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County tine* 1«0t

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83rd Ym t , N o . 272 -iSsnford, Florida

HRS modernizes operation

N E W S D IG E S T

Installation of computer to improve services in county

TS m S S S r

B v m e ft
Hsrsld Staff Writer

Ram coach wine modal
NAPERVILLE. III. - Lake Mary High School'd
M ike Gtbaon bent, folded and contorted hla body
on hla way to a bronze medal In the hammer
throw at the 1901 TAC Masters U.S.A. Track
and Field Championships this past weekend.
B e e P e fs I I .

□ N o p lt
Vines enhance landscape

SANFORD — Thousands o f county residents
having dealings with HRS services will find a
highly Improved operation In the near future.
The changes will be brought about through the
Installation o f a new social services computer
system In Sanford, the county seat o f Seminole
County.
District Administrator Paul Snead said. "Th e
Sanford office o f Health and Rehabilitative
Services Is one o f several operations In (he State
to undergo changes that will result In faster and

^The Sanford office is one of
several in the State to undergo
changes that will result in faster
and easier operations: j
-Paul Snood
—
i— —
easier operations."
Snead added. "T h e new equipment Is already
In place, and we have people already Involved In
the training process." Snead expects Sanford to

be fully operational within a couple of months.
The Sanford HRS office Is located al 107 V* N.
Oak Avenue. Because of the scope o f It's
operations, the specific number o f people In the
Sanford area (hat will benefit from the new
computerized operations could not be de­
termined.
HRS workers In the Orlando main office
estimate the total number of persons ranges In
the thousands. Including 5.118 people In Semi­
nole County who receive food stamps. Other
programs offered Include child support, aid to
dependent children and medicaid. .

□8 m H M , Fags 8A

Commission
to discuss
pool at SHS

Vines can be a colorful addition to the
character o f your landscape.

□ Local
Tex vote tomorrow
SANFORD — Voters will decide tommorrow
whether to Increase the county sales tax or to
face an almost certain property tax Increase to
Im prove roads.

By NICK PFB1PAUP
Herald Staff Writer

Utah upside down on map
S A L T LAKE CITY - Utah residents are used
to being called backward &gt;- but not upside
down.
A n eight-page spread In the French magazine
L e Figaro Included glowing accounts, pictures o f
breathtaking scenery and a map that turned the
Beehive State upside down and placed Idaho
and W yoming within Its borders.
* T v e heard people tell us before we’ re
backward, but not upside down." laughed Fred
Ball, president of the Salt Lake Area Chamber o f
Commerce.
Depending on how you look at It, the map
shows one Utah valley floating In the Great Salt
Lake not far from the Arizona border. Wyoming
is a stone’s throw from Ogden. Utah, and Idaho
appears to be the state's northernmost commu­
nity.
T f t r m p o r a r fr o m -M a le tourism officials?

C ’est la vie. The faux pas Is forgiven by the
exposure Utah received, they said.
"W h at can you say?" said Joe Rutherford of
the Utah Travel Council. "On the whole. It was a
really good magazine article. Just because the
m ap Is messed up won’t keep people from
com ing here."
Vera Novak. Utah's tourism agent In Brussels.
Belgium, said the mlx up was brought to the
attention of Le Figaro after It appeared In all
815.000 copies o f the June 22 edition. A
correction will not be forthcoming, she said.

Ministers make parachute lump
ALBANY. Ore. — Three ministers praised the
Lord by getting a little closer to Him — literally
— In a parachute Jump to celebrate completion
o f their new church.
Naturally, they prayed before boarding the
plane Saturday.
.
"Lord , you said In Isaiah that our spirits could
soar like eagles. ... W e’re claiming that today."
intoned the Rev. Dan Ketchum. senior pastor of
the Church o f the Nazarene In Albany, about 60
m iles south o f Portland.
T h e Rev. Mike O'Neill Joked about wearing
special undergarments in case fear got the
better of his bladder.
"Y ou know. I had Just been asking the Lord to
show me something I could do outside the
church. I never thought this would be It." said
the Rev. Karen Bull.
Th e Jump was a gift from church member Ken
S c o f i e l d , an e x p e r ie n c e d Jum per w h o
parachuted at ground-breaking ceremonies for
the new 54.000-square-foot church four years
ago.
"1 felt the wind of the spirit suportlng me ...
what a ride." said Ketchum. "I luid no sensation
o f movement In free-fall. I felt like I was Just
hanging out."

From staff reports

n w te 'b y C*ry Vo*«l

July called for a double celebration. Seated from left: Herb and Marlon Lesquier. observing their 50th
anniversary with granddaughter Amende, 6, Louise and Henry Stelnmeyer, Marlon's parents, colebrating their
71st anniversary. Standing: Leequlere* daughter-in-law Joann and son Rick hold grandson Justin, 3.

All the world loved to party
when-couple-wed after WW II
Pair mark 71st
anniversary on
USA birthday
By LACY DOMKN
Herald People Editor
SANFORD - When Henry und
Loulac S teln m ey er m arried,
flappers danced the Charleston.
French champagne was In vogue
and the world loved a party after
recovering from World War 1. It
was July 4. 1920.
Although they didn't dance.
Friday the Stclnmcyers toasted
each other with champagne at a
party In celebration of their 71st
wedding anniversary, held al
Lakevlcw Nursing Center, where
Stelnmeyer. who will be 95 al
the end of the month, now
r e s id e s . A ls o p re s e n t and
celebrating a 50th anniversary
July 6. were the couple's daugh­
ter. Marion Lesquier. and her
husband. Herb, with whom
Louise lives In Orlundo.
S teln m eyer. confined to a
wheelchair, dosed his eyes und
hummed lo the music he and
Louise, nicknamed his Sugar­
plum long ugo. have listened to
over the years.
He said the couple honey-

Henry and Louise Stelnm eyer
mooned In the Pocono Moun­
tains.
"It scented like every Itody was
there.” lie chuckled,
lie said he couldn't have been

Teachers oppose mandatory testing
NEA president: Education reform
should start from the ‘bottom up’

Classifieds...... 41,11 Movies......
Cemles................. Natien............
Crossword............ People...........
Dear AM y............. SB
......
Booths................... SA Sports......
BdHorlol................. 4A Television.
.......... SA Woothor....
...........SB World......

By KIRK I
Associated Press

.1B,

More steamy heat
Partly cloudy with
I hr high In Ihr low lo
mid 90s and a vari­
able wind al 5 to IO
mph.

For more weather, see Pape SA

MIAMI BEACH - The president of
Ihe national teacher's union says
their resounding vole In opposition
lo mandulury national testing of
students sends Ihe message that
education reform should com e
“ from the bailom up. nol the top
down."
"It sim ply Is a rculfirmallon of our
Insistence that wc will not support a
federally mandated testing pro­
gram." Nutlunul Education Associa­
tion president Keith Geiger said
during the union's annual meeting
here.
President Hush's Education Policy
Advisory Committee In early Jaiiu
ary proposed creatin g national
standards mid tests to measure
student performance. Such stan­
dards would set out the skills and

knowledge lo lx* learned at various
ages and grade levels, beginning at
age 9.
"W e can't rout Ilute to light the
dropout rate und simultaneously
send our students a message that a
single day ol testing will lx- the end
go.il to the school year." said Hetty
Kraemer of the New Jersey delega­
tion. who sponsored the testing
resolution.
T h e N E A le c ls the te s tin g
hom ogenizes the students and
would lx* "contrary to the diverse
Interests and needs ol children."
according lo the resolution passed
by delegates in an overwhelming
voice vote.
Michael McKay, an elementary
school teacher from Hlixmilngton.
III. told delegates: "These pre test
pressures ... really set these stu
dents up to fall."
See Teachers. Page 5A

J . U J ' I T F V - U . ' M . I ! I' £ T T T y ? ! T T T T r t T C T W

yFiRv* **

* ‘ f ft'-

happier In Ills marriage
‘ *1 certullll) dlil have a good
lime. Il went hv like two days,
lie sighed. "T h at's how InterS ee C eleb rate, Page 5A

SANFORD The question o f
building a swimming pool at Semi­
nole High School Is to be discussed
by (he Sanford City Commission
meeting tonight. The question Is
whether or not to support the
Seminole County School Board In
arranging financing for the pool.
Work has been under way by city
staff personnel for several months
on the various aspects o f agree­
ments and actions required to move
ahead with the project. The School
Board Staff has also been working
on the project. Including prepara­
tion o f a request for a grant
application lo the state. It will seek a
partial funding o f the pool con­
struction cost. The application will
have lo be received in Tallahassee
by no later than August 1st.
If the city agrees to pursue the
Joint swimming pool arrangement,
it would be necessary to approve an
interlocal agreement with the school
hoard, and adopt some type o f
resolution of support for the PECO
grant application. This would have
lo be accomplished by no later than
July 22.
Sanford Director of Parks Jim
Jcrnlgan said Ihe questions o f what
lo build and where to build It have
already been basically determined.
"W hat wc have to do now Is figure
out how wc can fluid It." he said.
Consideration o f a general obliga­
tion bond referendum that will deal
with (h r project Is also on the
agenda for Monday night's meeting.
As pre-planning continued during
Ihe past several months, an original
cost o f t l has escalated. The figure
is now estimated at $1,486 minion.
City Manager 1)111 Simmons expects
p o s s ib ly (3 0 0 .0 0 0 m ig h t be
trimmed from the cost with the
elimination of certain facilities and
ussorlutcd equipment which uppear
lo be beyond l i e reasonable scope
of the swimming pool facility.
Jcrnlgan dcsrrlttcd the proposed
swimming pool as a Junior Olympic
size, approximately 75 ferl long,
with u minimum of 6 lanes and u
diving lunk.
School Board figures estimate
p o s s ib ly as m an y as 3 0 ,0 0 0
swimmers would use Ihe pool dur­
ing an average year. In addition lo
Seminole High School, the facility
would also lx- used lor swimming
classes by other local schools. It Is
also projected that Ihe YMCA or
t See Pool. Page SA

M SCJj

SCHOOL GRIPES
What kida h at* about school

Being bored T
Poor gra d e s [
H o m e w o rk £
U nfair te achers £
Te sts Q
Stupid rules l

wvl

L u n ch : too short, |
7^ \
yucky fo o d 1-------------a j
Gym |

B%1

Too m u ch w o rk |

S%|

Other things I

7% \
MA

Sou*c • Zillions

Boredom is Ihe No 1 qnpe Kids have nboul school. Poor grades and home­
work also ranked high on Ihe complain! list, as did unlair teachers and tests.

- iT T

'U J.M TH T

1“

I

�NEWS

FROM

THE

REGION

AND

ACROSS THE

STATE

Economy, labor, quality of life inviting to big business

no Lono winner
TALLAHASSEE — This w eek's Florida Lotto grand prize
jackpot Jumped to an estimated 914 million when no lucky
ticket turned up with aU aU o f the number* drawn late
Saturday In the weekly game.
The number* were 3-&amp;8-14-41-42.
Although no one matched all six, 160 tickets had five o f the
number* and are worth 94 .523JO each to thetr owners. There
were 9J01 four-of-aix tickets, worth 9113.50 each, and
300.745 threeoTete winner* worth 90 each.
Jackpot estimates, figured on a 20-year payout to one
winner, are based on sale* projections, long-term Investment
rates end hinds from rollover*

iiw v «vvivv!hiiwvv onvo Djf nm nng omovf
T A L L A H A S S E E — In s u ra n c e C o m m is s io n e r T om
Gallagher's office diaertminated against a company that
hwt year by rejecting a rste-hlke
_
’** office violated both the law and its own rules
when U turned down Golden Rule Insurance Co. o f Indianapolis
in December, hearing officer DtaneKieattng said in i
Department officials aaid Friday that they are Ukdy to follow
the 30
X) percent
policyholders in Florida.
Gallagher aaid the hike was rejected without his knowledge
and that his inspector general would Investigate how tt
happened.

VohmtMra ptant tht town
LAKE PARK — Volunteers unhappy about the town's
appearance spent a day planting hibiscus trees end more than
200 plants on the Town Hall lawn.
Within days, the four 5-loot trees were gone.
"I'm m ad." said Mayor Belinda Baldwin, who helped vrtth
the landscaping project in this Palm Beach County community.
She helped formed the Gardening Chib vohmteera to clean
up and landscape public areas.
"T h e town's appearance sms going downhill." the mayor
We decided something had to be done, so we took it on
'ourselves to do It.”
The Town Hall image was spruced up June 29. but the trees
disappeared Wednesday night.
The landscapers sreren't discouraged. They plan to meet
today to plan Future projects..

Pilot's dMtti •xpMwti
KEY WEST — The combination o f bad weather and human
error contributed to the death o f a Navy pilot whose training Jet
disappeared In clouds while flying In formation, a Navy
investigation report aaid.
Lt. J.g. Christopher Coston. 25, was flying with three other
Jets when his jet crashed shortly alter takeoff from Key West
Naval Air Station on a flight to the carrier Lexington last Jan.

20.

The pilot "became disoriented In the clouds and flew into the
sea," Rear Adm. Jimmie Taylor, chief o f naval air training,
wrote in the report. "H e was probably killed instantly."
In heavy cloud caver. Coaton was flying in the outside
position in the formation and probably couldn't see the horizon
to orient himself. Investigators concluded.
The only wreckage found by search teams were pieces o f a
survival kit from the Navy Jet.
*
Lt. Cmdr. Robert Oarrlgonj^jfltO .'Jrtgte thr flnal report;:
advised training officers to monitor the weather more carefully.'

‘ *----------------- nrum

MoEGuito diflM r n n o rfd Bu nina
LAND O' LAKES - Much o f Florida should be free o f
encephalitis this summer, but s leading researcher believes the
Gulf Coast still may be a breeding ground for the sometimes
feta) disease.
Only three of 25 wild birds tested recently In Pasco County
showed Immunity, which develops from exposure to the St.
Louis encephalitis vints, said Jonathan Fielding Day, a
University o f Florida entomology professor.
Florida's worst outbreak In years killed eight people and
afflicted about 200 people last year. Day said Friday he plana
testa in Sarasota this month to determine the level o f immunity
there.

Custody tMttto centers on adoption
FORT LAUDERDALE - A British teen-ager and state child
welfare workers are fighting over who has the right to put her
2-week-old son up for adoption.
The 19-year-old mother gave birth to the boy June 20 at Holy
Crass Hospital but disappeared (he same morning.
Five days later, she and an attorney aaid she got frightened
and left.

From Associated Press reports

MIAMI — T h e pull o f Florida and the push
o f the Northeast are combining to bring big
companies to the fastest-growing state In
Chemical maker W.R. Orace A Co. is
moving Its corporals staff o f 450 from
Manhattan Into a vacant 10-atory building
in tony Boca Raton In August.
Salomon Brothers Inc. announced In
March R would become the Aral major
brokerage firm to move a large division out
o f New York City. Salomon will move its
back-office operation, which processes
The 1Smooth-old AT &amp; T Universal credit
.card operation employs 2.000 people in
Jacksonville, world headquarters for the
10.5-million card network.
American Express, Time-Life. Citibank.
Chase Manhattan. IBM, Prudential Insur­
ance and others have opted for a sizable
presence in the nation's fourth-largest and

^The reason Florida was
selected: we're going to
save money on relocation
and real estate and people, j
fourth-faateat growing state.
"T h e reason Florida was selected
purely for economic reasons," said Grace
spokesman Fred Bona. "W e ’i r going to save
some money on the relocation and real
estate and people. We're estimating maybe
95 million annually after the Initial m ove."
The growing sophistication o f computer
networks nullifies the need for a physical
link to corporate headquarters, which works
against a traditional Northeast base.
The economic magnets in Florida Include
an inviting corporate tax. policy, no income
tax and lower housing prices.
In terms o f quality o f lUe. nothing in

Florida Is very far from the beach and
barbecue weather taels year-round. Com­
muting can be tough in Miami but it's
"W e looked at some 100 cities around the
country and then narrowed tt down to 12.
For Solomon, the corporate thinking
that "cconomicaEy it made a lot o f i
From a technical atandpotnff w e n
had to be in the W all Street area. W e looked
at 72 cities. W e got down to a final eight,
then we got It down to a final tw o ."
Competing with Columbus. Ohio, tar the
final*, Tampa came out ahead on the
quality o f life and " a good feeling from the
public and private sectors that they will help
make this w ork." aaid Salomon spokesman
Mark Stemfeld.
service

inuUMnct, m uen

m ore mooue

than manufacturers, tend to chase the labor
pool, and far A T A T , Florida won in that
category.

Marino Patrol
anforcamant
‘haphazard*

State farming future clouded
with development continuing

TALLAH ASSEE — The Florida
Marine Patrol has a record o f
uneven enforcement o f commer­
cial fishing laws and regulations,
some critics charge.
Am ong the critics is Jerry
Sanaom, executive director o f
Organized Fishermen o f Florida,
which represents 1,700 com­
mercial fishermen statewide.
"T h e y sort o f look for excuses
as to why a particular law can't
be enforced," he aaid.
He called the patrol's en­
forcement “ haphazard."
"S om e p la n s and some of­
ficer* teem to do a good, com‘ ‘ i and some officers
seem to feel that enforcing
marine resources laws takes
them away from doing more
important things." Sanaom said.
R u ssell N elson , e x e c u tiv e
director o f the Florida Marine
Fisheries Commission, said hit
board sees “ a lot o f variation
from district to district in thetr
ability and commitment to en-

Agriculture has been losing
clout In Florida's economic
rankings for decades and
some say the trend Is almost
certain to continue.
No one predicts farming will
ever fade from the Sunshine
State. It la still a large and
Important segm ent o f the
state • economy.
Total farm sales are about
S6 button a year — or about
9400 far every Florida resi­
dent. Processing, packaging,
transportation and other costa
pump that figure up to 916
bitlJon and helps the Industry
account for one o f every six
Jobs In the state, mirroring
the national average.
For some crops — citrus,
tomatoes, sugar cane, foliage,
watermelons and honey, for
example — Florida leads the
nation.
Yet the Industry finds that
a s th e s ta t e g r o w s 'a n d
diversifies, farm in g'* total ■
contribution shrinks jn rela-

Commission
show three instances in
diffet'ent ‘parts o f Florida Ih
re c e n t y e a rs In w h ich the
patrol’s enforcement o f marine
laws has been questioned. The
Tampa Tribune reported Sun­
day.

1cm clout, which could spur
further decline.
The U.8. Census Bureau
■hows there are fewer than
37,000 fanner* in Florida,
few er than h a lf o f whom
count farming as thetr prin­
cipal occupation.

"People's perceptions are dif­
f e r e n t . " s a id A n n a M a rie
Hartman.

e total of 8784

Lawmakers boost pensions by working for state
TALLAHASSEE - By moving
into high-paying state Job*. 18 of
the last 86 state lawmakers to
leave the Legislature reportedly
d o u b le d o r t r i p l e d t h e t r
pensions.
"It stinks.” said Ted Burt,
regional director o f the American
Federation o f State. County and
Municipal Employees, which
represents most unionized state
workers.
"T h e system Is unfair in the
way it treats its highest-paid

highest-ranking officials com­
pared to how it provides for the
a v e ra ge rank-and-file public
employee."
T h e d iffe r e n c e b e tw e e n
le g is la to rs w h o trip le th eir
pensions and the ones who don't
can add up to millions o f dollars.
" T h e s e kin d s o f fla gra n t
abuses do nothing but diminish
public c on fid en ce." Dom inic
Calabro. president o f Florida
TaxWatch Inc., told The Tampa
Tribune. “ They serve no one
well, other than the Individual
la w m a k e rs w h o ab u se the

system for their own personal Calabro said.
profit."
T h e tw o key variables In
Lawm akers should neither figuring a pension are length of
suffer nor be rewarded finan­ service and the rate o f pay
cially for public service. Calabro during the five highest-salaried
said.
years o f service.
"Clearly public service as a
Lawmaker* have an advan­
legislator is not a financial tage over rank-and-file state
burden." he said. "W e've got io em p loyees because it takes
make sure it does not become a legislators only eight years to
bonanza."
.qualify for a pension, two fewer
Lawmakers arc mistreating a than other state worker*.
retirement system that already
T h a t m e a n s m o s t s ta t e
treats them better than nearly employees earning 923,000 a
all other state workers and their year over 10 year* would have a
counterparts In many states. 93.680 annual pension.

i*jln

L v i a
MIAMI' Hors ora Iho winning
Lotto numbnr* sowetsd Satur­
day in Iho Florida Lottery:
Si$M1-144XM2

Her* irt Iho winning num*

P D d itS V S : 8“nd*

,h*

THE WEATHER
.
*
— ----- —.... ^
i inVfiili* l ikdilYJ B
Today...Partly cloudy with a
4 0 percent chance o f afternoon
and evening thundershowers.
High in the low to mid 90s.
W inds variable 5 to lOmph.
W 9D M E1D AY
FRIDAY
TUESDAY
Tonight...Turning fair with a
M
s
ly
C
ld
y
91-72
M s ly C ld y 91-72
P
tly
C
ld
y
91P
tly
C
ld
y
91-72
P
tly
C
ld
y
91-73
73
low In the low to mid 70s. Light
wind.
Tuesday...Partly cloudy with a
r 1 ■ &gt; • i t W B M a iiB iiM y p M
hj .
tv
ja
40 percent chance o f scattered
afternoon thundershowers. High
T h e h igh tem perature in
in he mid 90s. Wind southwest 5
SOLUM A ll T A B L E ) Min. 3:25 Sanford Sunday was 95 degrees
LAST
to lOmph.
J u ly 14 a.m.. 3:40 p.m.: MaJ. 9:30 a.m.. and the overnight Jow was 75 as
July 4
E x ten d ed fo re c a s t...P a rtly
10.00 p.m. TID E S : Dtytasa reported by the University o f
c lo u d y W ed n es d a y th rou gh
Beach:
h igh * 5:54 a.m.. 6:38 Florida Agricultural Research
Friday with a chance o f after­
p.m.:
lo w * 11:59 a.m.. 1206 and Education Center. Celery
___.
p.n
noon showers. Lows in the mid
p.m .; New Smyrna Beach: Avenue.
70s and highs In (he low to mid
highs. 5:59 a.m., 6:43 p.m.;
90*
R ecorded rain fall for the
lows. —a.m.. 12:11 p.m.; Cocoa period, ending at 9 a.m. Mon­
t h igh * 6:14 a.m.. 6:58 day. totalled .69 Inches.
T ig s
Boi
p.m.; lows. —a.m.. 12:26 p.m.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
c*y
today was 84 d egrees and
Apalachicola
Sunday’s overnight tow was 76.
Daytona Base*
FI. Law*BaacS
as recorded by the National
FarlMyara
t» 71 M
I
t
.
A
u
gu
stin
e
ta
J
u
p
ite
r
In
le
t
Weather Service at the Orlando
Waves urc 1
GaJnatvIlla
N II S
Today: Wind south lo south­ International Airport.
HomakMad
*4 74 .3*
foot with a slight chop. Current
Jacksonville
*1 7) 04
Other Weather Service data:
is to the south with a water west less than 10 knots except
Kay Waal
*i ■) as
an onshore sea breeze 10 knots
□
B
n n d a y’ s h ig i..................9 9
temperature o f 84 degrees. New
t t 77 -)l
n m at Smyrna Beach: Waves are 1-2 near the coast during the after­ [IB a r a a u tr ic p r c u n r o .3 0 . il
V 77 J7
□ B o ln tiv o H um idity ....7 7 p et
noon. Seas 2 fret or less. Bay
Saratota
n 74 .04 feel and glassy. CurTcnl is to the and inland w aters sm ooth. □Wind*.............N o rth 5 mph
Tallahauee
*3 44 *4
south, with a water temperature
d R a in fa ll.........................O In.
Widely scattered late afternoon
n 7) so of 83 degrees.
Vare Bases
n 74 07
thunderstorms mainly near the
□ T o d n y 'o sunset
9:26 p .a *
W Palm Bases
n 77 44
coast. Tonight: Wind south tu □ T o m o rr o w 's su n riu ....9 :3 4
southwest 5 lo 10 knots. Seas 2
feet or less.

la r a n s n c s

lu m a vm i
Monday, July 8, 1901
Vol. 83, No. 272
n s »m
Florida and

P04TMASTIR; Sand i
_____
IpTHS SANFOSO Hi HALO. P A
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*■
L m U n Z Z Z E
Temperature* Indicate preview* Cay'»
high and overnight law.
City
M La P rt 0*U
Atlanta
44 71
cdy
Boatan
74 *S .4* d r .
Chicago
U *7 33 cdy
Cloveland
n 44
cdy
D allas F t Worth
*4 73
cdy
Detroll
*3 77
cdy
FWrtonJu
Tt 14
dr
Forgo
73 *3
dr
F lagttaft
m S3 41 cdy
Honolulu
m 77
dr
Indianapoin
*3 73
cdy
Jackton.M lu
44 73 M 4 cdy
Junaou
m 31
m
Konoao City
M l 77
cdy
Lm VogM
143 7*
m
lo o Angelo*
•7 44
dr
H rry k l I
•4 74
cdy
Milwaukee
44 4* 1.74 cdy
7* 44 .It cdy
Mg«» s i Pout
Naahvllle
H 77
cdy
New Or leant
rn
74 71 3.37
Now York City
47 71 .47 cdy
NortoUuVe•4 74
dr
North Platte
IS *3
cdy
Oklahoma City
4* 74
cdy
Omaha
cdy
*1 74
Philadelphia
*1 74 .44 d r
Phoonii
** 44
dr
Richmond
*7 71
dr
Sacramento
dr
*3 3*
St Loult
too 7*
cdy
Salt Lake City
cdy
*3 *3
San Diego
74 *4
cdy
Sen Juan.P R.
•4 77
cdy
Sente Fa
*4 43
cdy
St Sle M arla
•3 33 43 cdy
Seattle
•3 33
dr
Shreveport
*3 73
cdy
Sloui Falla
•1 M .13 cdy
Spokane
■I 4f
dr
Syracuse
as 44 .33 d r
Topeka
101 7)
dr
Tucion
n 73 41 cdy
T ulle
n 74
dr
n 74
Waohlngton.DC.
dr
W ichita
144 74
dr

1

�■ ■

Postal brass receive bonuses
Execs rewarded despite agency! lose of $1.4 billion
FITTBMJBOH CAP) — . t a t a l Service
isesttvea naUeawMs eoBectsd nearly S30
M o o la bonuses durlna a three-year

was unfair to tie executive bowusea to the
financial performance a t the Postal Service.
He said Die agency doesn't operate bhe a

In bonuses. ibenewepapereaSd.
Chicago received the f o n t rating In tli
country far overall performance. Just 0

Prank said be was examining ways to
revamp the bonus system.
The Chtcfap dtvMon. for example, loot
•143 million in the post three years, but S3
Its executives collected a total o f •503.396

Lots In name,
Schwarzkopfs
discovering

with Intent to sell and nnssr mien ofdru gp araphanelta.
Both Lewis and Bf gham were transported to the John E. M k
Correctional Facility and held on 06.000bond apises.

Warrant arratt

S e b w a r ttk o p fa a n d
flchwartxkoflk are
be­
in g b o m b a r d e d w i t h
strange telephone calls.
maU addm aed to the gen-

sun

Charles Rafael Knotts. 30, o f 33 Cowan Mougbtoa in SanfanL
was arrested Friday. He was charged with fatttng la appear tn
court on charges o f disorderly conduct. He w as transported to
the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and held tn heu o f MOO
bond.

Multipla ehargaa fllad
Frederic Lawrence Keller. 39. o f 904 W. 90th St. In Sanford,
was arrested on Saturday morning. He w as charged with
restating arrest without violence, obstructing Juadce by uatng a
false name, driving with a revoked driver ficenae and driving
under the influence.
According to the arrest report. Keller waa stopped far driving
erratically through Lake Mary. When asked far Ida driver
license he said It was at home. He aOegedfa gave the name
Michael Keller, whom the computer ahwred to have a valid
license.
Under further questioning, he allegedly g m e hla date o f btrth
differently on aeparate occasions. He also failed the alcohol teat.
Keller waa transported to the John K. Polk Correctional
Facility and held on MOO bond.

Burglary ehargml
Joseph Charles Baker. 30. o f S IS E. 8th St., tn Sanford, waa
arrested on Saturday morning. He waa charged with burglary
to an occupied dwelling.
^^wcm uwM ndfedSanfard Police a n ^ d en tM a d B a k er as the
When she refused him. he allegedly klcfcsd tba door in. m U * ‘
He e u arrested a short tirrie later, and transported to the
John E. Polk Correctional Facility and held In Ueu o f 35,000
bond.

DUI arraata
Michael Wesley Gray. 33. o f 1313 Lake Drive. In Caaaelbervy.
at the intersection o f 1-4 and State Road 436 tn Altamonte
Springs on Friday.
Peter Paul Dumas. 30. o f 4015 Barwood Drive, in Oriando, on
1-4 In Altamonte Springs on Saturday.
William Davidson Tuggle. 97, o f 490 Lake Bridge Plata
Drive. In Ormond Beach, waa arrested at VMoba. 965 Douglas
Ave.. In Altamonte Springs, on Saturday.
Douglas Keith Gordon. 46. o f 6607 Markham Rd. In Sanford,
was arrested on M . near the Orange County line, and charged
with driving under the Influence.

DUI crackdown
nets 80 arrests
ORLANDO — State troopers in
four urban countie* have been
nosing around neighborhoods In
street clothes, spying with bin­
oculars and using unmarked
cars and even bicycles.
As part o f a pilot program
called Operation Roundup, they
had orders to track and arrest
people still driving despite five or
more drunk-drivtng convictions
and revoked licenses.
The results after six months:
80 arrests In Orange. Dade.
B row ard, and H illsb o ro u g h
counties. That's fewer than the
troopers' boss had hoped — but
enough that he's keeping the
program alive for now.
"There is no silver bullet for
this problem, but I think Opera­
tion Roundup is a moderate
success." said Florida Highway
Patrol Director Bobby Burkett.
“ I'm leaning In favor o f expan­
ding It."
The crackdown is already
spreading into other areas. Using
the same investigative and sur­
veillance techniques, the FHP

R ou ndu p te a m s in com in g
weeks will start tracking down
some o f the thousands o f vehicle
owners whose Insurance has
been canceled.
Statewide, an estimated 1.3
mutton vehicles lack Insurance.
That's one reason why car In­
surance Is so costly for the
Florida residents who abide by
the law. Florida statutes require
motorists to be Insured, and
In su ra n ce c o m p a n ie s must
notify the state when policies are
canceled.
A state com puter contains
more than 65,000 tag numbers
o f cars and trucks uninsured for
so tong that police are supposed
to seize the tags. But fearer than
1 percent o f tags have been
seized to date.
In the tour target counties,
troopers will use lists o f canceled
tag numbers, names o f the car
owners and their last known
addresses to locate the cars,
remove the tags and charge the

"In any atore I go to. the
minute you hand them a
charge card they have to
aak.'' said Je a n

Scientists seek to solve
mysteries of lightening
TAM PA CAP) — The sap. crackle and pop o f
Florida lightning will be the focus o f an Intense
study by 100 scientists, engineers and students
for six weeks, begtnnlng today.
The project In Central Florida Includes re­
searchers from 3ft universities who will track
thunderstorms to study electric fields, storm
evolution and rainfall. It represents one o f the
most concentrated projects attempted on the
elusive subject o f lightning.
"T h ere's still some mystery about lightning."
said physicist Rodney Bent, president o f A t­
mospheric Research Systems In Palm Bay. which
monitors lightning activity around the nation.
"T h e r e * still a lack of undentandlng about how
the charge In the cloud to generated."
Technically
nt (CAPE).
Precl|dtatton/Efectfll)catton
the project Involves scientists from the Nat tonal
Center far Atmospheric Research, the National
Aeronautics and Space Admin 1stration (NASA),
the U.S. Air Force, the Federal Aviation Ad­
ministration and the National Weather Service.
Moat will work out o f the National Weather
Service station in Melbourne on the east coast
and tn airplanes or pn the ground In a brood line
across the state to the St. Petersburg area.

Central Florida was the likely place because of
Its Intense thunderstorm activity, spawned bv
high humidity and coastal tmeses. Bent saw.
More than 100 lightning storm days occur each
year In Central Florida, an area considered the
lightning capital o f the nation.
_ Scientists will use specialty modified airplanes,
Doppler radars, thermodynamic balloons and
satellites in hopes o f learning enough about
lightning to better predict the dangerous strikes.
Statistics show lightning has killed 6,000
people In the United States over the fast 34 yean.
Lightning killed 74 people and Injured 299 more
nationwide last year and In Florida. 14 were
killed and 27 Injured, according to a report in
today's Tam pa Tribune.
During the project, the Federal Aviation
Administration will conduct studies on the effect
o f thunderstorms and wind shifts at airports.
"T h ere’s nothing dangerous for commercial
aircraft In flight because the current flows around
the outside o f the plane." Bent arid. “ But when
that plane la com ing In to land and la hit by a
ground stroke, all beta are off. It can literally
puncture the fuel tanka.'*

HARVI Y
Friends and strangers
pose the wune questions:

MORSE

A re you related to the
general? And can you get
m e an a u t o g r a p h e d
picture?

I N V I S I I G AT I O N

678 1500

trace their roots to the
gen era ls ancestors. But
some say the resemblance
Is uncanny.
"M y husband's got that
same short Uttle squatty
nose and he's getting a
Uttle bald on to p ." said
Trlsh Schwarzkopf, whose
b u s in e s s c a r d s h a v e
brought Increased safes at
the C learw ater J e w e lry
store where she works.
" P e o p le Juat a s s u m e
because It's such an un­
usual name that you must
be blood brothers or aomet h i n g , " said Lee
S c h w a r z k o p f of
Hillsborough County.
H er la te h u s b a n d .
Donald, told her for the
first taro years they dated
that his name waa Schwarz
because he thought she'd
be put o ff by his real
surname. He didn't break
the nears about the extra
tout letters until they went
to the county courthouse
for a marriage license.
The general's new-found
fame also has provided Its
share o f benefits to fellow
Schwarzkopfs.
"You go Into stores, and
t h e y 'r e b e n d in g o v e r
backwards for you when
they hear the nam e." Jean
S c h w a rz k o p f to ld T h e
Tampa Tribune.
The New Port R ichey
widow said she gets tables
In restaurants much faster
these days. And a tele­
phone saleswoman agreed
to send her an exclusive
high-fashion c a ta lo g —
even though her husband
was no apparent relation to
Norman.

Chained wife frees self; spouse arrested
ORLANDO — A man was accused o f chaining
his wife around the neck, attaching the chain to a
concrete block and leaving with their young
children for Fourth of July firework*, police said.
Jeffrey Lape. 23. of Orlando waa arrested on
charges of false Imprisonment and spouse abuse
after she called police. He was held on S10.000
bond In the Orange County Jail.
The woman told Investigators she broke free
Friday morning after her husband confined her a
second time in their bedroom and went to work,
said police Lt. Randy Strickland.
Enrlv Thursdav evening. U p e gagged his wife

“ I want bonuses to be higher and more
difficult to attain.'' Prank said. " I would like
to set goals that obviously would be a reach
far someone to attain."

with a bandana, tied her hands with nylon ropr.
wrapped the chain around her neck, secured one
end with a padlock and the other around the
block, and tied her to the bed. Strickland said.
Lape then took their 3-and 4-year-old children
to a fireworks show at Lake Eola Park. They
returned hours later, and Lape ordered his wife to
cook dinner.
T h e next morning. Lape hamm ered the
bednxxn door shut to keep his wife from escaping
while he was at work. Strickland said. She called
police from the bedroom phone, and investigator*
found the rope, chain, padlock and concrete block
on the couple's bed when they arrived

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7i

$ar*w*, Stotts - Monday, Mf $, 1»1

SARAH

OVERSTREET

Achieving equality is

EDITORIALS
A

Americanism
Some thltiqs create a lump In the throat
even for hantened cynics.
On June 22, a quarter-mltton Albanians
pourra into tnc nrtcti &lt;n nrani 10 give
Secretary of State James Dahti a welcome
unUke anytime * * had ever seen. Waving
American flags.
up s (p a that
weucom, Mr. naaer, tnese mountain people
let feelings burst forth that had been
suppressedft
Obviously. the tumult wam’t for Baker, but
for the United States. Baker was the symbol
for an outpouring of sentiment directed
toward America. Ten days dler Albania held
Its first fine election since 1020. Albanians
were cheering us for helping to defeat
communism.
Modesty requires us to decline tsld^s^l t^r^r
much credit. Communten, as M an said of
capitalism, carried the seeds of Its own
destruction. Nevertheless, the Albanians,
despite d—
of isolation under Europe's
worst Leninist experiment, know who carried
highest the tanners of antt-communtsm for
50 years. Somehow, the word got through.
Albania was the last bastion of European
Leninism to foil. Yes, technically, commu­
nists still rule In the Soviet Union. Bulgaria
and Romania, but the party itself Is tn full
retreat. In Yugoslavia, not Juat communism
but the state Itself is disintegrating. In
Albania, the party was in full, gorious power
until recently. The country Is Mill giddy from
its electoral success of June 12.
That's what Albania was telling Jim Baker.
Victory tn the Cold War was a major
Afnencan acneve Rjctu* u Aincnc&amp;ns iorget
that from time to ttane. Albania — as well as
the other East Europeans — win be there to
remind us.

1

...... • ; ; .

Since 1 was a teen-ager I'v e been hearing men
ask. "W hat do women want, anyway?"
1 came o f age at the same tim e aa the women's
m ovemen t, and I have witnessed a foo d long line
o f perplexed men. But I've never blamed them
for being confined. even when I’ ve wanted to run
m y car over a few o f them. Society JuM doesn't
change overnight, and you can't take a guy who
p e w up with things one w ay and make him
Itnm rrilamy understand w hy things ought to be
different, even tfth ey ought to be.
So I’ve always been pretty sympathetic. Pint,
aa I said. I understand why they're confused.
And second, to tell 'em the truth, we're kind of
new at this wom en's liberation thing, too. We

Oakland. Calif., protested vigorously when I
res wanted to Im prove the school's financial
picture by tu rn in g

This conundhun has been wcB-chrontcfed tn
the media: One report talks about women
Bobbers' demand for equal treatment In the
armed forces, and another shows women ralhng
the possibility that women may face the
_____ combat aa men. One magazine airs a
Junior-high girl's fight to join the boys' football
team, while another laments the double bind a
career woman laces when she also wants to be a
mother.
This past year must have been especially
tough for the sbresdy-confined. A little over a
year ago, women students at Mills College In

f l h l $ eon
undrum h a t

program from
women-only to co-ed.
The students argued.
give their arguments
p o w e r, th a t c o ­
educational e d u ca ­
tion tends to produce
their place.'' o r w ho
at least team w ell the
Idea that th e y
shouldn't expect to
achieve equally with

One example cited
JJJdM*
by MUM students la
°
that nearly half o f the
W # media. ■
women now In Con­
gress are graduates
oi women •colleges.
That autistic becomes even more stunning in
light o f the fact that the percentage o f all women
who graduate from all-female colleges Is only 2
percent. Something em powering la happening In

Vote ‘Yes* on sales tax
As a homeowner for over 20 years In Seminole
County. I realize m y taxes were kept low.
Meanwhile our population and that of surrounding
counties doubled and tripled. Our taxes did not
provide the funds to build roads and maintain
(hem on a current basis.
We arc now In a bind. Road gridlock forces our
present County Commission to do something
NOW. If property taxes are raised now. I feel that It
will be very unfair iO retired senior citizens who
may already have difficulty in making ends meet.
Generally these citizens do not travel on the roads
in the morning and evening hours when traffic la
the heaviest. Gridlock Is not caused by them.
Much o f the crowding of our roads Is caused by
working people within our county and from
surrounding areas going lo and from work. College
students usually travel to and from college at the
same time. Another source o f traffic is the
shoppers who drive to our large malls. Twentyseven percent of these shoppers come from outside
our county to use our roads. They should pay for
the privilege. And there ore the tourists who use
our roads. They should contribute.
In summary. It seems to me that aff humeow nr w
(whether senior citizens or not) will find It In their
best Interest to rote YES on the July 9 referendum
on the penny sales tax.
Phil Hagerty
Maitland

other girl wins the right to
It a not hard to conjecture
aturafiy In the
...." . ————— ■■.... —i——
——^ . —i § Jd—If s little girl
gets brio the Boy Scout camp, and then grows up
and goes to MiDs College, w ill she be witting to let
her male ram pm **** tn, too?
Our society has underg one vast sociological
changes over the last 20 years. Correctly
halanring the rights o f self-determination and
free association against the legsl guarantees o f
I la going to take

JACK

ANDERSON

Who sold Iraqis all
the arms anyway?
WASHINGTON - T h e shine la o ff the
victory tn the Persian O u lf War aa patriotism
Is eclipsed by the next Inevitable phase — the
questions about Washington's role In arming
-Saddam Hussein in the years lending up to
the war.
Congressional Investigators ore conducting
an enormous probe Into atkfaUona that the
pro-Iraqi tilt o f the Reaaan and Bush
a d m in is tra tio n s a llo w e d Ir a q to b u y
technology that It later used In weapons
turned against U.S. troops.
In one case we ex
•mined, it
that the Bush ad
ministration not only
winked at the export
o f s e n s i t i v e
technology to Iraq,
but m ay have
stopped legitim a te
law enforcement efh g . to . W y d k t ih .

-

The state of Florida baa mandated
Seminole
County, along with all other local governments in
Florida, must menage their growth. Th e stale does
not mandate that Seminole County spend $490
million. ($300 million funded by a sales tax
increase) on roods over the next ten years, only
that we comprehensively plan far growth, cure
current deficiencies. and fund our plan.
The line o f least resistance o f our government la
to attack trouble with Increased taxes and higher
spending rather than skillfully manage available
resources as the private sector la forced to do.
The majority o f the county commission that sits
today la the same county commission that blithely
gave a green Ught to the developers while Ignoring
county staff and citizen input that the county
Infrastructure could not support that development.
This same commission now wants the taxpayers to
commit to a 1644 percent tax Increase for 10 years
to fund transportation Improvements which would
allow unmanaged development to continue as In
the post.
The county In Its direct mailing “ Information On
Roads" gives voters two choices: a one cent sales
tax Increase or a significant Increase In property
taxes to pay for their proposed needed road
Improvements. This is not true. There Is a third
choice.
The county can revise the comprehensive plan to
stay with the current road building program which
utilizes existing gas taxes and Impact fees on new
development to build the majority o f the roads on
the Hat for the next twenty years.
The answer to “ troubles In Seminole County” la
at the ballot box. both tomorrow and In November
'92 when three county commissioners must stand
for re-election.
Vote NO — force the county government to
manage growth!
Henry L. Pruitt
Oviedo

M ills students won. and M ills remained
. Then the Persian G ulf W ar brought
o f rquality In battle to th* editorial
the
id women fought each other over the
ferociously as they fought men who
And In late spring. 8-year-old
to court seeking the right to
argued that
her psychological harm. But a federal
to forte the Scouts to H 111!* her,
[that the matter would better be decided at
rgency hearing.
^

LETTERS

VotdJNo* on M lr r tax

business

Iff

n jk g g gkyM
f1
W n W W IW .w w WVi

MARTIN SCHRAM

Law and Order liberals emerge
Global headlines warn o f repression In
China, nukes in Iraq, strife In the Slovias, and
crime In Crimea. No wonder President Bush's
New World Order is looking painfully like our
old world disorder.
But late-breaking new s from our own
long-running war — our w ar on crime —
makes d ea r that w e've got a new order, after
all. And It's happened Juat In time to help us
fight the rising rates o f murder and crime right
here at home.
All hall the New American Order!
America's new order was created when our
law enforcement officers teamed up with an
altogether new breed o f pol — the Law and
Order Liberals. Together, they're enacting
tough measures that will make it harder for
crooks to get guns and easier for cops to
safeguard our streets.
The New American Order Is defeating. In
rapid-fire votea In Congress, those one-time
hardliners on crim e — conservatives — who
seem to have deep-sixed their old promises to
crack down on crooks.
It turns out that these conservatives, led by
President Bush, are more fearful of offending
the National Rifle Association's lobbyists than
they are of crooks buying guns where you live.
Now they've fought and lost on measures to
require a modest waiting period for prospective
gun purchasers, so police can comb criminal
records to assure the gun is not being sold to a
felon.
Fear o f the NRA left President Bush and his
d isapp oin tin g attorn ey general, Richard
Thornburgh, afraid lo Juat aay yes. even
though 87 percent o f the nation's gun owners
supported a waiting period, knowing that a
five- or seven-day wait couldn't hurt a citizen
who dealred a gun for purely legitimate
reasons.

captured the political mainstream that con­
servatives thought would be theirs forev­
ermore.
Ever since Richard Nixon first wooed Middle
America with his law and order campaign In
1966, conservatives chortled that they had
painted liberals Into a corner where the entire
Democratic Party would be trapped forever
with an Image o f being soft on crime. Truth be
told, it waa the liberals who had cheerily
grabbed a brush and
helped pain t
themselves Into that
corner. Those were
the days when liber­
als loved to fret in
public places about
the rights o f the ac­
cused — yet seemed
to feel that it was
u n s e e m ly to ta lk
about the rights o f all
other Americana to
live In security at
home.
Now It ta the liber­
f NOW it 18 lha
als who have been
liberals who
quick on the uptake
hav a baan
— and It's the con­
quick on the
servatives who Just
uptake. J
don't get It. Liberals
t r a n s f o r m e d
themselves Into what
I've called Law and Order Liberals. Some, such
as Senate Judiciary Chairman Joseph Blden.
D-Del.. now push measures expanding the
crimes for which the death penalty can be
legal.
But conservatives still haven't grasped what
the latest crime bill battles arc really about.
T h e y 're about security, w ell within our
national borders, when we walk down our own
street or through the darkened parking lot of
the neighborhood mall.

So too. Bush and Thornburgh rejected the
pleas o f our police chiefs, who merely asked
them to ban the domestic assault weapons
they say drug gangs are using to outgun their
cops on our streets. Bush, nervous about the
NRA. has banned only foreign-made assault
guns: but the Senate Just voted to ban the
manufacture of 14 domestic ussault weapons.
In 1989, Thornburgh scaled back plans for a
nationwide computerized criminal records
system. Now the Senate has called for creating
Just such a system, which will eventually
eliminate the need for a waiting period — and
It proposes to give states $100 million to help
automate their records.

The New American Order was forged In the
end because overwhelming majorities In the
Senate and the House decided that our
conservative president simply was not being
tough enough on crime. Surprisingly, it's the
Law and Order Liberals who are leading the
way In the 1990s.

The New American Order turns out to be un
i even bigger story when these recent House and
Senate crime bill votes arc read alongside thr
latest national polls. Here's the big picture:
The combined forces o f Law Enforcement
Officers and Law and Order Liberals have

Letters lo thr editor are welcome. All letters
must be signed. Include the address of the
writer and a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be on a single subject and be
as brief as possible.. Letters are subject to
editing.

LETTERS TO EDITOR

The case centers
on an engineering
consultant and petro­
leum e x p e rt. Bob
Bickel. who worked
IT h • c a • •
for about 20 years as
centers on an
an undercover In­
• n o ln a a rin q
formant for the U.S.
conaultanl
Customs Service. In
and patroieum
the normal course o f
•Xpert. J
Blokel's engineering
work, he would keep
Customs informed about what he thought
were suspicious orders filled for foreign
buyers.
Bickel told our associate Dean Boyd that In
1989 he was hired b y a now -defunct
company in Houston to give advice to a
foreign buyer on oil-related technology. The
Houston company waa acting aa the broker.
The buyer turned out to be an Iraqi, and the
technology he waa shopping for began to look
less like it was made for the ail business and
more like It was made for the war business.
Bickel was riven a shopping list that the
Iraqi wanted filled. Including a phased-ray
antenna system that could potentially be
used in a m telle tracking and guidance
system. Bickel called the contact In Customs
that he had always worked with and alerted
him to what was going on. The San Antonio
Customs office opened an investigation on
the theory that the materials the Iraqi wanted
were subject to strict export laws.
But the Investigation didn't get very far.
The Customs team sent Inquiries to Washing­
ton and Bickel alerted the'Houston broker
who had hired him that an investigation was
afoot Into the Iraqi client. The response from
the broker was unexpected. He allegedly told
Bickel and the Customs investigators that he
was connected to the U.S. intelligence
community. Then he clammed up.
It wasn't long before Bickel got the word —
Customs officials in Washington had told San
Antonio to cancel the investigation. Bickel’s
contact In Customs called Washington and
was told that the State and Commerce
Departments were behind the decision. Some
very Important people didn't want anyone
nosing around the technology deal.
Months later, the case was raised again In a
meeting In May 1990 o f Customs officials In
Houston. Bickel and his Customs contact
gave them a report and urged them to reopen
the Investigation. They reviewed the file and
decided that the case would remain closed.
Today, congressional Investigators believe
the Iraqi buyer was working for Ishan
Barbouti. an Iraqi arms dealer. Barbouti Is
suspected by U.S. Intelligence agencies to
have been a major player In the construction
o f a chemical weapons plant In Libya. And he
bankrolled at least four businesses in the
United States that were producing materials
that may have been sent secretly to Iraq for
in weapons.
Barbouti died mysteriously In London last
July — some say at the hands o f Israeli
agents who were angry about his success at
arming Iraq. Customs is now Investigating
the business ventures o f his son. Haidar
Barbouti. who has a base of operations In
Houston.

�.A sl

ianfurd &gt; ofaio, Sentord, Florida - Monday, July 8, 1991 - 8A

Gorbachev sends foreign
minister to Washington
"T h e president w rlrnmre tide

H

thin meeting wlB help energise

decision by President Gorbachev work on Anal stage o f S TA R T
WASHINGTON - The White
House said today that Soviet
Preatdml Mikhail S. Gorbachev
is sending M s face Urn
and top general to w a
this week In a redoubled effort to
conclude a strategic arma treaty.
Gorbachev relayed that word
on Sunday through hta am­
bassador to the United States,
one day alter Bush sent the
S o v ie t presiden t an urgent
to try to b rtn g th e
arms reduction talks to
with the president's view for the
need to redoubled efforts at
completing a START agreement
and accepted the president's
invitation to aend a delegation to
Washington to work on the
n e g o tia tio n s ," W hite House
Press Secretary Martin Firewater
said.
Firewater aald the Soviet am*
baaaador to Washington. Victor
K o m p le k to v . c o n v e y e d the
Gorbachev response to Brent
Scowcroft, the White House na­
tional security adviser, on Sun­
day.
“ T h e S o v ie t d e le g a tio n ,
headed by Foreign Minister
(Alexander) Bessmertnykh, will
arrive on Wednesday evening."
Firewater aald. The delegation
w i l l a la o In c lu d e M ik h a il
M oiifyfV i tDc cniii m iwc soviet
general staff, and Soviet Deputy
Foreign Minister A lex ei Ob­
ukhov,
They wlU meet with Secretary
o f State James A. Baker 111 and
other American counterparts'on
Thursday afternoon and Friday.

and hopes It can lead la farther talks."
progress In the S TA R T ncfotlaB u ah la id re p o rte r s th is
Ilona." Firewater aald.
morning as he returned to the
In Moscow, Soviet Foreign w h ite House ham Camp David
M in is tr y s p o k e s m a n V it a ly that he had heard hack from
Churkin aald today. "W e expect Gorbachev. He did not elaborate.

Slovenia wins partial
control off its borders
a n n u n v u s m Im u __ s u m ,
a n and federal lead en agreed
today on a formula that would
give the republic ta m e d control
o f Ha International borders and
tim e to peacefully work out
o u i etruuc wiosrncc
will.
Slovenia released Its last few
federal army prisoners — fewer
than 100 oftlcere — the army
command announced today.
In Croatia, which along with
Slovenia declared independence
in June 38. federal army tanks
broke up a firelight between
Croatian and Serbian forces
m arked by shelling and the
firin g o f rocket-propelled greCasualty figures varied, but at
least 13 combatants were re­
ported killed.
A fter months o f ethnic and
political' feuding, the Balkan
country o f six republics and two
provinces Is at a most dangerous
Sunday marked the first time
federal troops opened fire in

to break up fighting
the well armed ethnic
Croat and Serb ndhtanre who
have fought abnoat dally in the
repuhhc atore May - though on
The village o f Tenja. where
Sunday's fighting took place,
i reported quiet today.
it on Slovenia
today an the
Island o f BrionL o ff Croatia's
Adriatic coast, by the country's
eight-m em ber collective proaMency and Slovene leaders.
European Community media­
tors, who have Interceded three
times since the independence
declarations on
"O u r road to fall Independence
will be long but now tt is d ea r
that after three months o f nego­
tiations our sovereignty will be
fall." aald Slovenian President
Milan Kucan.
Federal President Stipe Mesic.
a Croat, told reporters after the
agreement was reached that
“ peace begins today."
But the leader o f the European
Community mission aald the
accord rested on "deep, dramat­
ic com plexities" and warned
against over-optimism.

HRS
Statewide, a saving o f about
SIOS million a year with the new
system Is anticipated. Beyond
the financial benefits o f having
the new system, the simplified
application process will be of
great benefit to e Wrens.
' Snead said. “ As it la now,
separate application forma are
required to be tiled out for each
f j ) o f the many HRS operation*.
J ‘ Under the new system, people
r
Will o d y have t o M l W t h e farm
°nce. fro m ih c" on. the infor­
mation wflTbc In the computers
and need not be requested
again." He added. "T h e overall
operation will consolidate sever­
al assistance programs and im­
prove aid to the state's poor and
sick.
L t . G o v . B u ddy M a c K a y
commented on the program. "It
will get benefits to people In
need maybe in two or five days
Instead o f 48." he aaid.
The new system, the first o f Its
kind In the country, brings
to geth er Inform ation on 14

w e lfa re , m ed ica l an d o th er
bllc assistance programs run
the state Department o f
Health and Rehabilitative Serv-

K

T h e computer network will
" t r u ly create one-stop shop­
p i n g . " H R S S e c re ta ry B ob
W illiam s said.
People seeking assistance now
must go to separate offices to
and a range of outer services.
H R S workers must c M t ir th in r
e l i g i b i l i t y m a n u als and g o
through aeparkte'forms for each
program.
Under the new system, HRS
workers wtU be able to find out
what types o f services a needy
person or fam ily qualifies for In
one run o f the computer.
“ W e c a n p r o v id e b e t t e r
b e n e fit s a t less c o a t m o re
quickly.” MacKay aald.
T h e $104 m illion system ,
which has been In the works for
tw o years. Is expected to do
m ore than speed processing o f
aid applications It also should

cut state costs and prevent
erroneous approval o f benefits
for ineligible applicants.
In Its first full year o f opera­
tion, the new system is expected
to save 8105 mlUon by reducing
errors In calculation o f benefits
and cutting paper work and
multiple filing o f forma for sepa­
rate programs.

Arguing against tha county’s propoaad ona-esnt
sofas fas Incrasas la Mika Funk and Sam Sykaa,
•aft. and for tha safes tax to county manager Ron
Rabun and Jim Stalling. Moderator Art Qrindfe,

Voters to decide fate of
county sales tax Tuesday
RyJ.
HareM Staff Writer
SANFORD — Voters will decide tomorrow
whether to Increase the county sales tax or to
face an almost certain property tax Increase to
improve roads.
Polls open at 7 a.m. and will close at 7 p.m.
Polling locations are printed on voter iden­
tification cards, but location Information la
available by calling 331-1130. then punching
7707 at the message.
Voters will decide whether to increase the
local asks tax by one cent for 10 y e a n to raise
S300 million towards a $450 million road
construction program. County officials say
many o f the road Improvements are needed to
k e e p c o n g e s t io n fr o m g e t t in g w o rs e
throughout the next decade.
About a third o f (he money will be spent to
Improve roads to meet slate growth manage­

Daniel Roberta Boone. 80,
1010 T e rr y Dr., A ltam on te
Springs, died Friday at South
Seminole Community Hospital.
Bom March 3. 1911 in Heflin.
Ala., he moved to Altamonte
Springs from San Diego in 1986.
He w aaa car salesman. He wasa
member o f Grace Presbyterian
Church. He was an Arm y Air
Corps veteran.
Survivors Include, son. Larry.
Lewiston. N.Y.; brothers. Oscar,
Charles, both of Jacksonville;
■later. Nancy. New Orleans;
three grandchildren.
B aldw in -F alrch ild Funeral
Home. Goidcnrod In charge of
arrangements.

LILLIAN

MARGARET

Lillian Margaret Hastings. 89.
103 South Sunland Dr.. Sanford,
died Thursday in Stuart. Fla.
She waa bom July 10, 1931, in
Patterson. N.J. and moved to
Sanford In 1968 from West Palm
Beach. She was an assembler for
WUlight. Inc. o f Longwood. She
waa a member of the Congrega­
tional Christian Church. San­
ford.
Survivors Indude, daughters,
Lucille Waters. McCormick. S.C..
Mclysaa Minor. Tequesta. Fla..
Carol Dowing. Port St. Lucte.
F la .; sons. Louis Fasciana.
S tu art. G uy Fasciana. Sam
H astin gs, both o f Sanford;
mother. Catertna Savage, of
Patterson N.J.; sister. Jean
H e c h e m o v ic h . T i t u s v i l l e ;
brother. Mauro Savage. Pat­
terson; 13 grandchildren; I
great-grandson.
G ra m k o w Funeral Hom e.
Sanford In charge of arrange­
ments.

Katherine K. Skoran. 74. 2101
Northlake Dr.. Sanford, died
Thursday at her residence. She
waa born May 28. 1917 in
Honolulu, Hawaii, and moved to
Sanford from Melbourne this
year. She was a homemaker.
Survivors tndude daughter.
Katherine “ Casey" Cayll, San­
fo r d ; sisters . D oris M lyato.
S h lxu ko Nakam ura, both o f
Honolulu; brothers. Carl. Robert.
Kenneth. Jam es Malsuda. all of
Honolulu, fiv e grandchidlren;
three great-grandchildren.
G ra m k o w F u n era l H om e.
Sanford in charge o f arrange­
m en ts

CAROLYN ELAINE WILLW
Carolyn Etaine Willis. 41. 104
Suffolk Court. Longwood. died
Saturday at Florida Hospital.
Altamonte Springs. Born August
IS . 1949 in Pensacola, she
moved to Longwood from there
tn 1971. She was an Instructor
at Seminole Community College.
She was a member of St. Francis

o f Assisi Catholic Church.
Survivors include, husband.
Lew is C.: daughters. Shannon.
Am an da both o f Longw ood;
parents. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrrnre
Reid. Apopka: sisters. Pat PerMAGGIE KIMBALL
M aggie Kimball. 63. 1632 rlne. Allison Klssick both o f
C lek k C irc le. G eneva, died Apopka: brother. Bradley Reid.

■

L

-

ment regulations. Th e remainder o f the
projects on the Improvement Hat are to
accommodate city traffic flow and Improve
traffic condition., throughout the county.
If the tax fails to pass, county commissioners
say they'll Increase property taxes by more
than S3 per $1,000 o f taxable property Just to
im prove those roads needed for growth
management.
Proponents o f the tax say It Is fairer than a
property tax because non-county residents
com ing here to buy things help pay It.
Supporters also say It's cheaper than a
property tax. $72 a year opposed to $175 a
year.
Critics say the program tends to encourage
more development rather than guide It. They
say property taxes will eventually Increase
because the Improvements will attract so
many people, more police and firemen and
oilier costly services will be needed for them.

Williams said It alao should
bring In another 833 million In
lion tnat would otherwtre have
been paid In welfare coats for
needy children.
Th e system was tested fast In
Leon County. At the brief cere­
mony In the county HRS service
center Monday, the computer
link waa officially extended to 13
North Florida counties. Snead
■aid an announcement will be
made soon regarding the start of
the program in Sanford.
T h e new system is called
FLORIDA for Florida On-Line
Recipient Data Access.

Tha audience listened carefully to the proa and
Sunday at her residence. Bom
A pril 8. 1938 in Rowdy. Ky.. she
m oved to Geneva In 1978 from
Lexington. Ky. She was a Bap­
tist. She waa a homemaker. She
w as a member of the American
Legion Auxiliary. Lexington.
She la survived by husband.
Paul. Geneva: daughter, Edna
Faye Smith. Geneva; misters.
Mahals Duff, Rowdy and Rachel
B yrd, C h ulu ota; nine
grandchidlren.
Gramkow Funeral Home San­
ford in charge o f arrangements.

Saminola County's slats raprssantltlva, is
cantor. Tha tsama squared off last Tuesday in
AHamonta Springs for tha only dabata on tha
lasua, facing voters tom morrow.

Apopka.
B aldw in -F alrch ild Funeral
Home. Forest CKy. in charge of
arrangements.

ANDREW WILLIAM HAG­
GERTY

Teachers1A

“ We're being forced Into put­
Andrew WUUam Haggerty. 71. tin g too much emphasis on
Grecnleaf Circle. Orange City, standardized tests," McKay said
died Sunday at Regency Park in an Interview later. “ We won't
Nursing Center. DeBary. Bom be teaching them the skills they
September 29. 1919 in New need to have a successful life."
York. N.Y.. he moved to Orange
During the last day o f the
City from there in 1888.
meeting Sunday, delegates also
He was a World War II and .shot down an attempt by anti­
Korean War U.&amp; Army veteran. abortion teachers to overturn
He was a recreation supervisor union rules preventing them
in New York.
from distributing any pins and
He is survived by sisters. Alice brochures they wish at the
Mullen. Garden City. N.Y. and convention.
M ary Quinn, Brooklyn: two
Th e union censorship Issue
nieces and one nephew.
was raised by Christine Nowak,
Memorial contributions inay a Buffalo. N.Y. English teacher
be made to YMCA Building and member of the NEA's Re­
Fund. 840 Deltona Blvd.. De- spect for Life cuucus. The dele­
Ilo n a . 3 3 7 2 5 . S te p h e n R- gates voted down a request to
Baldauff Funeral Home. Deltona, consider her motion.
in charge of arrangements.
"T h ey're very much against
PATRICIA MAYPELLRRIN
neutrality In the abortion Issue."
Patricia May Pellerin. 35. 550 said Nowak, wlxne group was
H a t t a w a y D r.. A lt a m o n t e
prevented from handing out
Springs, died Saturday at Flori­ material deemed offensive by
da Hospital. Altamonte Springs. NEA management. "I'm not the
She was born December 18. o n l y c a u c u s t h a t 's b e e n
1955. In Pontiac. Mich. She was censored."
owner operator of a daycare
center. She was a Baptist. She
The Boy Scouts of America
was a former Girl Scout leader.
was ordered to shut down its
Survivors Indude, husband. b oo th b ecau se the g ro u p 's
L a u ren t A. Jr., A lta m o n te policies forbidding homosexual
Springs; daughters. Tracy Anne scout leaders run counter to the
G ardner and Catherine A n ­ NEA policy against discrimina­
toin ette Pellerin. A lla m o n tr tion on the basis of sexual
Springs: son. Jerome Edward orientation.
Gardner. Altamonte Springs:
Richard Nuanes. the NEA's
parents. Fred and Thelma Cow­ manager o f convcnl Ion opera­
art. Franklin. N.C.; gra n d ­ tions. said tin- union hud llbcrulm o th e r , M a y b e lle C o w a rt. l/cd its exhibit rules In May lo
Franklin; sisters. Marlene Gail allow teacher caucuses lo offer
Tlchner. Sanford. Debbie Anne materials that differ with the
R ogers. Longwood; brother. union posit Ion as long as they
W illia m F re d C o w a rt J r . aren't produced by outside or­
Jacksonville. N.C.
ganizations.
Gaines Funeral Home Long­
But Nowak and other anti­
abortion teachers said they
wood in charge of arrangements

cons of supporting the county's tax.

believe the union is slilllitg
dissent, especially on the abor­
tion issue. The NEA's official
policy has been staunchly prochoice on abort ion for years.
Nowak showed a July 2 memo
from NEA convention manager
Peter Ridenour that approved
some buttons for display or sale

but banned others. Permitted
were buttons with slogans such
as "P ro-Life." "Choose Lite,"
and "G iv e Life a C h a n ce."
Banned buttons included "Ellin
Inulc Human Problem s Not
Human Beings." "Abortion Kills.
Choose L ife ." and "F o rm er
Fetus for Life."

Celebrate—
Continued from P a g* I A
eslingit was."
T h e k id s . L e s q u le r and
Marion, both agreed I hr secret lo
their 50-year union Is a lol of
love.
"Even though it's a four letter
word." Lesquler quipped.
Louise said site didn't have a
secret for the success of her
71-year union.
"She nrver Inid me the secret
either," Sletnmeyer confided.
About 40 Lakrvlcw residents
and family members. Including
the S teln m ey rrs' grandson.
Kick, his wife. Jounn, and
S t e l n m e y r r s ' greatgrandchildren, Amanda. 6. and
Justin. 3. from Lake Gem. Joined
the two couples for cake and
champagne. Resident Nick Suntclla danced to the music with
employee Peggy Brock.
"M ove your feet." Saotclla
challenged Bris k.
Partygocrs clapped in delight
at the music and dance, as
Sletnmeyer praised ills bride.
"She makes Hr Itest lasagna.
site's tin- l&gt;*-st of everything." he
said
Marion said her parents had
been "a great inspiration to
her."
"A n d I’m Pop's fondest memo­
ry ol his marriage, she said.
"G od lias been very good to us

all." Lesquler said.
Louise said she would marry
Slrlum rycr all over again.
"Y e s !" she exclaimed.
Stelnmeyer said he'd have to
think about It. then luughrd
"W ould I munry her again * I
gotta think a minute. 1 think I
would. Why not!" he decided
stelnmeyer resumed humming
lo I hr music, tapping his lingers,
sipping his champagne.
" Y know. I like tills patty.
When's the next one?” he asked.

Pool
Continued from P age ! A
some other
qu alified organization might
provide stuffing so the faiilty
would lie available to the general
public during ihr weekends or
non school o|xTulion lime*.
Tire Joint agreem en t and
}M&gt;v,lblr methods of funding will
he disciivscd (luring tin City
Commission workshop meeting
this afternoon at 5 p m . tlien
brought up tor commission ac­
tion during tin- regular public
meeling beginning at 7 p m
ton igh t. In tin- com m ission
chambers ol ilic Sanford City
Hall.

�M - Sanford HoraM, Sanford, Rondo - Wfondoy, July 9, ts tl

NAACP criticizes Thomaa
may endorse him anyway
would vote on w hether to

• f l ---------------------------------

Associated Press Writer

‘ I think N A A C P. in

HOUSTON - Clarence Thomas, the Mack
conservative nominated to the U.S. Supreme
Court, has been ertttetaed yiaeshty by the NAACP
but may win Its endorsement any way &gt;
ocnjiintii n o o U t e x e c u tiv e auTCtor 01 id c civu
n |n u o f f ntfition, m m v M tn tr to ctw o rK
Thomas la a major concern o f the 12.000
delegates at the S4th annual convention o f the
National Association far the Advancem ent o f
Colored People. The con vention opened Sunday.
"T h e problem I have with the current nom inee
is really a twofold approach.” Hooka aakL "First
o f aO. we were sure that we wanted the president
to appoint an African-American. On the other
hand, we wanted him to appoint a nominee who
embraced at least a part o f the phflnaophy o f
Justice Marshall."
Thurgood Marshall, a liberal, la tlKMDnljrh
to serve on the M fb court. Hooka aald ha was
uncertain whether Thomaa shared enough o f
Marshall's views to help Am erican blacks.
Thomaa opposes affirmative action and has
rticfesafi
written articl—
„ ----- --- -------“ We're not going to let race blind ua to the
totality o f the situation,.........
Gentry Trotter, NAACP nattooal press
tary. aald late Sunday he did not know when

‘Terminator 2'
tops box office
LO S ANOELBS - A rn o ld
Schwarzenegger's "Terminator
2: Judgment Day" was back
with a vengeance over the holi­
day weekend with a record*
b r e a k in g b o x o f f i c e t a k e
estimated at $52.9 million, in*
duatry sources said Sunday.
The sequel to the hit 1964
science-fiction movie stood to
break the flve-dsy debut record
set by "Bock to the Future Part
11" over the 1900 Thanksgiving
holiday weekend with 943.016
million.
"Batman" made 942.706 mil­
lion in its debut three*day
weekend in June 1999.
"T e r m in a to r 2 " fe a tu re s
S ch w arzen egger as a good
cyborg sent to save a 13-year-old
boy from an evil cyborg. The bad
cyborg Is sent from the future to
kill the boy, who is to be a leader
against robots of the future.
In second place o ve r the
W edneaday*tnrough*Sunday
period was the comedy "Naked
Gun 2V4: The Smell o f Fear,”
with between 912.3 million and
912.5 million In estimated reve­
nues, sources said.
Kevin Costner’s "Robin Hood:
Prince o f Thieves" earned an
estimated 910.7 million to 910.8
million, and "City Slickers,”
salesman Billy Crystal's cowboy
comedy, took In between 93.3
million and 90.5 million.
Rounding out the early Top 5
were the nasty kids comedy
" P r o b l e m C h ild 2 " a n d
"Rocketeer,” the flamboyant
good-versus^ v 11adventure.

(S M B S f M P U A M
L iR ffr ^ V tS tg r a L

JACK A. RL0FIL saR ANTHUN

ITO C K TQ R .W H A T LC V,
DRVtN ARM CORMNMV
RlAWTIRR,

HOTI d IS MCRCRV BtVEN

■ to
age o f 89.
tlon In lflS g to the V S

N w B W W W f a Mr• M R l P M Jitafafafa
1 iri 1 amsAsfaW.fafa.

t a m faiwfaVw t i i w i n
Cafajk Wfalfa fa Wfa Bsfa 1.

loaMfaB CMfafar, Pfanas fa
■RMS OOMAlF c. RAOOR fa

faSMk JaRMfa ORAM M awR
BANK fa MB RlSlllHN SSR i

On Sunday, the notion's ontv block oovemar. L.
nougjaa Wttder o f V M d a . aald Thom as la
"em inently quaMted.” B u t s p e a rin g on NBC's
"M eet the Picas.** W id e r re ta rd is say whether
t m i n gm * M v o c iic t (r tc u a nw
w r t t y from Iks stiffs
Ralph Nets, m eu th s director o f the Loader*
•nip UDfucrcncc d u v u ragnt** w a umk v u i
many o f the 126 groups in the conibrenct
m p raaaed "aertoui concerns” about Thomas's
record on enforcing civil i g N i when ha bsndad

s» fanfas pmhrb. m a s aw
MNa aasarrem M JM Mfa
Msrafa as ressrere m Mfa Bare

aMVS M wmnV
^ IT 1m m J m S ! f '*'*

o f appointing a black con*
„
„ o c ou rt." aald Harvard law
Dentck Bed, who la black and out*

SErlwu

CLERK OP THC ■

ARC HBRCRV NOT&gt;

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Murder of town bully:
folks say, 'Leave it lay*
AMWOQimWQ rTWll ffTiiMf_______
SKIDMORE. Mo. - Ken Rex
Me Elroy, a hulking man with
lo n g Mack side bums, blew
into town for the laot Ume 10
Dozens o f reatdento stood
within
outatde the tow n's only tavern
when shots from tw o rifles
rang out acrooo the main street
and pierced the town bully's
In the 100-degree heat.
M cE lroy'a 250*pound body
Med In his pickup for more
than 30 minutes before any­
one called police.
M c E lro y n e v e r s a w hla
killers. Police don't believe
that none o f those residents
aaw them, either.
But 10 years, two hooka, two
television m ovies and several
police investigations later, no
one has been charged.
R e s id e n ts o f th e n o rth ­
w e s te rn M issou ri fa rm in g
com munity o f 400 don’t like to
taRi abrul the killing! many
every!
ought to leave it lay. aald
D a ve Dunbar, a frien d o f
M c E l r o y 'a u n t i l f o lk s
persuaded him to becom e
tow n marshal.
Dunbar said many fanners

McElroy o f —— Hf«g
livestock, farm equipment and
the hearts o f their wives and
daughters. McElroy, 47. could
empty the pool hall Just by
w an in g In. Even the police
fcared hhn. Dunbar said.
McElroy would com e Into
town from his nearby farm
heavily armed, leading a cara­
van o f pickups driven by his
wife and his girlfriends.
State Highway Patrol Sgt.
Richard Stratton, w h o had
run-ins wtth McElroy far IS
years, said McElroy stalked
those who planned to testify
against him for hog stealing,
assault, rape and attempted
murder.
On the day he died — July
10, 1901 - McElroy waa out
on an appeal bond after being
c o n v ic t e d o f s h o o tin g
70-year-old Ernest
B o w e n k a m p . w h o ra n a
About SO men gathered in
the American Legion hall that
m o rn in g com p la in ed th at
McElroy waa getting away
with too much. Several met
McElroy In the tavern, then
fo llo w e d him outatde and
watched him get in hla truck
with his wife. Trena.
W hat happened n ext
shouldn't concern outsiders a
d e c a d e la t e r , s a id L o la

" iS t z u , is a n d ta m o c k
fa BCL-AIR. ACC000IN0 TO

RAM I* OR THC PUOLIC
RECOROS OR MMINOLC
COUNTY, FLORIDA

am t

OCN-M

The Journey ended April 27 with his arrest in
suburban Chula Vista after he allegedly took a
young girl to hia car. showed her pornographic
material, and made lewd comments and gestures.
Although the man authorities have arrested
won't aay who be is. authorities say they have
proof he fa Howard. Hla attorney. Albert Bradley,
won't discuss the case or the identity Issue.
Howard, 41, apparently supported himself by
selling refurbished cars and met several o f his
alleged victims at the swap meets, parka and
you th fa c ilities he frequented, said John
Williams, a San Diego County prosecutor.
The alleged molestations occurred In motels,
m o vie theaters, vacant fields and homes,
W illiams said.
Howard fa Jailed on 95 million bail, charged
with 266 counts o f child molestation and
pornography involving 11 girls between the ages
o f 3 and 12. U fa the highest number o f
molestation counts ever filed against someone in
San Diego County. He could be sentenced to 500
years In prison if convicted.
Louisiana and New Mexico authorities have
launched their own investigations.
Clem said Howard may not face trial In
Washington tf he fa convicted In California and
receives a harsh sentence.

Maine gets budget; back to
work in deadlocked Conn.
but not by rolling back benefits
were o ff last week.
for Injured workers.
Under
the
deal
the
Republican
Associated Press Writer________
In Connecticut. Gov. Lowell P.
governor cut with Democratic
Maine’ s governor signed a lawmakers, the new budget will Wckcker Jr. last week ordered a
budget today, ending u wccklong be canceled Wednesday If the p a rtia l shutdow n — Id lin g
government shutdown and sen­ Legislature faila to approve cuts 20,000 o f (he state's 48.000
workers and closing most suite
ding 10.000 people baek to in workers’ compensation.
*T think that the process fa parks over the July Fourth
work. Cunnectleut remained
without a budget, but the gover­ starting to work like it's sup­ weekend - after lawmakers
refused to bow to hfa demand for
nor ordered state employees posed to work." McKcrnan said.
back to work anyway.
McKcrnan and hfa GOP allies an income tax. Connecticut fa
Budget Impasses also con&gt; wanted business Insurance costs one o f 10 slates without an
tlnued In Pennsylvania, North curbed as a condition for accep­ Income tax.
Carolina. California and Illinois, tin g nearly 9300 m illion In
The state, with a budget last
Income, sales and gasoline- tax year o f 97.5 billion, faces a
one week into a new fiscal year.
In Maine, all 13.000 state increases.
projected deficit of 9942 million
em ployees were expected at
Th e governor wants Maine's for the last fiscal year and $1.9
work today after Gov. John
in su ra n c e s y s te m c o v e r in g billion for the current one.
McKcrnan signed a 93 2 billion on-lhc-Job Injuries scaled back
The governor could have con­
budget to end the shutdown that by a third from an estimated
•500 million. Democrats agree tin u ed the shutdow n u n til
began July 1. All but about
3.000 workers deemed essential employers' costs need to be cut. Tuesday.

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Accused child molester arrested
five years after he faked suicide
SAN DIEGO — Five years ago. while awaiting
trial In Washington state on charges that he
molested two young girls, Richard E. Howard
decided It waa a good time to die.
The drifter drove aboard a Washington state
ferry on June 22. 1906. and vanished by the Ume
it docked. An apparent suicide, he left behind his
car with his dog inside.
Authorities say he faked his death to avoid trial.
Now. a man authorities believe Is Howard again
awaits trial on child molestation charges, this
Ume In California.
"H e knew he was going to trial on everything."
said Dan Clem, a prosecutor In Kitsap County.
Wash., where Howard was to be tried in 1906.
"W e always thought It was a hoax. W e refused to
believe he was dead."
Investigators are still trying to trace hla exact
path, but say Howard went to New Orleans,
assumed a new Identity t\nd molested more
children.
Tavcllng as lk&gt;b Barrel Holder — the name o f a
2-year-old Louisiana boy who died in 1991 —
Howard made his way west to New Mexico, then
California, they say.

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COMPANY, A Ffarfas

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MONDAY

Sanford Herald

July

8,

B

■5ff!&amp;5?e”
■CtoMHM, rag*

IN BRIEF

-

Learning by competing

1(H R * ME FliLD— 11 Gibson wins bronze medal
Try, toy again
at national Masters meet
LAKE MARY — Lake Mary High School will
this evening to startt the 1991 Lake
at Don T.
High Summer Track
Reynolds Stadium.
The Series was supposed to start last week but
waa washed out because o f rain. T h e Series is
scheduled to run each Monday In July.
There win be 12 events offered In most o f the
10 age groups (10 each for both men and
women). The groups range from 5-and-Under to
BCsnd-Over.
Coot Is S I per person, per week with a limit o f
lour events per partIdpant.
Field events will start at 5 p.m. with the
ru n n ln geven tsp in goffa t 8:30 p.m.
Ribbons will be awarded to I n t . second and
third place In each event. Male &amp; Female and
each age group.
For Information, contact Michael Gibson at
323-2370or Lionel Bonck at 321-8834.

v ery th in gs at the 1991 T A C
Masters U.S.A. Track and Field
Championships at North Central
College.
" I coach the triple Jump during
the year and help coach the shot, so
I have to know how to coach It."
said Glbaon. who flew to Chicago
last Thursday night and returned
the next evening. "W h at 1 try to do
Is take what I coach and duplicate
It.
"But goodness knows I don't
k n ow e v e r y t h in g abou t th ose
events. I pick up a lot o f pointers

try

NAPERVILLE. 111. - You'd think
that someone old enough to com­
pete in the 4040-45 age class would
know better than to be bending,
folding and otherwise contorting his
body In an attempt to throw the
hammer, put the shot or triple
Jump.
But according to Mike Glbaon.
coach o f the Lake Mary High School
girls' cross country and track and
Held teams. It’s because he doesn't
know any better that he did those

E yi

Umpire Shot

Hsrald Correspondent

DALLAS — Major-league baseball umpire
Steve Palermo and former Miami Dolphin
lineman Terence Mann were shot early Sunday
while trying to help two waitresses being robbed
In a restaurant parking lot. police said.
Palermo, an American League umpire since
1977. was In serious condition with a stomach
wound after surgery. His wound was not
considered life-threatening.
Palermo was at Camplsl's Egyptian Restau­
rant for dinner after working third base In
Saturday night's game between the California
Angels andlin
thee 'Texas Rangers.
before 1 a.m.. a bartender noticed four
Shortl
orti/bt
men robbing the women at gunpoint In the
restaurant's parking lot. Palermo, another
patron and an employee rushed to help.
Three o f the suspects drove off In a car. and
the good Samaritans chased the fourth across a
highway overpass.
While they tried to make a citizen’s arrest —
without any weapon o f their own — the suspects
returned In the car and one fired two snots,
striking Palermo and Mann, who suffered a
gunshot wound to the neck and was listed In
good condition at Presbyterian Hospital.
Mann played for Miami In 198?i88and played
college football at Southciti'MethMMr Untvetsn
tyjrom &gt;983-88.
9#V* ltdIniu.kt'Mk 18-» I ;*/g.»Vvi

LONG WOOD - Entering the July
4th Invitational baseball touma
ment at Lyman High School this
w e e k e n d . A lta m o n te S p r in g s
Dodger coach Jay Bergman wasn't
sure about the depth o f his pitching

«.&gt;•»», tc-.on.o .
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m

Stich upsets Bscksr
W IM B L E D O N . E n g la n d H e 's th e
Wimbledon champion, a millionaire and one o f
the top four players In the world.
However. Michael Stich. the newest Grand
Slam winner, may have to pay a price for his
new fame and fortune.
*’ Hls life Isn't going to be the same anymore."
warned Boris Becker, the man Stich defeated
6-4, 7-8 (7-4). &amp;4 on Sunday In the men's final.
"H e is the Wimbledon champion. He Is a star
now."
Stich was largely unknown outside his native
G erm a n y tw o w e e k s ago. But w in n in g
Wimbledon ensures an end to anonymity.
Stich. 22. had won only one tournament
before Sunday. Hr had never played in a Grand
Slam final.
By the end of the afternoon, that all had
changed. His $384,000 winner's paycheck took
him to nearly $1.2 million In career earnings
and boosted him three spots to No. 4 In the
world rankings.

AUTO RACING

Taking lima out
Normally about this lime of year, Seminole Community College men's
basketball coach Bill Payne would be working with the likes of
10-year-old Amanda Doeblsr of Lake Mary at hla summer camp. But
Payne Is out of town the nsxt two weeks, senring aa an assistant
coach to the South team at the 1991 University Games In Los Angeles.

Andratti wins again
CLEVELAND — The pass was less daring but
Just as effective Sunday as Mlcliacl Andretti got
past Emerson Fittipaldi und went on to a victory
In the Cleveland Grand Prlx.
Andretti, who picked up his second win In a
row and third of the season, mude u heartthumping move between Fittipaldi and Kick
Mears two weeks ugo at Portland. Ore. lie got
away with It and swept away to the victory.
This time. It look the sccond-gcncrutlon
Indy-car star until the 53rd of 85 laps on the
2.37-mlle. 10-turn temporary road circuit to get
to the front for good.
He held off Fittipaldi by 2.5 seconds despite
two full-course cuutlon flags In the final 18 tups
that bunched the leaders.
The green flag came out for Ihc flnul time Just
three laps from the end. but Andretti cuslly held
the top spot, with Fittipaldi more occupied
trying to keep third-place Hobby Kahal. the
scries point leader, behind him.
Rahal wound up Just ahead of defending series
champion Al Unser Jr., who barely held off Arie
Luyendyk for fourth.

BASEBALL
□9:30 p.m. — ESPN. Upper Deck Old-Timers
All-Star Baseball game

from other people, especially In the
hammer.
"It's also a chance to gain a lot of
friends, meet new people and renew
acquaintances."
Aa It turned out. It was the
pointers he picked up from another
competitor In a different age group
that helped Gibson claim his first
medal In his three trips to the
national Masters meet.
" I got a lot o f help from another
contestant. Lloyd Higgins o f San
D ie g o ." said Gibson, w ho has
limited experience with the hammer
throw. "W ith his help. I improved
from around 75 feet on my first
throw to 103 feet. 1 Inch (good for
third and the bronze medal). He was
really a lot o f help.”
The event was won by Lawrence

W aite o f Las Vegas, who's best
attempt was 161 feet. 3 Inches.
David Stcbing claimed the silver
medal with a throw or 131 feet. 10
Inches.
You're probably wondering how
someone like Gibson who has little
or no experience In an event like the
hammer throw qualify to compete
In such an event at the national
level.
"H o w do you qualify for na­
tionals?" responded Gibson, who
competed In the 1988 meet when It
was held In Orlando and In 1990 at
Indianapolis. "Y ou don't qualify for
nationals. If you want to go. you go.
They don't have any qualifying
standards for nationals. Whoever
can get there, whoever Is Interested

Pitching comes through
for Dodgers in tourney

DOUBLE TAKESi Jk

j

m

1991

He did know, however, that four
days o f consecutive tournament
play would quickly reveal whether
or not he had enough healthy and
talented hurten.
And he did.
Bergman's fourth starter. Mitch
Schardt. came through with a
stellar performance In the champi­
onship finale against the host
Bullets, keeping his teammates in
the game so that when their bats
heated up. they were able to rally
for an 8-4 vlcf r.rv and the touma
ment title.
S ch ardt threw four Innings,
allowing Just three runs, before
being replaced by Dodger ace Brett
Black, who picked up the win with
three strong innings- U was Black’s
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second victory In the tourney.
"T h is tournament proved that wc
have quality pitching that can pitch
on any given d ay." said Bergman,
whose squad o f Lake Brantley high
school players won for the 10th time
In their last 11 starts. Improving to
16-11. "T h e pitchers did u hcck o f a
Job the whole tournament."
Black Improved his record to 5-1
during the summer. Schardt. Sean
Goldstein, and Matt W ood round out
the staff which helped Altamonte
Springs take the championship.
The Dodgers erupted for three
runs In each o f the last two Innings.
Eric Castaldo and Bobby Andino

□Bos
TBuraaassat, Page 2B
I J-ra.Jf .1
*
• #w

Oviedo* A.S. Americans
on Senior collision course
It looks like Oviedo and the
Altamonte Springs Americans are
headed for an eventual showdown
In the District 14 Senior League
All-Star tournament as both teams
won their first two games In their
respective area brackets.
The Senior League, for players
ages 14 and 15. la a part of the Little
League Baseball organization. Dis­
trict 14 covers a four-county area
that Includes Seminole County. For
ease of scheduling, the district Is
divided Into four areas.
A rea 2t A ft e r s h a k in g o ff
openlng-nlght jitters with a 4-2 win
over Rolling Hills last Friday night,
the Altamonte Springs Americans
exploded post Apopka-West Semi­
nole 19-2 Saturday afternoon at the
Oviedo Little League complex.
On Friday at Rolling Hills. Eric
Katuuskas escaped a boses-loaded
Jam by striking out the last batter,
saving a 4-2 victory for sturter

Russell Haney and the Altamonte
Americans.
Haney, who worked 6V&gt; Innings,
had loaded the bases on a single and
two walks around a pair of outs In
the seventh Inning. Kutuuskus was
brought In and he preceded to wulk
the first batter he faced, making the
score 4-2. He then struck out the
next batter to end the gamr.
Jason Perry broke u l- l tic with u
two-run single In the sixth for
Altamonte Springs. Hr eventually
scored that Inning on u pair of
Rolling Hills errors. Jim Newberry
and Rene Perez also hud singles for
the Altamonte squad.
With that gume behind them, the
Altamonte Springs Americans un­
loaded on Apopku-Wrst Seminole
on Saturday for 17 hits. Newberry
led the ussault by going 3-for-5 with
a double, a two-run home run and
five RBI.
A lso contribu ting were Chris
Lewis |3-for-3 with three Kill). Perez
□ E s s A ll-S tars. Page 2B

Som etim es kids take acting like adults too far
Sometimes kids pay too much
attention to what adults do. And I'm
not talking toddlers and the like.
Teenagers, many of whom think
t h e y 'r e u d u lls w it h o u t th e
paperwork, pay close attention to
the way their "p eers" uct.
Case In point:
On S atu rd ay aftern oon , the
Bullets urc playing Bates Sporting
Goods In a winners' bracket game of
the July 4lh Invitational basebull
tournament ul Lyman High School.
J u s o i i Goodpastor Is pitching for
the Bullets, a collection of Lyman
High School underclassmen. At the
plate for Bales. Dr. Phillips High
School's summr team. Is second
base-man Bryan Bruce.
Goodpastor kicks and deals u
high, urclng curve up and Inside.
Bruce, taking the cue from so many
Major League players who think
every Inside pitch Is u lest of
manhood, glares meaningfully ut
Goodpastor.
Give me a break.
Somewhere In Bruce's develop­
ment as a ballplayer, he learned
that's what he's supposed to do
when a pitch comes anywhere nrar
him. despite the fact that he crowds
the plate, making It all but lm(tossiblc not to throw u pitch near
him.
But my guess Is that It wasn't
(rom w a tc h in g M ajor League

EDOWTE

$

TO N Y
D«SORMIER

Baseball that Bruce and other ado­
lescent would-be churgers of the
mound got the Idea, but from
" o t h e r " adults w atching Major
League Baseball w ho somehow
glorified a pluyer "p ro te c tin g "
himself by going after a pitcher he
thinks purposely threw ut him.
I find It Important to bring this up
at this point und lime because we're
right ut the stirt o f the youth
baseball All-Star season. Little
Leaguers. Pony Leaguers and Babe
Ruth Leaguers of all shapes and
sizes will llcxxl local diamonds over
the next couple of weeks (weather
permitting).
Because It Is All-Stars, the com ­
petition will be a little keener. the
pressure a little more Intense, em o­
tions a little higher.
All It's going to lake for some
major confrontation to break out is
lor some pitch to come too close to a

batter — us If any but u select few
youth pitchers had the control to
willingly throw u ball thut close —
and thut batter take offense.
Stares get cxchunged. then wards.
Parents and fans (they can be
mutually exclusive) get Involved.
You don't have to be psychic to
figure out where It cun lead.
The problem Is that many funs
don't stop to realize there Is u big
difference between what goes on ut
the Major League level and the
youth level. In the Major Leagues,
most pitchers do have the ability to
throw with that kind of accuracy on
command . . . thut's why they're up
there. And with the velocity most
Major League pitchers can generate.
It's u very leglllm ule physical
threat.
T h a t d o e s n 't m a k e a 6 0
mtle-un-hour fastball taken In the
ribs by a 13-year-old boy any less
pulnful. And given the tendency of
most young arms to lie u little
erratic. It probably won't lx- the
only one suffered by that player,
either. Unless your Don Baylor,
anything more than once In the
category of getting lilt by a pilch Is
too often.
But bow do you keep a teenager
from reading the way lie's m -cii Ins
heroes respond to a similar situation
on television?

For starters. It's going lo take
som e seriou s d ep ro g ra m m in g .
Young athletes have to lx* tuught —
and It has to lx- constantly rein­
forced — thut you don't put up your
fists ul the drop o f u hut. as It were.
While It may lx* foolhardy lo
suggest such u thing. I'd like to
believe thut most managers and
coaches of youth teams know tills
us u mutter o f fact, that many
pltehrs that come close lo or bit a
batter are generally an accident and
should lx- treated as such. I'd also
like lo believe that most purcnlx and
funs ure also cognizant ol tills
distinction.
The evidence d&lt;x*sn‘t always tx-ar
out this assumption.
Certainly, there ure going to lxkids who Intentionally throw at
each other. If and when that
happens, let the umpires handle it.
Thut's what they're there lor. And If
you cun see It. the txlds are pretty
gtxxl that the umpire cun llgmc it
nut. After all. a league Is only
sup|&gt;oscd to send Its best umpires to
cull an All-Star game
At tlie risk ot a sounding like a
broken record, this is another part
of my ongoing rattle ol letting tlie
kids enjoy themselves. It's |ust that
sometimes, the kids need to lxsaved from themselves And that's
tile adults' job.

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

ft
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�■____________________________________

STATS &amp; STANDINGS

M the Altamonte Springs Dodgtn d
M to eWm the championship of tha,
Lyman High Softool Sunday aftamoon.

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both singled In
nina during the sixth-inning
rally, which b e fu i when Bullet
starter Kevin Stuckey walked
T yler Dkr and waa replaced by
J a a o n O o o d p a a t o r . T in t
Ruckdeachel and Dave Kessler
also pitched In the sixth for the
Bulleta.
In the seventh Inning for
A lta m o n te S p rin gs. Andlno
drove In two runs with a bases*
loaded single.
Despite the final-game loss,
Bullet coach Bob McCullough
was pleased with his squad's
perform ance throughout the

iw E t S !
m s 7 »-iii

**W e p la y e d s o m e g o o d
baseball." said McCollough. "I
rsrtss-ra saw many kids mature during
g a j M tt th is w e e k . It w a s a good
tournament for ua.
iS T sm iti
The Bullets Jumped to a 3-0
7HS7S-1H lead In the top o f the third
* £ 2 Z i2 Inning. Jeff Bouley doubled and
tvtsts—i u
stole third before scoring op
lasses—ns Stu ckey's sacrifice fly. After
\Donnie Baxter walked. Chad
B elan d |2 for-3 on the d ay ) was

w a lk e d In te n tio n a lly ! Doug
Porter singled home Baxter and
Beland came home a grounder
by WUl Ramlrex.

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714747-m

Carta. U M I . N J.. » fes*. MS; 14. S.J.
Janat. RaOtaf Hill*. Calif. U las*, feertaa.
All cemeetilert wave Manifest Batch

enough to go. can
compete.
"T h e y do have qualifying standards when
you get there. If there are more than eight
people In your event, have to be In top eight
after your first three attempts (in the field
events) to get your next three attempts. If
there are less than eight competitors In an
event, everybody gets six attempts.”
Aa It turned out. there were eight men
entered In Gibson's age class o f the hammer
throw. That gave him six attempts to work

on employing the Ups offered by Higgins,
going over 100 feet on his fifth attempt.
While there. Gibson also competed In the
shot put and triple Jump, two events in
which he competed at last year’s meet.
In the shot put. Gibson managed a throw
o f 35 feet. 144 Inches, an Improvement of
over three Inches on his best at last year's
meet. This year, he finished fifth In a field of
12 after finishing 10th In a field o f 19 at
Indianapolis in 1990.
Stebtng grabbed the gold in the shot put
with a heave o f 49 feet. 7V4 Inches.

While Gibson saw personal Improvement
In the hammer throw and shot put. his
distance In the triple Jump waa off. his best
legal Jump of 27 feet. IOV*h Inches almost 4
Inches shy off o f his best last year (28 feet. 2
inches). He did leap 29 feet. 1 Inch on one
attempt, but scratched.
As a result. Gibson had to settle for fifth In
a group of nine that was headed by Larry
Rodenbcck from St. Louts. Mo., who scrat­
ched on five of his six attempts but did
manage to clear 43 feet. 1 Inch on his one
legal Jump.

(2-for-3, two RBI). Danny
Antonclli (2-for-3 with a run
scored coming off the bench) and
Eric Leister (2-for-4 with an RBI
and three runs scored).
Winning pitcher Chuck Little
needed little of the offensive
s u p p o r t a s he d o m in a te d
Apopka-West Seminole, striking
out 15 and walking one while
allowtngonly five hits.
The Altamonte Americans are
o ff until Thursday, when they
will play the winner o f Wednes­
day's game between ApopkaWest Seminole and Rolling HUls.
A t m St When your offense
collects 23 hits in two games and
your pitchers surrended only
three, you expect some lopsided
scores.
How about 36-3? Or 28-0 In
five Innings?
T hat's how Oviedo waltzed
through Its two first games,
opening with a 20-3 rout o f the
D eltona Nationals Friday at
Eustls and following It up with a
28-0 skunking of the Altamonte
Springs Nationals at Southwest
Volusia Little League on Satur­
day.
Brlon King was the winning
pitcher for Oviedo Friday against
the Deltona Nationals, allowing
three runs (one earned) on two
hits while striking out nine and
walking four.
Leading the offense were Todd
Bellhom (2-for-3. a double, five
RBI). Brian Hendrix |2-for-3. one
RBI) and Mark Metcalf (1-for-3.
two RBI).
Saturday waa more o f the
same. Kevin Stephenson tossing
a one-hit shutout through five
Innings, when the game was
stopped by rain. Stephenson
struck out six and walked four.
B ellh om and Andy Hynes
were both 3-for-4 while Tim
Slavik went 3-for-6 for Oviedo,
each driving four RBI. Hynes.
Slavik and Mike Ruglenlus each
hit a double.
Pete Gaidis had the Altamonte
Springs Nationals' only a hit. a
single on Stephenson's second
pitch o f the game.
Oviedo now advances to play
Dr. Phillips at 7 p.m. Wednesday
at Apopka-West Seminole Little
League. Dr. Phillips opened with
a 1-0 decision over Eustls on
Friday and beat Mount Dora 8-4
Saturday.
The Altamonte Springs Na­
tionals. who defeated Cassel­
berry 9-1 on Friday night, will

average (5-fior-10).
Consecutive singles by Beland. •
P o rte r. R am lrex and Shane*
Odom gave the Bullets a single
run Int the fifth.
In the loser's bracket final.'
Lake Mary again rallied In the;
seventh, tying the game before*
topping Bates Sporting Goods;
3-3 In a spectacular elght-Innlng;
contest.
Matt Dlemer ripped his secondd o u b le o f th e d a y fo r th e!
game-winning hit. driving in Ben !
Rovlto. Marcus Bullock picked!
up his second win In tw o days:
(and his third o f the week) byi
shutting down Bates over the!
last three Innings.
T h e Mudcats tied the gamei
with tw o runs In the seventh.*
D an A n s o n and Jason!
Rasmussen both walked before!
Chris Barfield tiled to right field!
for the Inning's second out. B u r
T . J . H a m ilto n an d S c o t t4;
Johnston each slashed singles to;
bring home the tw o n m
*•
Area baseball action heats up;
'again' tbnlght. with'-Altamonte:
Springs traveling to Oviedo for
one contest, and the Bullets
hosting Lake Mary In another.

also play again Wednesday night!
at home against Eustls. Cassel­
berry was to have played the!
Deltona Nationals Saturday for
the right to face Mount Dora*
Wednesday at Eustls.

Little League
Area 3&gt; The only game re-;

ported so far had the Altamonte;
S prings Am erican s d efea tin g
W in d erm ere 8-1 In a light-;
nlng-shortened contest Friday;
night.
On Saturday, the Altamonte;
Springs Americans were to play;
Rolling Hills while the Oviedo;
Am ericans were supposed tq
play the winner o f Friday nlght'q
clash b etw een Apopka-W est;
Seminole and Pine Hills. The*
winners o f Saturday's games;
were scheduled to play tonight!
at 7 p.m. at Pine HUls Little
League.
A r e a St After getting rained;
out Friday night, the Altamonte;
Springs Nationals came back;
Saturday to defeat the Oviedo;
Nationals 16-3.

Lance Odom went the distance;
for the Altalnonte Nationals.;
striking out seven, walking three;
a n d a l l o w i n g f o u r h its .!
M e a n w h ile , h is tea m m a tes ;
erupted for seven runs In the!
second inning o ff Oviedo starter;
Drew Conoway. who waa the!
victim o f poor defensive support.'
The Altamonte team also added;
six runs In the fourth Inning.

*

S h a u n C h ild an d S te v e n !
Scheiber were both 2-for-3 with!
a double and three RBI to lead!
the Altamonte Nationals. Also!
chipping In were Billy Parker'
(2-for-3, double, one RBI) and!
Chris Ramlrex ( l-for-2. one RBI). !
I
T h e A lta m o n te N a tio n a ls !
advance to play the Deltona
Nationals (who defeated the Dr.!
Phillips Nationals Saturday) this;
evening at 7 p.m. while the;
Oviedo Nationals meet the Dr.;
Phillips Nationals In an ellmlna-;
lion contest.
Casselberry was scheduled to
play Mount Dora In Its first;
round game this weekend.

I
&gt;

�h- ;sr^f

- •-.-... &lt;**■

— I..

Sanford HoraM, Sanford, Florida - Monday, July 8, 1181

Use vines a variety of ways
Mm.

DemO Capuxxt. Monroe, ewneunre Urn
of ikdr daughter. Kaley
at

u, June It at the

en J u n e

It

to the roots.
Vigorous vines are produced wtth regular
fertilisations three or four times per year,
early spring, late spring and tall. Th e
amount o f fertiliser will depend on the age
and else o f the plant, the amount o f organic
matter In the soil and the frequency o f
application. Generally, about one pound o f a
16-4*8 or equivalent o f a balanced fertiliser
per 100 square feet la sufficient for

birth o f

a t rb ;

Birthing Center
grown pot in e ir
longer amd more
frequent M o o n in g periods than other
foe their fruit

IN

BRIEF

The dcntml Branch o f the
System win present the fttme. ‘ D eath Va
•Th e
Southwest" taoiaht, July
aa part o f Ha
MU8A Flhn Travw q
In the Central Branc
"Death Valiev** touches t h e !
chm ateof one o f the moot unique boiesln th e earth's surfocc. h
also features the sights and attractions o f the Death Valley
National Monument, a national monument that la larger than
the state o f Delaware.
"T h e Southwest." a p r o - a m about the la r g i land area o f the
Southwest, illustrates the region's Spanish and Mexican
influences as It takes viewers on a tour thnt Includes stops at
an od rig and a cattle ranch. T h e flhn stresses how the dry
climate and land o f the Southwest are both assets and
liabilities far future growth.
The Central Branch is located at 31S N. Oxford Road.
Casselberry. All library programs are free and open to the
public. Call 339-4000.

t.

l tu a variety o f ways in
o f vines exist that
t. brick or stucco so It
■elect nnes 10 give ensrseter
walla or fences. Certain
&gt;can be framed to an arbor or trellis
provide anaoe. privacy or screen tin*
sightly views. Vines can be used as ground
e o v e n III arms where turf la not desired or
w f lln o t f o * .
Vines must be adapted to the environ­
ment tn order to n o w successfulUv in the
Factora like the amount o f
type*
place vines tn the
o f sunlight required by vines
varies, but most vines grow and flower best
In fuU sun to partial shade. Vines prefer a
well-drained aofl containing some organic

matter.
When planting vines, folow the same
procedure as moat ornamental plants.
Deciduous vines, auch m wisteria or grapes.
: planted in the winter or dormant
Evergreen vines can be planted at
any tim e during the year with late winter or
early spring the preferred time. Care should
be taken not to dfeturb the root system as
little aa possible during transplanting.
W ater thoroughly alter planting. The
success or failure of any planting often
depends on whether the plants receive
adequate moisture. Construct a saucer-llke
basin around the plant with soil to help hold
the w afer so that It will drain down directly

Ornamental vines require little pruning to
keep them In bounds. Vines growing up a
wall should be kept o ff the roof to prevent
shingle damage. More vigorous vines may
need to be pruned to keep them on their
support and attractive. Blooming vines
should be pruned shortly after flowering.
Pruning later than that may reduce the
number o f flowers next year.
For our free fact sheet on vines, give m e a
call o r drop by the Agriculture Center. This
brochure la a handy reference to take wtth
you to your favorite garden center. It will
help you decide which vine would be best to
add to your landscape.
Celeste White Is Seminole County Urban
Horleulturtst. Phone 323*2900. ExL 5558.

Banking on art

Artists meet at canter
The Sanford Seminole A rt Association meets the second
Monday o f each month at 7 p.m . at the Cultural Arts Center In
Sanford. For Information. 323-4938.

Nursss to msst monthly
The Licensed Practical NuraCs Association o f Florida, Inc.,
meets the second Monday o f the month at 6:30 p.m. at A TS
Health Services, 1801 Lee Rd.. Winter Park. For Information
call 2994321.

For tha first lima, Semlnofo
National Bank, fanford, Is

■iifeliilllan oaf
a II ——*—**-----fou
fxniofTifiy
iw n iin g v w in f

puMie’s pfoaaura. Artist La
Ann Stewart, (•ft, featured
artist through duty 17, dlteuasaa har landscape with
horse end rider, titled “Country
* with Judy Hannon,

Ovsnstsrs to hsvs stsp study
A step study o f Overeaten Anonymous Is conducted on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. at W est Lake Hospital, State Rond 434.
Longwood. For more Information, call Charlie at 323*8070.

Narcotics Anonymous to moot
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
o f Ooodwtl), 3.17 Osk A v s , Sanford.
•f

Clogging groups to have clsssss
Dixieland d o g gers hold
7*8 p.m. each Monday at the
lary fire i
old Lake Mary
First Street and Wilbur Avenue.
Lake Mary. Coat la 125&gt; p er 10-week session. For more
information, call 321*5267.. T h e club m eeting Is held from 8*9
p.m.. at the Are station.
The Old Hickory Stampers hold d im e s 7*8 p.m. each
Monday at the Knights o f Columbus Hall on 9. Park Avenue,
Sanford. Cost la 82.50 per class. For m ore information, call
349*9629.

Ssnford Lions to gsthor
Sanford Lions Club meets at noon each Tuesday at the
Holiday Inn. Interstate 4 and State Rood 48 In Sanford.

Ssniors to msst for activities
LAKE MARY — The Lake M ary Seniors meet every Tuesday
for activities at the old city hall. North Country Club Road.
The program begins at 9:30 a.m. with watercolor clam and
drawing. Lap quilting. 10-12 noon and bridge from noon to 3
p.m.
Details, call 323*4938.

Bridge club to msst, play
Sanford Duplicate Bridge Club meets at noon each Tuesday
at the Greater Sanford Chamber o f Commerce. 400 E. First St..
Sanford.

Diagnosis Is prescription for trouble
ft I have been
happily and faithfully married to
my husband for 14 years. The
problem Is with our fam ily
doctor. Recently, my husband
thought he had a bladder Infec­
tion, so he went to our doctor,
who ran one urine test that
turned out negative. Then the
doctor informed my husband
that he had a sexually trans­
mitted disease!
My husband asked if U was
possible to have had this "sex­
ually transmuted disease" for 14
years — or was there some other
way o f getting It? Also, wouldn't
it be wise to run another test just
to make sure?
The doctor Insisted that his
diagnosis was correct, then with
a smirk he added. “ I'm not
suggesting that you run home
and beat your wife, but you
obviously got It from her."
Abbv, no wife could be more

’ 100
IM IJ
sw ­
im

worse. Besides. 1 hear that this
d o c t o r t h i n k s all n onchurchgoers (like my husband
and myself) are pretty much
"scum " anyway. What can I do?
I'm not taking this lightly.

BRI8TLINO IN ARISONA
DEAR

faithful than I. I never even
looked at another man In more
than 14 years. My husband says
he believes me. yet he's been
having bad dreams ever since. I
know I'd be accused of "p ro ­
testing too m uch" if 1 confronted
the doctor. This is a small town,
and It could make matters even

B R IB T L IR O i First,
change doctors — even If It
means getting your checkups In
a nearby town.
According to Dr. Willard Cates
Jr., director o f the Sexually
Transmitted Disease Division of
the Centers for Disease Control
In Atlanta: "No diagnostic test Is
100 percent accurate. Your
husband should be retested to
confirm the original test result."
(Som e sexually transm itted
diseases can lie dormant for long

periods o f time: also you failed to
mention w h ic h one your
husband allegedly has.)
The doctor who accused you
u n j u s t l y Is g u i l t y o f u n ­
professional behavior. He was
also in error in refusing to
perform more definitive tests.
Report him to you r county
medical society.

1 .8 .

^

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Sanford Herald

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323-2611

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By: CacaUe V. Eaarn
Dapyty Clark
PutolM: July R. u. B. 1*. INI
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ATTNACTIVI | and 1 bdrm.
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Equal Homing Opportunity

OUTSTANDING l/1to
In lacludad Country Dawn*.
Kvarythlng In lap candlllan.
All applianca*. Nawl .tl55.H0

Com eH om e To
Country Style L ivin g!

1. 2. ft 3 BEDROOMS

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Signature Sarto*. *7.000 Orlg
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330*5204
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apartments
T4MBIMiN.MAP0RTto.Va TURN WEST
tng OF A M U . toOH ON MQKT

limited Time Offer

Siep Up Into A
Great Apartment!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

(1st Month Only)

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartm ents
• Washcr/Dryers in Select Units
• Seif Clean Oven
[•Icemaker
•Dishwasher
!• Garbage

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actlvltto*. Now........ 575.500
SUPBR DELTONA LAKES 4/7
Evarything I* upgraded What
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AAAVFAIR AtSAOOWI VILLA
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wait I Call right now 554.NO

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155 00*1

II MONTHS NSW 5/7
On Hidden Lake waterway
Potltlvely loaded Soautllul
vtow Sao itnowt.......57*.*00

231— Vihicics
Wanted
AA AUTO SALVAGE

CARRIAGE COVE. l*X7f. 1
bdrm. 2 bath, anctoaad porch.
70X10 utility room Central
heal and A/C. all naw Interior
Naw ratrlg. and atovo
Wathar/dryar Financing
available. Call 177s i »
SAVE MSI NSW tatl HOMES!
WHY FAY RETAIL? 14X10.

OtDrBary
WE W EIG H A N D P A T
Top51 lor lunh.
Car* A Truck*

Call **a *00#er goal*.
aDRAPSS. neutral beige. *l&gt;
lined, tor eliding gleet win
dowt Paid 1100. will ucrihce
lor 515 or bail oiler Eacallanl
condition___________552*17*

239— Motorcycles
ind Bikes

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2 BDRAA MOBILE HOME

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| 2450 Hartwsll A vc, Sanford

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condition, a 5 litar ang . auto.
AC AM/FM *t*rao. tlntad
window*, mat linar Taka ovar
paymant*
177 *05*

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241—Recreational

Vihides / Campers

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U and turn to other m ethods o f
contraception. Ask your doctor
about this.
M A S M L OOTTj Our fam ily
has a history o f vitiligo. Are
there any n ew studies aa to the
cause o f thto skin pigment pro­
blem you can share?
M AS —
• V itiligo to a
•kin condition o f unknown cause
marked b y patchy a re a s o f
d e p ig m e n ta t io n . A lt h o u g h
vitiligo to associated with several
diseases. Including thyroid dis­
orders. diabetes and Addison's
disease (malfunction o f th e ad­
renal glands), (he detdgmeniation Is not harmful, only cosmet­
ically embarrassing.
TO treat vitiligo, any underly­
ing disease must be addressed.
Cover-up cosmetics can b e used,
as can darkening lotions.
Because o f Its re la tio n to
d is e a s e s b e lie v e d t o be
autoimmune (self-allergy). many
experts believe that vitiligo, too.

Spoooooooky

HOMO

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TH A T?

.
discarded. South had to lose a
A m e r ic a n p la y e r , an d Z la
trump trick for one down.
Mahmood.
the
Pakistani,
who
Bridge Today Is an Indepen­
dent m agaxlne published by had the passive role o f dummy.
T h e spirited auction led to a
Pamela and Matthew Oranovet­
ter In Baltoton Lake. N.Y. They sound stun that looked destined
ran a poll earlier this year. to succeed. But East, Kinunan.
asking subscribers to v o te for found a great play that deflected
their favorites among 30 players. th e declarer. Matt Oranovetter.
The top four women and four from a winning course.
W est led the heart ace. and
men will be Invited to jo in four
H
am
m an dropped the king.
other experts to compete In a
12-player individual tou rn a­ W h en West continued with the
ment. It w ill be preceded by a heart queen, declarer ruffed with
pro-am event. In which anyone dum m y's diamond ace to oremay "purchase" a top player as v e n t East from o v e rru ffin g
a partner, the proceeds being dum m y’s diamond six.
W h en E a s t u n e x p e c te d ly
donated to the M aim on ides
Hebrew Day School o f Albany. followed with the heart three,
Details of the event, which takes declarer paused for thought.
p la c e A u g u s t 2 0 -2 2 n e a r W h y had East false-carded? Did
Saratoga. N.Y.. may be obtained h e have all four trumps, or was
from th e O r a n o v e t t e r a at h e Just bluffing because he
thought the slam was going to
518-899-6670.
make?
E v e n t u a l l y d e c la r e r le d
Today’ s deal In volved two
dum
m y's diamond six and went
players expected to attend —
u
p
with
hto king. When West
Bob Hamman. the top-ranked

By Phillip Aider

TO WEAK ATI*
TO WORK, DAD?

By Barnlrs Bads Oawl
YOVJB BIRTHDAY
July 9 ,1M1

om o»

Do XOU
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T O P IC '

P P M / T IH P V O N

IN ffcTf ?
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THiNp X
TU£NH&gt; OUT L if t
THIS P K A U ji o f
*OMfTHiNC X
HA»

w

$
£

CONTROL o v e fil

Happy financial su rp rises
could be In the riling for you In
the year ahead, when Lady Luck
starts masterminding you r material affairs. She m igh t put
together situations you would
have never had the courage to
attempt.
CABCBB (June 21-July 22)
Someone involved with you in a
joint endeavor needs reaasurance today that everyone will get
a fair share when thto venture
comes to fruition. Clarify your
Intentions. Know where to look
for romance and you'll find U.
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
Instantly reveals which signs ore
romantically perfect fo r you.
Mall 82 plus a lo n g , selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
Matchmaker. d o this newspaoer P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You are
In a h o p e fu l c y c le w h e re
expectations can be achieved,
even an Important one where the
control ts In the h an d s o f
another. Don't disturb the arrangement.
VIBOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Several Important objectives arc
attainable In this cycle; you have
all the right factors going for
you: ambition, motivation, tenacity and luck,
LIBIA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
could be In for some pleasant
surprises In three or more situstlons at this time. Your chart
indicates that you may be given
seco n d ch an ces to succeed
where you previously failed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Joint ventures look especially
promising for you today. Devote
your efforts to the coalitions that
offer you the greatest potential
for reward,
BAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your greatest asset today la
your ability to bring divergent
interests together for beneficial
purposes. When you make the
arra n gem en ts, e ve ry o n e In ­
volvedw ill gain In some manner,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) This Is the right time to
begin Im plem enting changes
that you feel could Improve
working conditions or your profit
picture. What you have in mind
is certainly worth a try.
A Q U A J U U 8 (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Partnerships could work out
very fortunately for you at this

time, provided the common objective to given prominence over
the secondary Interests o f either
party.
P H C M (Peb. 20-March 20
End results are "U fy ." but it
looks like you could be luckier at
finalising Im portant m atters
today than you will be tomor­
row. T o be on the safe aide, don't
leave any loose threads hanging.
ABIE8 (March 21-April 19)
This could turn out to be a
rather fortunate day for you.
thanks to your social Involve­
ments. Something helpful might
develop for you throujgh an old
friend, such as making a new
contact.
TAUBU8 (April 20-May 20)
Don't lower your expectations
today In regard to something o f a
material nature that you've been
hoping to get. Conditions are
more favorable than you credit
them to be.
OEMOn (May 21-June 20) An
Idea you’ve recently conceived
that la grand In scope has a good
chance at becoming a reality.
You may have to modify It a bit.
but this won't change Us charac­
ter for the sake o f promise.
(0 1 9 9 1 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

by Laonsrd Starr
WHY'RE Vr A
QfJ'CX!
SCRW8IN&amp; H E £ WE
THE BOTTOMyJsBBte
OF THE J / W ? BUCK'S
PHONE’ //
SISTER’S
COMING TO

J y J P k VISIT?SHE-

GREETINGS. PLEASE.
PN&amp;ONME A MOMENT
WHILE I EXAMINE
Your kitch en

WE’RE PeCMEP

SHE'S MAKING
k TRICORDER

Ch eck

unper

THE

REFRIGERATOR

H iSi AMNMC AhD
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                    <text>m n n w n fH Pfrji
Sw Rw &amp; ’w

PS?*

Hi**"* N —J » 1 4 &amp; U &lt;ft
gSfiaa&gt;.vt td i l l p / l l
BBWiir
-ISWrWDWa/IhWf*^

S a n fo rd H e ra ld
Serving Sanford, Lake ISary and Sominola County alnco 1908
83rd Year. No. 294 - Sanford. Florida

n

Pow er-line uproar

N EW S DIGEST

Lake Mary’s com m issioners split but
move ahead over protests of residents

INSIDE
□ L e isu re

TV, weekend guide
The* w eek's television listing. Including a
sports calendar, plus a compilation o f events
and activities In and around the Sanford and
Lake Mary areas.
See L eisu re M a ga iln e

□ S p o rts

Seminole duo leads Colt’s.
Carrollton. Tx. — Robbie Morgan and Jeremy
Chunat pitched the Seminole PONY League Colt
All-Stars to a doubleheader win Thursday.
See Page IB

By NICK FFIIFA U F
Herald Staff Writer
LAKE MARY — Citizens filled most of the scats
at the Lake Mary City Commission meeting last
night. Many attended to oppose the 85 million
revenue bond Issue fc- capital Improvements.
Commissioners voted 3-2 to authorize prepara­
tion of the paper work necessary to qualify for the
bond Issue.
The proposed bond would lx? used to finance
four major projects. Including the Lake Mary

Sports Complex. Beautification ol Lake Mary
Boulevard. Undergroundlng nr powerllnes along
the boulevard, and paving and drainage Im­
provements.
A great deal o f citizen opposition dealt with the
powerllnc burial. The bond. If approved In Its
present form, would allocate 8I.29J.917 lor the
project. The city recently lost a challenge against
Florida E’owcr Corporation regarding who should
pay for undergroundlng. The State Supreme
Court determined that If the City wanted the lines
buried, they would have to pay for tt.

G o v e rn o r ta p s
S a n fo rd m a n
fo r n e w p o s t

S a y in g fa re w e ll

□ P eo p le

Three cheers!
Seminole High School cnccncaacrs reiurncu
front cheerleader camp with some superior
ratings.
See P h oto P age 3B

□

BRIEFS

By J. MARK BARFIELD
Herald Staff Writer_________ ________________________

Space Shuttle blasts off
CAPE CANAVERAL - The Space Shuttle
Atlantis blasted off today on a satellite transport
mission delayed twice by bad parts and once by
bad weather.
The five astronauts, wearing orange flight
suits, were strapped Into their scats about 2Vt
hours after fueling was completed.
The lllglit almost was delayed again when an
electronics unit In the crew cabin malfunctioned
Thursday night. The component translates
commands between shuttle computers and
systems In the cargo bay. including door latches
and the satellite stored there.
••
After numerous tests, engineers concluded the
problem was In a small part o f the unit that
would not be used during the mission and could
he Ign ored. The early m orn in g findings
persuaded NASA to proceed as planned.
On Thu rsday. NASA came within nine
minutes or liftoff. The launch team resolved a
aliicii involving u crew cabin vent vnlvc. then
watched helplessly as thunderstorms moved In
md forced a one-day delay.
The mission was postponed twice before: two
weeks ago because of trouble with a circuit that
disconnects the fuel tank during ascent and last
week because a main engine computer failed.

The Grove opens in Midway
MIDWAY — In what could become a major
step towards the revitalization of tilts lowincome community. The Grove Counseling
Center is opening a residential and out patient
drug treatment center staffed with 11 people In
the community tills weekend.
„
"It will mean a great deal for residents here,
said Jnhncll Jackson, president o f Midway
Citizens Against Drugs, the group that attracted
The Grove to open the center. "It will help them
gain a perspective o f themselves."
"Our main goal Is to empower the community
to begin to deal with their own problems." said
Eddie Martin, program director.
An open house will he held Saturday from 10
am . until 2 p in. at the center, located at 2300
Randall St ., at the corner of Midway Avenue.
Housed in a 1040s boarding house leased to
The Grove liv Midway pioneer Ernest Blocker,
ihe center will provide In- and out patient drug
treatment counseling for troubled youth and
programs lor the entire community, said Martin.
Martin said the center will offer graduate
equ ivalen cy training, vocational training,
parenting counseling and even recreational
classes in an effort to help Midway residents
g.iln more control over their lives.
The center, financed with S300.(X)0 from the
stair as a "thcrapullc community enrichment
program" or TCEI*. will offer six youths between
the ,,gt-s o f 12 to 18 treatment for substance
abuse. Martin said.______________________ _
From s t a ll and wire reports

HmaMPtulo by Tommy Vlnconl
Formor students Jossica Ligae and Mary Jane
Banks stand by the flag polo as their alma
mater, Sanford Middle School, falls under tho
battering ol the wrecking crane. The 60 year

------Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD — Although Seminole County com ­
missioners were able to limit service cuts
Thursday to make up for the loss of utility tax
revenues. Public Safety Director Gary Kaiser said
commissioners will have to deal with the same
needs next year.
"It won't go away." Kaiser said
Thursday, commissioners accepted County
Manager Ron Rabun's recommendation to In­
crease by ubout H percent the properly tax rale
tor residents of unincorporated areas of the
county to avoid cuts to fire protection services.
In order to lower the rate paid by non-city
residents to last year's rate of S3.13 per $ I .(XX) of
taxable property, commissioners would have had
to eliminate a new lire station In the Remington
Park area of smith Seminole County.
Kaiser said firefighter response times to tinarea are already at I I to 12 minutes, compared to
live to six minutes els -where In the county.
Commissioners set the tentative eountywlde
tax rate at 85.75. a 4 percent Increase over last
year's 85.53. The owner ol a SIOO.(XX) home.

C la s s if ie d s ......... 7-109 M o v ie s .
C o m ic s ...................... N e tlo n .................
C r o s s w o r d ................F o o p lo ................
Doer A b b y ................... 3 E F o lic # .........
D e a th s .......................... 5A R e lig io n ....
Dr. O o tt........................ 8B S p o r t s .........
E d it o r ia l....................... 4A T e le v is io n .
F lo r id a .......................... 2A W e a th e r....
H o r o s c o p e .................. 6B W o r ld .........

. 1B ,2 B

.......3B
.......2A
...... 6 A

Afternoon storms, again
Partly cloudy with
t h u n d v r s I o r in s
likely High near !K)
W ind south 10 Ifi
mph Rain chanc e 50
percent

P a g * 2A

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

fi T h e r e a r e g o i n g t o b e
ch an g es in M idw ay so m aybe
it’s a good th in g we wait to see
what happens there. J
-Com m issioner Jennifer Kelley
with a 825.000 homestead exemption, will pay
8431 48 In county taxes, about S ib more than
last year.
The owner of a S75.(XX) home, with the
homestead exemption, will pay $287 (»5 In
county taxes, less than a SI I increase over last
year's rale.
Both examples assume there was no change In
the appraised value ol the home, which would
affect the tax payment
Non city residents will see a slight Increase lit
their taxes, which are paid lor lire protection and
road maintenance provided by 1he county Both
city and unincorporated residents pay the
eountywlde tax
The owner ol the 8100.000 home with
homestead exemption will 8253.76 for the

laitini'f
inw iml I wcrt'ii
rs l.i\
I *I 1
11&lt;*M
unincorporated
services
lax. .ilmill
ahoul S I9
more
than last year. Tin* 875.000 homeowner with
homestead exemption will pay S ib !) 17. about
$13 more. Both examples again assume no
changes have been made In property value
County officials had estimated the p r o p o s e d
utility tax would cost the average unincorporated
citizen about SI 12 a year. Although others have
estimated the cost at more than $2(M) a year
“ I'd much rather pay 820 a year than $200.
said Fred Harris ol Sanford, a critic ol eouulv
efforts to tax utilities.
The multi victim of the cost-cutting was a SI 2
million road reconstruction program The pro
gram would have replaced worn-out pavement lit
Midway and other areas by recycling the asphalt
leaving the streets in a Itke-ncw condition
Commissioners also approve cutting, hut not
eliminating, the SI 2 million repaving program
by $375.(XX)
Commissioner .Jcniiltcr Kelley, who sup|&gt;ortcd
the rots, said residents can stand to wall lor
repairs In tough time.
We've delayed those helure." Kelley said
■There are going to lie changes in Mldwav so
S ee T a x . P a g e S A

Regulators delay ad limits on kids’ TV shows
By R O BER T N A YLO R JR .

INDEX

old building has boon replaced by a now
structure locstod behind the old one.Demolition ol the structure concluded Thurs­
day but cleaning up debris remains.

SANFORD — A black Sanford educator has lieen
named by Gov. Lawton Chiles to the panel that
nominates Judges to the 18th Circuit Court system.
Edward L. Blacksheare. community resources
coordinator In the Seminole County schools' Head
Start program, was one of 23 blacks named to the
Judicial nominating committees throughout the
state. Blacksheare. 65. also serves as coordinator &lt;&gt;l
continuing education programs In Sanford tor
Bedtime Cookman College.
Chiles said the nominations will make courts
fairer and nurture minority youths' hopes of
aspiring to such posts.
Dlavh.tffftm etiuhl not-He-rcnr+wJ for c tm iw n i .
this morning.
.
Chiles named one member to each of Florida's
26 Judicial nominating eominisstous on Thursday.
They Include 23 blacks, one Hispanic, one white
female and one white male.
The state has judicial nominating commissions
lor Us Supreme Court, cacti of its live appellate
districts and each of its 20 judicial circuits. Each
has three members appointed hv. the .governor,
three ap|&gt;oliited by the Florida Bar and ilir«i
appointed by the other six.
See Com m ission, Page 5A

County raises property tax rate a bit

Associated Press Writer

For m o r o w # a th *r,

Commissioner David Mcalor recommended the
city not bury the lines. "W e could certainly use
that 81.3 million elsewhere. Putting the money
Into the sports complex project would serve our
citizens far belter than burying the lines." He
added. I’ m not against beautification, but I am
against this."
Commissioner George Durycn said. "I agree
with Dave (Mcalor) on not burying the |xiwcr
lines. I understand the costs will probably end up
being higher than the S I.3 million Florida Power
Corporation originally gave us."
Torn Tuckey. district manager for the power
company agreed some additional cost may come
about, "som e or the right of way area lias already
been consumed by others." he said, "and we
won't be able to determine any additional costs
C See Uproar. Page 9A

WASHINGTON — Groups who
think young TV watchers are being
bombarded by ton many commer­
cials say the Federal Coinmtitiiea
lions Commission put the Interests
ol businesses before kids by delay­
ing new advertising limits on some
children's programs
But the head ol a broadcasters
group savs these critics should keep
one thing in mind no &lt;nmmcrclals.
no television.
Advocacy groups and broad­
casters have tended lor vears over
product pitches aired during shows
d e s ig n e d b n c h i l d r e n
The
advocates won a ma|or victory last
year when Congress told tlie KCC to
remipose limits on the amount ol
ads in kids show s
But the FCC on Thursday haudt-d
broadcasters at least a minor victory
when it voted unanimously to delay
the new ad rcstru lions mild Jan I
The limns — I O' a minutes ol ads
per hour on weekends and 12
minutes on weekdays - were to
have taken elleet Oct I

Both broadcast and ruble IV were
allccted by the rules, which the KCC
said apply to programs whose
primary viewers are lb years old
and under
Peggy ('barren "I Boston based
Action lor Children's I'clcvistnn said
t lit.* commission had "stolen l\
time that belongs to children and
given tt to the greedy grtnehes that
control broadcast mg "
But independent broadcasters
needed to sell t lu m axiiu iiin
n u m b e r o l c o m m e r c ia ls tor
Christmas to\s during their highly
profitable lonrth quarter to pay lor
shows that rim the rest ot the \&lt;ur
said James lledlund. president ot
the Association ol Indi p&lt; tub nt
Tclcy isuiii Stations
The association sought and re
c c tv c d t tic p o stp o n em en t tor
"bartered " programs — those that
already contain some cottuiieri i.ils
when they .ire bought b\ thestations
An estimated 70 |K-reenl to HO
percent o f the shows purchased by
inde|M-iideul stations an bartered
See Ads. Page 5A

COMMERCIAL FUNt

Soufc*-.

■ MEN
1] W O M E N

Roper Organization, lift*
N L A Gr-eP^-cy

�kntord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, August 2, 1991

NEWS FROM T H E REGION AND ACROSS THE STATE

Immunization campaign kicked off
ijw ciiiWa wui iK open, n
w ill not cost you anything (and)
w e sriQ not ask you about your
documentation.** NoveDosakl.
m t

Associated Praia Writer

Iranny midwifi n$iin$ iictm i

MIAMI - The U.S. Surgeon
General began a nationwide
Immunization campaign that
wit) target nine cities os part of
an effort to vaccinate at-risk
children.

FLOWERSVIEW. Fla. — Granny midwife Gladys Milton, who
has delivered more than 2.000 babies in the Florida Panhandle,
has won a two-year battle to regain her license.
Me. Milton said Wednesday that she has reapplied for her
license after the Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services agreed in a July 18 administrative order that she
could do so. HRS officials, however, demanded payment o f a
850application fee.
The agency revoked her license, which she had held for 29
years, after the 1988 death of a baby Ms. Milton had delivered.
The 1st District Court of Appeal and a state hearing officer
ruled earlier this year the baby’s death was Insufficient
grounds for the revocation.
Ms. Milton. 66. Is a virtual legend in the Panhandle. A book Is
being written sbout her life and a California production
company is Interested In basing a television movie on It.

II Inc pTTMOC.ni • glBnOCnUO

get vaccinated, then the
child of any tnuntgrant worker
has the same right of being
vaccinated." Burgeon General
Antonia NoveUo aatd during a
Twit to jA c u o n Mfm onii n w r
cal Center Thursday. "I believe
that tt’a no longer a choice. This
la a matter of right," she said.

measles and other dfoeaoea oc­
cur only tn children.
"N o matter how old you are,
once you hare been exposed to It
and you're not property immu­
nised, you can get measles."
novfuo MuO* i nc coinpiicsiions
• r e not only the rash, but
pneumonia,
— and
those thlnfi are the ones that

The other cities participating
In the National Immunization
C am paign S ep t. 21-29 are

Exltot plan demonstration against ABC
MIAMI — Cuban exiles accused ABC News of promoting
"communist propaganda" in Its coverage leading up to the Pan
American Games In Havana and planned demonstrations at
the network's affiliates here and In other cities.
"The Games In Havana have been used by ABC as the
context within which to promote Communist Cuba.” Francisco
J. Hernandez, president of the Cuban American National
salt In a letter to ABC President John
Foundation In Miami, said

A n gelea. New York.
* ..........hla;
Philadelphia:
Huntington. W.
Va.. and Wash!
faahlnator • »&gt;

FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. (AP) - Storer Cable TV's Encore
marketing plan, already dropped because of legal challenges,
does not violate Florida law or mislead consumers, a state
court has ruled.
4th District Court of Appeal criticized a Broward Judge
forr barring the plan and Florida Attorney General
G&lt;
Bob
But
jtterworth for falling to prove the tactic was unfair.
"W e find a lack of competent and substantial evidence
&lt;
to
support the trial court's finding that (Storer) misled or Intended
to mislead," the Judges wrote In an 11-page opinion released
Wednesday. "A t best, (the state) established that the Encore
plan was confusing."
Under the marketing plan, cable subscribers would have
faced automatic charges for the Encore m ovie channel starting
in July, unless they first canceled the 91- to 84.50-a-month
service. But lawsuits filed by attorneys general in at least five
states — and investigations launched in 25 other states —
prompted Storer'a parent company. Tele-Communications.
Inc., or TCI. to drop the plan nationwide.

KEY WEST — Proaecutora have dropped
manslaughter charges against a Miami
doctor over the death of a diabetic nursing
home patient.
The decirton Thursday ended the first
criminal case ever against a Florida doctor
regarding the care of u patient, aald John
Thrasher, attorney for the Florida Medical
Association.

valescent Center.
Swords was Indicted last January on a
manslaughter charge by a Monroe County
grand Jury over the death In February 1990
of 83-year-old Sherwood.

________Poaitga Feld at Senlord.
Florida and additional mailing

POSTHASTES: Send addreaa changoe
to THI SANFORD HERALD. F.O
Sol 1SS7, Senlord. FLJJ773-1447.
S abac riptIon Rates
(Dolly A Sunday!
leeie Delivery A ball

aia so

179 00
n » oo

Florida Roeidonta must pay li t ealee
U s in addRian la rotaa above
Mano (407)333-2011.

t

by u fed era l court Jury in
Gainesville o f conspiring to vio ­
late constitutional rights by
agreeing to Injure and intimidate
inmates after un hourlong riot
Oct. 3. 1989.
Eddie Lee Baker. 40. David
O'Stcen. 27. Sammy Williams.
29. and Sammy Royal. 27. also
were convicted o f beating and
assaulting specific Inmates.
Baker was sentenced to five

" I knew that I hadn't done anv
wrong and that I would be vindicated when
It was looked at by qualified physicians who
were able lo interpret U property.” Swords
told T h e Miami Herald for today's editions.

The case against Dr. Jack Swords waa
dropped after the prosecution's key medical.
expert reviewed the evidence and reversed
Ellsworth said that w hile the criminal
his initial finding, aald prosecutor Jon charges had been dropped, the caae has
Ellsworth.
been referred to the state Department o f
Professional Regulation, which licenses
The expert. Fuad Aahkar. determined that doctors.
Swords had not been criminally reckless In
hla handling of the caae of Homer Sherwood,
"It is still our position that the treatment
a diabetic patient at the Key W est Con­ this Individual received waa below the

W hile at the hoqilLaJ. the diabetic waa taken
off insulin and put on a special diet.
Sherwood later returned to the nursing
home, but waa nrvar again given Insulin. He
lapsed into a coma ana was returned to the
hospital, where he died.
Aahkar originally aald Swords waa crimi­
nally reckless by falling to put Sherwood
bock on the Insulin. But after a second look
at the medical evidence. Aahkar determined
there waa no proof that Swords was told of
Sherwood’s climbing fever before he went
Into the coma.

DU I manslaughter charges
filed in lawn mower death

his supervision. Sukhia said.
After the convictions, the five
were dismissed from their Jobs
by the state Departm ent or
Corrections. They had been on
paid sick leave.
Eighteen Inmates charged that
the correctional officers roamed
the prison after the riot was
quelled and beat prisoners In
retaliation for Injuries to officers
during the uprising.

years. 11 months Imprisonment
without parole: O’Stcen to four
years, nine months: Williams to
three years, five months: Royal
lo 18 m onths, and Cephus
Johnson. 33. was sentenced to
15 months In prison. U.S. At­
torney Kenneth Sukhia said.
Each was also sentenced to
three years supervised release
after his prison term, and Baker
was ordered to pay the cost of

standard of care and that Dr. Swords'
treatment was negligent."-Ellsworth told
the. newspaper. " I f I were Dr. Swords. I
would not take this as a vindication of my
actions."
Prosecutors add Sherwood was taken to
the hospital for treatment of pneumonia.

Five corrections officers sentenced to prison terms

Fie. JJT71

/ ($2,364)

i In the future.

Beating inmates

vSSeheS OeSv end Sundey, esceW
SeSrrdir Sy The Senlord Herald.
Ins. M S I t French Are., Senlord.

M y / ($1,060)

L a n d m a rk c a s e a g a in s t d o c t o r d ro p p e d

From Aatoclatod Prasa coporta

F rid a y , Au g ust 2. 1991
V o l. A3. N o . 294

BrM n/($836)

"W e need to come here and

GAINESVILLE. Fla. (AP) — An appeals court approved a 84
million malpractice award for a White Springs woman who had
parts o f her large intestines removed after she was Improperly
diagnosed as having cancer.
Judith Hodges Is to be awarded 84,182,000 in connection
with surgery performed In June 1967 by Dr. Nanjiinda Swamy
at the Lake City Medical Center.
A Jury,.last year,found that large sections of Ms. Hodges'
Intestines had to-be taken out because o f Swamy's removal o f
tumors he Incorrectly thought were cancerous.
Ms. Hodges. 41. who had been a waitress at a Lake City
restaurant, now has to spend about 12 hours nightly being fed
intravenously at a cost her lawyer estimates at 8300 a day.

I US F t 4SUMI

jap an /($1,036)

The measles epidemic la not
the only thing spurring this
nationwide effort. Novetlo said
the children who don't get lm-

waa chosen
ing place for the campaign
becauae of Its constant Influx of
people — especially thoae who
are poor or who fear Immigration

Malpraetlct award approved

MIAMI - Hers are tho winning
numbers selected Thursday the
Florida Lottery Cash 3: 2-2-7
Tho winning numbers selected In
the Florida Lottery Play 4 wars:
8144

tw a d * / ($1,361)

Twenty-three free clinics will
be giving Im m unisations In
Dade County.

Storer didn't violate law, court says

TALLAHASSEE - Five former
correctional officers were sen­
tenced lo prison terms ranging
from 15 months to nearly six
years for conspiring lo beat
Inmates after a riot at Cross City
Correctional Institution, federal
officials said Thursday.
The five former sergeants at
the prison were convicted In May

Aiism N a/($1,032) |

The surgeon general said
c e le b ritie s su ch a s Henry
Winkler and Steven Spielberg
w ill be appearing at some of the
free dlnlcs. skxig with cartoon
characters like B u ^ Bunny and
Donald Duck to "m ake It fun."
Actress Kate Capshaw will be
vtatttng the dtnica in Miami.

"The U.S. public has been consistently fed a diet of
propaganda and blatant falsehoods regarding Fidel Castro and
his totalitarian regim e." the letter said.
The anti-Castro foundation said in a news release Thursday
that members would picket ABC's Miami affiliate on Friday.
They also planned demonstrations In front of ABC In New York
and affiliates In Washington and other cities.

an

* * * * * * I &amp; &gt; '* ) 1

DEFUNIAK SPRINGS. Fla. The driver of a riding lawn
m ower has been charged with
m a n slau gh ter w hile d riv in g
under the Influence o f alcohol as
the result of a collision between
the m ow er and a motorcycle.

motorcyclist Mitchell L. Peters.
29. ofN lccville.
Brown also was charged with
d r iv in g th e 1 2 -h orsep ow er
mower on the wrong side o f
State Road 20 when It collided
with Peters’ motorcycle In the
Florida Panhandle hamlet o f
Choctaw Beach.

Charges were filed Wednesday
against James 0. Brown. 46. of
Portland, stemming from the
J u n e 1 crash th a t k i lle d

B row n and R o b ert L.
Fordham. 48. of Freeport, a
passenger on the mower, were
Injured.

THE WEATHER
T od ay: Partly cloudy w ith
thunderstorms likely. High near
90. Wind south to south 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Tonight: Partly cloudy with a
slight chance o f thunderstorms SATURDAY
until around midnight. Low in F tly eldy 93-73
the lower 70s. Wind south 10
mph. Rain chance 20 percent.
Saturday: Partly cloudy with a I m m m u
chan ce o f m ainly afternoon
thunderstorm s. High In the
LA ST
lower 90s. Wind south 10 to 15
A a g .S
mph. Rain chance 40 percent.
E x ten d ed forecast: P a rtly
cloudy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms each day.
—

Ponsacota
Sarasota
Tollahasaao
Tampa
V tr o B o o th

W Palm Baach

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MONDAY
F tlyeldy 93-73

TUESDAY
Ftlyeldy 9 3 -7 3

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FULL
A ag.2 S

—

SO L UMAR T A B L E : Min. 11:50
a . m . . ------------ p.m.: MaJ. 5:40
a . m . . 6 :1 0 p .m . T I D E B t
D aytoaa B sadu highs. 12:16
a.m.. 1:07 p.m.: lows. 6:34 a.m..
7:36 p.m.: N tw I f f — Boaekt
highs. 12:21 a.m.. 1:12 p.m.:
lows. 6:39 a .m . 7:41 p.m.:
Cocoa Boaekt highs. 12:36 a.m..
1:27 p.m.: lows. 6:54 a.m.. 7:56
&gt;.m.

□
Waves arc 1
foot and sc ml glassy. Current Is
to the north w ith a water
temperature o f 76 degrees. Now
Saiyraa Baach: Waves are 2 feet
and semi choppy. Current Is to
the north, with u waler tempera­
ture of 76 degrees.

W EDNESDAY
.F tly e ld y 93-7 3

|STATISTICS

1

m

esm m
C “ :-0

—

City
Apalachicola
Daytona Booth
Ft. Loud Booth
FortMyor*
Gatnotvlllo
Homottoad
Jacktonvliw
Koy West

SUNDAY
Ftlyeldy 9 3 -7 3

S t. A sfm stlas to J a p tto r la ls t
T o n ig h t : W in d s o u th to
southwest 15 knots. Seas 3 to 5
feet. Bay and inland waters a
moderate chop. Scattered show­
ers and thunderstorms.
Saturday: W in d sou th to
southwest 10 to 15 knots. Seas 2
lo 4 feet. Bay and Inland waters
a moderate chop. Scattered
shpwers and thunderstorms.

1

T h e high tem peratu re In
Sanford Thursday was 87 de­
grees and the overnight low was
72 as reported by the University
o f Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
R ec o rd e d rainfall fo r the
period, ending at 9 a m Friday,
to ta lled . 15 of an Inch.
T h e temperature at 9 a.m.
to d a y was 83 d egree s and
Friday's overnight low was 75.
as recorded by the National
W eather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ T fcarad ap ’s U gh .............. 88
□ B a ra an trie prasaaro.SO.OS
□ K a la tiv s H um idity....80 p et
□ W la d s ........— S a a th 0 a p k
□ M a la fa U . (•HIMtMM2 8 o f a a la.
□ T a d a y 's amass t
S: I S poa.
□ T e a w rre w '9 smarls«....S.*04

Temperetwss iftoicsto h
m
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Anchorage
a 4f
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AWwvills
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Allania
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Atlantic City
os 70
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Salttmero
ft 44
cAy
•lumps
dr
a M AS
Birmingham
n
II
cAy
Sltmarck
71 S3 At cAy
S0iM
■7 S3
dr
Boston
•1 OS
dr
Burlington. Vt.
a *4
dr
CNtrlnton.lC
S4 77
cAy
ChorWtlon.W Va
cAy
f l 17
CHtrWtte.MC
•t 71
cAy
Cheyenno
S4 a .14
m
Chicago
m
ts 4)
Coiumbl«.S.C.
71 71 A7 cAy
Cotumbuo.OMo
04 41
dr
Concard. N H
dr
f l 11
Dalle* Ft Worth
ff 70
dr
Denver
a 44
CAy
O n Molno*
f i OS
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Detroit
m
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Honolulu
dr
a 74
HouUon
fl H
cAy
ISdOSSSSta
fa S»
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Konto* City
cAy
a 44
ImVego*
ft 74 .44
lltfto Rock
f i 77
L n Angolo*
dr
a 44
Memphis
fa 44
dr
m
Milweukoe
n
44
01 44 07
m
Mpi* !• Paul
Nathvlllo
44
ft
dr
Hot* Or Mont
n
71 .14 cAy
Now York City
« 44
cAy
Oklahoma City
ft 71
dr
Omaha
fa 47
cAy
Philadelphia
ti 71
cAy
Phoonia
i« 44
dr
Pittsburgh
fi II
cAy
Pori land.AAaino
V 17
dr
Portland.Or*
77 u
dr
SI Lout*
07 74
cAy
Sait Laka City
U 44 01 cAy •
SaattW
71 17
dr

«

*

�Sanford Nsra'd, Sanford. Florida - Friday. August 2. 1991 - 0A

Commission stunts Gator’s growth
Zoning qusstlons
kssp satsry going

Traffic stop fou ls to snoot
A traffic stop landed a Bookertown man tn jail on
charges Thursday.
Johnny Ferdinand Brawn. 31.1901 DuBots St., wai
by a Seminole County deputy on State Road 46 for
loud radio at about 1:30 a.m. When Brown
vehicle registration In the auto's glove comportment, the
deputy reported seeing a handgun, which he found was loaded.
A subsequent search revealed another loaded handgun under
11)0 &lt;*rtvpr s ,c* t_and a sawed-off shotgun in the trunk, the
deputy reported. Brown was charged with ca

Qatar's Pocki Me restaurant, In Victoria Square.
right, with K ill ay's, far left. The two d o are not
•dfaoent, but closer than 800 fact, required under

changes In the 500 foot separatton.
City Planner Matt West could

Csshisr chsrQsd with foegory
A caahier of the Winn-Dixie grocery store on South French
Avenue turned herself Into Sanford police Wednesday and wan
charged with forgery.
According to police reports. Connie Lee Garrett, 90. 900 B.
13th St.. Sanford, cashed two checks for a total of about 1991
that were taken from a purse reported stolen from the store
July 1.
Police report Garrett told them she was behind tn her house
payments and needed the money. She w as charged with two
counts of forgery, two counts of using a forged Instrument and
theft.

Man charged In puraathaft
Ben Lenard Fowler. 10. 130 Scott Drive. Sanford, w as
arrested by Sanford police Wednesday after a woman reported
he took a puree containing 0313 In rings and cash from her car
parked la front of the County Services Building.
Police report witnesses chased Fowler aeveral blocks to the
600 block of Son Marcos Avenue where he w as apprehended.
The policeman reported Fowler told him he would tell where he
dropped the purse If the victim would drop charges.

Man nabbad with counterfoil eocaina
Patrick Payne, 27. 106 McKay Blvd.. Sanford, was charged
with conspiracy to sell counterfeit cocaine to undercover
agents Wednesday.
Agents with the Sanford Special Investigations Unit report
Payne encouraged them to buy dro p from another man. The
d r u p did not test “positive'' for cocaine.

Tatn arrattad for stalling clgarattaa
Jason Curtis May. 18. 890 Ocorgla A ve.. Sanford, w as
by U o ffM o d police and charged wtth
tea from a tbuck
J
stealing a carton o f cigarettes
on July IB.
of
Police reported May and two other youths took four
cigarettes and divided them among themselves. May w as
charged with burglary and grand theft.

Fugitives arraatad
The following wanted persons have been arrested:
• Robert Eugene Robinson. 31. 3045 W . 20th St., Sanford,
w as arrested by Sanford police Wednesday for a forgery charge
Issued Tuesday. He w as also charged with carrying a concealed
weapon, when police report finding a closed straight razor, and
possession of « false Identification.
• Mitchell Anthony Kennedy. 33. 1204 W . 11th St.. Sanford,
w as arrested Wednesday for falling to appear at a June 28
hearing for forgery charges.
• J o h n Henry Young. 39. 2220 Jltway, Midway, was arrested
Wednesday by Seminole County deputies on charges he
violated hla probation for a possession of cocaine conviction.
• J u n e Morgan Gemmer, 42. 962 New Castle Clcle. Apt. 104.
Lake Mary, was arrested Wednesday In Orange County for a
Ju ly 9 Seminole County warrant Issued for obtaining property
with a worthless check charge.
•J u a n Placldo Rivera. 27. 2000 Lake Mary Boulevard. Apt.
105-B. Sanford, was arrested at home Wednesday on a June 27
Orange County warrant Issued for obtaining property with a
worthless check charge.

Film star Hedy Lamarr
arrested lo r shoplifting
CASSELBERRY H edy
L a m a rr, the A u stria n -b o rn
screen legend of the 1930s and
1940s. got a lift home from
police after being arrested at a
drug store here on a shoplifting
charge, according to police.
Ms. Lamarr cooperated with
police and "was treated with
utmost respect os all persons
encountered by our officers are
when faced with similar Inci­
d e n t s . " C a sselb erry p o lic e
spokesm an Patrick S im pson
said after the actress' arrest
Thursday.
Ms. Lamarr. 78. was arrested
at an Eckerd Drugs when police
called to the store found the
actresa wtth 021 worth o f what
they described as "personal care
Item s".
She was released at the scene
In this town north o f Orlando,
according to a police statement.

Police then drove Ms. Lamarr to
her home In nearby Altamonte
Springs.
But Ms. Lam arr also w as
Issued a notice to appear In
Seminole County court on Aug.
20. on the ahopllftingcharge.
The arrest was not the first for
the movie star.
In 1966. a Los Angetes Jury
acquitted her o f petty theft o f 18
Items worth 086 from a depart­
ment store.
In 1933. Ms. Lamarr created
an International stir by appear­
ing nude In (he Czech film
"Ecstasy."
Four years later, she arrived in
Hollywood, billed as the w orld's
most b ea u tifu l woman. S h e
starred In many MGM films in
the 1940s. Her most successful
com m ercia l film was P a r a ­
mount's "Sam son and Delilah."
"Any girl can be glamorous."
she once said, "all you have to
do is stand still and look stupid."

Controversial war hero gats
5 years for securities scam
latad F ra u
SHALIMAK. Fla. - A Judge
rejected a retired Anny officer's
plea for a light sentence based
on his heroic military record and
sentenced him to five years in
prison for a securities scam.

Circuit Judge G. Robert Bar­
ron o r d e r e d the s e n te n c e
Wrdnrsday for retired Col. J.
R oss F r a n k l in o f D e s t ln .
F r a n k lin w o n n u m b e ro u s
medals for heroism but also was
embroiled In controversy over
alleged atrocities In Vietnam.

the study and recommendations
would be done, but hoped to
draw up proposed changes by
the next commission meeting.

■SMBS'

HAHVIY
Attorney Dam n Ownen.

betag taken care o f property and
• t r e e n o w h e lp s In th e
landscaping.
In response to a previous
commission request for Informs*
tlon. City Attorney Ned Julian
reported, “the problem resulted
from the fact that the city signed
off on the business* application
for a restaurant consumption on
premises liquor license as being
In compliance with the city's
toning regulations, without sc*
tually checking the distance

MORSE
IN VI STIGAT I O N S

seven children. **We go there
aeveral times a week, and It's an
excellent family restaurant.' he
• • * * !. “ A ll t h e y w a n t Is
permission to expand so they
can make It even better.’*
Following a discussion on the
situation, the commission voted
to approve a defacto non con*
formance use permit, which will
allow Gator’s to continue normal
operation. The commission also
instructed the staff to prepare
recommendations on possible

OUT

.

I f t f l M 11
-.39-2022

&lt;V2 8

I!)0 ()

A w Admission!

C ra s h in v e stig a tio n
fo c u s e s o n s w itc h

itu rd o y ,
N

A u g .

o o n - t :3 0

3 rd

p m

for CSX Transportation, said the
track had been Inspected the day
Federal Investigators ere try­
ing to determine whether s pin
that was mlastng from a railroad
switching, device caused an
Am Irak train to Jump the tracks
st 77 mph. causing a crash that
killed seven people.
Thirteen passengers on the
train had boarded In Sanford but
no local residents were reported
Injured.
Fifteen people were hospi­
talised. and some of the 407
passengers on the Silver Star
complained that rescuers were
slow to arrive after the train
crashed en route to New York
from Miami on Wednesday.
Christopher Hart o f the Na­
tional Tran sportation Safety
Board said Thursday that a rail
dispatcher notified authorities
11 minutes after the 0:01 a.m.
crash and the first emergency
personnel began arriving In the
Isolated woods In central South
Carolina 33 minutes later.
Although the train’s crew sent
an emergency signal to the
dispatcher momenta after the
crash. Hart said a radio defect
revented the dispatcher from
earing what the crew members
said.

S

Hart said investigators are
studying a rusted pin found
under the sw itch , but also
haven't ruled out human error
or other mechanical problems as
a cause of the crash.
He said the train’s locomotives
recently passed an Inspection,
and Norm Going, a spokesman

17-s* Sanford. (On Lata Monro* n u t HotpKM)
MW too ami fl» War m a n a gm i
m' r * m O T j n t o f n w u o n e W J 9 M )( 7 7 V O a « a (

Hart said the pin. do bigger
than a finger, waa part of a
mechanism that activates a rod
that moves the track Into the
proper position.
He said It apparently ares out
o f position for m ore than a day.
During the 24 hours before the
crash, four trains passed safely
over the switch, and the Stiver
Star’s two locomotives and first
11 cars also safely crossed. The
last six cars derailed and sideswiped taro freight cars parked
on a parallel track.
Hart said interviews
engineer and tapes from a train
recorder show taro signals were
sent minutes after the crash
from the train to a dispatcher for
C S X T ran sp o rtatio n , which
owns the track.
At 5:12 a.m.. eight minutes
after the second signal, the
dispatcher called em ergency
m edical personnel. T h e first
police car arrived at 5:25 a.m.
The ambulance arrived at 5:45
a.m.
" T h e resp on se tim e was
extrem ely q u ic k ." said Bob
Maya, a spokesman for the
K e ra h a w C o u n ty O ffic e o f
Emergency Preparedness.
Not all passengers agreed.
"It was pathetic." J eff Mullen.
19. o f Smyrna. Del. "1 think one
guy would have lived If they had
gotten there."
It was the worst Amtrak acci­
dent since 1987. when 16 people
were killed In a wreck In Chase.
Md.

SALE AND AUCTION
ONUSDMISCDUNKMISEQWPMKNT
n m r, aimust

mi

SALE twflkw at 0:00 AM and conchidM al 11:00 AM '
AUCTION begins 0111:00AM and concludM al 4 *0FM

LOCATION:

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4SO O O O W M U S H U m assurer

4TH AND MAKE
SANFORD, H

SANFORD
A C E HARDWARE
205 E 25th SL

TUM&amp; Codv Trwrelws O w d. Mamy O d w er Cvttftsd Owdi only.
AU ITEMS MUST BE QAJMED O N T&gt;€ DAY O f THE AUCTION
ITEMS SOtD AS IS WITH NO EXFKSSED OC IMfUED WARRANTY

V

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tbs present Lake Mary coda for aataMlshmanta
which serve alcohoNc beverages.

ACE.

H a rd w a re

321-0885
OStN S U N D A Y

S4

�J■a'JmrLJm/
*

W I L L I A M A. R U S H E R

Let’s alt thank Dr. Edward Teller
On the Fourth of July, the T V waa full o f
bands, flags, baton twirlera and the other
paraphernalia of the patriotic paradigm. The
:'Am *rlka"-haters were Maying under their rocks
far the holiday.
It suddenly occurred to me that there couldn't
be a better time to pay tribute to a great
American. Beat of ait. the one that I have In mind
la atm very much abve. W hy do we tend to

EDITORIALS

Terrorism
P r e s i d e n t B u s h h a s said, q u i t e
appropriately, that th is country can 't h a re
n o rm al relations w ith Ira q a a k n f aa S a d d a m
H uaaein remains In pow er . He should h a re
b ee n say in g the sam e th in g — and w ith eq u al
e m p h asis — about the
e cal) o f Iranian *
ren e w e d again this y ear, fa r the faith fu l to
m u rd e r author S alm an Rushdie and o th ers
conn ected with the publication of hts novel.
‘T h e Satanic Verses.” w hich some M u slim s
re g a rd a s blasphem ous.
T h e order to MU R u sh die, first issu ed b y
A y a to lla h Ruholla K hom eini In F e b u ra ry
1969, continues to fester. O n July 13. the
J a p a n e se translator o f the book. H iro sh i
Igarash i. a university teacher of com parative
literatu re, was stabbed to death outside h is
office. T h at killing c a m e nine days a fte r the
Italian translator o f th e book. Ettoro C ap rio lo ,
w a s w ounded in an o th er stabbing b y a n
Iran ian w h o is said to h av e had connections
to th e Iranian Em bassy tn Milan.

a

lo fat m e pay tribute, here and now. to Edward
Teller.
To get the w ont over with first, he la a white
European male. He waa bom In Hungary tn ISOS
and received his Pb.D. in physics at the
University o f Leipzig In 1930 as a graduate
student under the great Werner Heisenberg .
With the advent of Nazism. Tetter left Germany.
and tn 1935 accepted appointment aa Professor
of Physics at George Washington University In
Washington. O.C. Tn 1941, to our great good
fortune, ne became a citizen of the United States.
Now the plot begins to thicken. Dr. Teller had
long been engaged, aa a theoretical physicist. In
such fields as quantum.
quantum, molecular and nuclear
physics. On learning In 1039. along with the rest
of the scientific community, that nuclear fission
had been achieved, he waa concerned over the

possibility that Nasi Germany might be able to
create a new class of dreadfully destructive
atomic weapon*. He was soon at work on the
Manhattan Project,
to e n s u r e t h a t
A m erica w on the
fearful race.
A s we k n o w
thanks to Dr. Teller
and others like him.
America did. When
World War tt ended.
Tetter became Pro­
fessor of Physics at
the U niversity o f
Chicago.
B utthe Cold W ar
waa upon ua. and
soon the Soviet Un­
ion had stolen the
f Ha k&gt;ok» for
silt ha w orld
key technology and
constructed Its own
like an O ld
Testam ent
atom ic bom b. D r.
T eller returned to
prophet.^
government work tn
the field of nuclear
weapons (both fission and fusion), first at Los
Alam os and then at Berkeley's Lawrence

E a rlie r this year, R u sh die, who has b e e n in
h id in g in England e v e r since K h om ein i's
o rd e r w aa issued, tried to apologise an d
declared, tha* there w o u ld be no. p a p erb a ck
edition o f the novel a n d no further tran sla­
tion s. B u t that attempt w a a rebuffed.

O th e r than p ro v id in g bodyguards an d
p ro v id in g cover fo r I r a n * targets, the W est
h a s sent the same m essage to Tehran that it
se n t to Baghdad before the Invasion o f
K u w ait: W e will do nothing.

LETTERS T O EDITOR
Letters tu the editor are welcome. All letter* must
be signed. Include the address of the writer and a
daytim e telephone number. Letters should be on a
single subject and be as brief as possible.. Letters
are subject lo editing.

Berry's World
HEY, BUDDY, SEEN ANY
NUCLEAR EQUIPMENT
AROUND HERE?
1

i

NUCLEAR
W HAT?

ANDERSON

Gay group trying
Pentagon ‘outing’

T h e re 's no way to k n o w whether s stro n ger
W e ste rn response to the initial Ira n ia n
Invitation to the M u slim faithful to k ill
R u sh die and others connected with "T h e
S atan ic V erses" m igh t h ave had an effect In
d eterrin g the m ullahs tn Tehran fro m re ­
peatin g It.

In effect, the governm ent o f Iran Is w a g in g s
terrorist campaign ag ain st citizens o f other
n ation s. For a w h ile , the nations o f the
E u ro p e an Com m unity withdrew their a m ­
b a ssa d o rs from Iran . B u t that mild sh o w o f
d isap p ro v al ended lo n g ago.

In person, at 83. Dr. Teller is living proof that it
is no disadvantage to be short (or "vertically
challenged." as we say these days). Walking
determinedly, with the aid o f a wooden staff a
good foot taller that he ta. he looks for all the
world like On Old Testament prophet — your first
Impulse is to get out o f his way.
Conservatives will be interested to know that,
in Just about every respect, Edward Teller Is one
of them.

JACK

In neither case h a s an y o n e claimed re sp o n ­
sibility. but there is circum stantial eviden ce
in b o th that the victim ’s connection w ith the
b o o k w a s the reason. T h e re had been death
threats against the J a p an ese publishers, an d
Igarash i had for a tim e been given body*
e
gu a rd s. There were dem onstrations o u tsld
t
the offices of the J a p a n e se .publisher w h en
the bo ok cam e out in J a p a n last year.

T h e m urder of Ig a ra sh i an d the
iuk on
C a p rio lo make It c le a r that the rebuff w a s no
abstraction . In June. R ushdie, who h a d been
try in g to emerge fro m hidin g, was w arn ed by
B ritish inteligence sou rces that a n e w hit
sq u a d h ad been sent to B ritain to kill him .

Livermore Laboratory, and aa a
Fellow at the Hoover Institution.
Across the years. Dr. Tetter's contributions to
American's security are Hteralty too numerous to
mention. In addition to working on the original
atom bom b, he fought and won the crucial battle
with J . Robert Oppenhetmer. early tn the 1960a.
over whether this country should build a
hydro g su (La. fusion) bom b. (The Soviets were
doing ao. but Oppenhetmer and his procommunist circle didn't want America to match
r.) Teller's has also been the major
scientific voice supporting the brilliant concept
of a Strategic Defame Initiative, whereby this
country would be defended against Incoming
missiles by means of sm all orbiting satellites
capabable o f detecting and destroying them in

TOM TIEDE

Kilroy was first Bart Simpson
W ASHINGTON - It's been said that next
worse to losing a war is winning It. Because the
winners must spend their survival remember­
ing w hat happened. The United States will be
doing quite a lot of that regarding World War 11
later this y e a r, when the 50th anniversary o f
the start or the mmhal Is marked In December.
The w ar was Tar and aw ay the most
grotesquely excessive In human history.
Perhaps 45 million lives were lost. Including
300.000 from this country. It was likewise the
most chronicled of armed conflicts, and the
stories o f the hardship and heroism, of the
good moments and bad. live on In the nation's
collected memory.
Some of the stories have been gathered In an
anthology edited by m ilitary writer and
Journalism Instructor C. Brian Kelly. The book
Is titled: "B est Little Stories From World W ar
II" (Empire Press. Leesburg. Va.). The stories
have been combed from public prints and
private works, ana they are German and
Japanese as well aa British and American.
The stories range from a mention of the
"firs t" Yank to die In the hostilities (Freddie
Falgout. aboard a neutral U.S. naval vessel In
1937) to a tense sniper's duel at Stalingrad.
Not all the tales are grim. There is an entry, for
Instance, on a chambermaid who stole Hitler's
bathwater and displayed It In her vltrine.
Then there la the story o f Kilroy. The famous
chap with the awfully big nose. The globe­
trotting. if elusive, gremlin who may have been
borrowed from life. Kilroy. tt seems, really w as
there. Editor Kelly picked up the details from
author Richard O’Donnell, who wrote In Naval
History Magazine about the oddity.
Kilroy. Th e Bart Simpson o f his day. Only
more so. Wherever A m erica's 14 million
combatants traveled during the war. he tagged
along. Actually, he very often got there first.
Troops from Tarawa to Trieste found his
familiar signature scrawled on walls, ammuni­
tion crates and latrine sheds: "Kilroy was
here!"
It waa aaaay Irreverence, to be sure. Just the
kind o f baaaad bunkum GIs appreciated. W ar
may be hell. but. give the devil his due. It can
also be a gas. Soldiers put the Kilroy greeting
on bombs bound for Berlin, on toilet paper rolls
In the admiral's head: they even engraved the
name on the bloody jocks at Normandy Beach.
The men also left drawings o f Kilroy. He In
fact rivaled the mustachioed Adolf aa the most
copied cartoon character o f the era. He was
shown with his bulb nose drooping over a wall,
his weary eyes pecking at the follies o f his
fellows, and his three-fingered hands hanging
on. so to speak, to the flimsy parapet of life.
Every dogface teamed the drawing during
the war. It's said Dwight Eisenhower doodled It
from time to lime. And eventually Kilroy
became omnipresent. He became part of other
arm ies and olhrr cultu res. The British

Tommy* adopted him. as did the French: and
Germans left the logo to tease advancing or
retreating allies.
The Kelly book says Kilroy became a
movement. Yet most of all. n diversion.
Veterans still talk about the Infantry grunt who
fell In bed with an Italian lass, and left her a
package of personalized chocolate. When the
girl's mother showed
u p at c o m m a n d
h e a d q u a rte rs th e
n e x t a .m .. s h e
barked: "A ll right,
where Is this hum
Kilroy?"
There was also a
m ore serious case
that Involved Kilroy
and a murder. The
Kelly book says u
w o m a n
w a s
strangled to death In
England during the
war, and Scotland
a
Y ard In vestigators
ch a m b e rm a id
found Kllroy's name
sto le H it le r 's
written on a wall In
b a th w a te r a n d
her apartment. Natu­
d is p la y e d it in
r a lly . th e p o lic e
her v ltrin e . J
wondered if a GI did
It: there were loads of
them In London
then.
But no. The Yanks were clean. The British
cops looked around and around and eventually
arrested a deranged friend of the victim, who
lived next door, and whose name really was
Kilroy. The man said he couldn't understand
why It took the police so long to find him: He'd
left his name on the wall, 'adn't he?
Indeed, some o f those who left their Imprint
on the walls o f W W II were genuine Kllroys.
The name is not uncommon tn Englishspeaking countries. And when the fighting at
last ended, and there was time to get to the
bottom of It all. a U.S. transportation company
held a contest to see who If anyone the real
Kilroy was.
Several d ozen K llroys en tered . Some
frivolously and others with designs on eternal
celebrity. The contest Judges weeded through
the list, eliminating the misinformed and the
bar-betters. They finally settled on Jim Kilroy.
a part-time Massachusetts politico, who said he
started the phenomenon while working In a
shipyard.
Kilroy said his shipyard Job was to count the
rivet* lit the ironwork by checking them off
with chalk. But hr found that other workers
would erase- the chalk marks so he would
count them again, so they would get double
pay. lie slopped that by writing "K ilro y was
here!" by Godfrey, and the whole thing took oil
from there.

C

WASHINGTON - Pete Williams, the lanky,
bespectacled Pentagon spokesman who
became a household face during the Persian
G u lf W ar. ta considering resigning because of
accusations that he la a homosexual.
W illiam s is a victim of modern-day vlgllantism, not spasmed by gay bashers, but by
a radios! homosexual group that specializes
in "outing" — forcing closet homosexuals to
publicly declare their sexual preference. That
group, "Queer N ation." in Washington,
thinks Williams Is In the closet and they have
been agitating for more than a month to push
him out.
Queer Nation was
motivated by what It
calls the "hypocrisy"
an d "dou ble stan­
dard” in the military,
w h e r e civilian
h o m o s e x u a l
e m p l o y e e s ure
allowed to keep their
Jdb^but homosexual
s e r v ic e m e n a n d
w o m e n ar e d i s ­
charged.
T h e controversy
a b o u t W illia m s ,
whispered in Wash­
ington for weeks. Is f Thara was talk
s p r e a d in g . Ne x t
of hit moving
w e e k . T,The
ovartotha
A d v o c a t e ." a r e ­
Whita House
spected gay maga­
ataff. ■
zine published In Los
Angeles, will publish
a story on the issue.
A magazine spokesman told us that the story
"w ill confirm that W illiam s Is a homosex­
ual.”
Williams himself won't discuss his sexual
preference. He says he Is not paid to talk
about his personal life nor offer hts personal
opinions on Issues. It was that deft ability to
calmly- and dispassionately state the facts
d u rin g the war that television view ers
remember about Williams.
He is a former W yom in g newscaster who
went to work for Dick Cheney when Cheney
w a s the Republican congressman from
W yom ing. Then, when Cheney was tapped to
: be defense secretary, he took Williams with
1 h im as hts chief spokesman. W illiam s
, performed so well during the war that there
i w as talk of hts m oving over to the White
House staff. He even toyed with the idea o f
running for public office tn Wyoming.
Why does It matter in this Job whether or
; not Williams Is gay or whether he is in or out
of the closet? One answer Is his security
clearance. Some uniformed servicemen and
women, employees o f the Central Intelligence
Agency and other Intelligence outfits with
access to highly classified material have lost
their security clearances and have been fired
when U was discovered that they were
closeted homosexuals. The theory — a shaky
one — la that a closeted homosexual can be
easily blackmailed by a foreign spy service.
Williams acknowledged that Issue, but said
| that, historically, the Pentagon has not
considered the fear o f a security breach as the
j prim ary reason for dismissing homosexuals.
H e also noted that he had undergone a
rigorous background check by the FBT to get
&lt; hts current top-secret security clearance.
A spokesman for Queer Nation In Washingi ton. Michael Petrclls. told ua that the group
targeted WUliama for "ou tin g" becauae of the
Incongruoua Pentagon pollclea regarding
| homosexual! In the military. The Defense
Department, tn a directive that dates back to
1943. says, "homosexuality Is incompatible
with military service." The policy saya that
"th e presence of such members adversely
affects the ability o f the Military Services to
; maintain discipline, good order and morale ...
and to prevent breaches o f security."
M ore than 10.000 people have been
discharged from the military In the last
decade because o f their alleged sexual
preference. But there Is no mandatory
discharge for civilian employees o f the
| Defense Department.
In June. Queer Nation put up at least 250
crude posters of Williams around Washington
with the headline "Absolutely Queer."

�str.ff

. j r * Santoro, Ftorids - Friday, August 2, I ftl - M

Storm w ater project preview ed
•»
H erald S taff W riter

OOmWonaach
i toy Shsysar 2000.

W e ’re s till drinking
but not ’hard s t u f f
Aaaoclatad Press Writer__________
WASHINGTON - After a de­
cade o f heightened temperance,
more Americana are again or­
dering drinks with dinner. But
they're choosing beer and wine
and shunning the hard stuff.
And th ey're not drin k in g
nearly as much as they used to.
according to a recent survey by
the National Restaurast Associa­
tion.
"In the days of the big happy
hour boom, people would come
In at five, slam down drinks untU
eight and stumble out to their
cars. You rarely see that now,"
■aid Steve Henderson, director of
food a n d b e v e r a g e f o r
Baltimore's Omni International
Hotel restaurant.
In I960, Americana drank the
alcohol equivalent of 456 cans o f
year for everyone old
to drink. But consumpgan to drop off as states
ed raising drinking ages and
pie grew more conscious
it the effects of alcohol on
health and driving.
G iven changes In social et­
udes, we will probably never
the per capita consumption
Is or earlier decades," said
Farquhareon. president o f
association, which analyzed
ta from more than 10,000
holds nationwide.
R e s ta u r a n t d rin k o r d e r s
dropped an average 20 percent
between 1980 and 1964. And
federal statistics show perperson consumption of alcoholic
[ beverages In I960 was about 9
percent less than In 1080.
But diaries kept by people
p a r t ic ip a t in g In th e s tu d y
showed they ordered beer 30
percent more often In 1990 than
they did In 1987 and wine 6
percent more of the time. T h ey
did not find any new appeal in
hard liquor, however, ordering It
10 percent le u often.
W hat's changing?
Well, there are 23 million more
people o f drinking age — over
age21 — than lOyearsago.
Farquharson suggests that
more people may feel safer
d r in k in g aw ay from h o m e
b eca u se th ey've- started to
choose a designated driver, »nw

and the stations agree
to air the commercials when
contracting for them.
"T h e stations lose money If
(he ada don't air." Hedlund said.
Already, he said the average

LT. C O L. W ILLIAM DUNCAN
Lt. Col. William Duncan Allan.
82. 887 Tumbleweed Loop. Cas­
selberry. died Tuesday at Florida
Hospital. Altamonte Springs.
B o r n D - e c . 5 . 1 9 0 8 . In
Massachusetts, he m oved to
Casselberry from Germany In
1955. He was retired from the
U.S. A rm y Corps of Engineers
and a Protestant. He was a
member o f the Masonic Lodge.
Scottish Rite Lodge o f Orlando,
a n d t h e R e t ir e d O f f i c e r s
Assoc talon.
Survivors Include daughters,
Susan Culbertson. Winter Park.
L iz A lla n R eid. W ln n e p e g .
Monltoba. Canada; stepdaugh­
ter. Patty Fox. Texas; sisters.
E d n a M a e . J e s s i e H e la n
Sarachman. both of Lawrence.
Mass.; eight grandchildren: four
great-grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F airch lld Fu neral
Home. Orlando, in charge of
arrangements.
E LIZA BE TH E. BRADLEY
Elizabeth E. Bradley. 50. 2154
Center St.. Sanford, died July 31
at Central Florida Regional Hos­
pital. Sanford. Bom Sept. 1.
1940. In High Springs, she

Through a mathematical pro­
cess, the EDU Is determined, and
Feriand recommended the city
base charges on the number of
EDUs. He explained. "T he EDU
method wtU allow the city to
determine the amount of runoff
or stormwater drainage that
occurs In each parcel, regardless
o f whether It Is developed or

undeveloped.
Through an analysis of Lake
Mary property. Dyer. Riddle.
Mills A Precourt determined the
average residential property had
4.376 square fact tn the drainage
area, and 13.600 square feet lor
the house, driveway, and other
figure
Mary’ia EDU.
Feriand recommended the cMy
charge hom e and property
owners S3 per month, per EDU,
which would amount to 936 a
year. The ch arge would be
placed against natural and pre-developed land as well aa single
and multi residence home areas.
"This will bring In an estimated
9275.000 per year In revenue,"
he reported.
Feriand suggested the city

collect tfie money by asking*
Seminole County to include the
amount aa part o f its tax billing.
He said. "The City would pay
the County one percent of the
total aa a collection fee."
While the matter wak pres­
ented early In the meeting, prior
to the lengthy ittrnaaton on a
Dtoooted U bond tame. Mayor
Randy Morris explained that the
Utility referendum
y relate to the bond
Feriand said. " I f you
approve tide. It will provide i
enterprise fluid which could be
used In the Issuance of Hie
The report w as delivered ss a
■pedal presentation during the
Ctty Commission meeting, with
no commission action required
at the present time.

Uproar
until we actually
start on the project."
A number o f citizens com­
plained that the city w as trying
to push through a rapid p
o f the bond laaue without giving
the reaklenta aufldent informa­
tion on It. City Attorney Ned
Julian explained "W e need to
resolve this bond laaue by
August 15, because It Includes
the powerline burial, and we
have to make a dectalon on it by
that time.

Sheila Sawyer, a Lake Mary
resident, commented that the
city should not make a dectalon
on the bond tame, because It la
connected with the dty budget,
and the city has not yet had a
public, hearing an 11. "Five mil­
lion dollars la a lot of money,"
BheaaJd.
Later In the public discussion,
Sawyer warned the commission­
ers, "If this bond issue paaaea, I
assure you I will Initiate a recall
petition on every one w h o
approves it.
Resident Linda Hunt asked
why the bond laaue cannot be
brought up for a vote of the
citizens. "Money is being toaaed
around aa If It la nothing." ahe

alternative transportation or
sim p ly h a v e le a rn e d th e ir
personal limit.
Restaurants also are figuring
out how to deal with concerns
about drinking too much while
still pushing drinks, which are a
major source o f profit. Some
train servers to ask if a desig­
nated driver la at the table, for
example.
Another factor may be the
Lake Mary resident Ethel
alcohol Industry's adaptation to
a world in which moderation is Carlson commented. "T his Issue
has been pushed along too
the byword.
Beer has long been the most quickly. This Is the first time
popular alcoholic beverage in we've had an opportunity to
America. But the dramatic Jump speak." She told the commis­
F o llo w in g the p u b lic d is ­
sioners, "Some of you are not
It took In p o p u la rity from
cussion,
Commissioner Trem el
tiling all of the people.
1987-1990 cou ld be p artly
assured the citizens that a favor­
because it la viewed as a more You are displaying egotem."
able vote does not Immediately
moderate beverage, said Jeff
Commissioner Paul Trem e! Involve the City In the bond
Becker o f the Beer Institute.
responded. "I don't believe there Issue. "T h e vote Is Just to allow
Both the beer and wine In­
Is a monopoly an egoism, some us to go ahead with the bonding
d u s try h a v e a g g r e s s iv e ly o f the spokespersons who attend
resolution. It does not tie the
marketed their products as part
our meetings d o not necessarily city's hands, and we can still
of the meal. T o make It easier, represent all the people.”
change ways the funds can be
wineries are producing more
half-boUlea so that customers
aren't forced to buy a large
bottle or none at all. Restaurants
are encouraged to offer more
the Supreme Court chamber of
varieties o f wine by the glass.
Thirty of the latter appoint­ Florida'a Old Capitol.
Some waiters and waitresses ments remain to be made by the
" I f they were here today they
are schooled on which wines go Bar and governor’s appointees might be surprised to know that
best with specific menu Items so now In place.
a great-grandson o f V irgin ia
they can make recommenda­
A fte r T h u rs d a y 's a p p o in t­ slaves Is here today as our chief
ments. 76 percent o f the 204 Justice." he said to smiles and
tions.
The wine Industry also has current commission members laughter from members o f the
been trying to combat any nega- were white, down from Wt per* Urban League, the National As­
Uvc publicity about health ef­ cent previously; 19 percent were sociation for the Advancement o f
fects by presenting experts who black, up from 7.8 percent, and Colored People and black lawsay a glass of wine with the meal 4.4 percent were Hispanic, up
era* associations crowding the
can a c tu a lly prom ote good from 4 percent.'
Istoric courtroom.
Chiles announced the names
health b y enhancing digestion
Irtformatl«n from Tho Auociotod P ro u to
and Introduced the appointees In contained In Milo report
and relieving tension.
Restaurants are eager to see
an Increase in alcohol consump­
tion because It means more
nance costs will Increase until It
money In the cash register. One
maybe Is replaced. Commissioners also
restaurateur said he makes
about 25 cents on every dollar of It's a good thing we wait to ace deleted another 91 million In
reserves for equipm ent and
food and 50 cents on every dollar what happens there."
Kelley said she changed her other emergency needs. Kaiser
of liquor.
T h e m a i t r e d ' at D u k e support for the utility tax after said that and possibly more
how the 96 million money will be needed next year.
Ziebert'a. a power restaurant in studying
Commissioners voted 4-1 to
Washington. Indicated a change would be spent. She also said
she believed county officials approve the tax increase. Com ­
couldn't come too soon.
"S e n a to rs , govern ors and were not forthright In telling missioner Larry Furlong said he
congresspeople use to come for residents about the utility tax opposed It because he believed
lunch and three or four martinis. when they aaked them to sup­ SherifT Don Eslinger's 928 mil­
lion could be cul, em ployee
And now they don't drink at port the one-cent sales tax.
C o m m is s io n e r s a ls o cu t m erit raises elim inated and
all." said Raymond Ventura.
998.000 needed to replace a other cuts made to the coun­
"Business has gone so bad. And
we have to worry about $50,000 em ergency m edical response tywide tax to compensate for (he
vehicle. Kaiser said the mainte­ unincorporated tax Increase.
a month rent."

allocated In the total project."
M ayor M o rris ex p la in e d ,
"What we are trying to do la
approve authorizing the ctty to
borrow the money, and set up
the procedures to do so. as
required by law ."
When the final vote was taken.
Mayor Morris, Commiastoners
Tom Mahoney and Paul Treme!
voted In favor o f the matter,
while Commissioners Oeorge
Duryea and David Mealor voted
agalnstlt.
During a brief reccis following
the lengthy dtecuastan. Commie-

•I
hope the people realise that vote
didn't commit the city to a IS
mutton Dona, w ejuat votea to go
with launching Into
paperwork to d ra w up the
bondft.”
No decision waa made re*,
gardtng whether or not the dty
would continue to pursue the
powerline burial matter. Mayor
Morris explained. "It la con­
tained in the overall capital
Improvement bond matter, and
the exact distribution of that
money has not been finalized."

fayseOe's
CnMiyKtofcn
IM O N K S V H M O

Singing Your Favorite Songs

Xralg Diertam”

HNQ+lONOi TALENTNIQHT
ON THUR8.

Commission-

i m

independent station loses about
9200,000 a year.
" G r o u p s lik e A c tio n for
Children's Television, for all the
good they do. sometimes lose
sight of the fact that If a TV
station is losing money continu­
ally. II w ill go bankrupt and not

moved to Sanford in 1927 from
there. She w as a teacher's
assistant and Pentecostal.
S u rvivors include mother.
L illie M ae W illia m s . H igh
Springs; husband. James. Sanfo r d : s o n s . J a m e s A..
Christopher and Robert, all of
S a n fo rd ; d a u g h ters, R en ee
Burke. Deltona. Lenell, Candace,
both of Sanford; brothers. Robert
S. Williams. John H. Williams,
both of High Springs: sisters.
Catherine trill. Velma Hampton,
both of Sanford. Lucille Hughes,
West Palm Beach: seven grand­
children.
Wllson-Elchelvergcr Mortuary.
Inc.. Sanford. In charge o f ar­
rangements.
C. M EADE JAM ES
C. Meade James. 51. Alta­
monte Bay Club Circle, Alta­
monte Springs, died Wednesday
at hts residence. Born Dec. 30.
1939. in Trinidad and Tobago.
South America, he moved to
Altamonte Springs from Fort
Lauderdale In 1990. He was an
agent d is tr ic t m an ager for
Equitable Life Insurance Co. and
a member o f North Orlando
Seventh-day Adventist Church.
He was a m em ber o f CUC

only will there be no commer­
cials for kids, but there will be
no program m ing for k id s ."
Hedlund said.
Independent stations, he said,
generate about 53 percent of ail
ad re v e n u e r e c e iv e d from
children's shows during the

Christmas season. There arc
about 300 independent stations
In the United States.
Angela Campbell, an attorney
for the National Association for
Better Broadcasting and the Na­
tional Education Association,
also criticized the FCC.
"Once again, (he FCC shown
Its willingness to put the private
Interests o f broadcasters ahead
o f the needs o f our children.”
Campbell said.
Alumni Association and was
Commissioner James Qucllo
founder of the Resource Center, Joined other FCC commissioners
New York City.
In supporting the delay for
Survivors include wife. Jac­ bartered shows but said all
queline Oliver R un ; son. Cary. shows should be Included "o s a
Altamonte Springs: daughter. matter o f fundamental fairness."
Lend. Herndon. Va.; brothers.
The delay affects contracts
Gatty. Brooklyn. N.Y.. Dale. signed before April 12.
Wheaton. Md.. Vanus. Michigan:
Hedlund said stations fre­
sisters. Shirley Archer. Jcmlyn quently sign contracts for two- to
W e b s te r, C o r b c t t e . M lm ln three-year runs of u show.
Williams, all of Trinidad and
T o b a g o ; m o t h e r . V a lin e ,
T rin id a d an d T o b a g o ; one
grandchild.
B a ld w ln -F airch lld Funeral
•
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
m m
charge of arrangements.
j w t u r w --y v fWfa*
w n ry
JAM ES "N E W T * W ASH ING­
f ntofequeior I
TON
,Trat« excluded.
James "N e w t" Washington.
86. of 1905 Southwest Road.
Sanford, died July 29 ut hts
residence. Born July 5, 1905. in
Evergreen. Ala., he moved to
Sanford 60 years ago from there.
He was a r e tir e d ra ilro a d
ynrdsmrn and u Baptist.
Survivors include sons. James
25th s t Landscaping
J.. Jr.. Freddie L. and Burnett,
all o f Sanford: 12 grandchildren:
six great-grandchildren.
2400 W. 25th 81. Sanford
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
ford. In charge of arrangements.
321-2325

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PAYS INN » M It SR 46, Sitllord » 322-4S43

iN T R O b u c iN G U f f ;
LAURIE COLLUSS \
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LAKE HARY - The citizens of
Lake Mary a preview qf a
proposed Storm water Utility
project last night. Although no
action was taken. If eventually
approved. It would coot the
average homeowner $36 per
year.
The money would be used In
large scale remodeling and re­
building of stormwater drainage
In many areas of Lake Mary
Including areas near the city's
many lakes, which have been
Identified as problem spots In
recent surveys.
Ron Feriand, of Dyer. Riddle.
M ills 6 Precourt, gave an
extensive presentation on the
studies made by the firm. He
rep o rted th at th e m ethod

normally used In determining
the amount or drainage pro­
blems In any given area. Is called
th e E D U . the "E q u iv a le n t
Drainage Unit." It Involves con­
sideration o f the number of
square feet on a piece of property
where water runoff or drainage
occurs, such as lawn areas or
roof rundowns, and where It
does not occur such aa on a
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Quetliig Sttdet v$*c.
H om e O ffice
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A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s W r it e r

Congress
WASHINGTON is nearing a poaalhle veto
MOWOOWfl witn
i over extending jobless benefits
•a lawmakers wade t!
i a pile of bills and prepare to begin
thefr bummer recess.
The House planned give final congressional approval today
to a 99.2 button bill
lng people who have depleted the basic
26 weeks of unemi
t compensation up to 20 extra
weeks of government checks. The Senate approved the
measure on a voice vote late Thursday.
Is hope that unemployment
t
Democrats
figures for July, due out
today, will put pressure on Bush to sign the measure or hurt
him politically if het rejects It. But white House aides have
threatened a veto of the bill, asserting that the recession is over

and that the measure Will drive up the deficit.
With lawmakers
at the close of
sidestepped — a host

ng to race home for the August recess
today. Congress tackled — or
lingering Issues.

