in hill sw ing. Politicians
w ere sw arm ing all over the place
and used the opportunity to do a
little stum ping as the Tuesday
election approached.
The clu b president. M ayor
Bcllye Sm ith, seemed delighted
at the largest turnout ever re­
corded. In the club, the m ayor Is
a record herself. She goes down
In history as the first wom an
m em ber o f the Snnford Lions
C lub and the C lu b 's first wom an
president.
Proceeds from the event w ill
benefit the Lions Sight Program .
The results w ill be announced as
soon as the tabulation Is com ­
pleted.

Emy Bill Injured
Em y BUI. volunteer, civic lead­
er and president o f SIST E R
(Sanford's Interested Sarahs to
E ncourage R ejuven tatlon ), Is
under the w eather at Central
Florida Regional Hospital where
she Id recuperating from Injuries
In a fall while
i * “ attend
Ing a political gathering.
Em y Is hanging In there, but
she has seen better days. For
those w ho m ay want to send
w o r d s o f c h e e r, h e r ro o m
num ber Is 383.

After the b ig golden wedding
anniversary celebration on Satunlay, the next m ornilna the
fam ily had breakfast logd
a focal restaurant to culml
n l n K ^ ^ ^ T h e c o u■
n ty 's ch am bers
cherlahed milestone for the fam l
com m erce in c lu d in g O reater
Sanford. O reater Oviedo, Greater
iySem inole County. Lake Mary,
and Longwood-W Inter Springs,
together w ith SunBsnk. w ill join
forces to honor Sem inole Com ­
to several m em bers
m unity College and Its presi­
o f the Sanford Lions C lub, the
dent, Dr. Earl 8. W eldon, during
an n u al spaghetti din n er and
*h ^coU ege'a silver anniversary
last Saturday night at the
' .Ckrte C anter w a s a
J record-breaker.
A Business salute to SC C w ill
Patrons began arriving shortly
be held on Friday. Oct. 19. oh
after 4 p.m , and the line never
the SC C cam pus.
ended until closing time at S
p.m . Around 6:30 p.m ., the line
It doesn't seem Uke 35 years
w as all the w ay around the
since Dr. W eldon took com m and
sidew alk In front o f the civic
o f the fledgling Junior colleg**
center and w as at a standstill.
that keens grow ing and grow ing.
The w ord w as that the rush had
He and his wife, Geraldine, have
caused a shortage o f cooked
not o n ly b e e n a n a sse t to
spaghetti. But the cooks got on
education In Sem inole County,
the ball and soon the line w as
but they have also been active In
other areas o f the community.
under w ay again.

[ctU m yiip p'i 25th, SCC

Let's give them a big hand.

Duo visits Otartts
Lourine M essenger spent a
month this sum m er visiting her
family in T exas and other points.
Upon her return home, she
and Kay Bartholom ew took off to
the Oasrks In Arkansas for an
autumn sojum . They stayed at
Eureka Springs and enjoyed a
leisurely w ay or life Including
attending several folk fairs.
Kay probably tucked an Idea
or two aw ay to road test at the
Decem ber St. Lucia Festival o f
which she Is the founder.

BlAOwnil
nalBDi C
saailaa
r v f ilt a a
WIVTl
fw IH
Speaking o f Kay Bartholom ew,
she joined Phyllis O as and Rite
Schnyder. a newcom er to the
community. In colorful Swedish
costumes to welcom e about 380
patrons atten din g a cocktail
cruise on the St. Johns River last
S u n d a y a b o a r d th e O ra n d
Romance. The second annual
event w as sponsored by the St.
Lucia Festival and the Sanford
Historical Downtown Waterfront
Association to raise hinds for
fe s tiv a l e n te rta in m e n t a n d
lighting and holiday decorations
for downtown Santord.
"W e were so pleased with the
tu rn ou t," Kay said. "It w as
nice."
Pat Hltchm on directed and
produced 16 beautifu lly cos­
tum ed sin gers, d an cers an d
m u sician s In e x c e rp ts from
''Georgetown Ju bilee,'’ an origi­
nal folk opera about Sanford.
Kay said it w as a perfect day
for a cruise and mentioned that
the sunset w as "gorgeo u s."
Music for dancing w as pro­
vided by Nick Pfeifauf and his
"S tarllgh ters." "T h ey dtd such a
good Job or.J people danced up a
storm ." Kay said.

JunlorettM ln»tsM
T h e S e m in o le C o u n t y
Junlorette C lub, an affiliate o f
th e F lo r id a F e d e ra t io n o f
W om en's C lu b and General Fed­
eration o f W om en 's Clubs, re­
cently held installation o f of­
ficers.
N a n c y C r a w fo rd . F F W C
Director Junior Clubs. Installed
the following: Becky Crawford,
president: Leslie Bowers, first
vice president In charge o f pro­
jects, program s and reporting:
Christine Stleren. second vice
president In charge o f fundraising: D aw n Trencher, third
vice presiden t In ch arge o f

The club Is open to guis. ages
14-16. The m em bership is made
up o f girls from Sanford. Lake
M ary, Longw ood an d W inter
Swines. They meet the third
M onday
sy o f each m onth. For
In fo rm a tio n c a ll th e S C J C
a p o n a o r , C in d y M c D o n a ld
Qulies. days, at 323-4664.
Cindy says that present);
m em bers are focusing on

rpnmental issues such as re­
cycling. selling shopping totes to
discourage the use o f plastic and
paper shopping bags and the
W eklva River dean-up. among
other projects.

Longwood Sertoma’s ‘Man of the
Longwood Sertom a honored
Its "M an o f the Y e a r" recently
during an elegant banquet at
Townsend’s Puntatlon Restau­
rant in Apopka.
Honored for h is service to
mankind w as Sanford resident
Harold Dcklc, w ho w as stricken
wlht polio at 9-m onths o f age.
H arold w a s n om in ated by
Gene Prestera. w h o w as Im ­
pressed with H arold's persever­
ance in helping senior citlaena In
spite o f his handicap.
Harold has turned his w ellw orn w ood en c ru tc h e s Into
another set o f legs, using them
to get around town for Meals on
Wheels, the program for which
he volunteers his Ume delivering
meals to shut-ins In Sem inole
County.
Harold operates his car with
trnnd controls w hile a partner
actually carries the m eals, but
Harold said, he has on occasion
had lo pinch hit and deliver a
meal or two to som eone's door.
"I like to help anybody I c a n ."
Harold said after accepting the
commemorative plaque.
Harold has been honored by
J.C. Penney for his i
He received a cash aw ard which
he donated to Better Living For
Seniors. Inc,, through w hich
Meal* on W heels operates.
La Sertoma m em ber Maureen
Bravo sum m ed up H arold's in­
volvem ent w ith his su rrou n ­
dings.
“ T h a t's not h a n d ic a p p e d ,
that's handicapsble.” she said.
In other Sertom a business,
both the Longwood C lu b and the
Greater Sem inole La Sertom a
Insulted officers for the com ing
year.
La Sertom a aw ard ed 9500
scholarships to two area stu­
dents who have set patterns of
service and leadership in the
community.
Scholarships went to: Michelle
Enflngcr, a Lake M ary High
School graduate Who Is attend­
in g the U n iversity o f South
Florida Ui Tam ps, and Am anda

Savage, an Oviedo High School
grad u ate curren tly attending
Sem inole Com m unity College,
L a S e r t o m a a ls o n a m e d
m e m b e r S h llll H e d g e r th e
W om an o f the Year.
The banquet served as the
ch arter function for Sertom a
Autism C lu b. The c lu b w as
formed to help fam ilies touched
by autism , a condition In which
a child la oelf-abaorbed and muat
receive help to be able to func­
tion In society.
N ew officers for Longw ood
Sertom a are: President G ary
H o e n lg . V ic e P re s id e n t o f
S pon sorsh ip C h uck Fletcher.
Vice President o f Program s Rick
8eithcr, Vice President o f Mem ­
bership Charlie Petno. Secretary
G ene Prestera and Treasurer
Janice VerpUuik.
L a S e rto m a O ffic e rs a re :
Chairm an o f the Board Joyce
Cable. President Anne Pctsos.
F irst V ice P re sid e n t S h c lll
Hedger. Second Vice President
Penny Stone, Secretary Alice
J a r r e ll. T r e a s u r e r M e lis s a
O e o rgla d is an d S ecretary-ofA n n s Marilyn Arm strong.
Sertom a Autism officers are:
President Ron Boyers. Vice Pres­
id en t o f M e m b e rsh ip J u n e
Sim m on s. V ice Presiden t o f
Program s Sandl Boson Pardo.
Vice President o f Sponsorships
Jeanie Hays, Secretary Marilyn
A rm stron g. T reasu rer Sherry
French and Bergeant-at-Arm s
Chris Simmons.

Tiu g ygBsuf riBDoR
No m atter where you live, the
Am erican Legion w ants you!
The Yellow R ibbon Society

Fraaidant Elda Nichols. Programs Chairman Juna Lom unn wtd C.

P -m . a t the the Am erican Legion

Post 53. 3874 S. Sanford Avc..
Sanford. The purpose o f the
get-together la to m ake yellow
r ib b o n b o w s fo r A m e ric a n

, scotch tape and
a lo w rl .G oal is 1.OOO bnws.
For details call Bara Myers at
333*6599 o r BUI A u stln g at
333-1653.

L u n g w o o d C iv ic L e a g u e
W om an 's C lub were tresjed to
an o v erv ie w on tourism In
Central Florida foam E. Bates
Re e d Jr. f r o m the Orlando/Orangc County Convcn-

IM S

Uon and Visitors Bureau. Inc.
Reed said tourist money spent
here Is the equivalent o f every
person on earth spending 61 in
ou r area. Visitors spent 65.5
m illion in Central Florida in
1989.

�Sanford Ha raid, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, Oclobar 7, 1990 — 90

Miss Fashionetta heralds a ‘Better You, Better Me’
Tomorrow. A Belter You,
Belter Me" was Ihe theme for the
Miss Fashionetta 1990, pres­
ented by AKA's. Seminole High
School auditorium was the sel­
ling Tor the first Miss Fashionctla, sponsored by Kappa
Sigma Omega Chapter of Alpha
Kappa Alpha. Inc.
Fashionetta 1990 afforded an
opportunity for Alpha Kappa
Alpha women to enhance the
osltlve self esteem o f four
eautlful young ladles, three or
whom part ici pat ed In the
workshops and In community
service.

K

The theme "Tom orrow . A
Better You. Better Me." was
focused upon throughout the
evening. The contestants dem­
onstrated their talents through

Hlgh-caliber secretary
not for low-budget boss
ri "J o in Denver."
efficient, mature secretary
who said the present-day office
manager wants "a 19-ycar-old
with good buns" missed the
mark.
Besides Ignoring ihe fact that
many bosses these days are
women, she also overlooked the
fact that many companies these
days are d o w n a lx ln g ,
streamlining, paying off lever­
aged debt. The sad truth Is that
many boasses would love to have
a woman o f her caliber, but they
can't afford to pay her what
she's worth, so they settle Tor an
Inexperienced 19-year-old. I
know. My husband hired one.
His secretary's name Is "A r­
thur." He's Chinese and loves
rock music. As far as I know, he
doesn't have "great buns," but
he doesn't coat 930,000 a year,
either.
the

Df D ALLA S
DEAR WITHHOLD! Here’s a
letter from an office manager
who prefers an Inexperienced
19-ycar-old for another reason:
DEAR ABBYt I’ll take a young.
Inexperienced secretary any day
over the "mature woman with
years o f experience.” Why?
Because I will not have to hear.
"T h a t* not the way we d f d f t a
Mahoney. Valenti. Schwa
Schlockenberg."
NO NAME, NO LOCATION,
PLEASE
D E A R A B B Y t I c ou ldn ’ t
believe your saying that while
good looks and youth never hurt
anybody’s chances In the job
market, they will never be
valued over competence! Where
have you been?
My qualifications were tops,
but I happen to be a large
woman (3-10 and 188 pounds),
and I'm not old — unless you
call 43 "old."
First, 1 was Interviewed by the
office manager: then she said the
boas "wanted to see me briefly."
It was brief, all right! He came
In, took one look at me. turned
around and walked out. (Not
even a "h ello .") Would you
believe the office manager re­
turned and said. "He wanted a
more petite person"?
As It turned out, my disap­
pointment didn't last long.. My
next interview landed me in a
position as secretary to a lawyer
In one o f the moot prestigious
law firms In Manhattan.
B lO B t
ft I would like to
respond to Jo In Denver on
Appalled In Chicago.
ll you think 19-year-olds are
only hired so the boos can gel

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

excited your (sic) wrong.
I am a very pretty 19-year-old
secretary, but I am also very
knowledgeable on secretalal (sic)
skills, not only can I type, spell,
add. make coffee, water plants,
and run errands, I have a good
attitude towards people that la
how 1qualified for my job.
KNOWLEDOSABLE

"S ic" Is
Latin for "thus" and amounts to Mora birthdays ol net#
"that Is exactly the way the
Happy Birthday to Cynthia
writer wrote it."
and William TiUman. Sr.. Faye
DEAR ABBYt I come from a Williams. Roxeland Tillman.
large family, and we all live In Marva Hawkins, Valeria Mit­
the same town. Most of us are chell.
married with children, and we
always get together to celebrate Folk „
Excerpts from the production
the holidays, birthdays and an­
o f "Georgetown Jubilee,” a folk
niversaries.
It sounds wonderful, but It's opera o f Georgetown, board on
anything but. The celebrations
^ t ^ out OK. but after ev
i« drinking, trouble
out. My husband and I are not
big drinkers, but the others are.
told my father we should limit
the amount o f drinking. Hla
response: "It's none o f my busi­
ness how much they drink.
They're all over 21. and If we try
to put a lid on the drinking
nobody will come."
Abby, these family celebra­
tions are for the whole ramtly —
kids included — and I don't want
my kids witnessing the shouting
matches and drunken argu­
m e n t s . My m o t h e r s a y s ,
"Children don't remember what
happened.” I say they do.
I would hate to stop going to
these holiday get-togethera
because the kids look forward to
being with their cousins. Any
suggestions?
Please don't mention the name
o f our town. It's small, and
everyone will recognise us.
FEDUF
DEAR FED UPt Now that you
know what to expect, go to these
family celebrations early — greet
your relatives, deposit your gifts
and leave early. How about
having an annual "d ry" party
for the children's sake? That
w a y. the cousi ns can get
t o g e t h e r In a qui et , noncombative atmosphere. Who
September 17 — Ermlnla and
knows, the grownups might Lasaro Paredes, Mt. Dora, baby
learn something.
boy.
S e p t e m b e r 18 — A nge la
Catherine Lamb. Apopka, baby
girl: Ntnl Thuy Truong. Alta­
monte Springs, baby gin; Kelly
Warren and Shawn D. Ellis. Sr..
Longwood, baby girl: Lisa and
O r e g o r y Hale. A lt a m o n t e
Springs, baby boy: Paige and
Alan Beauregard. Apopka, baby
girl: Tracey and Rowan deCastro. Longwood. baby boy.
September 20 — Debra and
Mark Riel. Apopka, baby girl:
Catherine and John Bailee. Debary. twins — baby boy and
MARY
baby girl: Joan Puglia. Winter
BALK
Springs, twin baby boys.
September 21 — Marie and
Charles Stephens. Jr.. Deltona,
baby girl: Barbara and Walter
mam to call far mare Informa­
Horton. Sanford, baby girl:
tion. Also, many schools in
Susan and John Heflin. Winter
Seminole County have support
Springs, baby glri: Yolanda and
groups available for students.
Ernesto Garcia. Sanford, baby
Ask your teacher and guid­
boy: Donna and Christopher
ance counselor If you can join
McEwan. Debary. baby boys
one.
It's not easy to love someone
with a drinking problem, but
once you recognise that his
problem la his drinking, not
you: you can make healthy
choices for yourself, talk to
someone you trust when you
feel sad or scared, and then
your dad's drinking won’t be
nearly so much o f a-problem
for you.
Good luck, and let me know
how you're doing: I care.

W hat can you do to
help an alcoholic?
DBAR M AR Y! How do you
know If someone Is an alcohol­
ic? Every night after work, and
on the weekends, my dad
drinks lots o f beer. He says he
needs It to relax after a hard
day. but It seems like he
changes after he's had a few
been. He gets grouchy and
yells at me for no reason. He
also acta rude to my mom and
anybody else who comes to the
house. No matter how hard
Mom and I try to keep things
cool around him. he still gets
real mean.
What can I do to help him?
DBAR BCABBPt There are
really two questions here: 1)
What can you do to help your
dad. and 2) what can you do to
make life better for you. We'U
talk about both.
Your d ad 's dri nki ng Is
causing a problem for the
people who love him. but
there's really nothing you can
do to make him recognise this
and change. You didn't cause
the problem, you can't control
It. and you can't cure It: BUT
— you and your mam do not
have to let his drinking control
your lies. There are groups tor
people In your situation where
members share how they work
out their problems and sup­
port each other. The toll-free
n u m b e r f o r A l - A n o n Is
1-800-356-9996. Ask your

p o e t i c e x p r e s s i o n s . In*
tcrprclatfve dances and a piano
ingrat
contestants and their parents.
The Fashionetta Is one o f Kappa
Sigma Omega's efforts to con­
tinue providing scholarships for
worthy young students In their
quests far higher educational
opportunities as well as to enrich
young ladles culturally and
socially. As contestants for Miss
F a s h i o n e t t a 1 9 9 0: T a m l
Donaldson, the first place
winner, who Is a senior at Lake
Brantley High School; other
winners were Charlotte Offer, a
junior at Lake Mary High School.
LaTonya Farmer, a freshman at
Seminole High, and Joycelyn
Wright, a Junior at Lake Mary
High.
Special dancers were Alpha
Teen s group: Allen Chapel
ushers. New Mt. Cavalry youth
singers. Escorts Tor the contes­
tants were Jr. R.O.T.C. o f Semi­
nole High's 1st LI. Chris Lemon.
2nd Ll. Hubert Embry. Cadets:
Michael While. Terry Howard
and Chamon Eubanks. Serving
as M.C. was Soror Ira George
and the Chairman o f the evening
affair. Soror Sheryl Joseph,
made presentation a to the
runners-up and crowned Miss
Fashionetta 1990. Soror Delores
Myles. Baslleus and the Com­
mittee express sincere apprecia­
tion to ihe many patrons and
friends for their cooperation In
this their first annual produc­
tion. Other committee members
are Sandra Petty. Oeraldlne
W righ t. V ic to ria Smith,
Katheryn Alexander. Jacqueline
Klnsler and Ira George.

I. by Altermese S.
Bentley; abstract by Patricia
Merritt Hltchmon. libretto by
Annye L. Refoe. Cast appearing
In the excerpts were: Miss Oulsa,
M a r t h a Ann M c K i n n e y :
Longshoreman: Henry Debose:
Theodosia Walker: Urlpplthla
Long. Mrs. McLeater School
Children. .Young Tajiri Arts.
Church Choir: Crooms Alumni
special grou p. " R a g T i m e
Biand.” — Musical Director:
Gloria Williams.

Happy Mfhl
Shown celebrating her 85th
birthday aboard the Rlvership
Romance was the young looking
Vlvtan Dyer. She enjoyed the
cruise with her daughter and
-ion-in-law Shirley ana Norman
Farr along with Dorothy Powell,
a friend o f the family. Mrs. Dyer
is shown with her cake and
Happy Birthday balloons. Many
m ore Happy Birthdays are
wished the honorec.

Florida Hospital Altamonte
Patricia Ann Wahlln. Cassel­
berry. baby boy: Laura and
Kevin Louwsma. Deltona, baby
boy: Andree and Maroun ElKhoury. Altam onte Springs,
baby boy.
September 22 — Velma and
Wendell Ferguson. Winter Park,
baby glri: Diane and Michael
Overton. Winter Springs, baby
glri; Nan and Jhum Jbln. Alta­
monte Springs, baby boy.
September 23 — Cynthia and
Richard Reeves. Orlando, baby
Rosalind Egan and Jason
fllgcs, Apopka, baby boy.
September 24 — Barbara and
Todd Reese. Lake Mary, baby
boy; Constance Coleman. Alta­
monte Springs, baby glri; Wendy
Shafer and Michael Hopwood.
Winter Springs, baby glri: Shelia
Denises Whitaker. Altamonte
Springs, baby glri: Michelle and
Robert BredalU. Apopka, baby
glri; Nancy Roberts and Mark
Spear*. Altamonte Springs, baby
boy.

V E R TIC A L

»•

�4b - tenfold Herald, Sanford, Florida — Sunday, October 7, 1SS0

OH TVM r

I v___

I

by Marl Walhor

B C C TLK B A IL IY

emm?

PlANUTt

by Charles M . Scholl
/••a

lUHF.fl

flllt

A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 30-Feb. IB)
Y ou 'll be m ore com fortable to­
day and have a m ore enjoyable
time If you associate with people
w hoee political an d religious
view s are In tune w ith yours.
PM C —
(Feb. 30-March 30)
You have a unique faculty today
for bein g ab le to ferret out
Information others are reluctant
to reveal. However, It's best to
keep your curiosity within rea­
sonable bounds.
A—
(M arch 21-April IB)
P a r t n e r s h ip s itu a tio n s a re
favored today and there la a
possibility you m ay be Involved
in several such arrangem ents for
differen t p u rposes. T h ey a ll
should work out wed.
TAOR—
(A pril 30-M ay 30)
" A penny saved la a penny
earn ed " la s a fe advice for you to
fo llo w t o d a y . C u t c o r n e r s
w h e r e v ^ B H * ! . ) ! b e c a u se
sm all am ounts could add u p to a
hefty total.
O B — N I (M ay 21-June 30)
•p e d a l
thfta U

• T b s year
happy one for you socially owing
to a rise In statua and popularity.
T h is w il be due to not only what
you a rt, but w ho you know.
L O R A (S e p t 23-Oct. 33) If
you are forthright and frank In
your dealings with others today,
people with w ho you'll be In­
v o lv e d w i ll e m u la t e y o u r
behavior. Honesty breeds good
w ill an d success. M ajor changes
a re ah ead fo r L ib ra In the
com ing year. Bend for you r
Astro- G raph predictions today,
M all $1.35 to A atroO raph . c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Box 81438.
CtevetondTOH 44101-3438. Be
sure to state your codtoc sign.
BOO— O (O ct 34-Nov. 33)
Y our m aterial aapecta look very
encouraging for you today and
large gains are likely. In fa ct
you m ight even Incur som e
residual benefits that'll pay o ff at
a later date.
• A O fT T A —
(N ov. 33-Dec.
21) Things you do on your
sparse
today may yield only|r q
benefit*, h o t t ver. you could do

M/l ?lfl7»l

ARLO AND JANIft

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Knowledge you gain in the
year ahead from personal expe­
rie n c es w ill prove to be o f
enorm ous value to you. They
w ill be the factors that w ill tip
the acahatn favor o f eucccsB.
U N A (Sept. 23-Oct. 39) You
are definitely In the thoughts o f a
valued M end who preaenUy re­
sides at a considerable distance
from you. There Is a possibility
this M end might call o r write
you today.
S C O R P IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 32)
It’s Imperative that you keep to
yourself that which Is told to you
In confidence today, especially If
you have given your w ord that
you w on't breathe It to a soul.
SAfM TTAR ItJB (N ov. 33-Dec.
31) Your enthusiasm and op­
timism w ill have a contagious
affect on M ends today. T h is Is
very Im portant, because you
need the feedback as m uch as
they need your Input.
C A n i C O M (D ec. 33-Jan.
IB ) O ne o f the reasons you're apt
to fare better than most today Is
because you 'll be cognisant o f
significant details that others
m ay overlook. It pays to be

YOUR

MM

1pan

Uki

(•) IM S fey N iA. IM.

how you w ill be Judged by your
peers. Fortunately, you 'll give an
account o f yourself that w ill
enhance your Image rather than
detract from It.
C A 3 C W (June 31-July 33)
Y our Intuition, as w ell a s your
logic, are both quite keen today.
tal in
■uctlve
resolving critical
ir satisfaction.
23-Aug. 33) If there
you've been anxious

to contact, but have been unable
to do so In the past week, lines o f
com m unication could be opened
today If you 're prepared to m ake
a concerted effort

extrem ely w ell In two unrelated
partnership arrangem ents.
C A P R IC O R N (D ec. 22-Jan.

you have previously i
It's possible you m ay reap a
harvest from more than one
field.
o u m n (M ay 21-June 20) In
matters that are b f significance
to you. don't delegate authority
to others today
day umeaa
have
no choice. You have
lucky
touch, they might n o t
C A M C 1R (June 31-July 23)
Sources from which you expect
the least could turn out to be the
moat bountiful for you today.
Lady Luck might have several
Interesting surprises In her gam e
plan.
L B O (July 23-Aug. 33) Focus
on endeavors today where you
have high hopes and expectsItons, and relegate your more
m undane affaire (o ' the rear
ranks. D on't be afraid to think
big.
V tR O O (A u g . 33-Sept. 221
Your possibilities for fulfilling
your am bitious expectations are
“ kely to be better today than
they w ill be tom orrow. Don't put
o ff until later what can be done

w hat you want for yourself.
O b je c tiv e s a re a c h ie v e d b y
leaning on the arm s o f people
you help.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 30-Feb. IB)
D on't be afraid to request special
favors from friends today if you
know In your ow n m ind you
Intend to reciproca te later. Your
g o o d I n t e n t io n s w i ll b e
perceived.
PM C—
(Feb. 30-March 30)
You could be quite lucky today,
but not necessarily In the w ays
you exp ect Som ething about
which you've been concerned
m ay be resolved In a m anner
a t might surprise you.
AM —
(M arch 21-AprU IB )
Y ou have a delightful touch
today for turning all types o f
situations Into fun. even work,
W hatever you do should turn
o u t w e ll, bu t o f e q u a l lm portance, you'll ctUoy It.
T A U R U S (A pril 30-May 30)
P ro fita b le d ev elo p m en ts are
likely at this time in areas where

FRANK ANO IR NItT
^ / I f * p H lN O C jfiO / H CAN A U
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p la y e r s b e o n th e ea m e
wavelength. T od ay's slam dieaster has several points o f Intere a t W hen Boudi bid b u r notram p* W eet stuck in fare hearts
to crow d the appon m te ' com -

o f diam onds If he held the ace o f
hearts Instead, he should have
led the seven o f d u b s , h is
h ig h e st. B u t rem e m b e r the
o p e n in g e t a t e m e n t a b o u t
w a v e le n g t h . B a s t fo o lis h ly

iWMaT
lead the acs o f d iam onds. Then a
ch ib at trick .tw o w ould have
certainly set the contract, a l­
though Ihe two-trick act would
have gone away.

J**

rrSTiew
:

T I I O O (A u g . 3S-8ept. 22)
D on't be discouraged today If
y o u r a c h le v e m e m m — 0 b o '
m easure up to y o o r^ expects
tlona. The Important thing la
that you are m oving In the right
direction, even If It'a only a step
at a time.

r

(C )IS B O , N E W S P A P E R
TERPRISE ASSN.

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MOT TWO.

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�D ue to the com plexities o f
their m arital problem s, Psrlanl
Insisted Fred and a son w ho lives
at hom e take the course, too.
They did, and all better un-

Psrlanl said, Hl w ill never stay
in « relationship w here I don't
ha ve som e o f m y needs m e t”
P a r ia n l'a s e e in s tru c to r.
Valerie Harrison, said recently
that people come Into the d a m
with a lot o f inner and outer

li
t&lt;
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fi
o

o f the Mind. Also she
at Valencia Com m unity
and travels extensively
government’s training
r personnel covering the

PBS’s ‘Civil War* now bound

approved
ment w b
c o u rse s
T raining
Training,
H arden
n a n and

But slavery and tts consequence* remain —
must rem ain — fundam ental to any explana­
tion. A s Oen. Ulysses B, Orant, the architect o f
the Union's ultimate victory, put It in an 1863
letter to his con cession al patron, Ellhu B.
W aahbum e: " I never w as an Abolitionist, not
even w hat could be called anti-slavery, but I
try to Judge forety ft honestly and It becam e
potent to m y m ind early In the rebellion that
the North ft South could never live at peace
with each other except os one nation, and that
without slavery. A s anxious as I am to see
peace re-established t would not therefore be
w illin g to see an y settlem ent until this
quesuon is lorever ectuca.

Partani said she and Pred have
been m arried for 10 years and
ing. healthy! h JpJT w icP ffK iT y
peaceful.
The Partanls m et w hen they
both worked for Piper Aircraft.
They each have grow n children

p o rate e x p erien ce a n d Is a
hum an development specialist.
She ow ns her ow n business.

c a w tia a a a ream r a g s 1C
and put her tim e and effort Into
Carter still lives In the sam e w ork and her three children o f
house into which she and her whom she speaks w ith pride,
h u s b a n d m oved
fro m Ap* H er d au gh ter, O ay , liv e s In
patachla. V s.
Bustls and w orks for Southern
She says they m oved from Freightw sy, a trucking firm .
V irg in ia becau se b u sin e sse s D avid la a radio DJ an early
w ere closin g an d It becam e m o r n in g p r o g r a m m in g In
Increasingly difficult to m ake a Johnson City, T%nn. H e w ill be
living and support their children broadcastin g from D isney in
w hile there. Living In Sanford October. O ary ow n s his ow n
w as better for the fam ily. H ow - shoe repair shop In Memphis,
ever, there w as a divorce after Carter Is also a grandmother to
which her form er husband re- four girts and a n e b o y a n d a

The Civil W ar, which also coincided with the
In v e n t io n o f p h o t o g r a p h y , h a s b e e n
m agnificently - sometimes ghastly - brought
to Ufe by the 11-hour Public Broadcasting

maker
the grandkids and look forw ard
to thetr visits. I don't see the kids
from Tenn. very often but I
spend 1 day s month in Eustls to
be w ith m y daughter and her
fom lly. t look forward to that day
all month lo n g."
th e e p ito m e o f a g r a c io u s
waitress, perform ing her tasks
w ith the finesse o f a lady meticu­
lously laying fore for royalty.' her

Millie, a s told to Barbara
I — Kurt Vonnegut (No. B —
*d&gt;
Jackie ColUns (1,906)
H d aigh t * Stephen King (6

• — W illiam Styron (3 —
' — Kitty Dukakis (8 -

i B o ra s — Colleen M eCullogh
f tk a M a k — C an ts Fisher (9

Ingram Book

TSBggre

.--- l T T ' T r " ! 1

n octurn al an im al leaves the
cov er'o f the dense vagr la lton to
m ass after nlgbtfoll. W allabies
have been known to travel over a

I 1—
T’Tl ;■ , -

M uscular hind legs enable the
w allaby to hop. Thetr targe tails
are used to balance them selves
w hile they are hopping o r sit­
ting. Their sm all arm s are used
o n ly fo r fe ed in g an d w h en
w alking slowly.
So hop on over to the Centra]
Florida Zoological Park to sec
throe most fsclnatlng anim als.

survival since fresh w ater Is
o fte n u n a v a ila b le fo r lo n g
periods o f time.
T h e fifH Ht W allaby requires
den se lo w vegetation for U s
ran g ss

fo r

f e e d in g .

T h is

F rie d

Shrimp

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Sen ford, Ptortdt -

Sunday, October l , 1SK&gt;
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IN B R I E F

M i M r i T T ' ii i i i a i n

SCC grad toot Florida QKD
Jr

SANFO RD - Michael J. W alsh o f AHamonte Springs
recently selected by the Am erican Council on Education to
receive the outstanding achievem ent aw ard for the state at
Florida.
.
W elsh. 10, graduated from the Sem inole Com m unity College
O ED program In January 1000 and scored an ‘‘alm ost perfect
score" according to Carolyn Straw , Coordtnator/Aduh Basic
Education project.
• . ...
W alsh w as presented with a plaque for having earned the
t score on the teat last year.
the five years that the aw ard has been given, this Is the
second lim e It has been given to an SCC O E D graduate. In
1007, John Price won the sam e aw ard.

8cb«kt Initiated Into honor aootety
Trenton L. Sc hake, eon o f Arthur and Janet Schake o f
Sanford, w as recenty Initiated as a m em ber at the Liberty
University (Virginia) chapter o f Ute Alpha Lam bs Delta honor
society.
t
To be accepted Into the society, students m ust m aintain n
grade point average o f at least 3 8 on a four-point scale.

ocm inoN yvinrooR wins iw m ii
S A N F O R D — Sem inole H igh S ch oo l's yearbook. The
Salm agundi, recently won an All-Am erican rating from the
National Scholastic Press Association for the 1990 edition o f
the book. This w as the third consecutive year The Salm agundi
was so honored.
An All-Am erican la the highest rating the organisation gives
in the first round o f Judging. They were etted for their
excellence In design, theme and photography.
The theme o f the book w as ''W e 'v e Got a Hot New Attitude"
which reflected the students' feelings about renovations at the
school and (h e Im proved academ ic and extracurricular
program s.
Shannon Latim er, w ho la Sem inole H igh 's student corre­
spondent for the Sanford Herald. Is the editor o f The
8alm agundl.
Nationwide few er than ISO yearbook* earn the All American
status.

•^ V-

Juntef

Students, faculty
forward to Smith era
■
y&amp; L
n fq n school correspondent

LAKE MARY Lake
M ary High School has been
experiencing m any changes
lately In the area o f ad ­
m inistration area. W e 'v e
known for a long time that
p rin c ip a l D on R e y n o ld s
would retire before the end
o f the year, but it w asn't
until early Septem ber U w as
decided that assistant prin­
cipal Don Sm ith would take
over at the beginning o f the
second quarter. Now. an ­
ticipation rises as the stu­
dents wait to see what the
school w ill be like under a
new principal.
Sm ith, w ho has been at
L a k e M a ry s in c e the
sch ool's Inception. ‘
h is L M H S career/
u c iv ic s la ;
freshm an basketball cusch.
In 1963 Sm ith becam e
dean o f students and conUnued to coach bosket ball
R a n d the first v a rs ity
baseball team as w ell. He
went on to be nam ed assiatn charge of
and
supervision o f vocational
ed u c atio n an d so c ia l

Because he w ill be taking
over at the beginning o f the
second nine weeks. Smith
says he sees no need to
change anything this year
when the students and fac­
ulty are already com fortable
In their environment. In­
stead. he says his goal for
this year la to become more
fam iliar wtth the faculty
and to establish a comfort­
able storking relationship
with them.

S m ith sa y s. " I h a v e
taught. I have been a dean
and ! have been an assistant
p rincipal, a n d this h as
allowed me to observe stu­
dents and faculty In m any
capacities. I think my task
be to m aintain the
t h r o n g educational growth

JsSW ta and
iSMMSN*?
to provide the

A fresh approach to
ninth grade challenges
H

activities has given the daaa
at 1994 the chance to meet
a wide range o f people.