Bush optimistic about global probtoma
WASHINGTON — President Bush appears to have loot any
doubts about Mikhail Gorbachev’s commitment to difficult
reforms and he’s proclaiming that the two superpower! now
see eye to-eye on most j
I problems.
Bush returned ‘
from the Soviet Union late Thursday
with a new optimism
U.S.-Soviet relations. He also was
buoyed by Israel's i
o f terms for a Middle East peace
conferee
cnce sponsored by Washington and Moscow.
"This Indeed Is good news,” Bush said after reading a wire
service report that Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir had
Informed Secretary of State Jam es A. Baker 111 that Israel
would alt down with Arab neighbors In an effort to end
hostilities.
"There Is still a lot of hard work ahead but this t o bound to be
good news for peace Ifi the Middle East. ... So let's mark this
one up as good tidings and I hope that Ihtnga go forward right
now in a good w ay.” the president said.

Baksr still pushing for psacs
JERUSALEM — After Inching Israel toward a Middle East
peace conference. U.&amp; Sec retan- o f State James A. Baker HI
today undertook the task o f trying to squeeze concessions from
reluctant Palest InUna.
‘T h e re 's still work to be done." Baker said as he left hia hotel
to begin the session with a Palestinian delegation seeking
concessions from Israel.
They presented him with a letter from the Palestine
Liberation Organization calling for a role in the negotutions for
Palestinians from East Jerusalem.
Baker- arranged to; meet three leading Palestinians, all
Identified with the PLO. after getting Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir's agreement to attend peace talks on condition Israel
gcU Its w ay on who represents the Palestinians.

Kuwait caltbratas frssdom

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KUW AIT C IT Y — Kuwaitis prayed, fired guns and paraded In
cars today, the first i anniversary of the Iraqi Invasion, to
celebrate their war-wop freedom.
Shortly after midnight hundreds o f young Kuwaitis got Into
their cars and cruised Gulf Road, which runs the length of
Kuwait City.
They (lashed their lights, honked their horns and waved “ V”
for victory hand, signals. “ Kuwait la Free, Kuwait Is Free.”
chanted one carload of young m en.
"Pnfe Kuwait” had been their slogan after -Iraqi-leader ■
Saddam Hussein's troops thundered Into their country last
Aug. 2 and occupied the emirate for seven months.
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F»d* promts* action against BCCI
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials are promising to
take further action against the Bank of Credit and Commerce
International as they continue Investigating what’ s being
called the biggest bank scandal In history..
But they declined to say Thursday whether they are
considering removing two top officers of First American
Bankshares Inc., a bank holding company baaed in Washing­
ton. The Fed has found that BCCI. a prominent hank In the
Third World, secretly acquired First American In 1982.
From Aoooclotod Proto reports

I
■H

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W ASHINGTON f
The
S m ith son ia n In stitu tio n Is
scouring the country for black
memorabilia to fill Its proposed
new National African American
Museum, including derogatory
ra c ia l im a g e s that m a n y
museums fear arc too con­
troversial to display.
Project d irec to r Claudlne
Brown Is hurrying to determine
whether a sufficient volume o f
artifacts reflecting the social and
cultural history of black Ameri­
cans Is available to justify final
approval o f a new Smithsonian
museum.
Ms. Brown is spending her
summer w eeken ds v is itin g
museums, galleries and private
collectors from Houston and
New Y o rk to Atlanta. G e t­
tysburg. Pa.. Pittsburgh. Los
Angeles and Chicago In her
search for potential exhibit ma­
terials.
With the help of a research
assistant. Ms. Brown began her
detective work in early June.
Her deadline is Sept. lb. when
the Sm ithsonian's governing
board of regents will meet to
hear her report. Bui she's con­
fid en t th e re g e n ts will lusatisfied.
"I think there are literally
thousands of objects out there
available for acquisition." Mv
Brown said recently. "There are
many more collectors than we
previously had thought. Yes. I
think It’s absolutely doable."
In January, after a yearlong
study, a 21-member pdvlsory
board recommended that the
Smithsonian establish a National
African Am erican Museum at a
high-profile location on the N a­
tional Mall to "celebrate the
creativity and accomplishments
o f persons o f African descent."

Black
graduates
Number of blacka In U.1.8. with
4 years of c o lle g e or more
Number
Year
(IMMmaando)
1690

150

1060
1970

281
457

1980

1,108

1989

1,945

1990 (M t.)
2,100
Thd number of Mack collagb
greduslee hea ebeul Eeubbte
each docadx since 1M0

The museum would occupy
the old A rts and Industries
Building, an ornate Romanesque
s tru ctu re Just cast o f th e
Smithsonian's "C a s tle" head­
quarters. Built In 1879 as the
Smithsonian's first museum.
Arts and Industries toduy houses
a 15-year-old American Bicen­
tennial exhibit and a high-tech
experimental gallery.
The A frican American
Museum will focus on media
linages o f blacks. Including
films, television and videos, and
malerials documenting the civil
rights movement, blacks Ih the
labor force and other 20th cen­
tury developments.
Collections o f black American
and contemporary African paint­
ings. sculpture and textiles also
would be sought. So wifi black
lolk arts and ritual artifacts of
the C a r i b b e a n a nd So ut h
America.
hi May. the regents endorsed
the museum proposal on the
condition that Smithsonian of­
ficials Identify enough potential
collections to fill it. That's Ms.
Brown's job.

The Milwaukee Journal, quoting un­
named sources, said Dahmer told police
that when the officers brought Sinthaaomphonc back to hia apartment
photos of previous victims were strewn
on the floor and there waa a body In hia
’■mefllng like hell."
A police union lawyer, Laurie Egged.
•aid the officers saw no such evl
evidence
and believed Dahmer when be told them
aim n i i raiijWiPiyc. w ** irm lover*
Egged
p o lic e tried to in­
tervlew
v the be
boy but ne appeared highly
Intoxicated and "d id not respond." She
•aid Dahmer was “calm, relaxed and
•bow ed no sign o f trying to hide
anything."
Dahmer has since told police he
drugged his victims before killing them.

Dahmer. 31. was on parole for child
molesting, but the officers did not run a
background check during the Incident
May27.
A tape recording o f a phone conversa­
tion haa one of the officers telling a

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WASHINGTON President
Bush appears to have lost any
d o u b ts about Mikhail
Gorbachev’s commitment to dif­
ficult reforms and he'a proc l a i m i n g that the two
superpowers now see eye-to-eyc
on most global problems.
Bush returned home from the
Soviet Union late Thursday with
a new optimism ab out
U.S.-Soviet relations. He also
w as buoyed by Israel’s accep­
tance of terms for a Middle East
peace conference sponsored by
Wash!
ashington and Moscow.
"T h is Indeed Is good news,”
Bush said after reading a wire
s e r v i c e re p o rt th a t P r im e
Minister Yitzhak Sham ir had
In form ed Secretary o f State
Jam es A. Baker III that Israel
w o u ld sit down w ith A rab
neighbors In an effort to end
hostilities.
"T h ere Is alltl a lot o f hard
w ork ahead but this la bound to
be gpod e r a . for peace in the
Iddle East.... So let’s mark this
one up as goad tidings and I
hope that things go forward
right now In a good w ay." the
president said.
Similarly, he waa upbeat about
his meetings with Oorbachev.
where he signed a landmark
nuclear anna reduction treaty
and discussed a num ber o f
thorny issues.
" A lot has been accomplished
... the establishment of a good
mood, a good view as Car aa
future relations go," Bush said.
T h e summit was seen as a
political plus for both Bush and
Gorbachev.

Smithsonian seeks black items
A ssociated P re ss W riter

Th e remains o f Konerak Slnthasomphone, 14. were among those found In
Dahmer’aai
f * apartment.
The woman had repeatedly asked an
officer tf he was sure Slnthaaomphone
w as an adult and the officer Insisted he
waa. "U ’a an Intoxicated boyfriend of
another boyfriend.” the officer said.

MILWAUKEE - Police officers who
brought a naked boy back to Jeffrey
Dahmer's apartment In May detected
nothing unusual Inside and Insisted to
concerned witnesses that the boy was
Dahmer’s adult kwer. tapes disclosed.
Tw o months later, Dahmer told police
he killed the boy as soon as the officers
left, a newspaper reported Thursday.
Dahmer has confessed to killing and
m u tilatin g 17 people since 1078.
Neighbors said hia apartment had reeked
for months before he w as arrested last
week.
The three officers have been suspend­
ed with pay and face disciplinary charges
because they "failed to conduct ■ basic,
proper Investigation." said Police Chief
Philip Arreola. The officers, who have not
been Identified, won't face criminal
charges, he said.

Bush returns
upbeat about
Sovlat Union

If the regents and Congress
give the go-ahead, the Smithso­
nian will be able to boast 14
muacuma and galleries In Wash­
ington (plus Iwo In New York),
in clu d in g the n ew National
Museum of the American Indian
to be built on the Mall by the end
o f the century.
Once the African American
Museum la established, curators
will begin wooing collectors of
black memorabilia around the
c o u n t r y , h o p in g th a t th e
courtship will yield valuable gifts
to the museum.
Ms. Brown's shopping Hat will
Include "culturally sensitive"
artifacts, once widely produced
for the amusement of whites,
that symbolize the bigotry and
humiliation that blacks suffered
for years.
Am ong them arc such racial
s te reo ty p e s as L itt le Black
Sambo dolls, advertising charac­
ters. public "W hites O nly" signs
and figurines depicting the an­
tics o f grinning. walermelon:
eating black urrhlns.
" A lot of museums have col­
lected but never shown them
because they don 't want to
offend,” said Ms. Brown, who
w o r k e d for th e B ro o k ly n
Museum tn New York for 13
years before she Joined the
Smithsonian early last year.
Also prized, but much harder
to find, are 19th century relies of
black slavery — Iron shackles,
b ills o f sale, fie ld h ands'
cloth in g , old fa m ily Bibles,
h o m e m a d e t o y s and
"m a n u m is s io n " papers that
plantation owners gave to freed
slaves.
The museum's planners pro­
posed concentrating on 20th
cen tu ry m em orabilia sim ply
because black artifacts from
earlier times are so scarce. Ms.
Brown said.

CASE N *ff-bt3S CAM HW .b
Homo M utoga o f America. F A .

concerned neighbor there was no need to

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Lsq s I Notic—

PtDtOALNATIONAL
M0RT0A0EASSOCIATION,•

HANKY I F F I I t. otai..
TO: S H E I L A D .I F F I R
Knawn Mailing Addrs*
•Xm s

FloridaJOTS)

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and undwr ISHEILA
M f llA I0. I F F I R
YOU A S I NOTIFIED toNon
^Hffa^i k^i toroctoo*
encumbering fha lallaulng
pnaporhf In aomfnafo Cutty,
Floras:
Wool l» of to# ( M l B Y *1 to#
Norik * of too Southeast * ot
WetOn |t, Township It South.
• on to 3# N a il. Som ltolo
County, Flor Mo. looo Mo North
» Not N r roadway. Alto loot
tying tout* ot
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loot llno o ftoo worth N T lying
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art required to servo 0 cayy ot

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If MTfi ate

It on P la in tiff's oHornoyo,
SMITH S SIMMONS. P.A., 111
Who* Adams Itrstf. lulto Ills.
Jacksonville, PlarMo M R , on
or hotaro August 17. IWt. and
mo Mo original with Mo Clark of
WM* VSWfi SiW
NOy SS98*w**lwfC*r
on Ptototlffs oHornoy or Irrma­
in
you N r tho ratio!
Mo complaint or poNtton.
WITNESS my honS and tool
ot Mto Court an thlo n rS Sty of
July. m i .
(Court tool)
MAR Y ANN t MOUSE
Clark of Mo Circuit Court
■y: J a n o l. Jooewic
Deputy Clorii
Puhliah: July M a August I. V.

M,HM

DIH-140
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T N I IM M T I I N T N
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. r AOMCA l i K
F I D I R A L H O M E LO A N
MORTGAGE CORPORATION.
PUmtiti.
RALPH WOOD. Ot Ot..
Dofondant*.
NOTICE O F (ALK
NOTICE Is hereby |ivon Mot
pursuant to Mo Final Judgment
of Ptrocloaur* and lo ll onhrod
In Mo couta ponding In tho
Circuit Court of Eightoonth
Judicial Circuit. In and tor
Wmlnolo County. Florid*. Civil
A c t io n N o .: P I I J 3 0 CA
U K , tho undoralgnod CNrk will
County,
Condominium Unit H*. el
M A R S IV A CLUR CONDOMIN­
IUM. a Condominium, accord­
ing N Mo Declaration of Con­
dominium thorool os rocordid In
Official Roeordo Book not.
Fogs 1074. and Ro-Rocordrt In
Official Records look Itoo.
Fogs loan of Mo Public Roctrdo
at Wmlnolo County, Florida:
the Uniri un
of Mo common
e le m e n t s a n d com m on
exponas*, os proscribed In Mid
Declaration of Condominium,
oi public tow. N tho htgh**l and
boot bidder Nr cosh, ot 11:00
o'clock. A.M.. an Mo 17th dry of
August, m i . ot Mo Wetl boot
door ot Mo Wmlnolo County
Courthouse. Sentord. Florid*
D A TED Ml* 14M doy of July.

INI.

(COURT SEAL)
HOAR VANNE MORSE
CLERKO FTH E
CIRCUIT COURT
•y: Dorothy* Bolton
Deputy Clark
Publlih: July M A August 1. i*f I
OEM ir*

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE l«TH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IHANO FOR
SBMINOLK COUNTY,
FLORID*
CASE NO.: Vt-IMbCAMK
CITICORP MORTGAGE. INC .
l/k/e CITICORP MOMEOWN
IRS. INC. a Delaware
corporation.
Plaintiff,
v
PATRICK JUUANO. t l r l .
Defendant*
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H EREBV GIVEN
pursuant to Final Judgment
Ootod July 10. Itfl. onhrod In
Case No 41 u t t CA U K In Mo
Circuit Court ol the Itm Judicial

L*g*l Notic—
Circuit In
C o u n ty . F lo rid a , w herein
CITICORP MORTOAOE, INC.,
of ol.. Is tho alalntlH and
PATRICK JULIANG. ot ol.. ore
dgNndonta. I will toll N (he
Mghaot and boat kMdsr N r caoh
ot Mo wool front door ol tho
l omlnoN County Courthouse.
SonNrd, Florida, at lt : « AJkL
on tho loth day ot August, m i,
| described property
ao sat forth
rth In sold Final
Judgment, N wit:
LO T S. ELOCK St. C A M
P A R K V IL L A S PH ASE II.
ACCORDINO TO THE PLAT
T H ER E O F AS RECORDED IN
F I A T BOOK A PA0ESV7AH0
N . PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
o/k/a MS Casa Fork Court J
Winter Springs. F hr Ido
O A T I O THIS MM day ot
July. m i.
MARYANNS AHORSE
CIRCUIT COURT CLERK
■y: JeneB. Jaaowk
’Clerk
Publish: August
I,», INI
A
D EIJ4

«

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
O F THE BIOMTIINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FL0RI0A
CIVIL ACTION N fti
M-3133-CA-IOb
C A R T ER E T SAVINGS BANK.
IN C.
FMntIN.

vs.
RAYMOND W. WHITEHURST,
at us..
NOT ICE OF SALE
NOTICE li hereby given Mot
pursuant to Mo Summary Final
Judgment ot Foroctoiur# and
Solo onhrod In Mo cause pond­
ing In tho Circuit Court ol
KlghtoonM Judicial Circuit, In
and N r Seminole County. Flori­
da. Civil Action No.: M-SIS3-CAI0G. Mo undwslgnod Clark will
toll Mo property situated In said
County, daacrMod at:
Tho South J toot ot to# loaf 73
Not o# let 144, and Mo South a
Not ot Lot lot and vacated alloy
on Mo South end Mo East 1) loot
ot Lot ISO. and all ot Lot 1J7
(less Mo rood). M M LORD'S
FIRST A00ITI0N TO CITRUS
HEIGHTS, according to Mo plot
Ihorool aa recorded In Plot Book
1. Pago 17. ot Mo Public Records
ot Seminole County. Florida,
ol public w h. to tho highest and
boot bidder tor cash, ot 11:00
o'clock, A M., on Mo MM day ot
August, Iftl, ot tho Wool Front
Door ot Mo Wmlnolo County
Courthouse. Sentord. Florida.
(COURTSEAL)
C LER K OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
MARYANNE MORSE
■ y : */Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Chrk
Publish: July M b August 1. Iftl
OEH-ITt
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE NO. tOOTM-CAtt-O
G LEN D A LE FED ERAL BANK.
FE D E R A L SAVINGS BANK.
Plaintiff.
J*C. BROWN ANO COMPANY,
INC..
a Florida corporation, et el..
DehndentsNOTICEOF SALE
PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 4S
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment ot tarsdosuro doled
July U . INI. and entered In
COSO No. N 4 7 M C A U O of Mo
Circuit Court ot Me Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit In and tor Soml
nolo County. Florida, wherein
GLENDALE FED ER A L SANK.
FED ER A L SAVINGS SANK Is
Plaintiff and J.C. BROWN ANO
COMPANY. INC., o Florida
c o rp o ra tio n . H E A T H R O W
LAN D A D EV ELO PM EN T
CORPORATION, a Florida cor
par at Ion. AGGRESSIVE AP
P L I A N C E S A FI NE
F U R N IT U R E . INC.. JOBS.
INC d/b/o R ESID EN T IA L
B U ILD IN G S U P P L Y . A L L
S C R E E N S E R V IC E . INC..
SIN K ER MATERIALS COR
PORATION. PETER 0 KUC
and O Ed O R A H L. LU K A S
d/b/a LUKAS LANDSCAPING,
ore defendant*. I will sail to ttw
highest and best bidder lor cash
ol tho West Front Door ot the
Wmlnolo County Courthouse in
Sentord. Florida, ol II 00
o'clock a m on Ms 17th day ot
August. IStl. Me following dt
tcrlbod property o* sol forth in
sold Order or Final Judgment,
to wit:
LO T II. H EA TH R O W
WOOOS. ACCORDING TO THE
P L A T T H E R E O F AS RE
COROE0 IN PLAT BOOK 41.
P A G E S 14 TH R O U G H 10.
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI
HOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
DATED at Sanford. Florida,
on July 14 Itfl
MAR VANNE MORSE
As Clark. Circuit Court
By: OoroMy W Bolton
As Deputy Clark
Publish July 10 A August 1. m t
OEM 147

FORD CONSUMER FINANCE
COMPANY, INC., luccsssor by
Mwgar to FORD CONSUMCR
CREDITCOMPANY.
Ptototlff.
D A V ID R O SAD O AND
M A D ELEIN E ROSADO, HIS
WIFE. •
NOTICE OF SALE
bar ob i
too Final
Forecloi
above-styled couo*. In the
C irc u
Court of Seminole
■itf C
County. F h r Ido, I o U ate Mo

MgHce h

and Owryl
Kay Foator. M t wll*. Jack
Mutctuiik, United Slots* of
America. Stoto ol Florida. Da
p o r tm o n t g« L a b o r and
Employment Security, TIM IntbhlflH MiS
P*PM
mo.
BPte^^EFW^^wel FMVfT^^B
■ ^^Wv W
pony, a Phrtda«
Jan*/John Do*. I
r e p r e s e n t in g te n a n ts In

NOT ICE IS H ER EB Y OIVEN
Mai pursuant to a Final JuRb
manl et N s i l a k n datad July
p . m i. and antorud In Caw No
Lot MS. MANDARIN SEC­ t l- t m CA M Olv. O at toa
TION SEVEN, according to Ms
ClrcuM Court ol Ma EifbfoopM
thereof« recorded to PIN
Judicial OrcuN In and N r Semi­
n . Pages U end 11 or Mo
nole County. Florida wbarHn.
Public Records ol Seminole
Homo lavlnge i f America. F A ,
County. Florida.
Plaintiff, and Fail Itovon
*&gt;--- A lt- i f W W R m
and O w ryl Kay I
bool bidder, tor cosh, at Mo
, Jock Mufchmo.
MftST FRONT DOOR. SEMI
Dates of Am erica. State of
M O L E C O U N T Y C O U R T ­ Florida. P pM U w in l M Labor
HOUSE. SANFORD. FLORIDA,
and E mptoyt^
W c ^ .J T M
ol lt:M A JX , on MetTtodoy of
August, mi.
pony, a Florida cargarafhn,
CLERK OF
Joan OMoan (Tenant) and Dan
CIRCUIT COURT
Oboon (Tenant) ara Ma DMn• V tD m M y W . Bolton
dMtt, I wOf tail to to* tugboat
Deputy Clerk
and boat bbidw N r cadi *1 Ma
Publish: July IS A August t. m i
Woof bant doer of Ma tambwM
D E H -M
County Courtfwuaa. In EanNrA
CdMllteld
B|m U r mi
lt : « O'clock A M . on Me ITM
IN TNECIECWIT COURT,
day i f August, if t l. Ma toilow­
I M N T tS N T N JUDICIAL
ing io icrMod aragaHg as sot
forth to said Final Judgment, to

sswris^r
C

CASE N O El-ASA-CA-14-0
• A R N E T T BANKS T R U S T
COMPANY, N. A.., os Truotso
tor Mo FMrldP Housing Finance
Plaintiff.
GREGORY W. LEVINS,
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice It hereby glvon Mol,
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgment ol Foreclosure on­
hrod heroin, I will sell Me
property tifuetod In Seminole
County. Florida, desertbod so:
Lot 44. H A R B O U R ISLE
SUBDIVISION, ao recorded In
Flat Booh XL popes 30 and H.
public records ol Seminole
County, Plor Ida.
ol public solo, to Mo highest and
boot bidder tor caoh. at Mo KNet
front door of tho Wmlnolo
County Courthouse In Sentord.
Florida, at fl:M a.m. on tho i*M
dtyol August, INI.
WITNESS my hand end of­
ficial Seal ol sold Court Mlo 34M
day of July. Iftl.
(Court Sooll
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ol Mo Circuit Court
•y: JaneE.Jooowlc
As Deputy Chrk
Publish: August l.», m i
DC 111
IN THE CIRCUIT COUNT
IN ANO FOR
SIM INOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO,i M M V-CA-IAO
SAMCHARLESMEINER, etc..
Plaintiff.
vs;
&lt; THOMAS R. SMITH A
LYN N O .KEEN .olO l..
Dofondants.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H ER EB V GIVEN
Mot pursuant to Summary Final
Judgment ot Foreclosure doled
July &gt;4, (HI In Case No.:
S0-4037CA U G In Mo Circuit
Court In and lor Seminole
County. Florida. In which SAM
CHARLES ME INCH. etc. Is Mo
P la ln lllt and TH O M A S R.
SMITH A LYNN G. KEEN . Ol
*1.. ore Ms Defendant*. I will
sell to Mo hlghsst and best
blddtr lor ce*h at 11:00 A.M. on
Mo JtM day ol August, m i. oi
Mo West front stop* at Mo
Sam Inolo County Courthouse.
Sentord. Florida. Mo totlow lng
described reel property as sol
forth In tho Summary Final
Judgmentot Foreclosure:
That parcel el land lying In
Wctlon 10. Township 30 South.
Range 31 E o t l. Sem inole
County. Florida, described as
follow*: From tho SW corner ol
sold Section 10. run North. 400.00
loot to a point on tho cantor lino
Ot Mo SO toot right of way ot
Oscola Rood: monte run east
11.00 toot to Mo Cost right of
way lino ol told Osceola Rood;
thence run along Mo East right
at way lino ol Osceola Rood.
North. U01.30 toot to tho P.C. of
a curve to Me right, having o
radius Ol 413.40 loot and 0
control angle ol 35 dogrsos
13'14": thence run along the ore
of told curvo 17114 hoi to toe
P.T.i thane# run North IS do
greet I3'I4" East, mo.44 tool to
to* P.C. ot o curve to the right,
having s radius ol 07 44 hot
and a control angle ot 54 degrees
J4'14"; thence run along Me arc
of told curve 434 V7 hoi to to*
P.T.i thane* run at dtgrto*
47*40" East. 440 00 toot; thane*
having to* Southerly right ol
way lino of 0*c*oia Road, run
South 00 dsgraat 12'JO" East.
440 00 hot; thanes run South,
1430 U hot to tho point ot
beginning; Ihonc* run Eosl,
44000 hot; thanes run South,
1301.3b hot to to* South Iin* ot
Section 14. Township JO South,
Rang* n East; thonco run along
the South lino ot Section 10.
South t* degree* 11'I f Wtti.
300.00 hot; thane# leaving said
South lino run North 10 dogrsos
SI'S}" West. S3* M hot. thane»
run North 43 dogrtos 00'00“
West. 400 00 hat, thonca run
North to. II hat to to# Point ol
Bag Inning.
The above described parcel It
tubltcl to an Ingrttt Egret*
•element deter Ibed as follow*
Beginning ot the Point ot
Beginning ot the above da
tcribed parcel, run North to 17
hoi. Ihence run E**t. 33 00 hat,
thence run South 35.33 leal to the
P.C ot * curve to tho right,
having a radlu* ol 70 00 toot, a
central angle ol 101 degree*
14 0* ' and a tangent bearing el
South 43 degree* j* o*" Eatt.
thane* run along tho ore ot laid
curve 131 41 loot to ttw P.T .
Ihonc* run North 43 degree*
OO'OO' Wett. 70 00 hat to toa
Point ot Beginning, and o &gt;00
toot Florida Power and Light
Company aatamant on to* South
line of said parcel
DATED toil 34th day ol July,
mi
MARVANNE MORSE
C lE R K O F THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BV: Jana E. Jatawic
At Deputy Clerk
Publish August 1.0. m i
DEI 31

Lot I t. W I K I V A HILLS
SECTION BIOHT. actor png I*
Me Fief Mortal a* to cardt4 In
Ffdf Rook t i, at Fags* IB and II
Of Ma Public Rscarda of Ssmin oh Csunty, F torIda.
Having a street adOrots of:
177 Duncan TralL Lmgwood. FL
v n
Togothor wlM all Interest
which Borrower now he* or may
horooftor aegufra In or to told
property and In and to; (oi all
■nd rights of wsy
Mo mot; and (b) oil
frweturus, [
menft, fixtures, and
thareon, Including, but not
limited to, all aaparatuo and
U | llaW^MS M lV im f Sr
Ka IMM—4.. .—
kaihr offlaod to M* lend or any
used to provide or
supply alr-caoting, air condi­
tioning. hoot, goo. wafer, light,
power, refrigeration, ventila­
tion, laundry, drying, dishwash­
ing. gsrt oao. disposal or etoor
torvlce*; and all waits void
s y s te m s , a n te n n a s, peal
equipment, window coverings,
drapes and drapery rods,
carpeting and floor covering.
If being Intended and ogrood
Mot such Itoms be conclusively
doomed to be affixed to and to
bo pari of the reel property; and
lc) *11 water and water rights
(whether or not appurtenant)
and shores of stock pertaining to
such wo lor or water rights,
ownerthlp of which affects sold
property; and (d) Mo rents.
Income, leeuoe and prattle of all
property.
DATED this 73rd day of July.

mi

Maryann* Marta
Clark of Mo Circuit Court
by: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clorfc
PubIHh: July 74 A August 7. INI
0EH-7S1
IN TH I CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE 1ITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR
SIMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO.fl-1371-CA-IAK
HOUSEHOLD REALTY
CORPORATION.
Plaintiff.
ANTHONY D. TEDESCO and
PATRICIA R. TEOESCO. hit
wlfs,
Defendant*
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Mot on tho 3M day of Sep­
tember. mi. at 11:00 A.M. at
toa Most Front Door ol to*
Wmlnolo County Courthouto In
Sanford. Florida. MARYANNE
MORSE. Clerk of to* Circuit
Court, will offer for iol* to too
highest and host bidder tor cash,
at public outcry, to* following
described property In Samlnel*
County, Florfda. more particu­
larly described a* follows:
LOT 44. of HILLS OF LAKE
MARY PHASE FOUR, accord
lng to tho Plot !hereof, a*
recorded In Plat Book 34. at
Pages 34 and 37, ot to* Public
Records of Wmlnolo County,
Florida.
The above tala Is mad* pursu
ant to Final Judgment ol Fore
cloture entered In tho abovestyle caute.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I
have hereunto sot my hand and
official ***( toi* 73rd day of
July. INI.
ISEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk of Circuit Court
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clerk
Publish: July M A August 7. INI
OEH33J
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE HO.: N3JS3 CA I4F
AMERICAN PIONEER TITLE
INSURANCE COM PANY. *
F lorIda corporation,
Ptainlifl
v*.
JACK FOSTER.
Defendant.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN
that, pursuant to a Default Final
Ju d g m e n t In the above
captioned action. I will sail ttw
property situated In Seminole
County. Florida, desci Ibed as
Lot to. Q UEEN ’S MIRROR
A D D IT IO N TO C A S S E L
BERRY, according to Ih* plat
thereof, recorded in Plat Book A
page 33 of toa Public Records ol
Seminole County. Florida
at public sal*, to to* highest and
bast bidder tor cash, al to* West
Front Door of toa Mminol#
County Courthouse, located it
301 North Pork Avonu*. Senlord. Florfda at 11:00 o'clock
a m on August 27. INI
OATEO July 13. INI
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark. Circuit Court
BY: JanaE. Jotowic
DEPUTY CLERK
Publish August 1. f. INI
OEI 77

I

�FRIDAY

August

2,

1991

IN B R I E F

in South Zone title game
O N vs ( M

h i

s a r ie s w r a p t u p

HEATHROW - The t a b o f the 1 W I OHve
Garden Duathalon Series «D1 be ran this
Saturday morning. Aug. 3.
opon m m ny u iw c u vu ra* i t i c i o m c i ana
Arvtds. the race wtO begin at 7:30 a m . at the
Shops o f Heathrow wHh a three-mile run. That
wilt be followed b y a I Semite bicycle ■ride down
at- -■* ea-.j
mmmJi s iu ilu a
w iiin iiT i m
woooa
k o i a in o in o u iff
ending at the Shopa o f Heathrow.
Awards for the duathalon will be |
itedon
aite alter race with the aerie
awards being presented at I t a
the Ottre Garden Restaurant located on State
Road436 In Altamonte Springs.
Anyone registering today will pay an entry fee
o f 330 while la te registration w tt be available for
•39 beginning at 6 a m. Saturday. Par more
Information, contact the Track Shack. 1323 N.
Mills Avenue in Oriando, or call SOS-3428.
■y

w snW O lLTO N. Texaa

Thanks largely to the efforts of Seminole High
S ch ool rtan g Juniors Robbie Morgan and Jerem y
Chunat. the Seminole PONY League Colt Allare one win a w a y from the Colt W orld
iertea after winning tw o gam es Thursday night.
Morgan started things b y throwing a c o m ­
plete-gam e six-hitter to lead Seminole to a 10-3
w in over Lubbock. T exas. In an elimination
contest. Chunat then teamed up with Matt
Freem an (who win also be a Junior at Sem inole
H igh this year) to lift Sem inole post previously
undefeated Baytown. T exas. 10-7.
T h a t sets up s one-gam e, winner-take-all
show dow n between S em inole and B aytow n
tonight at 7 pm. for th e South Zone champion­
ship and a berth In the C olt (15 and 16-year-olds)
W o rld Series beginning Aug. 0 In Lafayette. Ind.
T h is will the the third tim e In live days that
Sem inole and Baytown clash. On Monday night.
Baytown scored three runs In the seventh inning
to beat Seminole 8-3 a n d send the local squad
Into the losers' bracket. Since then. Seminole has
w o n four consecutive gam es in three days, facing
elim ination In every contest.
F o r a moment T h u rsd a y. It looked like
Sem inole might be headin g home Friday as
Lubbock scared two runs In ihe top of the first
in n in g against Morgan. But Morgan Killed down
and did not allow a Lubbock runner to reach
■coring position until h e walked a pair o f batters
w ith tw o out In the sixth Inning.
Sem inole got one run back In the bottom o f the
first as Matt Dtemer (Lak e Mary High School) hit
a two-out single, went to third when Freeman's
fly ball to center waa mtsplayed Into a two-base
erro r and scored on a pass ball.
T h en . In the second inning. Seminole struck

I

O r la n d o , K n o x v llk s p lit
ORLANDO — A three-run homer by catcher
Mike Makaudlan led the Knoxville Blue Jays toa
9-3 win over Orlando's BunRays and a split o f a
doubleheader Thursday night.
Orlando (33-14) won the first game 3-3 when
Knoxville (35-16) pitcher Vince Horsman balked
home the winning run.
Winning pitcher tn flame one was Orlando
Lind (9-6). Jim m y Rogers (8-8) suffered the lorn.
In game two. Chris Jones (1-0) earned the win
while the loss went to Phil Wiese (6-9).
Blue Jays manager John Steams and Oriando
coach Mark Funderburk were ejected alter
exchanging blows prior to the start o f game two.

Jacksonvilto, Chattanooga split
JACKSONVILLE — Bret Boone drove In six
runa w i t h tw o home runa t o g iv e the
Jackaonville Suns a split with the Chattanooga
Lookouts in a doubleheader Thursday night.
Boone and Oviedo High School graduate Mark
Merchant both homered to give the Suns a 3-1
lead In the Drat game, but Chattanooga's Greg
Lonlgro singled home two runa tn the fifth and
Frank Kremblaa singled home a run in the sixth
to give the Lookouts a 4-3 win.
In the second game. Jacksonville was tied 3-3
when Frank BoUck hit a two-run homer to give
Um Buna a 4-8 Mad. Cbattamowi cut the M to
4-3 on Scott R ise’s bases-looded walk before
Boone's grand slam put the Suns up 8-3.

"OOTBAU I
Galore SEC prestaaon favorlta
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. - Florida waa a solid
favorite to capture the SEC championship,
drawing 60 first-place votes In balloting by 81 of
the media members attending the league’s
K ickoff 91 three-day meeting.
The Gators had 764 points and were followed
In order by Tennessee with 695 points. Auburn
03614. Alabama 563, Louisiana State 42214.
Georgia 397. Mississippi 354. Kentucky 23314.
Mississippi State 19344 and Vanderbilt 68.

Erickson to sit out soason
ATHENS, Ga. — Former Miami Hurricanes
quarterback Craig Erickson will be a graduate
assistant coach at Georgia Instead of an NFL
football player this season because o f nerve
damage In his lower right leg.
" I have little movement In m y foot.’’ Erickson
. said Wednesday night from Athena. Ga.
Erickson was considered one of the top
quarterbacks In the NFL draft until he tore three
o f the four ligaments tn his right knee tn
January preparing for the Hula Bowl all-star
game. In April he was drafted in the fifth round
by the Philadelphia Eagles and his doctors said
his recovery was ahead of pace.
But a stretched peroneal nerve has not
rehabilitated adequately in recent months.

— Can anybody here

for four runs to take the lead for good. With one
out. Roto Bologna (Lake H owell) doubled and
Brian Milner (Lake Mary) walked. Alter David
Eckstein (Sem inole) singled to score Bologna and
■end Milner to third. Scott Fergcrson (Seminole)
walked to load the bases.
Dtemer then hit his third double In two games
to score Milner and Eckstein. Fergerson getting
thrown out tryin g to score on the play. Freeman
followed with a single to piste Dlcmer.
Seminole added single runs In the third and
fifth inning*. W ith one out In th e third. Bologna
walked an d scored on a s a c rific e fiy by
Fergerson. In the fifth. Mike W erner (Lake Mary)
led off with a tingle and scored on an error on a
fiy bail hit by Bologna.
While Morgan was In complete control at this
slnt. ni
his teammates gave him
trig room by scoring three runs In the
sixth. After Chunat. Chad Kessler (Lake Mary)
and Werner all drew walk* to load the bases,
Bologna singled to score Chunat and Kessler.
Werner then stole third and scored on a wild
pitch.
In Thursday’s second game, Sem inole went up
against Dana Davis, described* by Seminole
manager Rod Fergerson as the best pitcher In the
tournament. But Davis, who w as the winning

K

G ator’s increases lead
SANFORD — Gator's Dockside
Increased Its league lead as AA A
Tree Service and T h e Olive Garden
Restaurant pulled upsets in Sanford
Recreation Department Thunday
N i g h t M en 's S p rin g / S u m m e r
Slowpitch Softball League action at

PtMhuM Park.

...... „ , ____

The Olive Garden Restaurant won
ita fourth straight game by knock­
ing off co-lcague-leadlng Seminole
Mobile Radio w h ile Gator's Dockiide
got back on the winning track b y
disposing of A A A Tree Service 14*5.
A A A Tree Service later won Its first
game of the season. 13-10, over
First Baptist Church.
With Its win. Gator's Dockside
( 1 0 - 2 ) i n c r e a s e d i t s lead t o
144-games over Seminole Mobile
Radio (8-3). The leaders arc followed
by Lee's Cabinets (6-5), First Baptist
Church (5-0). T h e Olive Garden (5-8)
and AAA Tree S ervice (1 •11).
The league w ill play a pair o f
make up nights next week.
Monday night at Chase Park. The
OUve Garden Restaurant will tackle
Lee's Cabinets at 6:30 p.m.: AAA
Tree Service faces Gator’s Dockside
at 7:30 p.m.; and First Baptist
Church'takes on Seminole Mobile
Radio at 8:30 p.m.
N e x t T h u r s d a y night at
Plnehurst. First Baptist Church will
challenge Gator's Dockside at 6:30
p.m. and Seminole Mobile Radio
will play a doubleheader against
Lee's Cabinets at 7:30 p.m. and

TSat

M ATm hnu

a» t - i m
IW ■ — M It
aw i - n

is

B 1 I-N ■

AAA Tree Service at 1^0 p m.

ift n ft w # tio ts A e Hailk \ took

1

4 *0

lead with four runs In the second
inning, but T h e O live Garden
creepcd back in to the game with a
single run In th e fourth Inning and
tw o runa in the fifth.
The Olive G arden claimed the win
in the bottom o f the seventh Inning
when Brian Spoon, Larry Edwards.
Scott Edwards and BUI Mahoney
ripped consecutive singles.
Providing th e offense for the
winners were Spoon (three singles,
tw o runs). Mahoney (double, single,
run. RBI). L a r ry Edwards (iw o
singles, run. RBI). Scott Edwards
( t w o aingles. tw o RBI). T o n y
Strileckls (two singles. RBI). Don
Taylor and Chris WUka (one single
each) and Blake Minton (run).
Doing the hitting fur Seminole
Mobile Radio w ere Dave MUliron
(triple, run), G ary Llttrel (double.
RBI). Jim Spcake (double, run), Jeff
W ilson (double), Doug Burleson
(single, run, tw o RBI). Bill Slevln
(single, run. RBI) and Keith Wallace
(single).
Gator's Dockside used a pair o f
seven run Innings, the fourth and
sixth, to claim Its 10th win of the
□I

Larry Edwards contributad a pair o f alnolaa, on* run acorad and an RBI lo
help The Olive Garden win ita fourth consecutive gams, a 5-4 upset of
second-place Sem inole Mobile Radio, on Thursday st Plnehurst Park.

Front-runners
win make-ups

IFOOTBALL
SANFORD — It was front-runners
night at Chase Park as the top three
teams in Ihe Sanford Recreation
Department's Tuesday Night Men's
Spring/Summer Slowpitch Softball
League all won make-up games
Thursday night.
Th e scores o f the games, which
were originally scheduled for June
25. found the third place Regulators
e d g in g Ihe K o k o m o Rccyclers
11-10, league-leading State Market
Restaurant w h i p p i n g Monroe
Harbour Marina 13-7 and secondplace Beer:30 crushing Kinco 21-9
In five Innings.
With the win. State Market Res­
taurant earned a tie for the league
title with an 11-1 record. They are
followed by Bcer;30 (8-3), the Re­
gulators (7-4). Kinco and Monroe
Harbour Marina (both 3-9) and the
Kokomo Rccyclers (2-10).
The league will play two more
make-up nights next week. On
□ Bss Chase, F a g s 3 B

Dolphins, Shula took offsites
TOKYO — With only one NFL game played
here each year, Japan's football fans are
understandably hungry for touchdowns.
But In the days before his team faces off tn the
American Bowl against the Los Angeles Raiders
on Sunday. Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula
Isn’t sure be can deliver.
" I think you're asking the wrong coach."
Shulp said when a Japanese reporter aaked If be
expected a high score In Sunday's game.
"W e had our first preaeaaon game last week
and we had zeto touchdowns.” Shula said,
referring to the Dolphins’ 6-0 loss against the
Chicago Dears, the first shutout they have
suffered In 93 consecutive preseason gam e*

B A SE B A LL
□7:30 p.m. — ESPN. Toronto Blue Jays at
Boston Red Sox^(L)

The wit comer
At 2 p.m. Thursday. Lyman High School's summer
baseball team was supposed to ploy a team from
Maryland In a first-round game o f Ihe National
Amateur Baseball Federation W orld Series But at

HtnM Photo byTi

2:30 p.m., this is the way Lyman Field looked despite
the best efforts o f Lyman coach Bob McCullough and
his ground craw. There was no report as to whether
the game was played, moved or rescheduled.

wtotmt Rtc,c ten

Mtwftl Hltotr Multi

SUM Mtrfctt SttttwaM

MS M l 1- r 14
Ml Ml i - II II
s u n - t ii
ItllM II - *1 11

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

�t

•••

t"

... : ..

Colts

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S

with ■ tingle. An out later.
Eckstein aingkd end P M tn o n
wafted to toad the taaeo. Dtemafollowed w ith a single that

b m e h i t b y B o t o f lp u .
1 Yabw Uadi
i a m km

SB's Rinas
•o sa a ro n
toMMMDWJO
I M C S 'lM s M fM
IM m O N h

triple and scoring Seminole**
first run tn the fourth inning on
a single by freeman.
Sem inole then Jumped all over
Davis in the fifth. Bologna led off

iN h C s v
atM i^ w rts n i

Seminole added two more
rum In the seventh. With one
out. Werner bunted for a aingfc
and went to aecond on ah
uYciTJut/w* iK men wove mtm
and scored when the catcher'h
throw eluded third besemari.
eventually came tn on a sacrifice
RybyEckatetn.

Chase

^

j|j|

p St t s s u m m

CHyatSI. Lists, i

I p.m. — WCPX «. Toronto*: Baton. (U
7 p .m .-it. Baltimore at Chicago. (LI
7p.m. — T i l Ian Diego at Allant, (L)
7 pm. — WON, Chicago at N.V. Matt, IL)
BASKETBALL
S p.m. - SC. W BL, Canary sr* at Halifax

Now York (Kam unlock! S3) at Datralt
(Tatiana F-f), 7:31 p.m.
Salt Imar* (McDansM *-)) at Chicago
IFamandti B7),I:I3 am .
Taxat (Satianon e-S) at Mllwaukaa
(Navarro S I ) , 1:31 p m
Saattlo (Holman t-?g) at California
IjAaaott *7). ta u p .n v
Mbwait a (Marrlt l&gt;7) at Oakland (Watch
a t i . t a a p m,
____

7 :» p m , - SUN. Fight Night at ttw Ohio
Center, &lt;L&gt;
FOOTBALL
1:31 pm. - W ESH 3. N FL pramoMn.
Chicago n . Son FranciKo. ID
4:30 pm. - W ESH 2. SpomWorM. NFL
Quarterback Chaltang*
to p.m. — IS P n T N F L pn u u a i. La*
AngaletReidtrtve. Miami Ootphin*. (LI
OOLF
3 p m. — tJF N , Senior PGA Lang liiand
f It i f f CL1
4p.m. — ESPN. BuldiOgan, (L)
4 p.m. — ESPN, LPGA. Phar-Mor Clauic,

Toronto
11* aTTmtan (Hnkatti
4-tl, 1:11pm.
Minimal* (Wmt I t) at Oakland ISIwartkl
}«).&lt; « pm
Baltlmara (M llackl t i l at Chicago
(McDowell I3SI, 7:03 pm.
Kama* City (GuMua a i l at Cltveland
(Sotndttl at), 7:13 p.m.
Now Vprk (J.Johntan a t) at Datralt
IGuilkhien l&gt;t],7:3Spm.
Tata* IJaGwiman at) at Mllwaukaa
(WagmanSlI.I 03 p.m.
Saattlo (Jahnaan at) at Calltamla (Finlay
US), M:01p.m.
Saaday't (torn**
Taranto at N i ton. I;03p.m.
N*w York «t Detroit. t:3Sp.m.
Baltimore «*Chicago. 3:13pm.
T*iw at Mllwaukaa. l U p m.

(L)

HORSERACINS
1 .m . -

WFTV ,. Mm '* I W l.,1 .

marathon MghilgM*. (LI

RACQUITM IL

EaMB.WwtO.tta
North I, South 1, tt

3 p.m. — SUN. National Outdoor Champ*
onvtipi
TENNIS
N a a n -!iU N . USTA 14 under Clay Court
ChamplamWp*
I pm. — SC. U.S. Pro ChamplonaMpa.
mon’i tlnglM lomlfln*t, (L)
3 p.m. — UNI. Panorama at Sport*. Maid*
ClgootClU
4 p.m. - SUN. Volvoat La* Angola*. man'*
■amlflnai, (LI. al*a at IS:30 pm .
MISCELLANEOUS
4 am. — SC. U .L Otymplt Shoo cam:
Tract 4 Hold. vaOayNad
4:Xpm. — W FTV t.Wld* World otSptrt*

BASEBALL
Wo*t OhtMaa
W L
L w Angata*
U
Atlanta
13
Cincinnati
-a*
SanFranclKO
it

a
to
to
II

Pci.
OS
tag U1 4V*
m
It*
M
I

SanOtaga

u

tot*

*•

Hauiten

vs

at
1* 410 17
Thurtdiy'a Boom*
San Frondtce0. Cincinnati i
PMiadMphia a. Montraait
St. Loula 4. Plttaburgh 3
Friday** O a n i
San Franc Iico (Black •■) at Cincinnati
(MyartOO). 7:31pm.
Philadelphia ICea I t) at Mentriai
IO* Mar tin*c l i s t . 7:Mpm
San Ologa (H u rt! i] 1) at Atlanta
(Laibrwidl F « . 7:aSp.m.
Chicago (Stakckl It 71 at N*« York
(Oaadwll-4). 7:40 p.m.
La* Angtlo* (0|*d* IE) at Houtton
(J.Jana*4’7). 0:33 pm .
Plttaburgh tf.S m lti IOI) at St Loul*
(DaLaan 14). 0:33 pm .
Plttaburgh (Orabah IOW) at St Lout*
‘ • J j J ^ ^ ^ ’ L r k a t t 71) M Cincinnati
(Otar In#

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7:« pm. - W HO OAM (*N). Sautham
L o o m . Knaavllla Blue Jay* at Orlande
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4: Hp.m. - WWN2 AM (741). SparNTtik
I pm. - WWN2 A M (700). Pithburgh
Plrata* at SI. Lout* Cardtnatt
7:01 pm. - W H O OAM («W). Souttwrn
Laagua. Chattanooga Loakaut* at Orlando
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Save*
Eckartiay. Oakland 30; Aguilera, Min
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Chicago. M: Reardon, BoaNn. 24. OHan.
Baltlmara. 37; Honka. Taranto, a .

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FROM
CALDER
T o d ^ • 3.00 PM

C e n t r a l F lo r id a 's L A R G E S T

Action Attraction

Tuesday night at Chaae Park.
Beer:30 will play Klnco at 6:30
p.m .; State Market Restaurant
w ill face Monroe Harbour Marina
at 7:30 p.m.; and the Regulators
w ill take on the Kokomo Re*
cyclers at 8:30 p.m.
Next Thursday night at Chaae,
Monroe Harbour will aquare off
with the Kokomo Recyclers at
6:30 p.m .: State Market Restau*
rant will vie with Klnco at 7:30
p.m .: and the Regulators will
challenge Beer 30 at 8:30 p.m.
In the first game of the even*
Ing. the Regulators an d the
Kokomo Recyclers traded the
lead until the bottom o f the fifth
Inning when the R egulators
scored two rum to erase a 10-9
deficit and claim the win. A
single by David Goldstlck, and
RBI double by Bob Rowe and an
RBI single by John Klger scored
the runs.
Providing the offense for the
Regulators were Rowe (double,
single, two rum, RBI). Randy
Middleton (two angles, run, two
RBI), Brad Kruger (triple, tw o
runs) and Brian Curtis (dAuble.
run. RBI).
A l s o hitting w e r e S c o tt
Murphy (single, two RBI). Klger
and Shiflet (one single and one
RBI each), Goldritck (single, two
runs), J e ff Kruger (single, run),
Frank Randolph and Bob Keefer
(one run each) and J e ff Futrell
(RBI).
D o in g the hitting fo r th e
Kokom o Recyclers w ere Allen
Peterson (double, single, two
r u n s , t w o R B I). L lo y d - W a l l
(d o u b le , single, th re e R B I).
Milton Jimlth (two singles, run,
tw o RBI). Jerry 1
_____ ____
Herman
(two
singles). Greg Hensley (single,
run), Nate Murphy (tw o runs,
RBI). Bert Herring (tw o runs),
Jam es Bell and David Graham
(one run each) and K eith Acrce
and Erik Luce (one RBI each).
State Market Restaurant used
back-to-back four run Innings in
the fourth and fifth Innings to
turn a 4-2 advantage Into an
easy win.
Contributing loan 18 hit State
Market Restaurant attack were

Jim Smith (double, two singles;
two runs, three RBI), Donnie
Anderson (double, two singles;
two runs, RBI), Mark Dowel)
(triple, double, two rum. three
RBI), M ike Laubert (triple;
single, ru n ). Tommy Oracey
(double, single, run) and Tolly
Frank (two singles).
Also contributing were Nick
Brody (single, run. SUM). W .L.
Oracey (single, two rum). Danny
Oracey (single, run), MJc West
(single) and Keith Swttser (run,
RBI).
Pacing the Monroe Harbour
M arina o ffe n s e w ere John
Axelson and Ran Favs (three
singles, one run and one RBI
each). R ick Poltam lus (tw o
singles, two RBI). Walt Ollfedder
(two singles, run, RBI). Brian
Volk (two singles). BUI McCombs
(single, two runs, RBI). Tom
Nave (single, run) and Chris
Cranlus(run).
B eer:3 0 reb o u n d ed from
Tuesday night's loss to State
Market tn style. They scored 12
runs In the bottom of the first
inning to get the carnage started
before ending the game by the
mercy rule in the fifth.
Doing the damage for Beer:30
were Tom Bledsoe (two doubles,
single, tw o runs, four RBI),
Robert Kerr. Steve Cray and J e ff
Joyce (tw o singles, two runs and
three RBI each). Jack Heame
(two singles, tw o runs. RBI) and
Jim Heaflngton (two singles, two
runs).
Also adding to the winners'
attack w ere w ill Bland (double,
two runs, three KBIL Chuck M cc
(single, three runs), Chris Wire /
(single, tw o runs), Eric Torblo
(single, run. RBI) and Dave Craft
(run).
'.eadlng the Klnco offense
were Joe Delucla (double, single,
two runs). Keith Redwlne (tw o
I
singles, run. RBI). Doug W ollver
(two singles, RBI). Craig Toast f
(triple, run. RBI). Kelly Denton f
(double, run. RBI). Troy Turner &amp;
(single, run. two RBI). Chris
Wargo (s in g le . RBI). R an dy 1
Bryant (single). Bobby Hanson
|
(run, RBI) and Keith Denton and
Emmlt Davis (one run each).

Pinehurst
Conttnwdd from IB
season.
Doing the damage for Gator's
Dockside were Derek Pike (dou­
ble. three singles, two runs, RBI).
Curtis Tabor (home run, double,
run, three RBI). Jay Crutchfield
(hom e run. single, run. four
RBI). J e ff Deen (two doubles,
run. tw o RBI) and T racy Stitt
(tw o singles, two runs, tw o RBI).
Also adding to the attack were
H a r o l d Beasley a n d J e r r y
Herman (one single, one run ana
o n e RBI each), Barry Hyscll
(single, two runs) and Lloyd
W all, Brian Rogers and Jason
Miller (one single and one run
each).
Leading the AAA T ree Service
offense were Brantley Brumley
(double, three singles, tw o runs,
tw o RBI). Tom Clark (double,
tw o singles). Mitch Burke (home
run. single, run. th ree RBI).
Curtis Bsgget (two singles, run).
R on C artel) (single, run) and
R an dy Rawlings an d Miguel
Soatre (one single each).
A A A Tree Service took a 44)
lead tn the top of the first inning
but First Baptist cam e back to
take a 9-4 lead after five Innings.
A A A .then put a aeven spot on
the board In the sixth Inning and

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added tw o Insurance runs In the
seventh to claim Its first win o f
the season.
Contributing to a 23 hit A A A
Tree Service attack were Burke
(double, three singles, two runs,
two R B I). Clark (home run.
double, single, run. five RBI).
Bagget (three singles, run. tw o
RBI) and Randy Yates (three
singles, tw o runs. RBI).
Also contributing were Dave
Noble (tw o singles, two runs.
RBI), Car dell (two singles, run.
RBI). Soatre (two singles, two
runs). Raw lings (two singles,
run). Shawn Gager (single, RBi)
and Brumley (single, run).
Pacing the First Baptist 18 hit
offense w ere Tommy Gracey
(home run. single, two runs, tw o
RBI). BUI Gracey and Robert
Jones (one double, one single,
one run and one RBI each). T im
Palmer (double, single, run).
Jack Eltonhead (two singles,
run. three RBI), Bobby Barbour
(two singles, run. RBI) and Jim
Cornell (tw o singles. RBI).
A l s o h i t t i n g were S t e v e
Laurence (single, run. RBI).
Andy Blake and Mike Henley
(one single and one run each)
and Jordan Beckncr (single).

�-

I

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday. August 2, i*9i - as

People
IN BRIEF
Clarifteatkm
A recent photo of local tecna who attended Boys State after
bring sponsored by the Sanford American U p o n did not
Include (he name of a participant who waa unable to be
photographed that day. He la Sanford resident Kirk Anderson.
Legion officer BUI Hill waa mlaldentined as Al Tounxen.

W ilr f O IftflM I WOvRWV VO Q liiv V f
The New York Retired Transit Workers meet at Casaelberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Triplet Lake Drive, the first Saturday of
each month at 1:30 p.m.

Old ears put in llnw llght
The Celery City Cruisers, an antique and classic automobile
club in Seminole County, sponsors a display o f old c a n each
Saturday from 7-10 p.m. In the Wal-Mart parking lot behind
W endy's on U.S. Highway 17-93, Sanford. Non-members are
welcome to bring their old cars or browse. For more
Information, call Herbert Partridge at 332-3687.

Thrgo ehoorol

nm m

The cheerfeadert from Seminole High School have just returned
from an Intensive week of training with the Unlvarsal
Chssrtsadsrs Association, known nationally for ttwtf top notch
Instructors. The camp was hold at the University of Central
Florida. Cheerleaders were Instructed in and rated on Jumpe,
tumbling, stunts, voles Inflection, formation and aynchronlxallon.
Seminole cheaaleeders walked sway with an oveail rating of

*•»

h

f . itaes

aupertor, seven Individual superior ratings and tw o excellent
ratings. The school mascot, 8ammy Seminole, also received a
superior rating In showmanship. Participating were: front. Tonya
Smith; beck, left to right,Tine Johnson Angela Show alter,
Demetrta Patty, Megan Livingston, H sather Wilkinson, Sandy
Wrtght, Dorl Sapp, Carey Helmedoller and Susan B ills . Sponsor
waa Seminole High School English teacher, Dabby Cam.

A b u se is wound that m ust heal

M cC u llou gh s begin an
anniversary adventure
W INTER SPRINGS —
Margaret and Malcolm A. Mc­
Cullough Sr. are honeymooning
In Central Florida. 50 years after
the wedding.
The couple began celebrating
their 50th wedding anniversary
early when four of their seven
children decided It should be a
four-m onth lon g adventure.
. They gave each o f their parents
two airline tickets to Jet o ff
anywhere In the country.
T h e M cC u llou gh s, fo rm er
Winter Park residents, w ere
married December 3. 1941. Now
residents o f Albuquerque. New
Mexico, they decided to use one
pair o f tickets to visit family In
Winter Springs. Son Malcolm A.
Jr., his wife. Martha Lee and
g ra n d d a u g h te r. A le x a n d ria
June, arc hosts to the couple
. during their two week visit.
Daughter Janet Wcsterman. her
husband. John Jr., grandson.
John III and great grandaughtcr.
Codie. whom the McCulloughs
will meet for the first time, will
spend tim e with the honey­
mooning pair. Daughter Janie
Flethcr. her husband. Donald
and granchlldrcn Justin and
Melissa will arrive from Danville.
Ala. to visit also. Janie plans to
escort her parents on a trip down

memory lane, visiting spots In
Mlalsslppl and South Carolina.
Daughter M illie Achromoltch
and her husband. Jimmy, also
contributors to the anniversary
surprise, were unable lo travel
from Albuquerque to celebrate
in Florida.
The McCulloughs honeymoon
night, cancelled because of
World War II. will be spent at
Lake Buena Vista Palace.
The McCulloughs other three
children arc Kelly. Patty and
Rodney McCullough.

B ro th e r on t o{ T Q f r f l e ! He
molested me until 1waa 17 years
old. and lo this day 1 have run
told a soul — ” Including ' my
husband, and wc have been
married for nearly 20 years.
I am so ashamed o f It. that
even now if I think of It for a few
minutes, it makes me physically
lilt

Please, parents, friends, rela­
tives — don't let this happen to
children. I came from a very
respectable family, and I am
sure that nobody would believe
that this happened to me. But It
did!
DEAR
d

o

K E E P IN O :
n

'

P lea se,
t

keep your secret any longer.
Contact your local rape crisis
c e n t e r and Inquire about
counseling and support groups
for people who have kept this

rsonal defense class. We col(his mother) to act like we're a
:ted newspaper articles con­
lovey-dovey couple before his
camera, so my granddaughter cerning abductions and rapes.
(hla daughter) can watch It More than half of those we found
someday and see her grandma Involved women being pulled nlf
and grandpa when they were the sidewalk Into cars.
Headphones keep a Jogger
"h a p p y" together.
Abby, we were divorced 14 from realizing that n car has
years ago because o f her infideli­ pulled up beside' I m t until it is
ty. and the thought o f pretend­ too late lo react. Ltstentng-lo
ing tn be civil. wUh .that woman music also ean tukc the Jogger's
: 11 more than I can bUWttte.hr Of mind off her spi roundings. A car
course, she's all (or It; so now "th at Is "smlklng"*!ier may have
I'm Ihe bod guy. Normally, wc passed her four or five times,
can't stand-the sight t * each a n d s h e v o u M n ' t n o U c c .
Along the suite lines. I would
other, and I think the Idea of
en cou rage anyone, m ale or
pretending Is ridiculous.
Both of our current spouses female, who walks nr Jogs alone
have said they wouldn't mind. — especially al night — to take a
personal defense course ut the
Any suggestions?
local
community college. YMCA.
■STUD INSANDIEGO
D B A S RETIRED: Unless both or wherever II Is offered. You will
you and you "e x ” are Academy learn many tips on how to
A w a r d - w i n n i n g perf orme rs , minimize the risk of being ab­
you’d be foolish to act like you’re ducted and/or raped, as well as
a "lovey-dovey" couple before u some physical defense tech­
camera. I agree with you — the niques.
A DEFENSIVE W ALKER.
Idea o f "pretending" is Indeed
NOVATO. CALIF.
ridiculous. It Is also dishonest to
DEAR
W
ALKER:
Another lip
attempt to rewrite history.
for anyone who walks, nuts or
U Just a few more Jogs on a road or street where
words on the dangers o f wearing vehicles also travel: Walk, run oi
he a dp ho ne s wh i l e Joggin g. Jog facing Ihe oncoming trafflt
Joggers, especially females, need on Ihe laft side of Ihe road to realize how many abductions never In Ihe same direction tin
Involve cars. I was recently In a ears are moving.

E

1 H H 1 A B E T : I am glad you
a g re e d wi t h G randm a! H er
1 1- y e a r - o l d g r a n d s o n a n d
8-year-old granddaughter should
not be sleeping with their father
— or each other.
When I was 10 years old. my
12- ycur-old brother and I were
forced to sleep together In one
bed at a cousin's house. In the

sssstsaam
kind of secret for years. You
hsvs nothing lo tie ashamed of
— you were a victim. Victims
should bear no guilt.
In counseling, you will learn
that In order to heal, you must
confront your brother after all
these years and tell him how
much pain he has caused you.
With counseling this can be
accomplished. Trust me. Please
get cousellng. then write again
and let me know how you are. I
care.
!t I've read your
column for years and have never
seen a problem quite like the one
I have. It all started when my
son bought one o f those video
cameras. Since he bought It. he's
been d rivin g everyone craxy
sticking that camera tn their
faces.
He wants me and my ex-wlfe

e
Cinemdt • 37 4 O l l h
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1.-00 3:15

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5:15 5:15 10:15“

1:45

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Michttl J. Fox I t . . .
SOAPOISH

The dog that g its
no nspect!

^flOW ELL^
f

1 1

Richa/d Pryor and
Gnnn Wilder in
ANOTHER YOU" i

DOC
HOLETWOOD

NAKEDOUN21/2

p L A C E l

"Catered Living For Seniors"

D A N G E R F IE LD

A C LF Apartments
Independent A A u b U d Living

1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00**
r o i
i

*f

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He headedfor
Beverly Hills to be
a plastic surgeon... •
But he took an exit to
a town that didn't like
plastic.
1:15 3:15 5:15
7:15 9:15**

4:30

10:20

COMING SOON

PUMLWIe
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I

TNI hasbaan ■ product*# (toy, on# W of purpoee. Nto mid*
afternoon. Th# lawn rtvala any in the neighborhood. Thi ear
eNnoo, as do tie toon. Qrocertee era Inin cupboard and moat
w i*w CfTVw nww own oonv- r w i o*r irw im w« • ■
Coma ait in tile lunny comer and eaten your bread). While
you ■ » reeling hara at t * dealt, why not look at God's Net—ttie
BlU t. Though our Q O ilt for todty a rt knporunt, the knowtodgt of
Qotfa tfm ird s tor your HI* it eeeeoM The B ite wM help you
lo aatatiiah Dfkxtties for vour Ufa on earth while oraoohoo vou ter
aiarniu
iwiiF* out pwwawwnfjp r*amor*

11*6

Worahip God in Htahouaa each week, and pray to Him each
day concerning Hie plan tor you. God win haip you to kaap your

J rtT M n a *

tx g *

Nufwry Fnjv'dwrJfor ANSdrvteM

United Church
O f Christ

Sundry ached

Mpmlng Worthlp
Inning Swrvtcv
•Ibl* Study

Religious
Science

Tw id e r w d Thunder

f ir s t c h u r c h o r
M LtOKHJI SCItNCI

Congregetlonel

U V R M WATERS CATHEDRAL
Hwse e l CWewf CResel

To A d vertise In
This D irectory
C a ll 322-2611

Meet SR PSw id Rennet Hoed
Senlord

poruATtra

Dr. Derdet J. Flee her
Evangdlil
M rs Wery Flecher
C o -P miot
Ur. MtchaM Vltete
C o P u to r
Sundey Wonting W ortMp IOOO i n
Thundey Evening Worship 2:00 p m.
NURSERY PROVIDEO

Homing Service

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Icemer EdgewMtrmd w. Cotonni
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Sunder S*rv(c*»
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FMowihlp A Hiding
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MwttphyficM Book Store
Dr Elite A. Illppt,
Mlnliier
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M O pm
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8TEN8TROM, MclNTOSH
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Equipment and Suppllaa
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SUPPORT YOUR
LO C A L CHURCHES
$6.00 Per Week
To Advertise On This
Page. Call 322-2611

�gowford H*faM, Sanford, Florida - Friday, August 2, 1001 • M

IN B R I E F

WtshrltwannotineMBIbtoteliool
SANFORD - Hey kldaft Come join ua at Vacation N d e
School on Aug. 4*0 from 7*0:15 pm . for stories. crafts,
recreation and refreshments. Our theme this yea r la ‘Celebrate
Jesus!” Come meet us at Westvtew Bopri* Church. 4100 Paola
Rood (46A). are are planning to have lots o f fun. T h e event will
Include a Penny Weigh, which Is a chaBende between the boys
and girls, so bring any pennies you have, l i d s offering wM go
to help the children at the Florida Baptist Children's Home In
Lakeland.
If you have any questions about VBS, please call the church
ofTlce at 323-0923.
t

Gospel tins stated for Sunday
SANFORD — An Old Fashion Gospel Stag wtn be held at
Calvary Christian Center, on the comer o f Fourth Street and
Laurel Avenue, on Sunday night at 6 p.m. The event win
feature The Howell Family, from Ocoee, and T h e Cox Family,
from Apopka. The public la Invited to attend.
For more Information, call 322*1519. Max W. Poole, pastor.

Youth retreat *91 next weekend
SANFORD — Triumph. The Church o f the New Age. 1006 W.
6th St., will be hosting Youth Retreat *91 Aug. 10*11. The
theme will be "Youths Being Steadfast. Unmoveable. Abound­
ing In The Work o f the Lord. ”
We invite you to share with ua a very uplifting
enlightening two days o f youth fellowship and spiritual
enrichmant. Our service on Saturday, Aug. 10. trill begin at 10
a.m. and will Include a panel discussion and question and
answer period. Sunday service will also begin at 10 a.m. The
speaker will be Dr. Clyde Oreene of Macon. Oa.
Please plan to come and be s part o f a great weekend.

Sunriet tlm# changed for tummtr
SANFORD - The First United Methodist Church. 410 S.
Park Ave., announces a change In the worship services for the
remainder of the summer season.
From Sunday. Aug. 4 through Sept. 1. there will be one
worship service scheduled at 10 a.m. with Sunday School held
at 0 a.m.

Holy Cross to bogin summsr schodulo

__

SANFORD — Holy Cross Episcopal Church. 401 S. Park Ave..
will begin their summer schedule on Sunday with breakfast at
8:15 a.m. £ jioral Eucharist'at 9 a.m.. followed by an adult
forum at 10:30 a.m. This sciittiukrwtH'be foi~the~month ofAugust und also for Sept. 1.
F o r .r m rotation, call 333
t
333-461.1...

St. P«t«r*s to hokl Grand Final#

LAKE MARY - St. Peter’s Episcopal Church. 700 Rinehart
Road, welcomes everyone In the area to attend the Grand
Finale o f Its week long Bible School tonight at 7 p.m. In
addition to Ice cream the attendees will be treated wijh music,
singing and a puppet show given by some o f the over 70 young
people who attended VBS.
The church ta on the aouth side o f the Post OfTlce Sectional
Center.
For more information, call 444-LORD or the VBS director.
Donna Lane. 321-1222.

Lat ua
The Sanford Herald welcomes news about church activities
and news for publication in the Religion page each Friday.
The following suggestions are recommended to expedite
publication:
1. All items should be typed or written legibly and include
the name of a person who can be contacted and a daytime
phone number.
2. The deadline la 11 a.m. Wednesday before publication.
There Is no charge for publication.

K e e p w h a t is vital in y o u r life
T h e ApooOe Paul In beginning
Ida letter to (he PhUUppUuis
cautioned them "to have a sense
o f what is vital." When Jesua
waa tempted o f the devil In (he
wilderness, he had a sense o f the
vital (hinge. He knew that life
waa more than bread, he knew
that bfc. though daring, waa not
meant to be foolish. He knew
that though there was pleasure
in possessions, there were even
greater th tn p to be acquired
through faithfulness to a greater
call, a call to what la vital.
When husbands and w ives are
unfrUthful to the vital things In
marriage, they should never be
surprised when the crash comes
because It Is inevitable. Even as
Paul admonished the Philllpptans, so must we admonish
ourselves.
Whatsoever things are true,
honorable. Just. pure, lively, o f
good report, these are the things
that are vital to every person,
community and nation. Things
that are very necessary to unity,
peace, and lasting goodwill.
Regardless o f how things are
In this present time, in spite o f
thg criticisms o f the church and
Christian living. I still firmly
believe that men of the world are
looking to Christianity for a sign,
they can be won. but they must
see more o f a sense o f destiny in
the Christian contenance.
Almost every newspaper you
pick up today, many o f the
speakers we are hearing, tell ua
we are living In an age o f
anxiety, o f dread and terror. No
matter how true this may be. for
the people o f God I t ' Is an
opportunity, a time for them to
walk wisely, making the moat o f
the time to hold fast to things
that are vital, to help d is­

^ T h M # ore not
d a y s fo r w i s h f u l
thinking, but days to
bo honsst In our
thinking. |

consolate people find their way
back to things real.
This Is an age when the minds
o f men need to be tough. These
are not days for wtsftftil think­
ing. but days to be honest In our
thinking. Rom e was a city of
great potential but unrealistic In
its thinking.
The time to defeat an enemy Is
before he or they get the upper
hand. Jesus did not allow the
devil to trap him. No matter
what you m ay think o f Chris­
tianity. It was never meant for
the soft In the head type of
people to control, for the soft­
headed a l w a y s becom e the
victims o f the hard-hearted.
The soft in the head type of
person like their comfort too
much to do much about i
problems, but the tough ml:
realise that there la a realistic
way to handle problems, and
they know It la not the way of
accepting self-truths.
If wc are really Interested In

the vital things of life, then we
h ave stopped looking for sub­
stitutes and are facing outaelvea
as w e really are. It la only then
that we know what la vital. But I
urge you to never lose sight of
th e fact that If a tough mind is
necessary for today, so la a
tender heart.
Remember Jesua said to his
disciples: "Behold I send you
forth as sheep In the midst of
wolves, be you therefore wise as
s e r p e n t s and h a r m l e s s as
d oves." Matt. 10.10.
T h e greek word fo r wise,
tra n s la te d , means s e n s ib le ,
exercising common sense, hav­
in g sound Judgment. A tender
hea rt means sincerity, simplicity
o f spirit, (like the spirit o f Ood).
Together they are compatible, a
tough mind and a tender heart,
m eans we are to be wise and
realistic, and at the same time,
gentle and sympathetic.
M y dear friends Utile two by
four minds who think they have

everything bound up In a little
package, do far more harm than
good. They would have ua going
backwards, and never again, can
we go back to yesterday in our
living, or In our thinking. We
must gird ourselves for the flay
in which we now live.
As pilgrims w e w ill progress,
for as pilgrims we know there is
no continuing city here below.
Today many are trying one
alternative after another, some
Insist on living in the past others
are saying we can't do anything
about the way things are or the
future, so. "L e ts Just eat, drink
and be merry for w e are going to
die anyway."
As God’s people facing the
future, what are we going to do?
I declare unto you that the
future belongs to God and to us
If we hold fast to things that are
vital. It may not be easy, but
when we try a little harder. Ood
turns the seem ingly Impossible
Into glorious victory. We are
alone for w e are God’s
people. So m ay our prayer ever
be "The cross la lifted O'er us;
we Journey In Its light, the crown
awaits the conquest, lead on. O
God o f might."
It is said that when Sir Walter
Raleigh was led to the block, his
executioner aaked him If his
head lay right. Raleigh answer.
"It mailers little m y friend, how
the head Ilea provided the heart
is right."
In the presence o f Ood. before
him through whom are revealed
the secrets o f all hearts, before
his cross o f mercy and love,
what does our heart apeak?
How does our heart lie?
Ttw t*v. S. Edeverd Jtawiwt Is paNr si
First Christian Church. Dtsdftss
1467S. Vsnfard Avw., f *

si Christ.

Mystery of the ‘weeping’
Catholic community Virgins
stirs controversy
plans Patronal Feast
- fs*r Giare Cathollo-Commu­
11. The Liturgy will be held
nity. 1207 Swiss Court. Dcon the futute site o f St. Clare
C a th o lic Community, oft Day
Uoaa will celebrate Ita second
PaUrmtd J r « » r i i f . S L . j j i ) ' -noa t r n f i-y iro'ftar Fsm v mir
llie outdoor event’, there will
the weekend of Aug. 9. 10. 11.
be a p a r i a h f a m i l y hrA variety of event* arc
Ing-your-own-plcnlc outing.
planned for the weekend In­
cluding worship services, a
In conjunction with the
pot luck supper, and a parish
weekend, t he Kni ghts of
family picnic ouiing. T he
Columbus. Asslssl Council
highlights o f (he weekend will
*10.367 will host a Pancake
be a visit by the current and
Breakfast on Saturday, Aug.
former Bishops o f the Orlando
10. from 7 lo 1 1 a.m. The cost
Diocese.
of Ihc meal, which Includes
pancakes, bacon or sausage.
Bishop Norbcrt M. Dorsey.
C.P.. will be on hand to Juice and coffee, will be 02.50
for adults and teens. 02 for
celebrate the 5 p.m. Liturgy
children ages five to 12. and
on Saturday. Aug. 10. The
free to children under five.
Liturgy will be held at the
The
breakfast will be held at
Osteen Civic Center, on New
the Osteen Civic Center.
Smyrna Boulevard. In Osteen.
Following the Liturgy, there
All members o f the com­
will be a pot-luck covered dish munity art- welcom e lo attend
supper.
the weekend events. Further
Former Bishop Thotnus J. Information can be obtained
Grady will celebrate the 11 by calling the parish ofTlce at
a.m. Liturgy on Sunday. Aug. 323-1703.

T h e longest-running mystery
Is not a play by Agatha Christie.
U
whodunit about the.,
"w ee p in g " Vtrglns.“ TR cy arc in
the news again on two fronts.
— w r r m r f f i r i f "w eep in g" stai" U r s of the Virgin" M3ry Have
attracted thousands o f visitors
w h o stand In line for hours to see
the strange spectacle.
For many of the devout, these
phenomena bear the unmistak­
able marks of the supernatural.
But not for everybody. " I t ’s
collective hysteria." said the
Roman Catholic archbishop of
Lima.
The plot thickens. Some peo­
ple have accused the Peruvian
government of orchestrating the
alleged miracles lo lake people's
mi nds off the war und the
cholera that have ravuged the
country.
"W e are comforted In our
great distress by these signs
from heaven." said one believer.
Ill May. the pope of the Coptic
O r t h o d o x Church in Cairo.
Egypt, proclaimed the phenom­
enon of the "weeping" Virgin In
a church In Seven llllls. Ohio, to

— 3 - . - . -------

E--S ***"

be a miracle. The Icon Is said to
have shed oily tears on more
than 20 occuslona In a year. The
pope himself came to the church
from Cairo lo Investigate before
declaring It u miracle.
There have been In the post
other stories of these Irons (or
small paintings) o f the Madonna
that are said to have shed tears.
But the most famous of the
" w e e p i n g " Virgins was the
"weeping" Virgin of Fatima.
The 4 1/2-fool-tall statue was
o r i g i n a l l y b r o u g h t to this
country from Portugal In 1947.
and It was taken lo various
dlocrses In the counlrv to be
venerated.

SEM INO LE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
ALLIANCE CMUSCH
Com m unity America Church, 4815 East Lake Ditv#, Wtntar Springs
N eighborhood A lllanca Church, X I M w th am Wood* S d . lo n g w o o d
Sanlord A llian ce Church, 1401 S Park A re . Sanford

ASSEM BLY

OP 000

Fam ily W orship Center, 24SI A irpo rt Bhrd , Sanlord
Fraedom Assem bly of Ood. IS IS W. Slh S I . Sanford
W aklva Assem bly of O od. 1179 D lio n fV J. Longwood
BAm OT
A ntioch Baptist Church, Oviedo
Calvary Baptist Church, C rystal L ake k 3rd, Laka Mary
Caesel berry B a e 'itl Church, 770 Sem m ola B ird
Central Baptist Church. 3101 W 1»l St
C h u iu o ia First Baptist
Clearw ater M issionary B a p tlit Church. Southwest Ad
C o un trynd e B e p lltl Church. Country O u t Road. Laka Mary
F irst Baptist Church. 919 Park A re
F ln t B ap titt Church o l Altam onta Springs. A l 43S Altam onla Sp rin g s
F irst B a p tlit Church o l Forest C ity
F irst B a p titt Church o l O anara
F irst B a p titt Church. Markham W oods
F irst Baptist Church o l Laha M onroe
F irst B ap titt Church o l Longwood. M t Cast SA 434
F irst Baptist Church o l Oviedo
F irst Baptist Church o l Sanlando Springs
F irst Shiloh Missionary B a p tlit Ch urch. 1101 W 13th St
F irst Baptist Church o l O ttaan
Fountain Head Baptitt Church. O viedo
H ope Baptist Church. Forest C ity Com m unity Center, Forest C ity
independent Baptist M is s C iv ic Laague B M g . Longwood
JordOT M issionary B ap titt Church. 820 Uptafa Ad.
Lighthousa Baptist Church. M S Longw ood • Laka Mary Aoad
Lakaview Baptist Church. 126 Lakaview A v e . L a te Mary
M ac adonis M ission B aptist Church. Oaa H ill A d . Ottaan
M issionary Baptist Church, North A d . in t tr p n t a
M orning Glory Baptist Church. Q aneva Hwy
Mt Monah Primitive Baptist. 1101 Locu st A v t . Sanlord
M l Olive Missionary B aptist Ch urch, Sanlando Springs A d . Longw ood
M t Sinai Missionary B ap titt Church, tkOO Jarry Ave
M t Zion M ittio n a iy B ap titt. Sipea Ave
N ew Bethel Missionary Church. 9th St A H ickory Ave
New Mt Calvary M issionary B aptist. 1109 W t2th SI
New Salem Pnnutrv* Baptist Church. 1309 W 12th St
New Testament Baptist Church. Q uafiely Inn. North Longwood
New Mt Zion Baptist Church, 1720 Pear Ave
New Lite Fellowship. &lt;911 E Laka Drive. Casselberry. Ft 32706
N on hsid a B ap titt Church, C h uluota
People t Baptist Church. t » 1 W F irst Street. Sanford
P m e c rstl Baptist Church. 119 W Airport Blvd
Fram e Lake Baptist. Ridge A d . Fern Park
Progress M issionary B a p titt Church. Midway
Second S h ilo h M issionary B aptist Church West Sanlord
Sm yrna B aptist Church. 290 Overbreoa D r . Casselberry
Starlight Baptist Church. 190 B aham a Ad
St Jam es M issionary B ap tist C h urch, St Ad 419. Osteen
St Jo hn s M issionary B ap tist Ch urch. 309 Longwood A v e . Altam onte
Springs
St Luee Missionary Baptist C h u rch o l Cam aion City. Inc
SI Paul Baptist Church. 913 Pine Ave
St Matthews Bapual C h u ich . Canaan H o is_________________________

&gt;irw-i

SANFORD - The Lutheran Church o f the ReAewner, 2829
Oak A v r„ arfll rctebeate the l l t h Sunday after Pentecost with
aenrtccaat K&gt;.30a.*. Communion wdl he ehenThe regular quarterly P eerin g o f the r w y r g a lle n or# be
held Immediately after oorrtceo. Members o f tfie cin iw h council
wtn meet In the PtOowthtp Hall Tueaday, Auft. 0, at 7&gt;90 p.m.
and the members at the Lutheran Women's Mtootonary League
win meet at 1p.m. Thursday, Aug. IB. Reporta win be etven by
attendees o f the Both A niU m aary celebration o f the LWML
held In Cleveland.

SI. Jo h n 's M issionary B ap tist Church. 920 C yp rsss St
Sp ringfield Missionary B ap tist. 12.h A Cedar
Sunland Baptist Church, 2626 Palm etto
Temple Baptist Church, P alm Sprtnga A d . Altam onla Sp rin g s
V ictory Baptist Church. O ld Orlando Ad. at H e ita f Ave
Woatvtev* Baptist Church. 4100 P ao la Aoad (46A)
W illiam Chapal M issionary B ap tist Church. Mark A W illiam S t .
A ltam on la Sprtnga
Z ion H op e Baptlat Church. 712 Orange Ave
CATM OUC
A il Soule Catholic Church. 902 O ak A v e . Sanlord
C hurch o l the Nativity. Lake Mary
Our Lake o l the Lakes C a th o lic Churcn. 1310 M anm iiisn. Deltona
SI. Ann a Catholic Church. Dogwood Trail. OeBary
St. Augustin* Catholic Church. Sunset O r. near Button Ad . Casselberry
St. Clare Catholic Com m unity m eela al Ostaen C ivic Canter
81 Mary Megadalene C a th o lic Church. Maitland A v e .
Altam onta Sprtnga
c m m b t ia m

F irst Christian Church. 1607 S S anlord Ave
First Christian Church o l Longwood. 1400 E E . WHlijmson Ad . Longw ood
O f ace Chnstlan Church. W ilso n Elementsry School. (Paola). 90S Orange
■ hrd. Sanlord
Lakariaw Christian Church. Bear L a is A d . at Jamison
N o n h sid a Christian Church. Florida Haven O r . Maitland
San lord Chnstlan Church. 132 W Airport Blvd
Sou th Sermnoie Christian Church. 300 W SA 4j4, Oviedo
F irst Church o l C h ost S cie n tist. 97S MarSham W oods Ad

Longw ood

C M U S C H OF CHASAT
C hurch o l Christ. 1912 8 Park Ave
C h urch o l Christ at la e e Ellen. U S 17 92. N Casselberry
C h urch o l Christ. 600 Palm Sonngs D r . Allam onle Spnngs
C h urch o l Chnst. Geneva
C h urch o l Chnst. Longw ood
C h urch o l Chnst. W 171h St
N o n h sid a Churcn o l C h rist. F la Haven D r . Maitland
South Sem inole Church o l Christ. S410 Lake Moweii Ad
C H U R C H OF OOO
C h urch o l Ood. 303 H ickory
C h urch o l Ood. 603 W 22nd Si
C h urch o l God. Oviedo
C h urch o l God H oliness L a ta M onroe
C h urch o l Ood M ission. Enterprise
C h urch o l Ood. 1402 W ISth St
C hurch o l God in Christ. Oviedo
C hurch o l God o l Prophecy. 2309 S Elm Ave
C h urch o l Ood o l Prophecy. 1706 S Persimmon Ave
C h urch o l Ood o l Prophecy 496 S Central Oviedo
Church o l Ood (7th Day). Deltona Community Cania&gt; Deliona (Sun Huom i
R escu e Church o l Ood. 1700 W IJth Si Sanlord
True Church o l Ood. 2700 Ridgew ood A v e . Sanlord
CO H O RT IH TIftNAI
Congregational CTinetien Church. 2401 S Perk Ave

S anlord

fifn ^ ii ORTHODOX
Eastern Ortnodos Church. SI George. 2001 Dylan Way. M aitland
E aalarn O th od o v Church. S i Slevwn s d O C t 1*93 Laee E m m a Ho.»j

Longwood. F L 32730
Eaalarn Orihodoa C h u rc h . SI Jo hn Orihodos. 2743 C o u n try C lu b Aoad.
Sanlord

Longwood C h u rc h o l Ihe Natarene. Wayman A Ja sa u p A v e . Longwood
Markham W o o d s C h urch o l the Natsrsn*. S A 46. 3Vy M il** Weal Ol 14
M the W aklva Alvar

EPISCOPAL

PRESBYTERIAN

A ll Saints E piscopal C h urch. E DeBary Ave.. E nterp rise
Chnst Episcopal C h u rc h , Longwood
Episcopal Church o l the N ew Covenant. 179 T u a ka w illa Aoad. W inter
Springs
H oly Cross E p iscop al, Park Ave at 4lh A t . Sanlord
SI Peters E piscopal Ch urch. 700 Rinehart Aoad. L a k e Mery
St Richard s Church. 3131 Lake Howell A d . W inter Park
The Church o l the O o o d Shepherd. Maitland. 331 L a k a Ave

INTERDENOMINATIONAL
Calvary Christian Career. SCO W Slh A t . Sanlord
Living Waters C athed ral. W est SA 44 and Kennel H oa d. Sanlord
Northland Com m unity Ch urch. S X Dog Track A d . Longw ood. P L 3 2 7 X
Outreach Deliverance Center, 2231 Sipes A v e , S a n lo rd

JEWISH
Beth Am Synagogue m eeting at Comer o l Sand L ake and County Lina
Road. W est 14
Tempi* Shalom. 17AB Elhcam Blvd . Deltona

LUTHERAN
Ascension Lutheran Ch urch. Overbrook D r . C asse lb e rry
Oood Shepherd U n ite d Lutheran, 2917 8 Orlando Dv
Holy Cross Lutheran C h u rc h 'o l Laka Mary. 760 S u n Drive. Lake Mary
Lord Of L ila Lutheran Ch urch. 395 Tuakawilla Ad . W in ter Spnngs
Luther in Church o l Providence. Deltona
Lutheran Church o l th e Redeemer. 2323 O i l Avenue
Messiah Lutheran C h u rch . G olden Days Or A Hwy 17 92. Casselberry
S i LuSe* Lutheran C h u rch . Rt 429. sievia
St Stephen Lutheran Church. 434 |u*l West o l T4. Longw ood

MSTHOOIST
Barnett United M em orial Churcn. E OeBary Av* . Enterprise
Bear Laka United M e th o d ist Church
Bethel A M E C h urch. Canaan Hgts
Casselberry C o m m u nity United Methodist Church. H wy 17 92 PI nay
Rgjgq FVJ . C t I M t tM ffy
Chnst United M e th o d ist Church. Tucsar O r . Su n lan d Estates
DeBary Com m unity M eth od ist Church. W High b a n k s Rd . DeBary
First Umtad M e th od ist Church. 419 Park Av*
Fust Methodist C h u rc h o l Oviedo
First United M eth od ist Church o l Geneva
Grace United M e th o d ist Churcn. 499 N Country C lu b Rd Lake Mary
Grant Chapel A M E Church. Oviedo
Oakgrov* M ethodist Church. Oviedo
Ostaen M ethodist C h u rch . Cor o l Carpenter A M u rre y S t . Osteen
Paola Wesleyan M e th od ist. 3430 WtysxJ* O r . S a n lo rd
Pioneer U e lh o d is l C h urch. 110 N Poplar Ave . S a n lo rd
Sanlando United M e th o d ist Church. SR 434 and 14. Longw ood
St Jem*« A U E . 9 lh at Cypress
SI lu t e M B C h u rc n o l Cam eron City. Inc . Bearden o il S R 46 i
St Mary S A M E C h u rch . SI Rt 413. Oaleen
St Paul s M eth od ist Church. Ostaen Rd . Enterprise
S listlo rd Mem orial Church. S OeBary
N A Z A A IN f
First Church o l th e N klare n * 2361 Sanlord Av*
Geneva Church o l the N arartne. S R 46. Geneva
Lass Mary C hurch o l the Na/eren* 171 E Crystal L a k a Av* Lake Mary

Deltona P resb yterian Church. Holland Blvd A A u stin Av* . Deltona
First P resb yten an C h urch o l Lake Mary
First P resb yterian Church. Oak Avs A 3rd St
First P resb yterian C h urch o l DeBary. E H ig h lan d
Markham W oods Presbyterten Church. 3210 M arkham W oods Aoad. Lake
Mary. FI
St Andrew s Presbyterian Church. 9913 Bear Laka A d
SI Marks Presbyterian Church. 1021 Palm S p rin g s A d . AjtamonI# Spgt
Tuscaw llla Presbytenan Church. 3600 West S la t* A d 429. Oviedo Fla
Upsela C o m m u n ity Presbyterian Church. U p aa la A d
W estm inister Presbytenan Church. Rad B u g R d . C asselb erry

SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Forest L a i* Seventh Day Adventist Church. H w y 436. Forest City
Mart H ill Seventh Day Adventist Church. M l E 2nd S t . Sanlord
Sanlord Seventh Day Adventist Church. M I S N H ighw ay 427
Seventh Day A dventist Church. Meiliand A v* . A lta m o n la Spring*
Winter S p rin g s Seventh Oey Adventist C h u rch . SO 8 M o ss Rd
OTHER C H U R C H E S
All Faith C h ap el. Cam p Seminole Weklva Park. Rd
Allen s A M E C h u rch Olive A ITlh
Beerdell Avenue H o lin e ss Chapel. Beard a ll Av*
Chuluota Com m unity C h u 'ch
Church o l J e t u s C h rist o l Latter D*y Sain ts. 2313 Park A s*
Family C h u rch C h ristia n Center. 1344 5 * m ln o ia B lv d . Caaaalbarry
First B orn C h u rch o l the Living God. M idw ay
First C h u rch o l C h rist. Scientist. ElSam B lv d and V enu s S t . Deliona
First P en te co sta l C h urch o l Longwood
First P en te co sta l C h urch o l Sanlord
Full G o sp e l C h u rch o l God in Chnst. 1626 Jarry A v e . Sanlord
Full G o sp e l Tabernacle. 2724 Country C lu b Aoad
Oraca B ib le C h u rch 2644 S Sanlord Av*
Holy Irm ly C h u rch o l G od m Chrisl. 1314 M a n g o u slm e Ave
Kingdom H all o l Jehovah s Witness. Lake M onro* U n it. 1362 W Third St
Lake M onro* Chapel Orange Bird . la k e M onro*
M l O live H o lin e s s Church Oak Hill Rd . O sta en
Neighborhood A llia n c e Church. W l Markham W o o d s Road. Longwood
Paniaco stal O pen Bible Tabernacle R idgew ood A v e . O il 2Slh opposite
Sem inole H ig h Sch ool
Preis* an d Pow er Church. I l l W Wilbur A v e . l a k e Mary
R olling H ills Moravian Church SR 434. L o n g w o o d
Sanlord A llia n c e Church. 1401 S Pars Av*
Sanlord B ib le C h urch 2440 Sanlo'd Av*
Second C h u rch O l The Living God 3428 B eard a ll Ave , Senio'd
The F u ll G o sp e l C h urch o l Out lo rd Jesuk C h n s l. W aahm gion Si C *
naan C ity
The Salvation Army 700 W 74lh SI
Tnumph The C h urch o l Ih* Nvw Age 1009 W 9 th S i
United C h u rch o l C h n s l Altamonte C o m m u n ity Chapal. Altamonla
S p ring s
United C h u rch o l C h n st Christian Fello w sh ip 260 N Country Club Rd
la e e Mary
U C S S Spiritual Centra 123 A South V olost* Av* . Corner o l Graves and
V o lu sia A re O range City
Winter S p ring e Com m unity Evangelical C o n g re g a tio n a l 219 Wad* SI
W inter Springe

�H e a rt stim u la n t c a n
c a u s e s id e e ffe c ts

THEM HOW ABOUT SOME

20 YEAR OLD SCOTCH?

THATVC KEUAftOMP
&gt; T T A V m E TH0U6H1

SORRY

N J O t w e u a * WWRDttS

AWED AT THEM

By P h illip A ld e r
T h e rubber-bridge match between the two defunct spy organizatlona, Control and Kaos,
finds both sides vulnerable in
the irttlal rubber. The sixth
•hand (today's)- was d e s H ^ y the

T U IB B ti

JSMlRuY MAUUTUt"

( W

the South position In the dla
gram since he Is the declarer.
Shtarker (West) led the spade
two.
"G ood luck. Chief.” said Max.
"T h an k you. Max. Spade Jack.
please."
But when Siegfried covered
with the king, the Chief won
with the ace. there being no
point In ducking. The C h ief
played a diamond to the queen
and a diamond to the ace, but
Shtarker discarded a heart.
It was time to turn to the
clubs. The Chief cashed the ace.
but this time It was Siegfried
who threw a heart. The C hief

j

W
r

tjv

S M B S ***

ofttrrt*®

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IwpoHG
A 6 A IN

WHAT WOOL? YOU S A V ttN V B E S T
CHARACTER TRAIT, G A R F lE lP ?

ANP m NOT JUST
SAVING THAT

VOOR ABILITV TO
ORPER PIZ Z A .

JfM

WWnc,

MEJJWUIHME

WWERhALF
OF NCf BOGY

82

I JUST HfME A FETISH FOR.
WEARING A WHITE SMOCK ANP
. LISTENING TO PEOPLE SHARE .
L a INHWVKTE PROBLEMS r

7 UHL.EXCUSE
A PERSISTENT
RASH ON THE

** y&gt;

PETER
GOTT.M.D.

and the length of time you win wttk
r e q u ir e the m e d ic a t io n s , tion.

shook his head In dismay. He led
the club six, covered by the 10
and Jack. The Chief returned to
hand with a diamond to the king
and led the club seven, but
Shtarker didn't cover with the.
qu een :H itretoef could wth'Offif
‘ lit tricks.

a

s o fti w

D B A S O B . OOTTt I take
Lanoxin and Norpace for cardiac
arrhythmias. What aide effects
do these drugs have on my
system, and w ll I have to take
mem loreverr aiy ooctor is very
uncommunicative.
D B A S B B A D B B t Lanoxin
(dlgoxln, a purified form of
digitalis] is a heart stimulant. It
increases the strength of cardiac
muscle contraction and slows
the passage of electrical Im­
pulses that trigger a heartbeat.
The drug, which has been In use
for centuries, can produce mi­
raculous effects on a weak heart
as well as stabilising the cardiac
rhythm so as to avoid an Ineffec­
tual rapid pulse or runaway
heartbeat.
Despite Its benefits, however,
L a n o x in h a a on e s e r io u s
drawback: It can be toxic to
heart muscle. Moreover, the dif­
ference between a therapeutic
level and a toxic one Is very
narrow. Toxicity usually pro­
duces characteristic symptoms:
nausea, vomiting, loss of ap­
petite, yellow vision, alow pulse
ittents
and m alaise
taking this me
closely supervised by their
doctors; such monitoring should
Include blood tests to measure
the level of Lanoxin In the
system.
N orpace (diaopyram lde) la
used to prevent extra heartbeats
that can cause heart stoppage or
cardiac damage If they occur
frequently. Hence. Norpace Is
classed as an antl-arrhythmtc
drug that Is used for specifically
defined Irregularities.
Norpace can worsen heart fail­
ure and may cause considerable
side effects, including urinary
retention, dry mouth, constipa­
tion. nauaea. vomiting, im ­
potence. rash and Jltterlness. By
an d la r g e , w h en u sed In
appropriate doses, the drug la
■are for the majority of patients
who take it.
My answer to your question Is
purposely general because your

'I V
&gt;
Sow . I
PWPTWCRK
W HERE.

.

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What an u n l u c k y hand.
M ax."
"Yes, Chief."
“ Vee dodged zee bullet zere,
Shtarker."
"Vat do you mean, Siegfried?"
"Veil, It Is simple. Shmart.
Ven Shtarker led zee shpode
two. showing only a four-card
suit, and zen turned up viz only
e ln dlamont. h e m u s t haf
shtarted viz 44-1-4 distribution,
Uddervlse he has a five-card suit
to lead. So zee clubs must be
4-0. Zee Chief should lead zee
club six Immediately, not cash
zee ace first."
"T h e old fourth highest from

Y O U B BIRTHDAY
A ug. 9,1991
T h i n g s shoul d g o r a t h e r
smoothly for you In the year
ahead w here your career Is
concerned. Increased earnings
are a probability, especially after
the fall season.
L B O (July 23-Aug. 22) ir you
merely do what needs doing.
Instead o f completing things the
way you know they should be
done, you're not likely to experi­
ence a sense o f accomplishment
today. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find It. The
Astro-G raph Matchmaker In­
stantly reveals which signs are
romantically perfect for you.
Mall 92 plus a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, do this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Even though your Ideas might
be superior to those o f your
companions today, you're not
likely to get the acknowledg­
ment for which you're hoping.
Let the results sing your praises.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If
you want a grrater share o f
something than what y o u ’ re

WANNA TAKE
A CHANCE
ONAMOTEl
AGAIN, WP?

m

M TTM hPTU*
TH1CftiptT CNtP
A6A1N, CHOPPER
THfcm t t TMCAf*
TH* RECEiPTE- (1*

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( t K W T iM A M M t

CLASSIFIED ADS

R ETK EO P IALC *

CUSCVX? c o u n t
W tN ftfTN JM O tCS A A
f lR O N T B r n ONION
p t m

a a a f ir r a r

Rg OMwal M n a t
l tL i f f l . at W t M A m

O k ’d t o d M f k t w

aM

S«mlnol«
322-3611

_ ..
CITY SAY—

PM M CAS40
P-S.R-. _
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Ptatnfltf,

VI
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PINANCI. tna.1
MpaaaaaaMnaf

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' ft-IM C A H G N R t

SAYIN R l P SB-. la
.......
an* Y Y O N N I O l V I O A i
P L I I T P I N A N C I , I N C .)

a

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M

paam ONTaf Ma aubtacTraai
praparty.jvv CMsaRaaftL I attt

M M r Mr

S S — Swe— MGMt*M ar at B«

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at

lltSB
M r at

La t SS C R Y S T A L L A R I
I S T A T I S ACCONOINO T O
T H I P U T T H IR IO P AS R lCONOID IN P U T BOOK M
P A M S IA N O S PUBLIC NICO R O S OP S I M lN O L R
COUNTY. PLORIOA a/h/a t il
latataa Circle, Lak* M ary.

C U M . O BCU IT COURT
By: Derg— W. DM—
: Jetty* A Aupuat L m i

Data* M* S*k Bay at July,

0PTW EE1GW TEBNTH
MM

at CtrcuN Caurt
ByJanoE.Jaaowic
Deputy Clark
Pukttak: AufualL*. tftl
M l- lf
P I M T UNION M O RTG AG E
GOWORATtQHi
IN Tttl CIRCUIT COUNT
OPTMEMTR J V B K U L L I
CIRCUIT IN— — — — D

TH O M AIA .R U M M iL.M M .
&lt;»).

PLONIOA
CASEN**M«F-CAt4K
WILLIAM CINTANI an*
NICHANO N. SHAW.

NOT (C l IS H ER EB Y OIVSN
Ito CM* HP. *1
CA M M i Oratof Court M top
EIGHTEENTH Judklto Ckculf
In M B Nr SIM) N O LI County.
PtorMa whereto PIRCT UNION
MORTGAGE CONDONATION
to tot Pktohft and THOMAS A.
H U M M E L * n l L I S L I I A.
NUNMML at* to# Owfendentt. I
s»M aa* to to* htgfwat aa* beat
M M r Nr c a * a* to* Wea#
•I tog SI M l NOLI
Cawrty CoarftMuog at i i : M
l o t i an Ma MM la v at Avgust.

C A T H V L . S T I V I N S an*
O A N V W. S T I V I N S , an*
FIR ST UNION N A T I O N A L
BANK OP PLONIOA.
NOTICI OP
POBICLOSUOR S A L I
NOTICI IS H I R I R Y O IV IN
pursuant It a PMnl JuBpmant at
FeraeNaurs Bata* Juty 8 . m i
an* anlara* In C a t* N*.
ti it)7 CAUK at Ma Circuit
Caurt at Me NM JuBtelat ClrcuH
In an* N r limlnaN Caunty,
PlarlBa. wtwrsln W ILLIA M
CINTANI an* RICHARD R.
SHAW ara P lain tiff* , an*
C A T H V L. S T I V I N S an*
O A R V W. S T I V I N S , an*
PIRST UNION N A T IO N A L
BANK OP PLORIOA. ara Otkndattf*. Th* praparty k r s
cNaa* MaraM will Be tat* la Ms
Mpksai MBBsr tar cask at Ma
Waal Prant Ooar at M* Santlneia
Caunty CturMauat. M l Harm
. PariuAsMua,UMard PkrMa.
*VPTl:M AJ*. an Ma S M t O ^ t

as sat N rM to sat*
■RES
U n it f - l . *1 T U S C A N Y
.P L A C E . A CONDOMINIUM.
DMAS! ONI. par Ma DeckraIn Official Records Bask IMt.
M i * t i l l . at am#n*a* In
amon*manto N TN* Declaration
-at CanBamlnium rtctr&lt;t&lt; In
Otticial BacarBa Book 1314.
M L Official

s£aS^ w Sr *

Ctvnty. PtorMa. T O O IT H IN
W ITH a ll a p p u rte n a n c e *
tnarala. jttcluEIng lim it**

Lat a WINOWARO SQUARI
SCCTION ONI. t ccarBlnp to
M* pttl Martel at r t carBa* In
Plat Bask If. Papa as. PuMk
RacarBi at Seminal* Caunty.
PlarMa.
T O M T H IR wtto all Ma Im-

P T H M NlmBP Nl Ifw cpniript
alamawN at aeM Candominium
at tat NrM in Ma Dae* rattan.
WITNISS MV HAND an* Ma
aaal at IMt Caurt an Juty U .
M l.
ISIAL)

•aaamanta. right*. appurte­
nance*. rants, reyaltta*. miner­
al. ell and pea right* and profit*.
- *- - —
(ULSo
imoM o
wP m i w M r iWWo VW w M t
stack, an* all flatyrwa m m o r
hereafter a part at Ma preparty.
InduBMB replacements an* a*B11HJri| TTWTWW'
(Caurt Stall
MARYANNS MONSB
CLKRKOF THC
CIRCUIT COURT
■y: JarwB.Jeaawk
Deputy Clark
PuMtoh: Aupuat l.*.l«*l
ORIX!

MARYANN! M OASI
CNrli at M* Circuit Caurt
By: Jana I . Jatsw k
Deputy Clark
Pukiiah: Aupuat I * , m i
o ii-ta

IN TN I CIRCUIT COUNT
O* TNI MM JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND PON
SIM M O LI COUNTY,
r LONI DA
CASINO fVaBMCAHN
CITIZINS FED ERAL BANK, a
Fa*arai Saving* Bank t/k/a
CITIZINS FED ERAL
SAVINGS ANO LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.

IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE MTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND PON
SikUNOLI COUNTY,
PLORIOA
Case Na.fi IMS CAie#
HOMC SA V IN G S B A N K .
F.S.B . a United Stake

JAMES M CHAPMAN AND
MILINOA LOU CHAPMAN.
Manila.

Plaintiff.

NOT 1CI OP S A LI
PURSUANT TO CN A P TIR «
NOTICI IS H IR B B V GIVIN
pursuant N an Or*ar or Pinal
lu ip - r * at Parselaaura *ata*
July XL INI. an* antars* in
Casa Ns. tiatSS CA14K at Ma
Circuit Caurt at Ma ISM Judicial
Circuit In an* tar Samlnal*
Caunty. n o rm nttaraln C IT I
ZBNS FEDERAL R AN K , ate..I*
Ma Plaintiff an* JA M IS M
CHAPMAN, at. at. art OatanI «M tall * " **

V IN C E N T M A R S H an*
ILAINK MARSH, his wll*. an*
HIDOEN RIDGE CONDOM IN
IUM HOMEOWNERS ASSOCI
AT ION. INC.
Dcfondants.
NOTICE OP S A LI
Natlea la haraky pivan mat
pursuant la a final ludpmanf of
taradatur* antarw* in Ike aka i
enfltta* causa In ttw Circuit
Court at Samlnal* County. PkrIda. I will tall ma praparty
situate In Samlnok Caunty,
PlarMa. daatriaed at:
Condominium Unit No. HIM
at HIDOIN RIDGE CONDO
MINIUM, m* Oaclarallon of
which it racordod In Offklal
Records Rook 1157. paps «15 at
tap. at ma puklk records of
Samlnok County. Florida and
amendments thereto. If any
at puklk sal*, k ma highoat and
bast biddtr tor cash, at ttw Watt
front stapt at tho Samlnok
County Courthouse. M l N. Park
Ave. Sanford. Florida, al li fe
A M on mo Itm day of August.

f at M * ........ .
Caunty CaurMauae In Seminal*
Caunty. Santar*. PlarlBa at
li st a’ttock A M an Ma itm
Bay at Au*u*t, ie*1. M* tallow
Sartn In saM Order or Pinal
judpmant.kwH:
Lat L Black B. C A M ! LOT,
UNIT L accardtop I* M* Plat
PwroM a* recorded to P k t Beats
II. Papa* N an* w. at M# PuMk
Racarda at Samlnok Caunty.
PlarMa.
OATID at Sanford. PlarMa
m o MMdayoT July. Iffl.
Clark. Circuit Caurt
Samtools County. n o rm
By: Janal.Jaaawk
Aa Deputy Clark
PuMtoh: Aupuat 1.*. l**i
D l l If

i«tt.
MARVANNE M ORSE
C lo rk C ircu it C o u rt

a d

by Jam E J is m k
Deputy Clerk
Publish: August 1.*. I**1

OBI M

CELEBRITY CIPHER _

^ w r wyatow*1* wo eaowa Sam wwtaaono by

• T X I I P U

L —

V A I X U B ' O
T
W
O A

L T P P

N W V P S

I W X R I . '

RS

H P P R*

I P X X A R .

R L W I O X P U
R A I N

O V L V A V

A M
—

V A K W R n V
I I I
V T R J

V I T R O .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It you k M a i our laws and to
gnd. I m t p atouM D* no end'* — Arthur Buga Baor.

CITIZINS PROSRAL RANK. A
FED ER A L S A V IN G ! BANK
t/k/a CITIZINS P I D I R A L
SAVINGS ANO LOAN

a iM M E B I A T E

PUMOIHB*

Orlando - Winfar Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DIRT.
HOURS

P R IV A TE P A R T Y R A T ES
Naa* a
toant Me

O. SHARON W ILSON A N O
O A V IO C .C A R U iasf.aL

|NOTICI IS H I R I R Y GIVIN
— ■ — to an Order or Pmal
at Fared***. dokd
INI. an* antora* to
■ f S B B P C A U K at Rw
OrcuWCaartef M a M M JuBtelat
Circuit la an* M r SamMsfe
County. PlarMa aMaraM CITI­
ZENS P I D I R A L RANK. A
PID IR AL SAVINOS RANK to
Ma Ptakftft an* a s h a r o n
W ILS O N a a * D A V I D C .
to Nit
Mto i n f
Nr cadi at MaWkatkwr*
at M* Samkato Caunty
M SamMaM Caunty.
PlarMa at 11:M
M aM M Bay af,
or Pinal
Lat S i Stock L Rapist af
Skaat N*. I an* 9. NORTH
ORLANOO T O W N S IT I,
POURTH AOOITION. accar*
Mp to Me p k t Moraaf aa racardad In Pkt Beak Mi Papas!
an* t at Ma PuMk Racarda of
OATID at Santar*. lam Mala
County. PlarMa Mto SNR day at
Clark. Circuit Caurt
By:Jan* I .
Aa Deputy Clark
PuMlak: Aupuat}. t, if f l
N IB
IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
OPTNR H G N T IR N T H
JUOKIAL CIRCUIT •
OP PLORIOA.
IN ANO PON
SikUNOLI COUNTY
BRNRRAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASR NO. fl-MSPCA-14-K
C H E M IC A L M O R T O A O R
COMPANY.
Plaintiff
HAROLD MARK HEADRICK,
etai.
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: HAROLD M ARK
HEADRICK
1M7 NarMlaka Drive
laniard. PL 0771
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action tor Faractoaur* at Marf­
an Ma Mtowkp
UNIT
N O RTH LAKE
rVILLAGE
e r tM7,
CONDOMINIUM VII.
PHASE II. TOOETHER WITH
A t/ta INTEREST IN AND TO
THE COMMON E L E M E N T S
APPURTENANT T H E R E T O .
ACCORDING TO T H E PLAT
TMSREOP AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK 17 P A G E S IS
THROUGH M. PUBLIC REC­
O R D ! OP S E M I N O L E
COUNTY
haa bean tiled against you and
k It. an Claudia L. Brook.
Attorney tar Plaintiff, what*
addratt It Suit* I M . 1570
Madruga Avenue. Coral Gabkt.
Florida. Ilia* on or bafor*
Auggtl M. Iffl and Ilk ttw
original with ttw Clark of mi*
Caurt atthar bater* aorvk* an
Plaintiff* attorney
ataly thereafter;
dtfk/ft *111 b* antora* against
you tor m* relief daman*** In
macampiaint.
WITNESS my hand an* ttw
seal #»mi* Court mi* tam day of
July. Iff I.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
A* Clerk of ttw Court
By Rum King
A* Deputy Clerk
Pubilth: July If. M A August I.
f .m i
DEM-III
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIRCUIT CIVIL NO.
H-IOtt-tA-ieK
NCNBMORTGAGE
CORPORATION.
Plalntllt.
n.
ELEANORS RAVE ALA. #1*1.
NOTICI OP ACTION
To: ELEANORE R AVEALA
le*t known ratidance
«M Rearing Dr.. *140
AltamonkSpring*. FLU7I4
Pmenl retldtnc* It
unknown
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
actten k torvclo** ttw Ikn of a
martgaga on ttw talkwing prop­
erty In Samlnok County
Florida:
Condominium unit No. ice.
Building H A . a l H ID O E N
SPRINGS CONDOMINIUMS,
according k ttw Declaration of
vombar IS. It*4 In Official Rac
ordt Saak ISfi papa* M* thru
TfS. Inclull vo ol llw Public
Rtcord* al Samlnok County,
Florida, and all amendment*
thereto, together with ail appur
knencot thereto and an un
divided interest In ttw common
element* at said condominium
aa tat term In said Declaration
Including tpeclflcelly but not
by way at limitation ttw follow
Ingteuipment:
Refrigerator w/lcomakar.
range, microwave, dishwasher,
d lt p o ie l. w a sh e r, d r y e r,
flrepkce. mirrored closet door*,
paddle Ian.
ha* been tiled against you and
you ara required to serve a copy
el your written detente*. II any,
k H an William M Gotten.
Esquirt. Plaintiff* attorney,
whose address l* IDO S. Myrtw
Ave. H U Clearwater. Florida
M I L an or belore August U.
1*01. and Ilk the anginal with
ttw Clerk oI mi* Court aithar
before service on Plaintiff*
attorney o r Immedlekly there
otter, otherwise a default will
be entered against you lor the
relief dwnaruM In ttw com
plaint or potman
W ITN ESS. M A R Y A N N E
MORSE, a* Clark of the circuit
Caurt. and the seal ol said
Court, al the Courthouse al
Sanford. Seminole County.
Florida
Oats July 10. m i
(teell
MARVANNEMORSE.a*
Clark ollhe Circuit Court
By Ruth King
Dm u N Cltfll
Pubilth* July 11. 1«. 7* A August
1. ISSI
DEM III

IR TttE CIRCUIT
N A M

rsnrsd tanAsrstt|N * ti toil

CASE n o n
MARY A kU LLIN .
MICHAEL L. E N T INGfLatsL.

NOTICE 1*1

_ .

L to U l
n akoU oSI.SOcoHu
r at Pw cast at an«
. Pay enty k r days yaur ad run* at rote &lt;
i tar kstaat raasdss. Cap: moot r

_

Circuit Caurt a f Samlna ia
Caunty. PNrMa.a*E aw Ma » M
day at Aupuat. tffl. p i tt:BB
e'ctock p jr . af Ma Waal Prant
Mar at Ma Semina** County
Civil Sul MMr . SRI N. Park
- ‘ - PI
to Ms Make*
tor teak. Ma la
_
praparty altuafa la
Caunty. PtorMi:
Latof m *7, Stock IdiTtorP.
I . B. TRAP FOR O f RRAP OP
TH I TOWN O P SANPOND.
M P k t SaM t.
to. Pukttc NacnrM pi
ptortda.
to Me Pmal
Mm*
Caurt, M* atyk af
i*

ip

WITNESS my
fk k i Mai at tat* Caurt Mto O r*
day af Juty. HPI.
(COURT SEAL)
MARYANNS MORSB
CLERKO PTH E
CIRCUIT COURT
By: OaraMyW. “
Deputy Clerk
tuMlak:.Juty S* A Aupuat L Iffl
Pukiiah:
DEH-151
IN TNECIRCW T COURT
O P T N IIM N TIK N T N
JU O K IA L CIRCtNT

BBNIRAL JSMtSBfCTION
DIVISION
CASINO. fkdTM C A M B k r.K
CITY SAVINOS. PSB.

INI at M S PJNU Aupuat % m
INF) MS SIM.
MAMA: Aupuat L i I ffl
D EM I

A O JU tT M IM T S A N O C M M T S t

M U C I M R K fR V .BIRKERY. unknown mauaa at
BRUCE B I R K I B V , Nmarrto*.
JOHN DOB, T aamt. JAN E
DOE. Twaaf, HIOOE N
VILLAGE CONOONUNIUM
ASSOCIATION. INC. an* any

caah at Hw Wool (rent dagr at
m* SEMINOLE Caunty Caurt
hauM. In Santar*. Plan**, at
u ao o'clock a .m . on m* n m
day el August, m i . ttw klkw■lm dm ilkad _nr*uartv. aa *a&gt;
•arm in «*M Pmal Judgment, k
LO T t . C L U S T E R K .
WILDWOOD. A P L A N N E D
UNIT O E V ILO P M K N T . AC­
CORDING T O T H I P L A T
THEREOF. AS R IC O R O ID IN
PLAT BOOK If. PAGES 7. E. f
AND It. OP T H I PUBLIC
RECORDS O P S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
DATED mia S*m day ft Juty.
Iffl
MARYANNE MORSE
A* Clark at taM Court
■y: Dorothy W.
A* Deputy Clerl
Publish: July M A A u p u a lL (Ml
DSH-SS4
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THI MTN JU O K IA L
CIICUIT OP PLONIOA.
IN ANO PON
SIMINOLI COUNTY
CAIIN&amp;ft-IIIT-CA-MN
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
FIRST BANK SYSTEM. INC.
PLAINTIFF,
CHESTER R. ELLISON.
ETAL.
OEPENDANT(S).
NOTICI OP ACTION
CO N STIU CTIVIII AVICI
- PROPERTY
TO:
MARY A. PICK
Residence unknown. It living.
Including any unknown spouao
ol said Defendants. If either hat
remarried and If either o r bam
of said Defendant* are dead,
their respective unknown heirs,
devisees. grankoL assignees,
creditors, lienors, an* trustees,
and all other persona claiming,
by. through, under or against
the nomad Ookndant(t); and
llw alorsmantknad named Oalandanllt) and such at ttw
aforementioned unknown De­
fendants and such *1 Ih*
aforamentkrwd unknown De­
fendant* oo may be Infants.
Incompetent* o r otherwise net
tut |urIt.
YOU ARE H E R E B Y NOTI­
FIED that an action haa bean
commenced k foreckee a mort­
gage on the knowing root prop­
erty. lying and being and sifuet
ed in SEMINOLE Caunty. Fieri
da. mart particularly described
follOWl
LOT i TOWN A COUNTRY
ESTATES. SECOND REPLAT.
A CC O R D IN G TO P L A T
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT ROOK to PAGE •. OF
THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA.
more commonly known aa O*
ROBIN ROAD. ALTAMONTE
SPRINGS. FLORIDA »7IL
This action ha* bean Iliad
against you and you era rt
quired to serve a copy at your
written dsknsa. II any. k It on
SHAPIRO A FISHMAN. Al
lorneyt. whoso address It
Berpert Piece. *2QO Courtney
Campbell Causeway. Sulk JO*.
Tempo. FL 11*07. on or betore
August ». m i. end Ilk the
original with ttw Clark ol this
Court either before service on
Plaintiffs attorney or immodl
ateiy there after, otherwise a
default will be entered against
you lor the relief demanded In
the Complaint
WITNESS my hand and teal
at mu Court on ttw lam day at
July. INI
(SEAL)
MARVANNE AHORSE
Circuit and County Courts
By Ruth King
Deputy Clark
Publish July If. M A August L
*. INI
OEM 1*0

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TEMPBBARY SEKYKIS

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AVOW S ELL SKINtOSOFT
l«P MAMM

lint Bay M

np rlv a k

tatkn.

IAM A MRS St SANPORBl
M/P

A-1 CNtLDCARI. OR I
D r.BaM AI

CHILDt CAB*, my Santar*

MlffLtMK*

W tM B IB Y B SH II

■amaRtaSOmr.
WhTratol

C N IL D C A K I, IR M f
I M9-4717, Pat R H t l t ar
TO: B R U C I B I R K E R Y .
---------- BH RKERY, unkfwwn
apauat *1 M U C K B IR K ER Y .
itmama*. JOHN DOE. Tenant
!• Tenant, an*

LAST KNOWN RESIDENCES:
m t o t PramllngRam Cf . Lake
m m v . p l a rm
YOU ARE H I R I R Y NOTI­
FIED Mat an aetkn k kratkaa

TBS

Samlnal* Caunty.

CanMmMum Unit M7, B u lk
top 7A. at HIDOEN VILLAOI
CONDOMINIUM accardlnp M
Me Declaration at Condominium
racarda* March 19. IMS In
Official Racarda Beak i m
Papa* IM1 through 1717. toclualvo. an* all amanimanto
MaraM. at Rw Public Be tarda at
Samlnal* Caunty. Plerld a.

M um a* tot term In
Including specifically but net
by way at limitation ttw followIng souwrrwnt: Range. RetrtpTEuaf.~awau*si._ ntakamoet'.
Mlcrawavo. Oven, Washer.
D ryer. P a « d lo P on e on*
r
haa bean tik* against you
you are required kaorvo a i
at your written Mtonaea. If any.
to It an Rakort H. Mooch, Jr..
HIS I. kaklnsan Street. Or
lanie, PtorMa R B I . and Hi* Rw
original with tk* Clark at m#
above stylad Caurt an o r kotora
Pw iam day at Aupuat. m i.
other*ha a Judgment may b*
tom*
WITNESS'my hand and aaal
at aaM Caurt an ttw Nk day af
July. INI.
(COURT SEAL)
/MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OP THE
CIRCUIT COURT
■y: Cecelia V. Ekom
Deputy Ckrfc
Pukiiah: Juty I t If. M A August
L INI
OEH-tlf

^ ^ M s l u kr. 7 ^ ^ M

t&gt;NtiltktpKNlStt(B_
to my
LaN al

OAVCARB
Hidden Lk

T LC

ASSY CBBD ITO RS *1 Laray
Bream. Sr., pkaaa aukmltt
clihnaatMtottmp. Wbaraiwt
Juty ...........
ft Larqy Bream. Jr.. M
I . MartkeM* Op .. B a tik

packspa.

train top
D M Naur M atari

MB_M
Z/— R V f l l r T B

tmanmm paraana or g

RUSSELL BARCILONA, at at..
NOT ICR OP
POBICLOSURI SALE
NOTICI IS H I R I O V OIVIN
aurauant la a Pinal J udpmant at
Peractoaur* data* July n . teat,
and antora* M Csaa Me. f»*71S
CA 14 Ok. K. at M* ClrcuH
Court *1 the EIG H T EEN T H
Judklal Circuit M an* Mr SEM ­
INOLE Caunty. Ptortda adtaroM
CITY SAVINGS. PSB la Pkinttff
an* RUSSELL BARCELONA, at
al. are D*Undent*. I will Mil M

■ a n O T M lN T
323-9171

thru Friday 19 Noow The Day Batara Pukktdkaw
Sunday An* Monday M B P M . Friday

Nl THE CIRCUIT CBfNfT,

CASENatS-IMPCA-lkK
ASSOCIATESNATIOMAL
MORTGAGECORPORATION.

7 1 - H r ip W M it e B

■ac. rofsl CPB i
maato. TLC I C a tlB M lM
•M ALL B A Y CA B E. TLC k r
A M ddkrs. Hatmoato,
MMIto
•MALL DUALITY NORM-LIKE
D a y a a r * B P r t a a k o a l.

) Sit Phan* Fa*.
'■ m m t
A B B YO U RHLIASLE AND
NABBEPOBKIBBf Veil'll Ilk*
M I K K V MAIDS. Weakly pay.
M an-Prl.. day haura. Car
* • ................H U M !

company. E spar lance praHarm* Put win tram. Peaman*
a v a lla k k an all 1 shift*.
Applicant* consider** far
position* will he drug task*.
Apply: MM San* Pawd A*.
Lake Mery, r o e _________

T A M M Y ' S T O D D L E RSI
Daycare In my ham*. Eng.
Mommy I Lata at T L C MAIMS

Par Detail*: I

17X51
Dr Ivors, security

A P P LY

••CONSTRUCTION JOES**

)1—Private

* FORKNOTT*
Call keigh k r Pkhupl

Log aI N otlctt
PUBLIC NOTICI
Prlvak Induetry Council
at Samlnok County. Inc.
Tha re g u io 'iv scheduled
Beard moating of ttw Prlvak
Industry Council ol Scmlnst*
’CawaSyuMMi. prevlovnVy wYTM
A u p u a t ,a. t e a t , w ill b*

.TaSN/HR

EX P ER T N A R O llr a r tls a . to
yaur hama ar my Nudto. SIAM
■hty. saaatam RaauH artontad
Instruction. Par all apat.
Wvots A atytoa. Summer A
Pall cksaa* now avail ‘
CaN Baa Pakaaa MAMM

Must fca naot. clean, fast an*
asparlancadl Seafood know)

an

REtfUCBriOM

m MflUAKIHIL. -~ “

AR ALkawas

A O C A B K I B R A . a w a ll
-•aetahttshad -ow* pvawlng
central FkarMn baaed com
pony otters you:
a Semi Annual Pay Increases
# Slap OH Pay
a Unloading Pay
d Vacation Pay
a Safety Bonus
a Spouse R king Pro*ram
a Average Trip A 7Day*
0 L a k Madtl Conventional
Tractors
11you hava 1 years out of stak
tractor trailer aaparlanc* and
a yaedarlvtop recard, ceil

Nr MM

RmanPRVESnSF"
•'DtVORCE kr*m STS**
K. MaaackL ANaraav, MAISM

NOTICI OP
FICTITIOUS NAMI
Nolle* I* hereby given mat I
am engaged In business at PO
Baa tO O tn. Pern Park. PL
u r N I T N . Samlnok Caunty,
P hr Ida. under the Fictitious

AFFORDABLE FRANC NISI •
HU DOLE HOUSE RESTAU­
R AN T. F Inanetop sources
p o s s ib le fo r fr a n c h is e
Doug Ktoy ar Sandra
l-t
RESTAURANT/PIZZERIA tor

ABOVE IT A L L BALLOON
TOURS, and that I Intend k
roplotor said name with m*
Secretary el S k k . Tallahassee.
Florida, to accordance with ttw
provision* at Ih* Fictitious
Nam# Sktwk. To-WIt: Section
IMJ*. FtorMo Statuke 1*57.
RanaM L. Garrett
Publish: August!, m i
OE1II

as. Ready to

M P.

Part tltna, tlaat poslllon.
Nursing ho^no a^^parlanca da
' ' '
t Health Cere
......... e o c

JJ— T ra W ts f

TSSnaTTapkmkar 19. t i l l . S O*
a.m. at Me attic** at too Prlvak
Industry Council -at Samlnal*
Caunty. 911 S. Santard Avenue.
Santar*. PtorMa »77l.
Publish: August!.*. INI
D E i-a

BUS

iw

Conor

17 M an*M M St.
Call anytkw. N M I *

EARN MSASHM W EIKt Stuff
aovotopa* M kaww. Ma caatl
SER B SASI to: GaMsa Ok
trMuters. PO Eaa X711NC,
Caraua Ortsh, TK r q o tllN
E X P E R I E N C E D TRACTOR
TRAILER DRIVER wankd
Must past physical and drug
s u m . Shari hauls withlnFtar
Ma. Call 574 *105

LET A

; SPECIALIST
V

s

.

C

D

r' i ;A A. ^^ 's v Vr /1
R

r F S

S

C

E ^

&gt; H B B lt e i
o c n 7 ^ ^ T a * M ia m ^ a y
service A ll makae. Free eel's
♦7*1*14,14 hours, 7dart

Eof/SaNkBaca
VCR REPAIR. AN.*5 It aw
can't tta It, NO CHARGE I

DETAIL FEV ER . Lat your car
sparkle tar summon Camp
MkH wcvkol
MAMM
HEAOLIHERSI Mast cars UO
VS Vinyl kps IM up
r -----* Rag
**B %
HEW. RBMOOEL. REPAIR
NOMEL O FF 1CX L STORES
AX types caaatraiNm. Ra*/C*m
m e a n a g . Ao*ud, c a o i n m
a ADOiTMMfS. Ali
X*«2JW ^a#l**47M # lt
&amp; B rp * f* try
CARPENTER All kinds ol ham*
rtpairs. painttop A caramk
Nk RtcSwrdGrw ,— 01-5*71

\ ifriT ii'*r
s/1

T

»

3 » y u i
c a rp a n lryl Horn*, olllcs.
kitchen, bam I n «0M7

Oi

ip t e i

f l u is t e g S tT V k B
a i*
LET US M
SWEAT-SAVE
PfOfllliOOAl I
_________ S P A 7 1 A M M _________

CATHY'S CLEANING SERV­
ICE R lkfoncos. reasanabk
rataa-Lkansadl Call 017470
SUMMER 1 HOT 1 CLEAN?
Rakskrwm U5 A i n QMS Jan
C o o c r r i*
C A P T A I N C O N C R I T I . Wayne

Aaal. 1 Man Quality Opera
tkni n s n K / M i t n

gUdrkBl

~~

MASTER SLECTRICAN. Lie 4
Ins. Rowlrlnp. addffient 14
hr* tvc. calls ...
0&gt;757t

w in

fthS t

I*, b-

worh Law 1*1 Fra* esl Wood,
chainllnk A repairs 01*011

Handy Man
ONI CALL OOIS IT A L U
Painting, masonry, avoiding
mowing, etc II PNIH177&gt;
C A R P E N T R Y . MASONARV
painting and Ilk work. Free
attimates Llsc’d CaM m aog

)tnu
/ ’#•/•

I

W 8RPT &amp;I. I S T C T

V
^

O

l

H usinrw

e a j A S CYPRESS* o. Mukh
or pine bark |I4 yd. picked up
Can dsilvar. Cypress kaMar
A Faaca waterlei evi to arPer I 4 mil** watt of Weklv#
Rlw

A G N EXTERIOR
XTBRtOR PA
PAINTING
A pressure clean. SAVE MM
L k /hee esl 11 m i m
DICK PI NOL A ’S PAINTING.
Quality workl Int/Eit. Lk'd
A Insured Fraaadl TO 5711
E X P E R T PAINTING A Press.
Washing. Repairs. Inl/til
Fro* eel II yrs. 707 0051
N O USE PAINTINO. Ihiari
o r/ a ik rk r. pressure dean
tog. troa estimatael 0 1 W17

~y*sr&amp;

LJWIS iB T V k B
COMFLXTE OuaUty Lawn A
Landscaping. Tree Service A
Irrigation, competitive rata*.
tree tellmatoeSunnv'elTl TON
LAWN CARS, fra* estimates 15
and up Santar discounts.
Trash removal ID 1711_____
LAW N M A IN T E N A N C E
Bates I Colt Tam
m om
BANOV'S Q UALITY LAWN.
Complete car*, ckan ups
Sine* Itei Fraeed.t 01 #71*

a b i s h o p p r s i Co n t r o l •”
Senior CllltenOhceunlt l
10roars oaportoneal 04177*

N O flI R S F U N W I M
All your plumbing needs I 14
hoursi |RFOgSI77O01 IN*
S P EB D V FLUMBINGl Abso
lukiy tree est ta» trips'»«c
charge. LJc./ks. 0 1 «t*s

atoning
refotsurG
rasrsvs
s

painting

Masonry

"Quel** by phona" Call
Ragar. 04404a. IAM SPM

TWP MASONRY. Brick, block.
Stucco, concrek Renovations
Lk'd Alnt0l-M*t/SSM15&gt;

Movirsq

i

Hauling

r r r a t a r r r f e
appl- turn Cheap'on lima I
515/up Call Bay M l Tip
* a a H A U LIN G .yard trash,
appliances, furniture, trash at
any kind) Richard...... 17177*1

I r n

l i H i i l i . ( n l ! ( l&lt; i

\ lhi\
n n ///&lt;*?/.

I nr

■ SBcrotariBial
Tyglna Strvios
CUSTOM Typtop/Beekkaepwet
0J Enterprises. NIB C 11th
S t . Sanford .04 0471/01 r**7
T r—

St

v

Ic T

BUNVANS TR K I SERVICC
Troo stark, light Iwulmg Free
estimates. Insured W isN

I

n

/« ///•

■{-- - t i l l

1&gt;

ym r

�tenford Hernkt, Sanford. Florida - Friday, August 2.

1901

DRLTONAT ta rsa i

FSIWAWTifMTT'

1t MOUTH LIAM ONLY

M i-am »&gt;»wr

Eff.,1,2, ft3 ft

TownhousM AvallabI*
RENTS STARTING FROM

MMTKiMI
CwCarw»w,SHtH

— V » A L LI» 1 1 C T

M.V m/MOMTH
ttcurlly. Santoro

Step U p In to A

L iving at R iverside C ondominium:
15LIKETAXINGA VACATION!

G rea t A p a rtm en t!

ALL THE CONVENIENCES. . . NO UP KEEP!

2 Bedroom , 2 Bath

ConThTminTunS

SPACIOUS SIN G LE FAMILY

NOW LEASING...

I AND 2 BEDROOMS

n «N n w r*v*H rvR N «n ai .

7m s. Franc* Av*. Tsnn
Mara, Clip IMSto OrtoH om

'

f MSSALE

Saturday and Sunday, S i.
Turn Ian afl A l r M SI an
SaMay Idrt rd. UN H « t/4

mU. trwnew^rl ww-yl ai^u

HOMES
WITH HOMESITE

INCLUDED

an Roaa la 51). rum. ctottilng,
mitt. Itama and facto._______

I

t

Cauwty »d. a t, laniard

Limited lime Offer

Come Hom e To
Country Style Living!

M O V IN S IA II. Sat. S Sun. S 3
asid Clalrmont Ava. Naar
SamIncto Highlchaol.______

A Maronda Homta Community
Howland B lv d . in D eltona, east of 1-4

3 FAMILY SALE
(1st Month Only)

From f t d ll Clalrmont Ava,
Sanford. (Naar Samlnola
High) Moving Satol

2 St S Bedroom
Apartments

houaatold mlK., G irl*. Larga
womam and mans doming,
baby Hama, quaan ilia bad
with trama. Sat. A Sun. 8:3b J.
188LINDA LANS. LK. AAARY

• C a b le T V

• Washer/Dryen in Select Units
• Self Clean Oven
. Icemaker
•Dishwasher
•Garbage
Disposal

IH

n

N

3 3 0 -5 2 0 4

I i

pool

r a w iH iw i

Clubhouse

jT lilffT

2450 Hartwell Avt, Sanford

a p a rtm o n ls

MON.-SAT. 9 - 6 • Sw. II - 5

SANFO RD

SANFORD

Sanford Court
Apartments

Geneva Gardens
Apartments
1, 2, or 3 Badro«mg AvsUaMe
Rentals Start al 1320 ISo.

33018. Sanford Ava.
I k b North d Lk. itory Bird

SANFO RD

law*l*wt * wno. &lt;l l t o m Ataa.
Cawaryba b a g •On .a . M m ign

ALL APTS. FAC* COLWTVAAO*

torf-Larndt

. k M u g M S 3 tf monui

• W a M &gt; i« H to « a tiM a M lM

CtMUlMNitoLlna
FWInaaMAr Uaiad »y:

CanatHaar v »O u m

S

323-3301

R0SECLIFF
APTS.
irand Ntw

A n g n . Oartai. P i^ an t banagam ari

li

\\

0
LA K E MARY

•

|a

U

LK. 1 MARY BLVO. A

// /

~ J

J le d h w w A pt*. $5X
LA E EMMA RO.

NOW OPEN!*
CALL

322-5955

l+alllauaWgCwanuna,

f

L o r te u fJ o b

322-2090

AT

f T

jn

Parkslde Place
Apartments
TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath
Qui«t A Secure
$400 par month, $200 Sec.
2540 HARTWELL AVE.

O

322-6447

We now accept MasterCard and Visa

�4*1mb

TTTT
«•*

, ... *,* * -- *

**

Sanford neraid. Sanford. Fforida - Friday, August 2, 1991 -

141— Womt» for Salt
T T T iin H o w u T ^ ANT CONDITION)
Need repair*? Behind on
payment*? Call Greo. i n 4714

LEASE M SALE
70S Sarlta St. 4 bdrm. 7 bath.
C H A tone*, family rm. eto
ramie floor, appf. SMO/mo. 1*1
and lasttTCO sot. **4331 0*21

LEASE/FVRCHASE
and 12th. 7 Bdrm. I
11 bdrm. I bath
apt. ovar 2 car garaga.
Cantral A/C. Low dawn, low
monthly payment, flexible
term*. Na credit. napreB laml

14» Cemmerckl
Property/Sek

141— Hom es fo r S a k
LEAK RIIN OfTMM

113— AcreegeLots/Sale

3 BDRM. 1 BATH on 3/4 acre oft
Sanford Ave. 3 car garage,

Sanford. 1 bdrm. 2 bath,
central A/C, all appliances,
mini* and vertical*, fan*, te­
curlty system, weed fence
S IM M ( M M down. lUB/me
_______c a i i m w n _______

ILOT!
For your new home. Hug*
oak*, alley access. Sanford
city wator/sawer. 117.100 with

workthep. great Me small
bo*t— etLMMBO 323BB3B

155—Acreefelots/Sek

m
m
m m .
It deem lor Vet* • A little
new]
11 bath
with 3
er aerate* tram WML

UU1AKT REALTY
327 74M______

* wRMCEOSAU!**

NINt PLUS ACRES Lk Mary
area. Zoned residential. Best
use Industrial. C a ll u*.

10 agricultural acre* In Os
lean. Reduced UB.M0I S4.N*
A taka te a r mtg.
t2f.NI. UROENTl

gM gu

133—AcreegeLots/Sek

155— Condom inium s
C o-O p/Solo

O C A L A N A T 'L F O R E S T .
Weeded totlt U .f » each, no
money down 1071.41 monmiy.
_______10009*2 302*_______
TWO LOTS, toned R-l. (Retl
deniiai tingle lamllyl S. San
ford area. City water avail
able Convenient to school*,
churches and shopping.
*70.000 firm tor bom
Serious inquiries call collect

WINTER SPRINGS-Sartre* L 3
bdrm. living^dining rm. 3* X
I] Ft., Ig screen perch, hilly
equip, kit., all amenities.
Owner will finance. 113.500
3394711 lee* art
YOUR NEW SMYRNA CONDO
C O N N E C T I O N ! S a n fo rd
native. Drenda, Ownby Real
Estate................. 9*4 *27 7*13

_________ *0477173*0__________

HI ACRES all or part, custom
pend*, tones. Will tlnanc*.
naar Deland................3*3-1700

tiff ,000.
ttoeslrem Realty 372 242*

For the current lakecolJ..

U i^ M a a ■ U I|H JMRaHHU

__• R v i a W l R M IT|Fa E I r w r W

M A N A R IM IR T B R EA LTY

* * P 0 « Z I6 IU L iy * *
SANFORD • Clean, pretty 1
Bdrm. an agprea. t acre In the
country! Onto *35J0QHHS7*

DM You Know Iff You Don’t Buy Your N uxt Cur From
Motvo Chryslor / Plymouth Wo Both Lo m Monuy

SANFORD - 2 bdrm. 1
p o itib la 3rd bdrm . Near
carpal, new paint, new A/C.
new dlthwatharl Eicallanl
II Price at

S21-NS1
♦ * * REAL MCE* * #

19
91
P
L
Y
M
OOOI

3 Bdrm., i Bam ham* Rica
Roc ream I Complete privacy
tone*, wall to wall carpet B
CHA. S4BQB0. a a o ttM lto
Government Repea A Ataume
No Qualify ttoma* In Seminela/Orange/Volutla/Lahe
Gauntlet.

tMMDONN

garape. fenced yard. *43,NO

p .11 V\ 1■.
W1 VI 1&gt;1 %H

a1/1 • renovated! New carpal,

LAKE HART, LESS THAN
S U M DOM
#1/1 - renovated, new carpet,
paint, appliance*, fenced
yard............................. IU. n o
a v i • renovated, new carpet,
paint appiianc**. fenced

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
W e list and sell
more property than
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/lake Mary area.

|(y a r d . . . . j ^ » . .................taf.fOO

COTTAGE STYLE 2/1
Great lor starter or rental.
Zoned commercial. Suitable
office use...................Uf.fOO

fy on mit hm ttory 2/21* with
appllancat, and llreplaca.
Fencedyard wimpool I U4.100

HIGHLAND PARK 3/7'*
Beautifully renovaltd and
expanded, charming iplil
plan. And all tor.........1*4 000

PLUS
■ 30X40 b u ild in g p lu t

w/ig. security fenced
Iw » d

C J.

“

it .do

cu m

par

r»7

M N ig It unit*. can ba
CM unit. JM
&gt;C e llX * 1 3 W

1 1 8 -O fflce
jg g c t / jt g t
liTrioT o f f ic ii too to
U N sq. ft. Soma furnished. I
Meeks to C ity M an. C a ll
B**HFimn-ie M W W M M A M
u H ro R D - m i^ n .

and 1.431square feet.
caim iwn

171— Condom inium
______ K in t il i
MIDOIN L A K I t,

2 bdrm. I

aaeurlty dapaalt. a x o n s

FINK RIME CUIII
1 bdrm. 3 bath, wesher/dryer.
ISIS/mo. S.E.C.M. Inc.. L k
Baal latata Broker, *37 3J04
PINIBIDOI - 2 bdrm. 1 bam
condo, all appliance*. Includ­
ing weaher/dryar. UOO/mo
plut tecurlty. 321-1*12 or
tu r n * _________________
IANPOtlO, laadabaaed Villa*.
I bdrm. weth/dryer, Krn. rm.
&gt;34»+ «ec.iH-27f**it. lit
N I N T H IPBINOS condo. 1
bdrm. 2 bath, pool, tannl*.
&gt;
J(IC II|4W n » C ^ I**P *J^ _

115— For Lm i i
a *1/1 PARK ON PABK* a
UM Mg. CAL L Al Chlodl
Cantary 11 CMadl Baalty

OWNER F I NANCI NG

Plnecretl. 1/2. living, dining,
family rm.. aaeurlty «vttom.
fenced yard... .SA2.N0

CHARMING OLDER 1/3
Zoning allow* professional ol
Ikt. Super tile. Lot* ot ilrat
Call now..................... m too.

IT. JO Hk i A ND LK MONROE
•S acre eitatot 4/2. INO *g tt .

cuttom built. S37T.N0
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS • 2/2

LAKE M ARY 7/7 • Pool/Spa
Adult community, clubhouse.
Florida rm.. horn* warranty.
Naar ovary thing.........141.000.

wim dalachad mother-in law
privacy lane*
yard and kennel*. IIJt.NO

■

■ • / i»* ’ it

U 'Q S ‘

IN DELIGHTFUL DELTONA
Spill 1/2- Supwr Hear plan.
Family rm., fence. Naar 1*4,
ell school*.................. tat.fOO
SANFORD/LK. MAR Y 3/7
Spacious, family rm. w/lplc
Naw p lu m b in g , la n e * .
Sprinkler ty*.. well . .171.900

BATEMAN REALTY
1*40Sanford Avo
4 bdrm. 11* bath block homo.
Family rm. llreplaca. tacurlty
bar*, tencad back, tool shed.
Ownor ralocallng. priced
right) *41.100

3214755............ 3111257
it \ 1 1

u i

\i

U j

3 bdrm. 3 bam on almott 1/3
acre greanbalt. Lott ot tpac*.
groat place tor kid*. Walking
distance to Lk. Monro* Fan
taatk qulat neighborhood. 3
car garaga, screened porch. In
ground pool. Great steal at
117,000. Call Poraclotura
daiitto Inc.
Specie
ALw
uw
m
tff)

f VI • fireplace,
carpet, lancedyerd.....J22.2N
aim*. i.Too tq. tt. wim hoi tub.
«ggtlancet. fireplaceSS2.N0
* v m eptlt plan, appliance*.
paint, root, carport, fenced
yard...-........................SN.NO
a 1/2 • on 1/1 acre! Maw paint,
tptc. family, living and dining
ream*. Privacy fence. *74300

1991 F ly P R CoH

SELECT USED CAR SA LE T H IS W E E K O NLY
1M0 MAZDA MXe

ssr *9790

114X1/2 TOYOTA SUMUl 1M * OOOOE RAM VAN
S 8PO. AIR. LEATHER
NT. STEREO.

&lt;5490 1*6* CHRY8. N.Y
1999 VOLKSWAGEN FOX
*9590
*6490 1999 OLDS. CUTLASS

TOPPER

CHAMPAGNE l A

1 M 0 n .V .R U N M N C (
AIR. AUTO,
PS. STEREO

323-5774
I. ORANGE COUNTY 1/2 on
44 acre*, large barn.... taf.000
W . M a lk te v a tb L R e a lto r

SILVERADO

SUPREME
e o n .. whtte

VS

9 JY U
1900 VW RABBIT

*9990

1M * CUTLASS CALAIS
jd r

. - ™

* 7 4 9

0

l a m XD Den Cam er Trade Equty.

OL

5

IR Y N H A V IH
Only *4.000
down! Almoat new 2 bdrm 2
bam with 2 car garage. Show*
IIS* model I Attune bond loan
with low rate* Sava on doting
cott*. only tat.aa*
Way betew martwll
Call Janet Maathald
Day*. 212-1224 Eva*. 323 7771
AA Carnet, lac

dur

4

HNOMOVARMUlOSiHKS
WITH tit* DOWN
AND SATISFACTORY CRIOIT
1 and 4 bedroom home* avail
able until Inventory'* told!
Pottlblt bond money alto
available with low Iliad rata*

T

i

*6399*

Air Beg. AM/FM Stereo

V T I U

P O N T IA C

*8399*

■“
O LD SM O B ILE

* Till. Cntt**. PB. PS. P L
Air. AM/FM Stereo

I

The P r u d e n t i a l (£&gt;
Florid* Realty

r

A

A

A

V V

V

1/

752231

DX

Automatic, PS, PB.
Cruise. Power Lock*

*11.499*

9 n*S™"Y| 5 j)99*

WANT TO S ill YOUR HOME?
1 am loon mg fo r n ic e hornet to
m a tc h w ith buyer*

Call Bob Gftforr, REALTOR
14*71 *24 aaaaer 121IH 4
L A K E F R O H T - A SS U A 4 A B LC
N O N Q U A L I F Y ! R e la i on the
wood d e c k o v e r to o lin g the
water when you buy m u tuper
2 b d rm 2 b a th home M a n ,
e a tre t in c lu d in g tpo. o a i &lt;eb
m elt, v e rtic a l* Fan tastic lot!
U n b a lie va b le a t tTt.tCO

later tew Realty Oreue lac.
SM-7734*33/40717* f i l l

|

1M S CUTLASS CICRA
2 DR. 1OWN

""

^

*13.927*

- D

C tp tu toi

*1 2 0 0 *
HOURS: SALES
M-F 8-30-9
SAT. 9-6
SUN. 12-5
SERVICE
7AM • 6PM M-F

Picture yourself driving a brand new Volkswagen

YOU CAN1!

With Volksw agen's new flexible 1st time buyers program.
Mo College, No Credit, No NomsI bb*

.
* .V '

i IN AND DISCUSS THIS
RAM WITH ONE O F OUR
ONSULTANTS...MOST CREDIT
PROBLEMS CAN B E
i :
__ O V ERCOME.
- --. '- v p

LftATV'i.V

a v -i
OVER 100 UNITS TO
CHOOSE FROM: FOX, GOLF,
JETTA, GTI, CORRADO, GLI, PASSAT,
VANAGON, PLUS A FU LL U N fir

- T u 1x

YVr'a»i» you buy A*i% yUu J#l i&gt;&lt;\J&lt; lK&gt;M you C4H COUfll (&gt;11 I
ignidf'ildi af I ^og bp*f •&lt;! mdnuUdutB' k WBHinly a* ' ( h&lt;y &gt;&lt;•»
procSu* t« if'die &gt;«« |&lt;60 IfBiiflgi 'uei T6«*w jib it wo comptgNfii
in* m i a&gt;
*a puns dagildtiie ’u *pto *Hi i)00 &lt;ul 4l xlutiidldi niilg*
&gt;4&gt; rTftltol , 4I&gt; A-tR *OI i)aaf 4&gt;Iq

J.R. Lewis

Steve Williams

Doug McCord

Charles Smith

5575 S. Hwy. 17-92, Casselberry, Florida
Hours Mon.-Sal 9 - 6 • Sun. 12 - 5

3 3 1 -3 8 3 7

89 N IS S A N

I

* k 5 | J| J| T

T O Y O T A
C A M R Y

14KMI..LOAOEO

•

225843

I C U T L A S S C IER A

91

U

222236

^

9C
94

1990 PLY. VOYAQEN LE

A

9fl

i

*14,327*

U

i r i l

D O D G E

i

.D

FIRST TIME BUYER?

l^q
99*

To Choose

IU

*fc(§&gt;

2 17711

ER 8

OPTIONS

0-rm ;(1f7:;-S '-‘ 3(3'131 ■*va (537131

rr~

c

1990 CHRY8. FIFTH AVE
4 600 Ml

1990CHRYS. SALON

C H R YSLER • PLYM QUTHN

t t p C U io l

*

9C

REAL NICE

/ / l*

o f io o o iim s n iE H T ! *

IM. Hadgi *10-1121

AIR.AMTM I K J I A *

w T"E*11,406*

WJM°AIR

141— Hom ot for Solo

C H E V R O L E T

SSS1"00*1300*

SuCwdto Pitor Sato Na Meney Oen KWnto mSh nnU4ea

pnrved Ciee*. A2 RebeM tw.nen ton
StgrayiMee

117—OW ict Rentals

i

V B . 5 SP 0 .

IBM CHEV. SUBURBAN

COBNiN l i m and 07 Office
bldg Great for all type* ol
bu*ineu. 222-2*17/112 aaa la**

4 Apartment* PLUS houiel
Racenlty renovated Good ran
tal neighborhood! Polanllal
grot* Income 130. Tqo per year 1
•iM.aea
W. Oornett While Realtor

1968 CAM AR O R S

WHITE, ALL

— ------ %waw*»«wem prw e*w v rw—

•

Oh% 3 5 d

PARCSSIENE | R A A A
BROUGHAM 3 Y Y U

A

1989 POND-LTD RWON

1990 LEBANON CONV.

1986 BONNEVILLE

&amp;:&amp;rz;%r&amp;zzrM

7141 Park Dr., San lord
4*1 W. Lake Maty Bl . Lk Mary

•%

A

‘J U *5825* ffdSS»249Q

322-2420
321-2720 1

O N LV 4I.NO

K

LOADED

IW M R.E8

CALL ANYTIME

A SSU M E N O O U A L IF V I 2
b d rm ., c e n tr a l H /A . Large
c o rn e r lot - I r o e t l

LOADED, IKE
NEW LONG S 8 6 9 0

*6 9 2 5 *

1989 MITSUBISHI P/U

DELTONA LAKES3/7
Largo greelroom. big country
kit, w/bay window Land
scaped A lanced. ...... .NO

n

GOV'T HOMES - Almott nothing
down, almotl no doting cost*
No g lm m lck tl Call Mlha
FtooH, v.l.P. 774-wee

*69 i r

ASSUME O NO QUALIFYING
Only 14.000 down. Lovely 7/1
w /breekleit bar, panlry.
skylights, more. Only!. 117.000.

NICE 3 bdrm. 2 bam horn*,
central air. lamityroom, hug*
oaka. good neighborhood.
SPECIAL BUYI 144.100

_________777 70*1_________

m

M B HOW IT WORKS
GUARANTEED Lowest Prise
On Any Voyager or Will
Give you A Cellular Phono
l**

1

■M

“

88 M A ZD A

240 S X

M X -6 L X

S S p d , A/C. Power
Window*. Sunroof

5 S p d . A/C. Power
Windows, Sunroof

90 G E O

89 T O Y O T A
C O R O LLA

DX

STO R M

89 VW

GSI

C A B R IO LE T

5 Speed. A C .
Aqua Blue

Automatic. A/C,
AM/FM Cast

Convertible. Auto.
A C . AM FM C a u

*11,995 *8895 *7995 *9400 *11,900
86 AUDI

86 AUDI

86 V W

88 V W

69 VW

4000

5000

JE T T A G L

JE T T A G LI

JE T T A G L

A u lo . A/C. Power
Window*. AM/FM Cat*

Automatic, A/C,
Power Window*

5 Spd . 4 Door. A C .
A U F M Cass

5 Spd . A C . Alloy
Wheels. Sunroof

Aulomabc. A C . 4
Ooor. A M F M Cat*

*6400 *6600 *5995 *9500 *8995

ARISTOCRAT
VOLKSWAGEN, INC.
4175 S. O rlando Ortv* (Hwy. 17-92) Sanlotd, FL 32773

Sanford 321-2277 or O rlando 3 6 5 -3 3 0 0

M
t

III to SAMaoao
Iff LKMAMt
fr aivo

(TjS&lt;

ira te *
454

w
H

«*

#

toon uANOO

WU3T U7E t U S UL.U RCQUACWCNTS

I T # b &gt;&gt;

�t

10B

-

S a n fo rd

r

f

H e r a ld . S a n f o r d , F l o r i d a

-

MIDSUMMER SPECIALS

34X4)
3/3 sp ilt. NIC* fa m ily
horn*..............................*1*000
14X54 • 2/1. g as and • la c trlc
....... ................. I f . 500

14X33 • 3/1 sp lit. IttO all e le c tric
......................... *13.300

t ik i ur p im

NO M O N E Y DOW N
accept tas. tag. title , etc
l«B7 .C H E V Y C K L E B R I T Y
A/C . au tom atic, stereo, tilt,
cruise. O nly *1M.)0 p e r m onth
(3* m onths o 1* .* % A P R )
C a ll M r. P a y n e
Courtesy Used C ars, 333 3133

201— Horses

e • e • 1*11 L I N C O L N
Towncar. Loaded! E see l lent
Cond i *33*3 373 0104_________

3 B D R M . m o b ile home, you
m o v e , ( o tf S a n fo rd A v e . l
N e e d , to m e T L C . *730 373 ISO*

• • N A Y F O R S A L E ! a * *3.7*
Bate. *33 raR. F E N C E BMg. A
R e p a ir1 373 3311 eve*________

H A R D W A R E an d B aach Stare
In O tteen Doing good b u ll
n e u I B u ild in g , land. Inven
to ry . 1140,000O w ner re tirin g !
T .m p lln R ealty Inc.
S3S-S41I/331-7473

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories

30'S C O L L E C T O R S I T E M •
G run dig stereo and rad io In
solid teak cabinet. 333 3333^ ^

• S A O IN A W to u r sp a e d
transm ission w ith c a st Iron
bell housing. A sh in g *100 obo
3 3 0 M l7 .lv .m sg ._____________

215— Boats end
Accessories

4 M tC H E L I N tire*. P333's and
chrom e m o d ular w h ee ls lor
Bronco II. *100 330177*

14 F T F I B E R O L A S S boat, tra il
• r A 1 IH P E v ln ru d e . Runs
e sc *300.......................331-MBB
1**7 B A Y L I N E R . m odel 1*30
E a g le II. offshore. ■ ft beam,
low hours, custom tra ile r. 470
M e rc 1/0*3.100...........333 7731
« H P E V I N R U O E ewtbeerd
motor. *330 O r Best O ffe r!
___________334-MB3________

235—Trucks /
Buses/Vans

111— Appliances
/ Furnltur#
CO M PLETE APARTM ENTI
L iv in g , d in in g A b ed ro om
l u r n llu r e . M in i c o n d itio n !
01100 L v . m«g. 324-2*3*_______
a C O U C H . C r a y A m auve In
co lo r 073 00 C a ll a lte r 3 P M
M F . A n y tim e on Sal 333 7700
• D R E S S E R A M IR R O R . C h e it
of draw er*, tw in bed A fram e.
0100.333-1003 _______________
• E N T E R T A I N M E N T Center,
w a ll u n it W aln ut. 7 com
p a rtm e n tt 70” X 41".
________ M S 00 330 4711
• E N T E R T A I N M E N T
C E N T E R . 30” X 30" ad|u»l
a b le .h elv e* 033. 333 074.
• K I T C H E N T A B L E . Ola** top.
w ith 4 chair* . 030 O r best
O tle r 334 0033
L A R R Y 'S M A R T . 313 Sanlord
A ve. N e w /U te d lurn. A appl.
B u y / ta ll/ T r a d e ......... 333-4133
L O V E S E A T A N D S O F A Beige
tweed B ro y h lll. 0173
___________ 333 370*___________
• M A P L E E N D T A B L E w/one
draw e r. L ik e new 033 333 3337
•O V E R TH E BED TABLE,
ad justab le w ith m irro r 03*00
C a ll a n y t im e ...............333 1041
• R E F R I O E R A T O R . O E 14 cu
tt. W h ite , w o rk * S U P E R
L a rg e I r e e ie r l F ro s t free!
0100 333 3371
W A S H E R / D R Y E R . M a y ta g
gas. e*c. cond *500 O BO ;
T V -V C R . C u rtis M athl*. *300;
F R E E Z E R . A d m ira l 17 cu II.
upright. 0I33Q D O 371 5*U4

21»—W anted to Buy
« » * Aluminum Cans..New spaper

Nen- F errou s M e ta ls ...........Olas*
K O K O M O ........................333-11M

222—M usical

• C O K E M A C H I N E . (B e e r
Cooler) 4 I t.4- upright, side
door *30OBQ373 M 7I________
• D I C T I O N A R Y l o r y o u th .
T reasu ry of L e a rn in g 70 vol
u m r M luttrated te l Section*
Iron, ato m ic en ergy lo W ater
m a m m a ls
E x c e lle n t condl
tlon. 330333 4130_____________
• F U E L T A N K 130 G al. Skid
m o u n la d . h a a v y d uty. 37)
O B O 331 3044________________
• P R O P A N E
3 burner
cam p»tove/tank*40 33l 1143
• S E O A O E N 3 IS C a rtrid g e 14
b it Super T hunder Blade. *23
never used/ 1300*44_________
• W ESTERN SAD D LE
IS”
seal, not fancy but good tor
tv e r y day A b a rg a in lor *00
C a ll eves/w eekends. 34* 3110

1?5— M achlnery/Tools
• M IS C . hand tools. Nothing
o v e r* * ........................331 7111

w — Pets A Supplies
C A T * . C A T * . Kitte ns! I y r old
F em a le , q ray tabby A cute
k itte n s F R E E I t 333 4*37
• C O M E G E T A C A T II Ages 7
m o nths lo 7 y rs F R E E I I
Abandoned near m y home
P lease g iv e them a GOOD
hom e!.
___________ 324 715?
N C C D I N F O lo r M o n t h ly
N ew sletter t Paw P rin t News
341 1431

1979 AUDI 5000 S

*888

1976 CHEVY NOVA

*688

i

.

i ■ &lt;.

i n i.t iid o

1.’ l ‘&gt; / 0 0

Good Credit’

a

A .........

Repo’

89 CHE
CAM

’

Bankrupt?

87 DODGE
CHARGER

86 FORD
MUSTANG

LOW MAE*. SPORTY
LOW DOWN

T-TOPS. AUTO..
NO CREDIT NEEDED

*4995

•3493

79CHEVY
ELCAMINO

83 FORD
F150 PICKUP

F k ix K t M o a .

Fli

% APR.

1

4X4.4 SPO . LK E NEW

EASY MONTHLY
PAYMENTS

LOW DOWN
PAYMENT

86 DODGE

79 FORD
E-350

DAYTONA TURBO

W D a i:

FORD
0 PICKUP

88

(SPEED . AIR. SPORTY

400. AUTO . AIR

EASY
TERMS

, OREAT
BOAT PULLER

85BUICK
CENTURY LIMITED

82 FORD
F150 PICKUP

L K E NEW. AUTO.. AIR.
LOW M AES

STEP SOE.V-0. AUTO.
AIR. LOW DOWN

•4993

•3493

1M3 F O R D F 1M 300 * cy lin d e r,
auto. A /C . long bed w ith step
bumper. 43.000 m iles. *4.300
V t n g a r d O ra c o hot w a te r
p re ssu ra w a sh a r, 110 volt.
MOO...............................373 54*4

fttlM IU St**
PONTIAC
MANS

w iu m n

-.*’ 1,1 ■ f

* •■•••/

Bad Credit?

CAMPER TOP. V0. AUTO.

1*«« J E E P C H E R O K E E
LARED O
4 w heel d riv e . 4
door, power locks an d w in ­
dows. dark b lue! V e r y very
low m iles, p ric e d lo s e ll!
________ C a ll 373 43B3_________

&lt;i -

CAVALI
$4800 to Fin X 42
■t 13% APR
I r o l l ! • Hail I m i l l •

NO M O N E Y DO W N
except la x . tag. b ile , etc
1 l* M H V U N O A I S
Pow er
s te e rin g an d b ra k e s. A / C .
E c o n o m ic a l! O n ly 317**1 per
month (44 m onths «« 1 * * N
A P R ) ............ C a ll M r P ay n e
Courtesy Used Car*. 333 2)33
• P U B L I C A U T O A U C T IO N •
E V E R Y T U E ). A F R I .f:3 0 P M
D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
Hwy. *3, Daytona Baach
________ *04-133*311__________

321; 2 9 9 3

I

"

32)

|4 5 0

□

3

1991 CIVIC 4 DR.

ROCS
ANO

*1188

CHEVY BEAUVILLE VAN

allelctraxrsSjSv
. siso e e d overdrive m anual tran*m .»i«n • 4 speed automane tran*mi»»ion with a l^ o n ie M jf
controlled lockup torque converter (available) •
i ta b ular bar • Multi-Control doubl* wistibone rear su t
S n m te-ooer ate d le h -iid sT S T a r *Full wh— I co w r** Tinted gl****FuS doth uphol*l*ry* 2 pO'nt
rrwxwixMS tmnt t e w bets xvesem ekSs manual lap b ell • Adn^.table Hearing cokrmn • Tachometer
• O u e m ^ M M ^ d o c K * P aee e n g e n tM le lh a n d le e • R w te rn head ra .u a m x • Eiaew c raar
window d alrtm er with timer* Rear »aat haatar d u c u • Ram ota trunk ralaase w u h lo rt • Remom
fu a M l^ d o o r ralaaaa with lo d i • 185/70 R14B7S ore* • Multi- ra Hector halogen headkghu

^ ^ /w H w jflM ^ ^ P o ie o iH iK iio le d v#ev*l#i#d f t o n ^ l*jS rew * n ™ rn *

-a»m batogan

upholstery • Rear window defroster • Remote fuel NNr How
‘
*
Child saltty-8*4! anchor* • C M d proof rear door lock* • Fold dow n m a r ta atb a ck with lock

Per
Month

([1991 PRELUDE S .l^
__________

*

1

f l 9 9 1 CIVIC 3 DR. |

BA412

_____________

4

Per
Month

9

991 ACCORD 4 DR.

tUt&gt;

I

______________

C B /b S

*988

ROE

*3988

«c

*1995

88 HYUNDAI
2 DR. GS
5 S P . A/C.
STEREO .
RE A L NICE

*3895
88 FORD
MUSTANG

AUTO. A/C.
ALARM.
LOAOED

„

5SP.

*6995

A/C. U PG RAD E
STER EO .
EXTRA C LEA N

*3888

1983 DODGE ARIES K

R A
W #

Q

S

• **

91 NISSAN SPORT P/U
FULLY LOADED.
ONLY 5K MILES. * _
SAVE BIG $ » .
5 Q

m
4

^ O N LY

*7395

CO LD A.C.
R U N S GREAT

Q

S

4 D R . AUTO.
FULLY LOADED.
MUST SEE

______________
$ Q s Q K

90 HONDA CIVIC
4 DR. LX AUTO
PO W ER WINDOWS
AIR C O N D .
LIKE NEW

O

Q

"

A/C. STEREO.
TOPPER.
RUNS G REAT

S

B

A/C.
STEREO.
RARE FIND

&lt;4895

________

$11 | Q S
■ ■/ ■

* **

AUTO A C .
READY FOR
SUMMER FUN_________M

m

O

S

* ** _

_ _ _ _ _ _

"

PRICED TO SELL

AUTO.
AlR
NCE

*1488

GfcT TO K N O W

M '* *

it 7 m .le North o l la k e Ma&gt;»

321-7800 or 628-9779

JIMMY

BRYAN

W *+

0

2 D R . AUTO.
SUN RO O F.
COLD AIR

_

e H

S

Q

S

oJoJ W **

87 HONDA
PRELUDE
RED. 5 S P .
SUNROOF.
LIKE NEW

*7795
m

RED. B S P .
SUN RO O F.
RUNS GREAT

8

m

^

Q

A Q S
W ■# W

M

AUTO A C. T-TOPS.

$11

_________
A Q S

MUSTANG GT

91 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
lo ad ed

S

88 FORD

88 HONDA
ACCORD
4 DR . DX W CRUISE
CONTROL.
LIKE NEW

^
V

89 MERCURY
TRACER

85 HONDA
CIVIC

88 FORD
MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE

89 MITSUBISHI
GALANT

m
9

COME IN AND S E E
89 HONDA
CRX

88 HONDA
CRX

1987 VW FOX G L
NCE CAR. AIR
STEREO. 4 OR
LUXURY
LOCAL OWNER

RUNS GREAT.
LOW MILES.
D EPEN D ABLE

SELECTION OF
CLEAN, DEPEND­
ABLE, PRE-OWNED
CARS AND TRUCKS

COLD A/C. EXTRA CLEAN.
MUST SEE.
THIS ONE
4 ?
WON T LAST'
~

- Tilt Wheel
• Full Wheel Covers
- Front Reclining
Bucket Seats

83 NISSAN
KING CAB PICKUP

83 HONDA CIVIC

BEST

85 FORD
ESCORT

198S FORD E150 VAN
CUSTOM. CAPTAINS
CHAIR. AIR. AUTi
STEREO. NEAT
AS A PIN

Air Conditioning
■AM/FM Cass.
Stereo
5 Speed Trans

ECIA

1981 CHEVY CITATION
V *. AIR. AUTO.
STEREO. OREAT
LOOKING. CHEAP

■Body Side
Molding
&gt;Rear Win­
dow Delrost
• Tinted Glass

• 4 Speed
• Air Conditioning
• 1.5 Liter 16 Valve
• Double Wishbone
^^Suspensiori

- Cruise
Control
- AM/FM
Cassette
• Lots More

15 Speed
*Air Conditioning
-2.0 Liter 16 Valve
•4 Wheel Disc
Brakes

*13,367

*8,258

*14.949

T\&lt;ili'!

Ken'Rummel
Hwy 17-92 •Sanford

•*L»* a

belt, with manual lap B W N J S s i

3

9 5
* * /* # " ^

4 DOOR SEDAN

*1888

»hodi
n^ r e w » n o c x

* *

NO M O N E Y DOW N
• x c tp t tax. tag. llt lt . ate
1**7 C H E V Y S P E C T R U M
4
door. auto. a ir. power steer
Ing. stereo! O n ly 311**0 per
month! 142 m onths u 1* *%
APR)
C a ll M r. P ayne
Courtesy Used Car*. 323 1133

*3V&gt; °

1984 NISSAN PICKUP

.1 S k ie r 16-valv*. 92 hor*epower S O L 1C engm* santfs

TAKE UP PAYMENTS

*2 Q O

-

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1991 ACCORD 4 DR.

TM E UP PAYMENTS

WE CAN HELP!

r

1W h eel Auto., Air,

MINCER MOTORS
forest
"

..

We Can Finance You!

e e Gene B u rk e Auto Sale* e e
Low a* *177 dow n! Low pay
m e n ttl * * * * * * *334-1417

GOOD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT? BAD CREDIT?

r

i.

231— Cars

Hi- M '

j

Of SANFORD

C H IL D S P ow er W heel* Jeep,
battery pow ered w /ch arg er.
excellen t shape, 3100333 1303

H A R D T I M E selling guns? For
s m a ll le e I w ill sail your
weapon w ith in 40 d a y s or tee
and gun returned I deal with
b uyers tro m a ll over US
C a ll F E B A 407 37* 0**4

“

W ill trade 3 acres wooded site.
L k G eo rge are a C a ll 3317111

Robin Hood Hits The Mark

Sanford Motor Co.

• A O U A R IU M
30 gal. w ith
hood and acce ssories tlOO
___________ 331 *030___________
B A R B I E C A R . I y r. old. Cor
vette. W ith b attery charger.
lik e new! 303 00........... 1300130

• G IR L S B I K E 3*” single speed
New tire s *33 00 373 M3*

ANO MORE

T R A V E L T R A I L E R , r X 30
Scre en rm . w /v ln y l window* A
u t ilit y p a rtitio n * . N ew /axt.
co nd S M A L L U T I L I T Y S H E D
a lu m in u m . A ll fo r *3)0000.
M u t t m o ! .................... 330-tMO

R.V. WANTED!!

223-MisceHaneous

117— Sporting Goods

DUAL AIR. AUTO.
c a . CUSTOM
m teror.

o lD e B a ry

W E W E IO H A N O P A V I
Top I* lo r junk.
Car* A Truck*.
Nmg*M*BMN*g«&lt;ate.

Baldwin Orga-Sonic Organ

• Z E N IT H CO LO R T V I It"
cab le re a d y A I condition!
(n o tre m o te). *100 333 *3*3

GREAT

R V R E N T A L lot*. *1*1 mo. Incl.
w a te r, te w e r A garbage
Parts Ave. M iB t M FB. 333-1M1

Loo ks g re a t, needs tuning.
Ideal for beginner. *300
333 0344___________

183— Television /
R adio / Stereo

DRIVES

A V A I L A B L E S E L F JT O R A O E I
O utbid# » for# gt tor R V b!
In q u lrt. 1-5# M -F . 222-5415

Merchandise

• W A S H E R . K e n m o re . v e ry
good cond J ipeed. M oving
M u lt Sell! *100 333-337*
• W A S H E R . G E . gold color
V e ry Good co nd ition !! SIOC
333 3134

AS
LOW
AS
AS
LOW
AS

3 ipeed. run* good. *1.300 o r
best o tte r.................... 333 331)

'M C A M A R O . Auto, new tire*
and trans. A /C . tint w indow s
*3.4*3........................... 3344*1*

211—Antiques/
Collectibles

AA AUTO SALVAGE

H F O R D B R O N C O ( c y l.. 4WD.
E d d ie Bauer Model, o n ly 31K
m ile s *17.*00 C e ll 777 *34*

71 CHIVY C-IOSTCP VAR

IM S M I C U R V M A R Q U I S . 4
deer, loaded e x ce lle n t condl
tlon. 3*.000 m iles. *4400
_________ C a ll 333 B**4_________

H O R S E B O A R D IN O
lot* of
tra ils . P erso n al attention at a
reasonable p rice . N ew barn.
A lso horses tor sale. 34* 13*4

140— Business
F or Sol#

1*7* O M C 3 U B U K B A N . ru n s
g o o d . N * * d * m in o r T L C
**00 0 0 ........................331 «3M

Vehicles/Cam per*

Wanted

1*1* M E R C U R Y T R A C E R
S T A T IO N W A G O N A uto . PS.
P B . A / C . e ic cond. 33*30O B O
C e ll 377 *341 after 4 30
weekday*, anytim e weekend*

241— Recreational

241 — Recreational
V e h ic le s / C a m p e rs

238-Vehicles

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans

1*7* C H E V Y P ic k up. « c y lin d e r.
3 speed. Good w ork tru ck . *400
Q B O ............................ 334-7*73

u in

S H I H - T Z U P e p p le * . A K c T o
fe m a le * , t m a le . B r ln d le
brow n A w hite. 1st A 3nd
shots. B e w orm ed P aren t* on
prem ises. 1330 300.......334 7300
T O Y P O O O L E S . A K C - 3 months
o ld w ith health c e rtific a te and
t lrst shots. M B 4337

333-11 M / n t -3103

COhCOURS
CPE.
STEREO. V i
AUTO. AIR

NO M O N E Y DOW N
•■cept tas. tag. title , etc
1**7 O L D S M O B I L E
Autom atic. A /C . stereo. O n ly
3I4V.M per m onth (4B m onths
• l»*% A P R 1 C a ll M r P a y n e
Courtesy Used C a rs. 373 3173

200— R egistered Pets

S A V E ( U l N E W t t t l H O M E *1
W H Y P A Y R E T A I L ? 14X7*.
H 4 N 34X70, &gt;lt,*t* 34*170*

AUTO. STEREO.
4 dUH. LOURS
OOOO RUNS
GREAT

TIKI Uf PAYMMTS

• R A B tIT S A c a m
CHEAP,
Cheap, cheap! *3 00 each to
good hom e.................... 221*7(1

34X40
3 /3 . a ll a lt c lr lc .
• x c a ll e n l lo c a t io n , m a n y
a x tra * .......... ..................* 1*000

235—Trucks /
Buses / Vans

231—Cors

Q U A K E R P A R R O T A Larg e
g i . • m o n th , o ld . (73.00
O B O ..............................331 )004

S A N F O R D A R I A M O B IL E
H O M E C O M M U N IT Y

• i

F r id a y , A u g u s t

m - P e t * i Supplies

157—Mobil#
Homos /Solo

t f

1 r t (

r

HONDA

89 HONDA
4 DR. ACCORD LX-I
A U T O . A'C.
FULLY LOADED.
CLEAN

*11,595

Hwy. 17-92, SANFORD
2913 Orlando Drive
323-6100 SANFORD
831-1660 ORLANDO
S A .E S Mon Sal 8 » 9 - O p a n s v " 10-7
SERV-CE V o "
• 7 PV

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                    <text>SUNDA

gust 25, 1991

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D IG EST

SANFORD - W hether or not they w a it to admit
It. the kids are probably looking forward to the
■tart of school tomorrow In Sanford. Lake Mary
and elsewhere In Sem inole County.
The first day of classes alw ays brings changes.
This year la no exception.
Tw o new elem entary schools. Including Heath­
row Elementary School In Lake Mary, will open
their doors In Novem ber. In the meantime, the
Heathrow fam ily of students and teachers will
share quarters at W ilson Elementary School on
Orange Boulevard In Sanford.
More thatn 1.200 students trill be housed on the
campus designed for 733 pupils.
"W e'll be ready for all of them ." Terry Rabun,
principal of W ilson prom ised last week.
The full adm inistrative and Instructional staffs
from both schools w ill also be sharing facilities for
the next few months.
To avoid traffic tie u p s on Orange Boulevard, the
starting and finishing times for each school will be
different. Heathrow classes trill begin at 0:10 a.m.
while W ilson students trill not begin until a half an
hour later. A sim ilar schedule w ill be followed In

BulkHng eastlsa In Sw sand
SANFORD - Charles W akefield la a selftaught professional w ho builds sand castles, an
a r t h e did not begin pursuing until he w as an
adult with a son. Truk, now 18.

□ N ation
Fall T V season conlrosscsy
LO S ANGELES - Y ou'd think the netw ork,
would make better uac o f the fall aeaaon with all
the scream ing by executives about Arm ageddon
in the television Industry.

□ W erM
Reforms btfora aid
KENNEBUNKPORT. Maine — The United
States may be able to provide cash to the Soviet
economy, but not before reform s take hold and
President Bush knows "w h o w e're dealing with
in these ministries."

Unda Lystsr, who taachas 4th oradsra In Pina
Crest's STAR program for at-rlsk students, puts

ths ^nlahlngtoi
Friday afternoon

Assignment: reform 3 Rs
as educators begin anew
Nswspapar Enterprise Association
D uring his 1988 cam paign. G eorge Bush
constantly repeated that If elected, he Intended to
become known aa the "edu cation president."
Now. after several false starts, he Is attem pting to
live up to that prom ise through a broad-baaed
proposal he says w ill revitalize the nation's
primary and secondary schools.
Th e Bush adm inistration plan, called "A m erica
2000." seeks to make som e ve ry fundamental
and controversial changes. It envisions spending
an eatra 81.2 billion over the next five years In
order to reform U.S. education.
Som e critics charge that the problem with

American education Is that the federal govern­
ment does not spend enough to begin with. Bush
doesn't agree.
.
The president has noted: " W e spend 33 percent
more per pupil In 1991 than w e spent In 1981 —
33 percent more In real constant dollars — and I
don't think thpxe’ e a person anywhere w ho would
say that w e’ve seen a 33 percent Im provem ent In
our schools' perform ance."
T o help rally public support for hla plan and
steer It through a skeptical Congress. Bush
named a new secretary o f education: Lamar
Alexander earned a reputation as an innovator In
education — both as a Republican governor o f
Tennessee and later as president of the University
o f Tennessee.

Commissioner
says schools
need changes
TA L L A H A S S E E — Classes will not only be
bigger, but tougher as students In Florida
return to school. Education Commissioner
Betty Castor said.
New curriculum Ideas and technology will
help schools raise their sights. Castor said In
her annua] Back to School news conference.
T h e nerd for that showed up In public
hearings by the Florida Commission on
Education Reform and Accountability last

Chiles pushes health care
SANFORD — Th e Sanford Christian Church
w ill hold a property dedication this afternoon, at
the site o f Its future location. 700 S. Upaala
Road.
Senior Minister J.D. S egroves explained. " It 's
not a ground breaking. W e haven't determ ined
w hen we w ill be able to have that yet. bu t w e are
gathering together our m em bers as w e ll as area
n eigh bors for a d edication ce rem o n y and
barbequed chicken m eal.”
Th e church has purchased approxim ately
■even acres on Upsala Road, when th e form er
property, at 137 W. A irport Blvd.. w as taken
o v er for construction o f the expressw ay project.
Rev. Segrove said. " W e haven't determ ined
where w e'll hold our services until the new
building is completed, but w e are w orking on
th at."

Correction
An article In the Thursday edition o f the
Sanford Herald stated Sem inole C ounty would
contract with Retired Seniors Volunteer Pro­
gram to operate a free food distribution program
this winter.
While RSVP volunteers w ill distribute the food
to low-income famlles. the county grant. If
approved, to operate the program w ill be made
to Seminole Community Volunteer Program Inc.
(SCVP) an "u m brella" organization to RSV P and
other organized volunteer efforts In the county.
SCVP w ill lease the space In Zayrea Plaza from
the Seminole County Expressway Authority for
the program.
\•

Mostly cloudy, near 90
B e c o m i n g m o s t ly
clou d y w ith mainly
a fte r n o o n th u n ­
d e r s t o r m s lik e ly .
H igh near 90. Wind
southeast 10 mph.
C hance o f rain 70
percent.

m lnent play In major newspapers —
foreshadowed the type o f domestic
Issue Democrats want to use In next
y ea r's campaigns.
" I want all the candidates to talk
abou t th is ." C h iles said In an
Interview after the NGA meeting. " I
think It's som ething that people arc
dem anding. Th ey should be de­
m a n d in g It from a Republican
president."
T h is year. 2.2 m illion Floridians,
o r 17.9 percent, have no health
Insurance, state records show. That
com pares to an estimated 37 million
people nationwide, or 13.2 percent.
Th e cost to states o f paying for
governm ent programs for the un­
insured Is astronomical: In Florida
alone. Medicaid expenditures have

T A L L A H A S S E E - G ov. Lawton
Chiles made national w aves last
week by pushing fellow governors to
advocate affordable health care for
everyone. Just the kind o f Issue
Democrats hope to use in 1992
■gainst the GO P and President
Bush.
C h ile s w a s u n s u c c e s s fu l In
persuading the National Governors
Association to vote for a policy
statement dem anding the federal
government overhaul the nation's
health care system by 1994. T h e
governors voted to urge the changes
but declined to set a deadline.
T h e charged partisan debate over
universal health care — given pro-

2 Lake Mary
city officials

LA K E M ARY — Official quali­
fyin g dates have been an ­
nounced by the City of Lake
M ary, for the Novem ber 8
G en eral Election. T w o city
commission seats w ill be on the
ballot.
T h e 2-year terms of commis­
sio n ers T om M ahoney and
George Duryea will both expire
this year. Asked about his
plans for this fall. Mahoney
said. "M y thinking at this Ume.

Cl See C h llss. P ig s 2 A

Local AIDS volunteers gather
■y VICK I D etO M M R *
Herald Staff Writer

JULIAN
STENSTROM

M e m o ria ls
and o ld y a rn s
A few weeks ago w e w rote to let
you know w e had all those plaques
once on the doors of various room s
o f the form er Sem inole Memorial
Hospital. Th e hospital was built In
three phases and from tim e to tim e
local individuals, fam ilies and orga ­
nizations would furnish the room s
In m em ory o f loved ones.
Several years ago the hospital,
ow ned by the county, was sold to
th e H o s p ita l C o r p o r a t io n o f
America, a for proflf organization.
HCA operated the hospital u couple
o f years before building Its own new
hospital at its present location on
West Seminole Boulevard.
About six months ago the ques­
tion arose. "W h a t happened to all
the plaques when HCA m oved Into
Its new facility?"
B ill V in cen t, fo rm e r b u ild in g
engineer for Seminole Memorial and
now In the same capacity for HCA.
was contacted but he didn't have
any Idea. Recently, however, he
reported lo work one m orning and
□ B e e Bteastrom , P age 5A
. * -vCr

H E 1M J D FO I
S

l

SANFORD - Though literally
thousands of people have worked
for the AIDS Superchallenge In
Sem inole County, only about 30
o f them showed up to be photo­
graphed Saturday m orning at
Thom as E. W hlgham Stadium at
Seminole High School.
Th e photo, arranged In con­
nection w llh a story on the
s u b je c t u n d e rta k e n b y the
Tam pa Tribune, was designed to
b o th than k th o s e w h o had
w o r k e d so h a rd fo r th e
Superchallege fundraisers and to
bring recognition to the both the
need for AIDS education and lo
the p eople w h o arc h elp in g
achieve lhal goal In this area.
K a r e n C o le m a n , a s s is ta n t
principal at O viedo High School,
h e l p e d o r g a n i z e the
Superchallenge when her brother
Tom Whlgham. a Sanford at­
torney. contracted AIDS from a
blood transfusion In 1983.
W hlgham died In 1988.
It was W hlgham 's wish that the
community be educated about
A ID S . He b eg a n ed u cation al
programs before his death that

*r*tt o' m
HOI-TING SEMINOtES

HoMMpNotoOyOaiy F.VotS
A photographer from the Tampa Tribune lakes a shot o f the AIDS
Superchallenge volunteers who gathered at Thomas E. Whlgham stadium
at Seminole High School Saturday morning

�N EW S FRO M THE REG IO N AND A C R O S S TH E S T A T E

la

Student
slayings
unsolved

1.

Archaeology survey of hugs air
bass complete after sight years
i

roar w a l t o n

- h

m a c k

—
m r m m T sI H ’ V I i
archaeologists finally have

Chiles
tripled since 1906 to
04.3 bUlkm In the current fiscal
year.
••If things don't change, w e n
go bust. I think other states
could go bust before we d o ."
Chiles said. "Because o f the way
w e have to pay for Medicaid, are
don't have enough money for
education, transportation, or
anything else. It's taking all the
available dollars."
Many of the uninsured are
working poor, people with jo b s
whose employers don't provide
health insurance. They often
don't qualify for Medicaid and
often end up In em ergency
rooms when health pr ooleme
reach the breaking point —
which cost# even more money.
“ They can't go until they're
very, very 111. That coots a lot
m ore." Chiles said.
Democrats coating about for
hard evidence to back up their
claim that Bush h as largely
Ignored domestic p rob lem s to
concentrate on foreign affairs
need look.no further than health
dare. Chiles said.
' "W e h a v e t b m a t t I f ln Issue."
he said. ,"t think-political cam ­
paigns are where you kind of
focus attention on these things."
M ark O c a ra n . e x e c u tiv e
director o f the Democratic G ov­
ern o rs A ssociation, said the
D e m o c r a t ic p r e s i d e n t i a l
nom inee — whoever it turns out
to be — should capitalise on
"h ig h an xiety" nationally about
lack of health care.
"T h is adm inistration does not
have a dom estic agenda about
health care, the environment, or
e d u c a tio n ." G caran said. " I
think health care w ill be a very
Important Issue next year for the
Dem ocratic candidate."
States want the federal gov­
ernm ent to slow down mandated
Increases In Medicaid expendi­
t u r e s to g iv e , so m e fis c a l
breathing room and then move
toward a system that guarantees
access to everyone while allow ­
ing each stale to design Its own
program s.
During the National Confer­
ence o f State Legislatures' recent
annual meeting In Orlando, a
g ro u p o f D e m o c ra tic s la te

~

m en d

~

tlon aim ed at lo M q rla g fo r
changes at the federal level. Its

killing
a la c k
government has Hatted to re­
spond to the needs o f m M fie
for
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* I •snteMdfhordasof
aatnil
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will be

will te dtoptiycd

01^01,1 ■»■A |kn|
CuHvlilCvU
Um Is if
II
_________ as to health
care, the coats o f m edical pro­
cedures and Insurance win drop
a s the price of paying far the

^

"W e can never control the
coots If we don't give everybody
access. But It's not totally within
the states' wherewithal to pro­
vide It." Chiles m id. "It's got to
be a partnership between the
states snd the federal govern­
m ent."
That translates into money
from the federal governm ent
w ith few er strings attached,
allowing states the ArxlbtlUy to
form program s such a s Health
Access in Florida, which helps
buy low-coal
If states m anage to
rising health care coats and
come up with systems that meet
federal goals. Chiles said they
could be rewarded.-O ne w ay to
do that would be to allow states
to reduce the matching money
they have to ante up for various
federal programs.
Chiles thinks states should
focus on early intervention, such
sa better pre-natal care, to pro­
duce healthier people and bring
down costs. An exam ple la hla
•4 2 m illion "H ealth y S ta rt"
program that add ed 18.000
low-income women and babies
to pre-natal services.
" I don't think we can sit back
and wait for the federal govern­
ment to decide what to d o ." said
Chiles, who left the U.S. Senate
In 1908 because o f "bu rn o u t"
and frustration in Washington.
'*1 don't have very much con­
fidence In the federal govern­
m ent."

near the University of Flor­
ida library. A wreath will
be placed on the w all on
Southwest 34th S t. where
the n am es o f the five
victims were painted on
the graffiti-covered w all
teat A u gu st
And amid the signs of
c o n t in u e d g r ie f, p r o ­
secutors say they are final­
ly closer to making formal
charges In a
h a d p le n t y o f fin g e r p oin tin g b u t no Indict­
ments.
Prosecutors announced
Friday that a grand Jury
w ill be empaneled Novi 4 to
h e a r e v id e n c e In th e
State Attorney Len Reg­
ister w ill seek indictments
on both prim e suspect
Danny Harold Rolling. 37.
o f Shreveport. La., and
secondary suspect Edward
Lew is Humphrey. 16. of
In d la la n tlc . sa id J oh n
Joyce, a spokesman for the
task force investigating the
fcllllBf r

• r fb p e fu lly . w e w ill
secure an indictment on
both o f them.” Joyce said.
Register catenates it will
take about two weeks for
the panel to hear the case
an d decide w hether to
Issue Indictments.
The families of the five
students mourn their loaa a
year after the killings.
" O u r c h ild re n w e re
w o n d e rfu l, lovin g,
beautiful. Intelligent, and
delightful. ... Through the
random, senseless act of
m urder, we all lost so very
m uch.

ttU S S

d O tS

th a t

W S rS

a M g void.

S lt ff.f
W

s u r v e y b r o u g h t the
number to 883. T hey range from
p re h isto ric In d ia n v illa g e s ,
camps an d m ounds u p to 10.000
years old to abandoned W orld
W ar n-era rocket teat sites.
Thomas Is president of New

Man charged in pup’s death
BtTHLO — A man who allegedly beat his
girlfriend with a puppy has been charged with
cruelty in what local Investigators
me o f the worst
an
called one
abuse cases they had
ever seen.
The 4-month-eld Doberman-mix pup. nam ed
Miracle, suffered severe Uver snd lung dam age,
other Internal Injuries and lost nearly all Its
blood In the Aug. 4 Incident. Investigators said.
"I'v e got pictures o f the dog. and every tim e I
look at It 1 get nightm ares." said Tom Rudge.
O rlan do Hum ane Society cruelty Inveatlgator. " I t tint had tobe ahorrtbiedeaihr1- WUUam W arren Wolfe. 27. got out of Jail on
81.000 bond shortly after be was charged late

T h u rsd a y , said O range County sh ertfT a
spokesm an Jim Solomons. If convicted o f the
third-degree felony. Wolfe could face u p to five
years tn prison and a 85.000 fine.
It took several weeks to press charges
because detectives were awaking a necropsy
report sn d the girlfriend kept changing her
story, sheriff's Detective Jem Suarez said.
Wolfe, reached at home Friday, would not
comment. "M y attorney will take care of m y
Suarez, however, said Woke told him he
never Injured the puppy. Wolfe said that his

A ID S patisnt R icky Ray back in hospital
ST. PETERSBURG Ricky
Ray. one of three AIDS-Infected
brothers, w as back In a hospital
Saturday only days after hla
fam ily said hla condition was
Improving.
Rteky.14. w as In fair condition
at A ll C hildren's Hospital, said
n u r s i n g s u p e r v is o r C h a r
Hawthorne.
"H e does have a fever." she
The teen-ager, who had been
re teased earlier in the week from
the hospital, returned Thursday,
according to a statement from
S a ra s o t a la w y e r J u d ith S.
Havanaugh.
His previous treatment was for

teg cram ps that m ade U difficult
for him to walk, said hla physi­
cian. Dr. Jerry Barbosa.
The doctor said at the time he
was uncertain If the cram ps
were caused by R icky's medica­
tion or an underlying Infection,
adding, "h e 's weaker than he
was before."
R ick y 's p aren ts. C liff and
Louise R ay of Sarasota, had
issued a statement saying that
"reports regarding Ricky Ray
being near death are completely
false."
In June. Ricky announced his
e n g a g e m e n t to W e n o n a h
Llndberg. 16. Their wedding Is
planned for December.
Ricky and his brothers. Robert
and Randy, were exposed to the

T o d a y : B e c o m in g m o stly
cloudy with mainly afternoon
thunderstorms Ukely. High near
90. W ind southeast 10 mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Tonight: Partly cloudy w ith a
alight chance of thunderstorms
m ainly In the evening. Low s In
the low to mid 70s. W ind light
southeast. Chance of rain 20

M t l y e l d y 8 0 -7 8

P tly e ld y 0 3 -7 4

Monday: Partly cloudy with
s c a tte re d a fte rn o o n t h u n ­
derstorms. Highs In the lower
90s. Chance of rein 80 percent.
E x ten d ed fo re ca st: P a rtly
cloudy through the period. A
chance of afternoon and evening
thunderstorms.

P t ly e M y 88-74

P tly e ld y 88-74

5:45
a.m .. 5:35 p.m .: MsJ. 11:45 a.m..
------------------ p . m . T I D B t i
D s y t s s s B s a d u highs. 7:41
a.nv. 7:58 j&gt;.m.;Jcws. lrM jrn v .

"V&gt;

I
i
Cty
Doytana Booth
Ft. Lout Beech
FtrtSym
Goinooylita
POSTUASTIR: Send I
taTHC SANTORO HSSALAS A
Sea 1(47. S an ta* FLZ777S-1M7.

Florida Seetaema muel pay *ta setae
laa In addNtan la i

"They have tried to put that
terrible time behind them, and
are now dealing as best they can
with their situation and the
boys' health, one day at a tim e."
according to the statement.

I

Tamparahirat M Iota arwlaua ita r t
MjS anttvamlfM tawtaasis. IDT.

Vol. 84, No. 1

Fta. 1X771

The Ray fam ily m oved to
Sarasota In 1967 after the DeSoto C oun ty S c h o o l B o a rd
barred them from c Isaacs and
their Arcadia home w as de­
stroyed by arson. No arrests
have been made In the case, and
the statute of lim itations on
prosecuting the crime expires
next week.

I

TH UR SD AY
P t ly e ld y 6 3 -7 4

p e r c e n t.

rftftdi

virus through the blood-clotting
medicine they took for their
hem ophilia. Both Ricky an d
Robert have full-blown AIDS.

M m 8 T — m gs

Numbsrs sslactsd in tbe Florida
Lottery Play 4 went T-8-8-8 .

IUSPS 4SI 3S3)
S u n d ay, A u g u s t 25, 1901

Runways, hangars and other
major facilities are concentrated
In a re lativ ely a m a ll a re a .
W eapons test ranges have been
carved out of the pine forests
that cover most o f the base.
Eglin also ow ns portions o f
Santa Rosa Island In the O u lf of
Mexico.

THE W EATHER

MIAMI - Hors art the winning
numbers ssltctad Saturday In the
Florida Lottery Cash * 0 4 4 .

Florida Lottery Fantasy Five for
Friday www IT-86-87-84-88.

th a t_____,
da Panhandle city la the devel­
opm ent and testing o f n on ­
nuclear weapons. EgUa h ad a
hand In many o f the sm art
bom bs and oth er h igh -te c h
w e a p o n s u sed d u r in g th e
Persian O ulf War.

• rch M o lo Q lctl

"W h en you look at
the m ap o f E glin w hen we
started ... there were tw o or
three dots that w ere the archaeo-

j , the
first'a n n iv e rsa ry o f the
discovery of the first two

______________ to effectively

public poMcy an Ihlo Issue

you look at
‘ lin
the m ap o f‘ Eg
whan w s started •••
or
fjlt t i W t r S
tW O
vr

Jeckoonviita
Key Wad

lahoUnt

Miami
PonoiCOta
VoraooM
Teitahooooe
Tom»e
Vera Beech
W Palm Batch

■M

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n
■
W
as
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aa
IS
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aa
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Aug. 17

- Ih

.13

.as

.it
.37

m n

FULL
Asg. 88

highs. 7:46 a.m .. 8.-03 p.m.:
lows. l:3 8 a.m .. l:4 0 p.m.:
C a s t s S s s tk i highs. 8 :0 1 a.m..
8:18 p.m .: lows. l:83 p.m.. I:55
p.m.

ommmmml

W aves are
l-2 feet and choppy. Current Is
to the north w ith a w ater
temperature of 79 degrees.
H aw 6 u y r s i B ssth r Waves
are 2 feet and choppy. Current Is
to the north, with a water
temperature of 79 degrees.

.

S t. Asgmstis# to Jsp itsr latet
T o d a y an d tonight: W ind
southeast 10 knots. Seas 2 feet.
Bay and intend waters a light
chop. Scattered showers and
thunderstorms.

.

f

The tem perature at 5 p.m.
Saturday w as 75 degrees and
Saturday's overnight low was
73. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other W eather Service data:

□SatsrSsy’s high............. 80
□Barsosstric prasaars.SO.12
□ R elative Hsaridity....87 pet

□Winds.....Jlarthaaat 8 xsph
sn La.
□Today's saasat.....7:58 p.m.
□Tam straw's saarlse....7:00

□ R a in fa ll..

Anchorego
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Saltimer*
Billing!
Birmingham
Blwnarck
Baioa
Sedan
BurlInfton.Vt.
CharlMtan.SC
Chartadan.w.Va.
Charldta.M C.
Chayanna
Chicago
Ctamtant
Cdum6ta.SC
Concert.MH
Oeltao Ft Worth
Omwf
Oh ItaflH
Oetre.1
Honolulu
Houitan
Inttanapalta
JocktenJOUte.
KantM City
LoeVogaa
umolocfc
Loo Angotao
MemgMo
Milwaukee
M*l» SI Paul
Noohviita
Now Orleone
Now York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha
PhltatHfhla
PhoonJi
Plltokurgh
Portland.Motne
SI Loull
Soil Laka City
Sooltto
Waehlngtan.O C

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�Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida • Sunday, August IS, t lt f - 86

Longwood: used oil container OK
HfUdBlsHWfWr
mjw • r i w u v i u w h y n n y e o v m v o n v ^ v i
CkiMln La« llm alay, IB. of SBB4H Htowttha In Bantoed
was anaolad an Thursday a( Ifea Albartaon’a auparmahat la

-----I has

LO ffO W O O D —

In the city, h took
the
C ity Com*
mission voted to accept the
agreement d urin g Ha regular
m eeting fast week. It allow * the
County to provide a container for
the depositing o f used motor oil.
The City wtU provide a public
of the con*
the oil level.
The County wtU be
Latonya D. Barber. 22, o f 1006 Cedar Creek Apartments in
I nUTBCMIy AIM C M u|C a wlffl QWOfOCTiy
they responded to a call about a car in a ditch
aar the Cedar Crock Apartm ents. The on per o f the car aaid
ad Barber, hie ex-ghMHend. ha d put It there.
_______
The arrest report said that Barber approached, screaming
coats at the ovner o f the car.
" w i n ■Aid inAi w n e n i w y A i u m p i n i to M iD a u f
u f n n i i t n a i i n t o o c n in a n m n i.

lnu

w r»

aha

traneported to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
iSSOOhond.

O n IIq M b i l n o t i i f f M l t
tLee Darla. 31. o f 101 Long L eaf Ct. In Banked: David
Leroy Jones, 33. o f 007 Bay A re . in Sanford: Michael Levis
Jones, 23. of 63 Sem inole Oardeno in Sanford and Harry Lee
Harvey. 28, of 82 Caatle Brew er Ct. in Sanford were aneoted on
Thursday at the D eLux Bar. 1006Southwest Rd. In Sanford.
According to the arrest reports, there were two fights
Involving the men.
The four were involved in a fight near the m en’s room at the
back of the bar.
The police aaid that David Jones and Harvey were
and that after Harvey, w ho they aaid hit Jones from belt
w aa handcuffed by officers, Jones continued to threaten him ..
W hen Jones refused to bock down, police aaid. he too was
Michael Jones and Lee w ere lndtln g the crowd and
encouraging the fight, police reported.
AO four were transported to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility where bond w aa set at 8100 apiece.

for draining the used oil n t r p
tack when It becom es lUted. aa
wefl as providing any matnte*
nance required wKh the racep-

but Public W orks Director Jerry
Herman said. "N o containers
have been set up by the County
ao h r ." The requirement la that
the containers ha placed on
accraaih k property. " Herm a n
added. "T h e only place w e
proposed waa the Public W ork s
grounds on West Pulton Street.
but apparently they didn’t
elder it aa a cc ew ............
"T here are ecr
service stations in the city lim its
w hich have their ow n used

taasektng to
m
a num ber of lo catio n s
bout the county, although
very little action haa apparently
taken place eo Mr. Lake Mary
P u b lic W o rk s D ire c to r R od
Btroupe said, "t know the City la
considering the County’s propoaaL but aa fer aa I know, no
specific agreem ent h as been

The

to cooperate with the County,

Property tax protest continues

MORSE

SA NFO R D - A group o f west
Hankey. w ho aaid hto own
Sanford residents win meet with property tax bill w ill d o u b k this
Sem inole County Commissioner Xeari to due reappraisals, said
Jennifer Kelley and Property . residents are tired o f being told
Appraiser BUI Buber to oppose “ “ W «* ** ■ »■ w ill keep taxes
tax Increase proposals and prop- down, only to have them raised,
erty value increases.
He said he opposes K elley’s
"Pfeopk have been burdened * * * to pursue a utility tax.
to d eath w ith ta x e s ." said although he said the county told
Charles Hankey o f V lh kn Road, voters taxes would not be raked
' T a x e s h a v e b e c o m e so
they approved the one-cent
burdensom e, they Just can't a sk s tax.
W e elect these people to be
afford them anym ore.”
_
Buber has raised the ire of
m any long time residents by 1
adjusting tne methods by which
older hom es are assessed. As a
result, m any hom es Increased
doubled or trebled in value,
■ending tax paym ents skyrock­
eting.
Kelley has called for a recon­
sideration of a tax on unin­
corp o rated resid en ts’ utility
bills. A 10 percent tax was
defeated In July. Kelley pro­
posed a 4 percent utUlty tax

"P eo p k are getting m ighty tired
of being dictated to."

• IN V I

to

vvniAf

Hankey said at least a dosen of
his neighbors will Join him and
h k wife tma Jean Hankey next
Thursday at 11 p.m. to meet
with Kelley at her thtrd*Aoor
office in the County Services
Buttdtng. A 1 p m. m eeting to
scheduled with Buber in hto
first-floor office in the servies
building.

m m u n _

i i t
FY.

im
FT.

m
FY.

m m

m m

19M M

97518.

914,708

$15001

$1508

B io a

•a o a

CfTY C L M K 8 0 F F IC 8
B Q U F U N T ___________
PM O M LM PAR TM N T
C f f Y M N M I lR A K M a F P K i
■ E A U n F B A T lO N F R O Q R N i
E Q U F N B ff
F M A N C f O IP A R T M U fT
E O U V M B fT
Q flM I M A L B iflW flA r*r«i

CITY OF IONGWOOD
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
A PUBLIC HEAMNQ WILL BE HELD AT L0NQW00D CITY HALL ON MONDAY,
SEPTEMBERS, 1901 AND MONDAY, SEPTEMBER23,1901 TO CONSIDER THE
PROPOSED BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 91/92 AT 7:00 P J L COPIES OF THE
PROPOSED BUDGET AR E AVAILABLE FOR BI8PECTION BY THE PUBLIC AT
THE CITY CLERK'S OFFICE, 17S W EST WARREN AVENUE BETW EEN THE
HOURS OF 8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY.
GENERAL SUMMARY OF PROPOSED BUDGET
EMTIRPftSE
FUND
$15500.00

TOTAL
$526,425.00

AD VALOREM TAXES 5.12 MIL
SALES A USE TAXES
FRANCHSE TAXES
LCENSESI PERMITS
INTERGOVERNMENTAL REVENUES
CHARGES FOR SERVICES
FME8 A FORFEITURES
IffSCELLANEOUS REVENUES
OTHER FMANCWG SOURCES

$2,515,724.00
$1,996,929.00
$873,695.00
I2M25Q 00
$317,112.00
$69,150.00
$210500.00
$62,233.00
$274357.00

TOTAL R M N W A O TH ER

ff.y7y.4fQ W

$20857150

$252158150

$$51851150

TOTAL KSTBIATID REVENUES

r , 075.4M.00

$21258150

$2,148,83150

$•438,77750

$126,443.00

$166596.00
$13500.00
$475.00

&lt;S7H

$1,945,988.00
$61,500.00

$2515,72450
$2,125,372.00
$673,69550
$25335050
$317,112.00
$2501534.00
$224,300.00
$12450650
$27455750

CITY HALL B U LD M Q
0PER6M AM T.
P O U B B O V A R IN W r
M N N TEN AN CEG AAAG E
O P E R 6 I4 A JN T .
PAVW G AO O . PARKIN G
T H E BU M PER S
TREES A H ED G ES
M O TO RCYCLE U M T
EQ U FM EN T

4VRl
FY.

m m

$488,700.00

$1,348,528.00
$3,154,613.00

$324527.00

$85,696.00

TOTAL AFFROFNATED EXPENDITURES
AND RESERVES:

$7575,45000

$21258800

$17,000.00
$109,700.00

$935,624.00

$1567,740.00

91 1 5 0a
ftU t

"
•

F P I D B A fT H D O
STATION #15 RENOVATIO N
O P E R A M A N T.
LAW N S P R M K LE R S YSTEM
EQ U FM EN T
F U N N M O D C P A R T M U fT
E Q U F M B fT
B U U M Q D C P A R T IC N T
EQ U FM EN T
P A IR S 6 M C M A H O N
LAND FO R PA R KS
GYM
P G M C SH ELTER
GREENHO USE/TREE FARM
COMMUNTTY B U L D M Q
S W M M M G PO O L
CAND YIANO P A R K K IP .
REITER P A R K RIP.
SM ALL W O RLD PA R K RIP.
SHADOW H L L P A R K R IP.
SANOALW OOO PA R K RIP.
HK3HLANO P A R K IIP .
EQ U FM EN T
FU R U C W O R K ! A D f R 8TRAT10N
ADM. BU LD M G A D O IT IO N
3 R E A K R 0 0 M EXPAN SIO N
PW AN N EX R EPLA CEM EN T
CEM ETERY W ALL
EQ U FM EN T
P U R U C W O RKS E N Q M H JS N Q
EQ U FM EN T
P U R U C W O RKS S T R U T S
R A N G B JN E RO AD R IP.
TRAFFIC AN AYLSIS
ROAD RESU RFAC IN G
DIRT STR EET PAVW G*
INTERSECTION RIP.
STORM O RAM AO E
SIOEW ALKS/BIKEPATHS
EQ U FM EN T
• PLUS CARRYOVER FROM PREVIOUS YEAR
PU R U C W O R M P U T T
EQUIPMENT

99159a

1

•h Imi 11-

1

" " " H MOO,000.
'M il
9is io a

1

m

$19508

G EN E R A L M V I N U O

9150a

Q B C R A L ItV M U B

980500

G EN E R A L R E V B R J B

9 s jo a

94.10a

G EN E R A L REVEN UES

9 1150 a

fy ^ y g p

• 1 .10a

G E N B M L IK V E N U E S
Q B C R A LR C V G O N O R
Q aeuuM VEN ua

s *» 1*•
tf.

•

9115 0 a

93L00a

93950a

9150a

9 150 a

91508

971,93a

976,70a

9 lL O O a
9K29R

99,000.

• 17 .00a

120 ,00a

m

9150 a
91950a

$1537.228.00
$3,171,613.00
$1545.32450
$1507,740.00
$0.00
$050
$306,52450
$903,825.00
$0.00
$604,523.00

C fM T fftY F U N D
PA R KS A RECREATIO N
ROAD P A V N G
TOTAL C E M T H IY FUND;
m n ito ia u fund

$104,126.

990150a

•11.718

9150a
999.99L

915,00a

919650a

915.00a

G BCM L
G EN E R A L
G EN BM L
G EN E R A L

93,150.

92.00a

9150 a

$ i.o o a

91.008

G EN E R A L REVENUES

9L5oa

9L50a

1273.000.

9193.000.

• 100 .00a

9210.00a

921050 a

9Looa

91050 a

910,000

9 108008 GENERAL/8TATE G RANTS
944,000. G EN ERAU 3TATE G RAN TS
G EN E R A L REVENUES
G EN E R A L R E V B IU E S
G B IE R A U S T A T E G RAN TS
9600.000. G EN ERAU STATE G RAN TS
G O E R A U S T A T E G RAN TS
G B IB M U S T A T E G RAN TS
GENERAL/STATE G RAN TS
GENERAL/STATE G RAN TS
G O IER A U ST A TE G RAN TS
GENERAL/STATE GRANTS
G EN ERAL REVENUES

• iz o o a

936.00L
910.900
94.000.
94,ooa
13000

9 i9 .o ia
92.000.
•3.00a
9i.o o a

93.000.
96.450.

•5,000.

93500.

920,000
93.000

G EN ERAL
G EN ER A L
910.000. G EN ER A L
G EN ER A L
93.00a
G 0 IE R A L

96.100.

92.500.

92.500.

9250a

G EN ER A L REVENUES

9400.00a
9 133598
960.000.
9100.000
990,998
99,500.

G EN E R A L REVENUES
G EN ER A L REVENUES
G EN E R A L REVENUES
G EN ER A L R E V B IU E S
G EN E R A L REVENUES
G EN E R A L R E V B IU E S
G EN ER A L REVENUES
G B IE R A L REVENUES

936,00a

99.500.

9114 .75a
945.00a
9434.997.

999.500
929.700.

9372,991
9193599.
926.00a
9100.000.
934.949
91M.000.

9 39L5M . 9454,069.
9133519. 9133519.
926,000
• 26.00a
9100.00a 9100.000.
834.646.
934,948
992.500.
92.500

$9531.77750
S23333SS323

•

96.000.
m u

TOTAL C A P. H P . PRO G RAM :

$2,146,83150

REVENUES
REVENUES
REVENUES
R E V B IU E S
REVENUES

&lt; * * * ».«* »* *

GERALDINE D. ZAMBRI. CITY CLERK

$194,000.00

REVEN UES
REVEN U ES
REVEN UES
REVENUES

G EN E R A L REVENUES

912.500.

NOTICE: ALL PERSONS ARE ADVISED THAT IF THEY DECOE TO APPEAL ANY DECISION MADE AT THESE
HEARINGS. THEY WILL NEED A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND FOR SUCH PURPOSES.
THEY W8L NEED A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND FOR SUCH PURPOSES. THEY WILL
NEEDTO MCLUDE THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED. THE CITY
OF LONGWOOO DOES NOT PROVIDE THIS VERBATIM RECORD.

***********

$530,607.00

G EN ER A L REVENUES
G S e M L R E V B JU E S
G EN ER A L R E V D W E 8
G EN E R A L REVEN U ES
G EN E R A L REVEN UES
G EN E R A L REVEN UES
G 0C M LR E V EN U ES

p m
•1.99a
|1 7 ,M L

112.535
•50.000.
1791.000.
•100.000.
•50.000.
•50.000.

•109.000

CEM ET ER Y REVENUES

t l 1.500.

92.000.

•540.000

1575.000.
940.000

150.000

960,000.

W /S REVENUES
1575.000. W/S REVENUES
W/S REVENUES
W/S REVENUES
S50.000 W /S REVENUES

(65.000

925.000.

9235.000. W /S REVEN UES
945.000 W/S REVEN UES

911.500. W /S REVENUES

91,000,000.
93,000,000.
9400,000
•5.000.

*1

•sw iiti M S I I I I

•57.500.
ir m n s s

1

M IN O R

9 1 ,10 a

toil

U TLfTY ACCO U N TM O
EQUIPMENT
W/S • REN EW AL A R EPLA C EM EN T
PUMP B U LD M G
9144.000
W ATER M A N R EP LA C E
W ELL AT PLANT #2
HIGH SERVICE PUM P
950.000.
SEW ER INFRAST./EQUIP.
W ATER DW BIO N
STORAGE TANK A PU M P
135.000
EQUIPMENT
W ASTEW ATER D fV B C N
LAND (W ASTEW ATER FACILITY)
W ASTEW ATER TREATM ENT FA C LIT Y
EFFLUENT TRANS M A N
EQUIPMENT
TOTAL EN TERPRISE FUND:
«MiOM

$30652400
$373318.00

] ’&gt; ( ) ( )

m
m mSm
9W L

TOTAL O H B U LFU tt:

GENERAL GOVENMENTAL SERVICES
PUBLIC SAFETY
PHYSICAL ENVflONMENT
TRANSPORTATION
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN SERVICES
CULTURE A RECREATION
DEBT SERVICES
OTHER FNANCING SOURCES (USES)
RESERVES

T U , A ’ l&lt; ) N ‘ .

CITY OF LONAUm OD
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM
F.Y.1991 -1 9 9 6

He waa taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held in lieu of 6100 bond.

$11,425.00

H A U v f

public servants, not kings and
queen s and d ictato rs." aaid
H ankey. a 16-year residen t.

w a i

Police aaid they stopped Flem ing for driving 70 miles per
hour on State Road 46 through Sanford. They aaid the vehicle
w as weaving through traffic.
Flaming had been drinking, police reported, but they said he

SSOOjOOOOO

unless terminated by either o f
the parties.
T n e recep
rect tacles a re plain
w h it e c o n t a in e r s w ith n o
a d v e rtisin g except ’’Recycle
Motor O il" an them. The city
would bo allowed to place its
logs on the
tainer.

13 to allow •
property taxes paid by

n irp u

Percy William Flem ing. 23. 480 Crest St. In Sanford was
arrested on Thursday.
He was charged w ith driving with a revoked license and with

SPECIAL IVY.
FUND

w ith

cities m Seminole County on

Man without lleonso arraatod

GENERAL
FUND

p rop o sal, a lo n g

M ay 2 o f this year. The intent
w as that they would be s«4«^4fri
and be In effect until September
30 o f 1661. It w as not adopted
until this
with the
o n ly a la w aak a a w ay . T h e
la automatically re*
uccesatve periods not

I U

tram m s m

B B

u

tolSMB

W /SR EV BO N O S
W/S R EVBO N D S
W /S R E V flO N D S
W/S REVEN UES

M SM M i

\

�Bookertown: the sag a continues

■

ED ITO RIALS
r%
U

Misconduct
A fte r a lm o st tw o y e a r* o f In vestigation , th e
8 e n a te E th ic s C om m ittee stm h a s not re ­
so lv e d th e c a se aftfnat Sen. A la n C ra n sto n .
D -C a lif.. w h o Intervened w ith re g u la to rs o n
b e h a lf o f sa v in g s a n d loan o p erto r C h a rle s
K e a tin g a fte r receivin g large c o n trib u tio n s
fro m h im .
In a n e ffo rt to en d the p an el's foot d ra g g in g .
S e n . J e s se H elm s, R -N .C „h as released a
c o n fid e n tia l com m ittee report re co m m en d in g
th at C ra n sto n b e cen su red by the fu ll S e n a te
fo r th is "re p re h e n s ib le ’* co n d u ct. H e lm s
d e s e rv e s credit fo r forcing the Issu e a n d
d e m a n d in g that h la colleagues o n the c o m ­
m ittee con fron t It sq u arely .
K e a tin g solicited the help o f C ra n sto n a n d
fo u r o th e r sen ators In order to preven t fed e ral
re g u la to rs from c lo sin g hta fallin g L in co ln
S a v in g s ft L oan Ui Irvine. A fte r re ce iv in g
n e a rly E l m illion In con trib u tio n s fro m
K e a tin g . C ra n sto n used his In flu e n c e In
W a s h in g to n to fend o ff the regu lato rs. A s a
con seq u en ce, the d elay In sh u ttin g d o w n
L in c o ln c o st th e governm en t n e a rly 1 2
b illio n .
L a s t F eb ru ary , the Senate E th ics C o m m it­
tee fou n d "su b sta n tia l an d credible e v id e n c e "
o f C ra n s to n 's w ro n gd o in g and reco m m en d e d
h e b e disciplin ed b y the full Sen ate. Y et, th e
In terven in g m on th s h ave seen v irtu a lly n o
action o n th e m atter. Som e m e m b ers o f th e
com m ittee seem content to keep th is e m b a r­
r a s s in g p ro b le m on th e s id e lin e s u n t il
C ra n sto n fad es a w a y . H e alrea d y h a s a n ­
n ou n ced h e w ill not seek re e le c tio n n e x t
y e a r.
- ••
F ru strated by the p an e l's In action , H e lm s
re le a se d a d am n in g report o n C ra n s to n
w ritten b y special counsel R o b e rt B e n n e tt.
H e lm s c o u ld Imve leaked the m a te ria l a n o n ­
y m o u sly to a reporter, a s occurs s o re g u la rly
In W ash in g to n . Instead, how ever, h e Issu ed It
u n d e r h la o w n n am e, thereby n u k in g h im s e lf
fu lly a c c o u n U b le for the m aterial's release.
T h e B en n ett report w as d elivered to th e
eth ics com m ittee m ore than a m o n th e a rlie r,
b u t th e p an e l had sought to k e ep It u n d e r
w ra p s. In the report, the special c o u n se l m a d e
a s t ro
case for w h y Cranston sh o u ld b e
c e n su re d b y the Senate for tra d in g h la
In flu en ce fo r cash. T h e senators’* actio n s o n
b e h a lf o f h la con tribu tor have "b r o u g h t th e
S e n a te In to dish on or and disrepute.'* B en n ett
con clu d ed .
In a d d itio n to docum enting C ra n s to n 's
m is d e e d s , th e re p o rt re c o m m e n d s f iv e
g u id e lin e s to g o v e rn d e a lin g s b e t w e e n
se n ato rs a n d potential contributors.
T h e eth ics gu id elin es are so self-evident It la
e m b a rra ssin g they sh ou ld have to b e sp e lle d
o u t at a ll. F or exam ple, one ru le c au tio n s
sen ato rs not to solicit funds In a m a n n er th at
w o u ld lead con tributors to believe they a re
b u y in g access. A n other w arn s law m ak ers n ot
to take "u n u s u a l o r aggressive action w ith
re g a rd to a special m atter before a fed e ral
a g e n c y " o n b e h a lf o f contributors w h o h a v e
so u g h t su ch services.
C ra n sto n con tin ues to claim h is in flu en ce
p e d d lin g w a s n o m ore egregious th an that o f
so m e oth er senators. Sadly. In the cu rre n t
e th ics environ m en t In W ash in gton . C ra n sto n
m ay h ave a p o in t Perh aps that e x p la in s w h y
th e E th ic s C o m m ittee's c h airm an . T e rry
S a n fo rd . D -N .C .. Insists the K e atin g F iv e
"d id n 't d o a d am n thing w ro n g ." S u c h
co m m e n ts m ake It a ll the m ore im p ortan t
th at the fu ll Senate go on the record to
c e n su re C ran ston for his m isconduct.

L E T T E R S T O E D IT O R
Letters to the editor arc welcome. A ll letters must
be signed. Include the address of the w riter and a
daytim e telephone number. Letters should be on a
single subject und be os brief us possible., Letters
are subject to editing.

LETTERS
Thank you, Lurlene Sweeting
T h e recent article appearing August 18.
1991 under Opinions by Dr. Lurlecn S w eetin g
on Bookertown was very enlightening and
revealing. Also, the coverage o f the Tutorial
Program so skillfully planned lo provide a
service to reinforce and enrich (he learning
process.
T h ro u g h this service two va lid factors
appeared to be evident, the enrichment for the
you th, and the church providing volunteers
w h ile u sing Its- opportunity lo broaden Its
ou treach ministry.
Such projects can became an agent for
change.
M y appreciation for Ibis service.
Alterm ese Smith Uentlcy
Sanford

W illiam *. Unfortunately, he v m fatally Injured
In a n on-the-job accident July 96. IO N . Annie
b e e s this community and has no desire to tire
elsewhere. She attends Rose Hill Baptist Church,
m «
member o f the Civic Association and
Assistant Director of the Tutorial P ro ^ am . She
h a s three childrens K elvin R u sh in g — a
"M cKnight Achiever". Sam uel Rushing. Seminole High School. and daughter. U llle Perklns.

efti! experien ces she h ad
1
N n O y related com*
m ew up with fe e tO is at
O rady Edge, were tnetrumentalj a rnmphtlag socurtty mgmdeisd by the caring concern
the worh on Providence BytIM Church late one evldencsd by the aduks. TheW HtUe school (now
Saturday night In time tor Sunday services. They the community center) was centrally located and
w ere ail carpenters. Edge, president a t t h
evst/day they went huJM tat lunch. Her lather
T h e two ministers in Bookertown. the Rev.
Bookertown Civic Association. Is ■bustnsas
was presMmt of the P.T.A. /Parent Teacher 'J am es Hagin, Providence Baptist Church and
representative for the Florida Power and Light AsmcMIm L She was the valedictorian o f her
the Rev. Capers SipUn Jr.. Rose HUI Baptist
Com pany. His wife. Frankie, is a nurse at Central flam whf n ens romplrlrd t him nlai j at Imol
Church, concur that there are m any dedicated
Florida Regional Hospital. Edge values the
. Christian people in this community. Like any
opportunities presented to mrmuam chddren to
AT* brother James, his wife. Martha, and thetr other community In Central Florida, there are a
avoid drugs and remain In school. He hoaapohm throe c M d ren also live here. Their sons ore oil
miniscule num ber of citixens w ho do not abide
to students at Mflwee and Lahsvlrw Mlddk students. Alan to at Santa Fe Com m unity
by society's rules. Rev. Hagin’a rm phasto to
Schools relative to these issues.
C tfh g e. Jam es to at Seminole High School and
youth ministry and saving the children. The
A l BradweU. social worker t o the
Jaooo w ill be entering Lakevtew . M artha
church recently acquired a van to provide
County School Board, hos alw ays Itvsd here and
BradweU feels that Bookertown to a nice place to transportation. Rev. Hagin stated that his
loves this community. Her patents, Jam es
live an d the neighbors are very helpful. A l and
parishioners are very involved in the life o f the
(deceased) and Resale BradweU. moved here In
M arth a 's nephew Ocky C lark g re w u p In
church and the community. Rev. SipUn would
1936. Her father w as employed by the railroad Baakertown. He attended Bookertown Elem entslike to see the bus that travels between Sanford
but enjoyed form ing the ftv* acres of lan d w hich ry and Seminole High School. He w as aw arded
and Orlando stop here. There are m any elderly
he owned. There were eight children In the the G old Medal at the Pan Am erican G am es In
citixens who need transportation. He plans to
fam ily, four o f whom continu e to reside here. Havana. Cuba. Although C lark's fam ily lives in
exert every possible effort to have the bus come
Som e o f her fondest fchttdhood mem o ries'are Caltfankto. hla roots arenere.
to Bookertown.

JACK

ANDERSON

Consumers fight
credit bureaus

ELLEN GOODMAN

Making a living, living differ
In her head: An storm clock, a lipstick,
p a n ty h o se , gasoline, a b a n k ca rd ...m on ey
m ovin g around the elaborate circuit w e call the
econom y. W hat does It take here? T w o hands.
F or m ost o f the year, the w om an on the
muaael flats "m akes a liv in g ." She produces
sentences In a building constructed for people
S o she la up and dressed for success In this
w h o m ake and sell sentences In return for
venture. On her feet, a pair o f blue and gray
paychecks deposited and w ithdraw n In banks
r e e f walkers. A bove them, faded green cotton
created for their convenience and their debt.
pants rolled up to the knee and b earin g berry
stains from seasons post. A b o v e that, a red ■ T h e reward for people w ho "m a k e a livin g ” Is,
|f th ey are lucky, a few w eeks in a place where
T-shirt, and a blue baseball cap ad vertisin g the
it seem s possible to sim ply live. A n d to live
local market.
sim ply.
In the city where she lives moat o f the year,
I f the wom an sounds rom antic about the
this fashion style could be faithfully described
country, she to not really. She has no desire to
os dork, full dork. or. In the language o f
Uve o ff the land In February. She has watched
fashion, dorque. T o complete the overall look,
h er neighbors here do the hard w ork o f
she Is carrying a vintage mesh potato sack for
bringing in that other island crop, lobster.
her hunting and gathering.
W a ter doesn't wholly
in su la te th is place
Th us attired, the woman heads dow n the dirt
from the world.
ro a d to th e ocean. S h e p a s s e s b y th e
S h e k n o w s that
blackberries, their prickly branches h eavy w ith
p e o p le w a n t m ore
breakfast fruit. She barely stops to Inspect the
than fish and berries.
raspberries that have acquired the fin e m old
T h e y want heat In
that signals the end o f their season. She w ill
the winter, beds in
com e back to them later.
their hom es, college
for their kids. They
A t the water’s edge, she m akes her w a y over
w ant candy bare and
the rocks whose vast crop o f m ussels are only
VCRs.
tem porarily exposed to the air. Carefully, she
But she also knows
clam bers over this space, lifting great clum ps
that aa these wants
o f seaweed, as small crabs scam per aw ay. She
expand like a mail­
carefully chooses her spots, places w h ere the
order catalog, some­
biggest blue-black mussels have the fewest
f The reward for
th in g else to added to
barnacles.
to m aking a
th e A m erican wish
She Is shopping fussy as a n y bu yer tor a
liv in g (a a faw
list. T h e longing for
trendy urban kitchen, picking the finest foods
vrssks In a
tim e.
available at the market. But w hat a di fferent
place to
A sk fam ilies what
sort o f marketplace this Is. A s th e loosens the
sim ply live. £
th ey w ant and the
beards (hat connect these, mussels to the rocks,
sam e answer comes
sh e finds herself overwhelm ed b y the natural
out: Tim e. Som e tell
bounty o f this season and this place. By the
the pollsters that they would exchange m oney
ease o f putting food on her Island table.
for tim e, literally buy It if they could. Others
e
x p r e s s It In a d e sire to s h o rtc u t th e
Mussels, raspberries, blackberries, m ackerel.
com plicated and unnatural cycle that takes
T h ese are the free meals that she gathers from
them around the days like a slock car in an
this Island. What, she muses Ironically, would
interm inable race.
It take to get such delicacies in the c ity ? How
S o on a summer day. up to her ankles In the
m an y extra steps have been put betw een us
rising tide, she to grateful for what to here for
and dinner In the urban obstacle course? An
the picking, mussels and peace o f mind.
education to get a Job to get a paycheck to get a
W
alking back this country road w ith tonight's
ca r to drive on roads that ore paved to get us lo
dinner, she to saving time, aware as only a city
the store from one direction and the food from
dw eller can.bc. o f the luxury In livin g hand lo
unothcr. Th at Is lust the beginning.
m outh. How simple life to when you can want
W hat does It take to bring hom e the bacon or
w hat to at hand.
berries In the city? Another random Hot form s

C A S C O B A Y . Maine - It to ea rly m orning,
but the clock that this w om an w atches so
du tifu lly all yea r to unimportant here. T h e tide
la w hat m atters And muaael beds d o not stay
op en 24 hours a day.

W A S H IN G T O N W h a t sp a w n s m ore
consum er complaints than any product or
service, m ore even than a used car? Credit
bureaus are the thing that, m ost bedevils
A m erican consumers, according to the Fed­
eral Trade Commission.
For m ost people, their credit rating to the
single m ast Important record fo r their future
aa a buyer and even as a worker. Yet. even If
y o u r credit to sterling, you r credit rating m ay
b e poor, and you could be the last to know. A
recent survey by Consum ers' Union o f 161
credit reports revealed that 19 percent o f
them contained mistakes serious enough to
disqualify someone for a loan,
r*" You rcan hsk for a
co p y o f you r file from
o n e o r a ll o f . the.
s e v e r a l co m p a n ies
that keep and sell
credit histories, but
you w on't get all o f it.
T h e c re d it bureau
w ill give you a sum­
m ary o f your credit
history, but It will
hold back the rating
It a s s ig n s to you
baaed on that histo­
ry. And the rating
could be unfair even
If the credit history to
accurate.
f You can ask
Figuring out that
for you r fila ,
y o u r c re d it rep ort
but you w on't
contains an error to
get a llo t It. J
on ly the beginning o f
the battle. Correcting
that error to like try­
in g to change a fingerprint. Even If you
persuade the creditor and the credit bureau to
put their heads together and correct your flic,
the reporting system to such that the sam e
error could spring out o f the com puter and
Into the (lie at a later date like an unwanted
com puter virus.
Th ere to no shortage o f nightm are stories.
One woman discovered that her credit report
at tw o agencies Included not only her history,
but her mother’s debts too. and her m other
had a huge mortgage.
A n attorney found out that her credit report
showed that she was long overdue on a
m easly $19 payment on a departm ent store
credit card. The truth was, she had returned
the credit card five years earlier and had
never received any statement from the store
It to not unusual for a credit report to show
that a person opened a credit account when
they didn't, or still ow es m oney on a bill
w hen thev don’ L
Even If you never ask for another loan In
you r life, an Inaccurate credit report can bu m
you because the credit bureaus sell the
In fo rm a tio n to in d ivid u a ls, b u sin esses,
banks. landlords, em ployers and Insurance
companies.
Som e consumers arc fighting back against
the odds. Six states have (lied lawsuits
against T R W . one o f the biggest credit
reporting agencies. One o f those suits accuses
T R W o f being Indifferent to the accuracy o(
Its data and slow lo correct errors. It also
alleges that T R W to peddling confidential
financial Information
Consumer groups want credit Inform ation
circulated less and credit bureaus punished
more. And they want a law saying all people
should be given a free copy o f their credit
report every year. The House Subcom m ittee
on Consumer Affairs to expected to unveil
legislation this (all (o m ake some changes In
the law. but until then, there are a few things
a consumer can do:
— Get a copy o f your credit reports from all
the major credit bureaus al least annually
und check them for errors. It w ill cost you up
to $2 per report.
— Demand a copy o f your credit report If
you are turned down for a loan or credit. If
the rejection was based on the credit report,
you are entitled under the taw to a free copy.

I

&lt;4

�Sanford HsrsM. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 29, 1441 - SA

Changes-

School

cxpccunions oi me scnooi were
not m y high,'* Castor said,
"W e 'v e got to Increase the
expectations o f schools. parents
and others."
T h e commlaatoner sold tight
budgets hove districts at a dto

The recently'demolished
school has been cleared away
and the new butldiaga tan*
atrueted at the bach af the

school year. Cantor aaht "O u r
present ranking o f 27th am ong
Mirefttetoacftsresnd totes.
the 50 states will probably drop
because o f our low budget."
T e a c h e r p a y a la o h a s n 't
School.
__________ budged. Castor aaht. Moat dtot £ 3 !S Z
trtrt* h aw "** ntfpmitd salary
h o ^ n a w tln a . TUe****y *
* &lt; recmcnt*
teachers, but
’****'
where they have been reached.
those w ho are not as increases have avenged only 1.5
about the start o f achool percent: she aald.
■might be. the first day off
At the aame time, the num ber
lay. Sept. 3.
of students continues to grow.

M l Peer gratas andhares

school's niehaaaia or
"We tooh a pod of tha students
and they Ufccd the Bravos." he
■aid. "so we kept tt.”
High
a^ tdentt In Send*
note County face the meet
—
•jMuwi’SSjreswsi iw
§||mk jums
mU
coauiccxi
ma &gt;me
co$nIin
*

tMAi
yoga •

garter i t * hrg times and the

The public schools enroll about
2 mutton, up m ore than 79.000
this fall.
Many teacher vacancies are *
unfilled because o f budget pro­
blem s. Castor aald. "Classroom s
arc going to be more crow ded."
In th e o p e n in g w e e k s o l
achool. education officials will
detail how many students show
up. how m any teacher posts go
unfilled and now large classes
are, to back next year's budget
re q u e st to th e L e g isla tu re .

Helping Improve curriculum
offerings this year w ill be a $7.0
million National Science Foun­
dation grant to r edesign math
and science education, and a
$3.5 m illion "T ech Prep" jobtraining program for students
aim ing at careen In technical
fields rather than college. Castor
T h e r e w i l l a la o b e n e w
technology In the classroom. In
(h e form o f an Interactive video
disc teaching system developed
by the Florida Deportment of
Education and AB C New s In­
teractive.

Throe R$
At the heart of**
3000" to the N ew Am erican
Schools concept. It calls far tha
creation by IM S o f 539 "nontraditional achooto" — one In
each of the natton'a 498 eon*
grcMionai osscncis Ana

to creativity that can lend to
Funding to atari these achooto
rould come partially from the
federal governm ent, partially
from state and local revenues
and partially from New Am eri­

can Schools Development Corp..
a privately funded, not-for-profit
corporation eatabltohed by Intereated buatnesa leaders. Once the
achoola are eaubltohed. con­
tinued funding would come from
local communities.
Other key proposals in th e
Bush educational package:
U S. standards: A presidential
panel w ill report by the end of

1991 on what should be the
e d u c a t io n a l a ta n d a r d a fo r
prim ary and secondary stu ­
dents,

School choice: T h is w ould
provide Incentives to states and
localities to allow parents to
choose the schools they want
th e ir c h ild re n to attend —

National tests: Voluntary na­
tionwide Am erican Achievement
Tests in five core subjects —
English, math, science, history
and geography — would aaacaa
student progress state by state.

p u b lic ,

p riv a te

o r c h u rc h -

s u p p o r te d . Limited U.S. funding

w ould be provided through a
vou ch er system , allo w in g a
student to take his or her share

o f federally allocated money to
the chosen school.
Teacher pay: A system to
identify and reward teachers of
■ p ei c
d laa l m e r i t w o u l d b e
established.
Alternative certification: Some
national system to allow easy
m id-career entry Into teaching
would be created.

Stenstromfound a note
Instructng him to d e a r out a
storage room. In It be found the
plaques. W ith H C A approval
Vincent turned the plaques over
to ua a n d w e h a v e th em .
Frfonds. these plaques are going
to be the basis of a num ber of
yam s stwcM oH Sanford famlltes.
For Instance, on m y desk to a
plaque which reads "In Memory
ofM .D .O ateh d ."
That doesn't m ean a thing to
moot o f you late com ers to
Sanford but what a story It tells
and we want to share it with
you.
W ho w as M.D. Oatchet? He
in a a native o f gpringftold. 111.
He 'w as 'a widower whan he
moved to Sanford In 1907 to
form celery. Com ing w ith him
were sona Forest ana Arthur and
two daughters. O ladys and Mary
C am eron. T h ere w ere three
other sons who did not come
south.
But the O atchd'a beginning In
the celery business didn’t get off
the ground. A freexe ruined the
first crop completely. T h e elder
Oatchel rented an old frame
building on the southwest corner
of Celery and MeionvlUe and
opened a grocery store. Hto son.
Forest, In his teens, worked for
hto dad and remained a part of
the business until 1933 when be
opened his own grocery at what
la now 406 Sanford Ave. Later
he bought 400. 403 and 404
Sanford Ave. — the area once
occupied by the Salvation Arm y
Thrift Store, and started his own
store.
Meanwhile Forest m et and
married a young lady named
Ruth Stewart. That w as in 1914.
Her father produced all kinds of
floral plants and ferns.
The Forest Oatchels added to
th eir fam ily In 1917 w hen
Stewart waa bom and In 1934
when David came along. Stewart
atten d ed old S a n fo rd High
School but got moat o f hla
s e c o n d a r y s c h o o l i n g at
Montverde Academy on the west
shore of Lake Apopka. Hla folks
then sent him to Marlon Military
Institute at Marlon, A la. He
spent two years there and a third
as a graduate instructor before

he got an appointment to W est
Point. In 1943. he married a
Seminole High music teacher.
Stew art's brother David grad­
uated from Seminole High In
1943. He enrolled at Clemaon In
South Carolina. In 1946. he
m arried Patty Hodge. Patty’s
dad waa pretty well known In
Sanford. Ftret. he waa a superin­
tendent at the Florida Power ft
Light Company plant near the
St. Johns River bridges. But to
■porta tons he w as a champion­
ship southpaw softball pitcher
for local team s in the city softball
program run by E.H. CuUum.
W hite David w as going to school
at Ctemaon. Patty was getting
In the late 1940‘s and early
1960*8 the methods of buying
groceries rhangrd considerably.

W est Carter Street. DeLand. died
R alph E. D avis. 67. 1231 Thursday at hto residence. Bom
O xford Road. M aitland, died Jan. 7. 1934, In Poughkeepsie.
N.Y.. he moved to DeLand in
Friday at hto residence. Bom
M ay 8, 1934. In East Orange.
1968 from Key West. He waa
N J .. he moved to Maitland from former police chief for the Lady
Arlington. V s.. In 1961. He was Lake Police Department and an
the owner and operator o f the EplacopbUan. He was a Marine
Bicycle Castle In Casselberry C o r p . V i e t n a m v e t e r a n , a
an a retired aa manager o f Me- m em ber of (he VFW Post 8093.
C rory Five and Ten Stores. DeBary. Am erican Legion Poet
Sanford, after 35 years. He w as a 4 0 0 . K e y W e s t . V i e t n a m
Navy veteran of W orld W ar 11 Helicopter Crewm em ber Associ­
and a m em ber of Faith Baptist ation.
Survivors Include wife, Lynda
Church. Orlando. He was a Paul
H arris Fellow, charter m em ber J „ DeLand. mother, Dorothy
o f the Rotary d u b , of Cassel­ M a c . D e B a r y ; d a u g h t e r .
berry. a former member o f the Katherine C . D eL eon . East
Sanford Rotary C lu b an d a Falm outh. M ass.: six gran d ­
m em ber of the Florida Audubon children.
Stephen R. BuldaufT Funeral
Society.
Survivors Include wife. Bobble Home. Deltona, In charge of
Lee: daughters, Betty Romlne, arrangements.
W aslUa. Alaska, Peggy Wilson.
L o n gw o o d . N ancy. S an ford.
W endy Lemons. Apopka. Tracy
B lakem an . T itusville; sister,
Jean Schmllx, Bloomfield. N.J.;
10 grandchildren.
Caines Funeral Home. Longwood. In charge of arrange­
ments.

(Gflnm a m M m m ftffl

M ® ffM a i

W hat w e offer:
• Extensive knowledge o f Florida law governing
real property assessments.
• Designated ad valorem appraisers
• Long term knowledge o f local markets
• Extensive knowledge o f Florida taw governing
real property assessments
• Advice for beat real property tax advantages
• Review o f real property for equity in tax
• Exam ination o f special assessment situations
• Annual status report o f properties
• Pursuit of tax assessment change where
warranted.*’

CMrJO 2{mnCxpmima3* Cmkdjimiia TaxOffice
‘I x - l r c h h o f f

**fl^ a ? so c ia te s

ever to appear In Sanford.
David got Into municipal ad­
ministration when he accepted a
jo b aa city m anager for Femandina Beach. He later served the
City o f DelRay Beach. Metairie.
La., and Deerfield Beach. *
After coming to Sanford as a
widower, as we get back to M.D.
Oatchel. a young lady named
Roberta Lynch went to work for
the elder Oatchel baking bread,
rolls, buns, cakes and what have
you for M .D.'s customers. They
m arried. After M.D. died Roberta
got Into the catering business
and for years catered the weekly
luncheon meetings of the San­
ford Kiwanto Club. T o put It
plainly. Roberta fell In love with
her Klwantona and the Klwanlans fell in love with her. After
her death she left most of her
estate to the Sanford Kiwanto

Club. And. in her honor the
Klwantona each year select one
o f Sanford's outstanding ladles
(o receive (he Roberta Oatchel
Aw ard each year.
And. to her honor, w e salute
her In furnishing a room at
Seminole Memorial Hospital In
memory of her late husband.
M.D. Oatchel. to serve the people
she loved. But she won't be
forgotten by the people who
loved her.

Your children
need to KOOiv
abouMruos.

Cone And
Eqjoy An Hour
Performance
At 3 :* PM On
Oct* At
of The Arts.
The oartnenhip o f Miriam ft Valerie
has become a symbol of their commitment to dance. They
are two o f the most successful dance teachers around,
conrimnlty producing graduates who are dancing profes­
sionally ail over the world. Their meticulously trained stu­
dents work within a strictly supervised curriculum. Cultivat­
ing the talents of each (fencer individually, is their specialty!

CallNowFor SchedulesAnd
________ Registration________
SPE C IA L O P E N H O U SE H O U R S:
Aag. 24tb thru 3$tfc 5 *6 to 1:46 PM
Satardsy Aag. 31st f * $ to Noon

GradedLevel Classes,
Begin Tuee, Sept. 3rd A Valerie's P o lic e / cf? S ta n ce Sz&amp;fo
CHILDREN • TEENS • ADULTS

Ballet •Tap* Jazz
•Musical Theatre
•Tumbling
•Mother/Ckild Tap

a im o m m s

i

LA K E M ARY
2560 ELM
AVE.
1

345 LAKE M ARY BLVD.
The Oaks Shopping Ctr.

I
V B LU H A
Gold’s Gym at Market
Place Orange CMy
ttS -3

Jam es John Kolbinsklc. 57.

IR®®11 IPir®ip®fffty T a x

new.

At one time the lady o f the house
Company o f Jacksonville, owned
would call her grocery list Into
by (he Davis Brothers, actually
her grocer and II w ould be
owned and operated the Pigdelivered to her door. But those
gly-W Igglys. the W lnn-Lovett
d a y s w e n t b y th e b o a rd s ,
O ro certerlaa a n d the T a b le
especially when the chain stores Supply stores.
took over — and take over
Forest and hto son Stewart got
Sanford they did. Remember the
into the food locker business
Plggly-W lggly store at Pin t and
where the Rich Plan to now
M agnolia. Lovett's Grocerterla
situated at 13th Street and Elm
on the 100 block o f East First
Avenue. Stewart also went Into
Street. Riley’s next to Laney’a
teaching and wife, Dorothy, waa
D rug Store on East First Street. also teaching.
Table Supply at W est First and
Meanwhile David served two
Oak, Margaret A n n 's on East y e a rs on the S a n fo rd City
First Street, the AftP at Second Com m ission and resigned to
and Magnolia, etc?
accept an appointment to re­
T h e r e ' s a y a m In alm ost
place O.P. Herndon, long time
everyone of these stores but
clerk of the circuit court. W hen
Forest and hto sow Stewart told
hto term expired he waa defeated
their Sanford Avtress store- In * for the office. D avid accepted an
1947 to Table Supply. O f course, offer to sign on with Chase ft
what a lot of folks didn't realise Company as an accountant with
that the W lnn-Lovett Grocery
the first on line IBM com puters

Call For
a Free
Consultation

M IL L IO N S T O L E N D
• Tax D ed u ctible BUI C onsolidation L o a n s
• C om pletion L oan s F or H o u ses U n d er
C on struction
• H om e E quity/H om e Im provem ent L oan s
• C on struction to Perm anent First
M ortgage L o an s, on ly one closing.
• Lot L o a n s
• F irst M ortgage L o a n s - Purch ase o r R efinance

•
•
•
•
•
•

C a sh O u t Investor R efinances
Sw im m ing Pool C onstruction L oan s
95% E quity Financing Loan s
C om m ercial Loans
M obile H om es W ith land U p T o 3 0 Y e a rs Finance
8 0 % P u rch ase M oney O w n er O ccu p ied Fixed
R ate W ith N o Incom e.

• KCN M0K10AM CORPORATION OFFSRS TNI LOWEST RATES W/ SUPERIOR
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A Call M ay Nr Currant Ratau and Nagraw A
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Daytona Botch Area

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• Orlando Area
740-8889

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774-4404

•Orange City Area

774-4404

•Daltona Arts

574-4070

•Sanford /Lake Mary

574-4070

Mon.-Thur. 8 3 0 to 5 3 0
Fri. 8 3 0 to 5:00
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00
Licsnssd Mortgage
Brokerage Business

• FOH OUS C U S to M M COMVtNCNCX. P U A K COMUCT OUN OCLTON* Of FCS THNOUQH VCUS U XM . M CA NUUSISISTIO ASOVf OK CS.L CCXUCT.

�•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 25, 1991

Fall T V season no big shakes
By DEBORAH H A STIN G S
A PTelevislon Writer___________

Cable m a rk e ts

LOS A N O E L E S - W ith all the
scream ing b y netw ork execu­
tives about Arm ageddon In the
television Industry, you 'd think
these gu ys w ould m ake better
use o f the fall season.
Say. for exam ple, as a way to
reclaim view ers headed for cable
ftl^a*
IWWlAwdbi
UAH
4JS&amp;010
and vid eo rentals. And. Just as a
Loa Angola*
2,844,470
‘ th ou gh t, as a sh ow case fo r
first-rate. made-for-TV movies.
1JSSA70
Or. per chance, to purvey In­
1,576,000
n ova tive dram a and com edy
1317,630
series.
San Francisco • Oak. - San J o m
But then, no one has ever
1,437300
a ccu sed a n e tw o rk head o f
Datroi
1.007300
con sisten tly th in k in g w ith a
waanmgion,
u.o.
900380
clear one.
So, It should com e as no
800,410
s u r p r is e In th e s e tim e s o f
Tampa - St. Peto. Sarasota
802,700
shrinking netw ork audiences,
dw indling advertising revenues
and predictions o f eternal dam ­
n a tio n th a t th e B ig T h r e e Tha metropolitan market araa with the moat household* wired for cable la
networks are using the upcom ­ Naw York CHy, whara mora than 4 mMton homaa hava cable. Lot Am ato* la
ing fall scuson as an opportunity a rather distant second, with Just under 3 mMon homae wired tor cable.
to hide.
Sim psons" creators Jam es L. Another rare bright spot. This
Instead o f re in v e n tin g the Brooks and Sam Sim on.
dram a set In the late 1950s
w heel, netw ork program m ers
"S tep By S tep ." Friday. Sept. chronicles blacks and w hites In
seem content to spin It with 2 0 . 8 :3 0 p .m . O n e o f t h e
the Deep South. From the cre­
formulaic m ediocrity.
"been-there-done-that" show s. ators o f "Northern Exposure.'
W hen the upcom ing season Suzanne Som ers and Patrick Sam W aterslon (" T h e Killing
hits full swing, ABC w ill have Duffy star as a recently m arried
F ield s") stars.
two shows about sisters. "S lb s " c o u p le w ith a to ta l o f a lx
"Flesh 'n Blood." Thursday.
and "G ood &amp; E v il." NBC has children from previous nuptials. Sept. 19. 10 p.m. (preview ).
one, aptly titled "S isters."
P e rh a p s t h e ' w o r s t o f th e
T im e period premiere, Friday,
A m ong their new and return­ wasteland.
Sept. 20, 9:30 p.m. D avid Keith
ing shows, each network also
"H om efron t." Tuesday. Sept. (" A n Officer and a G en tlem an")
will have: a program set In the 24. 9:30 p.m. (special 90-minute stars In this comedy from the
past; at least one reality series: a p r e m i e r e ) . O n e o f t h e
producers o f "C h eers" about a
sitcom In w hich there are too set-ln-the-past shows. Ensem ble
country con man and his sister,
m any children In too small a cast in a one-hour drama about
w h o was given up for adoption at
house: and an action adventure life following W orld W ar II.
birth.
scries starring a handsome man.
"G ood &amp; E v il," W ednesday.
"R e a s o n a b le D o u b ts ."
a beautiful w om an, o r tw o old Sept. 25, 10:30 p.m . Another Thursday, Sept. 26, 10 p.m.
coots.
(preview). Friday. Sept. 27. 10
s la t e r 's h o w . T e r l G a rr and
Th ere arc sm all oases In this Margaret W hitton star as good
p.m., lim e period premiere. Mark
vast wasteland, but they occur and bad sisters In this sitcom
Harmon and hearing-impaired
about as often as waterfalls In from the creators o f "S o a p ."
actress Marlee Matlin star In this
the Sahara.
legal series about a d ea f pro­
"A m e r ic a n D e t e c t iv e ."
What follow s Is a thumbnail Thursday. Sept. 26. 9:30 p.m.
secutor and a cop.
" T h e Torkelsons." Saturday.
sketch o f each network's new
Reality series about cops, on and
series and their premiere dates.
ofT-duty.
Sept. 21. 8:30 p.m. Another
too-many-klds show, this one set
"F B I: Th e Untold S to ries ."
ABC
In Pyram id Comers. Okla.. and
Thursday. Sept. 26. 9 p.m .
d e p ic tin g life w ith a sin gle
"H o m e Im p r o v e m e n t,"
Another reality show, this one
hosted by Pem ell Roberts, and
m other and six offspring.
Tuesday. Sept. 17, 8:30 p.m.
taken from FBI cases dating
One o f the oases. Comedian Tim
"N u rse s." Saturday. Sept. 14,
Allen plays T im Taylor, con­ from the mid- 1970s.
9:30 p.m. Sitcom about one male
and four fem ale nurses. From
" T h e C o m m lsh ." Saturday.
fused m anly man and host o f a
Sept. 28. 9 p.m. (two-hour de­ creators o f "T h e Golden Qfrla"
cable T V h om e-im provem ent
show.
and "E m pty Nest."
but). Michael Chtklls plays Police
" T h e Adventures o f Mark and
" S lb s ." Tuesday. Sept. 17. C om m issioner T o n y S e a l!, a
Brian," Sunday. Sept. 15. 7 p,m.
9:30 p.m . {s p e c ia l1 p re view ).
pau n ch y p ro fe s s io n a l w h o 'd
Fantasy show starring tw o Los
Tim e period premiere W ednes­ rather eat than chase bad guys.
A ngeles disc Jockeys.
day. Sept. 25. 9:30 p.m. One o f
" E e r ie . In d ia n a ." S u nday.
the sister show s. Marsha Mason NBC
. !"i*» Fly Away.',' Tuesday. .Oct. Sept. 15. 7:30 p.m. Fantasy
stars as the older sibling of three
show starring real actors In
t ig h t k n ll. sisters. .Frpm " T h p , 8. 8 p.m. (two-hour premier^).

TONY BU88IIN81IBANCE
P k . IS S 4 S U I
SS7 S S . F re a e h A v e .

^Auto-Owner* Insurance
I We. H m w c. t a r. H in H w v * . O u r w a r *»»» A sH .

gJPpWifg ?!

#

Horroll I bwrly

M
Whan the TV networks turn to news
w p t n i, m oor c n o tc M

lin o

to

m

■Traiwmsflons I

-w -:

»\tV i p * ' ’ .k

M rr
E mm.
S'"-' K'

*

rather that critics ol the political **•
series about a weird, small town.
"M a n o f the P eop le." Sunday.
Sept. 15. 8 p.m. Jam es Garner
retu rn s to television In this
com ed y about a con man w ho
assum es his dead w ife's city
council seat.
" P a c ific S t a t io n ." S u nday.
S e p t. 15. 8 :3 0 p.m . R obert
G u illa u m e plays a buttoneddow n veteran cop assigned to
th e eccentric beach com m unity
o f Venice. Calif.

CB 8
" T h e Carol Burnett S h o w ."
Friday, no prem iere date set.
Burnett returns to television In a

□ •e e N e w

Pag* 7A

NEW KINDERGARTEN PROGRAM
Limited Enrollment
• Providing Individual Attention

With A C hristian Touch
Mrs. Sue Chapin, Corrective Reading Teacher has
16yearsexperience with Kindergarten. A well-rounded
program stressing reading readiness and social skills
especially suitable for the 5 year old. Meadows Ele­
mentary is located in a beautiful, quiet country setting
on 13 acres on C.R. 427 approximately 2 miles north
o f 17-92 in Sanford. 'The Meadows" also has open­
ings in the 3rd, 4th, -5th and 6th grades.

Jean Carbon, Principal

'Excellencefor EkrnUy"
0018 N. County Road 427
Sanford, FL 32773

322-7910

W h a t W o u ld Y ou
L ik e To K n o w ?
PEOPLE ITEMS
Hems accompanied by pictures about the accom­
plishments of children end adult residents of Seminole
County are eligible for publication. Submit typewritten or
neatly written Herns to People Editor, Sanford Herald,
300 N. Franch Ava., Sanford, Fix 32771. Include name
and daytime phone number of person who may answer
questions.

RELIGION

5 =

S

3

O Jz j

~

Items about religious services or social activities
sponsored by achurch or synagogue in Seminole County
ere eligible for publication on the Religion Page each
Friday. Submit items no later than noon Wednesday
prior to the day of publication to Religion Editor. Include
the name and daytime telephone number of a person
who
answer questions.

muy

RETURN PHOTO PO LICY

How Do I Roport A Nows Tip?
It you sea something newsworthy, let us know. Call
the Herald and ask lor the news editor as soon as
possible.

O thor Itoms Off
BU SIN ESS BRIEFS
Announcements ot new businesses in Seminole
County, changes in locations and personnel promotions
and awards or other business distinctions are elegible
lor publication in the Sunday Business Briefs column.
Submit typewritten items to the Business Editor along
with a picture il appropriate and include the name and
daytime telephone number ot a person who may be
contacted to answer questions. The deadline is noon
Wednesday prior to the Sunday ol publication.

ENTERTAINM ENT
Organized events of an entertainment, recreational or
leisure nature in Seminole County are publicized in the
Weekend Planner each Friday. The deadline is noon
Tuesday prior to the Friday ot publication. Submit type­
written contributions to Weekend Planner.

C LU B , ORGANIZATION NEW S
News about social and service clubs and organiza­
tions in Seminole County is elegible lor publication.
Group publicity chairmen should submit typewritten
press releases to People Editor. The deadline is noon
three days prior to an event or as soon alter the event as
possible.

Photographs submitted to the Herald for publication
will be returned if that is requested. An addressed
envelope large enough to accommodate the picture and
carrying sufficient postage should be provided. Pictures
may be picked up at the newspaper within two days of
publication if a request to save the picture has also b een .
submitted.

How Do I Announco A
W odding O r ingogom ont?
People wishing to have their engagement or wedding
announcement published in the Sanford herald must
submit the appropriate tojm to the Sanford Herald people
editor. Completed engagement forms must be submit­
ted at least 20 days prior to the wedding. Wadding forms
should be submitted as soon after the wedding as
possible.
The forms provide the basis lor information that will
appear in the announcement. The forms are available at
the newspaper office or by sending an addressed,
stamped envelope to Engagements (or Weddings).
Hdesired, the completed forms may be accompanied
by a photograph (profassonal preferred) of any size to
be published in black and white with the announcement.
The newspaper reserve* the right to reject any photo­
graph that it cannot reproduce.
Photographs may be picked up after publicarion or
can be roturnod by mail if accompanied with an SASE.
Engagements and weddings are published in the
Sanford Herald Sunday edition of the People section.

Is Thors A nything I Should
Know About W riting Lottors
To Tho lefitor?
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters should be
typewritten or written legibly, signed and include a
mailing address and a daytime telephone number. The
letters should be on a single subject and should be as
brief as possible. Letters are subject to editing.

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CIo m H M A d?
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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 25, 1901 - TA

Bush wants reforms before aid
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W M I# O r A IK M fV O fl C O U IO 0 9 S w i p p M

TE H R A N , Iran — An Iranian source said Saturday that
Lebanese kidnappers could free A m erica n hostage T e rry
Anderson or British church envoy Terry W a ite If Israel released
a Jailed Shiite Muslim cleric.
Israel responded It was w illing to fre e Sheik A b d u l Karim
Obeid, but on ly In a brooder swap that Includes th e Western
hostages and seven Israeli servicemen m iss in g in Lebanon.
o f freeing the remaining hoatages b elieved held
cap tive b y pro-Iranian groups have been raised b y Intensified
talks and the release earlier this m onth o f A m erican hostage
Edw ard T ra cy and British journalist John M cCarthy.

CtiMffMctoMmjrctorplot trial begins
HO USTON — A s cheerleaders ready routines fo r another
football season, a Texas woman heads fo r trial M onday on a
butane charge — trying to arrange a m u rd e r so h er daughter
could w in a place on a high school cheerleading squad.
T a p e record in gs o f conversations w ith W a n d a W eb b
H ollow ay, her farmer brother-in-law and a n undercover police
1 to be key evidence In the murder-for-hlre
Mrs. Houoway. 37. described by police a s “ the ultim ate stage
m oth er." Is accused o f plotting the m urder o f Verna Heath. 38.
the m other o f her daughter's chief r iv a l for a spot on the
Channehriew High School cheerleading squ ad.
She has pleaded Innocent and remains fr e e on 8 1 0 .0 0 0 bond.

Prison taktom M ltrt fourth day
T A L L A D E G A , Ala, — A truck carrying cem ent b locks rolled
into a federal prison Saturday with a bu ildu p o f cars, trucks
and vans as a takeover by hostage-taking Cuban Inmates
entered Its fourth day.
S ix o f 10 people prison w orkers h eld c a p tiv e In a
high-security unit at Talladega Federal C orrectional Institution
received medication overnight in the secon d m eeting with the
Inm ates through a grill.

Abortion factions 'tofrlo-too'
W IC H IT A . Kan. — Thousands o f abortlon-rlghta advocates
gathered Saturday on the banka o f the Arkan sas R iv e r to decry
six w eeks o f protests by a radical anti-abortion group.
" W e are goin g toe-to-toe with these b u llies ," Patricia Ireland,
president-elect o f the National Organisation for W om en, told
the crowd.
S o far 3,600 a n ests o f anti-abortion dem onstrators have been
m ade since they began trying to block en trances to clinics that
perform abortions. Many protesters h a v e been repeatedly
anested. T h e protest was organized b y the national anti­
abortion group Operation Rescue.
Anti-abortion forces scheduled a rally fo r Sunday featuring
evangelist the Rev. Pat Robertson o f the Christian Broadcasting
N etw ork as keynote speaker.

From Associated Frost reports

La k e M ary—

1A

1A

Miam i a r e * .J o h e lp , finance a
research ch air at th e University
o f M iam i that will be dedicated
to f i n d i n g o u t a b o u t t h e
neurological effects o f the AID S
virus.
Th e p h o to taken yesterday w ill
be used to accom pany a story
that w ill be published in the
daily p a p e r based In Tam pa.
Colem an, who w a s not at the
Saturday event beckuae o f fam i­
ly obligations out-of-town, had
said ea rlier in the w eek that she
hoped th e photos could be used
lo en courage other com m unities,
la r g e o r s m a ll, to b e g in
grassroots efforts to educate
people a b ou t AIDS.
C olem an had hoped that 100
or so p eop le would be on hand
for the photo, but had feared
that m a n y who arc willing to
work fo r the cause would not
want the publicity.
"M a n y , m any p eople w ork
hard fo r the cause, but do not
wish to h a v e any recognition for
what th ey d o ." she said.

has served as C ity Commission­
er fo r the past tw o consecutive
terms.
G e o r g e D u r y e a h a s a ls o
expressed his Intent to seek
reelectlon. "T h e re are a lot o f
th in g s le ft u ndon e in Lake
M a r y ." he said, "an d 1 feel
obligated to see them to comple­
tio n ." He added. 'T m not ready
to g iv e up y e t."
D uryea Is Just completing his
second 2-year term as a member
o f the Lake Mary City Com­
mission.
Lake Mary City Clerk Carol
Edwards has announced that
qualifying w ill begin at noon.
T u e s d a y . S ep tem b er 3. and
conclude at noon. Friday. Sep­
tem ber 27. Dally hours for quali­
fy in g at the C lerk's office will be
the regular hours o f operation at
the Lake Mary City Hall. IOC
Lake Mary Boulevard.

___________________ -F i— Mont Both
N a t io n a l S e c u r it y A d v i s e r B r e n t
Scowcroft. playing In a foursom e behind
Palm er and the president, hopped aboard a
g o lf cart to brief Bush on the 11th hole
about the news. Bush also fielded a call on
the ninth hole.
Bush, w h o has o ffe r e d th e S o v ie t s
technical h d p and partial m em bership In
such Western fending a gen cies as the W orld
Bank, said he sees no im m ediate need to
step up aid for Moscow as It struggles to get
both Its government and econ om y In order.
"T h e position o f the United States Is w ell
known. W e want to help. Eventually there
m ay be a w ay we can h elp w ith m oney. But
before that w e've got to ace reform s In the
Soviet Union.*' he said.
"W e got to know w h o w e 'r e dealin g with
In these ministries. T h e re 's Just a lot or
things that have to happen before w e can
m ove forw ard." he said.

Botched coup seen as blessing
in disguise for U.S. and Soviets
A n A P News A n a lysis

KENNEBUNKPORT. M aine In retrospect, th e B ush 'a d ­
ministration sees the botch ed
coup against Mikhail G orbach ev
almost as a blessing In disguise,
o ffe r in g u n e x p e c te d o p ­
portunities for sw M action o n a
bogged down agenda o f reform .
Th e sudden shock and d esp air
t h a t a c c o m p a n ie d t h e a n ­
nouncement o f the coup a w eek
ago gave way 63 hours later t o a
deep sigh o f re lie f w ith th e
collapse o f the plot.
Now. there Is a palpable aenae
o f optimism that things that
once seemed unlikely h a v e a
distinctly better chance o f b e in g
achieved.
" I m nothing In here but good
news in terms o f speeding u p the
zt," President Bush ob served
tweek.
D eputy S e c re ta ry o f S ta te
L a w ren ce E a g le b u r g e r w e n t
even further.
"W h ile t w ouldn't want t o e v e r
praise s coup. I think th e fr e t o f
the matter is that. In the a f­
termath o f that coup, the U nited
States is better o ff in the rela­
tionship with the Soviet U nion
than it would have been before
th at." Eagleburger said S a tu r­
day on CNN.
A s Bush sees It. everyth in g Is
breaking his way.
T h e Soviet hard-liners w h o
tried to block reform s have been
stripped from power, replaced b y
a generation o f vigorou s r e ­
formers. One o f the ch ief o p p o ­
n e n ts o f d ra m a tic s te p s to
o v e rh a u l th e e c o n o m y w a s
Prim e Minister Valentin P a vlo v,
a coup plotter w h o's In Jail.
T h e Communist Party Is in a
spiral of decline, and the K G B
an d m ilita r y h a v e b e e n
weakened.
Soviet citizens, w ho turned out
by the hundreds o f thousands In
defiance o f authorities, re g is ­
tered a strong mandate to m o v e
ahead on a course o f change.
That will be hard for G orbachev

C

A ID S

. * I&gt; that I
Iw ill run for reelectlon."
Mahoney

KENNEBUNKPORT. M aine - President
Bush said Satu rday th e U nited States
eventually m ay be able to provide ca sh to
the beleaguered Soviet econ om y, bu t not
before reforms take hold a n d he know s
" w h o w e 'r e d e a l i n g w i t h In t h e i e
m inistries."
T h e drama unfolding In Moscow kept
Intruding upon Bush's vacation , as national
security aides brought h im w ord on th e g o lf
course and w h ile boatin g about Mikhail
Gorbachev s decision to abandon the leader­
sh ip o f the Com m unist Pa rty.
Even before final confirm ation o f the
that Gorbachev w as q u ittin g as the p a rty 's
general secretary and u rg in g its Central
Com m ittee to disband. B ush reiterated his
assessment th a t " A ll o f th es e developm ents
... appear to b e w orking In th e favor o f the
UnttedStatas."
T h e W hite House kept a n official silence
moat o f the day. "W e 'r e a w a re o f the proas
reports," was depu ty press secretary Rom an
Popadiuk'e only com m ent.
Bush's outing on the C a p e Arundel G o lf
C lub with Arnold Palm er tw ic e was inter­
rupted by calls co n veyin g th e then uncon­
firm ed report that G orb a ch ev was quittin g
the party.

^The very fact that this
coup has taken place now in
my view removes some of
the roadblocks to econom ic
reform |

to ignore.
Freed o f constraints against
bold action. Gorbachev has been
th row n Into a power-sharing
alliance w ith Boris Yeltsin, the
reform -m inded Russian presi­
dent w ho stood up to the coup
plotters and spearheaded theli
downfall.
T h ere are no more excuses for
Gorbachev to stall reforms, the
adm inistration believes.
" T h e very fact that this coup
has taken place - In my view
rem oves som e o f the roadblocks
to econom ic reform ." Bush said
Saturday.
Putting aside his usual caution
on m ajor questions o f foreign
p o licy , Bush said all o f the
changes In the Soviet Unton
''appear to b e working In favor o f
the United States.”
In recent months. Gorbachev
has played conservatives against
liberals to Justify his plodding
steps toward economic and polit­
ical freedoms.
" H e (Gorbachev) can't point to
the conservatives and say. hey.
w e can't do any more than wc
a r e ." a senior administration
official said. "W e m ay In a sense
see the true Gorbachev coming
out m o re."
A m id th e a ir o f sta rtlin g
change, the administration Is
draw ing up a wish list It would
like to see fulfilled.
A t the top is the granting o f
Independence (o the Baltic slates
o f Lithuania. Estonia and Latvia.
Once considered a distant goal,
som e adm inistration officials
believe Independence will occur
w ithin six months.
" I n m y v ie w ," Bush said,
"th a t would d o more to enhance
goodw ill In the United States
than almost any other single
thing that could be done."
T h e administration also wants
Moscow to reduce Its military
spending and cut off aid lo Cuba.
A shift o f power from the
central government to the re­
publics appears Inevitable, par­
t i c u l a r l y b e c a u s e o f th e
en orm o u sly enhanced power

N ew seasonC o n tin u ed fr o m P a go 6 A

i

new variety show.
" T h e Royal Fam ily." Wednes­
day. Sept. 18. 8 p.m. Redd Foxx
and Della Reese star In this
sitcom about an Atlanla mall
carrier and his wife.
" T e e c h . " W ednesday. Sept.
18. 8:30 p.m. Comedy about
young, black music teacher from
the Inner city w ho lands Job at
an exclusive boys school.
“ Princesses." Friday. Sept. 27.
8 p.m. Julie Haggerty, Fran
Drescher and T w iggy Lawson
s h a r e o p u le n t M a n h a t ta n

apartment.
" B r o o k ly n B rid g e.” Friday,
Sept. 20, 8 p.m. A nother timeera program . This one Is set In
Brooklyn In the 1950s and stars
M arlon K o s s (fr o m “ H a p p y
Days").
"P a lace G u ard." Friday. 10
p.m., n o p rem iere date set.
Action adventure scries filmed in
Vancouver. B.C., about a form er
thief w h o now serves as head o f
security fo r a luxury hotel chain.
"P .S . I Luv U ," Saturday.
Sept. 21. 10 p.m. Action series
starring C on n ie S ellccca and

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"R o c ,* * S u n d a y . A u g . 2 5
(sneak preview). Tim e period
premiere. Sunday. Sept. 1. 8:3 0
p.m. Cast o f Broadway's " T h e
Plano L esson " stars In th is
comedy series about a w o r k ­
ing-class family.
" T h e U ltim ate C h a lle n g e ."
Friday, Sept. 13. 9 p.m. Onehou r reality p rogra m a b o u t

y
U

thrills, stunts and other reuMIfe,
hair-raising activities.
“ D rexell’s Class." Thursday.
Sept. 19. 8:30 p.m. Dabney
Colem an returns to T V In a
sitcom about a churlish teacher.
T itle has gone from "Shut Up.
K id s." to "O h No. Not Drexclt."
to "D re x ell's Class."
"H e r m a n 's Hcud." Sunday.
Sept. 8. 9:30 p.m. T V viewers
have a ringside seat Into the
brain o f Hcrmun. an aspiring
w riter grappling with the ugly
business world. Formerly tilled
“ A ll in Your Head."

O r 4• v
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F O R M E R T E X A C O S T A T IO N S

imaf * 11 *. «*. * m*. m .

UOSTCAftS C a ^ w E « M 1 » l1

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two. n u n .

G reg Lvtgan about a New Y ork
cop and his Informant w h o are
forced to pose as husband and
w ife &lt;n a w itness protection
program In Palm Springs.

©

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1021 Lh Road, Oriaado * 3406 Edatwater Driw. Ortaado
2211 AJoma Await, Witter Puli ★ 203 Highway 416, Ottiia
600 South Woodlaad Soalawrd 4 Watt Volusia, Da lute
To bt auctlontd on at tire Parti Suites, 434 41*4, Orlando

7 P.M. ★ FRIDAY * SEPTEMBER 13
B U Y E R &amp; IE MUE R INUE M N I f I CA I ION

p l u s o th er f o r m e r t ix a c o s it e s im
Miami• Coni Bates*Date •NaUfMte*Ft. ItaCartte • Twn#» •
Ocala * Tallahaaaas *late Cfo * JackaamtlUt«O r t f Part *Casta

SEPT. 9 -10 -11 -12
* SOME SOLD ABSOLUTE A CALL FOR BROCHURE

Aucrion C o m p a n y o f Am er iea

27tOOrtando Dr.. Sanford
(Hwy. 17-92)
H O N • FRL M • SATURDAY S 4

Bush, who hosts the leaders o f Canada
and Britain at his W alker’s Point retreat this
week, said he feels no pressure from allies lo
boost aid to the Soviets.
" I have not been contacted b y any single
m em ber o f the G-7 (Group o f Seven ) w ith
that In mind. Nobody has suggested that to
m e ," heated.
Gorbachev, under pressure from Russian
Federation President Boris Yeltsin w h o
helped thwart the coup, has purged hard­
lin ers atop the KGB. m ilitary. Interior
Ministry and other agencies.
T h e Ukraine declared Its Independence
from the Kremlin Saturday, and Yeltsin
reportedly moved to recognize Estonia's
Independence. Russia has previously re­
cognized Lithuania’s Independence.
T h e three Baltic states — Lithuania.
Latvia and Estonia — form ally asked the
State Department Thursday for recognition.
T h e United States supports their bid for
independence, but has slopped short o f
form ally recognizing their governm ents.
" I feel under no pressure to d a y " on the
Baltics, Bush said. " W e 'r e goin g to see what
happens there."
Bush reiterated that he hopes the changes
in Moscow will "accelerate the econom ic
reforms. I hope that It would en able them lo
take some o f the steps that perhaps they
haven't taken."

i hijui /v»

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and p re s tig e o f Y eltsin ,
adm inistration believes.

the

• 'T h e r e 's p ro b a b ly been a
m ove toward the ability o f the
republics to g et pretty much
w h a t th e y w a n t b eca u se
G orbach ev doesn’ t have the kind
o f pow er base” he once had. the
se n io r a d m in istra tio n official
said.

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B ro k ers Sem in ar • Sept. 3 —

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H oliday Inn • 12125 High Tach Ave * O rlando
P ro p a illa s O pan for Inspection 1:00 p.m. • 4:00 p.m.
August 31 A Sept 1 * Sept 7 4 8
Properties in: Altamonte Sponge, Atlantic Such, Casselberry. Daytona Beach.
Deland. Deltona. Fern Park, Holly Hrll, Lake Helen, Mew Smyrrv) Beach. Ocala.
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JO E M A A S IN T E R N A TIO N A L , IN C .

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IN B R I E F
ivnpowms Anonymous onoroo
of Im potence" to the topic o f the next
"Im potents Anonym ous" meeting on Monday at 7 p.tn. in the
» &gt; n ^ Conference Center at Florida Hospital. Altamonte. 601
E. Altamonte Drive.
Endocrinologist Carlos A. Pacheco. M.D.. will be the guest
Florida Hospital Altamonte sponsors the meetings for men
w ho are affected by impotence and want to leant more about
Its causes and treatment. W ives and friends are welcome to
attend this special meeting which Is Tree and open to the
public.
For m ore Information, call 767-2218.

BrortMnfl dtoowtor group to m— t
The support group for persons with breathing dtoorer!
sponsored by Orange Pulmonary G roup and W est Medical, w ill
meet Tuesday at 11 a.m. In the Florida Medical P la n , 2801 N.
Orange Ave.. conference room *2 4 1.
Thin month Michael Kranx. certified stress management
educator, win discuss how btofeedback training successfully
treats headaches. Insomnia, asthm a, phobic behavior, de­
pression and other disorders.
The event Is free of charge and open to the public.
For more information or to get on the m ailing Ust call either
Joy or Bonnie at §96-5940.

Variety o th — Hhcas topics oftotod
Healthcare career opportunities, osteoporosis, diabetes, and
child abuse prevention are Just a few of the subjects available
through Orlando Regional Medical Center's free speakers
bureau. "Health Talks" offers organizations the opportunity to
hear professionals discuss wellness and healthcare topics.
Speakers are selected from physicians, nurses and staff at
ORMC.
"Health T alks" Is offered to community and church groups,
professional organizations, businesses and schools. ORMC is
available to help (dan a program tailored to the requestor's
needs.
A minimum o f three weeks advance notice Is requested.
For Information, call 841-8129.

Florida Hospital offers support groups
Florida Hospital offers the community the following free
support groups:
•M itra l Valve Prolapse (M VP) and Cardiac Support Group:
meets the third Tuesday o f every m onth from 6:30-8 p.m. In
room 237 o f the Florida Medical Plaza at 2801 N. Orange A ve..
Orlando. G ives Informatln and support to w om en w ith M VP
and other cardiac problems. Call 897-1617.
•O rg a n Transplant Support Group: m eets the fourth
Tuesday o f every month at 7:30 p.m. In room 237 o f the
Florida Medical Plaza, 2801 N. Orange A ve.. Orlando. Offers
support and information to fam ilies and friends o f those w ho
have had organs transplanted or are awaiting transplants. Call
380-6900.
•In fertility Support Group: m eets the second Monday o f
every month from 7-9 p.m. In the Center for W om en's Medicine
Resource Room at the Florida Medical Plaza. 2501 N. Orange
Ave., Orlando. Provides support and Information for wom en
dealing with Infertility. Call 897-1800.
•E a tin g Disorders Support Group; m eets the second Monday
o f every month from 6:30-8 p.m. at the Florida Hospital Center
for Psychiatry. 601 E. Rollins St.. Orlando. Provides support
and Information for people with eating disorders. A fam ily
support group meets every other Monday from 6.30-8 p.m. Call
897-1800.
• Parents o f Children with Diabetes; m eets the last Thursday
o f every month beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the Center for
Women’ s Medicine In the Florida Medical Plaza. 2501 N.
Orange Ave.. Orlando. For m ore Inform ation or to preregister,
call Julie Rogers at 884-0533.

Local studant awarded scholarship
The auxiliary o f AMI Medical C enter Orlando has com pleted
Its annual review of applicants for scholarship support and has
awarded 18,000 to area students to further their medical
educations.
Auxiliary members, w ho volunteer their tim e to assist
patients, their families and the staff at AM I. raise the
scholarship funds through their hospital gift shop and other
fundraising activities throughout the year.
Eligible scholarship applicants m ust be enrolled in a Central
Florida academic Institution and be seeking a degree in the
health care field.
Scholarshp recipient from Sem in ole C om m unity College.
Sanford, was Christine Peebles, o f Casselberry.

Hernia repair used to be
considered major surgerybut, no longer.
Today.ltcanbeasslmple
as a one-day "walk-in, walk­
out" procedure. Prompt
and cost effective.
For a new or recurrent
hernia, we use a mesh
technique that speeds
recovery, lessens pain
and reduces recur­
rences.
The Hernia Center

of Central Florida Is oper­
ated by Surgical Associatesan established team of
skilled surgeons who have
practiced In Centra) Florida
since 1973 and have per­
formed literally thousands
of hernia operations.
Three convenient loca­
tions: Winter Park, Mait­
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appointment, call us at
(407) 647-2727.

Tmttmtml You Can Tru*t

(407) 647-2727

S s H r a w w r a a a w s B is B r

Diagnosis, treatment of breast cancer
year* have not. to m y know !-

The Am erican C an cer Society
and many other* h ave taught
■elf breast exam ination aa •
means of early diagnosis, bu t
with the advent of good x-ray* o f
th e b re a st, c a lle d m am m o­
graphy, K haa been found that a
breast tum or large enough to b e
felt a * a lum p in the breast la
generally m ore than 1 cm. o r .4
o f an Inch In diam eter a n d
contain* buttons o f cancer c r ib ,
som e of w hich may have broken
loose, circulated through the

CO pCi

I A stats of tlw art
m a m m o g r a m can
dataot pinpoint
tu m o ro j

H

A study in 1967 show ed that
tum ors w hich are discovere d
e arly by m am m ogram s, th e
five-year survival rate la up to 82
percent aa opposed to 0 0 percent
for a controlled p o u p .
Quality o f m ammography h as
drastically im proved in the
five years and with the
the stats o f
the art equipment the accuracy
o f these exam s is very good.
T w en ty p ercen t o f b re a st
cancers Occur in wom en under
the age o f 80. T he Am erican
Cancer Society recom m ends a
m ammogram every one to tw o
years for wom en between the
ages of 40 and 49 and annually,
thereafter. O f course. If a wom an
detects a m ass In her breast sh e
should have, first o f all. a n
examination by her physician
im m ediately, and a m am m o­
gram immediately.
T here a re on goin g clin ical
studies brin g done throughout
the U nited S tates In v o lv in g
many university centers. Cancer
of the breast usually spreads
initially to the lym ph nodes In
the axilla o r arm pit on the som e
side of the Involvem ent. If the
cancer m ass In the breast Is leaa
than 2 cm. In diam eter and all o f
the lymph nodes in the ax illa
removed have, raffed tp show, an y
evidence o f spread. It connotates
a good prognosis, usually In the
range of approxim ately 88 p er­
cent cure for life. It h as recently
been shown by the National
Cancer Institute that even this
18 percent failure rate can b e
shrunken or dim inished by the
taking of an antleatrogen d ru g
called Tam oxifen or Nolvadex.
About 80 percent o f breast
cnacera seem to be sensitive to
the effects o f estrogen or fem ale
horm one an d by g iv in g the
antiestrogen drug the prognosis
for cure or prolonged disease free
state can be Im proved. T h e

u T ^ M v C B lC O
m

IM S

HI

h i

lW W iW fr

U 1C
Aa

F%c*

m u sek so n the lateral ]
chest w all to a for m ore

p
longer irc o rcry period* I r e n i
n e w n ip p le c a n d c cooa&amp;rucLet!!

In sum m ary, the d k g R a b o f
breast cancer la constantly im­
proving. that to the diagnosis
bring m ade at an card e r stage
and. therefore, the cute rate l a

infiltrate other organa. A state o f
the art mam m o y a m
than M cm . or .2 o f an inch
often well before the

D C C TI

in C lt M C u

National Cancer fw itn ue now
recom m ends that all women get
T a m o x ife n o r a n tle a tro g e n
o f the tumor or whether there to
any spread or not. T his to not
u n iv e rsa lly accepted b y *11
physicians, but k the drug that
doe* not cauae any appreciate
•M e effects and there to a chance
that It doe* Improve the survival
rate. Mori phyricien * prescribe
It.
A s stated above, the first line
of treatment for cancer of the
breast to surgery. one o f the two
options, that to either total re­
m oval of the breast and the
lym ph nodes, called a modified
radical mastectomy, o r w ide
local excision of the tumor and
rem oval of the lymph nodes in
the axilla through a separate
Incision and then postop radia­
tion therapy. I have alluded to
the addition of antleatrogen
therapy in the form o f Tam ox­
ifen. Chemotherapy, which Is o f
a m ore serious nature and Inv o lv ln g m any different
chemotherapeutic drugs can be
of treat benefit also in controlling
breast cancer. These m ore toxic
drugs with more serious side
effects are generally reserved for
people who have demonstrated
spread cither to the lymph nodes
In the axilla or to other areas
such ks' the lungs or, Uver.
Radiation therapy Is o f benefit
In controlling local recurrent
cancer of the chest wall.
L on g term survival rates for
the two different methods of
surgery are approximately equal
for the first five years. It Is
gradually being shown that the
survival rate to about 5 percent
better each year, thereafter,
w here the patient has had a
m odified radical m astectom y
than the patient who has had a
w ide local excltoon of the tumor,
rem oval of the lymph nodes and
Ibreast.
■ residual
I
radiation of the
i

a w ig m e m c n i a in c p t iin u n u
o f either of
the
been totally
removed or the
that
8 la rise by wide
o f the tum or has
hi the
The majority of
re done with
D in , inacnco
under the m uede o f the chest
an d filled wtth either attfg el o r aatoe solution. The
recent controversy over the risk
o f the use o f
implants
w a s directly related to the newer
silicone Im plants that had a
sup­
p o s e d to d e c re a s e c a p su le
form ation around the implants
an d keep the breast soft. The

tion of the breast to m ore readily
ivftUMtc ivKi more tmmn none
than In tim es past. W om en
.h nouu ld c o n tin u e t h ei r s e lf
sh
taught, se lf perform ed breast
e x a m in a tio n s o n a re g u la r
schedule. T h ey sh ou ld have
m am m orgnuns at least once a
year after the a ge o f 80 and
probably every tw o hears from
the ages o f 4 0 -8 0 o r at any time,
at any age a detectable lum p la
or felt.

L. Lergcn, M. D., P A C L to s
'Omm wMi oi ellk* et 1191. First
y•fp
iup ifu^Kiegh
vwvva

In
ireiin v*
MfVtCO fcy 1

as e

Cutoty

NARINDERS. AIM M.D., EL
ispleased to announce
the association of

•

SHEKHARS. DESAI, JULD.
to thepractice of

Adult and Pediatric
Orthopedic Surgery
For scheduledappointmentsplease call

323-5843
311 N. Mangouitinc Ave.
Sanford

767-5565

6 6 8 -6 8 5 4

70 Foot Ridge Court

521W. Hwy. 434 Suite 305
Longwood

DeBary

MtiWnrt iM ig a n t «tot most
HMO/I

O ptom etrist o ffers free
eye scre en in g fo r children
LA KE M A R Y — Poor vision
can affect m ore than a ch ild ’s
school performance. I f left u n ­
treated. som e com m on eye d is ­
orders In children ca n lead to
serious and Irreversible vision
problems.
Martin Kansol, O.D.. Is offerin g
free eye screen in gs for area
elem entary school children o n
Aug. 26 from 10 a.m . to 6 p.m .
at 641 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
"C hildren have a biological
tlm edock that m ay affect the
success o f treatm ent fo r certain
e y e p r o b le m s s u c h a s
strabismus (m isalignm ent o f the
eyes) and am blyopia (la zy e y c ).“
according to Dr. Kansol. " A

thorough eye exam should be an
e s s e n t ia l p a rt o f a c h ild 's
back-to-echnol routine.”
“ Children m ay reach a point o f
no return aa early as age nine,
w hen treatment becomes dif­
ficult or Impossible because an
eye m ay have stopped develop­
in g ." Dr. Kansol said.
T h e free screening w ill de­
term ine 20/20 vision (the ability
to see characters of a certain
height from 20 feet away), eye
m uscle Imbalances such as lazy
e y e . general eye health and
w hether the child needs correc­
tive lenses. Dr. Kansol said.
F o r an a p p o in tm e n t, c a ll
321-6434.

Is a proud member of tho “Waicom*
Wagon" Family In Seminole County

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

CHIROPRACTIC
FOR BETTOR HIAL TH
O f. A . ML

WOOOAU
• a m o M A c ro t-

MACHINE TH AT NEVER STOPS
You may not know U, but you
— a machine that will keep
running a si_long e * you hve. And
e a n o g time. If you
that can be
take ___ care oi It. The
lu iw r Your
• u u i body.
u u u j*
The hum an body _________
to * wonder­
In -n
good
ful machine when It’s •"
o *1
working order. But things con
— tU
to 9*
It that
of
h&amp;PpCH
ssesaxs throw »ifo
«u
« t —----------»_ poor
balance.
Poor posture, muscle
strains. A Spinal column out of
alignment putting unwanted
pressure on nerve center*. A
general fatigue caused fay poor
nutrition.
Spins! misalignments can be
corrected; so can the spinal
stress that result* from the
misalignment. The nerve cen­
ters can be soothed and pres u m relieved. The "out of b a lbody can be restored to

proper t
h sea eU u cEvery
for smooth op­
ture designed
‘
eration. Aiqr defect In that
structure can cause problems.
In the human body, structural
defects can cause problems. In
the human body, structural
defects can cause aches and
. ____ m the back, nec
other parts of the body. When
these ache* and pains persist
over a period of time that means
you need treatment.

Let your Welcome Wagon representative
answer your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.

If You Live In One Of These Areas,
Please Call
Sanford - 330-7542
Lake Mary - 321-6660
Longwood — 869-8612 or 774-1231
Winter Springs - 777-3370
Altamonte — 339-4468
Casselberry — 695-7974
Oviedo - 695-3819
O r Anytime Day Or Night

Call 648-9644

�Sanford Herald

IN B R I E F

Church
tomlnfl
w li w i w i i Iia o im whPU
■••PCwjjp
SANFORD — The Sanford Church Softball
League la re fM e rta g teame tor Its fall
which via atari play Saturday.
14.
■ Sept. o'*#
The season win be 10 weeks
seeks ‘tong with all
games being played on S a ilurdaya at Plnehurst
Park. The league w ill faT
m odeled ASA Ctaaa
•*C" church rules.
Coal o f the league wtO b e 6180, which c o m a
the coal of um pires, acocekeepers and
A coaches meeting w ill be h d d "Monday. Sept.
Oat Central Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
PCea and maters must b e in b y Sept. 5. Both
may sent to: Sanford Church Softball League.
207 Dogwood Drive. Sanford. FI.. 33771.
For more infannatkm call John Townsend at
323-7163or Dean Smith at 5744474.

[TRIATHLON
Olive Garden finale al Heathrow
HEATHROW The Olive Garden Sprint
Triathlon has been scheduled for Saturday.
Aug. 31, at the Arvida com m unity of Heathrow.
The race will start at 7:30 a.m . at the Heathrow
Racquet Club.
Participants w ill compete In a 1/3-mtle swim,
a 12-mile bike ride and a three-m ile run.
Awards for the w inners in 14 different age
groups from 14-to-18 to 80-and-Over. w ill be
presented Immediately following the event.
Individual registration for the event la $25
through Saturday. Aug. 24: $30 from Monday.
Aug. 28. to Friday. Aug. 30; and 835 on the day
o f the race. Team entries o f three people, each
competing In a single phase of the race, are $40.
$45 and $50, respectively. Early entries can be
made In person or by m all to Track Shack. 1322
N. Mills Avenue. Orlando.
Race packets can be picked up al the Track
Shack between Aug. 28-30 or at the race site on
race day.*
For more Information call 896-1160.

Valencia achtdulaa fund*ralaar
ORLANDO — The Valencia Community- Col­
lege Athletic Department is , sponsoring the
second y n p u a j W o r .
tournament on Friday. Aug. 30 at the Walt
Disney World Resort's Palm Course.
Registration for the event, which serves as a
fund-raiser for the VCC Athletic Deportment,
will be at 1:30 p.m. Play will tee off at 2 p.m.
The entry fee is $65 per person.
For more Information, contact VCC Athletic
Director Don Rutledge at 299-5000. ext. 1406.

Amarlcan Laglon Toum ay
SA NFO R D — S an ford Am erican Legion
Campbell-Loaslng Post S3 Incorporated w ill hold
a golf scram ble Sunday. Sept. 8. at the Mt.
Plymouth G olf Club.
Entrants should be at the course at 7:30 p.m.
with shotgun start at 8 a.m .
Cost Is $30 per player, which will Include
prises, food and entertainment by Eric Duncan.
Players must register b y Wednesday, Sept. 4,
and entry fee must be In by Friday. Sept. 6.
Send entries to Am erican Legion Cam pbellLoaslng Post 53 Inc.. 2874 Sanford Avenue.
32773. For more Information, call 322-1652.

Not your typical
weekend jaunt
Duo takes
classic bikes
to their limit
Herald Sports WrHtr

LONGW OOD — During the week,
Mike Kirby and Rick Breckon are
typical, hard-working people. But
10 weekends a year, they transform
Into road w arriors, goin g after
national cham pionship* on power­
ful. two-wheeled beasts.
W ith three races left In the
season. Kirby and Breckon, both of
Longwood, are third In the nation In
points In their respective classes of
the A m erican H isto ric R ac in g
Motorcyclist Association (AHRM A).
All of the motorcycles In the
AHRMA are at least 15 years old
and are considered classics. The
group has grown by leaps and
bounds in the last five y ean .
Kirby. Director o f the Sanford
Recreation Department, ta third In
the Sportsman 200 Claaa riding his
Japanese-built Bridgestone 1*
175.
W hile It is a sm all take. It was
for racing and la extrem ely bet. But
parts for the bike are hard to come
by since Bridgestone quit building
m otorcycles to c o n c e n lra le on
making tires.
Breckon. who owns Royal W eld­
ing In Longwood. la third in points
In the Sportsman 500 Claaa riding
his British-built Trium ph.
Both m e n a l s o r id e in the
Sportsman 750 Class. Kirby on his
British-built Norton and Breckon on
another Trium ph. Breckon w as as
high as third In points and ta still In
the top 10 nationally but a blown
engine earlier this season cost him a
lot of point*- K irby has also had
mechanical p ro b lem s with the
^torton Miji has not
In
several races.
The national cham pion Is decided
by the combined polnta scored in
each racer's top six finishes In the
10 scheduled races.
" I f you only make It to six races,
that's your points," said Kirby. "B ut
If you go to seven or eight, then
y o u r wor st f l n i s h( e s ) wi l l be
dropped. W e had an accident at
Talladega that dropped u s to an
ISth-place finish. If we get to drop
that one. it will move us up In
points even more.*'
Kirby's love of motorcycle racing

. In order lo w in hla
tournament an an am ateur,
Kresge m ust overcom e not
only Howell, but Oviedo High
School graduate Mike Dwayne,
who stands two strokes back
at 138.

cam e naturally. His father. W illiam ,
w as a racer back tn the 1950s and
OOs and has been a Norton parts
deatrlbutor for years.
Breckon got involved three years
ago while he and his brother were
attending Bike Week at Daytona.
"W e were watching the races."
said Breckon. "A n d my brother
Craig and 1 looked at each other and
said. 'W e can do this.' And we have
ever since."
Breckon said that part of his love
for the sport comes from the fact
that the Involvement has turned
Into a family affair.
"M ike used to only get to aee hla
dad two or three times a year.'

Breckon. "A n d 1 only got to ace my
brother Craig at Christm as because
he lived M Michigan. Now they go
everywhere with us. In fact, they
are kind of our crew chiefs, making
sure the bikes are ready to race and
they get to the races. Even our
w ives and kids have gotten Involved
In different w ays.”
Kirby, a native of Gainesville,
agreed.
"W ith out Dad and Craig, we
couldn't do It." he said. "W hen you
only get two weeks of vacation a
year, you have to have someone
who can work on the bikes between
races. Most of the time, I have to fly
□Si

W ss Weger when he attended Lake
Mary High School during 1967-88.

DeLAND — Lake Mary High School graduate W es
W eger was recently a unanimous selection to the
All-Star team of the Cape Cod League, one of two
Stetson University players to be named to the squad.
Pitcher Larry HIngle, a graduate of Daytona BeachSeabreeze, w as the other Stetson representative.
Other players from Florida schools named to the
All-Star team were University of Miami outfielder Jon
Smith. University of Florida llrst basem an Brent KUlen.
Jacksonville University outfielder Marc Marini and
Florida International University catcher BUI Scalzllli.
The Cape Cod League Is regarded as the top summer
am ateur circuit In the country, featuring many of
collegiate baseball's top professional prospects.
W eger, a shortstop, played for the W ore ham (Mass.)
Gatemen. Ranked as one of the Cape Cod League's top
10 prospects In a recent Baseball Am erica report. W eger
was ranked sixth am ong the professional players by the
league's managers, first among the league's infteldera.

"I'm going to take U one
shot a time and think posi­
tive.” said Kresge about his
final round strategy.
Ironically. Kresge also' won
his other Orlando City A m a­
teur title at Dudsbread In 1989
under wet conditions. That
year, the tournament's ftnal
round waa rained out.
O th er local p la y e rs
participating tn the event In­
clude J .W . Howard (75-77.
152) and Ray Landry (73-81.
154) of Lake Mary and Longwood's Jack Davis (72-76.148)
and Scott Davidson (82-86.
168).

A resident o f Longwood, W eger hit .349 for the
Gatemen. second highest In the league. He finished the
season with a league-leading 58 hits that Included 11
doubles, three triples and one home run. helping lead
the Gatemen to a 30-14 record and the league's West
Division championship.
W eger. who w ill be a senior at Stetson this year, has
the been the Hatters' Most Valuable Player the last tw o
seasons. He also holds the school record for hits In a
single season (87. set this year).
H Ingle posted a 6-2 record for the Hyannls Meta, who
finished second In the league's West Division. H e waa
tied for third In the league In w ins and his earned run
average o f 2.04 was the eighth best In the league.
W eger and Hlngle are the latest Hatters to play In the
Cape Cod League and hope to follow the paths of
several Into the professional ranks. A m ong those are
Lake Mary graduate Mike Plnckes, now playing In the
Cleveland Indian organization, and Lake Brantley and
Seminole Com m unity College alumnus Jim Waring,
now pitching In the Houston Astros' farm system.

AP: ’Noles are No. 1, ’Canes third and Gators fifth
that one state has placed three schools In the Top
AP Football Writer
Florida State, which has never finished first In
college football, la starting on lop In 1991.
The Scmlnolcs. w ho have com e elese to
winning a national title the last four years, are
No. I In T h e Associated Press preseason poll.
They were the overw h elm ing choice, gettin g 49
o f 60 first-place votes and 1,483 o f a possible
1.500 points from a nationwide panel o f spoils
writers and broadcasters.
"It really doesn't surprise m e because everyone
seems to be picking us No. 1." said coach Bobby
Bowden, w ho has 17 starters back from last
year's 10-2 team that finished fourth In the
nation.
"But I still say there arc eight or 10 teams that
you can put In a hat that have as much a chance
to be up there as we d o ."
One of those teams Is No. 2 Michigan, which
plays Florida State In Ann Arbor on Sept. 28. The
Wolverines got five first-place votes and 1,384
points.
Miami, which has won three national cham pi­
onships since 1983, Is No. 3 with two first-place
votes and 1.276 points. Washington Is next with
-

MT

1. Florida St. (4$)

o

| ■ rTT

Following four consecutive
pars, Kresge pitched in for an
eagle and a share of the lead
on the par-518th.

S

,

Kresge. who grew up
the street from
Dubadread but
‘
» Dubi
now Uvea tn Apopka, knocked
approached shots tight to the
flag sticks on both the par-4
11th and the par-3 12th for
easy birdies. He then sunk a
40-foot putt through standing
water for another birdie at 13.

•

□ 8 p.m. - ESPN. Cincinnati Hcds at New York
Mels. (L)

*'l started m aking som e
putts," said K ra g e . who calls
Sabal Point Country C lub In
Longwood hla home course. “ I
was Just trying to take It one
bole at a time and Just make
some birdies.”

|

BASEBALL

136.

Weger voted to C C L All- Star team

LAKE MARY — The Gator C lub of Central
Florida will host the 1991 SportsChannel Gator
Club Challenge G olf Tournam ent on Friday,
Sept. 27. at the Tlm acuan G olf &amp; Country Club.
The entry fee la $100 per person, which
Includes lunch, dinner and prizes. Am ong the
prizes will be a car for a hole In one. low net
winners and low gross winners.
For more Information contact Tori Atwlll at
(407)886-1036.

D ETRO IT — Not e v e n baseball's eternal
optimist thought this could hapen.
" I f someone had com e up to m e on opening
day. and told m e that w e would be tied fo r first
on Aug. 24, 1 w ould h a ve started looking for
some nice w hite Jackets for th em ." Tigers
manager Sparky Anderson said.
It's true, though. By beating the Mariners 7-2
Saturday w hile Toronto waa losing to N ew York
6-5. the T igers m oved Into a tic fo r the A L East
lead with the Blue Jays.
" I thought I'd be able lo sit back and watch
(he kids from Toledo play In Septem ber."
Anderson said. "N o w . these gu ys arc goin g to
make me w ork ."

Kresge in
tie for lead
of Amateur
O R LANDO - R didn't took
good for C liff Kresge In his
hopes for a second Orlando
C*tty Am ateur C lim piotw htp
In three years as he ducked
into the Dubadread Country
C lub Pro Shop during a second
rain delay Saturday with a
1-over p ar for hla aecond
round, five ahota off the pace.
But when the raina stopped.
Kresge, w ho started the round
at 2-under par. turned It on.
playing the ftnal eight holes In
5-under par to tie him with
Chris 1kneel! for the lead at

m aiR i

Gator Club tournament

Tlg trs pull «v «n with Blue Jays

August 25, 1991

SUNDAY

THRU
1$$0 Record
10-2-0

2. M ichigan (5)

9-3-0

3. Miami (2)

10-2-0

4. W a sh in gton (1)

10-2-0

5. Florida (1)

9-2-0

(First placs votes)
Complete list on Page 2B

one first-place ballot and 1.252 points, followed
by Florida with one first-place vote and 1.150
points.
Rounding out the Top 10 are Notre Dame.
Penn State. G eorgia T ec h , Clem son and
Oklahoma. Tennessee Is 11th. followed hy
Houston. Colorado. Texas. Nebraska. Southern
Cal, Auburn. Iowa. BYU. Michigan State. Texas
A&amp;M. Alabama. Ohio State. UCLA and Syracuse.
Clemson and Houston each received one
first-place vote.
With three schools In the Top 5. Florida Is
clearly the dominant slate In college football. It's
the first lime In the 55-year history of the AP poll

5.

"W e're starting the year os the No. 3 team In
Florida, and this Is one state where that's not all
bad." said Florida coach Sieve Spurrier. "One of
our primary goals Is to become the top program
In the state. If we can achieve that each year, we
will be a nationally ranked team."
This Is the second time Florida State has been
ranked No. 1 In the preseason poll. The
Srminotcs also were No. I tn 1988, but didn't
hold onto the top spot very long. After Delon
Sanders and several teammates made a video lo
celebrate their status, they went out and lost
their opener to Miami 31 -O.
"Th ai was a case of pulling on too much
perfume.” Bowden said. "It's OK lo smell like
perfume, but In '88 we took a bath In II."
Alabama. Ohio Stale. UCLA and Syracuse are
the only teams In the preseuson poll that weren't
ranked al the end of last season. Syracuse edged
Louisville by one point for the final spot.
Nebraska fulled to make the preseason Top 10
for the first tim e since 1977. w hen the
Cornhuskers also were 15th.
A team gels 25 points for u first-place vole. 24
for second and so on. down to one point for 25th
place.

\

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

�M - Sanford H*nM, Sanford, Florid* - Sunday. Augual 25. 1SS1

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
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•1
I
AUTO RACING
NIWMAN-NAAS RACINS - Si—od Marla
Andraftl to a two —ar contract and Mkhaal
AndratN toa ona-yoar cantr
Bascr al
DRTROIT TIBIRS noman, piKhar, — Ma lAday dtoaktod llat,
ratroactlva to Augual ia Racaltod Kavtn Rtti.
pitchor, from Tala— al Mo Intomattonol
HOUSTON ASTROS -

Jeneo pHeher. an Ma lAday OUiOicd IM,
ratraacllva la At—at 11. Racailad Xaviar
Haman— a pitcher, tram Tucaan aI Ma
Fadttc Caaat Laa—a.
H IM VOBK MBTS - Slgnad Bill
BASKETBALL
HOUSTON SOCKETS - Waivad Adrian
Caldawll. lanaarA Ranouncad Mo rl—ta to
Dm FoiN. contar
PORTLAND TRAIL I LAI IRS - Si—ad
Clllt Ratinion. forward, to a contract
axtanaUn Mrou— Ma im a t I
FOOTRALL
CLEVELAND RROWNS - Slgnad Imla
Lag— and John Thornton, dafanalvallnam— .
BREEN RAY PACKERS - Raiaaaad Don
Brock— and Jail Flit, puntan.
NEW I NOLAND PATRIOTS - Agrood to
form* wIM Maurlco Hurt!, comorkock: Tim
•ackla. —d .
Walukd Acton Ny—r. H

WELLESLEY ^ ^Namad t o i LllUvand

AUTO RAC IMO
T.SS a m. — ISFN. Formula Ona Boigi—
Grand Frla
• 1 p.m. - WFTV ». CART Taaaco/Havollna
Grand Frla alD—var
Jp m. — WFTV 1.1ROC
TtMp.m. — SC. Spaa—ray Sunday
BASIBALL
I M p.m. - WTBS. Mtlladalphla PMIIIot al
All—taRra«a«.(LI •
lilS p m. — WON. S— Ola— Padrot at
Chka— Cuka.IL)
1:M p m. - WAYK SA Taaaa Ror\trt «t
Kama*City Royolt. (U
I p.m. — ESPN. Cincinnati Rad* at Now
York Mot*. (LI
M&gt;Mp.m.—SC. ISA World All-Stor Gam#

ia ra

wolvoro tram Indl—tpalla.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Agrood U lormo
wIM Jamoa Jana*, fullback, to a onoyooc
contract.
TAMPA BAT BUCCANIIRS - Activated
aaampttoa llat. Waivad Molvlo H—tor.
HOCKRY
VANCOUVIR CANUCKS - Si— od Jot—
ttortor. dot—aam—. toa mol (lyoor contract.
COLLROR
RRLMONT ABBRY - Namod Sam Bundy
•porta Intormat tondlnoctor.
DAVIDSON - Namod Juatln Kurolt moo t
aaalatant baakotbail coach.
OUINNIFIAC - Namad Malt Bauatt
m—'a aaolal—t baakotbail coach and director
al NCAA compliance.
RUTRIRS - Namad Chrlallne E. John
aaaiat— t aMtotlc director tar academic
ouppart pro—oma and D— Rorrowa wnlor
academic advlaor and dlroctor at aummor
atud—t-athtoto pro—ama.
SOUTH ALABAMA - Namod Brenda
Bowlin worn— ’« aotlttont voltoyball coach.
WAKI FOREST — Namad David Keltor
and Ev— Brawn oattalent track and Hold

Placod

pamo
• pm. — SUN. Calla—. Florid* Slate at
SouthCarolina from 10
11:30 p.m. — CFL. Winnipeg Blue Bomber*
ol Calgary Slompodtra
OOLF
1 p.m. — ESPN. Mon a U.S. Amateur
Championthlp. (LI
4 pm. - WCPX A World S— lea ol Golf,
final round. (U
TENNIS
1p m. — SUN. Hamlet Challenge Cup. IL)
1 p.m. - WCPX A-Teem Spirit Chilian—.
(LI
TRACK aadFIELO
1p.m. — WESH l World Chemptonahipe
VOLLEYBALL
♦ p m. — SUN. INI Mill— Lite Tour
MISCELLANEOUS
Noon —WCPX A Sup—crow 'ft
BASEBALL
1:10 pm. - WMJK AM 11210). Montreal
Eapoo Ol Moulton Altroo
♦ pm. - WMJK AM OHO). Florida Slate
League. Oacooio Aatroool Dunedin Blue Jay*
♦ at pm. - WHOOAM (NO). Southern
Looguo. Greenville ot Orlando

Changes considered in largemouth bass laws
The G a m e and Fremh Water
Fish C om m laalon recently gave
the state’ * fisheries m anager*
the " t h u m b * u p " to m o v e
forward w ith a proposal that
could ch a n g e largem outh bass
fishing la w *.
At a J u ly 18 workshop In Fort
Myers, th e Com m ission unveiled
a proposal that would be Flori­
da's first m ajor change In bass
fishing la w s since 1990.
The proposed bass regulations
call for:
• A statew ide four-fish dally
bag limit In place o f the current
dally lim it o f 10 bass.
• A 14-Inch m inim um size
limit for w aters south and east o f
the Suwannee River.
• A 12-inch m inim um size
limit for w aters north and west
of i he Su w annee River.
• A statew ide one-fish dally
bag limit fo r bass over 22 Inches.
"T h is r e fle c t s a d ra m a tic
change In la rg e m o u th bass
management In Florida.” Scott
Hardin, a Com m ission fisheries
biologist, said In Com m ission
news release. "T h e proposal Is
the result o f more than a decade
of research on the state's bass
fishery and the Increasing fish­
ing pressure from bass an glers."

The regulations are designed
to protect small bass that an­
glers are catching now so fish­
ermen will have a greater oppor­
tunity to catch them as threepounders and larger later.
" W e r e trying to meet fish­
erm en's expectations based on
angler su rveys that show their
attitudes towards bass fishing
arc c h a n g in g ." Hardin said.
"M ost a n g lers say they would
rather ca tch a few large bass
than a lim it o f smaller fish."
Su rveys a lso revealed a strong
desire on th e part o f anglers to

" W e believe large bass should
be p r o t e c t e d ." H ard in sa id .
" T h is rule w ould help to In­
c r e a s e the a v e r a g e a n g le r 's
ch ance to catch a trophy-sized

JIM
SHUPE
reduce the dally bag lim it, regu­
late harvest o f trophy-sized bass
an d p ro v id e a d d itio n a l cat*
ch-and-release fishing areas.
"O u r lakes have as many
small bass as (hey ever did and
anglers' catch rates are good."
Hardin said. ' However, abun­
dance o f three- to five-pound
bass and trophy fish (over eight
pounds) has declined over the
past 25 years. This downswing
can be attributed partly to the
h a rvest o f large bass by a
grow in g number o f high-tech
anglers."
Creel surveys show that most
bass kept by anlers are three to
f i v e y e a r s o ld . F is h e r ie s
biologists have found that it
takes five years for a bass to
reach three pounds, and It takes
them eight to 10 years to reach
eight pounds. Som etim es not
enough llsh survive long enough
to maintain a quality baas fish­
ery.
"B a g limits serve m ore as a
yardstick for anglers to measure
their success than as a tool to
preven t overh a rvest." Hardin
said. "V e ry few anglers catch or
keep the lim it."
Trophy bass are an increasing­
ly rare resource and a statewide
rule o f one fish dally bag limit for
bass over 22 Inches long has
been proposed to help protect
big bass.

T h e key to the success o f this
typ e o f approach to largem outh
bass m anagem ent Is dependent
on anglers' com pliance w ith the
r e g u l a t i o n s a n d c o n t in u e d
stron g habitat protection. I f an­
g lers would be w illin g to keep
few er fish today, they w ould be
rew arded with m ore bass and
larger fish In the future.
T h e proposal w ould not re­
place regulations on lakes w ith
sp ecial bag and length lim it
restrictions currently in effect.
T h e plan, which still must be
subject to public review , w ill be
considered by the five-m em ber
C om m ission in March 1992 and.
If adapted, would g o Into effect
the follow ing Ju ly. Anyone In­
terested on com m enting on this
proposal can w rite to the Florida
G a m e and Fresh W ater Fish
Com m ission. D ivision o f Fish­
eries. 620 South Meridian St..
Tallahassee. FL.. 32399-1600.

fe a t u r in g m ix e d b a g s o f
flounder. redflsh.Jack crevalle.
small blueflah. snook (Reason
closed) and a few tarpon. Oneounce Jigs and live shrimp are
the tw o top offerings, and you
need to fish on or d o se to the
bottom for the best results. Old
timers aay that If you don't lose
a few rigs, you aren't fishing
properly.
C a p ta in J a c k at P o r t
C a a a v s ra l paints a rosy picture
for offshore anglers. There are
plenty o f dolphin, wahoo and
king mackerel from 80 feet on
out to 170 or so. A few cobla are
scattered from P s l k a a F la t s to
Just o ff the fetash. but they
aren't thick enough for reliable
action.
It Is alow Inside the P o rt, w ith
only a few flounder and sm all
Jack crevalle. T ro y Perez reports
plenty o f redflsh on the f l a t s o f
the B b» b b b and the
l a l s t has been calm ,
but the fishing has been rather
alow and the fish have been
• m a ll.

W ith an ever-tnereaaing popu­
lation Florida's anglers can log i­
c a lly expect increasing lim its
placed on both fresh and salt
w ater species to ensure healthy
fish populations for future g en ­
erations.
Gard at the O s t s s a
B r i d g e F is h C a a sp r e p o rts
ca rb o n -co p y su m m er fis h in g
patterns with bream and catfish
provid in g the bulk o f the action.
B etw een the heat and the high
w ater, bass fishing is tough at
b e s t . E v e r y o n e Is l o o k i n g
forw ard to cooler weather.
B s h a s t la a U U s t has been

EXHAUST

CaMMe Convert*

*149*

&gt; EXHAUST ♦ T U B

S te v e

U V E R A O N O A C T IO N

Greyhounds
lilMnoo -1 XX) pm

Thoroughbreds from CaJder
)* 1230 pm

MUFFLERS
BTAILPPE

�• *
Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 25, 1191 -

B u cs hop* thoy’ro for rsal
aflor another 3*1 prasaason
w ax
T A M P A — Now the Tam pa
^ .B «c c «w m !r ilW )»a S » f
th ey're m alty ready.
The B ucs finished a solid
P « * « a p o with a 30*7 victory
ower the Kansaa City Chtefa
Friday night. but history says
the team ahould be cautiouaty
optimistic about the prospects
faja u cc e aa during the regular
W hile the club compiled a 3-1
exhibition record for the third
coosecuthre year, coach Richard
W illiam so n and h is p lay ers
h a v e n 't forgotten that they
finished 5-11 and 0-10 the laat
tw o years w hen the gam es
count.
T am p a B ay h asn 't h ad a
winning season since 1982.
'Next Ume we start playing far
real and all of a sudden the
tntenatty level goes up about
three levels." said Williamson.
"A n d w e've got to pick our level
up about three times, too."
"T h is team has a nice at*
tltu d c," second-year running
back Reggie Cobb m id. "W e 're
not overconfident. W e Just fee!
w e can play with anybody."
Vinny Testaverde threw far
197 yards and one touchdown in
. the half he played and backup
quarterback Jeff Cartoon scored
on a 3-yard run to pace the
victory, which w as overshad­
owed by the death of 9-monthold A m an d a A n d e rso n , the
daughter of Bucs running bock
" ary
— tA
Anderson.
G
The child died of respiratory

WE’LL SERVICE YOUR CAR WHILE
YOU’RE SAVING AT K MART.

Andersen Ileft
the gam e m
T am pa Stadiumi Just beftfore
'■ a a d thing and H
takes s lot o f aparfc out o f the
sparkle (o f the victory).'* said
William son.
**My thoughts are w ith him.*'
the aoach added. “He’s a strong
young m an. and h e ll b e all right
with time. But It has to be tough

paaasa far 456 yards an d two
touchdow ns during th e pre*
eeaaou. He threw only one in­
terception. the Bucs produced
points on 9 o f the 18 poser salons
w ith him in the gam e and
ouiacorra opponent!
in

97

‘V) non

nU/M H U

WHIT(VfAU

Bay also held a 724in total yardagr
"W e 're a much better team
talent-wise, and the things w e're
doing are giving ua a better
chance to srin." said Testaverde.
‘W e're utilising Ihe abilities we
on offense and de*

B

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The Chiefs, who expect to
con tend for the AFC W est title,
finished with a 2*2 pw aeaaon
record. C oach M arty Bchot*
tenbdm er said his team was
"outplayed and outcoached."
but Is confident the players wlU
be ready for the regular season
opener against Atlanta.
"There were breakdowns In
o u r technique, not physical
breakdowns." he said. "W e can
fix that."

u T 7 i I E X K

ClassicsFriday night to get
So Dad and Craig make sure
everything is ready when I get
there."
A case in point is Kirby not
ra c in g th e N orton, the first
racing bike he ever built. H e said
the bike has been out o f state
since May. so he hasn't been
able to w ork on the m achine to
g et It race-ready.
Both m en have gotten to aee a
lot o f A m erica that neither had
seen before.
" W e 'v e been to T a lla d e g a
(A la b a m a ), D a y to n a . S o u th
B eloit (Illin ois, near the 1111*
nols-Wlsconsln border). Graton
(M ichigan). Sum m it Point (W est
V ir g in ia ) a n d L o u d o n (N e w
H a m p s h ir e )," sa id B reck o n .
" I 'v e put nearly 20.000 m iles on
m y truck this year and w e stUI
have three long trips left.”
T h e duo w ill travel to Las
V egas for races on Saturday.
A u g . 31 a n d to S te a m b o a t
Springs, Colorado, on Sept. 14
before finishing the season bock
at G ra to n . T h e season w as
supposed to end in Atlanta but a
legal problem with the track’s
ow ner forced a change In venue.
Kirby la ready for the experi­
ence.
"E xcep t for a trip to California
w hen I w as in college, I've never
been west o f the Mississippi."
said Kirby. " I'm looking forward
to the trip ."
A fter the Las Vegas race. Kirby
and Breckon will again call on
W illiam Kirby for help.
"T h e bikes s ic already in Las
V e g a s w a itin g on u s ." said
Breckon. "B u t we didn't know
how w e w ere going to get them
from V egas to Steamboat. But I
w as able to make arrangem ents
for friends o f ours to transport
the bikes to St. Louis, where Mr.
Kirby and another retiree will
pick them up and take them on
to Colorado. Mike and 1 w ill fly
out later."
T h e fr ie n d s th a t B reck on
speaks o f are other competitors,
som e that are In his and K irb y's
ow n class, which Is another
thing that Breckon likes about
racing classic motorcycles.
" I like the low-key approach
most o f the com petitors In this
series tak e." said Breckon. “ W e
ail want to win. but It's not
dog-cat-dog like m ost racing
aeries. If you have a problem,
most o f the guys w ill Jump right
In and help you get it fix ed ."
Breckon contributes to that
sense o f com m unity with his
22-foot enclosed trailer that can
carry 10 m otorcycles. Th e rig is
a ls o o u tfitte d w ith w e ld in g
equipm ent so the master welder
can ply his trade.
" W e 'v e transported com peti­
tors bikes to different events and
1‘ve also done welding for people
at races." said Breckon. "E ve n
for guys w ho are ahead o f m e in
points."
W hile the duo have traveled
extensively this summer, both
s a id th e y w o u ld r e m e m b e r
Blackhawk (Illinois) Speedway
the best.
“ W e both got our first national
w ins ever that w eekend." said
Kirby. "A n d Tom Kcester (w ho
also traveled with them that
w eek) also won. It was quite a
weekend for the Florida con ­
tin gen t."
Before his win. Kirby didn’t
give him self much o f a chance.

Ml

} J i T i !!il

TT1 I } A } J

i;ii a:: 11 r-x m . ;.a*: ■ i m
" A t first, 1 didn't kn ow I f w e
w ould finish a top because w e
had done a lot o f engine w ork on
the Bridgestone." said Kirby.
" A n d the track w as In rough
shape. W e w ere all com plaining
about the surface, but b y the
Um e w e w ere ready to leave, w e
though U w as the best track we
had been o n ."
Breckon said the difference In
the types o f race tracks are
another great thing about the
aeries.

1 1 *

UK! J
5 5 5

COMPLIMENTARY TIRE MAINTENANCE

m **tJ

ALIGNMENT

" I f you race an aval tracks or
are into drag racing, nothing
ch an ges," said Breckon. "O nce
y o u 'v e s e e n o n e o v a l o r
quarter-mile strip, y o u 'v e seen
them all.
" B u t ro a d ra c in g is n eat
because o f the differences in the
tracks. You race at the b ig tracks
like' Daytona and Talladega as
w ell as the small tracks like
Blackhawk and Graton.

tor many cars. Save
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— C x i S p rin g .. 69.97 PR.
p«r pair carryout

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Alignment recom m ended lot mony
oppircotioni

MUFFLER

OIL CHANGE

" W e (the top four) are so close,
any one o f us can win It.” said
Kirby. " I want to win It. but
w herever w e finish w ill be great
because at worst, we w ill be on
the second row at Daytona next
y ea r."

17£+

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your car*

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brand motar oi yn dock]
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motor brand oil change for
many cots and light bucks.

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many cars.......... 109.974

InstoUafton Avotiobfe m
Stores with Service

CO M PU TE EXHAUST SYSTEM INSTALLED
WWspertormance ondor rurtootype can. and cotatyhc converter he* hy W w
notmduded Puces ore good tor NeO and never yemciei horn tie conuertet boc*

69*7’

Kirby is lucky to even have a
class to race his Bridgestone In.
" T w o years ago. there were
only four or five bikes in the
c la s s ." said B reckon. " A n d
AH R M A was going to drop or
com bine the class with another.
But they (AH RM A) started a
cam paign to attract racers Into
the class and now It Is one o f the
tw o most popular classes wc
h a ve."

Kirby, w ho has also been to
Akron. Ohio for the National
Soap Box Derby finals, said that
he w ill hate to see this year end.
" I 'v e never had more fun than
I've had this year." said Kirby.

For Many Cttryslers
Many GM s
Ax low A x .......... *41.97 fA.

many U.1 can. Imports

W ith Just the three races left In
the season, both K irb y's and
Breckon’s classes have turned
Into four-bike chases.

Anyone Interested In getting
Involved in classic m otorcycles
is encouraged to call Breckon at
831-7736 during the day or
830-5443 In the evenings.

S I HU I S

Frta IMreyei re e Ml eHn* eaty X N M M a t/ lt.

" T h e fir s t co u p le o f laps
around those blind, falling turns,
I w as Just trying to keep from
falling o ff the bike." said Kirby, a
four-year road racing veteran.
" A fte r a while, it got to be fun.
But on m y little two-stroke bike.
If 1 didn't keep the rpm s up, It
had no power on the straights at
a ll."

" T o show you the difference."
said Kirby. " I f Rick stays in the
top 10 in the 750s. h e'll be on
the banking at Daytona before I
get to the second tu m o f the
infield. It sure helps to start up
fron t."

SHOCKS

21SL

"G raton is especially tough
because it has blind, off-cam ber
turns and changing-elevations. It
Is also one o f the few tracks In
A m erica that run both directions
to g iv e you a different look.”
Kirby agreed that Graton was
tough.

Because the starting positions
o f each race are determined by
the point standings, both Kirby
and Breckon are starting from
the m iddle o f the front row. Th ai
is a big change from other years
w hen they weren't In the top 20.

j

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IC A M , U. TMCKS, MMMANS

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Aries
Ca rolcer
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fueruo
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tanhoc 2000
Bezant
Shyhoet
StyiarS
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Celebrity
Century
C&gt;e«o
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Cunase
foumonl
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Grand AM
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LID
Marquis

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Muodo
Hmrn York+r f tfsOacJ
Grand Nil
Socxe
taurui
MohtKJ
Zephyr
Monte Carlo
•onneniie Mustang
tanhoc 6000
Cotan
Comoro Segal
Somerset
Capri
Cordoba tbrrd
Cougar

TSUCISrVANS
bunco*
Caravan
urv
Banger
S Senes
Voyoger
Che'ohee
Cher* Staler
Jim m y IGMCI
bom Charger

109*7*

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DM oH

Grand fury
tmpota
loSabre
tanhoc
Cimarron
tree no
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Tires and service in stores with service only • Tire A Battery prices do not include stale disposal lees it appli­
cable 'Lim ited warranty details in Store • to n *2 Slate or local ta.et or surcharges &gt;or en.'ronrreniar protect,on e.n oe
an ealra charge A tae't imposed cn the purchase or aach nee read acid ballary unless a used battery is ralurned ehere appi-cab^e

ORLANDO AREA 857 0291 896 1190 277 1901 298 6948
FERN PARK 831 3133
LEESBURG 787 0544
DELAND 734 8133
KISSIMMEE 846 1255
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS 862 7155
WINTER PARK 671 1766
SANFORD 323 9462
CLERMONT 394 2731

-

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- Sanford HwaM. Sanford, Florida - Sunday. August 29. 1001
&gt;v

Business
— ■

■&gt;«~

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IN B R I E F
LONG W O O D — Service* available to local employers from
the Sm all Buaineaa Development Center In Seminole County,
w ilt b e the topic o f the Auguat 26 meeting o f the
Longwood/Wlntrr Springs Area Cham ber o f Commerce.
Anne Marie Mendbetm. aaatatant to the Director o f the
Buatneaa and Industry Support Center In Longwood, will
outline progress m ade this year toward developing volunteer
buatneaa counselors, preparing workshops and sem inars on
business topics, and assisting local buaineaa development.
All area business people are encouraged to attend. Lunch will
be served tor a charge o f 66.. payable at the door.
The meeting will be held at Quality Inn-North. 1-4 at S.R.
434. from 12 Noon until 1 p.m .. For additional Information,
contact the Longwood/Wlnter Springs Cham ber of Commerce
office at 631-9081.

Crtumnlit to id d fin ctiunbr
LONGW OOD — The Orlando Sentinel’s Bob Morris will be
the featured speaker at the Greater Seminole County Cham ber
o f Commerce Industry Aw ards Membership Luncheon on
Friday, Sept. Sat the Altamonte Springs Hilton.
Registration will begin at 11:15 a.m.. and lunch will be
served at 11:45 a.m . Coat la S IS for members and 618 for
non-members. For reservations and Information call 834-4404
by Wednesday. September 4.

Q
in r il ■rait
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6
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D AYTO N A BEACH — General Electric Co., the nation’s third
largest defense contractor, announced It would cut at least 200
Jobs at a local plant by the end of this year.
The cutback m eans a 16 percent reduction In G E 's Volusia
County work force o f about 1.300.
The first wave of layoff notices to an undetermined num ber
o f workers w ill come Sept. 4.
' ‘Global defense budgets are shrinking and competition for a
larger share of a sm aller pie is Intense," GE-Daytona General
Manager Pete Ktdawskl said In a statement Thursday.
In May 1889. 100 people were laid off In Daytona Beach by
the Fa
fairfield, Conri.-based firm.

Toyotta supplier teat defends splf
MIAMI — Th e exclu sive supplier o f Toyota im ports In the
Southeast haa attacked lawsuits against his com panies In an
open letter as a vendetta by auto dealers blam ing him for their
buaineaa failures.
Th e letter titled " T e ll It Like It la " w as sent last week to 160
Toyota dealers In Florida. Georgia. Alabam a and (he CarolInas
and la th e first response by J im Moran, founder o f Southeast
Toyota Distributors.
A dozen lawsuits have charged dealers w ere strongarmed
into doing buaineaa w ith oth er Moran companies, and the
result w as higher sticker prices across the region.
“ I guess It's hum an nature to blame others for one's
shortcom ings." the letter said. "O u r argum ents w ill be m ade In
court, w h ere we h a ve an opportunity to hold these dealers
account*W e for m ism anagem ent o f their Toyota dealerships,
for casting false accusations.”

Firm films for bankruptcy protection
BOCA R ATO M -i..J tod lm r P ic, a Scottish company-.that
pion eered co m p u ter disk d riv es. Is h a ltin g production
w orldw ide and filin g for C hapter 11 protection for Its U.S..
operation baaed In B oca Raton.
Th e com pany peaked In 1989 with prom s o f 69 m illion on
sales o f 675.9 m illion. In June, the company reported a
second-quarter loss o f about 67 million.

*4
t it '

M

W
W—*—
—
.—————-..— 0M ■- SP
til. . -- *
entrepreneur «jeno r « riu iu cci, wno Marten
over" last year at age 72 w ith a new foods
company with nationwide sales. Is bringing
business back to Jackson. Ohio.
Paulucd started the Heathrow Community In
central Florida, financed the Chun King Carp.,

national chain o f franchised casual Italian
restaurants Pauluccl also haa established.
In the p ress release. Pau lu ccl sa id th is
expansion woo prompted by MteraSy "r
out of production apace" In foriktfea In
opened Just a year ago. Since the ffn k 1
NichfUfia i proauct
"w e have Increased to i
while more than doubUng production
ty...and we MUl need m ore,"

«no craura tieno0 •UnBb WJ110 cuio iiuien ptssp*
Now. he h as expanded horn Duluth. Minn, to
Jackson h is Lulgtoo’o, the packer o f Mlchettna'a
brand f t o m pasts
toa press release.
the
Luigi no’s. Inc., k
previously utilised b y each o f those companies,
with operatkma scheduled to begin later thla year.
The 172.000 square foot plant on 3 2 1
leased from the Jackson Community
ment Corporation and w ill be uoed to prepare and
pack sauces for the LtHgtao'e Food Service
Division and for Paata Lovers Trattorias, a

Lulgtno’a food sendee buaineaa tnvotvea pack­
ing a variety of frozen sauces In 5 and 10 pound
containers for restaurants, schools and towtttuThe new M khelina's products are nam ed for
J fn O S iDOliiCf

M C tU M

I n f TCCipft

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according to the press release.

Orlando-Brazil route sought
United Airlines la seeking fed­
eral authority to fly between
O rla n d o a n d tw o B ra s ilia n
points, m aking the central Flori­
d a city a hub for Its Latin
Am erican expansion.
U n i t e d p r o p o n e d In I t s
application to the Department o f
Transportation to have daily
scheduled service between O r­
lando and Rio de Janeiro pnd
Sao Paulo. Brasil, b y 1993. The
nights w o u l d o r i g i n a t e In
Chicago.
United also filed for authority
to operate dally flights between
Orlando and Mexico City.
“ Expansion to Latin Am erica
is an essential part o f Unlted'a
International growth strategy,
and Inauguration o f n ew services
to B r a s i l a n d M e x i c o w i l l
establish Orlando a s United's
newest International gateway.”
United Chairm an Stephen M.
W olf said.

American

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12
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154

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324

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462

33

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457

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Among motor domootlc akfnoo, Northwest and United hovo tho moot pianos
Ifi ITWi n f f i OVBv aU j H n 000# CJvUinWw§i» Ofi iflf w ln ff nfOO,

im S

fiO p w i f

men
join meat
processors
m

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rfffp o w in n n iif

—

D — Brent R
D avid T . Ruoal. J r., o f
k w h -u m i m corp., ssoM ra,
w ere am ong aeveral
thouoand ptop fr la n w iin
the 52nd annual American
Convention o f Moot Pro­
cessors. The convention
Mao held this past work at
tko H.Roc Bartle Halt In
iCtly.l
joined by meat proccmors
and Industry repreh u m
, B fn U lU Y ff AIrOfTi
U U uU fn O U l

the United States. Canada
and Europe, w ho gathered
for Ute four day convention
T h e d e l e g a t e s
participated In daffy semi­
nars and pond discussions
highlight:
ted Industry
trends, explored new mar­
k e ti n g id eas, an sw ere d
questions and solved pro­
blem s of many meat proThe two Sanford men also
had the opportunity to ex­
am ine a national supplier
display consisting of the
latest In equipm ent and
services offered to the meat
Industry.
T h e c o n v e n t i o n Is
sponsored annually by the
A m erican Association o f
Meat .Processors, a 1.900
m em ber trade association
representing the small to
medium-sized Independent
business enterprises In the
meat industry.

— In a Mast of 106 plana* — that is over 20 yoors old.

P et s h o p in d u stry sq u aw ks a s a irlin e s b ar w ild b ird s
A T L A N T A — A g r o w in g
number o f airlines are refusing
to fe r r y w ild b ir d s , a n d
A m erica's pet shop industry Is
squawking about It.

cam paign so far haa convinced
17 airlines to stop shipping w ild
birds — threatening to ground a
significant part or the pet In­
dustry. say bird Importers and
w holesalers, w h o argue that
airline travel la safe for birds.

African and South Am erican
birds sold In U.S. pet stores are
sn atch ed ou t o f th e Jungle,
stuffed Into cages and trans­
ported w ith dogs and cats In the
cargo holds o f airplanes, anim al
rights activists say.
A m a s s iv e t e t t e r - w r it in g

" T h is Is getting carried aw a y ."
said Cecil Gunby. an em ployee
o f For Birds Only in Atlanta w ho
has raised birds for 15 years.
"P retty soon th ey'll stop carry­
ing people because they’re g e l­
ling too crow ded."
Dr. Teresa T elecky. associate

director o f the ffum ane Society
In W ashington, said about 14
percent or the 461.861 w ild birds
flown Into the United States for
the pet trade in 1969 died either
In transit o r soon after their
arrival.
"T h e r e 's no good w ay to sb lp a
bird If It's a w ild bird.” Telecky
said. “ T h e y 're captured In the
w ild and a re easily stressed
anim als.”
T h e birds that make It alive
range In cost from about 612 for
a parakeet to 615.000 for a large
hyacinth. More com m on am ong

the exotic birds are macaws,
w h ic h a re p r ic e d b e tw e e n
61 .0 00and 61.500.
T h e pet Industry also is w or­
ried about legislation pending In
Congress that would ban airline
shipm ents o f wild birds.
"I'm doing business according
to all the Internationa], federal
and state rules." said W illie
Lawson, a Miami pet wholesaler.
"A n d the animal rights people
w on't wait for Congress to put
me out o f business — they want
to do It them selves."

Education
Law school prep will help dream

IN B R I E F

By VICKI I
Herald Stall Writer

Browvwll graduate tops In c te a
Shawn T . Brownell, son o f Richard and Patricia Brownell o f
Lake Mary, recently graduated at the top o f his class from the
college o f Social Sciences from the University o f Tennessee at
Knoxville.
Brownell, a 1987 gradu­
a te o f S e m i n o l e H ig h
School, m ajored In political
science w ith a m in or In
sociology.
lie intends to attend law
school.
Brownell had a perfect
grade point average during
his four years at the school.
He was awarded his degree
summa cum Imidr during a
cerem ony earlier this month.

i
W

—
1 *

M

’
■4B

S h ew n T. B row n ell

Ltsders sought for scholarships
Shell Century Three Leaders, the program honoring student
leaders from across the nation, w ill be accepting applications
throughout the month ofS ep tcm b er until Oct. 18.
Applications will be available at all high school guldancc
offlces throughout the district.
The Century Th ree Leaders com petition Is available to all
high school seniors w ho have a "p roven record o f leadership
and academ ic success along w ith a vision about solving the
challenges America faces during Its third century.”
T w o seniors from each state w ill be selected lo receive St .500
scholarships and lo attend the Shell Century Three Leaders
national conference In Williamsburg. V A In Murrh 1992.
At that conference, the students will com pete for a 810,000
scholarship.

l^ T T T fri x n

•

UCF piano school registration
Fall registration for the University o f Central Florida's
pre-college piano Institute, w hich offers weekly piano lessons
and classes will be on Sept. 3.
Classes w ill run from Sept. 9 through Dec. 19.
Th ere w ill lx- group and individual piano lessons for
beginners and more advanced students ages six and up.
For m ore information, call Gary W olf at 823-2H69 or Juanita
Becker at 774-6935.

School Board mooting sot
S A N F O R D — The Seminole County school board will have ns
regular m eetin g Tuesday. Aug. 27 at 7 p.m.
A m o n g the items on the agenda wilt be the vote &lt;&gt;u the pupil
progression plan.

SANFO RD
G oin g (o law
school la an expensive proposi­
tion.
T o som e people It la only a
distant dream , but some stu­
den ts th la su m m er had th e
chance to take som e law classes
In preparation for gettin g Into
law school.
Aldrcna Buggs o f Sanford w as
am ong a group o f 28 students
w ho attended the taw school
p rep a ra tory p rogra m at T h e
University o f M ississip p i this
summer.
" It was a dream clm c tru e,"
she said. *T've alw ays wanted to
be a law yer and this Is som e­
thing that w ill h elp me get
there."
The program, sponsored b y
the Council on Legal Education
Opportunity, provided the finan­
cial resources for the students
who traveled from six south­
eastern sla tes to attend th e
classes.
" T h e cla ss es ra n g e d fro m
basic legal principals to law
w ritin g." said Jerry Dr Loach.

assistant for m inority affairs to
the dean o f the la w school at Th e
University o f Mississippi School
o f Law.
Buggs. a 1982 graduate o f
Sem inole High School and a
1986 graduate o f o f the Universi­
ty o f Florida, w ill attend law
school at Nova L a w School In Ft.
Lauderdale n ext fall. She Is
taking a year o ff from school to
work In order to ca m money to
pay for law school.
T h e stx wcck program com ­
bines the resources o f several
southeastern la w schools to
provide the students with a wide
variety o f classes to chose from.
B u g g s . lik e m o s t o f th e
participants, w as nominated by
the administration at the law
school she will attend.
" N o v a n o m in a te d h er on
criteria dealing w ith her abilities
and econimlc n eed ." said DeLoach.
De Loach said that each o f the
stu den ts who com pleted the
sum m er program will receive
some financial assistance during
their three years in law school
from the the Council on Legal
Education Opportunity.

Aldrena B uggs o f Sanford, centar, waa among aavaral Florida
atudent lo attend the law prep achool at Ola Miaa this summer.

P re -K re a d y fo r stu d e n ts
W hat's for lu n o lif
Monday. Aug. 26,1661

P iiza
Steamed M ixed Vegetables
Apple C risp
M ilk
Tuesday,

Aug.

27,

1661

Spaghetti
Tossed Salad
Spiced A pp lesauce
Garlic R oll
M ilk
W ed n esd ay,

A u g u st

Hamburger Pie

Buttered Green Beans
Ju ic e Bar
Fresh Baked R oll
M ilk
T h u rs d a y ,

Friday,

26,

1661

A u g u st

26,

1661

Hot Dog and Bun
Baked Beans
Seasoned Com
M ilk
Auguot

Hamburger and Bun
Au Gratin Potatoes
Crtsp Cole Slaw
M ilk

30,

1691

T h e S e m in o le C ou nty PrcKindergarten Early Intervention
Program offers pre-school serv­
ices to children whose fam ilies
arc econom ically disadvantaged
or w ho have other special needs.
I f y o u a rc r e c e iv in g food
stam ps or AFD C or you r fam ily
Income qualifies for the Free
Lunch Program In the Scmtnole
C ou nty P u blic Schools. *your
four-year-old m ay be able to
receive free pre school services.
T h e age requirement Is the
student must turn four on or
before Septem ber 1. 1991.
T h e program w ill be held at
F ir s t Im p r e s s io n s E a r ly
Childhood D evelopm ent Center.

{

1221 W . 7th Street. Sanford.
C all Ja m es B rooks Jr. at
321-0407 for more information
about the program.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 25, I N I -

People
BRIEF

m and Agnes Alien do not
________ ___ granted. There la not a day that goes
bjr that the M idway couple does not thank the

rirvngnisr noffiofva
David Artxner. the American Medical Trane*
port Em ergency Medical Technician who aaved
the life o f an Orlando police ofllcer In August,
1990, has received the prestigious A ) Ridgway
A w ard, sponsored by the Florida Association o f
EM S Providers. Artxner works for the Oviedo
Fire Department full-time as a firefighter and
EM T.
“ David Is the first recipient from the entire
Central Florida area,** Mark McConnell, general
m anager of Florida AM T said.
' Artxner w as standing at the back of the AM T
am bulance after putting a traffic accident victim
into It. Out o f the com er of his eye he saw the
headlights o f a car coming straight for the
policeman and himself. He grabbed the police­
m an and pulled him out o f the path of the car.
seconds before the car crashed Into the back of
the am bulance.
The A l Ridgway aw ard Is given annually to
the single Individual In Florida who has gone
above and beyond the call of duty. All EMS
providers and Are deportments In Florida may
nominate an Individual.
Al Ridgway. EMS Chief of the City of Miami
Beach, founded the EMS Providers of Florida In
1975 In order to provide a forum at which al) the
EM S providers In the state could meet to
Identify trends and discuss common Issues. The
aw ard w as established to honor Chief Ridgway
upon hta retirement horn EMS service.
tsTvvffif -**-**»• r**■!( tiitffif'i tfi r
-,i***«»•• I
i»i«fl N

Here are the facts
about steroid use
DBA* MARYi 1am a 15-year-old high school
student (m ale) and I'm sick o f being the smallest
and least developed o f m y friends. Sometimes
other guys give m e a hard time about m y size,
but even If they didn't. I still hate being so
skinny. 1 had hoped I could gain weight over the
summer, but here I am, ready to go back to
school looking Just like I did last year. A friend
aays he can get m e some steroids to help me
gain som e weight. I've heard they can hurt you,
but I d o n 't kn ow how . and I'm g ettin g
desperate. Don't give me a lecture — Just give
m e some facts. I'll make up m y own mind.
SEDOnr AND PICK OF IT
I

DEAR MCE OF IT: OK. these are the facts:
A n a b o lic S tero id s are synthetic form s o f
testerone. the m ale sex hormone. Steroids were
originally developed In the 1930s to help aging
m en maintain their strength, but began to be
w idely used In the 60s by weight lifters to
Increase muscle size. However, In the 80s
research began to show that steroids cause fluid
retention In muscles rather than actual Increase
In muscle size and strength. In 1967, Kibble and
Ross reported (hat steroids only Increase muscle
mass and strength "in persons who are already
w eight-trained and w ho continue Intensive
training w hile m aintaining a high-calorie, high
protein d ie t."
It Is now believed that athletes who use
steroids and Increase muscle size and strength,
do so because they have been training harder
w hile believing that the drug Is doing the work.
There are nearly 100 known side effects and
adverse reactions to steroid use. ranging from
liver cancer to acne. The liver, heart, blood
vessels, and b c x organs are the most likely to b e
dam aged. The psychological reactions include
depression and extrem ely aggressive behavior
known as "ro ld rage."
As Lee "M r. O lym pia" llancy says. "Y o u 'll
m ake your best body building gains If you avoid
steroid use and Just concentrate on hard
training and good nutrition."

Mary Balk la a certified coaaselor with
tha Drug Prevaatiaa Office of the Seminole
County School District. W rite to her la car*
o f tha Herald at 300 N. French Ava..
Saaford.33771.

_ for the future, there la nobody
Ih a n Aden. He sold his faith and
&gt;what gets Mm through the day.
- Ha learned this I I years ago when suddenly
M a entire M b changed. On a typical day he
a o lstd at hia Job at Howe Industry to Sanford,
w here b e la a m achine operator. T he day proved
to b e a normal workday until be auddenly
becam e tfl. He fainted to the arm s o f a co-worker.
After being hoepttallsed. Aden w as diagnosed
w ith complete kidney failure. He was told he
w ould have to go on the dialysis machine. This
w as devastating new s for this strong-willed man
w ho baa alw ays been a hard worker, asking for
nothing.
At the time he and Agnes were not married.
H la reaction in the begin n ing toward the
m achine w aa to reject It.
A gnes recalls. “ He rebelled and refused to go
on the m achine."
She rem em bers the day that she went to his
house and found him swollen In the face. This
w as his final bout with reality.
“T h at's It!" Agnes raged. "Y o u are going to go
on the m achine." Allen did not argue' and
allow ed Agnes and his family to take him for the
treatment.
W ith Agnes' love and support he knew that he
could not lose. The couple were married shortly
after. Agnes became hta helpmate every step of
the w ay especially “ to sickness and In health.*
Their love for and dedication to one another is

completely obvious. Although Jam es could have
became s num ber on the disability list, he choae
not to. There w as nothing that waa going to get
him to “ Ue down and die. He continued to work
at his Job at Howe Industry.
His strong determination has Impressed his
boss. Chuck Hoffman, vice president o f Howe
Industry. Hoffman said Allen has worked for
them for over 30 years and "doesn't m iss much

The mere fact that Jam es has to go on a
dialysis machine twice a week and goes to work
each day Is remarkable In Itself. But Hoffmah
says he Is completely awed by the fact that Allen
has Just completed building a seven-room house
for his family. He did this on hla own In a period
of seven years.
The home on Briason. In Midway. Is directly
next door to the A llen's form er home. Surprts-

Sand man scu lp ts fantasy castles
ftf LACV0C1H
Herald Psople Editor
SAN FO R D - Charles Wakefield
thinks sculpting a sand castle Is like
livin g life. Enjoy It w hile you can.
T h e 1973 Sem inole High School
graduate and a B -l bom ber crew
ch ief currently stationed at Grand
F o rk A i r F orce B ase In N orth
Dakota, is a self-taught professional
w h o builds sand castles, an art he
did not begin pursuing until he w as
an adult w ith a son. Tru k, now 16.
" M y so n a lw a y s h e lp e d ,"
W akefield said.
W a k e fie ld ’ s m oth er. A udra. a
Sanford resident, said she didn't
know her son could create such
breathtaking art.
“ H e played In the sandbox as a
child. I guess I didn’t pay close
enough attention to what he w as
doin g in there.” she chuckled.
W akefield travels to com petitions
throughout the United States with
his partner. Justin Gordon, from
Boston. Th eir attention to minute
detail and true scale have cata­
pulted them to one o f the best team s
In the nation.
“ W e have free standing doors that
op en and w e ’ re v e ry particular
about scale and detatl. W e 've won a
bunch o f com petitions Including
second In the Master's Tournam ent
In V irginia Beach. T h a t's the grandaddy on our side o f the country.”
W akefield said.
He said the team w on 31.000 for
For four hours w orth o f working
{y3rJ*

Charfos WakafMM puts tho flnisMng touchos on Ms sand easMs.
in the sand, that's not b a d ." he
theorized.
A very elaborate sculpture that

stands about eight leet high will
take three 14-hour days to com ­
plete. W a k e field said. He uses
hatever tools are at hand to sculpt
ind.
“ Everything from putly knives to
melon-bailers and dental tools." hr
explained.

Z

And after laboring In a crumped
p o s it io n fo r h o u rs, h ow d o es
W akefield feel knowing the beauty
o f his creation Is fleering and will be
washed aw ay In time? His castles
last between one and three weeks In
New England, where the sand is less
salt-Uke and the heat Is less Intense
than In Florida, where a rustle may
last a week or two.
It's satisfaction and sadness, like
w atching a child grow up and g o ."
he said.
W akefield said much o f his satis­
fa ctio n co m e s from seeing the

wonder In childrens* eyes as his
creations lake form.
"1 rem em ber one little boy who
wanted to ask m e a question, but
his mom wouldn't let him. thinking
It would bother me. Finally she
must have agreed because he cam e
running up, very excited, and said.
‘ Mr., do you have u sandbox at
home?' Th e best purl Is the kids.
T h e y see e v e r y th in g y o u d o ."
Wakefield said.
And the worst part?
" T h e back ach e and the raw
knees. Fourteen hours a day spin­
ning In the sund and 1 bring my
Doan's pills," he admitted.
H ilt then a delighted child will
approach the castle with Its moul.
w orking w indow s, and resident
dragon. Wakefield rem em bers that
he doesn't mind the pain utter all.

�! Sanford Horald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday. August 25, 1981

1WBDDINO

.l

VVitv-V”-

Hospital paves road to recovery
At age 3. Kryatle McPadden ts
a veteran hospital patient, and a
m ode! one. at that. The charm­
ing Utile trooper w as released
tost week from the Florida Elks
Children’s Hospital at Umatilla.
Kryatle w as born with brittle
bones and has had surgery twice
at Arnold Palm er's Hospital for
Children. Orlando. On both oc­
casions. she has recovered at the
Elks Children’s Hospital.
H er m ost recent operation

incm oro inserting roam in ootn

fluBu»
MJLhb AftliMUMa
W l* BVWI MTv« W u n O v if Wb ^ ^ V I U

Lana Chapman wed
in garden ceremony

h

O V IE D O Lana Jane
Chapman, daughter o f Mr. and
Mrs. Thom as L. Chapman o f
O viedo, becam e the bride o f
Anthony Paaquale Cappetta. son
o f Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J.
Cappetta o f Miami, on July 6.
1091.
T h e 11 a.m . w edding took
place In the garden patio area at
the hom e o f the bride’s parents
in Oviedo w ith Notary Ronald
Jarabak. retired Lt. USN. o f­
ficiating. Tradition al w edding
vo w s aqd the w edding march
w ere Included in the double ring
cerem ony.
T h e bride w as escorted by her
father and join tly given In mar­
riage by her parents. H er Victo­
rian style gow n o f w hite satin
w a s e m b e llis h e d w ith seed
pearls and sequins on the bodice
and sleeves, w ith Insets o f net­
ting. Th e gow n featured a high
neckline, gathered lon g sleeves,
chapel-length train, and large
bustle bow. H e r bridal veil o f
w hite tulle w as held by a w hite
satin bow. She carried a large
n o seg a y o f w h ite m in ic a rn a tio n s , p in k roses, and
baby’s breath w ith soft pink lace
streamers.
Her m atron o f honor and sole
a tte n d a n t w a s M rs. M anuel
Patino o f M iam i. She w ore a long
pink satin gow n with organza
ruffles at the scoop neckline. Her
sm aller nosegay featured w hile
carnations, pink roses, and lace.

Th e bridegroom wore black
tux and tails. He wore a pink
rose in his lapel.
Jam es Hill o f Miami served the
groom as best man. His black
tuxedo included a waist jacket
and pink rose in the lapel.
M others o f th e b rid e a n d
g ro o m w o re s tr e e t le n g th
ensembles and corsages o f pink
roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Chapman hosted
a luncheon bufTct reception im ­
mediately follow ing the cerem o­
ny. T h e threc-tlcred "flo a tin g on
air” w edding cake, decorated
with white frosting and pink
roses, surrounded with pink net
ruffles, was cut using a da gger
handed down by the b rid e’s
great-grandfather. A traditional
champagne toast w as m ade b y
ihe best man.
T h e bride Is a graduate o f K ey
West High School. Florida K eys
Com m unity College, and St. L eo
College. She had been em ployed
as an Insurance adjuster in the
Orlando area.
T h e groom attended public
and private schools In the M iam i
a re a an d g r a d u a te d fr o m
Palm etto High School. H e is
currently em ployed as an Insur­
ance appraiser.
T h e honeymoon Included a
cruise to Nassau. Freeport, and
Pleasure Island In the Bahamas.

The nrwylweds will make their
,home in Miami.

..... , . J

M anns
ce le b ra te
30 y e a rs
L A K E M O NRO E - Mr. and
Mrs. Robert A llen (Betty) Mann
celebrated th eir 30th w edding
anniversary Augu st 14th in Lake
Monroe, the com m unity where
Robert has been postmaster for
the past 31 years. T h ey were
m arried August 14. 1961.
A fter a trip to Nashville. Tenn.
Mr. Mann w ill retire from the
Post Office Septem ber 13. 1991.
Mr. Mann Is a fifth generation
Lake Monroltc.

B a tty a n d R o b e rt M a n n

"It was wonderful. All the girls
arc so en th u siastic," Em ily
Whalton, civic league member
said.
"Th e senior club will sponsor
the new group." President Elda
Nichols said.
Attending the first meeting
were Lynn llroeckton. Kathy
C h e n et, J o d y N oah , L y n n
RI s ne r , J c n i nc N ew m a n .
Elizabeth McCall. Holly Horn
and Jan Goebel. Lynn Hrnecktun
was elected chairman protein
and Elizabeth was nameil acting
s e c re ta r y u n til b ylaw s are
enacted.
Emily said the tirsi tiling the
young ladies asked was II the
senior club would mind having
some flowers planted around the
clubhouse.
"W e were thrilled because
we're loo old to bend over and
plant them ." Emily chuckled.
The next meeting will ts- held
at the clubhouse on August 27
Cull Elda at H30-5022 or Emily
at 767-8840 for more Informa­
tion.

David McPadden and Dee and
Dennis HignHe.

Exparianee of s HMtaw
Dora L ee Russell returned this
week from L lllydak. N.Y., w here
she w as guest o f Psych ic Anne
Gehmah at her su m m er hom e
there. A nne, w ho now lives In
the Washington. D.C. area, w as
quite popular and successful In
psychic sciences circles when
she lived In Orlando.
Several seminars w ere In pro­
gress a l L lllyd a k including one
c o n d u c te d b y D r. D ee p a k
Chopra, author o f "Q u an tu m
H ealing."
Am ong the others attending
the w eekend festivities, includ­
in g severa l ph ysician s, w ere
Joanne Jones, a form er Central
Floridian o f Indian heritage, w ho
to now a law yer and president o f
the W innebago Indian Council
from Wisconsin to California.
But before Lee departed for
New York, she had th e experi­
ence o f her lifetime. She took her
five grandchildren on a cruise to
Mexico.
" W e had a wonderful tim e.”
she said. "T h e children w ere
marvelous, (cou ld n 't believe 111”
Sharing the fun and festivities
with their spirited grandm other
w ere: M elony S ch rocd er. 17:
Todd Schroeder. 16: Stephanie
Russell. 16: Christy Russell w ho

Mickey Mouse keepe h it eyes on Krystle McFedden, front, at the
Florida Elks Children's Hospital In Um atllls after members of
Seminole Chapter No. 2, Order of the Eastern Star, from left, Mary
Thrift, June McFedden, Barbara Ash and Phyllis Freund, tour the
facility.
celeb rated her 14th birthday
w ith a b ig party aboard ship; and
Scott Russell. 11.
T h e fu n b e g a n at t h e
H em ingw ay House In Key West,
hom e o f the fam ous author. The
you ng guests were quite smitten
w ith 42 cats In residence there.
Th en, they visited Mel Fisher's
Museum where they got the feel
o f gold and more gold.
In M exico, they visited Tulum.
Playa del Carmen and Cozumel
where they toured Indian ruins,
shopped until they dropped and
dined in splendor. O f course, the
fun aboard ship w as out o f this
w orld for the young travelers

w ho are already talking about
saving their m oney for another
cruise next year.

Back horns from Indiana
W inifred "6111" and W a lter
Qielow are back on the local
scene after several w eeks on the
road In their second home, their
m otor home. T h e Glelows d e­
parted Sanford w ith his sister.
Frieda Glelow. for South Bend.
Ind., where they visited another
sister. Ruth G reen , and her
husband. Dr. G eorge Green, w h o
spend the winters In Sanford.
W hile in the north country.
□ B m D ietrich. P a g * 7B

Scholarships awarded to local students

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ «

T h e 1991-92 school year has
begun. W e salute the Im proved
Benevolent Protective Order o f
Elks o f the W orld. Scholarship
C om m ittee o f Evergreen Tem ple
No. 321 and C elery CUy Lodge
342. Dgt. Carlethea Merkerson.
Daughter R u k r and Bi d . Bennie
Alexander. Exalted Ruler. Dis­
trict Tw o; Directress o f Educa­
t io n : D g t. E la in e C r u m lt y :
Director o f Education. District
T w o In . Earl E. Mlnolt; Local
E ducation C hairm an Bernard
M itchell and his com m ittee. W e
salute K ing Frederick A k xa n d er
o f C elery C ity Lod ge and Queen
Pam la Martin, supporters o f the
Elks Scholarship Fund, and the
m an y citizens and Elk members
w h o have m ade It possible for
the follow in g students to attend
the colleges o f their choice. T h e
s c h o la r s h ip r e c ip ie n t s a re :
Akeishakxi L. Toom er, Seminole
C o m m u n it y C o lle g e ; E r i k a
T illm a n . H a m p ton . Unlv.,
H a m p to n . Va.: and T e r ri
W illiam s. Congratulations to all!

C h r i s t m a s In J u l y

Junior woman’s club
forming in Longwood
The Longwood Civic Lcugue
Woman's Club Is sharing the
special gift o f strong friendships
formed between club members.
They arc helping young women
between the ages o f 20 and 40 In
L o n g w o o d fo r m a J u n io r
Woman's Club. The first organi­
za tio n a l m e e tin g w as held
A u gu st 20 at the h is to ric
clubhouse. 150 W. Church Ave.

k g s that extend six Inches to
allow lor growth. These rods will
eventually need replacing as
Kryatle grows.
Before K rystk's hospital re­
lease. several m em bers o f the
Sem inole Chapter No. 2 Order of
the Eastern Star visited the
hosotta) bearing several belches
o f hom em ade cookies. They
w ere given a tour o f the Gsciltty
a n d a c c o r d i n g to J u n e
M cP ad d en . K ry s tle 's g ra n d ­
mother and Electa In the OES.
th ey' ‘were very Impressed.”
Other Eastern Star members
visiting the hospital were: Mary
Thrift. W orthy
thy Matron;
Ash. pro tern officer; and Phyllis
Freund, secretary.
T he hospital to financed by
Florida Elks and admission to
open to Florida children up to
age 17. Necessary '•surgery
u r g e f t t ’ to
done at Orlando ares hospitals.
“ T h e nurses and staff
kind and loving.'* Ju ne said.
“ T h e y are the greatest."
Before Krystte left last week,
the hospital provided her with
braces, a w heel chair an d •
walker. She to at hom e now with
her parents and. from all reports,
is doin g fine.
She to the daughter o f Denise
and T o m m y McPadden and the
g r a n d d a u g h te r o f J u n e and

D O RIS
DIETRICH

T h e Congregational Christian
C h u rch w i t h the R ev. T o m
Tkachu k and the Rev. Ed W eb­
ber for over 17 years have com e
Into the G ood Samaritan Home
to bring holiday cheer to the
residents during the month o f
Ju ly — Christm as In July —
fellowship. T h e church m em bers
and Pastor T o m sang songs o f
Christm as jo y and reminded the
residents that the Lord does not
forget his children and that
Christm as is every day o f the
year. Those m em bers spreading
ch eer were Matthew Garden. Pat
Cavcnaugh. Mary Simpson. Sue
G a rd en er. R ebecca Tkachu k.

MARVA
HAWKINS
Angle and Emil Cavcnaugh.

ram ify, uiw nut cstwDfSie
New Mt. Calvary Missionary
Baptist Church w i l l o b serv e
Family and Friends Day at Ihe
11 a.m. worship service. Th e
Rev. Lew is Moore and Mt. Zion
Holiness Church o f O viedo will
be th e m o r n i n g g u e s t s .
C hairm en arc El ma C oop er.
Deacon Ruben B lak e, H elen
Morris, Issa Reid. T h e Rev.
Bobby Player Is pastor.

A n n iw r a w r y m a t r k t d

New Bethel Missionary Baptist
Church w ill celebrate the 52nd
anniversary o f the founding o f
the church. The them e is "T h e
Church: Preaching. T each in g,
and Proclaim ing Jesus.” which
will be presented at 1 1 a.m.
T h e R ev. A.L. M cW hotcrs.
associate minister o f St. John
Missionary Baptist Church. Or­
lando will be the speaker o f the
hour. A l the 3 p.m. service, the
Rev. Theodore Sm ith o f Faith
Tem ple Church o f Christ. Or­
lando will bring the message.
A f t e r t he m o r n i n g s e r v i c e ,
dinner w ill be served. Deacon
Sammlc darkness Is chairman.
Sylvia Bodlson handles publicity
and the Rev. W illiam Lew is Is
pastor.

K i n g F r e d e r ic k A t o x a n d t r a n d O u a a n P a m la M a r t in

Raunlon plannad
The Grooms Academy Class
Reunion for the classes o f 1932
th ro u gh 1949 arc m eetin g
monthly to plan for their reunion
to be held In December. Persons
knowing the whereabouts of the
fo llo w in g classmates, please
contact Katie Robinson Burke at
322-1628 or Kalheryn Joseph
A l e x a n d e r at 3 2 3 - 6 3 6 6 .
C la s s m a te s : B e a tric e Platt
Bivins. Lillian McCellcn. Wilma
Duckett Ycnrlay. Agnes Knowles
Moore. Mildred Hasting. Van

Williams. Ruth Franklin Button.
Grille Taylor. Bclford Austin,
und Laura McDonald Grayson.
Reunion meetings are being held
m onthly. Earl E. Mlnolt Is
chairman of reunion committee.
B ir t h d a y g r a a t ln g a

Happy Birthday to George
Jennings Sr.. George Jcnning
J r.. K e rri J e n n in g s . J o u n
Turner. Elolse Williams George.
Dcloris C. Johnson ami Bernard
Fulshe.

D JX M IIIIO M U IIIII D JX n illll U
LACY
DOMEN

I Allllbu Can Eat Chicken

Cham bar boats lunchaon
The Longwood Winter Springs
Area Chamber o f Commerce will
host the August Chamber Lun­
cheon tomorrow. August 26. at
the Quality Inn North. 1-4 and
434. Longwood.
Anne Marie Mendhcim. assis­
tant to the director of Business
and Industry. Support Center
Seminole Community College,
will speak about the services o f
the Small Business Center to
local businesses.

Gardan club is back
Sweetwater Oaks Garden Club
will hold Its w elcom e hack
memlM-rshlp coffee tomorrow.
August 26. 10 a.m.. at the home
of Mrs.. Raul Dallda. 104 Amberwood Court. Umgwood. All
residents o f Sweetwater are In­
vited.
Garden club president
year is Ami Wilson.

tills

For further information, call
Annul 862 5162.

per
person

Tuesday &amp; W ednesday
4:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Sanford Store Only
Eat-in O n ly
S kin F re e &amp; A ll W h ite M e at E xtra

fi IIIIIHKFCIIIIIIKKFC. IIIIIIIKFC
I

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8«nlord HsraM, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 28, I N I - VS

l* NNIVi itSADY

•
•V J

Part , c ru is e
50th
fo r G o rd o n s

Sf

SAN FO R D - WUaon and Elate
Gordon o f Sanford celebrated
thetr 50th w edding anniversary
on August 3. T h ey were married
August 3. 1041 In Crestvlew.
Fla.
A party and a dinner cruise
w e re h eld on th e R lverboat
Grand Romance. Tables were
decorated with gold and white
flowers, decorations, and a SOth
A n n iv e r s a r y c a k e th t com *
pic m e nted the affair.
A ttending w ere their children
Sarah Center. Denver. Colo.,
Janet and Earl Smith. Tampa,
and W ilson Jr.. Sanford. Grand­
ch ild ren J e n n ife r and A n ita
Sm ith o f Tam pa were there to
celebrate the occasion as well.
Sisters o f the couple In atten­
dan ce w ere Iris and Harold
Castllle, Lafayette. La.: Ila and
C arl C handler. Klnard. Fla.:
Mavis and Walt Bell. Milton. Fla.:
Ida and A l Adams. Fort Walton

may be beyond cure

iti
m at
kl
ft M y
to some, but to
Im portant. My
and I have been marlbr more than 30 years.
[ which time he has been a
He
only one fault, which really
Irritates me. He surely must take
T * because that's his

party and cruise.

Beach. Fla.: T een and Clyde
Sadler. DeFunlak Springs. Fla.:
Fay and T o m m y Sm ith .
Huntsville. Ala. with daughter
Nancy and son.
Unable to attend w ere grand­
children Karen and Kenny
Center o f Denver. Colo. Other
friends o f the fam ily enjoyed the

The Gordons have six grand­
children. W ilson Is retired from
the U.S. Arm y and Elsie Is a
homemaker. The couple enjoy
cooking and sports. The couple's
secret for a long marriage Is love
and trust.
*r&gt;

SUNDAY'S TIUVISION

.2

-

-

A o v te c

v

#
A B IG A IL
VAN BUREN
—

young woman over for us to
meet. (H is wife died about a year
W hen he talka about a trip we
«#
»J
•oak together, he soys. "W h en 1
She w as very loud, talkative
went to Yaaemtte." or he'll say.
and boasy. which w as disap­
have a r a d a o n " or. “ I own
pointing to us because we knew
aome lan d." He talka aa though
his first wife, who was a real
he doean't have a wife. I may aa lady.
It makea me feel ao
The following day. the man
fnifleant. It's ter­
came over alone and asked us
ribly humdlatlng.
what we thought of his lady
la U wrong to feel hurt about
friend. W e told him the truth.
this? Don't suggest that I talk to
W ell, you guessed It. T h ey are
my husband, I have, and It's
being married, and w e are not
done no good.
Invited to the reception!
W e r e w e w r o n g In b e i n g
M A R lU B T i Your husband s honest? My husband thinks we
overdose o f vitam in “ I” has
probably become addictive by
C A N T L IB
now. but If he's a good m an. he'd
D B A * C A N 'T : H onesty Is
make a conscious effort to avoid
always the best policy, but you
hurting you. Remind him that
should know that no man wants
v ltam ln 'W E " Is good for mar­
an honest opinion o f a
riage. and ask him to leave after h e's bought It.
vitamin " I” on the. shelf for a
is
while.
B E A U A M Y :1 fed Just terri­
ble. A friend ol ours brought a

Ingly. Allen built that
too. It w as when Mrs. Allen
expectin g their second son.
Jason that Allen decided to build
another home.
Mrs. Allen says that It w as a
"family thing." She speaka of
her h u sban d's a b ilitie s w ith
pride.
If there w as som ething he
couldn't reach, their oldest son.
C o r e y , w o u l d d o It b e i n g
carefully Instructed by dad.
Corey even pave u p some o f his
play time In order to help mom
and dad on thetr new home.

*

Allen is a man o f sm all stature
but not In character. Seeing the
love that radiates from hts wife
and fam ily. It la easily un ­
derstood how he d isp lays a
warm sincere sm ile aa he gently
speaka about building the home.
" I fed good about It." he says, " I
did It for my fam ily for there
may be a day when I w on't be
able to work.
Now that the house is com ­
pleted and his dream for his
family has been fulfilled. Allen
may become a recipient for a
kidney transplant.
Mrs. Allen. Head Start teacher
at Midway Elementary, antici­
pates great things ahead for her
husband
•z

Dietrich□i
Bill and W alter visited T ravis
City. Mich., the cherry capital o f
the world, which w as beautiful,
according to BW.
T h ey later visited her fam ily in
several North Carolina points
and report a good time.
BUI. a cancer victim , looks and
sounds great. ''I feel g re a t." she
said. My morale Is good and so Is
m y spirit."

i!

■ r id e * la n a m a o f g a m e

C h a r l o t t e S m i t h s a y s she
"pla yed bridge morning, noon
and n igh t" for tw o w eeks while
she visited Black Mountain. N.C.
Charlotte left Sanford with her
aon.\ W alter In hts m otor home,
w h ile his w i fe C h a r l o t t e
(hereafter called Charlotte II)
drove Charlotte's car so that the
m m

• Prompt, Friendly Servlcs
• Quality W brtnaanshlp
• w e D o Ikplarsiasnt Slats

90-year-old mother could have

:
1? 00

1? JO

&lt;00

1 10

1 CO

i JO

(0 0

For thefinest in vertical blindsandmini-blinds, call

transportation to flit around the
mountains.
W alter and Charlotte II went
on to tour Kentucky and T e n ­
nessee. Including Opryland. be­
fore returning to pick Charlotte
up to return home.

■Bill

I I)

SANFORD VERTICALS
"A Beautiful New Direction For 1

\

75 0 W y l l v A v e . , S a n fo r d
|WBW IP BBWWra aTI^WIWiJ__________

" I h ad a g r a n d t i m e . "
Charlotte said. She attended an
antique show In Asheville and
summer theatre at Montreal.
Also, she was In a church
congregation with the Rev. Billy
Graham and played bridge with
a 103-year-old woman. Charlotte
visited friends and also a cousin
of her late husband.
Her son, Ralph Jr., even came
up for a few days from Quitman.
Miss.

Iitc h fie ld
I l l III ^
»

y

H o m e a t la s t

Lourinc Messenger has re­
turned home after spending
nearly six weeks In and around
Odessa. Texas where she was
called due to the serious Illness
and death of her son. Wultcr
Beal.
This Is a sad time for Lourlne,
but she has kept her chin up.
She said she and her daugh­
ter-in-law. Helen, went to the
Bculs' summer home In the
mountains In New Mexico for u
few days which had u heullng
effect.
En route home. Lourinc visited
with her brother und sister-inlaw at Arlington. Texas.
S tra s t k w m

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For 24-hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday August 23.

U.S. SAVINGS BONDS
THE GREAT A M E R IC A N IN V E S T M E N T

★

s t y le s

Something different Is coming
to town In mld-Octobcr. A gala
street scene o f fashions will lie
on parade downtown to benefit
the St. Lucia Festival and the
Sanford H istoric D ow ntow n
Waterfront Association. More on
this later.
Maritza Pena Ellas, president
o f the Sanford-Semlnole Art As­
sociation. announces the group
will meet Sept. 9. at 7 p.m.. ut
the Cultural Arts Center.
Members are usked to bring u
covered dish to test their culi­
nary uptlludes und a work o f art
to share al the traditional covc r c d •d I s h d i n n e r a n d
show-and-tell mixer.

HOW TO RUN
ROM T o n TV
TKg secret it •#) the tgnoH

★

uqnm onanM tt TRACKIN'*IXO.

A
UM1

(Integrated deceive# Dateramble#I.
youI ready come out s winner
because VRACHi Hyv
•ty Me*eb«My Convergence And
ease of operation The whore
rune yards
If your goal is total TV d*t
cover what son sated,te

H a p p y b ir t h d a y , D o r is

If you should happen to sec
Doris Harrlman. wish her a
happy 95th birthday on Aug. 29.
The lovely lady makes her home
ul Howell Place and Is still quite
alert und active.
But there's one thing uboul
Doris. She Is publicity shy und
doesn't think she's "Important
enough for a story.”
She has lived In Sanford for 43
years, is a world traveler, at­
tends the First United Methodist
Church and plays bridge regu­
larly.
So. happy, happy birthday.
Doris llarrlman!

★

f hauqneit mol commfromIN ocMMg li lodln
s/hj touchdowntnto your i*v«vj loom ad bong
you»ho bod variety ol leRwuufl snfa«U*n
ooni youto rvw* •■porancaJ
I tilth yougal «#ver I0D(Nrwou
of endless tports schurt hrsi
runmovies mutre vwfeos. idhour news lull shows
srwj more
Ami if youreceive these

Beit Prices
In Town!

HTS

wHha TRACK!R I RD
if i Ty w*inan••us us

★

★
547N.HW Y. 17-22
(17 Ml N Of 414 BOUND OAJHY OCllTE)

LO N G W O O D

695*4433

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Joint endeavor. Tty to beep theae
facte straight In y o u r m ind
today. V bpo. treat yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for V irgo's
Astro-G raph prethetiona for the
year ahead by m alting 91.311
p lu s a lo n g, sclf-ad d resaed .
stam ped en velope to A stro G raph. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
B o x B I 4 2 8 , C l ev e l a n d , O H
44101-3438. Be sure to state

t.

l

VL

HERE'S JOE COOL APPLYING
FOR FINANCIAL AID...

UJMAT DO I NEEP?UKU;
.1 i i

i.A W

P jir e w

MOW MUCH IS A N
ORDER OF FRENCH FRIES?

I'M HA/IAXSA/VtAUMR
up A pa-&lt;23wrrMOJr

AG &amp; EM 0 JT

y

0EAUV?

You m a y b e luckier in the y ea r
ahead than y o u have been in the
p a st in fu lfillin g s e c re t o b ­
jectives, even though the efforts
you ’ ll expend m ight be rather
nom inal.
V IR G O (A ug. 23-Sept. 23) You
m ight be ve ry fortunate today In
w ays y ou 'd least exp ect and at
tim es w hen things look lik e
th ey 're goin g ajpUnst you . T h in k
positively and keep the faith.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 33) Even
thou gh you m ay be a trifle
extravagant In what y o u do for
friends today. It could still turn
out to be a solid Investm ent o f
good w ill on you r behalf.)
S C O R P IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 23)
T h is la a propitious d a y to talk to
influential individuals w h o can
h e lp a d v a n c e y o u r p erson a l
ambitions. Be forthright and lay
all your cards on the table.
S A G IT T A R IU S (N ov. 23-Dec.
21) I f y o u 'v e been a b it restless
lately and you have th e m eans to

1

■
■ ■

1

rA O T T IM a o A T '

N IN f HUNPPgp N lN f T Y - W * f P oU A / tf
TO U N W IN P IN T * 0 m e W
...
Q /
HOW M UCH w CUPP IT COST
B

WHAT A NIGHT/ WAS I
. EVER ON A ROLL)

k t

m r

ep oses to H O M f f

I MUST HAVE
HAP SEVENTEEN
CURTAIN CALLS)

If t COULP JUST

m i 1iM u zT &lt; o a-M tt&gt; iN w zr
D EZ T R C YA ll r b a n a n t z u f f

MY FUfTURlZTIC TEC hn OLQSY
ZO THERE. W ONT a * * ------- BE ANY kARE
. Z E ^ V E L ^ X ^ ttn ) &gt; ----- t ? A #
W « T A LA

.VISTA. 7 * 3 K O

T

JW

Iv M llllA M w
It had been a beautiful su m ­
m er's day — not a cloud In the
sky. But now that the sun had
set. I entered the bridge club for
the even in g's duplicate. Th ere I
saw the Senior L ife Master sip­
ping a Cam pari and orange. He
put dow n his glass to sketch the
fam iliar diagram on the back o f a
coaster. I strolled o v e r to hear
his tale.
" T h e true mark o f the bridge
ex p e rt." he began, " la that he
allow s for the'worst distribution.
S iltin g South on this hand w as
Perclval Blenktnaop, partnering
his fiancee. Jasm ine Dove.
"P e rc iv a l was slightly cautious
In bidding only three no-trump,
but he w asn't su re Jasm ine
w ould treat four no-trump as
natural; she would assume It
w as Blackwood. H ow ever.
Jasm ine appreciated the value o f
her hand, especially that jew el,
the diam ond quren. G iven som e

could

f

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S C IE N T IS T #

ON W\%
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frcmthe

SROCEPY.