It9h school corrsspondsnt

SANFO R D Changing
schools can be an experi­
ence that one never forgets.
A n d the transition from
m i d d l e s c h o o l to h ig h
school la often a M g change
as well.
•

4

Freshm en like D aphne
Brow n held preconceived
thoughts about what the
change would be like.
"In high school I expected
to be treated differently, but
here (Sem inole) I Teel at
hom e." said Daphne.
Being a freshman
c h e e r le a d e r h a s a la o
allowed Daphne (o lead her
claae In spirit.

"T h e aoclal aettlng Is
great. There ore so m any
people to meet. People o f
different ages and
sold freshm an che
Sarah Letch worth.
Even though their transi­
tion has been m ade easier,
either by friends, fam ily or
t e a c h e rs, the fr e s h m a n
c l a s s h a s to f a c e a
challenge. Freshm en must
stand u p to the challenge o f
J u g g lin g fun with
•choot wont.
"M y teachers have helped
m e s lo t ," said Atonda

Mont(

npl:

educa­
tional o p p o rtu n itie s fo r
young people that w ill help
them reach their potentials.

Joining a d u b or another
o rg an isa tio n h as helped
m any freshm en adjust to
high schopl.

Student Body President
Katie ailliam says. ' T m
id he w as chosen because
• been here for a long
lim e and he know s the
traditions. He w ill definitely
rem ain an asset to Lake
M ary."

"B v being on the dance
team scary things were not
to scary.' said Elena Bat-

S

T h e- transition to high
sch ool w h ere they have
becom e involved In m any

W it h le a d e r s h ip fro m
d a y presid e n t A n thony
Anderson, help from teach­
ers. and support from other
members o f the faculty and
encouragem ent from u p­
p e rc la ssm e n , fresh m en
have an atm osphere that
allow s them to guccagd*
“ Sem inole h as a good
atmosphere, one o f a k in d,"
said Carrie M agura.

•»VT iffW If|
li, David Pst

S W IS S !

Herald staff
oU writer

o u te rs a re re q u ire d b y the
P riv ate In d u stry C o u n cil to
m e n certain icvcn ov acmcvt*

The

'isE

c o m p u te rs

a re

u se d

5:

Tim Private Industry Council
o f Sem inole C oun ty w a s so
Im pressed wtth the results at

Thursday. The cost Is $40.
Par more Information about the
departm ent at SS3- 1400, eat. 330.

Fame*ahewoMtatSCC

their level o f reading ability, but
.any student can use the com*
puter at other times.
O aileao m id that the commiter
otter.Im m ediate feedbm ktoiJbe
students who m ight otherwise
be distracted from their team ing
In a regular classroom setting.
She noted a lso that som e
students, m any o f wham are In
the target g o u p . do not team
v e il when they bear inform stlo n . bu t th ey a re a b le to
sealm llsir the knowledge when
they see the sam e Information

f

‘O ur ordinary leaching techoes are a com bination at
urtng and reading textbooks
d som e people are Just not

0 a.m. It wgl he held In reams I IT and IIS of
h ilH tpg

J

Lochs Lowe

H i Aas *--------- t h a t aaemae ••A a lU n a x

Preparatory School

P ) nf

Par mere tnfannatlsn.caH SIS* 148a ext. S44.

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1

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* ••*

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NEWS DIGEST
‘ W a s h in g t o n - The failure of
its to regulate

__ _

mg is jraputll'

thg ’ ties &lt;health and safety of

•

a

i

iloners Sturm,
nd elections _®

•

SANFORD - Seminole County commission
Incumbents Bob Sturm and Sandra Olenn
survived their Republican primaries Tuesday

McGregor

J

A

l A A f l A l t f i

October runoff. Sturm gamed 47A percent of the
gained 16.5 percent oTthe vote.
*
___
In all. 51.414 of Seminole County's 111.932

•

•^Olenn handily defeated farmer county cotnmla- .! Although Sturm eald he would have been more
•loner and school board member Robert "Bud"
confident facing Fean In October wtth a wider
Feather by a 57.6 to 42.1 margin to win the
margin of votes. be said his support shows he wUI
District 4 primary Tuesday night. She will now
be re-elected. No Democrats are seeking the
face DemocntUuty Furlong Nov. 6.
Otetrtct 2 seal ao either Sturm or Fees will be
But Sturm failed to gain a plurality and will
deleted to the position by Republicans Oct. 2.
face former U *e Mary mayor DU* Fees la an
O toe Clsmsd s d sa, MflS 6 A
.

elected circuit

Brock, Julian
face runoff
in November
SANFORD - Newman D. Brock
and Ned Julian were the run-off
victors in the race for ISth Judicial
Circuit Judge, group. 10 yesterday,
while Robert B. McGregor defeated
Jeff Been to retain his seat aa circuit
H t e ^ l t ? j u d ^ circuit consists
or both Seminole and Brevard
counties.
•
•
In the group 10 race, the com­
bined two-county returns showed
Brock with 28.400 votes while
Julian had 22.801.
It was a dose call for Julian, who
was actually bested In Brevard
County by Robert E. Miller, who
domed 175 more votes than Julian
In that .county. Mdter's total waa

17.6%
Erie H. WMsr (U. QovJ
Anthony R. Martin (QovJ....7J4
Sobara A. Lindsay (U.OovJ
■obMsrtfaMfQovJL~.il .726

AMsonDotoorfU.OovJ

QhMsslQovJ.~JJ4S
__ SJI74 51.0%
....4415 44.1%

UUSCRIIH

T O I til

A N I O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Cal l 3 2 2 2 6 1 1

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in Brevard County c bruit Court in
CooflUl aakl the new warrant tad not I
but a detainer has been placed on H

now quaattoM whether

identified Ut the report

oh the child's body, mid

UtvmUgaUott, but
reoorda derh with the Indian River County

SherttTa Office.

'

V

•-

taw-i
durt

Baaed on the victim's otatement, Indian River ■ 'pita

authnrtllri iaeued a warrant charging Humphrey
with armed burglary and attempted eexuai
battery/

yaH.
unie
Humphrey was already being held under 91
Th
million band at the Brevard County Detention hour
Cantor In Sharpes. He waa charged Thursday In t Quee
Brevard County, aouthewn of OataeevUk. with Rum
Mpavated battery in the aBetaed fc—tif| of hb * "ft

W ith 18 percedt b f the
unity's 977 prectncla report-

Tuaie ■ area

« • | * n i * Have (i
which to exactly what

Important to American aa

gl

i s a p i

11

seeding amoothly. with an 80

a 'j r
T7'
td
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Ol

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4'^

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Semintf
Jm y Human reports charging Richest
Summer* oud TnU, Maitland, with for
•Begedty cashing a forged check tor

SANFORD - Lender NcO Wells. 30. 904
Altamonte 8prtngs. wanted on a Seminole Ct
two counts of uttering a forgery, surrendered
to be charged at about 10ajn. Tuesday.,
According to the arrest report WsRs Is aocu

■A10J0RD - The following persons tace a charge of driving
under the Influence of uloohottDU!) in Semlnalo Couutyt
•John Joseph Briggs Jr.. 38. of Ocala, waa arrested at liBd
a.m-Tuesdsy after he drove erratically In a parting lot off State
Road 430. Altamonte Springs. He waa ahocharged with
careiem driving.
•Rena Maieea Campbell. 33. of Palatka. wasarreoted at about
0 p m Tuesday after her car ran a Mop sign and hit a median
Springs
on Shehoa Boulevard. Winter Springs.
SANFORD - City police here are InveMtgMloog the 6:30
a.m. Monday robbery of the LQ* Champ. iT lS Celery Ave..
Sanford. In addition to stealing store property, police said the
knife-wielding robber stole the clerk's car. The cay waa

SANFORD — Co-owners of
. Cesaie'a Palace motel, 3900 S.
I Orlando Drive. Sanford, are free
I Qd 19,(100 bond each. Both men
1 irw rharawl with 19 counts each
: oftheftof^tcfCnds
; Cesarv A. Pohdoro. S3 , and
I Anthony John Milasso. 46. both
J of Oviedo, are accused of col-

documents show.
•
. Samlnote County sheriffs
warrants issued
through the state attorney a of*
ft®* arrested the men at the
Seminole County Jag. Mdasao
* “ arrested Aug. 89. and
Mtlasy surrenderedAug. 81. Jai
recordaahow.

m &amp; S S * CornoUM .

8 # p t Ith wfeha

•JOAM sign up

|&gt;I P.l*-

. (■

�to atom the flew af
i’d never

rtty
(He
sem

EDITORIALS

bur
iaat
"to
end

dtepatch from The
N e * York Time*’
MarfeUhUc:
’ ‘Bight month*
after the. American
eoike, Panamanian*
familiar with the
c o u n try '* Jungle

eh would
e for an

, covet* n
N» when
heldiRR.
arid* oil

typified

JACK

ANDERSON

Chamorro wary

R O B E l ! T W A r. M A N

further unaettle
Chamorr o * ahaky
adm ialatratlon.

iTVwfumora

adi m flak a a'I

relatively young and ineaperlanced

�•" ^

*2

Vti.&lt;

S S S S S S S
^ _____

m

__ __

-vV

,

I From th « fiflu rg t I
w o m w p»ip»f wVnon

■s HffiTS^.TSSJ'S
ws.ebout.ao ptretm
the rati In the Democratic Of tnO VOtO. pOfOOfU*

# t ( | in on two Irani otl uniK n rhlldr
In the Persian Gulf region called
Uw
Wednesday. The British Brand- two c
H2
easting Corp. reported the reinali
warships would Intercept the *---------------- # ----- ,_Md
tanhera g they attempted to land Stow j ^ ™ * * * * ^
up with oil.
Iraq said it would continue
efforts for a "comprehensive
Arab settlement to all issues In _____ _
____
the region" and an "Arab sotu- atnveafooefKowWt.
tlon" was the only way to end
TheMra Maws An
the crisis. The Irani News lag the gaeanrawnt a
Agency quoted an Iraqi govern- M id Wednesday I
ment spokesman saying the deavere* with all

STSZJSiLSiS^S^S: *Q* w fM
onto In (tec nm-term fcpublican Incumbent Craig

it looks Hk«
• .nMnOM#* l l i SAT#
tO M y l*Vt WOO. |

Uon and "would food to an
explosion In the region ...
threatening the miitiafo of Its
countries and othar world

g M g S ftg j
FWPM OMn « ■ » W w ^ W w

OomiM mmi a wmttkft m tilt
Orange wood Presbyterian
A iS v M n S K r S M w ? s ."

WHERESHOULD YOU00

fo e fo n e r s l d s d s iq n s a n d
w s h o n o r th e m .

v

�Circuit
=
!
•
•
j
]
j

pleased with not only
but the campaign
itself. Referring to hta opponents
he said , " T h e y w ere all
gentlemen In a gentleman’*
race.” He aald the victory * fcda
good, and with the right
momentum, we’ll carry It la

waa highly Important to "take
the time to study each caae
carefully, and take time In

J.OJJ

the margin o f victory waa

‘Very
1M b

for group ! • . Char lea M.
Holcomb or Cocoa received
43,M3 vole* far S1.3 percent.

33.711

.Governor
and health.
loeed that he
i Senate eeat
oe of clinical

Chile*, who predicted C
would be able to doeei
avoid the sort of Inter
breech through which

,Hrfiere’a a aptrlt that * dtfbrent (from IM S),” Chile* aald.
T think everybody la going to
mate together. I think It will
reopen Into time.”

"Now It’* time I
eratic family to cm
Nelson told hi* a
partem In Orfando.
In the Repubtt

EEK &amp; MEEK* by Howie Schneider!

WE’VE

CHANGED

wtth oOmt cnMae from ncaspapem acmes the countsy. The
Heraldwtnnlnicatiywillraoctraa aimedoriginal fromcartoon*
lot Howie Schneider, end achance at having Us or her gag and
name printed nationallyIn an BEK&amp; MEEKatrip in November.
The Sanford Heraldwin run 7 different Incomplete comics
between 8ept Sand 8ept 21. You can tiyrourhandatoneor
several...entoaaiiMmyUoieeaeyouwtah. Soptdeupyour pent

�AC backs school candidates &gt;
jrta
they have endorsed Barbara ;
------------------ Kuhn of Casselberry and In
SANTORO
The Seminole District B they have en dorse^
Itlcal'Action Jeanne Mums rfLoagw S
announced its
—
Mates in each * The Seminole UnOerve Po: school board lltkal Action Committee Is
___
made up of members of the
In the District 1 race, they four unions that represent the
ive endorsed John Bush of employees of the Seminole
'inter Springs: in Dtstrict 4 County school district.

“I'm eery
SAKfWtD - John Sloop and
Ken Swan, the two top votegetters In the five-man Seminole
wiU^Mce on in the Nov. 8 general
« 00|^ with 8.682 votes, receivM aas percent, and Sevan,
with 6 JS 8. had 22.2 percent of
the vote. Richard S. Taylor Jr.,
received 8,002 votes for 17.7
pereentt Michael Kramer had
4,704 votes at 16.7 percent: and
Chris Ray received 3.B43 votes
for 11 .2 percent.
As returns began trickling in
Tram various precincts around
the county, no trends seemed to
be indicated. K wasn't until late
in the evening when It became
dear that Sloop would m d v e
the largest number of votes.

SKIN CARE CLINIC
said, Tm not down. Just re­
member. Abraham Lincoln

Diseases k Surgery o f the Skin
Coemetic Vein Therapy

harder."
Sloop ha
experience
criminal ca
law work ti

.

.

f}'.

;u V

.•v*l^r^w6»•*t ' '*X~J’ f t * '

:• ,

H

■
iv *

M

Mi

hrfH

I

•

O T C H A N G E O F LAND Ui
PUBLIC HEARING
M. SEPTEMBER 10,1990

I

Iona office at the County
i Building until the last
I was reported last night,
over and over again that
"very pleased with the

R obert J. Smith, M.D., P A .

�MATIO

&amp; WINE

Judge Souttr receives htg fjf »t n tl
W A SH IN G T O N - - Suprem e-!
tin
well
received the American Bar AaeoclaUonYl
qualified." (he A B A announced Tuesday.
Ralph Lancaaler Jr., chairman o f the A B A Standing
Committee on the Federal Judiciary, reported hit committee's
findings Tuesday morning to Senate Judiciary Committee
Chairman Joseph Blden. D D cl.. and to William P. Barr. Deputy
Attorney General.
In a brief note. Lancaster said the "committee has
unanimously concluded that Judge David H. Souter Is ‘well
qualified’ for appointment to the Supreme Court of the United
States."
Well qualified Is the highest of three A BA ratings. The other
two are qualified and not qualified.

Maaslve payola ca st toaaad out
LOS AN Q ELES — A federal Judge Tuesday dismissed the
&gt;rtnglng to a stunning end
biggest payola case In U.S. history, br
the _government's prosecution of a once powerful record
promoter uflcr finding that key evidence w as Improperly
withheld from the defense.
In tossing out the charges against Joseph Isgro. U.S. District
Judge James M. Idcman said. "T h e court finds that there has
been outrageous government misconduct."
"H a v in g been caught with the sm oaln g pistol, the
government, having previously denied It had a pistol. denltJ
the pistol smoked,” Ideman said.

GOOD THRU TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 11
lif t

itaint

AllB iC WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD!
1102.

Possible link between fatigue end virus
PHILADELPHIA - Scientists reported Tuesday they have
found evidence that the debilitating chronic fatigue syndrome,
commonly called the "yuppie fiu.” may be linked to a virus.
Elaine DeFreltas. an associate professor at the Wistar
Institute, and two colleagues found evidence In the blood of
syndrome patients of a type of virus known as a retrovirus.
Retroviruses are viruses that use an unusual genetic
mechanism to reproduce. The virus that causes AIDS Is a
retrovirus while another retrovirus has been linked to a rare
form o f leukemia.
The researchers said they had not yet Identified the virus or
shown It actually causes the disease.
"A t the very least, we will sequence the gene of the virus that
we have found and determine Its relationship to other
retroviruses and Its biologic behavior." DeFreltas said.

BURNETTS
ith.

Cl OM H U M
rfijJU m A 'm A
t

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CtOM

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Soweto warmly w aleom at da Klerk
SOW ETO. South Africa — President Frederik de Klerk made
a surprise visit to the nation's largest black township of Soweto
and mingled easily with cheering residents welcoming the
leader they believe might end white minority rule.
It w as only the fourth visit tn 12 years by a South African
head of government to a black township and the first by de
Klerk since he became president Sept. 20.
De Klerk, his wife Marieke and two Cabinet Ministers spent
ay tn the township touring a hospital, schottrshopping
Tuesday
factional
center . poUcc M a ik m .a n d a workers' hostel tom
cc less tthan two weeks ago.
violence'

CtOMMUl*

I7MI

Cl. OM

m llt t V

it

“ -1J 9 S
CtOM

SUE
A n im o ff

C A N A D I A N SALE

South Africa: A! toast 35 killed
JOH ANNESBUR G . South Africa - Fighting In the black
township o f Sebokeng killed at least 33 people. Including 11
found dead after soldiers fired on crowds surrounding a hostel
for migrant workers, police said.
Nearly 100 people were wounded and more than 100 were
arrested Tuesday, police spokesman Col. Prana Malherbe said.
Police sources said a prominent local leader o f the Zulu
movement Inkatha. Them ba Khoza. waa am ong those detained
— allegedly found In the hostel area passing out AK*47s from
his vehicle to supporters.
From Uni tod F ro st Intom sUonol Roports

C tO M -S O M

IP! 9!L

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C t.O M M ttJ I
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QiLD

CROW

IN ’ r a n
Is a proud mombor of tho "Welcome
Wagon" Family In Samlnola County

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I 'A I I M lN I i W iNI

o T o T u .m m I c i o M

'. A i l

sr B it n
B 1 M I

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«

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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

It t -O M t -t llit t

tt.0M I-t1tt.il

IM I'OM I I 1) W IN t S A l 1

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

d-OM-ttm

3?

r

B

1M

B

7M

S

IM l

B

IM

B

441

B

O H

0

b i i
B

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B

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U

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TTSS

rnraS IMl

Sanford — 323-4614
Lake Mary - 321-6660 or 330-3311
Longwood — 331-4016 or 869-0369
Winter Springs — 696-2515
Altamonte — 869-4340
Casselberry - 699-9255 or 696-2515
Oviedo - 8696612

Z 1MI

—

B 7M

Z IMl
t'£ IMl
Z Ml

£

BM I

■Iran «

IM l

B S 1J I

AS
LOWER
NGlI H(iu»

J4L*

PRICES

MAUI

( Mi. h I IS

4.79

'.M ill' \
I'

I’M - I

NAPA

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CtOMI-ttUI

�WEDNESDAY

’ SANFORD - This ta the last week to sign up
your town to pUy tn the Sanford Recreation
Deportment Men's Foil Slowpltch Softball
Uagues that wtl start the week orSept. 10
The Racreation Deportment ta trying to line
i*&gt; S4 teams for Its leagues, tactudtag starting

2-1 In jam boree
KX:‘

W^ ^ ^ w 1 l . b e t 2 4 0 p e r t e &lt;un
(player* who dent fire ta Sanford would oloo
i. &gt;v^to pay a nonrea'dent's foe of 110 before
being elifibto to play).
Oomee wtn be played at Pinehuist and Chaw
pork*. The deadline far entry ta Friday. Sept. 7
at 5 p.m.

Foe more uuoniumoti* cocuaci me Kfcrciuofi

Department at SS04MB7 during working hour*.

ALTAMONTE SPIUNOB - The Florida Amoelation of The Athletics Coruree (TAC) has
announced that Schowanda Wiliams. a Lyman
High School graduate who was a member of the
IM S Olympic dOOmeter hurdle team, has been
nomtnafort for Induction into the Ftortda Track
and FteM Hag of Fame.
Williams was one of six new inductees

waa a good opportunity to try some different
Utliuta that might help them defend thslr titles.
"We experimented with a lot of different
players In different situations." aatd Oviedo
coach Anita Carlson. 'l l gives you ah Indication

N

Y O b h

a

R E A ,

REAL) T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A I L Y

�■

S TA TS &amp; STANDINGS
lartlalWEiiltiiaH

w w u %

= = 2 5 2 2 2 5 2 --------------

dragged pole Utter Mike Ookken
to l a t e r a l l y lape. Faulk wae

demon got to the race track late
fortheoMondnlghtlnaraw.
Wrt whan aJTwm aMd and

C A u tom o tive C hevrolet
Lumtna. -Borghl
until he
apun on lap » , loalng a lap In

■ «* *
Dave

saeuL^e-jisa'S^

■,

jm ii

Saturday ntgM'a aeoood leg of
the third annual Budwelaer
Twin 100 Late Modd Champi­
on ah ip a t N ew S m y r n a

I pre-race
l of the
mi,
d you're
ter «hat
Mid Ansr besting

by Dave McCabe In the Doug
Latham machine. Tim Puller
drove a superb race to take
fourth over t o o Bowers, the last
car on the lead lap at the Saleh.
Borghl came back to lake
Math, a lap doom, over follow
Miami driver Jtmmy Doyle and
Idoeraon' fostcat qualifier Bade. James
a In time Wllaon and Runty Hanson
d for two rounded out the top 10 .
i sent on
In other action at New Smyrna

Starting from the rear of the
AlMCWQ |H§ involved in
ana of the three aborted start
Inddenta, leaving hla Cosh Reglater Ineuram cfrrmrnl PrrCtrt
Still, the defending Florida
Oovernor'e Cup champion
worked hla way up through the
Reid and took over m ono place
on lap S3. Four laps later, he

QunSt knlvgSi HiWBiy m sNiofRbllRf 4 r ^ib s I drtvs
v fiW M 9 tW W V T W ifP iM i| iM vwm fQVit OMKV*

motors, totting tacfclt, miHnt otsctronics, soubR
•nd dMng qnt, irohciy.

DAYTONA OCEAN CENTER
SATURDAY, SEPT. Mh
&amp;JN| &gt; a m .- 6 p.m.
S r1* SUNDAY. S E P t am

r ~ ^ im
m z zrri

W

f■

�NNSBh m K h h K

Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida — Wednesday, Saptambar

. ^
Senior Center, at Seminole and Sanford
Avenuea, wtU be the alte of at. Informational coffee aponeorcd
hythe Retired Senior Volunteer Program of Seminole County.
w.|iu.&lt;Hv m Vt V I I i p i u l f I

sflU slw fli sICVMOf
js VOvUmMf
^■■n.umky.
ip fis C f

end a ande ahov -preeentatlon about vohmtaor arthithe

1N0

SANFORD — Jerry Seam reO u l^ W to S n td O M o ^ ftt* n

Brans' faulty name It fanSlnr
to Oentnd Honda dman aa Ida
dad. Dan, and upolaa mm and
operate Bdnne Perms who

rtertfTa departments with dulled and capertenced eervlcea
baaed on the votunteer'aintereats and background.
For mot* Information, call RSVP at 333-4440.
The Central Florida Rose Sac
IB p.m.. at the Marita Street 8
d Magnolia. Orlando. Judging

We*reOpenandOffering

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pfft

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�H i - : IS.*:,/:

otMrue linlna the v ttH ei He
also Mid I have loat about 80
percent af my heart voltage.
What cauaea lorn of body voltage
and what, if anything, can «v-

ia m m iL iY
wr, i w

m u

•ifcUTlPUL

had surgery to restore circula­
tion to the heart muscle that was
ad by ineufftcleat oxygen
i now you hive developed
’ obstruction In another
mgor artery (the right coronary

S
■ r '- j #

be measured by amplifying

FgAWtia
P5ST.FIUNKUN! INSW
TOSORROWA PENCIL
; AMD SOME MPK...

AOCTOnt

By Jamas Juosby
One advantage to transfer
bidding in response to no-trump
la that often the responder can
get a feel for the quality of
opener's trump support. So
*^ ^ ^ e rth batuftiltdtQhearts

Now what? In a vacuum It's
right to play club ace and a dub
to the queen. You win whenever
Boat holds the dub king; you
also win when West holds the
doubleton king of dubs. (After
winning the king, he would have
to give a-eluff and a ruff.) But

frv*j.» *

ARLOANOJANtf

k i b e far you.

YOU PONT LOOK 700
c iw w e *

TK15 MOWWNQ

�. .

3C. shredded cabbage

2 green ontons, sliced

MIDGE
MYCOFF

144C. sugar
2Tbsp, butler or margarine
It tap. sugar
I tap. lemonjuice
to tap. salt m l
Dash lemon pepper

Combine beans and water in
.
ql. casserole. Cover with caaa shorter cooking time, you will simmering to become tender. sero*e ltd. Microwave on 100%
have more nutritious. flavorful After bringing the beans to a power, 3-4 minutes or until
vegetables. Green beans do re- boil, the power is reduced to boiling. Stir, then reduce power
quite more liquid than most allow them to gently simmer. On to low (30% and M/W 9-10
vegetables because of a longer most microwave ovens It Is minutes or until tender-crisp,
cooking time. Even so. they can about 30% power.
Drain beans. Add cabbage, onion
still be cooked with teas liquid
Vegetable combinations are and butter. M/W on 100%
than is normal for conventional always attractive and add inter- power. 4-3 minutes or until
cooking. The microwave tech- eat as welt as flavor compll- desired doneness, stirring once,
nlque lor green beans is similar menu.
Add sugar, lemon Juice, salt and
to conventional preparation. M A M R A R D C A M A M
pepper; mix lightly,
because green beans contain
8 os. fresh green beans.
cellulose which requires some snapped (about 2 cups)
The flavor of bacon adds a nice

.

aalIces bacon
S C. fresh green beans

------------- a

lamall onion, chopped m a f f
UTbap. water
aTbap. cider vinegar
8 tap. tarragon leaves
to tap. salt

Add bqana, onion and water to
dripptap. Cover. M/W on 30%
power. 14-18 minutes or until
tender. Bttr in vinegar, sugar,
tarragon and salt. Crumble
bacon and qwtnkle over beano
Just before serving. Makes 4-8
servings— 48 calories each.
This recipe is much like the
green bean dish that appears at
every covered dish supper? how-

water In l-qt. casserole. Cover.
M/W on 100% power 4*8
minutes or until mixture boils.
Stir, then microwave on 30%
power 14-18 minutes or until
Just about tender. Stir m sour
cream t act aside. Combine
almonds and butter in glass
custard cup. M/W on 100%
power, uncovered. 3-4 minutes
or untfl golden brawn, stirring
minutes or until Just tendercrisp. Drain and run under cold
water to atop further cooking.
Dry the beans on paper towels
and set aside. Transfer the beans
to a large serving bowl together
with the red onion and tans wtth
to C. vtnaglgrette. Marinate at
room temperature for 30

Use fresh cho
vinaigrette for
combo.
____

al Sm
NM M
nala O

naitsuncawp
wciTiaa

For many families today, time la the moat
precious commodity. As a result, people are
relying more and more on the convenience of
prepared meals, especially at dinner time. These
meats can be high In salt and fat. adding sodium
and extra calories to your diet. Since excess
sodium has been linked to hypertension, a
condition which increases your risk of heart
disease and kidney, disorders, there Is added
concern.
But active people take heart) With ash-free
seasoning Mends, you can make quick and easy
entrees that are low In sodium and high In
nutrition and taste. Made with an all-natural
blend of herbs and apices, these blends add
delicious, hearty flavor to every evening meal
without added aatt.
Because one teaspoon of salt contains a
whopping 3.328 mg of sodium — nearly five
times the BOO mg needed in your dally diet —
reducing your family's salt Intake may be the key
to healthier eating In the 90a. With the great
taste of seasoning blends, you can create dinner
recipes that taste so good, your family won't
believe they are low In sodium.
This meal of Lemon Herb Sole. Vegetable
Stir-Fry. Fiesta Salad and Asparagus with Cream
Sauce will spice up your table with homemade
goodness the whole family will love. It Is easy to
make, low in soldium and (at and perfect for
those trying to eat a healthy, well-balanced diet.
Tty It tonight and see why for those on the go.
Dlnnera-tn-a-daah are the only way to go.
For information on the sodium content of more
than 10.000 foods and a free brochure with
additional low sodium recipes, call the Mrs. Dash
Toll-Free Hotline at I-MOOT-DASH.

bams.

(about Bounces)
2 cups thinly sliced fresh mushrooms
1 to cups fresh broccoli, blanched.
1 tbsp. red wine vinegar
Blanch pea pods In boiling water far 10
seconds. Drain and cover wtth cold water? set
aside. Heat oil at high setting (378*F) In wok or
large frying pan. Stir In to teaspoon seasoning
mix. Add carrots and sugar. Cook for lto
minutes, stirring constantly. Add mushrooms
and cook about 30 seconds or until tender,
stirring constantly. Reduce heat to 32B*F. Add
broccoli and wine vinegar. Cook for 30 seconds,
stirring constantly. Ada tomato, pea pods, and
remaining seasoning mix. Heat attiring con­
stantly until vegetables are crisp tender.
Makes 8 servings
PER SERVING:

to cup water

4 Sole Fillets or other flab fllleta (1M pounds)
2-3 taps, frozen orangeJuice concentrate
2-3 taps, lemon A herb seasoning blend
2 tbaps. sliced scallion
•
Preheat broiler according to manufacturer a
directions. Line broiler rack with foil. Spray foil
with vegetable cooking spray- Combine aeraonfog
blend and orange juice In small bowl. Let stand
for 8 minutes. Place fillets on rack In broiler pan
and brush evenly with acsaorUng mUture. Broil
for 8 to 7 minutes or until ftah (lakes easily with
fork. Sprinkle wub scallions.
Makes 4 servings
PER SERVING:
Calories: 126
iFat: 1 g
Sodium: 113 mg
Cholesterol: 71mg
Diabetic Exchange: 2 meat
VM UTAM M O knT
I toSpTorMlnSblrndteasoolng mix. divided
to tap. M‘gi&gt;r
I small tomato cut into wedges
3 ibaps.com oil
n ig s u e u e
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�FOOTBALL 1990
Previewing Seminole County’s six public high school teams.
Sanlord Herald — Wednesday. September 5. 1990 Herald Advertiser — Thursday. September 6, 1990 — Sanlord. FI______ _____________________

Niw faon
Lakt Mary High
School aonlor Joa
Manallo (latt) la
quartarbaeka In
Saminola County
thla yaar. Saa
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BRAKE INSPECTION
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FR O NT W HEELS ONLY...

ALL W HEELS.... 4
Mott Can. Parts Extra.

—

�Sanford Herald — Wednesday. September 5, 1W0 — Herald Advertiser — Thursday, September 8, 1990 — Sanford. Ft. — •

SEMINOLE FIGHTING SEMINOLES

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IBlake,

’Noles looking to go further than last year

■ v t o n y m o u m w ii
Herald Sports Editor

In two years. Emory
Blake and his staff have
taken the Seminole I Huh
S c h o o l fo o tb a ll team
from a 4-6 record In 1988
to the 4A-Distrtct 7 und
4A-Heglon IV champion­
ships.
This year, with largely
the same cast as last
y e a r. B lak e and th e
‘Noles are aiming to go
even further.
" I f we can go without
Injuries this year, we
could be the equal of last
year." said Blake oh his
1990 F ig h tin g S em inoles. "W ith a couple o f
b reak s, we cou ld go
further than last year.”
The main reason for
Blake's optimism is the'
amount o f talent Semi­
nole has back at the
skilled positions, begin­
n in g w ith th ird -y e a r
s ta r tin g q u a rte rb a c k
Kerry Wiggins.
In the wide-open o f­
fense S em in ole runs.
Wiggins Is an extension
of Blake. The plays come
in from the sidelines, but

SIMINOLS FIOMTIHO taMIHOi.lt
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l K a r r y W tw M a
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4 V a m a n M illa r
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10- 5

10-12
10-11

Blake has given Wiggins
the liberty o f checking off
to another play If he sees
th a t s o m e th in g e ls e
would work better.
This year. Wiggins will
have more options to
choose from. In 1989. the
Scmlnolcs threw the ball
about three tim es as
-ufttn as4hey can.Uje ball.
But this season. Blake
thinks the 'Noles will be
more balanced between
the run and pass.
"W ith Bruce McClary.
T im H a m p to n . J o J o
Murphy and Henry
Williams, we have a lot of
speed in the backfleld
and at wide receiver."
said Blake. "That gives

Opan
vs. DtLAMD, 7:30pm (C])
at Tltusvilla. 7:30 p m
28at Lyman, 7:30 p.m .(P)
at TitusviHa-Aatronaut, 7:30 p.m.
v*. EDOEWATM, 730 p m (•)
va. LAK E H O W E L L ,7 3 0 p m ( □ )

1029va. OVIEDO, 7:10 p m (□ )
at Lake Brantley, 730 pm. (□&gt;
11- 2
at Laaabum, 7:30 p m (•)
11*9
va. LAKE MARY, 730 p m (O X * )
11-16
HOMEGAMES
&lt;□)

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Coeeti Emory Maks
the opportunity to do
more things."
To further exploit the
backs' speed and W ig­
gin s' throw ing ability.
Blake has added another
wrinkle to the ofTensc.
This year, the Seminole
offensive line and re­
celvers also will have
defensive keys. W h en
they cofift u p o n thrtarihthey will be able make
adjustments to blocking
patterns or. if necessary,
relay the information to
Wiggins, who could then
change the play.
Blake says It'll make
things easier.
"O u r offensive line will
help us out with check-

/•) — 4A-Dlatrict 7 games
Seminole Athletic Conference Qamea
(*) — Homecoming

Ing off at the line of
scrimmage." said Blake.
"T h e receivers will read
the defense and change
routes. They'll call out
t h e c h a n g e s to t h e
quarterback, who'll have
more Ume to throw the
football.
"It sounds a little more
com plicated. but they
•waderairtPd - l U j ’ttEy'rr
doing It now in practice.
When you run a multiple
offense like we do. It
gives us more options.
"A n y time you're a
part of a group, when
y o u h a v e in p u t into
what's going on. you feel
better about it. W e feel
that If we give the kids a

lltte more responsibility.
It'll h e lp them know
what we want to do and
understand how we want
U done."
Because of a numbers
problem. Seminole will
be using a variety of
p la y e rs a lo n g the offenslve line. Carlo White.
an AU-County pick last
year on defense, will also

piaf c ctu ir'a r, -%Baqpg
t h is y e a r . L a w r e n c e
Williams. Darius
Johnson. Barry Burnette.
Andrea Jones and Gary
Lelncnbach will all see
extensive time on the
line. Tony Chavers starts
at tight end.
That same group also

forms the core of the
T r ib e defen se. T h a t's
Blake w ill be m oving
around, trying to
&gt;everybody relatively
i for 48 minutes.
Returning starters on
defense include Bernard
Brown. White. Terrance
Hlllery. Burnette.
Tom m y Mathis and Antowaln Bell. Mathis Is the
only returning defensive
back. Cory Bennett also
played some as a fifth
d e fe n s iv e b a c k a fte r
c o m in g u p fro m the
Junior varsity late in the
“ W e'U have to rebuild
o u r s e c o n d a r y ." said
Sem in ole defensive
coordinator Greg Regis­
ter. " W e have a few kids
who can do tt.
"O u r defensive front
should be strong. W e've
g o t - XJ \ j e e _ M !ju rn ln g
starters bn tH e~df^W /«*
•t
line.
H a n d lin g the placekicking chores again this
year is Oeordle Davison,
a m em oir o f the Semi­
nole varsity soccer team.
Henry W illiam s will once
again do the punting.

I MORotutts

1 M0 Varsity Schedule

9-7
9-14
9-21
9-

ta

41 N a t Juna
44 Dpv^MprG JfcpOMyo
47 J a y Caaialla
41R (c h a rt Rartrmr*
a tA a rw C M n
St A lacH aya*
*4 B a rry B u m a tw
SS T a m m y H tm p lla n
S t O w Im S y r S
Tt Oarlua JMrnaan
T S O a ry LamanSach
T t A n t r a a , Jana*
77 C a rla W hila
T t Law ranca W illia m ,
?t O a m a 'B a ll
t ) Ja Ja M u rp R y
M T a r r a n c a H illa ry

0-15
0-22
0-20
106
10-13
10-20
10-26
11-3
11-10
11-17

Seminole 32, DeLand 6
8emifKXa 20, Tltusvilla 7
Lyman 14,8eminoie 13
8eminois 25, Titusville-Astronaut 0
Seminole 42, Edoewster 14
Lake Howell 27, seminole 0
Oviedo 13, Seminole 7
8emlnoie 14, Lake Brantley 13
Seminole 22, Leesburg 8
Seminole 50, Lake Mery 7

11-24

&lt;A Raglan IV pfoyoff
8emlno!e 14, Tarpon 8pringa 7
4A Section II playoff
Marrltt Island 14, Saminole 7

12-1

0-13
0-27
104
10-11
10-17
10-24

at Laka Howell, 7 p m
at Laka Brantley, 7 p m
vs. LAKE MARY, 7 p m
at Lyman, 7p.m.
vs.DaLAND.7pm
at Ovlsdo, 7 p.m.

0-11
0-20
10-2
104
10-10
10-23
10-31

1000 Praalmaw Sokadufa
vs. LAKE HOWELL, 7 p m
va. LAKE SRJUfTLEY.Tpm
at Laka Mary, 7 p m
vs. LYMAN, 7 p m
vs. TITUSVILLE, 7 p m
vs. OVIEDO, 7 p m
at Sprues Creak, 7 p.m.
HOME GAMES

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_____

Rams hoping to srasa msi

44 to 7*4. And while
second-year Coach Doug
Peters prefers not to
speak in specifics when it
comes to wins snd loirs,
he thinks a repeat of
I B M Is highly unlikely.
“We had a lot of aesaid Peters. “ This year,

real Improvement In that
area. 1 think we have."
One reason la the addlt io n / o f d e f e n a l v c
c o o rd in a to r. B oyd
Rasmuaacn. A former
hnad c o a c h in Pt.
Lauderdale and at Or*
landO'Colon tal,
Rasmussen has been

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fan
Ca
lie
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exp
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fseason weight pro:

n we
ngto
o be
than

10-13

___ •fWtffffMJhBMaryJd
Lsha HowWI 70. Lake Mary 14

11S

UhaMary31,OpmoaCmah 12

10-12
10-10

m

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VB.OaiANO.7pjR.
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14
I-1S

v a .o w n o .7 p jR .

tl8 « m ln o j« .T a » W ^ &lt; B &gt;

•i lemmata, 7pm.
v e .U K IM M N L M p jR .

u\ _ SA-OiatrtctdotfnM
(□ ) — Seminole Athlatic Conference oamaa
(*) — Homecomino
-a —

—

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1011-

aa.UKS0SANTllV.7pjR.
Haabmaaa,7pjw.
al Udta Sranhay, 7 pjn.
IIIIIIIHUMUMII

114.

11-10
11-17
11-22

if •

PI. —• ‘ '

iM.trous 1089

we have guys who played
a lot last season. We're
coming Into this year

§■11

? :t

(guard). The rest are ail
lunlors: guard Kenny
Hoover, tackles Richard
OITuccI and John Laird

�easy. There are many Mary coach Doug Peters
who would try. But those MJoe throw* m y well."
who out ire unique.
The other nev hcc will
In this county. Kerry belong to either sopho.
Wlastns la the too tim er more Drew Jackson 01
mamrunning downoo- junior Dan Hargrave al
p o n e n t i i a s t h e Oviedo High School. Thu
quarterhack of the Semi- will be the third year that
nole High School football the Lion* wtU be ted by a
team. With throe year* al different quarterback
the control*, he M a n
(Matt Blanton called thi
unparalleled experience ahota In 1068 white Brtad
to the task.
M a c ln n e s* was thd
But at the Ove Semi- Harter lam year),
note County school*. . to the preaeason Jang
some relatively new toes home at Lyman Hlgl
(In three tnetances) and a • Bthoal an Aug. SO. botl
couple of totally new * Jartaon and Hargrari
face* (at two erhoote) look turn* under center. I
have been given the
At Lake Howell. Laid
control*.
Brantley and Lyman, till
A . U b . H u y High
3
School, aen lo r Joe algaal* will -be vague*
MeneUo I* a totally new tondBar If you were pad

(nolo Athletic Confi
ence-champlon La!
lloweM Slhrer Hawks. I
Metance. Ryan Thom

running euartarkuck
Mike Merthte. A year

Now
Th e home
delivery

I
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A C T NOWI

�LYMAN G R FY H O U N D

e d u c e art oth er re­
t u r n e r s wh o the
Qrtyhountfa w ill be

lot of questions and
baying only a few an-

For atartera. the
front a year ago. Of the
M player* that started
the eeaaon on Lyman *
IflM mater. IB graduated. Front the remaining
IB, only 13 are on title
year’s season-opening

Y j&amp; ife :
vonan M MOW
Tanner Morrison and
Tracy Duncan are re­
turner* anchoring the

the Greyhounds' 37-man B o ^ L y s n u waa a
At the shill positions.
quarterback Jeff
J a d m running badt
Cedric Bouey and recelver John Jump give
the Orevhounds’ some
talent on

did look partleulary
strong In the Jatuhowtt
waa on defense, etavtnd
with the offensively*
advanced attache of
Oviedo and Bsotlaele.

ovtedo and Bentlnole in

S|B
coach BUI Bcott saw
enough mletakes to
timfr7 M y eadfenwnt
entatwtnoind.*
7

“We didn’t tdsck up

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differentpetitions,
"WeH have to rotate
peonfe In and out so we
can try and keep
everybody freed.” eaid
Bcott **We hove to do

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�</text>
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Lake Gem to revive with long* awaited cleanup operation
^

N E W S D IG E S T

Haraid staff wrlttr
SANFORD - The cleaning and
clearing o f Lake Gem, on Bel Aire
Boulevard near East 24th Street In
Sanrord. will be taking a giant step
forward beginning Monday when
dragline operations begin.
The dragline equipment was un­
loaded at Lake Gem Park yesterday.
Iu preparation for one o f the final
moves In clearing out the weeks

□ Sports

Smith itamod playtr of th# ysar
For the second straight year. Lake Howell
running bock Marquette Smith has been named
Sem in ole County Player of the Year. His
statistics are mind-boggling and his attitude Just
as Impressive.
IB

A

□ Florida
Officer returned on rape charge

vided a haven for water moccasins
livin g In the lake, which posed a
threat to children.
The city had determined that the
area wasn't exactly a lake, but a
water retention area with no natural
springs reeding It- It Is. however, an
official city park.
.
Work w as finally started after
Kirk made a number o f pleas to city
officials and appeared before the
c ity co m m is sio n session s and
workshops.

Pag* 3A

□ Notion
Financial wizard aantancad
NfcW YORK — Former 1980s financial wizard
Michael Milken was handed a surprisingly tough
10-year prison sentence by a federal court Judge
telling him she was not punishing him for ’ ’a
decade o f greed" but giving out a fair penalty for
his confessed crimes.
\

Thanksgiving closings
SANFORD — Local government employees
are not only looking forward to that Thanksgiv­
ing turkey, but to a four-day weekend as City
Halls In Sanford. Lake Mary. Longwood and
Oviedo will be shut down both today and Friday.
The Seminole County courthouse, annex and
services bulldlngi and public schools. Including
Seminole Community College, will also be
closed both days
' T h ere w ill be no refuse pickup today.
Sanford's refuse department will not operate
Friday but regular service will resume beginn­
ing Monday. Longwood areas served by IWS
Western Waste In Lake Mary will be closed for
Thanksgiving but operating on the normal
routes Friday.
Other operations to be shut down both days
Include Chambers o f Commerce and the San­
ford City Recreation Department facilitiesWhile post offices will be dosed Thursday,
regular mall service and deliveries will be
operating as usual on Friday.
Although the Central Florida Zoo and the
Sanford Boy's and GUI's Club on Persimmon
Avenue will take Thursday off. they will both
operate normally on Friday with the usual
non-school day schedule In effect at the club.

Foundation of controversy
TOLEDO. Ohio — A northslde resident figured
the old gravestones he had found In a swamp
would make a great conversation piece as part of
a new foundation for his home.
•
He was right.
police and cemetery workers were talking
about them Tuesday, trying lo determine how
nearly one dozen old headstones made their way
from a cemetery to the Buckeye Basin, where
Terry Weaver said he found them.
Some o f the stones date to the turn of the
century. Weaver said he collected them and
took them home for use on a renovation project
on his house. Weaver said he Just wanted them
as a conversation piece.
A foreman at the city-owned cemetery says
the stones arc discards, hut lie noted that old
head stones are not supposed to be token from
the cemetery.
The foreman o f Forest Cemetery said when
headstones are charged, the old ones arc
defaced or tossed Into a pile.
"T h e y were stolen, there's no doubt In my
m ind." Murray said. "But nobody asked for
them, let's put It that way. Wc wouldn't give
them (away) If there urc names still on them."

d a y

Americans prepared Wednesday to celebrate
their 369th Th anksgivin g with appropriate
festivities ranging from parades and church
services to turkey bowling and turkey races.
In Sanford. Thanksgiving meals w ill be served
today at the Rescue Outreach Mission or Sanford.
1701 W. 13th St., from 1 to 4 p.m. Th e Salvation
Arm y, who Is assisting the mission with the
Thanksgiving meals, will deliver turkey dinners
to the homes o f northern Seminole County
shut-ins.
Th e Com m unity Im provem ent Association
Wednesday smoked 90 turkeys to raise money for
the group's projects. The organization will deliver
meals lo Lake Mary shut-ins today.
Religious Thanksgiving observances were also
held across the county.
On the minds and In the prayers o f many this
Thanksgiving will be the hundreds o f thousands
o f servicemen abroad, especially those In Saudi
Arabia, a few o f whom will be lucky enough to
share their bird with Presldcn. Jcorgc Bush and
the First Lady.
Hostages In the Middle East also are nub|ects or
concern this Thanksgiving. Fred Reed, celebrat­
ing his ffrat holiday weekend with his wife and
son In Malden. Mass., after 44 months In captivity Helping prepare turkeys for the Community Ronsld Prett and John Connelly. Some of the
In West Beirut, said he can't really enjoy his Improvement Aaaoclstion yfteterdey were (I to r). turkeys were donated by the CIA to needy Lake
freedom "unless the test o f the hostage* get out.
proaldent-elect Brian Loe, CIA members Tom West, Msry area families.
New York and Houston. Texas, will enjoy major
TtuuUuqtvtfag Dwy Parades.
.
New York’s, sponsored by Macy's department
store, will have Its usual giant balloons in the
form o f comic characters and something new
Saudi city bordering the Red exiled emir of Kuwait. Sheik
called falloons (a float and balloon combined) By MSUUI THOMAS
featuring Paddington Bear and a Victorian DPI White House Reporter_______ Sea. Bush was greeted with royal Jablr al-Alhmad al-Jablr a!fanfare bv Saudi Arabia King Sabah.
locomotive. Some 2.5 million people are expected
Bush arranged to meet with
F ah d and an en to u ra g e o f
JEDDAH. Saudi A rabia to line the parade route and 80 million will watch
President Bush arrived In the princes draped In ceremonial Fahd later over a state dinner.
on television.
In an announcement timed to
Houston's parade, staged by Foley’s store, will volatile Middle East Wednesday robes.
Under clear skies and a bright coincide with Bush’s dramatic
have Jerry Lewis as grand marshal and will add to spend Thanksgiving Day with
blanket tosaers from St. Paul. Minn., to Its usual American troops and bolster the crescent r.ioon. which Is the evening arrival. White House
lineup o f balloon figures, floats, and bands. Some alliance against Iraq's Saddam sym bol on the Saudi flag. Bush press secretary Marlin Fltzwater
Hussein with key leaders. In­ shared a cerem onial cup o f revealed that the president also
60 million are expected to watch this one on TV.
In Plymouth. Mass., where It all began In 1621. cluding Syria's President Hafez coffee with Fahd before heading would meet Friday with Aaaad. a
to the spectacular al-Hambra longtime U.S. rival but current
descendants of the celebrant Pilgrims and later Al-Assad.
Arriving In the second largest Palace where he met with the □8 m Bash, Fag# BA
□ S m Thanks, Pag* BA

Bush arrives for holiday in desert

D irector appointed to in itiate Sanford recycling program
By MICK P F IIP A U F
Haraid staff writer
SANFORD — Ken Knickerbocker has now
reported for duty at his new assignment post, that
o f recycling coordinator for the City o f Sanford.
Knickerbocker, who has Just retired as a
sergeant w ill the L'.S. Army, will be heading up
the city’s recycling program scheduled to begin In
January. He will be responsible for routing,
promotion and disposal of products.
Public Works Director J cn y Herman said.
"Although he worked moatlv with the Army's

tank corps, he Is an excellent writer, coordinator
and orguntzer. He'll be an excellent hands-on
manager."
Among Knickerbocker's first duties will be lo
Issue press releases, establishing a recycling logo,
and arranging for painting and graphics to be
used on the equipment. He will also be making
presentation;, lo schools and civic organizations
to explain the workings o f the city program.
Sanford's recycling project is being Initiated to
help resolve some of the overcrowded landfill
problems, and at the same time help reduce
refuse disposal expenses.

Starting In January, local customers will
separate presently recyclable products from their
normal garbage and place them In special
containers at the curbside for pick-up on days
other than normal refuse pick-ups.
Specific details on collection days and the rate
Increase o f 31.76 will be spelled out In detail to
Srnford refuse customers .before the project
begins early next year.
After sorting and pick-up. the recyclable
materials will then be transportated to recycling
facilities, thus reducing the amount o f refuse

□ Bee Director, Page BA

Sanford police
chief lends aid
to youth club
■y NICK PFUFAUP
Herald stall writer________________________

Pram staff and wlra reports

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Happy Thanksgiving
Mostly sunny with
the high near 80 and
un easterly wind at
lOmph.

F o r m o r e w e a th e r , s e e P a g o 2 A

__
....
. I .
I Im i U
The city trucked In several load*
o f dirt and constructed a berm
arbund the area. Later, a reclaimed
watering system was Installed, both
o f which have Improved the appear­
ance of the area considerably.
The final step ts to clear the
vegetation from the bottom o f the
take. Jerry Herman, o f the city a
Public Works Department, said.
••We plan to wlear out the weeds
down to a depth o f at least six feet.

Sanford, nation hold
feasts in celebration

MIAMI - A Metro-Dade police officer was
returned to Miami a month after he fled to a
small city in Mississippi after being charged
with raping a 16-year-old girl In his police car.

■act

that have choked the lake for yean.
Albert Kir*-. 2001 Washington
Ave.. has been trying to have the
lake cleared for year*. In 1988 he
submitted a petition signed by 130
area residents asking the city to
clean up the lake, but nothing was
done at that time.
Recently. Kirk saw the extremely
low water level as the opportune
time for a cleanup and he launched
a new drive. Kirk said the heavy
growth o f weeds In the lake pro­

The newest arrival at the Central Florida Zoological
Park is a male baby llama born Nov. 16 at the zoo.

seen above with its mother. The llama is native to
South America.

SANFORD - The West Sanford Boys
and Girls Club Is resting a little easier
now with a security alarm system.
Frank Molettclre. executive director of
Boys and Girls Clubs or Central Florida,
was looking for ways to Improve security
at the 919 S. Persimmon Ave. center,
which features a gym. game rooms, a
kitchen and playing Helds. He contacted
Sanford Police Chief Steve Harriett, who
recommended that the center have a
security system Installed.
The Sanford club, dedicated to helping
disadvantaged youth by offering them an
alternative lo the streets, had reported a
number of hrcak lns during the past
months. Harriett said several Items had
been removed from the building recently.
Stncc the club did not have money
budgeted for u security system. Harriett
took It upon himself lo contact a number
of security companies, one of which was
Network Security. Dan Ifaymore. Orlando
branch manager, agreed to supply the
needed system and arranged to have the
82.500 unit Installed at the club, free of
charge.
See Club. Page BA

rar

�&gt;

8A

— t&gt;-*mlord H e ra ld . S a n fo rd , F lo rid a — T h u n d a y , N o ve m be r

22, 1990

NEWS FROM THE REGION AND ACROSS THE STATE

New World feast changed diet
Fired employM Mila boss

GAINESVILLE - Thanksgiving marked
one or the first high- fiber, low-cholesterol
feasts In the New World, made up o f newly
discovered foods that reshaped Old World
eating habits, a historian aald Wednesday.
“ The European diet at the tim e o f
Columbus could generously be described as
high cholesterol and rather dull by today's
standards,” said Charlotte Porter, an
associate curator at the Florida Mutrum o f
Natural History.
“ Meals revolved around meats, with
vegetables seen as beautiful oddities that
even brave knlghta didn’t dare eat.”
Healthful American foods still M rve d at
traditional Thanksgiving dinner* Include
corn, squash and cranberries. Porter said.
Pepper*, beans, the ubiquitous potato and
versatile tomato were some of the other New

MIAMI — A funeral home worker shot and killed hto boos
after he was fired, police said.
Pat Sutter, 73. later confessed to the shooting and was
charged with second-degree murder, police aatd. He had been a
chapel attendant at the Riverside-Gordon Memorial Chapel,
doing clerical work for four y ea n .
Hit boss, Allen Brest In. 34. fired him Tuesday afternoon.
“ Hr didn’t think he was performing well enough." said
Melro-Dade homicide detective Tony Rodrigues.
Suiter grabbed a revolver and fired repeatedly, police said.
Hit twice. Brestln collapsed by the door o f Suiter’s office and
died.
Suiter called police and reported hla boos had been shot, then
called the funeral home chain’s main branch to tel) fellow
employees he was not the one w ho had been killed.
Police questioned Sutter at hla Westwood Lakes home shot
90 minutes later. He turned over the revolver and confessed to
the shooting, a police report aald.

New c

m

m

_____ __________ _______________ Into Its
larger Iriah cousin and the giant Idaho
potato o f today, she aald.
More than 4 0 va rieties o f American
w cogD tfco loamy, not peppers
Europeans o f black pepper, an
_____ ______ and were Boon used In China
for testy Hunan and Scechuan sauces and
In Hungary for powdered paprika, she aald.
A lt h o u g h ------ ,------ —
-----beans, garbanso beans and lentils, they had
never tried black beans, ttma bean*, kidney
beans, pinto beans or "strin g'' beans until
explorers brought them back from the
Americas, she aald.
parlors
b y the
discovery o f chocolate and vanilla In the
New World. Porter aald.
The

of •nc^phatttte found

at ftiture Ice

Trad* offices
re-opened

TALLAHASSEE — State health officials have confirmed 14
new coses of St. Louts encephalitis, bringing the total to 138
confirmed cases and 96 presumptive cases since the August
outbreak began.
Dave Adams, a spokesman for the state Department o f
Health and Rehabilitative Services, said the new cases were
reported in Brevard. Charlotte. Lee. Manatee, Sarasota. Palm
Beach. Polk and St. Lu ke counties.
The mosquito-borne virus causes flu-like symptoms and can
produce brain (nftemmation. Th e elderly and the very young
are most susceptible to the disease.
So far. six people have died since the outbreak began In
August. The youngest to die was 96.

unneo nuee imemeiionei______
TALLAH ASSEE - Florida Is
reopening trade offices in Jspsn
and Korea closed teat year dur­
in g a major retrenchment o f the
state's overseas marketing pro­
gram . Commerce Secretary Bill
Sutton i
The m ove coincides with the
opening o f ■ Tam pa office by the
Japan External Trade Organisa­
t io n , a n o n - p r o fit o u t fit
established b y the Japanese
governm ent to help U.S. compa­
nies market their goods and
services In Japan.
Japan la F lorid a 'a largest
overeeaa trading partner, but
there la a huge imbalance In the
relationship. Sutton aald Florida
M ils goods worth some 6300
m illion In Japan each year,
w hile 63.7 billion in Japsnere
products enter Florida.
Ladles from the Sanfcrd Moore Lodge Auxiliary ‘Operation Cookie' from left: Mildred Brazetd,
“ You can see the scales of
and the Flset Raaerve recently packed goodies Thea Moulton, Marge Miller, Doris Holcomb Mary
Justice
are not exactly equal.”
from homa for American serviceman currently Hambrecht, Roberta Domby, Jackie DuBoia,
Sutton aald in a news confer­
serving in the Persian Gulf. Participating in Betty Tuepker and Fran Brazee.
ence. “ Now that aome o f the
trade barriers are lifted, we know
that those figures are going to
get much closer. But U w ill take
aome time to do It."
Gov. Bob Martinez has been
criticised by som e business
leaders for hla handling o f trade
issues. Top Japanese industrial
leaders were reportedly insulted
become law. and that Is sched­ tion that we have that It's OK to last month when Martinez did
take drugs and then endanger not attend the annual meeting of
uled for Dec. 19.
other people with whom w e
MIAMI BEACH — An ordi­
the Southeastern U.S.-Japan As­
S u p p orters. In clu d in g the
nance requiring police to notify city’s police chief, said the ordi­ work.”
sociation in Atlanta.
employers when suspects arc nance would help drug abusers
Although Sutton attended on
B ut th e A m e r ic a n C i v i l
arrested on drug charges won get needed counMling through
Martinez' behalf, he conceded.
L ib e r tie s U nion c a lle d th e
preliminary approval Wednes­ employer programs. Other pro­ m ea su re p u n itiv e and u n ­ " I ’m sure they'd have rather had
day despite objections it would ponents said they were simply
constitutional, saying U would the head coach."
violate due process and spawn fed up with drug abure.
Last year, the state clored
violate the right to due process.
" I think It's a very brave step. I
costly lawsuits.
Florida trade offices In Toyko
A p r e v io u s v e r s io n w a s and Seoul and scaled back to
The Miami Beach City Com ­ think It's a very needed step,”
approved In an Identical a 5-2 tw o em p loyees each in the
mission approved the measure said Barry University President
in a 5-2 vote. It must undergo a Sister Jeanne Laughlln. “ I think vote, with Daoud and
London and Toronto offices and
second review before It can It will help change the percep­ sloner Abe Hlrshfeld dissent., .g.
to one In Frankfurt.

Viking klckur ptoads Innocunt
*

World plants that altered the European
palate, she aald.
“ Imagine Ireland without potatoes or
Italian spaghetti without tomato sauce,*'
Porter aald. “ Before Europeans found there
plants growing In the New World, the Irish
didn't know what a potato was and Italians
cooked spaghetti In a white sauce.’ ’
Food use changed as American cofontsts
adapted the new plants and explorers
Introduced them In Europe.
Native Americana ground com kernels
Into flour for tortillas, a bread that never
caught on in Europe, but the colonists
enjoyed the vegetable In the form o f com on
the cob, she aald.
“ Today com la so commonplace that very
few prepared foods don't contain It in some
form, be It com starch, margarine or com
syrup.” Porter said.
Sometimes the food itrelf changed. The

TAM PA - Minnesota Vikings kicker Donald Igwebulke
pleaded Innocent Wednesday to charges o f sm uggling heroin
from hla native Nigeria Into the United State*.
Igwebulke. 39. who remains free on 690.000 bond, entered
the plea before U.S. Magistrate Thomas Wilson.
The former Tampa Bay Buccaneer kicker, who Joined the
Vikings this year after playing for five years In Tampa, was
Indicted earlier this month by a federal grand Jury on charges
o f Importing heroin, conspiring to Import heroin, and
conspiring to distribute h e r o i n . ____________________

From United Prwwt International Reports

Goodttt from homo

Thank you George, as in
Washington, for today
By NICK
Herald staff wrltar

**

Thanks. George. W e owe
our Thanksgiving holiday to
you. No, not George Bush, but
George Washington, our na­
tion's first president.
The official observance o f
Thanksgiving was actually
the first holiday ever desig­
nated by a president of the
Untied States.
At the urging of a Joint
con gression a l co m m itte e,
Washington signed an ofllclal
proclalm atlon design atin g
Thursday, Nov. 36, 1789 as
the first Thanksgiving.
According to Chase’s An­
nual Calendar of Events pub­
lication. “ the Joint committee
had requested him to re­
commend a day o f public
thanksgiving and prayer, to
be olwerved by acknowledg­
ing with, grateful hearts the
many and signal favor* of
Almighty God. especially by
affording them on opportunity
to peaceably establish a farm
o f government for their safety
and happiness."
Over the years, the presi­
d en tial p rocla m a tio n had
wording added to establish

LOTTERY

the official observance on the
fourth Thursday o f Novem­
ber.
H olid ay decorations and
costumes used In conjunction
with Thanksgiving generally
point to the Pilgrims who
landed at Plymouth Rock In
1630.
W e see them Mated at a
table with a group o f friendly
Indians In attendtance. There
Is a roast turkey on the table,
as well as with pies, vegeta­
bles and fruits o f all kinds.
But the exact date o f any
harvest feaat that could have
started the observance, who
was on hand or what was
Mrved Is unclear. Practically
every research paper or book
w ritten al out the subject
points to a different time
period and a different menu.
Many o f them even claim
there was no roast turkey
M rved at that Drat meal.
Some aay .they had fish while
others report It was a gather­
ing o f field crops grown by the
Mttlers. held at-'.t time when
thanka w as offered for a
bountiful harvest.
Thanksgiving, however, has
always been and will continue
to be one o f the nation’s most
widely obM rvcd holidays.

TH E

Law revealing drug suspects to
employers w ins primary approval

O fficer returned on rape charge
MIAMI — A Mctro-Dadc police
officer who disappeared after he
was ch a rg ed w ith ra p in g a
16-year-old girl in his police car
was returned to Miami Tuesday
night, a month after he lied to a
small city In western Mississippi.
M etro-D adc O fP c e r D avid
Middleton, 29. was arrested
without incident Monday at his
new apartment In Greenville,

Miss. He (led Miami last month
a n d w a s l a t e r J o in e d In
Mississippi by his wife and two
children, police said.
Middleton, a six-year veteran
with the department. Is secured
o f picking up a 16-year-old girl In
northwest Dade County about
1:30 a.m. on Sept. 29. He told
the girl he would lake her to
J u v e n ile H a ll bu t In s te a d
handcuffed her and raped her In
the back scat o f his unmarked

patrol car. police said.
Middleton, who worked in the
department's warrants section,
called In sick for three days
before officers went to his home
Oct. I I to arrest him and
discovered he had left town.

ment complex recognized his
description. He Is black and hla
wife Is white, aald Greenville
Deputy Poijce Chief Ken Winter.
“ U drew attenUon to them."
W inter aald.

M id d le to n ’ s w ife w as not
Police said they were Upped charged. He faces charges of
t h a t M i d d l e t o n w a s I n kidnapping and rexual battery.
Greenville. Local police had little He waived hts right to fight
trouble finding him becauM o f­ extradition and was flown to
ficers living In the same apart-' Miami late Tuesday.

W EATH ER

Number t net pvailAbNatprnttlmr

&gt;*rvV
Today...Mostly sunny with a
high near BO. Wind east 10 mph.
Tonight...Mostly fair with a
low In the mid to upper 50s and
a light variable wind.
Tom orrow...A chance o f showera late Friday with a high near
80 and lows In (he mid 50s.

(UJPS MITSA)

E x te n d e d foreca st...M ostly
cloudy Saturday with a chance
o f early showers and a high near
80. low In the mid 50a. Clearing
on Sunday with a high near 80
and a low In the 40s Sunday
morning.

Thun duy, November 22, 1990
Vol. 83. No 78

PuCItih-d Deity end Sunday, n t iy l
Saturday by fha Until 1HtraM.
Inc., Mi N. French Avt., Santard.
Fla. D ill.
Sacand Clatt Pattis* Paid al Santar*.
Florida urn
POST MAST IM : Mnd tSSrtt* cbtast*
to THE SANFOSOHEBALO. P.O.
Bo. \Ut. Sanford. FL S1
77I.
Subtcriplten Salt*
I Daily A Sunday)
Homa Delivery A Mall
S Month* ......................... S1T.M
* Month* .........
Ot.lt
t Year ...............
MAM

]

National temperature* not available at
tima.

&amp;

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cr
TH U R S D A Y
FtfpCMk 7 3 -67

W B D N I6D A Y
FtyCldy 71-66

FR ID A Y
Suiuip 74-66

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SA TU R D A Y
FMyCfdy 76-66

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TH U RSD AY:

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0 - 0

F IR S T
BOLU1VAR T A B L E : Min. 8:40
Now. SB a.m.. 9:10 p.m.; MaJ. 2:30 d.m..

LAST
Doe. •

Florida tvmporolure* not Available at
prat* time.

2:55 p.m . T lD B S t D a y to n a
Bench* highs. 10:42 a m.. 11:02
.m.: lows. 4:04 a m .. 4:57 p.m.:
tyraa Beech: highs,
aw
10:47 a.m.. 11:07 p.m. lows.
4:09 a.m., 5:03 p.m.:
Boach: highs. 11:02 a.m.. 11:22
p.m.: lows. 4:24 a.m.. 5:17 p.m.

&amp;

BOATING
D aytona Bosch: Waves are
2-2W feet with a slight chop.
Current Is to the south with a
water temperature of 68 degrees.
N e w Sm yrna Beach: Waves are
2-3 feet and semi choppy. Cur­
rent Is to the south, with a water
temperature of 68 degrees.

St. Aagastlne to Jnplter Inlet
Today...Wind east 5 to 10 kts.
Seas 2 ft. Bay and inland waters
a light chop.
T o n i g h t . . . W i n d e a s t to
southeast 5 to 10 kts. Seas less
than 2 ft. Bay and Inland waters
smooth

6U N 0AY
FttyCM y 7 6 -67

STATISTICS
The temperature at 4 p.m.
Wednesday was 78 degrees, as
r e c o r d e d by the N a t io n a l
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

□ Wednesday's high........ 79
[ Barometric prBSonrs.30.16
n is U U v s Humidity....34 pet
□Winds......Northeast B mph
□BninfaU.....- ...... .......0 in.
□Today's snaset
□ T o m

o r r o w

's

9:20 p.m.

s n a r l s * tits 0 : 8 4

Phan, (ear) ns ltn.

i

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thursday, Norambar 22, 1N0

Historic tour features Goeb home
Stoft owner v

m

l i d

LONGWOOD - Th e ow ner o f dosene o f hobby a to m was
■nested qt his Longwood home Wednesday morning and
charged with the theft o f almost $140,000 In unrrported sales
taxes.
Barry Carlton Taylor. 39. 401 Nina Place, was arrested by a
Seminole County deputy and charged with 12 counta o f grand
theft o f state money. He was taken to the Seminole County Jail
and rekaaed fbut hours later on $ 2,000bond.
According to Robert Cone, an investigator with the Florida
Department o f Revenue. Taylor owned a aeries o f Hobbv Box
stores throughout the state. A recent telephone directory lists
five stores In central Florida. Taylor’s corporate offices were
located In Altamonte Springs, but are now cloeed.
Cone said Taylor opened and closed 41 Hobby Box stores In
J*ew shopping centers around Florida between March 1988 and
February 1909. Cone said Taylor would open a store, usually In
a new shopping center, collect sales taxes/ram customers for
several months then close the store wtthout sending the taxes
to the state.
Cone said $130,380 In taxes were not sent to the state.
Th ereh a s been a Hobby Box store In the Altamonte Park
Ptaxa, 998 N. State Road 434, Altamonte Springs, for about
four vests. Cone auid. That store is now under new ownership.
Another Seminole County store, located at 3030 E. State Road
438. Apopka. Is now closed.
He was charged with stealing a total o f $138,385 from the
state.
According to a report from the state Department o f Revenue.
Taylor collected money from his customers but failed to send
the sales tax to the state.
The charges were filed by Seminole County Assistant State
Attorney Robert F. Kitfeather at DOR’s request, said Cone.

Meter reader tips off police
LAKE MARY — A watchful Florida' Power meter reader led
police to the arrest o f a Fort Lauderdale man on attempted auto
burglary charges Wednesday morning. Donald R. Peterson of
Sanford told Lake Mary police he was looking for a meter at
100 Monica Court shortly before 10 a.m. when he saw a man
trying to get in a large pickup truck parked In front o f the
home, according to arrest reports.
Peterson said when the man saw him. he fled. Peterson said
he told a neighbor to telephone " 9 1 1" and summon help. An
off-duty fin f i l t e r spotted a man matching the description
Peterson gave on County Road 15 and reported his location to
police. Richard John Schroeder. 34. was arrested In front of
660 8. County Road 15 a short time later and taken to the
Seminole County jail when, he was held on $3,000 bond.

SAN FORD The home of
Julia and Michael Goeb 117 W
10th Street, will be open for
public lours Dec. I and 2. during
the Sanford Historic Trusi 1990
HomesTour.
According to courthouse recorda reviewed by Julia Goeb. the
home was built In 1914 at the
beginning of World War
and
Ibe Unit owner was Mrs. H U
Peabody. It was also owned at
one time by Judge Sharon.
believed to have been an early
Seminole County Judge
"The place Is really known as
the old Higgins place." Goeb
said. "Ed Higgins and his family
lived here for over 40 years."
The Goebs purchased the
house a little over a year and a
half ago. and have been working
on restoration ever since that
time. Because exact details on
what the house may have been
at the very beginning are lacking. the Oocbs arc attempting to
restore It to a home o f the 1914m
period, rather than a purist
restoration.
Originally the house contained
four bedrooms In the second
floor, but several additions were
made over the years Most re­
cently It was a six-bedroom,
two-bath home, but the Goeb s
are using only four rooms as
bedrooms.
•'We've been working on
fireplaces," Julia Goeb said.
"We' ve restored one that was
completely covered over In the
wall, and another
that had
the chimney sealed. Overall we
have four fireplaces."
The 3,300 square Iexit twostory home has pine flooring
throughout. The Goebs are ad­
ding furnishings and fixtures
from the early ISMKts as they can

illy ..
■

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■

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■
■
Jh 0 O o « » f o n t f t 117 W . 10th I t w ill b e

The Goeb home Is one o f eight
stopping places for visitors be­
tween 1 and 6 p.m.. the after­
noons o f Dec. 1 and 2. Advance
tickets at two for $15 are now
available at the offices o f the
Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce. 400 E. First Street or
by writing to the Sanford Histor­
ical Trust. P.O. Box 536. San­
ford. 32772-0536.
Tickets on the days o f the tour
will be available at the Cultural
Arta Center. Fifth Street and Oak
Avenue. Sanford, for $10 each.
The Cultural Arta Center will be
the first stop on the tour, and
In fo r m a tio n b o o k le ts w ith
addresses and Information on all
the locations will be available at
that time.