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UN\)SVJAI
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convince

r ir r * i r r

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f=

H f will w AT
THE RESEARCH
CENTER, CHILP,

j

w

r
this occur.
8 COR W O (Oct. 24-N ov. 33)
A n o v erh ea rin g a cq u a in ta n ce
could aggravate you today fay
tryin g to pressure you Into doin g
so m eth in g y o u 're a d ve rse to
doing. Refuse, but d o n 't o v e r­
react.
B A O IT T A B T O B (N ov. 33-Dec.
21) T o d a y ’s w orldly frustrations
should not be brought hom e
w ith you . E ither s o lv e y o u r
problem s where they originate
o r leave them on the fron t steps.
C A P R IC O R N (D ec. 22-Jan.
19) Th ere is a possibility you
m ay know in gly do som eth ing
today that caused you trouble In
the past. I f you do. the end
results w ill be sim ilar to w hat
you previou sly experienced.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 30-Peb. 19)
Requesting financial assistance
today from one w ith w h om you
h ave not settled an overdu e
account Isn't apt to evoke a
p o s itiv e response. E ith e r d o
w ithout o r look elsewhere.
P O K E S (Feb. 20-March 30)
It's best not to get Involved in a
partnership today I f there isn't
parity a m on g the participants.
Each partner must h a ve equal
Input.
A R IE S (March 21-April 19)

q

Responsibilities you have cle v­
erly sw ept under the rug re­
cently could raise a bit o f dust
today. I f you don’t take care o f
them now. the fallout could grow
in Intensity.
T A U R U S (A pril 20-May 30)
T h ro u g h th o u gh tlessn ess on
you r behalf, you m ay d o som e­
thing today that would Im pose a
severe im position on a friend,
causing this individual’s opinion
o f you to be low ered. Be careful.
O E M D fl (M ay 21-June 30) Be
certain in advance that an ob ­
jec tiv e you set for you rself w ill
provide you w ith som ething you

do so, this la a good tim e to do high-risk situations,
som e traveling. T r y to target a
T A U R U S (A pril 30-May 30)
venuc you ’v s alw ays-w anted-to - -T ry .to. alter, y o u r, raulioe. A b(t
visit,
today. Plan to d o som ething fun
C A P R IC O R N (D ec. 23-Jan. w ith the fam ily this evening.
19) T h is could b e a profitable such as an endeavor you usually
day for you in several w ays. You reserve for the weekend,
m ight gain financially and. at
G E M IN I (M ay 21-Junc 2 0 )
the sam e tim e, learn som ething Make an effort to stay in close
o f value for future use.
contact today w ith those w h o are
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Im portant to y o u r Im m ediate
Individuals you have dealings plans. By m aking them aware o f
w ith today on a one-to-one basis you r presence, th ey 11 be m ore
— either socially or com m trprone to assist you.

2 £ y.

don', b .

Your m otives for helping others
w ill be sincere today. Y et. ow in g
to conditions o f which you 'll be
unaware, you could be the one
w ho gains the greatest benefits

afral&lt;?

'"JlSw'SSlS' ai Apr.1

£^£5"«£h

dealing w ith t h U with w hom
y o u sh are s tro n g e mo t i o n a l
bonds. H ow ever, your rabbit's
tm l Ian'I llk rlv In work for Vou in

£ » » ' “ ,w • » '“ k
J or * ° ur
!pfH jJti",'“ iT f w ^ p a p f r f n
? A ^ fS P * PER E N ‘
TE RPRISE ASSN.

V

^

d

^ r y

191
to k y lo T y

encouragem ent. Perciva! had no
hesitation In bidding six notrump.
" W h e n the d u m m y was
ta b le d . P e r c l v a l sa id . ' F o u r
diam onds w as a beautiful bid.
partner.' w ith love oozing from
every syllable.
“ A lesser player would have
won the spade lead and im m edi­
ately knocked out the club ace.
But then East would switch to a
heart, putting South to a guess.
T h in k in g the diam onds w ere
solid, he would rise with the
heart ace and go down because
o f the 5-1 diam ond break.
"P erc iva l saw the right an­
swer. At trick two. he cashed
du m m y’s diam ond queen. Th en
he played a diamond back to the
king. Seeing the bad break, he
knew he needed the heart fi­
nesse for his 12lh trick.
" 'M y hero!’ cooed Jasm ine."
(0 1 9 9 1 . NEWSPAPER EN­
TE RPRISE ASSN.

'‘ B A p p r - *

WONT HAVE

HiAAT T-

fJ jJ ? *'a reH iM ^ foir
nn
y ° u to do things on a grand
,, , „
. ^
2 3 -A u g.2 2 ) W h a t s
w hom
In vo W rf todoy

Y ou ’ ll

NORTH
um
♦ A K T 4I
VS
♦ 9«

4 K Q J 01
WEST

EAST

♦ Q JIO

♦

VMSJ
♦ 107 • 5 3
♦ 5

#4

V K J 10C 4

♦ A 7• 4
SOUTH
VI S
VAQ7
♦ A K J 91
41013

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer North

Opening lead: A Q

1HATU K
W W W CK6
COMiN’ lN

HOW, PR. r
5PUTZ. f!

�M A R Y A N N ! M O R S!
C LE R K O * CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Jm
l.iM H k
DEPUTYCLERK
iliMt INI1 A.

■»
“Lanjido
.
you know what
works best when they fit tightly?”

“Afy UncleBemie^false teeth?"
MNo Larry safety belts.

You’vegot to alwaycmake

A
NOTICE OP
FO RECLO SURE SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y OIVSN
pwrtuant to an O rd er Be-

that whatever safiefybelt
system your car comes R(
with is in frek-woridng a d a f

o*k*M iiH *to

| o M # | a a i&gt; M

| o| s

BOMB August I t IWI. and ontoroB to Caw No. fl-W W CAU O of too Circuit Court of too
EIG H T EEN TH Judicial Circuit
to and tor SEM INOLE County.
Florida wbortto C T X M ORT­
G A G E C O M P A N Y , f/h /a
PLA V CO M O R TG A G E COM­
PAN Y, INC. le too Platotllt and
DONALD A. SMITH. M A R Y A.
SMITH. ST EV EN F. THOMAS.
DEBO RAH A. THOMAS. COM­
M E R C I A L C R E D IT LOANS.
INC., KIM DONA H O E. and

and boot bidder tor caofi at too
ontrance of too SEM IN O LE
County Courthouse at t ! :M
d m ., an too Ifto Boy of Sop

l«1.

This is a grsat opportunity for you to enjoy the s im s grsst rssuits ss
our ragular classlflsd custom ers at no co st to you. Just follow th sss
Instructions.
A d s will ba scheduled to run for 10 days.
Pries of Item must ba stated In th s ad and be $100 or less.
Only 1 1tem per ad end 1 ad per household par weak.
You should call and cancel ss soo n as Item sa ils.
Available to individuals (non Com m ercial) only. Does not
apply to rentals or garage fr-yCtd sales.
6. Th s ad must be on ths form show n below and either be
mailed In or presented In person fully prepared to ths
Sanford Harald Classified Department.
7. A d will start as soon a t possible.
8. C lassified Managements decision on copy acceptability will
be final.

(SEAL)
HONORABLE
M ARYAN N E MORSE
Clerk at toe Circuit Court
■y: J e n e l. Jeeewlc
Deputy Clerk
Pukilth: August II. 7S. IWI
DEI 1W

Oofondont(i).
S t CQNO A M E N D E D
NOTICE OP
FO RECLO SU RESALE
S V C L E O N OP T H E
CIRCUIT COURT
Nottcs to hocobr flvon toot too
u n d e r s ig n e d M A R Y A N N E
M O R t l. Clerk el too Circuit
Court of lomlnolo County. Flor­
ida. will, on too Ifto Boy of
Sfetemkir, l«*l, st 11:00s'ctock
A.M., ot too W stl Front Boor of
too lom lnolo County Court
houoo. to Santoro. Florida, offer
tor Mte and soil of public outcry
to too Mflfwot onB boot bidder
tor cash, too fallowing doocrlbod
property situated In Seminole
County. F lor Ido. to wit:
L O T 4. S P I C E W O O D , A
P L A N N E D UNIT D E V E L O P ­
M E N T ACCORDING TO TH E
P LA T T H E R E O F . AS R E ­
C O RD ED IN PLA T ROOK 37.
P A G E If. O P THE PUBLIC
R EC O R D S O F S EM IN O LE
COUNTY. FLORIDA.

pondtog In said Caurt. toe style
ot which la: Commonwealth
Merfgegi Company of America.
L.P . VS. Rennie L. Haggard, at
uv.etel
WITNESS my hand and otfk la i teal of told Court this nth
Bay of Augutt. t«*l.
(SEAL)
Clerk at toe Circuit Court
BY: Jeno E. Jotewlc
DEPUTYCLERK
Publish: August II IS. IWI
DEI li t

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

M A IL T O :

3 * n lo fd H arald r D V
P .O .B o x 1157
» « ■
S o n ford , FL 12772-1*57

o ONLY ONE ITEM

• MUST IM

Infer**! In too totlowing
proparty:
1*17 C h e v r o l e t . V I N
flGlAX4INXDTl7IM I
Chief Steve Harriott, of too
Sanlord Polko Dept. Samlnofe
County, FlorlBo. through hi*
offkart. Invotflgofera or ogtnto.
w in d too above property on
t/ l/ tl. ot or near Sanford.
Samlnofe Cautfy. FlorlBo. and I*
protontty holding told proporty
Mr too purpow of ferfeffum
purwont to Section* «17. Ft 1704.
Florid* Statute*, and will R E ­
Q U E S T that on Honorable
Judge of tho Circuit Court.
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit.
Sam lnofe Cautfy. Florida. Itauo

Thu request will bo mod* by
M AIL Mmotimo around t/ W tl.
THIS IS NOT A HEARING
DATE I You will bo tent o copy
of tho Rule to Show CeuM once
It It *ignod by too Judge and It
will odvlM you how and whan to
rotpond to Wilt request for
ferfeltum.
I H E R E B Y C E R T IF Y THAT
a true and ca m e l copy of felt
Notice wo* ten! fe the above
nomad addrouot by U S. r*gu
tend mail, nturn racalpl ro
gov*ted. thi* 14th day of Augutl.

IWI
NORMAN R W OLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
By: PhilipArcfwv
Auutent Slate Attorney
tool ParkAvo
Tltotvllfe. FI J7FM
14071 7*4 WO
Alternay lor Fteintltt
Publith Augutl II. 7J. IWI
DEI Its

I
«4Cte

NOTICE O F ACTION
TO: Orlando Swoetwator
ProportkoaN.V.
4f0 Atoll Fair bonk i Avonuo
WInfer Pork. Florida 17ft*
YOU A R E N O TIFIED that on
action to loroctoM a Claim ol
Lion on too following described
root property locatod In Sami
noto County. Florida, hot boon
fifed again*! you In too Circuit
Court of tho llth Jud icial
Circuit. In and lor Seminole
County. Florida, by Plaintiff,
SW EET W A T ER CLUB HOME
OW NERS* A S S O C IA T IO N .
IN C . to wit:
Lot* 7 and 4, SwMtwotor Club
E lla lot. according to too Plat
tooroof. a* rocordod in Plat
Boob It. Pago 100. ot too Public
Record* of Samlnofe County,
FlorlBo.
You ore horby required to
torvo a copy of your writ ton
detente*. It any. to It on EM IL
A GASPERONI. JR . Esquire.
P l o ln l lll’t attorney. whoi*
adOrow It MS Weklva Spring*
Rood, Sulla 000. Longwood.
Florida 37Fit, on or before
original with the Clark ol thu
Court either before wrvic* on
Plam llll't attorney or immedi
Ofely toerealtor, otherwise a
default will bo entered again*!
you tor tho relial demanded in
the Comolaint
WITNESS my hand and Mai
of toi* Court on toi* nth day el
Augutt. IWI
(COURT SEAL)
M AR V AN N E MORSE
Clerk ol tho Circuit Court
By Ruth King
A* Oepuly Cferk
Publith Augutl II. 7S 4 Sep
•ember l.*. IWI
DEI IW

tecuto took claims to ludfment.
to toe sstont toe is m s srtot out
of s r occur to conwoc tton with
tot coni true! tow of Improve
monfssn too Prapoefy.
s i s jA i| f s s u

MY

i

u

k i« ^ Hi

v^P EV^^F ve^^^mmwW wW^^w

boil bidder, tor cath. sTtoo woof
front Boor of too i smtosto
County Courtoswos. Sanford,
Florida at ll: M o.m. on Nsosm
official tool Of «B» Court an tote
l«to Boys! August IWt.
(SEAL)
M AR Y AN N E M O R SE
Clerk of Circuit Court

Case Ns. IS-S41 i-CA-is-E/L
T E C H PAR K «. LTD., a F lor Ida
limited partnership.
Fleintlft.
D O REZELECTRO N ICS
CORPORATION, s Florida
corpersilon.
Defendant.
FOURTH A M EN D ED
NOTICE OP SALE
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN
tool, pursuant to an Amended
Final Judgment In Foreclosure
entered in toe above styled
cause. In toe Circuit Court of
Seminole County, Florida. I.
Clerk ol toe Circuit Court of
Seminole County. Florida, will
M il that certain property tituet
ed In Seminole County. Florida,
more particularly described#*:
EX H IR ITA
Lot t ot "T E C H N O L O G Y
P A R K AT L A K E M A R Y ", as
recorded In Plat Book If. Paget
II and U of toe Public Records
of Seminole County. Florida
B EIN G F U R T H E R OE
SCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
Commencing at toe Southwest
corner ol TECHNOLOGY PARK
A T LAKE M A R Y at recorded In
Plat Beak If, Paget 41 end 47 ef
toe Public Recordt ol Seminole
County, F lor Ido; run toonce
North WIF'OF" East along too
Watt line ol told plat (told plat
being toe b a m ol boerlngt tor
to il description) a distance el
tel Of teal to the Southwest
c o r n e r o l Lo t 4 ol t e ld
T E C H N O L O G Y PAR K AT
L A K E M ARY lor the Point ot
Beginning; thence continue
North W I7 07" East long toe
West line ol M id Lot 4 4 distance
ot 2U 00 feet to toe Northwest
corner of said Lot I; thence run
South W47'S7" East along too
North lino ot said Lot 4 a
distance of 100 ft feet to the
Northeast corner ol said Lot 4 on
the West right ol woy line ol
T E C H N O L O G Y P A R K , the
same being dedicated to end
maintained by toe City ot Lake
Mary, Florida, by virtue ot toe
etorementtoned Plat; thence
tram e tangent bearing ol South
07*1 f i r East run Southeasterly
along toe arc ot Mid curve
IIS If feel through e central
angle ol I h l l ' k " and along M id
West right of way lina to toa
Easiorly most curnar ot M id Lot
4 thanct run along a radial
bearing ol South »*» » '' Wosl
along the South lino ot M id Lot t
a distance ot oa it feet, thence
run North 4W4717" West along
toe South lln* ol Mid Lot 4 e
distance ol 100 00 feat to toa
Point ol Beginning
EXHIBIT B
(at Futures
The items ot
property now or at anytime
hereeltof alined or attached to
or placed upon the real property
located to Seminole County,
Florida more particularly da
scribed on E ih ib 't A above (toe
"Prsperty''|. toe record owner
ot wnich is Teen Pert a. Ltd
(hereinafter toe Debtor") and

• M Q 3 0 C A U G of too Circuit
Court ot too INh Judicial Circuit
In onB for Seminole County,
Florida wherein C H R Y S L E R
F IR S T BU S IN ESS C R E D I T
CORPORATION, a Delaware
corporation. P L A IN T IF F, and
C ESA R E POL IDOR O. etc.; ot
ol.. D E F E N D A N T , are Detondants. | will M il to toa Mghett
and best bidder ter coals at Ifto
west front tfepa of too Seminole
County Courthouao In Sanlord.
Seminole County, Florida of
II R o'clock A M . on toe Itto

Eat I, Seminote County, FlorlBo.
dotcrlbad at toilowt: The part
of too following dotcrlbod land*
lying Wotferly of State Rood IS
and 4flt; beginning M.40 chain*
South and If link* Wotl of too
Nortoootl comer of Section II.
Tewnthlp 70 South. Range 70
Eat I, run totneo North 44 Bo
groat XT Wotl 14 chain*. South
7S d tg rM t W Wotl 10 chain*.
South *4 Btgrtot. XT Eat I X
chain*. North 25 dogma* JT
E a t1 10 chain*. North 44 Btgrnot
70* Watt 4 chain* to too Paint of
Beginning, oacopt tho Southerly
1*0 toot tooroof
Together with all ttructuro*
and improvement*, appurte
nance*, tangible property. In
com**. proceed*, contract
right*, name* and other Intangi
bfe* now and horooltor on told
land, and lUturo* attached
procoodt end profit* accruing
and fe accrue from told pro
miM*. oil ol which ore Included
within too toragoing description
end too habendum thereof; alto
all gat. tfeam. electric, wafer
and other heating, cooking, re
Irlgeroting, lighting, plumbihg.
vontlloling, irrig a tin g , and
power system*. machine*, op
pliant**, tuturat. and appurte
nancat. which now ore or may
twraalfer pertain to or bo utad
with, in or on M id prtmiM*.
even though they bo detached or
detachable
Dated at Santord. Seminole
County. Florida, toi* 17th day ot
Augutt. IWI
M ARY AN N E M O R SE
C LER K .C IR C U IT COURT
BY JanaE Jotewlc
DEPUTYCLERK
Publith Augutt It. 7S. IWI
DEI Itl

�I

101 - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday. August 25, 1991

Legal Notices

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d

CLASSIFIED ADS

•ID INVITATION

i

i •

ii

Sn M Btdi from Invited bid
•tors will b* received by Holy
Cro»»fcpiicopal Church [owner)
until 2:00 PM local time, on
September II. t**i at the office
of Architect* and Engineer*.
Roger*. Lovelock A Frltt. Inc.,
Winter Park, F L 177*0 for con
tlrvctlgn of Roof Replacement
for Sanctuary Bldg, at Holy
Crot* Episcopal Church. *01
Park A v., Sanford. F L 11771
Thi* protect I* funded In part by
a Florida Dept, of State. Olv. of
Htitorlc Pre*ervafion Grant.
There thall be a Prebid Con
ference at |ob *lte — 401 Park
Av.. Sanford, F L on Wed Sept.
4. It* 1 at *:20 AM Attendance I*
mandatary and I* a requirement
ol bidding
All material* and equipment
t u r n l i h e d a n d a l l w o rk
perform ed thall be In ac
c o r d a n c e w ith d ra w in g * ,
tpeclllcatlont and other con
tract document* pertaining
thereto, which may bo examined
at the office of Roger*. Lovelock
A F r l f t . I n c . .
Architect*— Engineer*— Plann
er*. 145 Lincoln Av. Winter
Park. FL,
C o n tracto r* m a y t t c u r e
drawing* and *peclflcatlen*
from Roger*. Lovelock A Frltt,
Inc., upon depot11 of 525.00 per
tet. with a limit of two tat* per
Contractor DepotIt will be re
turned to Odder* who tubmlt a
bona tide bid. upon return to
A rch ite ct of drawing* and
•pacification, In good condition
within teven day* after bid date.
Subcontractor*, material men
and other Interetted portlet
may obtain tull or partial let* ol
drawing, end (pacification* py
payment of 51.50 per «heet ol
drawing* and 111 00 per book ol
•pacification*, cott of which are
not refundable.
A Bid Bead properly executed
by Bidder end qualified Surety,
or C atM er'i er Certified Check
on a n y c o m m e rc ia l bank
Ileanted In FL. for not let* than
5% of amount bid payable to
Owner, thall accompany each
bid a* a guarantee that Bidder
wll not withdraw from competl
lion tor 45 day* after bid open
Ing. In event co n tra ct It
awarded to Bidder; he will,
within 10 day* thereafter, enter
Into contract and furnlth re­
quired Perform ance Bqnd,
Labor and Material Payment
Bond, falling which he thall
forfeit depotlt a , liquidated
demagei. Bid Bond. Pertor
mance and Material Payment
Bond mutt be tecured from an
agency of the Surety Company
having an established place of
b u tln e t* In F lo r id a , duly
llcented to conduct butlnet*
therein.
Bid Bond or check ot untuc
cettful bidder* wll be returned
within 45 day, alter time ol bid
opening
Mark each bid "Sealed Bid tor
Conttructlon of ROO F RE
P L A C E M E N T FOR SANCTU
A RY BUILDING at Holy Crott
Epitcopal Church, Santord FL.
Addret* each bid to: Root
Replacement lor Sanctuary
Building, % Roger*. Lovelock A
F rill, Inc., 145 Lincoln Av.,
Winter Park. F L 117*0.
Owner reterve, right lo waive
informant!** In any bid, to
refect any or ell bid* In whole or
In part, with or without caute,
and/or to accept bid which
Owner conilder* In hit betl
Inlerett,
Drawing* and tpeclllcallont
will be Issued only by Ih*
Architect and all quetllon, rela
five to bidding thall be directed
to hi* office.
Publlth; Augutt 25 A September
i. m i
DEI 270

Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

M O N D A Y t h n F R ID A Y
CLO SED SA T U RD A Y
A SUNDAY

ROW ACCKPTM 6

APPLICATOR SVC JOBS
Prices above reflect o 51 JCCosh discount tor prompt payment Schedul­
ing moy include Herald Advertiser ol the cost ot an additional day. Cancol
when you get results Fay only for d oyt your ad runs ot rate earned.
Use tull description tor fastest re iu tti. Copy must follow acceptable
typographical form
DEADLINES
Tuesday thru Friday 12 Noon The Day before Publication
Sunday A n d Monday 5 10 P M, Friday
A D J U S T M E N T S A N D C R E D I T S : In ttw B v tn t o l »n
e r r o r In a n a d , th e S a n to rd H e r a ld w ill bo re sp o n sib le tor
the llr * t I n io rtio n o n ly a n d o n ly to tho e x te n t o t ttw cost
o t th a t fn sa rtio fl. P le a s e c h e c k y o u r a d to r a c c u r a c y ttw
f ir s t d a y It ru n s.

21— P e r s o n a ls
ADOPTIONS
Free medical care, transpor
telion, counseling, private
doctor plus living tipenses
Bar *717515 Cell Attorney John
F rk k e r.............. t-we-tl2-M«e
SPECIAL W HITE lady 47. good
health, no smoking or drink
Ing. Would tike to meet gen
tleman who I* secure honest
and gentle. Marriage minded
onlyl 45 75 Pleas* write: Box

23— L o s t A F o u n d
LOSTII Black A tan male
puppy. Vicinity ol Sanford
Pott Office. Sunday morning.
HEW ARO I..................1214340

23— S p o c la l M o t lc o s
ADOPTION
Support A medical expenses
paid. C e ll A H y t: Weston
Sigmotsd A Natalie SAatAa
1-eee-UAsm f l Bar *074*115
A *07*40*1

• IC O N ! A ROTARY
For Detail*: I *004114154
Florida Netary At sect*flaw
FIN E T U N E PIANO SERVICE.
I, now ottering an Introducto
ry *5 eft piano tuning discount
with th i, ad. Special In
d ud e, minor key repairs and
Ira * h u m i lit y c o n t r o l
estimate*.................... 174-1454

27— N u r s e r y A
C h i ld C a r e
ARC S M A L L D A Y C A R E, TLC
lor babies A toddler*. Hot
meal*. Exc. fief's........323 411*
CHILD C A R E in my
lo d d la r s lo a yr* . H R S
certified M l *011
CHILE) C A R E , family salting.
•II shifts. Neg. rata*. Fenced
yard, hot meal*. 1211*7«
D A Y C A R E A V A IL A B L E In my
Hidden Lk. home. Lot* ot
TLC L k . t O f C U l .......I ll 4 tll
E X P E R I E N C E D CHILDCARE.
good home, good meal*, great
caret Men-Fri. 221-1*21
M O T H E R of 1 will b ab ysit
afternoons and eve,, m y San
lord home 111 1410
NEW BORN C A R E . 0 17 months
L.P.N.- babysaver cert SCC
area/Lk M a ry ............122 71**
SHARON'S AdoraMa Stinkers!
Exc ret'sl CPR trained Hot
meals TLC I Call H I 1154 '
SM A LL O U ALITY HOME LIKE
D a y c a r e A P r e s c h o o l,
Openings! Meals, learning
program! Playground! Fully
lic'dl Lie.4 4**-]..........121-7415
WILSON A R E A Childcare, all
ages Days/Night* Reason
able rales................. H e 2*11

33— T r a i n in g
A E d u c a t io n
S E A Licensed Contractor, Gen
eral/Builder/Residential Call
tor Info I *00212 lees

Legal Notices
L E G A L A D V ER TIS EM EN T
■ iDete/ti-To
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that the C ity o l Santord.
F lo rid a w ill rece iv e sealed bids
up lo I X P M on Thursday.
Septem ber 17, m l In Ih* P ur
chasin g O ffice . Room 741 lor Ihc
follow ing Items
HIGH PR ESSU RE
SEW ER HOSE
All bids a re to be d elivered or
m a ile d to. The C ity of Santord.
P u rch a sin g O ffice. 300 N P ark
Avenue. Santord. F lo rid a 12771
The sealed bids w ill be publicly
opened la te r that sam e day al
7 00 P M
In the C ity Com
m ission C ham bers. Room 117.
Santord C ity H a ll
Specifications and the proper
bid terms a re availab le , a l no
cost. In the P u rch a sin g Office
Room 241. J00 N P a rk Avenue.
San lord. F lo rid a . (4071 130 541)
Facsimile o r telegraphic bids
w ill not be acceptab le
The C ity of Santord reserves
the rig h t to accept or re ie c t any
or a ll bid*, w ith or without
cause, to w a iv e te ch n ica litie s or
lo accept the bid w h ich in its
ludgem ent best serves the inter
e s to l Ih e C ity
C IT Y O F S A N F O R D
W a lle r Shear in
P u rc h a sin g A q en l
A u g u s t27. I»»i
P u b lish A u g u st!} , m i O E I 244

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cwtabrirf L upfaiif try p log f&lt;•***« # p tfp jin J hum quoMtiomi by thmou*
P&lt;itf .»fHj prertopnl
[ m .fi toritaw m Ih# cephto* Af-AftoJA few

■urtotfMW FtvLjr * ctu* ft ikjiaM O
J Z

X

T

W

L V

G

U T A

S U

H L U E

H

W

J

N

L H

U
D L E L

P U N N Z

U I U E H
T

Eem u p totttTOhr.
We Train!
Hiring now for local area:
Call lOIAMAFtSI
A P P L Y NOWI Drivers, security
guard*, lanltors, warehouse
help and office help (Will
train) 515 Phone Fee.
_______ 1-toe-iM •***.

CHILDCARE WORKER
For before A after school
program. M usi be II yr*. of
age and have F L drivers lie.
Apply In person 1 n * Hf. 14th
St. Sintord. M -F tA M -llP M

CLERICAL

OEI 244

B T H E V

Aa E id tiR g Camr»
Recruiter o l International
com pany, seeking career
minded Individual, to consult
on:
•Color
• Fashion
•Glamour
Unlimited Income petentiel I
Professional training pro
vlded. flexible hour*.
Calf BearteWe
5M-I751

S J tP J L

t, m i

S W

ADO TO Y O U R INCOME
AVONt S E L L SKIN-SOIOPT
CALL m a u l e r 122045*

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
PRIVATE PARTY RATES

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
O F T H I EIG H T E E N T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
FO RTH!
STA TE OF FLO R ID A
IN A N O F O R
SEM INOLE COUNTY
FLORIDA
Cate N e .fld M )C A i4 (K &gt;
General Jurisdiction
CO M M O N W EALTH MORT
G A G E
C O M P A N Y
OF
A M E R IC A . L P .
P la in t Ilf.
vt.
R O N A L D O C R A IG . *1 a t .
De len d e r It
NOTICE OF
FO REC LO SU R E SALE
AY C LER K OF
CIRCUIT COURT
N otice I, hereby g ive n that the
undersigned M a ry a n n * M ort*.
C le rk of the C irc u it C ourt of
Sem inole County. F lo rid a , w ill,
on the 7*th day ot September.
I«*l. at II 00 A M . at the West
F ro n t door o l the Sem inole
County Courthouse. In the C ity
o l Santord. F lo rid a , o ffer for
•ale and te ll at p ub lic o utcry to
Ih* highesl and b e lt bidder for
c a lh . the follow ing described
property situated In Sem inole
County. F lorida, to w it
LO T
100, O A K L A N D
V I L L A G E . S E C T IO N T H R E E .
A C C O R D IN G TO T H E P L A T
T H E R E O F AS R E C O R D E D IN
P L A T BO O K II. P A G E S 71 A N D
74. P U B L I C R E C O R D S O F
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
FLORIOA
IN C L U D IN G S P E C I F I C A L L Y
B U T NOT B Y W A Y O F L IM I
T A T IO N T H E F O L L O W I N G
N A M E D
I T E M S
R A N G E / O V E N . D IS H W A S H
E R . D IS P O S A L
pursuant to the fin al decree o l
foreclosure entered in a case
pending in said Court, the style
ot w hich It C O M M O N W E A L T H
M O RTG AG E CO M PA N Y OF
A M E R IC A . L P vs R O N A L D
O C R A I G .e ta l
W IT N E S S m y hand and ol
tic ia l seal ot said C o urt this 70th
d a , of August, le t!
(S E A LI
By JaneE Jasewic
Deputy Clerk
P u b lish August 23 A September

P E U T S L

831-9993

* • a V O LT * *•
T E M P O R A R Y SERVICE*
Call 47**2**

V

W

B

H D L

43— L t g &lt; l S t r v i c t s

Part time. G a l Friday needed!
IS + hr*, week. 1211144 ask
tor Bother OT-5411 hi. t o f .

BABYSITTER
Flexible hr*. Markham Rd.
area References M2 0*47

CABLE TV JO tS
No experience necessary
III.SO per. hr. For inform*
lion: Call ! ***■777-47*2, ext.
H44 lAM -tP M . i Day*, in .t s
FEE

NAIL TECH
E x p e rien ced . La k e M ary
ere*. X I *742 after 7pm MS
4 X 4 “ Net Jett NeMs"

P0LICZ OFFICER
Full time. 54.47/hr. Closing
date 4/14. Only p e rm it state
certified a* a lew enforcement
officer or eligible lor compar
alive compliance need till out
a p p lic a t io n * . A p p ly :
Personnel Olfic*. City ot
Longwood. 155 W. Warren
Av#.............................. 24014*7
P O S T A L JOBS
SI 1.41 to
I14.*0/hr. For exam and
application information call
It* 749 444* ext. F L - l l f .
tarn *pm, 7d*y*
POSTAL and gevtntmen* |*bt
i l l 75/hr. Now open
For
exam and application call
X t 1554

M S NEEDED
Part llmo and t tull Urn*. I l l
shift. Perfect scheduling for
semi retired homemaker look
Ing for something to do with
that extra time on hand, or
those needing fo supplement
Income.

CONSTRUCTION ALL TRAMS
" B A N K R U P T C Y tram iter*
"D IV O R C E frem 571"
K. Neweckl, Attorney, 44*-71*4

49— M is c e lla n e o u s
I AM ERICAN AIRLINE I way
ticket* from Orlando, Fl. lo
Syracuse, NY. Mutt ba used
by 111 Best otter 1124 *2*4

55— B u s in e s s
O p p o r t u n it ie s
A G E N T S N E E D E D for building
canister distribution teams tor
non prolft organlralton, all
over Ih* U.S.A. High earnings
working from home sponsor­
ing fund collector, and taking
a percentage- No Investment
required. Writ* to: M S .
Foundation, 1170 Sunset Strip,
Sunrise, Fl. 1X11__________
RESTAURANT/PIZ2ERIA lor
rent, with equipment. Seel*
■4. Ready to open. Corner
17 *2 and 15th St. Santord
Call anytime, 14* 5141

SMALL BUSINESSES
Interested in doing M ilita ry ,
F e d e ra l or S late contract*.
C a l l ............................. 324 7057

14 Individuals Needed
Author ot best sailing book
e v e r, has excellent opportune
ty. II you
cu rre n tly earn
520.000 y r -t- and are un
satisfied with It ca ll John
&lt;4071-574- tin

$75,000 + + POTENTIAL
Established business Big
profits No selling All cash
income. Some financing avail
Inv only 51.f75. Call anytime,
1*00 *44 X45e»t *01

59— Financial
Services
JU D G E M E N T S AND LIENS
Reduced or elim inated, guar
anteed No reduction, n* tee.
C a ll X I 134*

Locel/Carlbbeen Island*
M g M j M g m j e g * BeltdersFee

Dental Assistant
Requiring relum e and copy of
Certification. Send to: Bea
*5*4*7, Lake M ary, F L 127*5

DRIVERS M E M O
A G C A R R I E R S , a w e ll
e sta b lish e d and grow ing
central Florida based com
pany oilers you:
• Semi Annual Pay Increase,
• StopOft Pay
• Unloading Pay
• Vacation Pay
• Safety Bcnut
• Spouse Riding Program
• A verageTrips 7 Day*
• Late Model Con von IIonaI
Tractor,
H you have 1 year* out ol state
tractor trailer experience and
a good driving record, call
la o o tra s e s i
tsee-iteee W E E K ! Stuff
envttope* at ham*. Ne cost!
SEND 5ASE to: Golden Dis
tributor*. PO Bex 771JTOC,
Carpus Osrlsfl, T X 7*477 1370

earn

Eip. Sewirtf Mach. OpratBn
W anted on a ll operation*.
M odern a ir conditioned shop.
P ie ce wk. p a y . P aid Holiday*
and Vaction. Health A Dental
insurance. A p p ly in Person:
7740 Old M a r y R d ___________

EXPERIENCED MECHANIC
D ie s e l A g a s e q u ip m e n t.
W elding c a p
helpful. M u st
have own tool*. For inform *
lio n ca ll 177 5214
F E D E R A L LAW
no eaperienen necessary. A lt
branches. U S Customs. D E A ,
etc For in to c a ll toll Iree
I 100 717 4 0 0 5 . e x t. 714*
S A M *P M . 7 d a y s
G OOD W ORKS R 5 MEEDEDII
DAILY W O R K DAILY PAY
Call bob
177 715) after lp m
O R E A T M O N E Y Distributing
patented nutrition products.
Debbie Martel
114 5111
H A IR STY LIST
H a ir A
Ranger* N eeded now I 122
0510 or a lte r 5177 4751

Housekeeper/Nann)
43— M o r t g a g e s
B o u g h t A S o ld
CASH FOR MTGS.-Bill Butler
300 Larkwood Dr. Santord
110-141*. Lic'd. M tf. Broker

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d

DON'T BE IGNORANT
WHY PAY SSI
BEFORE YOU'RE EMPLOYED!
WITH AAA EMPLOYMERT

YOU PAY NOTHING
UNTIL YOU'RE

HAPPILY EMPLOYED
WE CARE ABOUT YOU

EST. 32 YEARS
C N C M ach inist
M aso n Tender
B lo c k Mason
W arehouse W orker
Leasin g Agent
M g r Trainee
W re cke r D rive r
O llic * C le r k ...........
P lu m b er
L ice nse d Nurse

5400 wkl
52*0 wkl
5411 wkl
5240 wk
5250 wkl
5130 wkl
5273 wkl
5250 wk I
5400wkl
53*0 wkl

C A L L FOR M ORE LISTING!

AAA EMPLOYMENT
700 W. 25th ST.
323-5176

M a tu re w o m a n to p rovid e
h o u s e k e e p in g , m e a ls a n d
c h ild c a r e . In P ro fe s s io n a l
couple's ho m e
Please tend
resume to: Box IS. DeBary.
F L 32713 0015
LAB O RERS F u ll lim e V a lid F L
d riv e rs lic e n se required. Loa d
lim b s A logs, d riv e trucks, ru n
c h a in ta w . e tc
C o m p any
benefits! S ta rt 57 00hr.
Ethels' Tree Svc. 223 121*

LIVE IN Bafcpitttf
To help d iv o rc e d mother w ith
one child R o o m and board l
*50 wk m ust d r iv e 1)0*X1
L I V E IN To c a r* lor e ld e rly
woman Sept 21 Oct 12. 5125
wk X 3 0*49 n ig h ts A wfcends

IMNEEOfD
Fulltime. 117 shift
Com* join our team at DeBary
Manor, an SNF with sub acute
unit providing car* and serv
Ices lo skilled patients I*
ventilation dependent. Wo also
provide a variety of other
services usually ottered In the
acute car* setting Experience
desirable but will train. Com
potltlv* salary and benefit*.
Excellent working environ
ment. Apply:
D E B A R Y MANOR
44 N. Hwy t r m
DeBary, M-F.9AM-4PM.....EOE
ROO FER S. Aprentlc* A labor­
ers, own tools and transport*
lion.............................. 322 77*4

SALESPERSON
Professional lor radio and
cellular phonas. Full or Part
time positions, commission
pay stru ctu re. X I 1444_______
SC H ED U LER /TR A FFIC
R O U TER , ol food deliveries
tor It yr., old local company.
Should be lamillar with slat*
ol F L , organlred. a non
smoker, and have previous
office experience. Hours 10 7
Mon Thur , IS Frl. Apply:
401 Mf. 11th St. Santord.

R EH H SS
SITTER
F o r Infant 4d ays In m y home
M a tu re , reliab le c h u rc h lady.
C a ll a fte r 4 P M ....... 2 X 5142

STYLIST
W ith some following, com
m ittiG n or rental! 324 *414

Tdenurkettn Ntedtd
In o u r Sanford o tlic e . Bast
leads a n d pay a v a ila b le . It you
are professional and have a
good voice w e'll Ira ln you to
m ake 5150 550 plus per week!
C a ll L is a 10AM to 4PM lor
appointment. 12112*4________

WAITRESSES

73— E m p lo y m e n t
W a n te d
IRONING WANTED. Shirts

R O SEC LIFF A P A R TM EN TS
New 1 bedroom apartmenls.
for 1510 W/D connections,
screened pa Ilot and extra
storage closet. 1147 sq ft.
Located on Lk. Mary Blvd
Cat! 177 1*55
Equal Housing Opportunity I

af

47, keen week , live in
and out. Certilied In childcare
AM types of work. Box 7407D.
Orange City, FI 17743

C L E A N I BDRM.. I bath, no
pels. References 5X5 mo.
S lM W tp P J 1075
FIR ST FLO O R . 7545 Myrtle
Av*„ lg. living rm. 1 bdrm.. 2
both. Wall to wall carpet.
CHA, washer/dryer. S175 mo.
44S-l*14*r IVW-MSI

91—Apartment*/
House to Share
W ILL IN A R E 2 bdrm. 1 bath
patio home, with male or
tomato. Washer, dryer, pool
Cell H P *351. leave mso

T V. STS/wk end up. 1144471
FURN ISH ED ROOM In Long
wood. 140/wk pi us 5SO deposit
_______ Phone 4141540

73— Em ploym ent
Wanted
D R IVER
R etired gent will
drive you anywhere) Errands,
etc. I C h auflu er's lie. 54 30/hr
4 up I X 7737. an ytim e

575 ewk plus deposit. M l SM*

PR IVA TE horn* w/prlvltogot.
Excellent location. H I 041* or
days. *84 773 1001___________
SANFORD, Lg. bdrm.. private
bath. Hout* prlv. 570/wk plus
SI40 sec. Includes util. Mato
preferred. M t 4415
WALK TO DOWNTOWN, from
Park Av*. Furn. A Unturn. 530
w**k/5IS0 month. 3343422

geneva Q ardeqs
1905 W. 2Sth S t , Sanford

Managed byAngela Gordon Property M anagnw x

97— A p a r t m e n t s
F u r n is h e d / R e n t

Step Up Into A
Great
Apar

SANFORO • I bdrm., comptot*
privacy, t*5/wk plus 5200 t*
curity includes utilities.
________ Call 121254*

EFFICIENCY APT., Very nice,
utilities Included. 1 blocks
from downtown. 121017*
BEDROOM, living room, kltchen and bath. 5110 par week,
utilities Included, plus deposit.
171-4114 or 14* 5477

EFFICIENCY

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath
O N LY

COTTAOE,

Comp furnished, utilities pd.
person wily. Nop*t*. 172 1175

t

t e l e

FURNISHED EFFICIENCIES

MO.

Low rent, no deposit, weekly
or monthly. 414 554*________
SANFORD. I bdrm. adults, no
pets, all electric, modern, air.
S145 A up, 5100 dep. 323 401*

7 and 12 Month Lease
Available
- ewrmwig pool and Ightod
Mnnto courts
■C a t o t s e y
^ ___
• Screened Porc/ySatoony

SANFORD • t bdrm.. cottage,
with lg. fenced yd. Complete
privacy. 5*5 wk. plus 5100 sec.
Includes utilities.
_____
Call 123124*
SANFORD • I bdrm. excellent
n e ig h b o rh o o d , c o m p le te
privacy. 5*0 per week plus
5200 security. Call H U M *
e e t B D R M .e e Recently re­
modeled! W/W carpet, eat In
kitchen, all appliances. A/C.
sliding glass doors open to
large patio 15253- mo 124 *415
t BEDROOM, AC. colling tans,
roomy. 5175 plus sac. 5100.
Call...................... .......127 22**

•PtotCMM

/ r iH v n V n i
J

ALTAM O N TE SPRING* Huge
1 bdrm . 7 bath, w a sh e r/d ryer.
554*/mo. 44* 4775

8ETTEN THAN A MOTEL
Room tor rent by day . w**k
or month! Good rales I

v'-'-v-v

SANF0ID COURT....323-3301

on selectGd units

a duplex com m unity
• LMWfy ton
•Lam Care

I * M0VE-M SPECULA
1 K M AUGUST: SM OTTIM HO,
MNT FLU* MO APFLIAMCI F ill
•)

SANFORD

St. Croix Apartments

H f lf t

321-7303

t7-ae

3 X - 221s

S O N S O F IT A L Y 2441
1270 DOYLE ROAD, DELTONA

R i d , W h i t e A B Iu

574-1122

g

DOIT!

i

S G T Al F e licia n o
323-3317

Amcrii'iiru
tht’ir best

A i r C o n d it io n in g
A H e a t in g
DCI A/C
Fast tame day
tarvice All makes Freetst's
47* 1*14. IShourt. 7days

3

ances

NEW/USED APPLIANCES
Buy/Sell a Ractnd/ Guaranteed

HOME AP7LIANCE...322 3663
A u to m o tiv e

B uilding Contractors"

Thcsx; color! stand for freedom, dedication
and patriotism - the same ideals that
hmlt the Army National (hiard and has
kept it stron)! for mure than 3.50 years.
Many patriotic men and women have
defended these culm s over the years.
And America lias rewarded us all w itli
the ultimate &gt;iilt - a home where freedom,
dedication and patriotism are valued
above all else. Join the
FLORIDA
National Guard and help
keep this spirit alive.
Call tinlay.

ji

Home Im provem ent"

C O N C E P T One Enter. Gen
c a r p e n t r y ! H o m e , o lt ic e .
kitchen, baits 1124 4147

D E T A I L F E V E R . L e t your car
sp a rk le lor su m m er! Comp
d e ta il service!
2N4725

!

;

A ffordable 1 , 2, &amp; 3
B e d ro o m A p ts. In
Beautiful Lake Mary
Make
Paradise
Your
Address!

JDGfWOODAC1I5

Sunday 1 PM
T u esday 6 PM

All Regular G am es Pay S50

iiiarInit iil.s

99— A p a r t m e n t s
U n f u r n is h e d / R e n t

Hillhmn Health Can Cantir
322 6566............. .E.0.E./H

j AL k POIS

( *illus

,’ OQO I A K I MA RY Hi VO AIM H . ‘ t
S A N H J H D • J.M U:&gt;U4

A c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s lo r
C e rtilie d N u rs in g Assistants
Those w ith experience g ive n
p rio rity l A p p ly
esO M ellonvIlle Av* Santord

00 lop 4 Bottom Line on Al l

• 322-20*0

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:30 - 5:30 • Sal. 10 • 5

% SPECIALIST

NEW PAY SCALES AT HHC

All Papet Package • $15 $20-525

MARINER'S VILLAGE
LakaAda I bdr..............1*41 mo.
7 bdrm....«** mo A up■■■AJSB47I

LET A

M E O IC A L

3 ★ s250 Jackpots

LA K E JEN N IE APTS. Under
new management! Call us
about our move In specials
from Sit*I Broker. 1711X4

POOL and kitchen privileges.
Quiet non 4mok*r/drlnk*r,
mafur* adult. 575/wk 177 7X3

X-RAY TECH

PHONE OROERS.
People call you to order. Will
Train 1 100 715 l i s t Ext. 544

SANTOROCOURT...323-3311

GENEVA GARDENS

LONOWOOD FURNISHED
ROOM, with shower and AC.

5250 775 weekly t benefits
(W ill tra in ) t 2*1 2*04

S300TDAY PROCESSING

Single floor with private
enlranc* Studios. I A 1
bedrooms, many extra* In­
c lu d in g sto ra g e s p a c e .
Quttl.coiy community. Nice
landscaping ON SITE
M AN AG ERS WHO C A R Itt

Adam and E ve had
their Garden, now see
Sanford's

93— R o o m s f o r R a n t
SUMMER SPECIAL! Sr. cfNtew
dltceueltl Clean reams,

Warehouse/Drivers

F o r busy orthopedic o tlic e
Contact S h a ro n ............. 747 5SX

JUSTUKE4H0ME

* * BRAND N E W * *

51.50 ea. Free pkh up 1 del. tl
pket. Phone anytime . . . i n x*4
W IL L DO lawn mowing
reasonable rales.
___________ 0 4 7514

9 9 -A p a rtm e n ts
U n f u r n is h e d / R e n t

99— A p a r t m e n t s
U n f u r n is h e d / R e n t

D u n b ars Restaurant Santord
1114*15

M A ILER S N E E D E D E A R N
5504 51.000 W E E K L Y . No ex
perlence! Send long S A S E
e n v e l o p e to
Midway
Package. P O Box 2127* De
tro ll. M l. 4*771
M A T U R E Individual, w /car. lor
exc Income opportunity! W ill
tra in ! I 407 77] 7421 ext 1735

I U I L E

O J N N V
G J N A L E .
P R EV IO U S S O LU T IO N I never really thought ol myselt
a s a sex sym bol — more as a com edienne who could
d ance ” — Rita Hayworth.

71— H * lp W a n t e d

• A D D I T IO N ! A ll rem odeling
Q u a lity work I Troubleshoot I
References M e l e e 471141,
NEW . R E M O D E L. R E P A IR
H O M E S .O F F I C E S . S T O R E !
A ll typo* construe lio n R et'C o m
113 4511 S O Bo lin t, C B C O lftM

C a rp e n try
C A R P E N T E R A ll kin d s at home
re p a irs painting A ceram ic
tile R ich a rd G ro ss......1)15*71
CARPENTRY
H om o repairs,
re m o d e l O ecks. Sheds 5
G a ra g e s Q U A L I T Y ! I l l 344*

A D E P T C A R P E T C LEAN IN G .
C irc u la r d ry loa m ty s. d ry in I
hr Sum m ar discou nt 14* 4 X 5

Carpet Cleaning
CAR P E T /U P L H O L S T E R Y
Cleaning, rep airs. In stallation
7 d a y sl C a ll T im . 4*4 5013

Cleaning Service
CATH Y'S C LEA N IN O S E R V ­
ICE
References, reasonable
rates Licensed! Call X I 7470

Concrete
C A P T A IN C O N C R E T E . W ayne
B eal 7 M an Q u a lity O pera
tion&gt; 134 1)21/140 7t#2

H andy M an
ONE

CALL

Painting

O OES
m a s o n ry ,

IT

ALL!

m ow tnj etc !! P H. 114 1775

e e • H A U LIN G .yard trash,
appliances, furniture, trash at
any kind! Richard...... 771-7741

hom e Repairs

Pa inline

T H E H O U S E D O C T O R I A ll
home rep airs! P a in t Term ite
dam age L k . / I n s
12)7111

DICK PINOLA'S PAINTIHO.
Q uality w ork! Int/Eat.. L ie d
A Insured F re e e sl! X I 5771

Lawn Service

I N T E R IO R / E X T E R I OR
H O U SE PA IN T IN O . 12 y rs
e ip F re e e tt X0S4SI

C O M P L E T E Q u a lity Law n A
Landscaping Tree Service A
Irrigation, co m p etitiv e rates,
tree estim atesSunny sX 2 712*
B R U C E 'S Law n M aintenance
Call B ruceXI 111*
S3 OH tor new custom ers!
L A W N C A R E ! SS A U P I Free
estim ates Senior discounts
T ra th re m o v a l
22) 2711
LAWN M AIN T EN AN CE
C o m m ercial/ R esid en tial Low
Rates! C a ll Tom
X ) 4X1
R A N D Y 'S Q U A L I T Y LA W N
C om p lete ca re
clean ups
Since 1*42 Free est t 221 4714

w elding

B E S T P R IC E S ) Q u a lity work
Anything -Everything
Hom es O ffice T efal rep airs,
im provem ents I do If a ll!
F re e E i t A n ytim e. X 4 7151
CARPENTRY. MASONARY
painting and tile work F r e e '
estim ates L ite d C a ll X ) 4114

M o v in g A H a u lin g

M a so n ry
T W P M A S O N R Y B ric k block
stucco, concrete Renovations
Lie d A m s III 2444/124 4157

P lu m b in g *
HOPKINS PLUMIING
A ll your plumbing needs
hours! tRF0037770)X 1*44

Pressure Cleaning
P R E S S U R E C L E A N IN G M A N •
House wash painting 545 and
up Roger. ) ) . u rO 1AM I P M

Secretarial &amp;
Typing Services
CU ST O M Typing/Bookkeeping I
D J Enterprises. aOlB E 7Slh
Si . Santord 224 0471/ M l 7**7

Tree Service

M o v in g &amp; H a u lin g

BUNYANS T R E E SERVICE
Tree work, light hauling F ree
estim ates Insured U l 1414

B A R H A U L IN G Y a rd trash
appl
turn Cheap on tim e!
I l l up C all Ray 25/ 7117

R IC H 'S T R E E R E M O V A L
24
hr service, tree estim ates,
best prices! 774 W45

\drerti.se )o u r /in.sine.s.s I re rv Pa y I or l.v i.tnr A s
&gt;7.7 Per Month, ( till ( .la.s.sijietl. IP2’2 2(i 11

i

�Sanlord Herald. Sanford. Florida - Sunday. August 25. 1991 - 11M

99—Apartments
U w fum hlw d/R trt
I modi um t b o r m . duplex m
city, appliance!, mini blindi.
CMA. UTS m e..............Me o u t

TripHi/ lltwt

3/1 UPSTAIRS. 7 blocks eft
Park, U50 and sec Barb M F.
» * .............................. 333 M U

A T TR A C T IV E, I bdrm . T I T
rm.. gar eg* w/taundry. No
pots &gt;375 ptu» dra 371 BOM

1 0 1 -H o vsrs

C L E A N , O N I B D M L . S7S/rrfc.
+ »oc. I yr- toe**- carpet.
m » s A Park Avt. 117 3317.

[ H E A T 1 I D E M Apt W Jrtd St .
CHA, carpeted, kit. equip UTS
me Includes water. 134 1143

Furnished/ Rant

(N I C K I BD RM . garage apt.
1 Sanlord. SJOO per month plus
1300 damage deposit. HI 7557
[ OMK I OHM . t bath. sern
balcony, fplc CHA. carpet,
convlenlent to downtown S37S
mo 371 1443______________

SANFORO • Large 7 bdrm. with
Irani porch. I block tram new
hospital. 1110 per week plus
1330 security. Catt !»■ T3H
NICE 1 BEDROOM, quiet re
tiree area, south Debary. SJOO
month. No pets aai aMI

[ O N I B tD R O O M . Nice area!
Oft st. parking its a wk
Includes util. SIM sec, m W e

I B O R M . I bath cottage.
furnished. IJtJ/mo. 1150 da
jjM iL C a J in a jm e v e v ^ ^

lO S T I K N 1 bdrm apts.. StO per
week includes utilities. No
pets. Call 130 0311__________

IU -H

o ush

Unfurnished / Rent

PRRRSIDf PUCE
APARTMENTS

N E E D A 3 BDRM. or 3 Bdrm. m
DELTO NA? Large select km I
PRIM ARY R E A L T Y .... 8785734

MOVK IN S P E C IA L! 7 bdrm.
1 bait) townhouse apartments.
Oulet and secure. 5400 per
month. MOO security. 333-4447

DELTONA- 2 NORM.
Neat and Clean!

• IM0 BRENTLAWN ST.
t HIT WEST PAOE IT.

t’ 5 D O R C H E S T E R A P T S

No pats. References.
Otl Providence Blvd.. turn on
n o r t h P a g e , w e s t to
Brentlewn.
5175 mo.

Single Story. 13 Bdrm.
Ask about our....
"Lease Special .
N l k f npil**
****** JR C u l u RIHeVHl
I
M F S J Open Weekends
LA R K M A R T at-W M
R K M O O I L E D 1 BDRM.. large
eat in kitchen, appliances.
W/W carpet. A/C. Only UJO
per month I Call 374 SMS

,

SANFORD, large I bdrm, walk
to downtown from Park Aval
S5S/wfc. or 5351/mo. 338 3433
SANFORD. Ig. I bdrm. SSS/wk
plus ItfO security or S3U/mo.
7 bdrm 1435/mo or SllO/wk
i
Pool, laundry. A/C. 173 M M
SANFORD, t BORM. Walk to
town. ISO a wk. Also Studio
!
Apt.S70awk.330 I7ST_______
■ SAN FO R D , NICE AREA, huge I
1 bdrm. in charming i plex. Eat
In kitchen, enclosed sunroom,
lots ot windows. Very special
* S3S5/mo plus S350 securi
ty ................................ u n t i l

SANFORD
Nice 7 bdrm. 3 bath. Central
H / A , p riv a te fenced yd.
13*S/mo. 1250 Security
; Results Realty..............U M U O
SANFORD/W IN TER SPRINGS
Available now! 7 bdrm. 7
bath, all appliances. 5430/mo.
small deposit. Pels, kids OK.
Broker/Agent. 455 M U
S M A LL E X T R A CLEAN . 3
bdrm . I bath, quiet area. S3IS
mo. with tease............372 553a
TOW NHOUSE. 7 /t'i end unit.
Freshly painted. CHA. all ap
pllances. minis, verticals. Ig
sern rm., storage rm, cell,
fans, privacy fenced, prlv.
parking, trash pup. washer,
dryer avail 1435 ttt- lllt

115— D uplex-

99— Apartm ents
U fifu m M w d / R tfrt

S74-1R49
F E R N PAR K 1/1H CHA New
point, carpet L550 mo.
Ichera it Realty &gt;31-1347.
L A K E MARY/SANFORD. Two
3 bdrm. homes. 1450 and
t300/mo. 373 3303__________
SANFORD-MAYFAIR - 3 bdrm
1bath, C/H/A, fireplace, large
oaks, garage. S573 3771545
SANFORD. 3 bdrm S44S mo.
C o u n tr y liv in g , h a vo a
garden 1No pets......... M3 a m
1 BDRM. 7 BATH spacious
country home) Laketront on f
acres A t S700/mo 33B7I3T
3404 M Y B T L E A V E , S A N ­
FORD. 3 bdrm 7 bath. Fla.
rm/3rd bdrm. Central H/A.
calling Ians, carport, hitch,
appliances, redecorated 3/ft.
Quiet neighborhood. S450/mo.
plus 1300 dap. 501 377 7445
3 BDRM. I bath, appliances,
fireplace, fenced yard. SSOO
Paul and Beth Osborne
Ventura I Properties. 331 4744
3 BDRM. 3 BATH. Sanlord
Fenced. 1500/mo. Call 330 3433
days: 4305057, eves/weekends
1 BORM. U s bath, central H/A.
Q lf AOt ..... ,.„
,1410/mO'
St. John's Realty, 407 333 4133
3 B O R M l&gt;i BATH, central
H/A, deck, fenced Sanlord.
SSIO per month. 4415402_____
3 BORM., 7 bath. CHA. tencad.
family rm w/lplc„ Ig. utility
bldg . new carpet A paint. tS50
month........................333 I44J

1 ,2 &amp; 3 B ed ro o m
S

i

TOTAL
MOVE-IN
POOL, TENNIS COURT,
VOLLEYBALL COURT
EACH APARTMENT INCLUDES

• New Carpeting •New Applianoes Includ­
ingRefrigerator. Range, Dishwasher, Gar­
bage Disposal •Washer ADryersinstaled
n unita tor an eddDonal monthly fee •24
hour emergency maintenance service

330-5204
i

TAXI 17-07 M. AIRPORT BLVD. TURN WIST
TTtO OF A M U . MON ON RtOMT

limited Time Offer

FORSAURY OWNER

The Prudential®

1 BO R M ., central H /A. lawn
m e ln le n a n t e . S a n l o r d .
5308/mo Include* util. 3771757

CiN M fin g e i, RUtTON

LOOKING FOR A HOME?
Please let me help

WBMMO-5555Of 773-5155

F« Sate ly 0*MT
4 bdrm , 1 bam POOL home
A ssum able non qualifying
mortgage Monthly payments
IStl PITI, 174 08M

ONE B O R M . turn.. R AR O AIH
rant, qulel neighborhood.
Park Avo. MMHjt Ph. 333N4I
1 BORM. unfurnished 5373/mo

MULLET U K t PR.
________ 084157 1317________

t/t PURN. AC, water/garbago.
Fenca/covered patio. No pets I
4350 4- 5300 tec. 333-1017

113— P a r k in g S p i c e
For Kent
DO W NTOW N 5 A N P O R D ,
N E A R COURTHOUSE.
C A LL J2i 7004

114— W a r e h o u s e
S p a ce /Rent
D O W N T O W N E R I C K
W AREH O USE S P A C E 300 to
30.000 sq ft. D o c k H T .
Sprlnklered. Call 334 0548
CROWN SQUARE
LONOWOOO/LK. M A R Y area.
1.000 1.300 tq ft. with or
without A/C olllcos. Starting
5335. McIntosh Point, 130-3740
LON0 W OOD Lk Mary M id s in
storage warehouses. 400 000
1400 sq. It. fromS17S/mo.
__________llt-4510__________
SAN FO R D
1.350. 1.515. 3.100
square leet available.

117— C o m m e r c i a l
________ R e n t a ls ________
SAN FO R D 30X40 bulldlno plus
offices w/lg. security fenced
lot Zoned C 3 Call 373 7107

119— O f f ic e
Spa ce / R e n t
P R K S T IO t O FFIC ES
ICO to
4.000 sq. It. Some furnished. 3
block* to City Hall. Call
3340S44......... CROWN SQ U AR E
SAN FO R O 730.1.403.
and 1.450 square leet.
Call 331 7004

121— C o n d o m in iu m
________ R e n t a l i ________

Central Florida's Largest

SA N flN frA U . LESS THAN

(1st Month Only)

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartments
•Cable T V
• Washcr/Drycrs in Select Units
• Self Clean Oven
• Iccmakcr

311 737]

127— O f f ic e R e n t a l i
CORNER 17/0} and 477 Of lice
bldg Great for all types ot
business 133 1457/111 444 5454

141— H o m e s f o r S a l e

Quinn Really Inc

• Garbage
Disposal
• Pool

STAIRS PROPERTY

• Clubhouse

tr&lt;iiui)ll
2450 Hartwell Ave., Sanford
MON -SAT 9 - 6 • Sun 12-5

.IZi-iXlt

M A N A 0EM IN T8 R E A L T Y

407 131 7171/3175570

THE OAKS/SANFORD
FOR S A U R Y OWNER
1 bdrm 7 bait). Ig master. Ig
liv in g and d in in g a re a
w lireplece Wood deck. Ig
trees Privacy and security
Extra room lor oltlce. hobby
or poss Jrd bdrm Tennis and
pool privileges 4H.500
Days. 1T1 MIS
Eves/weekends. 131 5*44

WHY PAT RENT?

1S8B Ctsovy Corsica
Auto, AM, Law RX, Law
Pymt, Me ( m (

WtoChaaee, Why pay t l

TOO MUCH TO M B N T K M I 1
bdrm. 1 both, tlreploce. wintor lied screen porch, screened
3 car garage. Wooded comer
lot. Deltona Wood*. 575.700

D J99D 0M
•1/1 - rant vatod. now carpot.
p aint, appllancas. fancad
yard..............................511.418
•1/1 - renovated, new carpot.
p a in t a p p lia n c e s, ftn e td
yard.............................. 144.4(8
***57X55# o l mum, M --- ty on this two story l/IVs with
appllancos. and llroplaco.
Fenced yard with pool 1404.500

t» .r

OR INO year horse I Country
homo with all convenances! 4
bdrm. 7 bath down, 1 rm*.. full
bath, balcony upt 15X10
workshop w/5s bam. 1144.400
Mary. 331 3300/740 (474.. RM15

V

Lie. Real Estate Broker
3440 Sanlord Ave

321-0759.............32I22S7

*1, 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms*

$100 O ff

F I R S T

M O N T H S

R E N T

LONGWOOO

C a rp e t &amp; V in y l, C e ilin g F an , V e rtic a ls &amp;
M in is , P o o l, T e n n is C o u rt, C lu b h o u s e &amp;
L a u n d ry R o o m

ksskw -

FSBO J/|'» Concrete b!h
double lot 147 000 O w n e r ft
nance m m 47 000 dow n 4440
mo P lT I M o re in 40 *0 d ays
Toned H 2
_____131 4050
NON Q U A L I F Y I N G A s u m m *
bte, S anford 1 3 fa m ily r m ,
fplc . rem ude'ed ig tot trees.
4 to 000 down
240 5454

$7988

$5988

$6888

IBM BorottaOT

IBM Goo Spectrum

IBM Mustang OT

Cuatam CnOaar, A0&gt;«war.
Vi, • Peas., fhma Qreel

$9288

No Qualify! Low down. Total
cost 5570/mo Sanlord. 71
bdrms All now wiring, root,
c a r p o t , p a i n t , m in i s ,
westwr/dryer. Lg fancad yd.
shad, playhouse 4*4 7171

1590 Ford Feetlva

F. -.)■«*

i / xi J • S i i n t n r d

^

iJ

. x ; 3217800O
f6289779
s

AVIS

AVIS

Sslsct Cars From,£!5 0 Down
Z J t u r r y &lt; D n ^ o r H ^ e st S e le c t io n !
ACCLAIMS

1991 DODGE SPIHITS^
N

PINECRSST. reduced! Lg 4
bdrm 3 bath. 21X11' family
rm w/brlck fireplace Nice
quiet area 1.535 sq It only
554.400 Was Louwsma. 333
7454. beeper.445 1150 RJII

SANFORD. 3/1 Assumable
mortgage pool. 541.000.
TWO BEDROOM, large lot.
______ 513.000 110 1147
SANFOR D
Concrete block. 1
bdrm I bath Central H/A
Walk to school Needs a little
TLC 417,000 407 457 MOO

l

\rtesn. rsirsr.tsmrgP 7

O EN EV A. 1 ACRES MOBILE
HOME PER M ITT ED WITH
COUNTY A PP R O V A L
TERMS A V A ILA B LE! 534.100
ROSS CONNOLLY. 173 3200 or
371 1074
CLS5

SPACIOUS POOL HOME I 4
bdrm } bath split plan with
family room I minute from
Lake Mary Bl A great
value at.............
177.000

,

bdrm 1 bath In Brynhavan
Spill plan with cathedral ceil
mgt 7 car garage w/opener
Below market at
144.4*"

f l.G K E V R 0 L E T c a v a u e r s

4 DR.

2(W 445

$l

$250 Dn A P R 12 75% 0 $122 Mo i 60 mo* plus U r nq t te 5 tees

323*3200

Call Janet Mantlield
Days. I ll 1114 Eves. I ll n i l
AA Carnet. Inc.

SU CCESSFU L

Over 1 2 . 7 7 5 H o m e s Built

l

m

90 D O D G E SH AD O W
A*. P g w la w p g P B i i l U g U i l U ' . v u
22 4 7 5 5
$250 Dn A P R 12 V5% 0 $142Mo 1 60 mo* pi-star, tag tiVi t tiws

t o # # # 0#*
t« a #
|4 k 8 D D
4 1 1 7
" 9 7 7
te
1™ “

9 0 P O K T IA C G R A N D A M LE
•&gt; ? s r g t a u w r ,
202439
$250 Dn APR t2 7 5 \ 0 $170 Mo i GO mos ptusLu. tag LtlaO !aes

| 7 L Q Q
/ 0 7 7

W

a
J

n »

IN A

r0r.
8199. &gt;181
te

J lj
U

m .

. . . . . .
&lt;V A ,
J D B Q O
| 1 Q /
W W T T te
1 7 /

IDB.

a -,

&gt;0
C a r Sales O u tlet

A V IS

Lot Owners: No $$$ Down, or
WeMI Pay Off Your Lot!

qrmM
A l

m o.

The Sm art Place To B uy .
A **#

|Ou b u y A r t

y o u | t t p &lt; 9 l e ( b d &lt; ' | 5 u ia » &gt; v O «n &lt; j n

irtw

tm # * # w

t l'f ,

— Lhrysqt &gt;(gd\Kt( ir«#&gt;i g i I'M) wortot#* '5«l l i f t a t

869 4 4 4 4

S599VI22
399**140

91 T O Y O T A C A M R Y D X
/ M l
Aulnm*rc. 1*8. i*b . Cnote* Pobb*y Lot lit
911 J Q Q
$250Dn APR 12 75% 0 $260 M ) 4 60 mos p . s u i u g l ' e l tees I l y ^ T T t e

I T

* 5 ,0 0 0

:

O

91 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A D X
*
a . as p h i u i v i v h
$250Dn APR 12 75% 0 $137 Mo i 60 m « pi.s Lu -jg t t e l ' w s

O O YEA R S

i p to*-•«•%* *** &lt;3*%or* AKHE

995

9 0 P O N T IA C S U N B IR O 4 D R .
27740s
Fvayutotod I m u m
5250 Ckt APR 17
0 $140 Mo ■ 60 mgs pi„S Lu Ijij I t's 5 'ces

90 O L D S M O B IL E C U T L A S S C IE R A
_ , o,
tX C ru n * PB l&gt;S P i &lt;i l U I V U r w C w
*’0 6 ja 6
$250 Dn APR 12 75% 0 1*81 Mu ■ 60 mos p i.s U t. tag it'e 5 'ties

CASH BUYERS

qW *&gt;
y

CHECK O U T THESE LOW PAYMENT CARS!

1* ACRES! 4 bdrm 1 bath In
desirable Lk Mary Lg family
rm w/llr*place. formal living
and dining rms Heathrow
Elam 4144.400 Susan Lee.
373 3300/333 3117RG17

14.000 DOWN AND ASIUMEI 1

W

1991 LEBARONCONV?

ORANOE CITY A R E A Erctp
lionet 3 bdrm 3*s bath pool
home w/5.000 sq tt multi
purpose barn Truly a unique
property! 1145.000 McKennas.
334 0371/333 3300 ROIl

S E T T L E ESTATE 1 bdrm H j
bath Lg. cam tor table sern
porch, front and raar, nice
neighborhood
V ary good
condition! Ftnetd lor security
and pats 144.400 1314157

ORLANDO

$786

$588

IBM Pontiac Firebird
Map#,

1SM Hyundai Exeat
Law(Nap Oreat I

Lai f *L*

Mwy

DELTONA LA N EFR O N T
1
bdrm 7 bath two story on
IIO'X377‘ lot Gorgeous sun
rise Irom bach deck) Jecuul.
dock, shop area 440.400 Elsie.
313 4144 or Wes. 333 3444 RO 14

RENT TO OWN ON ASSUME

+

1B7BAudi 4000 S

1B73OMi Wagon

KenKummel

RAVENS BROOM I 4 bdrm J
bath trl level on 1 acral Great
yard, flrapleca. tonad. H/A.
Computer rm. tool 4314.100
W44 Lo u w im e. 231 7414;
beeper, 445 1350 .........
RQI0

NO QUALIFYING!

I E

$8980

$5188

$7488
1BB1 Goo Moira Convt.
Auto.F8.FBLI

Spcious bright 4 bdrm. 1 bath.
Pool w/chlld guard gate on
patio. Fireplace, Intercom.
Ians, sprinklers. 5154.400
Mary. 131 3300/140 4474 R R 23

54.500 down CHA. Itncod yd .
appliances, ramodalad. Move
In Today 1.................... 124 5544

SAVE
UPTO

Every Opaen, Lecal (toner
Fa*L Faal, Feat

*82788

LAKE MARY ATCROSSINGS

NICE • CLEAN • A FFO R D A BLE

1IM Pontiac B000LE

OOLF COURSE cammvolty.

Charles Slade, son.

m

$3788

IBM Dodge Omni
« D r ,A a .H P B .
Rkaw 8 Lsaka Ckeat

Auto. Air. V5, LawMk

$12,788
ISB4 Chrpalar Bth Am
LaaOwr, V8, Al

51 down lor Vets
A liltle
more lor others Brand new 1
bedroom 2 bain homes with 3
car garages from 4510.
total monthly payments
Universal Really. 143 3114
Choose Irom 4 homes* 3. 3 and
4 bedroom s Great lo ca tio n s
sc h o o ls
lib r a r y , s h o p p in g
ne ar'
F ro m 444 600
H O R E A L T Y , 1485808
LOCH A R B O R I story 3 b d r m
3'y bath Sunken liv in g rm ,
('replace, eat in kitchen, pool,
u r p orch 6 yrs old Double
garage P IT I 4444 mo SIB 000
down to assum e 333 3758

$1688
1M7 VW Fea O L
4 Dear, Air, Caa#

AS

$3988

VS. P. Wlndewa. P. Lack.
Tht Facsary Wan.

R ED U C ED ! Gorgeous! Almost
7.500 sq. ft. 4 bdrm 1 bath
w/poof and spa Leaded glass
door, ceramic tile. Inside
laundry. 4144.500 McKennas.
1331100/114 0171........... RC34

1 bdrm., 1 bath. CB home in
bettor Sanlord neighborhood
Top condition, central AC.
now carpet. A paint, all appll
ancts Lots at inside storage
built In. FHA qualified buyer
can put |ust 43500 down and
sailer will pay all ot buyers'
closing A loan costs. Double
lot. ISO X 140. Orlvaby at 30*7
Hibiscus Court, than call or
|ust knock on door. 474.400
total

LOW

IBM LaSaron QTCCpa
Tuvhe. taaOwr
EveryOp#an

EfanamyRperl
$6*98
1581 Lumksa Sedan

D ELAN O A R E A - 1 bdrm. 1
bam w/l cor garage, skylites.
screen porch, bay window, eat
In klkh. fancad yd. Former
modal. 172.400 M cKenna.
314 0375/3311300..............RH44

•BUT OWNER*

AS

$35 W k.
$ 2 0 0 Dn

IB M Camar# Ha Cpo
5 (p w d , PtS, 7 1

LO V ELY 1 bdrm. 1 bath split
plan. Eat In kltchtn. vaulted
cell, dbl garage, upgraded
carpal, appt., blinds. Dabary.
on lagoon, near I 4. 147.500
Susan Laa. 317 5757.........RVI5

BATEMAN REALTY

CARS

B
*
TMeeOkBCM

J U I T L I S T E D In lo v a ty
Idyl Iwild*. 1 bdrm. 1 bam split
plan. Extra clean, shaded
yard. Ig. screen porch, storage
shod Great areal 157.500 Was
Louwima. 33314g*..........R L li

A 5 S U M A B L E N O Q U A L IFYINOI Laketront 1 bdrm. 1
bath, cloaa to schools.
Call dkartono/Bmarsan Realty
__________574-4555_________

BUY HERE
PAY H E R E

5 Or- Auto, Air,
CtoopLutoor

Rod Estate Ore /R«fts

1M1 8-10 Btoiwr 4 Dr.
(part F*#, Ivory Opaan.

—

Y5. Laaka deed
91588

99477999H

O W N ER P IN A N C IN O Pinocrost. 1/7. living, dining,
family rm., security system,
tonead yard... .107.400
D ELTO N A -1/1 on 1 acre. scr.
porch, carport. (01.480

- -

$3988

$1988

8,480
$9998 I Q M C ip$1
H r a B iW w y s r )

lEBBWonto Carte
Two Tana. Mr, Auto

1495 S. Volusia Ave.
Orange City. FI.

PLUS

*

$7988

1BBS Feed EtM Caen. Van

1BBB For# R r W t o l l T

REGAL

IBBSFavdltMCaOw. Van
Cuateto bwwtar, Auto AW,
l a m , Etc.

YAlMBWitB.ii. Mr.
mwarhartoay

AR

11BBToyota CareXa

W A T E R F R O N T I Cam tom porory ] bdrm. 7 bam home,
light and bright. See. wt
deck, slda dear tntralca. 1 1
garage. Terrific
price el........................ 534.400

LTD, I

1MB Chevy 030 Van

1(88 Mento Carte SB

$10,
tMTB-IBTaN## Pickup
Vt, Auto Rune Deed,

IBM B U C K

PUHCM4M,
] TO CHOOBE. LOADED

Teas Chaim. ■ to

1EB1 Q##HrUMto

$8188

1588Covet
torWsflon
Wa
$H$f

414“

131 5437 or 747 0741

321-3663

• Dishwasher

SUPER BUY I I bdrm. I bath
home, tile d kitchen and
la u n d r y ro a m , v a u lt e d
calling*. Neatly landscaped lot
w/iprlnkler system. Includes
2 shad* w/runnlng water and
electric.......................... 53.(08

IARE HART, LESSTHAN

F*At 11 l Ht '« 1' Hi

1(88 Astro CL
r,TfaeTans
Vamv*. Air. Auto
$10,988
1580 Cheey CavaHan

YES, YOU C AN AISU M B
A L L O F TH ESE.
NO QU ALIFY MORTOAOEI

#3/1 - fireplace, now paint and
carpel, fenced yard......434.480
•1/1's. 1.780 sq. tt. with hot tub.
appliances, fireplace 452.480
•l/ivy split plan, appliances.
garage, fenced yard. 445.4(8
81/1 - renovated I New carpet,
paint, root, carport, fenced
yard..............................544.480
#5/7 • an 1/7 acral Now paint,
tpic, (amity, living and dlhlng
rooms. Privacy tone#. 474,MO

123— F o r L e a s e

ToUl
Movt-ln

1 bdrm.. 1 bath. Largo
screened rm. to? Meadow
Blvd. 534.450. 330-4700

&gt;A Assume
No Qualify Homes in Semlnole/Orange/Vatutla/Laka
Counties.

MUST SEU MOM’S HOUSE

Cantury II Chiedi Realty

SSOO DOWN
Many to Choose From !
New bank loan program lor
hardworking people with low
to moderate incomes t
Investor* Rratty, t i f 0*44

payments?Coll Pro#. 337 4314

PINE RIDGE CLUB!

• HISTORIC 3 B ED R O O M *
On PAR K on PAR K
4375 month

CRU9ART REALTY
322-74M

ANVCOMOfTMMI
Need repelrtT Behind on

HIDDEN LAK ES
3 bdrm I
bath. 1535 per month plus 4300
ipcurlty deposit. 322 0514

N E E D LK . MART or vicinity
Episcopal priest A wife wish
lo lease home For I year or
more starting. 0/15/01 Need
over 3300 sq It References
available 174-1047 ar 444-5471
Iv.msg

After baers Call Chris 111 4iao

**** I B O T N 0 6 S ES 4*4*

1.000's of properties
All types, area*, prices
Call for F R E E LIST
Orlando, toll trao. t (08(M l444

3 bdrm 3 bath, wesher/dryer
4535/mo S.E.C.M Inc.. Lie
^ £eaU4lateBrok»r^ 5M 50^ ^

5pecloul 3 bedroom. ] bath
home Fresh paint inside and
out. with new roof Bank will
help with tinanca. with otter ot
545.000

141—Hemet for Sale

1«1—H tm tsle r Sale

197—Mobil*
Homes/ l&gt;wt
O SH BY A. 3 bdrm. C H A . No
Pots) 5175 mo. plus dapoglt.

CLEAN
RANK RE P0

OW N A N O M E W ITH HO
M O N EY DOWN? Yrs. Jim
Walter homes will build a
home on your lot with no
money deem an# no toes 4. 2
or 2 bedroom, your dream
home is a reality with quality
Jim W alfar Construction
Nothing manufacturad or
pra lab. 10% Iliad rata mort
gagas make your payments
easy to hendla. Ask about our
program which lat* you do
some ot the building and save
money. For details, call Mr
Horton at I (00 174 4745 and
llnd out how you can OWN A
H O M E W IT H M O T H IN O
DOWN I

Florida Realty

17-07/L A K E M A R Y proa. 7
bdrm . | both, com pletely
remodslad l 33»5/mo. 337 3817
7 BD R M . I BATN. central A/C.
all appl, disposal/dishwasher.
near high school. 33I-SM5
7 BD R M . D U P L IX . carport,
security system, full kitchen,
371 0377, discounted. 5105
7 BD R M . 1 BATH. Sanford.
Appliance*. No pot*. 5408/mo
plus security. 540 4547 attar 5
7 B D R M U y BATH. Sanford. All
a p p l l a n c a s ,
A/ C .
washor/dryor hook up*, no
pots. 5488/rno 5387480 after 4

141— H o m e s f o r S a le

Assumable to qualified buyer
3 bdrm. I 'l bam. living room,
family roam or 4m b d rm ,
large kitchen. Nice corner lot.
In ground poet 447.888373 5453

S A N FO R D D U P LEX - I bdrm..
lovely, quiet. 5310/mo plus
dopostt. Eves, coitoct ggg 1311
TWO BEDROOM. 1 Bath. CHA.
wash/dryor hookups. Wall to
wall carpal..................131 70*7

123— W a n t e d t o R e n t "

Z d a &amp; c apartm ents

141—Homes tor Sele

141—Homes tor Sale

SAN FO R D , aka 7 bdrtss.. AC.
carpet. Dishwasher, laundry
rm ., carport. 1410mo. 53# 7018

___________ C e ll 321 7004

C om e H om e To
Country S tyle L ivin g !

K IT ’ N’ C A R L Y L E * by L m y Wright

&lt;

■ «*• ? e .M »»* '*r # r W 4 « s g n « « t l ( # • !

J R. Lewis
Doug McCord
Troy Stevchelu

A V IS

A V IS

A l # *8* t e t e a s

S i e v e W illia m s

Charles Erruth

AVIS

A V IS

AVIS

e l« '« l

&lt;

••'»«* t * i

5 w N y # «l W&gt; { t f B M a p y - /v w

5575 S. Hwy. 17-92, Casselberry. Florida
Hours Mon.-Set 9 •9 •Sun. 17 - 5

331-3837
AVIS

AVIS

AVIS

AVIS

AVIS

�0

1SB - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Sunday. August 25. 199f
1 5 7 - M o b ile
H o m e s / S a l e ___

1 4 1 - H o m e s f o r S a le

It

MID SUMMER SPECIALS

III

S A N F O R D A R E A M O B IL E
H O M E C O M M U N IT Y

\ | I

M i l l
ft v

»V\ I S

U 9 \ | |S I \ H

STENSTROM
REALTY, I N C .

14 X4 0
1 /7. a l l e l e c t r i c ,
e x c e lle n t lo c a t io n , m a n y
e x t r a s ............................114.000
24X4)
)/2 sp ill. N ic e la m lly
h o m e .............................114.000

Wr list and sell
more property than
anyone in the Greater
Sanford Lake Mary area.
NEW C U S T O M O N 1 A C R E S
Enjoy country but near I 4
B ig eat in kitchen and groat
rm Bring your ho rte tl Ito 000
EN E R G Y E F F IC IE N T !/]
Pool. A C jon ln g Near I a Big
fa m ily rm . office, rp a n lih
decor I/]a e ro . 1105 000
H IS T O R I C A L !/]
In Sanlord
Flroplaco. big
living rm N eedt to m r T L C
F o r ila rto r. r e llr t o l 149,900
F IR S T H O M E B U Y E R S , l / l l
O r lor retiree I Fenced yard ]
yr. old roof Owner m ay II
nance O nly 119.900
assu m e n o o u a l if y

B ig J/l. Spacioui. big lenced
yard N ice area See it today I
M any ■ t r a i C a ll u fl 17) 000
O R E A T B IO l/1
L illie T L C and you've got a
prettig io ut home loaded with
i tra t D on't m lu t h ill 179.400

I4 X M
2/1. gas and ele ctric
hom e ... ........................14.500
14X12 2/1 sp ill. 1990 a ll e le ctric
home ......................... H J.J00
B ro k e r. M l OI4d/B]l 224]
Repossessed M o b ile Heme
M U ST B E SO LD
" A S IS. W H E R E IS"
Im m ediately b y lender
Sale P r ic e 110.000
or Best O tter
19*2 Hom e o l M e rit
24X47 M o b ile H om e with
12X12 F lo rid a Room
2 B R . 2 B A. refrig era to r,
stove. A /C . R ead y to
m ove into Location
Oak Springs M o b ile Home
P a rk . Lot «9. M adison
Avenue. Sorrento. F la
In Apopka. F la . turn
rt. on Hw y 41) (P a rk
A ve). G o 7 m l to
end ot rd and tu rn lelt
staying on 41)
P a r k ] m ile* on right
W ritten otters to be sent to
C IT IC O R P N A T IO N A L
S E R V IC E S
P O B O X 44*149
Atlanta. G A X144
or contact Jo y c e K lam m
(4041199 0117
________Ref 17*5147)4_______

B R IT T A N Y F A R M «/]&gt;&gt;
N ew ly decorated, tp a d o u i
Dbl fireplace Country klfch
en Look at the price! 1119.900

Y O U M O V E . 12 X 44 2 bdrm
fu rn is h e d . D e b a r y . 12)00
44* 490* or 13] 4747___________
11X11 2 bdrm , double rootover.
Ig screened rm and shed
A d u ll p ark 15.000 122 1147

E L I T E 4/]
E xe cutive are a
Fire p la ce,
le c u r ily ly it e m , p rem iu m
site Loaded w ith i Iras Jum p
a t th iip r ic e ! 1159 000

II S K Y L I N E M O B I L E home. 24
40 1 bdrm 2 bath O S T E E N
area m ust be m oved I 117.000
1 1*0 2454

/ Equipment
• E L E C T R I C Typewriter.
Sm ith Corona P ric e d to Sell!
j]Q .............................. 113 1415

231— C a r s

1*1 A R D S D A L E CT.
W indsor
M an or, o ff 414 Longw ood
S u nd a y. 9 5 V C R T ap es,
w h e e lc h a ir , e tc . P L E A S E
R IN G D O O R B E L L !

e » Gene B urke Auto Sales e e
L o w as *177 d o w n ' Low pay
m e n tsl a * e a a a e 124-1497

991 A lum in u m Cans..New spaper
New Ferrou s M e la It.......... G ia ts

Doug______________________

K O K O M O ^ jjjjjjj; ^ ^

W R O U O H T
I R O N
F U R N I T U R E . Table, chair*.
sola. L ik e new 111 4947______
1 H P S N A P P E R T I L L E R . L ik e
new 1100 1421 M y r tle Ave.
Sanlord

2 2 2 - M u s ic a l
M e r c h a n d is e

B L A C K la b /g e M e n re trie v e r
m la pups 120 See 4 9 P M at
1104 R udder C irc le . Sanlord
(Neat to Sanlord A irp o rt)
P L E A S E H E L P ! 2 fem ale pup
pie* le lt In m y Iron! y ard need
homes! A dorable and Iree!
W ill be sm a ll lo m edium site.
124 (290. Iv. m sg . or work

ll^MTjiMonCalhj^^ay^

e * H A Y F O R S A L E ) 4 * 12.7)
bale. 1)5 ra il. F E N C E bldg. A

R epairlll^ llleve^ ^ ^ ^ ^
215— B o a t s a n d
A c c e s s o r ie s
9* A D V E N T U R E 25 If Pontoon
P a rty boat, sun deck, tully
enclosed, head, g alley, sleep*
2 90 H P M e r c . 19.900
91) 947 1427

• 19*7 M e rc u ry Cougar 1900
17) mo X 17 months
No money down needed

44 M A Z D A B7000.
5 speed.
A M / F M Stereo. AC
Good
Condition! 11495 949 0119

• CHINA. N O R IT A K E .
’ ’Taho*’ ’ pattern 5 pc Com
pie ter set. 150. N ever used!
122 1597_____________________

• 19*1 P ly m o u th R elian t 1400
I X mo. X 12 months
No money down needed

• SEWING MACHINE

C A S H F O R Y O U R C A R I Q uail
ty M o to rcars. Inc.. J400 N
H w y 17 92................. 121 7X1

• S T A M P C O L L E C T I O N , begun
In 1927. F o r tlg n A US. 190 For
and appointm ent phone
___________ 122 9919___________

F R A N K A L O R I’ S New A Used I
2102 5 F ren ch A v e T h rtlt
Store. C lip this *d lo r 19% 0911

MOVING SALE

TW O Q U E E N A N N E Chairs.
E th a n A lla n
Ok
c h e rry ,
m auve strip * w /blue A pink
I low ers 122 9591 A lle r 1 X
• M O A L L O N hoi w ater heater
Scotty’ s brand W orks. 270
required 115121 *501

Sat A Sun 9 4 225 Charles St
W inter S p rin gs

sconAVE.

Sal A Sun I S B ridesm aid
dresses, tools, household A
m isc. Item sl

*79 F O R D FI50
Runs good,
looks good 1*95 or best otter
___________ 111 6414

1942 V O L K S W A G O N B U G
Good shape. G reen, no rust.
I l l 4019

•It C H E V Y 1/1 ton P ic k Up.
Good condition 6 c y lin d e r,
custom w heels 12,on I X 9491

R V R E N T A L M s . 1145 mo Incl
w ater, sewer A garbage
P a rk A ve. M obile P h . 221 2MI

Quality Used Cars &amp; Trucks

n i l OIL O UN G f NM i fw r y

235— T r u c k s /
Buses / V an s

e P U B L I C A U T O A U C T IO N e
E V E R Y T U E S . A F R I. 7 :X P M
D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
Hwy. 92. D aytona Beach
_________ 99* 251 9111_________

N O M A D T R A I L E R . 29 It 1911
Ideal tra ve l or liv e in! Root
a ir. T V . sleeps 6 E a t r a nice!
O n ly 11 X 0
________122 7979

GOOD CREDIT! BAD CREDIT!
NO CREDIT! BAKRUTPCY!

• T R U C K B E O L IN E R lo r 1997
to 1997 F o rd Ranger I X
17) 7715

(H-2222

' 241— Recreational
V e h ic le s /C a m pers

M M Ctt MOTORS

G O O D U S E D T I R E S A ll site s
Irom 1) and up M ounting also
a v a ila b le M on F rl. * 5 1)19
Celery Ave, Sanlord__________

Ken

C a s h o n ly !

LO A N A R A N G E R R I D E S AGAIN

• C A M P E R C A P 99X 77. lor
longbed p ic k up In good
shape, w ith lock and hey
W hite 195 9)4 2111 or 122 4967.
eves________________________
• F O R D F M X T ran sm issio n .
E»C Condition lin)77 46 X
___________ D a y s* 5
______

C a rs m ay be seen at
Sundance Auto Sales
1979 S. H w y 17 92

S e llin g 1100

144 X X

1999 W E L L S C A R G O T ra ile r.
Enclosed S' X 8 ' a Nosecone,
roof vent, and e ilr a s l I I 1 X
904 19) 47)4 or 1 179 9915

233— A u t o P a r t *
/ A c c e s s o r ie s

• 19*4 14 FI. B a y lin e r
90 H P 1990 N issa n engine
11700
H U m o X 4* months
No money down needed

• MOTORCYCLE TRAILER
E a c e lle n t c o n d itio n ! Costs

237— T r a c t o r s a n d
T r a i l e r s _______

• 19*1 C a d illa c D e V ille 4 Or

more. In case V a ry good
condition 150 172 1114_________

217— G a r a g e S a le s

nos.

MUST SELL)

IX O n

“ 23f — M o t o r c y c le s
a n d B ik e s

1X0

• BABY P L A Y YARD . II"
W/padded rail*. E a sy to move
white set up and easy fold to
c a rry
Com es w ith folding
stroller Both lo r 155172 9119

1100 mo X X months
No money down needed

Top 11 lor |unh.
C a rs A T ru c k s
R in g 444 4000 tor quote

e * *97 C H E V Y P ic k u p Truck.
V4. Auto I r a n i . AC. Clean A
Sharp! U gotta se e !..... ..149X
• a Gene B urke Auto Sales • •
• e a • 6124-14*74 a a a 6 a

172 n /6

‘ 72 C A D I L L A C S E D A N D E
V IL L E
4 door. 1791 o r best
o tter............................ 121 4414
*4 B U IC K S h yh iw h . 47 000 m l
A C . p w r b r a h e s / s te e r in g .
auto M u st sell 12an OBO
171 1112 a lt e r ) ______________

• GAS LAW N E D O EN . 7 HP
. B rig g s A Stratton, re b u ilt
e n g i n e . N e w t u n e up
Goodwheels E x c shape 1100
F irm 90S C a ta lin a D r San
lord 122 0459________________
• O L A S S C O L L E C T I O N Im ll4
lion m ilk and c a rn iv a l glass,
assorted colors. 9100 takes a ll
___________ 111 9050___________
• L A D I E S B R I D A L Set. 04
c a ra t round d iam o nd
t4K
yellow g o ld St. S' * 1100
H I 1491_____________________

201— H o r s e s

ot DtBary
WE WEIGH AND PAVI

S E L L O R T R A D E ! 77 F O R D
P I C K U P , standard. 719 sail
52500 or trade fo r a u lo m a lic
van o r tru c k .............. C T Z*35

tan OBO___________ 111 *191

12.no

AA AUTO SALVAGE

1991 J E E P
O R A N O
W AGONEER
4 wheel d riv e .
V*. lu ll power and a ir L o c a lly
owned. I owner V ery v ery
clean Service records a v a il
ab le 14.445
C a ll 127 41*2

19*4 T E M P O good rubber, new
battery, no rust, runs good

B ad cred it ok 99 91 models
G u a ra n t e e d a p p r o v a l
No
down p aym ent I 10011) *799
24 h rs

i2 3 — M is c e lla n e o u s

__

Sanford Motor Co.

1979 VW R abbit, t 4 engine Fuel
ln|ected. runs, good work c a r!

AUTOMOBILES

B L O N O g u ild a co u tlie g uitar
model G 11 w ith h a rd shell
case A shin g 1175113 5159

i f f — P e t s t S u p p lie s

N O M O N E Y DOWN
except Ian. lag. title, etc
19*9 H Y U N O A I 4 door. aulo.
a ir. stereo, power steering,
low m iles! O N L Y 1129 99 per
month (4* m onths ft 19 9%
A P R )....
C a ll M r P ay n e
Courtesy Used Cars. I l l 111)

N O M O N E Y DOW N
eveept to*, la g . title, etc
19*7 C H E V Y S P E C T R U M
4
door. auto. a ir . power steer
Ing. stereo! O n ly 1129 90 per
m onth I (42 m onths «i 19.9%.
A P R ) ...............C a ll M r. Payne
C u r t o s y Used C a rs. 2211)1)

2 1 f— W a n t e d t o B u y

B U N T O N C o m m ercial
14" L I K E N E W I 11400 F irm
127 1747 o r 119 1904 ask lor

23S— V e h ic l e s
W a n te d
____

TARE UP PAYMENTS

T M E U P PAYMENTS

lf 3 — L e w n ft G a rd e n

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
B u ses / V a n s

____ 231- C a r s

217— O a r a g e S a le s

}

lif t M

IBNUB

•

J

1M . M

M

m n

407/321-2993
407/321-1450

A
1
J
i
„ „

1A0— B u s in e s s
F o r S a le

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420

O U A L IT Y L A W N M aintenance
Accounts. 125.000 plus p er
y e a r ! S a c r i f i c e 110001
E q u 'p rn e n te itra 111 0019

321-2720

READY MIX CONCRETE
COM PANY
Business. 2SK.
r e n tla n d C a ll 122 5751

1)4] P ark Or., Sanlord
441 W. Lake M a ry Bl.. Lk. M a ry

185— D u p le x f o r S a le -

•In Our 35th Year*
ALMOST NOTHING DOWN!
ALMOST NO CLOSING COSTS
G O VE RN M EN T HOMES
n o c i a Am i c k s
Special Buying Incentives Now
MUST Q U A LIFY

fell Mike Plouff
Venture I Properties
407774 9400

Dan

Hall

Realty

1991 C IV IC 4 DR.

1991 A C C O R D 4 DR.

logo

INVESTOR'S SPECIAL!
Duplea. 2 b d rm
w /central
H /A . and I b d rm . fenced
1550/mo incom e. 151.90011
2 S T O R Y O U P L E X I 1 bdrm
upstairs. 2 down! On Hwy 44
Zoned c o m m e r c ia l! ......1)5.900

323-5774
Recently Renovated.

149— C o m m e r c ia l
P r o p e r ly / S a le
t i l S. S A N F O R D A V E
O tl.ce
building Approx 1.000 sq It.
Covered p a rk in g O pposite
Chamber ot Com m erce bldg
By owner. 190.000 407 M l 1400
or I MO 19] 1400

153— A c r e a g e L o t s / S a le
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING LOT!
For your new home Huge
oaks, a lle y access Sanlord
city water/sewer St I. S00 with
owner term s

CALLBART REALTY
322-749B
N E A R M A Y F A I R Got I course,
nicely wooded 100X14) 114 SOO
O w ner/R ealtor
111 7474
OCALA N A T ’ L FOREST.
Wooded lots! 15 » X each, no
money down 1171 41 monthly
_____ 1 400 997 S014________
S U P E R S E C L U D E D 1 acres
w /d ea red homeslle Horses
OK O wner financing 150 000
Stenstram Realty 1111419
141 A C R E S a ll or part, custom
ponds, fence W ill llnance.
near O eland_________ 14) 1709

r~ACRES.

I l f — O f f ic e S u p p lie s

OAKS. OS

RIVER
TEEN
St Jo h n s access
Restricted Asking I X 900
_________ 407 174 1495

155— C o n d o m in iu m s
C o -O p / S a l e __
W A T E R F R O N T CONOOI 1
B D R M 1 B A T H , 171 500!
M otivated seller! C all Drenda
OwnDv R eal E s ta te 904 417 7451
WINTER
SPRINGS
The
Highlands, 1 bdrm Iv g.ning
rm 1* X 13 ft lg sern porch,
tully equip kit Tennis, pool
all am enities. Owner w ill ti
nance 1)1 500
119 4/11

157— M o b ile
H o m e s / S a le

Good rental h isto ry 142.500
SI Jo h n 's R e a lty. 407 1114111
1 B D R M . 1 B A T H , plus 2 bdrm .
2 bath N ear 25th St Income
1900 1*5.000 *49 4147 a lle r 4

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n it u r e

SA V E t i l l N EW 1991 H O M E SI
W H r P A Y R E T A I L / 14X79.
19 000 14 X 70.114.000 14) 1709

controlled lockup torque converter (available) •
™ M ^ n /e d rw th o c k
•titv iira r har • HAiIn Control double wish bone rear lu s p e n io n • G a s p r e t iu n ie d rear snoce
^
s ^
W
p r n Z n g (p o w e r-a ia iie d when ordered with a v w l a ^ W r i . D C
transmission) • Pow enassisted. ven.lated front ducrrear drum brakes • Ultra skm halogen
n e ad lo h is ‘ Tinted glass • 2 point m otonjed Irom te at belt* with m anual lap belt* Cloth
upholstery • Rear window de'roster • Remote fuel tiller door reloaae • Rem ote trur.k release •
Ch ild salary seat anchors • Child proof rear door lock* • Fold down rear seatback with lock.

motorued front seat bell system with manual lap t * l - Abatable.t*er mg column •TMhanwHr
• Q uart! d.gital dock • P ataanger assist handl** • Rear seat head restraints • Etoctnc rear
window d efrost* with omar- Rear M i l h M tw duct* • Rem ote trunk '•&lt; ••» •* "*
'’ « ^ no1*
fu«l finer door r e c a s t with loc* • 185/70 R14B7S Dm* • Multi-reINctor halogen headlight*

OCAM PER REFRIGERATOR
Good condition. I l l 119 1511
C O U C H . L O V E S E A T , C H A IR .
1121 tor the set 121 4421.
________ eves. 110 1291________
D I N E T T E S E T w ith leaf
4
sw ivel c h a irs A 1 Condition!
1100 C a ll a lte r 7111 4144_____

D R Y E R / W A S H E R . Color con
sole TV. 19 In remote co lo r
T V 175 150 499 1177 ________

M O V IN G S A L E
A ll lurm tu re
m ust got N ew side by side,
r e t r ig e r a to r . b la c k la q u e r
d ining set w /m irro re d top
Too m uch to lis t! 114 0949

• B I K E G ir ls 14 ' Pink A Aqua
color G reat Condition! A skin g
115__________________111 0597
• EXERCISE
BIKE
Se ar s
E rg o m e le r E a c C ondition!!
140 111 1)44
P O L IC E A C A D E M Y Collector
shooter p.».nt gunner or *&gt;d
venturer C a ll F E B A for some
ot the best p ric e s around'
407 25* 5 0 5

D O N ’T BE R E A R -E N D E D BY
H IG H IN S U R A N C E C O S T S !

(407) 322-4451
Servian C e n lm l Flontl.i
S in n ■ litJ/i

322-2611

•4 Speed
•Air Conditioning
• 1.5 Liter 16 Valve
• Double Wishbone
Suspension

Body Side
Molding
■Rear Win­
dow Delrost
&gt;Tinted Glass

&gt;Air Conditioning
•AM/FM Cass.
Stereo
i^«5 Speed Trans.

Tilt Wheel
Full Wheel Covers
■Front Reclining
Bucket Seats

r Q U A L I T Y U S E D C A R S P E C IA L S F O R T H IS W E E K O N L Y H j
((

85 F O R D
ESCO RT
VALUE BUY
A U TO . A C
LOW MILES

_

_

9 1 0 Q IC
I U M sJ

AUTO. AC
STEREO. LOW
M».ES. GREAT

m

A U T O . AIR.
STEREO. 4 DR
LIKE NEW

“f O

_

_

88 F O R D M U S TA N G
C O N V E R T IB L E
5 7 9 Q S
# MsWtJ

_

5 | A C O S
lw &gt; v T J

JIMMY

# H

LOADED, A C .
STEREO CASS
M UCH M O R E

7 J

88 C H E V Y A S T R O VAN
SWIVAL BUCKETS
POWER EQUIP. S O r t O ^
LIKE NEW
# W T J

91 PO N TIAC FIREBIRD

-

LOW MILES
M UST S E E

,

AU T O A C P O W E R W INDOW S
AM. FM
STEREO C A S S
$11 n Q
LOW M ILES
1 ■/w

-

#

A

*

CR U ISE C O N T R O L
l o w m il e s

m

Mil e s

s

m u st see

P R ICED TO S E LL

W

6 3 9 5

87 H O N D A A C C O R D
AU T O
STEREO
C U R lS E C O N T R O L

_

O S
7 vJ

$ O ^ O S
O H T J

89 C H E V Y B L A Z E R
AUTO A C
P O W E R WINDOWS
STEREO
XTRA CLEAN

5 Q S O S
w

m

$ 0 7 0 H

Mt

WJ

90 H O N D A P R E L U D E SI

90 FORD MUSTANG GT
B „A C K P A C K A G E
5 S PD O N LY 13K

______

FAH R VERG N UG EN

88 H O N D A A C C O R D

90 H O N D A CIVIC LX

9 W

88 VW J E T T A

86 H O N D A A C C O R D

89 H O N D A CIVIC DX

]

$ A O Q S

AUTO. A C
STEREO. CO M E

SELECTION OF CLEAN. DEPENDABLE. PRE­
OWNED CARS AND TRUCKS C O M E IN A N D SEE
COLD A C .

87 H O N D A P R E L U D E
LOW M ILES
f
_
A U T O . WHITE
S flh O h
PERFECT
O J T J

AUTO . A C R E D
S TEREO . LIKE
, NEW SA V E SSS

T J

79 M E R C E D E S 240 D
GARAGE
KEPT
A C . AU T O

BEST

$ 5 4 9 5

AUTO . S T E R E O
AC. SUM M ER
IS H ER E

87 FO R D T A U R U S
W AG O N
AUTO. A C .
x -to L I ­
VERY CLEAN
M O Q S
RUNS G R EAT
* * * * **

88 D O D G E A R IE S K

88 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A

_______

To Advertise In This Space
Call Our Classified Dept, at

*

*

•Cruise
Control
•AM/FM
Cassette
•Lois More

TUCKER &amp; BR AN HA M. INC.
211 W 1st St . Sanford. F L 32771

13,367

8,258

* 1 4 ,9 4 9
■5 Speed
•Air Conditioning
&gt;2.0 Liter 16 Valve
•4 Wheel Disc
Brakes

1991 ACCORD 4 DR.

1991 CIVIC 3 DR. *

1991 PRELUDE S.I.

• LARG E T A B LE LAM P
40 ’
ta ll, com plete w ith nice shade
115_________________ 111 9090
L A R R Y ' S M A R T . 215 Sanlord
A ve New Used turn 1 appl
B u y /S e ll/T ra d e .........11141)1.

•O U T D O O R C LO T H E S LIN E
sinqle pole lu m b re lla type)
square New s till In boa 120
123 9127_________________ _
R E F R I G E R A T O R . G E lg ca
pacify. Irostless
glass
shelves B eige 1 yrs old 1450
O B O 114 4405 a lter 5PM __
• R O C K IN G C H A IR
Solid oak
w ith country sty le charm 1100
____ _______111 94 1 4 ______
• T V . Z E N I T H 19 in Color w ith
stand
1100 or best o ile r
111 4949
• W A S H E R . G ib s o n
Heavy
duty L ik e new R u n s g r e a t I A
barg ain at 1*5 1217174_______
WATERBED
Q u e rn s u e
w a v e l e s s .
117 5
E n te rta in m e n t center. 145
c e ilin g Ian. 125. E ace llen t
condition C a ll 111 1014

Per
M onth

Per
M onth

• D I S H W A S H E R . Maytag,
brown, under cabinet, b uilt In
W orks ea cellent 140 O B O
111 41*4____________________

187— S p o r t in g G o o d s

D O U B L E W IO E
Needs work
Quiet neighborhood P a rtia lly
furnished has washer dryer
14 OOOOBO
444 0109
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• 5-speed automatic trv-.tmission with dual mod* selector *nd lockup torque converter
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power rack-and-pinon stew ing • power-assisted, ventilated front ditc/rear drum brake* •
Remote operated lift-side mirrof Full wheel cover* •Tinted glas* •Fulldoth upholstenr2-pant

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.

IS THE SIGHT CHOICE!!!

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                    <text>S an fo rd H erald
S e rvin g Sanford, Lake M ary and Sem inole C ounty since 1908
83rd Year. No. 271 - Sanford. Florida

Voters to decide tax
By J. MARK BARFIELD

IN S ID E

Herald Stall Writer

LONGWOOD

________

SANFORD — On Tuesday. Seminole Comity
voters are being asked in decide whether to
Increase the local sales tax hv one cent for iInnext lO years to raise SIMM) million for a 84SO
million road-improvement program.
County officials say the tax Is needed to
Improve congested roads and prepare new roads
for the growth that state and federal population
counts indicate will come. Even II the lax isn I
approved, county officials say stale growth laws
will require them to build many of the projects so
they'll have to raise properly taxes.

though no formal position has Issued, residents in
Geneva have expressed opposition to the tax to
resident leaders.
County commissioners Fred Strcciman. J e n ­
nifer Kelley. Boh Sturm and Pat Warren say thoysupport the tax because more people will pay to it
than pay property taxes. Commissioner Larry
Furlong opposes ii. saying It encourages growth
and lies up a revenue source that may needed to
replace sally water wells with new. clean water
supplies
See Tax, Page S A
________________

Besides, a sales lax Is more fair than a propertytax because many non-residents buy things in
Seminole ('utility but don't pay county property
taxes, county otlielalsargue.
Critics say the roads on the Improvement list
will attract more growth rather than accom­
modate It By slowing the pace of road-building,
population growth should be more manageable,
according to them. They say there arc more road
Improvements in the projeet list than are needed
to relieve congestion. They also suggest sales
taxes are more ol a burden on the poor than a
properly tax Increase.
The lax has been supported by the Sanlord and
Seminole County chambers of commerce. Al­

See Editorial, Page 4A

Soap Box
Derby time
draws near

There's a lot ot good-news stories In Longwood. Read about that In a special supplement
to the Sanford Herald Inside the newspaper
today.

□ Sports
Bullets, Dodgers in title game

By NICK FFEIFA U F

Herald Staff Writer

LONGWOOD — After racing the rain all
weekend, directors of the July 4th Invitational
baseball tournament at Lyman High School
finally conceded victory to the weather and will
play only two games this afternoon.
Sec Page IB

□ People
Bouncing back from adversity
When Sanford resident .Jerome Dixon lost a
job due to a devastating Illness, he decided to
lake the long road hack to the business world
With help from a loving family. Goodwill
Industries and Ins new employer. Dixon is on
his feet again.
See Page 5B

Hank! Photo* by Tommy Vlncanl

SI. James A.M E. Church, left, has been in existence
for over 120 years, with the current and third building
constructed between 1910 and 1913. Above: Pastor of
the church, the Rev Nolan Pitts, displays the
commemorative plaque presented by the City of
Sanford on May 19

B R IE F S
Injuries minor in traffic mishap
An automobile accident on Saturday alter
noon near the inlorsecilnn ol 2:&gt;lli Sired and
l s,. Highway I7u2 in Sallloul blinked U.lllii
lor quite a while and Involved representatives
Irom (In- Kuolonl 1'ollcc Depot Uncut and all
KMS null Irom Ibe Sail lord fire Deparimeul
Jerry Ransom, ol the KMS unit which
responded to the scene, said that the Injuries
sustained by tin* driver ol one ol the ears were
minor, but 'because she was older and sullcrcd
Irom arthritis, precautions were taken in avoid
compile.llloils
I lie woman, whose name was not released,
was taken to the emergency room at Central
Florida Regional Hospital where she was Irealetl
lor a possible broken nose and tcleaned,
according to Ransom

Head, face injuries sustained
A passenger m a van traveling ill the area ol
of,lIt Street and Airport Boulevard In Sanlord
about :» p m on Saturday allernoon apparently
lumped Irom the moving vclin le and stun k jlopavement i r -0. ding m llatallton t lilel Mike
I l.uicv ol the Saulonl Fite Ileparlmeiil
According to Haney. KMS nulls that re
sponded to the scene determined that the l.ici.d
anil bead mpuics that the man sustained were
serious enough to tcqilltc 11ullspoi latlori bv
helicopter to the trauma unit at Orlando
Regional Medical ( enter m t lilando
Ills name and • oiidltlou wi re mi.lVallalili as ol
last evening

Injured pedestrian is stabilized
George Sevmore H2. who was involved 111 a
collision with ail automobtli a s lie was walking
near V s Highway 17 ‘*'J and Mill Street in
Sanlord 011 Friday moimng was repotted m
serious. Inn stable condition on Saiiiiday
cv ••nlug
Seyilinic suttcied multiple liljiutcs. including
two broken legs a biok&lt; 11 I' ll ankle and posstbli
injuries to bis bead and mteroal organs
Sevmoti ts now m tbc inleitslM care mill at
o m it It is not know when lie will In icleased
Ftom stall reports

C l a s s i f i e d s ........9 B - 1 2 B
C o m i c s ........................... aB
C r o s s w o r d ................... BB
D e a r A b b y .....................7B
D e a t h s ............................ 5A
E d i t o r i a l ......................... 4 A
E d u c a t i o n ..................... 4B
F l o r i d a ............................ 2 A

By NICK P FEIFAUF

Herald Staff Writer____________________________
The St. Janies A.M.K. Church 819 Cypress Avenue
in Sanford can not only hnasi ot its cvci-guiwlng
membership, hut Us historical position in the
Sanford community. It was in existence Id years
I,chirr Sanford became an incorporated &lt;It y
Tin- first St. James A.M.K. building was con­
structed In IHB7 on wlial was then known as
Mcllouvllle Street. It has no relationship with ilupresent Mcllouvllle Avenue. The old street was
located along Sanford's waterfront, cast ol Sanlord
Avenue, in the area now known a.vl'ori Mcffon I'.irk
At that time, the community In that section ol the
present city was known as Tuckcrlow 11
I I,c man credllcd wllli being the city's founding
lather. General Henry Sanlord. arrived 111 tin a n a
three years alter the church began operating
In |HN&lt;). tt was moved to It s present location at Milt

E x -d ru g g is t
tro u b lsh o o te r

r

Not long ago w1 inetil lolled
tormer Sanlord d i u g g i s i Gordon
Kellett III one ol out V . l l t l s Ills
daughter Donna who testeles m
l.ongwood sent Iiiiii .i ■lipping 1lie
other dav tin phone rang and on tin
o ilie r e n d ol th e till* w a s liotie o llli I
th a n K clle -ll In m s e ll

Heal t h F i t n e s s ......... 9 A
H o r o s c o p e ................... BB
M o v i e s ............................ 7 B
N a t i o n ......................6 B . 7 B
P e o p l e ................... 5 B - 7B
S p o r t s ...................... 1 B - 3 B
T e l e v i s i o n ..................... 7B
W e a t h e r ......................... 2 A
W o r l d .............................. B A

M o r e of t he s a m e

I'.1111\ ' loud\ witb
tb&lt; high m tin low lo
m i d ‘ N is . m i l .1 s o u l b

itl\ wuni at I" 1111•b

For m ore w e ath e r, see Page 2A

Strcclaud Cypress Avenue. I lie current chute It
building Is the third one. with construction started
011 it in 1910 and finished In 1913. According lo
long-time church member Olllc Williams. "It |usi
kept growing, and every time the congregation grew,
they had a need for a larger building."
The colored glass windows on the present church
building arc one ol Hie most historic points ol
Interest. With the exception ol one section damaged
by a lallcn tree last year, and an occasional small
section replacement, the stained glass windows are
those lli.it were used in the original sirueltire over
1 ‘iO years ago.
. TVt l itv
.S.imoiit recognized Hie St. James
A M K. Church with a historic plaque on May IMtli
I he plaque Is displayed at the front entrance to the
sanctuary 1'hc wording ol It dedicates the church as
o n e
ol the featured parts ol the downtown Sanlord
historical district
Pastor Nolan I’itts presently leads the A M K.
congregation, which is 1 niiltimlug to grow

r

l u m p e d all I h e
I M |U

New w ay to select jury
pool called ‘headache’

WAY
BACK
WHEN

w

JU LIA N
STFNSTR0M

wav

I " tin

m .i|ois m

Non old lliiifis tee.ill wav bai k
Iv ill itt w a s a l s o a luglilv l a b e l
win II ( Iiirdoll bought
Dm
s e m i p m b a l l p l a y t 111 I n s ,-.n Iv
Mi Rev Holds dlllgslole
eo||l|ileti
day III t l ie | | XI ill l e a g u e s III
with soda tomilam 011 Park Dtivi
G eorgia
I elinessee
and
I lie
Kellett and his late wile Hetty
( ' a r o h i i a s In l . u i / m n I l u k w l m
opeiated the store lot a number at l i v e d m S . m l u t d m i n i I n s d e a t h .1
Ve .11 s lif to ii Belly - h e a lth
I n l i n e ! s h n r t s l o p l ot t i n N e w N o i k
til l cssll.ilcii thell III' W1 b.lt k to X a t i k i i s a n d t i n S t L o u t s i a n i m a l s
( ball. 1111 iiig.i
|it l i H, In In 1 a m i a s e u i l l t o t t i n
W a s h i n g t o n N e iia lo is a n d later tin
A 1 impli- ol items alii nit Kill'll
M innesota I w ins
tried to sign
Most ot von old limits know that
Ke l l i it B u t G o r d o n p a s s e d u p t i n
Belly passed away sriet.il v a ts
past Guidon has lem.inud lb - , h a i t i ' I " pi.iv p r o f e s s i o n a l b a l l • "
p u l s i n h i s d e g r e e a s a p l l . l l l l l . n 1st
liv in g at s i i | M1 11or d I) 1 1 v1
t l o l d o i i s a i d t o p a s s a l o n g b i s I n si
Rossv till 11.1 Hi7 11 iiisi south "t
I,,
dl
Ills ol d
ill .11
tin nils
and
thi I I'tmi'ssi 1 1 a ot gta In 11
Also 111111lot 1 Itad a Iit at I .it 1a* k , n s i . . m i i s III S a l l l o u l S o w i l l
1lot long ago But In s bai k to w01 k d o i n g d i a l I n n a n d n o w \ u d I I I '
li n - i n l s
an
I,-gnu 1
' ham 1 s an
as ,1 ttoitbli sliooit 1 so to spi ak
\ i m ii
among
tliosi
tm
whom
w itli tin Ri vi o drug ilia lti
i . o t d o n g " t o u t ot t o i l i i i i l u m i d d l i
i,o id o n s daughter Donna bv ilu
wav is mart 11 d to ideii Soium son III lln lllglll III go to Ills ill llgslotl
ot oin ot tbi 'tomig biothiis who a n d till a m i n ............... '• I " ’ - ' ‘ p ' n i n
oil, 1 up, 1 .it• d one ot Sanford s in si f i n v m i • n 1 t o v 1 d o i i i
Iv. Ik ll » i s
a n d st i l l i s
g&gt;. ii
I, Ii visum u p.111 shops
S. miiioli
I \ oil South Sallloul \ vt mn
Kelli 11 was uni si ill is 1,mil 1
lias, ball 1 hi hi Ins 1 uIv v. 11 s ii,
plavi .I am.ill nr b ill in i h itl.uioog 1
d*
Ol d S i i i i l t l s l d i
wiib ■sid Hudson tin viiimg 111111*1
■ Na i i l a d ' M i I"
v, In* pill ||i d lot tin I lornl.1 si ii,
S e e N l e 11 s t r 0111 . i ' a f j r 5 A
I »agin Nautilid *lull ill I1*l" an I
S

IN D E X
B u s i n a s * .........................4 B

S ta te ly b ric k c h u rc h g a in s h is to ric a l
p o s itio n , m e m b e rs h ip in S a n fo rd area

SANFORD - The third annual
Central Florida Soap Box Derby race
in Sanlord Is less than a week away.
Bv race time Saturday. July 13. the
number ol ears entered may be the
most yet.
Sanford Recreation Director Mike
Kirbv said early last week that over
JO entries had already been made,
"hut depending on when the cars
are linished and ready, the racers
can still sign up during Hie next
several days "
Kirby explained. Most ol the
youngsters spend six months ot
more working on their e.us Some ol
the work continues until almost the
last minute It reallv becomes a total
tamllv pro|eet
Generally tit*- prospective r a id s
obtain Iniounallon on the st/e.
shape and construction ol the vein
1 |e is obtained well in ad vatu • - and
many youngsters as well as their
parents are in constant Much with
the recreation 1lep.11 uncut with
questions "Wc also conduct regul.11
soapbox construction workshops lor
the youths said Kirbv
Ihe new launching ramp to lie
used In next Saturday s tan s will
he tested lit the S.mliitd City Hall
parking lot Monday allctnoou I10111
f) until 7 P III It Is expel Ie I all ol till
lilt Icut lx eiltei eil 1 .11 s and illixets
will be oil hand to lest Hie lamp
I he speellte details lot tin actual
IMMl i.u e ll.IV C alteailv been
fiuall/ed Ii Will i" Ill-Ill oil t: s
1 ligliwav 17 M2. Ill lln sail" |o« a
Hull as I IN1 VI ill ‘s 1 V1 III 1 nr*
star ling till e will lie neat 1 In
si mi In i 11 entrain 1 ()t III! S.llllUllI
low ti S'|ii.iit shopping «eni&lt; 1 on
Ficlicll Avenue I lie rae C I S I " gill t i n
Hie new 1.ill 11•. ill' ll Will II.IV' I down
the lull notlhelIv to .1 lllllsh Inn
neat I Hit Sin 1 1
We have a starting linn "l *
See Derby. I’uge 5A

By J. M ARK B A R F IE L D

Herald Staff Writer

_

SA\|-ClRD
lln in w jin v sili,
linll ptoi ess I hal uses drive I s
I,, e-ise 11 glsli.llloil instead ol Volet
lists vvill • a use ttellieneloiis lie ail
,n In s .mil expe list s lot tin lirsi si\
\ t ,| 1 s .11 1 ul'dlllg to Mat \ aline
Muisi tin Seminoli &lt;iiimiv • Ink
ol ( out ts
ll s going to a /no MeUse said
11 will In a teal Iill g a boo until wi
gi 1 .1 «lean tape Imm tin if* pail
im lit ol motor vi tin li s
L.ivv maki 1 s pass, d tin lavv tills
VI .11 I" e||( outage more pceiple to
tigtster lo vote atld lo give tin
1 ,nuts a latgel re sour, 1 ol • llglhli
11 sub tits to dluw mi
Saudi .1
1 ,ii,ii d Nmii 11in'll • until v 1 |ri tinns
sup. ivis.ii said tile ' ll.mge won t
iisoli 111 1 large irntias, o| u gis
i,-ii dv 1 iii ts in tin 1 omitv
I ll' !• L l s M a l H . l l W ill III! I* IS'
si

hi

11 vv 11a 1 l u l l

l ull

i ll a l i i . U l« a l l v

1 111.u 11 said
eioal 11 S.inl sitlin I«l‘,sp, ilivi !•
glsii.mis Ii.ivi nil m .I ivv iv do r
•o t ii i ii m u g

p i i n s it, s|. * I. 'I
b i l l ll' l l IliallV
X.lll I &gt;ii, m a i n eliiln m
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lls N,. t,

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l l l . n 11, p l l l s l s c v e l l ll tile V 11X, 111
lln 1•m i l l y M m s , s a i d
\ \ &gt; II h a v e l o s e n d m i l m a i n
m u l t lleetl ees p i s l l o i l l l l l l l l . l t , t i n
ineligible people
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•A - Sanford Mould. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Jufy 7. 1$$1

N E W S F R O M T H E R E G I O N AND ' A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

C h ile s has found ‘second life’
■jm
I’M

wonvction

Associated Press Writer

ORLANDO — The Associated Preaa erroneoualy reported
July 5 that a survey of 2.000 women at the Orlando Naval
Training Center, allowed that 32 percent had been raped or
sexually assaulted. In b et. only about 000 women permanent'
ly assigned to the base responded to the survey. The Navy’s
definition of sexual aaaault ranges from rape to receiving a
sexually suggestive letter.

TALLAHASSEE - Six months
into his term. Gov. Lawton
Chiles says he's found a ‘ second
life" in the Florida capital after
burning out on political pandyWa “
9
sis Ini Washington.
CMfcs. in a recent interview
over a redflsh-and-paeta lunch at
th e G o v e r n o r 's M a n e lo n .
sounded every bit like a politi­
cian interested In serving only
one term. But he insisted he
hasn’t made that decision yet.
T m just living a day at a
time. 1 used to be worried about
anybody being mad at me. any
vote I caal.” said the former
three-term U.S. senator. "I’m
relieved of that now. I don’t want
to disturb that tn any way.
"This Is like a aecond life to
me. a borrowed life. I'm not
looking beyond this period of 3 Vi

A ltopd con man Jaitod
■
••VtWl
r.l» a

WILTON MANORS. Fla. — A Wilton Manors man accused of
conning as many as 3.000 people In a rake job-finding venture
has been Jailed In Poland for carrying counterfeit money, police
Jens Borgwardt. 30. was arrested June 1 after police In
Sxczecln. Poland, stopped him for a traffic violation and
discovered 60 to 7(Tcounterfeit SfOO bills, aaid WUtoh'Manors *
detective Daniel James.
“We were contacted by Interpol and notified of the arrest.“
James said. “I thought his victims would Hke to know that he’a
sitting in a jail somewhere In Poland, and he hasn’t had a
chance to spend their money.'’

Boy’s body found In rivtr

'JfS%

O’LENO STATE PARK. Fla. - The body of a 4-year-old
Gainesville boy who disappeared on a holiday outing
discovered in the Santa Fe River, officials aaid.
Searchers located Kevin Kelsey's body Friday
about 24 hours after the youngster was reported missing from
a Fourth of July family outing at the state park In Columbia
County near Fort White.
About ISO picnickers formed search parties to look for the
boy In wooded areas after he disappeared, while two Columbia
County sheriff’s acuba divers searched the swift waters of the
river.

Monday marks the halfway
point of Chiles’ first year In
office, a time during which he
and the Cabinet grappled with
itni budget cute
•parked by lagging tax collec­
tions and had his first encounter
with the Legislature, which

( T h i s Is like a
second Ilfs to ms, a
borrowsd Ilfs* I'm not
looking beyond this
period of 3Vi years. I

largeiyai
Chiles, who left the Senate in
1909 depressed and burned out
after attaining chairmanship of
the prestigious Budget Commit­
tee. said he has discovered that
there’a far more action at the
state level.
“The same conversations take
place in the (Senate) private
dining room, in the cloakroom.
They are still, literally, in

gridlock." Chiles said, “tt'a not
because Congress Is controlled
the Democrats and the White
is controlled by the Re­
f louse
t
p u b lican s. O u r problem is
absence of will."
Chiles said he learned much
about will from former President
Ronald Reagan, who attained
smashing success tn his first
term partly by taking his agenda
directly to the people. Chiles has

TALLAHASSEE - The state's former chief carnival ride
Inspector should be fined *1.500 for alleged ethics violations
uncovered after a 17-year-old died on a Broward County Fair
ride, an ethics official says.
The report by Scott Williams, chairman of the state Ethics
Commission, will be considered by the full commission later
this month.
An attorney for Wally Rich, who resigned taro years ago. said
her client was vindicated by the report.
“We read this recommendation as basically saying that
Wally Rich did not have any corrupt intents." Martha Barnett
said. “We were very pleased.”

NASA will — k ntw computer bkto
FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. - NASA has agreed to seek
new bids on a 6101 million mainframe computer contract
awarded to industry giant IBM but protested by Encore
Computer Corp.. the Florida computer maker said.
The space agency has withdrawn its selection of IBM and la
asking IBM and Encore, the other finalist, to present new bids
limited solely to price. Encore said Friday.
The project carried a price estimate of $450 million, but
IBM’s bid last March came tn at less than half that. Encore
would not reveal Its bid, how it compared to the IBM price or
the exact nature of the protest.

Ptoatt pats tha cooklas
Rafraahmant break at Vacation Bible School, finds, (I to r). Addison Caldwsll. 4. Tara Owan, 4,
Lutheran Church of tha Redeemer, Sanford, and Aahloy Wilson, 3, sharing cooklas.
!U fr V (fHX^q
Mi
-------iG iT

Union concomod ovtr Bush's nominss
MIAMI BEACH — Delegates at the National Education
Association's annual convention passed a resolution that left It
just stivof q u ) jigbt oppositloir to President Bush’s conservative
LT.S. Supreme Court nominee.
The resolution expressed the union's “grave concern” over
Clarence Thomas' conservative positions on affirmative action,
“reproductive freedom." and the minimum wage.
The measure, passed overwhelmingly Friday in a voice vote
by the 8.100 teacher-delegates. Instructed their union to
monitor the confirmation process. It also said the union would
press for the nomination of a new candidate tf It was
determined that Thomas's positions are unacceptable.
“We’re telling the NEA that If things don't change regarding
what Thomas stands for. that It should work against his
nomination." said Phil Rumore. president of the Buffalo (N.Y.)
Teachers Federation, who wrote the resolution.

State lawyer No degrees of rape
Sexual battery in every
form may become felony
TALLAHASSEE — Sexual battery In any form,
whether the victim is an adult on a date or a child
In a wheelchair, should always be treated as the
same crime of force, says a state lawyer who Is.
suggesting a change In state law.
Assistant Attorney General Anne Swing dtafted
a proposal to make rape of any sort a felony In
response to the state Supreme Court's rejection of
a 60-year prison sentence In an attack on a
disabled 13-year-old.
Lee Curtis Davis. 48. of Lake Alfred in Central
Florida's Polk County, was convicted in 1987 of
sexual battery on a physically helpless person
and sentenced to life In prison.
In February 1989. the 2nd District Court of
Appeal In Lakeland overturned his conviction and
sentence. The lower court said because the
victim, who suffers from muscular dystrophy,
screamed, she was not physically helpless —
defined by the law ks “asleep, unconscious or
unable to communicate unwillingness."
So Davis was rcscntcnccd In May 1989 to 60

Savings and Loan shut down
NORTH MIAMI BEACH — Government regulators closed the
doors at the troubled International Federal Savings and Loan
Association.
The Institution, with assets of $69.2 million and liabilities of
$71.5 million, was shut down Friday by the Office of Thrift
Supervision and put under the control of the Resolution Trust
Corporation, according to an RTC news release.
The RTC’s Board of Directors approved paying off the
Insured deposits of International Federal after falling to find
any acceptable bids from prospective buyers.

From A$$ocl$t$tf Pros* roport$

THE

nrastAMaaaraomaasoMaB^apWMEmH

P la y 4 F an tasy B
3-9-7-0 12-22-10-24-34

t u r n «•! m&gt;
Sunday, July 7. 1991
Vol. 83. No. 271
kihlfohod Daily and Sunday, m i d
Saturday Sy T h a Sanford Herald,
Inc. M O N . Franck A * * , S anford.
Fla. 33771
Socond Ctaaa Pool ago F o ld at la n ia rd ,
Florida and additional mailing

P O S T M A S TE R :
lo T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D . P .O l
Boa 1M 7, Sanford, F L U 7 7 3 -I M 7 .
ubocifoifon Raloa
Daily
Sunday)
m a DaUuary S Mail
___ 414 40
• Mont ha...
.$34 00
t Vaar_......
17100

A

&gt;1

Florida Raatdania mual pay I h aafoo
taa In addition to raloa M o m .
Phono (407) 3 2 2 -M I t.

Today...Partly cloudy with a
high in the low to mid 90s.
Chance of afternoon and evening
r
thundershowers. 60 percent.
Wind south at 10 mph.
THURSDAY
Tonight...Partly cloudy with a Ptly Cldy B l -7 2
40 percent chance of thunder­
showers. Low in the low to mid
TT
70s. Light wind.
Monday...Partly cloudy with a
high In the low lo mid 90s.
Chance of afternoon and evening
thundershowers.
Extended forecast...P artly
c lo u d y T u e s d a y th ro u g h
Thursduy with u chance of
afternoon showers. 'Lows In the
70s and highs In the 90s.

C W a O

Mi La Pci

city

Apalachicola
Daytona Baach
FI. Laud Baach
Fort Myart
Gainotyilte
Homotteod
Jocktonvlllo
Kay Waal
Lakeland
Miami
Pontocolo
Varatola
Tallahauaa
Tampa
Varo Baach
W Palm Baach

Chiles won’t say yet whether
either step Is Inevitable, but he
said people m ust believe in
whatever proposal is made or it
will never fly.
"My feeling Is the services (ax
disaster, the unitary tax disaster,
were occasioned primarily by
the old mentality - get 51
votes." he aaid. "Get it done
quickly before there’s a hue and
cry. and they'll have to swallow
It. Well, they didn't swallow
either one.

years In prison for-sexual battery with slight
force, a second-degree felony.
Bui Wednesday, the high court said he was
wrongly resentenced because sexual battery with
slight force Isn't necessarily a less-serious charge
than the one originally faced. The court ruled
force Is not necessarily an element of sexual
battery of a physically helpless person.
The court said Davis should be resentenced for
battery, a misdemeanor punishable by no more
than a year In Jail. Because he has been In prison
since 1987. Davis is expected to soon be free.
Swing said the law allowing that needs to be
changed.
Rape Itself is “physical and forceful by nature."
she said. “Rape counselors advise people not to
light back during a rape."
She hopes the Legislature will rework the rape
laws, spelling out what It considers less-serious
charges.
“I can't Imagine that the Legislature Intended
any non-consensual sex to be a misdemeanor.”
she told The Tampa Tribune.
Defendants In date-rape cases often claim they
didn't use force, she noted.
Swing Bald she drafted the legislation before
Wednesday's decision because she expected It.

TALLAHASSEE — Insurance
Commissioner Tom Gallagher's
office discriminated against a
com pany th a t cam paigned
against him last year by reject­
ing a rate-hike request, a state
hearing officer says.
Gallagher's office violated both
the law and ita own rules when II
turned down Golden Rule Insur­
ance Co. of Indianapolis In De­
cember. hearing officer Diane
Wealing aaid in an order issued
late Wednesday.
She aaid the departm ent
should grant the 30 percent
increase In rates to Golden
J
Rule's 8,600 pollryhpldcru in . kJ
Florida.
Department officials said Fri­ s
day that they are likely to follow
the recommendation. Gallagher
•aid In a statement that the hike
was rejected without his knowl­
edge. and he said he'll have his
Inspector general Investigate
how It happened.
“We will not retreat from our
obligation to consumers to en­
sure that rates are neither
excessive. Inadequate or unfairly
discriminatory." he said.
Golden Rule Insurance Co.
offers health and casualty cover­
age in Florida. It sought the rate
h ik e Nov. 7. a day a fte r
Gallagher was re-elected and two
weeks after the company laun­
ched a $250,000 television ad
campaign that blasted Gallagher
as being anti-consumer.
The department rejected the
rate hike In December, offering
no reasons. It suggested that if
Golden Rule wanted to file again.
It would have to supply more
Information.
Kiesllng determined the de­
cision by-passed department
procedure and was made by a
staffer not authorized to de­
termine rate requests.

W EATHER

FforitfoLoffa ■,6d Frlday ln th"

C asks
1-0-0

you have over the
because you don’t have that." he
said. “ 1 would depend on the
buUy pulpit."
In the iwning nv'nths. the
will take to that pulpit
eed lfor
to convince voters of the need
tax reform, possibly Including a
proposed constitutional amend­
ment imposing an Income tax or
slon ofthe services tax.

Examiner
Insurance
bias found

Carnival ritft Inspector may Km fkud

MIAMI • Hart art tha winning

tried to do the same,
television and radio to tali
directly with Floridians about
state problems.
•i
__ able to do. You can't do tt
based on the power you have

41 71 .11
43 74 .33
41 71 .44
•4 74 «
44 73 43
fl 71 tr#
44 74 Ira
41 41 40
44 74 II
II 71 .14

---------- 1
FRIDAY
Ptiy Cldy 9 1 -7 2

II 71
77 01

II

SATURDAY
P tly Cldy 9 1 -7 2

SUNDAY
Maly Cldy S 1-72

MONDAY
Maly Cldy S l -7 3

(
BUNDAYi
SOLUNAR TABLE: Min. 35
J u ly 11 a.m.. 1:50 p.m.: MaJ. 7:40 a.m
8 :10 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
Baach: highs. 3:49 a.m.. 4:41
p.m.: tows. 9:59 a.nt.. 11:06
p.m.: Now S m y rn a Baach:
FULL
Ju ly SB highs. 3:54 a.in.. 4:46 p.m.:
lows. 10 :0-1 a.in.. 11:11 p.m.:
Cacon Baach: highs. 4:09 u.m..
5:01 p.m.: lows. 10:19 u.m.

Daytona Baach: Wuvrs arc 1
foot with a slight chop. Current
is lo the north with u water
temperature of H3 degrees. New
Smyrna Baach: Waves are 1-2
u n m k *1 an‘* ch°ppy Current Is to
JJ yt * the north, with u water tetnpera41 7« tra lure of 84 degrees.

II

—

..........-

St. Augustine to Ju p ite r Inlet
Sunday and Sunday night*
Wind southwest 10 knots. Seas 2
feet. Buy and Inland waters a
light chop. Scattered mainly
afternoon and early nighttime
showers and thiuiderstonns.

The temperature at 6 p.m.
Saturday was 91 degrees and
Friday's overnight low was 74.
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ S ato rd ay ’a h ig h...............93
[ :Barometric prsaaora.30.03
□Molativa H um idity....52 p e t
□W inds..............Booth B m ph
H Rainfall.......................... o In.
'T o d a y 's s u n se t.....S:2B p.m.
Tomorrow's sanrisa....6:34

rz rr
Tamptraturat Indicate provlout doy't
high and ovornight tear
Ctfo
HI la Fra om
Atlanta
«
71
cdy
Boctcn
at 43 .« d r
Chicago
•4 47
c£
Cfovtland
47 47
cdy
Doilra Ft Worth
74
cdy
44
Oonvor
47 tl
cdy
Dot Mot not
44 71 07 cdy
Ootroil
•7 44
cdy
Duluth
7* 41 41
rn
El Para
44 M
dr
Junaau
44 11
cdy
Kantra City
47 74
cdy
Lot V M M
111 41
cdy
Littte Rack
cdy
43 73
Lot Angttet
44 44
cdy
Loultvllte
43 73 .41 d r
Mamphit
43 74
cdy
Milwaukee
44 70
cdy
Mplt Si Paul
m
41 M
Nothvllte
7
1
cdy
41
Now Or fount
rn
44 71 .71
Haw York City
44 44 11 d r
Norfolk. Vo.
44 74 .40 d r
North Plotto
101 14
dr
Oklohomo City
44 71
dr
Omoho
44 71
cdy
Phliodtiphio
73 44 .41 cdy
Photon
III 11
cdy
Portland. Moino
41 » 44 cdy
Portland. Or*
77 13
dr
Son Dwgo
71 43
cdy
Son Froncltco
a; SI
cdy
Son Juon.P R
aa 74
cdy
Santa Fo
(7 14
cdy
SI Ste Maria
71 11 11 cdy
SaaMte
73 44
dr
Shnvaport
43 71
cdy
Sioui Follt
47 41
cdy
Spokona
« 41
dr
Topako
44 74
cdy
T wcton
107 74
cdy
Tulto
47 71
dr
«oth)ngfon.D C
44 71 11 d r
Wichilo
104 73
dr
Wilkra Borra
71 41
cdy

�drinking g am e" In w hich
Inaon conaumed too much

Aher a i t f grandVinson and Grace
idbrd. Her father,
The argument allegedly became physical and Hardy
allegedly shot , the victim In the left leg with a ,23 calibre
semi-automatic pistol.
The business transaction was allegedly never completed.
Hardy was transported to the John K. Polk Correctional
Facility where he was held In Ueu of96.000bond.

Diiordirty conduct chifQid
Daniel Ray Brown. 44. of 1912 Sanford A rt. was arrested on
Thursday.
He wss charged with disorderly conduct.
According to the Sanford M ice Department report. Brawn
waa allegedly walking In and out of traffic on Find S treet He
w ss allegedly cursing loudly and upsetting other pedestrians
and some drivers.
He allegedly refused police requests to stop his activities and
was then taken into custody.
He waa taken to to the John C. M k Correctional FUcfltty
where he waa held on 9100 bond.

Throwing rocfcii bottles brings wrest
Michael Louis Jones. 29. o f 63 Seminole Gardens in Sanford
was arrested Thursday.
He was charged with assault and throwing deadly missiles.
According to the Seminole County Sheriffs Office Report.
Jones was allegedly standing at the corner of lBth Street and
Southwest Road In Sanford where officers have allegedly been
threatened by Jones In the past and warnings have allegedly
been Issued for rock and bottle throwing.
The arresting officer allegedly had a civilian in his patrol car
and felt that she was In danger when the rock and bottle
throwing began on Thursday.
Jones allegedly attempted to elude the officer, but waa
quickly apprehended and transported to to the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility where he was held In lieu of $5.000bond.

SANFORD — County ronlng
officials have recom m ended
O sw tiw A lA ,county
P m *h 4i i cotninigt
juyM m laalaaiaaB
aeminoie
wfkcfi
delay action on dredge and fill
permits for two completed boat
docks at Marina Isle Flak Camp
e a s t of Sanford u n til cam p
owners get state environmental
permits and meet county re­
quirem ent*.^. • ■-«' •—*** li Marina Isle folia to meet the
requirements, staff has recom­
mended all structures built on
the site after 1980 be raxed.Camp operator Leonard Har­
rell waa scheduled to ask com­
m issioners next Tuesday to
grant boat dock permits for two
docks built at the camp off State
Road 46 sometime between
1967 and 1990. One dock of 660
square feet In size and a larger,
multi-slip "star" dock to 1.600
sq u are feet In stxe. County
officials said both were built
without county permits.
County toning officials in
their review, wrote the request
waa premature. They suggested
the permit application must first
be approved by the Board of
A djustm ent since the entire
camp and travel trailer park
never received forma) approval
from the county.
The county discovered earlier
this year the entrance road to
the camp showed signs of recent
fill material had been added to
the water.
The zoning staff recommended
th e county require all unpermitted fill to be removed,
dredge and fill permits from the
state Department of Environ­
mental Regulation be obtained,
along with a state Department of
Natural Resources submerged
land lease. The staff also re­
commended Marina Isle submit
a fuel spill emergency plan and a
site plan.
The site plan must Include
adequate parking, landscaping
and drainage, staff wrote.
Staff also recommended that
all of the conditions m ust be met
w ithin six months after the
county approves the permits or
every structure built on the site
offer April 1960 must be re­
moved.

V in to n a lle g e d ly b e g a n
drinking at about 8 p.m. on the
Fourth of July while she and a

Sanford chamber kicks
off its first blood drive

Uve director Have Farr. "If It
produces good results, we'll
probah)y make It an annual
affair." Farr, along with cham­
ber member Bobby Douglas,
have already arranged to be the
first donora at 11a.m. Tuesday.
Franck Lundqutst, donor re­
cru iter for Seminole County
said. "The 4Ui of July generally
has the largest need for blood.
We'U be holding this to help
replenish th e supplies." She
explained that thta to one of the
moat difficult times of the year

JULY#,.19*t

SEMINOLE COUNTY TRANSPORTATION
FLAN - TEN ftO) YEAR SALES SURTAX TO
FUNO COUNTYWIDE TRANSPORTATION
IMPROVEMENTS
(VOTE FOR (
Te provide public transportation improvemanta and sccgpubfa (raffle flow, SominoM County roquiroa additional rovonuo.
Tha propoagd rtvonuo toured is o tan (10)
ytar on# cgnt (1«) pgr dollar salat surtax
on taxable transactions occurring within
Saminoi# County. Those now rovanuos
would bo used to provide adequate levels
ol service by funding transportation im­
provements such as the renovation, Im­
provement, reconstruction and construc­
tion of various rood projects throughout
Seminole County.

during which to obtain blood
donors. "The regular resident
donors are asray on vacations
and we have a large number of
northern visitors in the area who
are often In n eed "
Lundqutst said the goal of this
drive la to.obtain at least two
persons from each organisation
that has membership in the
chamber. She said. "Seminole
County has stead y issued a
challenge to the City of Sanford,
to provide at least tiro donors
from each departm ent. That
should be a big help because the
county has 35 separate depart­
ments."
Donors will be allowed to
designate their blood to any
account they wish. They will be
allowed to establish their own
f a m ily a c c o u n t , h a v e It
earmarked for their church,
their business, or anyone elae
they so desire.

cow in, Vicki Dyer, 90. of Or- might be alcohol potaonlng. In
fondo went
*
............................
vtaMng a friend
In e lu d in g vom iting an d congfo, In Oraant County.
vuMona.
w portjM m group ptayed
An ambulance waaaummoned
d J u n e cafleo Piaa Out In to the houae, but the young
which the partletpanta consume woman was pronounced dead at
alcohol and then attempt to Florida HoapttalOrlando.
repeat a tongue twister.
Dyer, hospital reports indicate.
Vinson and her compatriots
allegedly continued drinking m
the parking lot of a Seminole
County convenience store before
tra v e llin g to th e h ouse of

not available
Drive in Orlando where VInaon
Her
began display symptoms which for comment on Saturday.

M M

AUTO MALL

County
Midway Elementary School,-22*1 Jltway. (Midway)
Saminoi* County
11 1
Altamonte Spring* City HtoC 21.- W wBBryport Avenu*.
Altamonta Spring*
Oviedo Woman * Dub. 414 King Straw! (batwaan High
School and Mathadtal Church), Oviedo
Geneva Community Houa*. F!r»l Straot. Geneva
Community Horn* Avarua E * 7th Blraat. Clwiuota
Waatmlnataf Unitad Praabytarian Church, Fellowship
Hall, M41 Sad Bug Road. Caaaalbwrry
Wahlva Prasbylarian Church FtlkmmMp Hall. 201 Waktva
Spring* Road, longwood
lata Mary Community Hall. 2*0 N. Country Club Road.
Lata Mary
Savanlh Ow Advantial Church, 4® Mantand Avanua,
Ahamonia Spring*
Country Cmali Inn and Racquat O u t, 820 Country Craak
Fartway toll turmoil Road). Altamonta Springs
Wlnlar Spring*
Northland Community Church, 530 Dog Track Road,
Longwood
Sanlord City Hall 300 N. Part Avanua, Statord
Lafcavlaw Chriatlai Church, t400 Saar Lata Road, Apopka
Council Chambara, Caaaalbarry City Htol. 98 Lata Triptal
Driva, Caaaalbarry
Sanora ClubhouM. Eaat oft Santord Avanua on Sonora
Boutovard. Santord
Saminoi* County Public Haaith and Hitman Sarvtca*
Auditorium. 240 W Airport Boutovard, Santord
Saminoi* County Agrlcultur* Cantor Auditorium, 4320 S
Orlando Drive. Santord
Alton Chapal AME Church, 1203 diva Avanua, Santord
Santord Cute Cantor, Sanlord Avanua al Saminoi*
Boutovard. Santord
Amadean lagion Pott 113,270B Wall* Avanua (olt
Highway 1792), Farn Part
Savanlh Day Advantial Church, South ol SR 434 on Mot*
Road, Wlnlar Spring*
Altamonta Spring* Civic Cantor, B93 Magnolia Avanua,
Altamonta Sprinp
l aka Mary City Commit ikon Chambar*. 15B N Country
Club Road, Lata Mary
Saminoi* County School Board Oflic*. kilaraaclion ol
MtilonvMI* Avanlm and Calory Avanua, Sanlord
Congr*gattonal Christian Church. 2401 &amp; Part Avanua.
Sanlord
Ooldthoro El*m«i1ary School, 1300 W 70th Straal,
Sanlord
Knlghta In". Roan 42B, 4750 SR 40 W. Saminoi* Counly
Athwood Condominium*. 1000 Lata ol ID* Wood*
Boulavard, Farn Part
Pina Ring* Oubhouaa,
w. Airport Boutovard, Banlord &lt;u m antranco off Old Lata Mary Road)
Longwood Qly Halt, Comar si Wvran Straal and Wilma
Straot, Longwood
Altamonta Spring* Elamanlary School. 300 Pinavtow Driva
otl Palm Springs Driva, Altamonta Spring*
Spring Oaks Community ClubhouM, 800 Spring Oak*
Boulavard, Altamonte Springs

MORSE
I NVESTI GATI ONS

U -iO t

53
54
58
SO
S7

S3
84
83
18
87

longwood Community Building, Oomar ol Wilma and
Church Straot, loiywoud
Waktva Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall. 201 Waktva
Spring* Road, lengwood
Ovtado Eaat Srarch Library, 310 Division SI (M l. Ovlado
Now Uto FaitowWilp Church. &gt;70 Tuakawllla Road. Wlnlar
Spring*
First Oaptlal Crtach ol CaaaalPaoy. 770 Saminoi#

Boutovard, Santord
Wathrtow Baptiat Church, 4100 County Road 48-A.
Santord
Altamonta Bprtnp Etomantary School. XO Pinovtow Driva
otl Palm Springs Driva, Altamonta Springs
Forest City Etomantary School. 080 Sand Lata Hoad,
Forest City
Forest Lake Etomantary School, 2801 Sand Lata Road.
Forest City
Seventh Day Advantial Church. South ol SR 434 on Mott

Altamonta Spring*
Bobby Rut*no's Place For Ribs, TBS N Douglas Avenue
(use Iron! entrance on Oouglae Avenue). Altamonte

Springe

Wefclwa Mwlne 8 Restaurant. 10QD Miami Springs Drive.
Saminoi* County
Longwood Church ol The Nwartna Fellowship Hell, 200
Lutheran Haven Fellowship Hall, Highway 428. South ol
Oviedo. Stoftinoie County
Slovak Garden. 3110 Howell Branch Road. Seminole
Counly
Wtdgewood Tennis Villa*. 1401 Forest Hill* Drive, Winlir
Spring*
78

*

*

St. Mary Magdalen Church Social Hall. SSt Maitland
Avanua. Altamonta Spring*
Sanlord Christian Church. 137 Airport Boutovard. Sanlord
South Saminoi* Mddla School. Eaat auto ot Queen s Mir­
ror Lata, turn Sojth oft Wlnlar Part Drat. CasMlbarry
American Lagion Post 1S3, 2708 Want Avanua (otl
Highway 1782). Farn Park
Elk* Club. Howell Branch Road. Goldanrod
MiIw m Middi* School. Highway 427, Longwood
Firtt Church ol llto Nararene Fellowship Hall, 250t San
lord Avanua. Sanlont
Slavik Cardan. 3110 Howell Branch Road. Sammoto
County
San Jot* Apartment* Racraalional Room otl SR 430 on
Wlnlar Wood* Boutovard. Saminoi* Cosnty
Summil Village Condominium ClubhouM. 1001 Esplanade
Way- Cattalbarry
Si Mark* Presbyterien Church (Activity Building). 1021
Palm Bpnngt Driva. Alijmonia Springs (can also inter at
Aldua Avanua oil Ol Norlh Slraal)
Longwood Hill* ttoptlsl Church. 1255 E E William ton
Road. Longwood
Spanish Trac* Apartment* Clubhouse. *45 Wymora Road.
Altamonte Spring*
Si Richard* Episcopal Church, 5 1SI Laae Howell Road.
Semmoto County
Fire Slalion *2. 850 Non hern Way . Winter Spring*
W

■4C

1

Pint Baptist Church of Sanlando fringe, M2 Sanlando
SoadfaM SM. 43*. It* mile* * W 0l M . between Mont­
gomery and Jam— town. Altamonte Spring*
Senior Oman* Multipurpose Cantor. 200 N. inprat On**

2*01

HARVEY

pared for the funeral home by
th e fam ily . V inson w aa a
member of the student council
at school and the vice-president

31 SltphwT* Catholic Church, 515 T useawill* Rued.
Winlir Spring*
77
Northland Community Church, 51) Dog Track Road.
Longwood
71
Saminoi# County Board ol R e a lm Olllca. 1500 Shepard
Road. Winter Spring*
79
Deer Run Country Club, 1523 S ( g h Circle. Saminoi*
County
SO
Latavtow Christian Chur-n 1400 tear Lake Rn*d Apopka
•1
Waal Brandi Library. 24S N Hunt Club Boulevard.
Seminole County
12
Wekiwe Marina 8 Raelourant, 1000 Miami Spring* Drive,
Seminole County
S3
81 Stephen Lutheran Church, 2140 Highway 434,
Longwood
84
lata Mary Pretbylanan Chruch, 128 W Wilbur Avenue.
Lake Mary
85
Oviedo Riverside Park Recreation Cantor, 1600 Lockwood
Bivd. Oviedo
86
Markham Wood* Presbyterian Chiacn. S210 Markham
Wood* Road tons mils North ol Lake Mary Boulevard).
Seminoto Counly
87
Part Suit* Hot#! (Ural Hoof). 225 l Altwnont* Drive.
Altamonte Springs
88
Sanora Clubhouse, East olt Santoro Avenue on Sanora
Boutovard. Sentod
88
Tutaawilla Pr#»b*t#«an Church. 3800 W SR 428.
Saminoi* County
•0
Plantation Apartments ClubhouM, 2105 Howell Branch
Road, Maitland
01
Spring Lake Elenwntary School Activity Cantor. Orange
Avanua. Altamonte Spring*
02
Sabal Point Elenwntary School. #80 Wekivs Spring*
Hoed. Longwood
93
Christian Neighborhood Athene# Church, M l Markham
Wood* Road, long wood
M
Wtdgawood Tennis Villas. 1401 Forest Hill* Drive Winter
Springs
05
Oviedo Women * Club 414 King Skeel Ibetween High
School and Methodist Chufthi. Ovtodo
INDICATES CHANGE FROM OCTOBER Z 10#0. LOCATIONS

�■
•11

*s master gardner program
a pwrtct M e roe, you are Invtted to acnuatot
yourselves with the o u t e r y v d e n tr program
under the aupervMou of County Hortlculturtat
Celeste White.
The maeter gardeners. all 53 of them, are
volunteers. Bill Popek has been a mooter
gardener far the poet 3Vi years. The volunteer
master gardeners n o n the "fffer o n ,a rotating
haala from • a m .-13 noon and 1-4 p.m. dally.

Junctkm^jlo |th e ^ space^ to ^be^ used. A lter

LURLENE
SWEETING

EDITORIALS

Vote ‘Yes*
for roads
improvement

experience
t the foundation far their rendering
Whenever they need additional Infer*
White la available to them. White

There la no question th a t s o m e th in g _____
to be done to Improve traffic circulation in
Seminole County. G row th, m ore Intense in
some p arts of th e co u n ty th a n In oth ers, h a s
m ade congestion a h allm ark o f drtvtng here
and a real headache too m u c h of th e tim e for 1
an awful lot of people.
T he expectation la th a t It la going to get
worse. T h a t's w hy foresight a n d plan n in g are
of th e utm ost Im portance. And th a t's Just
w hat the county la engaged In w ith Its
proposal to raise rrm tey th ro u g h th e sales
tax.
Seminole C ounty com m laaionera w ant to
impose a one-cent Increase in th e sales tax for
the next 10 years. T h a t would raise an
estim ated 3300 million to w iden ro ad s u n d er
c o u n ty J u r is d ic t io n , s u c h a s A ir p o r t
Boulevard. Rinehart Road a n d C ounty Road
437 In the Sanford, Lake M ary an d Longwood

far one’s lawn. The aotl in my
However, the soil In my front

w\2 l S 3 l5 o,8e” to0*e 0rtenthum b"
the situation.
. ! County
roiintw residents
r^ u v n t- are
-«• rnrour*ard
to
My
lawn
la graced by three large oak trees that
encouraged
to ^
* g ^ t y r e ^ U a re e»&lt;
»urajrt to
.eversl centuries old. Therefare. I was
usb the master gsrdener program In beautifying
J TOne
o ^offthet ^Initial
l E steps
u ^ to
£ wprocess
£ e 2 mtereated In ascertaining a proper ground cover.
their lawns.
In tthe
The Center has a wealth of information about
Is to bringt soil samples to the Agricultural Center
ala. Samples should be secured from all phases of gardening. We ren ewed a pamphlet
far analysts.
In your yard. Samples are entitled. ' Oround Covers far Florida Homes*'
different areas in
analysed on Mondays and Thursdays far a produced by the Cooperative Extension Sendee.
modest fic^,
The soli Is analysed to determine whether It la

JACK

WASHINGTON -

to

Berry's World

ANDERSON

Pregnant Air Force
nurse out of prison

T h e referendum , w h ich telesco p es th e
county's 30-year plan Into a single ‘
supported by th e G
&lt; reater Sanford C
Commerce, th e G reater Sem inole C ounty
C ham ber of Com m erce, m o at o f th e cities In
the county, and four o f th e five co u n ty
commissioners.
Com m issioner Larry F u rlo n g to opposed.
Mr. Furlong argues th a t th e c o u n ty ’s grow th
projections are w rong a n d th a t th is to no t th e
beat use of a safes ta x Increase. O ther

safes tax to regressive a n d unfair, especially to
low-income consum ers.
T here's som e tru th in w h at Mr. Furlong and
the others say. But. fet'a face reality. We live
In Central Florida, a boom ing area. G row th to
real and we’ve got to deal w ith w h at to
already a reality and deal w ith it in a rational,
not haphaxard m anner. P erh ap s w e ican
control growth but wc su rely can n o t elimi­
nate It, nor should we w a n t to.
Unfortunately, once ag ain , tax p ay ers are
being forced to m ake a choice w ith a g u n a t
their heads. Approve th e safes tax. th e county
says, or face a property ta x Increase because
the money m u st be raised som ehow . The
sa le s tax Is th e b e tte r a lte rn a tiv e . Ihe
proponents argue, because It w ould coot the
typical motorist about $ 7 2 a year, far leas
th an the Increase th a t a n average property
ow ner would have to p ay .
T he difficulty here to th a t rejecting th e sales
tax referendum , w hile n o t like shooting
ourselves in the head, w ould be like ahootlng
ourselves In the foot. We d o have a problem .
It needa to be solved a n d th e county to trying
to solve It responsibly.
Nevertheless, we believe th e com m issioners
arc taking the easy way o u t by ask in g for a
sales tax increase. We a re n o t convinced, for
example, that th e county h a s carved all of the
fat out of Its own b u reau cracy , o r th a t the
state Legislature h as done enough, before
asking residents to dig d eep er into th e ir ow n
pockets for more money.
It Is time for governm ent to s ta rt w orking
harder for the people by se ttin g m ore realistic
priorities and draw ing th e line on expenses.
T hat Is a sure way to sta n c h the stre am of
requests for Increases in ta x e s of all kinds. It
also to a sure way to have gained the
confidence of voters w hen It becom es neces­
sary to ask for money for legitim ate additional
expenditures.
We believe the county deserves th e benefit
of the doubt this time. T he voters will decide
for certain on Tuesday.

The Agricultural Center la at 300 W. County
Home Road off of 17*03. h la on the oppoatte aide
of the street from Flea World. There la a sign
posted advertising the program and urging that
you contact a master gardener at 333-3900, ext.

Air Force (feat. C
birth to
Kan., military

S h e w a s c o u rt
marttoled for "u n ­
lawful use off a con­
trolled substance."
.H er crime amounted
to this: To ease the
palQ from a hip Iqju;
last fall. Lancaster
o k tw o lefto v er
pain pills from her
wisdom tooth su n
g e r y tw o y e a r s
earlier. She was not
pregnant at the time.
Lancaster, a nurse
for the Atr Force,
ITho military
ad m itted In court
that she took the two
c o u r t was
Tylox pills, and she
sant ancl ng
produced proof that
bar to Qlvs
they were prescribed
b i r t h In
for her by her den­
custody. ■
tist. But. as the un­
forgiving military
court ruled, the medication was prescribed
for a hip ailment and therefore her use of It
waa Illegal. For that, she was sentenced to six
months In the brigIf Lancaster was Just any Air Force captain,
this case, as silly as it is. may have slipped by
without too much fuss. And the over-zealous
military Justice system would have gotten
away with yet another injurtice. But at the
time Lancaster was sentenced In late May.
she was four months pregnant. The military
court was sentencing her to give birth in
custody.
That apparently didn’t make as much
sense to the Air Fort
Force after we publicized her
plight.

K

ELLEN

GOODMAN

Patriotism not spectator sport
BOSTON — We have headed to the country
for the holiday. Far away from the prefabri­
cated parades and the made-for-televlalon
ticker tape that turns city streets Into postwar
spectacles.
The Pentagon won't send Its hardware where
we are going. The Fourth of July parade will be
homemade and down-home. A patriot is not a
missile everywhere.
So. we will be spared one last command
performance for the Persian Gulf. The red.
white and blue all wrapped In yellow. The
enthusiasm for a war that was won but Isn't
over. The endless curtain calls for Schwarzkopf
and fireworks for victory.
And Just as well. There Is something
Increasingly artificial, after all, in these
postwar productions. Do wc replay the last
hurrahs In order to prove to each other and the
‘'millions watching at home” that we are not
experiencing a relapse of Vietnam syndrome?
Do we go out in public to do an Impression of
pride In country?
The Fourth of July has always been a special
holiday. Never Monday-Ucd, it commemorates
a statement of principle, not a day off work.
This la the date on which Americana told the
world what we stood for: "We hold these truths
to be self-evident, that all men are created
equal, that they are endowed by their Creator
with certain unalienable Rights that among
these are Life. Liberty and the Pursuit of
Happiness."
But how watered down the current batch of
Gulf-Infused sentiments seems In contrast. In
the wake of a war that liberated Kuwait to hold
Its kangaroo courts, and conquered a tyrant
■till very much In charge, our ringing
declaration la reduced to: "We're Number
One."
As the days of glory are covered by ancient
sands and arguments. Americans are expected
to root for our country as ir it were a sporting
team whose only obligation was to win the
world cup. In our country's third century, wc
are more like fans than citizens. We prove our
allegiance by cheering "USA! USA!". We show
our citizenship by Joinings parade of approval.
How have we beeme a country of such
permissive patriotism? It's os if some perverse
child-raising manual was being applied to the
relationship between Ihe governed and the
government.
We. the people, are like parents reluctant to
set high standards for their children, to hold
them responsible, to criticize them. Wc have
become like parents who quake the first lime
their children react to discipline with an
accusing tone, "you don't love me." We have
retreated to the sidelines of civic life where we
offer only cheers as proof of our ties.

)

How else to explain the attention.to military
victory and the Inattention to our domestic
defeats? How else to explain the din of the
parades and the eerie alienee about our
economic slide? The attendance at postwar
parades and the absence of concern about
postwar policies?
Permissive patriots are easily pleased. We
ask little and cheer for less.
Thirty years ago. Jack Kennedy told Ameri­
cana. "Ask not what your country can do for
you but what you
c a n d o fo r y o u r
c o u n t r y . " N ow
maybe we've teamed
that lesson too well.
We have lowered
our e x p e c ta tio n s ,
and In return politi­
cians. like children,
lowered their per­
form ance. On the
streets, there la a
rtto
d a lly a h o o tln g
match; In Congress
they debate only a
waiting period for
lTh# Fourth of
buying a gun. In fam­
Jul y has
ily life there la a work
always been a
and caretaking crisis:
special holi­
In the government
day. |
they wrangle over
u n p a i d m e d ic a l
leave. In Ihe country
there Is poverty and
massive deficit: In Washington they argue over
John Sununu.
Permissive patriotism Is deceptively simple.
It’s too easy to become a point of light along
Ihe parade route. But like permissive parent­
ing. It covers up a lack of Involvement and
even caring. Mindless love — my country right
or wrong —is a mushy substitute for duty. The
results are spoiled In the process.
Real patriotism should be demanding. It
should differentiate — my country right AND
wrong. It should impose ethical standards
higher than being Number One. Patriotism
Isn't afraid of saying no. It embraces criticism
as well as praise.
But more than anything else, patriotism is
not a spectator sport. It demands that people
stay as engaged and committed as that first
group who came together — not for a parade
but for a daring venture to which they signed
thetr names. "And for the support of this
Declaration, with a firm Reliance on the
Protection of divine Providence, we mutually
pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes
and our sacred Honor."

After Lancaster was released, she got a
rousing welcome in her hometown of
Basehor. Kan. Hie state had been stunned by
her sentence. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.. attended
a rally for her In Basehor after pleading her
case personaly before Defense Secretary LHck
Cheney and Air Force Secretary Donald Rice.
Lancaster has now resumed her work at the
WIlford Hall Medics) Center at Lackland
where she has a stellar record as a nurse and
an officer. The drug conviction resulted from
an investigation at the hospital into stolen
drugs. Random urine testa were made of
employees, and Lancaster was tested on the
day she took her own pain pUls.
Her future Is still unclear. The Air Force
could dism iss her conviction based on
Insufficient evidence, or ft could get stubborn
and return her to Jail as early as August,
when she will be nearly eight months
pregnant. Dole has privately vowed that will
not happen.
Our associate Jim Lynch has learned that
the Air Force case may crumble for legal
reasons. In Its effort to prove Lancaster
allegedly had a drug problem, the Air Force
Introduced surprise evidence at her trial that
Implied she stale two painkillers that were
supposed to go to one of her patients. When
her attorney. David E. Wheeler, asked during
the trial where the patient was, the Air Force
maintained that it didn't know. As ft turns
out. the woman was Just across the base in a
military hospital at that moment. Wheeler
has since gotten an affidavit from the woman
saying that she did receive her medication
from Lancaster.
The Lancaster case Is one in a long list of
Injustices at the hands of military courts, a
system th a t too often prides Itself on
convictions Instead of common sense.

\

�Sanford Harold. Sanford, FforMa - Sunday, July 7, IN I - M

Stenstrom
□ C iilto a a i P lfli 1A

| | | r | | | i e p | M | . f e sa w note High h as
■ propose a inc
(M in e s to the
thouaanda of cam of grapefruit footbollbanquettotheendef the
ab
' to ratoe a total of about
i i h i _ _ __ sections go through tha UM Ing grid season because Uk r are $900 mUion dining the next 10
w"
machine that pul on Del Monte now ao many qports at SH8 far yearn. The tax currently gener­
ates about $34 million i
o y a rn .
to W .™ ~
^
County’s cities. Including San■tm
d u c t, aam e slan t, different awards.
3 ^ . ^ S 2 S n * * lE S h W » h . Today fast's a common
The Schaal trophy la aald to be so the county win take in the
Pwcth*. But way bach then H the oldcat continuous football entire $34 million each year.
*the me
M V*“ “
ua. Oh. yen, Kherson trophy awarded in the United
Hotel Duihtinf,
had Ha own brand.'TtoMfoM."
ft ^ much older than the to widen and make other im­
I Hetom an Trophy far col- provements to 29 county roads.
football'a moat valuable The money win also be used to
add traffic stgiato and other
In the tote 19RF* said Epps. sm aller-scale Im provem ents
1 ______ „ — m he was alfcc- throughout the county. The
Uooatdy known by ao many — roads wM be completed on a
died, he asked Wayne, then an pay-as-you-go schedule, with
to see mhki ■no cocMcnicuofi money
being g e n t a s the taxes are
collected, instead of selling
bonds to be repaid with the
‘toes.
The county win atoo collect
to the _______
■ ....I
High football phtyer each year about $151 milkm In gasoline
taxes and coratrucUon Impact
far the past 70 years.
We detoevt betna wrone. But fires during the next 10 years to
thto to one tone we were glad to complete the $400 miltton pro­
be In error. For thlbee of you who gram. Because gas tax backed
fAtol u n i
g j.L u |
be repaid shortly after
c m not m o w r n c r s c n M i, w c re bonds will he
o u n ty officials
______
wr 2000,. ccounty
doing research now far an entire the year
*km MStoMSH
program iftkM
theyt IlMM
have
enfuffifi about the man who ^ t (| predictI the
the time of hto death knew more uua out win amure transporta­
s DoitI oSfifofci im ii snyDoay. w c tion needs w il met for the
believe you’ll find It very In­ foreseeable future.
The plan atoo Includes $22.3
formative —and aurprtotngl
million for mass transit and

Anna Marie Chambers, 77. of
400 Locust Are.. Apt. 80 In
Sanford, died Friday a t her
home. Bom In Martha. West
Virgin^ on May 22. 1914. she
moved to Sanford from Amherst.
Ohio In 1087. She was a home­
maker and a Baptist.
She to survived by her slater,
Irene Reynold* of Sanford; a
niece. J e rry M cKelvery. of
Longwood and several nieces
and nephews elsewhere.
Brtaaon Funeral Home. San­
ford. in charge r f arrangements.

an d moved to gurney from
Sanford last year. Retired from
the Navy In 1005. he served In
the China Conflict of World War
II and In the Korean War. Aftei
retiring from the Navy, he
taught in Sanford schools for a
decade. He was a Methodist and
Memorial services were Satur­
day. Interment will be on Mon­
day at Arlington National Ceme­
tery, Arlington. Va.
He to survived by hto wife
Lynda C. Strickland of Quincy;
his step-son Bert Morgan of
Quincy; hto stepdaughter Sara
Morgan Lose of Loutovllle. wr.i
Ky.; a
grandson Gene Morgan In of
Chattahoochee. Fla.; hto grand­
d a u g h t e r s K a th e r in e M.
A ndrew s of C hattahoochee.
C a ro le C um ble M organ of
Quincy and Median McCombs of
Louisville. Ky.; hto brothers, Lt.
Cmndr. Jack Strickland. USN
Ret. of Quincy and Rupert
Strickland of Sanford.
Memorial contributions are
requested to theFlovtda Sheriffs
Boy* Ranch. Boys Ranch FL
32060-9802.
M organ-MeCellan F u n eral
Home In Quincy in charge of
arrangements.

Thom as LeRoy Davis. 43,
Snook Drive. D eltona, died
Thursday at Ft. Smith Btvd., at
Peoria St.. Deltona. Bom July 8.
1047 In Youngstown. Ohio, he
moved to Deltona three years
ago from Fern. Itorkr He win a
Baptist. He was owner of Pro
Drywall and tucco, Inc. He was
a U.S. Army Viet Nam veteran
Survivors are wife. Debafrah
' Anil! Deltona; parents, Mr. and
&gt;Mrs&gt;-Janies L Davis. Deltona;
three sons; Daniel T. Davis.
Jacksonville. Jam es.H . Ttodale
II, Midwest City. Oklahoma,
Timothy K. Graham, Deltona;
th ree brothers, Norman J.,
Venice. Barry A . Casselberry.
MeUaaa Ann Vinson. 16. of
Jam es D., Deltona.
Stephen R. Bsldauff Funeral 2221 Hartwell Ave.. in Sanford,
Home of Deltona In charge of died on Saturday at Florida
Hospital In Orlando. Bom in
arrangements.
Sanford on Dec. 30, 1974. she
was a lifelong resident of San­
Lt.Cal.THOMAS J . OLDS
Lt. Col., retked. Thomas J. ford. She was a student at
Olds. 60. Jericho Drive. Cassel­ Seminole High School and a
berry. died T h tn d ay at Veter­ Nazerene. She was a member of
ans Hospital. Gainesville. Bom th e Sem inole High student
Dec. 12. 1930 In Pollock. council and the vice president of
Louisiana, he moved to Cassel­ the Spanish club.
She to survived by her mother.
b e r r y fro m A l e x a n d r i a .
Louisiana in 1974. He was a D iane V inson, of Sanford:
Methodist. He was retired from maternal grandmother. Grace
the U.S. Air Force aa a Lt. Col. Woody, of Sanford; her father.
He was a veteran of both the Henry Vinaon Jr., of Winter
Korean conflict and Viet Nam Park: her paternal grandparents.
conflict. He was a member of the Mr. and Mrs. Henry Vinaon Sr.,
Armed Forces Association. He of Winter Park: a half-sister.
was a graduate of Louisiana Sonia Quinn of Louisiana; a
State University in 1952 with an half-brother. Joshua Lee Vinaon
of Lockhart. Fla. and a step­
R.O.T.C. Commission.
Survivors arc wife. Marla A.. s is te r. Je ssic a S an ch es, of
Casselberry; two daughters, Winter Park.
Linda L. Sherdel, Longwood.
P a t r i c i a A. C h a s e . New
Brunswick. NJ.; sister, Jimmie
Lynn W illiam s. D eltona: 2
grandchildren.
Stephen R. Baidauff Funeral
Home of Deltona in charge of
arrangements.

County oOkrlato say they must
improve many of the roads In
the project Hat. which Includes
Airport Boulevard and Sanford
Avenue, to meet state growth
management requirements. The
state requires that the county
establish standards for roads,
sewers and other services and
improve any facilities that don't
meet those standards.
The state also requires that
those standards won’t reduced
by new development. As the
msv MS iMtoSy asm I to 4sjn. • to • county allows new residential
pmelBrtw* Fww* Meme. tw*
development. It has to make
sure current services are ade­
quate to serve existing residents
N sav tiA n tM a.
and the people living In the new
homes.
aa sms a AltoMIr 4 ^ to
The county had a 20-year plan
MtosNat «to fee I a m , M n m y . M r t m
to improve currently-congested
at Osfctom Park C re a to r. * Lato Mary,
lav. Jean U O re m , f tot Unto* roads and accommodate new
Ckert* I w t o * wSctaHre . Bam growth, hut Jh? state’s g r a a tlr
to HartreH. Oa.. tfw mavaS to Ma« tnrrm * -management act required the
I rej w i -to -iw tr S tow e* a
r e f a mamSar a* Mm P in t county to accommodate new
growth when it arrives, not
aSto Ckwtk to Bantor* k r
vtvara toctoto to r Sawgrtar BaMy W. Dtoa at when the county chooses to
prepare for it.
C ounty planning d irecto r
in H
Pwneral Hama, Naw
Tony VanDerworp said the sales
tax road plan was established to
meet the two pow th manage­
to at
ment requirements. By accom­
to are. at
modating the population growth
estimated by the University of
Florida through 1996. VanWanto wM to Mem t tot are. an* a to f are.
Derworp said the county will
at ton Batoato F a ir* to Frearal Hama.
also be correcting current con­
Oekiewn Sark Che**. Lato Mary.
Batons SatrdWW Purer* Hrew. Qtolmre gestion.
Sark Cke*el. Lato Mary, to

J M 'a

t w ....

roads in the county so those are
the reads where the development is going to occur." VanTbe second five years of the
program includes roads-that will
be affected by traffic created by
future resid en ts, a num ber
Critics of the plan say the
estimates are high because (hey
don't take Into account the
u n n lan. VanDerworp said the
estimate to conservative, neither
high tar low. becauae of the
recession. VanDerworp said
. Seminole County construction
usually begins to resume Its
normal pace 18 to 24 months
after a recession ends, so the
county chose th e m oderate
rathnatr prepared by the Uni­
versity of Florida.
Furlong argues the county
should scale hack development
plane to curb population growth,
so the pressure to upgrade
services w on’t be aa great.
VanDerworp and other county

o f f ic ia ls a r g u e (h e s t a t e
estimates have been proven ac­
curate by the U.9. Census and
much of the services demand
will be from children of current
residents, not newcomers.
The sales wilt be used to pay
for existing reWdcnts' Impacts
on a road and help prepare the
road for future development,
which will create more traffic on
..•it iJCiiJdC co^tiwiEeSciiioii on line
new homes and toorea begin, the
developers will pay Impact fees
which will repay tneir new
residents' share of the Improve­
ments.
The sales tax program also
Includes a 20 percent reserve
and contengency fund, amoun­
ting to over $71 mUUon. Furlong
said that to an unreasonable
amount, but county
Ron Rabup has said ,
land and const nation costs five
or 10 y e a n from now la difficult
ao the contingency must be
Included to avail have too little

H m a K ii
U Q lD Y '
W
*said Kirby, "and wc hope
to nave all heats completed by I
or 2 p.m. in the afternoon. That
night, well have a free banquet
at tt p.m. for all the participants
at the Sanford Civic Center,
sponsored by SofatksSuba."
Two classifications for the
racers will be seen. Kit Cars and
those considered in the Masters
Division. The Sanford winner of
each class will become eligible to
participate In the championship
Soap Box Derby All-American
race in Akron. Ohio. That event,
to be held August 10. It will
feature competition between ap­
proximately 160 racers from all
over the world.
For all three years, the Sanford
event has been held on the
major highway. Kirby said steps
will be taken to re-route traffic
for aa abort a time aa possible

during the race. “Some busi­
nesses don't mind ua having It
there," he said. "They get a lot
of customers, others however,
object to us dotong the highway
for that Saturday.”
Efforts were made to seek an
alternate place for the races but
no area could be found that
would provide the hill and
straight run necessary for the
home-made racers. Looking Into
the future. Kirby said, ' Some­
day , m ay b e, w e'll h a v e a
soapbox derby racetrack built In
one of our park* or somewhere
else where we can hold thto
event, but that's still In the
ruture."
There are only three fran­
chises approved for soap box
derby competition In the entire
state of Florid* In addition to
the Sanford race, competition
will be held In Fort Myers and
Boca Raton.
”

8. F ri u l i A veMS a if tr i
\A u to - O w n e r * I n s u r a n c e
l ife. Horn*, far. Bitoian*. Oar saaw u t t ti sN.

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Anthony A. Padula. 70. 660
Central Avenue. Maitland, died
Thursday at Florida Hospital of
Altamonte Springs. Bom In East
Boston, Mass.. July 9, 1920. he
moved to Maitland from Orlando
In 1967. He was a Catholic. He
w asa mason contractor.
S u rv iv o rs are d a u g h te rs.
Marcia Baker. Walpole. Maas.,
Linda DePasquale. Walpole.
Mass.; son, Anthony Padula of
Rhode Island; 5 grandchildren:
one great-grandchild.
Baldwin-Falrchild Cemeteries
and Funeral Homes. Oaklawn
Park Chapel. Lake Mary. In
charge of arrangements.
r. OUT * . STRICKLAND.
U tN R st.
Cmndr. Guy R. Strickland.
U.S. Navy. Ret.. 86. of Quincy.
Fla., passed away on Thursday
at Tallahassee Memorial Re­
gional Medical Center after a
recent Illness. Born in Sopchoppy. Fla., he moved lo

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M - Sanford H*rsM. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 7, 1M1

Real cops, crimes, victim s:
Is it too real for television?

DOTTIE L. HOWARD, htowtto.

■ f CffW t .V l
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON — It's a gruesome tableau In
red and white, the red of the bedspread and the
woman's white clothing echoed by the blood
sprayed across the white wall during the vicious
beating that killed her.
"It's like her brains are coming right out of that
one spot." one police officer tells another as they
wrap the woman's hands in brown paper bags to
preserve evidence. "He totally crushed her skull,"
he says.
This gripping theater Is television's "American
Detective" from ABC. And, like the Pox show
"Cops" that preceded It to the air by two years.
"American Detective" features real situations,
not the re-enactments of several other programs.
These arc real lives being tom apart In front of
millions of viewers.
But some people wonder if all this reality la
such a good Ides. They question whether the
programs show too much — the faces of
Informants, suspects who may not ultimately be
charged or found guilty, the children of some
suspects and. In parttcuuu. the bloody remains of
murder victims.
"It Is a type of television which
fitch appeals to the
voyeuristic in our society, said Jill Otey. a
Portland, Ore., attorney who represented the
family of the bludgeoned woman. "It's as If we've
had murder and mayhem spoonfed to us for so
long In the form of fictional accounts ... that the
klcjfs keep getting harder to find."
"I'm concerned Hollywood has killed people In
so many different ways." said Portland police
Detective Mike Hefley. who ran that homicide
case with his partner. Thomas Nelson. "Is our
society to the point that we have to start showing
the real thing strictly for entertainment pur­
poses?"
Paul Stojanovlch, who produces "American
Detective," concedes the shows involve some
voyeurism, but he defends ..them a$ "an
extremely valldlbrm of television.”
"I think It opens the eyes of the public to

9P
&gt;•»•

:*■****

l i t is s typo of television which
appeals to the voyeuristic in our
society.!

Visibility grows,
but numbers lag
ly J N iL A V M N I
Associated Press Writer_______
WASHINGTON - There was a
time when black conservatives
relied on an older mentor to
Introduce them to each other
and. aa one recalls, "give us the
sense that we were not alone —
that we tn (act were not crazy."
Now they run for office. appeLr
on TV, le c tu re a c ro ss the
country and. In the case of
C la re n e e T h o m a s , g e t
nom inated to
Suprem e
Court. But their visibility has
Increased a lot faster than their
numbers, even as conservatives
contend they are the true voice
of black America.
Part of the reason la force of
habit: blacks were stow to desert
the party of their emancipator.
Abraham Lincoln, and their
loyalties to D em ocrats are
equally strong. In this case
there's another obstacle as well:
terminology.
"There's a residue from the
past." said Alan Keyes, a black
Republican who ran for the U.S.
Senate th re e y ears ago In
Maryland. "In the 1990s and
1960s. the word conservative
was used to denote people who
were resisting racial progress."
Some would argue that's still
the case. But the label has very
different Implications for the
slowly growing cadre of blacks
who wear it themselves.

Leqil Notlcts
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIG H TEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE NO. to 4124 CA 140
G O V ER N M EN T N A TIO N AL
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
Fir Inti It.
v.
CHRIS LAO and UNKNOWN
TENANTS/OWNERS.
Defendant
NOTICE OF SALE
Holier I* hereby given, pursu
m l lo Final Judgment ol Fore
closure for Pleinlltl *nf*rod In
•ho cause. In tho Circuit Court ol
Sominolo County, Florida. I will
Mil the property situated in
Seminole County Ovvcr.brd i t ;
LOT 17. H ID D EN LA K E
VILLAS. PHASE IV. according
lo the plat thereof a* recorded In
Plat Book It . Peg*# m 14.
Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida
And commonly Known at tit
Long Leal Pina. Sanford. Florl
da u rn
at public Ml*, to the highest end
best bidder, lor cash, el the west
front door ol the Seminole
County Courthouse, In Sanford.
Florida at II 00 am .on July IS.
mi
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ol tho Circuit Court
By JanoE Jesewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish June JO A July 7. IN I
OEG HO

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF TN B EIG HTEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
FOR TN B STATE
OF FLORIDA
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLBCOUNTY
FLORIDA
Co m Ns. tolM7-CAI4 K
S O U TH E A S T M O R TG A G E
CORF..
Plaintiff.
v*.
AMADEO A. MAOCIO. et a l.
Defendants.
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURESALE
•V CLERK OF
CIRCUIT COURT
Notice It hereby liven met the
under signed Maryann* Mors*.
Clerk et the Circuit Ceurt el
Sominolo Couft*. Florid*, wilt,
on the 1st day at August, m i , et
I I * A M . at Ik* Front daw el
tho Sominolo County Court.
howM. In the C l* of Sanford.
Florida, otter lor sale and Mil *1
public outcry to Wo highest end
best bidder lor cash, the follow
Ing described proper* situated
In Seminole County. Florid*,
town
Condominium Unit 242. Build
mg UB. ol HIOOEN SPRINGS
CONDOMINIUMS, according lo
the Declaration ol Condominium
record* on November IS. 1*4
in Ottlclai Records Book tS*4
pages MS thru TtS. inclusive of
the Public Racer* of Sominolo
Coun*. Florid* and ell amend
mtnls Iher*to together with ait
appurtenances thereto end an
undivided Interest in the com
man elements et sold Condomln
lum et tel forth in said
Declaration
pursuant to the final decree of
foreclosure entered In a case
pending in Mid Court, the style
el which Is: S O U TH EA ST
M O R TG A G E CORF . vt
AMAOEOMAGGIO. e tal.
WITNESS my hand end ol
tidal teal ol Mid Court this nth
da, ol June. i n i
(SEAL)
BY: Jan* E Jesewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish July 7. la, m i
DEM *0

MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION
_
PLA IN TIFF.

MICHAEL A. VO O R H IIS. ot

ALAN B. HEROO, RT AL.

OBFRNOANTtl).

if

D A L I J. VAXAHTWRRP, I * .
living, afal..

certain crime problems we have and sociological
conditions that are ci.ftalnly* not appropriate.”
such aa children being raised In homes where
drug dealing occurs, said Stojanovlch. who
produced “Cops'* until leaving last fall for the
newahow.
Not surprisingly, many law enforcement agen­
cies praise the shows, which have featured
departments from Florida to Texas to Oregon.
(And "Cops" recently went overseas to Mm police
In Moscow, Leningrad and London.)
They offer national publicity for good law
enforcement work, said Bart Whalen, spokesman
for the Sheriff's Office In Multnomah County. Ore.
And they Illustrate "the human side of police
work." said Portland police Sgt. Derrick Foxworth.
In Broward County. Fla., the shows fulfill
Sheriff Nick Navarro's philosophy that the public
should get "a little closer look at what happens in
a law enforcement agency." aald spokesman
George Crollus.
That closer look sometimes Includes astound­
ing footage, such aa clearly Identifiable Infor­
mants leading officers to drug suppliers.
"It's downright dangerous for people to be
televised In their act of agreeing to act as an
Informant." said Portland attorney W. Mark
MeKnight, who represented a man shown doing
Just that.
"I don't know of any Instances In which those
televised informants nave felt the repercussions,
but I expect repercussions are likely." McKnlght
said. "This ta the drug world wp.'p* dealing with.”
Nevertheless; informants, the Innocent and the
guilty have all signed releases agreeing to appear,
succumbing to the lure of being on national
television.