L rd . P

a r t m u

M

BuylMQ...SclUMq
V

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a t Io n s

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&gt;Uniqu$ Fountains (Cfons fiw o w io o fo m
Lawn Otoof • Pots • Ptams • Plants • Tr$$s
• Fertatzsf • Mutch • And Much Much Mors

School officials explain ‘leftover’ money
SANFORD - When the Semi­
nole County sch ool d istrict
finished paying off a $20 million
bond issued in 1968, there was
an additional $337,983.48 col­
lected from taxes not needed to
pay off the principal. Interest
and other obligations.
The money will be used to
help pay for the construction of
an art and music suite at Lake
Mary Elementary School. 132 S.
Country Club Road. Lake Mary.
'Tt’a not like the money has
been sitting there for 22 years
while we're asking for more.”
said John Pavelchak. the dis­
trict's director o f finance. "It has
only been there a short tim e."
According to Pavelchak. the
money was left over from the
debt service on the bond issue
and has been in a savings

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account since the bonds were spent In any way the board at
paid off two years ago.
fit." Pavelchak noted.
Pavelchak said the 1968 bond
He did not know why t
Issue was for approximately $20 board had chosen to wait ur
million. He explained that a now to spend the avallat
certain portion of that Issue had money,
to be paid o ff each year through
..,t h **,-, really
all if
laxc* ’
long that it has been avallab
"A t the end o f that time there though." he said,
was a little leftover." he said.
At Tuesday night's mectli
He added that Florida statutes the board approved u transfer
allow for the money to be spent the funds from the accou
at the school board's discretion.
where they have been sir
"T h e bond money itself must 1908 to their capital Impro
be spent on construction pro- ment fund where they can
Jects, but this money can be used for the Lake Mary project.

the Manatee

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V

4A — Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida — Thursday. Novambar 77, 1900

Editorials/ Opinions
C H U C K S TO N E

Sanford Herald

U.S. offers cornucopia of holidays

(USPS « t - » )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322 2611 or 831-9993
Wayaa O. Oayte, PaQIUlxr
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B a a a y lit

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:

3 Months......................................$19.50
6 Months..................................... 939.00
1 Year ......................................... 978.00

E D ITO R IA L S

Caring for our kids

T9

T h e m ost significant ach ievem en t o f th e
n o is y deb a te on C apitol H ill m a y not h a v e
b e e n t h e b u d g e t d e f i c i t p la n b u t a
b reak th rou gh for children.
A s part o f the budget reconciliation plan.
C on g ress approved a lan dm ark m easure that
p ro v id e s federal assistance fo r child care. T h e
last tim e th e House and S en ate agreed to d o
th a t in 1972. President N ixon vetoed th e
m easu re. B ut tim es h ave changed, m o th ers
h a v e retu rn ed to the w ork force en m asse a n d
P resid en t Bush w as w illin g to negotiate w ith
C on g ress on this child-care package.
T h e product o f all the com p rom isin g is n 't
perfect. T o get th e president’s approval, th e
m easu re increases basic tax credits fo r p o o r
fa m ilies b y about 912.4 billion o v e r five yea rs,
adds 9 7 0 0 m illion in tax breaks for fa m ilies
w ith babies under the a ge o f 1 and a n o th er
95.2 billion as a health-insurance su p p le­
m ent. A n y tax relie f fo r low -incom e co n d lton s
for th eir ch ildren. T h e y w ill h ave m ore m o n e y
to spend, and they m ay o r m a y not use it fo r
ch ild care.
,
S trictly fo r child care are a series o f a ction s
earm ark in g 92.5 billion du rin g the next th ree
yea rs for subsidized child care and efforts to
im prove the day-care system . A n oth er 91 .5
billion In Social S ecu rity funds w ill be sp en t
to pay child-care costs for poor famUL-s w h o
oth erw ise m igh t have to g o on welfare.
A separate bill au th orizes enough fu n d in g
so that e v e r y poor ch ild betw een the a ge s o f 3
and 5 w ho is eligib le fo r Head Start can e n ro ll
in this h ig h ly respected en rich m en t p ro g ra m
b y 1994. T h e bill also con ta in s m on ey so th at
Head S tart can b egin th e lo n g o v e rd u e
process o f co n ve rtin g from a half-day p r o ­
gram to a full-day. year-round program .
A s one ch ild-advocate put it. " T h is is th e
best yea r ch ildren h ave ev e r had in C o n ­
g re s s ."
B ut It Is not ju st children w h o benefit, ft is
th e ir fa m ilies and the businesses w ho e m p lo y
w o r k in g Darents. In C alifornia alone. 54
p ercen t or school-age ch ildren have m oth ers
in th e w ork force, and that figure is ex p ec te d
to g o as h igh as 75 percent In five yea rs.
E v e ry p rogra m offerin g subsidized child ca re
has a lo n g w a itin g list. Th ousands o f m oth ers
w a n t to g e t o f f w elfare, but ca n 't afford ch ild
ca re on th e lo w w ages they w ou ld receive.
O u r institutions n a ve been slo w to rea ct to
the rea lity o f sin gle m om s and tw o-parent
w o rk in g fam ilies. T h is year. C ongress r e ­
c o g n ize d th at ou r ch ildren d eserve to b e a
n ation al p riority. It is a w ise in vestm en t in
th e future.

Limit franking fiasco
Rep. V ic F azio. D-Callf.. w as Justly c ritic ize d
last y e a r fo r en gin eerin g w h a t m aity sa w a s a
p h o n y reform o f th e often-abused free-m all
p riv ile g e en jo y e d b y m em b ers o f C ongress.
T h is y e a r , F a z io d e s e r v e s c re d it fo r a
su ccessfu l effort at real reform . A Faziosp on sored am en dm en t to a con gression al
h ou sek eep in g bill w ill, for the first tim e, lim it
h o w m uch each m em b er o f the House ca n
sp en d fo r m all. In addition, the legislation
req u ires m em bers to report each yea r h ow
m u ch In public funds th ey h ave spent on
m ail.

T h e m ail allowance under the F azio
amendment Is still high, an average of
$ 178.000 per member per year. But it is still a
great improvement. Under current rules the
House regularly overspends its mall budget.
Just a few months ago, the representatives
even voted against paying a portion of the
$40 million tne House owed the U.S. Postal
Service for postal bills dating back to 1982.
After next January, when representatives
reach that limit, the postal service can stop
sending out their mailings.
Apart from the cost, the real concern about
Congress’ abuse of the free-mall privilege is
that it’s used by incumbents to fight off
challengers in election years. The ability to
saturate a district with thinly veiled selfserving literature — all of it sent at taxpayer
expense — is one of the most significant
advantages of incumbency. Fazio faced a
tough battle from members of both parties
unwilling to cede even a tiny portion of that
advantage.
As the House point man on many un­
popular issucs.the congressional pay raise
and free mail notable among them. Fazio has
taken a lot of easy hits from demagogues who
ply the radio talk-show circuit. But despite
the static. Fazio probably has negotiated as
g&lt;xxl a deal as can be achieved for the public
on both Issues. This yryr it has been free-mall
reform: last year he persuaded members of
the House to ban special-interest speaking
fees in exhange for a fair pay increase.
Common Cause, the poltical reform organiza­
tion. has called Fazio's leadership in these
areas outstanding, and It has been.
9

Every so often, w e need a reminder o f "how
good and pleasant It is to dwell together in
u n ity."
Th is Isn’t always easy, given the national
recrudescence o f racial, socioeconomic and
ideological tensions. Yet. what more felicitous
way to celebrate the splendid diversity o f our
rambunctious unity than with one big. neverending party? It's Just getting underway. I call It
the American Festival o f Holidays. Beginning
with Thanksgiving. It continues to Jan. 6.
In six weeks, six holidays are celebrated, some
by different religious or ethnic groups, some by
virtually everybody. No other nation In the world
crams ao many holidays in so short a period with
so much abandon. In previous years. I have
marked the Inauguration o f our eclectic celebra­
tion o f uniqueness with Thanksgiving. I have
learned, however, that I ought to do otherwise.
Th e festival really begins in October with the
Jewish holiday. Sukkot. or Feast of Tabernacles.
It la the historical antecedent o f the American
Thanksgiving, celebrated at the end o f the
harvest. Today, many Jews build a sukkah or
hut for eight days as a reminder o f the huts
where their ancestors lived during their wan­
derings in the desert. Some o f the following
holidays no longer exalt their original raisons
d ’etre. So. here’s Stone's annual American

Festival of Holidays primer — as my cherished
departed Jazz hero. Count Basle, would Impishly
pul it. "o n e m ore
tim e":
T h a n k s g iv in g
(Nov. 22): Originally
a g r a te fu l co m mcmoratlon by our
fo u n d in g m o th e r s
and fathers, the Pil­
grims. for their suc­
cessful h arvest. It
now serves as the
official opening o f the
C hrlM m as season .
But many still sing.
"W e gather together
to ask the L o r d ’ s
blessin gs." w ith a
spiritual affinity.
Hunukkah (D ec .
12): A Jewish com ­
memoration o f the
Mnrrahcan victory In
165 B.C. o v er the
Syrian tyrant Antiochus IV. In the Temple at Jerusalem, a small
cruse had Just enough oil to light the holy lamps,
but still burned miraculously for eight days.

T h a t 's w h y t h e m e n o r a h h a s e i g h t
candleholders.
Christmas (Dec. 29): One o f Christendom’s two
moat sacred days. It commemorates the birth of
a Jewish baby. Jesus. Today, the retail Industry
has profaned this sacred day Into a mercantilist
hustle. But the spirit of Christmas still shines
through and braces us with a happy glow.
Kwanzaa (Dec, 26): An African-American
Kvqn-day celebration that begins the day after
Christmas. Partly in response to the paganlstic
extravagance or Christmas and partly as an
affirm ation o f African Integrity. Kwanzaa
(Swahili for "first fruits") was Inaugurated In
1967 by a scholarly cultural nationalist. Dr.
Mauiana Ron Karenga. It celebrates a different
principle each of the seven days: umoja (unity),
kujlchagulla (self-determination), ujlma (col­
lective work and responsibility), ujamma (coop­
erative economics), nla (purpose), kuumba
(creativity) and imanl (faith).
New Year's Day (Jan. 1): Originally designated
as the first day o f the year. It is preceeded the
night before by the year's most sybaritic
blowout. The day Itself Is now devoted to
watching major college football bawl games and
recovering from the previous night's hedonistic
excesses.
(CltfWNEWIRAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

J A C K A N D ER S O N

New FD A chief
has tough task

R O B ER T W A LTER S

Solar power has brighter future
CAM ARILLLO. Calif. — " A few years ago.
that building was Tull. Nobody wanted to buy
the stuff." says Stephen K. Lowe, waving
toward a large warehouse. "Now. we can't
m ove it out fast enough."
Low e Is a spokesman for Siemens Solar
Industries, which owns the warehouse. “ The
s t u ff" su dden ly In dem and consists o f
photovoltaic panels that transform the sun's
rays into electric power as well as lights and
other devices that operate on solar energy.
A technology whose promise of Imminent
commercial applicability has gone unfulfilled
for several decades..solar power has. with little
fanfare, found an Important niche In both
domestic and International markets. Moreover,
it m ay now be poised to develop Into the more
general source o f entrgy Its proponents always
claimed It would become.
" O f all the forms o f energy we have —
renewable or nonrcnewablc — solar has the
greatest potential for providing clean, safe,
reliable power." says Ihc Union of Concerned
Scientists.
"T h e supply Is inexhaustible and ihc cost,
which has fallen dramatically In the past few
years, should be competitive with fossil fuels
within the decade." adds UCS. "Unlike fossil
fuels, however, solar energy does not increase
global warming, nor does it leave us dependent
on foreign suppliers."
Solar has emerged us the technology of
choice to provide power in remote locations
lacking ready uccess to an electric grid. In levs
developed countries throughout the world. It
has become indispensable In rural villages thal
previously had no electricity or relied upon
portable generators requiring constant refuel­
ing.
The most important use is to provide power
for the pumps used to draw wat«r from
subterranean wells that supply drinking water
for people and livestock as well as irrigation
water for crops.
In those often primitive sellings, solar panels
also provide power to health clinics and homes
that never before had electricity, allowing the
u se o f r e fr ig e r a t io n u n its to p re v e n t
pharmaceuticals und food from becoming
quickly spoiled. (Three-fourths of Siemens'
production here is destined for other nations.)
At Isolated locutions in this country and
elsewhere In the world, photovoltulc solar
panels provide the power needed by the
microwave and broadcast lowrrs crucial to the

transmission o f telephone, television and radio
signals.
Solar energy is also increasingly valuable as
a power source for remole vacation homes and
c a b in s , fa r m s and r a n c h e s , h ig h w a y
emergency assistance call boxes and marine
navigational ulds such us buoys and channel
markers.
The cost of producing solar energy has been
the principal impediment to its widespread use
In settings where consumers can purchase
p o w e r fr o m an
electric grid, usually
at a cost of 10 cents
per kilowatt-hour or
less.
The price o f a kilo­
watt-hour o f solar
|x&gt;wer has declined
dramatically — from
$ 2 0 In th e e a r ly
1970s to $1.50 In the
early 1980s to 25-35
cent s t o d a y .
P e s s im is ts sa y
technical constraints
preclude the price
from going below the
15-20 cent range in
th e f o r e s e e a b le
future bu» optimists
predict availability at
h a lf o f th at c o s t
within another de­
cade.

£ S ola r power
has, with little
fanfare, found
an Important
n ich e In
d o m e stic and
International
m arkets. J

Even at current prices, solar is gaining
Increased acceptance. Utility companies in
Austin. T e x a s : S acram en to. C alif., and
Phoenix. Artz. are among the first to operate
generuling stations (with modest capacity)
powered by photovoltaic cells.
Some reul estate developers In cities such as
Phoenix and San Diego have incorporated
photovoltaic panels Into new residential com ­
munities and are promoting them as amenities
that will reduce the electric bills of home
buyers.
To meet the surge in consumer demand.
Siemens recently supplemented Its production
facility here with a new factory in Vancouver.
Wash. Other industry leaders, such as the
Solarcx Corp. o f Rockville. Md. and the
Chronar Corp. o f Princeton. N.J.. are equally
optimistic about the technology's future.
(CHWO NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

WASHINGTON — The new commissioner
o f the Food and Drug Administration. David
Kessler. Is telling confidantes. " I ’m not going
to protect crooks "
That's not something that most federal
agency heads have to spell out when they
take the Job. But the FDA. once known as a
tough regulatory agency, has been branded
as c o r r u p t ib le .
Kessler. 39. Is now
the medical director
o f New York's Albert
Einstein College of
Medicine. When he
takes over the FDA
n e x t m o n t h . It
should be something
lik e g r a b b in g the
helm o f the Exxon
Valdes after ft hit the
reef.
Agency morale Is
low. The FDA has
had a stand-in leader
fo r m ore than 1 1
months since com ­
£ The F D A 's
m is s io n e r F ra n k
credibility Is
Young was forced to
at an all-time
resign — a casualty
lo w .J
o f the generic drug
s c a n d a l th a t o c ­
curred under his
watch In 1989. Four former FDA chemists
testing generic drugs have pleaded guilty to
accepting thousands o f dollars In Illegal
gratuities from drug companies. Last month,
the former chief of the FDA's generic drug
division, Marvin Selfe. was convicted o f lying
to federal Investigators when he denied
having accepted meals from generic drug
executives.
The FDA's credibility Is at an oll-tlme low.
The agency is catching heat for prematurely
approving life support medical devices. The
most recent Investigation looked Into allega­
tions that FDA agents were using their inside
Information about drug approvals to play the
stock market. A source told us that the
Investigation came up dry and no report was
filed.
Kessler knows that he is stepping into an
office where his predecessor was hung out to
dry. Tim e and again Young was caught
unaware by scandals under his nose, and he
was left looking like a bufToon. Congressional
Investigators knew more about what was
wrong with the agency than Young did. He
left office mumbling about being betrayed.
One congressional source told us a big
concern on Capitol Hill Is that Kessler doesn't
"g e t captured" by any bad elements that
Unger in the FDA. The hope Is that Kessler
will be savvy enough to do the right thing and
restore the FDA's reputation as a protector of
the public.
Those who know Kessler think he won't be
easily duped. He has privately vowed that he
won't put up with any more corruption. He
told one friend. "A ll I want Is 15 minutes of
Dingcll's time."
It would bean Interesting 15 minutes. Kep.
John Dingell. D-Mlch.. led the congressional
Investigation In the generic drug scandal with
the help o f Richard Kusscrow, the Inspector
general for the Health and Human Services
Department.
Dingell tried to push through a bill in the
last session that would h a vi temporarily
closed the doors at the FDA to any drug
company convicted of fraudulent dealings
with the agency. But the bill was defeated
and the generic drug companies dodged the
bullet. Similar legislation is expected to be
floated in the next session of Congress.
Sources told our associate Jim Lynch that
Kessler is respected by Democrats and
Republicans, but that his political godfather
is Sen. Orrin Hatch. R-Utah. Kessler is a
former consultant to the Senate Labor and
Human Resources Committee where iiatch Is
the senior Republican.
Kessler should not walk gingerly Into his
new office. He should let it be known that
there's a new sheriff in town with no
tolerance for the old way of doing business at
the FDA.

�A
X

S a n fo fd H « r M d , S a n fo rd , F lo r W f —.T h t if *t o y , N o ^ m b f

23, 1990 —

§A

Cleanup-

Marijuana OKad for AIDS patient
WASHINGTON — A Virginia man Is the second AIDS patient
to receive government permission to use marijuana to reduce
nausea, vomiting and pain caused by the disease. ofTlclals said
Wednesday.
Th e Food and Drug Administration confirmed that It has
approved a prescription to supply the patient with marijuana
from the government's stock controlled by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse.
Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics said the 34-year-old man.
Identified only as Danny, received his first supplies o f
marijuana Wednesday from an unidentified pharmacy in
northern Virginia.
" I have a lot to be thankful for this Thanksgiving. I was
worried I'd never make It through the complex paperwork.
Now. I can sit down tomorrow with my family and cat a good
Thanksgiving m eal," Danny said In a statement.
The patient Joins a 33-year-old Texas AIDS patient and n
handful of other patients with cancer, glaucoma and multiple
sclerosis who have rccclvcdgovcmment approval for medical
access to marijuana.

Macy’t pulls ads from striking News
NEW YORK — R.H. Mary's Inc. dealt a severe blow
Wednesday to Dally News management by announcing the
high-profile department store had decided to slop advertising
In the strikebound tabloid, union officials said.
Macy's, one o f the largest and most profitable advertisers lo
the News, decided to slop the ads as management continues to
combat crippling circulation problems that has plagued their
efforts at getting copies of the newspaper Into readers' hands
during the monthlong strike.
The announcement came the day before the B4th annual
Thanksgiving Day Parade, which Is sponsored by Macy's and
ends In front of the store's flagship Herald Square outlet.
From United P ro s * International Reports

P ofic# C h ief Steve Harriett helped find the club an alarm.

Club

I

C ontinu ed from Page 1A
T h e N e tw o rk C a re ta k e r
system Is being loaned to the
club for as long as It Is needed,
and will allow the property to be
monitored on a 24-hour basts.
Haymorc said. "B oys and Girls
Clubs have been doing great
things for a lot o f kids, and wc
were glad for the chance to
help."
Haymorc Is also arranging to

have two additional systems
Installed at no charge In two
similar clubs In the Orlando
area.
Harriett said. T m happy that
I was able to be the facilitator of
this project. I think the Boys and
Girls Club Is a real blessing to
our community and does a real
service In providing a healthy
and safe environment for our
youngsters."

Mental disorders increase
abuse of drugs, alcohol
■y KARIN KLINOSR
UPI Science Writer

ty disorder: and anxiety Includ­
ing phobias and panic disorder.
The sludy found that among
those wllh any lifetime diagnosis
o f a menial disorder. 22.3 per­
cent had a history o f ntrnhol
abuse, compared with 11 per­
cent o f those with no such
diagnosis.
For drugs other than alcohol,
the comparative risk o f addiction
among those with mental pro­
blems was even greater. Among
those wllh disorder diagnoses.
14.7 percent were classified as
"drug abuse dependent" com­
pared to only 3.7 percent of
those with no mental disorders.
In add!I Ion. Rieger said people
w ith a life tim e h is to r y o f
alcuhollsm were twice as likely
as others lo suffer from mental
disorders and six times mure
likely to suffer from forms ol
drug dependency.
Among (hose with a history of
drug abuse. 53 pereem had a
mental disorder — Ihe highest
ra le o f co m b in ed disorders
among Ihuse studied.

BOSTON — People who sulfcr
from mental disorders ranging
from anxiety to depression are
far more likely than others lo
abuse alcohol ur other drugs,
scientists said.
In terview s conducted with
20.291 people In the general
community and In Institutions
found those with disorders such
as phobias and panic attacks
were more than twice as likely
as those without such disorders
to abuse alcohol or other drugs.
Dr. Darrel Heglcr o f the National
Institute of Mental Health in
Bethesda. Md. said Tuesday.
The finding provides "clear
and persuasive evidence dial
m en ta l d is o r d e rs m ust be
addressed as a central part of
substance abuse prevention ef­
forts" In the United Stales.
Hcgler and co-rcseurchers said In
the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
The reasons for the high rates
of co-cxlsllng mental problems
and substance abuse are un­
clear. Heglcr said. Although
some studies have suggested
that mental disorders precede
drug and alcohol dependency,
A LB E R T E. LA RSO N
he said there Is "Increasing
Albert E. Larson. 95. 200 W.
a rg u m en t" that certain dis­
Airport Blvd.. Sanford, tiled
orders are the result — pot the
Wednesday ai Ills residence.
cause — o f substance abuse.
Researchers conducted In­ Born April 9. 1895. In Mangen
Varmland. Sweden, he moved lo
terview s during a four-year
Sanford In 1986 from Moline, III.
|&gt;crlod with adults aged lti and
He was a retired machinist for
older In communities in five
Internal Iona) Harvester C om ­
geographical areas and with
pany and a member of First
occupants of mental Institutions,
E v a n g e lic a l F r e e C h u rc h .
prisons and nursing homes. The
Moline.
scientists recorded the percent­
Survivors Include sons. David
age w ho experienced either
E.
and P h illip R . both o f
mental disorders or suostance
Rockford. III., Tort- Edward. Or­
abuse or both.
la n d o : b r o t h e r . J o h n V ..
M e n ta l d is o r d e r s w ere
Rockford: sister. Elsa Swanson.
classified Into four primary
Tampa: two grandchildren.
categories: schizophrenia: "a f­
Colllson Funeral Home. Ocoee.
fective" disorders such as major
. uyrjtun’e of arrangements.
depression
--u

DEATH

C e a t l i M * fra a i P i | t 1A
which Is further than we
normally would g o ." Although
the drag lin e was unloaded
yesterday. Herman said. “ With
the two day holiday followed by
Ihe weekend. It will probably be
Monday before we can really get
Into high gear on this."

Bush
C o a t ia a c d from P a g * 1A

ally in the Persian Gulf standoff
"T h e two presidents will dis­
cuss a number o f International
and regional Issues," Fitzwater
said from Air Force One. shortly
before Bush's Jumbo Jet touched
down.
Syria also Is believed to have
some Indirect Influence over
some o f the hostage-lakers In
Lebanon, but Fitzwater sa d the
main purpose of the two hours of
talks In Geneva Friday, arranged
at the behest of Mideast allies.
Including Egypt and Turkey,
will be to discuss the situation In
Ihe gulf,
Syria, whlcfi remains on the
U .S. list o f c o u n tries that
sponsor international terrorism,
has long been a biller rival of
Iraq and has sent troops and
tanks lo Saudi Arabia to join the
anti-Saddam coalition led by the
United States.
Bush landed In the oil-fed oasts
assured o f continued Interna­
tional support o f actions against
Saddam.
The meetings wllh Fahd and
Assad, an opportunity lo explore
the next steps the administra­
tion believes arc necessary to
check Iraq, are part o f his
continuing attempt to Isolate the
Iraqi president and bolster the
International coalition amassed
against him since Ihe Aug. 2
Invasion o f Kuwah.
Just before leaving Paris. Bush
said he looked forward lo spen­
ding Thanksgiving Day. com­
plete w llh turkey and trim­
mings. with the 230,000 U.S.
military troop* stationed In Ihe
gull.
"W c have u lot to be thankful
for." Bush told a news confer­
ence as he wound up his stay In
Paris. "A n d I will try lo tell every
single man and woman over
there that we arc going to
prevail. W e're not there for
mission Impossible."
As for his Journey Into the
troubled Persian Gulf area, he
also assured reporters he did not
feet he would be endangered
when he (ravels through the
Saudi desert on Thursday.
" I have never felt more secure
In going uny place than In going
to sec our troops there." said
Bush, adding. "And I think the
men and women there are look­
ing forward lo visiting with us.
Our safety Is guaranteed.
"W hy? Well. It's ThanksglvIng."
Belore turning to the coming
days' critical sessions wllh Mid­
dle Easlern leaders. Bush said
the European nations he had
consulted wllh were "very solid”
In their support of U.S. policy
against Iraq, adding that no one
is suggesting compromise.

A dragline operator at Lsks Qsm maneuvers •
large mat lo place In front of the dragline to keep

ThanksCeatlaaed freai Pafe 1A
Immigrants w ill take part
tn t h e t r a d i t i o n a l d in n e r
sponsored by the Chamber o f
C om m erce after a P ilg rim 's
Progress march In costume from
Plymouth Rock to First Parish
Church.'
Th e dinner for 1.400 at M-mortal Hall will require tw o tons o f
turkeys and four sealings.
A Gainesville, Fla., naturalist
said the original Thanksgiving
feast was one of the first high*
fiber, low-cholesterol feasts In
the New World.
Charlotte Porter, associate cu­
rator a* Ihe Florida Museum o f
Natural History, pointed out that
the European diet to which the
Pilgrims were accustomed was
heavy on meat and scant on
vegetables but New W orld plants
— including corn , potatoes,
beans, peppers, tomatoes and
cranberries — revolutionized the
diet o f American settlers.
But vegetarian dissenters in
Boston claim the Am erican diet
Is still too meal-oriented and
s c h e d u le d t h e ir m e a t - fr e e
Thanksgiving dinner Wednes­
day with a menu o f tofu turkey.
French pasta, butternut squash
chowder, a vegetable melange,
m ashed potatoes, cra n b erry
sauce and Swiss torte.
M ea n w h ile, th e F u n d fo r
Animals In Texas accepted live
turkeys for placement on the
organ iza tion 's B la c k B eauty
Ranch near Athens, Texas, and
a n n u a l n a t io n a l
th e
Adopt-a-Turkey campaign was
busy delivering 17 homeless,
abused and liberated turkeys to
adoptive homes w ith animal
rights activists In eight states.

firth

...fo r C H R IS T M A S

TABLE TOP TO G IA N T
4
4

4

It from sinking. Clsanup o f the city park has been
sought for years.

• Nova Scotia Balsam • Frazier Fir
• White Pine • Live White Pine
• Blue Spruce • Charlie Brown Trees

‘A • Fancy, Holiday P o in s e ttia s
4
in bud &amp; bloom • white, pink, red
V • White Pine &amp; Boxwood G a rla n d

• Balsam W re a th s
• White Pine R o p e in g
• Natural Green &amp; D e c o ra tio n s

3 2 1 -2 5 2 5

r ’ * 2 . b o ’

OFF

With This Coupon

25" SI

C

s

8 1/2 M ilss Wert o r 17-03
on 25th Street

SANFORD

,

Christman Hours: Hon. Sun. 9 - 9
L a n d s c a p in g &amp; Ir r ig a tio n D e s ig n s
In s ta ll A S e r v ic e CALL TODAY

The campaign's farm sanctu­
ary near Watkins Glen. N.Y.. has
placed 62 turkeys so far. all o f
wham will be guaranteed death
w ith dignity.
L es s d ig n ifie d Is the un­
orthodox ITurnksglvlng usage o f
frozen turkeys as bowling balls
b y bowlers In Norfolk. Va.. and
11 other cities spread across the
country from Atlanta o hoenlx.
Arts., where turkey bowls are
scheduled this week.

H o lly w o o d c e l e b r i t i e s an d
members o f the Los Angeles
Raiders football team will dish
up dinner to 5,000 homeless at
the Union Rcsuce Mission on
Skid Row. Houston's Superfeast,
which served 16,000 people last
year, is b e in g prepcard fo r
20.000 this year.
In New York. Inmates at the
Rlker’s Island Jail w ho are study­
ing culinary arts prepared 100
turkeys donated by restaurants
for distribution to hom eless
shelters.

Three holes are drilled In each
turkey so they can be Hung
down the lane In tournaments
that raise funds to buy holiday
food for the poor.
R o n D r e s n e r , m a r k e t in g
_____ 1 A
assistant for Pair Lanes blowling
centers, sold that Norfolk was going to the landfill areas.
the only city where bowlers can
Those Items to be separated
toss their birds at pins painted Include aluminum cans, news­
w ith the face o f Iraqi leader papers. glass containers nnd
Saddam Hussein.
plastic beverage containers.
"W e 'r e hoping that It will
Eventually the city hopes to
catch on,” said Dresner. “ You’ve expand the program by provid­
got to have some fun with this."
ing neighborhood recycling conDinners for the poor were the tamers. and call for additional
order o f the day.
product sorting o f tin cans and
-In- Los geles, a platoon of mixed paper product*.

Director

�BA

Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida — Thursday. November 22. 1990

Discount
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v O k u lU

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Player, coach off the year
Event to benefit Toys for Tote
The Tri-County Sports Club. ■ non-profit
organisation. Is boating a T o ys fo r -Tots
Volleyball Tournament on Saturday. Dec. 1. at
the W inter Park YMCA and Dr. Phillip* High

Smith clear
choice as
elite player

Bisceglia
selected as
top coach

Z2

n - l ____ a

ffT ln W S -

Last year, the Trl-County Sparta Club raised
•3.000 for the United States Marine Corps'
Central Florida Toys for T ots effort. Th e club's
1900goal to to triple last year's contribution.
Entry fee la 078 per team with 100 percent of
all donations gofetg toward the purchase o f toys.
While Orlando Orthopaedic Center and Royal
Jeep Bagle have already signed up aa major
sponsors, the Tri-County Sports Club atUl la
looking for sponsors w illing to donate cash or
Call 9666664 or 678-7656 to request a

Sanford Iw q i i h forming
SANFORD - The Sanford Recreation De­
partment la taking registrations for the winter
slowpttch softball leagues that will begin play
the week o f Jan. 7.1991.
There w ill be an organisational meeting
Wednesday, liec. 12. at 6 p.m. at the Downtown
Youth Center located In the lower level of
Sanford City Hal). 300 N. Park Ave.
Registration Is $240 per team (non-residents
will have to pay an additional $10 each).
Deadline for entry is Dec. 21 for returning
teams and Jan. 3 for new teams. Any returning
team not meeting the first deadline w ill be
considered a new team on a first-com e,
first-serve basis.
For m ore Information, call the Sanford
Recreation Department at 330-5697.

Christmas Shootout schsdulod
ORLANDO — The Downtown Orlando Recre­
ation Complex will conduct a free 3-on-3
Christmas Shootout, a three-point shoot out and
a slam dunk contest on Saturday. Dec. 15.
For fu rth er Inform ation, contact L a rry
“ Spider "McCaOey at 246-2288.
.

It's not very often that a person
wins an award unanimously. But In
Seminole County, there la no doubt
who the high school Player o f the
Year Is. For the second straight
year, he la Lake Howell running
back Marquette Smith.
So overwhelming waa the choice
o f Smith that when the time came
to discuss P la yer o f the Y ear
candidates, no one on the Herald
sports staff came up with any other
names. Not one.
His statistics are mind-boggling.
He has rushed for 2.144 yards on
Just 201 carries, an average o f 10.7
yards per carry, and a staggering 28
touchdowns. His rushing yardage Is
almost twice as many as his nearest
competitor and his 28 touchdowns
arc m ore than the next three
players have scored combined.
H r has also shown that he knows
—
what lo do when the ball Is thrown
,2 g j
In h'a direction as he has caught five
B M P' V1
passes for 101 yards (an average o f
■".•*4“
.- lr - e is l
20.2 yards per catch) and one
touchdown.
If Smith were a teum. hls 174 that has several people contrtbut
points (17.4 per game) would rank ing.”
him In the lop three In the county In
Before the season Smith said he
scoring.
felt the Sliver Hawks would have tr
And all (hls has been done In an go lo the slate finals for him to gel
o f f e n s e th a t d o e s not o v e r - 3.000-yards and break Emmltl
emphasize him.
Smith’s (no relation) Florida single
. . . . . .
.
. _
„ . . . __ season rushing record of 2.91S
“ A ot of people ask me why we
„
arr rtJ,ht |n ,lnt

MfffqiltM# Smith

1
f
35-40 limes A
a game,
«"* ■

«“ $

kr
said l^
Lake

for
»” do just that If he and hli
nm,c*
continue lo play
as the)
.
.. can
.
r

« “ &gt;' S E f f i f f ’E

W e want lo have a balanced attack

s S S i T S S i No. 3 on the alMtim
L’ ffes P la y e r, F a g* 2B

football program 10 years ago.
BfccegHa's record Is 70-33. Th e last
two years. M b teams have been 0-1.
S e m in o le A th le tic C o n fe r e n c e
champions and 5A-Dlstrict 4 cham ­
pions.
After last year's very successful
season. BtocegUs had to make some
alteraUors In the Silver Hawks'
attack, adapting the Lake Howell
offense to suit the talents o f the
players he and his staff had avail­
able.
And this Saturday. Bisceglia will
lead th e H aw ks a ga in st L a k e
Clty-Columbta In the 5A-Reglon II
playoff game.
According to Lake Howell Athletic
Director Harry Drtvas. the Silver
Hawks' success this year and In
recent years Is the result o f a
year-round program that Bisceglia
and hls staff have developed and
maintained.
“ When you talk about Coach
Bisceglia and the success o f our
football team, you have tJ look at
the year-round effort that he puts
In.'* said Drivas. “ Our players
participate In a weight program
from the end o f football season to
the beginning of spring practice,
four days a week. And after spring
practice, through the summer."
According to Drtvas. It took sever­
al year* for the program to take root
and begin to pay dividends. The
reason that It eventually did Is the

Mlkff Bltctglla
'dedication o f Bisceglia and hls staff
to make It work.
“ He ilnds a way to convince kids
that It's Important to provide that
effort all year." said Drtvas. “ It took
two or three years lo get the kids
Into II. It took time to develop the
tradition und the role models.
“ Th at (getting the year-round
weight program) o ff (he ground
lakes hard work. It requires u
discipline to be there every day to
open the weight room and supervise
the workouts. You have to be an
exam ple."

□ S «* Coach. Fags 2B

I

UCF schodulss clinics

r

ORLANDO — University o f Central Florida
hasrhalt M ach Jay Bergman and hls staff will
conduct d lM cs for hitters and pitchers on Dec. 1
and 2. *
The hitting clinic, which will be offered on
Dec. 1. will be broken down into stance swing.
hitting In the cage, pranada-machine drills,
short-toss drills, soft-toss drills, batting tee
drills, bunting and pepper.
The pitching clinic, set for Dec. 2. w ill be
broken down Into the following five stations:
arm care, proper mechanics, fielding the
position, plckoffsand bullpen work.
Each clinic wlD last from 1 to 5 p.m.
The cost for attending the clinic is 120 per day
or 130 for the weekend. The camps are open to
boys ages 8 to 17 (no high school seniors are
permitted). Players will be grouped according lo
age and ability. Each camper will receive a free
camp T-shirt at registration.
Deadline for registration Is Nov. 26.
For more Information, call 281-5265.

l
1

Notes, H aw ks lead A ll- C o u n ty team
Rtrpw, O r M s . Kanaaky. who led Seminole County In
Hsrald Sports Editor
This year. Seminole County high school football fans
have had the privilege of watching sonic players who
will be described as being among the best ever al their
position.
For many o f us. some o f these players will be the
standard by which we measure other future great
players. In fact, this season may rank as one of the best
In Seminole County history In terms o f the number of
outstanding athletes we've had the pleasure to watch.
Today, continuing a tradition started last year. 24 of
those athletes will tx named to the Sanford Herald
All-County Team.
Rather than pick the 24 best players regardless of
position, the selection process followed the premise of
putting together Ihe best offensive and defensive teams
possible.
Once ugaln. since most of Ihe county schools don't
make much use of a tight end. (he offensive unit will
not Include a light end. Instead. Ihe learn will consist or
three running backs (Including a slotback or flanker)
and two wide receivers.
On Ihe other side of Ihe ball, the defensive unit will
Include three down linemen, four linebackers and four
defensive backs.
While statistics make up a large pari or how players
are measure against one another. Ihe choices weren't
based solely on stats. How a player performed within
hls team's particular scheme wus also considered.
With all that said, here Is the 1990 Sanford Heruld
All-County Team:
Quarterback — Barry Wiggins, Bamlaol*. One o f
three toughest calls to make (placcklcker and punter
werr the other two). Wiggins was a very close choice
over Lake Howell's Ryan Thomas.

Turkey Shoot-out
WINTER PARK - The 1990 Thanksgiving
T u r k e y S h o o t-o u t S o c c e r T o u r n a m e n t,
sponsored by Lake Howell High School, will take
place this Friday and Saturday. Nov. 23 and 24.
Games will be played at W ard Field In Winter
Park. Bishop Moore Field In Orlando and
Richard Evans Stadium at Lake Howell.
In Bracket A at Ward Field on Friday. Nov. 23
U will be Winter Park playing Oak Ridge at 9
a.m.. Oak Rtdge facing Lake Howell at noon and
Lake Howell challenging W inter Park at 3 p.m.
In Bracket B at Bishop Moore Field on Friday
It will be Bishop Moore taking on Apopka at 6
a.m.. Land O'Lakes squaring off with Bishop
Moore at noon and Apopka battling Land
0 ‘ Lakcsat3p.m .
At Ward Park In Winter Park on Saturday, the
Lake Howell and Winter Park Junior varsity
teams will play a preliminary game at B a.m.
The fifth plate game will be played at 11 a.m..
the third place game will kick off at 1 p.m. and
the championship will start at 3 p.m.
The trophy presentations arc set for 5 p.m.

Banning hack — Marqsstts Smith, Lakt Howall;
Haary Williams. Bamlaola; Chris Hasty, Lakt
Mary. Smith, this year's Sanford llrrald Player of the
Year (see related story) Is the obvious choice at tailback.
Haney, the second-lcudlng rusher In the county, gets
the nod over Lake lirunllcy's David Sprinkle at Ihe
running back slot. Williams, who does a little o f
everything for Seminole. Is the pick at danker over Luke
Howell's Scolt Golden.

Rsctivar — Bill Baamsky, Lakt Mary; Blmoa

receptions, specializes In running precise routes and
making tougn catches. Because o f hls size and speed.
Harper la threat whenever the Lions have the ball. The
dose runners-up are Andy Boothe of Lake Brantley and
Seminole's JoJo Murphy.

OfftatlTS Um - 6 m Adams, Lakt Mazy; Bubka
Toth sad Chris Hsamis-Boad, Lake Hawaii. The
toughest position to select because there ure no real
statistics to measure an offensive lineman's success.
These five were selected because they always seemed lo
be In the middle o f big plays. A second group o f five
that’s almost Interchangeable with the first group
Includes Seminole’s Darius Johnson. Mike Wells of
Lake Brantley. Lake Mary's Ken Hoover. Kris Keene of
Oviedo and Lyman's Bobby Stephenson.
Plteektoksr — Ooordlt Davison. Bsmlnole. This
almost came down to a coin loss. Davison and Lake
Howell's Ted Lane arc lhat close. One deciding factor
was Davison's school-record 54-yard field goal In a
district win over Edgcwatcr.

Dsfeaalv* Us* — Carl* White, ksartnole; Thomas
Damps, Lake Hawaii; Mika McKenna, Lake Mary.
Each one o f these young men Is u load to deal with.
Teams try and lym their offenses uway from these three
and they still gel In on a majority of plays. Luke
Howell's Trevor Pryce. Lyman's Dallas Simpson und
Oviedo's Chris Tabscotl also can dominate play along
the defensive line.
•

Lias backer — Bernard Brava, Semlaole; Kca
•peanaaa sad Baa Times, Lake HeweU; Daryl
•ask . Lake Braatley. One thing this county docs not
lack Is quality linebackers. Not only ore these four the
county’s best, they're among the state’s best. Others
who were considered Include Lake Mary's Puul Clayton.
Seminole's Tom m y Malhis. Brian Grayson of Lyman
and Oviedo's May Aspinwall.

Deftaaive back — Freak Salta, Lake Howell;
Troy Todd, Lake Mary; Bekky Washington. Lyman;
Bari Gate, Ovlodo. These four have combined lor 15
interceptions and five fumble recoveries. Todd bos
returned three recovered fumbles for touchdowns,
making him the leading scorer umong defensive
players. It was difficult to leave off Seminole's Brill

□Baa All-Coaaty, Page 2B

FOOTBALL
□ 12:30 p.m. — WESH 2. NFL. Denver Broncos
at Detroit Uons. (L)
□ 4 p.m . WCPX 6. N FL. W ashin gton
Redskins at Dallas Cowboys.(L)

FOR 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 A R E A , R EAD T H E S A N FO R D H E R A LD D A ILY
**

____________________ -_

l

- I*

---------- --- —

I

�I — Sanford Herald,

still employs
I
. loomed e t SCC
ss Qetor ssslstent coach

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
•i

__________

W f Z -3 w in , lo s e f t D R E W

e »i

Heraid Correspondent

made the transition to college
b a s k e tb a ll e a s ie r fo r m e ,"
commented McCollum, who has
coached collegiate basketball
since 1902.

GAINESVILLE - From SCC to
the SEC.
Sixteen years after he last
In the past nine years. Mc­
donned a R aider basketball Collum has coached teams st
jersey far Seminole Community S ou th A la b a m a , S a m fo r d ,
College, Robert McCollum Is Southern Illinois, and Kansas
returning to the state which State. A nd with his return to
started his collegiate basketball Florida. McCollum hopes to take
career — Florida.
steps tn achieving hla lifetime
But this time he's not relying
al — being the head coach of a
on speed or shooting touch to get
vision I basketball team.
the jo b done. Now McCollum will
'You try and broaden your
use h is w it and w ea lth o f philosophy and find a (coaching)
experience to get the most out o f phikwophy you feel comfortable
h it p la y ers as an assistant with." aald McCollum onn why
&lt;
he
basketball coach at the Universi­ la so well-traveled,
Working
ty o f Florida.
with different coaches has given
And the program has never me a broad phlloaophy of the
been more In need o f help. Last game. A nd It slknrs you to make
year, the Gators endured a 7-21 coot;, taa ll oyer the country."
campaign and had their two top
But e v e n thou gh he waa
ayers. Dwayne Schtntxlus and always several stales sway from
vlngston Chapman, quit the where hla collegiate basketball
team. T o top things off. Florida career began, SCC always re­
waa flagged by the NCAA for mained clone to hla heart.
s e v e ra l rule v io la tio n s and
"1 really enjoyed m y two years
waited for Its penalty.
there. I waa appreciative for the
But now those aeas o f turmoil scholarship (they gave m e)."
are clear w ilin g for McCollum said McCollum, "ft certainly was
and th e rest o f th e O a to r a stepping stone. It opened a lot
coaching squad, led by first-year o f doors fo r m e."
head coach Lon Kruger. T h e
One person at SCC stands out
group led Kansas State to an boldly In the mind o f McCollum.
at-large bid In the NCAA tourney Tom Tipton, who still teaches at
lost season.
SCC. had McCollum as a student
"Our goals are always to be a In a Western Civilisation class In
better team come the conference 1973. A fter McCollum made a C.
(tournament)." said McCollum Tipton took the young student
about the UF basketball team. and told him that he would do
" I f we can Improve In those time well to w ork hard, do his best
fram es, h o p e fu lly , w e 'll be and never settle for passing.
playing better In March. W e
It waa advice McCollum his
want to go out and play hard never forgotten.
every night on a dally biwts."
M cCollum still remains In
Going out and playing hard contact w ith SCC. He has grown
t-very night was a value Mc­ close to current coach Bill
Collum learned while attending Payne, and still looks to recniil
SCC In 1973-74. During that kids from his alma mater.
time, SCC's head coach Joe
“ 1 fell I have found lifetime
Sterling, Instilled some values In friendships bcccause o f my ex­
McCollum which he has used perience at SCC." commented
throughout his coaching career.
McCollum. " I ’d never hesitate to
" T h e em p h asis placed on recommend SCC to any hlghfundam entals and discipline achool kid ."

S

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racalvlna valai: Alabama,
Tach, Oraaon. Southern

ii/i in

Player

Coach

C e a U a u d fr a a ll

________
m im
m
Also, Blsceglta doesn’t demand
that an athlete only play football.
What he does Is try to incorpo­
rate the football weight program
with the practices and demands
o f an athlete's other sports.

yarda and 82 touchdowns.
He needs 444 yards to catch No.
2 Willie McClendon. Th e all-time
at No. I mark la held by Emmltt Smith
with 8.804 yards.
A n oth er thing that m akes
Smith such a special player la
his attitude. He Is quick to heap
praise on his offensive linemen
and coaches and not take any
credit for himself.
He la articulate In hla spcach
and you almost never here the
word " I " when speaking o f the
Sliver Hawk team. Everything Is
we did this and we did that.
He la also a very good student
who has already scored over 900
on hla college board score* and
carries a 2.6 grade point average
but he w ill take the testa again
because he wants to score over
1.000.
He also aald last summer that
where he goes to school next
year will depend on the academ­
ics as w ell as the football.
“ I'm going to look at the
academics and the football pro­
gram. Hopefully. I’d like to go
pro one day. If possible. But
where I go to college depends on
a lot o f thlngi. I'm going to
graduate. I love football, but I
want to get m y degree. I want to
have something toTall back on In
something I like."

"H e’ll try and convince the
multi-sport athlete that Its im­
portant to find the time to do It
(participate In the weight pro­
gram) and that they can still
play their other sports as ef­
fectively o r more effectively.”
said Drivaa.
Drtvaa aald that the weight
program not only provides the
Silver Hawk football lean, jvith
the physical tools It needs to
compete. It plays a large role In
developing the sense o f team
unity necessary to be successful.
"You have to give the coadws
a lot o f credit.” aald Drivas.
"W hen the team la working out
together and getting stronger,
you're also building team unity.
The players feel comfortable
with each other off the field and
they becom e friends. When they
go on the field, they believe In
each other.
"It's hard to develop that If
you Just com e out on Aug. 15
(the first day formal practices are
allowed).'*

A ll-C o u n ty —
Continued from I B
Seminole's oflanaa struck with such qulcknass and precision In scored on a 10-yard Inslda revarsa. Altar Oaordla Davison kicked a
Monday's tiebreaker that it amazed even their own teammates Held goal to beat Edgewater, Henry Williams took a pitch from Kerry
below). On the Tribe's first play, Tyrone Williams (No. 82. left! Wiggins (No. 2, right) and scored the touchdown that beat Leesburg.

Henderson or Lake Howell’s Joe
Smith.

F a a U r — R o b ert F i a oewald. Lake Rraatlsy. Or. IT
you prefer, make Calm your
punter and move Fennewald to
defensive back. Lake Howell’s
S c o tt G o ld e n w a s a c lo s e
runner-up here also.
Other players w ho deserve

mention. In no particular order.
Include Bruce McClary, Rodney
Hooka and Tony Chavers of
Seminole; Joe Mcncllo and Vin­
cent Alexander of Lake Mary;
Cedric Bouey and Toby Durham
o f Lyman: Leon Loman and Dan
Hargrave or Oviedo; Greg Rigby
and John Myallnskl o f Lake
Howell: and Sadat Smith and
D a vid P o r t e r f ie ld o f L a k e
Brantley.

See &amp; Bel The Best of Two Woridsl

THOROUGHBRED RACING
POST TIME 12:30 RM.
(daily sxcepl Monday)

SEE rr LIVE!

LAR GE SCREEN T V S

IV Y U.S. SAVINGS GONGS
for rKecurrent rote coll... V*

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P eo p le
IN B R IE F
Liston to toetur*

A perfect circle

Dr. Bruce Pauley, history professor at the Untveratty o f
Central Florida, w ill preaent a lecture on the collapse o f
tatalltartanlam In Eastern Europe at the East Branch o f the
Seminole County Public Library. 310 Division Street In Oviedo.
The program Is Tuesday. Novem ber 37. 7:30 p.m. In the
library meeting room. The program Is free and open to the
public.
Dr. Pauley la a published author o f several books and his
specialty la modern European history. He has taught at UCF
since 1071.

of 8m M M Guild
v* o ifn in o ff w jufiiy tiemv oven
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s m IM I u s
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outdone* of

Miss Valerio, »or invir upcorTv
Ing performance In the Circle
of Light al the Sanford St.
Lucie FeethraL The troupe will
pvvioini uve e r r o r i ev tno
Sanford C M c Center. Dancer*
b rea k fro m p r a c t ic e lo n g
enouoh to elan areettna cwds
for American aarvtoemen who
will not be celebrating the
frvrtiijcy i ml iInmasa
om v.

Kids intkt gifts
Seminole County 4-H Is sponsoring the second In Its 4-H
Special Interest Recreation Program s entitled "S an ta's
Workshop" on Saturday. December 1. from 10 a.m. until noon
at the Seminole County Extension Office. This workshop will
give youth the opportunity to m ake a number o f holiday
decorations and crufts. The program la open to youth 8-18. You
need not be a member o f 4-H.
Cost o f the class Is 82 to cover materials and one can of food
for the needy. Pre-registration Is required as class sixe Is
limited. T o register call the 4-H office at 333-2900ext. 9580.

Microwavo for tt* holidays
The program "M icrowave Cooking for the Holkiays" will be
presented In December at all five branches o f the Seminole
County Public Library System. Local microwave instructor.
Dot Bibcau. will demonstrate the microwave preparation o f
several holiday recipes. All programs will begin at 7 p.m. In the
library m eeting rooms. Locations and dates are: Monday.
December 3, East Branch. Oviedo: Tuesday, December 4.
Central Branch. Casselberry: Wednesday, December 5.
Northwest Branch. Lake Mary: Monday. December 10. West
Branch. Longwood, and Tuesday. December I I . North Branch.
Sanford.

AIDS misinformation kept sister away
ft You cannot rere­
D B A S A B B Yt
peat often enough that AIDS Is
transmitted only through blood
contact, contaminated needles
or unprotected Intimate sexual
contact. My lover died o f an
A ID S -related lllnesa In Sep­
tember. after being cared for by
me for 28 months.
His sister, who lives nearby,
had rejected him upon learning

Bsmatoln tributs schsdutod
Musicians or the Florida Symphony Orchestra will present
Glenn Dictcrow. concertmaster o f the New York Philharmonic.
In " A Tribute to Leonard Bernstein” . John Covclli will be
conducting this benefit concert, which will be presented at the
First United Methodist Church. Orlando, on Sunday. November
25. at 8 p.m. Admission will b a 810donation.
The all-Bemsteln program will feature Dictcrow performing
tile late com poser's "Serenade for Solo Violin. String
Orchestra. Harp, and Percussion". Also on the program are the
"Divertim ento for Orchestra". "Sym pho tic Dances from ‘West
Side Story"*, and music from "On the Town *.
Tickets w ill be available at the CFMA office, 30.k&gt; East
Robinson: and at the church. 142 East Jackson, on the evening
o f the performance. For more Information, call 628-3514.

o f his
hia Illness. She refused to visit
him In the Intensive care unit for
fear o f getting AIDS and passing
It to her children!
Her letter to him. saying she
w o u ld ch erish th eir happy
memories as brother and sister,
arrived too late. Although she
rea lly kdored him. she was
totally uninformed about his
Illness.

Th e Norm an DeVere Howard Chapter o f the United
Daughters o f Confederacy held Ita November meeting at the
home o f Lillian McCall with Margaret Wright aa co-hostess.
Following the business meeting. Douglas Stenstrom con­
ducted an Interesting discussion on the early history o f Sanford
from ths 1BOO's. Stenstrom shared amusing anecdotes and
many historical stories o f the early settlers. Discussing the
increase In population In Sem inole County. Stenstrom
discussed the needs o f the public school system and law
enforcement division, also stressing the need for water control.
Members attending were: Ethel Carver, Sara Krlder. Juanita
Miller, Minnie Strickland. Clara Swain. Jean Wheeler. Isabel
Wilson. Elolse Wlmblsh, J. Wood.

Skatoall day
The Seminole County Chapter of the Council for Exceptional
Children la sponsoring an "A ll Day Skating Party" Friday.
November 23. from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Mclodee Skating
Rink In Sanford, everyone Is Invited to attend. The cost for the
skating session Is 34.50. which includes skate rental.

Craft tala coming

Roses, roses everywhere, but what arc the beat new roses to
buy for your garden?
The American Rose Society's new 1991 Handbook for
Selecting Roses rates over 1.000 commercially available rosea
and can quickly tell you which ones are most Ukly to succeed.
Thousands o f rosaiians from throughout the country have
grown and evaluated these roses, passing on their experience
with each one.
T o obtain your copy of the handbook, send 82 and a
aelf-addiessed, stamped. *10 envelope with 50 cents postage to
The American Rose Society. 1991 Handbook Department. P.O.
. Box 30,000. Shreveport, LA 71130-0030.

Airman Msribsth Palmar
Air National Guard Airman 1st
Class Maribeth J. Palmer has
graduated from the Information

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C ou rse g rad u a tes learned
administrative support and of­
fice management for functional
staff elements. The course In­
cluded typing, administrative
c o m m u n ic a tio n s , telep h on e
etiquette; and management of
publications, forms, and records.
Palm er Is I he daughter of
Robert R. Palmer o f Duluth.
Minn., and Nonna Palmer o f
Longwood.

■MAO

S g t . C ar! G iv e n s
Carl O. Givens, son of Carl O.
Givens. Jr. o f 1716 Merchants
Road, Knoxville. Tenn.. and
Janet L. Givens o f 3312 Pink
Hatcher Lane, Louisville. Tenn..
has been promoted In the U.5.
A rm y to the rank o f sergeant.
G iv e n s is an e le c t r o n ic
w a rfa re / s ig n a l In t e llig e n c e
analyst at Schofield Barracks.
Hawaii.
His wife. Army Spec. Jac­
queline F. givens. Is the daugh­
ter o f Louis and Cora Brown of
110 McKay Blvd., Sanford.

LVBDi How sad
that you r lover'a sister was
unaware that according to the
Centers for Disease Control,
there is no evidence that AIDS
can be spread by touching,
hugging or body contact other
than sexual Intimacy.
AIDS Is not spread by casual
contact with Infected Individu­
als. And neither Is there any
evidence that AIDS Is spread by
sharing towels, food or eating
utenalls with a person who has
AIDS. “ Sister" could have con­
firmed those facts by telephon­
ing her local department o f
health, or calling the toll-free
N a t io n a l A ld a H o t lin e :
1-800-342-2437. This letter fa
too fate for your lover's sister,
but It need not be too fate for
anyone who has a friend or
relative who fa living with AIDS.
ft I need your
advice. Six months ago. m y
husband and 1 separated. I
moved out. and took all m y
belongings and half o f "ou r”
belongings with me. I really tried
to be fair. One thing 1 kept was a
h an dm ade b ed sp rea d m y
husband's gran d m oth er had
made and given m e five years
ago at my bridal shower.
Abby. I have dearly loved this
woman and kept the bedspread
partly because o f what she has
meant to me! 1 felt sure that she
w ould want m e to have It.
However, recently m y former
husband called to tell me he
wants the bedspread back —
that his grandmother told him
she wants him to have It.
Well, I am so hurt over this
because I really thought my
loving feelings for her were

reciprocated. I even wonder If
perhaps m y husband didn't fab­
ricate the story: It's so hard far
m e to believe.
Anyway. I want to do the right
thing. I haven’t spoken to her
yet because 1 fear what she may
aay. This la really hurting me.
W hat should! do?
tCaUher.Be&gt;!
warm and friendly, and tell her*
that you dearly love her. Then
aak h er w h en It w ou ld be
c o n v e n i e n t t o r e t u r n th e
bedspread. Her reaction to that
question w ill '.cU you aU you
need to know.
rt W hy do some
people o f the Jewish faith write
"Q -d " Instead o f ' G od''?
Have you ever seen or heard o f
It? Please educate me. I would
feel foolish asking anyone else.

U O IR C M M M

Orthodox
Jews ronalder It disrespectful or
sacrilegious to trash anything
with the word "Q o d " written on
it. Therefore, instead o f writing
"G od.” they write "Q -d " so the
recipient need ant worry about
disposing o f tt. (OrthorT tx Jewish
tradition holds that anything
with "G o d " written on It must
be respectfully buried.)
r« I’m another
man who enjoys working In the
kitchen with nothing on. 1 also
do the backyard gardening and
watering In my birthday suit.
T h e hubby o f "B a ffled In
Vancouver" fa smart: he learned
the freedom o f not wearing
clothes at 49. I’m 65. and my
wife fa thankful that supper fa
ready when she gets home from
work.
Suit (or unsult) yourself. But if you fry
bacon In the buff, be sure to
wear an apron.

.

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Sanford Garden Club members Patty 8p**r, Florence Wshrwsln
and President Fran Morton, from left, display some of the
handmade craft items which will be sold at the club's annual
holiday craft and baked goods bazaar, Friday November 30 and
Saturday December 1 at tha clubhouse. Proceeds will benefit
community beautification projects.

Pick tho bast rotas

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■

Abby. no one was In danger o f
contracting AIDS from him. His
former wife and son came from
afar to show their love and hold
his hand. I still test negative
Uiter four year* o f "s a fe " In­
timacy with him.
Perhaps this letter w ill help
others to avoid heartbreak, re­
morse and recrimination.

DAR loams about Sanford history

'o o

■

WTmm [SmmW'
*i tuff)

For 24-hour listings, see LEISURE mcgazlnc of Friday, Nov. 16.

P v t. 1st Class Michael T.
Dotson has been decorated with
the Arm y Achievement Medal at
C ooke Barracks. Gocpplngen.
West Germany.
T h e Achievement Medal Is
a w a r d e d t o s o l d i e r s fo r
m eritorio u s service, acts of
courage, or oilier accomplish­
ments.
H e Is a m i l i t a r y p o lic e
specialist.
Dotson Is the son o f John M.
and Bonnie L. Dotson o f 2000
Lake Mary Blvd., Sanford.

• FREE in home estimates
• Large selection to
choose from
• Prompt. Friendly Service
• Quality Workmanship
• W e Do Replacement Slat*
• Custom Valances

For the finest in vertical blinds and mini-blinds, call

SANFORD VERTICALS
"A Beautiful New Direction For WinJowt*
7 5 0 W r Uy_ A v * r 8 anf T .

•

�140 — 8anlord HeriM, Sanford, Florida — Thursday, Novsmbar 22, 1990

See your physician
about palpitations

1

cause o f hts palpitation* has
been Uncovered. He should see a
doctor for a complete history and
physical examination, Including
blood testa (to rheck for anemia
and ex c e s s ch olestero l, fo r
example) and a cardiogram.
If the doctor la unable to find

PETER
GOTT.M.D
the cause of the palpitations,
your son should request a con
sultatlon with a cardiologist.

LIj U U

cnce episodes o f palpitations,
which can be caused by stress,
w orry, fatigue or stimulants,
such aa caffeine and nicotine. In
these Instances, people m ay
c o m p la in o f fe w . I f a n y .

I

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IP MAMA'*
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ftA flU G a

P IA 0 M 6 .

r - 1? .
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HO* 40,

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uk

IN HONOR OF THE
OCCASION. I use? MY
FIN6ERTD PRAMA TURKEY
IN YOUR 006 FOOT..

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w h i

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fI PARE
YOU TO
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sounds uke gastso
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IMIESnWALVOLCIUCE
ID Mt

com fort, nervousness and so
forth.
, In other cases, palpitations can
Indicate a heart dteufder. For
example, patients with mitral
valve prolajpae (weakness o f one
o f the cardiac valves) can expertcnce prolonged bouts o f palpitat lo n a , c u l m i n a t i n g in
lightheartedness. shortness o f
breath and weakness.
A ls o , p a tie n ts w ith
arteriosclerotic heart disease
(blockage o f the coronary alterlea) are prone to palpitations
when the cardiac muscle Is
deprived o f oxygen. In these
cases, doctors often prescribe
beta- blockers (such as Inderal)
or calciu m channel blockers
(such aa Procardia) to reduce the
work o f the heart and stabilise
th e p u ls e .

TUMBLEWEEDS
/ WHATAAf YOU ( u W
[M o r r ib flm fo L

hearts. Th is special convention,
named after Its Inventor, the late
D ou g D ru ry , ca n en a b le a
partnership to stop at the twolevel after a weak major-suit
third- o r fourth-seat opening,
even when responder has good
supporting values. South simply
bid a gam e, concealing any
Information about his distribu­
tion from the apposition. How­
ever. he did not play the hand aa
w ell aa he bid
He w on
dum m y's diamond ace, came to
hla hand with the ace o f dubs,
and led the queen o f hearts. East
won the king and returned a
diamond to w est's queen, and

i M f l * M M U M * .)

a.

rriAClAMCTALE
Of 6CA ADVCUTURE/

Y W * t T K tlD O fM V

IJU _

Mi 'l l 1

H f.ll.'IM

M i l l IN

NORTH
♦ K 713
P ais
♦ AS
• ♦ 10 7 f 2

u-n-M

»

T o a large degree, the decision
to treat or not to treat, and
which drug to use. depends on
th e fr e q u e n c y a n d ty p e o f
palpitation s, aa w e ll aa the
seriousness o f the symptoms.
Your son appears to have (airly
serious consequences from his
palpitations. Tree suggests that
treatment la In order — after the

I f t o d a y 's b id d in g se em s
bizarre, understand that North's
a r t ific ia l tw o-clu b resp on se
showed at least three-card heart

Vi

U u U U

JJUL'JUJ □ IJ U L O
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West now gave East a club rulT.
East later took the setting trick
with the spade ace. Declarer
should not exboae himself to the
chance « i ■ club ruff. It * proba­
b ly b e s t to w in d u m m y 's
diamond ace and - play a " low
heart from dummy. That way. If
East ducks, declarer can win the
queen, play to dummy’s heart
ace and lead another heart.
D eclarer w ill now need the
queen o f dubs to come down to
m a k e h la c o n t r a c t . T h i s
approach la better than playing
ace and a heart Immediately,
since East would duck and
presumably declarer would go
up with the queen. Now defend­
er East would be left with K-10.
enough to set the contract re­
gardless o f how declarer con­
tinued.
(0 1 9 9 0 . NEW SPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

HAST
♦ A J52
P K 10 7 2
♦ 10 7 • 2
♦Q

WEST
♦ Q 10 » 4
PS
♦ KQ8 83
♦ •5 4

SOUTH
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D ealer North
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North
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East
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: ♦ K

m

Mew a $o u t AfTB/i
piNNffi Vtf 6 0 OUT

"

' A W T * * # r u e &lt;h

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p

~cSw\rAT&amp;OTf Vf. «

W ELL,W HATEVER f t \b,

IT'S A M R N S IG H T .
B E T T E R THAN M V I\ .
FOURTH H0SBANR/- A ^
s WALPOf , .. *AT\

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY
GWACJOUS/ TM3 TURKEY 13 A M
TOO 3CWFWNY TO HEADLNE

WELL TDM,CL BO/. I GUESS MY
CRASH WET AND WEIGHT-UFT*»&amp;
PROGRAM WORKED OUT RDRYCU. HUH?

C THANKS, A
3 -

LJ

There could be a very coo- how to deal with you,
structive chanm o f outlook and
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
attitude on your part In the year Someone to whom you lend a
ahead. Your new pereonality will helping hand today shouldn't
win you numerous admirers, but expect you to do everything for
there w ill still be some character him/her. In certain areas, this
flaws that w ill need correction.
p e r a o n a h o u ld fe n d fo r
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
A R B S (March 21 April 19) It's
21) It cotud be very difficult to
_____________good
to be optimistic, but strive
own up to your mistakes
today.
yet it's beat you do so instead o f to
practical aa well tpdayratlonaUsIng. Excuses lessen Your anticipations aren t likely
vour Drestiae with others. Get a to be fulfilled If you structure
Jump o n l S e fay understanding you r hopes upon unrealistic
the Influences which are gov- probabilities,
cm ing you In the year ahead.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
Send for your Astro-Graph pre- you bonk too heavily on chance
diction, today by n u llin g S L M
luck to cany you through
to Astro- Graph, c/o this news- today In m atters that have
oaoer. P.O. Box 91428. Cleve- com p etitive elements, dlsapland, OH -*4101-3928. Be sure to p o ln t m e n t la l i k e l y . T h e
* «Btryouraodlacalgp
aforementioned are not reliable
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. allies.
19) It's beat to
do with
OBMOfl (May 21-June 20)
what you have today rather than You might have to deal with
borrow a treasured possession someone today who Is Inclined
from a friend. You're a trifle to exaggerate. Your friend can
accident prone In this area and a Ret away with his/her tall tales,
mishap could occur.
but should you try to stretch the
AQUARIUS Dan. 20-Feb. 19) truth, everyone will know it.
U su ally y o u ’ re open-m inded
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
w h ere Im portant Issues are business matters today, lake

...NO.&amp;*M&gt;y...PUHJA0

ample time to make accurate
assessments and calculations,
because If you make an error. It
could turn out to be quite costly.
L E O (July 23-Aug. 22) Today
It may seem like the harder you
try to please certain people, the
less you're appreciated. If you
r e c e iv e n e g a tiv e fe e d b a c k ,
saunter away from those who
take you for granted.
V IR G O (Aug.. 23-Sept. 22)
Usually you're the type o f person
who can be relied upon to take
care o f your duties and re­
sponsibilities. but today the less
disciplined aspects o f your per­
sonality may predominate.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) In­
nately you are not the show-off
type, but today you m ight try to
upstage your companions In
order to direct atten tion (o
yourself. This will detract from,
not enhance, your Image.
S C O R P IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Im proper m otivation can be
self-defeating today. For exam­
ple. if you want to do or achieve
som ething In order to make
another look bad. y o u 'll be
asking for problems.
(0 1 9 9 0 . N E W S PA PE R EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

�S a n fo ru H o ra M , S a n fo rd , Flo rid a — T h u n d a y , N o v e m b e r

Milken receives 10 years in jail

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sominol*

UP1

.

MUken must surrender March 4 to begin serving
his sentence. It was unclear, given that MUken
pleaded guilty to the charges, w hether his lawyers
would have any technical leeway to appeal the
sentence.
Wood said she sentenced MUken not to satisfy
an angry public demanding " a verdict on the
decade o f greed." but to aodrraa a "legitimate
public concern that everyone, no m atter how rich

power and wealth far htmsetf and his clients,"
Wood said be fare pronouncing sentence, " a
significant prlaon sentence Is required."
When ahe* handed up the 10-year jail term,
which waa about twice the length o f what most
observers expected, there wsa s hushed gasp from
the more than 900 People packing the fifth-floor
courtroom. It was the longest term received by
any^WallJM icct criminal In the crackdown on

ARLINGTON. Texas - Stu­
dents at the University o f Texas
at Arlington have resoundingly
vo ted dow n n p ro p o sa l to
establish the llrst on-campus
abortion clinic at an American
university..
Students voted 1.430 to 746
against allowing flrst-trlmester
abortions In the U TA student
health clinic. The election was
held Monday and Tuesday and
the results were made public late
Tuesday.
The Student Congress ordered
the Issue placed on the ballot
and It will consider the mandate
at its Nov. 27 meeting. The
members are expected to vote

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OR T N I EIGHTEENTH
JUOtOAl CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
STATE OR FLORIDA.
Coo* N*.i W f*M CAML

against sending the proposal on
to the school administration.
Th e whole Issue seemed moot
from the beginning because U TA
President Wendell Nedderman
h a d sa id h e o p p o s e d th e
measure, which could not be
enacted without hla approval.
Nedderman &lt;*m id more -than

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT,
■ ISKTBSNTN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. M AND FOR
S IM IN O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASINOKSMU-CAIbR
ALLIANCE MORTGAGE
COMPANY, a Florida

FLEETMORTGAGB CORF.
Plaintiff.

Plaintiff,
vs.
FCRNANOOL.TORRELsfaf..
Detondi
NOTICE OR ACTION
TO:
FERNANOOL. TORRES

OAWNP. DAVIS.
It living, at ua.. at al..
NOTICIOR ACTION
STATE OR FLORIDA
TO: DAWN R. DAVIS. II
living, and LARRY O. DAVIS,
her husband. II living. Including

Last Known Mai Img Address:

rtod and II either er b e * af said

Altamonte Springe. FLSUI4
Any unknown ham -«
gran tees, assignees,
creditors, trustee*, sr

respective unknown hairs, db
? !* * * - sranfees. assignees.

a n d '^ d e r
TORRES

and ail
..
claiming
by. through.____ __
the named Oetondants.