To them, tt'a a statement of
faith in the power of self-help,
the value of self-sufficiency. It’s
also a declaration of Indepen­
dence from the civil rights
establishment, the Democratic
Party* politics) stereotypes of
blacks and traditional Hbcral
remedies — such aa affirmative
action — for racial and economic
problems.
"The nation has to understand
that the black community Is a
diverse cotnmiJhHy and they can
n o l o n g e r a s s u m e . In a
patronizing way. that IT you’re
black you're a liberal Demoerst;" said Robert Woodson,
president of the National Center
for Neighborhood Enterprises.
Just how diverse Is question­
able. In the last presidential
election, nearly 90 percent of
registered black Am ericans
voted for Michael Dukakis.
And last year, a mere 95 black
Republican candidates ran tn the
nation's myriad city council,
mayoral, school board, stale
legislative and congressional
races. An even smaller group
won.
J.C. Walts was among them.
He earned a seal on the powerful
Oklahoma Corporation Com­
mission In the first statewide
victory for a black candidate.
But he doesn't have much com­
pany In the Oklahoma GOP.
"You can probably count us
on your fingers and toes." he
said.
The liberal leaders whose
philosophies and stature stem
from the civil rights movement

Legal Notices

S O U T H !A S T M O R T G A G E
COUP.,

el­

Black conservatives win attention

the

IN TNB CIBCNtT COURT.
Ml
INC
FLORIDA
C A SB N R ifM W K A -M O
WILLIAM L. HOWARD M d

CMKVIT COM T

rfPK * Pwffww y p i P A
RAsa*A RM
d a rt H We Circuit Ceurt el
Cruft*. Ftertoa. “
an to* 1st day H Augual. tfft. el
D M A M . el We dtoef ftm l
sew el we MwweH c m *
CeurWeuw. In We City el tas­
ter!. FierMe. efWr ter tele and
••&lt;1 m euWk e v t o v ^ M S e

P tor Me. to m i:
Let )•. M ID D IN L A X !
V IL L A ! FHASI IV. accardtog
te We ptot Wareel et recerses M
Piet Been n. faaee » a
Pubik Racer* at Sam mate
Crun*. Fieri*.
pursuant te We (Mel *cree el

IN TN B CIRCUIT COURT.
RIONTRRNTM JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASR NO. 444234-CA
DIVISION: 14
MERITOR MORTGAGE COR
P O R A T IO N E A S T , a
Pennsylvania corporation.
Plblntltf,

IN TN B CIRCUIT COURT
OF TM EtaTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO: tt-StSSCA 14-0
BANK OF CENTRAL FLORI­
DA. a Florid* banking corpora
lion.
Plaintiff.

H A R R Y C A R S O N
MIDDLETON. *1*1..
AMENDED
NOTICE OF M L R
Nolle* I* hereby given Wet.
pursuant to an Amended Sum
mery Final Judgment of For#
closure entered herein, I will
tall the proper* situated In
Seminole Coun*. Florida, de
scribed at
l e i 1. B l o c k C.
SW EETW ATER OAKS SEC
TION A according to the Flat
thereof a* recorded In Flat Beak
I*, pages X and It. Public
Racer* of Seminole Ceun*.
Florida, and alto beginning al
the Northwest earner et M id Lot
2. Mid Northeast corner also
being the Northwest corner of
Lot I, Blech C. e l sold
SW EETW A TER OAKS SEC
TION A thence run South *
degrees Sd‘ W East along the
Norm line at Mid Lot t a
distance of I N Net. thence run
South 41 degrees 51* IV* West
l i l t t l toe! to the Southeast
corner et Mid Lot I. thence run
Norm 00 degrees or 07" East
along tho East line of said Lot 2
a distance o&lt; l U i n toot to the
Point ol Beginning
al public M l*, to the highest end
best bidder tor ceth el the west
front entrance. Seminole Coun*
CourlhouM in Sanford. Florida,
at II 00 A M. on the 2Sth day ol
July, m i
WITNESS my hand and Of
tidal Saal ol Mid Court mis 21st
dayol June, m i
(Seall
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK. CIRCUIT COURT
By: Jane E Jesewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish June JO A July 7. m l
DEG Jto

E .E V E R E TT E H U S K E Y ,
Defendant
CLERK’S
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HER EB Y GIVEN
that pursuant to a Summery
Final Judgment in Foreclosure
dated tho 24th day ol Juno. mt.
and entered In Civil Action No
•I 0IS4 CA 14G in the Circuit
Ceurt of tho Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit. In end for Sominolo
Coun*. Florid*, wherein BANK
OF CENTRAL FLORIDA. *
Florid* Corporation, Is the
Pleinlltl and E. EV ER ETTE
HUSKEY. Is the Defendant. I.
MARYANNE MORSE. Clerk ol
the above entitled Court, will
toll to the highest end best
bidder, or bidders, lor cash. *1
the west front door ol the
Seminole Coun* Courthouse
Sanford. Florid*, et l l : « A M '
on the 2Sm day ol July. 1*1. the
following described proper* et
M t term In Mid Final Judgment
ol Foreclosure situate In Semi
nala Coun*. Florida, to wit
That part ol tho Northeast
Quarter et Section 4. Township
20 South. Range JO East. Semi
not* County. Florida, tying
Norm ol the Sanford Grant Lin*
and East of Slate Rood &lt;00
I Inter stale No- 4| Less Rights ol
way ol Slate Hoed 44 A on Norm
end Rhinehert Road on the
East
WITNESS my hand and the
oltidal saal ot mis court at
Sanford. Sominolo Coun*. Flor
Ida. mis 24m day ot June, mi
(CO UR TSEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
As Clerk ol Said Court
By Jana E Jesewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish June JO A July 7. m i
DEG JOI

A.

r lM

Nig tel tew Ing
Unit IM.

Inf IS Of HIOORN SPRHIOS
IHM
CuNPOM IN

'

*
fondants and such of tho
Ot-

m

Flelnllft.
ELMER LEE JONES and
SONJAH. JONES,
hlswltoiotel..
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : CITICORP SAVINGS O f
• FLORIDA. INC.
o/k/a AMERICAN EASTERN
C O R F.
Attn: DONT.K02ICH
2420 S E. ITW SI. Apt 207C
Ft. Lauderdale. F L
end any parties who may be
Interested os hairs, devisees,
grantees, assignees, lienors,
creditors, trust#*, or other
claimants, by. through, under or
against CITICORP SAVINOS
O F FLO R ID A . INC. a/k/o
AMERICAN EASTERN CORF.,
YOU ARE NOTIFIED melon
action tor foreclosure el a mart
gage on the following property:
Lot 12. Block A. COACH
LIGHT ESTATES, according to
Wo plot thereof * recorded In
Piet Book 21. Pag* JO and Jl ot
tho Public Records ot Seminal*
Coun*. Florida
has boon mod against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written detente# to It. It
a n y . on J O H N C .
ENGLEHARDT. P A . 1134 E
Livingston Street, O rio n * .
F lo rl* J200J. Plaintiffs at
torney. on or bolero August 2,
m i . end Ilia the original wlW
m# Clark ot this Court aimer
before service an Plaintiff's
attorney, or Immediately mere
alter, otherwise a default will b*
enter* against you ter (he
re. let demand* In the Com
plaint for Foreclosure.
WITNESS my h a * and seal
Ol mis Court on Juno J7. Iff t
ISEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLER K O FTH E
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Heather Brunner
Publish Juno 20 A July 7, 14, II,
mi
OEG 207

■If VU.S.

SAVING* BONGS
For the cuftefilroto Coll..

NOTICE OR ACTION
T O : SAN D RA L. O I L K
former* known aa SANORA L.
O'DONOVAN, JA M B S J.
O ’DONOVAN
YOU ARB N O T IP IID Wot aw
aetton la Nntlaaa a mortgage
m to* followtog piaaaiti to

IRtnlT^WbWRflfi

Th* Waal B J toot at toe Boat
I M I Nat ef ttto Stoat M chain*
•f to* Souto teat toaNarto to *1
toe Nwtoaml 14 at Wa South­
west to at Sactton IS, Tawmhlp
It South, E m m SI Boat, lami­
nate County. Florida,
ha* been tiled agetotl you and
ytoi are regelrad to serve a copy
at y«ur written drian***. It any,
tg It t n M A R O A R I T A .
WHARTON. Flatotltto’ attorney,
e to n addreM to P. O. BOX
1171, OVIEDO. FLORIOA 22744
m er before J v * 17, tftt, and
flto too arlgtoat «tth Wa dark at
Wte court aHtior before service

n S lftn *
g u u .
n_»
OT HPINIi »RIW
IIIIII RnwiPfMWi RmW
PlpIPSy tnBTBBTPrr OffBnWlH V

Mdiurto.
m
Y O U ARB HE REBY NOTI
F IB O Wot an action h * bo*
commanrad to torn Im o a mart
aago an W* Mtowlng real prap• t*. *lno M d hotot and sltoafad M S I Ml NOLB Cairn*, Fieri

* In a

IN T W I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I te JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND FOR
. SEMINOLE lO U ffTY ,
FLORIDA
CASE NOt W O O CAM -L
C IT IB A N K . F ID B R A L
S A V IN 0 S B A N K F /K /A
C I T I C O R P S A V IN G S OF
F L O R ID A . A F B D B R A L
SAVINGS ANO LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Plaintiff.
n.
THOMAS F. CUNNINOHAM. et
rl.

MHil if any hov* ramorrtod
and It any or oil ot sold

YOU AAR N O TIF IE D W04 on

_____ in teW Ceurt. We t*to
et which lit t O U T H IA S T
MOST GAG I CORF.. * t D A LI
J . VANANTWIRP. SR.. It II*
tog,afai.
W tT N IS I ft* tans m e •*flciei Mel el u M Ceurt mta WW
Say el June. m i.
(M A L I
BY: JanoE. Jeeawk
Drew* Clark
PuMItA: July 7.14. m t
D iH -et

COMPANY. INC..

Ltgal Noticas

and u nder M i l H A I L

HtoMod*in* Semina!? *e55yl

have been fairly muted In their
c o m m e n ts on th e T hom as
NOTICE OF SALH
NOTICE IS H IR R B V O IV IN
nomination. But Thomas and pursuant
te a Summary and/or
others say they've endured In­ Default Final
Judgment el NreJune 27, m t end
sults and Intimidation tn the
past — accusations that they are entered In Co m N*. *1242 CA
et the Circuit Court ot Wo
Uncle Toms, unsympathetic to 14-L
ISIti Judicial Circuit In and H r
the plight of thetr own people, or Sominolo County, Florida,
whore In CITIBANK. FEDERAL
somehow not really black.
"You team quickly to despise CS IATVI CI NOGRSP BSAANVKI N OF S/ K O/ AF
both the approach and the F L O R I D A . A F B D B R A L
ANO LOAN ASSOCI­
people who practice It." said SAVINOS
I* Plaintiff, and THOMKeyes. Illuminating the some­ ATION
AS F . C U N N IN O H A M .
times bitter depths of the conflict . ‘J A L f V i r HE.OGES F/K/A
•
MtooVoU
S y UNKNOWN T E the conservatives have sparked. " N ANT IN
OF
J.A. Parker, the man who SUBJECT PRPOSSESSION
O PIR TY It and
supplied companionship and L A R R Y P O N Z B N / K / A
moral support, years ago to- S E T ® W O S . w
young conservatives such as SUBJECT PROPERTY 71 are
Keyes and Thomas, played no Defendants, I will **ll to the
highest and Bast biddor fer cosh
part In th*e civil rights move-' at
Wo watt front door at Wo
ment.
Sominolo Coun* CourttwwM.
"I was busy telling people to Sanford. Florida. Ot l l t N
a.m. an tho 1st doy ot
stand on (heir own two feet." o'clock
1*01. Itw followingsaid Parker, who loured cam­ August.
described proper* * Mt forth
puses before founding the Lin­ In sold Summary and/or Dofoutt
Final Judgment ot toroctoeur*.
coln Institute, a conservative Wwtt:
black research group. In 1978.
Lot 42J. Ook Forget. Unit
according to the plot
Black conservatives share a |TFour,
4naaawl
u ———■
iidh iHtl^A Skawakki
t u l M rvCOTCRNI Ifl r * l M V H
bedrock belief that their views It.f fPages
St, 40. Public Racer*
on welfare, affirmative action ot Sominolo Coun*, Flor Ida.
DATED Wit 20W day ot Juno,
and other racial issues are
t.
shared by a majority of black mMARVANltE
MORSE
Americans. Limited evidence,
Clark ot Wo Circuit Court
B
Y
:
JanoE.
Joeawlc
both statistical and anecdotal,
As Depu* Clerk
backs up that belief.
Publish: July 7.14.1*1
A 1985 Independent poll DEH-42
published In a conservative
magazine found black Ameri­
IN TNB CIRCUIT COURT
cans had far more conservative
OF TH E EIG H TEEN TH
views than national black lead­
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
ers on such issues as prayer in
IN AN a FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
p u b lic s c h o o ls , th e d eath
FLORIDA
penalty, school busing, abortion
CASE NOt It-IM I-CA-14-0
and affirmative action.
McCAUGHAN MORTGAGE

Ltgal Notice*

JACQUBLINR B RAPPORT
ANO NICNAGO B. RAPPORT
WH OSE RESIDE N C I IS: » f
DUNCAN TRAIL. LONE WOOD.
FLORIDA NTTf

w cunw

JAMBS J. O'DONOVAN M d
SANDRA L. O CLK. former*
h n g w n as S A N D R A L .
O'DONOVAN.
_ _ ^ _

Coun*. PtorV

L O T n . O A R O IN L A K I
BSTA TB S. U N IT TWO. AC
CONOINO T O THB F L A T
T H I R I O P AS RICORORD IN
F L A T BOOK SL PAGE 74 OF
THB PUBLIC BICORDS OF
SEMI N O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
_____cam m on* .known as I N I

gt i M CmrnmMvm gg tgl
forth lh M id Dec lor alien.
VI f^f^m
A wt ar fe*H
Rba B
1 —*- - - "■■ p
wiwle
rlWpmBCQii
dto F a * . M irrored Clgoot
R4
Dryer,
h « Boon filed By the Plaintiff
In Wo
your errltton doWnooa. If any. to
ft * SM ITH A SIMMONS.
Plointtfrk ottornoyi. l t j Whet
Adame Street, Suite i t to,

L mi. end flit
Itw original wlW Wo Clark ol
mis Court either before aorvic*
gjfltly
dofoutt

you ter te
BB
im
#^MRB*l^kldbll VE
j * p pBTITIVn.
Ifto
De*Ttp4NHlT

WITNESS my hand and tool

ot tM* Court an fhie 34th day ol
Juno. mt.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE

Clark•&lt;thoCircuit Court
wy 1
DoputyCtork

ASTHR DRIVE, MAITLAND.
FLORIDA ant.
TM *

action he*

gulrgd to sarvo a copy at your
written defomo. If any, to It on
SHAPIRO 4 FISHMAN, Attoriwys, w h o * address Is
Soyport Plate, tm Courtney
Campbell Cauaewoy, Suite J00.
Tempo. FL XJ407. an or botora
Auguot . m t . and ttto to*
original wlto Wo Clerk of Wit
Court ottoor bofbra sorvk* on
FlalntlfTs attorney or im m *l
■rely InwvBirari WHwTm IIb ■
default will ho antorod against
you tor W* relief dimon*d In
WoCamMalnt.

2

WITNESS my hand and seat
*1 Wls Court on to* 17th * y ol

June. m i.
(SEAL I
MARYANNE MORSE.
Circuit andCoun* Courts
By: Heather Brunner

Publish June M 4 July 7.14 It.
mt
DEO JSS

Wy. I^^AA^^ Sa. —

PwMiUi: Juno JO S July 7.141).
1001
DBO-JOt

.

IN TH R CIRCUIT CO UR T.
■ lO N T IE N T N
JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT,
INAN OPOR
SEM INOLECOUNTY.
FLORIOA .
CASE NO. V1-MI-CA-14G
CALIFORNIA FED ERAL
BANK, a Federal loving* |
0* succoaoor In Intoreet to
Coiitomia Fodoroi Saving* and
Loan Association.
Plaintiff.

1

WILLIAM L. ARMSTRONG. O
single man; OCCUPANT, 1413
Menhafl Street, Sanford.
F ie ri* 32721; and OCCUPANT,
1417 Marshall Streat, Sanford.
FtorWa 32771.
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT T O CNAPTR R 44
NOTICE IS GIVEN Wat pgr
suent to a Summary Final
Judgment entered In tho
styted c o u m . I will Mil to
cosh at Wo watt henl door ot W*
Sominolo County CewrthouM.
Sanford. Somlnoto Coun*. FlorI * . at 11M Am . an m* B W day
ot July, 1001, Wo following
dascr Ik * proper*:
Lot I. Stock 4. 3rd Sactton,
Dreamwold, according to the
plat thereof * rice rd * In Plot
Book 4. Pag* 7*. Public Record*
at Sominolo Coun*. Flo rl* .
D A TED Wls 24W day of Juno,
m i.
M ARYANNE MORSE
Clark ot Wo Court
By Jan* E. Jaaowk
Dapu* Clork
Publish: Juno 30 4 July 7,1*1
DEO-301

IN TH B CIRCUIT COURT
INAN OPOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
CASE NO.! 4I-472S-CA-14-K
BEN EFICIAL SAVINGS BANK.
FSB.
Plaintiff.
KYLE D. KEOGH and JE A N C.
KEOGH, hlswito.ttal..
N O TICB O F SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY G IVEN
that pursuant to Summary Final
Judgment ol Foracloaura dated
June IS. m t In Co m No .:
t l 07JSCA I4-K In W* Circuit
Court In and lor Sominolo
County. F lo r l* . In which
BEN EFICIAL SAVINOS BANK.
FSB Is the Plaintiff and K Y LE
D. K E O O H and J E A N C.
KEOGH. Mt wlto. at of. or* the
Dafondanti. I will tail to th#
highest and bast bidder tor cosh
ot It 00 A M. * the 2SW day ot
July. m i . ot me West front
stop* ol Wo Somlnoto Coun*
Courthouse. Sanford Flo rl* .
th* following dater ib * real
proper* at m i form in m*
Summary Final Judgment ot
iFarnttlauar*
Lots 14. 11 14. 33.14. IS and 14.
Block II. PLAT OF CRYSTAL
LAKE W IN TER HOMES SUB
DIVISION, according to th* plel
thereof a* record* in Plot Book
2. Pages ltd through 114. Public
Records of Seminoto County.
FforMo
DATED this 25th day of Juno.
IMI.
MARYANNE MORSE
CLER K O F THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY. Jerw E JeMwk
As Deputy Clerk
Publish June 10 A July 7. m t
DEG 204

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
O F T N I IIO N T B IN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFO R
S IM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
C J U B N a tl-M N C A tS O
TH B FIRST, P.A..
Plalrtlff,
A LB ER TM .VA2.alal.
Delandents.
NOTICE OF M L B
Notice It hereby given that
pursuant to th# Final Judgment
ot Foreclosure and sol* antored
In Wo c o u m ponding In Itw
Circuit Court In and tor Soml­
noto Coun*, Fieri*, being Civil
Number &gt;100*5 CA 14 O. th*
undersign* Clark will Mil th*
proper* situated In Seminole
Coun*. Florida, dstcrlb* at:
Unit 404D. LAKE HOWELL
ARMS CONDOMINIUM, a Con
dominium according to We Dec­
laration et Condominium and
Eohlblt* ennoa* thereto, re­
co rd* In Officel Records Book
1377. Fag* 1144 ot to* Public
Record* ol Somlnoto Coun*,
F ie ri* together with an un
dtvld* Interest In th* common
alemonft a * limited common
elements doctor* In sold Dec­
laration at Condominium to b*
an appurttnanc* to too above
condominium unit,
at public ute. to the highest
bidder tor cash ol 11:00 A.M. on
Wo U W day ot July. m i . at tho
West Front Door ot Wo Seminote
Coun* CourlhouM. Sanford,
Flo rl* .
D A TE D Wit 14W day ot Juno,
m i.
(SEAL!
MARYANNE MORSE
Cterkot Wo Circuit Court
By: JanoE. Jaeowk
Dapu* Clerk
Publish Juno204 July 7. m i
DE&amp;305
IN TH B CIRCUIT COURT,
S IR H TS EN TN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT,IN AN O PO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIOA
CASE NO: S5-4I4CA-I4-9
BEN EFICIAL MORTGAGE CO
OF FLORIOA.
Plolnllft.
JAM ES R. BROWN end OE
BRA MAE BROWN. HAROLD
W. HENDRICKS and VIRGINIA
E. HENDRICKS, his wife.
Defendants.
NOTICE OF M ORTOAOI
FORECLOSURE M LR
NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN
pursuant te 0 Summary Final
Judgment *1 Foreclosure. * 1 *
Wo 11*1 day ot Juno, m i , and
enter* In Civil Action No
fl-flS C A I4G, ot the Circuit
Court ol fh* Eig h te e n th
Judicial Circuit In end for Semi
note Coun*. Florl*. wherein
BEN EFICIAL MORTGAGE CO
OF FLORIDA. It the Plaint,ft
and JAMES R BROWN and
D E B R A M AE BROW N.
HAROLD W HENORICKS end
VIRGINIA E HENORICKS. his
wlto. ere the Defendants. I will
tell to th* highest end best
bidder tor ceth et the West front
doer ot the Courthouse In San
ford. Florl* between th# legal
hours Ol sete I estimated lime of
SOI* I* 11:00 A M I on fh* 15th
day of July. m i . th* following
proper*, towit:
Lot 24, SPRING GARDENS,
according to th* plel thereof,
record* in Flat Book IS. Peg*
*7. Public Records ol Seminole
Counlv. Ficridi
D A TED IMS 74th * y of June,
m i.
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ol the Court
Seminole Coun*. Florida
By: JanoE Jesewic
Deputy Ctefk
Publish June 20 4 July 7. m i
O EG JO*

default will b* antored agatoat
tor Wa reltot damandad In
am plelrrterpatltten.
DATE Den June tl, m t.
MARYANNE MORSE
BY Joan Briltant
A*Oepu*Ctork
PubilUl: Juna t4 U . J* 4 Ju * 7,

C

OBG-llf

IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR S IM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Fite Wftnbar 41-144CP
IN R l : ESTATE OF
RUTH R.KINNBV
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* administration of the
•state at RUTH R. KIN N EY,
d a c a a ta d . F i l e N u m b e r
41J4SCP, It ponding to Wa
Circuit Caurt tar Samlnota
County, F lo rid a , Frabata
Division, the addreee ef which is
Pott Office Drewer C. Sanford.
FL 32773441*. The n «n a (i) and
■ddruHes) of Wa personal rep­
resentative and Wa pertonef
representative’s attorney are

l|u|Lk--h--

■PT no* 111 PPVPRPa,

A U IN T E R E S T E D P E R ­
SONS ARE N O TIF IE D TH A T:
All persons an wham Wls
notice It served who have ob­
jections that challenge to# yglid1* of to* wilt, to* guaiitkettons
of Wa personal representative,
venue, er lurledktton ef Wit
Court are required to flit their
objections with Wls Ceurt
W ITH IN T H E L A T E R O F
THREE MONTHS A FTE R T H E
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS N O TIC I OR
TH IR TY DAYS A F T IR T H E
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE OH.
THEM.
All creditors of We dicedsnt
and ether pertent having claims
or demands against decedent's
estate on whom a copy of Wls
notice It served within three
months after th* data of Wa tin t
publication ef Wit notice must
til* Weir claim* wlW Wit Caurt
W ITH IN T H E L A T E R O F
THREE MONTHS A FTER TH E
DATE OF TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS A FTE R TH E
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
All other creditors el th*
decedent and persons having
claims er demands against Wa
decedent’s estate must file their
claims wlW Wit court W ITHIN
THREE MONTHS A FTER TH E
DATE OF TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
A LL CLAIMS. DEMANDS
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
The date ol th* first public*
tlon ol this Nolle* is Juna X ,
m i.
Personal Representative:
Georg* R. Kinney
•17 Waterford Drive
Del ran. NJ OSO/S
Attorney for Personal
Representative:
S. Kirby Moncrtet. Esquire
MONCRIEF. REID A
WALLACE. P.A.
I l l W First Street SuifeaOl
Sanford. Florida 33771
Florida Bar No I2S5V2
Publish Juna X A July 7. m i
DEG 2*4

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
O F T H I EIG HTEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NOt
N4143-CA140
BARRON FINANCIAL GROUP.
INC.elc.,
Plalntitf.
vs.
ARTHUR WARO. et ue. al al.
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE Is hereby given that
purtuanl to tha Final Judgment
of Foreclosure and Sate entered
In the cause pending In Wa
Circuit Court ol th* EIG H ­
TEEN TH Judicial Circuit, In
and lor SEMINOLE Coun*.
Florid*. Civil Action Number
*041*2 CAUG tha undersigned
Clark will sail tho property,
situated In said County, d*
scribed at
Lot Ik Block 4 REPLAT O F '
SHEET I and 2. NORTH OR ,
LANDO. TOWNSITE. FOURTH
ADOITION. according to lha
Plat thereof, recorded In Plat
Book 14 at Pages 5 and 4 of tha
Public Records ot Sominolo
County. Florida
together wlto all structures.
Improvements, futures, appli
ancas and appurtenances on
said land or used in conjunction
therewith. *1 public sate, to tha
highest and best bidder for cash
at II 00 o'clock A M . on tha 15th
day ot July m i . at the west
front door ol th* SEMINOLE
County Courthouse. Sanford.
Florida
ICOURT SEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By JanaE Jasawk
Dapu* Ctefk
Publish Juna X I July 7. m i
DEG IN

\
»

�8anlord HsrsW, Ssnford, Florida - Sunday, July 7, 1991 - 7A

ouse pushes Fed on rates
WASHINGTON - The Bush
administration Is keeping up
pressure on the federal Wdm r
to cut Interest rate* to spur a
slu g g ish econom y, b u t the
central bank Is giving no indica­
tion that H will bow to the

NBW YORK — About 5,000 protester* rallied
I
__| H |
Saturday
• U.S. •™r*"**
Supreme Court iu
ruling
that bare
employ
re* IIS
of
W
—
h «i§ miui
uwa cn
i|n ujcn
federally funded clink* from discussing abortion with patients.
Some marcher* wore g a p or tape across their moutha to
dramatise what they view aa the high court's Infringement on

Mlrharl Boskin. the chairman
of the president's Council of
Economic Advisers, said Friday
th at he waa concerned that
growth In the nation's money
supply has been very sluggish
for much of the peat year.
"If the supply 'of money and
credit Isn't sufficient. It Is not
going to be possible for the
economy to have a reasonable
recovery and reasonable growth
thereafter." Boskln said.
While Boskln repeated his
belief that the recession has
ended, the administration Is
concerned that unless the Fed
ooct more to incrctK roc money
supply and lower Interest rates,
the upturn
be very anemic
In 1993. a presidential election
year.
Boskln told reporters “ we
certainly are not saUsAcd" by
th e rep o rt Friday th a t u n ­
employment rose to 7 percent In
June, the highest level In nearly
five year*.

"We are nearing the end of legal abortions unless women are
heard." said Patricia Ireland, vice president of the National
Organisation for Women, which is meeting In New York and
organised the demonstration.
"We have finally come to the point where It la not only Illegal
for the federal government to provide abortions. It la even
Illegal to talk about It." she said.
Hundreds of activists from other groups, including unions
and gay rights organisation*. Joined In the protest near Central
Park.

Explosion, Ik* ln|ura* 34
PBRRYVtLLE. Md. — An explosion and fire leveled three
buildings Including a five-unit apartment house Saturday.
Injuring at leaat 34 people and causing $3 million In damage, a
Are official said.
The six-alarm fire caused the "total collapse" of three
building* and damaged a dosen other*. Deputy Stale Fire
Marshal Dob Thomas said. A tenant from one oT the building*.
Susan Monsoon. 43, was missing and feared dead, he said.
Rescue dogs helped search for Monsoon, whose husband said
she was trapped to the kitchen of their first-floor apartment
when the three-story building collapsed upon them.

win

From A ssociated Press reports

Bush talks
to Gorbachev
about arms
■ V RITA I I A I I I N
Associated Press Writer
UAMSV1LLE, Md. - President
B u sh o n S a tu rd a y s e n t a
personal message to Mikhail
Gorbachev urging a stronger
effort from the Soviet side to
conclude thorny arms control
Bush said he wanted to do
whatever he could to see that the
Soviet leader "energizes his bu­
reaucracy."
"What we're doing Is trying to
move that process forward once
again. " Bush said, adding that
hie wanted progress before hla
talks with the Soviet president In
London at the conclusion of this
month’s economic summit of
industrialized nations.
U.8 . A m bassador Jack F.
Matlock Jr. delivered the oral
message to Gorbachev.
The president, speaking to
ireporters as he played golf in the
Maryland countiyside. Indicated
he still wants to conclude a
treaty on limiting long-range
n u clear weapons so That a
U.S.-Soviet summit can be held
at the end of July.
Bush said of the message. "It
was strictly to express once
again our continued Interest In
getting this START agreement
finished. He knows and we know
that to get a summit agreement,
that must be finished up."
If the process gets moving.
Bush said, there could be an
agreement "hopefully by the end
of July."
Pressed for specifics on what
he had said to Gorbachev. Bush
Indicated he prodded the Soviet
leader to make a greater effort to
resolve the remaining technical
Issues that hk e blocked an
agreement for months.

H o w e v e r, m a n y p r iv a te
analysts contend that the central
bank la unlikely to lower Interest
rates any more, given a variety
of signs showing that the re­
cession that began last July
ended In either April or May.
Top Fed policymaker* voted at
a meeting on May 14 . to leave
monetary policy unchanged,
according to m inutes of the
ireleasedlFriday.
The Federal O pen Market
Committee, composed of Fed
board members In Washington
and five of the Fed's 13 regional
bank president*, voted IDO to
follow a monetary policy that
was not biased either toward
easing credit or tightening cred­
it.
The minutes of the closed-door
meeting showed that the majori­
ty of officials supported a stable
policy directive In the belief that
won lea about economic growth
, an d h ig h e r In fla tio n w ere
basically In balance.
• While no Fed officials wrote a
dissenting opinion, the Fed
minutes indicated that some
members of the open market
committee did argue for a policy
directive tilted toward easier
credit.
"These members believed that
the risks In the economy re
mauled at least marginally tilted
toward a weaker than projected
economic perform ance.” the

USE ON
n

m

h

minute* said.
The Fed last cut Interest rates
on April 30 when It lowered the
discount rate ont-half percent­
age point to 5.5 percent, and
lowered Its target for the federal
funds rate to 5.75 percent. The
discount rate Is the Interest the
Fed charges to make bank loans
while the hinds rate Is the rate
charge each other for

believe the next Fed move will
be to start pushing Interest rales
up In the foil In an effort to keep
Inflation under control.
David Wyas, an economist
with DRI-McOraw Hill, a Lex­
ington. Mass, forecasting firm,
said he looked for various con­
sumer and business loans to
start heading higher after Labor
Day. reflecting tighter credit on
the part of the Fed.

Fed officials met again this
week In a session that not only
reviewed short-term Interest
rates but also act preliminary

He predicted that fixed-rale
mortgages, which averaged 9.63
percent nationally this week,
would be around 10 percent by
the end of the year while banka'
Private economists said that prime lending rate, used as a
they believed the central bank guide to set a variety of business
decided to leave policy un­ and consumer loons, would be
changed at this week's session around 9.5 percent, up from the
and many analysts said they current level of 8.5 percent.

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IN THE SANFORD AREA, SHOP MCDUFF AT:
M cDUFFSUPERCENTER

MeDUFF MALL

HWV. ITS* SEMINOLE CENTER, 370S Orlando Dr.......................... 407-321-6933

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NOBODY UNDERSELLS McDUFF!
*NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY/

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ri
•A - Sanford HeraM, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 7, 1M1

da

P a rtia l s o la r e c lip s e s e e n h e re T h u r s d a y

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Toward the Son

rTwTeKI VISIT ITTTltf

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.

I

SANFORD - People In the
Sanford area should be able to
see at least a partial ecHpee of
th e su n T hursday. A solar
eclipse can rarely be seen from
Florida.
E c lip s e s a re u n iq u e
astronomical events, occurring
when the Earth, moon and sun
are exactly aligned In apace. In
the case of Thursday's event, the
i be between Earth and
the sun. preventing the total
sunlight from reaching
read
this
» •• was s«
&gt;••• as* •• w *(* m s m *
planet. Only Hawaii. Mexico.
Central America and portions of
South America will see the total
eclipse.
A ccording to the Orlando
Science C en ter, th e p artial
Aluminum with Pinhole
eclipse In the Central Florida
area should begin at 2:40 p.m..
and be vtaabie for approximately
make • pifrhoto In the aluminum. Put a place of
For a "Pinhole projector", cut two 1 1nch holes •
two hours. It wUI reach Its
whtto paper on the inoMt M tht ofhor and of the
Inchaa apart In ona and of a long ci
maximum by 3:40 p.m., then
DOX.
low vtuffrifriifii pwwiwie iwWmu in
Ona hot# la tor your aye», to vtow
u gi ^n i n e w v w v n g i w w .
begin to diminish, ending com*
■ n o lO O R Ii ibU av u
Cover the other holt with aluminum foil
pkrtely by 4:S1 p.m. The max*
Imum level win be the sun's
coverage by the moon of approx* the event. One of the simplest When the aluminum pinhole la John Young Planetarium In Or­
observing devices is called a pointed at the sun. it win project lando w i b e holding a special
&gt;t.
Most of the continental United "Pinhole projector." It la a long a small Image of the sun on the Ectpae Watch at the Science
States w in be able to observe a "iM Jbos/tf box. with two i inch white paper. This may then be Center. For those unable to
partial eclipse. It will be leas holes about 6 inches apart In one observed by looking through the attend. Instructions on viewing
viaabie depending on Us distance end of the box. One hole Is for viewing hole. In actuality, the precautions may be obtained by
he total eclipse
ed it path. The the eye to look through. Cover person Is looking In the opposite
from the
The earth experiences only
New England states wUI not be the other hole, inside the box. direction of the eclipse. Sun
with aluminum foil, and make a glasses, even if the sky Is not one or two edtpaes each year,
able to notice any change at aU.
i of them vtaabie only in the
Persons viewing even a minor ptn*hoie In the aluminum.
bright, are not strong enough to
i of the Pacific ocean
Cover the Interior of the op* pre vent eye damage.
cdlpae are urged to exercise
extreme caution when watching poaite end with white paper.
The astronomy staff of the

Viewing Hole

White Paper

Image of the Sun

'

Pope to beatify priest who
m iraculously hoalad nun

P u t O u r L is t

1083. the pope
Del to a level nearly equal to a

O n Y o u r L is t

VATICAN CITY - A Spanish
priest who founded a group to
promote traditional Christian decree that a Spanish nun
values moved a step closer to
sainthood on Saturday when lously healed through the lo­
af Eacriva tat June
Pope John Paul n recognised a
report that he was Involved tn a
Rubio lived until 1988 and died
miracle.
The pontiff later this year
The Vatican's Congregation
p la n a to b e a tify th e Rev.
Josem arta Eacriva. who founded for the Ciuera of the Saints
th e c o n se rv a tiv e O pus Del determined her cancer cure
couldn't be explained by natural
movement tn 1928.
No date has been set for the
Alvaro del Portillo.
beatification, the laat step before
who
heads
Opus
Del. attended
s a i n t h o o d , s a i d V a tic a n
oftbed
the signing of
l_______
spokesman Joaquin Navarro.
T h e pope a lso approved
Opus Del./has ..about 75.000
members, mostly lay people, beatification for an Italian
from more than 80 countries. In housewife. 0 terms Beretta Molls.
0*»il*

fitm on yaurM. flush as buys

you can asm isonsyt
8o to shortMi your Hat, sand tor tw has
b a rsth sM a sts4 a
mwj K w w iff im.
Just sand us your i
M M iM M H i

i

M i l E U M I m Mp B wM la al bast paritaly
.........................................
w ti bs^a asar Hswsfl sad

st ssasst svsr Brss«.

Guatemalan Indians bang
pots, pans to resurrect sun
But In places like San Jose
Chacaya.
the eclipse has greater
Associated Prats Writer
significance.
Tuts says his people believe an
SAN J O S E C H A C A Y A .
Guatemala — When the moon ecllpae Is an announcement from
ecllpaea th e aun this week. Ood. It Is not yet clear, however,
Guatemalan Indian villagers will what Ood la saying.
"It is Just too pure to be
ring church bells and bang pots
understood by mortals." said the
an d pans to resurrect the aun.
75-year-old man said, shaking
"People worry that the sun his head.
will go aw ay forever." said
His neighbor. Juana Amez*
Nicolas Tula, a village elder.
ulta. plans to take the day off
Some villagers have been
ram her Job as village treasurer.
hoarding firewood and food for "I don't want to walk home In
weeks In anticipation of Thurs­ the dark." she said.
day’s ecllpae.
Tula and Amezquita are de­
"Everyone knows darkness la scendants of the ancient Maya
coming and they want to be I n d i a n s , w h o s e p r e c i s e
prepared In case they can't leave astronomical calculations and
their house for a long time." said calendar from the first five
one man In this town of 1,000 centuries A.D. are still used In
Quiche and Cakchiquel Indians, some parts of rural Ouatemala.
"The Mayan priests were very
west of Ouatemala City.
Thursday's total eclipse will be concerned about an ecllpae."
visible along a 6,000-mlle long. said Samuel Franco, founder of
180-mlle-wldc path stretching Casa K'ojom. an Indian museum
from Hawaii to Braxll. Skies will In Guatemala City. "They would
darken, stars will appear, winds pray hard that the end of the
will change and the temperature world wouldn’t come."
will drop during Its nearly
The a n c ie n t M ayas a lso
seven-minute duration.
believed In the healing powers of
For moat of the 40 million, an eclipse, and some of their
people expected to view the desomdants still expose Injured
eclipse, the event will be nothing or ailing parts of the body during
more than a spectacular show. an eclipse.

?????What Would You Like To Know?????
Ws’d Nks to mate K

for you
op-

per, but you moy not know
to who to
contort or how to wrHo

CLUB, ORGANIZATION NSWS
Naws about social and service clubs and organiza­
tions In 8sminote County is stsgible for publication.
Group publicity chairman should submit typewrittsn press releases to People Editor. The deadline
Is noon three days prior to an event,or as soon after
the event ss possible.

PEOPLE ITEMS
Items accompanied by pictures about the ac­
complishments of children and adult residents of
8emlnole County are eligible for publication. Sub­
mit typewritten or neatly written items to People
Editor, Sanford Herald. 300 N. French Avs., Sanford,
Fla. 32771. Include name and daytime phone
number of person who may answer questions.

RELIGION
Items about religious services or social activities
sponsored by a church or synagogue In Seminole
County are eligible for publication on the Religion
Page each Friday. Submit items no later than noon
Wednesday prior to the day of publication to
Religion Editor. Include the name and daytime
telephone number of a parson who may answer
questions.

Herald must submit ths appropriate form to the San­
ford Herald People editor. Completed engagement
forma must be submitted at least 20 days prior to
the wadding. Wadding forms should be submitted
as soon after the wadding aa possible.
The forms provide the basis for Information that
will appear In the announcement. The forms are
available at the newspaper office or by sending an
addressed, stamped envelops to Engagements (or
Waddings).
If desired, ths completed forms may be accom­
panied by a photograph (professional preferred) of
any s lit to be published In black and white with the
announcement. The newspaper reserves the right
to reject any photograph that It cannot reproduce.
Photographs may be picked up after publication
or can be returned by mail if accompanied with an
BASE.
Engagements and waddings are published in the
Sanford Herald Sunday edition of the People
section.

If you see somthing newsworthy, 1st us know.

Photographs submitted to the Herald for public*
Hon will, be returned If that Is requested. An
dressed envelope large enough to accommodete
ths picture and carrying sufflcl
Blent postage should
be provided. Pictures may be picked up at the
newspaper within two days of publication If a re­
quest to save ths picture has also boon submitted.

Call our Circulation Department at 322-2611 1
find out subscription rates. Also call this numbi
if you would like your subscription service ints
rupted for vacations.

How Do I Piece A Classified Ad?

Call the Herald and ssk for the news editor as soon
as possible.

Othtr Hums Of Interest:
BUSINESS BRIEFS
Announcements of new businesses in Seminole
County, changes In locations and personnel promo­
tions and awards or other business distinctions are
eleglble for publication In the Sunday Business
Briefs column. Submit typewritten items to the
Business Editor along with a picture If appropriate
and Include the name and daytime telephone
number of a person who may be contacted to
answer questions. The deadline is noon Wednes­
day prior to the Sunday ot publication.
Organized events ol an entertainment, recrea­
tional or Isisure nature in Seminole County are
publicized in the Weekend Planner each Friday. The
deadline is noon Tuesday prior to the Friday ol
publication. Submit typewritten contributions to
Weekend Planner.

f
le There Anything I Should
Know About Writing Loiters
To The Editor?

Simply call 322-2611 between the hours of 8:00
am to 5:30 pm Monday through Friday and one of
our Classified Advisors will be happy to halp
you.

Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
should b t typewritten or written legibly, signed and
Include a mailing address and a daytime telephone
number. The letters should be on a single subject
and should be as brief ss possible. Letters are sub­
ject to editing.

To Place an ad in any other section of this
newspaper, call 322-2611 and ask for a Retail Adver­
tising Representative, who'll help you In design,
layout and wording of any size ad you wish.

I Would Uke To Earn Some
Extra Money A t A Newspaper
Carrier.

ENTERTAINMENT

How Do I Announce A
Wedding Or Engagement?
People wishing to have their engagement or wed­
ding announcement published in the Sanford

Back issues are available for up to one year prior
fo current publication date. You can purchase back
copies In person at our Customer Service desk qr
order by mall (payment must be enclosed). Call
322-2611 to place your order.

How Can I Receive Home
Delivery?

RETURN PHOT.O POLICY

How Do I Report A Ntwo Tip?

Can I Buy A Back Issue Of
The Newspaper?

Our newspaper carriers art made up of all types
of people of all ages, who enjoy being outdoors,
meeting friendly people and making extra cash.
Stop in our office at 300 N. French Ave., Sanford
to file your application. Wa ll notify you when a
home delivery route becomes available in your area

Sanfbnl Herald
300 N. French Ave.
Sanford, Florida

322-2611

�Sanford HeraM , Sanford, F lorid a - Sunday, July 7, 1991 - M

.

IN B R IE F

■. .

b l l H I M I D H M K IW IV IV TN S W 9 M
■ANFORD — The Greater Sanford Chamber o f Commerce
win be hokftng a Mood drive for the community July 0 through
July 1^*
P onaUom wtH be accepted at Die Central Florida Hood
Bank's Sanford branch, 1308 K. Second Street In Sanford.
The donation center will be open an Monday. Wednesday
and Friday from 9 a m . to 8 p.m. and on Tuesday and
Thursday from 11 a m . to 7 p.m.
Fbr more Informal Inn about the blood drive, call the chamber
at S39*2313or the Central Florida Hood Bank at 392-0632.

Vofemtssrs sought
GAINESVILLE — Pectin-enriched fruit punch la being
evaluated by Dr. Jam as Cerda of the Untveraity of Florida aa a
natural wav to reduce cholesterol levcla la the blood.
Cerda la seeking 94 volunteer human pattewta to partlctpote
in a 16-week study an the aubtett.
Volunteera wdlW paid8980to participate In the project.

at 904-399-4881 o r407-389-4889.
The Central Florida Chapter of the American Bed Croat wilt
offer a basic sailing class beginning on Wednesday. July 31
from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
Classroom sessions are Wednesday evening at the Chapter
House. 8 North Bumby Ave. In Orlando.
The sailing aemtona will be held at Lake Baldwin in Wtnter
Park on Saturdays from 9:30a.m. until 9:30 p.m.
The coat of the d a ta la880.
prepaid, first come, flrat served basis
call 804 4141
For more Informationi can

.

—,

,

______ ______-■

^H o w many men
can honestly claim
that the Idea of be­
ing Impotent has not
crossed their mindsj

ckUm that the Idea of being
mlmfo? Yet for many. &lt;
la m r than Juat a tkou0N. la
m r 9unvuu Duivv mionc. DviT « u
million men suffer from im­
p o te n ce . a lm o st alw ays In
allenoc. After Ml. who can they
turn to?
“ *■into all areas of
Unfortunately, thta Is
to

Impotence due to physical
causes occurs when disease or
Injury affects the nerves, blood
vessels or hormones that control
erectile ability. A disease like
diabetes may decrease erectile
Impotence to tem­
Dtagaoato begins with a com­ ability by 20 percent which, a
end ft affects nearly all plete nistory. physical and lab figure which increase* Jf paUcm
men at one time or another. teste. H to at this point that the a n x i e t y I s a l s o . h i g h .
of temporary physician determines whether Arteriosclerosis (hardening of
as a result ine cofKiiuofi is poycnoiogmi or the arteries) to another common
of stressful lob situation, mental physical tn nature, or a combi­ condition which can give rise to
nation of both. Until recently It Impotence. Consequently, suf­
a period of
anxiety, worry, fear of failure, was estimated that 90 percent of ferers from these ailments are
drugs. slmiHMi smoking. seda­ Impotence was psychological, especially at risk.
tives and certain hypertensive while only 10 percent stemmed
Due to the specialized nature
medications. This to known aa from physiological problems. of Impotence, a family practi­
psychological Impotence. Other Researches have now concluded tioner will usually refer a patient
cases of Impotence are longer- that, in feet, aa many ss 50 to a urologist, who will de­
te rm a n d re q u ire a m o re ' percen t of Impotence cases have termine the precise cause of the
thorough investigation aa to the
Impotence and decide on cither
medical or surgical treatment, aa
appropriate. Among the many
medical treatments available are
counseling, done by a qualified
theraptot; Yohimbine Therapy,
baaed on an Indian tree bark
******

cause end treatm ent. While
to neither a ra n nor

Some progress in

The committee found ei­
ther insufficient or no con­
vincing evidence to link
DPT shots with such dis­
orders as Reye syndrome,
sudden infant death, aseptic
m e n in g itis . J u v e n ile
diabetes, autism, learning
disorders, certain types of
nerve Illnesses, anemia or
severe skin rashes.
Inconsolable crying was
fo u n d to be th e m oat
common adverse reaction to
DPT shots, the committee
found. The Incidence rates
were estimated at 0.1 per-"''
cent to 6 percent or children
receiving the shots.

Anaphylaxis, the severe,
life-threatening allergic re­
action. occurred in about
two cases per 100,000 In­
jections. the com m ittee
found.
Studies of ahock-Uke reac­
tions. which may Include
lo ss of c o n sc io u sn e ss,
showed rales of from 3.5
patients to 20 ) patients per
100.000 injections. Most of
these reactions were of very
sh o rt d u ratio n , though
some lasted for 36 hours,
the study said.
Brain disorders, such as
encephalitis, were even
more rare, occurring only
about 10 limes per 1 million
DPT Immunizations.
Reactions in the form of
acute or chronic arthritis to
the rubella vaccine oc­
curred mostly among adult
women. The committee said
13 percent to 15 percent of
adult women receiving the
German measles vaccine
experience the Joint pain for
a brief time. There was only
weak evidence that the
shots could cause chronic
arthritis that could persist
for months.

i

Hope for som e im potent men

Vaccines may cause
some health problems fighting headaches
patients don't seem to respond
WASHINGTON - Rare
cases of severe allergic reac­
tion. uncontrollable crying,
shock and unconsciousness
may be caused by DPT, a
vaccine administered to mil­
lio n s o f c h ild r e n n a ­
tionwide. a panel of medical
experts says.
A study from the Institute
o f M ed ic in e , re le a s e d
Thursday, said there was
e n o u g h e v i d e n c e to
establish a "causal rela­
tion" between the diphthe­
ria-pert uaaia-tetan us (DPT)
vaccine and a sudden, rare
and life-threatening allergic
reaction called anaphylaxis.
A causal relationship also
was found between DPT
shots and what the com­
mittee called protracted, in­
consolable crying. This re­
action to the vaccine has
been described as scream­
ing or "a cerebral cry” that
Infanta may start a few
hours after inoculation and
continue for up to 24 hours.
The committee also found
a causal relationship be­
tween vaccines for rubella,
or German measles, and
acute arthritis, a transient
type of Joint disease. There
was leas strong evidence,
the committee said, con­
necting rubella vaccine with
chronic, or long term, ar­
thritis.
Eleven experts on the
committee spent 20 months
review ing studies
w orldw ide on the rela­
tionship between DPT shots
and 17 adverse reactions.
They also studied the effect
of rubella vaccine on three
adverse reactions.
Some evidence was found
to suggest a link between
DPT ahots and two other
reactions: brain Illnesses
such as encephalitis, and a
"shock-like s ta te " that
could Include collapse or
rapid loss of consciousness.
The committee said these
symptoms may be caused
by DPT shots, but the
evidence Is not as strong as
the findings for protracted
crying or for anaphylaxis.
Dr. Marie R. Griffin, an
assistant professor at the
Vanderbilt University Medi­
cal Center in Nashville.
Tcnn.. and a member of the
Institute of Medicine com­
mittee. said the findings
"will not be surprising to
practicing physicians."
Illnesses and reactions to
childhood shots have been
suggested for years. Earlier
stu d ie s have prom pted
la w su its, congressional
hearings, changes in federal
law and withdrawal of some
vaccines from the market.
However. Griffin said
serious, adverse reactions to
vaccinations In the general
population are "very rare"
and she said the committee
finding should not result In
changes In current Im­
munization practices.
DPT Inoculations are re­
quired for school children
all across the nation.

_________________________

extract: horm onal or o th e r
medication, which may be selfInjecled. and Vacuum
Tum eacence T herapy. Any
surgery la carried out by the
urologist and the treatment op­
tions Include penile prosthetic
Im plants of various ty p es:
Semi-rigid and Inflatable, which
mimic normal activity: and
Vascular Reconstructive S u r­
gery. The urologist decides with
the patient on the best treatment
In each case.
Whenever possible, the pa­
tient's partner should attend the
diagnostic sessions with the
urologist, as an aid to discov­
ering the underlying cause or
causes of the Impotence, and to
enhance recovery.
New developments In medi­
cine are continually improving
the outlook for Impotent pa­
tients. adding to the great strides
already made In both medication
and surgical techniques. Today,
the means at uur disposal are
better than ever, giving us a
level of choice and comfort
previously unknown. Men with
Impotence and their partners
can once more look forward to
the quallt) of life enjoyed by
others.
Dr. Gmutlo Hum an. M D , of Ttm Urology
Cantor. P.A , ha* ofttcM at t « l Mrttcai
Plata Drlv*. Suita 101. SantarO. ( * » ) J »
, MW. LakaMary SM . Suita IIS. Lake
in* IMS Saun BIvS , Suita 10*.

to any of these treatments and
surgery may be recommended.
The experts presented a aeries
CHIROPRACTORS
WASHINGTON - Researchers
of
reports Wednesday on re­
are seeking new treatment* far
recurring headaches that get so search Into new ways to treat
FOR TRIATNKMT OF
bad viefinis live tn fear‘of the* kcluster headaches. Several ex­
NECK I BACK INJURIES
next episode. They're trying amined the effects of capsaicin,
• AUTO-WORK COMP.
everything from red pepper the active ingredient in red
firPtobklaatsss
— Dr. RA. Cunrir.fwi
•SUP A FALL •
extract to bright lights.
^jn^one
study,
headache
suf­
Doctors si the International
M O S T I N J U R I E S TREATED W I T H
Headache Congress on Wednes­ ferers got dramatic relief when a
day focused on the problem of capsaicin solution was applied to
LI TTLE O R N O C O S T T O Y O U !
duster headaches, which most the nostril on the side of the
head
where
the
headache
oc­
often strike men and can recur
M.-F.9-9
several times a day for week* or curred. in another, patients who
had capsaicin ointment applied
9DAVS
SAT. 9-19
even months.
Dr. Ninon Mathew, chairman to their temples were head­
W O O D A l t C H I R O P R A C T I C CE MI L R
of th e congress* organizing ache-free during'day* when they
committee, called clusters "the normally would have had pain.
Mathew said U was too early to
most excruciating form of head­
tell
if capsaicin would be ef­
ache known." Between attacks,
fective
in treating cluster head­
"patients live In mortal fear of
aches
but
that It’deserves further
the next one," he said.
Tho Cold Front and
research.
cream la
Cluster headaches affect about sold over Capsaicin
the
counter
for
the
Tha Arthritis Foundation
1 percent .of the population.
PRESENT
About 80 percent of the victims relief of chronic pain from con­
are men. Severe pstn Is felt on d itio n s Including ahlnglea.
one side of the head, usually tn diabetic neuropathy and arthri­
fesCreamEffing Contest8 Mfo^VfiTvir
and around the eye.
Attacks tis.
Another
study
found
success
Saturday, July 27th •10AM-5 PM
last 30-45 minutes and occur
with
use
of
pressurized
oxygen
Conttit StartsAt 1:00PM
several times a day for weeks or
months at a lime. The pain to so in cases where normal-pressure
intense sufferers have been oxygen failed. Patients who In­
• f!
known to consider suicide dur­ haled the hyperbaric oxygen got
pain
relief
within
an
average
of
To
Register
Yourwtf
or
Your
Business
ing attacks. Some patients suffer
from chronic cluster headaches six minutes.
Researchers cautioned that the
that can last for years at a time.
"The pain of cluster headache hyperbaric oxygen treatment is
3590 N. Hwy. 17-92 (Victoria Square)
1s one of the most severe pain expensive and m ust be ad­
9 8 9 - i i A i H*a*»aSon Fm : BUSB
910
ministered
In
a
special
romO U O O QENCHAL PUBLIC M
conditions known lo mankind.”
D r. K a r l E k b o m of t h e preaslon chamber but said It
oct i F a n
K a r o l l n s k a I n s t i t u t e In might be useful for patients who
don't
respond
to
anything
else.
Stockholm told the congress.
"The suffering of the patient Is
enormous. A better treatment is
a challenge for all of us."
Standard treatments Include
drugs such as lithium and
ergotamlne as well as oxygen
Inhalation to abort or shorten
attacks. Patients also may be
advised to control their anger
and avoid alcohol, volatile chem­
icals. excessive exercise and
changes In their sleeping habits.
However, about 20 percent of
Associated Prsas Writer

(A*

322-4762

imteunomauuMKL

Contact THE COLD FRONT

A

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The Institute of Medicine
is an affiliate of the National
A cadem y of S c ie n c e s,
which is chartered by Con­
gress to conduct research
Tot the government.

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S a n f o r d

2 5 3 0 Sanford A v e . #104 A R A M S i
v
Sanford
M H H H

t

H

e r a l d

�1 M - Sanford Harakt, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 7, 1991

S tu n t to save w o m a n ’s life h a s u p s , d o w n s
B fVICKII
Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD — A publicity Hunt, designed to
draw attention to the plight of Nancy Dukes, a
Sanford woman In need of a heart transplant, has
attracted quite a bit of attention, but not much In
the way of financial conlralbutlons.
Ed Lewis, a Geneva firefighter, perched himself
atop the ladder of a vintage 1949 fire truck
parked at Fun World, In the Flea World complex
on U.S. Highway 17-92 In Sanford, on the Fourth
of July and will remain there until this evening.
Local television, newspaper and radio outlets
have vtstted Lewis at Fun World. A tape was
filmed Tor Cable News Network (CNN) which was
expected to be shown this weekend. Still,

promoters say there Is "less than a thousand
dollars" In the coffers for Dukes* cause.
Dukes, the mother of 10. Is In need of more
than $100,000 for a heart transplant that will
save her life.
"Everyone at one point or another has said they
want to be a hero." Lewis said, "well 1 think that
saving someone's life Is pretty heroic and that’s
exactly what they'd be doing If they contribute to
this cause. This la a life and death situation
here."
According to Syd Levy, owner of Fun World
and Flea World, one dollar from each game of
miniature golf played at etther of the complex's
putt-putt courses will be donated to the cause.
Levy said announcements throughout the
complex were bringing In well-wishers and

donors as well.
Levy said that thunderstorms throughout the
first part of the long holiday weekend had
brought Lewis down from his perch on more than
once and that It had kept the numbers of golfers
low. Better weather on Satuday was bringing in
more visitors and more contributions.
Sold Lewis of his occasional descents fror
ladder "I didn’t find any need to test
Franklin's theory, thank you."
Lewis, who had climbed to the top of his fire
engine ladder a few years ago to raise money for a
young man who had broken his neck, had sworn
lo himself that he would never do it again, but
said he couldn't turn his back on Dukes'plight.
"I had to do this lust once mote." he said.

Longwood
to consider
new budget
■ y M C X m V A Iir
Herald Staff Writer
LONGWOOD - The Longwood City Commission will hold
two separate meetings Monday
evening. The earlier meeting will
deal with a number of Items held
over from the July 1 meeting,
the second is a budget hearing.
One of the Items during the
first session, scheduled to begin
at 5:30. deals with the future of
the Longwood Medical Clinic. A
letter to the city from the
Seminole County Commission
has requested the Commission
authorize Mayor Hank Hardy to
sign a letter stating that the city
has no objection to dosing the
clinic.
Hardy has responded as re­
quested. adding “The City of
Longwood sincerely appreciates
the role the Seminole County
Medical Clinic played In provid­
ing medical care to the residents
of Longwood during our king
relationship."
T h e s tr u c tu r e h a s b e en
utllltzed to only a small extent In
recent months, as a counselling
center or Immunization clinic.
The normal activities of the
operation have been moved to
the Casselberry area where It Is
located In larger, more adequate
surroundings, u
Other Items to be brought
before the Commission, deal
with matters that require action
In the near future. Thebe Include
th e a p p r o v a l of c o n tr a c t
modifications with the Interna­
tional Recovery Corporation.
International Environm ental
S e rv ic e s and C h ero k
Groundwater Consultants.
A number of matters Including
several public hearings sched­
uled for the July 1 meeting, will
be postponed until the
regular meeting July 15.
The brief meeting, expected to
last no longer than 30 minutes,
will be followed at 6 p.m. by a
commission budget hearing.
Items to be considered Include
operating budgets for the Long­
wood fire department, police
department. City Administrator
and City Ctcrk.
Both meetings arc open to the
public and will be held In the
commission cliambcrs of the
Longwood City Hall, 175 W.
Warren Avenue.

Fatal shooting
remains under
investigation
■y VICKI DaSOfUIIM
Herald Staff Writer______________

1,0Nil WOOD - Longwood
Police Investigators say they
were no furtlter along Saturday
In their Investigation of u double
shoot Ini' that occured there on
Friday afternoon than they were
when the inquiries started.
According to a report issued
by the agency, a shooting was
reported at 791 Sutter hoop In
Longwood at I): 10 p.in. Friday.
ll Is apparently unclear who
shot whom, however.
According to the report. Toni
Mitchell, a resident of the home.
Is hospitalized with gunshot
wounds to her abdomen. Her
estranged husband, whose name
was not released, was proIton need dead at South Seminole
Community Hospital In Longwood. shortly after the shootings
occured.
Mitchell’s boyfriend, also a
resident nt the house where the
shooting occured. was not Iden­
tified by |)olicc. Police did not
report that he was seriously
injured In the gun light.
According to Izmgwnod Police.
Ihc husband allegedly arrived at
the home on Sutler Loop and
began shouting lor the hoylrtcnd
to come out. The boyfriend
allegedly ignored Ids requests.
Tile report staled that when
Milebell returned home about 3
p.m. a light between the trio
erupted In the yard. It was then,
poller officials said, that the
gunlirc began.
Investigators have been un­
able to determine who lired the
fatal shot and the shot which
wounded Mitchell.

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323-2132

�I

. J j l y . 7 , 1991

SUNDAY

Sanford Herald

Sports
IN

Racing the raindrops

BR IEF

IWC MMMTMU
ICBA Mils gams tonight
OVIEDO — Hungry Howie’s and the Geico
Blazer* - the first and second-place teams
during the regular season of the Inter-County
Basketball Association men's league — both
won their semifinal games last week and will
play for the league championship tonight at 8
p.m. at Oviedo High School.
Geico rallied from a 20-point halftime deficit
to top the defending league champion Preten­
ders 74*73. Trailing 73-72 with one second left.
Garth Bolton hit a pair of free throws to cap the
comeback for the Blazers.
Bolton led a well-balanced scoring effort for
Geico with 23. Also contributing were Cliff
Williams (17). Marcus Neal (14) and Eddie
Norton and Sam Haynes (10 each). Doing the
scoring for the Pretenders were John Taylor
(26). Russ Lawrence (21). Dan Bone (11). Bob
Miles (10) and BUI Marcum (5).
Hungry Howie’s also trailed In Its semifinal,
but came back to win big. defeating the Domino
Nolds 80-97. Providing the offense for Hungry
Howie's were Nino Lyons (30). Reggie Johnson
(22). Sam Hamilton (11). Rick Lorraine (8). Buzz
Younce (7) and Jay Evans |2). For the Nolds.
doing the scoring were Jeff Whipple and Robb
Rhlnehart (21 apiece). Fred Lawson (11) and
Mark Mann (4).
Earlier In the evening, the Domino Nolds
defeated Gun and Pawn of Oviedo 60-96 to
advance to the semifinal game against Hungry
Howie’s. Leading the Nolds In that game were
Whipple (29). Lawson (14). Rhlnehart (9). Mann
and Jay Ganglowisch (6 each) and Rick Davis
(4). Gun and Pawn were paced by Nels Pate (26).
Steve Buchanan (24). Charles Hardy (II) and
Mike Doby (9).

ALL-STARS
Altamonte Americans win
ORLANDO — Jason Gallagher was 4-for-4
with a double, three singles and three RBI
Friday night to help the Altamonte Springs
Americans defeat Windermere 8-1 In a Little
League All-Star game stopped after 4W Innings
by lightning.
Kyle Ruckdeschel was the winning pitcher.
Also chipping In with two hits each for
Altamonte Sprlngt^wcre Chas Smith (triple,
single) and Chris Mart Indale and Adam Sewell
(Ufa singles each).

Graf tops Sabatlni, doubts
WIMBLEDON, England — Steffi Grafs doubts
disappeared and the smile she seemed to have
lost forever finally returned as she cradled '
Wimbledon's sliver trophy for the third time.
In that tingling moment on Centre Court as
she hugged the ornate tea tray and held It aloft
for the cameras and the crowd, Graf shed the
burdens that threatened to destroy her career.
More than anything.
Graf said, her 6-4. 3-6.
8-6 triumph Saturday
over Gabrlela Sabatinl
In the second longest
w o m e n 's f i n a l In
W im bledon h isto ry
proved “that I had the
guts" to win a tough
match again.
"It gave me so much
pleasure to sec myself getting through It.
winning a close match again, not letting up."
she said. "I needed It."
The killer Instinct that had abandoned her
was back. So was the knack for coming up with
the big shot at the right moment.
"I worked through some tough months." she
said after winning her 10th Grand Slam title.

Suprisa: Tribe cant Mac
CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Indians,
baseball's worst team, fired manager John
McNamara and replaced him with first-base
coach Mike Hargrove on Saturday.
The announcement was made at a news
conference at Cleveland Stadium.
McNamara. 59. was In the second year of u
two-year contract with the Indians, the sixth
major-league team he has managed. Only
McNamara. Jimmy Dykes and Dick Williams
have managed that many major-league teams
since 1900.
McNamara was the sixth major-league man­
ager lo be fired this season. The others were
Buck Rodgers of Montreal. Don Zimmer of
Chicago. Nick Leyva of Philadelphia. John
Wathan of Kansas City and Frank Robinson of
Baltimore.

Stuckey
a primer
for Bullets

Bullets,
Dodgers
advance

45

Sy ROBB IB STOCK
Herald Correspondent

HereidSp^rl1 *Edftor*" ___________

LONGWOOD - Looking for a
barometer for next year’s Lyman
Greyhound baseball tram as they
battle for the Seminole Athletic
Conference title?
Try Kevin Stuckey’s statistics.
If the Junior stands among the
area leaders In batting average,
stolen bases, and earned run
a v e ra g e , y o u c a n b et th e
Greyhounds will be close to or at
the top. Bu( If he's having a down
year. Lyman may be looking up
at the SAC leaders.
It's not that the Greyhounds
lack other talent. It's Just the fact
that Stuckey can have an Impact
on a game In so many ways, from
his high-velocity fastball to his
sm ooth b a ttin g stro k e and
base-running ability.
"He's a player." said Lyman
head coach Bob McCullough,
who also In stru cts Lym an's
summer team, the Bullets. "He
makes things happen. He's one of
the sparkplugs of our ofTense.
□ I n Prim er. Page SB

LONGWOOD - Not only did Bob
McCullough get what he needed, he
got what he wanted.
As the director of the July 4th
Invitational baseball tournament
being played this w eekend at
Lyman High School. McCullough
needed a tot of games played in a
hurry Saturday to make up for lost
time suffered when the rains fell
Friday nighl.
As head coach of the Bullets.
Lyman High School's sum m er
baseball team. McCullough wanted
to see his team win one of
a those
quick games. That way. the Bullets
winners'
could advance to th e w
bracket final and help the toumamcnt along.
But for that to happen, he needed
a big game from pitcher Jason
Good pastor.
In the parlance of the sport.
McCullough was 3-for-3.
Goodpastor. a rising senior
senl who
has been used almost exclus
In
In
relief this summer, step

Third basaman Shane Odom w u 3-for-3 with a pair of doubles and two RBI
Saturday afternoon lo help the Bullets get past Bates Sporting Goods 3-1 in
the July 4th Invitational tournament being played at Lyman High School.

Hoop camp
of Payne in
fifth season
By MAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer

SANFORD — In Its fifth year the
Bill Paync/Scminulc Community
College Summer Basketball Camp
continues to get bigger and better.
Started lo give local youngsters
(both boys and girls) with limited
knowledge n rhanre In team'In play
the game. The camp has grown
from two weeks und 30 kids to three
weeks with approxim ately 100
participants.
“ It's fun w orking w ith the
younger kids.” said Payne, who will
be starting his 10 th season ut the
college with a 200-95 record. "We
try to stress the basics und huving
fun playing basketball. It's amazing,
even In Junior college wc get kids
who have no Idea of how to play.
They can't puss the basketball, they
have bud shooting form and no Idea
about defensive positioning."
Normally this would be the third
week of the camp but Payne will be
leaving for California und the 1991
University Games tomorrow. The
games will Ik- held ut the University
of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
from July 13-21.
Puyuc will be an assistant for the
South Team that will be coached by
Wimp Sanderson from the Universi­
ty of Alabama. Payne Is the first
Florida coach to Ik*selected lo roach
at the University Games.
Because of Payne's trip the third
week of the camp will be July
22-25. And while (here arc several
youngsters signed up (here Is still
rixmi for inure.
The camp Is open to boys und
girls ages 7*14. Dully sessions lust
from 2-5 p.m. at the uir-condltloned
Health and Physical Education
Camp. Page SB

Working on tho basics
After working with junior college
players during the school year.
Seminole Community College
basketball coach Bill Payne
(above) enjoys working with
younger players like (above, Irom
le ft) W inter S p rin g s' Brian
Guskiwicz and Amanda and Katie
Doubler of Lake Mary during his
summer camp at the SCC Health
and Physical Education Center.
(Right) Katie Doebler attempts to
put Payne's lessons into practice

H*r«MPhoto* TommyVlncoot

O viedo continues trend off
players going on to college
By MAM SMITH
Herald Sports Writer

TV

BASEBALL
□2:30 p.m. — WGN. Minnesota Twins at
Chicago White Sox. (L)
TENNIS
□ 9 a.m. — WESH 2. Wimbledon, men's singles
llnal. |L)

HwtMFUoPhoto
Oviedo High School graduates B.J. Calapa (above). Pete Arcomone. David
Blanton. Ryan Alkire, Chris Hull, Bubba Fore and Rulus Boykin all will
continue their baseball careers at the college level somewhere next season

ZE

jl a

OVIEIXJ - When B.J. Calapa
signed u scholarship lo attend
Seminole Community College Iasi
week. II marked (lie continuation of
an unusual. Inil very good, trend.
In the three years since Mike
Ferrell look over the couching reins
ul Oviedo High School, every one ol
hls seniors have gone on lo play
college tiasctuill
"It means a lot lo me." Mid
Ferrell. "It's very gratifying lo see
kids who work as hard as they do
gel a charier lo go play college
busc ball.”
But while Ferrell Is proud of hls
young men. he says he will miss
them.
"I’m. going lo hale lo see these
guys go." com m ented Ferrell.
"Some ol lhem have been with me
for three years. It’s going lo seem
strange walking on the held and uni
having them out there.

"A lot of people think ull we
coaches want to do is win. But
that's not true. It hurts when you
realize after the last game of the
season that you won't be coaching
some of these guys again."
In addition to Calapa. six oilier
Lions will he taking their talents on
to new environs nrxt year.
Third baseman Pete Arcomone
will Join Calapa at SCC next year
where they will atcmpl to help
Couch Jack Pantellas rebuild Ihe
Raiders back Into a statr contender.
SCC may also get pltcher/llrst
baseman David Ulantnn. The big
right-hander will either attend Sem­
inole or Dlvlsigu III power Mcthodlsl
College in Fayetteville. North
Carolina. Mcthodlsl Is coached by
ex-Bishop Moore coaclt Tommy
Austin.
Oulfleldcr/caleher Ryan Alkire.
the Lions' leading hitter the past
two years and a member of the
All-Seminole Athletic Conference
See College, Page 3B

no; MlTH1 [

t JD

�S TA TS

&amp; STA N D IN G S

4373-M3
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7371-141
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&gt;373-143
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7373-14)
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7471-147

Is a proud mombor of tho "Welcome
Wagon” Family In Samlnola County

Safety gear the difference between

the motor stuck In reverse — but
tt is no laughing matter when
you are 20 miles out In the
ocean. It was around 4:30 p.m.
and the seaa were building
ste a d ily w ith a p p ro a c h in g
, squalls.
I Immediately put the anchor
hack down and let out all 300
feet of my anchor Une to keep us
from drifting at the mercy of the
wind and currents. My owner’s
m anual had no Information
concerning this particular pro­
blem. so I broke out my toots
and we began to search for
solutions. By this time we were
In 4 to 6-foot seas and working
on the outboard was difficult. If
not impossible.
No boats answered my call for
assistance on the radio, but a
radio operator at Cape Marina
responded to our increasingly
desperate situation. My good
friend. Captain Jack, also Joined
in on the radio conversation. The
Delta Dawn, a commercial (ow­
ing vessel was summoned to tow
us In.
With help on the way. Johnny
and I were relieved and we

It w o u l d be a n o t h e r
hour-und-a-half before they
reached ua.
That would be 9:30. and It
would be pitch black. All of a
auddcn. 1 developed a sober
a p p re c ia tio n of a ll sa fe ty
JIM »
equipment required by the CoMt
Guard. Life jackets and flare
SHUPE
guns took on a whole new
meaning, for our very llvea could
wcU depend on these items.
The world becomes very small
settled Into a routine of balling
out watfr every 15 minutes or when you are In a boat on high
so. We positioned ourselves In aeas after dark. My world warn
the boat as to keep undue weight reduced to the radio microphone
away Tran the bow and stem — I held In my hand — It was our
we did not'&gt;want to take on any only tie to land, and maybe to
life Itself....
more water than we had to.
Around B p.m.. I noticed a
By 7 p.m.. I had not been able
to contact the Delta Dawn by bright light approaching from
radio, so I called the Coast the west. Shortly afterwards.
Guard. Captain Jack and Cape Coast Guard cutter 429 hailed
Marina had already contacted me on the radio. I removed my
the Coast Guard and they were dive light from my dive vest and
aware of our dangerous plight. It p o i n t e d It t o w a r d s t h e
was then 1 found oig that the a p p ro a c h in g v e sse l. T h e ir
Coast Guard had alieady dis­ searchlight flooded the area
patched a vessel to the rescue, around my boat and I knew we
for high seas had forced the were going to make it.
Delta Dawn to return to Port1 have always been fanatical
By 8 p.m.. darkening skies and
surrounding squalls prompted about maintaining all of my
me lo call the Coast Guvd for an equipment in top condition, and
estimated time of arrival. The In this particular situation 11
Coast Guard station contacted may have well prevented a real
the rescue vessel, and we could tragedy.
My Loran (a navigational
hear the conversation between
the two. We did not like what we computer) functioned perfectly.
heard. The 40-foot Coast Guard sa n d 'i was able to give my exact
cutter had only been able to coordinates for rescue purposes.
make It 10 miles in the first The' VHF radio transmitted 20
hour. SU to 8-foot seas were miles to Cape Canaveral and
rocking the steel-hulled ship and provided us with a life line of

communication. Life Jackets and
a flare gun were on board If
needed. I had the necessary 300
feel of anchor rope to keep us
from drifting aimlessly In high
Never go offshore without ev­
erything In perfect working
condition. Your very life may
weU depend upon one single
item.

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

Steve Guard at the

■v!4f« risk C u p reports
plenty of bream and catfish.
Bream love crickets while catfish
wtU eat virtually anything from
dead shrimp to cut bait.
f c lM tlM b l i t has been hot
w ith re d flsh . ta rp o n . Jack
crcvalle. snook (season closed),
small blucflsh and flounder.
Finger mullet or Uve shrimp are
good all-around balls, but Jigs
and lures will also work.
C a p ta in J a c k a t F a r t
C anaveral said that there are
plenty of dolphin In 100-170 feet
of water along with scattered
wahoo. Some good grouper
catches have been made at the
"steeples.**
The tosey Use is slow, but
some nice flounder have been
caught Inside the Port on finger
mullet. Trout and reds are good
on the fla ts of the Ban an a and

Let yo u r Welcome Wagon representative
answer your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.
If You Live In One Of These Areas,
Please Call
Sanford — 330-7542
Lake Mary — 321-6660
Longwood — 869-8612 or 774-1231
Winter Springs — 777-3370
Altamonte — 339*4468
Casselberry — 695-7974
Oviedo - 695-3819
Or Anytime Day Or Night
Call 646-9644

Inlet has been calm,
but slow. Swanns of shccpshcad
and a few blueflsh have been the
main catches. This Is still a great
place lo relax and catch a few
fish without a lot of effort.

1

�Elliott rebounds from personal losses to claim sweet Repel 400 win
Ju n e 17. His mother. 70, died
s u s w a*g a lentthv Otnesa on

lima I I
“This la for them.'* he aakl.
**l*d love for them to be here to

finished seventh, and pole-sitter approval of the 33-year-otd
S te rlin g M arlin s e ttle d for Elliott's victory. Once the moat
eighth.
dominant driver on the .Winston
Irvan, the reigning Daytona Cup circuit, he v o n for the first
time since last September at
Dover* Del.
The win did not came easily.
Elliott was R ag^d early In the
race far driving too fast leaving
the pita, and the penalty re­
quired him to make another pit
stop on the next lap.
"I made a mistake/* he aald.
In addition, his cool suit
malfunctioned halfaay through
the race. On a 96-degree day, the
water In the suit steadily got
hotter.
"With 90 laps to go, 1 couldn't
have fait worse if I'd had boiling
water poured on my bock.
Elliott aald.
He kept his coal to earn career
victory No. 34 and a 375.000
check,
The winning speed, 159.116
mph. sraa slowed by four caution

tm an's Olds.
Waltrip's car went onto the

.
_
seven-car chain-reaction collialon on the 13th lap. K began
when Lake Speed’s Pontiac
turned atdewaya com ing out af
turn two after H
from the rear.

Huizonga: Marlins will represent region
is
Saturday and threw a com­
plete-game four-hitter to help the
Bullets knock off Bates Sporting
OoodafDr. PhUlipa High School's
summer team) 3*1 In a game
that took a little more than two
hours to play.
Unfortunately, all of Goodpastor's good work was wasted.
at least as far as the tournament
is- concerned, when rain fell
midway through the game be­
tween Bates Sporting Goods and
the Sanford American Legion
Post S3 Orioles Saturday night.
Things were moving along as
the Mudcata (Lake Mary High
School) rallied for three runs in
the seventh to pull out a 9 3 win
over Daytona Beach in the third
game of the day.
Then, as clouds started to
gather. Bates Sporting Ooods
built a 9-1 lead over the Sanford
Orioles going Into the fifth Inn­
ing when it started to rain again.
When it became apparent that
there would be no more games
played that night. Coach Krone
Brown and the Sanford Oriole*
chose to concede the game to
Bates.
As a result. Instead of three
games today, there will only be
two (weather permitting). At
noon, the Mudcata and Bates
Sporting Goods will meet tn the
consolation bracket final to de­
cide the third and fourth-place
teams. Then. •as soon as the
volunteer ground crew can get
the field ready, the Bullets and
Dodgers will play for the cham­
pionship. Game time la ten­
tatively set for 3 p.m.

m aw

ito,

• ti

( I ) , Svltock ( « ) an*
■rt M l. Daytona Saadi an» - Suttock (M ). L P ~
~ — Otoatato l» 7 ).

around the plate and makes you
hit the ball.
On S stu rd a y . G oodpastor
didn't walk any while striking
out five an d allow ing four
singles. Bates' lone run came In
the bottom of the first when
Branlff Bonaventure singled,
went all the way to third on a
sacrifice bunt by Bryan Bruce
and scored on Kevin Chabot's
sacrifice fly.
Bates starting pitcher Jose
Torres made the lead stand up
until the fourth inning. With
Doug Porter on first base. Shane
Odom hit a two-out line drive
that centerflelder Brian Costello
tried to make a diving catch on.
But it went off hts glove and
roiled to the fence. Porter scoring
from first.
The Bullets scored the winn­
ing run and an insurance run In
the sixth. Chad Beland hit a
one-out double. An out later.
Will Ramirez hit a grounder that
the Bates third baseman threw
away, allowing Beland to score
and Ramirez to go all the way to
third. Odom followed w ith
another double to plate Ramirez.
Errors played a big role in the
Altamonte Spring* Dodgers’ win
over Sanford American Legion
Post 53. the Sanford team m ak­
ing three errors that were key
parts of the Dodgers' three-run
first Inning and two-run sixth.

T he Dodger* were able to
make that advantage stand up
thanks to the combined two-hit
pitching of atartc
and re tievers Matt Wood
Prank Manner. Wood, who re­
in the fourth
i the winning pitcher.
Improving to 2-1 while Harmer.
making hki second pitching apfor the Dodgers since
moving Into th e Lake Brantley
district, earned hla font save.
“This summer has really been
Important tn term s of the devel­
opment of three young pitchers
— Golsteln. Wood ana Mitch
Short." said Dodger coach Jay
Bergman.

Petersburg, which were both denied an
MIAMI — The new Florkki baseball franchise Is
only o iy i o n , out n o r m Martini owner n.
Wayne Hulaengi has no plans to keep the infant
team home.
He wants to design an extensive minor league
system with a team In the Caribbean and wants
to put a spring training camp tn another part of
Florida.
Those plans, Ike the team 's name, reflect
Huizenga's desire to represent more than Just
South Florida.
"Baseball needs that regional approach today.
You need to draw from th rt bigger area."
Hulzenga aald Friday after major league club
owners named Miami and Denver as expansion

There is. theoretically, an unatUed baseball
Even with the improvement of market of about 13 million stretching from the
those three, th e addition of Georgia border to Key West, and millions more tn
Harmer has been a real boost for the Caribbean and Latin America who may
th e D odgers. A ccording to support the mqjor league's southernmost team.
Bergman, the Dodgers ate 9-1
Hulzenga. chairman of Blockbuster Enter­
since Harmer and his younger tainment Carp., envisions a statewide marketing
brother. Joey. Joined the team.
plan for the baseball franchise, including
"The addition of Frank s bat weekend-package plana aimed at upstate fans.
and leadership has been very
He also wants to put the Martins' spring
Important." said Bergman.
training camp somewhere to the north.
"I believe II should be held out of tow n/' he
Against Sanford. Harmer hit a
d o u b le and a single. Eric said. ‘"I don't think we should (train) In this area I
Castaldo added a pair of singles know some people might not like to hear that, but
while Bobby Andlno contributed 1 think we've got to come home for opening day
Just like everyone else comes home for opening
a double and two singles.
For Sanford, Matt Freeman day."
A possible out-of-town site would be somewhere
and Tony Duncan had the only
between Orlando and Tampa — "baseball
hits.
corridor/' Hulzenga aald.
In the first losers' bracket
The spring (raining camp wc
gam e of the afternoon, the
Mudcats of Lake Mary rallied
horn two runs down in ‘ the
seventh Inning to defeat Lake
Brantley graduate Brad Rigby, Cra tlaaM from IB
team both
who Is pitching for Daytona
seasons, will ply hla trade for
Beach this summer.
Jay Bergman at the
With one out and the bases Coach
University
of Central Florida.
As of late yesterday afternoon.
loaded. Ihe* Mudcats slapped a
Second baseman Chris Huff
McCullough waa stUl hoping to
pair of ground balls back to
get the entire tournament In.
Rigby, who mishandled them has accepted a scholarship to
thanks largely to Goodpastor.
both, allowing three runs to McMurray Ju n io r College In
Jacksonville. Illinois. McMurray
score.
Is a semi-private J.C. that has
“He throws a lot of strikes,**
one
of the best sports programs
said McCullough of Goodpastor
Marcus Bullock, who caught
(5-1). "If he's going to lose, you
the first five Innings, was the* in Illinois:
First baseman Bubba Fore will
have to out-hit him. And If you
winning pitcher for the Mudcats
be
going to Samford University
do that, that's baseball. He'a not
In relief of Ben Rovilo and Chad
going to walk many. He stays
In Birmingham. Alabama. Sam­
Kessler.
ford had a very successful
season this year and Ihe coaches
are ver excited about having
Fore play for them next year and
are confident he will have a good
t r o u b l e s . B u t w i t h t i m e . him pitch.
C ro tin —d frros IB
"He was very enthusiastic season.
He's very aggressive on the Campbell feels that will all go
away.
The Iasi of the group Is
base paths."
about baseball/' recalled Me"As he gels older, he's going to Collough about Stuckey. “I real­ pllcher/outflelder Rufus Boykin.
On Thursday night. Stuckey
went 2-for-3 and scored three learn to pitch and not throw," ized he was a multi-talented kid. He made tremendous strides this
runs as the Bullets streaked past said Campbell, a former relief He w as a d ed ica te d , hard year as he played very little os a
Junior but Improved to the point
an older and more experienced pitcher with the Atlanta Braves. worker."
"As he matures, he'll be a
So S tu ck ey listened and that he was a late round draft
Daytona Beach team. 11-5.
pitcher."
practiced. He stopped pressuring pick by the Cleveland Indians.
But Stuckey didn't slop there. quality
Stuckey didn't do so poor last himself so much and played
"They (the Indians) are not
He also shut down Daytona year aa he posted a 6-2 record. In
going
to sign him now." said
through
his
mistakes.
And
in
Beach’s booming bats, limiting one of those losses, Stuckey
Just
t\.o
years,
he
has
become
a
Ferrell.
"They will watch him for
them to Just four hits and four threw a one-hitter at Lake
top
player
for
a
tram
with
high
a
year
and
then decide. Hr will
runs tn flve-plus innings. And Brantley only to see his team­
either go to Valencia as un
three of those runs came In the mates blanked on a no-hlttcr. He aspirations.
"We have good pitching." said outfielder or attend UCF on un
first Inning w hen Stuckey also threw In the Greyhound's
Stuckey. "W r have a great academic scholarship and try to
walked Tour men. After that, 3-2 district loss to the Patriots.
chance to take it all next year.”
make the team as a walk on."
though, his fastball baffled the
" I need to t h r o w m o r e
In order to do th at, the
batters. Several times. Stuckey strikes." said Stuckey about his
Ferrell says that even though
reared back and hurled balls at pitching. "I need to do what Mr. Greyhound will need a top-notch they leave he will always consid­
effort In every facet of the game, er them his players.
80 mph to strike out hitters.
Campbell tells me.”
from hitting to pitching to field­
"They all come buck to set*
"1 was real shaky," com­
Two years ago. when Stuckey ing.
me."
said Ferrell. “They come
m ented Stuckey about his transferred to Lyman from Colo­
"He's an everyday player that
(Irst-lnning troubles. "But then I nial. he didn't do much work on can play an y w h ere." com ­ back and tell me stories about
started feeling natural."
the mound, seeing action In the mented McCullough. "He's Just their college experiences. Sonie
According to pitching coach Infield and outfield Instead. But one of those guys who comes of them don't even wult until
Dave Campbell. Stuckey's youth with enough Insistence, he along every now and then and they get home. Some call very
early In Ihe school year because
contributes to his early-game talked the coaches Into letting works."
they are having problems and
want some advice on what they
should do. I really enjoy thut
they think that much of me."
C m U s b M frsra IB
Catherine Docblcr. Brian Anderson and Wesley
Edwards.
Center. Cost Is 345 for the week, which includes
The winners in the older age group were:
insurance. Instruction. Camp T-shirt and awards
Free Throw Champion —Corey Miller.
sponsored by SCC and the SCC Foundation.
Coaches Award —Jeff Smith.
Anyone interested in enrolling their child should
Moat Valuable Player — Darren Kogcrs.
call SCC at (407) 323-1450. extension 210 during
Threc-on-Three Champions — Matt Bledsoe.
the week.
Daryl Presgraves. Blake Conner und Andy
Each camp Is broken into two age groups. 7-10
Holzcmrr.
In the younger group und 11-14 in the older. Each
The award winners from week two (June
camper rccieves a certificate of participation,
WIN A BAND NEW REGAL
24-27). which had 3H campers, were:
while the winners of each competition receives a
Younger kids:
trophy. Runners-up receive ribbons.
Free Throw Champion —Jercrncy Hancock.
Competitions Include Individual as well as team
Com* to th« Track and register
Coaches Award —Ryan Kelley.
events.
to win a Vatard 170 with 115 hp
Most Valuable Player —Chris Herring.
The first ramp was held June 17-20 and
Mercury Engine and traitor from
Three-on-Thrcc Champions — Ashley Ballance.
attracted 26 campers. The first week's award
(Marin*Products A ThiBoatTroa
Stephen Carter and Ryan Cloth.
winners were:
Every time you come you can
And
front
the
older
age
group:
In the younger group;
Free Throw Champion —Matt Bledsoe.
register to win (hi* fantastic boat
Free Throw Champion —Ashler Balia ru e.
Coaches Award —Bobby Hull.
Coaches Awurd (for the most cuachablc kid
Most Valuable Player —Chris Snyder.
with the best attitude) —Brett Holland.
Thrcc-on-Threr Champions — Chris Snyder.
Most Valuable Flayer —Justin Wright,
Charles Smith, lit tun Stensrud und Jason Rosier.
Thrcc-on-Three champions — Justin Wright.

"We don't Hkett."
of The Sports Bar to
"Who wants to go to
m d n t get
Everybody la so dfaappi
II* 10 every m ay » Doycoiiinf live ifim
Some promoters and sports nffirtols aay the
out-of-town market with the moat potential Is
south of Miami. ^__
^
^
Many nuyor league players hall hum the
Dominican, Republic, Nicaragua, Venesoela,
cultural tie* to South Florida.
all over the
coming horn
I
*'We*n
state, Latin America and the
Joe
Robbie Stadium with Hulzenga. "Bar
tracts wider demographics than football.
In an effort to
Hulzenga aak
minor-league team somewhere In the
and may take an offoeaaon road trtpi
"t envision ... a little road Mp to go down to
South America and try to Introduce us to acme
people," he said.
But many of these plans are still only visions for
Hulzenga and It will be up to the team 's front
office to realize them.
Hulzenga said he hopes to name a president
within the next two weeks, but he has been quiet
about candidates fewthe team's executive posts.
Whoever Is selected will have to he creative
with money and personnel. Team officials expect
the ftrst-year payroll to be tn the 310 million to
312 million range, and they aay free agency won’t
be much of anim us

College---------

Primer

Cam p-------------------------

DOG

R A C IN G
G R E Y H O U N D PARK

�4ft - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 7. 1991

Education
IN B R IE F
Tasker graduates Baylor
HOUSTON — Honda Rhea Tasker of Lake Mary, recently
graduated from Baylor Unlvrrsity with a bachelors degree In
nursing.
Tasker was one of only two students from the state of Florida
to graduate from Baylor with a rum laude degree.

Lyman student is a future leader
LONGWOOI) — Todd M. Davis, a senior at Lyman High
School. 1141 State Road 427 In Longwood. was recently
honored as a leader among his peers at the 1991 National
Youth Leaders Conference held In New York City.
A three-year letlcrman In soccer, he has also been selected
three years In a row for the Who’s Who Among American High
School Students.
He placed first In the school's science and English fairs.
He has also participated In math and physics competitions at
the local and state levels.
According to the National Youth Leaders Conference
organizers. Davis has been selected for his leadership abilities
In both the academic and extra-curricular areanas.

N ature stu d ie s at H a m ilto n
c o m in g next school year
By VICKI BeftOimmi
Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD - Hamilton Ele­
mentary School Is the future site
of a new environmental study
center thanks to the efforts of
several local volunteers.
"They have worked very hard
to make this thing a reality for
the students at our school."
Carem Gager, principal at the
school said.
Hamilton, located at 1501 E.
8 th St. In Sanford, has an active
parent coalition, according to
Gager.
"The parents felt this would be
an effective way for their kids to

learn about science and the
natural Florida environment and
never have to leave the school."
he noted.
The Seminole County school
district approved the use of the
school property for use as an
environm ental study center
during their last meeting.
"They have been able to do all
the plans and come up with the
money without having to come
to us for any assistance." said
board chairman Joe Williams. "I
think that shows what can be
done at the school level when
parents get Involved In the
educational process."
The school district will provide

some assistance In the form or
equipment for planting and in
summer-time maitrnancc of the
facility, but other than that the
c en te r will be run alm ost
exclusively by the students,
their teachers and their parents,
according to Gager.
"We actually have the start up
m o n e y In h a n d . " G a g e r
explained, but noted that ground
would not be broken on the
project until September when
the students had returned to
school and were settled Into
their classes.
Gager noted that not only
would the youngsters provide
free labor for the project, they

would also learn a great deal
from helping place the plants
Into the ground.
Approximately 9600 In start
up money was provided by the
Hamilton PTA.
An additional grant for 81.000
Is expected from the University
of Florida In the fall.
The university has also pro­
vided the services of several
horticultural and landscape
experts who will work with the
group In the planning phases of
the project.
"We've got a great thing going
here." Gager said proudly. "We
can hardly wait to get II operat­
ing."

Cops on bikes class a! U C F
ORLANDO — The University of Central Florida Police
Department will be hosting two seminars during the month of
July to train law enforcement officers to patrol on mountain
bicycles.
The training sessions, entitled ’’Police Patrol with Mountain
Bicycles." will be conducted by Sgt. Paul Grady of the Seattle
Police Department.
The sessions arc open to all Florida law enforcement ofTlcers.
Bike patrols allow police to patrol places that were formally
Inaccessable to officers In cars.
The first workshop will be on Monday. July 15. The eight
hour class will be for supervisors and administrators and will
Include demonstrations, discussions on the advantages of a
bike patrol and fundraising Ideas for such a project.
The cosl of the class is 955.
The second workshop will be on Wednesday. July 17 and
Thursday. July IB. The 16 hour course will be for officers and
training officers and will Include riding skills, dismounts,
apprehension and confrontation techniques and Injury pre­
vention.
The cost of the class Is 990.
For more information, call Marilyn Crotty at 623-1204.

Greenwood Lakes yearbook honored
LAKE MARY — The Greenwood Lakes Middle School
yearbook stalT. led by faculty advisor Mary A. Morris, has
received a state-wide award of excellence.
Greenwood Lakes Is located at 601 Lake Park Dr. In Lake
Mary*.
The annual. ‘Altalr’ received a first place rating as a result of
top evaluations earned In the Florida Scholastic Press
Association's annual competition.
Of the 111 yearbooks entered from throughout the state.
Greenwood Lakes was the only middle school or Junior high
school to gel a first place award.

L M H S takes
third spot
Lake Mary High School's
team recently won third
place In Central Florida in
th e MESE c o m p e tio n
s p o n s o r e d by J u n i o r
Achievement.
The Management and
E c o n o m ic S im u la tio n
Exercise competition pitted
Lake Mary economics stu­
dents. under the direction of
Anna Van Landingham.
against teams from Semi­
nole. V olusia. O ran g e.
Brevard and Osceola coun­
ties.
The competition was de­
signed to sharpen their
knowledge of both econom­
ics and computer skills.
Critical thinking skills
were also challenged.
Van Landingham has
been honored In the past Tor
her Innovative teaching
techniques, including rec­
ognition for the Job shad­
owing program that she and
Sandy Davis, the school’s
occupational sp ecialist,
created to teach Job shills In
a realistic environment.

Aliens Scarce ol Junior Achievement congralu- Monserrate. All Hicks of sponsor KPMG Peat
tales Anna Van Landongham and the Lake Mary Marwick was also on hand to congratulate them,
team of Jason Redditt, Sean Randall and Tony

Business
IN B R IE F
Simplimatlc names regional manager
SANFORD — Patrick Ortiz has been appointed eastern area
sales manager, electronics, for Simplimatlc Engineering
Company. The firm has a manufacturing plant In Sanford.
The announcement was made in Lynchburg. Va.. where the
company Is bused, by Jam es W. Parker, vice president of sales
and marketing.
In this new position. Ortiz Is responsible for regional sales,
marketing and other activities for the company's electronics
product handling systems.
Simplimatlc manufactures a variety of conveyors and other
parts handling systems for Ihe electronics market. Including
Class 10 clean room conveyors, edge-guide PCB (printed circuit
board I assembly line conveyors, controls and related equip­
ment.
He and Ills wife. Margaret, and their son. Patrick James, live
In Wellington, Fla.

Disney launches tryout show
LAKE BUENA VISTA — Disney-MGM Studios lust week
luunccd "The Disney Channel TV Tryouts" show.
Throughout the summer, guests entering the Disney-MGM
Studios will be given the opportunity lo audition before video
cameras and a studio uiidtenee with the possibility of
appearing on The Disney Channel.
The show will run live times a day through the end of
August, with up in 150 park guests each day having a chance
to audition.
"This is a great chanee lor people who have ever dreamed of
being on television lo strut their slulf for our cameras." said
Mike Nichols, vice president of creative development for The
Disney Channel.

Orlando adds new air service
ORLANDO — liranltt Iniernaiionat Airlines. tx&gt;ru of a merger
between BN Air Inc. and Emerald Air Inc., began Bights
between Klip NY. and Orlando and Fori Lauderdale.
The carrier, which employs 300 people and operates eight
aircraft. Ircgan lhe flights Monday li was scheduled to add six
additional llights today between Dallas anil Los Angeles and
Newark. N.J
Ur.mill Iniernational is tin- third airline to operate under the
Branlll trade name Two previous llruiilll airlines, one based In
Orlandoand the other in Dallas, are bankrupt.
Even s o . many i n n s u n i c r s harlxircd no ill feelings toward the
Branlll name. The calls lo reservation clerks have been
"overwhelming.” said .Julie llarrod. a Branlll spokeswoman.
She said they fielded an average o( 2H0 calls an hour Monday.
Not everyone, however, was swayed by the Introductory
fares, which arc a s low a s S13H between Orlando and New
York
Tom Burnette, president ol Teamsters Local 19 In Grapevine.
Texas said his union is distressed that llranltf International
has not hired more members that were employed by Its
predecessor, ibr bankrupi Branlll Inc

Air Force renews Harris contract
.

MELBOURNE — The U S Air Force has awarded Harris
Corp. a renewed contract valued up lo 933 million lo enhance
the Eastern Test Range Opcrai urns Control Center

Southeast
O K s pact
w ith feds
A i m I f d f t r —i ____________
Southeast Banking Corp. bus
reached agreement with the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
on certain reporting and approv­
al procedures designed to keep It
financially sound.
Under the agreement. South­
east will submit to the Reserve
Bank within 30 days a capital
plan designed lo uehleve and
maintain adequate capital for
the company and Its subsidiary
banks.
"We are firmly commuted to
improve the financial soundness
of the company." Douglas E.
Ebert, nresident and chief execu­
tive officer of Southeast Banking
Corp.. Miami, said In a news
release.
The agreement will enable
Southcasl lo continue current
efforts lo downsize (he company,
reduce expenses and explore
alternatives lo bolster Us capital
position, Ebert said.
In a n o th e r d ev elo p m en t.
Charles J. Zwlck. former chair­
man and chief executive officer
of Southeast Bunking Corp.. has
sued the company for reneging
on his $ 1.6 million severance
packagc.
The suit filed in slate circuit
court describes the stormy rela­
tionship between Zwlck! who
served Southeast for 22 years,
and the comptroller of the cur­
rency In Atlanta, the bank's
primary regulator.
The suit says regulators,
dismayed by Zwtck's manage­
ment. urged Southeast's board
to oust film, but the board
refused lo comply. The still
alleges that regulators pressed
their demands and threatened to
seize Southeast if the bank
didn't comply.
Al that point, according to
Zwick’s attorney Gerald J.
Houlihan, the bourd. in hopes ol
getting "favorable treatment"
from regulators, decided lo push
for Zwlck's resignation.
Zwlck. who resigned under
pressure in January, signed a
severance agreement which
provided lor monthly payments
of 941.667 for 36 months plus
an initial 97H.(XX)

H era ld photo by Shari Brod&gt;«

AAA welcomed
The Lake Mary chamber ol commerce officially
and formally welcomed the Automobile Associ­
ation. The AAA has relocated its national
headquarters lo Heathrow from Virginia. At the
recent briel ceremony were (from left): Judy

Rankin, Lori Beim, Stuart Hodes (AAA), Bob
DeVito (AAA). State Rep. Art Grindle. Barbara
Santos (AAA). Diane Parker. Mike Curasi. Dennis
Courson. Kathie Ragan. John Litton, Sheri
Fulton and Brad Tallman.

B u s in e s s took lu m p s from high court
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The busi­
ness community suffered losses
m two of iIn- most Important
eases decided hi Ihe recently
concluded Supreme Court term
Hie key rulings demonstrated
■hat ibc in creasin g ly c o n ­
s e r v a t i v e c o u r t is n o l
automatically pro-business.
The Justices wrapped up their
1990 *M term on Ju n e 27. with
ilic s u rp rise re tire m e n t ol
Justice riiurgood Marshall over­
shadowing other ilev elopmeiils
In ilu two most significant
rulings ol the term tor bustlicsses. the court refused lo place
a lid ou skyrocketing punitive
damage awards and said women
i i i . i v rioi b e barred from j o b s Just
U rausi those assignments p o s e
r i s k s to ictuses
In the punitive damages case.
ih&lt; conn delighted consumer

activists as u derailed the Amer­ policy imposed since 1982 by
ican b usiness com m unity's Johnson Controls Inc., the na­
campaign tor more protection tion's largest manufacturer ol
car batteries. The Wisconsinfrom costly lawsuits.
Voting 7-1. the Justices refused based company bad banned
to limit the sl/e ol damage from certain Jobs women ol
awards Juries may impose to childbearing age who could not
punish and deter wrongdoers. prove they were Infertile.
While the ruling may not be the
Five Justices said the federal
court’s last word oil lhe subject,
ihc Justices rejected claims that law against sex bias bans all
fetal protection
corjMiraiUms are being treated sex-speclllc
policies.
unfairly m lawsuits.
The court upheld a $1 million
Businesses worry the ruling
Jury award lo an Alabama will expose them lo lawsuits
woman victimized by Insurance accusing th em ol harm ing
fraud.
fetuses. Women's rights groups
The ruling left the controversy said the answer is to improve
over punitive damages where it workplace safely lor everyone.
lias Ik-cii. in the hands ol slate
In a major victory lor corpora­
legislators, judges and Juries.
hi the fetal protection case the tions. the court ruled that U S
court said such policies amount b u s i n e s s e s dn mil break the law
lo illegal sex bias when ettlorced wben tlicv discriminate a g a i n s t
women and minorities who work
solely against women
The ruling struck down a lor them in foreign &lt;outlines

1

�Sanlord Herald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday. July 7, 1991 - SB

People
IN B R IE F

DISTINCTIONS

Picking up the pieces
Goodwill Industries,
supportive employer
assist after illness
■y BAMXUL BUJOTT
Herald Correspondent____________________ ______

Workin’ on the railroad
Both Joe W. Jarrell, left, and Hoke Duggar
retired after working on the Seaboard Coastline
Railroad for 50 years. Area railroad retirees
gather monthly, except In the summer, for a
variety of festivities, including fish fries and
Informative lectures.

Top barbershopper named
Society of Darbcrshoppcrs. Orlando Chapter,
encompassing Orange, Seminole and Osceola
counties, had a great honor bestowed upon it.
Its president. Prank Caldaraz/o. now in his third
term of office, has been selected as the
Barbershopper of the Year among the 2.000
members In the state of Florida.
Recipients for this prestigious honor are those
who have served their chapters and the district
In exemplary fashion. Caldarazzo has chaired
many district and local committees, produced
various shows and assisted In raising funds. He
has acted as master of ceremonies of most of the
chapter shows and several district conventions.
He Is designer and editor of the monthly chapter
bulletin, all flyers, tickets and show programs.
The chapter, with Its 100 members. Is a part
of the largest singing fraternity in the world, the
Society for the l*reservatlon and Encouragement
of Barbershop Quartet Singing in’Atnerlca. Inc.

SANFORD — He Is lean and trim with a
positive outlook on life and a 1000 -watt smile
that lights up his face today as he works In a Job
he realty enjoys. But Just a year ago. the picture
was very different for Sanford resident Jerome
Dixon.
In January. 1990. the 39-year-old construction
worker was returning to a work site In Lake Mary
from a lunch break when he became dizzy and
unable to breuthc. For the next 18 days he
struggled to live after suffering a complete
respiratory shutdown, massive heart attack and
mcdlcation-related kidney dysfunction.
Doctors advised the North Carolina native he
would not be able to return to the physically
demanding construction Job, but with care, he
should live a long life.
An active man who was used to physical labor,
Dtxon experienced depression during his recu­
peration. His doctors, realizing Dtxon could not
be happy sitting home collecting social security,
referred him to the Sanford Vocational Re­
habilitation office. After counseling, he was
referred to the Goodwill Industries Rehabilitation
Center for Job skills evaluation, work adjustment
and Job placement.
During his darkest days. Dixon even consid­
ered suicide. "I became suicidal at one point.*' he
recalled. "You took at your kids and say. "What
use am I at all?"
With the love and support of his wife. Elmeita,
and his four children ranging In age front 5 to 17,
Dixon pressed on toward his goal of working
again to become a productive member of society
not a part of "the system."
While recuperating. Dixon devoted a lot of time
to his seven-year-old son, who Isuutistlc.
"He needed me." Dixon said, "whether I Just
played with him. talked to him or just held
him...that helped me a lot."
Dixon's wife was stead fast In her support.
"She would say. 'As long as there Is breath In
your body, there’s u chance.’ Dixon recalled,
adding, "there are not too many women |or men)
you find today who stay through thick und
L See Dixon, Page 7B

Btrald Photo by Sandra Elliott

Je ro m e Dixon helps Jo hn and Jeanetto
Thompson, a semi-retired couple from Montreal.

Canada who spend part ot the year in Sanford,
with food questions.

R isk of drug p ro b le m s
c o u ld be greater here
DEAR MARY: We are fairly
new to Central Florida, having
lived In (lie Midwest all our lives
DRUG
until the move. We love living
here: (tie climate, the In-aches,
attractions, etc., hui there seems
to he a lot more problem with
drugs here than there was Ixiek
MARY
home. Is It just that we're
BALK
bccouting more aware ol the
problem, or Is II really worse
here?
IOWA TRANSPLANTS network of Inug-tciin friends and
DEAR TRANSPLANTS: I’roh
family. Tills often leads in a
ably both of your observations feeling ol Isolation during limes
are true. Average citizens ev­ of stress. Another result nl being
erywhere are becoming more a p o p u I a I I o n m o s I I v
aware ol the problems associated transplanted from somewhere
with the use ot alcohol and other else Is tlial we do lint have
drugs, hut Florida has some faiilily nearby to help In the
specjfie risk factors that are not shaping ol values and traditions
common to other areas ol the lor our children. Finally, the
country.
Timm ihe sun" mentality that
One of the most obvious risk |iermeales ihe lourisi capital oi
factors Is that nl geography. The the wot Id lends ilsell lo an
thousands of miles of coast line altitude ol IniiuediaU- gratifica­
In the stale make the Illegal drug tion Without the necessary con
supply virtually unstoppable. slderlion lor long-term conse­
Additionally, almost the entire
population ol Central Florida has quences ol our behavior.
These factors and others
been "transplanted" Imm other
areas ot the country. T hen-lore necessitate Increased awareness
we don't have a deeply-rooted and concern in oureommunilv.

f

Actor just being himself
■y AN D R IAB K H N
Herald Correspondent___________________________

LONGWOOD —Scan O'Neal, in his own words.
Is not as quirky or as weird as Sam. the character
he plays on "Clarissa Explains All." appearing on
the television network Nickelodeon. Though he
admits lo mild weirdness. It Is apparent tills
young man of 14 is truly a Yuppie-Young.
Upwardly Mobile. Professional Performer.
Yet. the l.ongwood teen cares little about the
peer pressure that otten ai companies upwardly
mobile types.
He says. "In the show It’s — 'Don't worry about
anything. Just be ymirscll. He nice. Ik- cool.' I've
also learned lo do whatever comes along — amt
the "Clarissa" show Is what came for me."
The setting ol "Clarissa Explains All" has only
become his second home in recent months.
Within two short years prior to securing a major
role. O'Neal has accumulated substantial acting
experience. His rise in stardom was set in motion
by a chain reaction of recommendations.
He says. "It was really weird, the reason 1 go!
Inin the business —I was in a school play singing
I was George Washington. My aunt saw it and
thought I bad a good voice and told me to get
voice lessons." He continues. "I stayed wtih the
voice teacher a couple ol months and my mom
thought I should trv acting s i 1 got an acting
coach. The couch thought I w . i s very good, s o I
got some age-nts And that *&gt; pretty much how |
got started."
O'Neal has remained on cue ever since. He
says. "The lirsl lug |ob I gol was a commercial
with Curly Neal and basketball io Ins credit.
O'Neal has also performed lor the Mark II Dinner

Theatre and the singing lroti|&gt;e. “The New
Dimensions."
Then along came "Clarissa."
O'Neal says, "I auditioned four to five times in
December and January. Then lur three weeks. 1
was not called lur anything. I thought I was dead
in the water. Then. I gol a call from the talent
coordinator and he said. 'You're coming back lor
another audition."'
Once there. O'Neal was able to take a chunk out
oi ihe Hlg Apple when he landed the role nl Sum.
in "Clarissa Explains All " "It was really tun. 1
was like 'Oil my gusli. [ got the part."’ tie says.
O’Neal may have received a pari, hut It's one
that is a full-lime responsibility, as he explains. "I
wake up at 7:30 and 1 have lo In- at Ihe studio by
9 o'clock Once I'm there. I'm tutored, along with
the other kids Sunday through Wednesday, until
4 o'clock. At lour, we have read ihroughs. (script
reading practice), lor an hour. Then, we block
scenes, all on the same days. Thursday and
Friday- we shoot the regular show."
Hard work and enthusiasm the two magic
ingredients lor any television series. Is apparent
m O'Neal’s altitude toward himself and others.
"I'm not sure it the show is being picked up lor
lfie next season yet. hui I hope it goes on lor a
really long time. Everyone is so great to work
with —always helpful. They call it. (Nickelodeon),
the Kid's Network, so kids have to be nice "
O'Neal is a terrific mix ol spunktness and
seriousness As the only "local" on the show, tie
docs a great |oh a s t x i i l i . h i actor and promoter o |
the talented resources available m the area
Hopelullv next season, tie’ll tit- a teen you will he
seeing in all the ole' lamlltai places

DEAR MARY: I've known lor
years that during the teenage
years mothers and daughters
often have arguments and mis­
understandings. Inn this Is ridi­
c u lo u s. My flftccn-yi-ar-uld
daughter has changed Imm a
delightful ehflil into a person I
don't really know nr iiiiderslaud.
In fact, sometimes I don't even
want to Is there some wav I can
judge whether her behavior is in
the "normal" range, or whether
she has a serious problem? I
can't Imagine three more vi-ars
ol th isera/iness.
EXHAUSTED MOM
DEAR EXHAUSTED: It's real­
ly hard lo |udge when a teen has
gone past the "normal teenage
rebellion ililn hehavioi lh.it can
he iudlcallve ol serious pmhicuis
or substance , d u i s e . Ik-lovv ,ire
some Indicators ol serious pro­
blem behaviors Itt.it you may
want to consider. Ik-as honest as
you can In your responses and
he prepared to lake action li
iieccssarv:
I H as y o u r ■It1 1&lt;1 e v e r
purposely destroyed someone
elsc's property?
See Balk. Page 7B

How does he do it?
Jacob Tegreeny, a resident of Howell Place. Has
been seen in the company of some stylish ladies

recently, including Bettye Gramkow, left, and
Kay Bartholomew Story and Photos. 6B

�FORD — John 8. and 8ho lo prearatly attending Semlr J . Whitman of Sanford note C— mutiny College and Is
wunrtng th t w # » w ir a t m p teyed part-time ao waitress
Ir daughter Jacqueline and Amend h o m eaiM an t.
to D o m in ick Jo o cp b
Her (lance, bom in Cornwall,
nte Jr., a n of Fatrteta H.Y.. te the maiemai gmndaun of
rd. Hewbum h. N.Y. and Fanny Wlaa and Francte Cook.
Ch Jaaeph Sptgnardo Sr. b o th o f V a lla O a tc . N.Y.
on.
B p lg a ard o la th e p a te rn a l
i la U llea, N.Y.. th e g raad ao a of Dom inick Oua
Heet la th e m aternal Sptgnardo of Deltona.
■tighter of francte and
Ha la a IBM graduate of
very elegant. Dreaa-up and
church drteaea made a dramatic

provided a cheery ietttng far the
tastcftiL early summer event.
Door p rlsea w ere beautiful
plants, accented with yellow
ribbons, that were uaed aa decoradons.
A potpourri of tempting and
delectable party Care was under
the command of Patty Pratt.

unturned as the staff prepared
and served the food from china,
crystal and slhrer appointments
on elevated pedestals arranged
on the tastefully decorated
tables. Refreshments included a
w aterm elon gasebo carving,
assorted fruits, freshly baked
teacakes with marmalade cream
Ailing and a variety of summer

M ullican, Streetm an w ed
in Longw ood cerem ony
LONOWOOO - Teresa Marla
Mullican an d Lt. Frederick
Daniel Streetman. U.S. Army,

Oteima Thornton. Marta Guthrie
and Kerry Young. Their suits
and Sowers were identical to.lhe

Chuftfl.

Howell Place residents serving
a s m o d e ls w ere: R eb ecca
Stevens. Charlotte Smith. Jessie
Hayman. Margie Thompson, Bea
Berube. Marge Melick. Marion
Smith. Ruth Bartolinl. Selma
Caiaae and Alice Kilpple.
Guest models were two of
Sanford's favorite ladies. Kay
B arth o lo m ew and Bette
Gramkow. Escorting the models
was Jacob Tegreeny.
Chorus tunae up
Speaking of Howell Place.
Donna Pratt arrived at the facili­
ty last year with a song In her
heart. She has since organised
the Howell Place Chorus com­
prised of 12 residents and three
employees.
Already, the chorua has made
a name for Itself and specialises
In an Americana slng-along. The

Sund** ” Auguac th a y w tn aln g
in a concert at Howell Place,
J * baling with Homer
SewcU AKA Abraham Lincoln.
Also, the chorus to getting
luned up to perform at the
member blender meeting of the
Oreater Sanford Cham ber of
Commerce, hosted by Howell
Place, on July 18.
_
,____
Couple wed 88 years
__
_ congratulations are to order to

o n their 66th anniversary
fred gave the fallowing advice
for a happy and successful
marriage: ’T ry to get together
^
WfMt you should and
don’t try to control the other
peraon."

Patter wateomad back

" W — teM R trteteW te
J«»n Couiombe. a Sanford
School teacher who ventured to
the Philippines to teach school.
now bach In the states. Joan
was packed and ready to embark
on an o th er sch o o l-teach ln g
assignment- In Germany when
the volcano in the Philippines
recently erupted. Alas, she finally made it off the lava-drenched
islands on the last plane before
the airport was cloaed down as a
safety measure,

The Rev. Jean U. Ouerry and
his wife, Pat. were honored at a
welcome reception on July 33
following the 11 a.m. worship
celebrated their M th wedding aervlce at the first United Mcthu V * odl*t Church- Rcv Ouerry has Milwaukee. Joan will return to
couple were married on that day begun him second year aa the the
Sanford area before depart­
lnlB231nBoonevUle.hllaa.rred church D M to T ^
ing for Germany.
was already living In Sanford
and after th e w edding, he
Hosted by the Paator-Parlah
brought his bride back here Relations Committee, the event
where they have since made «■■ well-attended, according to
their home, sweet home.
Nellie Coleman. Nellie said the
Fred la a walking history book reception was held "to welcome
and has been through a world of
(the Ouerrys) and show our
changes In the community. He love a n d a p p re c ia tio n for
spent 37 years at the farm ers another year." A large cake was
Market where he saw truckloads inscribed: "Our Love and Appreof produce shipped out dally, elation. Jean and Pat."
Farming was the main industry
While engaging In genuine
at the time with about 250 fellowship and sipping fruit
fanners in Seminole County punch, the church members
know nas the celery capital of munched on cookies, mints,
the world.
nuts and tea sandwiches. "It was
Although "they arc getting on • J ' Y h*PPy occasion." Nellie

Little ones mark first of life’s m ilestones
trim m ed the sw eetheart
neckline, puff sleeves, skirt and
train. The bow at back was
accented with small satin roses.
She carried a cascading bouquet
of white orchids, white rosea and
deep-hued ivy.
Lisa Mayer, a longtime friend
of the bride and recent graduate
of Emory University, served as
maid of honor. She wore a
two-piece, tea length, white
tailored suit of moire taffeta with
cut-aw ay back. The Jacket
featured embroidered eyelet trim
at the neckline and on the
sleeves. She carried a bouquet of
white orchids with yellow roaes
and ivy.
Bridesmaids were Kappa Delta
Sorority Sisters Shelley Toulaon.

Seaward.
Following a wedding trip to
the Florida Keys, the newlyweds
will be making their home In
Vtcenaa. Italy within the next
three months. Lt. Streetman will
begin his Aral tour of duty there
after having attended special
schools. The bride is presently
employed with Trust Company
of Oeorgla. In m anagem ent
training.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

from Valadu Flewellyn. local
and wrlter. Director Jlml
Brook» p r i n t e d Mrs. Flewellyn
on appreciation award for her
dcvouon and service to the
center. Thelma Franklin. Early
intervention prc-klndergarten
teacher, and Elmelta Dixon,
assistant,

Bsidors racognired
University of Central Florida
McKnlght Center of Excellence
McKnlght Achievers Society.
Seminole County Chapter, presented their Senior Recognition
Program at New Mt. Calvary
The following babies were Marta Weaver and Jason Gaines. Baptist Church. Eight high
school seniors were honored by
born at Central Florida Regional Sanford, boy.
June 15 — Shelley M. und the Society.
Hospital.
The program was presented by
June 8 — Cynthia L. and William M. West. Sanford, girl.
June 17 — Tracy and Lonnie Sheila Bridges and Cynthia
Robert G. Werner. Longwood.
E.Grkscmer. Oviedo, girl.
Sweet. The MAS rewards ocaboy.
June 18 — Julie A. Myers, detnir excellence and cultural
June 9 — Jill R. Bass. Oviedo,
Altamonte Springs, boy.
accomplishments to those stugirl.
June 19 — Vrrnltu Ward, dents who achieved significantly
June 10 — Betsy C. and
Ricardo J . McCauley. Geneva, Sanford, girl: Cundy L. Fisher in Ihctr studies and have been
and David R. Rhein. Sanford, recognized for their outstanding
boy.
artistic or other cultural abilities.
June 11 — Ann M. Smith and girl.
June 20 — Johnnie Edwards Those present lo receive their
Willie M. Thomas Jr.. Sanford,
and Lamar Jones. Sanford, girl.
awards were: Nyoka Hughes.
girl.
June 21 — Judith M. and LaKosclu Ken non. Tclisha Sand­
June 12 — Regina Y. and
ers. Michael Smith and Ertcka
Richard A. Harrell. Sanford, boy;
Tillman. Lee Kayam Is program
assistant. University of Central
Florida Special Projects. Cecelia
Rivers Is Director: Nina Frazier,
program coordinator. All stu­
dents were graduating seniors of
Seminole High.

Educators maka a difftrtnes

QoJLH

Educators make the difference
in our schools and communities.
St. Matthew Missionary Baptist
Church honors the following
educators: Leroy Hampton,
principal of Midway Elementary
School: Johunv Rowe. Mldwav

School Community volunteer:
Mary Rowe, musical Instructor.
Midway Elementary School: Ira
George Huggln. te a c h e r at
Milwee Middle School; the Rev.
Arthur Graham, pastor of St.
M atthew B a p tis t C h u rc h :
Dorothea Fogle, teacher at Keith
Elementary School: and Bernard
Brown, teacher at Seminole High
School. Not photographed were
Pamela Hawkins. Euta Martin.
Earl E. Mlnott and Minister
Arcce James.
Ensambte to — &gt;mbto
The Central Florida Jazz Soci­
ety presents the Don Scaletta
Ensemble. They will appear
Sunday. July 21. 2-5 p.m.. at
Chris’s House of Beef. 801 John
Young Purkway. Orlando.
Don Scaletta will be heading a
group of nine players to do a
collection of the best of big band
Jazz. J o in in g h im on th e
bandstand with the vocals will
be Laurie Yeager, one of Or­
lando's best kept secrets, one
that needs to be shared with
everyone, so make It a point to
come to the concert.
Donations are for members:
$5. non-m em bers — 57.50.
students —52.50.

�Sanford Mou ld, Sanford, Ftodda - Sunday, July 7, l l t l - TS

Some very nice
Ibin."* in the face of seem­
ingly overwhelming adversity.
Even after he recovered. DUon
could not And work because
many prospective employers
would not hire him because of
his medical history. Goodwill
Vocations! Rehabilitation coun­
selor Charlotte Hill encouraged
Dixon through i the long months
of rep eated rejection from
various employers.

BBAB I M T i Your letter
co n ce rn in g handshakes and

color of your skin, but for how
you carry yourself."
am currently reiirra. arver
"People should strive to be the
■pendtag 37 years wtth a wellbeat
they can be." he continued.
known public relationa firm for
“ If It hadn’t been for Pubttx
Whom I traveled around the
i
■ ABIGAIL
giving me this opportunity. I
■
I VAN SUREN
country to set up press conferdon’t know what would have
antes far major events. In doing
happened tom e." Dixon added.
ao. t w o rk e d with Gen.
DUon la philosophical In his
In
December.
1990.
Dixon
Eisenhower when he was cam­
outlook on life. Living one day at
reached
his
lo
ti
of
Coins
back
to
paigning in Denver for his sectime, he said If he were to die
and term a s president. I worked p e r s o n e n t i r e l y b y h i s work when Paul Bracket-. 2nd atomorrow,
he would have no
handshake.
assistant
manager
of
the
Sanford
with Walter Cronklte while he
regrets because he didn't cop out
B
A
IL
BOW
Publlx
hired
him
as
a
store
clerk.
was at the NASA apace center in
EAEOEWT .T E E A S
“He gave me the opportunity and give up.
Huaton. and Nikita Krushchev
“I did ail I could do;" he said,
BEAM
M
L
W
i
l
l
Thank
you
to
prove I'm worth something.”
when be was In Des Moines for an enlightening letter. I Dixon
adding he hopes to see his
said.
"This
1
s
my
seclouring forms In the Midwest. I
leave the aubject of Hon.” he said, pointing proudly children go to college; and have
also helped set up the press cannot
handshakes
without adding this to the soda, soft drink and grandchildren.
center In Dallas the day Presi­ personal comment:
It to general- bottled water aisle. He also
"There Is nothing glorious In
dent Kennedy was killed there.
where I am today." he says, In
. There were other cefebrttirs I ly accepted that a firm and inventories and orders products all
humility. ‘.‘I awe It all to a
handshake conveys an for the beer coolers.
m et personally, and whose resolute
“I'm
sincerely glad to meet you"
you
__ ... Publlx workers en- host of people who helped me."
"I’m
Hto
fellow
hands 1 shook. One eras Richard
Bui one should never courage DUon to make sure he
Downplaying a bt« Publix’s
Nixon when he was campaign­ message.
use
It
when
greeting
a
woman
has
taken
his
medication
and
continuing
support and hiring of
ing In Houston. When I shook who's wearing a ring on her haa had hto required eight
Individuals In rehabilitation
his hand. I was surprised to find hand.
ounces of orange Juice and a programs. Bracken said, "We
It was very small, sweaty and
Just like people who like to
limp!
In the mld- eoa, I helped set up
th e p ress c e n te r for Billy America." In which you poked |
"
nd family. A "roast" of the O ra h a m ’s C ru sad e In th e
Hiple was a highlight of the Houston Astrodome. ! met Billy everything they wear and use
nntveraary celebration.
Graham, a large. Impressive from some foreign country. I had
fellow whose handshake was to write to share the following:
The couple have four daugh- amaxlngly almost Identical to
A number of years ago. I saw a
:ra Carolyn Mancuso. Pam Nixon's—weak and very limp.
display of merchandise bearing
mlth. Beth Klapatetn. Debbie
| had always believed that a labels reading "MADE IN USA.”
There are still households needed to house the Japanese
aatstad and two sons. Richard person’s handshake revealed hto
It seems that on Shikoku —
University foreign exchange students coming to the Sanford
nd Tom Powler. They have 13 character. I later learned It the smallest of Jap an 's four
and Seminole County area August 1 through August 23
rsndchlldren.
wasn't true. Now I never Judge a Islands — there to a city named
sponsored by the International Education Forum. Coordinator
“Uaa." All the products made
Angela Harris should be contacted at 679-7896 by July 10.
i ii,i in !■»,
, —— — — — — — —
there arc marked "MADE IN
Families provide room and board. A host family does not
have to be a husband and wife, as long as the family has more
g U n W
I O N
1
" w o u l d you
.h o ,
than one person In the household.
_ purpose of those labels was to
Intentionally mislead the buyer?
COVTBCtkMI
....
1 think so.
The name of Harriet Boyd, who won an award for her
b DBBb I
primitive watercolor painting in the recent Lake Mary Seniors
and Lake Mary Historical Society Serendipity Art Show, was
Inadvertently left off the list submitted to the Hermld.

Fowlers mark 40th
SANFORD - Retired Rear
Adm. Richard Edward and Mrs.
Jean Ray Fowler of Sanford
celebrated their 40th wedding
anniversary on July 0, 1991 at
their home. 3400Whitner Way.
They were married July 8.
19S1 at St. Lukes Episcopal
Church. East Greenwich. R.I.
A b a c k y a r d Te x a a - s t y l e
barbecue was attended by 29

2. Docs your child often Uc to
get nut of trouble or make
someone else appear responsi­
ble?
3. Hus your child ever run
uway from home for longer than
a few hours?
4. H as y o u r c h ild e v e r
shoplifted or stolen money from
someone?
5. Has your child been sus­
pended or expelled from school?
6. Docs your child often do
whai she Is told not to do
because she doesn't like people
"bossing" her around?
7. Has she been In trouble for
talking back lo a teacher, prin­
cipal or other authority figure?
8. When angry, does she break
nr throw things?
9. Does she seem to lack u
conscience and feel no guilt
when she behaves badly?
10. H ave you e v e r been
frig h ten ed by y o u r c h ild 's
behavior?
While many teenagers have
done some of these things: If you
unswered "yes" to most of these
questions, you may want to
c o n s id e r m e d ic a l u n d /o r
psychological help for her.
Mituiut-ra.

OW ELL ^
PLACE
| 6 JO

"Catered LiWag For Seniors“
ACLF Apartments
Ind«pendant A Amtotod Living
200 W. Airport BIvcL, Sanford

r 30
0 JO
9 00
9 30
7 00
0 00
10 00
10 30
C.TnimlMp.aBi Al;ns5*i$ i M U t i n (W w Hm m lAj |knsagRreoi iP*ri I ol #itj
jl
Smroig H
lei* lor cmeg*

322-7700

I - ------ j-i ----

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LEISURE magazine of Friday July 5

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�osaw

X HEAR? THfRR

heat

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hand, social alliances might
leave a bM to be dtalmrl from
time to time.
C 4W C H (June 21-July 22)
Your sense of independence
might be overly exaggerated
today, and you may toll to
coopera te wtth another tn a way
t ha t ^ c o u l d be m u t u a l l y
beneficial. Cancer, treat yourself
to a birthday gift. Send for
C ancer's AatmOraph predic­
tions for the year ahead by
mailing g j.23 phis a long, seifaddressed, staugied envelope to
AatRhQrapb. cfo this newspaper.
P.O. Box 9 1428, Cleveland, OH
441014428. Be aure to Mate
y^ j S dS u l y B23-Aug. 22) It
might be difficult for you to keep
secrets today. You may tala

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GEE.GARFIELR I FEEL TERRIBLE
EATING IN FRONT OF VOd.WNAT
WITH VOO ON VOtiR PtET

SPECIAL NoWT MjTHEWS
A Hl«*N MICROPHONE
SOMEWHERE IN IMS ROOMM30 HAVE
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TO FINP IT.

VOtPt.
7 -4

HERE SOU
GO FELLA

AITS
A ll', ITS A SM*Jf
AF-TQ? AU M T5 ASMAU-

AHHWHMHR!

Even though you are an indus­
trious Indtvidud. you may be
doing yourself a disservice at
this time by having too many
Irons In the flie.
U M U (Sept 23-Oct. 23) Be
extremely carefol in this cycle
that you aren't tempted to
involved wtth people you don't
know too well in something you
sense may be unethical.
ICOO T O (Oct 24-Nov. 22) If
your Ideas are not baaed upon
realistic premises, they'll have
small chances fcr success today.
Be visionary, but also try to be
pragmatic.
•AORTARTOB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you're looking for a luxury
item you desperately desire but
can't afford, this is not an
especially good day to go shop­
ping. The temptation to buy may
be too great
CAnUCORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Try not to make any com­
mitments or promises today that
you know In yotr heart you may
be unable to keep. If you do and
can't deliver later, It could Jeop­
ardise your relationship.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Neither you nor your mate
should make a major decision
today without first consulting

the other party. Unity of purpose
Is essential.
W C H (Feb. 20-March 20)
There’s a possibility at this time
that you may be putting too
much stock in another, one who
doesn’t warrant your faith and
loyalty. Start looking at thla
Individual without your rosecolored glasses.
A B U S (March 21-AprU 19)
Usually, you're pretty good at
analysing the motives of others.
But today you might be taken tn
by someone you're very anxious
to impress. Be watchful.

J a ly g .lM l
There are indications In the
year ahead that you may profit
from something engineered by a
least-suspecting Individual. It
pays to keep on good terms with
everyone.
CANCER (June 21 Ju ly 22)
Someone who to presently In­
debted to you may begin today
to m ak e an e ffo rt tow ard
eliminating the obligation. How­
ever. It might take awhile before
it is finally erased .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) An
agreement or contract to only as
good as the Intent of the Individ­
uals involved. Fortunately, It
looks like today you’ll be dealing
with someone who to as trust­
worthy as you ate.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you feci you have a worthy plan
for fulfilling a present ambitious
objective, this to not the time to
make changes. Persistence will
pay oft. but you must be patient.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You

are now in a very fortunate cycle
wherein friends and social contacts can help you get things
done that you could never do on
your own. Don't be afraid to ask
for favors. "
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Shifting conditions tend to work
to your ultimate benefit today,
even changes that are lnaugurated by others. In the final
analysis, it could be you who
profits the most.
SAQITTAR1UB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You’re not likely to make
faulty decisions today: you'll
balance all the facts at your
disposal an d measure them
against lessons you've learned
from your own experiences.
,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Financial aspects are moving
in your favor at this time, and
im p ro v e m e n ts are possible
through your usual mode of
earnings a s well as through
8C^2S2¥31521ir? ^ ’
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
S it u a tio n s you p e rs o n a lly
manage should run rather well

By Phillip Aider
1________
was new...Intown,
to and on my
first night I went to the bridge
club. As I entered. I noticed a
white-haired man sitting in an
armchair next to a roaring fire.
He was surrounded by a group of
people.
"W hat's going on there?" I
asked.
"Oh. that's our Senior Life
Master. He leUs stories about
how bridge has wrecked and
nurtured budding love.”
Intrigued. I wandered over. I
was handed a piece of paper
displaying today's diagram.
S o u th ’s tw o c lu b s w as a
M ichaels cue-bid. show ing
length in both majors.
T h e S e n io r L ife M aste r
explained: "East was Sarah
ffo rb e s-Ja c k so n . th e m o st
beautiful woman I ever saw hold
a bridge hand. West was Giles
Courtney, a great player, but at
that moment his mind was more
on Sarah than on bridge. He had

asked her to marry him. and ne
was hoping this session would
result In their contacting the
clergy.
"Giles found the best lead of a
trump. Even so. with the favor­
able trum p position, declarer
seemed destined to lose only
three tricks. He won trick one in
hand and played three rounds of
spades, ruffing the last in the
dummy, while Giles discarded a
club. Next came a diamond.
Sarah won wtth the king and
cashed the spade queen. Giles
discarded the club ace. Now
Sarah cashed the club king and
led another club If the declarer
ruffed low. Giles would ovemiff.
If he ruffed high. Giles' heart
eight would be promoted to a
winner.
"The apparently impregnable
contract had been defeated by
Giles* brilliant unblock. Three
months later. I witnessed their
exchange of vows."

*****
A LOT T'AgAf,
CHOPPER, ROT
EVERYTHING*
GOT T'lOOK f

NORMAL,*

TH-THERf* NO FONT i w £MUT
IN TOUR. COALIN’ALONG 2 * * 7 6 0
THW.MNW W 'A N I
WILLTRY TViAKE * r
A i0 N t ,S 0 ,..6 ^ i^

TAURUB (April 30-May 20)
It’s beat to avoid deep dis­
cussions today where you are
unfamiliar with the subject mat­
ter and hope to bluff your way
through. If you don't, your
facade will be eaMly pierced.
OBMDVI (May 21-June 20)
This might not be one of your
better days for conducting busi­
ness: your ability to evaluate a
good deal may not be up to
snuff. Walt until you're more
perceptive.
( 0 1 9 9 1 . NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.
today. Even when It is necessary
for you to be firm, you'll still be
remarkably fair,
WWCMM (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your greatest success today ta
likely to come from a development that requires a second
effort. It may aho teach you not
to get out of the kitchen when
someone turns the heat up.
A R B S (March 21-Aprll 19) If
you have a serious matter to
discuss with an old friend today.
gradually lead up to your subJect; don’t plunge into U Instantly. This material should be
presented as comfortably as
possible,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Focus your energy on achieving
important, material objectives
today. Victories you score at this
, lme cou| d have favorable,
long-lasting effects,
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If
you-re involved with someone
who can add to your storehouse
of knowledge today, be attentive.
You'll retain what you learn and
wm use It to your personal
advantage at a later date.

Opening lead: P I

ER-Wt KNOW THAT

IMP #0MT AREAFTER

ANNieAN' "fT" TOO, A5P,
50, UM-.jHOULON'Tr-

�w m sm m tu

Sanford H tra M , Sanford, Ptorfda - Sunday, Ju ly 7, 1SS1 • S t

NoUeM

C LA SSIFIED A D S

S«minol«

Orlondo •Wlntot Pork

333*2611

831*9993

Hurry t Hurry I
IIM P L O Y M E N

I

eta, Santard (14ParkM*rB»

CMrkef Me Circuit Caurt
■ V : Cacotta V. It e m
Aa Deputy Clerk
PuMWl: J m M. U . » b July 7.
I amInala County

IN TNB CIRCUIT COUNT
OPTHN WTN J U f CIAL
CIRCUIT M AND POO

«HkaMy da­

rn -

CtrtSa
Ptawwd ua* *f Rm prugarty la
kaconatruct a family raam.
------- PHI"
- •

M T ttC CIRCUIT COURT
O U A R O IA N B A N R . f/fe/A
OUAMOIAN IAVIN OS ANO
LOAN ASSOCIATION.

ADVICE T O T H B PUBLIC: If

haarinp.

abava maatlnf
‘
will now
af lha

oco-w*
IN VITATION T O BID
M M IN O LB COUNTY
■X PMBMW A Y AUTHOR ITY
laatadblW wtnbaracahmdby
lh a S a m l n a l o C o u n t y
■xpraaaway Authority. County
Sarvtcua EuildMg. IN I Raul
P in t ttraat. laniard.
W771. until t : » pm.
Tim a) an July n . IWI
IpItWHlf pfpiCf'
RID NO: m at
SCOPf OP S IR V tC IS : P r »

v l d a aabaataa abatemant/dwnattttan tarytcaa far
structural acquired durtng lha

T

l-ef-way acquttittan pracaaa
tho Semi nol e Count y
H O W * TO A P P L Y :

P ro -

and ablaln a
packago for lha aboverafarancad prafact at na caal
from lha Aufherlly’t rapra
tentative. Mary Raulenen.
Olattlnq lapai Marcher Anglin.
Inc.. 1) Bait Pina Street, Or
lands. Florida S M I. (M7) 444
UR.
The Authority retarvaa lha
right la re|ect any or all bid*.
Publith: July 7.1*41
DBH-aa
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I IIO H T B IR T N
JUOfCIAL C R K U fT
OP FLORIDA.
IN AND FOR
S IM !N O L I COUNTY
O B N IR A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
C JU E N O iV im C A M D tv .K

C H EM IC A L
COMPANY.

MORTGAGE
Plaintiff.

CHERYL JG O F F .e ta l.
NOTICE OP
PORECLOSURISALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
purtuanl la a Final Judgment al
Foroclatura dated Juno 77. Iftl.
and entered In Cam Ha. ft MS
CA 14 Olv.K. al lha Circuit Court
af the EIG H TEEN TH Judicial
Circuit In and ter SEMINOLE
County. Florida wherein CHEM­
ICAL MORTGAGE COMPANY
It Plaintiff and CHERYL J.
G OFF, el el era Defendant!. I
will tall la lha hlghetl and bait
bidder Mr cath In lha SEMI­
NOLE County Courthute. In
Santard. Florida, at I I . 44
o'clock A M . an tho 1tl day af
Auqutf. m i. the following da
acribed prtparty at tel torth in
aeid Final Judgrnont.tawtt:
L O T S4. U N IT TW O OF
M O UN T GREINW OOO. AC
C O R D IN G T O T H E P L A T
TH ER EO F AS R IC O R O IO IN
P L A T BOOK U . PAGES 1*11.
PUBLIC RECORDS. COUNTY
OF SEMINOLE. STATE OF
FLORIDA
D A TED thit J4th day at June,
m i.
MARYANNS MORSE
Aa Clark af taid Court
By Jana E. Jatawk
A t Deputy Clark
Publith: July 7. IA IN I DEH44

’ P U B

Z U

T I U C
X M

O EE V •

C

T V
M

J

P T 0 F
V T O U V

I f

O U A R O I A N B A N R . l/k/a
O UARO IAN SAVINOS ANO
LOAN ASSOCIATION. POOL
W A TIR PROOUCTS. INC.. •
Florida cdrpardtldn. and
H U O H IS SUPPLY. INC., a
N O TIC tO P IA L B
NOTICE IS HEREBY O IV IN
N Judamantaf
I Juno 74. m i ,
and onforad In Cata No.
f i U M C A U K . Cental (dated
with Cam No. tl-W M CA-M K at
the Circuit Court of lha Wh
Judicial Circuit In and ler Sami
nefe C t w h . PterldUw w^karatn
T H E OUAROIAN BANK It
Counter and Croea-Pleintiff.
BANR OP C IN TR A L PLORIDA 1$ ttit
Dfftnfpnt
and P O O L W A T I R P R O ­
DUCTS. INC. and H U O H IS
S U P P LY . INC. are Cratt
Oafandanta. and DAVID T.
SMITH. BARBARA I . SMITH
, I will tall la
cam of lha Watt Front Oear at
the Seminole County Courtheute
*n M nw oi mm mom L^UnTYi
Florida, at 11:00o'clock A M. on
Ma H I day of Augutl. m i . the
property
m told Final Judg­
ment, to wit:
Laf as of SW EETW ATER
SPRINGS, accardtaq la the Plat
•at. at racardW In Plot
i M e t Paw si at the Public
Recerdt al Sim Inota County.
Florida, mart particularly da
tcrlbed an EiMMI "A " attached
harata and mada a part hereof
■ X N IB IT"A "
T O G E T H E R W IT H A
P R IV A T E O P E N S P A C E
EASEMENT AS OISCR IEEO
AS FOLLOWS
A portion el lha Narthaatt w
af SECTION H. TOWNSHIP 10
SOUTH. RANGE I* EAST. Sam
Inala County. Florida, deterIbed
aeMlewf:
Commence al lha Northern)
comer al taid Narthaatl W at
Sactlan ) l . thence South
o r s r t r Eatt along lha Eati
line at laid Narthaatl M at
Sactlan )l. a dittance at 44*77
teat: thence South 4**07'I7"
Watt, a dlilance at « IS teat;
lhanca South M'SI'Oa" Eatt.
14).47 feet, lhanca South
)t*trs*‘' Eatt. n 41 teat la the
i of Beginning at the landt
&gt;1*17*14" Eatt. 1)1.4) teal:
lhanca South M'ST**" Watt
M ll'i lhanca North SHIT'S*'*
Watt. IIA 9 Mat: thence North
m a n " Eatt. m m Met to the
Point of beginning
Bait lino at lha Narthaatl U of
Section )!. Townthlp M South.
Renpa I t Eatt. at being North
arST'41" Wett. attumad
bMfiHf
DATED thi* 24th day of June.
IWI.
MARVANNE MORSE. Clerk
Circuit Ceurt
By JanaE. Jatewk
Deputy Clerk
Publith: July 7. IA IWI
DEH4S

V EB BE Q
J X U

,

Z A J

T

Z U B T U O U
P X E B A I O
X M W

J X U
Z U

U I M L P . ‘

CIVIL DIVISION
CASEN0LW-IB4CJM4-K
O L IN O A L IF E D E R A L B A N K .
FED ERAL SAVINGS BANK.

and

U I A R C J T M V

W C N

M

D A VID T. SM ITH
BARBARA I . SMITH.

C A M NOi TM HBCA-M R
BANR OP C IN TR A L PLOMI
DA. a Florida banking

prWISiV i f raw WITy P 9 P P »
(PSSBMIW)
PubUah: Juno 17 A July f. twi

hh

M a in

—

Z T K C
R M f Z N .
PREVIOUS SO LU TIO N : "M y whole Ufa rovotvwa arourv
"
* " — Marvin Hamkach

J.C. BROWN B COMPANY,
INC.. R IN R IR MATERIALS
CORPORATION. LWK LEAS­
ING, INC.. Q U IC K -F L IO H T
STAIR CO., d/b/a SOUTHERN
S T A IR C A S I C O M P A N Y .
DAVID KAPLAN d/Va OBSION O f CORATING OP OR­
L A N D O . P IR O U S O N E N ­
TER P R IS ES. INC.. R ALYN
INDUSTRIES.INC. d/b/a L I
C L A I R E M A R B L E . SCS
H A R D W O O D FLO O R S OP
O R LA N D O . P U T R IL L
C U S TO M P O O L S . IN C ..
CUSTOMCRAFT MARBLE A
STONE CO.. IN C . THE R.O.
COFFMAN COMPANY. INC..
W ILLIAM KRBHL. TRI R OP
O R LA N O a INC. d/b/a TH E
PLOORINO CEN TER . GARY
0 . H E N S O N d/b/a P R O ­
FESSIONAL WOODWORKING.
HUGHES SUPPLY. INC.. SU
PER (OR TR IM A DOOR. INC..
PRESTIOE INDUSTRIES INC
d/b/a PRESTIOE LUMBER A
S U P P L IE S . D E B O R A H L .
L U K A S d/b/d LU K A S
LANOSCAPINO. R E P T IL E .
IN C . K E ITH HJUWMSRSLEV
CONSTRUCTION. INC.. OAVIO
1. FORD d/b/a T A T CON
C R E T E S P E C IA L IT IE S ,
ROBERSON PLUMBING. IN
C O R P O R A T E D . J .
S H A R O N E 'S . I N C . , E D
M ILCARSKV'S APPLIANCE
C E N TR E . INC.. BRIAN A.
CO M PTO N and LIN OA N.
COMPTON, hit wIM. PETER D
KUC and FEN TON B. FROOM
and ROBERTA FROOM.
NOTICE OP SALE
PURSUANT T O CHAPTER 44
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
purtuanl M an Order or Final
Judgment af MrecMture dated
Juno 27. IWI. and entered In
Cam No. VD-lbaCA-iaK of lha
Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit In and Mr Sami
note County, Florida, wherein
GLENDALE FEDERAL BANK.
FEOERAL SAVINGS BANK It
Plaintiff and J.C. BROWN AND
COMPANY. INC., a Florida
corporation. RINKER M ATE
RIALS CORPORATION. LWK
L E A S I N G . IN C .. Q U IC K
F L IG H T STAIR C O . d/b/a
S O U T H E R N S T A IR C A S E
COMPANY. OAVID KAPLAN
d/b/a DESIGN DECORATING
OF ORLANDO. FERGUSON
ENTERPRISES. IN C . KALVN
INDUSTRIES. INC. d/b/a LE
C L A I R E M A R B L E . SCS
H A R D W O O D FLO O R S O F
ORLANDO. FU TR ELL
C U S T O M P O O L S IN C ..
CUSTOMCRAFT MARBLE b
STONE CO . INC.. THE R.G.
COFFMAN COMPANY. INC..
WILLIAM KREHL. TRI R OF
ORLANDO. INC. d/b/a THE
FLOORING CEN TER . GARY
0 . H E N S O N d/b/a PRO
FESSIONAL WOODWORKING.
HUGHES SUPPLY. IN C . SU
PERIOR TRIM b DOOR. INC..
PRESTIGE INDUSTRIES INC.
d/b/a PRESTIGE LUMBER b
S U P P L IE S . D EB O R A H L
LU K A S d/b/a LU K A S
LANDSCAPING. R E P T IL E .
INC.. KEITH HAMMERSLEV
CONSTRUCTION. IN C . OAVIO
E. FORD d/b/a T I T CON
C R E T E S P E C IA L T IE S .
ROBERSON PLUMBING. IN
C O R P O R A T E O . J.
S H A R O N E 'S . IN C . E D
M ILCARSKV'S APPLIANCE
C E N TR E . INC . BRIAN A
CO M PTO N and LIN OA N
COMPTON, hit wIM. PETER D
KUC and FENTON E. FROOM
and ROBERTA FROOM are
defendant!. I will tell M the
htghett and belt bidder Mr cath
at the wett Iron! door el the
Seminole County COurthoute In
Sanlord. Florida, al 11:04
o'clock a m on tho lith day of
Augutl. IWI. lha following do
tended property at vet forth In
taid Order or Final Judgment,
to wit
LOT iX ALAOUA PHASE It.
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECOROEO IN
PLAT BOOK 14. PAGES 77 2t
ANO 7t. PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
DATED ot Sanlord. Florida,
on June 74. IWI
MARVANNE MORSE
At Clerk. Circuit Court
By Jane E Jetewic
At Deputy Clerk
Publith July 7. IA IWI
O EH ai

•pecla!

CaM
-1447
FORD PICK VP
m i . Rune
food. Goad work truck. 41,444
^ B o m t iM M jw s m m *

27-Nw rtoryA

OHMCart

A-1 CHILDCARE, On IdyllwIMa
Or. Safa b loving environment
Mr your child Rata*. U0 45 a
id Monty
...M4-7847
CHILD CARE . 7 deyt a &lt;
Pun. enriching activities
HRS W F P * ............... 747*345
CHILD CARE - EtperMnced.
with reference!. ReeeenebM
roNt. Hen tmofcor. PM47S

e M A R K B TtN R R IP e
Tep pey H r yeur (kill* Cam
pany n n T l you on their
payroll M a y I Hurry ItitaI
AAA B M PLO YM IN T
n w .w m .M n in

L tg il Notlcft
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT.
EIO N TBEN TN
JUOfCIAL CIRCUIT.
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NOUW MICA-140
CALIFORNIA FEDERAL
BANK, a Federal Savlngt Bank,
a* tuccotter in InMrott M
California Federal Savlngt and
Loan Attadat Ian.
Plaintiff.

a CUSTOMER SERVICE a
1)15 wkl Fun caraar tar a tall
motivated perton! Oral with
ordart ovar phone* A antar on
computer. Great Oenetlli!
AAA EMPLOYMENT
7WW.24BH4. 234117*

M A M MOM I M O N IV PART
T I M I than yau ra now mafc
Ing full tlma. 431 DM________

OCUWRY D ttV C I
For tractor traltar needed
Mutt ba DOT cartlflod. Mand a y -F r ld a y . C om pany
banality. Apply In parton:
Party City. M l B Cornwall Rd.
Santard.FI......................E O f

wilLIAML. ARMSTRONG, a
tingle man. OCCUPANT. 241)

Martha 11Street. Sanlord.
Florida P77I; and OCCUPANT.
14l7Marthall Street. Santard.
Florida P77I.
Defendant!
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 4S
NOTICE IS GIVEN that pur
tuanl la a Summary Final
Judgm ent ontarad In lha
above tfyMd caute. I will tall M
lha htghett and belt bidder lor
cath at tho watt front deer el the
Samlnola County Courthoute.
Sanlord. SemlnoM County. Flor
Ida. at II:00 a m. an IhaSSthday
el July. IWI. tho Mllowlng
deter Ibed property
Lot X Block A 3rd Section.
DreemwoW. according M tho
plat thereat at recorded In Plat
Book a Pago 74. Public Rocordt
ol Seminole County. Florida
DATED Ihlt 74th day ol June.
IWI
MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk ol the Court
By Jane E. Jatewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publith: June M b July 7. IWI
OEOKJ

RBSTAURANT/PIIIERIA tar
rant, with equipment. Saati
M. Raady to opan. Comar
17*2 and 2SM St. Sanlord.
Call any lima, 14* SU)
V ■ NDiNO R O O TIi Far Sato.
Attar dabla cath butineta.

eWCLDSRa

V SO hr. I Stable firm oftart
you |ab tacurily and tap
banaflH Call Quick I
AAA EMPLOYMENT
IW W .SSM M .m SIM

LET A

SPECIALIST
A

D O

DEH4*

IT !

Horn# Repairs

IN T H I CIR C U IT COURT

OF THE EIB N TEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN ANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
CASE NO.I1774CA IAO
MICHAEL N JENKINS and
B E TTY L. JENKINS.
Pleintlttt.
vt
W IL L IA M Q B A IL E Y .
BARBARA A BAILEY, and
F L O R IO A C O N F E R E N C E
UN ITED METHOOIST CREO
IT UNION.
Oelendantt
AMENDED
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice It given that purtuanl
to the Final Judgment in lavor
ot Pleintlttt entered on June 71.
I t f l In C iv il Action No
•1 7 7 0 C A U G ot me Circuit
Court ol the Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit. In and tor Seminole
County. Florida. In which
W IL L IA M Q B A IL E Y .
BARBARA A BAILEV and
F L O R IO A C O N F E R E N C E
UN ITED ME THOOIST CREO
IT UNION are the Oelendantt
and MICHAEL N JENKINS
and B E TT Y L JENKINS are
the Pleinhltt. I will tell to tho
highett and belt bidder lor cath
al the wetl front ttept ol tho
Seminole County Courthoute in
Sanlord. Seminole County. Flor
Ida. commencing at the hour ol
II 44 o m . on Augutl 4. IWI. the
following deteribed real proper
ty tel torth in the Final Judg
men! in lavor ol Pleintlttt
Lot 44. ALAFAVA WOODS.
PHASE IV. according to the plel
thereof at recorded m Plat Book
71. Paget W through 102. Public
Recerdt ol Sem.noie County.
Florida
Dated tnn 2nd da, ol July.
IWI
MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk ol Circuit Court
By Jane E Jetewic
At Oepuly Clerk
Publith July 7. 14 IWI

6-

RON COLLIER t Remedtllngl
Carpentry, reeling, painting
"NeMbMatmaht" 771 4477
T N I N O U S ! DOCTOR! All
homa repaint Painl/TermlW
damage LM./Mt.
7747411

AppiiancoT
M
m //HUeSrn
i frM
i mC tcS
H lW
U A
F Ui M

HOtft«miMCl~U2HS3
A u t o m o t iv t
D ETAIL F B V E R ^ H T y o u ^ a r
tparkle Mr tummerl Comp
detail torvlcel
174-4771
HEAOLINKRSI Mott cart 444
Wagont S7S Vinyl Mpt M0 up
Carpet MB up. 7)4 U44

SMALL butinett bookkeeping.

accounting, tai and computer
tervkevOn^OiMiien44B*4
Bulging Contractors
N IW .a iM O O IL R IP A IR

HOMES. OFFICES. STORES
Ail fypet ceattlructMB. Ret/Com
nxam S.O. Bafud, CBCTtWM
• eADDITIONS All rem«MI
ing Quality workI CGC0H077
lSyrterp Meta e #47*4*1*
CARPENTER All kind* ol home
repairt. painting A ceramic

hleBichardOra^^JlISm
Cleaning Service

B b B CLEANING SERVICE.
O llier home Lie b Int Pro
tenlonot couple
MI-44W
CATHY'S CLEANINO H R V
ICE Relerencet. reatonabie
ralet licenced1Call 17J 7470

Cleaning W rvlce
HOMB/OFFICE CLEANINO
E ip ., reatonabie. quality
work I PMi l i tv. mt

SMI MONEY! CALL USI
_________ W47M-44M_________
SPRINO CLEANINO BLUEST
Rate* tram US b &lt;m Call Jayl
Rat/comm.
tsa M47

ConcrtfR
BOBBY ADAMS CONCRETE
Quality and claanlinett It
guaranteed It yrv retidentiel
eeperlence lot m t/1 3 0 1417
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Beal ) Man Quality Opera
lion! U4 2774/IM 7W7

F»nc*
SHARP F E N C E I Itl Rato
work Law Ml Free ett Wood.
^ h a in lin ^ ^ e jji^ r ^ T M tJ ^

O fitr a l S fv ic ts
^ O U T TB t^ T L E A N E O ^ r
Commercial Retidmlial
Call Tam
U lU T t

Land Cliaring

rANOCLBARINaTm^Irr
backhoe. loader work, hauling
and dean up. Countrywide
Devetopement. 447 277 471S

Lawn Service
cS dP LET^TS d y^aw ^T
Landtcaping. Tree Service b
Irrigation, competitive rote*.
lreee*tlmale*Sunnv'*J73 747*
LAWN CU TTIN G ANO MAIN
▼E N A N C I . L K . M A R T .
CBOSSINOS AREA. 737 2142
LAW N M A IN T E N A N C E
Cemwerclai/BtiMenhai- Law
Rate*I CaM Tern
334*274
BANOV'S Q U A LITY LAWN.
Complete care, clean upt
Since 1*42 Fretetf.l 721471*
RELIABLE LAWN MAINTE~
NANCE! U aft Mr Itl hot*
117714/17
ST. AUOUSTINE GRASS piugt
mtlalled 17* tq It Free
Etlimatetl Suntef Lawn Ra
noveliont. Inc 407444 *401

___ 1j B
■ B ■ HAULING. Yard hath,

appt. turn C k tq 'w timet
SH/UP CaM
m Ray
» » t7S7-7M7
i

Painfiwg
r T t T i K T I R I O R PAINTINO
b pretture clean LAV I MM
Lk/treeetll 14*471*4
DICK PINOLA’S PAINTING.
Quality workl Inl/Eal. Uc'd
blntur*d Free ett I 27) 5777

Ptsf C e n triT
OBISHOPPBST CONTROL*
Senior CItIten Oitcaunlt I
Hyearteiperiencal 274477*

Plumbing
Ail your piumhmg need! I 74
hourtl &lt;RF04S7770 277
P rw s u rt O

rr

n in g

DRIVEWAYS. Rooft. Houtet.
elc Low ralatl Commir
clal/Rmdentlal 2724444
PCM Hout* wath and pointing
"QwoMt by phono" Call
Roger. 274 444*. 4AM 4PM

I iRcrtiarial A I
Typing S fY ic ts
CUSTOM Trpmg/Soekktepmgl
O J Enterprltet. 40IB E 7&gt;m
S I . Santard 274 04/I/J77 7447

Handy M an

Masonry

C A R P E N TR Y . MASONAR V
painting and tile work Free

TWP MASONRY. Brick, block,
ilucco. concrete Renovalwnt
Lie d 4 mt 331 34M/45Q4IS7
w em m m w w w w w w

M o vin g * H auling

T r f ^ r v lc t '

CONCEPT One Enter.. Inter
renovated! Home, ollice.
kitchen. b4th&gt; 77447*7

e e e H A U LIN O .ya rd Irath.
appliance*, turmlure. hath ol
any kind' Richard......77477*1

■UNTANS TR E E SERVICE
Tree work. Iighl haulmg Free

ethmate^Ut^^CainiWI24
Home Im provem ent

Sewing
tewtn^weSt^H
typet Phone Uta Graham
(4
4
7
1
)7
1
1/74
i o n n i u n . u ie w t

etlim atat. Intured 111 1421

If/ r r r t i Af* )/////• llu.sincs. \ / r c r \*M n I in Is /m r
S/.7 /Vr M o n t h . ( n i l I l u s s i j i m l .TJ'J J i l l I

1%

�'

I M - Santord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday. July 7, 1991

71-HalpW nttd

91— Apartmtfrts/
How— to Shirt

• ••V O L T • • •
TEMPORARY SERVICES

FEM ALE W ILL share mobile
homo, phono a cable *33 a
m i m oon

uMtit-tm

tl-Apartments/
HouftoShart

93— Rooms for Rtnt

LA K E MARY, furnished 4
bdrm U*0'mo Includes util.
Single adult only 173 4314
SANFORD House to share with
mature M ilt Reasonable
Cull JJJ 4317 tor Information

ACROSS M O M FIM WorM. full
hoot# prlv. w/pool 145 wk or
S330 mo n t aMt ttAM-lPM
CLEAN ROOMS, kitchen A
laundry facilities Cable TV.
Starting at 175/wk......D O 4473

93— Rooms tor Rtfrt

93— Rooms lor Ront

ADULT P O S T S i SPONSOR - In

FURN ISHED room, kitchen
privilege*, utilities Included
S5S/ wrh SSS s e c u r i t y .
Downtown...........Call 377 30*4

HOUSE TO SHARI w/*
3 reams end bath tor rent,
share kitchen. I330/mo373-3l47
NEAR HUNT CLUR rent with
option to purchoso hell Inter­
est. Pool, patio, deck. S400
mo............................. 334*117
SANFORD, kltchon and laundry
privileges, clean, cable hack
up 143/wk, S43dew 773 m a
S A N F O R D . Slaaplng rm .
Private ent. Wash/dryer, hit.
prlv. 143 wk................ DO ISM

F u r n i s h e d r o o m a il a
laundry prlv ledges Uhl. In­
cluded. 133 wk. plus S35 dtp.
ID Resell* Or. After 3.
HISTORICAL OiAte* Hate). 401
AAagnolla Ava. TV. micro,
rafrlg Utilities Included Rea­
sonable weekly ratetl 371 lies

Step Up Into A
G reat Apartm ent!

Jfarwntt/uz/6 ffccu^anoy
1,2, ft 3 BEDROOMS

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

RENTS STARTING FROM

ONLY

MO.
7 Month Lo o m Only

775174a

mentathr

S7— A f i i mmts
~
i/r
SANFORD - 1 bdrm., complete
privacy. MO per week plus
Pe» security 333-I3M________
A TTR A CTIV E I bdrm. quiet
area. MO per week plus POO
depeslt. Cell 331 4047________
C LEA N . O U I I T Private I
bdrm.. AC util. paid. M l wk.
1180 sec....................... 333*434
CUTE • C L IA N I 1 Bedroom
Utilities paid) UTS plus depes
It Avail. 07/15............373 7SII
1ANFORO • I bdrm. excellent
location, complete privacy.
MO ear week plus *300 tecuri
ty.CellJ
ROOMY redecorated
Ideal ter couple USS/me plus
POO security 377 77S4
SANFORD - I R 1 Bdrm. Apts I
Fum/Unfum! POO 4 Up plus
P M sec dap T B j O j W H t M
WORK INO couple, one large
bedroom, newly painted. Very
private. Just outside Sanford,
All utilities furnished. No pot*.
UTS/mo plus U00 deposit.
__________ 333-Hit__________
SANFORD - Huge &gt; bdrm .
eacellent location. Complete
privacy. SIOO per week plus
STOPsecurity 373-734#________
1 IDRAA. I balk. AC no pete.
*300 1st A last. I ODRM. I
balk. turn. UOS 1st A lest.
I 3*3 7*3* /333 5I7I tv msg

tlMMBNlR!I SfOCili
anford. Ig I
(Limited lime) Sank
bdrm. central H/A. pool.
laundry. Sate/Qulet. 313 W43

9f— AairfiM
Unfunrtilwd/ R tn l

150S W. 2SUl S t, Sanford • 322-2000
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 1:30 - 530

n —A p irtm ifrts
U frtu m H h td / R tfrt
PAMSIMPIACE ’
APARTMENTS

99 Aaartnitnti
UfifymhhiM / Rtfrt
A TTR A CTIV E I and I bdrm.
W/W carpat. quiet areal
MO/wh plu*U00 dap. 3314*47

3 bdrm. I bath townhouse
apartment* Quiet and secure.
*400 par month, *700 security.
__________ 377 4447__________
PATIO HOME 3 bdrm. 7 bath.
Winter Springs area Like
new. Peel end tennis *47S/mo
Call 440 43*2 ______

WAN THE QUIET!
Single story studio. I A 7
Bdrm. Apt*. Many extras Incl.
storage space I Quiet, coty
community! Nice landscap­
ing. On site manager* who
CAR E11 Sterling at Utt/mo

TWO BDRM.. upstair* U7J and
security. 304 W. 13th. Barb
M F, *4.......................333 *443
UNIQUE OARAGE Apt at W*
torlc home. Avail. July 1*1.
Ceth. celling* ten, AC. cable
evell. *335 mo............. 337-7344
1 BDRM. nice area, oft (treat
parking. 1340/mo. 11)0 tecuri
ty includes utllllies. 371 *3*4__

1 0 1 -H o u s m
Fu rn lth td / Wtnt

D O n C H E S IE R APTS

.323-3311
HISTORIC DOWNTOWN San
ford. Very clean I bdrm.. I
balk. Kitchen, big Living,
dining, appliance*. Fenced.
Good neighbors *173 mo. UOO
d*P...........................1*57 3*03
LAKE JENNIE APTS. Under
new management I Ceil u*
about our movie In special*
from HW I Broker, 332 4734

I Story, t A 3 Bedroom Apis.
Askebewtour
"17Mwilh Loom Special!"
LAKE MABY 333-4*33
SANFORD. RICE AREA, lerg
est i bdrm around I Large
living room, enclosed sun
room, all appliance*. Central
H/A. 1371/mo plus U » secu
rlty............................ 44*1473
SANFORD
CLEAN, quiet I
bdrm. apartment, upstair*.
UTS/mo.................... 333 3534
SANFORD - 1)00 Santord Ave.
Apt. house, I bdrm. *300/mo
plus deposit. Quiet and sate.
________ Call 333 &gt;443________
U N F O R D TOWNHOUSE 1/3.
H/A. kitchen eppilwasher/dryer. micro
avail. Minis, vertical*, fresh
paint, storage shed, semi prlv.
fenced yard, reserved parking
*44*/mo. Call 34**151________
UNFO R D
CLEAN, qulat 1
bdrm. apartment, upstairs.
UTi/mo........ ............ 333 5514
U N FO R D , 3 BDRM.. 3 bath.
Screened patio, refrigerator,
dlahwaihor. CH A . F R E E
washer/dryer. 5400 month,
plus deposit. Days 4*5 3453 or

3
LAKE AAAEY/SANFORD
I bath. wa*her/i
and 3 bdrm I balk, washer.
*435 per month plus security.
444 let I or 374 3*44

LAKE MART
CARPORT
With 3 bedroom ground level
condo *430 par month plus
t730deposit (Summer Rates)
Cell Carmen, 33t-m I
MARINER'S VILLAOE
Lake Ada Ibdr..............134*mo.
?bdrm..*3**mo*up....32M4T*

Mm * Ie Spicial Fiiir 1293
(Limited time) Sanford, large ),
3 and 3 bdrm. Central H/A.
pool, laundry. Safo/Qulet.
_________Cell 333-M43________

NICE I EDRM. garage apt.
Senford. *M per month plus
UOO damage deposit. 331 7S47
O S T E E N •11
week Includes utilities,
pet*. Cell J » « 11

Uirtumishid/Rifrt

1 VO*4*54530______________
U N FORD modern 3 bedroom .
duplex. CHA. appliances, mini
blinds, nice areal U75 month
M* 0134

No

EXTRA NIC*, with air. Nice
quiet retire* area. *335/mo
44* 4W* or 333*7*7

IM — Houses

Ufrturalshtrt/Rifrt
NEBO A 1 BDRM or 3 Bdrm. In
DELTONA? Largo saiectkml
PRIMARY R E A LTY ...*7*034
A TTR A C TIV E 3 bedroom. Quiet
arte. No pet*. St 10per week
_________Cell 331 4*47_________
COUNTRY CLUB Area. 3/1
w/den. AC, clean and no pats.
SO), discounted. Ml *74*
DELTONA. 3 bdrm . I bath.
Neat A Clean 1743 mo NOT
Including utlllllet. I*** *33
discount tor prompt pay I No
petti Available Now
__________ 574-1*4*__________

ID ftU tllM AREA
3 bdrm.. vary largo family
room w/llreplace. Completely
remodtled Including central
H/A. New carpel and appli­
ances w/dlahwether. New
verticals all windows. Calling
(ant. Fenced yard w/boat
shelter end storage. Looking
tor tenant wanting a very nice
piece to live and willing to
take cere of II. Absolutely no
pelt. Net's, required. *450 plus
security deposit. 331 3134

♦ w M M O N C W **

Limited Time Offer

Come H ome To
C ountry S ty le L iving!

(1st Month Only)

%%f 3 Bedroom

ROSECLIFF APARTAAENTS
New 3 bedroom apartments,
tor U10. W/D connections,
screened patle* and eatra
tierapt ctoaet. DAT *q. ft.
Located on Lk.AAary Blvd.
Call 317 m s
Equal Housing Opportunity I
CLEAN lakavlew 1 and 3 bdrm.
Garage. Reliable tenants *330
and *400 per month 377 0444
O AR AD I APT. Historic Dis­
trict. 300 sq. It., 4 rooms, A/C.
*300 per month plus deposit.
Celt 444*741 or MO-0774

1 9 9 1 G e o P r is m

^ rn w W fp p

A partm ents

POOLTtNMRi
VOLLEYBALL COURT
EACH APARTMENT MCUXXS

•Washcr/Drycn in Select Units

• Self Clean Oven
• Icemaker

New Carpeting •Nm AppEanoa* M uding fieMgerMer, Rang#, DNMaashar,
Oarbaga Oispoaal •Washer A Dryats Initaladln units
unit*tor
fora
'
“ ®
' BO
an addlSonai
24 hour tmtrQtncy mainimnet Mntoi

Call 321-05S4

•Dishwasher
Garbage
Disposal

330-5204

• Pool
• Clubhouse
2450 Hartwell Ave„ Sanford

( fa a t t n t f ,

apartments

MON.-SAT.9-6 - W 12-5

TAKE 17-Se K AIRPORT BLVD TURN WERT
m e OF A M U . RON ON MONT

MM Lake AAery Blvd Sarsterd

324-4334

* MOVE IN SfCCUU.*
* I f NT rtOM (435-5455*
★ UMITEO TIME ONLY ♦

4 Door 8 4 Door LSTi
Tintpd gitM, BSM consol*,
child s*l*ty locks, 4 wh#*l
indopdodent suspension,
scotch guard.

$ 0 0 0 9 ’

SPACIOUS 2 NORM 2 BAINS
1,433 SO FT I
IM M EDIATE OCCUPANCVtl

•

OHO

t ii)/ 1 i n / h o o
( 4 0 / i b in 9 / / v

OPEN AAON.-FRI., 4-4
SAT. I A*. SUNDAY t S

W A R N IN G
Did on Know
II &gt;i on I &gt;uii I Kn\ ^ our \c\t ( .ii I m m
Mclui ( III \slti I*I\ii1 1 »1 1 111 \\c Until I nusr Miilicx

G U A R A N T E E D !
1991 P L Y M O U T H V O Y A G E R

'K

F IR S T T IM E B U Y E R ?
Picture yourself driving a brand new
Volkswagen
(

TO U C A N !!

With Volkswagen's new flexible 1st time
buyers program.

Mo College, Mo Credit, Mo Hassles*
OVER 100 UNITS TO
CHOOSE FROM:
FOX, GOLF,
JETTA, GTI,
CORRADO, GLI,

Bring nacompaeore buyers order signed by an offteer of Pie company satfi VW number end el
op&lt;or* luted, we will beal lhal price. Service hook-up requved w&gt;r telephone______________

1991 Plymouth
Sundance
77 law 30 HC Ef I Engine- Tinted Gust - Ait Condemning •AW-tUETR
Sierao Redo •Passenger 4 Cargo Cwpwng
0
*
ig.■Damslwt
- MeWkxtowe‘Quwr Toned Eineuel Syliem-Dmw Ar fig ►
uiugen MutkgMt •OultaJe Ramil* Mimxa
•RcdtfSd* Mowings •1 Pont lap 4 Shoudw
iWis FiwU and Raw
STK • DOOM

* 6 9 ir

1991
kPlymouth
l_ _ Laser

Tgji

srx a Dei re
*l 4LITEfl UPl Engine ■Hentwck Buckets. Redvvng *AAAI U Caaawt* Radio I
- Paiiangw A Cargo Cok» k*v«i Carpw -Gc m Bw lockng •Quad llalogwi
HaaOamw •wsirwnwuian SjioA - Deifed rnuilaeoy tgrwn, - Pawar |
grama •Poww Steenng •Remote
Rewsaa f uWL&lt;tgii* •TekSng
Raw ia tm k •Ano nvcK mor*

*9348*

1991 Plymouth
Colt
®A*
stk

•Dona

•I S llroU P l Engine - HASH Redo- Reck! PwxmSisenng-Power Brskee I
•Consow a n Storage Bn • Retiring From Seal* •Fokt Down Rear Seal &gt; I
Sungiauaa bioraga Conpartirent •Dwnelws. « am
M A
Sda Window-Front WheetDnw-FuelFilkr
1
Poor, lockng •Inianor Lgmng, Courtwy________ M
M N #

1991 Plymouth
Acclaim
7 g _ t
•5030 Bern* Sewte WRetkne-Automate TisnsmMwn-PewwBrekee-Fue I
Cwtwtng •itwogwi ReedUffpe •Body Sda MokSngt •Aa Condoonng •Rear
Wnoow DaToggw •Tntad Clau * Ta

Siawng •Cnees Connor
(4) Sruem STM 4 D0071

*8786*

O U A I J T Y IISKI) ( Alt SALK T H I S VVKKK ONLY
17 DODGE
sooes

4 Dear , Hue. Eata Clean,
laa

17 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

•5 0LDSM08ILE
CIERA LS

Ow Owner. 34.000
tuwa* new

Lew Mae*, One Owner.
Lee

*3 7 9 f

»699r

*2800*

•9 PLVM. GRAND
VOYAGER SE

•9 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER

MHONDA
ACCORD 4 DR. LX

Diamond Blue. 4 Paoeengw,
Only 37.000 kMe*

*9591*

44 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME BROUGHAM
1 tan*. Leaded *&gt;ti

Raw Data*. la ctAanl

Optene, Law MW*

4 2 9 0 0 *
90 PLYMOUTH
SUNDANCE 4 DR.

*5191*
S7FORD
MUSTANG LX

Srtver. Am*. wHh AWCarat,
MceCw

Aula. A*. aUtM Stereo,
4 Ural* t* Cheeee Fr*m

Aule, AW. AI4FH lim a
Only

*5491*

*5691*

*2991*

*9191*

■M L.OC 00

Duen Cask nr Trad*
EguXy SubmlW
Pngr Saw tw
Www, Oman Wan
rVavpawi Creda AA

S7 CHRYSLER
FIFTH AVENUE

C H R Y S L E R &gt; P L Y M O U TH
4113 Kay. 17-52 Sa-irt

C r « j •50-9200 •Sms 322-1835 •BY* 553-7535

HOURS:
SALES
M-F 8 30-9
SAT. 9 6
SUN. 12 5
SERVICE
7AM •6PM

M-F

D A C O A T

VANAGON, PLUS A
FULL LINE OF
USED CARS!

COME IN AND
DISCUSS THIS
PROGRAM WITH
ONE OF OUR
CONSULTANTS...
MOST CREDIT
PROBLEMS
CAN BE
OVERCOME.

( 'r n tn /I I lu rith i s O n ly I \\ Iftd io r iz c tl Hotly S h o p
• SERVICE

’

• PARTS

A R IS T O C R A T

VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

4175 S. Orlando Drivo (Hwy. 17-92) Sanford, FL 32773

N ill tQSAN40RD
• fn IKI4ARV
^ ft blvd
jjf
ftl
'll

~ w

414

TO04)1JINOO

Sanford 321-2277 or Orlando 365-3300

■must meet
U N UoM

REQUIREMENT!

I

�¥

Sanford herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday. July 7. tyyi - f II

113—H a n ts

141— Hamm far Sate

141—Hum— te r Sate

I bbI EstateOM/Rnei

■ XCHANOE OR SELL your
pfoptfty locitvd Btiywhifif
Im r t w i Rutty, M f t lX

141-HomGt for Sate

141— Homtsfor Sg 1«

141—Homes lor Sate

NICE SANHMtOABEA

ALL AREAS Looking lor your
dream home? Call a pro
fettionel who knows your real
estate needs. Call me today I

V t TTWS m f f W w f WWfwl
H O O II 4/1. *7» mo
*c. dip *550 Can h*
Man at tMI I m M Aw . Call

1aWwryM............im-Ttn

v r dbubto parage,
i CHA. W/W carpal- Ilraplaca.
WM rant. U t
|FlumaMPr.Sa a la r&lt; »-l7 iy
C l I I M M .. H i bath. CHA.
t l«. lam. rm., walk ta lamlnoto
'
♦ a a c.niM M
I I V IA X K IW I J barm. I
h In new Sanford tutoPvlio lo n . 1*75 p a r month.
[ A L I O . . . C H A R Y , new ]
1 bath* wiih i car
liaraga*. From U75/mo Call
data Joanno. **esio*
|TowpAa CooWy lac.. PO-OOtO
S T U N ■ 1 bdrm. I bath.
I *00/ma phi* Mcurtty.
Call n a a n l________
■ * L A R I FR O N T, t
i.. I bath. Sac. Wpotit
|reaulred. References. U N
F M D . 1 bdrm., H i bath.
I CHA. all appliance*. M O me.
[ p t u o M iia c m m a ________
O • 1 bdrm. 1 bath,
appliance*, formal living and
Owing. don, front and back
oncloood perch. SMS/mo
M100W, art for Stephan
( a m FORD brand now I Bdrm..
rate w ry private. Low M l
..UM471
SANFOROS/llll
Air, fenced. S500me.
Ichare■ Roatty U M M .
Sa n f o r d
oni
V IA R Nowl Immaculate. )
bdrm., 1 bath. Lg. yard. Only
IIM m o Musi seal .M l-15*0
Ea N F O R O / S A N O R A , 1/].
Largo double garage, nice
o .« m month
mOOlfor *451*00
| A N F M O 1 bdrm. 1 bam. M 0
par month pi vt deposit.
Call MI-MO________
I F H D , TWO BIDROOAL
CHA. 1*50 a month plw tacurlty.Call......... ......... M ) MOO.

W w Cat S orted Cwm il
II nice IKtlng* from M .N 0 I
Some with loan* that need no
qualifying! Call today for
locattontl................... T*rm»l
H O R IA L TY ,:
I I M M . I BATH, quiet Sanford
neighborhood. Central H/A,
well insulated, new paint In
and out. Carpet, fenced yard.
SMS plu* depotIt No pot*.
m-1503. leave menage
f l BORM. t BATH, central H/A.
1*75/mo. Ravenna Park.
M * m * o rm »«
4 BORM m BATH. Oveldo
Hugo Florida room, J car
garaga. Sprinkler *y*tem. »
celling Ians, 3 Air condi­
tioner*. S450/mo. 1*5 3155

IBS—DuplexTriplex / Rent
L A R I MARY, 3 bdrm . CHA.
good condtlonl No Patti Ref
trance* required. *110.
*45-M77or 731 *444__________
L A R I MARY. 1/1. Nlca areal
W/W carpal. CHA. appliance*.
fenced yard................031 *700
IMLONOWOOD e e e
Duplex140.750.
Uhuren Realty mi&gt;47.
N I C ! N IIO H B O R H O O D I
Large 3 bdrm., gleu porch,
carpet, no pot*. *3*0 plu*
security 330100*___________
SANFORD Largo 3 bdrm.
Clean, appllanca*. hook up*
*335 Part. Vantura 1774-»«*i
SANFORO. 1 bdrm . I bath,
kltchan equip Good area. *150
plu* tec. 14* 54001v mig.
SANFORD, luxury 3/1 dep. all
appl.. garaga. tertened porch.
(tncad 1550014 4017_________
SANFORO
3 bdrm. 1 bath
Badroom* upstair*, living
room downstair*. *1*5 par
month....................... NO FEE
A. A. Carna*. Century 31
__________ 3*0-11**__________
3 BDRM. 3 BATH. Sanford
Appllanca* No pat*. MOO/mo
jlu w a c u h t j^ a e a s i^ t i* ^ ^

107-Mobile
Homes / Went
ELDER SPRINOS. Ott Hwy
477 1.3 A 3 bedrooms *75 *0 e
week 131 233**r 774-1240
I BORM 1 bath, country slta.
*350 par month plu* *100
deposit. 334 0313

109—Mobile Home
Lots / Rent
WHY LIVE CRAMPED In park
space’ Live on lensscaped 75
X 111 fenced in country setting
lot Close to schools and
: ■ shopping Storage shed 13 X
13 screened In room 40 tt
cement pad. well A septic
WON'T LASTI Call newt
__________ S4S71S1

114—Warehouse
Spa ce / Rent
OOWNTOW
WAREHOUSE
to 30.000 sq
Sprinklared
laava messaga

N BRICK
SPACE 3.000
It Dock HT
Call 314 054*.

117—Commercial
Rentals______
i TWO 1000 sq II units, can be
used together One unit. 100
sq It
Call 330 11*7
[M l E. Crystal Lake Ave. Lake
Mary (la sq tt building 1410
per month. Ilrsl and last plus
deposit Call 111M50________

1S00 SQUMI FOOT
Commercial space tor rent
Perfect lor retell, office, video
store, etc Call
Ml HO*
SQ FT STORE
A C.
alarm, extras! *100 per
month 17*0 Country Club Rd .
Sanford Call 1171*11

111—Office
Space / Rent
PRESTIGE OFFICES 100 to
4 000 sq tt Some furnished 1
blockstoCity Hall
Call 114 054*. lea »e message

~121—Condominium
Rentals
IKE MARV 1 bdrm 1 Oath
washer/dryer. Iireplace
nautilus amenities late
* tM0
003* or 4*5 4140
LONE BEDROOM wash,dryer
screened porch storage UM
plus security *s*17*le»1 117

PINE RIDGECLUB!
2 bdrm 1 bath, washer dryer
*525 mo 1 E C M Inc . Lie
Heal Estate Broker *57 5504
IA N D L E WOO O V ILLA * I
■ bdrm I Oath 112$ per month
piusdepcs t Call 111 5*1*

II A S C / L I A M PURCHASE
O ’# aero plus I ] bdrm. 3 bath.
Ilraplaca, screened porch,
treat room. Term* vary on
type/length of learn. Sharon.
3311300; eve*. 3*0*35* RRN
R E N T W/OPTIOW or assume no

RWflfylisg. Spacious 1 bdrm. 3
hath with family and dining
room, nreplace, largo wooded
corner let Sailor wants effort
R. Spivey, E m . 3M AM RC34
IX T R A LARGE AND HIGH
L O T In desirable area of
M fona. Sidewalk*, ctoea ta
now otamonlary and (hopping.
Make attar! *35.0*0 Suton Loe.
3311300; eve*. XM 53J3CT53

BONOMONEY, FMA-VA

Horn hr Sate, IM M

11replace I
SIW.fee Sutan Loo. 131
M0B/XMS2S3.................ROM
COMMERCIAL LAND!I Corner
left with 1)0 ft. of Ironlago on
bu*y hwy 17 *3 near downtown
Sanford. Pottlbl* owner fi­
nancing. *335.000 Coll Dolly or
Mika, 131-1300................CFS3
P IN IC R IS T . REDUCED! Br­
ing the family) Large * bdrm.
3 bath. 3SX1S family rm.
w/brick fireplace. IJ M sq. II!
ts t.ro Wes Lauwima. 131
RJ1I
L A R I B K T H IL CANAL LO TH
Buy one or buy all five!
*37.300 or *117,50* tar ell I
Call McKenna*. 131M00
eve*. 1340375

h

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie fleelEilateBroker
3*40 Sanford Ave

323-5774

Q u i n n R n .ilty Inc

Government Repo* A Assume
No Quality Home* in Semi
nale/Orange/Volusla/Lake
Counties.

* -* * I N T HOUSES ^ hA N T CONDITION I
Need repair*? Behind on
payment*? Call Greg- 1M 4714

BEST BUY TOMVI
MAYFAIR Load* ol room In
this 1 bdrm. 3 bath with
screened porch, built In BBQ
and huge yard! This It pra
shgeatS13f.ro

SAJIFORMLL LESS THAR
S3.BBODONN

T hePm ctontw l^

a 1/1 •fireplace, new palnl and
carpel, fenced yard......*i*.*oo
e j/ l'l - new root, carpet, palnl,
screened perch, fenced yard.
garaga.......................... *53,100
•1/1 • on 1/4 acre, new paint.
Appllanca*. 3 car garage.
&lt;onadC3-**3.500
dl/1 - renovated! New carpet,
point, reel, carport, lanced
yard..............................W*.*00
OI/l . on 1/1 acre I New paint,
fplc. family, living and dining
room*. Privacy lance. *74.500

Florida Realty
LOOlIMFOC AH0ME?
Plea*eletmehelp.

M Bafefinpry, HAlTOe

IMraafrUIEWlYMU

D E B A R Y -H O M E ON T H E
LAKE reduced lo 54*100 7
bdrm. 3 bath. Immaculate!
Family room On t/4 acre
wooded loll
DELTONA ESTA TE SECTION
Lovely lot located on cul de
la c w ill meat a ll your
requl rementi.............. 111.000

FLU*

Larp U | Ham, 21/4 Bens

$2170 MOVES YOU IN!
Rant with option to buy!
Unique preparty, park your
boat on MS It canal
watarfront! Closed communi
ly. Fenced mobile home,
needs work Garage A
w orkshop. C a ll ta lla c l
1 *04-5*7-2343

1991 C h e v y C a v a lie r R S

DELTONA All brick Cacloppo
built 2 bdrm 1 bath spilt plan
Loaded with axlratl Close to
shopping. Priced to sell at
*7*.*00

03/1 - renovated, new carpet,
paint, appliance*, fenced
yard............................ 153,*00
03/1 renovated, new carpet,
paint appliance*, tancad
yard..............................U*.*00
••*17AW dawn, assume ne quali­
fy on this 1/3 two Story with
appliance*, and Ilraplaca.
Fenced yard with pool I ***.300

2 DOOR, 4 DOOR

DEBANY RIVERFRONT 4 50
gorgeous wooded acres avail
able now on the bend ol the SI.
John's river. Owner financing.
*350,000

O W N ER F IN A N C IN G
Plnacrast. 1/3, living, dining,
family rm., security lystem.
fenced yard...141,*00
IT . JOHN’S AND LK MONROE
5 aero estate) 4/3. 3500 sq It ,
custom built. *370.100
ALTAMONTE SPRINO*
1/1
with detached mother In law
homo I Pool, privacy fence
yard and kennel*. *12*.*00

Hwy. 4*and 14 area......*14*.*00
Call MW* Ptaeff
Valero I drape rile*..... 77*-*te»
N I I D B O . good credit and
(toady Income! Remodeled 1
bdrm. I bath on largo comer
lot Only 11*,500 M 1-0*3

WHY PAY BENT?
SI down for Vets • A little
more lor others Brand new J
bedroom 7 bath homes with 2
car garages from 1510.
total monthly payments
Universal Realty, **21234

a REDUCEO a M O TIV A TED #
1300 Sq. Ft. Looks Ilk* a
modal, great neighborhood.
WHAT A VALUE IM4.500!
The Cevrsan Campany 333 *7*7

4/1 on park like lot In tine
neighborhood. Sunken family
room. pool. Perfect lor grow
Ing family I **7,500311 0M7

Central Florida’* Largest
Independent I

S3 BOO DOM

II* Summerlin
Sanford/Meytelr
1/1 ktadita LabaMwreal
) bdrm 3 bath SUBMIT OF­
FERS! Family and dining
room* plu* tastefully updated
kltchan and bath. Garaga and
double carport are accessible
from rear alley*- Huge tree*,
double lot. Motivated teller I
ttl.ME..... TempUn Realty lac.
•30-4*1*/tWMSS

M ANAO EM ENTB REALTY
4*7 37*7377/377 *57*

Emgrson N utty S n ip Iik .