YOU A R I NOTIFIED Wtsf sn
aetton fa toractoaa Ma rnsriasgs
encumbering tha fallawlnt
srm«rty In Sam Inals County.
Florida:
La* I. ROdIN HILL, accsrb
to Ma pie* Msraaf aa rb
irn Flat Bash 14. Rage 44.
^
-- k‘e- ttataOS W
- ‘-- »OT (EOTpiOTta
OT*OTDRWta
County. Rk

unknown.
YOU ARC NOTIFIED Mat an
•erian to torsc less a

"tE T * *
S*mmet* County._______
LeMSJ and Ms Nerto v* af Let
104, M. M LOROS FIRST AD­
DITION TO CITRUS HEIGHTS,
according to Ms plat Maras* SO
recorded m Rial Saab L Rags
U. al Ms Rubik Records af
Seminole County, Florida,
has baan Iliad against you and
you are required fa serve a copy
af yeur written detonaas. If any.
|| || .
JOSEPH M. P A N IIL L O .
ESQUIRE. Plaintiff's attorney
whasa address is:
N l N. Franklin Street. Sulfa
IDS Tampa. Florida a m
Ma IM day sf
_________ N ______ ________
original with Ma Clark al Mia
Court either kotora ssrvkq an
Ptetoftirs attartwy or
dsfaulf__________
you tor Ma rsUal dim ended In
IhsCimpliInfsr Petition. •
DATED an Mis NM day sf
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
RY: I toother Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Navambar 1. L IL JL
1MB
D€Z
^

^

E?NA N D o " ?

S a te e n - lito d b y M e "pieMtlff
&gt;a espy at your
If any. ts It an
SMITH S SIMMONS. P.A..
Plaintiff's attorneys. I ll West
Adams Stredt. Salto lit * .
Wle Mb original wlMMa Ctork af
M s Court attoar bsto
.
»
wise. • dates it wit! bo i
1
III InD LOTIot^*"
WITNISS my hand and tael
af M e Ceert an M s NM day at
ISIAL)
M ARYANN! MORSE
Cisrkaf Me CkcuH Court
Deputy Ctork
Publish: Navambar I, l 11 D.
ia «

o «z n

j C E ^ P W I T Y CMPtMEW
peeeto. peel andpreeant (sea wnww*w npnw Mendstm
snedwt radar s«w Veewauu

’ O J
M I L

Ltgal Notices

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OR T N I IM N T IE H T N
j u d ic ia l CIRCUIT
IN AND RON
SEMIN O LI COUNTY.
RLONIOA
CIVIL DIVISION
Cass Nit BMtSbCA-ISR
GLENDALE RIORRALIANK.
RUf/k/aOLINOALB
REOERAL SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.

IN TN I CIRCUIT COURT.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA

LRM REALTY INVESTMENT
CORPORATION FRANK
HOWARD. ROY MEADOWS.
LIONEL RAYMOND, and
WINGFIELD NORTH
HOME OWNERS'
ASSOCIATION. INC..
Oetondants.
NOTICE OR ACTIONPROPERTY
TO: FRANK HOWARD
Billdmca unknown
Lost known addraes:
IFI4 Door Barry Court.
Lsngweed. Florida
YOU A R I NOTIFIED Ittol an
aetton to torse loop Ma toilowing
pragorty in Samlnoto County.
Florida:
Lot L WINGFIELD NORTH
II. sccar One fa Ma plat thereof
as raesrped In Plat Book IS.
Page 44. Public Records sf
Samlnoto County. Florida,
has been filed against you. and
you are rtgulrsd to sarvo a espy
of your written defenses. II any.
toi If an the Pietotitr* attorney.
IRVINOO. LAWRENCE.
ESQUIRE
LAWRENCE A PAYNE. P A.
SBI la r i Jackson Street
Tamps. Florida M W

;sui ns-FMi

an er before Dscamber 4 IMO.
and BN Me original with Ma
Ctork of BVa Court aimer before
sarvtcs an Ptalnttfr • ettomey sr
Im m a d la fo ly lh a r o a ffe r j
otherwise a Safsulf will bo
entered Ofalnsl you tor tha
relist demanded in Me com
plslnf or petition.
WITNESS my hand and Me
teal el said Court an October It.
Has
(Court Seal)
MARYANNE MORSE.
Ctork Clrcull Court
■y: Cecelia V. Ekera
Ctork
November 1. a. I I 71.
IMS
DCZS4

»

CAUNatSMBSCA-IAlH
UNITED COMPANIES
FINANCIAL CORPORATION.
Plaintiff.
WAYNE LORANCE. UNITED
STATE SOR AME RICA. and
any unknown heirs, devisees,
grantees, creditors, and ether
unknown parsons er unknown
spouses claiming by. through,
and undar any af Ms
above-named Defendants.
Oetondants.
NOTICE OR ACTION
TO: WAVNE LORANCE. and
any unknown hairs, dsvlsass.
grantees, creditors, and any
unknown parsons or unknown
ipsusn claiming by. through
and undar the abovbnamad
Defendant. If dscaned
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED Mat an action to torse lees
Mortgage covering Ma tallowing
real and personal property In
Samlnoto County. Florida, towtt:
Beginning at Mo l outhoasl
earner si Lei Z. Black IT,
SANFORD FARMS, according

I * |to . n i l —— --------- *— -a i _
tOMTng.pill
mtrNf M rtCOrON 81
a

b

Flat Saak I, Rages ITT through
IN**, af Ms Rubik Records af
SamMato County, Florida, run
Nariharty along Me East lint of
said Lot L a dlstanca at MB teat,
thanca run Saulhwaslarly
parallel wiM Ma South lino af
said Laf L • dlstanca of 110 toot.
Monca run Southerly parallel
wiM said le a l IMa MB leaf.
imfiCv run nonnttiivriy i iu
^
J k|
a g fenJnt
m — In nIhqp.
ln n
•Wt
IDtRW
• Bill ^OTOTgltW
has Baan mod lailnst you and
you are required Is serve a copy
of your written Batons**. It any,
to It an C. Victor Butter. Jr., UIB
I . Robinson Street. Orlande.
Florida m n i and flit Ma arigi.
nal with tha Clark af tha
above-styted Court an sr betore
the TM day af December. IMS.
otherwise a Judgment may ba
entered against you tor Ms
reltol dent ended M Ma Cam

plaim.

WITNISS my hand and seal
af said Court an Iho MM day at
October, IMS
(COURT SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLIRKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Hoolttor Brunner
Deputy Ctork
Nubllth: November 1. L IL a .
IMS
OEZ J

E I C X K X M A

W D M

W R J J N U
A I C N

L+git N o tlc f

D Z N U

I C N U X Q I ,
A X R

two weeks ago that the proposal
to permit abortions in Student
Health Services was "grossly
Inappropriate.” He was was crit­
icized by students for announc­
ing a position before the vote.
A second question, asking
whether students would support
the resolution If the abortions
were not paid for with student
fees, resulted In a nearly Iden­
tical vqte: 1.372 against. 718 for.
Although the abortion clinic
was rejected. 1,128 atudents
said they considered themselves
"pro-choice” while 889 called
themselves "pro-life” and 198
■aid they were undecided.
Only about 9 percent o f the
school's 24,800 students cast
t.-ballots.. *.*.!■
i-i i .

R R I J T A V X Z X J V
I K K

J
I K

RD

C D C N J R

R X C N . *

—

For the current rate call...

R D M

R .

—

D I K E

V U T M L

C Q W X A D .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "T o o often pqogto a m (No
fiandtCBppod as pals who are kind of cut# and can loam •
tow tricks." — Larry Drake.

OCAOiPNS
Neon Tho Day Baton Pvblkatton
Sunday • 11 AM . Saturday
Monday - 11:10 AM. Satvrdoy

ADJUSTMENTS AND CRIDITfi fa fat SVPRt sf SR
----- la

rM EfamtiafaiR

^

sf that tftsprtisR. Pirns* chsdi ytsr ad ISr sccsrscy fhs
first day Hi

He and his wife Loti, accompanied by his
brother Low ell and other friends and supporters,
later slipped out through the fudge’s chambers.

Although the abor­
tion clinic was re­
jected, 1.128 s tu ­
dents said they con­
sidered themselves
‘pro-choice.’

Loqil NoMcti

T IB B C N C I D. MCCALMOWT.
M O R TA L .
M R IN O AN TlS i.

MUken. who wore a somber grey suit and a
maroon tie, addressed the court briefly. “ What I
did violated not just the law but all o f m y
principles and values." he told Wood. " I deeply
regret It. I will for the rest o f my life, and I am
truly sorry."

“ Judge Wood has crafted a sentence that Is both
fair and appropriate to thecircumstances." U.S.
Attorney General Dick Thornburgh said Washing­
ton. “ T h e balance sheet now reflects not only
•800 million In penalties, for which MUken Is
personally responsible, but a bottomline o f IO
years behind the bars o f a federal prison as w ell."

831-9993

MORTGAGE ANO TRUST.
me
__
PLAINT IRF,

By com parison, speculator Ivan Doesky received
a three-year term for hla 1987 conviction on one
charge o f filing a false document with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. Dennis
Levine, convicted o f inside trading In another
prominent esse, received just two years in prison.
Milken's sentencing not only concluded his own
case, which authorities began assembling In 1986
when arbitrageur Boesky agreed to cooperate with
a probe o f MUken's activities, but also seemed to
close out the 1980s era o f debt-fueled enrichment
schemes tn which he played a central role.

Texas students vote down first campus
abortion clinic by overwhelming majority

J

Orlando - Wlnfar Pork

322-2611

NEW YORK — A federal court Judge Wednesday
hand'd farmer IM O a Hnancial wizard Michael
Milken a surprisingly tough 10-year prlaon
sentence, telling him she waa not
him
far " a decade o f greed" but m eting o u t a fair
penalty for his confessed crimes.
U.8. Dtatrld Court Judge Ktmba Wood aantenced MUken to two yea n each on live counts o f
securities and tax law vtolatione, phis three y e a n ’
probation on a conspiracy charge. The longest
sentence a h ' could have given Milken, who
pleaded to six felony counts In April, waa 2fl ye a n
In prison.
Milken. 44. wiped away tears during a state­
ment by his attorney, Arthur Lim an, but listened
stonyfaced as Wood pronounced sentence.
Liman, whose Impassioned statement described
MUken as a brilliant financial Innovator whose
business dealings had a "m essianic quality." a
devoted husband and father, a generous philan­
thropist and a longtime volunteer In the cause o f
distressed children. was visibly chagrined at the
outcome.
During each probationary year. Wood said.
MUken must perform 1.800 hours o f unspecified,
full time community service. She said the JaU
sentence could be reduced If Milken cooperated
fully with federal Investigators.
Under standard judicial practice. MUken should
be eligible for parole after serving one-third o f hla
jail term with good behavior.

22, 1M 0 — 06

O U N D • S m a ll D i g .
Black-tan whit* ihartkalr
tomato. vktoify •I Lk. Mary
• Iv d .. Hldkan Laka Dr.

II/IS/TB............... J W

O eW : OrtMerML me
RICHARD L. COX, JR.
UNITBO STATRS MARSHAL
MIDDLE DISTRICT OR
FLORIDA
ROBERT W. OCNZMAN
UNIT1D STA T IS ATTORN! V
MIDOLI DISTRICT OR
FLORIDA
RwMHft: November I. I I S . B.

ADVERT IS IM I NT
RON BIOS
THE SCHOOL DOARO OR
U M IN O L I COUNTY. Florida
will recaive bids at Ma aftka af
Ma School Board, n i l South
Florida, a m . until I M P M .
Daaambar BL Mae at whkh time
bids will bo opened tor Me
services el:
RASTIN
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
OVIEDO. FLORIDA
A
HEATHROW
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
LAKC MARY. FLORIDA
Bid must bo itrempanlid by
bid daasolt: A Bid Sand. Cash­
ier's Owes er Certified Chock
tor five (STS) af Me total amount
kid. Tha Bid Band shall ba
drawn M lever of the Owner,
and such Rid Bond M l suaran­
ise that the Bidder will not
- withdraw Ms bid tor a partod of
JO ealandar days after tha
The mccoesfui bidder Mail
furnish a Martormence-Reyment
Sand tor tha total amount af Ms
award within ton IN I days af
naflfkaftan af Me award. Bonds
must Ba written by a surety
company Ikerned tods business
in Florida.
Drawings and Sgeclfketlene
w ill ba a v a i l a b l e tram
D alm w aad . D o r r y b a r r y ,
Fovekhok Architects. P.A . MB
Wilma Street. Ling nd. FL
MTM. A deposit af IUBJB plus
4% sotos toe whkh Is refundable
eccardtog to spacifkaftons. All
eto^ba iluuiU kw madB aautala
to Ma temhwto Csaafy libasl
Tha Beard raaaruaa the right
to waive miner Informalities In
Ma MddMg It said waiver is In

”W99W I Pfll infOTWT.

Dated Mis DM day af NO­
VEMBER NOB.
/s/.OavW R. Sgaar, A.I.A.
Dirocfaraf Faclllttos
PlanningCansfructkn
Publish: Navambar IL t t It.
IMS
0SZ-M1

IU I# &gt;&gt;niis&lt;

(U A L )
M ARYANN! MORS!
Circuit wM County Courts
By: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
RvMHA: November I. (. IS. &gt;1.
IWS
DEZ-lt______________________
IN T M IC IIC U rr COURT
O RTH IIISM TB SN TN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN A M R O R
IB M !N O LI COUNTY,
RLORIDA
CASI NO. i M-WSS-CA-SS-R
I S T IA SON CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY. INC,
PUMtltt
w
l V
H ILLIS R A N PA SON, INC.,
stal.
Dstondanflsl,
CINTRAL FLORIDA
SHI L T IR ID WOR KIHOR,
INC.,a RlorMe non-profit
corporation
Third Party Plaintiff.
HILLCRRAND ASON. INC..
Otal.,
Third-Party 0*
NOTICIOR ACT
TO: PRANK A SHIN!
AOOBISSUNKNOWN
YOU A R I H IR IS Y NOT I
R IID that an action hao boon
K M apatnst you In The Circuit
Court at l emlneto County, RtorISp anS Mat you art regetrad *t
any, with tha Clark at the
Mars stylaS Court anS la torvo
a copy lharaaf on Marparst W.
Hull. Itguire. nkarman. Sontsrfttt S (M o t . R.O. Boo HI.
Orlande. RlorlSa a n an or
w loth Say af Decern-

If you tail to da to. Judgment
Sy Solaull may bo ontoroS
■Silnst you tsr tho roiiot So
maims In Mo Complaint.
WITNISS my bans anS seel
Ml, Mh day of November, loss.
(U A L )
MAMYANN! MORS!
NOTICIOR
C L IR K O R T H !
FICTITIOUS NAME
CIRCUIT COURT
Notks la hereby given Mat I
l ornInala County. RlorlSa
am angawsd In bueMssa af t i l
RV: HoaMor Prunnor
Panama Rd. Winter SgrlngL FL
Deputy Clork
n m . Samlnoto County. Florida,
Publish: Novombor L IL 0 . 1*.
undw tha RkUttoua Name af
IMS
ESSENTIAL RROOUCTS AND
DKZ-ISt
SERVICES and that I Intend to
UNITS D STATS S
rogietor laid name with the
DISTRICT COUNT
Ctork af Me Circuit Court. Sam­
M
ID O LI DISTRICT
lnoto County. Florida. In ac­
OR RLORIDA
cordance wiM Mo Rravlilani af
ORLANDO DIVISION
Ma Fictitious Name Statutes.
COURT NOt tS-m-Ctv-Ort-IS
TbWIt: Section SSLS0 Florida
UN ITID STATIS
Statutes IMT.
OF
AMERICA,
Jshnto Bkkonhockir
Plaintiff,
Publish: Navambar I, L IL a .
v*.
IMS
Hubert* R. Mimt
DEZ 1
DtfonSant(i).
NOTICIOR SALS
Nottco It hanky plvon Mat
NOTICIOR
punuant la a Default JuSpmonf
FICTITIOUS NAME
Novombor S. IMO by
antlttaS Court In Mo
Nottco la hereby given diet I
causa. Ms unSinlpnsS
am engaged In buslnase at M » •
||g 0yQ
lu g, w\n*f
UnllsS Slots* Marihol. or ono sf
MS Suly author Ired dopuliot.
Springe. FL UTSS. Samlnoto
will toll Ms property lltuels In
County. Florida, undar Iho
I smlneto County. Florida. St
Fictitious Name af MICKEY'S
scribed ae:
TAR ROOM and Mat I Intend to
register said name with Ma
From Ms Southssit corner of
Ctork af Ma Circuit Court, Sam
Lot IF, Slock D. ALLCNDALC.
Inoto County. Florida. In ac­
so ncsrSsS In Plat Saak A Papa
cordant* wiM Me Provisions of
F, of Mo Public Rocords of
SimlnoN County. Florida, run
Mo Fictitious Name Statute*.
Monca I a n aianp Mo South lino
TbWIt: Section skips Florida
of Lai IS. H R loot tar a Point of
Statutes 11»
BegMIng; Monca run South ioi S
Ouide Anna Millar
Nat to Mo NorM Right ol Way ol
Pubiith November 1. L IL II.
Highway 414: Ihoncs North
IMS
Easterly along laid Right of
oez is
Way af Way IlS.at Not: Manca
Norm ti l tool, thence Well
IIS 00 feel to the Point ol
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
ol public outcry to tha hlghotl
Nolle* Is hereby given Mol I
and bait bidder tor coth at IF
am engaged In buslnase al Ml
o'clock noon on December if,
Walnut P la ta . Altam onte
IMS at Ms Weil door of Mo
Springs. FL HIB1. Seminole
Seminole County CeurlhouM.
County. Florida, undar Ih#
Sanford. Florida.
Fictitious Name af CABANA
Dotod Novombor F. IMS.
POOL SERVICEL and Mat I
RICHARD L. COX. JR
inland to rogietor said nemo
UNITED STATES MARSHAL
with the Clerk of Ma Circuit
MIDOLE DISTRICT
Court. Samlnoto County. Flori­
OR FLORIDA
da. In accordance with Iho
ROBERTW GENJMAN
Prevlilons at the Fictitious
UNITED STATES
Name Statutes. TbWIt: Section
ATTORNEY
Ml M Florida Statutes IMI
MIDOLE DISTRICT
Russell S. Gellaher
OF FLORIDA
Pubiith Novombor IL 71. I t
Pvbillh Novombor IL II. I t 1
A December 4. IMS
December A lew
DEZ II*
OEZ 1J0

DAYCARE In my
homo. Loti nf TLC. Fem 1pm

W IS T

fSFCAn................ ZH-dlSF
IN MV SANFORD H O M II
ChHdcan tap'd. Intents 4yr*.
CPR t ip 1SJwk. CM BVMSV

L6flil Notices
NOTICE OR
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that ws
are mgagid In butinoaa af IS1
Longhorn Rd.. Winter Park,
a m . Samlnoto County. F torIdo.
under mo Fkiittom Name at
AUTO A TRUCK REPAIR, and
Mat wa Intend lb regliter laid
name wIM tho Ctork of tho
Clrcull Court. Somlnato County.
Florida. In accordance wlt.i Mo
Rrovlllont of tho Rlcllllout
Noma Stetutei. To-WII: Section
B1S.0» Florida Stetutei IMF.
BUILDING SERVICE INC.
Torsi V. Khachatourlan
Rubllih: November a . I* A
DecembeO. IL IMS
OEZ N f
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OR T N I IISHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OR TNR STATE OR
FLORIDA. IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CIVIL DIVISION
Cato Na IS-Mf I-CAI4E/L
Ftorida Bar Ns. nets*
MID STATE TRUST II. a
Delaware Builnoti Truit.
Plaintiff.
VA
JOHN GlIVENS a* surviving
ipoute. GILBERT BAGLEY.
CHARLES SAGLEV, ALTON
BAGLEY. JAME S BAGLE Y.
SHALES BAGLEY. DOROTHY
BAGLEY. heln el lew. tho
UNKNOWN hair*. dev Itee*,
grantee*, creditor*, or other
pertto* claiming by. through,
under or ogalntl BERNICE
BAGLEY GLI VENS. dtetatod.
andPEARLIEMAE
HAMPTON
Defendant*.
NOTICE OR SUIT
T O : JO H N G L IV E N S .
GILBERT BAGLEY. JAMES
BAOLIV. ALTON BAGLEY.
CHARLES BAGLEY. SHALER
BAGLEY. DOROTHY SAG
LEY. and ALL UNKNOWN
HEIRS AT LAW ol BERNICE
BAGLEY GLIVENS. dtesesad.
II alive or dead, their unknown
•pome. holn. divine*. gran
Not. creditor* and all other
portlet claiming by. through
under or again*! them
Whole Reildencei art un
known.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIEO Mot an action to torodoia
a mortgage on the to! lowing
property In Samlnoto County.
Florida, to wit
Lot U l ol MIDWAY SUBDI
VISION, according to Ma plat at
MIDWAY. Plot Book I. Page 41
af Ma Public Record! of Semi
notoCounty. Florida,
hat been tiled egemst you and
you are required to terve a copy
at your written detente*. It any
to II. an Ma Plalntllt't attorney,
whote name and oddrett It
Harry M Hobbt. Etquire
Harry M Hobbt. P A
PO Boa I044S
Tampa. Florida XMF1044S
and file tho original wiM tho
Ctork of tha above it*tod Court
an or before December 1, IMO.
Siherwlie o.Judgment may bo
entared ogalntl you lor tho
reltol demanded In tha Com
plaint or Petition
WITNESS my hand and tha
leal ol laid Court on October n .
IMS
(COURT SEAL)
HON MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK CIRCUIT COURT
By Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
PuDlith November I. I. IS. 71.
IMO
DEZ 4

L tg ii Nolle**
IN t h t CIRCUIT COUNT.

In o l i com
FLORIDA

IN RE: THE MARRIAGE wR
SAINTCLAIRV. BURNETT
KELLY A. BURNETT.
NOTICE OR ACTION
TO: KELLY A. BURNETT
Addrtaa link, team
YOU A R I NOTIFIED Mol an
aetton Nr dUaafurian sf mar­
riage hsa been filed agstnsf you
and you ore required to p n s a
copy of your written defenses. If
any. to It on Jed Borman,
petitioner'! attorney, whoso
eddreti It R.O. Drawer » .
Winter Park. Florida B IS . an
or before December X IMS. and
Ills Ms original with Ms ctork sf
(hit court either before wry ice
on potittonert attorney or

l

s default will ba entered against
you tor the reitof dwwandr t In
Mo petition.
OATEOonOctoberFS. ISIS.
(SEAL*
MARYANNE MORSE
At Ctork of Mo Court
By Sharon Dunn
At Ooputy Ctork
Publish: Novombor I. L IL D.
IMS
DEZS
NOTICIOR
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given Mat I
am mgagid In butlneta at 4BI
Lake Markham Rood. Sanford.
FIs. JJFFI, Samlnoto County.
Florida, undar Ma Fictitious
Name sf P A R A RESCUE
CONSULTANTS, wtd Met 1 In­
land to register laid name with
Ms Clerk of Ms Clrcull Court.
Samlnoto County. F torids. In
accordance with Ms Rrbvlttona
of Mo Fictitious Noma Statutes.
TbWIt: Section 1*100 Florida
Statute* IMF.
Jon M Dickens
Publish: November IL » . Ft
k December 4. IMS
o e z is;
NOTICIOR
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given Mat I
am engaged In busines* at ISM
Bailey Avo.. Sanlord. FL. Sami
noto County. Florida, under Mo
Fictitious Name ot MOBILE
LUBE, end Mot I intend to
regular sold name wiM Mo
Clark ot tho Circuit Court, Saminoto County. Florida. In ac­
cordance wiM Me Provisions sf
Mo Fictitious Nemo Statutes.
TbWIt; Section MS 01 Florida
Statutes m ;
Paul A. Lard
Publish: November n. It 4
December*. IL IMS
OEZ MS
NOTICE
~
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
In accordance wiM FIFOS.Id]
that, on or alter Novombor IQ,
ISM. Ma City of Sentord Florida,
will DONATE ABANDONED
BICYCLES to charitable &lt;
nationtd)
Janet R. Donahoe
City Ctork
City af Sqntard.
Florida
Pubiith November 71. It. It
OEZ JO*

i

�— -

S a n to rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a — T h u ra d a v , N o v e m b e r

22, 1900

M T ’N*CARLYLES by Larry Wr%*

M

a * r &amp;

it

't o m s

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

UF TO l i t hour processing mall,
woakly check guaranteed.
Free detail*. w rl*. SO. iMie
Control. wlte m S F L . Chino.

•% 6m 344

m in e _______________

eT^P Mai

Privacy, close to downtown I
•M per «m b ptu« UM security

MTRT1EIIMQUKUM
EMITHRMT

323-5171

g M B B l
V I N T AFFORDABLE S/IVe
TOWNHOUSI. Coed location
Commurlty peel. Maim. In

family rm„ security system,
lanced yard....MMM

321- 2720
322- 2420

SANPORDI PenLAhdem. ta p

A up plus dm. and rat's. No
p o t*.n i»o io rjT M e *a

SANFORD ■ 1 bdrm, complete

privacy I 111 par meek plus
tMO security
Cog........... ..................m-naa
SANFORD Largs I bdrm. pool,
laundry. C/H/A. UtVm o or
llis/wh. Sota/gulat. m W*J
SANFORD • I bdrm . aicellanl
location, cocnplata privacy I
ttSporwMh plus MM security
CaR............................. m -naa

HKALTN FO RC f needs you
nowl Sfaftlnfl all eraasl
Plenty of swrk I CaR S im la

M -F . S -1 0 :llp m A Sal.
l : A b f f l . Delivery Can FL.
area. CaR................ J l i n i a

Vertical*. m M blinds, ate.
Cammlsalan and bonus. Great

called her laniard Harold
Clatsinad Advertising Cansultant to step her ad from
continuing on the lO Day
Special rate. Something YOU
need to advertise at lour coat
and achieve quick rasu'i-T
Try our IS, 14 A It-Day
Special rata*. Law**! coat par
line tar consecutive days'
advertising. Advertiser* are
free to cancel as lean at
results era reached
CLASSIFKDOIPT.

D O R C H tS ttR A p r s

waler/gos Inci.
SANFORD • Large I bdrm, pool,
laundry. C/H/A. uas/mo or
SlOS/wk. SaN/gulatXPMU
I bdrm. condo, all appliances
Including washar/dryer. KUO
per month. Sendlewood Villa*.
________Can ter « m
_____

U ZM m R iJN rtA M rt

THI S W E EK ' S

Starting at U U par menlhl
Soma weekly's availabla
Starting at MOpar week.

tn-Mii

2000LakeMary Blvd

.121-2297

• Spadou*. Affordable.
Homelike

• 1 Bedroom ] Bath
• Bast Buy For Your Rental t
• Include*. Water, Sewerage.
Trash Pkh Up. Past
Control. Pool and Tarmlsl

Ul 121-014

YAMSMI!I
F urn iture, Jaw lary and
M O R III Sat. and Sun. tram
A l. 411Waal Crystal Dr.,

COUNTRY CLUB • 1 bdrm. I
bath lanced yard w/larga
utility building. Family ream.
fireplace. UM month, PT-TTST
tfSCIdermlll, Lk.Mory

\ l&lt; l)l

N S

I

IMEMMm

s jp

Satellites...
lasers...avionics
^
... microchips...
The Army deals
with all o f 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.

R EN T T O D A Y
FOR O U R
M O V E -IN SPECIAL

I BIDROOM. Its bath,Hew
CHA.itov* and frig, near ale
mentary school. MTS par
menth. 1st and Last. MM WO
DRCAMWOLD SURD. - S rms..
1 bdrm*. I bath. Oty w/s. pvd.
*1. Nice areal IM.Nd. Ay
aepl., MMMdayt/ttS-llM

- The

322-2090
Prf monlh

Relax•

I

We have immediate
openings!
•Painters
•Book Binders

•Construction
•Warehouse
• Production
Employees with transportation
needed Immediately

Apply
1018 S. French Ave., Sanford
5 A.M. SHARP

LABOR WORLD U.S.A. INC

pet*, sen

1289IU6A0UA SMRMO

On Beautiful Lake Monroe
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 $450
2 Bedrooms from $540

2135 W. Bomlnolo Blvd.
Hwy. 17-92, Sanford

323-2628

J/lVj. large home with OH/A,
flraplace and tsneed yard.
U U par month. Cpan Sunday
Irom IT noon 3PM.....i/7 S47*

1 BDRM 1 RATH VILLA
fireplace, pool. Nnnl* courts
Silb par month plus socurlly.

CallOdcacTormUM
iK M O M ir in N
La-ga lamlly room. C/H/A
fenced. UM month plus sac
H A LLR IA LT Y --- ------HUTTO
tt*l MOV! IN no vjallfy, move
In. Rani to buy. 5 room*, IFJ1
Summarlin Ava. 1% 143I-4TT4.

103— DuplexTriplex/R»nf

REGATTA
SHORES

\
\
%

�r

j

*

m

#N 0B 49 N U m M *
ORLTOMA
Mon Qualifying martgagi
bdrm.. I bath. m M an
All appliance*! Bacall

.... ninpytiMPMWi

Blu« Book •Block Book •N JL O JL Book
•Toko Up Payments •No Monoy Down

f i t be Can##. Compute
w/cemm. paol b tennis. la ml.
ta la. Oily • 11MM..RP 11. Call

turn » n w/a&gt;ww a rn

C o M &amp; sy P g S O p c 3n « B 42S3o9a

5 Ibamat. (mall home. Artotlen

/jiPWIi IWBr

Of pfCfKrtW

.tettweyl Mek*Otttrl....RM11
I BMt M vay m W D H M
It*. calllm tana. Raaa. g H W t

.■COIN HtRBI ) bdrm 1 bath
baau
IW iW

fc a / ftM a #
&gt; ———------ a
w t K i m li p o o l. C O V fffO

‘ patio,

family

room

HANDYMAN M CC IALt 3/1
Ready for finishing Iniida.
Lumbar available. Cloaa to
(hop*, bus, tchooli. Owner
may llnanca. Hurry I Ul.OOO
M l Harvoy m-MIt...._____ SO

' W/
W i

LAKIPROMT • Dabary, owner
financing, low down. 111.an

METRO CHRTSIER POTMOUTH'S
AMERICAS WAY TO OO

\W !
^

Com e M eet The Cars That Beat
The Im ports

323-3200

Save on these great motor cars that beat the
Hondas, Nissans &amp; Toyotas in recent tests using
real people most likely to buy an import.

AVIS
’

snapoiat

•

1990 Grand Voyager*

T h u n k s g i v ln g

*12,167**

Buy any m w 90 or91
Modol Ctwyoior Plymouth
•od o«t our ruol proofing
palm — lom and fabric
protection, ■ 9799 Vakio

1990 LeBaron Sedan

*1,000 Robot*!

FREE

S A LE H !
1990 TO Y O T A CAMRY DX
IV W - J k .

PS, PB. PL. PW. AIR. TILT.
CRUISE A MORE

Starting From

W ■

*9999

1990 PONTIAC SUNBIRD SE

1990 LeBaron Convertible*

1990 Plymouth Acclaim

*12,647*°**

*8995**

Starting From

*6999
1990 CHEVY LUMINA EURO

Starting From

1990 D O D G E

CARAVAN SE

Starting From

s ter eo and more

1990 D O D G E
c r u is e , c a s s e t t e

*9799

GRAND CARAVAN
«

more

Starting From

1990 D O D G E

SHADOW
4 DR HATCHBACK. PS. PB. AIR. A U T O ,
.. ^
AJWFM DIGITAL Sf EREO A MORE Starting

FlW U

"We stand behind every used car. Our warranty is
dearly dated and posted on every used vehicle

1990 Plymouth Sundance.
$9,995’
1990 Chrysler New Yorker 5th Ave. $16,995
1990 Chrysler LeBaron Coupe
$9995'
1989 Dodge Arles
$6995'
1989 Dodge Daytona Tlirbo
$8188'
1989 Dodge Caravan
$10,788'
1989 Plymouth Reliant LE
$6588'
1988 Dodge Dynasty
$8495'
1988 Chrysler LeBaron Coupe
$7788'
1987 Chrysler LeBaron GTS
$5995'
1987 Dodge Shadow
$5995'
- Plot Tax. Tag. Tala *Sightly Uud

PLYMOUTH

�HP

&gt;1 •

S .n r &gt;'ii H .-i.tiii SantnHt
181— A p p l ia n c e s

221

!i

TliursdHy

No vi*m l)C i »«’

G o o d T h in g s
lo E a t

/ F u rn itu re
• M A G IC C H I T K ing*
|0
%l*iV " •*•&lt;♦*•
*4e.*t
.'•♦Okbuffer •irm*»nt\ 1 *S
IXJ 9777

Ii

S IG N A 1 U R T R t f * i « » r » f o r
A1
♦* \t
* &gt; •»
n j* r » g*w,ft* owjiftiori
1/00 (.411 177 KOI
• (O F A ih&gt;p# ji r p v i ti(v.|l

f •: f *n1 i oojfitinn
l ) f A.*l!
• SO FA
I'orpl
O tv g n m thAitvk 0* orjft.iQ*
4 nt. iMif i* on iviiy l in
122 7)74
IR IP ir

t 'R F S W O

i"4 ppM

•^1 of

lip|&gt;1 1«i,»»(1 l/i *•■••

223— M is c e lla n e o u s
sell

tr a d e

773

• W H F E I C H A IR A lm ott nnw
rem y»eaf)ie tmrsg our foot
rett Cott 1400 nee ten mg
now for 1100
AOS f a ’a'ina [)r Saefonf

T c R M I T C R E W P R E S E N TS
A C O I L F C T IO N OF
HO! IP * Y C R A F TS A G IF IS
SA I D FC I
9AM SPM
SUN O f C J
12 10 SPM
•OS f If TM ST S A N F O R D
O FF S A N T O R D A v r
l.A R A .I Opener
t**- »»»f.*r *
iV-.fc ) deck I h.«ir \ Ig pmg
poiHJ N M f
2 file « ab•nett
•a* ftina.hipe
4)9 $I IS
• Q t if r N S l l F H rdspreart
*&gt;*•%•% nba rte* 1 » FMe««\e
»••
) D S44 ’

23*— Im p o r t C a rs

P a rts

1914 P O N T IA C F IC R O
A C tfereo
Magic I nu I u

AMC CON CORD*
II
F*c
running great g a t m l 1 100 dwn
Sullivan s Auto Ranch
124 4474

sueed
1J99S
D ) 4/44

I9f| R U IC K R E G A L
Good
' '
( Day 1 1or D2 9191

C H E A P ' F B I/ U .S SEIZED
94 VW
ISO
•/M ercedet
I.YYJ
95 Mercedes
S'OO
4S Mustang
ISO
C hoote frpm fhouVindt start
mg 1/S /4Motif Recocdmg
Repeals De»a
901 J/l 29/9
e .f F J I F K
f A IR W A Y M O TO R S
Home of 1194 Down A Ride
1400 US I / 9 / Long wood ) ) t 1700

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407/831-9788

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�TH U R S D A Y

Sanford Herald

Novem ber 2£, 1

Holidays
H O L ID A Y T IP S
Holiday shopping mad# oasy
William Sauer, a consumer consultant for retail companies,
offers the following tips to make shopping easier:
•S e t a budget on how much you can afford to spend.
• List the people for whom you plan to buy gifts.
• Decide how much you will spend per person.
•Choose at least two alternate gifts If your first choice Is
unavailable. Alternatives will prevent you from Impulse
purchases and keep you within a budget.
•Start shopping early, especially for children's toys.
• Avoid using credit cards. Interest payments can add up.
•J o in a credit union or Christmas Club to help you save
money so It will be available In time for gift buying.

Firt prevention for the Mason
It's a glim holiday fact: Christmas tree fires kill a dozen
Americans each year, bum scores of others and cause millions
of dollars In damage from coast to coast.
Statistics complied by the National Fire Protection Agency
show that about 650 fires are started each year by Ignition of
Christmas trees, causing 12 deaths. 66 Injuries, and t l0 .2
million very year In direct property damage.
To prevent fires during the holiday season, the association
recommends the following:
• Never use candles to light Christmas trees.
• Keep candles out o f tne reach o f children and away from
decorations, combustible materials, exits and windows.
• Do not leave children alone In a room with candles.
• Purchase Indoor Christmas tree lights that are approved by
a testing facility, such as Underwriters Laboratories.
• Outside your house. Install holiday lights and decorations
that are marked "For Outdoor Use."
• Never put lights on a metal tree.
• Never overload electrical outlets.
• Do not use extension cords. Use electrical strips with safety
devices.
• Keep the tree away from hrat sources.
• If purchasing a manufactured tree, make sure It Is labeled
"Fire Retardent."
• When hanging Christmas stockings, make sure there Is no
fire In the fireplace.
If a person's clothes catch on fire. "Stop. Drop and Roll."
Cover the face with hands, drop to the (loor or ground, and roll
to extinguish the dames. Never run. the air feeds the dre.
Families should also have home evacuation plans. Including
primary and alternate escape routes.

Tips for trips
Last year, about 26.5 million Americans hit the road for the
holidays. A number like that can add up to endless crowds,
dlght or rail delays and lots o f stress. Here are several tips to
reduce holiday travelling headaches:
• Make airline reservations and round-trip seat arrange­
ments as far tn advance as possible. This can help save money
on fares and Increase the chance o f getting the seat you want.
• If possible, travel In the oil-peak hours — before 8 a.m..
after 7 p.m. and on weekends — when there are fewer delays.
• Choose non-stop dlghts when avalable. If you must change
planes, try to avoid doing so In crowded, major-hub cities —
like Denver. Atlantu or Chicago — where delays are most likely
to occur.
• Get your tickets ahead of time either through the mall or at
an airline ticket office. If you're carrying your bags, you won't
have to wait In line at the ticket counter and can proceed
directly to the boarding gate.
• Speed up check-ln by using curb-side rather than counter
check-ln. Always check baggage destination tags to make sure
your luggage Is headed to the same place you are.
• Try to get to the airport at least one hour before a dlght. If
you arrive late, you muy have to cheek luggage at the gate or
have It sent on a later dlght.
• Always make guaranteed latc-arrival hotel reservations to
avoid being left roomless If you plane Is delayed.

Battery saving tips
To keep those toys, gumes and other high-tech gadgets
running long after the wrapping paper has come off. the
experts at Duracell Batteries recommend the following
power-saving tips for the holiday season:
• Check the toy's box lor battery requirements. Different
toys require different batteries, and some may require as many
as six or eight batteries.
• Buy fresh batteries. An "installed b y " date stamped on the
battery eliminates consumer confuslun about how long a
battery has been on the store shelf.
• Amplllled music systems are big power enters, low erin g
the volume can double the life o f the batteries.
• Always replace all batteries In a device at the same time.
• Don't mix old and new batteries or battery systems such ns
alkaline with zlnc/carbon types.
• Don't carry batteries loose In your pocket or purse. They
can short out by coming In contact with coins and metal
objects.
• Keep terminals clean and dry. Use a pencil eraser to clear
battery tips and terminals.

Reducing holiday stress
The holiday season brings an abundance of stress along with
large measures of good cheer. The stresses that plague many
people during the season can be acute for the newly divorced.
Children can have u unique set ol stresses associated with
the holidays, said Carol Roeder-Esser. clinical social workrr for
lh&lt; Mental Health Center In Johnson County. Kan. They can
fell stress from the need to be In two different houses, the
disappointment of not having an enjoyable holiday, or feeling
disloyal to one parent If they have too much fun with the other.
Roeder-Esser and other psychologists suggest several ways
divorced parents can reduce holiday stress for their children
and themselves.
• Put the child's needs first. "Especially with young
children, you've got to think of that which provides the most
stability and continuity for the child." said Anthony Schuham.
a professor at Washington University In St. Louis.
• Set a schedule lor visits with euch parent. Let the child
know which parent he will be* with and when.
• Don’t overextend. "During the holidays, people tend to
pace themselves loo fast. Th ey overextend themselves
financially, they tend to keep Irregular hours, and they tend to
overent and drink too m uch." said Uiuna Casner. chief
psychologist at Research Mental Health Services In Kansas
City.

The Salvation Army began Its kettle drive recently with festivities
in front of Wal-Mart at Seminole Centre. Singing Christmas
songs at the event were, from left to right, Sidney Brock, Tom m y

Johns and Jim Cornell, the three gentlemen are staff members at
First Baptist Church, Sanford. Sergeant Major Vem Massinger, of
the Salvation Army, waits patiently to begin collection.

Gifts brighten a home at Christmas
Arc you struggling with the
hollday rush? Trying to find the
perfect gift?
Phyllis Swccd Is editor and
co-publlshcr of Gifts A Decora­
tive Accessories Mngazine, a
leading, source o f n c w s .a q d
trends.
She offers these suggestions
for the home ut Christmas:
"You needn't spend a fortune
redecorating your house or
apartment for the holidays,"
Swecd says. "Everyday Items
can be simply transformed to fit
the holiday theme. Add red or
green lumps hade s to
candleholders. or buy holiday
mugs to uccessorlzc your dinnerwarc.
" A personalized wreath Invites
Individual crcutlvlty and charm
to any home. Small Nativity sets
can lie added to each room In
your house, giving the room Its
own distinctive character."
With the return to traditional
elegance. Swecd (Milnts out that
country couture and Victorian
collectibles are more popular
than ever.
For things reminiscent o f a
holiday season past. Victorian
Santus and Father Christinas
dolls with (lowing robes spark
romantic sophistication. Among
this year’s hot Christmas collect­
ibles are Nullvltles. nut crackers,
annuul ornam ents ami c o l­
lector's plates.
Any.hlng and everything to do
with home fragrance Is another
great gift suggestion. Enjoy
nature's bounty ycur-round with
an assortment of scented pro­
ducts front candles and pot-

(Miurrl. to more unusual finds
like scented pillows and 2-footh ig h . scented w ix k I sculptures.
There's no "lim e " like the
holidays: Clocks have com e Into
their own. both us a functional
and fashionable gift.
No longer just u housewares
Item, clocks offer a wide variety
of Interesting sck-ctlons. Choose
from trendy, ucryllc neon styles,
to more upsculc timekeepers In
quartz, crystal und porcelain us
contrasts In a traditional setting.
Area rugs arc another home
accessory that can make a fushIon statement. Gift hunters can
cIkmisc from hundreds o f pat­
terns or colors. Also, select a rug
with a seasonal motif to warm
up any foyer.
Cages are not for the birds.
Swecd says. Instead, fill them
with traditional holiday silk
Mowers, fresh polnsettius or
other, more unusual arrange­
ments.
Outdoor products, too. urc
I lading their way indrxtrs us
decorative accessories. These
Include garden sculptures und
Euro|K*au-stylcd cafe sets. Pro­
ducts with a garden m otif are
also bestsellers, with flowers
covering everything from dinnerwure to linens.
And. according to Swced. tap­
estry is quite the rage — draping
h o m e p r o d u c t s s u c h us
lam p sh ades, photo alhum s.
books, pillows. Jewelry I m ix c s .
fool stools, frames, hat or band
boxes and more.
Finally, Sweed suggests get­
ting In the right "fram e" o f mind
lor holiday gift giving.

P ick w in e s to m ake
h o lid a ys sp a rk le
They come In all sizes ami
descriptions — large or small,
quiet or robust, convivial or
profound. Some are more or less
scholarly. Some are undeniably
sexy. Some act younger than
their age. othersolder.
Are we talking about people?
No. we're talking about wines.
Much fun for iK illd u y shoppers
ran be found In simply matching
the right bottles of wine with the
right recipients. Wines cun have
us many distinctive personalities
as the kinds of folks who enjoy
them.
Not Just i lie wines themselves,
but even their names and Iu I h -Is
cun play a special role. Ilour hunt
Pere A Fils Vlgne dc I'Enfunl
Jesus (the vine o f Infant Jesus)
or Mastrobcrurdlno's Laerlmu
Crystl (tears o f Christ) ure wines
with names lliut have special
Christmastime significance.
For art lovers or historians. the
labels on four varietal wines
from the Lungurottl vinryurds of
central Italy could hold a special
fascination Each Is a full-color

photograph of a centuries old
carafe on display in the classic
collection o f lire* l.ungarotll wine
museum at Torglano. Just out­
side Perugia.
Even the outer package of a
bottle o f wine can reflect Its
personality. The hinged w im k I c ii
( m ix containing two bottles of
Moulon- Cadet Is a perennial
favorite ut gilt-giving time.
For the epicure, one choice
could Ik - Cerrito's Harolos and
Barbarescos (single-vineyard red
wines Ir-mt the Piedmont area),
which would 1k - perfect with u
subtle dish. Uther clear can­
didates are Ladoucelle's Poullly
Fume (tlie world-famous dry
white Irnm tin- "laird of the
l.o lr e "). Huron P a tr ic k de
L adou eellc. or Its premiumpriced sibling Baron d'L.
There's even a choice of prized
Rudolf Muller German wines
with a natural sweetness — or.
in some cases, an alisrncc of It —
t h a t c a n m a t c h a w h o le
spectrum of personalities.

Gift of travel is a
very festive idea
If you’re looking for a way
tn make the holidays special,
you might want to give the
gift of travel. Near or far. For a
weekend, a week or longer.
The Christmas season —
when families go visiting (and
kids arc off from school) — Is
one of the most popular times
o f the yeur to travel.
Tra vel expert Denis
Scyuhueve, president o f DcIscy Luggage, suggests giving
somelxHly on your holiday list
u round-trip ticket to visit a
loved one.
Or. If spending the holidays
with relatives or friends Isn’t
your Idea of a treat, you can
find u suitable destination for
Just you and your mate.
It cun bo a welcome — and
p e r s o n a l — s u r p r is e at
Christmas.
You can ulso plan for a trip
months after the holidays, but
surprise the right person — or
the whole family — with the
good newsut Christmastime.
T o m a k e g ra n d p la n s
w ithout g iv in g away the
secret. Just mention that a
Distinctive frame Innovations
for HKX) Include the use o f fuu.x
stone, damask and tapestry
fabrics: embellishments such us

frequent flyer you know got a
free round-trip to the destina­
tion of his choice — then
Innocently ask. "W here would
you go?"
Careful planning and pre­
paration are the key tn keep­
ing the "surprise" In u sur­
prise. Don't wait until the last
minute to sturt talking about
trips.
Buy a travel muguzine and
leave It In a conspicuous
place, creating the perfect
conversation starter when
your partner starts to rllle
through It.
Fantasize aloud ubout your
Ideal getaway vacation after
wutchlug a travel commercial
on TV. Ask your male ubout
Ills or her favorite dreuru spot.
Cover all angles o f the gift
trip, to make It a memorable
experience.
For example, plan for the
transportation to und from the
airport: cull ahead und con­
firm reservations, und pick up
the Itinerary from your travel
agent so It won't Ik- discov­
ered In the mall.
beads, sequins und lace: combi­
nations such us leather und
metal: sandblasted, etched und
painted glass.

Lay-a-way, gift certificates,
popular shopping options
The winter holiday scuson
Is fun and some lips may add
to the en joym en t o f gift
shopping
Buying gills using lay-a-way
plans and gltt certificates aretwo ways holiday shopping
has become (xipular. Some
consumers have found that
lay-a-way plans help case fi­
nancial demands.
The "bu y now. get later"
plan enables consumers to
pul a sm all Initial down
payment on an Itrm and then
pay for the Item over lime
before owning it. If you are
buying on lay-u-way. it Is very
Im p ortan t to learn ea ch
s t o r e 's la y-a -w ay p o lic y .
Policies may vary and some
stores may oiler lay-a-way
Incentives.
Before pu lling Hems on
lay-a-way. find out how much
Is required down, what your
montiily payments will I k -.
how often you must make
payments. II late payment
penalties apply and what type

of refund or credit you will
receive If you change your
m in d . C o n s u m e r s u s in g
lay-a-way should maintain u
record of all |Kiyments.
Consumers have additional
shopping options avallable
which can also make holiday
shopping quick und easy.
Giving a gift certificate may­
be a satisfying gift for both the
gift giver und recipient. Gilt
certificates are convenient
and successful because the
recipients get the guts they
waut and avoid tlit* post­
holiday rush of people re­
t u r n in g u n w u n le d . I m ­
practical or Incorrectly sized
gifts. Gill certificates also sat­
isfy out-of-state relatives and
friends.
Gilt certillcules may have
red em p ilot) req u ire m e n ts
which must Ik- met by those
h o ld ln g th e c e r tific a t e s .
Consumers should check the
store s policy and redemption
requirements.

�t

•— Sanford Herald A Harald Advertiser, Sanford, Florida — Thursday. November 22, 1900

Think of Mother Naturd at Christmas
Th is Christmas, many shopp e n w ill be thinking o f the Earth
and our environment when (hey
select gifts. A carefully thought
out present can be a gift not only
for a realtlve or friend, but also
for Mother Nature.
W h at's hot on the shelves of
b o o k s to r e s n a tio n w id e a re
best-selling volumes on things
you c a n do to p rotect th e
environment. These make great
gift*.
" T h e Solution to Pollution.
101 Things You Can Do T o
Clean Up Your Environm ent."
by Laurence Som bke la $7.95.
It’S published b y MasterMedla
Book on recycled paper.
Another book that lists what
you and your fiuntly can do to
cut down on waste Is " 3 Minutes
A Day For A Greener Planet."
(Harper and Row; $7.95).
An unusual present for out­
door buffs — whether they're
bikers or hiker* — la a Siena
C lu b G ift M em bership. T h e
Sierra Club is a conservation and
environmental group focused on
keep in g A m erica ecologically
A $33 membership provides
'm on th ly editions o f the Sierra
: Magazine and the Sierra Club
; newspaper and a year long calI endar o f events. For more lnfor! matlon. write or call the Sierra
'C lu b national headquarters at
730 Folk St.. San Francisco. CA
9 4 1 0 9 (T elep h o n e: 415-7762311).
| You r might surprise a special
: person at Christmas with a fake
fur.
T h e fake fur business la strong
this season. Some manufactur­
ers expect their sales figures to
be double, or even triple, what
they were last year.
It's more than the environ­
mental consciousness brought
abou t by the a n im a l-rig h ts
movement. The popularity and
acceptance o f faux furs has been
Influenced by the greatly Im­
proved quality o f the fabrics.
Technical breakthroughs have
enabled manufacturers to create
fibers that ore softer and take
dyes more readily.
i
' The wide choices In stores
Include real-looking fakes and

Santa will b t delivering fake furs
that look Ilka tha mat thing. This
faux lynx parka from Montamy
has a zipper front and a knlttad
rib collar.
novelty looks Inspired fay such
things aa American Indian o r
giraffe prints, along with solid
colors such as navy, hunter
green, purple, red, rust and
brown.
Faux furs come In new sporty
sty les such as parkas, pea
jackets and toggle coats, along
with traditional silhouettes In
animal prints and solid colors.
Well-known fur designers such
as BUI Blass. Suzte Kk&gt; and
Adrienne Landau ore joining the
ranks o f fake fur producers with
their special stylish touches.
The fakes range In price from
$80 to over $1,500. Aside from
making an antmol-rlghla state­
ment. these attractive coats are
warm, lightweight, eaay-to-care
for. less costly and simply fun to
wear.
S om eth in g a sim ple aa a
drinking mug Is also a fine gift
Idea. It combats what can be an
environm ental villain — the
disposable piatlc cup.
VUIeroy A Boch, the china
company, has been leading a
" L e r a Mug Am erica" campaign,

telling to Americans to “ stamp
out styrofoam " arid use a m ug
Instead. T h e y o ffe r an Im ­
pressive variety o f designs in
porcelain and bone china, rang­
ing In price from $ 15 to $35.
According to Dale Ritter, pres­
ident. "T h re e out o f five office
workers drink their daUy coffee
front disposable cups, adding
tremendously to Am erica's al­
ready troubling and mounting
waste problem . Experts say It Is
nwr^fpiiU H iig at a rate o f 110
mUbon tons a year.”
He auggrts "B y vow ing to
give up styrofoam, are can con­
tribute to the future survtvablllty
o f life on Earth."
E n v ir o n m e n ta lly fr ie n d ly
mugs have a rich history. After
aU. they have been around since
the 15th century (the name
derives fro m the N orw egian
“ m u g g e” ). O rig in a lly , m ugs
were used fa r beer and cider. R Is
only in this century that they
have become papular for serving
tea, coffee and soup.
T o complete the gift for the
colTee-drln k ln g e n v iro n m e n ­
talist. th in k about g iv in g a
tree-sa vin g perm anent Inter
specially m ade for drip coffee
makers.
Krups Is one o f the companies
now m anufacturing reusable
versions w ith Its G old Mesh
F i l t e r ( $ 2 0 ) . M a d e In
S w ltx erlan d . the p erm an en t
niters are available In a No. 2
size to fit moat coffee makers;
and a No. 4 model that has an
adapter ring for Krups* 10- and
12-cup machines.
There are all kinds o f gifts that
are fitting for an environmen­
tally conscious Christmas.
Nature's beauty provides the
Inspiration for the sophisticated
tableware and gift collection
from Chase Ltd. It's designed by
artist, sculptor and conserva­
tionist Lynn Chase.
A percentage o f profits from
Chase Ltd. Is donated to the
Chase W ildlife Foundation, a
t a x - e x e m p t p u b lic c h a r it y
founded to promote the pre­
servation o f wildlife and the
environment. Chase Ltd. dinnerwarc ranges from $125 to
$275 for a five-piece place set­
ting.

New gadgets make choosing gifts
for video game fans an adventure
For the 1990 holiday season,
the video game bandwagon Is
rollin g ,al*;a ' East pace, with
g r o w in g n u m bers o f adults
Joining the kids. Th is video
boom Is reflected In the dazzling
array o f new gadgets and add­
ons designed to make gameplaying even more challenging
and entertaining. So, if there's a
video game nut on your holiday
gift list, here are several Ideas
guaranteed to bring a gleam to
those glazed-over eyes:
Hailed as the "Id ea of the
year” by the video game in­
dustry. the Game Genie Video
G a m e E nhancer by G aloob
($49.95) Is a new device that
enables players to customize
play to the level o f their ability.
Connect It between any of your
favorite game cartridges and
your Nintendo set. and you can
program everything from Infinite
" l i v e s " to m ore speed and
power. For two-player games,
each player can set their own
handicap to their playing skills,
which means that parents can
now compete on equal footing
with their children.
I f y o u 'r e t ir e d o f w ire s,
A cem ore International has a
complete assortment o f wireless
Freedom Stick and Freedom 16
joysticks (from $24.95 to (39.95)
available for every game system,
from Nintendo. Commodore and
A t a r i to th e n e w , more
sophisticated 16-blt systems by
N EC T u r b o G r a f x and
Sega/Genesls. Without the wires,
players can m ove at will (as
much as 50 feet away from the
screen) and couch potatoes can
play without w orrying about
anyone tripping over wires.
Pressman has an Ingenious
new way to Improve your Nin­
t e n d o g a m e s c o r e s In the

(0 1 9 9 0 N E W SPAPE R
TERPRISE

\.

B

Lillis operator

EN­

Picture Phons by Playskool Electronics Is no toy. It's lor children
too young to look up and dial phone number* In amargencles.
Pictures of people and objects (relatives, pollct. ate.) make
calling simple. Inhibitor twitch keeps preachootar* from using
the memory dialer to make unauthorized calls.

7am . to 1 0 am. K

EVERYTHING!
Our
Regular
Prices
After 10 a . m . , we will feature

f / L Off
M

,4 0

Our R egular f . W * *
Prices

on selected items!
Look for th e o ra n g e

clearance tags!

Shoe City.
Video game Ians might like a Speed board to hold their Nintendo
Entertainment System controller. It's a fetter way to play, with
improved dexterity and reaction time. It's from Pressman Toy Corp.

How about a new-fangled light
gun that you wear on your head
and "shoot" with your voice?
That's the idea behind the Laser
Scope Voice Command Stereo
Headset by Konami ($39.95).
Looking like a cross between a
laser weapon and a telphone
operator’s headset, this hi-tech
device allows you to "sigh t”
your video game targets through
a crosshair on the eyepiece and
"fire " at the target by shouting
into the microphone, y freeing
your hands, the Loser Scope
may do away with those in­
famous Nintendo sore thumbs.
But be careful not to get laryngi­
tis.
(0 1 9 9 0 N EWS PA PE R
TERPRISEASSN.

EN-

Certain books appeal lo all age
groups. "Susan Costner’s Great
Sandwiches" (Crown Publishers)
offers recipes from uptown,
down home und around the
world.

Clearance« Clearance

Clearance • Clearance
Clearance • Clearance
Clearance • Clearance
Clearance • Clearance
Clearance • Clearance
Clearance • Clearance

Open 10 - 9 daily: 12 - 6 Sun.

O u r biggest sale
in 47 years!

From now until the end of the year we are offering
once in a lifetime prices to reduce our inventory.
Shop N o w F o r Best Selection!

30- 40- 50%
* Diamonds
* Gemstones
* G old
* Watches

favorite classical music. T h e
kids can rock on. using the
headphones with their portable
stereo players.
Sports equipment is som e­
thing that often can be enjoyed
by the entire family. Whether
it's an exercise bike or a table
tennis set. you know they'll
appreciate It — especially after
all the holiday eating!

S h o e G ty .

S E M N O L E C E N TR E
3671 N . Orlande D r., W al-Mart Plaza
next to Simply 6 - S A N FO R D

G oo d for limited lime only . . . so hurryl

Speed board ($7.00). an Injec­
tion-molded plastic board that
holds your NES Controller so
you don’t have to. By simply
sliding the basic controller Into
the Bpccdboard. your fingers are
finally free to hit the buttons
that you need to. when you need
to. Experts and novices agree it's
now the fastest way to play, with
Improved dexterity and better
reaction time.

Bringing joy to a
variety of people
You might need to find a
Christmas gift for the entire
famtly.
Maybe It's something for your
ow n h o m e . Or for y o u r
neighbors. Or for friends who
have invited you to a holiday
parly. Or for rcleatlves.
Finding something
appropriate for a group of people
with different interests Is tricky.
So here's are a few gifts that
cun be enjoyed by everyone;
Pioneer Electronics' line of
Coaster headphones (4401 will be
appreciated by all. Mom or dad
can plug the Coaster Into the
stereo at home to listen to their

T h a W o rld W ild life Fund
benefits from a collector plate
aeries by VlDeroy A Boch. These
gifts o f life feature enchanting
portraits o f endangered species.
A portion o f the proceeds from
the sale o f these $38 plates Is
donated to the organization.
And remember, you can make
sure that the Christmas cards
you send and the wrapping
paper for all your gifts can be
recyclable.
By putting the environment on
your rift list, you w ill not only be
spreading holiday joy. you will
alao will be helping to aave the

O FF
ALL

* Cultured Pearls
* Antique Jewelry
* Crystal
* Silverplate

Vie offer on-premises watch and
jewelry repair and jewelry design
x .

i*

Hours:
M -F 9:30-5:00

Sat 9 - 1PM

cU a

Q w e to i&amp; f

112 So. ParkAve.
Sanford 322-2303

Layaway
A ll meyor
credit card *

�■ ■ ■ ■ ■

S a n fo rd H e rald A Herald Advertlaer,

22. t 090 —

in fo rd , F lo rid a — T h u rs d a y . N o v e m b e r

a

For men, Christmas is looking good
When Santa gaea shopping for
guys this Christmas, he’ll keep
in mind that the news In men’s
wear this season isn't heavy.
Designers and manufacturers
are concentrating on lighter
weight fabrics and loose silhou­
ettes. New technology allows
more creativity in m en’s de­
signs, which provides a wide
range o f gift-giving options.
A good example is the sweater,
revolutionised with chenille, a
rediscovered construction tech­
nique that produces an airy,
lofty texture without sacrificing
warm th. Fine-gauge knitting
techniques are lessening the
b u lk o f t r a d it io n a l w in te r
sweaters.
Cectle Piatovsky. designer for
the Tricots St. Raphael label
says.
"Our fine-gauge cotton
sweaters Tor the holidays have a
soft, tight feel. Color is used
boldly. Impulsively, to create a
fresh look for the season com­
pared with fall styles."
Jantzen. Lord Jeff and Barclay
Club are other names to watch
for when looking for the perfect
sweater.
A s the calendar year comes to
an end. the winter sports season
begins. And coats, as well as
sweaters, are high on male
Christmas lists.
Ski fans will often be wearing
coats with quilted patterns or
toggle closures. Quilting adds
visual Interest and serves a
practical purpose by creating an
insulating layer. And hoods will

be everywhere.
T h eo Da men, outerwear de­
signer for sportswear manufac­
turer Members Only, believes
that men value versatility and
practicality when choosing a
jacket.
"O n e o f the Jackets from our
A ll Points collection features a
rem o v a b le d ow n -filled Inner
lining that can be unxlpped from
the shell and worn by Itself as a
reversible jacket:" says Domen.
’ ’ Men arc dem anding perfor­
mance features found on pro­
fessional gear, like hi-tech nylon
coated for wind and water re­
sistance. so w e're using it in
m any o f our designs."
Pants with drawstring waists
are a trend that make it easy to
purchase a gift for those men
w ith flu ctu a tin g w aistlin es,
especially with holiday meals
under their belts.
Th e latest attitude for pants is
dresaed-down casual In luxe
fabrics like plush corduroy, wool
blends, even cashmere.
D e s ig n e r R on C h e r e s k ln
created pants from a blend of
ca sh m e re, w ool and n ylon .
"T h e y 're the ultimate In comfort
and style for the season." he
says. "T h e fuller thigh, tapertng
gradually to the knee, provides
b e a u t i f u l d r a p e and the
cashm ere gives them a soft,
sophisticated texture you don't
get with any other fabric."
Denim treatments seem a little
out o f the ordinary and Include a

w ide variety at washes and
finishes. Always easy and ever
casual, jeans are making the
social scene day and night.
The new "anti-fit" styling —
larger In the hip, narrow at the
ankle — from companies In­
cluding B. Free by M. Julian.
P e p e C lo t h in g . M a r lth e A
Frasncots Glrfaaud and a.b.s.
MEN — offers comfort as well as
cachet.
According to Jean Driscoll o f
Jeanswear Communications, an
Industry, trade group, "Jeans are
perfect for gift or gala.”
What else can you give to a
man st Christmas?
According to GQ Magazine,
men spend an average o f 45
minutes each morning grooming
f c the day ahead.
Lab Series products by Aram Is
comprise an entire hair and skin
care regimen. T h e Roy Face
C a re S y s te m , c r e a te d b y
California chemist Linda Silver
for her husband. leads men
through a series o f treatments
and Is sold only though men’s
specialty and clothing stores.

cording to Harvey Weinstein,
president o f Lord W est Formals,
a fo rm a lw e a r m an u factu rer:
"F orm al events crowd the cal­
endar st this time o f year, and
m e n 's form al w ea r and a c ­
cessories should reflect the e x ­
citem ent and style o f special
occasions."
Neckwear ties up the tradi­
tional gift options.
Expect to see conversational
prints and ecology-inspired floral
and fauna mot f a from Handpaints and New Ideas collections
from Wemco. Ever- popular re­
p-stripe ties are still available for
the most conservative men. And
Barry Wells designs whimsical
ties that even Mr. Scrooge would
love.
(C 1 1 9 9 0 N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

i

Gift baskets are just right st Christmas. To go with fruits and
homemade goodies, select a variety of hearty sod healthy foods.
Among the choices are low-fat, no-cholesterol and no-lactose
Formagg cheeses.

Country Furniture
OF S A N F O R D

Classic gifts such as watches,
hosiery, belts and other men's
furnishings also can fit into
everyone's gift-giving budget.
W atches from T im e x and
Swatch have bold faces and
bands and incorporate chrono­
graph and other functions for
specific activities.
No man ever has too many
cu ff links or studs either, ac­

IS C O N D U C T I N G

A

GOING out of business SALE!
Af T f R O V E R

30

YFARS IN

C L O S IN G OUR
* N O TH ING

(

Give her the personal touch for the
holidays, she will thank you all year
What personal gift can a man
buy for the special woman on his
Christmas list?
According to a recent survey.
Intimate apparel is second only
lo flowers as the present a
woman most often hopes to
recetve from the man in her life.
Elegant, colorful sleepwear
and loungcwear. In luscious
fabrics that caress the skin, are
the most purchased or received
Items o f Intimate apparel in u
woman's wardrobe.
This Christmas, sleep fashions
run the gamut from sleek sil­
houettes In brilliant gem tones to
poeiic, romantic gowns gener­
ously adorned with lace, rufflea
and embroidery.
Whether she's In the mood to
be daring or wants to look
demure, the '90s woman has a
variety o f choices for the holi­
days.
Fluid fabrics, which Impart a
feeling o f luxury and elegance
and softness next to the skin, are
an essential part o f the fashion
picture.
Knit or woven In lustrous,
silky fibers such as Patina or
Captlva nylon, these supple
fabrics drape beautifully to (lat­
ter the figure, and at the same
time afford the wearer the most
modern, casy-care benefits.
Lingerie can be freshened In a
m atter o f minutes. A quick
swish through mild soap and
water and they can be hung to
drip-dry smooth and wrinkle
free.
Li l y of France fa vors
brushed-back Creme de Captlva
satins for richly colored sleep
shirts and double breasted paJamas. ador ned with
embroidered crest pockets or
floral print collar and cuffs.
Fernando Sanchez la another
who works fashion artistry with
brushed- back satins from Allied
Fibers' Creme de Captlva collec­
tion o f luxurious nylon fabrics.
He combines vibrant hues of
v i o l e t a nd hot p i n k In n
lou n gcw ear en s e m b le of
camisole top. tapered pants and

Evtrything from soup to nuts

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fe a t h e r y m o t if In a lo n g ,
spaghetti- strap gown and wrap
robe o f CapUva nylon In teal and
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Whatever her taste, there's a
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QUALITY, SERVICE, PRICE
Colorful slsap shirt is from Lily
of Francs. It Is In brushad-back
satin from Allied Fibers' Creme
de Captlva collection of nylon
fabrics for elegance and soft­
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A t E d M ilc a rs k y ’s Y o u G et A ll Th re e !
S P E C IA L L IM IT E D T IM E OFFER O N GE A P P L IA N C E S !

180 D A YS S A M E A S C A SH !*

short, puff Jacket.
Sanchez also does an Oriental
caftan and a plunging V-neck
gown, both suitable for at-home
entertaining, in this favorite cold
weather fabric with Us sleek,
shimmering surface on the out­
side. and warm, flannel- like
texture next to the skin.

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• Pot Of Appoonco pw'c Am m hnoneod "vm *o»wntw JJ In 0*c*»**r /3 r«D on rout GtCAP'
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Microwave
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C h a r a c t e r l i k e s t he ol dfashoned look in a long, granny
gown with tucked yoke and self
ruffles against a small rosebud
print on ivory ground.
Cine Star's demure gown In
Patina nylon features an inset
yoke bodice and full, flounce
hem . A nother by the same
manufacturer combines a fig­
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Soft prints add interest to
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Lorraine features u swirling.

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UwHod P ress Iwldraattowat

Millions of Americans plan lo
celebrate the holidays wi th
friends, family and co-workers
and that means parties, plan a
party to ensure the host and
hostess enjoy them selves as
much as their guests.
S ix w e e k s before

Make a guest list and purchase
Invitations. Mall Invitations at
least four weeks before thr date.
F ou r w eek s before

Prepare lists o f foods and
beverages to be served and plan
the menu. If you plan to decorate
with llowers. cull the florist and
make those arrangements.
T w o to three w e e k s b efore

Prepare dishes that can be
frozen and purchase beverages.
Decide on color and type of
t a b l e a r r a n g e m e n t s and
purchase glasses, napkins, ta­
blecloths. plates and other deco­
rative Items.
Four days before

Begin prcparlnf-'dlshes that
can be refrigerated.

Three daya before
Confirm delivery o f floral ar­

rangements und centerpieces.
Begin decorating rooms to be
used for the party.

Extra Large
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T h e night b e fo re

Set up the bar. set the table
and prepare last-minute dishes.
T o make your food display
look festive, wrap silverware In
Individual napkins, lie with red
or green ribbon and place In
baskets.
For a Iasi-minute decorative
touch, lay evergreens on the
mantle, or Weave along stair
banisters. For a touch of color,
add red plaid bows.
T h « d a y o f the p a rty

Buy extra bags o f ice. For
small gatherings, drop cherries
Into Ice cube trays before freez­
ing to "dress up" beverages.
Apply Christmas-scented oils
(pine, holly, evergreen) to the
tops o f light bulbs. As the lights
bum. the aroma will fill the
room.
One hour b efore
Lay out the food and fill the lee
bucket. .
Get dressed anti relax. Every­
thing Is done and you are ready
to enjoy your party.

Potscrubber Cycle
Dishwasher.

Spacemaker
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Model WWAMSOM
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Variable end ol-cycie signal

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�Finding her a gift that’s fit to wear

PEDIATRICS
n Marttsa C. Pattis, M.D., F.AAP.
^\Pallav1 B. Dallwala, M.D., FAA.P.
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1

Announce The Opening Of Their
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that contribute to a flattering
W hat better holiday gift than
form-fittin g tights and tops in
brUttant c o lo n and prints fo r the

fabrics. Mae la not a problem aa
long aa you’ re In the right
general area — email, medium or
urge. In fact, many itrMgna are
tn "o n e Mae Ota Ml” dimensions.
What goes Into a fit Christmas
In n o v a t iv e n e w

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w om en la the * o r i or jogging
bra. often designed to be worn an
e ith e r underwear or aa out*

aborts lined In IfydraM nylon tn
a rain bow o f b rig h t colors,
Snappy tan k tops t o m atch
complete a colorful costum e m

a y n th e tlc

L ig h t w e ig h t y d u r a b ilit y ,
moisture transport aa wett as a
soft, natural fern are JuM a few o f
th e fc a tu r e a p r o v id e d b y
a ta te -o f-th c -a r t s y n t h e t ic s .
H ydrofll, the industry’ s first
truly breathable, arlcking nylon,
la M the forefront o f hijgh-tech

nylon, m ahrs a fashion state­
m ent In trendy, flattering colors
and cut to create a lean, pared
down silhouette.
Colorftil sport tops can be
paired w ith Ughta In abort,
mid-calf or long lengths, again in

f n“ JOr j p j j ? * P” W *? th to 9H*
to the fabric surface for quick

black and Jade, ocean blue and
hot pink In ait deco-inspired

(C119BO N E W S P A P E R
TE RPftBE ASSN .