LAKE MANY, LESS THAN

O ff ISM M Y12-S

321-0759.............321-2257
BYOMEN

CAUGHT IN A TRAP? t* tor
2nd and 3rd mortgages Free
loreclosure Into. M l *130

STUBS MOfflTY

\11 h i \i n

INVESTOR** DREAM
Con
crate block 3 story, 4 rental
imlfi. Almost 4 000 sq H i
Only 4 years old! Ite.400
NICE 3 bdrm. 1 bath horn*,
central air, lamllyroom. huge
oak*, good nalghborhood
SPECIAL BUY) *43.500

Investor - Outer Financing

Sanford, lJthSt. (Goldsboro)
L w Dlihmen. 4071*5 **33

O U P L IX OR SINGLE FAMILY
LOY IN SANFOROI Nice
free*, clow ta perk and shop­
ping *15.000 Coil Sw*an Lae.
3 3 U M /3 M -S M .............CCS*
NEW L ltTIN G I 4/1 on 3 acre*.
Formal living, dining roam*.
Lg family room. &lt;

3/1. W*ll kept home AC.
Large corner lott *44.000.
apprlasal price...........133 3*43

141— Homtsfor Sole

141— Homes for Sale

Tinted glass, radioing bucket
seats, fabric protector,
•tainlMS stool oxhaust.

*8

III TIM E BUYERSI 3 bdrm. I
bath. 4 years old. appllanca*.
screened porch, garage.
11X134 wooded lot Only
*41.500
1033 S. Volusia Ave
Orange City. FI

R A V EN SB R O O K , okocullvt
lltaitylol 4 bdrm. 1 bath trl
la v o l on I a cre . Pool,
tlroptac*. new root and air.
1.300 tq It. *33**00 Wes
Louw tm a 131-1*1* eves;
betper. *45*350 RQIO

Hwy

88

1 / i.* • *. A N ! ( Hit I

*

l .JO / i T J t / BO O
111/ /■/« •&gt;//•/

904-775-0035
407-574-9555

D E L T O N A , lovely 3 llo ry
lakefront 1 bdrm. 3Vi b*th •
only 1 year* oidl Vaulted
celling*, large deck with
Ja c cu tlll Beautiful vlawl
Reduced *15.000 to SW.WO Call
We*/CI*le. J33*3»* ROl*
REDUCED! REDUCED! Super
4 bdrm. I bath pool home on 1
acre In Longwood. Heated spa
off m a ile r. Magnificent
lartdtcapingl 333 1300; eves.
3350315........................... R C »
CAN 'T TOUCH THI1I 1 bdrm. 1
bath home on largo lot. *10,000
Need* repair to satisfy city
coda. Excellent Investment
property. Hurry! Call Bill
Harvey. M l 2411..............RS47

323-3200

Ml H II
i*»
k Ni ►
V%1S
W» M t nf XIt
su m

STENSTROM
REALTY, I N C .
W e list and sell
more property than
anyone En the Greater
Sanford/Lake Mary area.

•5 Spaad
•Paint A Fabric Protedoi
•AM/FM Cassatt# Starso
•Powar Windows
•Powar Locks
•Dual Powar Mirrors
•Cruis# Control
•Powar Assistad Rack A
Piniun Staaring
•Adjustable Staaring Column
•4 Wheal Indapandant •Doubla
Wishbone Suspension
•Digital Clock

’ Tinted Glass
•Wheel Covers
•Rear Window Defroster
•Intermittent Windshield Wipers
•Locking Remote Trunk
Realeasa W/Kay
•Ramota Fual Filler Door Release
•Body Colored Bumpers
•Moquette Upolstery Full Carpeting
•Front Reclining Bucket Seats
•Aero Halogen Headlights
•Child Proof Rear Door Locks
•Rear Seat Healer Ducts

PER
MO.

1991 PRELUDE S.l.

1991 CIVIC 3 DR.

ED 634

BA412

M OBILE 4/1-f-AODITION
Wall kepi. For big family On
lVi acres Musi see to eppre
date Call now I ........ *4* *00

% c
1991 ACCORD 4 DR.
CB754

W AITING FOR YOU
Wall kepi factory built 2/1
Quiet area Energy efficient
Super starter
*S4.fOO
PRESTIGIOUS 1/1 P POOL
In Wilson Place Spacious
Fplc., bar. cath. callings,
corner lot More! Only
*140.000
Al/1 BUYERS DELIGHT
Especially lor ilrsl lime
buyers New root, carpet,
paint, etc Near school
*53.*00
ORANNY'S HOME FOR SALE
Cute 3/1 w/lem rm, on treed
lot In quiet erea Motivated
Circle this ad
*41*00
LOW CASH TO I.1 S M T0 .
Lakelrorl 1/1 In Hidden Lake
Wheelchair access, great
room, many liras
*77.*00
NEARLY NEW SPLIT 1/1
In Senloid Place Very up
greded All appliances plus
microwave Just
ua.500
CU TE OCBARY 1/1
Split plen small lake In quiet
area Assume no quality *311
per mo
174 *00
HIOOEN LAKE 3/3 VILLA
Assume no quality with *13 000
down Park, laka naarby
Priced ta sell!
*53 000
W ELL M AINTAINED 1/1
On large well treed lot Has
great potential You need to
lee It Only
14* *00
IN LOCH ARBOR
A 3 1 w/lols ol potential on
quarter acre Open beam
callings Me, trees
1/0 000
TWO STOR TELEGAN CE

This 5/1 has bdlcon.es deco
ralor drapes chandeliers
elc etc Must see" 1775 000
CALLANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720
3545 Park Dr . Sen!o&gt;d
*41 W Lake Mar, Bl . Lk Mar,

Hn Our 35th Year •

*14.949
15 Speed
1Air Conditioning
■2.0 Liter 16 Valve
■4 W heel Disc
Brakes

*8,258

• Cruise
Control
• AM /FM
Cassette
• Lots More

• 4 Speed
• Air Conditioning
• 1.5 Liter 16 Valve
• Double Wishbone
Suspension

*13,367

&gt;Body Side
Molding
•Rear W in ­
dow Defrost
•Tinted Glass

1Air Conditioning
1AM /FM Cass.
Stereo
15 Sp e ed Tra n s

’ Tilt W heel
1Full W heel C o ve rs
Front Reclining
Bucket Seats

[Q U A L I T Y USED C A R SPECIALS FO R T H IS W E E K O N LY '.G
85 FORD
/f
85 CHEVY
84 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA
BEST
ESCORT 4 DR.
S E L E C T IO N O F C LEA N , D EP EN D ­
CAVALIER 4 DR.
ABLE. P R E -O W N E D C A R S AND
oOlO1
S IN C E N TR A L FLORIDA
Am¥ ¥ ^
GOOO
O I T J*
AIOC* TR U C KCOME
IN AND SEE
A U TO . AIR.
LOW MILES,
CLEAN DEPENDABLE

_

87 HYUNDAI
4 DR. GLS
AU TO . AIR,STEREO ^
CASS DIGITAL
CLOCK. LOW MILES

JH TJ

J

89 FORD MUSTANG
A U TO . AIR
STEREO C A S S .
LOW MILES.
MUST SEE

„

9700^
#4 TJ

91 NISSAN PICKUP
AIR STEREO C A S S . SLIDE REAR
i WINDOW.
BED LINER
\ ^ S P O R T PKG

* ^

^

_

Sift
QQC
IV^XT
J

AUTO . AIR
STE R EO C ASS
ONLY 38K Ml

.

JCQOC
J W W J

88 HONDA CRX
AIR DIGITAL CLOCK
UPGRADE S TE R EO

lx
. r NICE

,

*8195

5 1 1
1

5 SPEED. AIR
STEREO CASS
LOW MILES

88 FORD MUSTANG

oQOOR

O

O

A U TO SPOWER
WINDOW LOCK
SUNROOF LOADED

AIR, O NLY 19K
POWER EQUIPMENT
LOADED
NICE CAR

MHOT O
T ^J

86 HONDA ACCORD LX

O lJ T J

4 D R . A U TO
FULLY LOADED
POWER EQUIPPED

i ;

A U TO SUNROOF.
POWER WINDOW,
LOCKS FULLY
LOADEO

O TTJ

88 HONDA ACCORD
LXI
A U T O . AIR
POWER W L
ONLY 29K Ml

4

$ 1 1

C

A

A U T O . AIR
ONLY
1IK MILES

BRYAN

$

i

Oft
T O OR
TJ

89 TOYOTA MR-2
T TO PS AIR
SPEED
.
ONLY
K
$ 1 1 Q
MILES MUST SEE
1 l ; 0

5

C

t \ fr j ¥ r j

12

• PAYMENTSBAStDON*0 MONTHCLOSEDtNQIf AsEWIIH*!«» DOWNPU/S )AA. TAG 1STPAYMENT.
HEEuNDAfkc SfCUOITvtxPOSITHES’tAJAi *5*1)33 WiTMAPPHOVtDCREDIT TOTALPAVMtNTS»'0.17*

JIMMY

_

$4LOO^
UOTJ

90 HONDA
CIVIC DX

87 HONDA PRELUDE SI

87 NISSAN PATHFINDER
CD PLAYER SE - V-6
ALARM S Y S T
M IN TC O N D
LOADED

A U T O . AIR,
S TE R E O CASS
RUNS

87 NISSAN
STANZA GXE 4 DR.

87 HONDA
CRX

$C4LO ^b
¥

AIR. S TE R EO
CASS . POW ER
SUNROOF
ONLY 40K MILES

.

88 HYUNDAI
4 DR. GL

87 HYUNDAI

87 TOYOTA
TERCEL DELUXE
A U T O . AIR.
STEREO CASS
CLEAN LOW Ml

A U T O . AIR.
POWER WINDOWS
LOW MILES
PLUSH INTERIOR

_

H O N D A.

Q
7

C
J

JJ

H w y . 17-92, S A N F O R D
2913 O rla n d o D rive
323-6100 S A N F O R D
831 -1 66 0 O R L A N D O
SALES Mon Sal • 3 0 9 - O s ^ , . - I » 7

SEHVCE Mw

SM « 30 /I’M

�■7

,

*» 7

1

- Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Sunday, July 7, 1891

141— HMMtftr Salt
A T tJ% FIXf D!
Aha AvMlaAN ■Covernment
t Faroetoturat

US—OHke Supplln
• F L O P P Y D IS R D R I V I
alignment eet up Include* In
•truetten*. dltkettev A proto
.................. &gt; » * »

woosM const

i t i -

3 barm. 1 bam. concrete
Mock, toll root, recently da
tailed
'•**•••
IwlylOornwlu.

0M.T 2 TIMS RCV)
low rate* I t n . MO
cam joaofi
ooy^ m - m t leoo. m - m t

frame end screen, axes.
Reiter* recently i
Item...............

S T I I L BUILOtHDS
Invoice. MOB la
eg. It, Caff 407-IV1WB1

control A/Cra

1 bOrm. I bom (gilt glen with
comoOrol cellIno*. double car

231—C ars
O ITALIAN P O TTE R Y Nr •
tddeNcoLSWSc
RESISTANCE
flee type) *25*; t drawer flM
cabinet (i t ; 4 drawer dreeeer
*25; W*gbNM|4A
MI-EWE Eve*.________
•SLIOtNO gteee d*er with

STOR A CE BU ILOM E. Factory
bum. weed A tNnpM NEW
MSB. etklng (B5BOOO; IB IN.
•LACK A DECKER Miter
tew. w/muth enMe Bern end

lf&gt;— Lawn t Oardu
PLANTS FOR M L R ON and
up. Society garlic day
oyiter, Iran plant.
Palm* by the teat. Ht-fMS
TR O Y DUILY ROTO-TILLER

• T Y P I M O I T I R . Centurin
Royal Oetuee with stand. (20
M1-7M3

H e n ja a s m a iN ^

IIS AAacMmry/Taak

Uts/Sato

inn wrr wnr:
M i l U M each, no
el 171.41 rnonmty.
W
OVER S ACRE*. fBgh A dry In
onduel ve Lobe Homey wood*.
Security tote, boot ram*. Coll

I Largo building M o on Route
40 near Lobe Homey. Total I d
acre* toned A I . Include*
water mater. Nee or iced at
SSa.fOB with owner term*
aval labial

122-7*1
R ESID EN TIA L LOT ON Quiet
H ^i| » - _» - ^
O ^m
P»W»i m i l
Nice troop. Now SjM W.
Steootreoi Realty 7 0 -H it
Ml A C R U all or part.
Will

Cs-Op/Sste
YOUR M IW SMYRNA CONDO
C O N N I C Y I O R I Sanlard
native. Brenda. Ownby Real
* « * * ...................m w - n a

197—M obil*

Homt/Sak
C A R R IA R I COVE. 14X10. ]
bdrm. 1 bath, encleoad porch.
20X30 utility roam. Control
hoot and A/C. all now Interior.
New ra f rlg . and atove.
W ether/dryer. Financing
available. C a lU P U N
I . ORLANDO •1/1 mobile. 1 car
garage and gue*l Mt-Sae.MO
W. MoNcaewahL RoaNer
___________ » j w a __________
S A V I SMI N IW IN I NOMISI
W HY PAY R IT A IL T 14X10,
om oo . MX to, tie m o x n i t t

SUMMER SPtUMS IN
SANTOROM U MM
14X40 • 1/1. Florida room,
carport..........................*14.000
24X4* - 3/7 *plll. carport.114.000
REPO • 14X44 1/2 tplil lltttl
*15.000
14X54,2/1..........................It, 500
h m m o /m i i t o i

1 BORM. MORILR H O M I 40
tt.oacollont condition I *5.000
1244571 or *04M l 0015

1M— Butin***
F or S a k
CUMIKBRVICt
Grow. *50.000 per year guar
anteed *30.000 In auatv Sell
Ing price. *10.000 Will finance
A*k tor Mark. 1247057

145—D upkx for S alt
1 BDRM. 1 RATH ptu* 1 bdrm. 2
bath. Near 25th St. Income
*400 145.000 *444547 alter 4

i l l — Appliances
/ FumiturR
BAKAIRS!
E le v e n p c. t e c llo n e l
w/tNaper. brown volvel; 2
lat* lop labia*, queen u
uropeen bdrm tel, blue
velvet; 23.5 Cu. FI. tide by
tide Irlg/lreeier. almond
w/lco A water In door; town
mower 4 HP 72ln cut; 3 double
bed* complete; 3 teeter
c o u c h , w h o a t. 3*5 10*4
enytlmot___________________
OAEOKOOM S I T
Full »l&lt;*
bod with hoadbord. matching
cheat, drattar. comforter,
rulfle and pillow thorn* 5100
___________ H I*'?*__________
OCHAIR. Living room typo
*15.00 333 0744______________
a C O F F I I T A B U . Inl4id
walnut top. with magatint
tholt. *1533* 4711____________
•COLOR TV. 31". Eicellent
condition. *05 00 123 10*3
CRIB J IN N Y LIND

f

m

—

CAPTAIN COOT NN MACAW. 4
yrt aid. Talk* a loti Blue A
getdl Pig* beautIhtI decorater
cagelNOB n s i t i r or m -m o
M &gt;M R *bby______________
• P R I I T O OOOO H O M I,
V a ry affectionate black
Nmala cat, appro*. 5 month*
atd.............................. 331 5745
N I R O IN F O far Maatfcly

except tax. teg tltN, etc
IWB PONTIAC «NB •Auto. eir.
brake*, cruise. Mitt O N LY
1151*3 per month (40 month*
• 10.71% APR)
CaH Mr. Payee
C*erNw UeedCer*. 30-31*3
C H IV Y MONTE CARLO • IT7L
cold air, hilt power, good tire*,
new Battery, runt greet! *700
or be*t etNr. 3711M*________

• POUR TIRIS. bieckwall
UP12GoodcondlBon. (IS.
SOWS*
CK. from It
37" X 4B".
M A JESTIC ISO weR I
em g Perfect cendltNw. Rest
etNr, Alter 4PM. 3BK3BB
• TO Y O TA M l front Peer with
Bie*e. 0*0or &gt;w«t etNr 14054*1

1«B* CH E V Y SIB Excellent
cendltNn. 41 liter *ng„ auto.
AC AM/FM stereo, tinted
eln&lt;*wi . met liner. Take ever
torment*.......... - ...... 173*05*
01 NISSAN pick up truck, need*
work. Moke etNr. m t e t l
Cell anytime.

239—V tW cks
______ W anted______

AAAUTOSALVAGE
OtOeAery
WE W EtR N AHO PATt
Top M N r |unh.
Car* Struck*.

23t— Mtkrcycks
IN* HARLEY DAVIOSON Nw
ng«r* i p i eft lAfOM*
« wwtw» wm
rntteg meet tell. I M N Celt
etNr (PM , MB SHI__________
77 NONOA. 7MR medal. Block.
Excellent condition. II.M B
Cell M l 4*45 otter 5PM

Ken

2 4 1 -H acrM tk M l
V a b k te s/C a mpt re

Kum

AVAILABLE SELF STOEAAEI
Outside *tor eg* lor RV'tl
bmNro.gs.M-P.MSMt*

o

Ao o m im o
ITS f ih e T T
ever 33 yr» pcetewlenel exp.
Vet recommend»d 1451474

2R1— H»rsts

Ing iteroot Only SIM.M per
monthI (as manth* • tf.«%
APR)
CeMMr. Payee
CeerNey UeedCer*. m ilt s
FORD 0 RAHADA t*77. A rare
find I Very peed cenNtlew. No
mat. no ripe. M JW mile*.
(I.sai Call 47*4411__________
*tn
&gt;M»ta«7

TMC UP N1MEBTS

HO MONEY DOWN
except tex. teg tltN. etc
IN I O O O O I OMNI - 4 dMr.
black I Automati c. A/C.
stereo, power titering. Only
30.000 ml let I Only ttlB.M per
month (4* manth* O !*.«%
APR).............. CaH Mr. Payee
Courtesy U*ed Car*. 1311113

211— Auctions
TOYO TA Tercet, bright
auto Irani. runt well.
*000 firm....... ............ 3340531

215-Boats and
Acctssorks

TMi HP MYMINTS

SEARS II Ft JON BOAT A NEW
SEARS 1 HP MOTOR Good
Condition I * f»0533__________
1*at CHAPARRAL • 1*7 XL. 300
Morcury black Max. with
tanturn trailer. 54.000 Mutt
Mil. Call alter 4PM. MOM25

217— Qaragt Saks
NEW TH R IFT STOKEI Frank
A Lorl’d 2102 S. French Avo.
^ e m e m te ^ le ^ E v e ry e d - — _

21f— Wanted to Buy
it* Aluminum €*n*..N*w*p*p*f
Nee EifiM N STMiln — 'U m *.
KOKOMO!!:........... - ......3 H H W
POLO SMALL UOLY BOAT.
Under 540. It It Hoot*. I will
buy Itl PteoMring. .3212515.

NO MONEY DOWN
axcapt tax, teg tltN. etc
H M C H IV Y CAVALIER CS •
Auto. A/C. AM/FM stereo.
PS. PB. Only S12B.4B per
month. 134 month* m 1S.*%
APR ).............. CaH Mr. Payee
CoorNty U»od Com. 313-3)33

DIAMONDKING
I 40 carat Solitaire. Very
beautiful I 51.750 OBO. may
trad*. 121 2*04______________
eDRAPES, neutral beige, all
lined, tor sliding glass win
dowt. Paid 5100. will ticrillc*
for 525 or best offer. Eicellent
condition................... 112*170
• FOR SALE. 110 gallon fuel
tank, 540 221 02*3___________
PH OT WATER HEATER,
electric. X gallon. Scotty'*
Thermo Flow Works!
*15...............................1211503

19 9 11 l o \ o l n (: ; u n r \

b

A

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
HO MONEY DOWN
except tax. tag. tltN. ate
IVB7 CHEVY C E LE B R ITY •
Auto. A/C. AM/FM stereo,
tilt, cruise. P L PB Only
(144.30 par month I (34 month*
a If .*% APR) Call Mr. Payee
Coortevy Uvod Com. MS-3133

• Automatic
• Power Steering
• Power Brakes
• ECT Transmission
• Overdrive

TAREUP MVMtRTS
HO MONEY DOWN
except tex. tag. title, etc
I f 17 C H I V Y C A P R I C E
CLASSIC Auto. A/C. stereo
Only II4V V7 per month!
(41 month* « ! » .* % APR)
Call Mr. Payne
Ceurt**y Used Car*. 3*13133
1VT3 OOOOI DART
Slant *
engine. *100 or best offer.
131501*. evenlngtonly_______
1VM CHEVY Impale, need*
Iran*.. 5100 or belt otter. Body
excellent. Rum!........W-TVOl
IN I FORO LTD. Power Steer
Ing. Air Conditioning, now
paint. 53500OBO........333 TOM
lf«5 L IN C O L N Towncar,
Signature Sort**. 07.000 Orlg
ml., leather Inter, w/ phone
Manyextro*! 57.500.33t-lf7*
t3 NISSAN Wagon, auto. AC.
new tire*, bat A broke*.
Greet cond l 510003314070
« RENAULT LE Car Sunroof
Run* good, given TLCI 5700
1141440 alter tPM.

• Factory Air • Cruise Control
• Tilt Wheel •Tinted Glass
• Power Windows • Power Locks

1991 Caravan SE
• Power Locks • Till
&amp;. Cruise • Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Power Brakes
• Power Steering
• AM/FM Stereo

#746471

1990 Buick Century Custom
o

a

\ —

Loaded!
AM/FM Stereo,
Cruise, Tilt,
Power Brakes/
Windows/Locks

#200027

Plugging will glvt you tht samo results u
sodding at 1/3lha prica. 12a aq. ft. installed

#222028

■Automatic
&gt;Air Conditioning
&gt;Power Brakes
&gt;AM/FM Stereo
»Power Steering

4 Door Model Available

% &amp;

Auto., PS, PP, Till
Wliccl, Cruise, PW,
AM/FM Stereo, Air
Conditioning A More!

FOR FREE
ESTIMATE CALL

LAWN RENOVATION INC.

407-668-9601

#2190%

The ProbtatonNM in
Lmm Plugging

/

• Air Conditioning
• Power Steering
• Power Brakes
•Stereo
J.R . Lewis
Steve Williams
Doug McCord
Charles S m itl).

M*V M) twd k C ' V N d b M I

I U»»t
U IN H IU '

C hoose
From

A V /S C a r S a le s
* When you bjy Avis, you gel prolocBon you can count on the
remainder of Tie unexpaed manufacturer * warranty (on Chrysler
products there is a $ 160 transfer lee) There are aiso comprehen­
sive service plant available for up to 100.000 total odometer
miles on most cart Ask for details

.

TUCKER A BRANHAM, INC.

Hours: M -F 9-6, Sal. 9-6, Sun 12-5

211 W 1st S t Sanlotd. FL 32771

5575 S. Hwy 17-92 •Casselberry

(407) 322-4451

"Serving CnUr.il Florida"
Since 1925

5 To

Driven For Dependability

• AUTO •
- HOME - BUSINESS

ANTHONY J NASI

*19,399’

1990 Chevrolet Cavaliers

DON’T BE REAR-ENDED BY
HIGH INSURANCE COSTS!

/ TINT IVSSi IRSWUKE AttRCT

*5,999’

1990 Dodge Mini Caravan SE

Average lewn sire 4000 tq. ft. total coat *4B0 (2000 sq. It. nun.)

SuH &amp; C t

*7,999’

1990 Pontiac Sunbird

&gt;Convert your Bahia grass lawn • Rapa* (ho thin areas in you
to sbeautikii 9. Augustin#
old St. Augustins grass

J*

1) 1 A

Mm

L A W N RENOVATION

T

•

IN* JE E P CHEROKEE • I
4 wheel Wive, sport
a cylinder. 5 speed,
steering and brake*.
A/C. very very clean, low
mile*. "The One You've Boon
Welting Fori" Co* 331*30

223— Mlsctliantous

0*43_____

?5

iw
Vm
* hatoHMBf
nr*'
m IIr O M W W.

PIANO TUNINO. o* low o*
522.501 Lie. 30 yrt. txp. Ro
pelrteitre Charlie 331-»*M
PIANO. 5300 Good condition I,
Hood* bench. Dark wood up

BU Y.......... S E L L .........TRAOE
HUEY'S CROWN FAWN
___________333-I7M__________
A D U L T W HEELCHAIR.
Excellent condition! 5150
Firm .......................... 123 11*2
eBOYS BIKE
Sear* Free
Spirit BMX. eicellent condl
lion New. SITT. Now only 555
113
OCHAIN LINK FENCE. 100' X
4* with gat*. You move.
5100 00........................121 47*1

a£

Low at MV down 11
NeleNroit l 331-0410
* PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION e
EVER Y TU B A A PRI. 7iM PM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. M. OeyNna Reach
_________tea m m )_________

222— Musical
Mrchandisa

_____

te e

•el

e e ttA Y FOR S A L IIa e *1.75
i. NS red. FENCE Bldg A
I 331-3311 eve*

117— Sporting Goods
ABOVE OROUND POOL. 24
Ola 3' Walk around 1X4
Deck Pump, filtor A ec
cotorle* You ditattemble
5450 333 0*54 a*b N r Don.
O BOV'S BIKE. 1 »peed 24
eicellent cond *50 3M 5411
alter 4 PM._________________
HARD TIM E Mlling gvntt For
tm all lee I will M il your
weapon w in 40 day* or tee
and gun returned I deal with
buyer* Irom all over US
Call F E BA M l 520-04*4
SHOTGUN. Remington 12 ga
Magnum Interchangeable
choke*, used once 5275
224S*7J tear* meuaoe

.

except tax, lag tttN. etc
IM7 C H IV Y SPECTRUM • 4

189—C om puters
a C O M F U T IR
Ponotonlc
hand hold with micro printer
end carrying cate. 1100 or bail
olter Call *14*710

17f4t*2

*

*N FORO TRACTOR with buth
ggp MBfTOv wIMi un^vtknf
..........■■■■ir..±222121

TMI HP M1MMTS
•1/1 S IA M IS I, H yea pNetal
Kitten*. Adtreble little orien­
tal*. 1 male. 1 Nmol*. *5 each
to LOVINO ttOM t ONLY I *5
^ u jj a la lo t la j N l^ j jj ^ e iM *

n e w is t s o o

___________ M l 3041__________
LAR RY'* MART. 215 Sanford
Avo. New/Uted turn. A eppl
Aey/lotl/Trede.........333-4133.
P L A IV BOV ROCKER RE
C L IN IR - Tan. nice condition!
&gt;35133 41*4_________________
RECLIM IR 5 gold *35. brown
tweed (35. Goad condtlon!
373 4MB____________________
SOFA 7 ft gold velvet, cured
back Good condition *40
_______ 3M 454*73311754
TV 11" IL V V A W A Centoto
Good condition I Dork wood
ttoo Mt-fie* call oeyttmo.

ttenl *5B.

IjH M / jt o W j

moott
a l upp i k t

•METAL TOOL BOR Nr Pick
up Truck. 5*1" bottem

221— Trucks/

2 3 1 -C a rt

FORK LIFT.

BS M ERCURY CAPRI R L S
tpeodi LB w/ 41JO* mi. AC.
PL. FB ........................121*512

2 3 7 -T racto rs aod
T ra ik rs

I t; -

331-3837
7L

I

\

�Librarian Blanche Kisaane (front), club Prasidant Elda Nichols, Treasurer Louise Buffaloe. Story Page 2.

�• - Senfmd h m M - Sondey, July 7, H tl - Hm M XBmlteer - Tfcuredey, July 11, t» 1 - beidoU, F t

She knows
everything
H is to ric
c ity ’s
librarian
can tell
all from
A th ro u g h Z
By LACY DOMEN
Herald People Editor

ibrarian Blanche Kfauane.
06, know s w hat’s written
In every book housed In th e
M axine McGrath Library In •
Longwood.
"O h, I haven't read quite all
of th em , bu t l*m w orking on
It," K lsaanesoys. pointing to
volum es th a t are h er
p articu lar favorites. Age has
slowed h er down only
slightly, she walks w ith a
pronged cane, b u t h er eyes
tw inkle a n d her wit Is sharp.
"1 live d o se enough to the
library to walk to work, or
□Bee L ib ra rie s. Fate i s

L

H l« y l

B I #n ch e
Kleeene tends
the s ta c k s In
her library
■with loving
care.

IrandNtwApts,
Boutique

50*•. 75*Mwtion
H a m Brand Books
Nona Ovar $20.00
All Now Gift Books

Collectibles
Books
O A it
O Travel
O Crafts
O Antiques
O Cooking
O Automobiles
O Childrens
• Sports

f iif ii

O Decorative G ifu
O Baskets for ail
Occasions
O Pictures
O Topiaries
O Birdcages
O Wreaths
O Hand Decorated
Stationary

W holesale Books for
the Entire Fam ily
3 1 3 N .S J L 4 I7

LOMGWOOO

■fc.fi el Fm iOOm I

A A A

A O A B

2M K EX L1

Brw W O T V tf

2&amp;3Bedroom
Apartment Homes
Rentsfrom
$4 3 0 AMonth

•Security e

• Self Clean
• Dishwasher
• Garbage Disposal
• Pool • Clubhouse
• C able TV Included
• Convenient To
Shopping
• Near 17-92 and Othe
motor highways

•HurrySpaceIslimited,
G e t yours today!

3450 H artw tf A v r, Sanford
Mon.-Sat. 9 - 6 •Sun 12-5

324-4334

�Smfofd H ifiM **' Suvid0|P»

S tro ll into h is to ry here
h 'U

LONGWOOD - People
who enjoy h istorical
buildings will soon be
able to take an Old
Longwood Village walkIng tour, will be a walk
Into the past.
the
focal point of homes built
in the late 1800 s.
The tour has been an
on going effort on behalf
of a number of organlxaHons. Sharon Wright to
chairman of the Historic
Commission for the City.
She said. "This to going
to be a big help for the
city of Longwood. It's
going to be a point of
prtde. juat as our approv*
al to be entered in the
National Register of Htotortc Places by the Nat tonal Park Service.'*
Wrtght explained that
the city originally hired
the consultants to perpare the plan for the
future Improvements of

■

;

’

4

1

‘V ./.’a i
_.,;0 ;,,-i
v; ‘^ 1

3

■«^
^ B F ^ ^ B
^ B ’r

\\

11
&gt;u t o i

;j ,3
'
the downtown htotortcal
area. She said partial
matching grants would
be available to help fl*
nance the overall project,
The completion of the
walking lo u r will be
formally announced in

the near future, as soon
as all the final details are
worked out.
P l a n s c a l l for a
brochure to be available,
with a map of the tour,
and a brief description of
each of the historical

bu ltd fugs that can be
visited. Also Included to
Information pertaining to
other structures In the
Longwood htotortcal area
that will not be part of
the walking tour or not

Purchase of any
JPree on Site*
This Coupon Exp. 10/1/91

tmW

mature

TREES
•^
'2
f |
F I

%

^

SINCE 1982

•SABLE PALMS
•L1GLISTRUM TREES
•LARGE OAK TREES
.SPECIMEN PALMS

24 H our Staff
►Transportation to Shopping, Doctors
&amp; Special Events
*O rganized A ctivities (with A ctivities
D irector)
*G reat Food (special diets available)
►Laundry Service
*D aily M aid Service
*

Locally Owned and Operated
Aa?UIVI\Uh&gt;**•**

Call Todcty3 3 1 * 5 0 5 1
480 E. Church Ave. • Longwood
Maintaining the correct lav pressure will help save America out two
million gallons of gas a day. And reduce our dependence on unreliable sources of oil.

DOYOUflMKl DRIVESMARl
The United Suites Department of bier#)

I

�4 - Sanford Herald - Sunday. July 7. 1991 - Herald Advertlaer - Thursday. July 11. 1991 - Sanford, FL

Dividend really pays off
for volunteer in reading
■y VICKI D a to m a m
Herald Staff Writer______

LONGWOOD - Kathy
Yakubchlk. a full time
homemaker and mother
of two. believes the key
to success In school is
parental involvement.
But. in instances where
youngsters either have
uninvolved parents or
where the student might
need Just a little more
assistance. Yakubchlk is
willing to lend a helping
hand.
A Oivldcnds volunteer
at Longwood Elementary
School and Milwce Mid­
dle School, she has put In
more than 5.000 hours of
volunteer service to the
schools.
More than 1.000 of
those hours were logged
this year at longwood
Elementary alone.
"Really, it's not work."
she said. "I enjoy doing
It."
Yakubchlk volunteers
much of her time in the
library at Milwee Middle
School where her daugh­
ter Elizabeth Just com­
pleted the seventh grade.

school volunteers are
fespected by the stu ­
enjoy doing it. I dents.
who enjoy the
like encouraging a adult companionship.
love of reading In
"Many of these kids are
kids. |
starved for adult atten­
tion," she said. "I go Into
-Kathy Yakubchlk
the lunchroom to cat and
they Just flock around."
"I like encouraging a
In addition to volun­
love of reading in kids."
teering her time In the
she said.
classrooms. Yakubchlk
When she's not work­ has a licence lb sub­
ing In the library at stitute teach and often
Mtlwcc. Yakubchlk can fills In when the teachers
be found working with she assists can not be in
first and fourth graders class.
at Longwood Elementa­
"Because I work with
rythe classes on a regular
Primarily, she Is In­ basis.” she said. "I know
volved In listening to the the routine. They can’t
youngsters tell her about put
.., »•anything over on
the books that they've me.
read, but she helps out
Yakubchlk Is also very
with other subjects as Involved In the PTA at
well.
both schools. Next year
Though she has not she will serve as presi­
completed her college dent of the group at
degree. Yakubchlk was Longwood Elementary
two years Into a major In and will be on the board
science before she left of Milwcc's group.
school to get married.
“ I never get tired ol
"I hope to go back and doing this." she said.
finish my degree some "But when I go home.
day." she said.
I'm home. That's the
She noted th at the time for my family."

fcy TOflwity Vlncifil

Kathy Yakubchlk outalda Longwood school whara aha voluntaars.

SOUTH
SEMINOLE
COMMUNITY
HOSPITAL
Your em ployee-owned com m unity ho sp ital in Sem inole C ounty

• 24 hour emergency care
• One Day surgery center lets you recover at home
• One stop diagnostic testing
• Doctor Referral Service will help you find a doctor 648-3806
• Community education helps you prevent illness and injuries
• Free pocket first aid kit, call Diane at 767-5858
• NEW women's health program including maternity care
We’re just minutes away, and ready to meet your health care needs...

Now / Have Everything I Need...
...B EFO R E I moved to 1lowcll Place everyone worried, my children, grandchildren,
friends and especially me. I needed more help, now I have Just what I need. My own
private apartment, delicious, nutritious meals, housekeeping, transportation,
activities to enjoy anti companionship. Good neighbors and u earing stafT have
relieved my friends and relatives.
There arc also Certified Nursing Assistants and a I lorne I Icullhcare Services office
on the premises. Visit Howell Place today and see for yourself. It's GUEAT1

Visit Howell Place To&lt;lay
and See for Yourself...

SOUTH SEMINOLE
CO M M UNITY HOSPITAL

IT S GREATIII

No Endowment or Enlry

Fee

JJO W ELL pLA C E
(4 0 7 ) 3 2 2 - 7 7 0 0
Send For Free B rochure
2 0 0 W. A irport Blvd.. Sanford, FL 3 2 7 7 3
""nhunting
"* tWm
‘m&lt;1
«■•l«T.»ol
Prw&lt;tie toropka 3 4 ht our
raere
No rrliiOmnH.,•
dilution.

�i

Sanford Herald - Sunday, July 7, 1981 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, July 11, 1991 - Sanford. F I - •

W

is h

F
P
W

Y

o u r

o

t

o

Stenstrom

Realty, Inc.

HARVEY

r o b l e m
o u l d

G

M O RSE

o

AntNIIONH

sum ! limits!
FOR THE ULTIMATE IN CONVENIENCE
A COMFORT IN SELLING OR BUYING!

A w ay?
IN V E S T IG A T IO N S
FOR THE BUYER!
A Pnvate Showing of Video Photo's Of Every Home Listed in
the SeminoJe/Orango County MrftipJe Listing Service In The
Comfort of Our Offices Before Mailing Your Selection to
Provievnl

R oth &amp; M i n , D PM

exp erien ce
in te g rity

• Podiatry
• Foot Surgery

Call Any of Our Home Specialists Today
For Your Appointment to See
THE ABSOLUTE LATEST IN "NOME SHOPPING"

130 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Lake Mary • 323-2566
19 Legion Place
DeBary •668-0226

FOR THE SELLER!
The Satisfaction of Knowing YOUR Home Will Be Exposed to
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ERA STENSTROM REALTY, INC.
Confirming /Is TYadltton of Being "1st In Service"
For Over 30 Consecutive YearsII
Sanlord Office
2565 Park Drive
Sanlord, FL 32773
(407) 322-2420

BIJY ONE

Pearle’s 30th Anniversa
THE PURCHASE OF A
COMPLETE PAIR OF
GLASSES
Minimum purchase S99 after dis­
count. Complete glasses include
frames and lenses. No other cou­
pons, discounts or insurance bene­
fits apply. Coupon must be pre­
sented at limcof order. Good through
84-91 at parucipaung:

PEARLE VISION
CENTER
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regular price, and gel a second pair
(same prescription) from our spe­
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additional charge on second pair.
Coupon must he presented at lime
of order. No other coupons, dis­
counts or insurance benefits apply.
Get your glasses at participating:

youqofyourFEARtEf

f a

Buy a complete pair of glasses and
receive 50% off your second pair of
equal or lesser value (same pre­
scription). Chonw any frame In
the store. Coupon must be presented
at time of order. No other coupons,
discounts or insurance benefits
apply. Good through 84-91 at par­
ticipating:

mmmm

In honor of Pcarle's 30ih Anniversary, we re
offering special prices on all of your favorite
PEARLITS, even designer frames. And because
they arc PEARLE*5. they come with a free limited
warranty that covers quality, materials,
workmanship - even breakage - for one full year.
A trained professional will make your glasses
accuratclv rtghi in our m-siore lah. So. at Pcarlc
Vision Center you can get your glasses last.

•Have

Lake Mary Village Center
641 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Laka Mary, FL 3274S
(407) 321-2720

(y v PEARLEA
iw o n c e n te rJ

S a n f o r d • 3 2 3 -5 0 0 0
Seminole Centre
pttfk, Pwtk Vwun Cwila, tnd Pud* Vuun fcipm. «n indawkl at huU. Inc.

»IMt Puita, Inc

From a select group of non pre­
scription sunglass styles: Carrera
5595. 5425, 5429, Ellen Tr*;y B9.
DIO and Ray Ban® Wayfarer® or
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apply. Good through 8 4 91 at par­
ticipating:

L S S S S S S S U

�.

• - Sanford Harald - Sunday, July 7, 1001 - Htrald Advertiser - Thursday, July 11, 1001 - Sanford, FL

S h a rin g c e n te r le n d s n e e d e d h and
lose their Jobs and they
have trouble meeting a
rent payment or a utility
LONGWOOD - The bill. We do what we can
South Seminole Chris­ to help them."
tian Sharing Center lends
Romagosa say s the
a hand to the needy often
center
helps an average
when there are no others
of about 260 families a
available.
“There Is really not a m o n t h . If f l n a c l a l
lot of help out there." a s s is ta n c e Is g iv en .
says Angle Romagosa. R o m a g o sa s a y 3 th e
director of the center. landlord or the utility
"Wc are kind of the last company Is first con­
tacted to assure there is a
hope for a lot of people."
problem. If so. a check Is
For five years, the Issued to the landlord or
sharing center at 1680 N. company, not the Indi­
County Road 427 has vidual.
oITcred food, clothing and
financial assistance to
The center asks foq
those who have no where Indcntlflcatlon to make
to turn In an emergency.
s u r e t h e y a r e n ’t n
The renter Is supplied fugitive or a resident of
by 42 area churches and Sanford. The Sanford
some private donations, C h r i s t i a n S h a r i n g
but does not restrict Center, which Is nota
assistance according to affiliated with the South
Incom e or re lig io u s Seminole center, serves
beliefs. Romagosa is the only Sanford residents.
only paid staff member.
T he South Sem inole
She Is assisted by two center serves all other
full-time volunteers and residents of the county.
about a dozen other vol­ Romagosa says.
unteers dally. The center
Is open 9 to 1 five days.
Romagosa says though
the center is equipped
"Lately, we've had a and operated by local
lot more middle-income churches, center stafT do
p e o p le c o m in g I n ."
Romagosa says. "People □Boa Sharing, Page 12
Herald Stall Wrltar

Ji

«/
it

Hew * mete Sr T e w

Susan Koos (ItH), a voluntaar at tha cantor, and Anglo Romagosa, director, prepare a food package.

FREE

/i
j

*

HEARING AID MODEL
Beltone - A free offer of special
interest to those who hear but do not
understand words has been an­
nounced by Beltone. A non-operat­
ing model of the smallest hearing aid
Beltone has ever developed will be
given absolutely free to anyone re­
questing it.
It’s yours for the asking, so send
for it now. It is not a real hearing aid,
, .
.
--------— — but it will show you how liny hear­
ing help can be. The actual aid weighs less than an eighth of an ounce,
and it fits completely into the ear canal.
These models are free, so we suggest you write for yours now. Again,
there is no cost, and certainly no obligation. Although a hearing aid may
helped cvcr^one*more an^ m°re people with hearing losses are being

5 A cres!

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902 East Lake Mary Clvd.
Suite 202
Sanford, FL 32773

330-9124

Many Haaring Problem* Can B a H e lp ed
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'■

�Sanford Herald - Sunday, July 7, it t l - Herald Advertiser - Thuradey, July 11, I N I - Sanford, PL - T

Longwood

at a a

m

i

.V a 7 r
S t'S &amp; tV

. jiF*: a .

f«fc- K , !-

Location: southwest of

sp-

Lake Mary.

Area: Longwood: S.S
sq. miles.
Population: 13,462.
Taa rates: Property,

Shuttle Thu

4.15 mills per $1,000 of
assessed value, minus
exemptions, Including
$ 2 5 ,0 0 0 h o m e s te a d
exem ption; 6 percent
sales tax; no state in­
come tax.
G o v e r n m e n t : F iv e
commissioners elected
from districts; mayor and
deputy mayor are elected
from among them. Ap­
pointed city administrator
and city clerk.

M Straight Vb
The Airport
7 Days A Mfleei
Seminole County Residents
Only $30 (2 person max.)

Parks and Recreation:
Numerous neighborhood
parks featuring ballflelds,
picnic areas and shutfleboard.

P o lice and fire:
Fulltime police depart­
ment. 339-1297; fulltime
fire department, 260-3490.
Schools: Three elemen­
tary schools, two middle
schools, one high school.
U tilitie s : Longwood
Electricity: Florida Power,
501 E. 434, 629-1010.
Telephone: United Tele­
phone Company, 850 E.
Altamonte Drive, Alta­
monte Springs, 339-1811.
Water City of Longwood
Utilities located at City
Halt. Longwood County

TRANSPORTATION

H m M n if M

Hank Hardy, mayor of Longwood
and some city residents
are serviced by SanLando
Utilities tor water and
sewer, and Longwood
Utilities, Inc., west of
C.R.427
Payroll: Longwood an­
nual city payroll, exclud­
ing elected officials’ pay:
$3.3 million. Each com­
missioner and the mayor

1-800-235-9640
(407) 348-6775

receive $4200 a year.
Budget: $10.8 million.
Longwood City Hall:
175 W. W arren Ave. ,
L on g w o o d 32750,
(407)260-3440.

BY APPOINTMENT
AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION ONLY

SERVING ORANGE, M
SEM., OSC. CO.
S
V - SENIOR DISCOUNTS
C

Greater Seminole
C o u n t y C h a m b e r of
Commerce: 291 Maitland
Avenue.

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Thanba la yau, aur laymlruataman, hr maktif ua ana
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(arnilyliuatnaaa that actlatly auppartt Ihlacamiurtty
Wlfllamliaa»J a Ja n k n lvatfadaianarpmUng
cintamiTaa«h lha »naal atnfcl andiha h&lt;di nl VIahry
Jaualry
Jaaalor
r yau, purthaaa rn
I lmWlbam Itoward a Jaaalan

partanla
Mm Inal hi vhy. —
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and MifMam. Yau
tan bain
an nwlib l iht fjally yau tanaal at prtraa that w«l
pfeaaayau.
Wt tn-tta rau la ahap and n
taa* yau a ba happyMthau,
and prlraa

W IL L IA M H O W A R D ’S
•MaJer Credit Cards
• U jw r
•U m e r m

SEMINOLE CENTRE • SANFORD • 321-3140

Hours:
Mon. - RL
10-9
Sal. 10-5:30

�• - Sanford Marafd - Sunday, July 7, 1M1 - HaraM Atfwrttssr - Thursday, Juty 11, 1IS1 - Sanford, FL

South Sem inole hospital begins
w ork toward new obstetrics unit
•v m e d p rn F A u r
Herald Staff Writer

Birth Center one of
a kind in this Area

LONOWOOD - A new
arrival Is expected at the
South Seminole Com*
munlty Hospital. Con*
structlon Is about to
begin on a new 126 bed
acu te care obstetrics
unit.
The addition to the
facility Is set to begin this
month. It will consist of a
remodeling project on
the existing fourth floor
as well as the addition of
a new wing to that area.
In total, the project will
cost $3.2 million. Of that
amount. $1.9 million Is
In actual construction
costs, the other $1.3 mil*
Hon is for equipment to
be added to the new
facility.
The unit will consist of
six LDRP suites, (labor,
delivery, recovery and
port partum rest). They
are an Improved version
of the birthing room but
have more technology,
safety and options. The
expectant mother will
stay In the beautifully
decorated suite from
adm ission through to

#1991

REPAIR ORDER

w

p l»

SUMMER SPECIAL
CONDITIONING
24.95
TUNE-UP

Includes: Evacuate and
recharae system and
check pressures.

✓
✓
✓
✓
✓

(Includes up to 3 lbs. of Freon)
(Some models less.)
W e also offer c o m p le te m a in te n a n ce a n d re p a ir o n d o m e s tic
a n d foriegn c a r s a n d tru ck s.
H ig h p e rfo rm a n c e , fo u r-w h e e l
drive a n d d ie s e l s e rv ic e

126 W. Crystal Lake A v«.
Lake M ary
Mon. • Fri. t •6. SaL 8 •2
OFFEREXPIRESJULY 3IM

Hours:

BM

a i

3 .

10-3199

tal's Chief Executive Of­
fi cer S t e v e G r i m m .
"Those studies revealed
a need existed which
more than Justified the
addition to the hospital.
We specifically designed
Ihe OB unit similar to our
top HealhTrust hospitals
across the country who
have the most efficient
and attractive units."
In addition to the LDRP
Hospital, Page 12

irchhoff

"Located
In Historic
Downtown
Sanford"

Over 35 Years
Experience In Central
Florida Real Estate

$4
i

CEOm review plane lor new obstetrics
unit.

discharge.
family. Some would even
C a th e r in e P rlv o tt. c o n t a i n a p r i v a t e
director of Womens Serv­ whirlpool tub.
ices at South Seminole
The additions to the
said. "We will be focus­ hospital are being made
ing on th e physical, at the suggestions of
social and psychological various obstetricians.
needs of the total fami­ Including area Drs. Clyde
ly." She explained that Cllmer. Willie Newman
the suites could be used and David Goss. At their
to not only serve pro­ urging, a vast study was
spective or new mothers, made to determine Ihe
but husbands, families best possible approach.
and other children In the According to the hospi­

LAKE MART
AUIOMOIIVI. INC.

l

A IR

Catharine Prlvett, director of Women's
Services and Steven Grimm, hospital

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�I
X

Sanford HaraM - Sunday, July 7, 1SS1 • HanM

Classified
helps you
find
the job
that fits
your
career
goals.

V/

\
,4

■err

There's a job tailor-made
just for you in classified.
Hundreds o f different job
opportunities are listed each
day. Begin your job search
in classified today and find
the job that suits you per­
fectly!

Call our Classified
Advertising Department
Today!

322-2611

Sanford Herald

- TNnday, July 11, 1ft1 -

I n S eminole County
O ne H ospital Is A lways
Prepared
Florida Hospital Altamonte
is a 290-bed, full-service
community hospital located
just down the street from
Altamonte Mall. Florida
Hospital Altamonte has
been growing with Seminole
County since it opened with
103 beds in 1973. Today, the
hospital provides advanced
diagnostic and treatment
facilities for residents of
Seminole County. Some of
our services include:
• ASK-A-NURSE® physician
referral service and health
information line — 897-1700
• Breast Screening Center
• Cancer HelpLink®
information line features
specially-trained oncology
nurses to answer questions
related to cancer —
897-1700

• Microsurgery for limb
replantation
• Diagnostic testing,
including Central Florida's
latest Magnetic Resonance
Imaging (MRI) System
• Neurosurgery
• Ophthalmology
• Orthopedic surgery,
including joint replacement
• Outpatient services,
including cardiac testing,
surgery, lab. nutritional '
counseling, oncology,
physical therapy, pulmonary
function, radiology and
diagnostics and wellness
programs
• Pediatric and children s
health services
• Plastic and reconstructive
surgery

• Cardiac diagnostic services,
including nuclear studies
and outpatient cardiac
catheterization

• Physician office building on
campus

• Community education
classes and support groups

• Premier Health senior
program

• Critical care units

• Psychiatry

• General medical and
surgical services

• 24-hour emergency
services

• Home health care

For more information about
Florida Hospital Altamonte,
or for referral to a physician
who practices at Florida
Hospital Altamonte, call
(407)897-1700

• Maternity and newborn
care, featuring the Our First®
membership program for
expectant parents who aren t
quite sure what to expect

• Physical therapy

FLORIDA HOSPITAL
AlUmonte

FL - •

�10 - Sanford Harald - Sunday, July 7, 1001 - HarakJ Adw llw r - Thursday. July 11, 1001 - Sanford, F I

Coach inspires and w ins
■y H O U II STOCK
Herald Correspondent

LONGWOOD - In (he
(rack meet of life, many
choose to sprint around
the Inside lane, looking
onb’ for the fastest times,
the easiest route, nnd
Indlvlduu) stardom.
Fred Flnke. however,
runs a different ■race,
opting to stay In the
outside lane and help
make those dashing by
him better athletes.
For the past nine years.
Flnke has eoached rross
country and track teams
In the state, including his
last six at Lyman High
School. Ills squads have
won three state titles and
under his tutelage, six
runne r s have been
nam ed A ll-A m erican,
and over six of his pupils
currently compete for
Division I schools.
Rut more importantly
fo r F l n k e . he h a s
strengthened the love of
each athlete for his/her
sport, thereby adding
pleasure to thrtr life. and.
In turn. his.
"Winning comes and
g o e s.* ' s a i d F l n k e .
"Sometimes the talent Is
t he r e , s o m e tim e s it
Isn’t."

f I’m the one who's introducing the athletes to the sport. My
job is to keep the kids interested In the sport. The joy is
having someone come back 10 years later and tell me that
they are running four times a week, j
-Coach Fred Finks

"I'm the one who’s
Introducing the athletes
to the sport. My Job ts to
keep the kids Interested
In the sport. The Joy ts
having someone come
back 10 years later and
tell me that the are run­
ning four tlmcft'a week."
Some of the athletes
who have trained under
Flnke do better than that,
running everyday for a
major college, such as
Teddy Mitchell at Ten­
nessee. nr for the United
Slues, as Janet Green­
berg will do for a portion
of her at the Elite Camp,
where she will train for u
f u t u r e be r t h In t he
Olympics.
Fln ke b e g an his
coaching career as a
youngster at Harding
College in A rkansas,
where he ran on the
cross country and track
teams as well as serving
as the captain for the
swim team.
His first hlgh-school

coaching Job came In
Florida at Mount Dora
Bible School, where he
and his wife Meredllh
also housed troubled
youth. In 1983, Fluke
won his first state title
with the boy’s track
squad from that school.
But he also learned his
first lesson as a coach, a
humbling one.
During that year's stale
meet. Flnke's desire to
win overcame him — and
he made Kevin Cantrell,
one his top distanee
runners, compete, in the
mile, two-mlle. and 880
meter runs. Cantrell won
the mile and 880 as well
as finishing second in the
two-mlle race. But he
never again ran competi­
tively.
Flnke blames himself.
"I don’t think It was
worth It." Flnke com­
mented about his first
state title. "I was more
worried about winning or
losing (ban the athletes.

HanM mala tv Hatty

Fred Flnke coaches at Lyman High School.

( l .l II

SEMINOLE
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
Your C enter For SuCCess!
SCC is centrally located in
Seminole County with an
additional instructional
center located at Hwy 436
and Hunt Club
Boulevard. We
invite you to
visit our campus and see for
yourself how SCC can help you
find SuCCess!

Sem inole Com m unity C ollege
100 Weldon Boulevurd ♦ Sanford, Florida 32773
3 2 3 -1 4 5 0

Love your athletes, not
the winning.”
From’there Flnke trav­
eled to Mount Dora,
where he led the girls’
track team to a state title
in 1985.
But the next year.
Flnke changed again,
this time to Lyman.
"Seminole County had
always been a hotbed for
track and cross country.”
said Flnke. "I figured If
you're going to compete,
you might as well com­
pete with the best."
And Finkc has done
nothing to dispell the
not i on t he Sem inole
County Is Florida's rac­
ing haven, especially
distance running. This
past yrar. his youthful
g i r l ’s c r o s s - c o u n t r y
squad won the state
without the benefit of
havi ng a s e nlor
participating.
"H e’s enhanced the
h i s t or y of S em in o le
□ Bee Flnke, Page 12

8 4 3 -7 0 0 1

E&lt;lual A e e w e / E q u a l O p p o r t u n it y C o m m u n ity C o lla ga

I
I
I
I
I
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I
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I
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I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

L

FOR
SOMEONE SPECIAL
SurprtM that tomaona ipacial
with a Club Nauttco memberihip and lave 5100 off the
ragiiar Irt nation fa*. Ato Club
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OIFIIEXPIRES JULV 15th

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�Sanford Harald - Sunday, July 7, 1991 - HffraJd Advartlaar - Thursday, July It, 1901 - Sanford, FL - 11

P re v e n tio n is g o a l o f fire fig h te rs
pliance with the city
codes.
Herald Staff Writer
Lt. Laurie Whitlock of
the
Longwood Fire De­
LONGWOOD - Mem­
bers of the Long wood partment has been re­
Fire Department are do­ sponsible for providing
ing more than extin­ many classes to busi­
guishing fires. They arc nesses. homeowner assobusy doing what they c 1a 11 o n s . s c h o o l s ,
ran to prevent fires from c h u r c h e s , h o s p i t a l
groups and Individuals.
starting.
For the past several Some of the projects In­
months, the department v o l v e e x t i n g u i s h e r
lias been eonductlng a classes, station tours, fire
Safely Survey Program. safety classes, first aid
The main goal Is for the classes, home and busi­
city's fire fighters to ness fire safety inspec­
contact all of the busi­ tions and classes in CPR.
The school room activi­
nesses located In the city
of Longwood. Each shift ties include those In day
has been given responsi­ care centers as well as
bility Tor covering a Lyman High School.
Other sessions have been
particular area.
Not only are the visits held with both Boy Scout
helping firemen to know and Girl Scout groups.
morc about the location
The Fire Department
and layouts of particular has found it Is not only
businesses, but they arc an excellent way in
im portant In helping which to help Longwood
owners, proprietors and residents and business
employees know more leaders, but to serve as a
about hazardous materi­ public relations vehicle.
als that may be housed
in their building. In cases
Inform ation on the
where problems have project, nr arrangement
been uncovered, owners for tours, demonstrations
a rc m a d e a w a r e of or business checks, can
possible improvements be made by contacting
and/or repairs they may Lt. Whitlock at Long­
m a k e to b r i n g t h e wood fire station 15,
establishment Into com­ 260-3-HX).
■y NICK RPKIPAUP

H«rsMFII»Mwto

Flrelghtvrs in Longwood do more than fight fires, thay aducata rasfdants to try to prevan! tham.

FREEMAN
SOFT DEER SKIN
C hoose Fro m slip on or tie shoe.
B row n or Bone Deerskin
Our ttoro it ptoatod la introduce
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IN HISTORICAL
DOWNTOWN SANFORD
208 E. FIRST ST. * 322-0204

Shoe S tore

HRS. UON -THURS. S SAT. 9-5:30. FR l 9-7

You'll find many
nursing homes, that,
like ours, arc clean
and comfortable.
What sets us apart
is the caring and
dedication of every
single member of
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You're invited to stop
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residents, and
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the very best In
nursing home care.
R E S T O R A T IO N
N U R S IN G
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0 5 0 M eilonrille Ave.
SANFORD
322-8 5 6 6

H IL L H A V E N
H E A L TH C A R E C E N T E R

�«• - Santo* Hwsp - Sun**, Ju»r 7. 1 S « - Hm M M i i HIi i f - Thursday. * * t 11. tSW - ■ante* . F I

i

Flnke

Sharing

them , and they have
about a mile from Lyman
High School since.
"I like the people so
much I decided to move
here." Flnke explained.
"I Just love the commu­
nity. Longwood Elemen­
tary is one of the best
school 1 have ever been,
to.
"I can walk around the
For his first three years block without being hurt
at Lyman, Flnke still and we have access to all
lived In Mount Dora, sorts of field and parks."
commuting every day.
Flnke has one son.
But th e n th e city of John, age nine.
L ongw ood e m b ra c e d
With all his prestige.

County being successful
(in tr a c k a n d c ro s s
country).** aald Lake
Howell cross country and
girl’s track coach Tom
Hammontree. "He’s con­
tinued the long trend of
Seminole County having
p ro d u ctiv e te am s for

not try to "preach" to the
people they aertre.
"We don't put a whole
lot of requirements an
people/’ she says. "We
tty to take care of their
physical hurt fin*. We.
feel they're not receptive
to spiritual assistance.
Maybe later."

w ifw i •wfv w n n v v n v

W.R. White &amp;Assie,
Social Security Disability
Consultants

Ikm't

u h iw i

H o s p ita l-

Birth-

the
center Include prenatal
u n its, two additional care and labwork. nutri­
operating rooms, a baby tion counseling, m an­
n u r s e r y a n d a agement of labor and
gynecological unit will be delivery, family planning
added to handle other c o u n s e lin g , r o u tin e
gynegology services and
womens’ medical needs.
c h ild b irth e d u c a tio n
With the pending con­ classes.
s tru c tio n start-u p In
July. It could be said that
Operating from an an­
South Seminole Com­ tique house, the Family
munity Hospital Is going Birth Center Is located at
Into an "eight month 2 11 W e s t W a r r e n
labor" of Us own. Com­ Avenue in the heart of
pletion is slated for Feb­ Longwood’s historical
ruary o l 1962.
district.

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Flnke could have easily
moved up to the college
ranks years ago. In fact,
he has entertained offers
from various sch o o ls
across the land.
But he doesn’t want to
leave Lym an o r th e
community of Longwood.
"I love the subject mat­
ter 1 teach.” said Flnke.
who Instructs students In
Earth-space science. "As
long as I love what I'm
doing. 1 see no reason to
leave. Succesa Isn't the
goal. It's the Journey.”
Twenty-four hours
a day, 365 days a
year— no matter
whprf
ip «U
irm
mi
WlPtlC At
UUI
IIBuu
Forces are— the
.American Red Cross
delivers emergency
messages and provides
other critical services
for their families.

'A* ’% Birth, death or
critical illness—
when they need to
&gt; *' know,
we reach them.
^■ Red
American
Cross
Iff-

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EASTBROOK
Astoria Dr., DtLand
904-7364634

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Dirkstn Drive, Deltona
4074684924
From Ortwdo, dial direct: Ph. 0444000 or 82B-21B

I

j

�Hotel

Stroll*

building then became the
The structure waa built City H al and Ore de­ I H
ak
■
in 1870. on property partment building until er, that the structure was
given by E.W. Henck. the mid 1880’s. It Is started by Edward W.
one of the founders of
Mr. 8 Mrs. Tom Pratt. Henck. credited with
Longwood. First services
being one of the principal
were held in the church The entrance foyer la a founders of the city. In
on Easter Sunday. 1882. permanent school room 1883 he commissioned a
It has been used a s a exhibit.
b u i l d e r . J o s h i a B.
church continuously and
Clouser, to construct the
contains m any of the
Built In the 1880’s, it la hotel. It took five years to
original
believed
to be one of the c o m p l e t e , a n d w a s
during
oldest houses to be built o p e n e d a a “ T h e
stmctlon.
In Its pr esent location, Waltham" in 1968.
Following the terrible
although a complete his­
A te m p o ra ry h o m e tory of the budding has citrus freexe of 1894. the
hotel waa closed. It
b u i l t b y J o s e p h B. not been completed.
Ctouser. for his wife and
It waa divided Into a not reopened until 1910.
family. C lo u se r w a s number of small apart­ when it waa purchased
building the Longwood m ents for many years, by C.W. Entxminger. His
Hotel, and a larger house but has since been re­ ownership and operation
at th e tim e nls wife stored to Its original ap­ continued for 12 years.
a r r i v e d f r o m pearance by the present He Is credited with hav­
o w n e r . Mrs. R o b e d ing Installed spittoons
Pennsylvania.
and g aslig h ts In th e
lobby. In 1922. Entxm­
While
a
complete
list
Built between 1888* has not been finalised, inger sold the structure
1880 b y J o s e p h B.
th e r stru c tu re s th a t to George E. Clark, a
Clouser. It became the omay
be included In the former shoe salesman for
eventual Clouser family walking
are the E.W. Baas Shoes who gave the
home. It Is archttectur- H e n c k tour
H
o
u
se. F it c h hotel his own nam e,
a l l y a t m l l a r t o House. Hopkins
calling It the "St. George
P e n n a y l v a n l a f a r m Mllwee H om e . Home,
Hotel."
Civic
houses. Used for some League Building. Long­
On April 3.1923. Clark
time as an antique shop, wood Hotel and possibly and his wife held an Ice
it now serves as the several small cottages.
cream social for the cltlLongwood B irth in g
sens of Longwood. Dur­
The
Longwood
Histori­
Home.
cal Society has spent a ing the festivity. Clark
great deal of time and was found dead at the
Originally built as a effort on the protect, and rear of the hotel. His
2 -room school in th e the final establishment of brotner Fred then took
1880's it was used as a the tour is now nearing over the hotel. He re­
furbished It and reopened
school until 1924. The completion.

open to the public.
According to preeent
p l a n s , a l l of t h e
structures are located
west of S.R. 427. within a
few blocks distance from
the City Hall. Currently
being planned for in­
clusion In the Old Longi wood Village Walking
Tour are the following:
Built In 1888. It Is
considered as one of the
last remaining examples
of the luxurious winter
cottages built in South
Seminole County. The
building is currently be­
ing restored with funds
from the National Park
Service under
s u p e r v i s i o n of t h e
Central Florida Society
for Hlstprlc Preservation.
|n i l|U ^ifraM ra

Originally built in the
B o s to n a r e a in t h e
1870's. It was so-named
} because of Its unique
style of construction. The
house waa shipped first
to Sanford by water, then
&gt; m ule-carried to A lta­
monte Springs where It
w a s r e b u i l t . It w a s
e v e n tu a lly moved to
Longwood In April. 1973
and has been restored by
private owners.

the hotel aa a gambling
house called "The Or­
ange and Black Hotel".
In 1926 It was sold to
Ed Crocker, head of a
baseball syndicate. He
arranged for It to be the
site cm the National Gov­
e rn o rs’ Conference In
1929. Thirty-two gover­
nors attended a reception
at the hotel that year.
The next sales were
made in 1946. to F.S.
Sanders, then In 1947 to
Maximilian Sh e pa rd .
Shepard started opera­
tion of a restaurant in
addition to operating the
hotel.
From 1962 to 87. the
building waa used for
living apace and
c l a s s r o o m s for th e
Geo rge B a r r Umpire
School. Asptrtng umpires
learned their trade in
nearby ball fields, but
spent
th&lt; evenings at
it their
the hotel.
In 1987. L.T. Hunt. Sr.,
purchased the hotel, and
remained the owner for
18 years. In 1964. the
motion picture "Johnny
Tiger” , starring Robert
Taylor and Chad Everett,
was filmed using the
h o t e l a s o n e of th e
featured backgrounds. In
1969 the Central Florida
Society for Historic Pre­
servation made the hotel
its center of activities.

The hotel
sold in 1972. to Mr. A
Mrs. Robert Bradford
who -e-named it the
“Longwood Village Inn".
It was sold the following
year to Mr. A Mrs. Oemge
St. Laurent, and in 1979
It was donated to Cornell
University.
The Centennial Com­
pany acquired the prop­
erty from Cornell In 1983
and began plans for res­
t o r a t i o n . C e n t e n n ia l
team ed with Orlando
Architect Robert Kelley
and noted historic presentatlon attorney
William S. Turnbull, to
proceed with working
toward nomination of the
project to the National
R e g i s te r of H is to ri c
Places. The nomination
was made by the Florida
Department of State in
February 1964, and the
following Ju ly a re ­
habilitation program was
certified, having met
with approval by the
Secretary of the Interior.
The latest rebuilding
project was started In
November, 1984 and
completed In August.
1 9 8 8 . M ost o f t h e
structure is now being
used for office suites of
various sizes and styles.

A TTE N TIO N SANFORD RESIDENTS
G arden Chapel
Funtrals

Meet
RENO
TRIPPANERA

NEW M AN AG ER

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M

"15 Years Beltone Experience

JUNE
HEARING
CUSTOM AIDS

AID
SPECIAL

lam M iraaetw hite, J r .

330-1007
335 East S tale Road 434
Longwood
(Acrossfrom White Rose Nursery)
Sponsors of the MEMORIAL GUARDIAN PLAN
(Insurance Funded Prearranged Funeral Program)

*

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Hearing Aid Center
I 1 1 *i u h (\

S t i n f or (I

323 1400
\ illhll'l

�History of historic city
■y J . MARK BARFinO
Florida Railroad, which Midland Railroad was an
Herald Stall Writer
offered daily two-way unsuccesful venture and
by 1891, It was In re*
-------------------------------- transportation between
Longwood was begun O rlando and Sanford celvershlp. Also. Peter A.
as a model of a New with eight stops In be* Demens, another railroad
England town and much tween. At this time. It builder, also lived In
of Its early history had was the southernmost Longwood. although he
ties to the Northeast.
railroad In the United never built a line from
there.
The city’s founder was Slates.
E.W. Henck. who arrived
T h e r a ilr o a d a ls o
By 1887. Longwood
in the area In 1873 from showed the community’s had
to a popula­
Massachusetts to Join the ties to New England, tion grown
of
1,027.
the sec­
growing community of Prancke wrote most of
ond-largest
community
Myrtle Lake. He renamed the bonds used to finance In what became Semi­
the community "Long* the venture were bought nole
in 1913. The
wood’’ after a Boston by the owners of the g ro wCounty
in
g
c
m u n ity
suburb of the same name Boston Dally Herald. The boasted fiveo mchurches,
he helped lay out.
railroad became known three hotels, eight stores
A c co u n ts of Long* “ the only one In the and a weekly newspaper.
wood's history ore de* c oun,
b u , l t * and
Demens was a leading
tailed In "Early Days of operated by a newspaper.
Seminole County. Flori* • The community was b u s in e s s m a n In th e
f f t ” WThieti by locaf-hts*' 'hnnntpc^lrrt In I£fUUlMU» mmmimlty(and operated
torian Arthur E. Prancke town. In 1033. It was a large' tohif«A: (fag fcluaJness with a lumbermlll.
Jr. and published by the Incorporated as a city.
Seminole County Hlstor*
In 1 8 8 6 , a n o t h e r
leal Commission.
railroad was begun again
In 1 8 8 0 . H c n c k e u s in g New E n g la n d

Km

PS ■■ 'v ;
||n |M
BEL*
Mb
KHeh

11

323-2436

FIRST CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE

SANLANDO
UNITED
METHODI8T
Sotu
Su
Sui

#■

B u i l t In 1 8 8 5 , t h e
Bradlee-Mclntyre House
(left) is considered one of
the last examples of the
luxurious winter cottages
built In South Seminole
Co u n t y . It Is In the
Longwood Historic Distict that was placed on
the National Register of
Historic Places last year.
The ladles' parlor (above)
is on the first floor.

Sunday School
W orship

9:30
10:30

Youth MbtMor, Rick Hutton

OPM
*35,9:45 11:00 AM
Ic
^hool 9:40 AM
i Ministry. Sunday 5:30 PM

1890 W. S t Rd. 434, Longwood

338.1260

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST, LONGWOOD
878 MARKHAM WOODS RD.
Comer of E.E. Williamson Rd.
Sunday Church Service
and Sun. School
10:00 AM
Wednesday
8:00 PM
Nursery Avaiable At AN Services
Reading Room: Mon.-Wed.-Frt. Sat.
10 A M - 1 PM.Thurs. 7-9 PM

CONGREGATION
BETH AM
CONSERVATIVE
Longwood
Friday Evening Service
8:15 PM
Saturday Morning Service 10:00 AM
Cel asa-SSOS tor Sunday S Hebrew School Schadutoa

BINGO

Sunday School
Morning Worship
Youth Hour
Evening Worship
Prayer Meeting Wed.

9:45 AM
10:45 AM
5:00 PM
6:00 PM
7:30 PM

200 Wayman St, Longwood

631-6558

Lake Mary Dance Academy
544 Wru Ltki Mary Bird.
Salta 209
ABUNDANT LIFE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
EVANGELICAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

LONGWOOD CHURCH OF CHRIST
1 0 1 8 N. HWY. 17*92
(1 Mile North Of Hwy. 434)
SUNDAY WORSHIP
10:30 a.m.
SUNDAY EVENING WORSHIP 6 :0 0 p.m.
For F urther Information:
4 0 7 -3 2 1 -5 8 7 2
4 0 7 -3 2 3 -5 8 3 0
4 0 7 -6 6 8 -1 7 4 9

VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME

�FL - f t

Good words

Librarian
ride a btke." she confides.
The historic library,
founded In 1912, is a
project of the Longwood
Civic League Woman's
Club.
" T h a t's p re tty old.
Almost as old as I am."
Kisaane chuckles.
Between the walls,
about 3,000 volumes are
te n d e d lo v in g ly by
Kissane. She can re*
com m end selectio n s,
issue a library card, or
chat politics with her
welcomed visitors. A
Longwood resident for
almost 30 years, she says
she likes the city Just
fine.
"Why do you think I
stayed?" she says. She
calls Longwood "old In
tradition but modern In
existence.”
A form er volunteer
Pink Lady at Central

resides at Longwood Re­
tirement Village and vol­
unteers her time closer to
home.
"I don't think the pa­
tients liked me. I could
read their minds." she
laughs and says.
K is s a n e . a fo rm e r
s c h o o l t e a c h e r , now
chooses to read stories to
schoolchildren in the
library at Longwood El­
ementary School.
"Blanche is a won­
derful story-teller, so
expressive." w om an's
c lu b P re s id e n t E lda
Nichols says.
Kisaane was touched
when the klndergartners
to whom she read stories
last year all made her
paper presents to which
they signed their names.
On the last day of school
the giggling children
presented them to her.
" T h e y w e re k l n ­

de rg a rt n e rs . I did n 't
know they knew how to
■peUI" she relates.
Kisaane la a published
author, having written
books for teenagers and
of poetry.
" S h e ’s q u i t e a n
author." Louise BufTaloe,
woman's club treasurer
says.
Although the library is
not affiliated with the
county system, it was
once the only one In the
area, and still is the only
one In Longwood.
"The public is always
welcome here. We're Just
a little smaller, but we
have a nice selection."
Kissane says.
The library Is closed for
the summer, but will
re o p e n in la te S e p ­
tember. Kissane says she
will be back.
"Absolutely. Of course.
If I can't find a ride. I'll
walk," she determinedly
says.

Chamber focuses attention on city
H t l d Staff Writ*

LONGWOOD - The
o ffic ia l n am e Is blmunicipal. "The Longw ood-W lnter S p rin g s
Area Chamber of Com­
merce." The work It ac­
c o m p lis h e s is a ls o
equally done for each of
th e two c itie s. Alex
Gourlay is the current
president.
We play an active role
in Longwood. Just as we
do In Winter Springs." he
said. "This year one of
our major Longwood pro­
je c ts w as th e p r e s ­
entation of $2,300 In
scholarships to seniors of
Lyman and Lake
Brantley High Schools."
Four of this year's schol­
arships were newly pres­
e n te d to g ra d u a tin g
s tu d e n ts , w h ile th e
o th ers were given to
previous winners so their

*W »
clear*
ina house for out
of town people
who are consid­
ering a move to
this area.|
-AtaxQouriay
higher education could
continue.
He explained that one
of the big Jobs done on a
recurring basis is cooper­
ation In working with the
c i t y 's b e a u tific a tio n
committee on a variety of
projects.
"In connection with
th e L ake M ary a n d
Oviedo Chambers, we
hold a very active Busi­
ness Education day every
fail." Gourlay said. The
program lakes students
Into work places for
on-the-job information
they may be able to use

in determining a future
c a re e r or a d d itio n a l
study needs they might
pursue.
He said, “We also have
our Business After Hours
meetings where we wel­
come new businesses
Into Longwood. and we
h o ld a n o c c a s io n a l
Longwood Day. when we
Invite the city leaders to
address our group."
Through the publica­
tions. the Longwood W lnter Springs Area
Chamber of Commerce
also advises members of
the two areas about up­
coming events, special
observances, and new
businesses. "Wc'rc ahn
sort of a clearing house
for out of town or out of
state business people
who may be considering
a move to this area and
want information about
the city, or Ihe govern­
m ental and bu sin ess
climates." he said.

�J M S M M L S 'T T !

S S 5 iS w —

Natural Birth
MARY ANN BECKER
CcrtllWd Nurx Midwife

^

957 loppy children have been
delivered by M«y Ann Becker,
Certified Nine Midwife.

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Fam ily B irth C enter

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�</text>
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                    <text>Sanford Herald
S e rv in g S a n fo rd , Lu k e M ary an d S em in o le C o u n ty s in c e 1 S 0 S
83rd Year, No. 293 - Sanford. Florida

NEWS DIGEST

Crime fee investigated
By J. MARK BARFIELD

INSIDE

Herald Staff Writer

□ Nation
Sanford p a s s e n g e rs in w re ck
Thirteen people hoarded the ill-rated Amtrak
train In Sanlord before it eareened off the tracks
In South Carolina.
See Page 8A

□ Sports
C o lts h e a d in g d o w n the stre tch
CARROLLTON. Texas - The Seminole Colt
All-Stars beat host Carrollton 7-4 In an elimina­
tion contest Wednesday to move to within three
wins of a trip to the Colt World Series.
See Page IB

SANFORD — Seminole County will research a
criminal Just lee fee for new homes to help pay for
law enforcement, rourtsand Jail space.
Tuesday night was the second time commis­
sioner Larry Furlong made the proposal, but the
Mrst Mine his fellow commissioners were willing
to look Into the proposal. In January, commis­
sioners said Furlong seemed like he was trying lo
push the fee forward without asking staff to
research It.
"It's a stop the bleeding approach." Furlong
said. "T h e longer we put this off. the worse It
gets. This Is another cost of growth that we’ re not
recouping by the tax structure that wc have."

Furlong said crim e tends to Increase as
population Increases, so It will be fair to get new
residents to Help pay Tor that Impact when they
buy a new home. Similar "Impact fees" arc now
charged for roads, fire protection and as of June
1. libraries. Furlong said criminal Justice Impact
fres arc already being charged by Oviedo and
Citrus County.
Furlong noted the growing needs of the
criminal Justice system. This year, county and
circuit court officials sought $7 million for new
equipment and employees. The bulk of the
amount. 86 million, was to expand the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford to accommodate
the Increase In eases.
County Manager Ron Rabun and commission­
ers reduced the spending to about 8215.000.

Lake M ary’s
storm drains
topic tonight

□ Psoplo
Poker Run p la n n e d
Indian Mound Yacht Club Is planning a F’oker
Run that will benefit terminally 111children.
See Page SB

By HICK PFBIFAUF

BRIEFS

Herald Stall Writer_________________________________

A tla n tis ’ la u n c h d e la ye d
CAPE CANAVERAL The twice-delayed
mission to put a huge space communications
satellite Into orbit was delayed again late this
morning.
The 100-ton Space Shuttle Atlantis was to set
off on the nine-day voyage at 11.01 a.m. but the
blast off was put on hold.
Workers had filled the shuttle's rust-colored
external fuel tank licfore dawn. The astronauts,
wearing bright orange Might sidts. strapped Into
I heir cabin seats 2 ,/4 hours before liftoff.
The mission, commanded by .John Illaha. Is
the 42nd shuttle Might for NASA.
It was delayed twice In as many weeks — once
tor one day In replace a bad connector In a
eirc'itl used to separate the orblter and fuel tank
“^ ff^ in g ascent, then by en*TITMayVTU replace air
engine computer, which failed hours away from
liltoll last week. It was found to have a cracked
wire. ________ _____ _______ __ __________
The high poini ol iTic flight — releasing’ the*
if* I y o

111 11iii

•t i i u i i i r

Itm n m i l f l i i l r —

was set lor six h o u rs after Ilf toft.
The crew was in free It from the rnrgo bay.
an&lt;l a n Ilnur later an attached rocket was to
Imost the 4.600-pound craft 22.300 miles above
the equator to join three other such Tracking
and Data Relay Satellites lit orbit.
The network o f satellites Is an improvement
over NASA's old ground (racking stations In
enabling Mission Control to talk lo astronauts In
space virtually all the time. The satellites also
allow controllers to communicate with the
Hubble Space Telescope and a half-dozen other
NASA satellites.
The newest satellite Is 57 feet across when Us
twin solar panels are unfurled.

S uit seeks repeal o f bo at fee
WASHINGTON — Congress and the Hush
administration violated the Constitution by
taxing up lo 4 1 million pleasure l&gt;oats to help
reduce the budget deficit, boat owners contend
In a lawsuit seeking to void the levy.
The 395.0OO-mrmlx:r Ho.it Owners Associa­
tion ol the United States said It sued the
government In federal court Wednesday, con­
tending that the S7IH million the bill would
raise over five years would go Into the general
treasury instead ol Coast Guard boating pro­
grams.
Thus, although described by Congress as a
user fee. it actually Is a tax on an arbitrarily
selected group — a violation ol the Constitu­
tion's equal-protection guarantee, association
President Rlebard Seliw.nl/ said.
In two 197-1 eases, the Supreme Court ruled
that user lees must raise money directly lor
services ili.it hcuelti people who pay them, said
Larry Motion the group's attorney.
Angry boaters have Hooded Congress with
thousands ol letters and telephone culls.
From stall and wire reports

INDEX
Bridge.............
Classified*....
C o m ics.......... .......... 4B
C ro ssw o rd ....
Dear A b b y..... ........... 5B
Deaths............ ........... 5A
Dr. Oott.......... ........... 4B
Editorial......... ........... 4A
Florida............

Furlong said he wasn't certain all o f the requests
from court olhclals were urgent, noting a 85.000
request for draperies for a Judges' suite. Commis­
sioners approved that request.
Sheriff Don Esllnger requested a total of more
than 81 million for new employees and equip­
ment. Commissioners granted about 8733.000 of
the request.
Furlong suggested two separate fees. One to he
charged on all new home built In the county to
help pay for the courts and Jail, which arc used by
all residents, and for countywldc sheriffs opera­
tions. such as the City-County Investigative
Bureau. Furlong suggested an additional fee
would be charged on unincorporated homes for
sheriffs law enforcement protection.
□ S e e Pee. Page 5 A

H o ro s co pe ...... .........4B
M ovies............. .........SB
Nation............... .........6A
People.............
Police...............
Sp o rts..............
T e le vis io n .......
W eather........... .........2A
W o r l d ..............

Cloudy, thunderstorms likely
In c rea sin g c lo u d i­
n e s s wi t h i h u it
i l e r s I or ms lik e ly
High near 90 Wind
south 10 15 mph
Rain chance 7o |x r
i cut

For m o rs w e a t h e r , s e e P a g e 2A

H m M photo sr t o n f •w e *

Beverly Rogers (center) was named the 1991 With her: Hospital Administrator Roy Vinson
* Dr.Trlst Humanitarian Award winner Wad neT-“ IISM),~R6g e fa' daughter Deboran, her husband •
day. at HCA Central Florida Regional Hospital. Oav'd, and Chief ol Staff Dr. Jamo9 Quinn.

H o sp ita l honors Rogers
Dietary hostess named annual humanitarian
By NICK PFBIFAUF
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Beverly Rogers has been
named 1991 recipient o f the Dr. Frist
Humanitarian Award. The honor was an-nounccd yesterday at 1ICA Central Florida
Regional Hospital.
Rogers, of Deltona, was selected from
among 36 nominees for this yeur's award.
H o s p ita l A d m in is tr a to r R ov Vinson

explained thut the award was given to the
person "w h o has demonstrated unusual
concern for the welfurc and happiness of
patients, und hits performed extraordinary
acts of kindness."
Additional consideration Is given to a person
who has a positive effect on others, made a
significant contribution to the Improvement of
patient relations, and demonstrated a level of
commitment to community services.
□ See A w ard. Page SA

LAKE MARY — Drainage problems will be
discussed over and over during tonight's Lake
Mary City Commission meeting.
Both a stormwater utility study, and a proposed
bond Issue which would finance drainage Im­
provements arc on the agenda.
One Item to be bmught up tonight Is a resolution
authorizing 85 million in revenue Ixmds for capital
Improvements, which, among other things. In­
cludes 82.350.000 for paving and drainage Im­
provements. The Commission has already dis­
cussed the bond Issue several times during various
meetings.
,
The paving and drainage portion o f the proposed
bond money woidd be almost half of the total Item
list, which includes undcrgrnundlng o f power lines
and beautification on Lake Mary Boulevard, as well
as construction o f Phase I o f the Sports Complex.
Early In tonight-'*—m a tin g . results of thestormwater utility study will again be discussed.
The focal point Is expected to !*• responses to
questions previously asked hy commissioners and
citizens that required more explanation.
Ron Fcrlund. Vue President ol the Eiiviroiimcn
tal Division of Dyer. Riddle, Mills and I'recoiirl.
engineers, led the stormwater utility discussion
during the July 18 meeting. At that time he
explained the studies made In the city concerning
drainage problems, the extensive rainfall that has
caused Hooding, and why water does not drain
from certain areas o f the city.
During the July meeting. Fcrlnnd received so
many questions from members o f the City
Commission as well as private citizens. It was the
consensus of the Commission tliat I lie Issue he
continued during a future meeting.
The major question brought out by citizens who
s|&gt;okc on the matter last month centered on
exuctly what the city planned to do. and when
efforts would tx'gln, to resolve tlx* p ro b le m .
Mayor Randy Morris. Individual commissioners
[ JSee Drainage, Page SA

Rural road deterioration
cost of utility tax loss
By J. MARK BARFIELD
Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD - T w o crumbling
Midway streets that might have
been replaced under a new county
program probably will continue to
d e t e r i o r a t e a n d ru ra l ro a d s
throughout ihe county will decline
wtthout maintenance and upkeep.
A 81.2 milium street replacement
program is one large neck on the
budget chopping block today as
Seminole County commissioners trv
to cut about 85 million from the
county budget that supplies lire
protection and street maintenance
for unincorporated residents.
Tuesday, commissioners herded
the opposition ol about 75 people
attending a bearing and decided not
to impose a lo percent tax on utility
lulls lor residents ol the county who
don't live In elites City residents
already pay the lax Because the lax
would be collected from unin­
c o r p o r a t e d r e s i d e n t s , iin ln
corporaied programs must be cut
Commissioners did tentatively
allow County Manager Ron Rabun
to retain the same S3 13 lax rate
paid by non city residents when
considering which cuts to make
Commissioners had proposed cul­
ling the immrnrpor.iicd tax rate lo
S2 H2 along wiili adopting the
utility tax
Rabun is also recommending cut­
ting another SI 2 million from
spending that would lx- used lor
repaving oilier sire e s and roads
"Reconstruction is gone," Rabun
said "T h e whole resurfacing pro­
gram is m great great peril
Rabun said be will ask the
i minu s labor attorney il the

f Reconstruction is
gone; The whole re­
surfacing program is in
great, great peril, j
-County Manager Ron Rabun
buildup ol the (bird man on lire
engine crews ran be hailed without
Jeopardizing negotiations with the
new firemen's union. The delay
would save another S32 1 ( KKI
Among the streets considered
under the reconstruction program Is
Beardall and Sipes Avenues lx-tween State Road 46 and Celery
Avenue, sections of Celery Avenue
b e t w e e n iie a r d a ll a n d S ip e s
Avenues, and sections o f Upsula
Road.
Allbough no Iiii.il decisions bad
Ix-eii made lo do the work on Ihe
tour streets nexi year, they were
considered ihe prime candidates in
northern Seminole Couniy said
Herb Kirov assistant county road
superintendent
llcroy s,ud under a major re
construction all ol the osph.ili is
removed, the base Is patched il
needed, then the asphalt is melted
and poured on the base again
llerov estimated Sipes and Iieardall
would cost about S 150.(KM) each lo
reconstruct The Upsula Road re
pairs would cost 8100.000 and the
( elerv Avenue repairs would cost
about Sal) (HK) lif said
Midway residents living along
Beardall and Sipes were mixed in
their reaction lo ihe probable del.tv
m (he road repair work
Sec Roads. Page 5A

M «t»ld Photo by Tom m , Vincont

Runako Mungan shoulders the responsibility o» taking care of Shephanie
Parra as they prepare to enjpoy a day of excitement at Fun World with the
Sanford Recreation Department s playground program

C ity recreation program
a world of fun for youth
By VICKI DeSORMIER
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD - Eighty youngsters
sk.impend through the doors .it
Fun World on 17-92 m Sanlord
vchterday morning
Leaders Irom Ihe Sanlord Recre­
ation Department, armed only with
a bullhorn kept the youngsters in
coni rol

I like tills a whole lot heller than
going lo I In- |iark. said ( hrls Gru’ni
ol Sanford who was matching wits
wiili the cars and hollt-is m the
\tdeo game Road Bl.islers
I like doing siull like Hus heller
than anything. &gt;ud Rohm Morris
ol Sanloul who was irvlug in decide
which game to play
Lori Neiuler ol Sanlord look a lew
See Fun. Page 5 A

�1* - to te m Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thun-lay, August 1, 1901

NEWS FROM T H E REGION AND ACROSS T H E S T A T E

Suit: Bank financed smuggling
Involved In weapons deals with Israel and
South Africa, witnesses and attorneys In the
case say.
In M ay. h e w as In d icted In F o rt
Lauderdale for 93 million In tax fraud linked
to the coffee case, and fled to Amman.
Jordan.
BCCl's role In the coffee-smuggling and
other activities also are the focus o f federal
grand Jury probes In Miami, according to
court statements Wednesday by Arthur
Koski. a taywer for Bilbeisi and his compa­
nies.
Koski and BCCl’s Miami attorney Gregory
Baldwin fought Wednesday before U.S.
District Judge Federico Moreno to limit

Father charged with murdar

Associated Press Writer

T A M P A — A father has been charged with murder In the
death o f hla 3-month-old son. who doctors say had a fractured
skull, broken riba and brain hemorrhage.
T om m y J. Young. 21. was arrested Wednesday on charges o f
first-degree murder and aggravated child abuse In the death
Sunday o f little Ryan Thomas Young.
Young claimed he dropped the Infant Friday night and didn’t
ten hla wife, authorities said.
But a Hillsborough County medical examiner's report
concluded the injuries were too severe to be caused by simply
dropping the baby.
Doctors found that Ryan had "six fractured ribs, a blunttrauma to the head and shaken-baby syndrome." said sheriff's
Lt. Ken Allen.

MIAMI — More than 9100 million In
falsified letters o f credit were supplied by
the Bank o f Credit and Commerce Interna­
tional to beck a massive coffee-smuggling
scheme that cheated U.S. Customs, ac­
cording to a lawsuit filed here.
The fraud ring was headed by Munther
BUbetat. a Florida businessman and brother
of BCCl's regional manager In Jordan.
Fakhrt Bilbeisi. the racketeering lawsuit
filed by Lloyds o f London claims.
Munther Bilbeisi also traded arms beJordan and Guatemala, and

Allegations dirteM a! SWAT mambar

Republicans elated
over Burt’s victory

DELAND — A mechanic says the SW AT team member who
fatally shot a woman last week threatened to "blow m y brains
o u t" In December.
Charles Montgomery. 27. who has a lengthy arrest record,
said the Incident happened as he was being led In handcuffs to
a patrol car after being arrested for making verbal threats to a
police officer.
Montgomery said Tuesday the Volusia County sheriff's
deputy. Oeorge T. Hemlen. punched him repeatedly and then
placed the barrel o f his gun against Montgomery's head,
cocked It and said he would kill him.
Sheriff Bob Vogel, who said the SW AT team killing o f
61-year-old Helen Lucille McConnell last Saturday was
Justified, dismissed the allegation against Hemlen. Vogel said
• the accuser la a drug dealer and that his attorney. Jim Crock. |s
capitalising on media attention.
Hemlen fired the shot that killed Ms. McConnell after a
45-mlnute standoff during which she threatened to commit
suicide and fired at deputies with a shotgun.

Associated Prats Writer_________
TALLAHASSEE - Locke Burt
became the newest Republican
In the Senate by 227 votes, and
now he's ready to get to work.
"T h e next step Is to get m y
committee assignments." Burt
said Wednesday after a recount
confirmed his victory In Tues­
day's District 10 special election.
" I was obviously pleased."
Republicans were elated by
the victory, which made the
Democrats' margin 22-16 In the
state Senate and gave the GOP
another vote with reapportionment coming In 1992.

Body of misting tssn found
ST. PETERSBURG — The body of a missing 16-year-old was
pulled from Tampa Bay a day after the bodies o f hla stepfather
and stepsister were recovered near a beach where the family
had been swimming.
Sheriff s Investigators believe the three became stranded on a
sandbar and were caught by an Incoming tide during a squall.
They were Identified as Donald D. Williams. 41, hla
7-year-old daughter Karl and stepson Ricky Ortwin.
"It was windy, choppy. They were trying to get bock to
shore." said Marianne Pasha, spokeswoman for the Pinellas
Sheriffs Office. "T h ere’s a bit o f a drop-off that they maybe
didn't know about."
Witnesaes reported seeing the family struggling In the water
Just beyond a safe-swimming buoy off Fort DeSoto Park and
alerted a lifeguard. Rescuers found the bodies o f the father and
daughter Tuesday, and the teen was found Wednesday at
daybreak.

Associated Press Writer
W EST PALM BEACH - William Kennedy
Smith's attorneys have gained a postponement
o f his rape trial, but their own polls Indicate his
Image has been rocked by three women's
claims he also sexually attacked them.
Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Mary
Lupo granted the motion Wednesday to put off
the trial, which was scheduled to begin Aug. 5.
She told prosecutors and attorneys she would
confer with them on setting a new date.
Smith's attorneys wanted at least 90 days to
allow pretrial publicity to cool down and to
give them more time to prepare his defense.
In later arguments to seal the court file or to
make sure the defense gets 48 hours' notice of
future disclosures. Miami attorney Roy Black
called a Duke University polling expert who's
been taking surveys for the defense.
John McConahay said he was |ust complet­

From A990Ci9t«d Praia raports

POSTMASTER: Sand eddreea change*
(o THE SANFORO HERALD. P.O.
Boa 1S47, Sanford. FL 32773 1**7
Subscription Rates
(Daffy S Sunday)
Home Delivery 4 Mail
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Florida Residents must pay * h Mica
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Phono (407) 322-2*11.

Donation mad*
Mother Ball Weaver, left, director of the Sanford Rescue Mission,
accepts a water cooler donated by Loons Orcutt, center,
representing Holy Cross Episcopal Church and the Rev. Mary
Smith, chaplain of the Good News Jail and Prison Ministry.
Smith and Orcutt are asking local residents to assist In raising
money for a new Icemaker that will be used at the mission center
for abused
women and children, now under construction. Call
_
,

»;n!.nn,

.i

ing a first poll when the news broke that the
prosecution planned to call as state witnesses
three other women who claim Smith attacked
them In the past. &gt;
Prosecutors told the Judge they were only
following state public disclosure law In releas­
ing the women's claims.
There was a "dramatic reversal o f perception
o f the defendant." among those polled. Mc­
Conahay said.
In Palm Beach County, he said, the percent­
age o f those polled who said Smith was
definitely or probably guilty Jumped from 25
percent to 41 percent and those who said he
was definitely or probably Innocent fell from
30 percent to 21 percent.
McConahay also cited similar results from
three other counties polled — Duval (the
Jacksonville areal. Hillsborough (Tampa), and
Orange (Orlando). He didn't say why he
surveyed those counties, but court officials
there have said they were contacted about
hosting the trial If It were moved.

Will Florida
take convicted
child molester?
LOUISVILLE. Ky. - Convicted
c h ild m olester and fo rm er
physician Fred Rainey will learn
by next week whether he can
m o ve p erm an en tly to N e w
Smyrna Beach. Fla.
Rainey, apparently traveling
In Florida now. pleaded guilty
last year to sexually abusing
seven teen-agers, some of them
his patients. In Hardin County
between 1959 and 1988.
Rainey. 60. was sentenced to
10 years In prison, but gained
shock probation after serving
seven months. One condition o f
his probation is that he move out
of Hardin County.
On Sunday and Monday, news
media in New Smyrna Beach
publicized Rainey's plans to
m ove there, as well as his
criminal record.

TH E W EA TH ER
■A T W O O D O UTLO O K
Today: Increasing cloudiness
w ith th u n d e rs to rm s lik e ly .
Highs In the lower 90a. Wind
south 10-15 mph. Rain chance
70 percent.
Tonight: Partly cloudy with a
chance o f thunderstorms. Low In
the mid 70a. Wind south 10
mph. Rain chance 40 percent.
Friday: Partly cloudy with
thunderstorms Ukely. High near
90. Wind south to southeast 10
to 15 mph. Chance o f rain 60
percent.
E xten d ed fo rec a s t: P a rtly
cloudy each day with a good
chance of afternoon and evening
thunderstorms.

cm
Apalachicola
D a y to n * B a tc h
F I l a u d B eech
For IM y e r t
G ainesville
H o m e ite e d
Ja c k to n v llle
K o y W o tl
l A tte n d
M ia m i
P tn ta c o la
S a ra to la
T a lla h e tie e
Tam p a
V t r o B a tc h
W P a lm B a tc h

-----------1

---------- *
THURSDAY
Ptlycldy 93-73

FRIDAY
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Ptlycldy 93-73

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SUNDAY
Ptlycldy 93-73

----------- MONDAY
Ptlycldy 93-73

STATISTICS

a

LAST
July 4

c
o
]

I D a ily a n d S u n d a y ,

Second Cleeo Poetege Paid el Sanford.
Florida and addfllonal mailing

The recount, required by state
law If a margin o f victory Is 0.5
percent or leas, showed that Burt
defeated Democrat Ed Dunn
20.616 votes to 20.389 votes
T u e sd a y . In d ep
P*en d en t T om
Visconti, a Rcpubl lean who ran
intl-abort Ion platform.
on an anti
finished third with 6. 366 votes.

Trial delayed; pollster says
major shift against Smith

MIAMI BEACH — A fire destroyed much o f the Forge
Restaurant and Bar. an elegant Miami Beach landmark where
the rich and famous have gathered for decades.
The restaurant, which underwent a 95 million renovation
last summer, has been a watering hole for celebrities such as
Godfrey. Judy Garland. Jackie Gleason. Sammy Davis Jr., and
Frank Sinatra and gossip columnist Walter Wynchell.
Wednesday's fire was already well under way when a
restaurant employee opened the front door at about 7 a.m. and
was greeted by flames and smoke, said Detective Larry
Carmody o f the Miami Beach police.
Smoldering debris sho'wered onto Arthur Godfrey Road, the
main thoroughfare through central Miami Beach. Police
redirected traffic while firefighters worked Inside the restau­
rant. which is filled with antiques and artwork.
No Injuries from the fire were reported.

SaturSiy S y T h e S e n to rd HHereto.
Inc. 300 M. F r e n c h A * * , SSen
* lord.
Fla. 33771

In the suit filed last year. Lloyds under­
writer Nicholas Sturge charges that with
BCCl's help. Munther Bilbeisi mounted the
coffee scheme In 1963 as a deliberate fraud.

"Eighteen Instead o f 17 guar­
antees that the reapportionment
process will be more fair than It
would have been." said Senate
M in o r ity L e a d e r A n d e r
Crenshaw o f Jacksonville. "U
helps lay the groundwork for the
1992 elections, when I think we
can take over the Senate."

MIAMI — Borden Is recalling
some o f Its cans o f New England
c la m c h o w d e r In F lo r id a
W in n - D ix ie s u p e r m a r k e t s
The company, whose head­
because o f under-cooking, the
quarters are in New York, last
company said Wednesday.
About 200 cases of Snow's week issued the same recall In
14 other states, mainly In New
brand N ew E n g la n d C lam
England
and the mid-Atlantic
Chowder were recently distrib­
states. McKinley said.
uted to Winn-Dixie stores, said
James McKinley, a Columbus.
"W e haven't had any cases of
O h io-b a sed sp o k esm an fo r Illness attributed to the soup."
Borden.
he said. "W e had discovered the
He said consuntcCA. should -pm bfcaiduring a routine.qua^kra
rciufriTcaris Tor a refund at the' ty-control It.tpectlon."

Fir* ravages landmark

(UtPS wires)
Thursday. August 1, 1991
Vol. 83. No 293

"T h e y are asserting confidentiality for the
world's greatest collection o f criminals,"
said Dougherty.

supermarket If the cans are
stamped on top with a "FEB 94"
or "M A R 9 4 " production code
and a second Identification line
that ends In "C ."

PENSACOLA — Nearly 250 civilian naval employees
received term ination notices in Pensacola and possibly
hundreds more soon will be laid off in Jacksonville. Navy
spokesmen said.
The layoffs Wednesday are part of cost-cutting reductions
. . . . IJhfcrtL fqr thft.N tyy'lTroM W M aPfoF.oia acmes Jhc country. .
T w o are trr Florida, at the Pensacola and Jacksonville naval air
stations.
The Naval A ir Systems Command expects to save about 972
m illion o v e r five-year*, by eliminating 2.450 Jobs at the six
depots.
In addition to the layoffs, about 550 other Pensacola
employes were notified they will be reassigned to new Jobs,
some with pay cuts, said Harry White, a civilian public affairs
officer.
Those changes and the terminations will be effective Sept.
30.

MIAMI - Htrs arc ths winning
numbars sslsctsd Wednesday In
the Florida Lottary Cash 3:1-7-9
Ths winning numbers In ths
Florida Lottery Play 4 were: 9-9-99
Florida Lottery Fantasy 6 num­
bars drawn ware: 03-99-04-10-99

Lloyds attorney James Dougherty mocked
BCCl's complaints that opening Its records
would violate the privacy o f Its account
holders.

Clam chowder recalled
at Winn-Dixie markets

Civilian naval amployaas tarmlnatad

!
aaM W

depositions and avoid turning over records
in the case. T h e Judge did not rule
Immediately.

FRIDAY:
_
SOLUMAR TABLE: Min. 11:00
July 11 a.m.. 11:25 p.m.: MaJ. 4:50 a.m..
5:10 p.m. TIDES: Daytoaa
Beach: h ig h s .------------ a.m..
FULL
July SB

Daytona Beach: Waves art* 1
foot with a slight chop. Current
is to the north with a water
temperature of H4 degrees. N ew
Smyrna Beach: Waves arc 214
feet and choppy. Current is to
the north, with a water tempera­
ture of 83 degrees.

12:12 p.m.: lows. 5:45 a.m.. 6:32
p.m .: New Sm yrna Bsack:
h i g h s . ------------ a m .. 12:17
p.m.: lows. 5:50 a.m.. 6:37 p.m.:
Cocoa Bosch: h igh s.-----------a.m.. 12:32 p m .; lows. 6:05

8t. Augustine to Ju p U cr Inlet
Sm all crafts exercise enntloa
Ton igh t and Friday: Wind
south 10 to 15 knots. Seas 3 to 4
feet. Bay and Inland waters a
moderate chop. Scattered show­
ers and thunderstorms.

T h e high tem peratu re In
Sanford Wednesday was 91
degrees and the overnight low
was 72 as reported by the
University o f Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center. Celery Avenue.
Recorded rain fall for the
p e rio d , e n d in g at 9 a .m .
Thursday, totalled .02 o f an
Inch.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 79 d egrees and
Thursday's overnight low was
75. os recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airpdrt.
Other Weather Service data:
□ W e d n e s d a y ’s h igh ............89
! : B arom etric p ressu re.30.02
□ R ela tive H um idity....9 1 p et
□ W in d s ...........South 12 mph
[ R a la fa ll............. 21 o f a a la.
□ T o d a y 's sunset
8 : 16 p.m.
□ T o m o rro w 's su n rise....6:47

T a m p e ra fu c o * Indicate previous d a y '*
h ig h a n d overn ight low to i p m E O T .
C ity
H I La Prc Otlfc
A n c h o ra g o
33 33 .13 cd y
A *h e v ilie
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*3 47
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clr
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�Ssnford HtfsW, SsnfonJ, Florida - Thursday, August 1, 1991 - 88

Oregon head
signs school
overhaul bill

Rm M m i M burglary In Late Maty

SALEM . O re. — G ov.
B a rb a ra R o b e r ts on
Wednesday signed a bill
that will restructure the
s t a t e 's h ig h s c h o o l s ,
separating college-bound
students from th ose In
vocational training.
Roberts said the measure
represents “ another major
Oregon first" that will be
copied by states across the
nation.
The program, called the
Oregon Educational Act for
the 21st Century, w ill re­
vamp high school so that
students get a “ certificate
o f mastery" In the 10th
grade. Students then wlU
be steered toward college
preparatory courses or a
program com bining aca­
demic work and vocational
training.
The reform s also w ill
eliminate the traditional
grade structure from kin­
dergarten through third
grade, grouping children
according to abilities rather
than age.
Also, the school year will
be lengthened from 175
days to 220 days by the
year 2010.
'

The Seminole County S heriffs deportment Is Investig ating
the reported residential burglary Tuesday, a l the home &lt;7 Paul
J. King. Apt. 108. 734 Sugar Boy W ay. Lake Mary. Officers
reported someone apparently entered through o dining room
window, although there were no signs o f any forced entry.
Am ong Items reported stolen were o V C It. telephone answering
■ machine, two coin collections, and m any Herns o f Jewelry.

Drug raid nabs two
Officers of the Joint Clty/Oounty Bureau o f Investigation, with
a warrant, searched the home o f KeOy J o Joffiff. 38. 340
Plnetree Road.. Casselberry Tuesday night. Several drug
related Hems were found, according to a police report.
In addition to JoUtff, officers also arrested Shawn 8. Desaow,
26. o f the same address. Each was charged wtth possession o f a
controlled substance, cocaine, and possession o f drug par*
aphemalia. police said.
The police report said JoUtff had a history o f convtctloos for
trafficking cocaine, and Desaow hod a prior conviction on a
charge o f possession of cocaine. A search o f Dressow produced
a switchblade knife, which resulted In an additional charge
against him o f possession o f a concealed wea pon. A stun gun
was also found In JoUtff s vehicle parked near the house.
Both persons are being held in the John E. Polk Correctional
FacUUy. under 83.000bond each.

Longwood hom# robbed
The home of Sandra L. Locke. 1101 Deik Road. Longwood.
was burglarised sometime Monday night or early Tuesday.
Officers however, have been unable to determine how entry
was made, as all doors and windows were reportedly locked
and there were no signs o f a forced entry, according to a police
report.
Am ong Items taken were a number o f expensive books,
antique maps, a vacuum cleaner, stereo, coffee maker, sporting
equipment, and the telephone. The Seminole County Sheriffs
department Is Investigating the Incident.

Outstanding warrant arraata
The following persons were arrested on outstanding warrants
•Dom inick Moricca. 32. 214 Stevenage Drive, Longwood.
was served two warrants at the John E. Polk Correctional
Faculty Tuesday. He Is wanted In Seminole County In
connection with a charge of theft, and in Orange County on a
charge o f petit theft. Moricca was In JaU on a separate charge at
the time the warrants were served.
• Loren George Baker. Jr.. 36. 701 E. 8th Street. Sanford,
was served a warrant at the John E. Polk Correctional FacUUy
Tuesday. The Seminole County warrant eras for violation of
parole. Baker was paroled Sept. 27. 1900. connected wtth a
charge o f attempted possession o f cocaine.
•Christopher Andrew Thomas. 27. 2546 Clalrmont Avenue,
Sanford, was arrested at his home Tuesday afternoon, by
Seminole County Sheriffs deputies. He was wanted on a
warrant Issued In Orange County July 11.1991. for violation of
parole. Thomas was on parole following his conviction for
possession of Cannlbls.

Officials ‘tickled pink’
Expressway bids
come In on target
By J.MARRBARFI8LO
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD - Slate highway
officials arc pleased with the first
tw o batches o f bids open ed
Wednesday for portions o f the
Seminole County Expressway.
"W e're Just tickled pink." said
W allace Gldden, d irector o f
p r o d u c t io n fo r F l o r i d a 's
Turn pike. “ We arc lo o k in g
forward lo be under construction
soon."
Giddrn said (he apparent low
bidders were not higher than
estimates the state prepared for
the projects.
Ted Harr Held, manager o f the
Florida Department of Transpor­
tation contracts office, said re­
view of Ihc bide would take
about n week lo assure the low
bids were complete and accu­
rate. The expressway will be
built In seven separate sections
lo sperd completion, expected
by Oct. 1993. The total cost Is
expected lo be over 9200 m il­
lion.
Barcflcld said. I I road con­
struction companies bid to build
the 1.8-mlle bridge over Lake
Jesup. The apparent low bidder
was Boh Brothers Construction

Co.. New Orleans, which bid
822.8 million. The apparent
h ig h b id d e r w a s R e c c h lAmerican Inc.. Miami, which bid
829.9 million, said Barefteld.
Construction on the bridge Is
scheduled lo begin Oct. 21 and
be completed by Sept. 29. 1993.
according lo Seminole County
Expressway Authority director
Gerald Brlnton. The bridge Is
considered the key to the entire
12-mlle toll road from Aloma
Avenue lo U.S. Highway 17-92
at State Street because It links
n o rth and sou th S em inole
County.
Barefteld said a total of 13 bids
were received for the 1.8-mllc
section o f the expressway be­
tw e e n C h ap m an Road and
W inter Springs Boulevard. The
apparent low bidder was Hub­
bard Construction Co.. Orlando.

which bid 814 million, said
Barefteld. The apparent high
bidder was Lane Construction
Co.. Connecticut, which bid
820.7 million.
Construction o f that section 19
expected to begin by Oct. 21 and
be com pleted by March 23.
1993.
Oiddens said the spread o f
bids amounts, while wide, was
typical.
“ T h ere's no telling how these
people bid." Otdden said. "It Juet
com es out that w ay sometimes."
W hat surptaed state officials
was the extremely high Interest
in th e projects. Barefteld said
150 specification packages were
mailed out. He said many of the
packages were sent to subcon­
tractors who w ill vie to supply
materials and services to each
contractor.

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The Florida Highway Patrol stopped a vehicle on highway
17*92. near Bush Boulevard Tuesday night. Th e car. driven by
Cynthia T erry Omana. 34. 270 Live Oak Blvd., Sanford, had a
~~4wc4wMffirudlJght. according-to u police
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lie

�CHUCK S TO N E

W e m u s t revise e c o n o m ic priorities

EDITORIALS

Voter apathy
Elfhty-Mx percent of Americans who were
to vote did vote in the 1988
presidential election, but 75 million etigtble
Americans are not registered, so they don't
vote In any elections sta ll
Some people may ace nothing wrong In
this. But it does give a hallow ring to
"government of the people, by the people,
and for the people.'* Seventy-five minion la
more than the ptynlarion of many a country,
of these 75 million Americana five fn
households with incomes below the median.
Complexities of city ttfc, red tape, party
double-dealing, machine polltics, official
apathy, dlfnculties in getting off work — there
are aU kinds of reason why eligible voters
don't register.
Legislation now pending In the Senate —
the National Voter Registration Act of 1991.
S.250, Is designed to raise the current
agencies, which could register approximately
ercent o f eligible voters.
91 p
percen

When it comes to taking care o f the unem­
ployed. the Bush administration has never met a
foreign national it didn't prefer to help over a
QOuidUv vllUdl*
The disproportionate amount o f energy, execu­
tiv e persistence and legla la tive initiatives
expended on behalf o f needy foreign nationals
com pared to needy Am ericans is blatant. The
Bush administration has its economic priorities
screwed up.
In the twinkling o f an eye. President Bush
rem oved sanctions a g a in s t South A frica,
expressing hope that his decision would jumpstart jobs for its ctttoena. even though serious
questions were raised about the status o f 8outh

to maintain an ugly record on human rights
abuse and reciprocal trade to U A . goods.
And Secretary o f B u t e Jam es Baker is
spending virtually all o f his tim e trying to
negotiate a diplomatic formula for peace and
economic stability In the Middle Bast, even
though the astronomical U.S. aid that keeps
Israel’s economy afloat has almost no influence
an that country’s flexibility toward negotiations.

Meanwhile, back a t the ranch, the Bush
administration is busy opposing efforts to rescue
unemployed Am erl- |—
cans from sin k in g
deeper into an economlc quagmire.
f
*

ft
something so eco­
nomically humane so
th e e x t e n s io n o f
u n e m p lo y m e n t
benefits should be a
partisan Issue. Dem­
o c ra ts a n d R e ­
publicans d isagree
over the need fo r
such legislation.
But to 2.3 million
unemployed workers
soon to be joined by
another 1.4 million
workers whose un­

ite would recommend a

f Howdoyo
debate an
amply
stomach?

are about to expire.
*—
such legislation Is not debatable. How do you
debate an em pty stomach?
If the issue were not so critical, a tamed George

States w ou ld be required to p ro vid e regis­
tration b y m a ll In all federal elections.
R egistered voters w h o m o v e w o u ld rem ain
m o ves d u rin g tw o years an d lose registra tion
status.
a*

T h e Bush adm in istration 's lo gic in e x te n d ­
in g m ost-favored-natlon statu s to C h in a fo r
o n e yea r la irrefutable. C o n gress’ a tte m p t to
put China on a trade b lacklist shou ld b e
veto e d b y the president. It 's u n lik ely th e
Sen ate has a tw o-thirds v o te t o overrid e.
T h e w a y to m ess ch a n ge u pon C h in a is n ot
through blacklists, but th rou gh o p e n in g It up
to the fresh w in ds o f trad e and exch an ges.
D em ocrats h ave chosen C h in a 's statu s o s an
issue for n ext year's election s, and th ey h a v e
chosen badly.
T o gran t trading p rivile ge s to C h in a la n ot
to con don e ita com m un ist g o v e rn m e n t — a n y
m ore than gran tin g It to R om an ia. L ib y a .
South A frica. Iraq o r Iran, a ll n ation s w ith
most-favored-nation status, la t o con d on e
theirs. T h e Tian an m en b ru tality tw o s u m ­
m ers ago w as an offense again st h u m a n ity,
but cu ttin g ties w ith C h in a w ill n o t k e e p it
from happening again.
D eepening econ om ic ties w ith C h in a Just
m ight.
China’s com m un ists s h o w ed tw o yea rs a g o
they w e re n 't ready to b e sw ept a w a y b y
student protest, but restating th e tid es o f
history ta another story. A lb an ia . Y u go sla via
and E th io p ia are n o w fo llo w in g E astern
Europe ou t o f the shadow s. N o rth K orea.
V ietn am and Cuba are n ex t, an d C h in a w ill
not be far behind.
T h e last thing the W est w an ts to d o to d a y ta
to force China back Into resen tful Isola­
tio n is m , th e o n ly a tm o s p h e re in- w h ic h
com m u n ism e ver had a chance.
U sin g trade as a p olitica l le v e r can be
successful. It w orked In R hodesia and S ou th
Africa, and Is having a d eva sta tin g e ffe c t In
Iraq. It w ill w ork In Cuba as soon as M oscow
cuts o ff Its subsidies.
But It w o n ’ t w ork In China. C h in a ta to o big,
to o diverse, too open (p rim arily th rou gh H o n g
K on g) for Congress' gestures to h a ve an y
effect.
T h e debate In C ongress on C h in a 's M FN
status has been entertaining, an d In p u ttin g
the C hinese on warning, even has serv e d a
purpose: A m ajority o f A m e ric a 's re p re ­
sen tatives don 't approve o f B e ijin g 's policies.
It w ill not take much for that sim p le m a jority
to b ecom e a two-thirds ma|oritv.

L E T T E R S T O E D ITO R
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must
Ik - signed, include the address of the writer and a

daytime telephone number. Letters should be on
a single subject and be as brief as possible..
Letters are subject to editing

should b e d i d i f i t f o ff limit# w hit) cUscusiiit^
legislation to exten d unemployment benefits to
American workers.
And T H A T Is not haggling about price.

Syrian snitches
for U.S. officials

IM NOTMUCU OF
A SPORTSMAN.,
WTIDOENJOV
QMlE SEASOM.

A lso, em p loyees In p u b lic w elfare, unem p lo ym en t and disability services o ffices
f
ffe
w ou ld b e _ required to o n
e r assistance
assistance to
appUcants w h o wanted to register to vote.

Don’t blacklist China trade

He w ou ld exclude certain categories — such as
emergency loragn n o — iron) poniw c cuts.
ly ta PR1MA FACIE wrong,
th e Bush administration has
treat foreign w orsen wiui

JA C K ANDERSON

R egistration opportunities w o u ld b e o ffe red
to people ren ew in g o r a p p ly in g fo r drivers*
licenses o r personal Identificatio n Issued b y
m o to r veh icle agencies, w h ic h cou ld re gis te r
ap p roxim ately 91 percen t o f e lig ib le voters.

A com parison m ade In 1983 sh ow ed th e
U n lte d S ta le s has' the lo w e s t rate o f v o tin g In
fed eral elections am on g m a jo r dem ocracies.
In a list o f 23, the U n ited S tates la ran k ed
23rd.
Isn’ t it tim e to Im prove th e U.S. record ?

subseque n tly downgraded to a humiliating
fumtiftt, tndignaatly responded. "What do you
think I a m ? ” Shaw chuckled. "W e've already
catsbHsh ed that. W e ’re just haggling about price

ROBERT W A G M A N

Space station in free-fall?
WASHINGTON - Th e Bush administration
and industry lobbyists have saved Space
Station Freedom for at least another year, with
both the House and Senate voting to continue
funding In 1092. However, the victory may be
short-lived as critics have vowed to renew
efforts next year to kill the costly project.
The administration asked for 42.02 billion
for continued development o f Space Station
Freedom. Originally slated to be launched In
1902 at a coat o f about 48 billion, the project
now carries an uncertain completion date
sometime late in this decade at a cost now
estimated at 440 billion.
The full coat to build, equip, launch and
maintain the space platform for ita estimated
30 years of life Is 4120 billion. About 45 billion
has been spent ao far.
Opponents o f the project — and there are
many both Inside and outside the scientific
community — argue that the apace station la
too costly and scientifically unnecessary.
Aa originally envisioned by the Reagan
administration in the early 1960s, the space
platform would be a floating laboratory and
factory, developing wondrous new products In
near-zero gravity. There was even talk that the
space station might earn money by charging
private industry for working there.
However. It soon becam e apparent —
through experiments done on space-shuttle
flights — that near-zero gravity was not
commercially Important. At the same time.
NASA began to realize the space platform
would cost vastly more than first estimated,
and that It warn questionable whether some­
thing that big could be maintained &gt;ln orbit. So
the purpose and the size o f (he space station
were changed.
After downsizing, the Reagan administration
emphasized that the new. smaller-scale space
station would be the site o f Invaluable
scientific experiments. However, the scientific
community came forward to say that it was
neither needed nor desired.
. The opponents pointed out that we have
done about all the near-zero gravity experi­
ments needed on the various space-shuttte
(lights. Now. they say. shuttle crews are
hard-pressed to fin d en ou gh s cien tific
experiments to fill up six-day missions. (On the
most recent launch, the main scientific
experiment was ascertaining the effect of zero
gravity on 2.400 Jellyfish. The conclusion:
They seemed confused.)
Recently a consortium of 14 major scientific
and professional research organizations
warned that the space station was o f dubious
scientific merit and would drain badly needed
research funds from higher priority research.
The Joint letter — signed by the American
Geophysical Union, the American Physical
Society and the American Chemical Society,
among others — sharply questioned the

"scientific, technological, and educational
merit of the currently planned station.''
Now the Bush administration has again
changed the underlying mission o f the space
station. It Is characterizing the project as the
first step in "a new age o f exploration" of space
and our solar system. D. Allen Bromley —
assistant to the president for science and point
man for selling the
program — puts It
this way: " . . . the
space station Is our
In itial p e rm a n e n t
step into space, the
critical next chapter
In a grand story o f
exploration that will
take humana away
from the home planet
into an endless fron­
tier."
Bui at the same
lime, the space sta­
tion is being sold to
Congress In a much
d iffe r e n t an d fa r
m ore b lu n t w a y .
Quite simply. Con­
gress has been told to
consider the space
station as a massive
employment bill
aimed at helping states and congressional
districts hold Jobs they might lose in the
forthcoming Pentagon cutbacks.
NASA sent every senator and congressman a
map o f the U nited States subtly titled
"Businesses Get The B u ckk." The map
pinpointed the location of every company that
would share In contracts and subcontracts
from the project. Not surprisingly, they were In
almost all 50 states, and spread across almost
every congressional district.
Early In this year's congressional budget
process a House appropriations subcommittee
voted to strip space station funding from this
year's budget. But congressmen representing
districts that will share heavily In contracts
fought back and got the decision reversed on
the House floor by a vote o f 240-173.
Opponents vowed to take their fight to the
Senate, but now they have lost there as well,
after a key appropriations subcommittee voted
to fund the program.
Opponents did score some'’ points In the
Senate arguing that the project was simply
unaffordable. The Senate found the space
station money. In part, by cutting 41.2 billion
from the program to provide affordable hous­
ing to the elderly.
The Bush administration wisely did no! seek
a long-term funding commitment for the space
station this year. Rather. It will come back to
Congress In the '93 and ‘94 budgets.

W ASH ING TO N - The brother of Syrian
Presid e n t Hales Assad to a longtime, clan­
destine snitch fo r the Central Intelligence
Agen cy, feeding the C IA Information about
other countries In the Middle East and
passing back-channel Information to Wash­
ington fo r Assad. ’
T h e any Is Syrian Vice President Rlfoat
Assad; the younger brother at the president
and th e man m ost likely to succeed Hafez
Assad I f he ever steps down.
It ta alm ost un­
heard o f in the Arab
work! In recent times
for th e C IA to land a
contact as high u p tn
governm ent os Rlfaat
Assad, especially tn
an A ra b country with
s h istory at hostile
re la tio n s w ith t he
United S tacelT" * "
. In s ir n d o f c o n ­
d u c tin g dl|/.omatlc
negotiations through*
the S t a t e D e p a rt­
ment. Rlfaat to one
vice president who
takes h is deals to the
CIA. H e recently held
discussions with CIA
o ffic ia ls about the
prospects for long­
term peace in the
Middle East and the
sincerity of his brother's peace proposals. One
knowledgeable source sold that the globe­
trotting Rlfaat was "debriefed" on those
matters at s C IA safehouse In Maine.
R lfaat Is loyal to his brother, but very
different from him . and it isn't dear whether
Hafez always knows what his brother is
telling the CIA.
T h e Assads are members o f a minority
M uslim sect, the Alawltes. who must use an
Iron fist to keep control over the majority
Sunni Muslims.
R lfaat became the hatchet man o f his
brother's government In the early 1980s. He
led governm ent military forces In quelling an
uprising In the city o f Hama In February
1982 when a fundamentalist sect tried to take
over the city and kill A —art's supporters. By
the tim e Rlfaat was finished with the city, at
least 10,000 people were dead.
H e to despised by many Syrians for that,
and for his ostentatious lifestyle that he
flaunts In a poor country. Hafez Assad leads
an sacetic life, but Rlfaat loves luxury. He has
at least four w ives and a fortune of more than
4100 million. He alternately Uvea In Parts,
G eneva and other European capitals.
Knowledgeable sources say It was Rlfaat
w h o first approached the CIA about a
proposed relationship. This happened before
the summer o f 1982. because the CIA
stepped In to smooth over some trouble Rlfaat
had tn the United States that fall.
Through a front corporation. In August
1982. Rlfaat bought a 41.1 million mansion
in Potomac. Md.. the priciest suburb of
Washington. Neighbors, unaware of who the
new guy was on the block, soon began to
count more than 40 burly armed guards
hanging around the place and other strange
goin gs on. Then. In September, the fire
department responded to a fire at the house.
T h e residents had already fled, but fire
investigators managed to snag two maids
hurrying out with guns In briefcases. Inside.
It looked like Rifkat's men were prepared for
w hat organized crime syndicates call "going
to th e mattresses” — hunkering down in a
house furnished with little more than guns
and mattresses to wait for a gangland war.
O u r sources say the CLA tried to keep the
In ciden t under wraps because o f their
grow in g relationship with Rlfaat.
W h ile be has received CIA gifts and money,
Rlfaat does not work with the CIA for profit.
He likes the Intrigue and the clout It gives
h im In the West. His brother has not
discouraged the relationship, even at a time
w h en the Soviet Union was the primary
external source o f funding and arms for
Syria.
S om e CIA officials became uncomfortable
w ith the relationship after their dealings with
Panama's Manuel Noriega came to light.

�aantord H e '* d

Sanford, Florida - Thursday, Auguat 1, IN I

Survey report to be reviewed
LAKE M ARY - Results o f a
r e c e n t s t u d y o n p o s s ib le
downtown redevelop m en t o f
Lake Mary have been complied,
The report Is to be presented at
tonlgbt'a city rrwnmlsalnn meet-

tog.
The study dCptcts possible
fa tu n development of a major
downtown area. estabUahment
ef a Town Center, guidelines Ibr
downtown areo budding and
landscaping, prumuUou o f the
city aa a “ C ity of Lakes", and a

number o f other suggest tons,
A public workshop was held
on June 29 to determine what
the cttliens felt Lake Mary could
become. 10 or 20 y e a n In the
future. Prior to the meeting,
2.900 notices were sent to realdents, requesting Input. Many
nudfed thetr comments. For the
actual day-long meeting. 40 chi­
m u turned out to offer thetr
suggestions,
Mayor Randy Morris consider*
the results excellent. “ With In­

put from over 300 Lake Mary
residents, we really have an
excellent Idea o f what the future
o f our city could be.
T h e presentation tonight win
be made by Fred Hal back, o f
H erbert/H alback. In c., w h o
conducted the survey for the
city.

event magnitude."
The City Commission m eeting
begins at 7 p.m. this evening In

in te r s e c tio n o f L a k e M ar
Boulevard and County Clui
Drive.

T h e Lake Mary City Com­
mission meeting will begin at 7
p m . this evening, at the Lake
Mary City Hall.

m om en ts to select th e

h osp ita l e m p lo y e e relation s
Although not sought this year,
programs. It la named In honor sheriff's officials asked voters to
o f Dr. Thom as F. Frist. Sr., one approve a penny sales tax Ino f the founders o f HCA. and la crease last year to raise 99
given annually to an employee million to expand the county jail
who mirrors hta humanitarian and 910 million to replace the
spirit.
sheriff's administration build, a
Rogers award consisted o f a World W ar Il-era U.S. Navy
lu clte Dr. Frist aw ard, the barracks. S h e r iff's o ffic ia ls
w in n er's pin. and engraved expect the county jail to be full
keychain, a bouquet o f roses, a In about a year,
check for 9290.. and probably
■
the hospital employee's most H O B C l S — ——
»
sought-after prise, a parking *
„ _____ .
space to be derignated for her l * “ *1* , B
r i f i lA
use only, for the next year. Her
W e r c 9 ° ,n«
P *F ■ J
nam e will aloe be entered In the- -percent sales la x fo r everybody
jaaikmwiri£ Dr. Frtt! competition
* h y they c^n’t they
M H I f f T L . pM- 1••wwasswtotetwxtr .io r .« iir Mstreet."* said
Bertha Eudell. 2710 Beardall

any one o r m o s o
August I f f Buy*
1
OMMJt

#82*
nmm
w

G E R A LD J. KEANE
Gerald J. Keane. 70. 570
Devonshire Blvd., Longwood.
died Tuesday at his residence.
Bom Feb. 23. 1921. In Webster
Groves. Mo., he moved to Longwood from Cleveland In 1975.
He was a salesman for Unlroyal
and a Catholic. He was an Army
veteran of World War II.
Survivors Include wife. Lois
Ruth; sisters. Virginia Malone.
Florissant. Mo.. Lois Bowden.
Missouri. Patricia Caronc. Plainfie ld . N .J .. M a rilyn K o lb .
Crestwood. Mo.; brothers. Noel.
Littleton. Colo.. Gale. Cld. both
o f St. Louis.
B aldw in -Falrch lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
E LIZAB ETH C. KEARNEY
Elizabeth C. Kearney. 78.
2041 W. Stale Road 426. Oviedo,
died Wednesday at Lutheran
Haven. Oviedo. Born Aug. 17.
1912. In St. Louis, she moved lo
Oviedo from Miami In 1967. She
was a retired traffic office clerk
for Dade County and a member
of Ascension Lutheran Church.

*i b *i
* £
K r m y 9 tm

o f St. Mary Magdalen Catholic
Church.
Survivors Include sons. Rafik.
Altamonte Springs. Nagy. Foxboro. Mass.: brother, Fouad.
Morocco: two grandchildren.
B a ld w in -F a lrch lld Fu neral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge o f arrangements.

V IR G IN IA R. 8CHOENHERR
Virginia R. Schocnherr. 78.
1015 Laura St.. Casselberry,
died Tuesday at her residence.
B o r n N o v . 7. 1 9 1 2 . I n
Portsmouth. Ohio, she moved to
Casselberry from Dayton. Ohio.
In 1979. She was a retired
bookkeeper for Dayton Medical
Society and a Protestant.
Survivors Include daughter.
Nancy Brockman. Apopka: step­ M AURICE ACCAD
daughter. Shirley Ann Wall.
M a u ric e A c c a d . 79. 220
Springfield. Ohio: son. Ronald Wlndmeadows Lane. Altamonte
L.. Buford. S.C.: stepson. J.W.. Springs, died Sunday at Florida
M ilto n : s is te r . L ee K rebs. Hospital. Altam onte Springs.
Shallmar: 13 grandchildren; five Bom Nov. 12. 1912. tn Cairo.
great-grandchildren.
Egypt, he moved to Altamonte
Gaines Funeral Home. Long- Springs from there tn 1989. He
wood. In charge o f arrange­ was a retired manager in the
ments.
banking Industry and a member

the finest in
service andfacilities with
•
p re-p la n n in g through
"rJM
The Simplicity P l a n J u ^ t 9 r m 3 W c m M
Y ou r only "hometown
cemetery and funeral
hom e combination.

M m k *w

IM fty X M fr

O M ah m Fkrk

Q \&gt; ^

Cem etery and Funeral H om e

SR 46A at Rhinehart Road, Lake Mary 322-4263

..a friend when you really need one.

I

And Some Do.

jij

Never

m
*

i V m ff m
#f#
9
Up»
SST i
t«7w
f l « ff *
dll
fi
BbJ
c
now
m
m

CO ffering

BALDWIN - FAIRCHILD

i i

turn

H S c

Joseph W illiam Vargo. 74.
Coleman Avenue. Deltona, died
Monday at West Volusia Memo­
rial H ospital. DeLand. Born
March 1. 1917. In Erie. Pa., he
moved to Deltona eight years
ago from Miami. He was a
supervisor o f cabin services for
Delta Air Lines and attended Our
Lady o f the Lakes Catholic
Church. Deltona. He was a
member o f the Delta Pioneer's
Club.
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e w ife .
Margaret. Deltona: daughter.
S h ir le y Y e a g e r . M tllc r e e k
T ow n sh ip . Pa.: sister. Mrs.
Edward Hollobough. Mayport.
Pa.; two grandchildren: several
nieces and nephews.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona, tn charge of
arrangements.

i w

-S
|_____ ft

Victoria Hodge Anderson. 93.
919 E. Second St.. Sanford, died
Wednesday at Lakevlew Nursing
Center. Sanford. Bom March 2.
1898, In Jedburg. S.C.. she
moved to Sanford from Apopka
In 1934. She w as an a d ­
ministrator for the former An­
derson Nursing Home In San­
ford. and a member of the First
United Methodist Church. San­
ford.
Survivors Include son. Walter
H.. Ormond Beach; daughters.
Helen Mosler. West Palm Beach.
Emily Holloway. Fort Myers.
Doris Gormly. Sanford. Dorothy
Hamncr. DeBary: 16 grandc h i l d r e n : 14 g r e a t grandchildren.
G ra m k o w Funeral H om e.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

She w as a m em ber o f the
American Legion Auxiliary o f
N orth Miami and the Cray
Ladies. Miami.
Survivors Include son. Thom­
as G. Jr.. Oviedo: sisters, Anna
Stasia Sterrett. Escondido. Calif..
Virginia Chandler. St. Charles.
Mo.
C a r e y H an d C o x -P a r k e r
Funeral Home. Winter Park. In
charge o f arrangements.

will stay on the state payroll
until his vacation ends on Sept,
12. but he left office Immediately,
As chief deputy, he was In
charge o f the dally operations of
the 91 billion Department of
Administration, which acta as
Florida's personnel department
and m anages Its retirem ent
system. He earned 965.000•

l

TALLAHASSEE - The No. 2
person In the state government's
personnel department has been
fired in the midst of a police
Investigation Into the disappear­
ance o f more than 9100.000
from private realty accounts.
Secretary o f Administration

John Pleno said Wednesday that
he decided to fire his chief
deputy. Ronald M. Brown. In the
best Interest o f the agency.
"T h ere was no one thing that
caused It.” Pleno said. "It had
festered too long."
B ro w n . SO, m ansged the
p r iv a te a ccou n ts being investlgated on.hjs own Ume. He_

mu

m

Did vou get married and change
&gt;our name? Did &gt;our address change
because ihe hisl Office changed vour /ip
code or because- vour count) converted lo
emergency 9-1-1 service? While* some
things never change, names and addresses
sometimes do. So )ou should let us know

1

sum m er." she said. " I can play
video games at home."
Nender said that the recreation
department's summer program
was “ loads o f fun every day.
even when (they) stayed at the

T on i Orant stod she was more
In terested In go in g on Fun
W orld's carnival rides than any­
thing else.
" I like getting dlxxy." she
commented as she descended
from the Tubs, a wildly spinning
ride.
Orant declined, however, to
ride the Pirate Ship which rises
high above .the ground while
swinging to and fro.

(
5
g

when the information in the white page
directory listing should be modied.
It's simple, it's fast.xnd it's knportvx.

|
£
T
4

Residential customers may be listed
on the names of two individuals whh
the same surname, such as: DoeJoin A
A Maryann.

The deadline for new while page
listings, changes or additional directory
services in the new Ccam l Florida
■■t fhowe Book from Inked Telephone
and Dunnriky Directory is A o p r i 30,
1991. So don't delay.

(all vour local Customer Service
Center today in nuke sure &gt;uur new
while page listing
___
is accurate.

�Bantofd Hm M, Sanford, Florid* - ThurocUy, August 1, 1M 1

Local riders safe in crash
Amtrak collision
Kills
7,hurts 78
NAACP opposttThomas* nomination
W ASHINGTON — More than an y other group, the NAACP**
decision to oppose Clarence Thomas for the Supreme Court
encourages the emergence o f a solid and credible coalition to
fight President Bush's nominee.
T h e N A A C F s strong denunciation o f Thom as on Wednesday
doesn't by itself spell doom for the nomination, but It provides
the key Ingredient for an effective opposition.
Without the nation's oldest and biggest civil rights group In
th eir corner, opponents had little chance o f seriously
contesting the nomination o f a black Judge to replace Justice
Thurgood Marshall.

Bush issvss Moscow
MOSCOW — President Bush, venturing Into the volatile world
o f Soviet politics. Is attempting to strengthen ties with the
nation's restive republics while underlining support for the
central government o f Mikhail Gorbachev.
A fter a warm farewell to Gorbachev this morning, Bush left
Moscow to undertake the politically sensitive mission with s
visit to the ancient city o f Kiev, capital o f the Ukraine and an
agricultural and Industrial stronghold In the Soviet heartland.
"M y optimism about the future o f the Soviet Union stems
from the strength o f Its leadership, that o f President Gorbschev
and many others In Moscow and across this great land," Bush
aald In a carefully balanced departure statement.

Om

U x

propoMl facet veto

WASHINGTON — fo r the second time In less than a year, a
5-cent Increase In the federal t o on gasoline Is making Its way
through Congress. But unlike 19BO. the W hite House says, this
one will be vetoed.
A badly split House Ways and Means Committee agreed
Wednesday night to boost the 14.1-cent-a-gallon t o by a nickel
next Jan. 1. In addition, the Increase enacted last year would
be extended an additional three years beyond Its scheduled
1996 expiration.
T h e vote was 19-17. with most Republicans opposing the bill.
The new money, about 936 billion over five years, would
help finance 9153.5 billion worth o f highway and mass-transit
Improvements. That total Includes 66.8 billion In demonstra­
tio n — or "pork barrel” — projects In members'districts .

Baker back In larval
MOSCOW — Secretary o f State Jam es A. Baker lit. on .yet
another trip to the Middle East, hopes to secure s promise from
a reluctant Israel to attend an October peace conference with
Its Arab neighbors.
The United States and the Soviet Union turned the spotlight
on Israel again Wednesday by announcing a Middle East peace
conference after months of Israeli resistance to diplomatic
overtures.
Baker left Moscow this morning to fly to Jerusalem for
meetings today with Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and then
on Friday with a Palestinian delegation In attempt to secure
their attendance at the conference the superpowers want to
convene In October.
The Idea Is to resolve the Isracll-Palestlnlan dispute over
which Palestinians would be engaged In the negotiations.
F ro m A ssocia ted Proas reports

m r a o wan w n w
Thirteen people boarded the
llt-fhted Number 81 passenger
train In Sanford on Monday
night abopt 9 o'clock. Norma
Douglas, public Information of­
ficer with Am Ir a k 's corporate
office In Washington. D.C. said.
According to Amtrak officials
n o S a n fo rd re s id e n ts w e re
am ong the Injured taken to
Camden. S.C.-area hospitals fol­
lowing the derailment that killed
seven passengers, including a
M iam i p o lic e o ffic e r , e a rly
Tuesday m orning. S ix other
Floridians sustained Injuries
serious enough to require hospi­
talisation. T w o are In critical
condition.
B e c a u s e It w a s a n o n reservation train, neither local
station employees nor national
representatives know for certain
who boarded the train In San­
ford.
Investigators are studying a
switch at the spot where the
Amtrak train Jumped the tracks
and crashed Into parked freight
cars.
Hospitals report treating 78
passengers. Including live criti­
cally Injured In the derailment,
the worst Amtrak accident since
1987, when 16 people were
killed In a wreck In Chpac, Md.
Christine Raynor o f Sanford
arrived home this morning from
a trip to New Jersey.

WASHINGTON - The newly
signed Strategic Arms Limita­
tion Treaty compels the United
States and Soviet Union to slash
existing nuclear arsenals, but
won’t require them to halt re­
search on a new generation of
even more dangerous weapons.
U.S. laboratories argue that If
arsenals are being shrunk for
political and fiscal reason*, the
remaining weapons have to be
superior. That means more pow­
erful. safer to use, better able to
evade enemy radars.

Even with S TA R T reducing
the current arsenals of longrange missiles by 30 percent.
U.S. and Soviet scientists stUl
can develop and produce new
ty p e s o f lon g-ran ge nuclear
weapons.
T h eir appetite for technologi­
cal Innovation has not been
suppressed, despite the vastly
reduced U.S.-Sov!et rivalry and
grow ing budget constraints In
both countries.
"T h e enthusiasm on Capitol
HtU and at the Defense Depart­
ment for proceeding with these
p r o g r a m s Is lo w . but the
laboratories will always have on

RICHM OND. V a . - M aggie
Tavaa wanted to spend a few
r e la x in g d a y s v is it in g h er
husband In Newport News, but
Instead found herself In the
middle o f the worst Amtrak
wreck In more than four years.
" I was com ing to meet my
husband to have a few days
without the children for the first
time In 33 years," she said.
"H e's been up here for a month,
so It was kind o f Important that
we have a nice couple o f days
together."

Ltgal Nolle*
Interest." said Edward Warner, a
senior defense analyst at the
Rand C orp oration , a
California-based think tank.
U.S. labs, still buoyed by the
carte blanche o f the Reagan
administration, which oversaw
the largest expansion o f U.S.
arsenals since World W ar II. are
focusing their efforts on the
concept of "m ore bang for the
buck."
In the U.S. debate over how
much money should be allocated
to developing and building new
weapons In the post-Cold War
age. the emerging compromise Is
to hedge all bels.

Legal Wotlcti

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

NOTICE O f
FICTITIOUS KAM I
Nolle* I* hereby (Ivon that wo
art engaged In busine** 1 P.O.
Bom *30401, lake Mery, FI.
l i m o i l , Somlnolo County.
Florida, undor tho Flctlttou*
Nam* of
DM ACCOUNTING S MEDI­
CAL SERVICES, and that wo
Inland to raglttar told noma
with tho Secretly ol Slato.
Tallahattoo. Florida. In ac
cordanca with tho provision* 1
tha Flctltlout Noma Statute,
To wit: Sat 11on H it t , Florida
Slatulaa 1MJ
Miriam J. Jlmanai
Raul L. Jlmanai
Publish: Augutt 1. m i
DEI»

VEHICLE AUCTION
Thlt ouctlon will ba hatd on
Augutt II. lift ol I0 M o.m. ot
M l Alloy# Troll, Oviedo. FI.
Proapactiva bidder* may in
tpoct vahk lot on l^t^t day boforo,
from f i l l am. until 4:M p.m.
Ttrmt art coah or cortlftod
fundt only. Tlbtoitti Inc/Atom*
Samoran Towing ratarvaa tha
right to occapt or ro|oct any and
ailbldt.
IfJf Chevrolet Camara Blue
I S47GfL4S044J
INS Chrytlar La Baron Black
IC3BH30EOF N I11170
\m Oldtmatollo S daar Bluo
1G3AB37BXCW3I30I4
IH4 Chevrolet Comoro Brown
IG1AP07ISEH3
Putollth: Augutt 1.1001
DEIS

NOTICE OF A
PUBLIC HEARING
TOCONSIMBTHB
ADOPT ION OF AN
OBM NANCE BV
T N I CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
N ik * 1* hereby glvan that a
Public Hearing will ha hold In
tho Commlttlen Ream at the
City Hell In the City 1 Sontard.
Florida. 1 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
Augutt II. IHt. to contldrr tho
adoption 1 an erdtaanco by tho
City ot Sanford. Florida, title 1
which It a* Moan:

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given Mat we
art engaged in bwtlneu 1 Flea
World. Hwy 17 W, Sanford. Sam
Inoto County. Florida, undtr tho
F kill tout Noma 1
TRICIA'S BOUTIQUE, and that
wo Intend to raglttar told noma
with tho Secretary ol Slot#,
Tallahattaa. Florida, In ac
cordanca with the provlttoni 1
tho Flctltlout Name Statute.
To-Wit: Section MS Of, Florida
Statutoa lfS7.
Mary Patricia Staler
Gladys G. Stephana
Putollth: August I, IHI
DEMI

u Tt h I

CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NaCIM-Un-CA-U
MICHIKO T. SHAMUS and
DIANE N. LOVELY l/k/a
DIANE N SHAMUS,
Ptalnlltti.

vt

SERGIAS CONLEY.
Oalandant
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice It glvan mat in ac
cordanca with tha final |udg
mant anlarad on July 1/. 10*1 In
Civil action no. Cl HAJ71CA 14
ol tha Circuit Court lor SamInola
County, Florida. In which Sargla
S Conlay wai tha Oalandant.
and Mlchiko T. Shamut and
Diana N. Lovoly f/h/a Diana N
Shamut tho Plaintiff*. I will tall
to tho hlghott biddar lor cath on
Augutt JO. m i at tha Watt
Front door ol tho courthouta In
Seminole County, Sanford. Flor
Ida. at 11:00 a m . on tha toltow
Ing proparty:
LOT Of. RIVER NUN. SEC
TION THREE, according to tha
plat lharaot at racordad In Ptat
Book It. Pagat 41 through 44.
Public Racordt ol Samlnola
County. Florida
Dated thlt MM day of July.

NOTICE OF SALE
Toni Harrlton
A•AA *
Coliatta Davit
A 10
Ematt Lowing
67
Dwayne Mitch*11
BIS
J.W. Schcettaikofte
BIO
Rsbart Wathburn
BIO
Bart Tuckar
C3
Danit* Mikhail
C 40
Paul Provlnc*
E7
MarvinOavit
E IOC
Oannlt Thaodorton
FI
Eudtll Rlchardt
F ll
JaanWIIHamt
F14
Par tonal proparty cantltllng
of lurnitura, matlresaa*. lire*,
lampt. drattart. clothing,
electronics. induttrlal equip
mant. mitcailanoout botat and
other partonal llemt utad In the
horn* will b* sold ter cath at
public tala on Augutt 17. m i at
11:00 P M . at below addratt to
tatltfy owner Ilan far rant duo In
accordance with Florida Stal
ulat. Sail Storage Facility Act.
Sactlont U N I All Item* or
ipacat may not ba available ot
data of tala
A A A Security Storage
DIS Airport Blvd
Sanford. Florida m il
Putollth July 31 AAugutll. It*l
DEH 143

I**»

MARVANNE MORSE
Clark of tho Circuit Court
By JaneE Jatewtc
Daputy Clock
Putollth Augutt I.B. IHI

AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF SANFORD. FLOR I
DA. CRCATINO CHAPTER IS.
SECTION ISM OF THE COOK
OF ORDINANCES OF THE
CITY OF SANFORD TO RE
Q U IR E P E R M IT S FO R
“ SPECIAL EVENTS": PRO
VIOING A DEFINITION FOR
TH E T E R M " S P E C I A L
E V E N T "; REQUIRING A
PERMIT FOR ALL SPECIAL
EVENTS: ESTABLISHING
P R O C E OURES FOR
APPLICATION FOR SFECIAL
EVENT PERMITS; AUTHOR
I2ING CITY COMMISSION TO
GRANT OR OENV SPECIAL
EVENT PERMITS; PSOVID
ING FOR PENALTY; PBOVIOING FOB COOIFICATION.
SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS
AND EFFECTIVE OATE.
A copy than bo avllatoio at
tho office 1 ttw City Clerk tar
I I portent dotirIng to aaamln*

vfteasfvts
All portlet In Miami and
cltltont than have an opportunl
ty to bo hoard ot aid holing.
By order ot toe City Com
mlttton 1 tha City 1 Sanford.
Florida
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
a p t r w dacldat to appeal a
decltlon mad* with respect to
any matter contidtfad at the
above mealing 1 hearing, ha
may need a verbatim racerd ol
tha proceeding*. Including the
tattimony and evldwtc*. which
record it not provided by tha
City ol Sanford (FS 31 01051
Janet R Oonaho*
City Clerk
Putollth Augutt I. m i
DEI 11

OEI-10

CIRCUIT COURT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL DIVISION
CASINO.*! 303S-CAI4Q
GLENDALE FEDERAL BANK.
FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK,
lor marly known at Glendale
Federal Saving* and Loan
Association

ptmtiif

va.
SONIA COORINGTON. ADOLF
COORINGTON. her husband,
and PH YLLIS MORRIS, a
tingle person.
NOTICI OF ACTION
TO: SONIA COORINGTON and
ADOLF COORINGTON
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to tortdote o mortgage
on tho tallowing prepity in
SamInoto County. Florida
LOT 377. MANDARIN SEC
TION EIGHT, according to tha
Ptat lharaot a* racordad M Plat
Book 37. Pag** SI and SI. Public
Records ol SamInoto County.
Flor Ido.
hat been tiled against you and
you are required to serve a copy
el your written dafantat. il any,
to It on Ray Peacock, plalntlira
attorney, whoa* addratt It 1344
Sunset P in t Road. Ctoarwator.
FL H IS on or before September
t. m i. and tile the original wIM
tho ctork ot Mi* court aithor
balora service on plaintiff'* at
tornay or Immediately thereat
tar; otherwise a default will be
anlarad against you lor lha
retlel demanded in Ma com
plaint or poll lien.
WITNESS my hand and tha
teal of Mit Court on July 30.

mi

II. J .

UHIHOS BONDS

Officials say
dacrease in
darailments

Survivors complain about confusion

T fe s ity w o n ’t s t o p w e a p o n s
■■ h u t m a w A i
Associated Prat* Writer_________

Passtnotr* gat off tha southbound SHvar Meteor
S ou th C a rolin a yesterday. Thirteen people
If
at the Sanford Amtrak station. Th a Meteor la the
Star In Sanford
slater train of tho Silver Star which derailed In
nHOVO ffwllflt
She said that the train on police spokesman George U w
which she had arrived had aald late Wednesday.
Richland Memorial Hospital
bypassed the crash site.
"People that needed to go to reported Joe Gresham. 59. o f FI.
that area were pul. on buses." Lauderdale and Paul Fisher, age
she said. "It didn't really affect unknown, o f Belle Glade were in
people who weren't going to that critical condition. Yolanda Arrevondo. 64, o f Lake Worth and
area too much."
Sandy Holland. 30, o f Fort Myers
The Miami officer killed In the
were stable and Kevin Paul
derailment waa 16-year veteran
WASHINGTON - Derailments
Fisher. 37. o f Belle Glade, was In
S g t . P a u l P a la n k . w h o s e
o f the kind that killed at least
good condition.
personnel flic was filled with
seven passengers aboard an
Information tram Via Aiaoclotod Frau la
letters o f commendation. Miami canti na* &gt;nthl* rasart.
Amtrak train In South Carolina
have declined dramatically over
the last decade, government and
railroad Industry officials say.
"But Its still an Important,
up at 6:30. And they started
Mrs. Tavss. a nurse from
Miami, spoke Wednesday night treating people at quarter o f very troublesome and dangerous
from the Am trak station In seven. They had to decide what problem." aald Mike Benson, a
Richmond before getting on a they wanted to do because they spokesm an for the National
train to Newport News, where were working In the dark and Transportation Safety Board
her husband, an engineer, has they had to set up lights. \J/here which la Investigating the crash
been on a temporary assign­ were they for an hour and a hall? near Camden. S.C., on Wednes­
I know It’s a small town, but day that also Injured 76 people.
ment.
Tw o other major derailments,
M rs. T a v s s w a s o n th e everybody has a 911. right?
b o t h in C a l i f o r n i a , d r e w
Miami-to-Ncw York train that Everybody has fire and rescue."
She aald the scene moments widespread publicity last month
had derailed earlier In the day In
Camden, S.C.. killing at least after the wreck was one o f alone.
On July 14. a locomotive and
horror.
seven people.
"People were running around seven leading cars of a Southern
Mrs. Tavss described the re­
sponse o f emergency crews as and screaming, people crying. Pacific freight train derailed,
"extremely slow. An hour and a 'Please help me.' and they could p u n ctu rin g a tank car and
half Is extremely slow. It hap­ see (heir own blood running dumping some 19.000 gallons of
metam sodium, a weed killer,
pened about 5. and they showed right out of their arms.
iPtotheSHcianwntoRiver. _____

THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT

ISEAL)
Clerk of tha Circuit Court
By: Hoalhar Brunner
Deputy Ctork
Publish Augutt I. ■ IS. 71 Iffl
DPI IS

INTM I CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNB EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO: ft-ISI-CA-14-a
BANK OF CENTRAL
FLORIDA
Plaintiff,

v*.

GEE WILUKKERS. INC.,
atc.atal.,
Defendants
CLERK'S
NOTICI OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that pursuant to a Final Judg­
ment ol Foreclosure deled the
Itth day et July, IH I, and
antorod In Civil Action No.
11-137 CA 14 G In tho Circuit
Court ol tha ElgMeenlh Judicial
Circuit. In and tar Samlnola
County. Florida, wttofln BANK
OF CENTRAL FLORIDA It lha
P l a i n t i f f and GEE
WILUKKERS. INC., etc., el 1..
a re th e D e fe n d a n t s .
MARYANNE MORSE. Ctork ot
the above anti Had Court, will
Mil lo tho highest and bail
bidder, or bidder*, for cath, at
tho West Front door, ot the
Samlneto County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida, at 11:00 A.M.
on ttw 13nd day 1 August, IHI.
the tallowing described propity
at set lorth In said Final
Judgment of Foreclosure situate
In Samlnola County, Florida,
to wit:
All Inventory. Matures, dit
playi. a c ctn o rlsa , parti,
equipment, and occasions
listed on ttw attached Eahltoil
EXHIBIT “ 1"
GEE WILUKKERS
Front Pear Ditetoy
I *a Gum Ball Machine —
Arnold Palmar Hospital
I *a Walnut Crest win*
package —gilt
1 a* Warttalnar premium
Varum packg* w-1glass — gilt
1 a* Perrier — J--------Champagne gilt package
I a* Napa Ridge win* gilt
package with-------- food and
crackers
I pkg t belli** SO ml assorted
liqueurs
I ** Chanlain* B-------CRoyal with cham
DdMinvo iill
1 ** wicker basket bottle
I aa decorative vat*
I ta Gian Elian win* gilt
package with cracker* and tood
t is Robert Mondavi Cabomat
Sa--------gill package
4**C-------- Pub glasses

4*a Brown stains

3#a Butch bear glasses
I ** Llto Bear electrical sign
I is Silver plated tray XT'
I a* Walnut Crest win* gift
package with assorted cheat*,
ate
I ** Millar sign
I ** Coort Lila Silver Bullet
clock
I ea Silver plated tray 0‘*
I ta Artificial Mower basket
I is Pressed wood round table
Lett Wall
I pkg 4 1 ot plasttc wine
glasses
l ** 11 oi Tie Marla Cream
Liquor -------3*a 335 m l Call, 4 no Liquor

I ** ISO ml Chantame Brut
Cordon Royal
4 is 350 ml Rhamplalr white
wine
II ea 330 ml Schmitt
white wine

3r« 350ml Mntaus Whit*

1aa 730ml Matous Roe*
1a# t L Bitoy* Irish Cream
1 ea 7J0 ml Cardan* Irish
1 aa 7S0 ml Matous White
Cream
Blush
I t * 730ml Truffle* White
t aa 7SOml Blue Nun Whit*
1ea ISOml Truffle* Chocolate
1 aa 750 ml Chardonnay
1to 7M ml Drambuie
Macon
1* * ISOml Rumpto Minie
3ea 710ml CordH Be.-doeu*
3 ea ISO ml Arrow Cream de
I to 730 ml Mouton Cadi
CiHCH#
Bordaau.
J a# ISO ml DaKuypar Cream
1 aa 730 ml Cimalto Sacrade Banana
mental grape Win*
3 aa 730 ml Carmail* Concord
1 aa 7S0 ml DeKuyper Clnrumen
Grape Win*
1 ea ISO ml DeKuyper Apple
3 is 750 ml Manlschewlti
Blackberry
Barrel
1 aa ISO ml Martini A Rossi
4 00 ISO ml Manlschawlti
Vermouth
Concord Grapa
1 ea 37S ml Martini Rossi
4 oa ISO ml Dallcato Whit*
Vermouth Em Dry
Granoch*
1 a* VS ml Marilnl Rossi
3*0 730 ml Rlunlto Rot*to
Vermouth
3oo 730 ml Rlunlto Blanco
1aa ISOml Rlunlto DOro
lea ISOml Clntano Vermouth
1aa ISO ml Clntano Vermouth
I aa ISO ml Ingltnook Whit*
E.tra Dry
Zlnfandal
3ta 37Sml Clntano Vermouth
t *a 1 L Paul Masson Whit*
10* ISOml Dry lack Sherry
Granoch*
I aa ISO ml Harveys Bristol
1*0 1L Paul Masson Chatoll*
Cram#
4 aa 730 ml Rocca dell* Made
1 * * ISO ml Harveys Bristol
Whit*
Ory
1 aa ISO ml Ruttlno Chianti
1oa ISOml Rlcard Liquor
Clastic*
laa ISOml Llllat Win* Rad
4 aa ISO ml Madonna da Como
1aa IN ml Lillet Whit* Win*
Rad
1aa ISOml Taylor Champagne
1 aa ISO ml Asti Spumanto
1aa ISOml Dubonnet Rouge
Sparkling
1*o ISOml Outo Liquor
1 oa 1.5 L Round H ill
1to 730ml M i l * Brluard
Chardonnay
40* 730ml Arrow Anita**#
1*a 750 ml NavaII* Selections
1 *o 730 mt Gran Marnier
White Zlnl.
1 is ISO ml Chateau St. .Cram* da Lie.
1 aa 730 ml Gran Marnier
Mlchalle Samillton
14 ea 730 ml Delicate While Cordon Rouge
1* * ISOml Ailio Cognac
Grenache
4 ea ISO ml Palmer Cabinet
loaVSml Frangallco
Liqueur
Sauvignan
3e* ISOml Irish Mist Liqueur
3**750 ml J Padrocelll White
Zlnfandal
SealSOml Sant Regis Rose
lea ISOml Sant Regis Blanc
1 ea ISO ml Ory Creek
Chardonnay
1 ea ISO ml Sant Regis
Champegne
1 ea ISO ml Chalk Hill
Chardonnay
I ea ISO ml Wild Turkay
3 ea ISO ml Liberty School Liqueur w/Honey
Chardonnay
3 ea IN ml Laurent Perrier Brut
3 oa ISO ml Liberty School
LP Champegne
Cabinet Sav.
1 ea ISO ml Ait) Spumant*
1 ta ISO ml Liberty School
Sparkling Win*
Seuvignon Blanc
4 * * ISO ml Carlton Brut
4 ea 730 ml Sttvenet White
Sparkling Win*
Zlnl.
) oa ISOml SebastlanI Brut
3 is ISO ml Ernest A J. Gallo
1 oa ISO ml SebastlanI Blanc
Hearty Burgundy
deNoirt
1 aa 730 ml Ernasl A J. Gallo
I ea ISO ml LaDommalne Brut
Whit# Zlnt
Champagne
1 aa 730 ml E A J G ilo
3 ea ISO ml Great Western
Sauvignon Blanc
C ld Duck
1aa 730 ml E A J G ilo White
4 ee ISO ml Great Western
Grenache
Pink Champegne
10 ea 730 ml Glen Elian While
3 ea 750 ml Chanlina Cordon
Zlnl
Royal w/gl*t*
1 ea 750 ml Gian Elian
1ea 730ml Korbel Brut
Chardonnay
4 ea ISO ml Greal Western
* aa 750 ml Sutter Home While
Champagne Vary Dry
Zlnt
13aa 10 ml Undarbarg Natural
J is tiO ml Taylor Light
Herb lllt t fl
Tawny Porto
1Winston Clock
l*a7S0 ml Taylor Light P it *
1Natural Light Clock
1 aa 750 ml Oakrldg* Gran
1CMS Royoto 4ia Cosh AAngml
Sirah
• System . R a g ltta r S erial
1 aa 750 ml Great Western
4SN*300*3
("gld Quell
1Contact pricing machine
7 aa 730 ml Great Western
t National Business System
Champegne E. Dry
Modal 1001 credit register
3 aa ISO ml Sam bucc*
1Tepe packaging machine
Mol man
11 ee Sip and Stir Straws
3aa ISOml Pimrns
Phoaniaware Regular 100count
1 aa ISO ml Cmentay Tras
7 aa Slip and Stir Slaws sword
L icor
picks 40count
7is 750ml Southern Comtorl
* aa Stirrers A melaguert
l aa 750ml Kemor* Colt** LI
100ct
la*7S0mlTI*Marl*
4e* Ivory torkl 30ct
l aa 730ml Kahlua
* ea Her* &lt;Toeuvre Parasols 10
tea 1L Kahlua
ct
7aa Ball drink stirrers 14ct
Peachtree
1Helium Tank
I aa 730ml Dakuypar Stoe Gin
tl Comat Champagne Glass**
1**730 ml Dakuypar
25count
Blueberry
0 Comet Champagne Glasses
4**730 ml Dakuypar
bottoms
Peppermint
S aa Plastic Big Drink cups SO
t aa 1L Dakuypar Tript* Sac

1401.
17is Comat Win* Gtoaae* IS
Sot.
t is Comat Party
10oi.
IS Win* glass bottoms
la-Coha Castor
4*aQuart Butch Bear
-1SI* Pack Millar bottlas
4Boltlas Mlclwlob II oi
3 Bottles Court Light 11o*.
I SI. Packs Mich*tab Ory
4 Cans Coort
I I Cant Bud Light II oi.
14Bottles Bud Dry
1Can Millar II oi.
3 SI. Packs Busch Light cant
4SI. Packs Butch cant
* SI. Packs Bud cant
114 Casa Butch cans
la tc. Machine
SOfib. bags ol Ic*
Right Wall
l Butch Baer Sign
I is 1.75 L Dewars While
Label
5is IL Dewars Whit* Label
laatso ml Chlvat Regal
I ** I.7S L Johnny Walker Rad
1*a IL Johnny Walker Rad
I aa 750 ml Jchnny Walker
Rad
la * 1L Johnny Walker Rad
I aa I L Johnny Walker Rad
Black
t aa 730ml Bombay Gin
1aa I L Bombay Gin
1a* 730ml Bombay Dry Gin
4aa IL Bombay Dry Gin
1aa I 7SL Bombay Dry Gin
5 aa 730 ml Seagrams E.tra
Dry
1 aa 1 L Tanquaray Special
Dry
I aa 1L Boodles British Gin
4*a 1.75 Boodles British Gin
I eel.IS Baafaatar
I a* I L Be#to* tar
It a 730Gordons
3*a IL Gordons
3a* IL Gordons
13** 730Gllbeyt
I aa 1.7S L Flaischmannt
3a# 730J L B
I I LTtachars Scotch
1730ml Passport
3tLCulty Sark
3 730ml Pinch
I 730ml Knockando
4 730mlB*llanlln*i
3 730ml Crown Royal
3 730ml Canadian Club
7 I L Lord Calvert
31L Canadian Club
31 73L Canadian Club
3 730 ml Windsor Canadian
Supreme
II L Canadian Hunter
t aa 37S ml Canadian Club gift
pack ml glass**
I is 730ml Mt Gay Rum
I aa 730ml Mayers Rum
I aa 373ml Mayers Rum
3 aa I 73 L Cpt Morgan
Splcad
4 is 730 ml Cpt Morgan
Spiced
I a* 730Malibu Rum
4*a I 73 Bacardi Dark
3a* 750ml Bacardi Light
I aa 730 ml Bacardi
Rater**
le a l 73Castillo Whit*
4**730RonricoRum
laatLRonricoWhit*
That certain liquor licanta
issued by the State ol Florida to
Ga* Wllllkkars. Inc . under
license number tf 00741
WITNESS my hand and lha
official teal ol this court at
Sammola County. Sanford, thlt
llthdayof July. tWI
(Court Saal)
MARVANNE MORSE
At Clark ol Said Court
By VDorothy W Bolton
Deputy Ctork
Publish July IS A August 1. IHI
DEH 113

�THURSDAY

Seminole All-Stars face three games in 30 hours
pitcher who foes Just one pitch beyond three
Innings must have 40 hours rest, n e e d with
playing three games In 30 hours. Fergerson has
his entire staff available for action.
In W ednesday's win over Carrollton, for
example, starting pitcher Chad Kessler ahd
releiver Matt Diemer (both from Lake Mary High
School) each pitched “
while Mike Werner and Mike Carr (also from
Mary) worked the seventh Inniiw.
As a result. Fergerson has the Seminole
S ch ool rf “ '
com bination o f R obbie
Morgan and Jeremy Chunat — w h o have been
the aces for the Seminole Colts all summer —
ready to go In today's doubleheader.

Jaokaomrllto official resigns
JACKSONVILLE - The president o f an
arpntsatloa formed to lure a NFL expansion
team to Jacksonville resigned Wednesday after
being charged with offering an undercover
officer 040 for oral sex.
A rth u r "C h ick ** S h errer. p res id en t o f
Tmtchdown Jacksonville! Inc. is accused o f
solicitation o f prostitution in a July 38 Incident.
Sherrer, 46. Joined "T D J a x " two years ago
after, resigning as president o f the Jacksonville
Chamber o f Commerce, a position he held for
five years.
Sherrer maintained his Innocence Wednesday
during a brief new t conference In which he
announced his resignation.

Falcons* Sandars: gons flailing
A T L A N T A — After ending his baseball season
with a flourish. Delon Sanders la supposed to be
In football gear today. Instead, he says he's
going fishing.
Sanders hit a three-run homer in his final
appearance o f the season with the Atlanta
Braves Wednesday night, helping them to an
S -8 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates and a
sweep o f the four-game series.
Sanders was scheduled to report to the NFL
Atlanta Falcons today, but he said he plana to
take a few days off.
“ I'm going home (to Fort Myers) to relax and
go Ashing," said Sanders. " I plan on reporting
on Monday."
Sanders, who was lined $40,000 last year for
reporting late to the Falcons' training camp,
may again find himself shelling out money. He
could Be fined up to $1,500 a day, beginning
July 18. for his absence from camp.

CARROLLTON, Texas - Other than he hadn't
bargained on hie team being a game down In the
lots column. Rod Fergerson has the Seminole
PONY League Colt Alt-Stars right where he wants
them.
Playing In the South Zone tournament, the
Seminole All-Stars defeated boat Carrollton
(located lust outside Dallas) 7-4 tn an elimination
contest Wednesday night to move within three
wins o f a trip to the Colt W orld Series, scheduled
to begin Aug. 6 In Lafayette, Ind.
Seminole now advances to play Lubbock.
Texas (a 8-5 loser to Baytow n. Texas, late
Wednesday), this evening at 0 p.m. COT. If the

Se minole Colts win that game, they will have to
turn right around and play Baytown tonight and
again at 7 p.m. Friday.
Because Seminole already has a loss In the
double-elimination playoff, falling to Baytown 5-3
on.Monday, another loos means the end o f the
wemmm.
Working in Seminole’s favor Is the fact that
Fergerson has been able to Juggle his pitching
■tan around the tournament rule that says any

Bullets put off vacation
for NABF World Sarlas
The min also gives the Bullets the
chance to play at least one gam e at
home. Because o f wet conditions at
the fields In Apopka, which to
hosting the World Series, several
first-round games have been fanned
out to other local fields in an
attem p t to keep th e 13-team,
double-elimination tournament on
schedule.
A s a result, the Bullets will play
Maryland at 3 p.m. at Lyman Field.
If the Bullets win. they'll have to
come back at 7 p.m. tonight and
play the winner o f this afternoon's
gam e between defending NABF
W orld Series champion Dr. Phillips
and Oennesaee. M ich ., at the
A popka L ittle L e a g u e 's S en ior
League Field.
A loss in this afternoon's game
will bring the Bullets bock at 9 s.m.
Friday at Colonial High School.
Regardless o f how things shake
down. McCullough believes that the
B u lleta / Q reyh o u n d a can o n ly
benefit from being Involved tn this
tournament.
"T h e guys get to see somebody
different." said McCullough. "A n d
playing In a tournament like--this

Botox’ Gray soomt to bo OK
Relief pitcher Jeff Gray was
BOSTON
resting comfortably In Beth Israel Hospital but
lias made only slight progress since collapsing
tn the Boston Red Sox clubhouse Tuesday
morning, the team said.
In a brief report. Dr. Arthur Pappas, the Red
Sox physician, did not give the cauae o f Gray's
Illness and said he did nol know when the
Boston player could pltrh again. He raid Gray
was undergoing farther touts,---------------------------------------Pappas raid Tuesday doctors were optimistic
Oray had had a apaam or • m lgnU ic ■ » — X and.
not a stroke. There was no comment on
speculation that the right-handed pitcher may
nave had an aneurysm.
The doctor said that Gray had a similar attack
10 years ago while a student at Florida State. He
recovered without any 111effect.

Bikini Beach
back in race
at Pinehurst

T m ivis boat trad* daadllna
The Oakland Athletics played beat the clock
for the second straight year, and the Lorn
Angeles Dodgers and Atlanta Braves did the
same. Now. will any o f the new pitchers lead to a
pennant?
The Athletics, looking to strengthen their
starting rotation far the stretch, got Ron Darling
from Montreal on Wednesday night for two
minor league pitchers. The deal came minutes
before the midnight trading deadline and waa
announced while the Oakland and Boston were
playing extra Innings tn a game the Red Sox
finally won 11-10 In the 14th.
About an hour earlier, the Dodgers bolstered
their bullpen by getting Roger McDowell from
the Phillies for pitcher Mike Hartley and a minor
leaguer. Los Angeles leads the National League
West by VA games over Atlanta.
The Braves also made a deal Just before
midnight, getting pitcher Jim Clancy from
Houston for a minor leaguer and a player la be
named later.

Miami gats sat for Big East
MIAMI — The University o f Miami to marking
out Its first basketball season In the Big East
Conference with a full schedule against all nine
Big East opponents.
The Hurricanes' entrance Into the Big East
Conference, beginning with the 1991-1992
season, marks the first time (he school will
compete In a conference fallowing 41 seasons as
an Independent.
The team’s non-conference schedule features
the sixth annual Palm Beach Classic where
Miami will play host to Penn Stale. George
Washington and Marshall. The Hurricanes will
also visit San Juan. Puerto Rico, where the team
will compete far three days In an eight-team
field shootout.
Tw o Big East Conference games featuring the
Hurricanes — facing Pittsburgh on Jan. 29 and
the game against Providence on Feb. 12 — will
be shown on the cable network ESPN.

closer to
Chase title

SANFORD - All o f a sudden.
Bikini Beach to right back In the
middle o f things.
By sweeping a pair o f make-up
games last night. Bikini Beach
made the Sanford Recreation De­
partment Wednesday Night Men’s
S lo w p ttch S o ftb a ll L e a g u e at
Pinehurst Park a three-team race
with three games logo.
With first-place H.D. Realty idle.
Bikini Beach made up a full game In
the stan d in gs by b e a tin g Ed
Bussard's Pro Bass Guide Service
6-1 and Regency Mazda 13-5.
In the nightcap, the Wrecking
Crew needed eight Innings to pull
out a 32-18 win over Enslcy Inc.
W ith everyone In the league
having played 14 games o f their
15-game schedule. H.D. R eally
(K M ) still to In first place Just ahead
of Bikini Beach and Bussard's (both
9-5). The Wrecking Crew (8-6) to a
close fourth with Regency Mazda
(6-8) and Enslcy (0-14) rounding out
I he pack.
In W ed n esd ay’ s fir s t ga m e.
Bussard's Pro Baaa Guide Service ,
took a 1-0 lead In the top o f the first
Inning as Jeff Bergman singled and
scored on a sacrifice fly by Ed
□ l a a Ptaakarst, Faga 3 ft

SANFORD — Sometimes a man
has to do what a man has to do. And
If that means wallowing around In
the mud. muck and mire created by
a summer’s worth of rain saturating
the clay Infield at Chase Park, then
so be It.
That was the assignment facing
the trams o f the Sanford Recreation
Departm ent's W ednesday Night
Men's Slowpltch Softball League,
who allp-sllacd their way through
three make-up games fast night.
Originally, the league waa sup­
posed to have finished last week.
But with all the rain-outs, there are
still five games left to be played
b e fo re a le a gu e c h a m p io n la
crowned.
Current league leader Florida
Manor moved a step closer toward
claiming the title aa It romped to a
23-3 win over Hall's Stucco In a
game stopped In the top o f the
fourth Inning by the 20-run mercy
rule.
Second-place DCC was able Uf
keep pace as it held on to defeat
Hopkins Meats 5-4 In Wednesday's
first game. Hopkins Meats then
picked up a 7-0 forfeit win over
Smitty's Plumbing before Florida
Manor and Hall's Stucco took th^
field.

BvuarVi
BWMBaach

1M MB • W M 1 -

1 IS
1 1}

HI__ - ■

NagancyMaida
Btkun Baack

bbt Mb b Mb Ml ■ -

1 II
11 IV

Pat Rupp contributed a pair of doubles, a single and three runs scored to
help the short-handed Wrecking Crew pull out a 22-18 decision over Ensley
Inc. insight innings Wednesday night at Pinehurst Park.

Wracking Craw
I inlay, lac.

W
.■

Oviedo Junior, Senior All-Stars in state
BA 8 E B A L L
□ 8 p.m. — WAYK 56. WON. Texas Rangers at
Chicago White Sox, (L)

Like Tug MeGraw once said, sometimes you kill the
tiger and sometimes the tiger has you far lunch.
On Wednesday night, the Oviedo Little League Junior
(13-year-olds) and Senior (14-15) All-Stars experienced
markedly different results, the Juniors suffering a 14 0
thrashing at the hands of Homestead at Sportsman
Park In Port St. Lucie while the Seniors eliminated
Dunedin 6-3 at the Lake Wules Little League complex.
Both teams will play far the stale championships in

the respective divisions today At 11 a.tn. In Port Si. Lucie, the Oviedo Juniors were
to play Homestead far the third time lit four days. On
Monday. Oviedo knocked Homestead Into the losers’
bracket with a 4-2 victory. The winner of this morning s
game advances to the Southeastern Regional, which
will be played at Allumtmle Springs’ Kuslinunic Park
Because the Oviedo Seniors have a loss at lilts level,
having fallen to Dunedin 6-5 in nine Innings on
Monday, they will have In lx*at undefeated North

m
a it aa — u ir
tM t l t m 4b - 11 M

) showdowns,
Dwnadm

0»M*

w IN ( &gt; )
ui m ■ - l

Sobik. Bulk ID. Kollar ( 1 ) and
Ruflwniu*. Sltphanun 141 and Mynac
llaakanwn 110) LP - Bvth Sava — Mo,
Ovwdo. Ruqamut IB - Non# HR -

See O vied o, Page 3B

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

4t%

�Horafd, fconlord. Florida - Thursday, August 1, 1991

Lake Howell’s Kohn
shoots Team [Florida
____ IBS
to Junior

STATS &amp; STANDINGS
MafnRfitti, Cerrito* 3

r, Tucwn, Art*.,

5*ft Oleg*. r.-H ertt, San Dtec» *7-

—J

LeSmlta, tt. Ladt, 77; (MM
P n m New Yer*. tit
■lliiMMMkl* ITi ft ftai |m OHM Ml
Righetti, tan PrencitcA 10; Deism(1*.
.10.

ai

turn:

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AMERICAN

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n
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ClavalanS (N agy 4-11) at Taranto
(Ju.GwmanM). llXJa.m
MinnaMta (P.AMrtt 34) at Now York
(CaSarat34». lg-m.
Calltornia |Fatten 41) at Oatrait (Utter

ID . 1:Mp.m.

Kama* City (BoS4*ckar 47) at Mllwaukat
(Hunter 4*1.1:15 p.m.
.
Oakland (Stww 11) at Sotten (OarStmr
35). 7:J5p m.
Toxa* (S.WItt 311 at Chka«e (Garcia 11).
4:BSp.m.
Taranto at Batten, 7:14p.m.
Kama* City at ClavalanS. 7:15p.m.
Now York at Oatrolt. 7:M p m.
Baltlmora at Chicago. 4:05 p.m.
Taxa* al Mtlwauk**. 4:15 p.m.
Seattle al Calltornia. 10:11p.m.
Minnetola at Oakland, 14:15p.m.
NATIOHAL LIAOUC
Frt.
W L
.404
40 a
35 45 550
S3 47 .330
% 53 .400
.430
43 5;
*3 N .430
WestDtvtstoe
W L
Frt.
Lo* Angsle*
a
43 .500
Allanla
S3 % .535
Cincinnati
49 *9 .500
44 51 .403
Sen Francisco
SanDtogo
44 53 .473
Houston
41 59 .410

OB
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17

Cincinnati S. Chk4|B *
PNiadiiphla 9. San Otego 1
Atlanta A Plttikurgh*
Houston 9. St. Louis 5
Lo* Angola* A New York!
San Francisco (McClellan 141 at Cincinnati
(Grou 4 It, 7:15p.m.
Phlladtlphia (MwlhoUend 1 101 at Montreal
(Gardner 5 71,7:15p.m.
Plttakurgh (Tomlin a l l «• St. Lout*
(Oliver** 11). 1:15p.m.
Frtdey's Reuses
SanFrenclacoetCIncInnali. 7 lip m
Philadelphia at Montreal. 7 25p m
San Diego at Atlanta 7:*tp m
Chkego at New York. 7:40pm
Lot Angela* el Houston, I 11p m
Pltltkurgh at SI. Louis. * Up m

Saltern DhttM
W
L
Or lands (Tvrint)
21 U
Charlotte ICubtl
19 17
a Groenvllte (Brvsl
It If
Jockseovtlto (Mmr»)
10 N
Carolina (Pirates)
11 24
Western Dtvtston
24 11
Knoxville (Blue Jays)
Memphis ( Royals 1
21 It
a-Birmingham IWSox) 20 »
to 11
Chattanooga (Reds)
17 11
Huntsville (Athltcsl
i (m i hall titte

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.03* —
120 JV»
525 J'x
.044
351 10
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500 « '»
500 S'x
442 4
447 4*7

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ChaHaaaaga al Jacfetanvrite, pps.. ram
Graanvllto 1. Birmingham#. Ulgame
Birmingham 1. Greenville*, tnd jam *
Charlotte 7. Hunhvllte A 12Inning*

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77;
71; FsMwIra Ton*. TJj White. Toronto. 79;
Thomo*. CMuga 44 Franca To m a 49;
CHIpkon, Soltimoro, 441 DH*nrt»rton.
Oakland 44: RHonrtarmn, Oakland IS.
FiaMtr. Dotroll, 15; CaraacA Oakland 44;
Thamo*. Chkaga TU Sterra Toxa*. tis
JaCtrter. Toronto. 71; Gonxatei, Toxa*. 74;
COavta MMnateta. 49.

AAlomar, Toronto, 31; Bogg*. Btakn. 11;
CRIpkon. Bolllmoro. 7*
Matlter, Mllwaukao. 9; RAIomar, Toronto.
7; P llml*. Calltornia 7; White. Toronto. 7;
Puckatt, Minnesota. 4; Knoblauch. Mlnnttota I; Me da*. Kama* City, 1; Whiten.
Ctovtland 5; Dovoroaux, ialltmara, I;
Hilmi. CMcfr^a, 9.
Ftetotr. Oatrolt. 34; Camaca Oakland 34;
JiXartor, Toronto. 21; CDovte. Minamata.
&gt;3; Tartabull. Kama* City. 11; CRIglwa
Saltlmoro.» ; Door, Detroit, it.

I9D0CWMN)
Erkkwn. Minnesota, tad .42*. 1J4; Henneman, Detroit. 4-2. ISO. 1.44; Kllnk.
Oakland 7 2. .774,1.41; Krueger, Seattle. 93
.750. XV: Finley. Calltornia 14-5. .717.1.91;
Langiton, Calltornia. 14-5, .717, 1.41;
McDowell, Chicago. 135. .722,1 0 0
RJohmon. Seattle. I*t; Ryan. Toxa*. 145;
Clement. Boston, 1*2; McDowell, Chlcaga
111; Swlndoll, Cleveland, 111; Finley,
Calltornia 121; Langston. Calltornia, 111.

L i ____
t. MMAe Altnflc A, TrtS, 11
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Tam CMrtUnSMse SewHim,

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Jamas Hagan. MMSMAtMntlc D, I; 4. Arlan
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IS; X Jamla WMgtar. Indians Imrth. 4 X
MUwFrsikh. MMSM Atlantic A. A
M A a - I . Tany Vaughn, Indiana Marti
tt; t. Soan Mikhail, MMSM AHantte A. I; 7.
Tim OiaaA MMSM Atlantic A, 4; A Ban
Aahall. Indiana Imrtti 4

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RHanrtorton. Oakland 3*; Raima Ortcago.
31; RAIomar, Toronta, 11; Polonla,
California, Mi Cuylor, Detroit. 1*; While.
Toronto. H; Franca Texaa 22.

MMnaaais It. Nsw Ymk 3
DaaMn1l.0aklsnS14 Ulmvlng*
Dttrolt X. CailtarMa 1
TarcntaX CM.aMnS t
ChlcagcMiTwaal
Kamat City 4 MIMnmA m 4
AaHImora A iiilH iX II Innlnga

Pittsburgh
Now York
St. Louis
Chicago
Montreal
Philadelphia

•

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Falmolra Taaaa 117; Pucfcatt, Mlmaaota.
133; Malltor. Mllwaukat, 111; CRIpium.
Saltlmoro. US; Sterra Toxa*. 1H; Franco.
T o m a IM; RAIomar, Toronto. 119.

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SOCCIA

Atsociatad Pr— Wittar_________
TALLAH ASSEE —, Josh Kohn
•cored fare points in the final
1:30 to lead T eem Florida to ■
100.100
___________ Team fcfehigan in
AA U J u n io r Olymptca basketball
Wednesday.
T1 i i
it t m

Wft I i
____ I - j * fcl- ■
F io n a s , s c r o t a n o . o,

advanced to play Mth-oeeded
Iowa Metro, which eaaily de­
feated top aeed Central Indiana
122*92 earlier Wednesday In the
25th annual Amateur Athletic
Union Junior Olympics.
Kohn. a high school senior
from Lake Howell, hit a threepointer that put Team Florida
ahead to stay with 1:23 remain­
ing. then hit two free throws for
(h e c u s h io n T e a m F lo rid a
needed. Kohn finished with 25
Dwight Brown. ■ Florida State
University recruit who will at­
tend Junior college to Improve
his grades, led Team Florida
with 27 points. Voshon Leonard,
who is headed to the University
o f Minnesota, led Team Michigan
with 24 points, while University
o f Michigan-bound Jalen Rose
added 2 1 .
Iowa rode 38 points from Fred
Holberg. an Iowa State Universi­
ty atgnee and this year's top
Iow a p rep p layer, to crush
Central Indiana In the earlier
game. Indiana was without Its
top player. Olen Robinson.