Jigsaw puzzles fit on holiday gift lists
In the m id 8th century, an
English " u r « « i * r
to
c u t o n e o f hla inaps Into Uny
pieces as a diversion for friends.
^ w o r id h m ^ h o ^ o n
"Jigsaw” pusxleaever aince.
This holiday m o o n , don't tfo
topteccs trying to find a gift m
the person who has everything,
Join in a centuries-old tradition
and give a Jigsaw puxsle.
Jlgm w pussies are traditional
Christmas favorites. Because o f
their appeal, pussies make great
holiday gifts. They can be aa
much fun for 7. year-olds as fo r
70-yearokte.
"Pussies have universal sppeal there Is no language
barrier, no age limit, and they
require no special skills.” says
Pat Duncan, president of the
Great American Puzzle Factory.
I t s a tradition In many house-

“ T h is would be especially
appropriate. aince the very first
JIp * '* pusite ever nude w as
a&amp;o a map. And the Soviet
Union, with all it . different
republics, to a lot like a giant
p u u ic itaelf.*’
activity* working on a Jigsaw
equally gratifying aa a
soiopursult.
"D oin g a pumte can be very
U*cr* P c u *lc*
Duncan notes.
it a a quiet, meditative activity
that can help get your mind o ff
the troubles o f the day. Y ou
w ork at your own pace, spendtag tw o minutes or two hours on
1&gt; as the mood Milhes you. You
^
* sense o f accomplishment
“
•** lt gnulually com e
together before your eyes. And.
everyone knows, putting that
in fa a very gratifying

SpecfaUzing In

pie. Pat Duncan recommends
warning that Uu. package to
frsgUesnd shouldn't be shaken,
Many people are reluctant to
d im J m t S e V p u m t e once they
have finished I t Indee d, a comDieted LlMMW p*»— w !• often an
S S J g p S ^ o f , a rt, the
interlocking lines running across
n , face enhancing its unusual
appeal.
When givin g a puxsle aa a gift.
|t m ight be a good Idea to
include a bottle o f one o f the
.p ed al glues made to preserve
completed pussies.
( c )f0 9 O N E W S P A P E R ENfE R P R iS * ASSN,
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Homs: Moa-Stt. 9-9, Sun. 12-5

�Super Mario Broe. 3. Gam e
Boy. Cheerful Tearful. Guard
Doga. Hom Magic. Read My U ps.
A t flrat glance, thta m ight
aeem like a* Hollywood list o f
Christmas film releases. In fact,
they're already blockbusters in
Uielr own right.

toys this year are holiday favorites?
HUH
Don’t be startled by the prices of
holiday toys, be a smart shopper

These toys are among the hit
parade that w ill be playing In
noroe* cvciyw nere in to noncuiv
season , a c c o rd in g to P ra n k
Reysen, editor o f Playth ings
" I t may be a late developing
year.’ ’ Reysen says, "but I think
w e can expect quite a surge aa
w e com e Into the holidays,
b eca u se th ere a re a lo t o f
exciting products about to hit
"S om e of the best toys and
products that w ere seen at New
York Toy Fair in February have
yet to hit the marketplace. W hen
they do. It should cause quite a
stir far children, parents and
retailers alike."
Reysen says: "F o r the third
straight year. Nintendo c o n ­
tinues to dominate toy sales.
W i t h a c c e a a o r le a lik e t h e
hand-held G am e Boy. Su per
Mario Bros. 3 cartridges and an
assortment o f action and power
acts, there's no end in sight to
their popularity.”
For parents w ho disapprove o f
electronic games, the good news
is that there w ill be plenty o f
other toys on the market that
offer plenty o f Christmas fun.
"Batman action figures and
play vehicles are very popular."
aaya Reysen. "T h e release o f
'Batman on hom e vtdeocaasette
has given theae products a
second life. Dick Tracy, the
Jetaons and FUntstones figures
and accessories are starting to
m ove, and I think they’ll be
good, strong aellers this
Christmas. A lso In the action
flgures-supcr heroes category:
The overwhelming popularity o f
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
shows no sign o f letting u p."
A fte r an apparent la ck o f
high-quality girls’ toys In recent
years, m anufacturers fin a lly
seem to be responding.
T h e trend tow ard well-made

Cuddly Quant Dog with a sacral.
goods, combined with the surge
In Victorian couture, makes
Playmobtl'a Victorian Dollhouse
a predicted best seller. However,
retailing at 8150. this Is a fairly
expensive Item.
Other foreseen hits In girts*
toys this year Include Skip It (a
Jump- rope toy) from T ig e r
Electronics, Tyoo's My Pretty
Ballerina doll, and the Cheerful
Tearful doll horn Curiosity — all
offering lots o f pfay. At 30.
Barbie's more popular than ever,
and this year Mattel Introduces
Ice Capade Barbie.

to store belongings Inside, end
then It can be locked with a
personal combination.
( 0 1 9 0 0 N E W S P A P B R BN*
TB R PR B E AS 8N .

Don’t be startled by the prices
o f holiday toys this year.
Not all Christmas presents
ca n y today’s high price ta p .
Here are 10 auggr stlona that sell
for under $10:
•T ra ve l Jeopardy! (Pressman.
J|8): Give hum o f the popular TV
game show their answers and
q u e s t io n s o n th e r o a d . A
specially designed take-along
version features 30 Jeopardy!
gam es, Including 10 ’ ’ super
challenging" pussies.
•M ini Labyrinth Game (Car*
dlnal. 18): A precision-control
miniature version of the Hassle
Labyrinth pusste game comes In

C U D D L Y G u ard D og Is a
plaything with a secret. It has a
pouch for hiding valuables. The
dog barks w hen picked up.
Guard Dog la m ade by .Naata
Industries (about •54.981.

to create their own unique Cash*
Ion look.
•C h ris tm a s P la y in g Cards
(Chrtatmaa Cards Inc.. •3.80):
Find ehres In place o f spades,
snowm en In place o f hearts,
Christmas trees Instead o f chibs
and reindeer Instead o f

playing

the Joker? Santa, of

^ • W h e r e a W aldo? Jigsaw
Puzzles (Great American Punic

■

Factory. *3 each): Young fans of

1.

Martin Handford'a beat-selling
aerlea of picture booka will
delight In theae two 100-piece
Jlgaaw puzzles. Both Where's
W a ld o ? On T h e B each and
W here’s Waldo Safari Park are
lavk-by* 17-lnches when
asaembfed.
• Fantasy Fortunes (United

&lt;
1

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*
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..
_____
New looks with Bsndazzies.
first fortune* telling gsm e just far
airls. The Docket-slxed game
features 54 cards that Include

Little Tikes manufactures an
a rra y o f playacts Inclu din g
houses and furniture for Indoor
and outdoor use. These brightly
colored, sturdy sets are popular
with both boys and girts. This
season, look for Little Tikes'
Cllmb/Slide Treehouse to &lt;be a
w in n er with kids and their
parents.
Consumers are more cautious
due to the economy and will
probably spend somewhat leas
this year, predicts Reysen. Aa a
result, they want Items that offer
more bang for their buck.
Sales of board games have
been active, especially the kind
o f gam es that can be played by
the whole family (or by adults
alone). This year’s picks Include
Read My Lips from Pressman
and the Simpson Mystery o f Life

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                    <text>TUESDAY

1 ■ ■■
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83rd Year, No. 10 -

Ssntord, Florida

Voters turn out slowly

NEW S DIGEST
□ Sports
Burners’ firs extinguished
ATLANTA - The Casselberry-based I ram
Bums' Burner* hud l Itch Arc extinguished
Monday as they lost In the finals of the
Ford/Pele* L ab or Day T ou rn a m en t, lit
Dunwnody, Ga.. 3 2 to the Atlanta Steamers.

□ Florida
Clsssss resume In Gainesville
O A IN E S V IL L E — Investigators continued
searchng for new leads In the slayings of five
college students afc University of Florida stu­
dents began returning Monday for the resum p­
tion of classes.

□ Nation

Exeter sighting recognized
EXETER. N.H. - The 2Slh anniversary of the
"Incident at Exeter" UFO sighting will he
observed by flying saucer-watchers with a
week-longjirognini of Alins and discussions.

Poor countries receive pledge

In the District 2 county commission race.
12-year Incumbent Bob Sturm hopes he will
outlast two challengers, former Lake Mary mayor
Dick Fcaa and former challenger Bob Desmond, to
extend his county commission term to 16 years.
If he gains more than 50 percent of the vote.

PARIS — A pledging to give 0.2 percent of
France's gross domestic product to help the
plight o f the world's 42 poorest countries was
made by President Francois Mitterrand. A
suggestion w as made to other Industrialised
nations do the same.

Sanford commission
qualifying to bsgin

□ World

State traffic deaths total 22
D ELAND — The Labor Day holiday trafAc
death count totaled 22. seven less than
predicted, a Florida Highway Patrol spokesman
In DeLand reported this morning.
There were no fatal Seminole County traffic
accidents reported during the 76-hour holiday
weekend that began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended
at midnight Monday.

Savan Injurad In bathtub raca
SER AVEZZA. Italy — A bathtub speeding
down a hill at BO mph veered out o f control and
plowed Into a crowd of spectators. Injuring
seven people, police said.
Eight bathtubs equipped with wheels, a
steering wheel, and auto- style brakes were
enterea Monday In Seravessa's sixth annual
bathtub race. The race's route ran down a steep
hUI and ended In a central square o f the town
Inland from the coastal resort of Vtoreggto In
northwest Italy.
Police said a tub driven by Luciano Silvestri.
16, w as traveling around BO mph when It ran off
the road at a curve and crashed Into the crowd.
Six women and driver Silvestri sustained
Injuries In the crash, but there were no broken
bones.

On# man's art
PORTLAND. Ore. — A sculptor whose work
shows llfe-stoe. nude male torsos skewered by
hugc~swtocte sticks to securing officials of
P ortland's Art quake festival o f censorship
because they won't display his pieces.
Mike Randles raid his sculptures were rejected
because they portrayed mate nudity. But
Artquake officials said they refused hto work
h w n w r It w as different from slides o f the
sculpture* he submitted earlier for approval.
Randies admitted the sculptures were not
Identical to the ritdes, but said the slides showed
less mature work.
The graduate teaching fellow at the University
o f Oregon said the alidea depleted the mate sex
organ Transformed into a rifle.

Never too young to campaign. Jessica Howard, 10. at the Sonora Club Horn*, which is also voter
does her bit while walling at her school bus stop precincts 88 and 18 In Sanlord.

Gubernatorial candidates make
final rounds in state cam paigns
Florida's leading giibcrnalnrlal candidates
made last-intuulc appeals for mip|Kirt Monday at
tabor Day picnics and parades.
Voters will decide In Tuesday s primary
whether former Sen. tawlon Chiles or Rep. Bill
Nelson will be Ihe Democrat who will attempt lo
unseal Republican CJov. Bob Martinet! In Novem­
ber.
The Florida Ncwspa|*cr Poll Indicated Sunday
Ibal Chiles Is leading Nelson 55 percent lo 30
perrent. wllh 15 percent still undecided.
Nelson dismissed the results, saying he
expected the undecided voters lo swing Ills way

Campaigns’ quiet
but school board
election coming

SANFOR D — Although the statewide primary
election today will decide some winners and pare
other races down to a runoff, qualifying for city
elections will Jusl be getting started Wednesday
morning at the City Clerk's office InCIty HaU♦ T w o Sanford City Commission seats will be on
this year's city ballet, those for District 3. currently
held by A.A. "M ae " McCUnahan. and District 4.
held by Whitey Eckstein. Both Incumbents have
indicated they will be seeking reeled Ion to another
four-year term. Sanford's commissioners receive
an annual M lary o f $3,000.
The qualifying period to eight weeks long,
running from 8:30 a.m.. Sept. 8 to noon. O d . 30.

SANFO R D - Because o f Ihe legal battle
over partisan versus non-partisan school
board elections w hich raged over the
summer. Ihe Aral primary for the three seals

Sanford City Clerk Jan Danahoe said. "T h e
qualifying fee this year to $180. and muat be drawn
on an established campaign account. In addition to
that, except for those already In office, clly
commission candidates will have lo file a financial
disclosure form and complete a campaign treasur­
e r's an d cam paign depository fo rm ." Those
Q u a lify , P a g * S A

□ • * * Oavsraar's, Pag* BA

Troops fight desert boredom with scorpions
Unltad Prsss Intsmatlonpl

D IIA IIR A N . Saudi Arabia —
American forces deployed lit Ihe
sblftlng sands and 123-degree heal

of Saudi Arabia are Inventing a new
desert-oriented array of weapons lo
flghl one of the military's most
oppressive enemies: boredom.
Some Marines, for example, are
spending off-hours snaring scorplons and pitting them against each

other In desert Aghts. wllh bets
being placed all around.
Soldiers o f Ihe A rm y's 101st
Airborne Division are building their
own amenities.

They have fashioned a mock
television out o f cardboard, a pay

phone, an electronic teller machine
and — the piece de resistance — an
air conditioner, before which they
aland and pretend to bask In a rush
of cool, soothing sir.
.

“ Have you ever heard Ihe raying.

Etta! Carlson (I to

Pertly

Cloudy

Partly cloudy with a
40 percent chance of
thunderstorms. High
In the low SO * with a
northeasterly wind at
5-10 mph.

Kids help seniors
find ‘second wind

‘Squeaking wheels* of Lake Mary
keep tabs on city commissioners
LAKE MARY - They attend every clly
commission meeting with agenda In hand,
scribbling notes and paying close attention

until Ihe very end. even when Ihe meeting
lasts until I a.m.
They're not lawyer* or clly clerks, they're
Margaret Wesley. 80. Mary Wolff. 77. and
Ethel Carlson. 68 - the watchdogs of take

S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . C a ll 3 2 ? -2 6 1 1

�•

^ Q ^ J S m L E U n t v c r a l t y ^ o f rtortds

Inmates, determining t
to make room for other,

■
WBHjHpgnk

M ean w h ile. a spokesm an fa r t h i
flamaaifflr Tnllri Department slid them
was no new Information to report about the
search for the kilter or kitten.

they were eearchng for new keds In the
slayings of five college rtudents.
The tk y in ii oronuHed mm crock* of

ipped
swat
news,

from the top eight.

Alter a week of Inveatlgatli
they were not tdoae to nMwn|
were warning residents not to

lobe

The bodka of the five «ol

JACKSONVILLE

U ter finding out

CAP* CAMAVSAAL

shoot, which one

from traps S3 yards away.

deman Manorial
in which T 0 0 0
raise ftmdi for a
hree hours by a

Pa.. whordfalsed to give Me name. "W e're
doing our. best. We aren't here to hurt
an v«»e."
. ;
Among the proterters were members of five

T h u rad a y ^o n ^ s I
after a w eek ta

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Cct it with i traditional comumer
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LU K

�ROBERT WALTERS

EDITORIALS
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celebrated in i M l ,

108 ANQELB8 — The Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy
Tdethon broke Its fend-rafctng records Monday, receding
phjgcsofmore then 844 mIBUt.
The 81 Vh'hour effort, In Ns 88th year. exceeded lest year s

wife. Judy, who
The American enterprise
magaxtne reported that an
(AM« a Hot by about 100000
classes resume.

M ice reported no nu^or proMemo thle year aa fewer than
90,000 students shnar rl up for
th e h o l i d a y , r e n a m e d
"Laboreet" by the city.
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In New York, where the (tret

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LAK E MARY — Iraq did more than Just Invade
jfiypy m iintry half w ay around the world on Aug.
2. Iraq Invaded our lives as well.
Local reactions to the Invasion, sampled last
week, ranged from fears of a return to the
Involuntary draft to complete support for the
current situation to' using nuclear weapons
against Iraq.
Christl Jones. IS. o f Lake Mary, said her friends
are getting nervous about the situation.
"Everyone's getting scared o f the Involuntary
draft, but I don't think the public will let It
happen. T okill people over oil is pretty dum b.”
Don Corey. 24. o f Orlando, is not as concerned
over the reinstatement o f the Involuntary draft as
he is with President Bush's call up of the
*
reserves. Bitting on a shopping
center bench
reading his newspaper, he said the Invasion has
made him take a second look at his plans.
“ A month before the invasion, said Corey.” t
w as thinking about going Into the reserves, but
now I don't know. If It were a long standing war. I
would probably try to dc something.”
jC o r e y agrees with sending troops to defend the
■ fc k
and he also sees It
▼
•arrangement.
"It's necessary we stay over there right now.”
said Corey. ” 1 think they might try to come into
Saudi Arabia. They have a good sited army.”
Norma Normandy. B7. of Osteen, said her
husband served in the Marine reserves during Ihe
Korean W ar.
"I feel so n y for the reserves. " said Normandy.
"H e Iher husband) went over the first winter. I
hope we have enough troops and clout over there
without going to an all out w ar.”
Normandy also said she is concerned about the
hostages.
"W e don't have any diplomatic immunity and
that's terrible.” said Normandy. " I think they're
(the hostages) a prime concern. They’re always a
prime concern."
W hile Norm andy is concerned about the
situation, she believes the government is han­
dling things srell.
” 1 think w e have very qualified people in
charge, and I think w e should put our faith in
them. It's esay to sit back and say what we

concerned about the hostages s q ^
" I don't feel sorry for the hostages." said Spear.
"T h ey went over there for oocrcsen n .-an d that
reason w as big bucks.”
Spear was discussing the Iraqi situation over
break fast w ith Retired N a v y C h ie f D avid
McFaddcn •
McPadden likened the hostages to ''sacrificial
lam bs" and asked how m any prisoners o f w ar

Legal Notices

M » a « &gt; --

Legal nonces

CHOuaean Trail
^

A w e w r S u ro

wit a

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. . .

S cw N O tl COUNT Vi

Legal Nettcee

cteSss m m m cssri WITHIN
TMSIK MONTHS AFTSS TH «
OATS OS TM€ FIRST FUSLI
CATION OF THIS NOTtCC.
ALL CLAIMS. DIMANDS
AND OSJICTtONS NOT SO
FUJ»&gt; W1LA. M FOSSV IS

EEK &amp; MEEK* by Howie Schneider

U.*/UM*

:i

\ &lt;#.■-*

i.

y.'cA &lt;in
of a fanny fag to

-

The Sanford Herald will eeiect a winning entry to compete
with other entries b o n newspapers senes the country. The
^ ft| in a i fr o m c a r t o o n *

__________
h iv ln iU io r her gag and&gt;
name printed nationally In an EEK A MBEK strip In November.
The Sanford Herald wtU run 7 different Incomplete coadcs
between Sept 5 and Sept. 31. You can try your hand at one or
several...enter as many times as you wlah.8optck up your pens
and enter today!
N o r C T ft t U t t

�Sanford HfOd, Sanford, Ftortda — To— day, tg^NWbgr 4, 1SS0 — —

When on asaignment. the
pictures shot by Herakl pho­
tographers vary in angle,
pose and content, and not all
of them are published Imme­
diately; From time to time,
the newspaper takes a sec­
ond look at those news and
features scenes from around
Seminole County.

rTKHTling wOflfiip. UflUrCnQOtrv

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ItaliM^aMi
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PUT YOU* BUHNtM ON TNK NOVI

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Antiques
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�INSIDE:
■ P«opk, Page 3B
■ C I«s s lH «d &gt; * 9t 4B

Burners steamed 3-2
“Mm ! the Hawke" tonight
WINTER PARK — Lake Howell High School's
Quarterback Club will hold Us annual "Meet the
Hawks" Night this evening In the school
cafeteria.
The meeting, which will feature the introduc­
tion or the Lake Howell freshman. Junior varsity
and varsity football teams, will begin at 0:30
p.m. with a pot luck dinner.
For more Information, conlact the Lake
Howell High School Athletic Department at
678-6165.

Lyman Back to school dinner
LONGWOOD — The Lyman High School
Booster Club will be holding Its annual
Back-To-School Dinner on Saturday. September
8. from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. In the school
cafeteria.
Tickets for the event will cost 85 and arc
available from members of the full sports learns,
the school office and at the door the day of the
event.
Along with a bar-b-que chicken dinner
attendees will get to meet a coaching repre­
sentative from each varsity sport at Lyman.
For more Information, contact Dave Scott at
831-6700 or 834-5694.

Local soccer team loses
In finals of Ford-Pele
Dleblcr of Longwood who drilled u
penalty *klek past the Steamers
goalie.
The Burners had reached 'he final
by defeating the Atlanta Steamers
5-2. Ihc Asu Kings Wolves 6-2. Cobb
Union of Marrlettn. Ga. 4-1 to win
their elimination bracket and then
won their semifinal over the Stone
Mountain IGa.) Fire 2-1.
The second-place finish hy llte
Burners was quite Impressive ns Ihc
Ford/Pele' Tournament Is one of the
biggest soccer tournaments In llte
southeast, uttrnrtlng 300 learns.
Including 50 outside the stale of
Georgia and two foreign entries. The
Burners finished abend of 14 other
teams In Its division.
T h e B u rn e rs fin is h e d Ih c
tournament with a 4-1 record und
bested 14 other teams in Its nge

Prom staff roparts
ATLANTA — Bums' Burners fi­
nally had their fire extinguished
Monday as the Cnssclbcrry-lHtsed
team lost In the finals o f the
Ford/Pele" Labor Day Tournament
3-2 to the Atlanta Slcamcis 78
lielng played In the Atlanta suburb
ofDunwoody.
The Steamers 78 leant Is the
defending 13-nnd Under Division
Regional Soccer Champions.
The Burners, an under-14 hoys
select leant In the S.C. United Youth
Soccer Organization out of Cassel­
berry- went 18-mlnules Into llte
game before Sean McSorlcy of
O vied o d rib b led through the
Steamers defense und stuck In the
goal. The only oilier scoring for the
Burners eante off the foot of Brian

bracket. The tournnmcnl was Just
the second that the learn had
competed In since Coach Jon Bums
pul the tenm together a few weeks
ago. The tenm had won the six-team
Tampa Bay Thunder Tournament
In Clearwnlcr two weeks ago.
A fter the com pletion o f the
tournnmcnl McSorlcy. who led the
team In scoring with six goals, was
named the Most Valuable Player In
the tournnmcnl.
T h e B u rn e rs had a g r e a t
tournament ns goul keeper Ryan
Smith of Chuluotu only allowed
eight goals while the offense scored
19 goals In the five games they
played.
Another outstanding statistic for
the team was the fact that nine
different players scored goals for the
burners. In a sport known for only
two or three players dominating the
offense this Is u great statement for
the teamwork of the Burners und
the coaching of Jon Bums.
The other players who scored In

the tournament, beside* McSorlcy.
were Dlebler with three goals.
Salman Lewis or Winter Springs.
Damon Cottlngham of Altamonte
Springs and "A c e " Delaney of Lake
Mary (with two goals each). Netting
one goal each were Jeff Solstman of
Winter Park. Jason Tlsdcll of Long­
wood. Brad Massey o f W inter
Springs and Charles Whitmore or
Altamonte Springs.
Other members of th-r Burners
who made the trip were Team
Manager Don Smith and players
Chad Felkel of Carselberry. Randy
Jenkins or Orlando. Alan King or
Winter Park. Will Lipscomb of Lake
Mary. Gralg Noyes of Oviedo. Paul
Riggins of Longwood and David
Kinsley of Casselberry. Coach Bums
Is the sole coach of the team.
The team will now get ready for
the regular season which will be
s ta r tin g up soo n . T h e n ext
tournament action for the team will
be at Thanksgiving when the team
travels to Plantation for a Holiday.
Tournament.

Graf rips
Capri atti
in Open

OOLP
Ztllwood Station Golf Toumay

=*4

ZELLWOOD STATION - The Zellwood Sta­
tion Red Cops, a 100-member service organiza­
tion based In Zellwood Station, will sponsor the
Sixth Annual Florida Hospital Apopka Goff
Tournament on Wednesday. Oct. 10. at the
Zellwood Station Country Club.
Over the past six years, the tournament has
raised over 870.000 for special equipment for
use at Florida Hospital Apopka, such as
telemetry monitors, a computerized EKG
machine, a CT scanner, autoclave and Items for
the hospital's endoscopy department.
The tournament Is a scramble format with
Individual prizes for the first golc-ln-onc on each
of the four par-three holes. Teams may compete
In either the handicap or non-handicap
divisions.
One hundred and forty-four golfers are
expected to shotgun start at 8 a.m. and another
144 will tec off at 1 p.m. The entry fee of 850 per
player Includes green fees, cart, lunch and
individual and team prizes. There will also be a
special donation draw for several valgable
Items. Corporate sponsorships are available.
For more Information, call Bill Jorgenrud at
880-2873 Dick Koch al 886-6021 or Carl
Ahlstrom at 889-4337.

Parent Rasourct Cantar banafit
LAKE MARY — The Parent Resource Center's
Third Annual Golf Fest. sponsored by WFTV
Channel 9. Joy 108 FM and the Family Journal,
has been scheduled for Monday. OCt. 15. at
Tlmacuan Golf and Country Club.
There are several ways to participate In the
surprise scramble: as an Individual at 8125 per
person: as a four-player team at 8125 per
person: or as a 8200 or 8600 corporate sponsor.
Proceeds from the event will go to the Parent
Resource Center.
Registration will begin at 11:30 a.m.. which
will be followed by a "llte bite" and a shoygun
start. After the tournament, there will be a
buffet dinner during which the prizes will be
awarded.
Among the prizes that arc available are a day
at Safety Harbor Spa; dinner and golf for four al
Marriott's World Center: use of a Bulck Regal for
one year; and a dinner for four at the Hard Rock
Cafe.
'
For more Information, contact the Parent
Resource Center at 425-2662.

ratl—
■v

Volleyball Jamboreo
Action Ilka thla can be axpactad " h a n U * * &gt; Me * .
Lake Howell, Oviedo and Seminole Qet together today
for a volleyball jamboree at Lake Mary High School
starting at 4 p.m.
Each team will play three 15-polnt games. In game

Buc’s Igwebuike shocked by release
United Prose InternaH—tal_______
TAMPA - A puzzled und hurt
Donald Igwebuike. waived Monday
despite a glittering five-year record
as Tampa Bay's kicker. Is still
awaiting the reason behind his
release.
Igwebuike. who has converted all
41 of his career field goal attempts
from 34 yard* or less, lost the
kicking battle against rookie free
agent Sieve Christie, who went
unaruucu
im becoming
uvwuiuittg William
ww**•*«•••• &amp;
undrafted aafter

Mary's career scoring champion.
Tampa Bay Coach Ray Perkins
indicated Christie's youth and supe­
rior leg strength on kickoffs were
critical factors In the decision to
release the popular Igwebuike. a
10th-round pick In 1985 out of
Clcmson.
.
"I'm still waiting to hear why. I
don't understand." Igwebuike said
at his home In Tampa. "I showed up
to run yesterday and (wide receiver!
Mark Carrier told me. Good luck.'
Coach Perkins called me In and said

Z E L L W O O D S T A T IO N — T h e N ational
Cremation Society will sponsor the First Annual
Florida Hospital Apopka Tennis Tournament on
Wednesday. Oct. 10. at the Zellwood Station
Country Club.
All proceeds will be donated to the Florida
Hospital Apopka for the purchase of equipment.
The tournament Is a round robin format
limited to a 32 draw.
One round will start at 8 a.m. with the second
round set to begin at 10 a.m. Each player will
play 25 no-ad gam es to complete one round.
The entry fee of 820 per player Includes court
fees, tennis balls, lunch and prizes. There will
also be a special donation draw for several
valuable Items. Corporate sponsorships are
available.
For more Information, call Judy Opdyke al
886-3723-

MIAMI - The Miami Dolphins traded a conditional
late-round draft choice to Atlanta for Journeyman nose
tackle Shawn Lee Monday while releasing 12 players
and placing two others on Injured reserve.
Jackie Cline, waived after being paid an Injury
settlement for his bruised thigh, was the only player
released who played with the Dolphins a year ago. Cline
was picked up from Miami by Atlanta under Plan B last
winter, released by the Falcons last week and signed by
the Dolphins Thursday.
_
.
.
lie Injured his thigh on Friday during the Dolphins
20-17 loss to Minnesota.
Offensive lineman Stacy Scarels. an offensive line­
man. was given a settlement for his toe Injury. Shula
said both Cline and Scarels could be re signed during
the season by the Dolphins, who open their regular

□ 7 :3 0 p m . -

USA. U.S. Open. ID

□D m Discs, Page 81

* m e lts i f al
ol M
f 'W P
.n ffllllld .
season CSunday
New
England.
Placed on Injured reserve, making them Ineligible for
the rest of the season, were comcrback Donnie Elder, a
Plan B acquisition from Tampa, and free agent tackle
Dave Popp.
. „
Cut were tight end Greg Baty. guard Tony Brown,
defensive end Jeff Faulkner, comerback African Grant,
linebackers Chris Hacrlng and Stacy Harvey, fullback
Garrett Llmbrick. nose tackle Jeff Roth, wide receiver
Thomas Woods and lineman Jim Zdlar.
. . . . .
Shula also said linebacker Barry Krauss. who led the
Dolphins in tackles last year, underwent arthroscopic
surgery on his left knee Monday and wl I be out throe to
four weeks. He said Kraus* would be placed on Injured
reserve Tuesday, opening up another roster ^
which
could be filled by picking up a player from the waiver
wire.

N E W YORK — Steffi Graf,
her two biggest rivals already
e llm ln a te d T p e rso n a lly r e ­
m oved the d a rlin g o f the
crowd from the U.S. Open
Monday with a 6-1. 6-2 victory
over Jennifer Capriati.
T h e m u ch a n tic ip a t e d
s h o w d o w n b e t w e e n th e
w orld's best wom an player
and the 14-year-old prodigy
w as a runaway disaster as
Oraf. the two-time defending
c h a m p io n , sped to a 53minute victory for a berth In
the quarterfinals.
Boris Becker, the m en's de­
fending champion, endured a
much more difficult struggle
than did his West Oerman
c o m p a trio t b e fo re e d g in g
Australian Darron Cahill 2-6.
62.6-3.3-6.6-4.
No. 4 seed Andre Agassi
coasted Into the quarterfinals,
sweeping 11 games In a row in
downing No. 13 Jay Berger.
75. 6-0. 6-2. In 1 hour. 50
minutes.
P e r h a p s too m u c h w a s
expected o f Capriati, w h o
begins ninth grade next week
in Boca Raton. Fla., and the
pressure w as compounded by
a sellout crowd of 20.000 at
the National Tennis center
solidly behind her.
From 1-1 In the opening set.
Capriati managed merely 11
points In the next eight games,
effectively ending her day.
Capriati, who has a 35-9
record In her first season on
the tour and climbed to No. 14
In the world rankings, said she
absorbed a solid lesson from
the champion.
" I wasn't doing anything out
there." she said. "I wasn't
making the shots. 1 wasn't
going to the net. Next time I
can't let that happen."
GraTs victory, her 18th In a
row at the Open, fittingly
comes on the day she broke
the record for men and women
o f holding the No. 1 world
ranking for 160 weeks.
" I expected a very tough
match, said Graf. 21. " I knew
It wasn't going to be easy to
play her because o f expecta­
tions. but It turned out dif­
ferent. She deserves a lot of
attention, being 14 and doing
so well, but It's not making It
easy for her.''

□D m Dolphins. Pago 8D

Thigpen sets new major league save record
________ _____________________ ______
_____ i™., In
I . Anaheim.
innknim
on___Saturday

UnHad Draaa InlamaNaaal___________________

□ 7 :3 0 p.m. ESPN. Ouklund Athletics at
Boston Red Sox. (L|

told him. 'Good luck, coach.' I
didn't have any reason to expect
this ... 1 did everythin g they
wanted."
Affer holding out during 1989
training camp. Igwebuike received a
considerable raise. He rejoined the
learn and quickly found Perkins In a
critical mood.
"After I signed. I remember the
first kickoff In the next exhibition
game." Igwebuike recalled. "I came

____

UwHcd Pro— Iw lfw M — *_________________________

■

■ADEBALI

t...
&gt;iifi luHui
is* best
lu*sf fur
r Iteam. I
he did
what Is
for (h
the

Miami Dolphins pick up noss tackle
___________________

Zellwood Station Tournament

one. Lake Mary will play Seminole, In game two It will
be Oviedo squaring off with Lake Howell, game three,
Lake Mary and Lake Howell, game four, Oviedo and
Seminole, game five, Seminole and Lake Howell and
game six, Lake Mary and Oviedo.

l

CHICAGO — Ex-Scmiuolr Community College
Ih u m * hall player Bobby Thigpen set u major
league record for saves In a season and Carlton
Fisk smacked a lie-breaking homer In the sixth
Inning Monday night to boost the Chicago White
Sox loa 4-2 victory over the Kansas City Royal*.
Thigpen, whose 47 saves are more than any
major league leant except Oakland, started the
ninth. He retired Kevin Seltzer on a ground ball
and after a single. George Brett grounded Into a
double plav.
He had tied Dave Rlghettl’s mark of 46 saves

Thiuncii. whose
whose
Thigpen,
previous single-season best wus 34 saves in 1988
and '89. now has appeared In 65 games. Rlghettl
set the mark in 1986 In 74 games, finishing 68.
Fisk's blast. Ills 15th of the season and a major
league record 330th as a catcher, made a winner
of Wayne Edwards. 4-3. who pitched 2 2-3
innings In relief.
The home run. off Kevin Appier. 11-5. was the
351st of Fisk's eareer. to move him Into u lie with
Dick Allen for 42nd on the all-time list.
Fisk went 3 for 4. with a single, a double and
the homer.
Robin Ventura added an RBI single with wo

out In the eighth for the final runrun.
Kansas City took a 2-0 lead In the Aral. Bill
Pecota singled and one out later, reached third
on Brett's double, the 545th o f h i s ^ r . D a n n y
Tarlabull then doubled to right, driving In both
Pecota and Brett.
Chicago tied the game 2-2 In the fourth on a
pair of sacrifice flies. Dan Pasoua singled to lead
off and reached third on Fisk * double. Frank
Thomas (lew out to center. • c ° r ^ P M q u ^ « m d
Fisk advanced to third on a passed ball before
tallying on Ventura's ffv ball.

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la id , M , M i M In Monday'a

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