SYNCHRONII ID SWIMMING
(UteMsndey)
(Mrh1314
Aguilera, Mlnnatota. 17; Eckoriley,
SemlWaal RoaHnac Trio — I. Swoatwotor
Oakland 17; Harvey. Calltornia. 15; Tlrtgpoo,
(Shannon Cramer, Amber McDanNt. Tammy
CMcage. 24; Reardon, gotten. 14; Olson.
Teytor). 75 200; 1. Washington. 74 449.1 (tie),
Baltimore, tt: Henke. Toronto. II.
Synchrog*tors and New Jersey, 71441; 3
Indianapolis. 74440; 3 Tonawand*. 7*4*0.
NATIONAL LSAOUI
7. Tray SculplhA 70 2*0; 3 Arlwno. 72 *00;
O AB B N Prt.
Pendleton All
ft 324 42 no .137 *. Tualatin Hill a 71.440; 13 Clayton Shaw
Nixon All
If no 41 *7 .137 Park, 70.920; 11. Menomonee FaUA 70 444; 13
TGwynn SD
101 *03 55 114 .133 JLrltonA44.no.
13 Florida, *lS4*j u Pugrt Sound 43404;
Morris Cln
0 307 0 tt .322
JoteSiL
19 354 47 111 .315 13 Florida. 44434; 13 PtoridA 43441 17.
Creighton. 41.140; IA FHridlM.914
Biggie Hou
9) 33* 49 IDS .310
Sato — 1. Carrte Barton. Plrouottei 0 230.
Calderon Mon
*5 153 54 10* .10t
Finley Hou
ft lit 44 101 .101 1. Joannira Oswald. TacomA Wash.. n.HO;
Tracy Gayoskl. Conn., II.4W; A Lynda
Sandberg Chi
to 34t 0 111 .101 3Ludwig.
SynchrogatoTA 10 200; 3 Christl*
tt 104 71 114 .XI
Butter LA
Hill. VA. 77400; A Joy WllllamA Nawark.
OSmlthStL
92 335 43 101 .XI
N.J.,
74
4*0;
7. Lorna Fountain. Waterworks.
Bent Scored
3 Erlh Smith. Wash.. 7S.&lt;40; 9. Amy
Butter. Lo* Angeles, 71; Johnson, New
Bartlett. Aril.. 7A930. 13 Kristina Ollvor,
York. 4*. Sandberg. Chicago. 47; JBell.
Wash., 7*400; II. Andl Arm. Brlarngod
Pittsburgh. 4); Van Slyko. Pittsburgh. 41;
7* 520; 11. Emily GoddtA SynchratOtofA
OSmilh, SI. Louis. *1. Gant. Atlanta. 41;
74 000; 13 Mltly Ford TonawondA 7AM; IA
Pendleton, Atlanta. *2
Tany* Rcesor. Clayton Shaw Part.
Rum Rafted la
IS. Deborah Snell. Cygmti 739M; IA
WCIark. San Francisco. 74; Band*. Pit
KrUlln Marlin. A ril. 7X108; 17. LarNw
ttburgh. 74; Johnson. Now York. 71; Dawson,
Schanuter, Tellebatsea, 7) 444: 13 Jemltef
Chicago. 44; GBall. Chicago. 45; Bonilla.
Little. Scarlet Knighti 72 720; 19. Vanessa
Pittsburgh. 44. MaWIUIams. San Francisco.
Shaw, Mareguat. 71440; 23 Shannon Me
43.
Cartnay,
TonawondA 71.140; II. Denis*
HR*
Marlin#;. Arliona Aguaelara 72.113
TGwynn. San Diego. 114; Butter. Los
21. Katie Tarkington. Briarwood 71 4M; 21
Angeles, lit; Samuel.Lo* Angelas. IIS; Jose,
(tie). Erica KargA Fatal Reacb. and Farrah
St. Louit. Ill; Sandberg. Chicago. Ill;
Dailey. Cygnet*. 7140. 25. Jeaay Jest*. Fata*
Pendleton. Atlanta. 110; Caldwon. Montreal.
teach . 71.440; 14. Break# irltenhem,
109
Greenville, 73740; 17. Jeanne Rousseau.
Menomaneo Falls, 4* 1*0.
Jose. St. Louit. 10. Morris, Cincinnati. IS;
Duet — 1. Sarah Andrews. Megan Smith.
Bonilla. Pittsburgh. 25; Me Reynolds. New
Walnut Creek, Calif.. 79.720; 1. Carrte Barton,
York. 15; Gant. Atlanta. 21; Pendleton,
Shannon
Montague. Pirouettes. 794*0; 3
Atlanta. 22. Zelte. SI Louis. 22. TGwynn. San
lliei Jamie Hendren Hyatt. Erin Smith,
Diego. 22. Sandberg. Chicago. 72.
Tacoma. Wash., and Theresa Snowman. Joy
Triple*
WllllamA Newark. N J . 77 *40 S. Amber
TGwynn, San Diego, f. Lankford. St. Louis.
McDaniel. Tammy Taylor, Swoetwater.
•; LGoniatol. Houston. •; Finley. Houston. 4;
77.7*0. 4. Oelaiya Kararlan. Allison Wood
Kruk. Philadelphia, t. Candaote. Houston, «.
San Francisco. 77 *00
Felder. San Francisco. «. Van Slyke. Pit
7 (lie). Emily Goddes. Nicola Suhar,
ttburgh.*
Cine mam. Ohio, and Andl Arm. Lydia
M
taftflfcfrR9ft%
HJohnson, New York. 21; MaWIUIams. San Woods. Briarwood. 714*0; t. Sara Brandau.
Erika Ludwig. Can. Tallspinnen 74140, 14.
Francisco. 21, Gant. Atlanla, 20; GBell.
M is ty F ord , Shannon M cC arln oy,
Chicago. 20. WCIark. San Francisco. It.
Tonawand*. 75 920; 11. Lori Barbgali*.
McGrilt. San Diego. It. Mitchell. San Fran
Tanya Rmsot, Clayton Shaw Park. 73740; II.
dtco. II
V icki Lowandowikl. Michelle Bllkty.
Stolen Bate*
Tonawand! 74 240
Ninon, Allant*. St. Grissom, Montreal. 47.
I I Lorn* Fountain. Cherl Peterson.
OaShleldt. Montreal. 41; Coleman. New
Waterworks 7* 1*0. U Larken Marchmgton.
York. ]*; Bonds. Pittsburgh. Jt. Lanktord.
Jam! Washburn. Tualatin Hilk. 7* 040. IS.
St Louis. TV. Butter. Lo* Angelas. 77
Amy Bartlett. Mind! Ison. Arlron*. 71400; 14
Pitching
Facrah Dailey. Deborah Snell. Cygnets ,
(f PftttlHifll D
73720. 17 (INI. Kristin Martin. Jennifer
Hi ID Cincinnati. 72. 771. 2 47. Walk.
Vaughn. Tucson. Am , and JoEllen Deluci*.
Pittsburgh. 71. 771 IIS. RMartinei Lot
Allison OeWlno. Troy Sculpim 72 4*0.
Angeles 14 1. 7}7. 7 25. Glavme. Atlanta.
I* Jennifer Utile. Natalie Lohrke. Scarlett
US. 7)7. 2 IS. Hu»sl. San Diego. IIS. 70*.
Kmgt.t*. 72 004; 10 Lesll# Meier. Lisa
I IS. Carpenter. SI Louis. 7 ), 700. * 72.
Breuer. Macguamaidi 714*0. 21 Mariya
Avery, Atlanla. II S. 447.5 4*
Nava* 10 Lisa Sharbaugh. Va. 71.130. »
Strikeouts
Cone, Naw York. le*. Gooden. New York. Chrlttln K lein er, Susan Sanlollppe.
Me#™nee F all! 71. QS; 13 i f y Jeaeb.
124. Glavme Atlanta. 111. GMaddux.
Erica Karp*. Palm BoacA N.400i 24 Vaterte
Chicago. 127. Harmtch. Houston. lOl.Benes.

Uart*r-19 Dtvlsten
North Co. Alliance 12. Michigan Elite 0

AurtiwFtear* W. TonwomoValteysung0
Cut HiiteCraw3 L*k*Jackson Fiyorrt^

BASISALL
CLEVELAND INOUHS - Placed Rudy
Sooner, pitcher, on the is-dey disabled list.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Acquired Ron
Darling, pitcher, from the Montreal Expo*
tar Mart draft andRuttell Cormier, pitcher*.
HOUSTON ASreretS —Vradod JIm Clancy,
pltckor, to the Atlanta Brave* tor Matt
Turner, pitcher, and a player to be named
LOB ANSEL IS DOOOERS - Traded Mike
Hartley, pitcher, and Breulto Castillo, outItekter, to the Philadelphia Phlllte* tor Roger
McDowell, pitcher.
BASKETBALL
N A T I O H A L A S S O C IA T IO N OF
BASKETBALL COACHIS - Named Roy
Williams to Ih* boardo&lt; directors.
CAL8ARY M i -

Signed Von Me Dad*.

FLORIDA JAO Rt torward.

Activaled I r k
be ksiored ltot.

AMHHNVIf Klftgj
Iftf Rftgi
ftl p||g{g|Mir m ma tn| ypuri.
FOOTBALL

CINCINNATI BEHOALS - Signed
Dlngte, running back.
EfcBBN BAY PACKERS - Signed Chuck
Webb, running back, end Chuck Cecil, solely.
Waived Joey Hosier, punter. Placed Elston
Rldgle. defensive lineman, on the waived
Injured Itot.
HOUSTON OILERS - Agreed to term*
with Cody Carlton, quarterback, on a twoyear contract.
NEW TONE OIANTS - Signed Jarred
Bunch, fullback, and John Washington, do
tensive lineman, to threa yaar contracts.
SAN 01 BOO CHARTERS - Reteosad
Roland Pote*. running back.
Arana Paotbod l
ORLANDO PREDATORS A*—
a* HOCKEY
aarigvftg
*- -a -y
CHICAGO BLACK HAWKS - Slwwd Justin
Latayrtto. toft wing, and Rob Conn, right
MflftRMINNESOTA NORTH STANS - Named
Bob Uoftmoyor coach of Kalamaxoa ot the
International Hockey League
NEW YORK RANGERS - Named Martin
COL LESS
BENTLEY — Named Carl Charabatci
men'* assistant basketball coach
CLBMSON — Nomad Jack Itggttt assls
lent head baseball coach.

T V flt A M O
AUTO RACING
9:10Am. — SUN. Indy Car World
It p.m. — SUN. Formula USA Road Racing
BASEBALL
• pjn. — WON. 14. Texas Rangers at
Chicago While Sox. (LI
* p.m. — SUN. Yankees Mag* 1me
BOWLING
7 4) p m - ESPN. Bud/ABC Masters
Tournament
BOXING
9 p.m. - ESPN. Todd Foster vs Felix
Gonxatex. lightweights. (L)
FOOTBALL
10 X pm — SC, Arena League Tampa
Bay Storm at Orlando Predators
TINNIS
7:JB p.m — SC. U S Pro Championships,
men's earty round matches
BASEBALL
* 05 pm - WHOOAM (VfOI. Southern
League. Knoxville Blue Jay* at Orlando
SunRay*. doubleheadsr
MISCELLANEOUS
*: 14p m - WWNZ AM (7*0). SportsTalk

In other action. Michigan prise
recruit Chris W ebber scored 33
ta aa Detroit Superfriends
Boston 102-39. Dell Lewis
had 37 points to lead Atlanta to
a 120-115 v ic to ry o v e r the
Arkansas W ings and David Crim
•cored 30 points aa the Cantoo-Akron Runnin* Rebels t a t
the St. Louis Eagles 122-117.,

e

Team North Florida, the host
squad, w as eliminated 11006 by
Richmond Metro, which ro t 19
points each from Jaaon Williford
and Odell Hodge. Bobby Davis
led North Florida with 22 potato.
The eight remaining basket­
b a ll t e a m s c o n t in u e p la y
Thuraday. Com petitions also will
be held in 12 other sports.
In track and field. 12 -year-old
D avid O o n a a le a o f C orpu s
Christl. Texas, set a new 11-12
age group national AA U record
in the high Jump with a mark of
5 feet. 81-2 inches.
Oonsales* leap breaks the AAU
record act during a 1979 re­
gional com petition by David
Moseley o f Sunnyvale. Calif., o f 5
feet. 8 Inches.
In b a s e b a l l , a d o u b le e lim in a tio n tou rn am en t got
started with six games.

Chase-

DCC began things by taking a
2-0 lead in the bottom o f the finst
r
in n in g a n d e x t e n d in g its
I
O L Y M P IC S
1
L
advantage to 54} with a single
Slrib* Perce- Impact 3 Clartwvllte Reyals 1
ARnaiuo
run in the third tuning and two
TALLAMAX1IB - Rawrtte
more In the fifth.
Ma 1991AAU JunMr Otemgka
M W LTFCYlHn
Hopkins Meats came (baring
Strike Pare* Shark* h Florence FlamesO
U sMMm Sm )
back with four runs in the top m
111314)
(tartar-11 Ptotetea
the sixth as six o f the first seven
79Cla**k 7,44-NIYS01
T o M potato — I.
batters hit singles that inning.
.
Tl
Olive Hill*. Kon., 19M; X Ckaty Mtnbsll.
But even though they had the
Martimvllte. V a. MW; X Marta Phltman.
Magic 3 Fteraacb Cagra* 4
Hurtington Boach. Catlf., 1741; 4. Lanelka
tying run on second with one
Thompiwi Ponltyn, Pa., VM: X Kerry
out. H opkins Meats couldn't
W a n e ttwwttogton Beach. Cattle 1715; 4.
Eagle* 3 Ti
come up with the equalizer.
Angola Rica. Yoakum. Toxa*. tMI; 7.
o. Expr
Paulding Co.
Expram 3 Cobra* I
Steghante Mldgtey, San Carte*. Catlf. ISM; 4.
Danny McCoy led DCC’s 15-hit
Candaca Fartnay, I I Dorad* Igrtegii Ma..
attack with a double, single and
Uart*r-I404ilsl**
3*91; 9. Nlcato Claxten, SprtngMd Ma,
Wbtvm 3 Strlk* Portal
one nfn scored. Thad Brooks
1349; id Rhanda Yacham, Laming, III., m i;
Fteranc* Skoal Magic 1, Paulding Co.
added three singles while Joe
II. Patrkla WellA Narttvlll*. Tann., ISM; 11,
Jennifer Williama Knanvillo. Tam., 1775; 13 ‘leHel
Lipscomb contributed s pair of
Jennifer Hoya Potwet. TevaA 1225 .
.
v
.wwNSngies and two runsjcecatl
— IHWBldMI •VrtVtWWW.. IU7 seconds. T "
Colllnsworlh, 1511; 3 Clexton, 14 70; A
Phllman, 17.44; 4. Thompson, 17.17; A
Fortney, 17.11; 7. Mldgley. 14.17; 4. O 'Irk,
14.14; 9. Williams. 19.0; 19. RkS. 19.15; 11.
HayA 1947; 11. Yoctwm. 1044; 13 WellA
31.71
Lang (onto — I- Marshall, 14 tort. 4 Inchat;
I. Ctaxton. 134; 3 Cctllmw rfti 13W; A
O'Rrlc. 144141 3 Mldgley. 14SN; A Fartnay.
141; 7. Thompson. 141; 3 Rica. I3llte; 9.
Phllman. 1372*1 Id Yochem, 137; II. HayA
137; 13 WllllamA I3SV4; 13 Watte. 11-7N.
lbo( prt —.1. Phllman. 114*4; 3 Marshall.
I M ; 3 HayA » !1 !4 ; A Yacham. » 9 ; 3
Rico, W7Vt; A Portnoy, 3S4S4; 7. Claxten.
24 10; 3 O'Arlc. 14-1%; 9. Thampmn. 13M;
10, Coiiimworih. 339%; II. Mldgley. 144tot
II. WllllamA 215%; 13WoHAl1-11to.
High lamp — i (tie). Phllman and
Thompson. 49%; 1 (IN). Claxten and Coi­
iimworih, 47%; S (IN). Mldgley. WBrlc.
Rico, and WllllamA * A 9 ONlTManhail and
WellA 41; II (IN). Fortney and Yacham, 4d
•aa — I. O'Rrlc. i:iAW ; 3 CdUmoNrth,
2:15.10; 3 Mlditey. 1:17.33- A RICA 1:».05;
3 Fartnay. 2 .2V45; 3 Yacham, 1:19.79; 7.
Mldgley. 1:17.71; 4. Marshall. 1:44ft; 9.
WellA 1:4341; 10. Phllman. 1:5310; 11.
WllllamA 1:SA51.

" I think the aeedtnm are a:
little m la lea d ln g." said Iowa
coach A m te Oaarde. " I f a the
state that gets seeded. Indiana
always has had 4w d tm k tibad."

. f t 1”

?* J F S i t f o S i l

Johnson and Ira Hall With two
singles and one run scored
apiece. Frank Turner also hit
two singles while Scott Williams
and Mike Brodericks each had
one single.
For H opkins Meats, which
collected 12 hits. Shawn Wyman
and Kay Robinson each hit two
singles and scored a ran. Robert
Burgess and Andy Dickens both
singled once and scored once.
Mike Frazier and Glen Burgcas

each added tw o singles with Tim
W addles and Brian Burgess
chipping in with one single each.
In the nightcap, Florida Manor
jumped on top o f H all's Stucco
with eigh t runs In the first
Inning. H all's Stucco got one ran
back in the home h a lfo f the first,
but Florida Manor pushed across
seven m ore runs In the top o f the
second.
Cliff Partlow. Rick Poore, Jerry
DiBartolo and Blake Murray
each hit three singles and scored
three runs as Florida Manor
amassed 27 hits In leas than four
com plete turns at bat. Kent
Brubaker added a double, three
singles and tw o runs scored.
K y l e B r u b a k e r . B rya n
Hartman and K )&amp; &amp; en ager each
contributed tw o singles and two
runs t a n t d while Joe Fetpes
had tw o singles and one ran
scored. Ron Leaage singled once
and scored once. V ic DiBartolo
and Joe DiBartolo each had one
single.
Jim Hall singled twice and:
scored o n c e to lead H a ll's ]
Stucco. J. Garner hit a double;
J a m e s T h o m p s o n . F re d d y
Moreno and Bob Garner each hit
a single: and Spencer Bagget
scored the other ran.

Pinehurst—
CoatiNNSd froas ! ■
Busaard. But Bikini
Beach used six hits to score four
runs in the third inning to take
control o f the game and never
looked back.
Bikini Beach later added a pair
of insurance runs In the alxth
Inning.
Richard Barry and Al Sumner
paced Bikini Beach's 15-hlt at­
tack in the first gam e with three
singles and one run scored each.
Jerry Dick and Bobby Flowers
both hit a double and scored a
ran.
Also chipping In were Jim
T ro x e ll and Mike Dick (two
•ingles apiece). T im Folon and
M ickey H elm s (both with a
•ingle and one run scored) and
Billy W am ock (single).
Tim W ilks and John Wilks
both contributed three singles lo
Bussard's 12-hit offensive effort.
Bergm an finish ed w ith two
singles and the only ran scored
for the team while Jim Bussard.
Tom Wilks. Duane Goembel and
Rick Roscoe each chipped in
with one single.
Bikini Beach had to come from
behind In the second game as
well, taking a 3-0 lead in the
bottom o f the first inning only to
see Regency Mazda put together
a five-run rally in the top o f the
third.
After tying the score with two
runs in the home half o f (he
fourth. Bikini Beach regained
the lead for good with a five-run
rally o f their own In the fifth
Inning. They added three more
runs In ihe sixth.
Helms led the offense In this
game, collecting two doubles, a
•ingle and two runs scored. Tim
Dulmstra and Arnlc Van Zyll.
who were both shut out in the
first game, got untrucked In the
second gam e. Dulmstra con­
tributing a double, single and
three runs scored while Van Zyll
had three singles and Iwo runs
scored.
Other contributors Included
Troxell (double, two singles, one
run scored). Warnock (double,
single, one ran scored). Folon

(two singles, two runs scored)
Richard B a n y and Flowers (both
with a single and a run scored]
and Mike Dick and Sumner (one
single each.)
Providing the offense for Re
gency Mazda were Jerry Brussel
and Don Cousscaux (each with a
double, sin gle and one run
scored). Scott Pensala (double,
s in g le ). J im T ru e m a n (two
singles). Keith Sparks and Carl
Lee (each with a single and a ran
scored) and Steve Woodley (one
ran scored).
The finale turned out to be a
slugfest o f the highest order aa
the W re ck in g C rew , with a
lineup o f Just nine players, and
Ensley Inc. combined for S3 hits.
Trailing 14-9 after five innings,
the W recking Crew ou(scored
Ensley 12-6 over the last three
Innings to pull out the win.
Leading the Crew were Bill
Marino (home run. triple, dou­
ble, tw o runs scored). Steve
C ooper (tr lp )e , d ou b le, two
singles, three runs scored). Steve
Pridgen (tw o doubles, three
singles, three runs scored and
Heath Short (triple, two singles,
three runs scored).
Also chipping in were Pal
Rupp (two doubles, single, three
runs scored), Tim Winkle (dou­
ble, tw o s in g le s , tw o runa
scored). Mike E. (three singles,
three runs scored). Ron Wlrth
(double, single, two runs scored)
and Jim Stern (single, one ran
scored).
P r o v id in g the o ffe n s e for
Ensley were Denny Evans (dou­
ble. four singles, three runs
scored). Scan Goutd (triple, three
singles, th ree runs scored).
S h an e G r o s s (d o u b le , tw o
singles, three runs scored). Barry
Sweat (double, two singles, one
run scored) and Rick Pettis
(three singles, two runs scored).
Others who contributed were
Ed Mlchalowskt (triple, single,
one ran scored). Chris Boyle (two
slrgics, two runs scored). Steve
Barnes (two singles, one run
scored! and Donny Ball and Mike
Grenier (each with a single and a
run scored).

�Sanford HsraW. Sanford, Florida - Thursday. August t, IS tl -

Oviedo

NABF-

ll
Bmndon twice to datm the slate
Utlc. The first game is set for
9:30 pm . with the "If necea•O "
to follow totmediately. If needed.

IB
see what the out-of-stale
teams bring In."

PORT S T . LUCIE - Jay
Burnett threw a two-hit shutout
Wednesday night to lead Home­
stead to a 14-0 win over Oviedo
and force the "If necessary"
Bumett struck out seven and
walked four. The only hits he
gave were a pair of singles to
aHgucl Balsa.
Oviedo starting pitcher Anhits and alao struck out seven,
but walked nine, committed
three balks, threw three wild
pttchea and had five more pit*
chea get by catcher Kevin
Jackaon for pass hetfa King
wasn’t helped any by the 10
errors committed by his usually
sure-handed teammates.
Trailing 7-0 going into the
seventh Inning, things went
from bad to worse for Oviedo as
relievers Kent Brown and Greg
Moan were roughed up for seven
more runs.

Oviedo loot In nine Innings,
•truck out four a id walked three
after taking over far starter Mike
Rugleniiw wtth two out In the
fourth.
Oviedo took a 3-0 lead It. the
bottom of the second Inning on
Jay Buase’s long three-run home
run to left field. Andy Hynes and
Rich DfTorc had both walked to
set the table far Busae.
Dunedin got to Rugteniua for
two runs tn the top oTthe third,
but Oviedo came right back In
home half of the Inning to
score three more runs.
Tim Slavik started the rally
on s pass baft. Rugtentus then
doubled to occre Slavik. After
Todd Bellbom Ml a ground ball
that moved Rugienius to third,
Hynes ami DfTare both walked
again to load baaea.
Buaae collected hie fourth RBI
of the gon e when he drew a
walk to plate Rugleniue. Brton
King then hit a mound ball that
mlsplayed by the Dunedin
third baseman, allowing Hynes
toseos*.

that

LIVE R ACIN G ACTION
WNB9Q MONEY ON THE GREYHOUNDS
Dunedin continued to chip
Rugtentus, who had been hit
by a pitch near Ms right knee tn away at Rugteniua In the fourth,
Oviedo’s 12-2 win over Coral using a pair of Mngles and a walk
Springs Tuesday, appeared to be to score another run. When
favoring his leg while struggling Rugtetmlus went to 3-0 on the
next hitter. Stephenson came fa
through the first 34* Innings.
After being set down in order and was able to put out the fire
In the first. Dunedin loaded the without any more damage being
bases against Rugteniua In both done.
Busae paced Oviedo's five-hit
the second and third Inning. He
was able to work his way out of attack wtth his home run and
the second Inning Jam without four RBI. Slavik added two
surrendering a run. but couldn't singles and a run scored while
duplicate the feat In the third, Ruglenots had a double, one run
giving up a two-run single.

Evening-7 :4 6 pm
B a k u g S lik A
H V n R 'D v e e

2400South Boy St

177*2141

*&gt;&lt;4470

mm

A C T IO N T O D A Y

iusns

WINTER GARDEN

SANFORD

LAKE WALES — Relief pitcher
Kevin Stephenson allowed one
hit over 314 scoreless Innings to
help the Oviedo Senior All-Stare
eliminate Dunedin 33.

Colts-

McCullough explain ed

having to
to play
ptsy a^tnat a team
that you’ve never seen before
and know nothing about Is aa
much a part of the teaming
experience, saying that If (he
players pay attention, then’ll
realise there are certain generalIsatlons they can make about
bow a lineup la put together.

"They’ll team that the heal
hitters are usually the Noe. 3. 4
and 9 hitlers In the lineup, that
the lead-off hitter usually has
pretty good speed, that the Nos.
8 and 9 hitters are batting eighth
and ninth for a reason,” said
McCullough.
"When you don’t know what
to expect from a team, there are
things you can look for. The
guys win learn how a team Is put
together. That’s part of the
game.”

NEW SMYRNA BEACH
1441 S Otoe H ty w o y

423-7104

anyone) W e're got over
IB

Sem inole Jumped out to a 3 0
lead over Carrollton in the top o f
the first In n in g David Eckstein
(Seminole) led o ff with a single
and Scott Fergeraon (Seminole)
followed wtth a walk. Dtemer
then doubled them both in.
A fter advancing to third on a
paaa baft. Dtemer scored on a
sacrifice fly by Churut.
Dtemer and Chunat figured
directly in Seminole’s next three
runs. In the third Inning. Diemer
led o ff with a double and. an out
later, scored on Chunat’a single.
In the fifth. Diemer walked and
■ c o red o n C h u u at’ a triple.
Chunat later scored on a paaa
ball.
Seminote’ a final run came In
the top o f the seventh aa Matt
Freeman (Seminole) and Chunat
both hit singles. After they each
moved tip a base on a fielder’s
choice by Robert Bologna (Lake
Howell), Freeman scored on a
sacrifice fly by Werner.
K essler and D iem er sailed
along through the first six in­
nings. Kessler allowed Just one
hit and one walk while striking
out two in his three Innings o f
work. Dtemer. who registered
one strikeout, also gave up Just
one hit and one walk.
T h e gam e almost got away
from Seminole tn the seventh
through n o real fault o f Werner,
w ho started the Inning but could
only get tw o outs. Werner was
touched for two hits and a walk
that led to four runs, but only
tw o were earned as Seminole
suddenly had trouble handling
the ball.
Carr, w h o came In with two
outa and runners on first and
third, picked up his teammates
by getting the third out on Just
one pitch.
O f f e n s i v e l y . D ie m e r and
C h u n a t p a c e d S e m in o le ’ s
seven-hit attack with three hits
’a piece. Diem er collected two
doubles and a single while scor­
ing three runs and driving in two
more. Chunat contributed a tri­
ple. two singles, one run scored
and two RBI.
Alao chipping in were Eckstein
and Freeman (both with a single
and one run scored). Scott
F e rge rs o n (run scored) and
Bologna and Werner (one RBI
each).

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Conditioner!

• tKXJO’i

• Lrfittm Warranty

•Brandt may *ary by liars

O r AJUod
Mastics FWx
Funnol

•120Z • U m lU

2.49

•44 pan

•525 fowl

S o n C lu tc h o s

Disc Pods

•5.00 oil rag. pries
• Sim Is (it many cart 4
light tracks

2 * . w.
•At iodiart 5.00 off raa

14.9940.99

6.95

3.99-15.99

1 .4 9
KP ON Fitter
W rench
*7-5528, fits many
largs tiseoil Mtort
•7-5529 lift many
imoN tits oil lillart

2 .9 9
• 9 out of 10 cart
Iranvniuiont foil due to

•AR6500
•Kay it lafo winIs
working undsr your
car uts car rampt
2 ton capacity

•Sint to M many
core 4 W * svk4»
•From *• m Jw i

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inifruction* indudod

Gafarwl ihockt
• B9000. rerere

•Brands moy vary by

15.99

16.95

12.99

Scott Fergerson scored s run (or
the Seminole Coll All-Stars in
their 7-4 win over Carrollton,
Texas, Wednesday night.

*57230
•Spray away gum &amp;
varnitn
rarnitn from cab»
cob»
choirei pc* vahre ttc

1.79

System

I0W30, I0W40.
20W50. 5W30.
Duron I. Typs f

(Max*

Cooling
•9 3
•Abtorbant,
Durable

FUSS TRAVEL MUGS OFFER

C T jy r r r l

No. 6

Umrf 17 Quart*
Nr CutJonwr

'Prafouiond
cisansr/ww

•M06I6
l+w bo*i kookf

1.29

4.79 '

Buy A 12 Feck of
Cestrel Out IMs Fair
of Travel Mugs I8 U
(W.4i MoJ InONr)

�Cyst removal is a
simple procedure
D B A S M L QOTTt I have
several setaceous cysts of the
scalp. Can they be treated with

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from vertigo, which my doctor
attributes to an Inner ear Infec­
tion. He ha« suocsted an MR1 tf
the problem continues, yet I am
reluctant to undergo the pro­
cedure.
D B A S g M I W i Your doctor

jiff 1^

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structures of the body, thereby
enabling doctors to see tf smelt
tumors or growths are the cause

formation. Vertigo (uncontrolled
toss of balance, associated with a
sensation of spinning) la usually
caused by Irritation o f the
balance mechanism In the Inner
ear. This trriUtfan can result
from a presumed virus Infection.
In which case the vertigo win
disappear In a few days as the
Infection resolves of Its own
accord.
However, vertigo can also be
caused by an acoustic neuroma,
a growth In the Inner ear. This la
usually associated with continu­
ous vertigo, or progressive
worsening of symptoms. In such
esses, further testing la needed
to determine if a neuroma la
present. MR1 scanning is useful
fo r t h i s purpose. U s i n g
electromagnetic waves, the MR]
machine creates a picture (on
X - r a y f i l m) of the i n n e r

A U R o u n D O T s ta r r

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By PhllUp Aider
T h e rubber-bridge match con­
tin u es between Control and
Kaos, those two spy organiza­
tions -with- unlisted' 'telephone
numbers that are In all W ashing­
ton. D.C., directories.
Control Is vulnerable thanks to
a slam made by Maxwell Smart,
Agent 86. Two other contracts
went down; the fourth hand was
thrown In. Today's hand Is the
lU th .

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The auction was ditllcult. Over
t h r e e d ia m o n d s , p e r h a p s
Shtarker, North, should have
temporized with three hearts.
But actually he made a voidshow ing splinter bid o f five
clubs. When Siegfried. South.
J u m p e d to six d ia m o n d s .
Shtarker drew the conclusion
that to do all that b idd in g
without (he spade ace or A-K-Q
o f hearts. Siegfried had to have
good trumps.
" S o r r y I f zls is w r o n g ,
Siegfried."

“ Veil, seven hearts Is better,
but zis isn’ t a bad ahpot."
T h e Chief led the spade king.
-K- was clezrto Siegfried‘that* the'
only danger to his contract was a
4-0 trump break, which would
make communications difficult.
Finally Siegfried spotted the
right play. Hr put up dum m y's
spade ace and discarded a heart.
He led a diamond to hand,
uncovering the bad split, ruffed
the club Jack In the dummy,
played a second trump to hand
and ruffed the club queen in the
dummy. Dummy's heart ace
was cashed, and dum m y's last
diamond was led to hand. Now'
Siegfried cashed the diamond
ace and club ace, discarding the
K-Q o f hearts from the dummy.
He claimed the remainder with
his four heart winners.
"B r illia n t. S le g fr ic d t”
exclaimed Shtarker.
"Oh, it vos nutting." replied
Siegfried with false modesty.

extremely carelul os to whom
you delegate authority today,
because a poor choice could
A u g. 3,1991
It looks like you may be given force a commitment on your
greater responsibilities in your behalf that you'd never agree to
chosen field of endeavor In the In person.
year ahead. Perform up to your
BCORMO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
capabilities, because It could F a m ily members. In c lu d in g
offer substantial rewards over a yourself, might be a trifle edgy
protracted period of time.
today. Be very careful that you
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Som e­ d on ’ t do something w ithout
one with whom you were once thinking that could raise their
very tight Is beginning to lose boiling points.
patience with you; this person
S AG ITTAR IU S {Nov. 23-Dec.
resents being taken for granted 21) If possible, try to temporarily
lately. Some fence-mending is shelve tasks or assignments that
needed. Get a Jump on life by you find extremely distasteful
understanding the Influences today. Doing work you dislike
governing you In the year ahead. tends to create results that
Send for Leo’s Astro-Graph p re­ ar^ L uptopar'
dictions today by mailing 61.25
C A PR IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
plus a long, self-addressed, 19) Business and pleasure might
stam ped envelope to A stro- not mix too wed today, so think
Graph, c/o this newspaper. P.O. twice before pitching a deal In a
B ox 9 1 4 2 8 , C levelan d , O H social setting. Your chance at
44101-3428. Be sure to state making a sale doesn't look good.
your zodiac sign.
AQUARIUB (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
V IR O O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You In your last-minute effort to
may lack the ability to see the catch up on things you ’ve left
error o f your ways today, but undone this week, you may atari
you could have an extrem ely cracking the whip over others
critical eye for Sliding faults In instead of yourself. W hipping
others. This Is not a formula for the wrong horse won’ t save the
popularity.
day- ,__ „ , „
L IB R A (Sept. 230ct. 23) Be
PISCE8 (Feb. 20-March 20)

VJUII4I
♦

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harmony with one another. It
could Impede your progress regardlng something you want to
do.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A
similar situation to one you
didn’t handle too well recently
might present Itself today, (f
you're not thinking, you may
make the same mistakes you did
previously.
CANCBR (June 21-July 221
This Is not a good day to poke
your nose Into an affair that a
friend Is trying to keep secret. If
this individual wanted you to
know, you would have been
briefed.

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

EN -

TERPRISE ASSN.

b y L e o n a r d S ta r r

ffiED.1 l\ *E WHAT YW DID WITH
toeOTMAN'S ROOM SO MUCH, 1
T WANT W TO 6 N E ME AM m
\ ESTIMATE O N HH ROOM -.J

I'MNOTH.SOFARTO STRIVED 1 THINK l ‘M \ MOM! 1 FOUND
STANDINGINI THE VElVEETA
DIRECTION/AWED-INLOOk-VEW SCNCTHlNG/YWWEREASWNS
ABOUT! tm*
JO 6 0 -rtfEARTHY. W 0R6ANC ORGANICSURE WHICH) FOR THE BOHEMIAN*

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FCLlUt BAWJia. WAS LOOKIN'
w a a &lt;ip with w m m u*e
YDU*i WHO HAP 5a*t KlMP a
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SanfonS Hm M, Sanford, Florida - Tlturadar. August 1, 1991 * SB

People
Bucking the system

IN BRIEF

Sanford roskfont Nancy Dukas,
In naad o f a . 878,000 heart
transplant, has raised commu­
nity support for her plight.
A d m itta n ce to Ihe benefit
planned for A u g u s t 10 at
Harry's Tavern can be gained
by flashing a Benefit Buck,
available at area businesses.
Th e bucks can also be uaed at
the auction planned for the
afternoon of the evsnt. Com­
mittee members and volun­
teers shown left to right: Missy
M u llin s , Dukas* d a u g h te r;
F ra n k and N a ld a A ra n x a ,
owners of El Bar Tax Max
Restaurant, the official dis­
tribution center for the bucks;
Biron Wsbb; Pat Moyer, owner
o f H a rry 's T a v e rn ; E s th e r
Ramirez; Mary Lou NonJman;
Ralph Dukas, N a n c y ’s
husband; Diana Layer; Mtchaal
Page; Zab W sbb and Lon
H ow e ll, city com m issioner.
New Items for the auction may
be dropped off at the tavern on
Park Avenue between 1st and
2nd streets or call for pickup,
321-9719or 322-4717.

Hstpthssidsrty
A M j g M g . M *H n» the D W crencc" for all iho*c who
■ * * * * « for older P «« o iw will bo sponsored by the Area
c S S «
5 ^ t,Ccn,™ ! i lorlda Re« ,onaI P i n i n g
Councll on August 6 and 7_. from 8:30 a.m. to 4:18 p.m. at the
B e y tUU^
Center. 800 S. Delaney Ave. In Orlando.
Bentley Upaewnb. secretary of the new Florida Department o f
f™
™
" wUI * * the ^ n o t e speaker. His subject will be
*THei Department o f Elder Affaire and State Aging Directions."
Special courses will be offered on Case Management.
I * * * " 1* " 0" " w Referral. Health and Safety and Fiscal

Admin M u lion.

***** co* t o * ***: workshop is 810 a day. which Includes lunch
your
calendars for August
Auaust 8
6 and
____refreshments. Mark; y
°ur c*kndare
7. For more Information, and for a registration blank, calt the
agency at 633*1078.

Chorus looking for mtmbtrs
The Seminole Community Chorus Is looking for new
members beginning with the first semester In the calendar o f
the sponsoring agency. Semihole Community College. This
chorus o f mixed voices Is opened to all singers regardless o f
previous musical experience or music reading ability. No
audition for membership Is required.
T h e Community Chorus was founded In 1973 and continues
under the direction of Dr. Burt H. Perlnchclf. The group
performs a very diverse program o f choral music, both sacred
and secular.
Registration for college credit must be completed by August
23. Leisure time registration will be conducted al Ihe time o f
the first rehearsal at the college on Monday evening.
September 9. All rehearsals are held In the Fine Arts Concert
Hall. Monday evenings at 7 p.m.
For further Information, please call SCC at 323 I4SO ext.
281.

Poker Run to benefit ill children
S A N F O R D - T h e In d ia n
Mound Yacht Club has sched­
u led a C h a rity P ok er Run
beginning at 10 a.m.. Saturday.
August 24. In (he Lake Monroe.
St.Johns River area.
The Poker Run will benefit the
Children's Wish Foundation.
Inlcrnallnal, one o f the five

EM t-W M t Kiwanls to gathtr
East*West Sanford Klwants Club meets Thursday at 6 p.m. at
Friendship Lodge. Seventh and Locust.

City.sponsors atroblcs

D B AR ABBYt I am writing In
response (o the couple In An­
chorage who were tom over
whether or not to keep the 942
the husband found In the glove
compartment of the used car

Swtst Adsllnss to rohsarss
Sound o f Sunshine Sweet Adelines women's barbershop
" Hmgmg'gfttupTfchettrtietrevety-TIiUfsday-ut?.59p:m.-at Prairie Lake Baptist Church. 415 Ridge Road, Fern Park.

tte y bad ¥et't&gt;iM yinuci&amp;u*d;--------

They have no legal responsibil­
ity to return the money to the
c a r's original owner. T o Il­
lustrate. here's a similar case
that went to Ihe Supreme Court
In 1981: In the case o f the City of
Everett v. the Estate of Sumstad.
the Mitchells were a couple who
purchased a used safe at an
auction for 950. The safe had
p re v io u s ly b elon ged to the
Sumstad estate and contained a
locked Inside compartment. The
Mitchells had a locksmith open
the compartment and discovered
832.207 Inside.
The Everett police Impounded
the m oney and brought an
action against both the Sumstad
estate and the Mitchells to de­
termine the owner o f the money.
The trial court decided in favor
o f the estate, but In appeal,
summary Judgment was for Ihe
Mitchells.
Since the Mitchells understood
the sale was final, and the
auctioneer reserved no rights of
Ihe estate to any contents of the
safe, the reasonable conclusion
is that the autloncer objectively
Intended to sell both the safe and
Its contents, and that both

NBW ARRIVALS
C oakley. Altam onte Springs,
girl; Beth Bates. Winter Springs,
boy; Stcffany Heath and Richard
Prokop, Altamonte Springs, boy:
Alla and Henry Brown. Long­
wood, girl.
July 17 — Delores and Thom ­
as W akln. Casselberry, girl;
K im b e r ly and S teph en DcGaetano. Lake Mary. boy.

July 9 — Janet and Thomas
Ball III, Lake Mary, girl: Heather
Sisson. Casselberry, boy.
July 12 — Slu and Jlan Liu.
Lake Mary. girl.
July 11 — Susan Fleming and
Donald Smith. Longwood, boy.
July 13 — Latrtcla and James
Eaton. Geneva, boy.
July 14 — Patricia and Ken­
neth Brantley. Lockhart, girl.
July 15 — Tanya and Michael
MacCoy. Winter Springs, girl.
July 16 — Shlnltha Reddick.
Oviedo, girl.
July 16 — Nicole and Jeffrey

July 18 — Esther and Roberto
Cubcro. Casselberry, girl: Norma
Burgess. Sanford, boy; Katherine
and Randall Slacks. longwood,
boy; Rochelle and James Isham
Smith II. Sanford, boy.
July 19 — Wendy Roberts and
Saul Jim enez. Geneva, girl:
Karen Metz. Geneva, boy: Teresa
and Jerry Wilson, Oviedo, girl:
Angela and Chad Braden. San­
ford. girl.
July 20 — Debra and Jeffrey
Smith. Altamonte Springs, girl.

THURSDAY’S PRIME TIM E
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ABIGAIL
V A N j^ H U

parties mutually assented to the
sale. Therefore, the Anchorage
couple should feel no guilt In
keeping the 942. since the
Supreme Court ruled that the
Mitchells could keep 932.207.
KNOW S T U B L A W
D BAR KNOW Ri Surely you
also must know that that which
Is legal is not always moral. I
rest my case.
ABBYt The first time
you q u o te d “ T h e R e a d in g
Mother." I meant to write to you;
when you did It again today. I
decided I would not fall this
time.
Why not a reading father? My
three sons received bedtime
readings from the time they
were small until almost through
high school. I. their father, was
the reader: I love books, and I
enjoyed the material al leust os
much as they did.
We got through the Alice
hooks. “ G u lliver's T ra v e ls ."
"Huckleberry Finn." "Lord of
Ihe Rings." and scores of others.
t was In medical school and
psychlulrlr residency training
during many of these years, and
the hours spent reading to my
children were u welcome relief lo
me. as well as an Introduction lo
the world of literature to them.
1 recoin mend reading uloud to
children of all ages by cither
parent.

V e r t ic a ls
s FREE In home estimates
• Largs selection to
choose from
■ Prompt. Friendly Service
• Quality Workmanship
• We Do Replacement Slats
I s Custom) Volant
Valances

For thefinest in vertical Hinds andmini-Hinds, coil

SANFORD VERTICALS
'A Bmmhful Ntm U n r t t a t fm l V M m '

T M W y llt A ^ S M f o r i
_____ |WEi

ip

^ &gt; 2 1 -3 6 0 1

— B i i i a n g p ^ / _________

ROB HARDY, CHJBF.
MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES,
R.A.F.. LAKBNHEATH,
UNITED KINGDOM
DBAN MR. H AR D Yi I am
printing your letter In Ihe Inter­
est of fairness lo those fathers
who read to their children.
Although their numbers may
not be as great as mothers, they
deserve to be counted.

Iktl UHtfrua I m M

[m W m U

CONFIDENTIAL TO DES­
PERATE IN CHICAGO: "T h e
darkest hour in a man’ s life Is
when he slis down lo plan how
lo gel money wltlmul earning
It."

HOEACE GREELEY
O FjoydThsatrss

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G* f««*t (■•d d tWLllOMw If

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Five checkpoints will be set up
In Lake Monroe and at the

Sanford Boat Works and Marina to do so.
where participants can pick up
Location o f the checkpoints
cards and complete a boating are to be provided In a dyer
activity.
providing further details on the
Entrants are encouraged to Poker Run, and entrants may
register In advance by calling start the Poker Run at any one of
the Indian Mound Yacht Club at the checkpoints.
324-2781, or by completing a
Volunteer com m ittee mem­
registration form, which will be bers planning the Poker Run
provided. Entry forma will be Include Rear Commodore Jim
available at the yacht club. 4180 McAllister, Fleet Captain Dennis
Chickasaw Dr.. Sanford, or from M lnich. and clu b m em bers
a r e a b o a t in g b u s in e s s e s . Gerald Gallagher. Tom Hodges.
Entrants may register on the day Ron Marlar. Matt Morris and
o f the Poker Run at any o f the Robert Whitaker.
five checkpoints.
Other volunteers arc needed to
The donation requested for assist with the checkpoints.
entry Is 915 for each boat or Judging, cooking, parking, shut­
poker hand. The 915 donation tle transportation, solicitation of
Includes a meal at a Pig Roast to prizes and publicity. Members
be held at the Indian Mound are urged especially to solicit or
Yacht Club following the Poker donate prizes from their busi­
Run. A 95 donation per person Is nesses. Contact Jim McAllister
requested for additional meals at at 322-8384, Ron Marlar at
the PTg RbaslTThePlg Koast arid 32V-3854 or'ariy ofTfic'cdnihitt-"
award of prizes Is scheduled for tec members U you can help
with this event.
8 p.m.
The club plans to award a VHF
The Children'* WM*h Founda­
radio as the top prize for the best tion, International, which aids
poker hand. Other prizes are children stricken with terminal
being solicited from area boating conditions by fu lfillin g their
and other businesses. Prizes wishes, w ill allocate money
donated so far Include a half-day raised here for children from the
pontoon rental, safety equip­ East Central Florida area.
ment. meals for two at area
Other community service pro­
restaurants, t-shirts, a water jects of the Indian Mound Yarlu
bottle and fishing gear.
C lub In clu d e the Sem lnnlc
Entrants may pick up a card at County Parks Department lor
each o f the live checkpoints and care o f the Indian Mound from
complete a safe boating maneu­ which the club lakes Its name.
ver. Boating events on tap In­ Seminole County Humunc Soci­
clude: docking, a man overboard e ty , S em in o le C ou n ty Sufc
drill. Joining another vessel and House. and the U.S. Coast Guard
respoae to an emergency situa­ Auxiliary.
tion. Boaters may also receive a
U,S. Coast Guard A u x ilia ry
ST S M MwUr, IinNm M*u«d
courtesy Inspection. If they wish Vacates*

■ »d tMy~M M |H)

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tM frattow • U,ui Bmto (» SI*KJ) P0 ]S*rth IttA t
“IVMfCll
|H, ;0fMf fmWfwto It I—■ConiMt
k M O M H f Ml* lH (
....
*, w.
_Jfc
! l i m « Mi to*
• M . I •» (iMStp*n.t dm w ' _ "Wife *
_
*pr z O
■I1‘*■»&gt;. Om m h 0* [id 0 ti "
ClMf,,
MSIi iDm
m*
!&amp;
* »■ « |
H w i - i l i S I (a r * i,i&gt; / « HnlmlHH IM lino i
itS T iiw ls e U i • • i 'W
e&gt;uM(k in SWfol PO t j
O f SHrtliOi PC,
. cm»i emtf ra g
__
_ ______ _JL*. LM ~C*pU»' 1**1 GNUWtHn•• IIM1 d*Hlj| Id l In m
' ------------- r n w
t ••|IW*I
I4MM d Utirn'ft* llfri MonaV
&gt;M •••‘i itUfTim,,;1ow tMii
■ in au aiaM fM rtff or

w

Prises and trophies will be
awarded for the best poker
hands and for safe boat handling
practices.

Finders, keepers
according to law

The Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics classes at
the Downtown Youth Center, lower level o f city hall. 300 North
Park Ave. Classes are held Monday. Wednesday, Friday and
Saturday mornings from 9 to 10 and on Tuesday and Thursduy
evenings from 8:30 to 6:30. Cost Is 82 per class. Exercise mats
will be furnished. For more Information call 330-5697. All
non*Sanford residents will be required to pay an annual 910
fee.

The following births have been
recorded at Florida Hospital:
Late Notlces:
May 29 — Nancy and Stephen
Grobmyer. Altamonte Springs,
boy.
June 2 — Teresa and Dennis
Black. Longwood. boy.

community service projects o f
the club.

Jjlfl_
lij Oft I H H
__

f

i f . l ltiit

liff WfM Ml l-df- *•• ••• lli'O Sfvnrj

u r » f tn it

£,**• tMj

.

t t r ut H M f i x i

mi **t im • »
s o*r —

1 £ b HUNTS
N TM 980KI
1ig TN fc jH fl* * *

■t

mi

n iin a

|StCS [ACM

F o r 24&lt;hour T V listin g s, see L E IS U R E m a g a zin e o f F rid a y J u ly 26.

t&lt;£ Q &gt;-

NAKEPOUN21/2 gp
SOAPOISH

U T C H T R tiiT M X A T a ia a s o iiM o jjA to y M o iO T O u a iu ia a s a iu o s M o w s tA C H
TUtSOAV AND WIDNUOAV MOBISMQ AT tSSS AM. COMI AMO SCI VOOO FAVORnl
MCOONALOUMO CtUUUCTtaS^IACM MOMUOAV UOMMIO ST ».M AM.

7/30 A 7/31

P1PPI LONG STOCKINGS

�iWu» &gt;.' t-M*«».i«, ,*.-■&gt;rni.)&gt;it,tii‘^ r» d^&lt;liftlB

7 1 - h &gt;Ip I * ii&gt;&gt;&lt;

CLASSIFIED ADS

ilnol*
■ M il

O rla n d o • W inter Park
831-9993

15— Training
A Education

4 3 -1 —

AO CARR IE RS. • w all
aitabllihed and grow ing
central Flarlda band camparry oTtan you:
• Sami Annual Pay Incroaoa*
•SlapON Pay
• Unloading Pay
avacatlenPay
• Safety Bpnua
• Ipauaa Riding Program
0 Avarago Trip A 7Day*
a Lata modal Convantlenal

1S t r v l c t

5 5 - B v tlM U

Oppoituntti—

JtVcHiLDCARR. On Idyllwlkto

REST AURANT/PIU ARIA tor
rant, with aguipmant. Saatt
84. Raady la epon. Comar
17-01and 35thSt. Sanlord.
Ca«any1lma.l4»5)q

H tO T O W IC h L a A B L 1 1

59— F in a n c ia l
S e r v ie n t
NOTICIOP
FICTITIOUS KAM I
Mol lea la haraby glvan that wa
ora angagad In butinou at iftM
Nurtory Rd , Unit it IX Winter
Spring* 31701. Samlnola County,
Florida, under Iha Flet 11lout
J A JS AUTO CLINIC, and that
wa Inland lo ragiitar taid nama
with lha Sacralary of Stala.
Tallahattaa. Florida. In ac
cordarrca with tha provltiont ot
tha Fldltlou* Nama Statula.
Ta-WIt: Section 8*5 00. Florida
Slatvta* 1957.
Jotaph C. Sclnla Sr.
Jotogh C. Sclnla Jr.
PuMIth: Augutl I, !99t
DEIS

City i f laniard. Florida, title ot
which It at follow*:
ORDINANCE NO. 3878
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF SANFORD. FLORI­
DA. AMENDING CHAPTER II
OF THE COOE OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD E N T IT LE D
"GARBAOE. TRASH. WEEDS
AND SOLID WASTE"! RE­
Q U IRIN G REFUSE C O L­
LECTORS TO O R T A IN A
FRANCHISE AOREEMKNT
TO PROVIDE COLLECTION
OF COMMERCIAL WASTE
WITHIN THE CITY ON SERV­
ICE A G R E E M E N T S E N ­
TERED INTO ON OR REFOni
JUNE 14. m i; PROVIDING
D E F IN ITIO N OF TERM S
"FRANCHISE AGREEMENT".
"FRANCHISE COLLECTOR"
AND - ' R E F U S E C O L ­
LECTO R"; PRO H IBITING
THE COLLECTION OF CONS
MERCIAL WASTE IN THE
C ITY BY REFUSE COL
LECTORS AFTER OCTOBER
I, 1918. WITHOUT A FRAN
CHISE AGREEMENT; RE
QUIRING APPLICATION FOR
FRANCHISE AGREEMENT
FILED BY AUGUST 38. m i;
PROVIDING AUTHORIZA
TIO N FOR F R A N C H IS E
AGREEMENTS; PROVIDING
DUTIES OF A FRANCHISE
COLLECTOR. PROVIDING
FOR TRAN SFERAB ILITY;
PROVIDING FOR FRANCHISE
FEE AND ADMINISTRATIVE
FEE. PROVIDING POR COO
IFICATIOM. SEVERABILITY.
CONFLICTS AND EFFECTIVE
DATE
A espy that l bo aval labia at
tha office of the City Clerk tor
all pertont detirtng to a«amine

Ranf* 18 E att, Samlnola
County, Flarlda. thane* run
Wnt. along tale) South Lina ot
Country Club Road 12588 toot;

too Complaint lor Faroeleture
WITNESS my hand and m
aftoNCaurtan July II. m i.
I MALI
MAN VANN E MORSE
CLERKOP THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Ruto King

Track Road. Pott Office Boa
1117. Longwood. Florid* M ill

mi. end file the anginal with
the Clerk ot thlt Court either
before tarvlc* on Plaintiff*'
altornoy or Immediately there
after; otherwit* * default wilt

|F Z X K P

V i M M

V I K P .

pftEVKXJS SOLUTION: "Thd onfy way tO tw •»occ*
HoBywood to to bd aa obnoiioua at thd n«*t guy.

roll*I demanded In the Com
plain!
DATEOon Julylt. I0tl
(COURT SEAL)
MARVANNE MORSE
Clark ot tha Circuit Court
By: Heather Brunner
At Deputy Clerk
Publlth Augutl 1.8.15.«. 1901
DEI 17

All partial in interact and
clfiient thell have an opportunl
ty to be heard at laid hearing
By erdtr at the City Com
mittion of lha City ot Santoro.
Florida.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: It
a parton dacldtt to appeal a
Oreit&gt;on mad* with ratpoct to
any matter contktorad at tha
above meeting or hearing, ha
may naad a verbatim record ot
tha proceeding*. Including tha
totlimony and tvldmce. which
record it not provided by the
City ot Sanford (FSlSeOlOSI
Janet R Donahoa
City Clark
P-Alith Augutl t. loot
DEI II

MfTOCtlOiT?
Nona bad bankrupt? Naad a
car, boat or homo loan? No
down paymant loan* arTRUCKER'S SPECIAL. Prlv.
antranca. I big room, bath
and place to pock rlgl-JlIGWl

For lha currant rotacall,

P a lm in g
CONCEPT Owe Eater. Gen
carpentry! Home, elflco,
kitchen. bathim — F
L a n d s c a p in g

C l— n in g S t r v l c t

CATNV'S CLEANING SERV­
ICE - Referme t v reasonable
ratev L learned I Call 773 7470
SUMMER 1 HOT 1 CLEAN?
Retot treat 05 A op. Call Jay I
C o n c r g tg

ContracW?

E le c t r ic a l

a a J B S CVPBBlt# a. Mulch
or pine berk 114 yd. picked up.
Can deliver. Cyprete lumber
B Foam material tul to or­
der l 4 mile* wet! ot Wtkiva
River Hwy 48 98*181-1084
Law n S tr v lc t
COMPLETE Quality Lawn A
Landteaping. Tree Service A
Irrigation, competitive rate*,
tree etllme let Sonny'v377 7«lt
LAWN CARE, free till motet 85
and up. Senior dltcounlt.
Troth removal . HI 1711
CammarclaURetldawHal. Low
Ratotl CaU Tam........m a n s
RANDY'S QUALITY LAWN.
Complat* car*, clean up*.
Sine* lttl Free til. I HI 8718
M a son ry
TWP MASONRY. Brick, block,
ttucco. concrete Renovation*
Llc'd A In* HI &gt;404/81*0117

C a rp g n try

work Law III Fro* at! Wood,
chatnltnk A repair*. 177 0*31

M o v i n g A H a u lin g
B A R HAULINQ. Yard hath,
appl . turn. Ckaap/on timet
tlVup Call Bay *57-7387
a a e HAULINO.yard troth,
appliance*, lurnituro. troth ot
any kindl Richard...... 173-7781

A B N EXTERIOR PAINTING
A prettur* dean. SAVE M88
Lk./traoatll 180Sno*
DICK PINOLA'S PAINTING.
Quality workl Int/Ext., Llc'd
A Interred Free t ill jjj 5731
Watking Repair*. Int/ait.
Froattt. llyrt. 747 OtSJ
HOUSE PAINTING. Intorlor/atterlor, prttturo clean
Ing. tree atllmatotl 311 9*17
P o t t C o n tro l
• BISHOP PEST CONTROL •
Senior Cltlten Dltcounlt 1
18year* eiperlencel n o 8779
P lu m b in g
H O fllR SfU N IM M C
All your plumbing noidtl 14
hourtl iRFOUlTTOm 1988
SPEEDY PLUMBINQI Abto
lutaly tree etl No Irlpo/tvc
charge LIc./Im . h i uee
P r ts s u r t C lta n in g
PCM Home wath and painting
"Quota* by phona". Call
Hog*r.H4 4*40.8AM8PM
S G c r t t a r ia l A
T y p in g Sg t v I c m
CUSTOM frpLg/LeU eopleel
DJ Enterpritat. 481B E. 15th
S t. Sanlord XI* 0471/331 7*«1
T r t t S tr v ic *
Tree work, light hauling. Fro*
attimetot. Inturert 17I I410

I#/rrrtisr ) mu Itusinrw / rrr\ Ihiy
S / ) /'#•/* \lnlilll. I iill ( hi n &gt;i/inl

l
I

�cy

Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Thursday, August 1. 1991 - 1%

m

T V C A B L Y IM by U t t f Wrlgta

I

fi—kBSU

f

21»— Wanted te Buy

•rn ^ m rrn m m rm

to m u a ijB ib m m

■ M M . S B A TH . M a i

• DICTIO NARY for youth,
Treasury of Looming. » voi
umo Illustrated Ml. Soettom
from atomic onorgy to Wotor
mammal*. Eicellent cottdT
U o n a o m o iM ________
Ctty HaO.CoM

JUSTLIKEAHOME
Single floor with private
entrance. Stud let. i A i
NOroemo. many ealrao Inelu d in g t le r a g e space.
Qutot.coty community. Nice
londtcoplng ON SITE MANAMIRS WHO C A M It

petit. Cell m i n , ymo.

jjK c ifW t,

jn m ?

Fomli/ rm. flrtplace, Mcurlty
IP It Hi HCiO DSCRi tPP Ww&lt;l
Owner relocating, priced
ngMI soiJH

ing woeher/dryer. MM/mo
plus security. M M f l l or
MAH14

sty* security. ase-Mo; oiler «

T M E U fP m K R T S
NORRONIY DOWN
•tcopt too, tog, title, etc
1 11*0 HYUNDAI!
Mower
steering end broket. A/C.
Economical I Only ttlf.M per
month IN month* O 1t.*%
AMR).............Call Mr. Payne
Courtesy U ted Cor*. 1331117

3214739.............321-2297

A M MART ITUDtO. privets
perfect fsr retiree) tie pots
MNInclurtsutlHtto*.gp-P*7
rent, quiet nelghberheed.
Port Ave. MsMM* Fb. » M H

P COUCH. Grey A mauve In
color STS.M. Coll after SPM
M F. Anytime on Sot, m i w *

i l l — Parting Span

e s r n if it mirror. chett
of drawer*, twin bed A from*.

CALLHIHA4

T H E IfF PAYMENTS
HOMONt v DOWN

lot Onty SJS.MO 01X743

eicept la*, tog. title, etc

K l TWO AIDMOOM APT.,

!»•?. O L D I M O I I L I

dbwnleem Sonhad. Vety fee
Call Ml on*

nulumallc. A/C. ttartc. f&gt;t.y
tMf.M per month ita month*
.» IS *X APR).Call Mr. Payne
Courtesy tiled Cor*. m i W

plut deposit. 311X1*3
CROWHSQUARI

TM E Ilf PAYMENTS

322*2420

NOMONEY DOWN

321*2720
Sec room I Complete privacy
fence, well to wall carpet A
CHA. *41X08. e * eMS-SIM

tOO per month, m -r m

Single Story. M Bdrrn.
Atk about our....
"L oom Special....
4E
'tfi§EMDEN094§1^
M F * J:Open Weekend*
LAKE MARY W I U

1, 2. ft 3 BEDROOMS
RENTS STARTING FROM

WASHER/ORVIR. Maytag
gat, **c. cond. MOO 080;
TV-VCR. Curflt Mathli. U00.
FREEZER. Admiral lieu. It
upright. SIM OBO. MtSSM

Onh.ii);

ttl, loot A security. Aviltoktl

Step Up into A
Great Apartment!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

OOVIA THE B ID TABLE.
*d|u*labl* with mirror IIS.M.
Cell anytime ............. 173 urn

I BUY HOUSES * * *"

bedroom I bath homes with I
car garages from 1310.
total monthly payments
Universe! Realty. SU-UN

ANY CONOITtONI
Need repairs? Behind on
payments? Cell Grew, 331 *71*

117— Sporting Poods
aOIHLS BIKE 30“ tingle speed
New tires US 00171 tAM
HARD TIME telling guns? For
small tee I will tell your
weapon within *0 days or lee
end gun returned I deal with
buyers from ell over US
Cell FERAW? lire***

153- A c r e ag e
Lots/Salt
LAKE FRONT • ASSUMABLE
NON QUALIFY! Rota* an the
wood deck over leaking the
water when you buy this super
1 bdrrn. 1 bath home. Many
estraa Including spa. oak cab
Inetv vortical*. Fantastic toll
Unbelievable *t ITT.1*0

OCALA N A T ’ L FOREST.
Weeded total U.fW each, no
money down I |7t 41 monthly
________ isooeei iw *

P IK E REDUCED!!
3 Large building lots on Rout*
44near Lake Harney Total 14
acres toned A t. Includes
water meter Now priced at
114,fOO with owner terms
available)

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans

I f f * J E E P CHEROKEE
LAREDO
4 wheel drive. 4
door, power locks and win
dowt. dark bluet Very very
low miles, priced to Mill
Call 312 4301
1(74 CHEVY Pick up. * cylinder.
3 speed Good work truck *400
obo ..............
m nn

US— Machinary/Tools
1915 FORD FI 90 PfCN UP

l t » — Pa ts &gt; Supplies

Low mlleagel 11,300 Cell
111 1731between 3PM 3PM
t i l l M E R C U R Y TRACER
STATION WAGON Auto. PS
PI). A C eac cond 13S30OBO
Call 313 *341 alter 4 30
weekdays, anytime weekends

IS FORD RRONCO I cyl . 4WD
Eddie Bauer Model, only 3IK
miles tll.SOO Call 111 334*

Com e Home To
C ountry Style L iv in g!

THIS W EEK S

231— V a h ic lts
ORAIBITS A cages CHEAP.
ChtAp. chd*?1 IS 00 «*&lt;h to
good home
321 9743

200— Registered Pats
C R »R {f
Friday and Saturday. Aug
Ind and 3rd 311 Power Rd
(Otl Rlvervlew Dr) 371 1104

(1st Month Only)

2 A&gt; 3 B ed ro om
A p artm en ts

2 FAMILY S M I
Saturday and Sunday. *3 lie
Valencia Cl W Santord Re
ligerator, 1 freezers. Mars
garden tractor, beach crultar
and 10 spaad bikes, queen
brass bed. hot tub. seals I.
wedding dress. S3 ti ll. 10
Speed bilu. mlsc____________

• Cable TV
• Washo/Drycrs in Select Units
• Seif Clean Oven

• Iccmakcr

• Dishwasher
•

(faattnty

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessorial
e i A O I N A W tou r speed
transmission with cast Iron
bell housing Acting tlOO oho
1 3 0 ttlt.lv m tq____________
4 MICHILIH tires. P7J*» end
chrome modular wheel! lor
Bronco II 1100 UO 173*

LEASENUN OPTION
Senlord. 3 bdrrn. 1 both,
central A/C. ail appliance*,
mini* and verticals, ten*, se­
curity system, weed tone*.
US.SH. U.000 dawn. SSSS/mo.
_______ cell r o i r n ________

eecept to*, tog. title, etc
It*) C H IV Y C IL C A R ITY
A/C. eutometk. stereo, lilt,
crulto. Only I14R.3Q per month
II*month* u 19.9% APR)
Coll Mr. Peyne
Courtety Used Cor*. 173 )in

3 FAMILY SME

Garbage

i i j
•Clubhouse

. t t l f t lT u

j apartments

2450 Hertwrll Ave.* Sanford

TAM 17-OPN AMPOR

324-4334

MON.-SAT.9-6 • Stm. 12-3

MOW B6 SALE
Household Items, kids clothes
A toys Sat ONLY! * ? 1*41
GEORGIA AVE.

SATURDAY, 173
From * 4 1*11 Cleirmont Ave.
Sanford I Near Seminole
High! Moving Sato1

Boat motor, furniture, dishes
clothes mlsc Saturday 41
140 E vansdaia Rd. Lk Mary

1HIHTZU Puppies. AKC. 4
(■males, t male Brlndle
brown A white 1st A Ind
iholt Dewormed Parents on
114 73*0
premises *130 300
TOT POODLE*. AKC 3 months
old with health certificate and
first shots 4*4 4117

HORSE BOARDING
lots ot
trails Personal attention al a
reasonable price New bam
Also horses tor sale 149 I1S4

Mousebold misc . G irls. Large

211— A n tiq u e s/
C o lle c tib le s

womens and mens clothing
baby Item*, queen site bed
with frame Sat A Sun ■ Id 3.
IS* LINDA LANE LK MART

IJ'S COLLECTORS ITEM
Grundig stereo and radio in
solid lea* cabinet 177 3737

3 FAMILY SALE

W anted
AA AUTO SALVAGE
ot DeBary
WE WEIGH AND PAVI
Top It lor |unk.
Car* A Trucks

241— Re c re a tio n a l
V e h ic le s / Cam pers
AVAILABLE SELF STORAGE1
Outside storage lor RV\
Inquire. 1 1. M F 331 3SI3
Will Irade * acres wooded sde
Lk George area Cal* 131Till
RV RENTAL lots. *143 me Inci
water, sewer A garbage
Park Ave Mobile Ph 173 JSai
TRAVEL TRAILER. I X 30
Screen r m w vinyl windows C
utility partitions New e .
cond i M A L L U T I L I T Y SHED
alum inum
All lor S7S00 00
M u ll see'
J 10 u t l

14 FT. TRAVEL TRAILER
sleeps * air eicelent shape
37*00
Call lav «i*t

�I » * I

i i t‘ I t f f I i i t

r r » /V » 7

f f f I l r r M

' »

- Sanford HtfsM, S anford, Florida • TDuradar, A u gu st t, 1 M 1

L«fl«l Nolle*
1 0 , TOMRSUP 31 OOUM, SAMOS 31
w n ,
A PORTION OF M B BAIT 3 3 0 .0 0 F IS T
OF LOT H " M B BLAVXA COLOR! COMPANY'S RSROXY 1B I0B *, ACCORDING TO T M FLAT TM R B O B , M
XR M A T BOOR I , M S I 7 1 , OT M l
OF I H H OU COUNTY. FLORIDA,
AB

MTtn

UBBINOiR COUNTY.!
•^NNNuH

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jf,1* POW
' «*X ORU
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lARYm
* * * S-ClAYTONl/iOaiOA
CO
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&gt;u u a r o v_.i n v o r r , jranrttr l w y p r r i

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(M M N lS n rR M lR lIR ia M N W t
rsNiiUlwlmswrlwtirw»lwaNrMHn&gt;»rf&gt;
MNWa

f f f t t l R I C^IMJNO I*n -1R I*T * Y , THNOUGN. UNOER OM
AOA 2 » f TMt NAMEDDf F ■ NOAMTS: AND TO ALL PARTIRB
MAVJNO Oa CLAIM INOTO W A V ANY RIGHT. TITUI CM
INTIRRST IN TN« PROPRRTY DCSCRIBIO tlLOW.
An Rmbant Oamato M W w . N a M a r *Hft m On

LOT M , FOR A PO IN T OF M &gt;M INCE; M M CI M R
M U M # 1 *4 3 *3 0 " IA R T , ALONG M B NBBT U H I OP
SAXO I0 T 00 , A 01R M R C S OR 00.00 F I S T ; M M CI
RUN NORM 0 0 * 1 0 * 1 1 " IA R T , 144.01 P U T TO M B
W U T U H I OF T M BART 330 P U T OF M B AFORRI, ANO M B POINT OF M O X N R IN Q ;
00*10*11" IA R T , 1 0 0 .0 0
01*33*49" BART, 3 .0 0
00*10*11" NBBT, l o t . 00
NBBT U H I OF M B BART
LOT M ; M M C I N N ROOM 0 1 * 3 1 * 4 0 *
M O T ALOM SAXO N U T U N I 3.00 FSNT TO M l
POINT o r BBBXNN1RO.
M B ABB YI DORTNIOI P BASN4SNT U U ZN i m i N O U
----- T Y, F L O N IM , ANO OQNM 1M 4R» NQUAM P U T ,
ON LB SI.
B » BUO L A R I NOAO
NO. 114
TUOKAWILLA NOAO TO OR 430
F IB output
o r U N O LYINO IN M l SOUTHEAST QUAR-

~~

wnenomit,

I I B O O M , M R S ! 31 BART, ALRO KRONN
AO LOT 10 o r n W P QOOtU) "P A M IR RUBOXVISION",
ACCORDING TO M R OSH) TNSUOF, AR FOUNO IN
OFFICIAL I NOCROB BOOR 001, PAGE 0 3 7 , OF M B
VUBUC I I CCROO OF im X N O U COUNTY, FLORIDA,

T a u r a k n k M liM b ta r a n M M a w tR r
FASCCL NO. 109

TUOKAWILLA MAO VO

tit

. A OARCSL OF LAW , B I I I M A M O TIO N O f M l BOOTH
h a l t o r m i M t m iiA a r Q U A i m o r th s
OUARTIR o r i i c v i o n
ig ,
t o w n s h ip s i
R A M I 31 lAfT, H I M
NOUS M S T lC U U ItV
S C R IBED AJ FOLLOWlI
_______

N i f f l or0rw n n n ;
MM M UM 0 1 * 4 3 IART, ALONG T N I
■ A a r u n i o r m i i a i d n ou m n m t o u ar tsn , a i . o o
m r TO A MINT LYING ON TNS IO O N M .I MONT*
or-NAY U N I or MO MM L A M MAO ANO M l M IN T
o r MOINMNO; M M C I CONW M II OOUM G1*41*3G"
■AST. ALONG M l M ID BAIT U N I . 10.00 M I T ;
T N M C I NUN I0UM 93*3G*11" N U T , 1314.14 M S T ;
THRMCS GOUTH 44'SS*44" WSGT, 34.03 M IT TO TNS
■AITIKLY IIONT-Or-NAY U N I OT MOOttO LANS;
T N M C I N04TM 01*17 •03" N U T , AL0N0 M ID IAOTM L V RICHT-Of-KAY U N I . 79.03 MST TO A M IN T
ON M l AT0MM1D OOUTNIILY RIGHT-OF-WAY U N I
O r M O MM LARI NOAO; T N M C I N0GM • • • • • • S O "
THW CI

■ A I T , ALONG SAID 004ITNISLY RIGHT-OF-WAY U N I ,
1 3 0 1 .0 1 M I T TO M l FOXMT OF MGINN1N0.
T N I ANOVB OBBCBIBIO FANCSL OT LAND U U
ZN
a m i N O LI COUNTY, FLOttZOA, AND CONTAIU 1 . I 4 S
A C M S , N 0 M 01 L U S ,

PARCEL NO. 709

t otatS or N ltA
SID mo u u IO IB
TUSXANXLLA NOAO TO U 434

A FANCSL OF LAND BEING A FONT!ON OF M l NOWS
HALF OF M B N0NMIAIT QUAURR OF M S SOtfMNMT
QUARTER OF SECTION 1 0 , TONNMIF 31 OOUTN,
HANOI 31 IA0T, ANO NBXNO NOM PARTICULARLY
OUCRIBEO AS FOLLONOl
CONNMCI AT M l NONTMIAST CONNER OF BAZO
aOUTNWUT QUARTER, FON A POINT OF BSMSMC8;
T N M C I NUN BOUTN 01"43*3G" N U T , ALONG TNS
KAGT U N B OP M IO SOUTNNUT QUARTER, 14.00
F I R TO M B POINT OF BNGINNING/ TMNCS COMTIMUB SOUTH 01"43'39" N U T , ALONG SAID M IT U N B ,
4 .0 0 M I T ; M M C I NUN OOUM •••39*11" W O T ,
1130.00 M IT ; M M C I OOUM S S *0 0 'II" N U T ,
310.73 M I T ; M M C I SOUTH 1S"09*41" N U T ,
34.00 F I R TO MB BASTMLY NIONT-OF-NAY U N B
OP BROOM LABI; TMNCS NOSTM 01*37' l l * N U T ,
33.09 M ST ALONG GAXO NIONT-OF-NAY U N B ;
T N M C I MM NOOTN 44*01 *44* BART, 14.03 M i r ;
THENCE RUN NORTH 44*34' l l " BART, 1334.14 FRIT
TO W 1 POINT OF BBOINMXNO.
THE ANOVB DE9CRIGRD EAOM4MT U U IN OMUNOLB
county.
FLORIDA,, AHO _C0NT M N*„0«M f tOUAM .
PIET, SORE OR LESS.

wen ggo l a r i NOAO

PARCEL HO. 10»

TUMANILLA NOAO TO BN 430
FEE SINPLI
A PARCEL OF LARO LYINO IN T N I SOUTH1AST QUAR­
TER o r SNCTIM I t , TONNONIO 31 SOUTH, RANG! 31
■AST, RHINO A PORTION OP LOT SB, "THE BLAVXA
COLONY CONMHY'i SUBOZVXBXON*, ACCOGDXFG TO
T N I FLAT THEREOF, AB NBCONOBO IN PUT BOON 3 ,
FAOB 71 OP ME PUBLIC RECOROR OF BMUNOLB
COUNTY, FLOOIOA, ANO NMNO NOM PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AB FOLLONII
'
COMMEMC! AT MB BORTNBU T COMER OF SAXO
SOUTHBART QUARTER, FOR A POINT OF RBMRBNCI;
THENCE NUN SOUTH 01*43*31* BAIT, ALONG THE
NEST U N E OP SAID SOUTHBART QUARTER, 31.00
P U T . TO A POINT LYING ON M B SOUTHERLY RIGHTOP-MAY U H I OP BIO BUG LA M ROAD; THENCE RUN
NORTH S S * 3 S 'll" BART, ALONG RAID SOUTHERLY
RICHT-OF-HAY UNE, 39B.B3 MET TO TNI POINT OF
BEGINNING; TNENCB CONTINUE NORTH 99*29*11"
BART, ALONG M l AFORESAID SOUTHERLY RIGHT-OFWAY LINE OF RED SUQ LARI NOAO, 330.00 FEET TO
THE EASTERLY U N I OF APOMBAID LOT SS; M M C I
RUN SOUTN 01*11*49* EAST, AL04I0 BAXO EASTERLY
LINE, 90.00 PUT; THENCE RUN SOUTH SB*3S*11*
WEST, 330.00 PUT; THD4CI RUN NORM 01*31 *41*
MEET, 99.00 FEET TO THE POINT OF BBOIKNINO.
THE ABOVE PARCEL OP LAND U U
IN • M I NOLI
COUNTY, FLORIDA, ANO C04TTAINS 30,119 SQUARE
FEET, NOM OR LU S,
to g a th w r w it h

u.
...
PARCEL NO. 70*

RED BUO LAKE ROAD
TUOKAWILLA ROAD TO SR 43R
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT
A PARCEL OP LARD LYING ZN M B SOUTHEAST QUAR­
TER OP SECTION IS, TOWNSHIP 31 SOUTH, RANGE 31
BAST, BEING A PORTION OF LOT SB, "THE SLAVXA
COLONY COUPART'S SUBDIVISION*, ACCORDING TO
THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PUT BOOK 3 ,
PAGE 71, OP TNI PUBLIC M CQROR OF SM1BOLI
COUNTY, PL0B10A, ANO BEXNO NOM PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWSI
OONNINCt AT TNS NORTHWEST COMMIE OF SAID LOT
09, FOE A POINT OF RSPERMCI; TMNCS NUN OOUM
01*43*2t" BAST, ALONG M B N U T U N I OF SAXO
LOT 99, A DISTANCE OF 00.00 P U T TO M l POXKT
OF BEGINNING; TNENCB RUN NORM 14*31* 11* BART,
344.43 FEET; THENCE RUN SOUTH 01*31*44" BART,
7 .0 0 FEET; THENCE RUN SOUTH 11*24*11" WERT.
344.41 FEET TO THE AFORESAID NEST U H I OF LOT
99; THENCE RUN NORTH 01*43*29" NEST ALONG SAID
NEST LOT LINE 7.00 FEET TO M E POINT OF BEGIN­
NING.
THE AROVE OUCRIBEO EASEMENT U U IN SM1NOLR
COUNTY, FLORIDA, AND COMA I HE 3,412 SQUARE
FEET, MORE OR LUS.
PARCEL HO. 110

TUSKAMXLLA ROAD TO SR 430
r t l SZKPLB
A PARCEL OF LARO LYING IN M E SOUTHEAST QUAR­
TER OP SECTION IS, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 31
EAST, BEING A PORTION OP LOT S9, "THE SLAVXA
COLONY COMPANY'S SUBDIVISION", ACCORDING TO
TUB PLAT THEKBOF, AS RRCOBOBO IN PUT BOOK 2 ,
PAGE 71 OF THE PUBLIC SSOOA0S OF SMINOLS
COUNTY, FLORIDA, AND BRING NOM PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS!
COMMENCE AT TNI NORTHWEST CORNU OF SAID
SOUTHEAST QUAJITU, FOR A POINT OF REPIRBNCS;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 01"43*3S* EAST, ALONG M R
WEST LINE OP SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER. 39.00
PEET, TO A POUT LYING ON M E SOUTHERLY RIGHTOF-WAY LINE OF REO BUG LAKE ROAD; THENCE RUN
NORTH SS*3S* 11* EAST, ALONG SAID SOUTHERLY
RIGHT-OF-NAtr LINE. 399.S3 FEET TO THE POINT OF
BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUE NORTH 99*24*11"
EAST, ALONG THE AFORESAID SOUTHERLY RIGHT-OFMAY LIMB OF RIO BUG LAMB ROAD, 330.00 FEET TO
THE EASTERLY LINE OF AFORESAID LOT S9; M M C S
RUN SOUTH 01*31*49" EAST, ALONG SAID EASTERLY
LINE. 9S.00 FEET; THENCE RUN SOUTH S t"3 S *lk WEST. 330.00 FErr; THENCE RUN NORTH 01*31*49"
WEST 99.00 FEET TO THE POINT OF SHINNING.
THE ABOVE PARCEL OF LAND U U
IN SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA, AND CONTAINS 19,470 SQUARE
PEET. MORE OR LESS,
*

t o g e t h e r w it h

RED BUG LAKE ROAD
PARCEL NO. 710
TUMANILLA ROAD TO U 420
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT
A PARCEL OP LARD LYING IN M B SOUTHEAST QUAR-

M l NUT U H I OF M B
, 33.00 P U T TO A POINT
LYINO OR T M NORMUU.Y RIGHT-OF-NAY U N B OP
M D BUO L A U NOAO ANO TNI POINT OF M01NNIN0;
M M C I CONTINUB NONM 01*33*49" W O T , ALONG
M l M ID N U T U N B , 1 0 .3 ) PU T TO A POINT ON A
NON-TANGENT CUNVI C09KUV1 SOUTHERLY, M INCE
NON BAfTERLY, ALONO M l ARC OF RAID CURVE,
NAVI NO A RADIUS L O O M OF 143*0.94 P U T , A
CENTRAL A M U OF 01*12*30", AN ARC LSMOM OF
303.0) PO T , A CHORD L U O M OF 3 0 3 .0 ) P U T ,
ANO A CHORD NRANIM OF NONM 0».*30*00* BART,
TO M S NUTBRLY IIONT-OP-NAY U N I OP AN M4NANSD STRUT (00* BID I ) ; M M C I RUN NOUM
01*11*01" BART, ALONO SAID NUMBLY RIGHT-OFWAY U H I, 0.00 P U T TO M B AFOHUAID NORM BELY
RIGHT-OF-WAY U N B .OF U D BUG LAKE ROAD; M M C I
RON OOUM 00*30*11" HINT, ALONO SAID NORM 0LV
NIONT-OF-NAY U N I . 303.0) P U T TO M l POINT OF
B M I RHINO.
MS

ABOVX PARCEL OP LARO U U
ZN IB I1 N O U
, FLORIDA, ANO CONTAIN! 4 ,1 2 7 SQUARE
NOM ON L O N ,

to g e th e r with
RID RUG LAXB ROAD
PARCEL NO. l i t
TUSXANXLLA ROAD TO OR 42R
F IB ■ INFLI
A PARCEL OF LARD U IN O IN M B SOUMRANT QUART M OF M B NORM IART QOARTIR OF RNCTZON 10,
TONNMIF 31 NOUM. R A M I 31 IART, ALRO KNOWN
AR LOT 33 OF UHRECON O P "PARKSR OUBOIVIOZON*
ACCONOINO TO M R ORSD THEREOF, AB FOUND ZN
OFFICIAL M CONOB BOON R tl, PAGE 037, OF M l
FUOUC I I CONON OP RRNZNOUt COUNTY, FLORIDA,
B U M NOM PARTICULARLY DESCRIIED AR FOLLOWRl
CONNM CE AT TMR ROUTNWUT CORNU OF M E SAID
NOUMSAOT QUARMR OF M l NONMEANT QUARTU,
FOR A MINT OF R U W N C I ; THENCE RUM NORM
01*31*41" N U T , ALONO THE WERT LIMB OF M R
■AID OOUTMART QUARTU OF M B NOIMIABT QUAR­
T U , 33.00 P U T TO M B NORTHERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY
U N B OF MD BOO U U ROAD; TNMCS RUN NORTH
•0*30*11* BAST ALONO SAXO NORTHERLY RIGHT-OPMAY U H I. 340.03 F I R TO MR EARMRLY RIGHTOF-WAY UNB OF AN UN-NAMED RTREKT (OR FEET
N ID I) ANO M E POINT OF BEOINNINO; THFWCI RUN
NORM 01*99*01" NEST, ALONG ME RAID LATTERLY
NIONT-OF-NAY U N I , 7.03 FEU TO A POINT ON A
MOM-TAMOENT CURVE, CONCAVE SOUTHERLY; THEMCE
RUN EASTERLY, ALONO M E ARC OF SAZO CURVE,
HAVING A RADIUS L U O M OF 143R0.04 PERT, A
CUTMAL AM U OF 00*13*01", AN ARC LBNOM OF
'*3 .1 1 PUT, A CHORD LENGTH OF’ 93719 FEET, AND
A CHORD REARING OP SOUTH a f*lS *4 9 " EAST, TC
M E POINT OP TENDENCY THEREOF; THENCE RUN
OOUM E«*07*49" SANT. 04.47 PEET TO M E AFORE­
SAID NORTHERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY LIWI OF RED BUO
LAKE ROAD; THENCE RUN SOUTH t t * 3 « * l l " WEST,
ALONO RAID NORM ERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE, 184.43
FEET TO THE FOIST OF SEOINKIWO.
M E AOOVI PARCEL OF LAND U U IN SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA, AMD CONTAINS 730 SQUARE F I R ,
NONE OS L U S .
t o g e t h e r w ith

REO BUG LAKE ROAD
PARCEL NO. 714
TUMANILLA ROAD TO SR 434
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASUENT
A PARCEL OF LARO LYING IN M E SOUTHEAST QUAR­
T U OF M B NORTHEAST QUARTU OF SECTION I t ,
TONNMIF 31 SOUTH, R AM I 31 EAST. B U M A
PORTION OF LOT 20, UNRECORDED "PARKER SUBDIVI­
SION", ACCORDING TO M E FLAT THEREOF AS FOUNO
ZN OFFICIAL RECORDS BOOK R tl, PAGR 437, OF THE
FUOUC RECORDS OF OMZHOLB COUNTY, FLORIDA,
ANO OBI KG NOM PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS!
C040IIMCI AT M I SOUTHWEST CORNU OF SAID
SOUMBAST QUARTU OF M B NORTHEAST QUARTER,
FOR A POINT OF REFERENCE; THENCE RUN NORTH
01*33*49" NEST, ALONG THE WEST U N B OF THE
M ID SOUMBAST QUARTU, 49.23 FEET TO THE
POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUE NORTH
01*33*49" NEST, ALONG THE SAID WEST LINE, 4.00
FEET; TNENCB RUN NORM 7S"0!*40" EAST, 10R.90
P E R ; MINCE RUN SOUTH 77*33*04" EAST, 123.40
FEET TO A POINT ON A NON-TANGENT CURVE CONCAVE
SOUTHERLY; THENCE WESTERLY, ALONO THE ARC OP
M ID CURVE, HAVIM A RADIUS LENGTH OP 14390.94
P U T . A CENTRAL ARGLE OP 00*S4'39", AN ARC
LENGTH OF 228.05 PEET, A CHORD LENGTH OF
23B.04 PEET, ANO A CHORD BEARING OP SOUTH
•R"39*05" NEST TO THE *'OXNT OF BEGINNING.
M E ABOVE DESCRIIED EASUENT L I U IN SUXNOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA, ANO CONTAINS 3,419 SQUARE
FEET, NOM OR L E U .
REO RUG LAKE ROAD
PARCEL NO. U S
TUSXAMILLA ROAD TO SR 420
PEE SIMPLE
A PARCEL OP LAND LYING IN THE NORM HALF OF
M E SOUTHEAST QUARTU OF SECTION 19, TOWNSHIP
21 SOUTH, RANOE 31 EAST, BEING A PORTION OF
LOTI BJ AND 93, "M E 8LAVIA COLONY COMPANY'S
SUBDIVISION", ACCORDING TO THE P U T THEREOF,
AS RECORDED IN P U T BOOK 3, PAGE 71, OF THE
PUBUC RECORDS OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA,
N i l NO MORE PARTICULARLY OUCRIBEO AS FOLLOWS l
CtMOtUCS AT M B 1WTBMBCTX0W OF THE EASTERLY
RIGHT-OF-WAY U N B OF NIXLXH NOAO, ACCORDING TO
M B P U T THEREOF, AS ACCORDED IN P U T BOOK 4,
PAGE 14, OF M B PUBUC RECORDS OF SM IN O L I
COUNTY, FLORIDA, H IM M E SOUTHERLY RIGHT-OFWAY LINE OF RED BUO LAKE ROAD, FOR A POINT OP
BEGINNING; THENCE RUN NORTH •■•26*11" EAST,
ALONO M ID SOUTHERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE, 9S7.3S
FEET TO THE EAST LINE OF THE WEST ONE-HALF
AFOASMIO LOT B3; THENCE RUN SOUTH 01*02*19”
BAST, ALONO M I D EAST LINE, 94.90 FEET TO A
POINT LYINO ON A NOM-TANOENT CURVE, CONCAVE
NORTHERLY; THEMCE RUN WESTERLY, ALONO THE ARC
OP M IO RIGHT-OF-WAY CURVE, HAVING A RADIUS
LBNOM Of 1377.24 FEET. A CENTRAL ANCLE OF
07*33*11". AN ARC LENGTH OF 1*1.*7 PEET, A
CHORD LENGTH OF 141.94 FEET. AND A CHORD
BEARING OF SOUTH 87"05*31" WEST TO THE POINT
OF
TANGENCY
THEREOF;
THENCE RUN
NORTH
•9*07*45" WEST. 4 0 9 .•• FEET TO THE AFORESAID
EASTERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF HZKLER ROAD;
THEMCE RUN NORTH 01"20'03" WUT, ALONG THE
SAID EASTERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE, 46.53 FEET TO
THE POINT OF BEGINNING.
THE ABOVE OUCRIBEO PARCEL OF LAND LIES IN
SEMI MOLI COUNTY, FLORIDA, ANO CONTAINS 1.946
ACRU, NOM OR L U S ,
t o g e t h e r w ith

REO BUO LAKE ROAD
TUSKAMILLA ROAD TO SR 426
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT
A PARCEL Or UN O LYING IN THE NORTHWEST QUAR­
TER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 20.
TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANCE 31 EAST. BEING A
PORTION Of
LOT
61,
"THE SUV1A
COLONY

PARCEL NO. 724

COMPANY'S SUBDIVISION",
M U I O P AS RRCORORD IN FIAT

AT

: . ...... ...
I, POM A PO IN T
TNENCB RUN BOOM 00*SG*47"
N U T U M B OF M I D
P U T ; M M C S ROMM M *4 G *E 3 "
OF I t . O S F i n
TO M S I I

TO M B P U T
B , M S B 71 o r

m b

e SB.GO
, A DXVUMCB

0 0 *4 0 *3 3 * M S T,
LOT 4 1 , m
u
w jir iM w
X UM B, 3 S f.lt
ALOMO R AID SOUTHERLY BH
UMB o r
P U T TO A POINT LYXNS OH TBS
EAST HALF OT M I D LOT U , BAXi
POINT OF SSOXNHINO; TR U C E
4 9 *4 4 *3 3 * BAST, ALOMO
FUF; 1
HAY U N B ,
137.43t ~
.41 FEET; -------------- „
• 3 * 1 7 * 0 4 " H U T S I -------------•1 * 4 7 * 3 1 " N U T , 43.17 P U T TO M l APOMBAID
H S U LOT U U ; TMNCS BUM BO M B DG*Bt*G7"
H S U , ALOMO B U D H S U U U , 3 .3 3 P U T , TO T U
POINT OP MBXNNXNO.
. .
THE ANOVB DESCRIBED PARCEL OF LAND U U IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA, ANO CS4FVAXND SAY
•QUASI F E U , NOMB OR L I U .
PARCEL NO. 117

TUSXAMILLA ROAD TO M 4 S I
r n iiM FLB
A PARCEL OP LAND LYINO IN M B
T U OF M S SOUTHIAU QUARTU OP 8BCT10N IS ,
TOWNSHIP 31 SOUTH, RANCE 31 I A U , BUNG A
PORTION
OF
LOT
II,
"M B
BLAVXA
OOLONV
COMPANY • R SUBDIVISION", ACCOMOZBD TO M B FLAT
TNUBOP, AS BSCODOtt ZN FLAT BOOM 3 , PASS 71,
OP M B PU BU C RBCORDS OF B U I NO LI COUNTY,
FLORIDA, BU N G BO M PARTICULARLY DBDCD1BBD AS
FOLLOWRl
COm U CB A T M S NSBIWBABT COMMIR OP M ID
SOUTHBAHT Q UARTU, FOB A PO IN T OF 1 BFBBBBCB;
TNENCB BUN NOUM 0G*3G*47" BAHT, ALOBS T U
E A U U B B OP SAID AOUTHBADT QUART I D, 33.SS
F E U ; M SM CS RUN SOUTH • S * 3 S * 1 1 " W B U , A
DIUANCB OF 1 1 .0 0 F I R TO A PO IN T LYINO OB Y U
SOUTMSBLV RIGHT-OF-HAY U U OP I D
BUO L A U
ROAD AND A POINT OF BBOXNBXNO; THBHCB BUN
SOUTH 0 0 * 0 6 * 4 7 " I A U , ALOMO M S M U U U OF
M IO LOT S 3 , A DIUANCB OF 3 0 . I S P U T ; THENCE
RUM OOUM 7 8 *4 3 *6 3 " WBU, S 3 1 .S D P U T TO T U
POINT OP CURVATUU OP A CURVB CONCAVE NORTHER­
LY; THBHCB BUM MBSTULY, ALOMO M S ARC OF M IO
CURVE, HAVING A RADIUS L U O M OF 1 ) 7 7 . BO F B U ,
A CENTRAL ANGLE OP 0 4 *3 4 *9 6 ", AN ABC LBNOM OF
110.14 F B U , A CHORD L U O M OF 1 1 0 .1 1 F B U ,
ANO A CHORD BBARINO OF SOUTH 1 1 *0 1 * 2 0 " U U ,
TO THE WESTERLY U N I OP T U I A U 0N8-NALF OF
THE AFOREMXD
LOT S3;
M M CI
RUN NORTH
01*02*39" N B U , ALONG M B RAZO WBSTBRLY LOT
U N B , 9 0 .9 0 F B U TO T U AFORS3AXO SOUTMSBLV
RIGHT-OF-WAY U N B OF M O BOD L A U ROAD; T U N C !
RUN NORM 9 9 *2 6 *1 1 " M U , ALOMO RAXD ROUTURLY
RIGHT-OF-WAY U N I , 337.41 PBBT TO T U POINT OF
■BOINNINQ.
T N I ABOVE DESCRIBED FANCSL OF LAND U U
ZN
9U I NOLB COUNTY, FLORIDA, AMD CONTAINS 0.900
------M OM OR L I U .

PARCEL NO. 133

TUSXAWILLA ROAD TO 00 410
* FIB SINPLI
A PARCEL OP LAND LYINO IN M B ROMTMAU QUAR­
T U OF M S MORMME U QUARMR OP SECTION 30,
TOWNBNIF 31 OOUM, RAMI 31 I A U , U1NQ A
POMXON OP LOT 4 ),
"M B
SLAVXA COLONY
COMPANY*R SUBDIVISION", ACCORDING TO M l P U T
THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN FLAT ROOK 3, FAGB 71,
OF M E PUBUC RECORDS OF OMXMOLI OOUNTY,
FLORIDA, BEING MORE PARTICULARLY DMCRUBO AS
FOLLOWSI
COMMENCE AT T U NOBTHMBM CORNU IF OAlRaLCT
43, FOR A POINT OP RBFBRBNCB; MBNCB MM BOUTN
01*09*24" W BU. ALONO M l W B U U N B OF SAID
LOT 43. A DIUANCB OF 10.00 F B U TO M B POIM
OF SK INNIN G; THENCE RUN NORM B 9 *3 )*0 0 " EAU,
A DIUANCB OF 4.43 FEU TO A POINT LYINO ON A
NON-TAMGENT CURVE,
CONCAVE SOUTHEAU ERLY;
THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY, ALONO M E ARC OF MIO
CURVE, HAVING A RADIUS OF 3203.24 F E U , A
CENTRAL ANGLE OF 00*19*14", AM ARC LKMOTM OF
9.49 FEET, A CHORD LENGTH OP 9.00 F E U ANO A
CHORD REARING OF SOUTH 4f *SJ»iML" JfltM, ..W. THE.4
WESTERLY LINE OF AFOREMXD LOT 4 ) ; THENCE
NORTH 01*09*24" WEST, ALONO SAID WESTERLY LOT
L1WE, 1.63 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING.
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED TRACT OF LAND U U
IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA, AMD CONTAINS 8
SQUARE F E U , MORE OR LE89,
t o g e t h e r w it h

M O AUQ LAM ROAD
PARCEL NO. 722
TUSXANXLLA ROAD TO 9R 424
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT
A PARCEL OP LAND LYING IN THE NORTHWEM QUAR­
TER OF SECTION 20, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 11
EAST, BEING A PORTION OP LOT 43, "SLAVIA
COLONY COMPANY*8 SUBDIVISION", ACCORDING TO
THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 2,
PAGE 71, OP THE PUBLIC RECORD! OF BBUNOU
COUNTY,
FLORIDA,
BEING N O U
PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS!
COMMENCE AT THE NORTHNEUERLY CORNU OF M ID
LOT 41 FOR A POINT OF REFERENCE; THENCE RUN
SOUTH 01 "09 *24" EA U , ALONG M E MEM U N E OP
SAID LOT 41, 13.63 FEU, TO A POINT ON A NON­
TANGENT CURVE CONCAVE SOUTHEASTERLY. MID
POINT BEING THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE RUN
NORTHEASTERLY, ALONO THE ARC OF M ID CURVE,
HAVING A RADIUS LENGTH OF 1203.24 F E U , A
CENTRAL ANGLE OF 00*16* 14", AN ARC LENGTH OF
9.69 FEET, A CHORD LENGTH OF 9.49 F E U , AND A
CHORD BEARING OF NORTH 49*99*43" E A U TO A
POINT ON THE NORTH UNE OF AFORESAID LOT 41;
THENCE RUN NORTH S 9 "ll*04 " E A U , 9.47 F B U TO
A POINT LYING ON A CURVE CONCAVE SOUTHEAST­
ERLY ; THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY, ALONG THE ARC OF
SAID CURVE, HAVING A MDIUS LENGTH OP 1197.34
FEU, A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 00*91 *19 ", AN ARC
LENGTH OF 17.15 F E U , A CHORD LENGTH OP 17.39
FEU, AND A CHORD BEARING OP SOUTH 49*59*11"
WEST TO A POINT ON T U AFORESAID W EU UHE OF
LOT 41; THENCE RUN NORTH 01"09*34" WEU, 7.74
FEU TO THE POINT OP BEGINNING.
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED TRACT OP LAND LIKE IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA, AMD CONTAINS 71
SQUARE F E U , MORE OR LEM.
RED BUO LAKE ROAD
PARCEL HO. E l l
TUSXAMILLA ROAD TO SR 434
PERMANENT DRAINAGE EASEMENT
A PARCEL OF LAND LYING IN M E NORTHWEM QUAR­
TER OF SECTION 31, TOWNSHIP 31 SOUTH, RANGE 11
EAST, BEING A PORTION OF THE NORTHWEM QUARTER
OF LOT 122, "THE SLAVIA COLONY COMPANY'S
SUBDIVISION", ACCORDING TO M E PLAT THEREOF,
AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 2, PAGE 71, OF THE
PUBUC RECORDS OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA,
BEING MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS!
COMMENCE AT THE INTERSECTI OH OF THE SOUTH LINE
OF SAID NORTHWEST QUARTER OF LOT 123 WITH THE
EASTERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF U ATE ROAD 426,
FOR A POINT OF REFERENCE; THENCE RUN NORTH
16*41'49" EAST. ALONG THE SAID RIGHT-OF-WAY
LINE, 203.49 F E U TO THE POINT OF BEOINNINO;
THENCE CONTINUE NORTH 19*43*49" E A U , ALONG
SAID RICHT-OF-HAY LINE, 136.00 F E U TO THE
POINT OF CURVATURE OF A CURVE CONCAVE SOUTH­
EASTERLY; THENCE RUN NORTHEASTERLY, ALONG M ID
RICHT-OF-NAY U N E , ALONO THE ARC OF M ID
CURVE, HAVING A RADIUS LENGTH OF 90.00 F E U , A
CENTRAL ANCLE OF 17*37*37", AN ARC LENGTH OF
19.31 PEET. A CHORD LENGTH OP 19. IS P E U , ANO
A CHORD BEARING OF NORTH 47*27 *29" EAU;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 31*10, 42" W EU. 44.94 FEU ;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 41*15'00" E A U , 111.09 FEU ;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 34"41, 49" W EU. 61.90 FEU;
THENCE RUN NORTH 59*16* 11" WEST. 66.19 FEU;
THENCE RUN NORTH 71*45*01" WEST. 62.77 FEU TO
THE POINT OF BEGINNING.
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED PARCEL OP LAND LIES IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA, AND CONTAINS 10,414
SQUARE F E U , MORE OR LESS.
REO BUG LAKE ROAD
PARCEL NO. 929
TUSKAWILLA ROAD TO SR 424
FEE SIMPLE
A PARCEL OF LAND LYING IN THE SOUTHE A U QUAR­
TER OF SECTION 17, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 11
EAST, BEING A PORTION OF THE EAST 460 FEU OF
LOT 19 AND THE WEST 70 FEU OF LOT 20, "THE
SLAVIA COLONY COMPANY'S SUBDIVISION", ACCORD­
ING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT
bOOK 2, PACK 71, OF THE PUBUC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA, BEING MORE PAUICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS!

AT T U

HOBTHHBOT CONOR DP RAID LOT

i t . pom a r o x n o r :
0 0 * 4 0 * 0 0 " D A M . AL
LOT I f . A D I U ANCB OP 1 0 1 . 0 0 ____ .
o r DSoiaHiHS; tm n c s c o m nub bonm oo*4B*oo*
BAST, A D IU M C S OP 3 1 1 .OB P U T TO A POINT ON
IBB
M IIIB U B F in il U U
OP UOHMJOO SHOT
CANAL; MBNCB MM NOUM 9 3 *1 9 *9 1 " BAST. ALOMO
------------------- U R B . D D . lt F B U ;
■ 1 *4 1 *1 0 " B A M ,
~
IV U U , 1 0 4 .0 0 F B U ;
OOUM 0 3 »4 0 »4 4 " I A U . CONTINUING ALOHB RAID
BBTBMLY U U ,
70.B B F B U ; T B U U BUN
0 0 *0 0 *0 9 ” M U , « A DISTANCE OF 1 0 0 .1 0
TO A P O IM LYINO OB M B MOR M M I Y OMAXNU B OF M B BBBXBOLB BXFUSOWAY;
7 0 *3 0 *3 S "
■ 3 *0 3 *0 3 "
0 3 *3 0 *1 0 "
3 1 *1 1 *1 B "
•1 *0 0 *3 S "

M l

U U ;
N B U , 19 0 .0 0 F B U ;
N B U 10 3 .0 0 F B U ;
W B U , 100.14 F B U ;
W B U , 0 3 .0 3 FB U ;
W BU, 1 3 4 .I S F B U

ABOVE OUCRIBEO TRACT OF LIND LIES

-------------------HEFTY,

IN

FLORIDA, AND CONTAINS 2 . BIO

OR LESS.
■mn

m rwwmr im inM i m tow r winm m wtu
■sf Taking Batata Me Hen*rak4e C Vaman Ml**. J ra n a
af Meeker*-*
ICdwrt.anMaftoRayaf
1991. e l I D pan., IN Ms i
FtortRt to accerdwtcawtM it* Declaration *4 Taking koratoter* filed
In RMS'- ------------ * * *
------ 1
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le e Me PMWhNh r HwOrMreFTefclep
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thrift* ONhr ef TeftlNp «4M N

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hem cr d e M In md le Me snpert* dncrMed In m m RHNltft m t H
Wmr t r e t . H eey yee K . My wM praparty R s N Net be
ceNRmiNeR ler Me mbs mh pwrpeeee m ref ferM le reM PeHHew. it
yew MN M mmmr, a RWawNmey He eelereR apebiel yee Mr Me relief
m mm trnt M Me P rim . If yew M l le m eal a hearlap *n Me
FafHm Mr OrMr at Tahlep yaw Mall waive any npftt M ahfacf •*
wM OrRar at Tahlnp.
YVITNSU iwy lianO aed net of aeM Cewrt aa Me » 0 Ray ef July.
1991.
(M A O
MARYANN! MORS!
CLSRKOPTHi CIRCUIT COURT
IN ANO FOR SIMINOCI COUNTY, FLORIDA
• y : RuM Klnp
Dapwfydarh
r o r i r t a . M cM il l a n

Caunty AHamay

Mrl awUwaMCauwly
FlarM alarfta: ibm u
lemWieMCewNfw 3*rvka* BulWnp
1191 Saal FNafifraaf
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AHarwayMr PafmanwPuMHh: Aupuat 1.9.11 and a , m i

Dll-2

MQTKI OF SHIIIFF’f MLR
NOT 1CI It H I R I I Y OIVIN
Mel by virtu* af Mai carlaln
Writ at laacwHan lutwd out ef
and undtr M* tael af M* Circuit
Ceurt af Oran** Caunty, Fieri
da. Cea* fCI 97/1JO u*en a final
ludfm ant rendered In the
Of June A.D. IfW. In Mai certain
«* * * anftHad: Donald 9. Allan.
PfeWWIH v*. Land and Hama*
Real 9 elate Invatfwanf Com­
pany, Inc. Cecil Idem Boeaar.
Jr. and Ventura Corporation ef
Saraaata. Inc.. Dafandant,
wftkft aferaaald Writ of Eiacu
flan waa dallvarad to m* aa
SharIff of Seminal* County,
PterKM, and I have WvWd upon
ail the rlphl, title an* inter**! at
M* dafandant. Cavil ROwln
Boaxar, Jr., In and t* the
,JWMwInp dtacrlbad proparty.
aald praparfy taint located in
lamlnol* County, Florid* mar*
p a rticu la rly daacrlbad aa

follows*

Unit 9-A. SAUSALITO. a Can
dominium, Ptiea* I, according to
Maf certain declaration of Con­
dominium ef Seuulllo a Con­
dominium, Fhat* I, dated
Auguat 10.1*71, rvcordad In O.R.
Book « . Pag* aih Public 9*cerda ef Samlnel* County, Flori­
da. togvthvr witti an undivided
1/JOM Interact In and to Me
common • lemonta of Mtd Con­
dominium.
and Ma undaraignad aa Sheriff
at Seminal* Caunty, Florida,
will af 11:09 A M. en Mo l*M
day of Auguat A.D. 1991. otter
tor tela and aoll to tfw hlghaat
bidder. FOR CASH IN HAND
AND SUBJECT TO ANY AND
ALL EXISTING LIENS, at Ma
Front (Waal) Door, al Ih# atvpa.
ef the SomlnoN County Court
houao In Sonlord. Florida. Mo
above daacrlbad ptraonel prop
arty.
That aald aol* la being made
to aatlafy Ma farm* ol aald Writ
at Elocution.
Donald F. Eallngar, Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
Publlahad: July IS, Auguat I. A
IS. with Mo aeN on Auguat 14.
l*fl.
DEHJ15

NOTICE OF A
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDERAN APPEAL
OF THE DENIAL OF
A CONDITIONAL USB FOR
NON-CONFORMINO
STRUCTURES
Nolle* I* hereby given that a
Public Hearing will b* held al
Ma Commit!Ion Room In Ma
City Hall In the City at Sanford.
Florida, at 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
Auguat 12. I**1. to conttder an
Appeal of the Denial, by the
Planning 4 Zoning Commiuton
on Juno a. 19*1. at a Conditional
Uta requatt tor non conforming
structure*, to change Ih* ua*
from o retidenllel to a miiad
ut# of protoatienal olllcet and
two apartment!, tor property
located ol 1391 and 1307 Pork
Avenue. In an RC 1. Realrlctad
Commercial Oittrict. Sold prop
arty being more particularly
dvacrlbadat toilowi
Lot a and 7. Block IS. Tlar 1.
Town of Sanford, a* rvcordad In
Plat Book i. Pago «0 ol the
Public Rvcordi of Svmlnol*
County. Florida
The ' City Commluion may.
alter Public Hearing, atllrm,
deny, or modify Me decision,
finding and recommendation of
ih* Planning and Zoning Com
mlaaion. and the action ol mo
City Commlaalon anal l bo final
All pertlea In Interest and
entrant tholl hove an opportunl
ty to be hoard at laid hearing
By order of the City Com
minion of the City ol Sanlord
Flor Ido
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC
IF A PERSON DECIOES TO
APPEAL A DECISION MADE
WITH RESPECT TO ANY
MATTER CONSIDERED AT
THE ABOVE MEETING OR
HEARING. HE MAY NEED A
VERBATIM RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS. INCLUDING
THE TESTIMONY AND EVI
DENCE. WHICH RECORO IS
NOT PROVIDED BY THE
CITY OF SANFORD
IFS2SA010S)
Jane* R Donehoe
City Clerk
Publlih August I. 1991
OEI 7

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
■MftTIINTN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
SIMINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASI NOli 9I-IN1-CA-14-0
BENEFICIAL MORTGAGE CO.
OF FLORIDA.
Flalntiff,

v*.

YEHHETH J. CROTTV. an

known par tana er unknown
apouaoa claiming ky, through
and under KENNETH J.
CROTTY, and KEY FINAN­
CIAL SERVICES. INC.
NOTKBOP ACTION
TO: KENNITHJ.CROTTV
... (La*»knownadWaaal.............
239* Pal motto Avanu*
Sanford. FLM77I
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to toraclea* a mortgage
230* Palmetto Avanu*. Senlerd.
Florida 37771. daacrlbad a*
follow*:
•South V* of Lata 1A 1. Black I.
SFURLINO'S ADDITION TO
SANFORD, according to Ih*
map or plat 9
In Plat leak 2. gag* 117. of Ih*
Public Record* of Semi noIa
County. Florida
ha* bean tiled again*! you and
you ara required to aarv* a copy
at your written daftnaaa. It any,
to It en MICHAEL A. VAN
HOUTEN. ESQUIRE, tha at
tornay lor th* P la ln tllf.
BENEFICIAL MORTGAGE
COMPANY OF FLORIDA, aald
attorney'* addrtts la It* South
Palmetto Avanu*. Daytona
Beach. Florida 2211A no later
than Auguit If. 1991. and III* th*
original wIM th* Clark ef Mia
Court either betore aorvko on
Plaintiff* attorney or Immedi­
ately thereafter; otherwise a
default will ba entered against
you tor th* relief demanded In
the Amended Complaint.
DATED MU ISM day of July.

1991.

ISEALI
MaryannoMori*
Clark el tha Circuit Court
By: RuM King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: July 16 2J A Auguat I.

6 1*91

DEH IAS

NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that by virtu* ol Mot certain
Writ of Esecutlon Isaued out of
and under th* teal el the County
Court of SomlnoN County. Flor­
ida. Case 190/022*4 CC upon a
•Inal lodgment rendered in th*
aforesaid court on th* 27th day
ol December A D 1*16 In Mol
certain cat* entitled: Bemetl
Recovery Corporation, Plaint Ift
v*. Dorothy S. Gordon a/k/o
Dorothy F. Garden a/k/a
Dorothy Sack* Garden. Oaten
dent, which atoratald Writ of
Esecutlon was delivered to ma
a* Sheriff ef Svmlnol* Caunty.
Florida, and I have levied upon
all the right, lltl* and Interest of
Ih# defendant. Oerelhy S
Gordon. In and to Me tallowing
described property, said proper
ty being located In Seminole
County. Florida mar* particu
larly daacrlbad at follow*:
On* lag* Otdsmobile ) door
A u t o m o b i l e , VIN
• IG1GM47YXGP1III0S being
stored at AI lemonto Towing,
and mo undersigned as Sheriff
ol SomlnoN County. Florida,
will al II 00 A M. on the Ulh
day ol August A 0 19*1. oiler'
tor sale and Mil to me hlghaat
bidder. FOR CASH IN HAND
AND SUBJECT TO ANY ANO
ALL EXISTING LIENS, al th*
Front (Waati Door, at m* step*,
ot Ih* SeminoN County Court
house in Senlord. Florida, the
above described personal prop
erfy
That said tale la being made
to satisfy the terms ot said Writ
of Esecutlon
Donald F Etlinger. SheriII
SeminoN County. Florida
Published July 2S. August I. 6
IS wim the tele on August I*.

1*91

OEH 22*

t

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                    <text>Student grading
system protested

NEW S D IG EST

B fV fB K IB sB B B i
Herald Staff Writer
Some parents o f third graders In
Seminole County w e not happy
with the grading system that the
school board has proposed for use
this school year.
Several o f those parents took up
placards and marched in front of
Winter Springs Elementary School
this morning.
Perhaps even more disturbing
than the grading system changes,
they say. la the school district’s
failure to Inform parents about the
changes the board will vote to
finalize du rin g Tuesday’s board
meeting.
In stead o f n u m b er or letter
grades, the new pupil progression
plan requires only an *‘S " (for
satisfactory work) o r an " N " (for
work that la not satisfactory).
"T h at Is not enough to give our
children an Indication o f where they
stan d." said Debbie Halle, the
parent o f a third grader at Winter
Springs Elementary School.
During presentations to the school
board. Instructional coordinators
have said that the system will allow
teachers to keep portfolios o f their
students' work, which will make
parent-teacher conferences more
informative.
"Teachers will not be required by
board policy to back up their S's
and N'a with number grades." Halle
said. "S om e principals may require
it at the school level, but It won’t be
required by the county.”
Halle, and other parents opposed
□ S ea Q ra d in g, F a gs 8 A

Loeal harriers In tha running
LAKE MARY - The Lake Mary Rama are
seventh In the Class 4 A boys' cross country
lesson poll with Lake Brantley ranked 12th.

iP e fs lB

Dane# ballet
The Ballet Guild of Sanford Seminole County
Is accepting talented you n g dancers for the

Banafit ta halp mlaalng etilldran
SANPORO — Missing Children Center. Inc., a
clearinghouse for Information about children
mlaalng. abducted or w h o have run away from
home, will benefit from a yard and bake sale to
be held Sunday at the Rose Garden Mini
Shoppes. 2621S. Orlando Dr.. Sanford, from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Th e event Is sponsored by Accent AITalr
Beauty Salon. A to Z Collectibles has donated
many unusual Items for the yard sale.
For more Information, call Linda Brown at
Missing Children Center. 327-4403. or Accent
AITalr Beauty Salon at 322-6179.

Priest plana reunion for couplaa
PITTSBURGH - A priest perplexed by the
divorce rate has Invited all the couples he
married over the past 47 year to a special Mass
Sunday —Just losas how they're doing.
The Rev. Charles Ceradlnl. 86. Invited about
1.000 couples. More than 200 have accepted, he
said.
" I'll congratulate them for holding to the
Indissolubility of marriage.” he said. "I'll tell
them that It Is good that they are still together
and still love each other."
Ceradlnl was pastor o f the Mother o f Good
Counsel Roman Catholic Church from 1940
until his retirement in 1973. He still presides
over an occasional wedding, the last In 1987.
Th e priest said he doesn't know how many of
the couples he married still are together. The
nation's divorce rate puzzles him.
“ I guess It's the times." he said.
Carl and Teresa DePietro, who married In
1958. plan to attend Sunday’s Mass.
"W h en Father Chuck married us. he told us
there would be hard tim es and good times, that
you had to take them b oth ." Depletro said. "You
can't pack your bags every time there's a
disagreement. We hung In there."

A ID S fighters to gather for photos
ByMICKPPBIPAUP

Hsrald Staff Writer
SANFORD — A gathering of Sanford area
people who arc helping In the fight against AIDS.
Is being requested for Saturday morning. The
people will represent the area In photos used
around the state as well as nationally.
‘ Karen Coleman, assistant principal at Oviedo
High School. Is seeking persons for the photo who
are involved In fund-raising for the Thomas E.
Whlgham Foundation, considered one of the most
outstanding antl-AIDS battlers In the state.
The photo session was arranged by the Tampa
Tribune.

f With these photos, we want
to show others that we are
behind this battle against the
Killer disease, j

-Karan Coleman
W h lg h a m w as In fected th ro u g h b lo o d
transfusions In 1983. Until his death, he
personally organized a major AIDS education
program, which was continued by his family and
friends. "But we wanted to do even m ore."
Coleman, who Is Whlgham's sister, said, "s o our

PAINESVILLE. Ohio — The beauty queen
wore leather. All over.
A five-member panel o f Judges on Wednesday
selected 5-year-old dairy cow "Miss Montvllle."
known to her companions on the Rettger Dairy
Farm as "L a zy." as Miss Lake Cownty Fair
1991.
"S h e's got a cowsmetlc look." said owner
Dave Foy, whose animal was one of four entries
In the bovine beauty contest In northern Ohio.
The tan-colored Miss Montvllle. a Jersey, was
up against thrpe black-and-white Holstelns
(Dolly. Alena and Brittany) In the first-ever Miss
Lake Cownty competition.
The Idea for the competition grew out o f the
county fair logo, w h ich features a cow 's
countenance encircled b y a blue ribbon, fair
spokeswoman Christine Krause said.

sa

Hsrald Staff Writer

n t i t f i * * ........... .......

Overcast, good chance of rain

Par mara waathar, aaa Papa BA

□Bee AIDS, Page BA

By NICK PPBIPAUP

Or. 0«M .................. SB ■ parts................1B,
Bdltsvtal................. 4A Talsvision
................. SA Wsathar...

Mostly cloudy with u
60 percent chance of
thunderstorms likely
m ainly during the
afternoon. High In
u p p e r 8 0 s . W in d
southeast 5 to 10
mph.

activities have Increased each year."
The foundation has endowed a research chair
at the University o f Miami. It Is the first chair in
the field of AIDS research at the university, and
one o f the first In the entire nation that has a
neurological application.
Coleman said, "In addition to the chair, we
have given over 200 presentations to clubs,
groups and organizations throughout the slate.
She also commented on the fund drive. "State
Senator Bud Gardner had promised us If we could
raise a half million dollars, he would have the
state approve a matching amount to be used In
the fight against A ID S ." She reported (hat

T h o m a s offers n a m e
c h a n g e fo r 13th S tre e t

It was a mooooving caramony

A M y............. SB

Debbls Halle and her daughter, Melissa, 8, a Winter Springe Elementary
8chool third grader, carry picket signs In front of the school this morning.
Thsy are protesting the proposed grading system to be used on third
graders this year.

Cementing connections
Phillip Hayles. owner of Heyles Plaster, helps In putting the finishing
touches on Sanford Middle School by cementing eround the
medallions that were taken from the recently demolished school end
Incorporated into the design ol the new administration building. The
school re-opens on Monday.

SANFORD — City Commissioner
Bob Thomas wants to rename 13th
Street. He has suggested calling It
Martin Luther King Boulevard.
Thomas submitted a brief memo­
randum Thursday to Mayor Bettye
Smith and his fellow commission
members. Hr wrote. "T h e vast
legacy that Dr. Martin Luther King.
Jr. left to his nation, and the world,
deems It most fitting and proper to
make the above request a reality.
Hence, It Is my prayer, that you will
approve same, and Join all In the
celebration o f this most worthy
gesture."
The proposal is not scheduled for
Monday night's city commission
meeting, as the memo was sub­
mitted after the agenda items were
determined. Thomas said however,
he would bring the matter up for
discussion near the conclusion of
the meeting at the time allocated for
comments and suggestions from
members o f the commission. He
Indicated he will seek the com­
mission's support to have an ordi­
nance prepared that would officially
rename the street.
Although Congress has officially
designated the third Monday In
January as Dr. Martin Luther King
Day. Thomas said he would request
that the name change become
effective hopefully on the anniversa­
ry of Dr. King's assassination In
Memphis. Tenn.. which occurred
April 4. 1968.
Thomas Is suggesting a renaming
uf the entire length o f 13th Street. It
presently extends from Sanford
Avenue In the eastern section of the
city, to slightly beyond the Crooms
School of Choice near Dixie Way. on
the western side. While there are a

Commissioner Bob Thomas
few private homes, mostly In the
western end. the majority of build­
ings are rommerclal businesses.
In addition to (-hanging street
signs und maps, the renaming of a
street would also require changes in
printed material such as advertis­
ing. stationery and business cards.
One of the major businesses Is Rich
Plan o f Florida, located at 401 W.
I3lh St. Thomas said. "I have
already discussed the idea with
Duke Adamson, president of Rich
Plan."
The company's vice president.
Brcnl Adamson, said he would
prefer to continue calling It I3tli
Street. "It's easier to give direc­
tions." he said. "It might Ik- con­
fusing to explain to someone that
13th street is Martin Luther King
Boulevard, while the 12th and 14th
C Sec S tre e t. Page 5A

�r i

*A - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Friday. August 23, l l t l
'. I

mm

NEWS FROM T H E REGION AND ACROSS T H E S T A T E

Busing kids: Change proposed
m

M a rin e P a tro l crtticiaed for e th n ie M a t

Children should not
ti through high-crime
ter said, proposing a

MIAMI — A state senator and sport fishing group In Miami
blasted the Florida Marine Patrol for laaulng citations that ask
violators to mark down whether they are Hispanic.
The citation, which is like a traffic ticket for boaters, asks
defendants their vital autistic and then asks them to check a
box indicating whether he or she la of "Hispanic ethnicity."
The citation does not mention any other ethnic group.
"T h at la discrimination If they only ask if you are Hispanic."
said Felix Hernandez, president of the Miami Sport Ftahlng
Association during a press conference Thursday with Sen.
Lincoln Diaz-Babul. R-Mtaml.
"W hether you're Hispanic, black or Chinese. It doesn't
matter at all. The Infraction Is the same." said Hernandez .
"That question Is a vestige o f a segregationist past that has to
change." said Dtsz-Bakurt. "It would be something else If there
were several boxes for different ethnic groups."
MaJ. Kenneth Clark, the Marine Patrol's district supervisor In
Dade and Broward counties, said the question was for a means
o f Identification. ^

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SANFORD — The Seminole
County School Board has heard
the v o ic e s o f su pport from
parents w ho want to get In*
votved th helping the district
su rvive th e c u rre n t bu dget
crunch.
"W e know that the real pro­
blem la that there la not enough
in the big pot In Tallahassee."
•aid Judy Smith, a member o f
the board o f directors o f the
Sem inole C ou n ty P T A . "W e
want to know what w e can do.
We want to know how w e can
a
••
neip.
The PTA met recently with the
school board and members o f
the Seminole County legislative
delegation to discuss the finan­
cial situation.
Most o f the 70 or so people
who were in attendance at last
nights meeting said that they
were new learning about the
budget and how It wi financed
by Tallahassee, but they also
expressed a frustration with the
wsy the money was allocated.
"T h e funding formula has
been worked, massaged and
changed In Tallahassee," Smith
said. "And It's not bad It Just ■
doesn't help Seminole County ■

" ft ’s very unusuaL" Set.
R a lp h O e p h a r t s a id
Thursday. ‘ T h e children
did not know what they
were doing due to the fact
that they were told It was a
reiauve i nomc.
A n n e W h ite . 2 9 .

Mtly eM y 89*7$

"She told her kids it was
her aunt's house and that
she had lost her key. and it
was all right to break In
and re m o ve p ro p e rty
because it b elon ged to
them." Gcphart said.

~
'

Florida Raaidanls mual pay I k aalaa
ta i In addition to ratas abovo.

boosting one son through a
window to unlock a door
Tuesday, police said. Of­
fic e rs re sp o n d in g to a
n e i g h b o r 's

Issue of equalization, though
they have been advised that the
state constitution only provides
for equal education, not equal
funding to pay for It.
"It was wonderful to sec the
support o f so m a y p eop le,
especially the legislators." Smith
said.

W

*3

La

Atlantic City

SATURDAY
M tly sMy 89*72

SUNDAY
PtlycM y 93-74

MONDAY
Ptly cMy 93*74

Pet

73
n
n
n

•IS
as

1

.15

D ayton a Beach: W aves are
IW feet and semi glassy. Current
Is slightly to the north with a
water temperature o f 79 degrees.
Now S m yrn a Beach: Waves are
I
foot and glassy. Current Is to the
north, with a water temperature
of 79 degrees.

of

■

"She gave the VCR to the
child and she was ready to
run.

W

Saturday: Mostly cloudy with
thunderstorm s lik ely mainly
during the afternoon. High in the
upper 80s. Wind southeast 10 to
15 mph. Rain chance 70 per­
cent.

at
as
H

rep o rt

b re a k -in fo u n d W h it e
holding a vldeocassette re­
corder and a child holding
a camera.

the state.
She claimed the extension
would save the state $53 million.
Commissioner James Stelling.
a Martinez appointee from Or­
lando. questioned her figure,
saying there's no way to tell If
money has been saved because
the contract wasn't put out for
competitive bidding.
CDC Is represented by lobbyist
Frank Mlrabella. His partner la
Damon Smith, who worked on
Chiles' staff when he was In the
U.S. Senate.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy with a
good chance o f thunderstorms.
Low In the lower to mid 70s.
Wind southeast 5 to 10 mph.
Rain chance 50 percent.

1

re*

the Palm Beach County
Stockade on $3,000 bond.
She Is charged with bur­
glary and contributing to
the delinquency o f minors.
The children, ages 10.11
and 12. were in state pro­
tective custody.

PENSACOLA - The Florida
Lottery Commission will hold a
special meeting to discuss Lot­
tery D epartm ent h irin g and
contract controversies, but one
member said the session sounds
political.
Lottery Secretary Marcia Mann
also accused the three-member
msjority appointed by former
Republican Gov. Bob Martinez of
politicizing the Issues after a
regular m eeting In Pensacola
Thursday.
Mann, who was appointed by

Today: Mostly cloudy with
thunderstorm s lik ely mainly
during the afternoon. High up­
per 80 to near 90. Wind south­
east 10 mph. Rain chance 60 FRIDAY
percent.

POSTMASTER: Sand addrooo changaa
to THE SANFORO HERALD. P.O.
Boa 1M 7, Scntofd, PL U 77Z-1M 7.
Subscription Halm
(Daily A Sunday)
Homo Dal Ivary A Hail
3 Months___________ $ 1* » «
• Monlha---- ------------$30.00

in burglary

TH E WEATHER

C!t»
Apalachicola
Daytona Baach
Ft. Laud Baach
ForlMyart
Galnatyllio
Homattaad
Jackaonvllla
Kay Watt
Miami
Panaacoia
Saratota
Tallahattaa
Tampa
Vtro Baach
W Palm Baach

^

but now they're In state
custody and their mother
faces burglary charges.

Of the 67 school districts In I
Florida. Seminole ranks 68th in
th e a m o u n t o f f i n a n c i a l
..
** * * *
assistance tt receives from the I B $ * n $ * * i M p i m a $ l i
state. The district is one o f top parents who were in attendance
10 in the state In terms o f the at the meeting .wanted to learn
number o f students enrolled In who they needed to contact to
the schools here.
s ta rt m a k in g fu n d a m e n ta l
"There is some very basic changes In how the district
frustration am ong the parents In receives (heir money from the
this district." Smith said. "W e state.
want to do som ething."
The parents are considering a
She noted that most o f the law suit against the state on the

GAINESVILLE — The families o f the Gainesville slayings
victims have released a statement expressing their continued
mlserv over the unsolved murders one year ago.
"W e are angry, very angry. Sometimes the feelings o f rsge
and anguish almost take us over. Life has become a struggle."
said the families of murder victims Sonja Larson. Christa Hoyt.
Tracy Paulcs and Manny Taboada. In a statement released by
the Gainesville Police Department.
A separate statement was released by the family o f
17-year-old Christina Powell of Jacksonville.
The family members urged the public not to forget Ms.
Larson, of Deerfield Beach: Ms. Powell, o f Jacksonville; Ms.
Hoyt, o f Archer; Ms. Paules, of Palm Springs North and
Taboada. o f Carol City.
"O u r children were wonderful, loving, beautiful, intelligent,
and delightful." they wrote In the Tuesday statement. "D o not
expect us to forgive the person(s) responsible; some o f us will,
some o f us will not."
All five were found stabbed to death In their Gainesville
apartments. No one has been charged with the killings,
although Danny Harold Rolling of Shreveport. La., has been
listed as the prime suspect.

Sacond Claaa Poataga Paid at San lord
Florida and additional mailing
otticaa

______ ____ — ■&gt;—

abduction resulting in a molestation and
b ee n sm u rd er."M a h u ro n m id ."it’s
a high drug area. Where the school Is,

to o m u c h . "

Familus o! victims relaaaa statements

Publithad Doily ond Sunday, aicapt
Saturday by Tbs San lard Harold.
Inc. 300 N. Franch Avu. San lord.
Fla. 12771

Middle School In east f t l a ndn

P a re n ts v o w s u p p o r t o f s c h o o l
d is tr ic t d u rin g b u d g e t c r u n c h

TAVERNIER — The bodies of a pregnant schoolteacher and
her husband were found In their home on Plantation Key In
what police say was a double homicide.
Susan Maclvor. 29. who was seven or eight months
pregnant, and her 30-year-old husband. Michael, were
apparently strangled. Capt. Joe Letter of the Monroe County
Sheriff s Office said Thursday.
Mrs. Maclvor's hands and feet were bound, and she had tape
on her face, while her husband's eyes and mouth were taped,
said sheriffs deputy Becky Herrin.
Police have no suspects, and a m otive Is still under
investigation.

Friday. August 23. 1091
Vol 83. No. 312

Beverly Mahuron dreads Monday’s first

Htgh-crtmc arasa a rt not considered

Pregnant teachsr, husband atranglad

(USPS a t n o )

Orundo Repubncan padd.

The definition o f
should be expanded.
Richard Crotty.

0RACEV1LLE — A 28-year-old man has been charged with
murdering his parents in this Florida Panhandle town near the
Florida-Alabama state line.
Gerry Fuller, the youngest o f eight children, was arrested
Tuesday at the home o f a woman friend In Tallahassee, about
80 miles southeast o f here, authorities said.
He was being held without bond Thursday at the Jackson
County Jail In Marianna.
His parents. GUlis Fuller. 68. and Vivian Fuller. 68. were
found shot to death Saturday in separate bedrooms o f their
home.

MIAMI - Hers are the winning
numbers selectsd Thursday In the
Florida Lottery Cash 3:2-9-0
Winning numbers in the Florida
Lottery Play 4 were: S-t-2-O

T

------------------------------.
B a sa rtyM ah u ran ,U fiosn ta ilp a rsn t
. ____1 ______ ___________
1

Man charged with murdaring parents

V

“

m----- .

C R YSTAL RIVER - It will cost an estimated t l . S million to
clean up a masalve bed o f sea gram and algae that abut down
two Florida Power Corp. plants last week, com pany officials
said.
The sea grass and algae forced the shutdown o f a coal-fueled
plant and a nuclear power plant, posing a threat o f brownouts
throughout the utility's 32-county service area In West Central
and North Florida.
The S I.3 million represents labor equipment coats for
cleaning up the mesa but not the cost o f purchasing pow er to
meet energy demand. Florida power spokesman Mara Jacobs
said Wednesday, a week after the plants were returned to
service.
Jacobs said the figures on the purchased power were not
available.
He said the cleanup costs nnd ’ he 3,400-rocgswatt hours the
utility purchased from other utilities represe nt a very small
part o f Florida Power's expenses and w ill not dramatically
Impact customers* bills.

a »p -!

I

■ Since we*ve been hore,
there ha* been an abduction
resulting in a molestation
andthara'abaanamurdar. |

$ t. A u gu stin s to J u p lts r In le t
Tonight: Wind southeast 10 to
15 knots. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Bay
and inland waters a moderate
chop. Wind and seas higher near
scattered showers and thun­
derstorms.
Saturday: Wind southeast 15
knots. Seas 3 to 4 feet. Bay and
Inlund waters a moderate chop.

Phono ( 407) 323-3S 11.

$

TU ESD AY
PtlycM y 93*74

' The high tem p eratu re In
Sanford Thursday was 87 deand the overnight low was
? recs
2 as reported by the University
of Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded ra in fa ll for the
period, ending at 9 u.m. Friday,
totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature at 9 a m.
today was 84 d egrees and
Friday's overnight low was 74.
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ T h u rsd a y 's h igh ...............9 0
□ B a ro m etric p res s u re .30.04
□ R tla U vs H usaldity....72 p et
□W lm ds.......S ou th east 6 mph

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Mplt SI Pawl
KMhvlllo
Now Or Nana
Naw York City
Oklahoma CHy
Omaha

�M M M H i

Sanford Htrakf, Sanford, Florida - Friday, August 23, 1991 - M

to discuss bond promotion
The city is expected to mall information
about the total bond issue to all In-ctty
utility customers, as well as participate in a
number o f speaking engagements before
clubs, groups and organizations.
Simmons sold plans call for possibly one
polling place for the voters, rather than four
separate district sites. "T h e city commission
still Hm to agree on ail o f this." Simmons
Mid. "but this is the tentative plan m they
will be presented."
The dlartmdon will be held during a
workshop m eeting o f the Sanford City
Commission, beginning at 4:30 p.m. Mon­
day afternoon. The regular city commission
meeting la scheduled for 7 p .m . In the
commission chambers at the Sanford City
Han.

M O T M IV I1 9 U 8V JM I
John Whitley Lowte. Sr. o f 3407 M m Way la Banlbcd
He wee charged with
worthless check*.
Lowte was arrested at the John B. W k CorrecUenal FadMty
where he was serving time on other charges, the arrest report
said.
He is being held without bond.

Environmentalists support
smaller wetland protsctlon
SANFORD - Load
m entallsu support a recommen­
d ation b y Sem inole County
planners to regulate smaller
but afl my even
"W e need to preserve whole
mmtetna,” M id Pat Harden, a
member o f the St. Johns River
W ater Management District gov­
erning board and past president
o f the Friends of the Wekhra
River In c , "n ot Just Isolated
wetlands and large wetlands and
uplands if we are to preserve
(phu t and animal) species.”
" I t is something that should
have been done a long time
a g o ." aaid Sharon Carveth.
chairman o f the Central Florida
chapter o f the Sierra Club. ‘ T o o
m a n y w etlan ds have fallen
through the cracks that are too
valuable to lose.','
"In general, the staff has done
a good Job with this plan,’' said
Mary Ostrander, president o f the
S em in o le County League o f
Women Voters. "But I agree
with (league natural resources
ch a irm a n ) P o lly M iller, the
county should not allow 10
percent disruption.''
Last month, the Florida De­
partment of Community Affairs
criticized portions o f the county
com p reh en sive developm ent
plan dealing with natural land
protection.
DCA reviewers said the county
policy to allow up to 10 percent
o f wetlands on a construction
site 'to be altered did not offer
adequate protection o f the envi­

City County investigative
against lewd acts at the
Studies Center on
Arrested were Tim othy W iyne
»
1090 D m A r e ,
Hu m . SO. 10
Sanford; Kevin Paul Demers, 32, 000 Spreading
and David Cokesbury Castor. Winter
Vinter P v t

Nonpayment of pain klllarlaadatoarrtit
A Longwood woman wan charted with pomeaatoa o f n
controlled substance when the staff at a Long wood dentist’s
office reported she left wtth a nail [killer wtthout paying t o It.
PameL
nets Sue Marteney. 33.
B. Pine A v e , waa also charged
_
_
it preaenunion in a petn w en
by Longwood police Wednesday. According to arrest reports,
she left a dentist's office on Aug. 16 wtth a 090 prescription o f
Percocct. Employees were able to get Marteney's auto tag
number which allowedi ipolice
“ ' ptoi......................
track her to her home, reports
state.

Stolan gun racovarad, man ehargad
Michael Anthony Levant. 22, o f no known local address in
Sanford, waa arrested by Sanford police Wednesday and
charged with having a stolen handgun.
The policeman reported seeing Levant carrying a paper bag
with a gun handle sticking out while he waa walking on
Valencia Court. After receiving permission to examine the gun.
the policeman reported a check revealed it had been reported
stolen to Seminole County deputies Aug. IB. Levant was
charged with possession o f stolen property, carrying a
concealed firearm and possession o f a firearm by a convicted
felon.

T w n arrasttd on grand ttwft charge
A 15-year-old Bookertown youth waa charged with grand
^ p u &amp; c iM T p o rt shopping a car on Gilbert Street for reckless
driving. The three occupants fled, but the youth waa captured
nearby, reports state.’'A check o f the auto tag revealed it had
been stolen In Sanford, reports state. The deputy reported the
youth gave him a false name and address. The youth waa
charged with grand theft and restating arrest.

HAPVI t

MORSE
• IN V f S IIG A ! IO N S

The following people have been taken into custody on
outstanding charges:
•Herm an Lee Pryor. 32. 1802 Cooledge A v e , Sanford,
turned himself In at the Seminole County Jail Wednesday,
reports state. He has been wanted since July for falling to
appear at hearing to respond to failure to pay a fine charges.
•Anthony Bernard Jamison. 24, 1804 W. Fourth S t,
Sanford, was arrested Wednesday at the Seminole County Jail
for violating probation sentences for conspiracy to sell cocaine
and aggravated assault.
• Emory WIUls, 18. 2445 W. 20th S t, Sanford, was arrested
Wednesday for violating a probation sentence for a July
robbery conviction.
• Bernard Jerome McMlller. 37. 1112 Locust A v e , Sanford,
was arrested Wednesday for a July warrant for violating a
probation sentence for a burglary with Intent to commit assault
conviction.
•Darren Eugene Holden. 20, 807 S. Magnolia A v e , Sanford,
was arrested Wednesday for violation of probation for three
burglary convictions.
•C lyd e Perry Williams J r , 39. 6505 Sandy Lane. Sanford,
was arrested at hts home Wednesday on July charges o f
obtaining property wtth a worthless check.'

ronment. It also criticised the
county's policy not to protect
wetlands smaller than five acres
in also.
County planners will recom­
mend to commlasJoners Monday
that the county should regulate
wetland areas as small m onehalf acre in aise. Planners would
still allow disruption o f up to 10
percent o f the wetlands at a
development site if those areas
are not considered "significant."
County natural resources of­
ficer Tim Clabaugh said he had
encouraged county officials to
protect wetlands a haid-acre in
aise in 1987 when the county
a d o p te d Its aw ard -w in n in g
wetlands protection ordinance.
Clabaugh said the water district
d id n o t r e g u la te w etla n d s
smaller than five acres In size at
the time, so county officials
decided to be consistent with the
district.
T h e district recently complied
with a state order and lowered
Its protection "threshhold" to
one-half acre.
Clabaugh M i d larger wetlands
would go undisturbed under the
p olicy b y regulating smaller
w etla n d s. S in ce the county
allows dlsrputlon of a portion of
the total wetlands on a site, he
aaid a developer's 10 percent
might be used up In the small
areas, leaving the larger ones
untouched.
Harden agreed, but said the
district may require even the
small wetlands to be replaced If
they are found to be environ­
mentally significant.

•

Warrant, probation violation arroata
628 1500

Celebrate the Future
Sem inole
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE

11

to rn s t L a n d s c a p in g

♦ College Credit Classes

&amp; N u ra a ry
1400 W. tSSt S t, Sanford

♦ Vocational Classes

D ID YOU M ISS IT ? ?

♦ Adult and Continuing
Education Classes

SchoolBusSchedules

♦ Leisure Classes
♦ ...and Much
More.

&amp;/A

Packed with important information, it contains all
Seminole County school bus locations and times, as
well as back-to-school advertising and sales by local
merchants.

ria s s «s

Copies Available
•tour off(lee

E,eS

300 N. French Ave.
Sanford

“i’le!

SEM INOLE COMMUNITY C O LLEG E
Sanford (4 0 7 ) 323-1450 or O rlando (407) 843-7001
Main C a m p u s

H unt C lu b Instructional Center

100 Weldon Boulevard
Sanford, FL 32773-6199

510 Hunt Club Boulevard
Apopka, FL 32703

AN EQUAL ACCESS EQUAL OiVOW UNITY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

4

»

w arn*

�WI L L I A M A. R U S H E R

Soviet spasms mark long goodbye
canfo$y. But their only serious function now to
to K i n o u r Dem ocratic Congress Into

EDITORIALS

Q uayle’s prey
Dan Q uiyte fo es to funerals, vtolta baaea.
» fends and comforts conservatives, He
rarely speaks on policy or gives preen
unpopular. J
Cable News
i
extreme

Recently, the Bush administration m ade an
exception. Ouayle went to Atlanta to teO the
American Bur Association that America has
too many lawyers. The lawyers greeted his
speech with atony silence and watched aa
their president. In an extraordinary breach o f
etiquette, challenged the vice president before
be had even left the podium.
But Quayle is right. America does have to
m any lawyers. And If It is not the administra­
tion's Job to point out the economic and social
coots o f excessive litigation, whose Job Is It?
The presidency should be a bully pulpit. With
Pr esident Bush on vacation, let Quay le do it.
The historical explanation for the lawyer
phenomenon la that the United States Is a
nation of Individual rights. The BUI o f Rights
meant to guarantee that government did
not trample on the governed. Aa the nation
expan ded, diversified, industrialised, it
needed m ore law yers to defend against
encroachments by the system . Result: 70
it o f the world’s lawyers today are
Quayte’n jo b was to say officially what
many Americana have said unofficially for
years: that the balance has swung too far
toward the lndtvludal; that the victim of
excessive litigation today often la society
Itself. That In pursuit of his own self-interest,
the Individual, through hto lawyer makes
everybody pay.
The excessive, coat of .doing business In
America hurts the economy., the motor of
society. W e pay higher coots for medicine.
Insurance, education and government. O ur
economic productivity Is lower because legal
fees, a non-productive expense, are higher.
The Japanese and Germans outcompete us
because their sharpest minds are busy trying
to create wealth, not take somebody clse's.
Quayle’a speech deserved to be given. It's
symptomatic o f the problem that John J.
Curtin Jr., the ABA president preferred to
argue than to listen. Yes, Curtin and others
can Justifiably point to the progress made
through litigation In civil liberties, product
liability and personal injury law.
But It's time to take stock. Excessive
litigation la a societal problem and requires a
national debate. Should legal
leg costa be shifted
to the losers? Should leg
egu contingency fees
be eliminated? Should limits on punitive
dam ages be Imposed? Should the fixing of
dam ages be transferred from Juries to Judges?

Tightening rules
To virtually no one's surprise, the House of
Representatives has approved a $33,200 pay
raise for senators, thus bringing their salaries
to the same $135,100 that House members
have been paid since the start of the year.
The trade-off is tighter ethics rules that will,
am ong other things, prevent senators from
receiving speaking fees and other payments
from special Interest groups. But senators still
can pocket up to $33,068 In such outside
Income this year until the new law la signed.
House m em bers applied the same rules to
themselves earlier when they voted for their
pay raise.
Because o f the House action, however, the
rates on gifts for both chambers will be far
teas restrictive than before. In fact, the public
disclosure requirement on gifts has essen­
tially been eliminated.
Current House rates require the public
disclosure o f gifts In excess of $100 per year
from anyone doing business before Congreaa.
The new rates raise the disclosure threshold
to $250. But the rules also prohibit the
acceptance o f gifts exceeding $250. That
m eans lawm akers will be required to disclose
gifts only in cases where they already have
violated the $350 limit.
The new rules also enable lawm akers to
accept gifts worth up to $100, without any
limit on the number of gifts accepted. This
m eans lawm akers could accept goods and
services worth thousands of dollars so long as
they are dtw ied up in small amounts.
llie r e Is nothing wrong with lawm akers'
voting themselves a pay raise, provided they
do so In the open and shut the door on outside
incom e and expensive gifts. But the m anner
In w hich lawm akers have cut this deal falls
on both counts.
The Senate has an opportunity to do the
right thing by passing a companion bill that
would scrap the liberalization of the gift rules
an d tighten them Instead. This should
Include a public disclosure requirement that
Is enforceable.

of (quiet)

JA C K ANDERSON

Law m akers tour
paid by big oil

LETTERS
Utility tax: something's wrong
The Seminole County Commission to de­
termined to force the utility tax down the
taxpayers throats regardless o f apparent ma­
jority opposition.
According to the County Commission as
reported by Herald articles, this utility tax is to
be used to raise 92.3 million annually for road
maintenance and repair.
The county needs, according to the Com­
mission, $450,000 for repaving and repair of
Sipes, Beardall. Upsala Road, and Celery
Avenue. The Herald reported on July 20. that
•230.007 is the county's “ share" o f the
Heathrow Beautification project. On July 18. it
was reported that $570,250, collected via the
touriat tax. Is to be spent on "to u ris t
development." This Includes $180,000 for a
boardwalk at the zoo. $50,000 for midge
control. $50,000 to develop Lake Mary Central
Pond. $20,000 each for the Hydroplane race
and the Red Lobster tailing regatta and
$10,000 to promote Golden Age games.
The Commission also decided to spend
$5,(XX) forjudges suite draperies.
Channel 0 reported the gro undbreaking o f
the $2 million Central Winds l ark In Winter
Springs. Where did that money come from? $
Something is wrong when over $230,000 is
spent on ^beautification." $180,000 for a
boardwalk, and $5,000 for drapes but $40,000
can't be found to pave a road.
Ron Rabun, the county manager, wants to
lend $640,000 to a development review board,
whatever that to. He also can’ t do the Job he
was hired to do without two deputies at a coat
o f $132,000 per year plus perks, plus his
salary. And he was hired to do what we elected
the commission to do.
These items add up to over $3,580,757
taxpayer dollars, and who knows what else Is
hidden In the proposed budget.
It appears there are some serious priority
problems at the Seminole County Commission,
especially during these tight money times.
There seems to be enough taxpayer funds to
run the county if it's done the way most o f us
have to budget Just to get by.
H.D. Hood
Sanford

Property appraiser insensitive
Let's see If I understand Seminole County
Property Appraiser Bill Suber correctly:
Fu rnish ed with irrefutable proof o f widespread
tax Inequities, he not only falls to state that he
will check for errors, but does not see the need.
I.e. "le t them eat cake."
Citizens of counties unfortunate enough to
itave insensitive appraisers with the mind-set
of Bill Suber will be forced to cither work to
have an amendment placed on the ballot for

both a tax and amendment cap. or appeal to
the state legislative body to address the
inequities.
JimMarklee
Altamonte Springs

Taxes making ua poor
Every time I pick up the paper. I read the
same item over and over. Pad taxes up. county
taxes, school taxes, utility tax. rood tax.
property taxes. My salary after taxes has
dropped to a two-year teas.
The County Commissioners cannot find
money, hut yet (County Manager Ron) Rabun
gave the Sheriff's Department everything It
wanted. They would like 23 positions so they
a*h for so. and thev Set 23.
The coat o f living u up 5 percent but yet our
teachers with 4 to 8 years o f college are told by
the School Board (who received 4 percent)
there is no money for raises. W hy? Because
Mr. Chiles needs U to raise his staff from 30 to
80 thousand a year.
E.B. Smith
Sanford

Pay attention, Mr. Suber
An open letter to H.W. (BUI) Suber, tax
appraiser.
Mr. Suber:
Saturday morning I found a notice in my
mailbox from you. U said the value o f m y home
located at 900 S. Elm Avc.. Sanford had
Increased 300 percent In Just 12 years. I ran
outside and looked at m y house to see If Midas
had passed by In the night and touched my
home while I slept. But alas, such was not the
case. It was M1U the same old bungalow In
need o f repain then and still is that I had
bought 12 years earlier for the sum o f $12,500.
If you or one o f your friends would like to
purchase this valuable dwelling for the sum of
$26,000 cash, bring your money and come on
down! You can then resell U for the price of
$35,910 that you say it to worth. That will give
you a profit o f $9,910. Aren't I nice?
P.S. 1 noticed your name wasn’ t on this
notice Uke aU the other correspondence I
receive from your office. Are you afraid the
people will remember you in the future when
we vote?
Vem on Hall
Sanford
____
I C T T C R C
1 1^ n w

l W

E D IT O R
U l/ i I v i »

Letters to the editor are welcome. Ail letters
must be signed. Include the address o f the
writer and a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be on a single subject and be
as brief as possible.. Letters arc subject to
editing.

WASHINGTON — Ten members of Con­
gress and their entourage Just got back from
Alaska where they were supposed to take an
Impartial look at a wildlife refuge to decide
whether It should be opened up for oil
drilling. But the hosts for that Impartial look
were oil companies. Eight o f the lawmakers
who made the full tour stayed at an oil
company lodge, flew In oil company helicop­
ters and were led around by oil company tour
guides.
In the one instance when the travelers used
taxpayers’ m on ey to get around, they
m anaged to squander the money. The
delegation flew to Alaska in a military C-9 at
a cost o f $67,774. Commercial air dare for the
members o f Congress would have been a
fraction o f that, hut then they wouldn't have,
been Able to tik e ilontf six sDouies.snd.s
bevy o
atf staffers.
The hospitality o f
the o il com pan ies
was thinly disguised
lobbying, and It may
s ta c k th e d e c k
against the A rc tic
N a t io n a l W i l d l i f e
R efu ge w h e re th e
Bush administration
wants to put out a
welcome mat to oil
d rillin g . T h e c o n ­
gressional delegation
spent tw o nights at
plush corporate lodg­
ings owned by Brit­
C lfw
ish P e t r o le u m In
hospitality of
Prudhoe Bay. And
thooil
th e y to u r e d th e
companies
w ild life re fu g e In
was thinly
helicopters owned by
dispirited
the Alaska Oil and
lobbying.
Gas Association with
tour guides from Brit­
ish Petroleum who
tried to convince the lawmakers that oil
drilling would leave only a small footprint on
the wilderness wonderland.
A spokesman for the House Merchant
Marine and Fisheries subcommittee, the
group that made the tour, disagreed with
environmentalists who said the trip was
manipulated by oil companies. He noted that
Rep. Oerry Studds, D-Mass.. the chairman of
the subcommittee and the leader o f the
delegation, is opposed to the drilling. And the
spokesman said, "W e were very careful to
make sure the members were getting a
balanced presentation."
But not careful enough to stay away from
oil company favors. Our associate Jim Lynch
asked why the delegation didn't pick a hotel
without any strings attached, and the sub­
co m m ittee spok esm an said there was
nowhere else to stay in Prudhoe Bay.
How about the Prudhoe Bay Hotel or the
North Star Inn. only a short drive from the
British Petroleum digs? They have about 800
rooms between them and both had vacancies.
The spokesman said the corporate lodge was
more convenient and claimed that all con­
gressional delegations stay there. A clerk at
the Prudhoe Bay Hotel had a better explana­
tion: "W e're not aa fancy os what they have
at British Petroleum."
T h e subcommittee has indicated that It will
reimburse British Petroleum if it gets a bill,
but It's not d ea r whether that bill will ever
come. A British Petroleum spokesman told us
that catering to the needs o f Congress was
simply "an opportunity to show with pride
how w e do our business up here."
N o one to talking about paying back the
Alaska Oil and Gas Association for the
helicopter*. They-were a freebie arranged by
Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan. House
ethics officials found nothing Improper about
the gift.
In an effort to get a balanced presentation.
Rep. Studds instated that British Petroleum
a llo w tw o en viron m entalists from the
Wilderness Society and the North Alaskan
Environmental Center to come to Prudhoe
Bay and give a slide show. But the environ­
mentalists were not Invited along on the
helicopter tours, nor did they bunk In the
British Petroleum lodge.

�4

■ M

i

MBMHBSMBiflMMMWM

Santofd Herald. SantonJ, Florida - Friday. August 33, 1W1 - M

Flood map changes begin P**1?1
n V r V D M n IfT iW f

SANFORD - Residents of homes near 31
Semtnote County takes could be in for some good
nears or acme bad news from the county's
proposed revised maps of flood-prone areas.
The Army Corps of Engineers, commissioned
by the county, found the water from many of the
lakes could flood much broader areas during a
hurricane than previously believed. But the Corps
also found several lakes would not reach flooding
heights the county had estimated.
The pubMc and area ofllciale have an opportuni­
ty to comment on the proponed levels at hearing
10 a.m. Thursday at the county’s Agricultural
Auditorium at the five Fotnta Complex.
Chan t s In county floodprone area mapa can
affect Insurance rates for new homes, but could
also serve to krarer the Insurance for some
existing homes, said Sheila Hill, who reviews
flooding areas in the county. She said If an
existing home Is removed from s floodprone area.
Us hnuarlmkl instnanrr may tn kia t u tl.
But If an existing home Is now within a
floodprone area, their Insurance will stay the
same. Hill said.

Street
&gt;M

better solution would be to gtw
the TWfftf to the expressway
being built through the city, “ft
would be a larger and more
modem street, and would not
d e s t r o y th e h i s t o r i c a l
significance of one of the old
pioneer streets we have tn our
city."
The original City of Sanford,
planned by Henry Shelton San­
ford In the 1870s. designated
routes going north and aouth as
avenues. Those that rtui east and
west were streets. It w as a
common practice In cities
created during that era.
Changing the n
name o f a city
street to Martin Luther King
Boulevard will not be something
new. Since 1968, the naming o f
streets In honor o f the stain civil
rights leader has occurred In
cities and towns across the
entire nation.

Hilt said the county had uacd beat available
Information to estimate the current flood levels,
but uatng a federal grant, was able to get mare
accurate levels from the study.
The “ 100-year" level la the height water might
teach during a atom that might occur on!
every 100 years. Hurricane Donna, which passed
through Sanford m September 1900. vaa the last
100-year storm.
Lake Monroe. Lake Jesup and Lake Mary were
not included In the study. Hill Mid. Detailed
information on those lakes are known, ahe said,
ram i mu Dcnciactofi of lno w
living next to or
the 100-year level Would reach much lower levels

ra w when they
old county maps. Also a
Oeneva, Upper Proctor and Buck, were
Hill said the county
to be build
at Imat a foot above tl
be at risk of flaadhtH where the lewis
Increased by more than a foot, aha aakL

Derby kids
to display
their racers
"V 2 "^ J£ 2r 5 .
honored by the City of
Sanford Monday night. The
two Titusville youngtfers
represented Sanford tn the
national Sore Box Derby
races tn Akron, Ohio.
P e rry . 13. won the
Masters DtvMon race dur­
ing the races In Sanford on
July 13. TwandeU. 10. waa
the victor In the Ktt-Car
claaa. Both youngsters
participated In the national
races tn Akron on August
10. Perry lost in the first
race, while TwandeU won
her first run. but lost tn the
second.
S a n fo rd R ecreation
Director Mike Kirby said
the cars wlU be on display
at city hall beginning at
6:30 p.m.
__________

AIDS
iM
throttfb Stands and
u d ao cc tal fondthe

__ _

S C - mT73K TTtfii 7 « y .

$600,000 by June of this year!
| The gathering, Saturday, win
he at to a.m.. at the stadium at
i t s ■■II | I ■t ■

la k
m-m-------a
.k lw k
acRuiKNc Uftign
9CIMXH, -vm
cn

has been officially named, the
“Thomas E. Whfgham Memorial
“With tMse
to show the
de of Florida that we
other
aro bei
ithis battle agrtmt the
killer
In the hope that
others may do eomethtag simi­
lar. We want everyone who has
supported the foundation to he
on hand, whether they ere
members or not. We

at accident scenes.
Bsltnger wrote that about 29
percent of the Seminole County
manhours are spent In dealing
with traffic In a copy of the letter
provided by ChNes' press office
Often deputies
to aecddento and reno troopers
MB* ■wmMmDfC# ItC WTOl*. wvvfl
when a trooper la available, a
deputy has to be on hand to
dfrecto traffic, he wrote.
The highway patrol la re­
e x a m in in g its 10-year-old
statewide staffing formula and Is
due to make recommendations
to the Legislature by Nov. 1.
The formula, approved by the
governor and Cabinet, was
baaed largely on how many
accldcnta were Investigated In
each county In 1981. MaJ. Mike
Boles, FHP spokesman, said
'TufMWAQF#
Botes mid a task force repre­
senting state, county and local
law enforcement authorities Is
working on a new plan to

ties to keep order at trafnc
accidents. Esltn^r'a Jan. 7 fet­
ter was directed to Adams in
care o f the Florida Sheriffs
urged a grand Jury
p r o b e Into possible
mismanagement at the patrol,
but the Florida Department of
Law Enforcement recommended
■ fw n n ituncmng i grand jury

Inveathpuion.
The tflortda Tbnes-Union re­
ported ***** it nk**&gt;ft*d coptea of
the letters, and while some
generally praised the patrol,
others criticised assignment of
vying with sheriffs officers on

criminal Investigations.

S e v e ra l said p opu lation
changes have outdated the staf­
fing Dlsn.
For example. In 1900, Osceola
County had 13 troopers who
investigated 1.421 accidents.
Last year, the number of
troopers had been cut to nine
but there were 2.418 accidents
In the (sat-growing area. Osceola
County Sheriff Jon Lane wrote.
“More than half the time we're
the first ones on the scene." St.
Johns County Sheriff Neil Perry
smite. “Sometimes other crimes
have to wait because we have a
serious traffic accident."
■aw bsm n » Annum Fun a
IlsSiUraswt.

$3 O F F
ONLY ftlftJO WITH COUPON

IH C p D v v lIU H • v n D tn C l

&gt;M Rag to response to a
k u d ttlh it mSTtroopers
_
t o some duties
ctvtUsn employees could do less

mf

... County Sheriff Jamie
complained to Chiles In
WnlhmatmaH ArnJ &gt;^^mA ak m
rrofuumr, mj*g sent use fovcjrnoc
letters from 14 other shertfb*
offices which were using depu-

® Express LubP
itxAco

OflChongoSpoctfflli

SANFORD AUTO MALL 4S7-4M4MS

M B*

2710 Orlando Dr., Sanford
(Hwy. 17-92)

MON.-PmS4*SATUnOAVS4

: w ho Just feel the desire to

concluded. “We want to
show everyone that the people of
the Sanford area are really
concerned, and doing some­
thing."

D A&lt;s&gt;gy

G rading---------to the faying system,
claim that the lack of number or
letter grades to g p * students an
Indication of how well they arc
learning i Subject, hurts the
learningjM M iM i
*•»**&lt;*■* ■«
They cite a drop of- seven
percentage potato In the dis­
trict-wide CCTB scores.for sec­
ond graders who were graded
with the S and N system last
year.
____
The CCTB tert is a nationally
scored achievement test.
According to Information from
the district testing office, scores
at Goldsboro Elementary School
dropped nine percent from 1990
to 1991. There was a one point
drop at Idyllwtlde Elementary.
Lak e Mary Elem entary also
showed a one point drop. The
scores at Longwood Elementary
w en t down nine percentage
potato. There was a three per­
cent drop at Hamilton Elementa­
ry School. The decrease at Pine
Croat Elementary School
y

■ . w*

ft* js ty -i "•

JAMBS P. CONRAD
James P. Conrad. 72. 1938 N.
Carol wood Blvd., Fern Park, died
Wednesday In Boston, Mass.
Bom Feb. 19. 1919. in Clcveland, he moved to Fern Park
from there In 1975. He waa a
retired regional sales manager
for an aviation electronics Arm
and a Catholic. He was an Arm y
veteran o f World War II.
Survivors include son. Ran­
dall. Arlington. Mass.: stepson.
K a rl S te fa n o ff. Fern P a rk :
daughtgers, Carla C. Freeman.
Alfred. N.Y.. Alcxa. Hackensack.
N.J.; slater. Jean Kiefer. Toledo.
Ohio: five grandchUdren.
C a r e y H an d C o x - P a r k e r
Funeral Home. Winter Park. In
charge o f arrangements.

Etta Watts Crummett. 89.
1920 S. Grant St.. Longwood.
died Thursday at Florida Hospi­
tal. Altamonte Springs. Bom
June 22. 1902. In Buena Vista,
Va.. she moved to Longwood
from Virginia. She was a home­
maker and a Protestant.
S u r v i v o r s i n c lu d e s o n .
W illia m . O viedo: d a u g h te r.
D ou gh Slusher. C a lifo r n ia :
brothers. Earl Watts, Nelson
W atts J r . both of V irgin ia:
sister. Mrs. Charles Lack ey.
Virginia: aeven grandchildren;
eight great-grandchildren.
Wilcox-Winter Park Memorial
Chapel Funeral Home. Winter
Park. In charge o f arrangements.

VIVIAN JAMISON
V ivian Jamison. 61. 2180
Church St.. Sanford, died at
Thursday Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford. Bom
March 25. 1930. In Quincy, she
moved to Sanford In 1944 from

■
nine percent. WUaon Elementary
School showed a one percent
drop. And there was a nine
percent drop at Woodlands Ele­
mentary School.
Halle and the others said they
believe the Bckod district testing
staff failed to provide the test
score Information to the school

board for th is ," Halle said.
“ T h ey just haven't been In­
formed o f aU the facta. They (the
Instructional division staff) tell
the board Just what they want
them to know.”
Halle said most of the parents
ahe has talked to about the
proposed changes have had no
knowledge o f the plan.
“ T his will affect 2,900 stu­
dents next year if It la passed,
and moat o f the parents I've
talked to don’t know anything
about it." ahe said. "T h e com ­
m unity relations department
waa supposed to get the word

out. but they have not done
that."
Sandy Eldrldfs, also o f Winter
Splngs, defends the group which
the change.
are net-opposed to a !)
_
ahe said. " W e Just d o
not believe th a ra n y good w ill
coroeoflh la.” ; - .
The school board will hear the
public one more time on the
subject o f the grade change
during their 7 am . meeting on
Tuesday Aug. 27.

I w b i l w m 'r l m i t o
runi*«prvto&gt;u»Ar*'fMmni},«i&gt;
TUIm Ai Amw— UnwwmAr
(A m U

ANNIE O. BANKER
Annie G. Kanner. 87. Beach
Street. Daytona Beach, died
T h u r s d a y at H oliday C a re
Nursing Home. Daytona Beach.
Bom Aug. 10. 1904, In Umatilla,
she moved to Daytona Beach
from Sanford in 1970. She was a
hommakcr and a member of
Wesleyan Methodist Church o f
Paola.
Survivors Include husband.
Murray. Sanford; sons. Herbert
T. Ellis. Daytona Beach. Clyde
Ellis. Port Orange; daughter.
N o rm a Jean H ayes. N ew
Sm yrn a; brother, Robert J.

h m tm t o

Prices VendAugust 4 - 27.1991
...

mm

.

— ------m a n o o ro

fMsdhan

PROFESSIONAL
P R OP E R T Y TAX
ASSESSMENT
R E VI E W

C a lk 3 2 1 - 9 0 8 5
Ir lr c t&amp; o ff

196 W.

i

to** b w » X V H s m « l i l
■mill
wsmtolto
IIS W fls a M -W lM IS M M y
« W V I ! s a m i - M i l u l t o '»•»
- w 'lfu a m .u m w N iit m y

ALL VARIETIES

*14.49
SURGEONGENERAL'SWARNING:OwingSmofcng
NowGfwdyWuct* Sawn Rah toYowH«Wi

PEPSI
ALL FLAVORS

12PKS.

99

2 LITERS

GATORADj
32 OZ.
$H 39

KAJMia. AMMI a. tTMOMAl)

xmut.i

S

MARLBORO
CARTONS
fry New

LEO J. McCALLAN

GrmmtM* tvm rtt m tv Ic m to Mrt. Kwwar
will to teturtoy. Am* to at II am. In Mw
Sylvan Lato Camatoy. Saaia. *tm Dr*
Joan Bryant attklallns Frlanto may call at
mo Britton Funoral Homo F rM y from a
until Sa m.
Arreneementt by Srtuan Funmal Homo.

t t i M cksooo,

Discover Hie Handy Way
DifferenceI

M id .

Leo J. McCallan. 88, 240 Lake
EUen Drive. Casselberry, died
W ednesday at his residence.
Bom Sept. 3. 1902. in Johns­
town. Pa., he moved to Cassel­
berry from there In 1964. He was
a retired streetcar mechanic and
a member and usher o f St. Mary
Magdalen Catholic Church. A l­
tamonte Springs.
S u r v iv o r in clu d e s s is te r .
Bernice Bendford. Johnstown.
Gaines Funeral Home, Long­
wood, in charge o f arrange­
ments.

sob

niw tnii

Halle and Eldrldge said they
still bring a large group to that
meeting and they plan to speak
out.
“ We want the board to know
how we oppose this,'' Halle said.
Halle said ahe and Eldrldge are
h o p in g to inform as m an y
parents aa they are able about
the changes.
"T h e district administration
has not done their Job In letting
people know about this," Halle

T hom as. Paola; nine grandc h i l d r e n ; 18 g r e a t ­
grandchildren; three
great-great-grandchildren.
Brlaaon Funeral Home. San­
ford. In charge o f arrangements.

fm j Jar Wt o Mrp o m

IlmpviJaiMyunUiM
N-mIhbRhAAmA. naUbtot

. Mg}*

there. She waa a homemaker
and a member of Church o f God
by Faith. Sanford.
Survivors Include husband
Oscar. Syracuse. N.Y.: son. Os­
car Jr.. Syracuse; daughters.
Anna Corbin and Rutha Lee
Frlaon, Sanford; brothers, W illie
Oliver. Syracuse. TUlls Oliver.
Verdell Oliver. Joel Oliver and
Theodore Oliver, all o f Sanford;
slaters. Lola Allen and Beulah
Bryant, both of Sanford.
Wilaon-Eichelbcrger Mortuary
Inc.. Sanford, In charge o f ar­
rangements.

Withdrawal from social activities. I
These could be the first warning signs of a mental Illness.
Unfortunately, moat of us don't recognise the signs.
Which to tragic. Because mental Illness can be traded.
In fact, 2 out of 3 people who get help, get better.
= ' For a (tee booklet about mental Ulness: teattthe’
a.
kij
UUli l *. *
American Mental Health Fund: ‘
. VI
1-800-433-5959
►A j **■- ** • ' ‘ ***

3
WOOF
b ig

FO U N TA IN
DRINK
44 OZ.

89*

«

OZ.

�•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday, August 23. 1991

L is t o f c a n d id a t e s n a rro w e d

Iclarification

f o r S e m i n o l e p r i n c i p a l ’s jo b
BfVtem ii

Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — The list o f candidates to replace
Wayne Epps as principal at Sem inole High School
h as be e n n a r r o w e d to f i v e .
The decision o f which one w ill be presented to the
school board for their approval is in the hands of
S u p t .
R o b e r t
H u g h e s ,
All arc assistant principals in Seminole County
s c h o o l s a t t h l s t i m e .
Bobby Lundquist who Is at Seminole: BUI Moore
and Dee Schumaker who are at Lake Mary High
School: Gretchen Schapker w h o is at Lyman High
School In Longwood and Raym ond Gaines, who is

24 Hours that shook
Soviet Union, world
*Mo m Aflifyili
MOSCOW - T h e 24 hours
that ended with the InppHwg
of a monument to the man
who first unleashed "R e d
Terror" on this troubled land
were arguably the moat dra*
matic in ilx years o f reform.
T h ose hours w e r e a ls o
fraught with clues to the
future.
Events spun m adly from
T h u rsd a y's firs t m in u te s
when thousands o f Russians
stUI locked arms to protect
their parliament against m ili­
tary attack, to their climax at
11:38 p.m.. when a statue o f
F e lix D s e rs h ln s k y c a m e
The coup attempt by hard­
line Communists clearly had
failed. But it was equally clear
at the end o f the day that
although Gorbachev was re­
s to re d to his p la c e , th e
country could never be the
"People pow er" and the
decentralization o f authority
were proven. During the same
day. the power o f the KGB to
threaten and Intimidate was
d a m a g e d , p e r h a p s lr ably.
reparably.
As Thursday passed from
the damp and cool o f pre­
dawn to late summer sun­
shine and a moonlit night.
G o r b a c h e v r e t u r n e d to
Moscow and proceeded to
turn his security services and
presiden tial s t a ff upsidedown. He appeared before
reporters to reveal how he had
been kept Isolated at his
vacation home.
But all around the man who
la both p resid en t o f h is
country and c h ie f o f the
Communist Party swirled a
storm over which he had no
control:
• The interior minister,
coup conspirator Boris Pugo,
shot and killed himself rather
than face arrest, officials say.
The act was reminiscent o f
the pre-Gorbachev politics o f
conspiracy and violence that
Pugo represented.
• Boris YHtsln rode a w ave
o f resurgent pride am on g
Russians, the Soviet Union's
largest ethnic group, to even
greater popularity and politi­
cal pow er. H is r e p u b lic
form ally reverted to th e
whlte-red-and-bluc (lag that
once (lew over the czar's
empire.
• The KGB apparently lost
Its ability to command obe­
dience through Intimidation.
Its chief was under arrest and
Us Icon, Dzerzhinsky's statue,
was violated.
• Baltic republics, threat­
ened by harsh repression if
the coup succeeded, made
gains toward their cherished
Independence.
In no other day in the
frequently dramatic six years
since Gorbachev took power
had there been a period when
events tumbled past each
otherat such speed.
The biggest winners were
the 15 S oviet re p u b lic s ,
whose leaders mostly resisted

the coup because it would
have meant an end to th eir
push for more autonomy. T h e
biggest winner o f all
Yeltsin.
"Boris Yeltsin is now the
center and the symbol o f
initiative in the Soviet Un­
io n ." said radical Rusalan
legislator Oleg Rumyantsev.
He added he was "absolutely
sure" that the Russian presi­
dent was now more politically
powerful than Gorbachev.
Russians also celebrated at
a Jubilant rally an outpouring
o f ethnic pride for their re­
sistance to the coup. T h e
w o rd "R u s s ia n " w a s o n
everyon e's lips. The w ord
"S o viet" was nowhere.
T h a t e m o tio n c o u ld
energize them to Invigorate
their huge republic, but also
cause their smaller neighbors
to w o rry about p o s s ib le
Russian expansion and dom i­
nation.
In the Baltics, the coup
turned out to be an advan­
tage. It seemed to prove to the
rest o f the world their longstated suspicious .about re­
maining part of the Soviet
Union, and It emboldened
them to make even stronger
d e c la ra tio n s o f th e ir I n ­
dependence.
More practically, the e m ­
barrassed Soviet s ec u rity
forces slunk away from build­
ings they had seized in a
cam paign of Intim idation.
Around dusk, they pulled out
o f the Lithuanian broadcast­
ing center In Vilnius, site o f a
bloody assault In January
that left 14 people dead.
The military and security
o r g a n s — th e D e f e n s e
Ministry, (he Interior Ministry
and the KGB — were the
biggest lasers.
By Thursday morning. D e­
fense Minister Dmitri Yazov
a n d KGB ch ief V la d im ir
Kryuchkov were under arrest,
and police were headed to the
hom e o f Interior M inister
Pugo. But Pugo shot him self
Instead, officials say.
Removal of the Dzerzhinsky
statue as Thursday came to u
close symbolized that.
"A ll of our lives the KGB
was stronger than the p eo­
p le." said Irina Kalina. T h e
secret police shot her father In
1938 and sent her Into exile
In 1949-1953.

presently at Lake Brantley High School In
A ltam on te S p rin g s , are still In running.
Hughes said he will have his final rerommendntlon r e a d y f o r th e b o a r d by M o n d a y .
The original list o f candidates was reduced by a
committee which included Dr. Marlon Dailey,
assistant superintendent for Instruction: Jack
Hclsler. director o f high school education: John
Reichert, director o f personnel and Lance Abney,
a s o c ia l s t u d ie s t e a c h e r at S c m ln o tc .
The school board will vote on the superin­
tendent's recommendation next Tuesday's 7 p.m.

m

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.

J a i l p r a i s e d f o r fire r e a c t io n
By J.MMKBARFMLB

Hsraif Stiff Writer
SANFORD — Seminole County
Corrections Administrator David
Brterton praised the actions o f
corrections staff Wednesday ip
responding quickly to bedding
fires reportedly startod by In­
mates In two separate Incidents.
"O ne o f them could have been
a real problem If they didn't act
quickly." Brterton said. "Y o u
Just have days like that som e­
tim es."
The first and potentially m ost
serious fire was reported at
about 1:30 p.m. when Correc­
tions Officer Agustln Valentine
Jr. reported hearing someone
s h o u tin g " f i r e " fro m t h e
women's holding cells. CO Pam
Pettit was summonded and she

reported seeing black smoke
Issuing from a cell. Pettit quickly
extinguished the fire and pulled
the Inmate from the cell.
Brterton said the inmate. Carol
S u e B r l g h t w e l l . 2 7 . 101
L a rk s p u r D rive. A lta m o n te
Springs, was checked by a
physician, but did not sustain
injuries. Brlghtwell has been
held since Aug. 13 after leading
Sanford police on a chase o f up
to 100 m.p.h. The chases ended
when her car veered off State
Road 46 into a ditch near Upsala
Road.
A n I n v e s t ig a t io n fo u n d
Brlghtwell had started the fire
using several books of matches,
reports state.
The second fire was reported
at about 8:45 p.m. in the men's

Jernigan will retire
from nis job earlier
■yNICKRFBIFAUF

Herald Staff Wrllsr
S A N F O R D - The c i t y 's
Director of Parks. Jim Jernigan.
has announced an earlier re­
tirement date than originally
planned. He will leave office as o f
September 30.
When he first planned his
retirement, Jernigan had sug­
gested the effective date of Feb­
ruary 21. "A fter I looked at
several Items, particularly health
Insurance," he said. " I d e ­
termined that an earlier retire­
ment would be more practical."
Jernigan had expected to re­
main in his job until after the
Golden Age Games, scheduled
for November 3 through 9. He
has been chairman of the gam es
since they began 18 years ago.
and is considered lo be one o f
the major originators o f the
annual event as well as one o f
the driving forces behind Its
continuing success.
While his future connection
with the games has not been
determined, he said, "I guess I
will be able to continue working

area. Reports state a corrections
officer saw smoke issuing from
an isolation cell occupied by
Rodney Burnett, 26. 1240 Mullet
Lake Park Drive. Geneva. The
o fficer discovered a burning
blanket on the floor of the cell
with Burnett sitting nearby.
The fire was extinguished after
Burnett was removed, reports
stale. A lighter was found near
the entrance to the cell after
Burnett was taken out. reports
state. Reports state two officers
were required to subdue Burnett
before he could be removed.
Bumcit had been taken to the
Jail Wednesday morning after he
was arrested at his home and
charted with auto theft by Semi­
nole County deputies.
Both Brlghtwell and Burnett
were charged with arson.

L u n dqu ist presently is an
nsslstanl principal al Seminole
and the subject o f the petition
favorin g his appointment as
principal o f that school.
11 was report cd t hat Lance
Abney, a social studies icachcr
ut the school did not sign the
petition that was endorsed by 85
members o f the school's staff.
Abney, w ho Is Ihe teacher
representative serving on the
com m ittee that was charged
with reviewing Ihe applicants for
the Job. was singled out as not
having signed the petition only
to point out that he had re­
mained unbiased In his the task.
It was not meant to imply that
he did not support Lundquist in
h is cu rren t position at the
school.

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on that project." While he has
been a city employee. Jernigan
has been allowed to volunteer
his services as chairman. The
final decision will be In the
hands of the directors o f the
Golden Games Corporation.

SUPER GARDEN
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He has no immediate plans for
his retlrmenl. When he first
announced the move he said, " I
don't have any definite plans. I
Just want to relax and continue
to have fun in mv life."
Jernigan, who turned 60 In
July, has served In his present
capacity for the past 31 years In
Sanford. with an additional 5
years In similar positions in
North and South Carolina.
Sanford City Manager Bill
Simmons, who Is responsible for
fin d in g a rep la ce m e n t fo r
Jernlgan's position with the city
has not officially advertised for
the Job yet.
"T h a t's something w e ll have
to be doing within the next week
or tw o." he said. As o f the
present time. Simmons reported
no one has Indicated an Interest
In applying for the position.

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OPCN SUNDAY M

H ard w are

Baham as-bound jet lands;
tourist trips still on hold
■y NICK FPBIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer
S AN FO R D - A la rge Jet
engine passenger aircraft arrived
In Sanford yesterday afternoon
en route to the Bahamas. It was
a temporary stopover however,
not a return to regular dally
service lo the Bahamian Island.
Steve Cooke, director o f the
airport said, "T h is plane, a
com m ercial 737. belongs to
Bahamas Air. It has no connec­
tion with the one that was used
for the Paradise Island flights."
He explained. "This particular
flight is a prlvulc one. which
arrived In Sanford shortly after 6
o'clock, to take on a load o f
passengers from the Hawaiian
Tropic company."
The earlier nights between
Sanford and the Bahamas, spe­
cifically to Paradise Island, used
Delfavllland Dash-7 4-englnc

aircraft, painted white, blue and
y e llo w . Th e proposed d ally
flights started off with great
hopes several months ago. but
were discontinued after just a
few weeks of operation. During
that time, the only passengers
were travel and tour agents and
their representatives, who were
to handle sales of Ihe two-day
one-night packages which In­
cluded hotel lodgings, and casi­
no privileges.
The island, casinos und hotels
are all owned and operated by
Merv Griffin, of television fame.
T h e y are continuing un der
norm al operation. The only
change was ihe flight cancella­
tion from Sanford.
The financial backers o f Ihe
actual aircraft, cancelled the
fllghts. reportedly due to the fact
that their Investments appeared
unlikely lo mukc a desired profit.

B IV W W V W IM t W W U W W IW B W
D UNBAR'S
322-6935S
R E STAU R AN T &amp; LOUNGE S

Watching the Dzerzhinsky
statue come down, she said;
"T h is Is the first lime in 70
years that the people are
stronger."

17-92 and Lake Mary Btvd.

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t

Epps has transrered lo Oviedo High School to
replace Charlie W ebb who recently retired.

A slory In Thursday’s Sanford
Herald may have left an er­
roneous Impression about the
actio n s o f a Sem inole High
School leachcr In relation lo a
petition In support o f Bobby
Lundquist.

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FRIDAY

Sa n fo rd Herald

SHS Booster Day It today
SANFORD — The Seminole High School
Athletic Booster Day will be Friday. Aug. 23.
from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
S em inole High School ath letes w ill be
canvaslng the city seeking Athletic Booster Club
memberships. Family memberships will be 810.
For more Information contact the Athletic
Department. Seminole High School. 322-4352.
extension 151 or 152.

[

wm

FIVE PO INTS W ith the
summer season in the books, the
Seminole PONY Baseball League
now turns its collective attention
to the next Item o f business,
namely, the winter season.
A n d w h i l e A u g u s t Is
\pchnlcally a summer month, the

Seminole PONY winter campaign
has already begun with the
registration o f players.
The final day to register for the
w inter program w ill be this
Saturday. Aug. 24. Registration
will be available at the Seminole
PONY Baseball Five Points Com­
plex on Highway 419 between 10
a.m and 2 p.m.

LAKE MARY — When getting ready for a new
season, the beat way to get an early handle on
who ore the teams to beat Is look back at what
they did last season.
In high school cross country, that means
taking last year's state championship meet,
eliminating all the seniors who should have
graduated and rescortng the meet with the
remaining competitors.
Following that sequence o f logic, defending
Class 4A boys cross country state champion
Lake Worth-John I. Leonard, which returns four
o f Its top runners from last year’s squad, is a
■olid favorite to repeat with defending Class 3A
state champ GalnesvIUe-Buchholz. which moves
up to 4A this year, a close second.

ORLANDO — Mike Poehl (5-4) pitched a
five-hit shutout Thursday as Memphis had a
season-high 21 hits in Its 12-0 win over Orlando.
Poehl struck out one and didn't walk any.
Memphis had four hits each from Kevin Long
and Darryl Robinson. John Toale drove In Tour
runs, and Jim Baxter went 3-for-3.
Orlando had to recruit its second baseman.
Carlos Capellan. to throw the ninth inning
because the SunRays ran out o f pitchers.
Pat Bangison (11-10) got the loss for Orlando.

The Lake Mary Rams, led by senior David
Lewis. Is seventh In the prraeason poll with the
Lake Brantley Patriots coming In 12th.
F illin g In th e rest o f the top 12 are
Jacksonvllle-Mlddleburg (3rd), Tampa-Gaithcr
(4th). Clearwater (5th). Pensacola-Waahlngton
(6th). Mclbourne-Palm Bay |8lh). Coral Spring!*
(9th). Lauderdale Lakes-Boyd Anderson (10th)
and Cooper City (11 th).

Bravts edge Jacksonville

IC O L L 8 Q 8 F O O T B A L L
Miami: Torretta fo start
CORAL GABLES — Gino Torretta will be the
University of Miami's starting quarterback for
the Aug. 31 season opener at Arkansas. Coach
Dennis Erickson announced Thursday.
Torretta. a fourth-year Junior from Pinole.
Calif., beat out Bryan Fortay for the Job. but not
by much, according to Erickson.
There has been talk of Fortay, a third-year
sophomore from East Brunswick. N.J., trans­
ferring if he didn't get the starter's Job. Erickson
said he didn't expect that to happen, but added
that Fortay was unhappy about the news.

Florida: Doan boats out Fox
GAINESVILLE - Florida Coach Steve Spur­
rier named rcdshlrt freshman Terry Dean as his
backup quarterback Thursday heading into
Saturday's second full-contact scrimmage.
Dean, who had been competing with junior
Brian Fox for the backup position behind Shane
Matthews. locked up the Job in Wednesday's
scrimmage when he led the offense to three
touchdowns In three possessions.
Fox. meanwhile, hurt his chances for the Job
Wednesday with two Interceptions in the team's
first scrimmage.
Spurrier has planned another full-contact
scrimmage for Saturday and said the things
could still change.

Florida State: ’Noles fine tune
TALLAHASSEE Florida State's orTcnse
continued fine-tuning its game Thursday follow­
ing a disappointing scrimmage the day before.
*‘ l saw that if we don't do better. I don't think
we can win the gam e." said coach Bobby
Bowden. "It would be hard for me to think we
could win the game executing like we did.”
The Seminolcs held their final scrimmage of
the preseason Wednesday. The offense spent
Thursday’s practice correcting missed assign­
ments and regaining a measure of Intensity.

■MT BITS ON TV

B A S E B A LL
□ 7:30 p.m. — WGN. Chicago White Sox at
Cleveland Indians. |L|
FO O TB A LL
□ 8 p.m. — WESII 2. NFL Preseason. San
Francisco 49ersat Seattle Seahawks. (L)

Baseball Inc. will conduct Its
annual meeting at the Five Points
Complex on Sunday. Aug. 25. at
2 p.m.
The meeting will be held in the
meeting room at the baseball
fields. All interested parents and
p eop le are in v ite d and e n ­
couraged to attend.

"Lym an Is a perfect example." said Calloway.
"T h ey won the Seminole Athletic Conference
championship last year but didn't get to the state
meet. They'd definitely be In the top 20 this year
and could break into the top 10."
Individually. Lewis Is the county's highest
ranked runner, his time of 15:44 at last year's
state meet the seventh best of those competitors
eligible to return to the state meet this year,
which will be run on Saturday. Nov. 23, on the
north campus o f Florida Community CollegeJacksonville.
Lake Mary sophomore Toby Ayers Is the only
other Seminole County runner In (he preseason
top 20. his 1990 state meet time o f 16:37 putting
him 16th.
The complete individual top 10 is. In order.
Jaime Fain and Ryan McNally o f Leonard. Miami
Beach's Luis Prestea, Chris Thomas o f Leonard,
Buchholz's Randy Holllnger and Jonathan Schol,
Lewis of Lake Mary. Tampa-Leto's James Seller.
Craig Gillespie o f Mlddleburg and Gaither’s Kyle
Hogc.
Besides Lewis and Ayers. Junior Steve Platt
also represented Lake Mary at the state meet last
year, finishing 104th. Expected to round out the
Rams' lineup this year are seniors Chris Hurd
and Erlfr Hamm and |unior Joshua Smith.
Lake Brantley has four of Its runners who
competed in last year's state meet back for
another shot this year. They are Juniors Michael
Cnpelll (59th at last year's state meet) and Wes
liter (64th) and sophomores Dan Hlllcy (73rd) and
Hunter Kemper (103rd). Senior Danny Rodriguez
also returns for the Patriots.
Capelli's time o f 16:58 at the state meet Is the
30th beat among returning meet competitors,
liter, who ran a 17:06 lost year, is 31st with
HlUey's time of 17:17 the 38th lowest mark.

Herald Sports Editor________________________

Poahl blanks SunRays

JACKSONVILLE — Scan Ross hit a two-run
double In a three-run fifth inning to lead
G re e n v ille to a 4-3 w in T h u rsd a y o ve r
Jacksonville.
J eff Wetherby. Rueben Gonzalez and Tony
Manahan each had RBIs for the Suns.
Ben R ivera (10-7) worked 6 1-3 innings to ea rn .
the win white Bill Taylor picked up his 20th
save. Marcus Garcia suffered the loss.

W inter ball is open to all
players between the ages o f 5 and
13.
Prospective players will need to
bring copies of their birth certifi­
cates and a registration fee of
835. Players must be age 5 by
Aug. 1.
Also this weekend, the board of
directors o f S em in ole PO NY

Rams, Pats ranked;
’Hounds not far off

SANFO RD — Sanford Am erican Legion
Campbell-Losalng Post 53 Incorporated will hold
a go lf scramble Sunday, September 8 at the Mt.
Plymouth GolfCtub.
Entrants should be at the course at 7:30 p.m.
with shotgun start at 8 a.m.
Cost Is 830 per player, which wilt Include
prizes, food and entertainment by Eric Duncan.
Players must register by Wednesday. Sept. 4.
and entry fee must be in by Friday, Sept. 6.
Send entries to American Legion CampbellLossing Post 53 Inc., 2874 Sanford Avenue.
32773 or for more Information call 322-1652.

C om plst* llstfn t on Po«o SB

1991

Harriers in the hunt

American Lsgion Toumsy

Q

23,

Seminole PONY League prepares for winter play

IN BRIEF

■ w

August

"T h e only way to do a preseason poll like this
Is to look at what the teams did at the state meet
last year.” said Lake Mary coach Willie Calloway,
who compiled the ranking. "T h at's what (he
state ranking is baaed on. getting to the state
meet."

Lake Mary senior David Lewis has the seventh
best time of those returners who competed in
last year's Class 4A cross country state meet.

O f the seven runners on Lym an 's SAC
championship team last year, the only one who
graduated was Kevin Padgett. The six possible
returners are seniors Eric Schmalmaack and
Francisco Somarrlba and Juniors Dan Melvin,
Brian Nelaen. Johnny Carrasquillo and Caleb
Keers.

Calloway admitted that basing the slate
ranking strictly on last year's slate meet can
exclude a young, developing team that didn't
make It to the championship event a year ago but
becomes a state force this year.

Plug pulled on
Summer Blowout
Pram Staff Bsparts
SANFORD — What If they gave a softball tournament
and nobody came? Odds arc, they'd reschedule It.
At least that's what the Sanford Recreation Depart­
ment did, cancelling this weekend's scheduled Summer
Blowout softball tournament but announcing that It
would try uguin later this fall.
"W c only had four learns pay the entry fee." said
Sanford Recreation Department supervisor Rocky
Elllngsworth Thursday night. "A fter we cancelled it. wc
had two more teams say they were interested."
Elllngsworth said that still left them about six teams
short of being able to run a quality tournament.
"You need a minimum of 10 lo 12 teams to have a
good tournament." said Elllngsworth. " I f you have 12
teams playing In a double-elimination formal, that's a
23-game tournament. That makes things Interesting.
Thai way, a team Just can't waltz through It. It makes It
a little competitive. And that's what tournaments are all
about."
As It turned nut. this Is a bud lime of year for local
groups to be planning tournaments. According to
Elllngsworth. there arc at least two big regional
tournaments being played this weekend In Atlanta.
"There are a lot of big tournaments going on the next
eouplc of weekends." he explained. "I know there's an
ASA and a USSSA tournament this weekend In Atlanta.
A lot o f teams In the area are going to them."
Elllngsworth said the Recreation Department hopes
to try to host a tournament in October or November.

Edith Chester (left) and Jill Sanders (right)
accepted Ihe trophy for Fred's Lawn
Service for winning Ihe Sanford Recreation

W alsh battling for
Saints’ N o. 1 spot

DeBerg returns
to Ta m p a Bay

Associated Frees

By PVUD QOODALL

MIAMI — Sieve Walsh Is In Ihe midst of
another quarterback duel, and the outcome will
deirend a lot on how he does when the New
Orleans Saints face the Miami Dolphins Saturday
night.
Walsh Is fighting for the starling slot against
returning veteran Hobby Hebert as he prepares lo
do battle against the Dolphin defense in the
exhibition finale at Joe Robbie Stadium.
"T h is Is the closest race I've been Involved In."
Walsh said Wednesday via conference-call hook­
up. " A lot of emphasis will be put on tile game
against the Dolphins as far as who performs
better."
It ap|M'arcd Walsh bad dually golten the
starting Job when, afler arriving from the
Cowboys last year, he look over for an ineffective
John Foureade In game five against Cleveland.
Walsh led the Saints on a 14-play. 70-yard
touchdown drive, hitting 7 of 7 passes, and
Sec Dolphins. Page 2B

Manta(total* Os* r.

Taking home the trophy

AP Sports Writer
TAM PA — It's only a prcscuson game, but
Steve DeBerg admits he'll probably have a
special feeling when he iruts onto the field
Friday night to lead the Kansas City Chiefs
against thcTatnpu Bay Buccaneers.
Dctirrg. who's beginning his 15th NFL
season, was traded to Kansas City In 1‘JHH after
spending four years with the Dues, who haven't
hud a winning record since 1082 and won only
14 games during his stay.
"Yes. It docs mean a lot lo m e." the
37-year-old quartcrliark said, harking ahead to
Ihe final tuncup la-fore next week's regularseason opener. "Tam pa was my fqvorile place
to live and play football because oi ihe jK-opIc
— the friends I made there."
DeBerg returns to the area as much us he can
during the off-season, but liusu'l bad an
See Buccaneers, Page 2B

Departm ent W om en's S p rin g-S u m m e r
Softball league title Irom department
programmer Lisa Jones (center).

Pats eyeing m ove
to Jacksonville?
Associated Press_____________________________
JACKSONVILLE - New England Patriots
owner Victor Klum met in May with the head of
Burnell Banks and later boasted to some National
Fool ball League owners that he had struck a deal
lo move fits team to Jacksonville, a newspaper
reported Thursday.
Sources told The Florida Tlmcs-Unlon In
Jacksonville that the nice I lug between Kiain and
Barnett Chairman Charles Klee temporarily hurt
the city's changes to land an expansion team.
"K lee met with him In New York to discuss
moving the learn to Jacksonville. Il hurt Ihe city
ircrausc some owners though Jacksonville was
making an eltort to get the team. At the time,
some thought Jacksonville may have shut Itself
In the ft hi! iht-re." an NFL source told the
newspaper
"V id o r came lo the league mccliugs (May
22-23 in Minneapolis) saying tie had a deal
worked out with Jacksonville. What gave the
story mini- credence was Ihul (Rice) flew to New
See Jacksonville. Page 2B

FOR THE BEST COVERAGE OF SPORTS IN YOUR AREA, READ THE SANFORD HERALD DAILY

�?&lt;

S T A T S &amp; STANDINGS

O r t c y Bean, IM . Wsfeh « n
Forced to leave the fa n e at
halftim e w ith a separated
■boulder.
“Coach (Jim) Moca and (Treat*
dem) Jim Flnka aald I waa going
into training camp the atarter
and I just had to keep my Job."
Wakh aald. 'Tve felt I’ve done

(58.1 percent) and la eecorH in
p a t t in g y a rd a g e, a t te m p le ,
completions, and touchdown*.
But Hebert eat out the entire
1W 0 aeaaon becauae o f a con*
tract d m i t t . He returned In
June and haa atepped In where
he left off. completing IB o f 93

Buccaneers
I « f * T t»+ l)

MnaMTMM)

•na«ta.M

aurwuioaa)

frCfawsvMe (B n

"Usually when I go bock and
play in a game like thia. I play
bad." aald DeBerg. who’ *
served stints with the Son Tran*
cisco 49ers and Denver Broncoa.
"S o I’U probably play bad ... But
it won't be that big a deal
becauae it’s only a preseaaon
game."
Since leaving T am p a Bay,
DeBerg haa been one o f the
NTL'e moot effective passers.
Only three quarterbacks have
had a better pass rating over the
past two yean , and last season
he completed 59 percent o f his
attempts for 5,973 yards and 34
touchdowns.
"During m y years in Tampa,
we Just didn't have a very good
football team ." said DeBerg. who
has a knack for attracting young
phenom quarterbacks to the
teams he ptays far.
Joe Montana replaced him In
San Franctfco,.Denver benched,
him In favor o f John Elway and
Tampa Bay is staking its future
on VlnnyTestaverde.
"T h e main reason I wanted to
play for Tamps Bay is they had
an outstanding defense (in the
early 19SOs)." DeBerg said,
"W hen I got there that changed
and we had one o f the more poor
p erfo rm in g defen ses In the
league. So It turned out to be not
what 1had hoped for."
DeBerg has started the last 21

Oammral Ptwanix, 1S-.as.ni.
Cincinnati n

Green Bey at Milwaukee. 7

* Now Yarfc JaH vs. Washington at Columkla. LC .,7 p m .

NawOrlaeMat MHaml.ls.nl.
Buffalo af Chicago. * p.m.

San Wats (Hunt 144) M ChicagoIBietockl
11l),l:»pj|».
San Francises (Burtwtt 07) at Pittsburgh
(Drabek 11-11), 7:Mpjn.
Phllidsiphla (MuSwIland 17-18) at Atlanta
(ClavlnaIAS). ?;d p.m.
Cincinnati (Browning IN) at Naw Yarfc
(Vleis»M&gt;.7:«p.m.
Montreal (DaJMarftnoc 11-7) at IlaMilan
(BawanM), Islls m
Las Antoiaa (Ofada Ml St It. Laaia
&lt;OoLoon5*).l:Mp.m.
Cincinnati atllm^«5^U||.jii.
SanDiageat Chicago^4:Mp.m.
SanFranc(*caatPttt*bufgh,7:MpmPhilodslpk ia a* Atlanta. 7: tap.m.
Mantroai at Houston, S:Mp.m.
LaaAngtNcat It. LauNtl:Nsm
Iwtayi Saaasa

MttsNaW

Jew Marla OUsabai
«W y atrpswmr
011lard Srultt
■Illy Ray Brown
Jay Don Blahs
Slava Clklngtah
Caray Savin
Mark brooks
JtmOallaghar
JaaOtakl
TomPurttor
Brad Fawn
Davit Lava III
NkkPrtco
Ion PokorF Inch
Tad Scholl

Son Francisco at Pittsburgh. 1:Mpm.

PMIeSalghleatAHanls, &gt;: N set*
LosAngtiatetSt. LautAl:i3p-m.
SanOtsgael Chlcass1:Wsjn.
Montraal at Houston. IMs-n.
Cincinnati atNawYarfc, Siasp."**

Rut* Cochran
Salar Soriana
Wayno Lavl
Tim Simpson •
Mark O'Meara
Peter Sanlor
Payna Sfawart
Slava Pata
Lanny Wadhlnt
Kanhy Knox
Ricky Kawaglthl
HMaklKasa
Frtd Coupl*&gt;
Mika Hulbart
Rogtr Watiait
Satoahi Higashi
BraftUsgar
BraftOgia
Paul Ajlngar
Billy Andrada
Kanny Parry
John Oaf y

Chicago
Oakland
Seattle
Kama* City
Tax**
California
Button 1. Clavaland 4. I# Inning*
MinrwMla 3. Saattta A I# Innings
Oakland 3. California l
Milwaukaa A Toronto 7
Taxa* A Kama* City 3
Friday's Gama*
Minnesota (A Andtrton 41) at Baltimore
(McDonald 57). 7:33 p.m.
Chicago (Hibbard • * ) at Cleveland (Blair
011.7:31p.m.
Saattla (H olm an to 13) at Datralt
(Gulllckton 154). 7:31p.m.
Naw York (Taytor 47) at Taranto (Can
dtottl 1411). 7:13pm
Texas (Bohanon 1 0 ) al Kama* City
(Appiar )# •), l:15p m
Boston (M .Young 1 1 ) al Calllornla
IJ Abbott 111). ta:35p.m.
Milwaukaa (Navarro I I ? ) al Oakland
(Stewart 07), 10 11p m
Saturday's Gama*
Seattle al Oatrolt, 1:13 p m
Naw York at Toronto. 1: IS p.m
Chicago al Cleveland, t :13 p.m.
Mllwaufcaoal Oakland. 4 03pm
Minnesota at Baltimore, 7:11 p.m.
Texas at Kamos City, l:M pm .
Boeton at California, tO M p m

Jacksonville

Wayne Vtatliwi

SocfiMidiilv

TGwytmSO
PondtotonAH
JasoSlL
NtarrfsCIn
WCIarfcSP
Bonilla Pit
Butler LA
Nixon Alt
Me Goa SF
Sandberg Chi

130
111
114
Nl
113
IU
Ilf
103
*0
US

477
4IS
43*
334
431
4D
4*0
141
IM
447

44
74
34
«
44
7S
U
70
4S
II

ISO
IU
IM
I II
IIS
US
141
104
1«
114

313
377
.317
JM
JU
JI7
.111
MS
304
300

B u lltr. Los Angola*. I l l Sandbtrg.
Chicago, l i t Johnson. Now York. 77j Gant.
Atlanta. 74; B onilla. Pittsburgh, 71:
Pendleton. Atlanta. 74: OSmlth. St. Louis. 74.
Bam Ballad la
WCIark. San Francisco. N ; Bond*. Pit
tiburgh. a*. Johnson. Naw York, It ; Gant.
Atlanta. 7S; Me Griff. San Dtogo. 71: Dawson.
Chicago. 7S: Bonilla. Pittsburgh. 77.
Niff
TGwynn. San Olago. ISO; Butler. Las
Angola*. 143: Jot*. SI lou lA IM: Grace.
Chicago, IU; WCIark. San Francisco, lit.
Bonilla. Pittsburgh. IU : Sandberg. Chicago.
114
Jaae. Si. LouIa M: Bonilla. Pittsburgh. M.
Sabo. Clndnnall. 37; Gant. Atlanta. 37;
McRaynoidA Now York. 37; MorriA Clncin

"R igh t now 1 feel very good
about m y situation with the
Kansas City Chiefs." he added.
"But If there was anywhere I d
e x p e c t a fran chise-like
quarterback to come in It would
he now with it, for sure, betna
the end o f m y career."
c h ie fs coach Marty Schot*
tenheimer said DeBerg and the
rest o f Kansas City's starters will
play about a half Friday night,
Bucs coach Richard
Williamson has similar plans for
his team.
Testaverde. entering his fifth
g r a i n t r b m n s p i s n w tn
each o f Tampa Bay’s exhlbitlona. The Bucs have scored on
6 o f 11 possessions with him In
the lineup, but Williamson is
concerned that the first-team
offense has produced only one
touchdown.
One erf the more encouraging
facets o f the Bucs’ preseason has
been the play o f the defense,
Tampa Bay has held their three
opponents to only 172 yards In
the first half o f their games.

M13-71
1334-71
3415—71
3537-73
3414-73
1537-73
3414-73
3537-73
1434-73
1517-71
3414-73
3434-73
3417-71
3434-73
3413-73
1334-73
3714-71
34-15—71
3431—73
3534—71
1417-71
151S-71
1417—71
3114-74
1414—74
34 34—74
14 34-74
IS 34-74
3*34-71
143*—71
3434—73
4115-74
IS M —74
37 44-77
3441-7*
4040—40

LPGA
OAK BROOK, III. — Laadart attar Thurs
day's first round ot tha LPGA Shootout,
ptayad on tha L D I yard, par M 14—77 Oak
Brook Galt Court*
Laura) Kaan
33 34-40
Jody Amchuti
34H-47
Mi til Edga
3*34—40
Shtrrl Stalnhauar
3731-40
OataEggellng
1315-40
Martha Haute
1M7-40
3314—a*
MkhaltaEstill
1*13-4*
Pearl Sinn
131*—4*
Gail Graham
1*15-4*
||
Af
Barb Mucha
Donna White
1314-4*
Pago Dunlap
14 33-4*
Danielle Ammaccapana
M U -4 *
Elain* Crosby
M U -4 0
Leri West
M 34—70
Mag Mellon
1414-70
Cindy Schrayar
M 34-70
Barb Bunkowtky
Kata Hughes
Mlctwll* Mack all
Anna Marla Pall)
Sue Thomas
Cindy ftartek
Vat Skinner
Margaret Ward
Dabble Matter
Sutan Sanders
Kata Roger ton
Nancy Scranton
Lynn Connelly
Daada* Lasker

4p.m. — USA, World Saflaa at Gall. (L )
TENNIS
7 p m. - SUN. Hamlet Challenge Cup.
men's tingle* guartortlneML)
Sefwdoy
AUTO PACING
7:31 p.m -E S P N . NASCAR Pud tap

BASEBALL
I p.m. - WCPX 4. Cincinnati at Naw York.
ID
4 p.m. - WFTV t. LI ft la Laagut World
Sif lot. Championship Gama, (L )
4 p.m.— WON. San Otoge at Chicago. (L )
I M p.m. - TBS. PHilaSaipMa af Atlanta.
(LI
lp .m .— JA Texas at Kama* City, (L )
BASKETBALL
lp.m . — 3C.WBLpiayaltgama.IL)
BOWLIMA
1 p.m. - ESPN. Etonlta PBA Sank*
Championship, ( L L atte at 1:M a m
BOXING
t:)0 p.m. — TBS. Olympic Gate, baaing:
Kara* va. Unitad Slates
FOOTBALL
11:10 p .m .- WCPX A TMe Itlfw NFL
7:3# p.m. - SUN. Callaga. Virginia Tad* al
Florida Stott tram *40
• p.m. - 4A N FL exhibition, Kanto t City
Chl*t* at Tampa Bay Buccanaart
•p.m. - WCPX a. NF L exhibition. Buffalo
Bill*at Chicago Boar*. ID
GOLF
4p.m. — WCPX 4. World Sarlat al Golf. IL)
4p.m. — ESPN. U.S. Amafaur, |L)
HOCKEY
M p m. - SC 14S7 Canada Cup Final*.
Gama 1: Canada va. SavWt Union
TENNIS
I p.m. — SUN. Hamlet Challange Cup.
nwn’t tlngiat tamlf InalA IL)
II p.m. - SUN. Virginia Slim* al Washing
tan. womans tingle* final
TRACK
3 pm . - W E SM 3. IAAF World Champion
thipt
VOLLEYBALL
5 p.m. - SUN. Pro: ltf I Miltar Lila U S.
Chamatanahlp*. IL ) .

MISCELLANEOUS •
1 p.m. — SC. U.S. Olympic Showcase:
Track, vol layball
a .Ji.
BASEBALL
7 p.m. - WMJK AM (1210). FSL. Fori
Laudtrdal* Ysnkaat atOtceola Astros
7 03 p.m. - W4*00AM (sot). Soufham
Laagu*. Memphis a I Orlando
FOOTBALL
I p.m. - WDBOAM 11001. Kan*a» City

York to meet with Victor. It
wasn't Just like he was stopping
In town. The meeting was to
discuss financing the move.” the
source said.
Rice would neither confirm
nor deny the meeting took place.
"1 will not discuss who I meet
with,” Rice said.
Kiam waa unavailable for
com m ent and N ew England
public relations director Pat
Hanlon said Kiam would not
discuss his financial situation o f
any rumors o f a possible move.

between his organization and
the Patriots. He said he waa
unaware o f any Rice meeting
with Klam.
T h e N FL source told the
new spaper that T ou ch dow n
Jacksonville! was aware o f the
meeting and It took some work
by group officials to let the
league know It wasn't shopping
for an existing NFL team.

The Patriots are reportedly
deep In debt and already beyond
the National Football League
limit, which has been set at 035
million. At the May meeting,
Kiam r e p o r t e d ly r e c e i v e d
permission to extend the Patri­
ots’ debt limit an additional 010
million to $45 million. Kiam aald
he needed money to meet rising
costs at Foxboro Stadium.
The Boston Globe reported last
week that the extension was
given In exchange for Kiam
agreeing to keep the team in
Foxboro for three more years.
In (he months leading up to
the May meetings. Kiam had
also made other inquiries In his
attempt to move his team to
Jacksonville, the newspaper
reported. Former Mayor Tom m y
Hazourl said he was aware of
talks between Kiam and city
representatives.
The NFL source said he knew
o f al least one call Kiam placed
to Touchdow n Jack so n ville!
Inc., lo discuss a possible move.
The source said the officials at
Touchdown Jacksonville!, the
group seeking a NFL expansion
team, quickly alerted the league
office to cut off any chances It
would hurt their bid for a team.
Another source, however, said
Touchdown officials had dis­
cussions with either Kiam or his
representatives on several oc­
casions.
Tou chdow n P resid en t and
Chairman Toip Petway would
not comment on anv meetings

Luting (lovcK
Gonctt Since 1782

�Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Friday, August 23, 1191 - OB

Woman can’t stop loving husband

IN B R I E F

(•m rars m ra» w m s i
i s i s w ism

AOVMO

fr I need help and
don’t know where to turn
Anymore*

My husband and 1 have been
separated for more than two
years. I at10 love him. but there
qualifies for

Bhsfiliri
m*
rUDM
C 91

free pre-school sendee*.' The
imaal turn 4 oa or before Sep
For consideration and to register. you must present a birth
certificate nr proof of date of birth, food atamp verMcatloti or
A r i i t venncauon. ircoros of imiiiuiiissuons ado pnjrMCii

The program will be held at Flrat Impressions Early
Childhood Development Center. 1221W. 7th Street, Sanfard.
Call James Brooks Jr. at 321-0407 for more information.

The Seminole County Extension Homemakers are proud to
sponsor the 30th Annual Holiday Basaar on October ft. from 9
a.m. to S p.m. They win feature the finest hand-crafted Items
lor noroe Ana nooaxy (iiu . m Aoattiof) to pAnscipAuon oy uw
homemaker's chibs, they are renting tables to other handcraft
artists. Table space is limited and wHl be reaenrad on a first
For more Information oa table apace, immediately caU
Margie at 349-5188 or Shirley at 323-2800. ext. 9560.

Roots to talk yoiM
First Florida Poets meet at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets are welcome.

Sanford Rotations to m H t
Rotary Club o f Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

Alanon m om bors to congvogata
Alanon will meet at 8 p.m. ’ Sunday at Chrlat United
Methodlat Church, at County Road 427 and Tucker Drive.
Sanford.

O v o ro a to fito w o ig h in
Overeaten Anonymous meets at 7:30 p.m. each Sunday at
the Casselberry Senior Center. 200 Triplet Lake Drive.
ry .C a iir
Casselberry.
I the center at--------------096-5188 for more information.

together i
Abby. how do you atop loving
somebody? I’ve been going to
group therapy meetings, but tt
has not helped to atop the ache
In my heart. Misery may love
company, but It doesn’t make
me fed any better.
Maybe a reader who has gone
through the aame thing can give
You can’t
"kill” love, tt has to die by Itself.
Don’t dwell on thoughts of him,
and throw out an the reminders
Force yourself to think of
something dse. Keep busy, and
don’t fed sorry for yourself. Tell
yourself you deserve to be
happy, and eventually you will
be.Ooodtuck.
PBARATi lam the mother of
a baby who Is learning to feed

Th e following births have been
recorded at HCA Central Florida
Regional Hospital:
Aug. 2 — Julia M. Green and
Reginald D. Conquest. Oviedo,
boy: Sherri M. and Harry E.
Felnberg. Oviedo, boy: Elisabeth
A. Gall, Altamonte Springs, boy:
Linda D. Carpenter and Shawn
E. Rosendahl. Sanford, boy.
Aug. 3 — Sharon L. Bowen
and Ventura D. Taylor, Sanford,
girl.
Aug.
5 — Stacy L. York.
Oviedo, girl.
Aug.
7 — Sunday L. and
Ronald A. Green. Sanford, boy:
B r e n d a L. an d S t e v e n M.
S a m a rtin o , Sanford, g irl;
Creslnda T. and Michael A.
Jones, Sanford, girl: Melinda A.
Acree. Sanford, boy.
Aug.
8 — Drcama K. and
Raymond W. Lanier, Sanford,
girl.

Ballot G u ild

of Sanford anno unces
details a b o u t auditio n procedures
SANFORD - The Board o f
Directors for the Ballet Guild of
Sanford — Seminole recently
announced details o f Its audition
procedures for Ita upcom ing
1991-92 season. Those auditions
for positions In the guild will
take place on Saturday. Sep­
tember 7 at 10 a.m. at the studio
o f the School o f Dance Arts,
2960 Elm Avenue In Sanford.
The auditions are open to all
area dancers, male and female,
who are least 10 years old and
have a minimum o f two years of
training In ballet and/or Jar*.
All dancers are asked to arrive
promptly at 9:30 a.m. to register
and to fill out applications.
Dancers who are minora should
be accompanied by a parent, and
there will be a brief parents'
meeting at which time Informa­
tion regarding rehearsals and
performances will be discussed.
The Artistic Directors o f the
Guild, Valerie Rye W eld and
Miriam Rye Doktor. note that
proper audition attire Includes
pink tights and a black leotard

yfjOWELL^
v X I

pLACE *

‘ Courtd Living For Seniors"
Iadiptadtat A AwkSsd Livlag

1200 W. Airport llv A , Saafbrd |

•

322-7700

ABIGAIL
VANBUREN

B

■ i

If you are recetvtng food

•

VrsasrixzxzzrJL

for the females and a white tec
shirt and black tights for males.
A11 dancers should bring Jazz
and/or ballet shoes. No Jewelry la
to be worn during the audition.
The Board also notes that
there will be an adjudication fee
o f 89 per dancer to defray the
coats of the Judging. The audi­
tions will end at 12 noon. A ll
audltioncra will be notified by
mall o f their audition results.
Area dancers who becom e
guild members will participate
In the 24th season o f BGS. and

what’s the difference
which hand he eats with? M s
mouth la In the mtddte.

Hw h S

during the season will develop
their skills In a professional
environment, and have the op­
portunity to dliplay those skills
In various dance programs dur­
ing the season. The highlight of
the upcoming season will be the
spring performance of a major
biUlct. this year the third part o f
the BGS "Dlddy Trilogy."
Dancers or parents who need
any further Information regard­
ing the September 7 audtlons
are asked to call 323-1900.

I am almost
I put the spoon tn hia right
hand, be tramfera tt to Ms fell

My husband aaya I should
brain Terry to be right-handed
i everything la geared for
right-handed people and the hoy
will be handicapped If he’s
left-handed Now my husband la
forcing Terry to cot with his

,&lt;^RiSt5

B U I A H V i 1 and several
blends have hit upon an Idea for
losing weight, a* far out as U my
i. We pun o
lock the door, and then dean
house In the nude.
We noticed overweight women
do not tend to took at themselves
In mirrors as much as store
■lender women. WdL tat denn­
in g houae (which la Itself
exercisej we force ourseives to
look at our bodies. Our only rule
ts. try to keep the stomach
muscles pulled tn whOe clean­
ing. It’a hard at firat. But actual­
ly seeing the muscles tightened
hdpa one to keep them taut after
the body la clothed.
Moat of us have mirrors tn
every room. As we go from room
to room cleaning, we can’t help
but come face-to-face with
ourselves. This may sound
eraay. but I promise it works If

My experts
to let the cbfld eat with
■hand he wants to. To
force Terry to use his right hand
m m m " A W T O r i Now. In
when he Is naturally left-handed
could create many more pro- addition. If you could arrange to
mik
# -watch yourselves eat you might
DtCIDA
I n sAaf tl IIIK
N *----YC B .

have it made. (P.S. And should
you decide to cook tn the nude,
do wear an apron while frying
bacon.)
DMAS ABBTs I knew when I
married my husband that his
first love would always be
horses. I never minded being
second to a hone, but now 1
think s female biped has put me
tn third place.
This woman is not married.
She baa hones of her own and
she relies on my husband for
help and advice about her
hones. They seem to spend a lot
of time together. I am Invited to
Join them, but what fun la there
for me when there la nothing but
horse talk?
People who know her aay that
she haa no women friends,
enjoys the company of men. but
i’t want the responaibUHks
•tel] me what to do.
T H K D PLACE
BUR Take It from
th e h o rs e 's m outh, your
husband la probably Just feeling
his oats. Turn the twosome Into
a trio, brush up on your knowl­
edge of hones, and you may win
b y r ~ ^ J~

Let the Good Times
for Only 25&lt;
a Game!
A quarter buys you a whole game fuW
of fun this weekend at Bowl America.
Shoe rentals are only 2 5*, too,
so bring along your family and
friends and let the good
times roll until 6 p.m.
It's always a great
time to enjoy America's
first great sport This
weekend, at 2S* a
game and 2M for shoe
rentals, Bowl America
is the only place a little
money buys you a
whole lot of hint

• SATURDAY •

25c Shoe Rental, Too!

TThm farm Imit BiWUoOwn —

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ZMOOrtngt

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�tanfoid Hm M, lenford, FlerMa - fMdoy, August 23, 1881

Atrambty Of Qod

pi—nfcnawowwum
M tM )

M M lk M M i

Wed. Prayer Meet

Grow

iocs »n«
P30 pm

TJOpm

TX

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NwM&gt;S.WMar
fatter
Owryi HarWWargar Muda Mlnlilar
Sundw Sthaai
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lo a ta m
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CamdrOT EE. MMtawanM.
lundW" Church S
and Sun. School
M
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M 0 pm
Nuraary AyaaaBNi A( Ad SarHcea

Pecked with PMunrmi burtttna with anlidoaiion thw bwh Ii o I m I m m w j
buMV lumbori along, than screechM and groans to a halt Excited youngsters
dMemberfcto scurry up and down Iha halts, chattering like aqulrrala as they starch
tor dtelr claaarooma and acroungt through that backpacks tor locker combinations,
schedule. and book receipts. Scants of chalk dual, lunch preparation, and hash
paint minpto in the air. Ths ball rings. Lockers slam shut. Thrve minutes pass and
all la quiet. Another school year has begun.. .a year dedicated to guiding young

Church Of
Chrlet

fntfiuwi • •io mowing irwtn rof out nwi ^on^fitwi.
The ability to learn is a gift from God. As our muscles develop vlh er.erdse, so
our mind becomes more keen d we continually seek to learn and to grow. Proverbs
18:15 observes. Th e heart of the discerning acquires knowledge; the ears of the

United Church
Of Chrlct

Sunday tched
MO am.
WonM#
t f t « ami a M S pm
Qiw y Tiw m is
.
soo pm
MMatonam Mewing and
CMM Chorum
SJfrTCO am

mt'SiS7h^a,m
Monday •Friday
700 A M. ( 00 P M

Eplecopel

Mtacaasr aaerai chuocm
11# W. Airport SIM. tanlord

asm

NEW HARVEST
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
7710Country Club Rd.
Sanford, f l
jx io e o ; m m u
EZ Conlrarai
Pi
Sunday AM lenrlce
I
Sunday PM Same#
Tuaaday PM Bible Study
Thuraday PM Santee

Congregstlonsl

show s * d o w n

o f tu ta a
n r Elm Avenue, Sanford

masts

Timothy Hudson
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Pruning Service
SIMo Study
Tuesday and Thursday

P
10:00
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S00
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H U

�SanfOfd Herald, Sanford, Ftorida - Friday, Augrat t * 1191 - M
i k

i
IN B R I E F
W fiiio r v n s c n o t r r v g m r i u o n N V
SANFORD - A "Heapuni Bid Childrens Choir
will be held at Central BaptM church on Sept 4. from 530 to
6:45 p.m., far all children ages three thraaiBi 6th grade.
The event la an enrollment party far the yew. Children's
choirs are held every Wednesday throughout the &gt;
at theaamettme.
For further Information, contact Jack or Sherrill
332-3914.
C M A jI lllll A AAAHkilitA

a a IH L j
rrftoom MivmDvy io openAAasa
m w I TMHity

SANFORD — Freedom Assembly of Ood win open a new
church facility on Sept. 1 at 3 p.m. In the former Zayre
Shopping Center. 3960Orlando Dr.
A special appearance will be given by Fred "ReRun" Berry,
from the old sitcom “What's Happening.*'

BapHtto announes Hi m etians*
LAKE MARY - Flnt.BaptM Church Muthain W oo*. MOO
Markham Woods Rood, announces a time
1. Sunday School win begin at 9:45 a.m. rather than at
9:30a.m. Worship services will be at 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.
For information, call 333-3065.

Lutherans sponsor roundup
SANFORD — Good Shepherd Lutheran Church. 3917
Orlando Ek., will sponsor a Sunday School registration round
up Aug. 24 from noon to 3 p.m. T h e event win be a Fun 'N Sun
afternoon featuring waterplay and a cookout.
The 1991-92 Sunday School year win begin Sept. 8. For
those who miss the roundup, registration will also be accepted
Sept. 8.
For more Information, call 323-7312.

'8 m Y ou At Th# Poto*
LAKE MARY — Join In a special event which has been
deemed one of the largest gatherings o f Christian youth in
Florida history entitled “ See You At The Pole.'' On Sept. 11.
Christians from all denominations will gather around flagpoles
at junior high school, senior high school, colleges and
universities across the state for 30 minutes before school starts
to Join handstand hearts and pray for God's blessings on the
campus, community, state, nation and world.
Last year over 41.000 Texas students participated In the
first-ever statewide affair. This year the Evangelism Division o f
the Florida Baptist Convention w ill lead out and prayerfully be
joined by other state conventions.
For more information, call Damon L. Willow, youth director
at Lakevlew Baptist Church. 321-0310.

Citywkto crusada •gainst drugs
SANFORD - A citywide crusade against drugs wUl be held at
the Sanford Civic Center. In downtown Sanford, on Aug. 34. at
7:30 p.m.
"Freedom From Drugs!” will feature J 3 t Ponzlllo, Louisiana
Youth Choir. Sanford Church Choirs. Blrdellu Hall-Walker and
kenny McMlIlcr.
All proceeds will go toward drug rehabilitation.
A 85 donation Is being asked. For more Information, call
323-1010 or 324-9147.

Daallng with difficult children
SANFORD — "H ow to Succeed with a Difficult Child in a
Group Setting" is the subject o f a seminar Aug. 27. The
seminar will be conducted by Marilyn Brown, psychotherapist
at West Lake Hospital.
Participants will learn to profile a hard-to-manage child, to
Identify and discuss effective techniques for dealing with 'a
difficult child and to Identify and examine the negative effects
o f being labeled a difficult child.
The seminar, at 7 p.m.. and supper, at 6n.m.. will be held at
the First United Methodist Church. 419 Park Ave. Hot dogs and
baked beans will be served for 81.50. adults, and 50 cents per
child, under 10. Family cost Is 85. It is not necessary to eat
supper to attend the free seminar. A nursery Is available.

La* us know what’s going on
The Sanford Herald welcom es news about church activities
and news for publication In the Religion page each Friday.
The following suggestions are recommended to expedite
publication:
1. All Items should be typed or written legibly and Include
the name of a person who can be contacted and a daytime
phone number.
2. The deadline is 11 a.m. Wednesday before publication.
There is no charge for publication.

‘Standing orders of the believer’
truly in love with
Is an iinresalng awareness of
that other person. The bottom
line here Is practicing the pracm uoa in c?cryuun| inmt

to you a
Ood our Fatehr

|Th# basis of our

Is the counsel of our Lord to us.
What really raattera is how
Ood’s Word directs our path, tnt
5:16-18. we read

t U n i" " * 0M“

Prav without ceasing. In
thing gtve thanks: for this is the
win o f Ood in
you.”
These three
by some "the standing
of the behever." They are
in me im p c rs u rc
commands directing our at­
titudes and actions. The very

thanks."

"Rejoice always" Is not the
same as commanding us to feel
happy at all times. Feeling
happy is the natural response to

The basis o f our Joy is Jesus
Christ himself. For In Him we
are able to distinguish between
appearances and reality. Joy is

Churchwide
assembly to
meet locally
The local arrangements
c o m m it t e e has been
working for more than a
y e a r t o s e e t h a t t he
churchwide assembly of
the Evengeileal Lutheran
C h u r c h in A m e r i c a is
"m em orable and enjoya­
ble.” according to the focal
co-chairs o f the event, the
Rev. Robert and Quaidie
Hock, o f Winter Park.
The 5.2 million member
E v a n g e l i c a l Lutheran
Church in America will
hold its second biennial
Churchwide Assembly at
the Marriott World Center
In Orlando Aug. 28 to Sept.
4.
The 1,050 voting mem­
b e r s w i l l c o m e from
t hro ugh out the United
States and the Caribbean.
S em inole county con­
gregation s helping with
local arrangem ents and
c ha iri ng subcom m ittees
Include the Rev. Gregory
Moore, pastor/developer of
Epiphany, a mission con­
gregation in Oviedo and the
Rev. Scott Suskovic and
members o f his pariah. St.
Stephen Lutheran Church.
Longwood.

The third
to give
thanks, g rass out of the
he Brat
two. Joy

tala that Ood is at work for feed.
While we may not be able to ghre
of all of the things that
i can ^ptve

at bring us fe­
£ ipertences that
don't ask me to
feel happy when I've Just
smashed my thumb with the
hammer, or even when I've just
lost a ten n is m atch, etc.
Throughout the Bible we are
called to Joy and rejoicing in our
suffering. We must distinguish
between toy and happiness. One
can't be nappy all the time, but
I'm convinced that there can
always be a basic Joy in our
lives.

regard rejoicing, praying and
giving thanks as things rather
thanfceltnge. We all know that
fcetmgi cannot be commanded.
Telling your spouse not to feci
angry or your child not to feel
badly seldom leads to a happy
evening at home. But God has
commanded in I These, that we
"Rejoice always. Pray without
ceasing and in everything give

fc

tied to reality, not merely to
The reality o f Ufe
! is Jesus In central in our
minds and hearts, and because
o f this we can rejoice even when
the earthly moment appears
hopeless and unhappy. It really
becom es a matter o f obedience.
W e need to pray without
ceasing. How? Well we ought to
be converting unceasing think­
ing into unerasing prayer. If we
think and live in the presence of
God. then God is always there
and open to us; and we can
consciously bring all o f our
works and deeds into His pre­
sence. When, for example, one is

that God la shram present and
at work for wood, in our ttvea.
Therefore we read, “this Is the
wfll o f Ood In Chrfet
you."
You are encouraged to
th is W o rld o f O od m oot
seriously. Obedience to these
commands is difficult. But
Christ calls us to a Me of Joy.
worthwhile is ever
we yield to the Holy'Spirit to
empower us we will grow in His
grace. May your tomorrows be
ones of rejoicing, unceasing
prayer and the giving of thanksi
Amen.
Tfce Hev. Frank ladvtnke U

•flare

at IMS

P a n a m a n ia n p a s to r s c h e d u le d
LAKE MARY - The Rev. BUI
Wilbur, pastor o f Gamboa Union
Church, in Panama, will apeak
at a special meeting o f Abundant
Life Christian Fellowship. 332
Seminole Ave., a newly formed
E va n g elic a l Presbyterian
Church.
Bill Wilbur, brother of the Rev.
Bob Wilbur, pastor of Abundant
U fe. is pastor o f Gamboa Union
Church, located on the Panama
Canal between Panama City and
Colon, where he has served 15
years.
D u r i n g that time he h at
shared the Christian faith at the
highest levels o f government.

doss staff of
dictator Manuel Noriega)
with Indians in the

Pagton SINand Bob WHbur
laborers o f the dredging division.
Aihfertcan military, prison in-

«U8 winner uoo. tie urea
through the Invasion o f Panama
and Its aftermath and asw God
working even during those dif­
ficult days."
The meeting w ill be held at 7
p.m. Aug. 38 at the Lake Mary
Dance Academy. 549 Lake Mary
Blvd.
Fellowship and refreshments
will follow.
The public Is invited to attend.

T E M P L E SHALO JM o f D B L T O N A
TO ALL UNAFFILIATED JEWISH FAMILIES

OPEN

HOUSE

Ftafnghmmto to ftgggnwf

Matt our Mambars and Loam About Our Many Activities:
•Yiddish Night •Aerobics •OvereatersAnonymous
Sisterhood • Brotherhood
SUNDAY SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN
Jtor More fri/brmcUfon Coll

HIGH MOLT DAW

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y A R E A C H U R C H D IR E C TO R Y
AiUAMCE CHUMCH
Community Alliance Church. 4413 Eaat Laka Orl*a. Wlntar Springs
Neighborhood Alliance Church. M l Markham Wood* R d . Longwood
Sanford Alliance Church. 1401 8 Park A ye. San lord
ASSIM8LV OP 000
Family Worship Center. 2451 Airport Btvd . San lord
Freedom AtaemDly ol Ood. ISIS W. Slh S t. Sanford
Weklva Ataembiy ol God. IS75 D io n Rd. Longwood
BAPTIST
Antioch Baplltt Church. Oviedo
Calvary Baplut Church. Crystal Laka A 3rd. Laka Mary
Caaaalbarry Baplut Church. 770 Seminole Blvd
Central Baptist Church. 3101 W let St
Chuluoia First Baptist
Clearwater Missionary Baptist Church. Southwest Rd.
Countryside Baplisl Church, Country Dub Road. Laka Mary
First Baptist Church. StB Park Ave.
First Baptist Church ol Altamonte Spring*. Rt 436 Altamonte Springs
First Baptist Church ol Forest City
First Baptist Church ol Oanava
First Baptist Church. Markham Woods
First Baptist Church ol Laka Monroe
First Baptist Church ol Longwood. SOI Eaat SR 434
First Baptist Church ol Oviedo
First Baptist Church ol Sanlando Springs
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church. ItOt W 13th 81.
First Baplisl Church ol Osteen
Fountain Head Baptist Church. Oviedo
Hope Baptist Church. Forest Dty Community Canter, Forest City
Indapandanca Baplisl Mis* Civic League B ldg. Longwood
Jordan Missionary Baptist Church. 820 Upsal a Rd
Lighthouse Baptist Church 465 Longwood ■Laka Mary Road
Lakeview Baptist Church. 174 Lafceview Ate . Lake Marry
Macedonia Mission Baptist Church. Oaa Hill Rd. Ostaan
Missionary Baptist Church. North Rd . Enterprise
Morning Qlory Baptist Church. Geneva Hwy
Ml Monah Primitive Baplltt. ItOt Locust Ave . Sanford
Mt Dive Missionary Baptist Church. Sanlando Springs Rd . Longwood
Ml Sinai Missionary Baptist Church. tBOO Jerry Ave
Ml Zion Missionary Baptist. Sipes Ave
New Bethel Missionary Church. 9th St 4 Hickory Ave
New Mt Calvwy Missionary Baptist, t tOfr W 12th Si
New Salem Primitive Baplisl Church. 1S09 W I2tn St
New Tsstamsni Baptist Church. Qualiaty Inn. North Longwood
New Mt Zion Baptist Chuich. 1720 Pear Ave
New Lila Fellowship. 4941 E Lake Dm* Caaaalbarry, FI 32704
Norlhside Baplisl Church. Chuluoia
People's Baplisl Church. 1201 W First Street. Sanford
Pmecrest Baptist Church. 119 W Airport Blvd
Pram* lake Baplisl. Ridg# Rd Farn Park
Progras* Missionary Baptist Church. Midway
Second Shiloh Missionary Baplial Church Waal Sanlord
Smyrna Baptist Church. 2S0 Ovarbrook D&gt; Casselberry
Starlight Baplisl Church. 190 Bahama Rd
St James Missionary Baptist Church. Si Rd 415. Ostaan
St Johns Missionary Baptist Church. 309 Longwood Ave. Altamonte
Springs
St Luka Missionary Baptist Church ot Cameron Dty. Inc
SI Peul BeptiSt Church. 413 Pm* Are
St Metthews Beulist Church. Cwneen Hals
_______
_______

Si John * Missionary Baptist dhureh, 920 Cypress 81.
Springfield Missionary Baptist. 12th A Cedar
Buniand Baptist Church. 2629 PM vatto
Tempt* Baptist Church. PMm Spring* Rd.. Altamonte Spring*
Victory Baplltt Church. Otd Oriando Rd M Hester Ave
Waahriew Baptist Church, 4100 Paoia Road (48A)
William Chapel Missionary Baptist Church, Mark 6 William S t,
Altamonte Spring*
Zion Hop* Baplltt Church. 712 Orange As*.
CATHOLIC
All Boult Catholic Church. 902 OMi Ave. Sanlord
Church ot the Nativity. Lake Mary
Our Lake ol the Lake* Catholic Church. 1310 Maximilian, Deltona
St Ann a Catholic Church. Oogwood Trail. OaBary
SI Augustine Catholic Church, Sunset Or., near Button Rd. Casselberry
St Clara Catholic Community meet* M Ostaan Clvtc Canter
St. Mary Magadalane Catholic Church. Maitland A re .
Altamonte Spring*
CMN8T1AN
First Christian Church. 1407 8 Sanlord Ava.
First Christian Church ol Longwood. 1400EE. WWiamaon Rd. Longwood
Dac* Christian Church. WUson Elementary School. (Paofa|. 9BS Dang*
Lakevlew Christian Church. Bew Lake R d. at Jamison
Norihald* Christian Church. Florid* Haven Dr.. Maitland
Sanlord Dm alien Church. 132 W Airport Btvd
South Seminole Christian Church. 300 W SR 434, Oviedo
CHRISTIAN SCICMCI
First Church ol Christ Scientist. 973 Markham Wood* Rd. Longwood
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Church ol Chris!. 1512 S Park Av*
Church ol Christ el Lake Ellen. US 1792. N Casselberry
Church ol Dwtal. 400 PMm Springs D . Allamont* Springs
Church ol Chri*l, Geneva
Church ol Chnst. Longwood
Church ol Chrial. W 17th SL
Northaid* Church ol Clwtal. Fie Haven D . Maitland
South Sammole Church ol Christ. 5410 Laka Howell Rd.
CHURCH OF OOO
Church ol God. 303 Hickory
Church ol Ood. 403 W 22nd Si
Church ol Ood. Oviedo
Church ol Ood Holiness. Lake Monro*
Church ol God Mission Enterprise
Church ol Ood. 1402 W 14th St
Church ol Ood in Christ. Oviedo
Church ol Ood ot Prophecy. 2509 S Elm As*
Church ol Ood ol Prophecy. 17M S Persimmon At*
Church ol Ood ol Prophecy. 494 S CentrM. Oviedo
Church ol Ood (7th Dey) Deltona Community Canter. Dellone |Sun Roomi
Rescue Church of Ood 1700 W 13th S I . Sanlord
True Church ol Ood. 2700 Ridgewood A .* . Sanlord
CONORS OATIONAL
Congregational Christian Church. 2401 S Park A y*. Sanlord
EASTERN ORTHODOX
Eastern Orihodos Church. St George 2001 Dylan Way. Maitland
Eastern Orihodos Church. SI Steven s of 0 C A . 1444 Lake Emma Road
Longwood. PL J2/SU

Eastern Orihodos Church, SI John Orihodos. 2743 Country Club Road.
Sanlord
EPISCOPAL
All Saints Episcopal Church. E. DaBary A y *. Enterprise
Chrlat Episcopal Church. Longwood
EpIacopM Church ol th* New Covenant, I7S Tuskawllla Road. Winlar
Springs
Holy Cross Episcopal. Park Ay*. M 4th S I. Sanlord
St. Peter* EpIacopM Church. 700 Rinehart Road. Laka Mary
SI Richard'* Church. 5151 Laka Howell R d. Winter Park
Th* Church ol th* Good Shepherd. Maitland. 331 Laka Ay*
IHTEROt NOMINATIOMAL
Calvary Christian Career. 500W 4th S i. Sanlord
New Harvest Christian F«o**Ne.27M Country Club Rd. Sanlord
Northland Community Church, 530 Dog Track Rd. Longwood. FL 327SO
Outreach Deliverance Center. 2231 Sipes A v *. Sanlord
JEWISH
Beth Am Synagogue meeting M Corner ol Send Laka and County Lino
Road. Weal M
Tempi* Shalom. 1740 Elkcam Blvd.. 0*1Iona
LUTHERAN
Ascension Lutheran Church. Ovarbrook Dr, Casselberry
Good Shephard United Lutheran. 2917 S Orlando Or
Holy Cross Lutheran Church ol Lake Mary. 740 Sun Diva. Lake Mary
Lord Ol Lite Lutheran Church, 390 Tuskawllla Rd. Winter Spring*
Lutheran Church ol Providence. Daitona
Lutheran Church ol the Redeemer. 2523 Oak Avenue
Messiah Lutheran Church. Ootden Days Of 6 Hwy 17-92. Casselberry
St Lukes Lutheran Church. Rt 424. Slavia
SI Stephen Lutheran Church. 434 fust Watt ol 14. Longwood
M8TH00IST
Barnett United MemonM Church. E DeBery At* . Enterprise
Bear Lake United Methodist Church
Bethel A M E Church. Canaan Hgtt
Casselberry Community United Methodist Church. Hwy 17 92 Piney
Ridge R d . Casselberry
Chnst United Methodist Church. Tucker D . Suniand Estates
DaBary Community Methodist Church. W Highbankt Rd . DeBery
First United Methodist Church. 419 Park Ava
First Methodist Church ol Oviedo
First United Methodist Church ol Oenova
Grace United Methodist Church. 499 N Country Club Rd . Lake Mery
Grant Chapel A M I Church. O.iedo
Oakgrove Methodist Church. Oviedo
Osteen Methodist Church. Cor ol Carpenter 4 Murray S I. Osleen
Paoia Wesleyan Methodist. 5650 Wayside Dr . Sanlord
Pioneer Methodist Church. 110 N Poplar Av* . Sanlord
Sanlando United Methodist Church. SR 434 and 14. Longwood
St Jama* A M E . Slh at Cypress
St Luka M B Church ol Cameron City. Inc Beerdail oil S R 46 E
St Mary s A M E Church. St Rt 415 Osleen
St Peul s Methodist Church Osleen Rd Enterprise
Slretlord Memorial Church, S DeBery
NAZARENE
First Church ot th* Na/aren* 2561 Sanlord Av*
Oanava Church ol th* Neraran* 5 R 46. Oanevs
Laka Mary Church ol the Harare” * )7t E Crystal Laa* Ave . Lake Mery

Longwood Church ol th* Naxarene. Weyman 4 Jo* sup Av*., Longwood
Markham Woods Church ol th* Natarene. BN 46. 3V» MUaa Weal ol M
at the Weklva River
PMSSVTIRIAN
Daitona Pratbylarian Church. Holland Blvd • Austin Av* . Deltona
First Pratbylarian Church ol Lake Mary
First Prasbytanan Church, Oak Av*. 6 3rd 81.
First Presbyterian Church ol DeBary. E. Highland
Markham Wood* Presbyterian Church. 5210 Markhwn Wood* Road. Lake
Mary. FI
SI Andrews Prasbytanan Church. 1813 Bear Lake M .
SI Marks Prasbylanan Church. 1021 PMm Springe R d. Altamonte Spgs
Tutcawilia Pratbylarian Church. 3400 West Slate Rd 426. Oviedo FI*
Uptefa Community Presbyterian Church, Upaata Rd
Westminister Presbyterian Church, Rad Bug R d , Casselberry
SEVENTH DAT ADVENTIST
Forest Lake Seventh Dey Adventist Church, Hery 438. Forest Dty
Mara Hill Seventh Day Adventist Church, M l K. 2nd S t. Sanlord
Sanlord Seventh Day Adventist Church. M IS N. Highway 427
Seventh Day Adventist Church, Maitland Ava. Altamonte Bering*
Winter Springs Seventh Dey Adventist Church. BO B Mots Rd
OTHER CHURCHES
All Faith Chap*!. Camp Seminole. Weklva Park, Rd.
Alien a A M E Church. Diva 4 t2th
Beardail Avenue Holiness Chapel. Beardell Ave
Chuluoia Community Church
Church ol Jesus Chnst ol Latter Dey Saints, 2313 Park Ave
Family Church Christian Canter. 1544 Seminole Blvd. Ceeaeiberry
First Born Church ol the Living Ood. Mldwey
First Church ol Christ. Bcionlisl. Elkem Blvd end Venus S I. Daitona
First Pentecostal Church ol Longwood
First Pentecostal Church ol Sanlord
Full Gospel Church ol Cod m Chnst. 1B2B Jerry A v *. Sanlord
Full Gospel Tabernacle. 2724 Country Dub Road
Dace Bible Church. 7644 5 Sanlord Av*
Holy Tnnty Church ol Ood in Chnst. 1514 Mangouttm* Av*
Kingdom Hal ol Jehovah s Witness. Lake Monro* Unit. 1562 W Third SI
Lake Monro* Chapel. Dang* Blvd. Lake Monroe
Mt Dive Holiness Church. Oak m.ii Rd . Osteen
Neighborhood Alliance Church. Mt Markham Wood* Road. Longwood
Pentecostal Open Bible Tabernacle. Ridgewood A v *. Oil 75m opposite
Seminole High School
Praise and Power Church. I l l W WHbur Av* . Lake Mary
Roiling Hill* Mo'avian Church. SR 434. Longwood
Sanlord Alliance Church. 1401 S Peril Ava
Sanford Bibl# Church. 2460 Sanlord Av*
Second Church Ol Th* Living Ood. 342B Beardell A ve. Sanlord
Th* Full Oospei Church ol Our Lord Jesu* Christ, Washington S I, C *
naan Dty
The Salvation Army. 700 W 24th St
Triumph The Church ot th* New Ago. 10M W 6tn SI
United Church ol Christ. Altamonte Community Chapol. Allamont*
Springs
United Church of Christ Christian Fellowship. 260 N Country Dub Rd.
Lake Mery
U C S S Spiritual Centre. 125 A South Volusia A ve. Comer ol Dave* and
Volusia Av* Dango Dty
Wmlev Spring* Community Evangelical Congregational. 219 Wada S I.
Winter Spnngs
________________

-

*

■fr.

�7,sfcsrs*

F a tig u e o fte n s lo w s
d o w n e ld e r ly p e o p le
D * A * A t OOTTt I'm 82 and
always Urn). My doctor says I
have a metabolic Imbalance.
Would thiacause fatigue?

M M WOKHYMG | COHSTMTlif
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* INTRODUCTIONTOCAREER
OEVELOfMENT PLANNINGANP
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ASSESSMENTTODETERMINE
J0» ALTERNATIVES'

NEVERS16NUPFOft A
CLASS WHOSE TITLE IS
LONGERTHANTHE COUftSE

I f you asked a

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nans

Pietro Forquct. who played
together on the Incomparable
Blue Team. T od ay's hand, from
the 1968 World T ea m Olympiad,
shows their excellent defense.
N o r t h s e n s i b l y r e b l d his
seven-card heart suit, but then
the diamond fit came to light.
South cue-bid the spade ace. and
North used Blackwood before
bidding the slam.
Garozzo. West, led a low spade
to dummy's king. Things looked
good for declarer. The trumps
were 3-2, the clubs were 3-3, and
the heart see w a s in front of the
king. However, declarer could
not see the cards. He decided to

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social activlllcs.
activities, re-emphasis
i t -emphasis on
close family tics, or counseling
by a professional who Is familiar
with health problems In the
elderly.

PETER
GOTT.M.D

v-LJl I
,'JUl'JM

saying “ you're g e ttin g o ld ."
True, a metabolic derangement
could cause excessive fatigue
but such a condition Is always
treatable, so I'm afraid your
doctor has painted hlmseir Into a
bttofacomer.
For example, thyroid disorders
— especially hypothyroid ism. a
sluggish thyroid — are readily
corrected with h o rm o n e re*
placement or other therapy. Po­
tassium d e fic ie n c y , a n o th e r
common affliction in the elderly,
can be easily reversed with oral
potassium supplements. Like­
wise, anemia — du e. perhaps, to
a mineral or vitam in deficiency
— la curable.
T h u s . If y o u d o h a v e a
metabol i c I m b a l a n c e , y o ur
doctor should be able to identify
the cause and correct it.
Unfortunately, elderly patients
•Imply begin to slow down as
they age. They take longer to
accomplish tasks that w ere a
breeze when they were young;
they may not sleep as soundly or
they may require more sleep:
they may be depressed, with
f ati gue being t h e p r i m a r y
symptom.
Therefore, I suggest you re­
turn to your doctor and request
a thorough exam ination and
blood teats to determ ine the
cause o f your problem. I f every­
thing checks out fine, ask your
doctor to 1) level with you. 2)
avoid medical gobbledygook and
3) recommend w a ys or helping
you to cope with your excessive
fatigue.
Such therapy might Include
close attention to a nutritious
diet, a p p r o p r i a t e e x e r c i s e ,
modification and restructuring
of your dally activities. Increased
Involvement I n c o m m u n i t y

By Phillip AUUr

}

?

T h e possibilities for advan­
cement In you r chosen field o f
endeavor look very hopeful In
the year ahead. Individuals who
like you will b e doing everything
they can to assist you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you do not m anage critical
assignments skillfully today, you
could compound your own pro­
blems. Something that starts out
relatively sim ple may turn Into a
big headache. Know where to
look for romance and you'll find
It. The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
Instantly reveals which signs arc
romantically perfect for you.
Mall ( 2 p l u s a l o n g , selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, d o this newspa­
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
LIBRA (S e p t. 23-O ct. 23)
Usually, you 're not a showolT.
but today y o u m ight try to
upstage your friends in order to
call attention to yourself. This Is
a role you won't handle e f­
fectively.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Conditions In general are subject
to swift changes today. Make the

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lead a low heart fro m the
dummy at trick two. Forquct
was ready; Im m e d ia te ly he
played the queen. He knew that
If declarer had the heart acc, the
contract was sure to succeed.
Declarer would win the second
trick with the heart ace, cash the
spade ace, discarding dum m y's
club loser, draw (rumps and run
the hearts.
When the heart queen won.
Forquct switched to a low club.
Declarer won with the club ace
and cashed the clu b k in g.
Garozzo dropped — the queen.
Convinced the clubs w ere 4*2
and fairly sure East had the
heart ace from his prompt play
of the heart queen at trick two.
declarer drew trumps ending In
the dummy. He then led the
heart king and ran It. Garozzo
produced the uce to defeat the
slam.
(0 1 9 9 1 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

most o f opportunities when they
present them selves, because
th e y m ig h t be s u d d e n l y
withdrawn.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) This Is one o f those days
when you may be Inclined to
seek advice from individuals
who are equipped to help you
the least. If you fall to screen
your sources, you could regret It
later.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) If you have to b orrow
something today that the lender
treasures, treat It with respect.
There are Indications you could
be careless with the possessions
of others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Your attitude will have a strong
effect on your companions to­
day. If you arc uncertain or
indecisive. It could cause them
to begin to question their own
Judgment as well.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You’ re nol likely to perform well
the tasks you rind distasteful
today. Rather than attempt
them. It might be wiser to
postpone them until you're In a
better frame o f mind.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) It's
good to be optimistic today, but

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S-tS-tl
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41
EAST
4 J 10 7 S3
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♦ 10 S3
4 J 79

WEST
4QI643
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♦ 71
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SOUTH
♦ A*
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Vulnerable Neither
Dealer: North
So«th

West

34
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Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nsrth
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Opening lead: 4 4

it must be tempered with real­
ism and practicality. T ry not to
build your expectations upon
false premises.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ir
you depend a little too heavily
upon chance and luck to get you
over the rough spots today,
disappointm ent Is p ossib le.
These arc not allies one can
totally rely on at this time.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Sometimes, we can get by pre­
tending we are knowledgeable
about something which we real­
ly aren't. Today, however, you
must have the (bets to back you
up, because someone might call
your bluff.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Being careless or Indifferent to­
day and making miscalculations
In your commercial afTalrs could
turn out to be more costly than
usual. Keep your focus on what
you're doing at all times.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It
might seem like the harder you
try to please others, the less you
are appreciated today. T o spare
yourself frustration, stay away
from those who you know take
you for granted.
(0 1 9 9 1 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

JTMCWVff,

extrem ely

1

carefu l

THE UDDER

IT S MADE VJF
Liquid metal
TT Can CHANGE

apTEVEN

YE$, YDU CAN - Oft.
SPUTZ, •CAHSi
THERE AREN'T ANV

ilN K J W n T !

VOLUHTHAS

NOT EVEN TH'
.
----------2 A SA /

onto any form

terminator

YES.
CHILP?

. . . I 'V S M E N S H A N

'

-.THAT YOU

T’ YOU FOR SOMETHIN'

m m rs o .

“’H A T IS N 'T n o p g W IN ’.

1 KNOW. I

!&gt;\ SCWY IT'S JUST
THAT- THAT,,.

COULD BE
AN YW H E R E /

t
V

i

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V

�Sanford Herskl, Sanford, Florida - Friday, August 23. t f t l - YB

HMVF.MPI

raacti an agreement In eontract naootfatkms. To
data, no agreement two been reached.
Central Florida Zoological Pert In Sanford, One
of the activities was a coloring contact.

LegalNeMces
in

p w r rn e jW RAMi
Nebco ti hetoBy given R R to
a n BugBBBi to BwiIi n i i ei NBl
1 French Ave., lentord. FL
8771. temlrwto County. Florida,
under Me FkWttoue Name at A
- CHECKER CAB, end that we
Intend to regtoNr m IB ndmd
with the Secretory ol Biota.
TollohdMoo. F torIdo. In oc-

Ttnciecurr cover

OF T IM M M JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AMO ro e
II M I N O il COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CAf I NOi tl-tft-CA-MO
M A R JO R II C l ROMAN.

vt.

Ptalntlff.

F H I L I F R O B IN SO N a/k/a
F H IL IF J. ROBINSON.

cervence wi m me prwvwens ev

tho Fkhtleue Nome Statute,
To-Wit: Sectton EMM. Florida
Stetvtoem7.
CITY OB

CASSILM RSY. FLORIDA
NOTICE OP
r t f l l t t HE R BING
IN

-W hen on aBslgnment. the
pictures shot by Herald pho­
tographers vary In angle,
i pose and content. And not all
of them are published Imme­
diately. From time to time,
j the newspaper takes a sec­
ond look at those news and
features scenes from around
Seminole County.

Linde L. Theme*
Jownto L. FIther
Publish: Auguat 71, mi

DSI-MF

I BO R S I BANC ■

T O WHOM IT M AY CONCERN:
NOTICE I I H C R I S V G IVEN
by Iha City a4 C oeeelbarry.
Florida. that tha City Cam
fMeeton will BaM a public hear
mg to MwaMar aRBatBWRt af

tt. i

North » rt ot the 7 5

Wee*T ft. at the to ft. rear utility
aaaathiisl tacataB on Let t.
■tack I. Cametot unit I ae
recarBaB In Rial Baah to Page*
ffrm Public RacarBa af Somineto County, F torIda
Title notice to given pursuant
to Iha prevtotone af ChtaHar taa.
Florida Statutes ersBIha Charier
and Ordbsancas at Ria City af
Cattalbarry, Florida as
imoisBtoanasugplinsanlea
laid Ordinance will heconsidorod on llrst reading an Monday.
’
’ f, if*l, and the City

On c Io m Inspection

i will i

Eric SwMter, new second-grader at Wilson Elementary School,
Sanford Inspects a plant held by new sixth-grader, Alan Jamison.
Eric was searching for caterpillars In the school's butterfly
sanctuary.

ha public hearing which
i hold in tha City Hall el
CMulberry. Florida, on Manday, September to. m i at 7:8
p.m. or ae Men thereafter ae
taMallkid At BBm a^Mltaa In^ r
p Q V e t B f V , M l TTW n ^ W i n s g N l W f *
astod parttoe may appear and be

srdirsence. This hearing
may be continued tram time to
time until final actton to taken
by the City Com mission.
Csales of the proposed ordi
nance are available at City Hall
with Ike Clark af Iha City and
the same may be Impirtod by
ttw public.
Dated this 70th day at August.

m i.
CITY CLERK.
Ttw)ma McPherson
"Persons are advised that. II
they decide to appeal any de­
cision made at those meet
Irsge/haarlrsgt, they will need a
record af the proceedings and
tar such purpose, they may need
to Insure that a verbatim record
e f tha proceedings Is made,
which record includes the testi­
mony and evldwsc* upon artslets
the appeal to la be tile d , per
Section 204 0105. Florida Slat
utos."
Publish: August IX 1*01
DEI 18

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
O F T N I IIGMTRBNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLI COUNTY
FLORIDA

IN T N I CIBCUIT COURT
OP THE BIGHTBINTH
JUOKULL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
NO i tl-MM-CA-MK
CARTERET MVINGS BANK.
F.A.
Plplntltf,

ROBE RT BOOO. e t* .
Defendants

NOTICI OP ACTION
T a : R O B E R T ROOD and
SANORA L. ROOD. Me spouse It
a n y . an d D E N N IS J.
BOISVERT and DONNA J.
BOISVERT, file wile, net known
ta be dood or alive, AND ALL
H IIR S , DEVISEES. GRAN
TEES. ASSIGNEES. LIENORS.
CREDITORS. TRUSTEES ANO
O T H E R C L A IM A N T S BY.
T H R O U G H . U N D E R OR
AGAINST THE DEFENDANTS,
ROBERT ROOD and SANDRA
L. ROOO. hie spouse. II any, and
DENNIS J. BOISVERT and
DONNA J. BOISVERT, hie wile
ReeMmco: UNKNOWN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOT I
FIEO lhal an action to toreclote
a mortgage an tho fallowing
deecribed property In SEMI
N O L I Count*. Florida. Ip wit:
Lot M. Howell Estates2nd
Addition, according tn the Piet
thereof ae recorded in Plat Book
1J. Pago 5. Public Records ot
SamInata County, Florida,
hat Boon filed egeinst you and
you are required ta N rve a copy
ot your written defenses. If any.
upon GBACE ANNE GLAVIN.
ESQUIRE, ilea Tuskawllla
Road. Pott Offke Bex 2771.
Winter Springe, FL 27700 277*.
an or before the loth day ot
September, Itol. and tile the
original with the Clerk at this
Circuit court either before serv
Ice upon the Plaintiff i Attorney
o r Immediately Ihereatlor;
otherwise, a Default will be
entered egeinst you for ttw
relief demanded In the Com
plaint or Petition.
WITNESS*my hand end seel
ot this Court on mis 20th day of
August. INI.
(Court Seell
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By . Cecelia V. Ekern
Deputy Clerk
Publish: August 11. 10 and
September 4.12. Itol
DEI » S

CASE NO: tl-m »C A -l4 K
ASSOCIATES FINANCIAL
SERVICESOF AMERICA.

Horn# at last
TU b Rev. Don N o ll, left speaks at the
groundbreaking of a new home being built for
the Beasley family in Sanford by Habitat For

Humanity, as Ametika Geuka, local civic leader,
and Jennifer Kelly. Seminole County commls*
sioner, wield shovels.

Hereto Phase by Lacy l

Gaining knowledge
Carrie Kefalas. Niki Snell and Cindy Nasso. from
left, study the lifecycle of the butterfly at Wilson

Elementary School. The students tend a butterfly
garden to further their knowledge.

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given thal I
am engaged ln business et 111
Shane Circle. Winter Springs.
Florida 8701. Seminole County.
Florida, under ttw Fictitious
Nom e e l P R O D U C T IV IT Y
SYSTEMS, end that I intend to
register said name with ttw
Sacrstary ot Stale. Tallahassee.
Florida. In accordance with me
provisions ol tha Fictitious
Name statute. To Wit Section
IS5 0*. Florida Statutes i**7
Kenneth E Reesar. It
Publish August 71. m i
DEI 745

pursuant N a Final Judgment of
Forttlaw r* doted August 11.
IN I and entered In Caaa No.
*i-*7 iC A -iaO af tiw Circuit
Court at tha llt h Judicial
Circuit. In and tar l aw Inala
C ou n t*. F lo r id a , w h erein
M ARJO RII BE ROMAN la the
P la in tl It a n d P H I L I P
ROBINSON a/k/a PH ILIP J.
ROBINSON la tha Defendant. I
will Mil to tha hlghott bidder tar
caah at tha Watt front daar at
tha Saw Inota County COurttiawM
In Sanford. Florida, on Iha 17th
day at lidtaw bir. leaf, at ll:SB
o'clock o .w „ tha tallowInf dr­
ier Ibod property aa Mt tarth In
•aid Final Judgment, lying and
bolng iltu a ta In Saminala
County. Florida, to wit: ■
Lot I. Black C of DRUID
HILLS PARK according to thr
Plat thereof, aa recorded In Plal
Bod: 10 at Page I I at the Public
Record! ot Seminole County,
Florida.
D ATE D this llth day ot
Augutl, Iftl.
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk at the Circuit Court
By: JaneE. Jeaewlc
Deputy Clerk
Pubtlah: Augual l*. U. IN I
OEI 1*7
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. tl-ITM-CA-ta-O
SUSAN ANN THROM.
Plaintiff.
THE ESTATE OF ROBERT S.
THROM. JR.. JEANNETTE
MICHELE THROM.
KYMBERLEESHANNON
THROM end OUALITY SOLAR
SYSTEMS OF FLORIDA. INC..
Detendenti.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that, purauant to a Final
Judgment dated Auguat II. Iftl.
in Co m Number f t I7MCA.
MG. ot tha Circuit Court ol tha
Eighteenth Judicial Dlalrlct In
end tor Seminole County. Florl
de. In which SUSAN ANN
THROM la the Plaintiff and
THE ESTATE OF ROBERT S.
THROM. JR.. JEANNETTE
M IC H E L E THROM. K YM
BERLEE SHANNON THROM
end Q U A L IT Y SO LAR
SYSTEMS OF FLORIOA, INC .
ore the Defendants. I will Mil lo
Itw highest and beat bidder lor
cash el Itw Weal Front door ol
the County Courthouse. Sanford.
Florida, at II 00 A M . on Sep
tembrr 10. Ift l. the following
described property set forth In
the Final Judgment:
Lot II, Sandalwood, according
to the plat thereof ea recorded In
Plat Booh II. Page It. Public
Records ol Seminole County.
Florida
Oaled Ihts llth day ol August,

lt*l

|Uf

Plaintiff,
vs.
PAUL CANTOR at at.
Ds tendonIs
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE It hertby given that
ttw undersigned Clerk el the
Circuit Court of Sem inole
County. Florida, will, on ttw l*th
day at September, iftl. at 11:00
A M. at the West Front door ot
ttw Seminole County Court
house. Sanford. Florida otter tor
sale and sell et public outcry to
ttw highest and bast bidder tor
cash, ttw following described
property situated In SEMINOLE
County. Florida
Let to. WHISPER WOOO AT
SABAL POINT, according to the
plat thereof, as recorded in Plat
Book It, Papes 47 and 4*. Public
Records ot Seminole County.
Florida
pursuant to ttw Final Judgment
entorsd In a c o m pending In M id
Ceurt, Itw style el which is
Indicated above.
WITNESS my hand and ot
tidal seel el M id Court this 10th
deyet August. t*tl
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk et ttw Circuit Court
By Jerw E Jesewic O C
Publish August 71. 8.1*01
OEI 751

NOTICI OF
FORICLOCWRI SALE
NOTICI IS H IR IB V O IV IN

IN THE CIBCUIT COUBT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
CASE NO: *1-1771 CAI4K
COUNTRYWIDE FUNDING
CORPORATION.
Plalnlllf.
v*.
ROONEYW FIGLEY.
DENISE L. FIGLEYandTHE
INDEPENDENT SAVINGS
PLAN COMPANY.
Defendant!!)
TO: ROONEY W FIGLEY and
DENISE L. FIGLEY
Last Known Addren
U1 Weybridge Court
Lake Mary. Florida 2774*
NOTICE OF ACTION
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action tor foreclosure. seeking
an Interest in the following
described reel property located
in Seminole County. Florida
Lot 44. Block 1. Greenwood
Lakes. Unit D 1A. according to
me Plat thereof recorded In Plot
Book 1*. Pages 1 *8 . Public
Records ot Seminole County.
Florida
has been Iliad against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written defenses, il any,
on CLAUDE R W A LK E R .
ESQUIRE. Pest Oltice Bos
l l l l l . Tallahassee. Florida
H1I7 111! end Ilia the original
with the Clerk ol mis Court on or
balore Septtbmer 27. Ito l.
otherwise a judgment may be
entered egelnsl you tor the
relief demanded in the Com
plaint
WITNESS my hand end seal
ot this Court mu list day ot
August. IWI
(SEAL)
C LE R K O F THE CO URT
By Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish August 72. 20 4 Sep­
tember». 12. Itol
O EI 254

(Court Seell
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By Jane E Jasawic
Aa Deputy Clerk
Publish Auguat 14.11. m i
DEI IM
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTIENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
FLORIDA
C ASIN O :f1tS7*C A I4 K
NAVY ORLANDO FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION.
Plalnlllf,

vs.
TIMOTHY R CHRISTIAN and
DOREENM CHRISTIAN el el.
Defendants
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE la hertby given that
the undersigned Clerk ol ttw
C ircu it Court ol Seminole
County. Florida, will, on the llth
day ot September, iff l. at II 00
•AM at Itw Front door ot the
Seminole County Courthouse.
SANFORO. Florida otter lor
Mia and sell at public outcry to
the highest and best bidder lor
cash, ttw following described
property situated in SEMINOLE
County. Florida
Lot I and North &gt;s ol Lot 1.
B l o c k I t . 4th S e c t i o n
OREAMWOLD. according to
the plal thereof, as recorded In
Plal Book 4. Page to. Public
Records of Seminole County.
Floe ida
pursuant lo the Final Judgment
entered m a case pending in said
Court, ttw style ol which Is
indicated above
WITNESS my hand and ol
liclai saat ot said Court this 10th
day of August. Itol
(SEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ot Itw Circuit Court
By JeneE Jetewic D C
Publish August}] » Itol
D E I 2SO

VEHICLE AUCTION

TlBukk
7* Cadillac
TfFetd

*/tbm

aaaac
tU T U Q t ■
V fS ILIB M *

Tt Honda

1118728*

74 Detsun

RLS8B81I7
HLAtotttgaB

SB Detain
MOtdwrwbito
iQiAjtHW flDiiggw
7*OMsmebito
US7*6*t*B#
•I Panttoc
lAYtBfTBtIBMBS
•I Tapyete
lTE7107BttsaMt
aa Datam JNtPBtiSXEUedteaa
k m h l a i uiGuaaeBaa
Ff Ford
O AM H ttm i
Altemanta Towing
117Marker St.

lALEBaaim TSTM i « A M
V IE W ) HOUR PR KM
Publish: August U. Itot
OBI 147_______________________

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AMO POO
SEMI N OLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
Ca s i n o .: ti-tsMCAM-K
FLORIOA BAR NO &gt;170171
CITIBANK. FEDERAL
SAVINGS BANK, f/h/a
CITICORP SAVINGS OF
F LOR I DA. a tadarel savings
and lean aaaoclatton.
Plaintiff.
THOMASA. LEAHY,St.el .

NOTICI OP ACTION
TO: THOMAS A. LEAHY and
JANE DOR, hit wile. H living.
Including any urtrwwn spouse II
either has remarried and II
either or both era dead, their
respective unknown heirs, de­
visees, grantees, assignees,
creditors. Itsners, and trustees
and ell g fN r jn r p o g t 'totaling,
by. through, under a ------YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to foreclose e mortgage
on the tallowing described reel
end personal property In Semi
note County Florida:
LOT II, ALAQUA PHASE I.
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT ROOK 13. PAGES 47
THROUGH 71. PUBLIC REC
O R D I OF S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. FLORIOA.
has been filed egelnsl you and
you ere required lo servo o copy
ol your written defenses. It arty,
to It on Don A. Lynn, Esp.
Shulls b Bowen, attorneys tar
plaintiff. wheat address It ISM
Miami Cantor, M l S. Blsceyne
Blvd. Miami. Florida
on
or before September 17, Itol end
tile the original with Itw Clerk of
this Court either before service
on plaintiffs attorneys or im­
mediately thereafter; otherwise
a default will be entered against
you for the relief demanded in
the complaint herein
DATE DON August II. Itol.
(Court Seel)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ot Mid Court
By: Moottwr Brunner
as Deputy Clerk
Publish August ZL 10 A Sep
(ember 4. II. Itol
OEI Ml*o
l
IN THE CIBCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. fe-llil-CA-14-O
THE RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION as Receiver tor
COMMONWEALTH FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCI
ATlON. FORT LAUDERDALE.
FLORIDA.
Plaintiff.
vs
DIANA RAE BIOWELL end
MAUREEN J WARMAN and
AETNA FINANCE CO.
Defendants
NOTICI OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that pursuant lo Final Judgment
ol Foreclosure entered in Itw
above styled cause in the Circuit
Court In and ter Seminole
County. Florida. I will M il el
public auction to the highest
bidder in cash at the West front
door ol ttw Cour mouse In Sen
lord. Seminole County, Florida,
•t It 00 o m on September II.
Itol. that certain parcel ot root
property situated in the County
ot Seminole. Slate ot Florida,
more particularly described os
follows
Unit Number 0 1. LAK E
KATHRYN VILLAGE. A CON
DOMINIUM ACCORDING TO
THE Declorolion ol Condomint
urn ot Lake Kathryn Village. O
condominium and eah.bits an
neaed thereto, tiled the TVth day
ol August, (too. tn Official Roc
ord* Book I l f ) . Pages 1011
through I04f. Public Records ol
Seminole County, F lorida ,
together with an undivided In
If'esl in Itw common elements
described m Mid Declaration ol
Condominium to be an ep
purtenence to the above Condo
minium Unit
WITNESS MY HAND ANO
SEAL of this Court on mis the
lathday Of August. ttol
ICOURTSEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By Dorothy W Colton
Deputy Clerk
Publish August 14. 71. Itol
DEI IIS

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f e

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1 I 1

• i

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t

i

i t

Sanford Herald. S a n ford . F lorid a - Friday, A u gu st 23, 19B1

Ltgal Notlcas
U N C U IM ID
VEHICLE AUCTION
*/w/tt
UAMC/Ranouil
lX M 0M H ueK I)M *7
7»Owvrotol
INPPUPStUm
*t Chevrolet
1GCFK)4KXKE)M11f
7) Chevrolet
CCUI4PAI1PD*
flO o d lp JB)XD44SOMYPtra7
* ) Ford
ABP03)lCW)414S7
t* Ford
tfo a u u n
TJ Ford
T C V F lfM I
71 Lincoln
lYUAtlUOO
PI Mercury
iM E B P M ix o w u m r
•4 Plymouth
1P1BMS4CXC01444M
13 Pontiac 1GlANlSAPDBMTWr
P) Toyota J T K P t 1G 7C*5* I t lf
Altamonte Towing
I t 7Mortar St.
Atfafontl Sprlnyi
SALK B I 8 I M AT M:M AM
VIEW 1HOUR PRIOR
Publish: August D. t*Pt
DEI-14*
CITY OF
CASlELBEKiV, FUMtlDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HIARINO
TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF
PROPOSIOONDINANCK
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by th* City of Cam lborry.
Florida, that tho City Commillion will hold a public hear­
ing to consider onoctmont of
Ordinance No. 70Sentitled:
Ctoling. Vacating and Aban­
doning a portion at an l oooment
record^ In Dead Booh M. Pago
140. and to located on Lot L
Bloch G. Fern Part Etlatot. a i
racorttod In Plat Booh i, Pag*
II. ol the Public Record! of
Seminal* County, Florid*.
Ttvli notice to given punuant
to the provltloni ot Chapter It*.
Florida Statute* and the Charier
and Ordinance* ol the City ot
C a it a lb o r r y , F lo r id a a t
amended and supplemented.
Sold Ordinance will be comld
•red on tint reading on Monday,
September «, Itot, and the City
Commliilon will comlder tamo
lor final pottage and adoption
alter the public hearing which
will be hold In the City Hall of
Cattolbarry, Florida, on Mon
day. September i*. m i at 1:10
p m. or at toon thereafter at
potiibl*. At the meeting Interettod part tot may appear an^ be
heard with reipect to the propoted ordinance. Thlt hearing
may be continued from time to
time until final action It tahan
by th# City Commlttton.
Coptot of th* propoeod ordi­
nance are available at City Hall
with tho Clerk of the City and
th* tamo may be Impacted by
th* public.
Dated thlt 10th day of Augutt,
IN I.
CITY CLERK,
Thelma McPher ton
"Parians are adv Ited that. If
they decide to appeal any da
citlon mad* at theta meetIngt/hoarlngt. they will need a
record ol th* proceeding* and
for tuch purpota. they may need
to Inture that a verbatim record
ot th* proceeding* It made,
which record Include* th* tottlmorty and tvldanca upon which
th* appeal It to b* bated, per
Soctton to*.0101, Florid* Stat­
utes."
Publish: August}), m i
DEI-140
CITY OF
CA1SELRERRY, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HIARINO
TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF
PROPOSIDORDI NANCE
TO WHOM ITM AY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by th* City e l Cottolberry.
Florida, that th* City Commillion will hotd * public hear
ing to contldar enactment ot
Ord Inanca No. 10* entll tod:
ClotIng. Vacating and Aban­
doning a portion of th* utility
•element. Tho NLY 1 tool ot the
SLY M feet ol Lot 10. Block H.
Camatot Unit 1. at recorded In
Plat Book tt. Paget tS M .
Public Record* ot Seminole
County. Florida; lot* the WLY
TO toot and the ELY SO feet
thereof. Containing 140 square
toot, more or toil
Thlt notice It given puriuent
to tho provlttont of Chapter tee,
Florida Sla M at and th* Charter
and Ordinance* ol th* City ot
C o t t o lb o r r y . F lo r id a o t
amondod and tupp lamented.
Said Ordinance will b* comld
•rod on lint reading on Monday.
September t. m i. and the City
Commlttlon will comlder tame
tor final pattag* and adoption
otter the public hearing which
will b* hold In th* City Holl ol
Cottolberry, Florida, on Mon
day. September 14. I ff ! at 1:10
p m. or at toon thereafter at
potllbl* At th* matting inter
•tied partial may appear and b*
heard with retpecl to th* pro
potad ordinance. Thlt hearing
may b* continued from time lo
lime until final action It taken
by th* City Commlttlon
Capiat ol th* propowd ord I
nanca era available at City Hall
with th* Clark of th* City and
th* tamo may be Impacted by
the public.
Dated thlt TOth day ol Augutt,

mi
CITY CLERK,
Thalm* McPher ton
"Pertorn ere advlted that. It
they decide to appetl any de
citlon mad* el thet* meet
Ingt/hearingt. Ihey will need a
record at the proceeding* end
lor tuch purpote. they may naed
to Intur* that a verbatim record
of the proceeding* it made,
which record Include* the tettl
mony and evidence upon which
the appeal It to be bated, per
Section lie 0101. Florida Stel
utet ”
Publlth Augutt 11. m i
DEi lie

71-HrtpW anttd

CLASSIFIED ADS
Saminol*

Orlando • Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

C L A S S I F I E D D E P T . m ............., 1 T t e
H O tm s
P R IV A T E P A R T Y R A T E S
&gt;fc M P J L

M

Ifttn F M A T

W K D C S K W

D lose I B f a t oqulpmant
Wtoiding tap. helpful Must
•save awn tools. For Intorm*
tton cat! m u t e _____________

Prtcot above rMtoct o I t SOcath discount lor prompt payment. Schedul­
ing mey ksetode Harold Advertiser ol dw cosi c4 on oddHtonol day. Cancel
whan you f i t n w ltt. Poy enty tor doyt your od runt ot roto oomod.
Ute lull dotcrlptton lor foetott resvftl. Copy mutt loftow arctptabto

D(AM IMS
Tuetdoy thru Friday I I Noon Th* Day Betor# Fuhlkotton
Sunday And Monday 5: » P.M. Friday
AD JU STM E N TS A N D C N ID IT I:

I n M b FYW ri F f mm

trrer man ad, rise toitfprB HtfiM wilt Be re iRPNi NM Mr
rite first htstftlBN etriy pitelettty t* tfw Bitifit bI Mb m b *
• f f f w f tm e r tiw i. Ptaese dw efc yew * d N f b c c u f ic y tb e
first Bay it runt.

21 — P e m w e l s

Fra* medical cere, tramper
fatten, countellng, private
doctor plut living ■■pent*
ill ,Attorney
Bar m i l t s CaW

L O S T ll Black A tan mala
puppy. Vicinity af Sanford
i Offle*. Sunday morning.
P eetO
a e w a r o i­
ls —

Sgectal M ot! CBS

Support A medical expanses
paid. Call A f ly ii Wattan
§kmmmg £ Ifttlilli1 iim h i
1
f l k r *749115

BECOMEA R0TUY
For Detail!: 1MB433 42S4
1 AMERICAN AIRLINE. I way
ticket* tram Syracuta, NY to
Orlande. FI. Mu*I be uted by
*-M Bait oftor IS4T1W

27— N u rs e ry ft
C h ild a r e
ABC SMALL DAYCARI, TLC
ter tablet A toddtor*. Hat
meal*. E*c. Rat'*....... m ans
CHILD CARR In my home,
to d d le r * to 4 y r t . HRS
certified. H I M U
CHILD CARE, family tatting,
all thlttt. Nag. rata*. Fenced
yard, hat maato. M ite l*
D A Y C A R I AVAILABLK In my
Hidden Lk. home. Lett of
TLC. LteJOTCMl........ n M lM
EXPERIENCED CMILOCARI.
c a r a lliM t o t . M - F . n u m
M OTHER at 1 will babytll
lord home n i lMD
NEWBORN CARE. A l l month*.
L.P.N.- babytaver cart. SCC
area/Lk. Mary........... m - llf *

Legal Notices
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
B IO fts m -M
N O T IC E I I H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that th* City af Sanford.
Florida will receive tea tod Mdt
up la 1:10 P.M. on Tuatday,
September io, m i In the Purchating Office. Ream 241 tor th*
following Items:
WATER TREATMENTPOND/LAKES
All Mde are to be delivered or
mailed to: The City el Sanlord.
Purchasing Otfic*. XX) N. Park
Avenue, Sanford. Florida H ilt.
The tea tod bid* will be publicly
opened later that tam* day at
1:00 P.M. In ttw City Comminion Chamber!, Room 111,
Sanford City Hall.
Speciticattoe* and lh# proper
bid torm i are available, at no
cait, In the Purchasing Ofllca.
Room 241. MO N. Pork Avenuo,
Sanford. Florida. (4011 230S4I3
Facsimile or telegraphic bids
will not be acceptable
Th* City of Sanford reserve!
the right to accept or re|ect any
or oil bide, with or without
couto. to waive technicalities or
to accept the bid which In lit
lodgement belt tar vet the inter
•tt of tha City.
CITYOF SANFORD
Walter Shear In
Purchasing Aganl
Augutt TO. m i
Publlth August}]. Itfl
OEI 2$1

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given lhal I
am engaged In business at m i
Orlando Dr., Sanford. FL M ill.
Seminole County. Florida, under
tha Flctltlout Name ot MEL S
FAMILY DINER, and that I
Intend to regitlar said name
with the Secretory ol State.
Tallahassee. Florida. In ac
cor dance with lha provisions ot
th* Flctltlout Name Statute.
To Wit: Section US 09. Florida
Statutes ItSl
SANFOROENTERPRISES
INC
Gayle A DeBoer. Sec'Treat
Publish August» . m i
DEI laa

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—

L X T I I R
DV

J I I PXI V

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J D L X

TP

U D J X H Q X O O X
U O C I H
L O W

T

M T O U X .
K T N V D L W K .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "L it* is short, Out it * long
enough to ruin any man that wants to ba ruined." — Josh
Biiknga.

\

LONBWOOD FU RN ISHED
ROOM, wtth shower and AC.

M EAT

and prevent
[ ech tetter et the cone. ttandt lor
another todar &gt; ckre J rp u v i u

O X N X L

Wonted on all operation*.

WORKER* NEEDED!!
DAILY WORN DAILY FAY
dlBeB........r a m i attar *gw

CELEBRITY CIPHER
C M t r l) C.pnvr cryptogram! are creeled from quotation! by lamuu!
•O

SUMMER SPECIAL! V . I
d ls c p o o til C lean room s.

ElffRIIRCIOMQMWC

..... ...

27—N u r a t r y ft
Child C a r t
SHARON'S
Eec. rat'd CPR trained. Hot
meal*. TLCI C alim ilS C

SMALL DUALITY HOME LIKE
O ayc ara A Praschaal.
Openings I Maato, learning
pregramt Ptaygraendl Fatty
tot'd) Lk.F4M-l..„..... MI-ISM
WILSON ABEA CMNkara. all
ago*. Day*/Night* Reason
able rata*.................. MAMB1

31—P r iv a te
Instructions
EXPERT PIANO Iwsfrucltoa. In
your homo or my studio. SIAM
wkly. i o« i tow. Result oriented
Instruction. For all agas,
level* A style*. Summer A
Fall classes now available.
Cali Rea FakeaaM AliM

3S—Training
A Education
BE A Lie*mad Cawlractor. Gary
eral/Builder/Residential. Call
tor Iw4e I-MAIM-MM_________

42— Ltgal Strvlcts
"BANKRUPTCY tram 1IM“
"DIVORCE tram 111"
K. Mewackl. Attorney, 44P-7PM

55— B u B in tB t
O p p o r t u n it y *
AOENTS NEEDED for building
canister dlitrlbutlon teams tor
non-protlt organliallon. all
over th# U.S.A. High earnings
working trom homo sponsor
Ing tund col lectors end taking
a per cm lege No Investment
required. W rit* lo: M.S.
Foundation. 1110 Sunt#I Strip.
Sunrise. F l.x m i
RESTAURANT/PII2ERIA tor
rant, with equipment. Seat*
*4. Ready to open. Corner
l l f l and 11th St. Sanford.
Call anytime, 14A1I41
m m
Interested In doing Military.
Federal or Slat* contract*.
Call.................... ...... M41QS1
.1411
Author ol best tolling book
ever, hot aicallent opportunl
ty. It you
currently corn
*10.000 yr. + and or* un
tatittlod with It coll
(4 *7 )I7 *tn *

43— Mortgage
Bought ft Soid
CASH FOR MTOS.-BNI Buftor
NO Larkwood Dr. Sanlord
HAMM. Lk'd. Mtg. Brakar

71—HtlpWanftd
EMPLOYMENT

MONEY DHtr toutIng
nutrition product*.
..... A H *11)
H A I R S T Y L I S T • H a lr -A R angers. Needed newt m

SANFORD - t bdrm., complete
privacy. HS/wk phi* SMP se­
curity includes utilities.
_________ Cad r a - a w
EFFICIENCY AFT.. Very nice.
utilities Included. 1 Meeks
.»P 8 1 f

S 7 S aw b .p toid w M lt.n iH M
M O B IL E NOME. Complete
privacy cleea to doantown. ASS
W y .ra r
POOL and kitchen privileges.
Quiet non tmokor/drlnkor,
mature odutt. ATS/wk » TIM

I mem. kitch
SIM per ewefc,
utilities Includad. plus dsppslt.

m aiiaarM PM H
R P F I C I I N C V COTTAGE.
Camp, furnished, utilities pd. I
parson only. No pets. D l l 175

P R IV A T I home w/prlvllofos.
Excellent location. H I M i l or
days. MATTS-Mil
SANFORD. Lg. bdrm., private

FURNISHED EFFICIENCIES Lew rant, no dsposlt. weekly
or monthly. » H MOP__________

*100

Include* util. Mate
1B411
WALK TO DOWMTOWNl tram
Park Ave. Fum. A Unfum. AM
week/ttM month. XtOStn

IA up. SMP d w 2X2 M l*

Aparfmv

97—A fta rtfiw fils

Fumifthttf/Rtnl

T iis h o d /

SANFORD • 1
with ig. fenced yd.
prlvscy. **5 wk. plus PMP
Include* util Diet.

SANFORD, NICE A R IA . huH I
bdrm. In charming * ptox.
i &gt;Tm
In kitchen, i
iloti ol
*211/me plut USd securi­
ty.............................APBH72

Cad ran**

SANFORD • I bdrm . wilh
* c r a * n p e rc h . C lo t * to

N T T flT N M R W O T E l
Ream tor rani by day , weak
ormanthl Geadratost .

ca aran e
SANFORD - I bdrm. axcallent
n e lg h b e rh e e d , c o m p le te
privacy. MO per week plut
ity.
e e l B O D M .ee Recently ramads ltd i W/W carpel, eel In
kitchen, all spplisrmi. A/C.
sliding glass dear s span to

INWORDCOHtT

323-3311

JUST LIKEAHOME
Single H eer with p rivate
entrance. Studios, t B &gt;
e lu d in g i t e r a t e a p a c e .
Quiet.eery community. Nice
landscaping ON SIT I
M A N A O IM W N O C A O IH

I RRDNDORL AC. celling Ian*,
roomy. MTS plus tec. MM.
CMl................... - ...... r a n t *

M M W C0M T

323-3311

Limited lime O ff er

Mature woman to provide
housekeeping, moat* and
chlldcara. In Praloislonal
to: I

FL M ill-M il
KUWAIT/SAUOI JOBS now
hiring man/womon many
ftotd*; excel lent pay w/tran*,
p a i d . C a ll l o r d a t a l l s
1M S17*M M E»t.KI47
lERSFull lima. Valid PL
driver* license required. Load
limb* A togs, drive trucks, run
chain saw, ate. Company
howelttol Start *7.M hr.
■cams'T reo See. n u n *
U R II
To hotp divorced mother with
ana child. Room end board +
AM wk. must drive. MAWM
LIVK IN To car* tor oWorly
woman. Sept 11Oct tl. (MS
wk. m b — nights A wkond*.
MATURE ladle Meat, w/ear, tor
a*c. Incoma opportunltyl Will
tralnl 14871717411 ext. 1715
MEDICAL

I
s

Z 4 p M &amp; W tfo -

(lit MonthOnly)

S *7 S Bedroom
Apartm ents
• Cable TV

•W
tsher/Dryai inSekci UnUs
Washer/D
Self Clean
leaniOven
[• Diihwasher
Disposal

I 2450 HaitwHI Avt^ Saaford
M O N -S A T .9 - 6 • Sm

3274544.

l

I2 -S

3 2 4 -4 3 3 4

Accepting applications lor
Cert I(tod Nursing Assistants.
The** with experience given
prior My! Apply:
*S0 Mellonvllto A v# Santord.

- i l l

\ \ • \ I I O K I ) \HI I

* 1( 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms*

$100 Off

F IR S T

• Pool
• Clubhouse

NEWPATSCAUSATHMC

M il

M O N T H S

R E N T

Cmb«I ft Vftwl. OtWnoFan, Vftrtieftlftft
Rftnla, Pool, TannlaCourt, Clubhouaaft
Laundry Room

mmm

OWcg Hours
M-F B3 M 3 0
o i l DY flnWVfYllMI It

- L 0 .L / H

HAILTIQt
Experienced. Loko M ary
area. H I «M1 after 7pm HA
AB4. “ NM Jest NaHs"

OfFICfMARAfilR
Flexible hour*. Local com­
pany. Ground Hoar opportunlty ................ ............. W4-1114
POSTAL M
I12.1)/hr. Now opon. For
exam and application call
331-1M4

* * POSTALJOBS* to
Santord aroa. Start SII.M/hr
plus bonoflts For appllcotlon
and Into. Call 121S-H4 41*7
7am 18pm 7days.____________

RRSNEEM0

TOW NHOUSC AFASTM EM TS

3301 a . B on ford A y * .
1 AIl NwPi d Ul Hwy Bled.
Angle Swry Ptodto. 1A 2 Bdrm. ApN.
• Cawey-M* Bdtoig •On-aia UanaMto
•D w W gatSfB ------

Part tlma and t M l timo. l it
shift. Reflect scheduling tor
i*m l retired homemaker look
Ing tor somothlng to do with
that extra tlma on hand, or
those needing to supplement
income.

ROSECLIFF
APTS.

LPRNEEDED

3 Bedroom Bold. $S30

Full timo. II 7 thill
Come |oln our loom ot DeBery
Manor, an SNF with tub acute
unit providing care and tarv
Ice* to skilled pattonli le.
ventilation dependent We also
provide o variety ol other
servlets usually offered In the
acute care setting. Experience
desirable but wilt train. Com
pel Hive salary and benefits.
Excellent working environ
menl. Apply:
O l BAR Y MANOR
M N. Hwy 17/fl
Do Aery, M-F, SAM-4 PM... EOE
ROOFERS. Aprentice A labor
art, own tool* and transport*
tlon.......................... 171 77*0
SCHEDULER/TRAFFIC
ROUTER, ol food deliveries
for II yr., old local company.
Should b* lamlllar with tlato
ot FL . organIred. a non
tmokar. and have previous
office experience Hour* 10 7
Mon. Thur.. IS Frl. Apply:
401W. I)th It. Santord.

Parktidft Pisco
Apartments

Sanford Court
Apartments

2 B ed ro o m , 1 B oth

Quiet 4 Socuro
(400 per month, (200 Sac.
2540 HARTWELL AVE.

323-3301

•

322-6447

LAKE MARY

Dorchester
Apartments

B ran d Nesv
Locxied 1 m4aa from
gm1
I-4 - Lake Story!
Healfvow (ExSM)
New 3 barXoomapw. eneashar Oryar
. poaanad In pwlaa

ON 4PAm m a* 174* In Labe lb
mdngtoM
i t b e to rll

*NOW OPEN!*

»

500 DorchGstGf Square

call 322-5955

Egud HouMnp Oppenundy

O

Geneva Gardens
Apartments

323-4923

To Advertise In This
Rented Directory

1,2, or 3 Bedroom* Available
Rental* Start at 1330 Mo.

Coil

ALL APT*. FACE COURTYARDS
Pod • Laundry
■WashCryw Hedapa In BslicHd Unto
CkxalaSchaobP But Lina
PrckesiloniPy Hanaaad By:
Angala Qcrdon,, Ffopany
I
UanagamarX

Saqford Herald
Classified D ept.

322-2611

322-2090

323-5176
mow,m

b it .
* • • VOLTa a a
TEMPORARY SERVICES

call tie e m
ADDTOYOUR INCOME
AVONI SELL SKIN-SO-SOFT
CALL 111 4 1 » ar m au*

APPLICATORSVCW5S
Earn up to *11.70 hr.
W* Tralnl
Hiring now lor local area:
Call l 111 M AIH I
APPLY NOWI Orivert. security
guards. |anltort. warehouse
help and oltlc* help (Will
train) tISPhon* Fee
I-WAM4M40.
AUTO MECHANIC NEEDED
Evpertonced only need apply,
wages open. I l l * Celery Ave,
Sanlord

AUTOPARTSDRIVER
Call* II.Monday Friday
M0 14*«

BARTSITTER

Flexible hrt Markham Rd
area Relerences 1010*47

CHILDCAREWORKER
For before A alter school
program Mutt be II yrt ol
age and have FL drivers lie
Apply in person: toe W. 14th
SI. Santord. M F tAM 11PM

CLERICAL
Part time Gal Friday needed!
IS v hrt week Jlt llM atk
tor Aether *71 *411 ty. mtg.

CONSTRUCTIONAU TRADES
mi

BE AN IM A M CONBULTANTI
To cenautt on beauty, loth Ion
■I........... M A tn i

I V amort. ttooMh B I
Apply In Person:
1*4&gt; Ota Mary Rd

V7—Apartments
Fumtsted/ Rtnt

f2— Room* lor Rent

Local Caribbean Island*
I 4*7 t«7 IMtTatont BuildartFee

DRIVERSNEEDED

AG C A R R IE R S , a w a ll
established and grow ing
central Florida based com
pany offers you
a Semi Annual Pay Increases
• M o p on Pay
• Unloading Pay
• Vacation Pay
• Safety Bonus
• Spouse Riding Program
• Average Trip 5 7 Days
• Late Model Conventional
Tractors
It you have 1 years out of state
tractor frailer experience end
a good driving record, call
I 400 174 *054
EARN *50*11000 WEEK! SMI
envelopes at home No costl
SEND SASE to Geidan Dts
tributary, PO Box 771514 C.
Corpus Christi. TX 7*417 1510

SECURITYOPTICERS
SITTER

Sanlord area Call 740 0040

For Inlant. 4 days In my horn*.
Mature, reliable church lady.
Call altar 4PM— ..... m SMI

STYUST

Wilh some following, com
mission or rente 11114 *4*4

to

TtlamifUtfrt NooBod

In our Sanford otllc*. Bast
leads and pay available. It you
are professional and have a
good vole* we’ll train you to
make *1S0 5SO plus per week I
Call Lisa 10AM
*FM tor
appalntmant. r a - 11*4________

WAITRESSES

Dunbars Restaurant Santord
111**15

Wvehoust/Drivtfs
*150 715 weekly * bene 11Is
(Will tralnl I-H1MM

I RAYTECH
For busy orthopedic ottlce
Contact Sharon............747 5535

73— Employment
Wanted
E L D E R L Y A S S IS T A N T
P erson al c a r* provided
Cooking, cleaning, driving,
day or night 111 147]
IRO NING WANTEO. Shirts
*150*0 Fre* pick up B dal. 11
plus- Phono anytime 173 719*
W IL L DO lawn mowing at
reasonable rates
124 7*14
WOMAN it . housework live in
and out Certified in childcare
All types ot work Boa 7407U.
OrangeCity. Fl 1174]

VI—Apartments/
House to Share
W ILL share home Washer,
dryer, microwave SaO-wk
pays all HI 147]
WILL SHARE 1 bdrm 1 bain
patio home with male or
female Washer, dryer, pool
Call 130 *JS1 leave msg

■uru.s.

SAVINGS BONOS
Tor the current rate call .
1- « 0 0 -U *-B O M O *

T^ondHIonmg"
I ft Heat ing |
DCI A/C
Fast same day
sarvica All makes Fraeast’s
4 7 ^ » l4 j4 h o u r s ^ d a j^ ^

Ap p lia n c o B

NEW/USEDAPPLIANCES
Buy /VHI • Recoisd/Guaranlead

HOME APPLIARCL..322 31*3
A u to m o tiv e
DETAIL FEVER. Let your car
sparkle lor summer! Comp
delaiI service! ......22M111
HEAOLINERSI Most car* *40
Wagons *75. Vinyl tops *40 up
Carpet 140 up 904 444 ]*4S

Building Contractors
• ADDITION* All remodeling
Ouality work I Trowbleshooll
Relerences M elee47AP4l*
NEW, REMODEL. REPAIR
HOMES. OFFICES. STORES
Alt type* construction. Res/Com
3214*11 LO . Balint. CRCIlfMO

Carptntry
CARPENTRY. Horn* repairs,
remodel. Decks. Shads A
Garages
I M**
ragts QUALITY
OUALITYII H
211

■1ST FBICISI Quality work
A n y t h In g / E v e r y th in g .
Homet/OHic* Total repairs.
Improvements. I do It all I
FroeEst. Anytime. 2247UI
C A R P E N T R Y . MASONARV
painting and III* work Free
animates Llsc'd. Call 1)2 4 ln

jw frlo ori

Home Improvement

ADEPT CARPET CLEANINO.
Circular dry loam sys. dry In I
hr Summer discount see 4115

CONCEPT On* Enter. Gan.
carpen try) Horn*, oltlc*.
kitchen, bath! 2244147

Cleaning Strvtct
CATHY’ S CLEANINO SERVICE References, reasonable
rates Licensed! Call 111 7470

THECUEDTEEM
CLASSIC CLEANINGI
FOR CLASSY CLIENTSI
Call lh* Clean Team
epoTM-atM

Concrete
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Beal 2 Man Quality Opera
I,on! 1)0111*/140 7*01

Fence
SH ARP F E N C E I 1st R at*
work Law U l Free oil Wood.
chamlink Arep.sirs 111S4J1

Carpentry

Handy Men-

CARPENTER All kinds of home
repairs, pointing A ceramic
Ilia Richard Grass..... 221 l»71

ONE CALL DOES IT ALLI
Painting, masonry walding.
mowing ate I! PM. 124177*

Home Repairs
THE HOUSE DOCTOHI All
homa repairs1 Paint/Tarmlt*
damage Lk./la*
311)111

L a w n Service
COMPLETE Quality Lawn A
Landscaping. Tree W v ic e A
Irrigation, compalitlva rata*.
treaasIlmatosSunny's))) 7S1S
BRUCE'S Lawn Maintenance
Call Bruca 1)1 711*
U Oft tor new customers!
LAWN CAR El IS A UPI Free
estimates Senior discounls
Trash removal
2)31711
L A W N M A IN T E N A N C E
Commercial/Residential. Law
Retail Call Tam
31) 4311
R AN D Y’ S QUALITY LAWN
Complete care, clean ups
Stncaim Freaetl.l 1)14714

TWP MASONRY. Brick, block,
stucco, concrete Renovations
lIC d A Ins l3l-144A/P*4-ilS7

Moving 4 Hauling
B A k HAULING. Yard Iras
trash.
eppi.. furn. Cheap/on timal
I I 5/up Ceil Hay 1)7-72*1
a a a H A U LIN G .yard trash,
appliances, furniture, trash al
any kind I itebard...... I7377U

Painting
DICK PINOLA’ S P4a i n t i n o .
Quality work I Inl/Ext.. Llc’d
A Insured Fraatstl 2)1 S72J

Wumbing'
HOFKIRS PUMIIM
All your plumbing needs! ]4
hours! lRF00U77O2n:

Pressure Cleaning "
PRESSURE CLEANINO MAN House wash/painling u i and
up Roger, 1)4 4*a0. PAM IPM

I Secretarial ft I
Typing Services
CUSTOM Typing/______
DJ Enterprises. 4018 I
SI , Santord 314 04H/W

Tn^ervlce
BUNVANS TREE SERV
Tree work, light hauling
eslimatas. Insured U l ti
RICH’ S TREE REMOV4
hr sarvica. tree esti
bell prices' 774 INS

t tlrrrti.se )n iir Itu.sinr.s.s / r r r v Da y I or I s I ta r l.s
s tr, D rr Mondi. ( till 1 luM.siJinl.
‘ (ill
2

�/

|t

»

-*

I IT I * • •

tl_#*

Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Friday, August 23. 1991 •

n —A f i t r m i Hs
U n f w m h li N / W e n t

K IT*N ’ C A 1 LY LE * by Larry Wright

n-AMrtmtnta
UnfwmislMtf/Rent

ALTAMONTE 1 f t WAS Hug*
J bArm. I bath, wesher/dryer,
))»*/mo. 8*4433)____________

* A BMW KM* *
ROSECLIFF APARTMENTS

far U tt. W/0 connections.
K rtw a l HU** and extra
storage cleeet- 11*7 H It.
LecaMon Lk. Mary Bird
C M »M I
level HewSfngCqoertunltyt

CLCAN 1 I M A . 1 batfl. no
pat*. I t l t r w t n i n j me.
&gt;7Md*» a i m s__________
f I t l T f LOOt. Mas Myrtle
A**., lg living rm. 1 bdrm., 1
bath. Wall la woll carpal.
CHA. washer/dryer. U7S mo
M U tH arlW A M W
LARK 4 I M I I APTS. Undar
new manafamanll Call u*
about our mov* m ipaclali
tram P tll jrafcar, 3738734

MARINER'S V IL L A M
Lake Ad* I bdr..............SMB me.

3irtm....8BWm*Ae»....aM*&gt;0
NKAT-IBOKAL Apt. W. Jnd SI .
CHA. corpqtod. kit. aeuip- «7S
me. Inchidaa water W i l d
L parapa apt.
NICK 1
Santard. P M par manth piu*

at-m r

iving at

R

IS LIKE TAKING A VACATION!
ALL THE CONVENIENCES... NO UP KEEP!

C onTTo
niRNtsiKna tiNnnfmiien

R. ORANGE COUNTt 1/3 on
*4 acres, targe barn.... S4V.0M

[)0f(( M| ,1

•420S

M Ftl:0pen Weekends
LAKE MANY N44W3

U w l MrwH h R d / K &gt; w 1

BBM00KLRD t

ATTUT10HIHVCSTDM

eat In kitchen, appllai
W/W carpet. A/C Only
pec mental C a t l» 4 * B »

CALL US PI AST tor top Sami
nala County single family and
duptoa rental arsportlast
WO M A L TY . Ml H

SANFORD. large 1
to daantoan tram Park Aval
t*S/wfc. or PtS/rna. a m a
SANPORD, Ip' I bdrm. t*)/wk
plw* IIM security or PaS/ma.
1 bdrm. WS/mo or 1110/wk
Peal, laundry. A/C. MSkkM

313 DtRKSEN DRIVE
DCRAKV

( 4 0 7 )8 4 8 -8 3 1 4

Nko t bdrm. t baNk Control
H/A, private fenced yd.
UU/ma. PSB Security
Resutta Realty...............C l - 1*40
IANPOBOVWINTRB SPA I NAS
Awallebto now I 1 bdrm. ]
bath, *11 appltoncet, 140 /mo.
small deposit. Pets, kids OK.
Brokar/Apant, **»M1*
TOWNHOUSE. 1/lta and unit.
Freshly pilntod, CHA. all ap­
pliance*. minis, vertical*. Ip.
tcm rm., storage rm, cell.
Ian*, privacy fenced prlv.
perking, trart pup. washer.
dryer even. S4MMM1S1
V I UPSTAIRS. &gt; blacks *tt
Park. PS* and sac. Barb NLP.

Affordable 1,2, &amp; 3
Bedroom Apts. In
Beautiful Lake Mary

44................................W M

111— H rusds

Fumishtd/ U til
SANFOBD - Large 1 bdrm. with
Iron! porch, t block from new
hospitel. 1110 per week plus
M » security. Cell m -m *
N ICI 1 BEDROOM. quiet re
tire* ere*, south Oebary. UM
month. No pets kt»4to*
1 BDRM. 1 bath cottage,
furnished. UtS/mo, 11)0 d*
posit. Call ai-Ttw . eves.
t I DBM, 1 bath, washer, dryer,
fenced yd. Near lakatreatl
m o mo. plus dap.322 44*

M ake
Paradise
Your
Address!

Sf. Croix Apartmtnts
321 7 3 0 3

103— H o u s b s

Unfurnished/ Rtnt

Step Up into
G reat Apartm ent!

N IR O A 1 BDRM. or 1 Bdrm In
0 ELTON AT Large selectKmI
PRIMARY RRALTV.... 1744714

&gt; BDBNL I BATH, central A/C.
^PO*
e WipilIRT/HOWVWWMaw* t
^ w e r J iljh s c h o e ^ lM M ^ ^ ^

187— MoWk
H o fiw / K u t

DCLTOM -2BOIM .
Neat and Claanl
*1040 BRINTLAWN ST.
•HIT WRIT PARK ST.
No pat*. Batereness.
Ott Pravldinc* Blvd. turn on
n o r t h P a p a , w a t t to
Brantlawn.

O IN E V A . 1 bdrm. CHA.“
Petal *37) mo. plus depoelt.
ONE BDBNL, turn., B A R M IN
rant, quiet neighborhood.
Park Ave. NtoblN Pb. 3743*41

071 m*.

T IM U R HOUSE

578 -18 *

On private tot 1 bdrm. 1 bam,
A/C. Cleant Water furnished.
PM/mo. Call Wi 431________
1 BDBNL. unfurnished 137J/mo.
M ULLET LARK PR.
__________*04-117-1117_________
2/t BURN. AC, weter/garbeg*
Fence/cavared patio. No petal
U M 4W W S0C.3Q .m 7

P IB N PARR V lh CHA Now
paint, carpet tUOma.
Scburaa Meetly BI-IK7.
1 bdrm ., ample storage,
central H/A, carpal, fenced
y a rd , u tility roam w ith
w a s h o r/ d ry e r hook ups
freshly painted. 1471plus dap.
CeMMHML
SANPORD-MAVFAIR • 1 bdrm.
I bath. C/H/A. flroptec*. large
oaks, parage. 1171M M tol
I BDRM. t BATH spacious
country hem* I Leketrent on f
acres. A l . 1700/mono-7)17
1404 M V R T LR A Y R . SAN ­
PORD. 1 bdrm. 1 bath. Fla.
rm/)rd bdrm. Central H/A.
celling tons, carport, kltch.
appliances, redecorated 3/P1.
Quiet neighborhood MJO/mo
plusnwdep. *0130 7401
) ROAM. 1 bath, appManets,
fireplace, lanced yard. 1M0
Paul end Bern Osborn*
Venture I Properties, a t 47*4
) BDBNL t BATH, lantord.
Fenced. IMO/me. Cell 3141431
days; k»«17,ev**/w*ekend*
1 BDRM. ivy beds, central H/A.
garage................... .MM/mo

St John's Realty. 487 371413)
)

BDRM. tta BATH, central
H/A, deck, fenced. Santard.
1110 per month. 4rtMW
) BDRM.. 1 both. CHA. fenced,
family rm. w/tplc., ig. utility
bldg., new carpet A paint. UM
.37) 1441

105— DupitX-

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

185— D up fR XT r lfltx / K u l

185— H d u s b s

113— P a r k in g S p i n
N f lW

D O W NTO W N SANPO R D ,
NEAR COURTHOUSE.
CALL QI7M4

114— Warthouse
I p g f / Rant
D O W N TO W N M IC K
WAREHOUSE SPACE MO to
30.000 s q It . D ock HT.
Sprlnklerod Call 3340)44
CROWN SQUARE
LOWOWOOO/LK MARY area.
1.000 t.300 Sq. ft. with or
without A/C offices. Starting
1335. McIntosh Point. 134774*
LONOWOOD-Lk Ntery Mid slit
storage warthouees. 400 MO
1400 sq- tt. from 113)/mo
____________131-011*___________
SANFORD
1.1M. I.SU. 1.100
square feet available.
Call 131 7004

117— Commercial
______ Rtntals
SANFORD 30X40 building plus
of Iices w/lg. socurlty fenced
lot. Zoned C 3. Call 373 71*7

111— OffiCB
Spact / Rtnt

T r ip t o x / R R n t
CLEAN. OMt BDRM.. STVwk.

O N LY

4 sec 1 yr. leave, carpet.
*l)taA P *rk Ave. 331 3717.

*435

IAN FORD, nk* ) bdrm.. AC.
carpet. Dlshwether. laundry
rm.. carport. S4IBmo. 834701*
1ANFOBD DUPLSK I bdrm .
lovely, quiet. UtO/mo plus
depoelt. Eves, collect I** f ill
TWO BEDROOM. 1 Bate. CHA.
wash/dryer hookups. Wall to

7 and 12 Month Leas#
Available
wIVipW

well carpet............... 171 7*47
17-fi/LAKfc M ARY area. 7
bdrm. I bath, completely
remodeledi IMl/mo. 177 3017

A dam and E ve had
their Garden, new see
Sanford's

GENEVA GARDENS
Com e H om e To
Country Style Living!

t

P f l l l T I O I OFFICES
100 to
4.000 sq. tt. Soma furnished. 3
blocks to City Hall. Call
3340)44........ CROWN SQUARE
SANFORD 71*. 1.4*3.
and 1,430 square feat.
Cell 111 7004

MUST SELL M O m MOUSE
3 bdrm., 1 bath. CB home In
better Sanford neighborhood.
Top condition, control AC.
now carpet. A paint, oil eppll
once*. Lot* at Inside storage
built la FHA qualified buyer
can put |u*t UMO down end
seller will pay oil of buyers'
dosing B loon cotta. Double
lot. IM X 140. Drive by ol 3017
Hibiscus Court, then call or
|usl knock on door. iTf.MO
total.
Charles Slade, son.
331)417or 147-0741

HO QUM JFYIM !
14.MO down. CHA, fenced yd.,
appliance*, remodeled. Move
inTodev!.................. 334 UM
NON-QUALIFYING A summe
bl*. Sanford. 3/1, family rm .
fplc.. remodsled. Ig. lot. trees.
)10.000 down...............340)4)4
PICTURE PERFECT! Lovely 3
bdrm. 1 bom all brick custom
homo with upgraded applloncos and a itr a touchest
Camai with overslrod comar
let (riding mower Included to
taka care ol II). Mature oaks,
mankurad lawn. Owner ready
to soil a
t . ...... 177,too
*047740035/407 )7 4 * m .
Q u in n

PTi m I I v I n c

3 ? 1 -3 6 6 :

FOR SALE IT OMHER
Assumable to qua! Ifled buyer.
3 bdrm. tta bath, living room,
family room or 41h bdrm.,
largo kitchen. Nice comor lot,
In ground POOH43.00B 331 *401

ForSafokOomor
4 bdrm.. 3 both POOL home.
Assum ebl* non qualifying
tgege Monthly payments
srn PITI. 114 OOM

THE OMS/SMFORD
FOR SALE BT08HKR

e'' t * I RUT HOUSES r* v *

3 bdrm. 1 bath, Ig. master, lg.
l i v i n g and dlnlnjg a re a
w/tkaplaca. Weed deck, lg
Ire**. Privacy end socurlty.
Extra room tor otflce. hobby
or pose 3rd bdrm. Tennis and
pool privileges. )**.MO
Day*. 3 0 4 0 )

ANV CONDITION I
Need repelrsT Behind on
*T Call Grqfc 3334714

NUT M Y I f HT?
SI down tor Vote • A Hill*
more tor others. Brand new 1
bedroom 1 both homo* with 1
cor garagot from SSIO.
total monthly payments
Uatversel AeePy, 0*43334

J b d rm ., 1 both, L a rg o
screened rm. 107 i
Bfvd. 17*.*00.00*704________

SlopI* Story. I t Bdrm.
Art about our.....

3347*03___________

MANAGEMENT A RRALTV
W 7 -3 D B B W H H I

manth, P M security. 334*447

ONLY

•MtlwiVf

SANFORD • Concrete block, )
bdrm. I both Central H/A.
Walk to school Nwdt a little
TLC.S37AM407 W71
SB T T L i ISTATR - 1 bdrm. tta
bath Lg. camfortabie sent,
perch, (rant and rear, nk*
neighborhood. Vary good
condition I Fenced lor security
end pets. &gt;54,WO. 333-*307

CALLMRT RCRLTT
322-7491

NOW LEASING... ***■
MAirrAT

I AND? HFJMtOOMS

LOCH ARBOR -1 story 3 bdrm.
3&gt;y bam. Sunken living rm .
fireplaca. eat In kitchen, pool,
scr. perch. * yr* eld Doubt*
parage. PITI Met/mo. H U M
down to assume. 333 3714

Your opportunity to own a
prestigious older 1 story home
on beautiful double comer let
In s u p e r S a n f o r d
neighborhood. Largo rooms.
Ilreplec*. CHA. Irrigation
system plus m any other
features. P rk e It 17,500.
PUT MAKE AN O FFER! I

Ott it. parkin*. MS a a*.
Includes util. SUB sec 33413*4
OfTKKN - I bdrm apt*.. MP par
week Includat utilities. No
pat*. Cali MPeifl__________

iverside C ondominiums

141— H u n t s i f S a lt

IMRE OFEER Far Q aid Sdt!

'

I

L

141—H t w t k r S R k

F1BO. V ita. Concrete blk.
double tot, 147.00*. Owner II
nance, mm. 17MB dawn S4M
me. PITI. Mov* In 40*0 days
ZonodB 3.................. 331 IBM

O N I KDRM.. t bait), acrn.
balcony, fplc. CHA, carpal.
mo j n 144}

141—H o m e * t a r S a lt

i
407-774*4**

II \ l I III \l IN
ASSUME NO 4 U A L IP Y I 3
bdrm.. central H/A. Large
corner lot trees I
ONLY4t.NO
COUNTRY ATMOSPNIREI 3
bdrm. 3 bath on almost 1/3
acral Family ream and relied
petto. Hug* oak treesl S3.M0

The Prudential &amp;
F lo rid a R ia it y
MART TO S U L TOUR HOME?
I am looking tor nice homos to
match with buyers.

CM fc k C fO fT , REALTOR

323-5774

II

(4*7) Oil n e r 334)3**

THIS W E E K S

m ImIm1w
W BAW SAil

SU M M IB SALEII Fantastic,
huge, brand nama consign­
ment shop. Designer sample*,
plus a great selection ol
c lo lh ln g from top notch
ladletl OOINO ONCE/OOING
T W IC E C O N S IG N M E N T .
Prevldenc* P'ete. Providence
Blvd.. Deltona. *40 3)4* OPEN
7 Day* A W IB K I

From IAM-1PM. Saturday.
Aug. 14th only. Mlsc. Item*.
SO* Escambia Or. Sanford

CARAfiESALE
Saturday. 0 4. 114 Winding
RldgaPr. IHIddenLake)

CARAfiESALE
Last Week's Leftovers reduced t
Dining or gam* fable 170.
port. d.w. S3), mower 140.
convoct. oven 110. Good cond.
children'* clothes 1)4 **..
toys. mlsc. Sit. I - ). I l l
JUSTIN WAY. SANFORD

TARO SALE
t i l l Chase Ave, Sanlord. Sat­
urday and Sunday. f-S.
Children's clothe* end toys,
m aternity clothes, tables,
lamps, bookshell, bed. met
tress, doorknob set* and
deadbolts.
__________

CARAfiESALE

RENT TO ONN OR ASSUME
No Quellfyl Low down. Total
cost 1570/mo. Sanford. 3-3
bdrm*. All now wiring, roof,
c o r p t l . p a in t , m in is ,
wavher/dryer. Lg. fenced yd.
shed, playhouse. 4*47071
SANFORD. 1/3. Assumebl*
mortgage, pool, 141.000.
TWO BIDROOM. largo let.
_______ 133.000 3X17*7________
SPACIOUS POOL HOME) 4
bdrm. 3 bath split plan with
family room. 1 minute from
Lake Mery Bl. A great
value al....................... *73.ooo

ALMOST NO CLOSING COSTS
GOVERNMENTHOMES
NO GIMMICKS
Special Buying Incentives Now
MUST QUALIFY
CaRMtePtERff

Rain or Shine I Ml S. Park
Ave. Sat. Onlyl 7:30-tPM.
FRANK * LORI'S New R Used I
1103 S. French Ave. Thrift
Mere, Clip this ed for l t » ONI

**.o*0 DOWN AND ASSUME! 3
bdrm 1 balh In Brynhaven.
Spilt plan with cathedral cell­
ing! 1 car garage w/operwr.
Below market a l.......... M*.f**
Call Janet MansHeld
Day*. 333-1134 Eves. 33) 7371
AA Carnes, lac.

C e n tu i^ ,

TARO SALE
1)1 CLOSITER COVE. Cas
selberry. ott ol 434. oft ot
Tlm berlan*. (L k . Hodges
Estates.) tot. 34th. 7 7. Lot* ot
E v e r y th in g ! F urn .. T V .
wash/dryer. clothes, etc. Good
prices, no lunfc. 4*44*14______

GOOOIAAfiAlHSt
Appliances! Lota of evtry
thing! Set. k Sun. 7:347 IM
C L IA R L A K I CR. MIDDEN
_________________
LAKE.

2 FAMILY SALE!!

LA M E 6AAA6E SALE
Frl. L Sat I f . New bunk
beds, old gleuwero t tools,
too many Items to lilt! Osn'l
Miss this On*I 10* WEKIVA
PARK DR. Oil ol Hwy 44
follow the signs._____________

Plnecrest area. Ott ot Airport
Blvd 111 W. COLEMAN CR.
Toys, clothes, mlsc.
also Ig.
womens si. tot. AT___________

2 FAMILY SALE
Lots of goodlesl Sat. 13.
301 VIHL1NBO.

2 FAMILY SALE

LEFTOVERS!
B **ch Crusler Blk* 1100,
clothing, dishes, ate.
Sat
Only. 3141S. Park. Santard.

RltMMME SALE

■ 3 Sat. Onlyl Childrens
c l o t h e s , o l e . 1701
MELLONVILLE A V I.

3 FAMILY TARO SALE

Church of tho /Uiwuclitiofl
1*3* Mentgemery Rd. Alta
monte Springs. Sat 1/34.
■AM 3PM. Benefits: Abused
Children.___________________

TAAOSALE
33* BRISTOL CIR. tot. 44.

Dressers, rocker plus many
other Items Saturday. 1 3 404
P in * Dr. Sanford (N ear
Mayfair Oott Course)________

110 s. scon AVE.
Sat. A Sun 1 1. Bridesmaid
dressa*. tool*, household k
mlsc. Items I

121— Condominium
______ Rtntals
NIDOKN LAKES
7 bdrm I
bath. 1)1) par month plus U00
security d e p o s ltm 0)14
NORTH LAKE VILLAOE 17 *3
end Lk. Mary Bl. 1 bdrm. 1
bam, fireplaca. pool, Nauiliu*.
UM/mo043 11130 3301*1)

'Down

PINE R IM E CUM!
1 bdrm. 3 bam. washar/dryer.
l)l)/m o. S E C M. Inc., Lk
^ M l £ s m * iB «k * r i 4 ) 7 ) M ^

125-For Lbbsb
* HISTORIC 1 BEDBOOM r
On PARK on PARK
*37) month
COUNTRY, 1 BDRM-1 ACRES
U ** month.
Century It CMedl Rtelly
1141111___________

ZH-urry ZJn JFor ZDest Selection!

r

1991JkCCLAIMS

L £ fe «a

127-OHict Rtntali

1305 W. 25lh St. Sanford • 322-2000

TOTAL
MOVE-IN

CORNER 17/n cad 417 Office
bldg. Greet for ell types ol
business. 133 14)7/11144* 1454
TWO 1.000 sq. tt wilts, can be
used together One unit, )00
sq It
Call I X 13*7

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:30 - 5:30 •Sat. 10 •S
Wanagrt byAngele Gordon Property Wonagmonl

POOL. TENNIS COURT,
VOLLEYBALL COURT
EACH APARTMENT INCLUDES

SPACIOUS SINGLE FAMILY

•New Cerpebng-New Appliances includ­
ing Refrigefany. Rwige, Dishwasher, Gar­
bage Disposal •Waiha A Oryari mstaled
m unit* lor an addkorval monthly la* •24
hour emergency maintenance service.

H
O
M
E
S
WITH HOMESITE

330-5204
0ountnty

THE GREAT AMERICAN
INVESTMENT

a p a r tm e n ts

INCLUDED
P r io o d fr o m o n ly

CHECK OUT THESE LOW PAYMENT CARS'
^^H EyROLETCAVAUERSHOR 20a44S

JtlQ Q *

|2MDn APR U 7 S X Q 1122 Ufa s 80 moe dm Ui.uq title tie **
I BO P O M T 1 A C S U N B I R O 4 D R .

1FhM^Lm M , Ump M&lt;m

BO DODGE SHADOW

m o of a h l e . arcN on mcht

190 POMTIAC GRAND AM LE

1 u r i m t« tiHrw« k M WMMS
202439
11250 On APR t2,75% 51170 Mo i BO mos plui Ui. ug, too i tees

Check us

90 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS CtERA

TH C n « P i PS, Pi. Ar &lt; u fu Siwm C*m
206386
&gt;250 On APR 12.75% Q I I I I Ma ■ 80 mo* plus Ui tag, btte 1 tees

Sanlord Landing •1800 Wast First Street
Sanford, FI 32771

20301

91 TOYOTA COROLLA DX
AVW.Ar PS PB W U I V m

D a te

fld R s s s s s r-fe a

T IM B E R

J mc r e s

A Maronda Homes Community
Howland Blvd m Deltona, east of 1-4

EflU8u s U ^ M a J f i D l - ' _________________

Call 3216220for details!

Eistbrook OoLand Astoria Or
Dtltona Models De tena Bud
Doltona Model** Doy'e Rj
Timbdrcrtst Howland Bud

(904)
(407)
(407)
(904)

736-7210
574-6634
668-0924
532-0124

CRC 024C222
0^ &gt; L l : : * ) i

Yijiovi A»e Qidotje Lil| i i04i * ’ I e'UOO

IT

11A

|S2S0 On APR 12 75% 9 8140 kto 1 90 mos pij* m, teg, title S '»*)
I M. Power tWemg P i l l Beg. AMf U tlsraa
224755
S 2 » 0 APR 12 75% 9 1142 Mo i BO mos pus m . leg, m l lees

TAXI 17*3 ML IMPORT UVD. TUAN WEST

JJTT

222406

S2S0 Dn APR 12 75% P IH7 Lb « 60 mos pus U», lag. Mi* 8 iwn

91 TOYOTA CAMRY DX

‘6499V142J
*7699* *170ml
*8199**181mI
w r . w .

752283

AvkwwfK. PS. PB Due
S2MDn APR 12 75%»&gt;260Ma « 80mos pimtsi.lag, W e4

ja r Sales Outlet
AVIS
The Smart Place To Buy.
J.R. Lewis
Doug McCord
Troy Stevchela

Steve Williams
Charles Smith

5575 S. Hwy. 17-92. Cetoelberry. Florida
Hours Uon.-SaL P • P « Sun. 17 • 5

331-3S37

�/
9

9

9

* 9

9

9

9

r

9

101 - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday. August 23. 1991

153— AcreageLot»/Sale

141— Homes for Sale
n i u AHi • Ml IM&gt;
V

w

lU j

NEAR MAYFAIR Coll course,
nicely wooded 100X143 SI4.500
Owner/Re4ltor.......... 1217171
O C A LA N A T 'L F O R E S T .
Weeded letil 15.130 each, no
money down I 571.41 monthly.
_________1 100112 5024_________
GUARTIR ACRE Zoned OC 2
on corner Good traffic vlaw
from US 17 12 Now te5 000
Stentfrom Realty 372 2421
141 ACRES All or part, custom
pond*, fence Will finance.
near Poland.............. 341 3700

;

BONO MONEY, FHA-VA
r Financing
Government Repo* 4 A mime
No Qualify Home* in Semi
nola/Oranga/Volusla/Laka
Countie*.

SMNMD4U USS THM
53.000 DOWN
•1/1 • fireplace, new paint and
carpet, fenced yard.....Ut.fOO
•1/1V*. 1.700 to ft. wim hot tub.
appliance*, fireplace 153.100
• 3/1W *pllt plan, appliance*,
parage, fenced yard. 545.*00
• 1/t ■ renovatedl New carpel,
paint, roof, carport, fenced
yard............................la f .100
• 1/1 • on 1/1 acre! New paint,
fplc, family, living and dining
room*. Privacy fence. 174.500

2 1/2 ACHES
Zoned county A t Already
split Into 2 building sites.
Close lo town B E T T E R
NURRYI Priced to sell at
513.500

CAUIAITREAITY
322 7451
5 ACRES. RIVER OAKS. OS­
TEEN • SI John’s access
Restricted Asking 130.100
407 374 2411

UKE MANY. liSS THAN
13.000 DOWN
• 1/1 renovated, new carpet,
paint, appliance*, fenced
yard............................153.100
• 1/t • renovated, new carpet,
paint ap p lian ce*, fenced
yard ........................WMQO
‘ **I7.M* dawn, atiume no estalify on ttil* two *tory V V j with
appliance*, and fireplace.
Fenced yard with pool) 5*4.300

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/ Salt
W ATE R FR O NT CONDOI 2
BDRM. 2 BATH. 573.5001
Motivated seller I Call Drenda
Ownby Real Estate 104 427 7453
W IN T E R I P R I N O S . The
Highlands. 2 bdrm Iv /dining
rm 34 X 13 I I . Ig tern porch,
fully equip kit. Tennis, peel
all amenities. Owner will II
nance 553.500 ...........131 4711

PLUS
OW NER FINANCING
Plnecrett. 1/2, living, dining,
family rm., *ecurity lyttem.
fenced yard.. .W2.100
DELTONA - 2/2 on 1 acre. »cr
porch, carport. 113.100
-1

&lt;.

S

w.

157— Mobil#
Homes / Salt
DOUBLEWIDE
Need* work
Quiet neighborhood Partially
furnished, ha* wathar/dryer.
54 000OBO.............. 441 0201

’ •&lt; 1 .H ilB N I
.' J I ' U ' ►
t . 1

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

215-Boats and
Accessories

223— Miscellaneous

231— Cars

• BUNKB1PSSH 323 1043
• CAMPER RIFRIOERATOR •
Good condition, 533 331 3331

M ADVENTURE 25 ft. Pontoon
Party boat, tun deck, fully
enclosed, heed, galley, sleep*
3. 10 H P M e rc
51.100
• 13 507 3527

TWO SS OAL. Aquarium*, com
p lat* with stand, hoods,
filter*, gravel etc Eat. Ig
fish MM for all 324 0W4
• X OALLON hot water heater
Scotty's brand Work*. 720
required 533 323 5503

* PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION e
EVERY TUES. A FBI. 7:30 PM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. 12, Daytona Beach
_________ 104-233 5211_________

1t3— Television/
Radio/Stereo
• 11" color TV In excellent
condition St00 Cell 13!02M.

SANFOBD AREA MOBILE
HOME COMMUNITY

Call CXarlafte/ Emarten Realty

24X40
2/2. a ll e le c t r ic .
• scellent location, many
e ifra t......................... 514.000

____________174-1533___________

BATEMAN REALTY

555 A turnteem Can*.. Newspaper
Non-Ferre** Metal*......... Ota**
KOKOMO..................... 323-1150

183— Computers

222-Musical
Merchandise

• C OM PUTER P A C R A G I
Commodore 44 keyboard, disk
drive. Okidata 120 Printer*.
5100 ........................ 221-3101

TM! UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
eicept tai. tag. title, etc
I1B7 CHIVY SPECTRUM 4
door. auto, air, power steer
log. stereo! Only 511110 per
month! (42 month* Q t*.*%
A P R )........... Call Mr. Payne
Courtesy Uted Car*. 222 2123

223— Miscellaneous ~

• B IK I. Gl'l*. IB" Pink B Aqua
color. Gr- at Condition I Asking
535............................322 0557
• EXERCISE BIKE. Sear*.
Ergometer. Eic. Condition!1
540 222 3544_________________
POLICE ACADEMY. Collector,
shooter, palnf gunner or ad
venturer. Call FEBA for tom*
of the belt price* around I
41715A14M

•A T A F r"u !r"t*m *"7 yt»*m . 40
oome* 52S323 1114___________
• BABY P L A Y YAR D . I I "
w ,padded rail*. Easy to move
while set up and easy fold to
carry. Comet with folding
stroller Both for 533 373 4311 »
• CHINA. NORITAKE.
' ’Tahoe” pattern 3 pc. Com
pleter tat 510. Never used!
322 33*7______________________

119— Office Supplies
/ Equipment

• OAS LAWN E D O IR . 3 HP
Briggs A Stratton, rebuilt
e n g i n e . N e w t un e up
Goodwneel*. Esc. shape 1100
Firm. 505 Catalina Dr. San
ford. 322 043B________________
• OLASS COLLECTION Imita­
tion milk and carnival glass,
atiortedcolor* 5100 take* all
___________ 33) 5050___________
• LADI ES BRID AL Set. .04
carat round diamond 14K
yellow gold Si J's. 5100
321 2453_____________________
• SCWINO MACHINE
Ken
more. In case Very good
condition 550 372 3134_________
• STAMP COLLECTION, begun
In 1127. Foreign A US 510 For
end appointment phono
___________ 322 5130___________
TWO QUEEN ANNE Chair*.
Ethan Allan. Dk. cherry,
mauve strip* w/blu* A pink
flowers 322 5551 Alter 5 JO

• E L E C T R I C T y p e w rite r.
Smith Corona. Priced to Sell)
*30 ......................... 323 5413

193— Lawn A Garden
■UNTON Commercial
34 " LIKE NEWI 51400 Firm
327 1747 or 131 1104 aik lor
Doug_______________________
• LAW N MOWER. 31" cut
E xcellent Condition! 541
322 5744_____________________
5 HP SNAPPER TILLER. Like
new 5200 3431 Myrtle Ave,
Sanlord

201— Horsts
e e H A Y FOR SALEI a • 53.71
bale. 523 rail. FENCE bM«. A
Reealrl 122 2111 evet

AUTOMOBILES
Bad credit ok H i t models
Guaranteed approval No
down payment 1 100 713 1254
24 hr*
_____

MUST SILL!
• 1157 Mercury Cougar 5*00
571 mo X 12months
No money down nested

• 1153 Plyn oult Reliant {400

m

M M K

r

• 1*01Cadillac DeVllleaDr.
53000
5100 mo X 3* months
No money down needed

Cars may be seen at
Sundance Auto Sales

11715. Hwy 17-12

898-2222
CASH FOR YOUR CARI Quail
ty Motorcars. Inc . 1400 N
Hwy 17 17................ 322 75*5

otOoBary
WC WEIONANDPAVt
Top 55 for |unk.
Cars A Trucks.

239— Motercydes
and Bikes
• MOTORCYCLE TRAtLKR.
Excellent condition! Costs
5100. Selling 5100 Cash only!
1354054____________________
( I HONDA CB7S4 F. Real nlcal
Must ta* to believe! 5100 OBO

MtOJjaaffar^PM^^^^^

241— Recreatienal
Vehicles/Campers

two WELLS CAROO Trailer.
Enclosed 5' X I 'e . Nosec on*,
roof vent, and extras! 51150
W4-jaj-47J4ar MTa-aaiJ

NOMAD TRAILER. 21 ft t ill
Ideal travel or live ini Root
air. TV. tleept 4. Extra nlcal
Only 51300................123 7571
RV RENTAL left. 5143 mo Incl
water, fewer A garbage
Park Ave. Mean* Pk. 122-2541

LOAN A RANGER RIDES AGAIN

MINCER MOTORS
Quality Used Cars &amp; Trucks
GOOD CREDIT! BAD CREDIT!
NO CREDIT! BAKRUTPCY!

• CAMPER CAP. 11X72, tor
longbed pick up In good
shape, with lock and key
White 515 134 2313 or 372 4142.
eves______________________ __
a FORD FMX Transmission
E ic Condition J in 322 4430
___________ Days I 3___________
GOOD USED TIRES All sites
Irom 55 and up Mounting also
available Mon Frl. 15 t i l l
Celery Ave. Sanlord__________
• TRUCK BED LINER for 1117
to 1157 Ford Ranger 350
___________ 371 1713__________
'41 • '45 CHEVY II post parts,
glass, sheet metal, interior,
bumper Going last, call now!
330 1310

a i m It Ft. Bayllner
10 HP tWO Nl!**nengine
13700
Sin mo X 41 months
No money down needed

Ca

237— Tractors and
Trailers

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories

550 mo X 12 months
No money down needed

Wanted

t i l l JEEP O R A N O
WAGONEER 4 wheel drive.
VI. lull power and air. Locally
owned. 1 owner Very very
clean Sarvlc* records avail
able I4.W3 ........ Call 377 4357
SELL OR TRAOEI 77 FORD
PICKUP, standard. 2tl sail
S7S00 or trad* tor automatic
van or truck...........
322 1533
'74 FORD F1J5
Runs good,
looks good U lJorb ett otter
171 4434

NO MONEY DOWN
eicept ta*. tag. title, etc
) * « HYUNDAI 4 door. auto,
air. stereo, power steering,
low miles! ONLY 512155 per
month (4t months u 111%
A P R )............. Call Mr Payne
Courtesy Uted Cars. 221 7171
1117 VOLK5WAOON BUO
Good shape Green, no rust
___________ 323 4011___________
1171 VW Rabbit. I 4 engine Fuel
ln|ect*d. runs, good work carl
*400 OBO
_______ 121 t i l l
tit* TEMPO good rubber, new
battery, no rust, runs good
*7 o n ...................... 371 n76
•11 CAOILLAC SEDAN OE
VILLE
4 door. 5711 or best
otter
__________
i l l 4434
55 BUICK Skyhawk 47 (XX) ml
AC. pwr brakes steering,
auto Must salt 12400 OBO
373 1537a lt e r ]______________
54 MAZDA B71M
S speed
AM/FM Stereo. AC Good
Condition! 51415 541 013*

* • Oen* Bark* Avt* late* • a
Low at 5177 down! Low pay
menu I a a a a a a #324-1457

2 3 8 - V e h ic le s

MAUTO SALVAGE

S $

TARE UP PAYMENTS

231-Cars

BLOND guild acoustic guitar
model G37 with hard shell
^ • s r A s k ln jU T ja illJ O ^

117— Sporting Poods

MIDSUMMER SPECIALS
A I I U M A R L E NO Q U A L I­
F Y IN G Lakatront 1 bdrm 2
bath, clota to tchool*.

219— Wanted to Buy

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans

FliiOUCIUNGfWMthoryhnhm

407/321-2993
407/ 321-1450

24X43 1/2 split. Nice family
homa ..................... 114 000

Lie. Real Eitate Broker
21*0 Sanford Ave.

321-0750............ 3212257

14X14 - 21. gai and alectrlc
home ........................ 31.500

VI I X H

Mil)

I4XS2 - 2/1 spilt. 1110 all electric
home......................... 513.500

til

k M INN I S
Ml M » S | \ I |

Broker, 313 1140/131-3703
SAVE t ill NEW 110! HOMES!
WHY PAY RETAIL? 14X70.
11.000. 24X70.110.000 141-1701
YOU MOVE. 12 X 44 7 bdrm
furnished. Debary. 12500
441 4101 or 333 1717___________
II SKYLINE MOBILE home. 24
^ 40 3 bdrm 2 bath OSTEEN
area mutt bt moved I 117.000
1 310 7454____________________

STENSTROM
REALTY, I NC.
Wfc list and sell
more property than
anyone in the Greater
Saniord/Lake Mary area.

160— Business
For Sale

WILSON PLACE 4/1 • POOL
Thl* home'* xtra* are endle**
Don't buy anything before you
tee th ill................... t i n 300

QUALITY LAWN Maintenance
Account! 521.000 plus per
y e a r ) S a c r if ic e tIOOOl
Equipmente»tra 371 0UJ9

SUPER COUNTRY 4/3 PLACE
On 2.11 acre* Space, horiet.
barn, tack rm Near 14.
tc h o o l* , th op p in g Only
1144.100

•2 2 ktar. 125 hocsapoou r, SOHC 1B-vatva angina with Multi-po&gt;ni Programmed Fuel Injection

Rtctntly Rinovitid.
Good rental hittory 542.500
St John t Really. 407 377 4111
2 BDRM. 1 BATH, plui 2 bdrm.
2 bath Near 21th St Income
1900 515.000 141 4547 alter 4

HIDDEN LAKE SPLIT]/!
Super ttarter/retiree on big
lot Rear yard like a park On
cu ld etac...............
549.900

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

ORANGE CITY 3/1
Sprlnghollow Big lot. quiet
area New water heater and
fridge Now only ...... 149.100
.DELTONA LAKES 3/7
You'll never forgive yourtell
If you lall to tee thi* immacu
late home
1114.100
Beautiful 2/1&gt; i Townhome
Atsume no qualify Uptcale
com m unity Tw o m atter
tuitei Super location! 1*9.900

CAU ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720
11*5 Park Dr.. Sanford
M l W. Lake Mary Bl . Lk. Mary

•In Our 35th Year*
144— Commercial
Property / Sale
112 S. SANFORD AVE Otlice
building Approa 2.000 tq It
Covered parking Opponte
Chamber ol Commerce bldg
By owner. 590 000 407 143 3400
or I (00 I f ] 3400

COUCH. LOVE5EAT. CHAIR.
1125 tor Ihetet 321 4472
________ evet 220 5292_________
DINETTE SET with leal 4
swivel chairt A I Condition'
HOP Call alter 7 373 4144
ODISHW ASHER
M a y ta g
brown, under cabinet, built In.
Workt excellent 540 OBO
317 4114_____________________
DRYER/WA3HER Color con
tole TV. 11 In remote color
TV 375 150 499 1177__________
OLARGE TABLE LAM P 40
tall, complete with nice thade
315
323 1090
LARRY'S MART. 215 Sanford
Ave New Uted turn A appi
Buy/Sell/Trade
1714111.
eOUTDOOR CLOTHES LINE
tingle pole (umbrella type)
tquare New itlll In boi 520
377 9117_____________________
REFRIGERATOR. GE Ig ca
p a d ty . Ir o t t le t t
g la tt
thelvet Beige ) yrt old 5450
OBO 774 4405 alter 5PM
• ROCKING CHAIR Sol d oak
with country ttyle charm |&gt;00
___________ 127 M l*__________
#TV. ZENITH 19 in Color.
ttand 5100 or b elt otter
722 4944
OWA5HER. Otbton Heavy
duty Like new Runt great! A
bargalnatSIS 771 7174_______
WA T E R B E O Queen t u e
w a v e l e t ! .
S!7S
Entertainment center 545
ceiling Ijn 525 Excellent
condition Call 123 1024

**

»5 Speed
&gt;Air Conditioning
12.0 Liter 16 Valve
&gt;4 Wheel Disc
Brakes

VALUE BUY
AUTO. AC
LOW MILES

3400 N. Hwy. 17-92
LONGW OOD

Sal 9 5

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CONVERTIBLE
AUTO. STEREO
AC. SUMMER
IS HERE

LOW MILES
AUTO. WHITE
PERFECT

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M* J 6

322-7585

* 1 3 ,3 6 7

Body Side
Molding
Rear W in­
dow Delrost
■Tinted G lass

4 Speed
Air Conditioning
1.5 Liter 16 Valve
Double Wishbone
Suspension

Air Conditioning
AM/FM C a ss.
Stereo
5 Speed Trans.

^

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91 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
AUTO . AC RED .
STEREO LIKE
NEW. SAVE SSS

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______

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AUTO. AIR.
STEREO 4 DR
LIKE NEW

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VERY CLEAN
RUNS GREAT

f lO S
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BEST

■Tilt Wheel
1Full Wheel Covers
Front Reclining
Bucket Seats
^

89 HONDA CIVIC DX
COLD AC.
l o w m iles

MUST SEE

.

_

LOADED AC
STEREO CASS
MUCH MORE

88 CHEVY ASTRO VAN

88 HONDA ACCORD

90 HONDA CIVIC LX
AUTO AC POWER WINDOWS
STEREO CASS
LOW MILES

A Q C
1 l/ W "

BRYAN

&gt; IO K
# * ? 7 J

AUTO AC
CRUISE CONTROL
LOW MILES

A A C
V 7 J

$ Q C Q C
7 ^ 7 ^

90 FORD MUSTANG GT
BuACK PACKAGE
5 SPD ONLY 13K
MILES m u s t s e e
P R iC E D T O S E L L

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______

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AUTO, A C
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86 HONDA ACCORD

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/ 4 7 J

SW IV A L B U C K E T S
PO W ER EQ U IP. S Q
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7

79 M ERCEDES 240 D
GARAGE

88 VW J E T T A

SELECTION OF CLEAN, D EPEN D A B LE. P R E ­
O W N ED CARS AND TR U C K S COM E IN AND SEE

N

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11 , 7 7 J

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AUTO.
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CURlSE CONTROL

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t r i « ita lU »w •

$ 0 4 Q ^
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89 CHEVY BLAZER
AUTO A C
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$070&gt;%
/ 7 J

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2 05 LITRE AIR
SUNROOF UKE
NEW POWER $ 1 Jk
PACKAGE

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Hwy. 17-92, SANFORD
2913 Orlando Drive
323-6100 SANFORD
831-1660 ORLANDO

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QUALITY USED CAR SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK

Some Cars As Little As

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Per
Month

1991 ACCORD 4 DR.

1991 CIVIC 3 DR.

* 1 4 .9 4 9

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Quality Motor Cars

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Month

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, P R ELU D E S.I.

BUY • SELL • TRADE

82 Escort
80 Concord
80 Caprice Wgn.
78 Monte Carlo
78 Fairmont Wgn.
78 Caprice
78 Impala

• S-Sprro overdrive manual transmisson • 4-speed automatic transmission with alactroncally
controlled lookup torcue convener (avaiace) • DouCe wishbone Iron suspanaion • From
itab^zer bar • Mum Control douce wrshoon# rear suspanaion • Gas pressurized rear shock
absorbers • Rack and pmon steering (power-assisted when ordered with avwlabia automate
trantmisaon) • Power-united, vends ted front disc,'rear drum brakes • Utra-akm halogen
headlights • Timed glass • 2 pom motorized front seal bait* win manual lap baits • Ctoth
upholstery • Roar window defroster • Remote fuel filler door releata • Remote frunk release •
Child safatyseat anchors &gt;Child proof rear door locks •Fold-down raar saatback with lock.

window detrotter wth timer- Roar seat heater duct* •Remote trunk reNata wuh lock •Remote
fuel frier door release with be* •155/70 R1457S Brat •Multi-reflector halogen haadkghu

W R O U G H T
I R O N
FURNITURE. Table chairt.
tola Like new 721 4947
___

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Tile fplc.. pool tennu. lake
access Leave purchate avail
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531100

•t 5 liter. 16-valve. 92 horsepower SOUC engine with QuaI-Point Programmed Fuel Infection

• 5-speed automasc transmission with dual mode se'ector and lockup torque converter
(ava-iabi*) •Doubt wishbone from and rear suspension - Front stabilizer bar -Vanable-atust
power rack-and-pinion Hearing • power-assisted, vanDialed from 0 so rear drum brakes •
Remote-operated tail- Pda mrror - Full wheat covers • T mtadglus • Fu« doth upholstery -2-poini
motorized from seat bait ty Siam with manual lap bait •Adiustabia steering column •Tachomater
•Quartz digital dock •Paaaangar-aaiiit handiat •Rear seat haad restraints •Eloctnc rear

163— D up lex Tor S a le

SANFORO PLACE 1/2
E itr a large lanced yard,
tcreen ed patio, o v e rtile d
g a r a g e w / o p e n ert Now
117.100

87 Reliant Wgn.
86 Celebrity
85 Skylark
85 Ciera
84 Ranger P/U
83 Chrysler
82 Datsun

1991 C IV IC 4 DR

1 9 9 1 A C C O R D 4 D R.

SAIFS Won Sal * 3 0 5 - Open s^n lb 7
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                    <text>FR ID A Y

NEWS DIGEST
□ U liu r t

TV, wgtktvtd fluid#
The week's television listing. Including a
sports calendar, plus a compilation of events
and activities in and around the Sanford and
Lake Mary areas.

SANFORD — A Ulpleheader will highlight the
Sanford Recreation Department's first Junior
and Senior Girls Slowpitch Softball League
awards ceremony on July 20 at Ft. Mellon

War mamorabilla display*!
For the first time, a portion of Sanford resident
Bud T obin's extensive collection of war
memorabilia la on display to the public at the
Seminole County Historical Museum.

Freedom of txprflision wins
MIAMI BEACH — Freedom of expression won
the day over grammatical correctness at a
national gathering of teachers Thursday.
A t-shirt that flippantly read, "I Be A
Teacher." prompted a 20-mlnute floor debate at
the National Education Association's annual
convention. The 8.100 teacher delegates finally
voted resoundingly for the freedom to be
ungrammatical — even when the Joke is aimed
at their own profession.
During discussion of a proposal to ban Hems
promoting alcohol, tobacco or drug use at NEA
convention exhibit booths. Carol Haack. an
English teacher from Appleton. Wis.. offered an
amendment to ban the sale of any "deliberately
ungrammatical" product.
"As a teacher of English and a professional,
anything that is connected with us should be
correct." she said.
But several teachers pointed out the Irony of
the NEA considering a motion to restrict
freedom of expression on the very day It was
celebrating the bicentci ntal of the Bill of Rights.
One English teacner said simply: "I don't
want no such motion passed."

Man bltaa 21 doflt
NEW YORK — A 23-year-old engineer gobbled
21 hot dogs to break a record set In 1959 —and
said he had room for more.
Frank Dellarosa matched the record of 17.5
hot dogs and buns eaten at Nathan's annual
frankfurter-eating contest at Coney Island. Then
he ate three and a half more.
The 6-feet-2. 270-pound. Dellarosa ac­
complished the feat In 12 minutes Thursday.
"I think If I'd been sitting down. I could have
eaten a couple more." he said.
"1 just started banging them down." he said.

Helicopter emergency
SANFORD — Traffic w as rerouted from
Highway 17-92 near 9th Street shortly after 10
a.m. this morning.
The roadway was cleared to allow an
emergency rescue helicopter to land.
According to Initial reports from the Sanford
Police Department, an elderly man. Identified as
George Seymour. 82. of Sanford, was apparently
struck by a motor vehicle.
The Incident occurred at 10:10 this morning,
almost In front of the police station.
The resctie helicopter from the Orlando Re­
gional Medical Center waa called to airlift

Sanford’s ‘People’ burst with pride
Capital parade
watchers hoot
captured tank

From staff and wire reports

INDBX
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7B-10B Her*seep*.. ...........BS
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Dear Ahhy.......
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More heal, humidity
Partly cloudy with
the high in the low to
mid 90s and a south­
erly wind at lOmph.

Partly
Cloudy

V
SANFORD — Thousands of people
turned out last night for the Second
annual People's Fireworks Extrav­
aganza at Ft. Mellon Park along the
shores of Lake Monroe.
Flag-waving men. women and
children lined Seminole Boulevard
and crowded Into Ft. Mellon Park to •
cheer the bombs bursting In air.
“There were a lot of people out
there having a blast.” said Lt. Mike
Rotundo of the Sanford police de­
partment.
The flrewarks ended a day-long
aeries of activities at the lakefront.
Including a barbecue and an an­
tique car show.
The People’s Fireworks Extrava­
ganza. organized by Steve Alford of
Sanford, was a celebration for the
Fourth of July which was financed
by private donations from the
community.
The the city decided not to
finance Independence Day celebra­
tions last year. Alford began lo look
for community support for the
project.
While many spectators liked the
display, some were less favorable in
their assessment of the 17-minutc
show.
The intimate, community a t­
m o sp h ere of th e c e le b ra tio n
exemplified what promoters say
Sanford is all about.
“I like that we all pulled together
to get fireworks here.' said Lcnora
Little of Sanford. “I would not have
wanted to drive all the way to
Orlando to sec a show. It wusn't the

TALLAHASSEE — Thousands of
p e o p le tu r n e d o u t to se e a
pockmarked Iraqi tank paraded
through the streets of Florida's
capital on the Fourth of July.
The tank, which was hauled on a
flatbed truck, was greeted with
clapping and hooting. Gov. Lawton
Chiles said he believed it was the
first display of captured Iraqi
hardware In the United States.
An estimated 8.000 people turned
out for the event, which organizers
said was Florida's biggest military
parade ever with 86 military units.
The daylong "Freedom Festival"
began Thursday morning with a
so lem n h o u r-lo n g c e re m o n y
honoring th e F lo rid ia n s who
became casualties In the Persian
Gulf war.
More than two dozen relatives of
Desert Storm soldiers killed or
wounded In action sat in front of a
wall of yellow ribbons as they
listened to speeches, songs and a
gun salute. A crowd of about 300
people stood or sat on bleachers
nearby.
The speeches focused on the
sacrifices made by Florida troops
during the Persian Gulf war but
mention was also made of Vietnam.
Korea and the two World Wars.
"Today we honor those who gave
□Be* Capital. Page BA

□See Pride. Page BA

Two tenants may occupy deserted plaza
SANFORD — The first tenants to
occupy the Zayre's Plaza on U.S.
Highway 17-92 In more than a year
could move in a week or so.
Members of the Seminole County
Expressway Authority, which now
owns the shopping center, approved

Demolition
date is still
unsettled
There's a lot of good news stories in Longwood. Read them in a special supplement to the
Sanford Herald Inside the newspaper this
coming Sunday.

Seymour to the hospital.
When EMS responded to the scene It was
determined that the victim Injuries were serious
enough to require transportation to a Level One
trauma center.
r ..
According to Batalllon Chief J.F. Poovey of the
Sanford Fire Department, thdre are only two such
centers In Centrid Florida.
Orlando Regional Medical Center In Orlando is
closer than the facility at Halifax Hospital In
Daytona Beach, so their Air Care Team was
dispatched to the scene.
A cco rd in g to W illiam C le m e n s , EMS
coordinator In Sanford, the victim was suffering
from multiple Injuries, including fractures to both

SANFORD - Despite the In­
tensified construction activity both
Inside and outside the building
officials still do not know for sure
when the old Sanford Middle School
will be tom down, but they expect It
to be within the next two or three
weeks, according to Dan Pelham,
the school's principal.
The facility on French Avenue,
constructed In 1926 with additions
made over the next three decades,
has. according to school district
officials, outlived its usefulness.
Once used as Sanford High
School, the campus bccanc a Junior
high school in I960 when the new
Seminole High School was built on
Ridgewood Avenue in Sanford.
A new- school was built last year
behind the old one and students will
begin using the new classrooms in
the fall.
"I think we're pretty much on
schedule here." Pelham said, noting
that the asbestos abatement project
currently underway at the school
should take another few weeks.
Pelham said that the majority of
the asbestos is located In under­
ground steam pipes installed in the
1920s and 1930s. Some air condl□Bee School. Page BA

two leases Tuesday. Habitat for
Humanity, which builds affordable
houses for low-income people, will
operate their Seminole County of­
fices and a fund-raising flea market
In the space formally occupied by
Walgreens.
Habitat will pay the authority
• 100 per month plus 10 percent of
the net proceeds of the market.

The Freedom Assembly Churrh
will hold services In the store-front
that formerly housed a 50‘s and
60‘s music nightclub. The church
w ill p a y $ 5 0 0 p e r m o n th .
Expressway director Gerald Urinton
said church officials told him they
will move from their current loca­
tion at 1515 W. Fifth St. in Sanford,
but retain that building for a

daycare center.
•
Urlnton said he expects both
Habitat and the church lu In-gin
preparing the spaces within a week.
He said c o n stru c tio n on the
expressway likely will not begin
before 1995.
The shopping center became the
property of the authority curlier this
□Bee Plasa, Pag* BA

Hobbled horse needs help
SANFORD - The Humane
Society of Seminole County Is
Issuing an urgent appeal for
money to provide care for a
crippled horse.
The society needs S 1.500 to
•3.000 for medical care and a
new stall for "Tommy Meadows."
a former racehorse that has a
broken leg. The society Is too
strapped for money to pay the
expenses, said society director
Diane Albers.
Albers said the horse's leg was
broken at the "fetlock." the Joint
above the left front hoof between
one and three years ago and was
never properly set. As a result,
th e h o o f h a s gro w n In a
backwards position, preventing
the horse from using it for mure
than support, said society animal
caretaker Carol Daniels.
Daniels said the horse doesn't
seem to experience pain from
using the leg. but it docs bother
him.
Albers said the society received
Tommy Meadows about three
weeks ago from a Sanford woman
when a caller reported a possible
abuse. Society Investigators
found the horse was well cared
for by the woman, who gave the

...................
iwuMm— h r— &gt;, vwKtu
Bridget ‘Bridie’ Schein with horse with malformed lower left leg.

�8A - Santo;' MeraM. Sanford, Florida - Friday. Ju4y V tftl

N E W S FROM T H E R E G I O N A N l ) A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

ETHNIC
ILLUSIO
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Schwarzkopf won’t run for Sonata
NEW YORK — Oen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf says he won't
run for the U.8. Senate in hla home state of Plortda next year,
but he haan’t ruled out a career in pottles down the read.
Schwarzkopf. 95. who led the Persian Gulf troop* and la
retiring from the military In August, told Parade magazine In
Ita July 7 Issue that he was "absolutely not** going to run for
the Senate. State Republicans had hoped the popular general
"I’m so busy right now that I'm haring trouble getting It all
together. And what I'm gonna probably try to do Is. when I
retire. Just kind of get my thoughts and my Ideas organized.”
he said.
* As for a future In politics. Schwarzkopf added:
"What I've said Is never say never. Because who knows? I
may be 70 years old and decide that Mfc la boring, and I might •
want to be the local district commissioner or something like
that."

WASHINGTON - Blacks are moving away
from the Rust Belt and toward the South and
West, census figures show.
The trend, reversing old migration patterns.
underscored by declinesi In black poput
j tat Ion
In the Chicago and Pittsburgh metropolitan i
from 1980 to 1900.
The Census Bureau tables from the 1990
national census, released Thursday, revealed that
Macks appear to be Joining whites in seeking the
economic opportunities and better living condi­
tions of the Sunbelt and Far West.
The Census Bureau also reported th a t the
H i s p a n i c p o p u l a t i o n In the
Lo*-Angele*-Rlver*ide-Anahelm area grew by
more than 2 million, or 73.4 percent, during the

Mayor bslonss to aM-wNts eounby dub
ST. P S re m S U M - Mayor D M d TMchcr. who &lt;na
strongly supported by black voters when he was elected In
March, belongs to an all-white country club.
The chib, which Fischer has belonged to for 30 years. Is
being sued by a former employee who said he loot his Job
because he married a woman with a black child. Lakewood
Country Chib Is also criticized by black activists who say It
does not accept black people as members.
Fischer said he thought It odd over the years that no blacks
belonged to the club but that when he asked about It he was
told that none had applied. He said he didn't puraue the matter
because he wanted to play golf, not get Involved In
membership politics.
‘‘You’re telling me that while I’m recreating there with my
family I should be crusading." Fischer said. "I d be thrown out
of the club. Where would! go?" he said.

Woman, 110, raeallt paat
OLDSMAR. Fla. (AP) - When a Central Florida woman who
was born on Independence Day In 1881 talks about the thing*
that she’s seen in her life, she doesn't talk about Inventions or
wars. She speaks of her babies.
Sitting on her daughter’s back porch Wednesday. Mary
Porter Brown noticed one of her great-great grandchildren
standing nearby and nodded toward him. smiling.
Mrs. Brown doesn't hear or see well and rarely
a murmur. But doesn't like to sit for long. She Ukcs to be up
and moving. Periodically she rearranges the furniture In her
daughter’s living room.
On the Fourth of July In 1881. the nation was in turmoil.
Two days earlier. President Games Oarfleid had been mortally
wounded by an assassin, a grim reminder of the murder of
Abraham Lincoln 18 years earlier.
Mrs. Brown raised seven children on a farm in the Panhandle
town of Sneads, washing clothes, cooking meals, making their
small wood-frame house Into a home.

WASHINGTON - Here la a
breakdown of the changes tn
black populations that took
place from 1080 to 1000 In 50
Census Bureau figures.
The first column lists the
metropolitan anas. The refer•nee to Orlando includes Seminole County.
♦HI ♦h i
%om
OY.-OsRLJ
ZtoMM UM.NI HA
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Play 4 takas off with a bang
TALLAHASSEE — Play 4 took ofT with a bang. Florida
Lottery officials said.
Sales for the newest on-line computer game were $759,900.
sold Ed George, spokesman for the Lottery Department.
Lottery officials had expected to sell only 8215.000 on the
game's first day Thursday.
"Soles really took ofT In the afternoon." George said. "We
were Just astonished."
Play 4 la a dally game In which players select four numbers
from O-O-O-O through 9-9-B-9 and buy a 81 ticket. If those
numbers match. In order, the numbers drawn that night, the
player wins 85.000.
The Lottery expects Play 4 to generate $1.5 million per week
In sales.______________________________________________
From Associated Proas reports

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Ta m p a councilm an’s suspension
sets off a scramble for his seat

hero said the u n ­
paid bills raised d o u b ts
about Jose Rated Fern
he

TAMPA — The suspension of a Tampa City
councilman following his Indictment on em­
bezzlement charges has set off a political
scramble for the vacant council seat.
Gov. Lawton Chiles removed Perry C. Harvey
Jr. from office Wednesday, a day after the
pioneering black politician and longshoremen's
boss was Indicted on federal embezzlement
charges. "Harvey la accused'of taking nearly
890.000 In Illegal salary, bonuses and Insurance
premiums from hla Pori of Tampa union local.
The suspension set off a (lurry of political
activity and speculation about who might seek
Harvey's seat while he stands trial.
The focus of attention was Rubin Padgett.

another leading black politician who aerved as a
Hillsborough County Commissioner until losing a
bid for re-election last year.
Tuesday's Indictment accuses Harvey and two
other union officials. Alexander Cattman and Lee
S. Jefferson, of Illegally giving themselves more
*llftn..»W/t5 ^ J 9..»Bla)rtea, bonuses, vacation pay
and other perquisites from union coffers.
A unlAto'attorrie)Qias*(£u3tered the*allegations.
' teylng -that all of the,.actions referred to In the
Indictment were approved by union members
and were legal.
A date for the special election for Harvey's seat
on the city council will be set within the next nine
days, said City Attorney Pam Akin. Balloting will
take place 60 to 90 days later.

Immigration chief faces bribe allegation
told a Cuban tele­
vision audience Tuesday
he biflknted the CIA
the FBI m wed as TV
Marti, the UJL goveromeiu'a
tetevteton acrvtca to Cuba,
went on the air teat
In­
filtrated U.S. Intelligence or
had access to any sensitive
Information at TV Marti.
"He
acoUeague
nth
at TV
Fernandez
aware of his
Marti and

MIAMI — A covert probe Into
whether a high-ranking Immi­
gration official allegedly ac­
cepted $5,000 bribes from illegal
aliens seeking green cards was
made public after an affidavit
was filed In court this week.
L u is Del Rio, director of
foreign operations for the Im­
m igration and Naturalization
Service since 1988. is accused In
the federal court papers of ac­
c ep tin g the paym ents from
C h i n e s e . C o lo m b ia n a n d
V en ezu elan n a tio n a ls. The
Miami Herald reported Thurs­
day.

The Justice Department had
hoped to gain access to the bank
accounts of Del Rio. who works
In Washington, w ithout his
knowledge. However, the af­
fidavit was filed Wednesday in
Miami In public court papers.
The affidavit said that If Del
Rio became aware of the In­
vestigation. he might "cease any
Illegal activity until suspicion
fades away, he will have the
opportunity lo falsify records,
and he may unduly influence
witnesses participating tn this
Investigation."
The Justice Department's Of­
fice of the Inspector General said
In the court document that a

confidential source claims Del
Rio look bribes from foreign
nationals In exchange for the
perm anent residency cards,
known as green cards. .The
Herald reported.
Del Rio. 51. oversees INS
refugee, asylum and parole of­
f ic e s . a s w ell a s fo re ig n
personnel matters.
The government hasn't filed
any charges. The Herald said the
allegations are detailed In an
affidavit by Special Agent Willie
Haynes of the Inspector gener­
al's office. The affidavit asks a
federal Judge to let the govern­
ment Inspect Del Rio's bank
records over the next 90 days.

—

MIAMI Hers art the winning
umbers selected Thursday In
the Florida Lottery:

Friday, Ju ly 5. 1W1
Vol S3. N o 270
aid m
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Caddyshack Craw arrastad
BOCA RATON — Five friends surrendered to federal agents
on charges that they posed as caddies to get Into fancy country
club, then stole golfers' credit cards and racked up more than
8ia0.0881i»W|*hr?*\&lt;*-"-«i to
Dubbed the - 'Caddyshaok Crew" by the Secret Service,
which Investigates major credit card fraud, the young men
were accused of hitting.country.dwba In .A ica Raton, anftl
northern Broward County during the past three years.
Agents who searched the men's homes said they found
waterbeds. CD players. 10-speed bicycles, surfboards,
sculptures — even a dog. all suspected stolen credit card
purchases.
Allan Fielder. 21; Brent Needleman. 20; Dror David Shtetf.
20; Yron Jerry Shtetf.-26; and Ivan Alex Chirlboga. 20 all
surrendered Wednesday after a grand Jury Indicted them the
day before.
Agents say the group's scheme was to pose as caddies or Just
use their "preppy looks" to get into upscale country dubs.

The biggest percentage chahges were In
Orlando. Fla., up 271.2 percent: Washington, up
136.7 percent: Las Vegas, up 138.3 percent;
Atlanta, up 135.8 percent: and West Palm Beach.
Fla., up 133.7 percent.
Los Angeles had th? largest Hispanic popula­
tion with 4 78 million, followed by New York with
2.78 million. Miami with 1.06 mUlton. San
Francisco with 970.000 and Chicago with
893.000.
While black population rose in some northern
cities, the rate of Increase was far less than
elsewhere and often was leas than the 13 percent
national Increase In the number of blacks during
the decade.
Black population rose 65.5 percent In Sacra­
mento. 52.5 percent In San Diego. 50.1 percent In
Mlaml-Ft. Lauderdale and 40 percent tn the,
Atlanta and Seattle-Tacoma i

TH E W EATHER
ga\.-n—a»aiii| was,
- -i:'J1. .i . ' . u r i t e a nL

j

Today...Partly cloudy with a
high tn the low to mid 90s.
Chance of showers 60 percent.
V t j m .----------1
r y * * ---------Wind south lOmph.
FRIDAY
THURSDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
SATURDAY
Tonight...Partly cloudy with a PtlyC ldy E l-78
MalyCldy S l-7 2 MalyCldy E I-72
PU yC ldy E l-72
P
tly
C
ld
y
EI-72
low In the low to mid 70s. Light
wind.
1 ■&gt;
Saturday...Partly cloudy with
afl rtP
STATISTICS
u high In the low to mid 90a.
Wind south at 10 mph. Chance
SATURDAY:
The high tem perature in
of rain 60 percenL
80LUNAR TABLE: Min. 12:45 Sanford Thursctay was 95 de­
J u ly 11 a.m.. 1:00 p.m.: MaJ. 6:50 a.m.. grees and the overnight low was
E x ten d ed fo recast...P artly
7:20 p.m. TIDES: Daytona 76 as reported by the University
cloudy Sunday through Tues­
Bench: highs. 5:50 a.m.. 5:11 of Florida Agricultural Research
day. Lows In the low to mid 70s
p.m.; lows. —a.m.. 11:13 p.m.;
and Education Center. Celery
and highs In the low to mid 90s.
New
Bmyraa
Beach:
nlghs.
Avenue.
FULL
J u ly S t 5:55 a.m .. 5:16 p.m.: lows,
Recorded rainfall for the
•••u.m .. 11:18 p.m .; C ocoa period,
at 9 a.m. Friday,
B each: highs. &amp;08 a.m.. 5:31 totalled ending
0
Inches
p.m.: lows.—a.m.. 11:33 p.m.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
CWy
M U M
Apalachicola
*2 75 7*
today
was 81 degrees and
Daytona Baach
0 77 O
Thursday's
overnight low was
FI. Laud Beach
M 75 9*
Fort Myvr *
76. as recorded by the National
*2 74 .Ira.
Daytona Beach: Waves are St. Angnstine to Jopltor Inlet
Geinetyllle
*2 74 00
Weather Service at the Orlando
noawuvM
•I 71 25
116 feet with a slight chop.
Tonight and Saturday: Wind International Airport.
Jecktonville
*4 75 U
Current Is to the north with a south 10 to 15 knots. Seas 2 to 4
Kay Wad
•I 7* Ira
Other Weather Service data:
water temperature of 84 degrees. feet. Bay and inland waters a
f l 75 *1
Miami
M 77 tra.
New Smyrna Beech: Wuves arc moderate chop. Scattered show­ t Thursday's high............... 91
Pvniacoia
to 74
[ Barometric prcaaora.SO.07
flat. Current Is lothe north, with ers and thunderstorms.
Sara tot a
to 74
L Relative Homldlty....88 pet
a water temperature of 83 de­
*1 74
Tampa
I Winds. 4444MMMM«SOUtll 9 Opb
V 77
grees.
Vcro Baach
•4 7*
Rainfall....................... SO la.
W Palm Baach
•I 75
□Today'* soaaat.....8:27 p.m.
[ Tomorrow's snarl**....6:33

© 2 ^ .0

T im p tfitv rn Indicate
M«h and avami0 il low.
City
HI La Pre
Atlanta
ft 75
Atlantic City
77 47
Baltlmara
77 79
Bo*tan
70 to
Chlcapo
94 0
Ctevatond
to to .09
Color ada Soa»
17 51 .14
Columbia. SC
• 1 72 I f *
Dal to* Fl Worts
*1 72
Danvor
*2 57
D n /Aointi
to 0
Datrott
to 4* .14
Indtonapoti*
U to «
Junaau
44 49
Kantat City
•0 *5
Laa Va*a*
112 7*
Loa Anotte*
79 0
Milwauaao
0 *5 .«
Mp4* SI Paul
79 42 to
Hatbvllte
•7 47 0
Now Of teant
*2 74 to
Nm York City
0 *1
Pttiladalpbto
U to
Phoanu
10* to
Poftland.Malna
77 ■
Portland.Or*
90 IS
Providtnca
7* to
St Thoma*.V 1
•* m
Satem.Ora
0 4*
Salt Laka City
to to
San FranciKO
70 54
San Juan.P R.
*1 77
Savannab
to 75
Saattte
75 SI
Spokano
to to
Spring! aid. Ill
94 41 02
Springfield. Mo
to to
Syrecuw
It 41
Tupclo
f t 71 41
Waco
to 71 .21
Washington. D C
71 72
Wichita
to 45
Wichita Fall*
to *5
Wilka* Barra
79 44 •1
Wilmington. Dal
74 49

Otlk
cdy
clr
cdy
cdy
clr
cdy
clr
cdy
clr
cdy
clr
clr
cdy
cdy
dr
clr
cdy
cdy
cdy
rn
rn
dr
cdy
cdy
dr
cdy
cdy
dr
dr
cdy
cdy
rn
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
dr
Cdy
cUy
cdy
dr
dr
cdy
cdy

�to tS S fiS m S m

gBafiSB

Leroy Kelt! Jr. ofIS37 Laki M n m Ir I m Cn A v o i n c i i a i
on Wednesday.
He to charged with trespassing bRst w a rin g
Keitt was arrested at the Wtna Dtadt Supanaarket on Airport
Blvd. in Santord. He had bsen a rm la d a t that stars tn January
of 1990 and charged with alleged re ta i theft Mid barn taaued a
trespass warning.
He allegedly returned to Um stars an Wednesday and
mamutciB called oobcw. •
Hawaii transported to tbs John E. M k Correctional Facility
where be was held on MOO bond.

Training Center properly
ORLANDO — A Defense De­
partment report concludes the
Orlando Naval Training Center
properly d ealt with sexual
Harassment and fraternization
cases, Lut said the number of
Incidents Is still "unacceptably
high."
"The repqrt is very favorable
to the people here in Orlando
who work long and hard to make
sure this center operates well
snd effectively.” said base com­
mander Rear Adm. Len Oden.
T h e d e p a rtm e n t's probe,
which Involved 168 Interviews
snd a review of 39 sexual assault
Investigations, found the base
was thorough In Its handling of
rape cases.
Base officials now must re­
spond In writing to the report's
findings, said spokeswoman Lt.
Cmdr. Nettle Johnson.
“ In essence we feel that
women do feel safe here and
they do get education and
training Just as well as the
men." she said.
A deportment survey of 3,000
women at the base found that 51
percent had experienced some
form of sexual harassm ent.
That's down from 64 percent In

a 1MB study.
About 33 p ercen t of the
women surveyed at the base said
they had been raped or sexually
assaulted. That's compared with
43 percent of those questioned
three years ago.
The report also said while
Investigators treated victims
sensitively, they should be kept
Informed of their cases.
Base officials must act more
quickly to resolve allegations
and th e re m u st be b e tte r
coordination between the Naval
Investigative Service and the
Family Service Center, which
handle the sexual assault cases,
the report said.
The report released this week
quells a Navy task force's criti­
cisms last summer that the base
was lax In handling rape In­
vestigations and was Inconsis­
tent In Its punishments for
fraternization.
The Navy Investigation last
July followed allegations from a
former recruit Instructor that
sexual assault, sexual harass­
ment and Improper social con­
duct between the ranks were
rampant at the base.
This year four petty officers
were convicted for fraterniza­
tion. sexual assault and sexual
harassment.

JU U fiH l-K e g * Bar-B-Que *
Ths Legacy Band
km cm *
JULY Bth - Kag A Mantlcor Band
uneova*
JULY am. Kag a Juat-N-TIma Band a* con*
Q K K tl K*g of tear July Sth-ethamiemai

DIFFERENT LUNCH SPECIALS DAILY

^ " B u v l LSSgnjKkBssr /P &amp; H

LUN CH

HARVEY

Hardwar

MORSE
IN VE SI I G A T I O N S

M A aa •

^ fhnn rum*a War
CHOICES FOR A CHANGE

C bosst sa y 3 a f a s r M r is a a co sstry vagataMas o r asfcda for dw parfact

6 28 1bOO

H o tM Potatoes A Gravy •Comtlry Style Green S**u •Colt 5faw •Com on
Ik* Cok (15$ Curm) • H**d Btam A Mic* •t o i l Aamt *Fomo Salad

WEDNESDAY IS
FAMILY DAY
1

8”Hanging
BasketsS‘
2 P c.
Super
Snack

1/2 O v e n
Roasted
D in n e r

■ SU M

SANFORD
A
C3
C09
HE
AflO
ALRE
39tW
hS
(

ACE.
H
ardware

321-0885
OPCN SUNDAY M

|

I

-

�_______
t

II ,

W ILLIAM
300 N. FRENCH AVI.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
A m Code 407-322-2611 or S31-M03

A.

RUSHER

W hich road should Democrats take?
But no lease on political life Is eternal, as the
early *60a. As a conservative, my sympathies are
conservative Republicans so brilliantly demon­
with Clinton. Robb
strated In breaking libera)ism's long hold on the
and the DLC. on the
White Mouse. First, they did their homework on
sam e th eo ry th a t
prompted The New
economic theory, until they could apeak knowl­
York Times to prefer
edgeably and confidently about the benefits of a
free market. Then they identified themselves
R o c k e fe lle r o v e r
side Is the Democratic
with the concerns of the “social conservatives."
of relatively conservative O o ld w a te r: If he
prevailed, the parties
who were formerly Democrats and Independents
but were prepared to vote Republican to express
t n v i t i kooo 01 virgin ml kjt cxtmpic — would be relatively
their support far the "family values" and related
s im ila r, an d T he
causes. The result was the great coalition that
Iover It by various Times would be In
'h a s put the Republicans In the Oval Office for
jm and come to be the happy position of
five out of the last six presidential terms.
l with the family values that are winning, whichever
party won the generThe trouble, from the standpoint of the liberal
dear to the hearts of the American mtddte class.
Democrats In the CDV, Is that It la going to be
On the o th er side is the Coalition for
But I must admit
devlltahly hard for them to Imitate the con­
Democratic Values, represented by such staunch
servative Republican feat. The only economic
liberals as Ohio Sen. Howard Metrenbaum and t h a t . In p u r e l y
theory that they might conceivably tum to as a
sale
te r s. I
ic term
Dhnots Sen. Paul Simon . They argue that it’s stra teg
f No lasso on
Metien
rival of conservatism's enthusiasm for free
fatty far the Democrats to try to ape the
political lift It
enterprise Is some farm of diluted socialism (In
etam ai. ■
Republicans: If th e American people want Simon and the CDV
a
American terms, governmental activism), and aa
policies they will vote Republican. have the better of the
luck would have it socialism to badly discredited,
ats* only hope, aa they see It. la to argument. There Is
just now. aa a solution for economic problems.
_
uinnftTYci •nirpiy rrovn me nr* UtUe profit far any
Nor does any substantial segment of the
publicans, and offer policies th at are re* porty In merely say- —
Ing "Me loo." Aa long aa conservative principles Republican coalition seem ready to break loose
u y i U i oiy auierem.
AU this, aa I say. la keenly reminiscent of the continue to command strong public support, and and Join the Democratic Party. Republicans who
battle waged between liberal and conservative the Republican Party continues to espouse them. favor "abortion rights" may be uneasy with their
party's policy on that issue, but It to far from
Republicans (roughly, the Rockefeller and
RcpubUam* d ear that they are ready to switch parties.
Ooldwater camps) during the late 1960a and lEfESSnS1k“ p “
debate Is being
over the
If N Is to
M with

EDITO R IALS

Accom m odation
in politics
Politics rarely
rarely m ak es
in th e decennial
than It Is mn ak
aking
ln g right n
battle over congreaolonaJ
rlct boundaries.
re w hile Repul
m are lining u p
Conservative
w ith liberal black Den^ocrats. to th e probable
11ft- —

*L —
—A_ M
w ncii LDc
i c i u p p t n^i oc o w n irii
is
pleted. blacks m a y w eflb e In position to elect
m ore m em bers o f th eir race to Congress. T hat
would b e good, in Itself. As th e nation’s
largest m inority. African A m ericans deserve
more th a n the 2 6 H ouse sea ts th a t they
occupy now.
B ut h ere’s th e hitch. T he sam e retlggering
that creates black d istricts would u n s S t a lot
of w hite Democratic Incum bents w ho have
supported legislation of particular Interest to
black citizens. C hsnces a re th a t those citisens
would have fewer friends in Congress th a n
before.
T he Republicans w ho succeeded ousted
D em ocrats would be answ erable. In th e m ain,
to conservative w hite voters. More th an ever.

repre se ntation. Polarisation of th e parties
along racial lines is too pronounced already; It
certainly does n o t need to be increased.
Instead of trying to create a huger n u m b er
of overw helm ingly w hite districts by redraw*
ing boundaries, die GOP should concentrate
on m ore legitim ate goals. For Instance, It h a s
a perfect right to a tta c k g erry mandering th a t
h as given th e D em ocrats a n unfair advantage
in m a n y states. And th e Republicans have a
d uty a s well a s a n opportunity to com pete for
blacks’ support by attending to their needs
an d ru n n in g black candidates.
W hat the GOP should avoid is the cynical
gam e o f gerrym andering along racial tines.
But w a sn 't such m ischief Invited, perhaps
Inadvertently, by th e 1962 am endm ents to
th e V oting Rights Act? T h a t’s a possibility
th at th e co u rts m u st so rt out.
Even so. th e party of U n c o la a s well a s the
party o f Jefferson, should be careful not to
divide th e natio n along racial lines.

Sales, lies and hypocricy
A w orld w ith fewer weapons would be a
safer world. Soviets and A m ericans have
recognized th e w isdom of th a t Idea an d are
doing som ething ab o u t It. Now. President
B ush w an ts to extend th e principle to the
Middle East.
If B ush h ad the slightest intention of
p u ttin g forth a real policy of Middle East arm s
control, he would deserve full support. For 4 0
years, no region in th e world h a s been
deadlier than th e Middle East. The deadliness
has no t been caused by a n Increase in
enm ity, but by m ore and better weapons.
W hose w eapons? O urs, for the m ost part.
Since 1967. U.S. adm inistrations have had
non-discrlm inatory w eapons policy: We wtl
sell to anybody. A rm ing both sides in a
conflict. A rabs and Israelis for exam ple, is
^ood business.
T rue, if we d id n 't sell the arm s, som eone
else would. T he Soviets surpassed u s for a
while in the '80s. but now have dropped back.
France sold arm s to Israel until 1967 and
then sold to Iran, Iran an d U bya. W hen
C o n g re s s im p e d e s U .S. s a le s to A rab
countries, Britain steps in. W hen countries
are blacklisted, as Libya. Iran and Iraq have
been. China Is ready. The big five account for
about 70 percent of all a m is sales to the
region.
T he horse having escaped. Bush w ants to
bolt th e b a m door. He h a s tw eaked the
Interest of French President Francois Mil*
terand. who h a s unveiled his own Middle East
disarm am ent plan. A m eeting of the big five
arm s-exporting nations is being scheduled for
Paris.
If any th in g com es of these plans, bravo.
But. a s outlined recently. B ush's plan is
self-righteous flatulence. He has no Intention
of doing more dam age to the U.S. a rm s
industry . It would not be surprising to see the
a rm s exporters focus even more attention on
Middle East sales, to m ake up for dom estic
cuts.
M o rally , a r m s s a le s to poor n a tio n s
(Jordan), to antagonists (Israel and Syria),
even to both sides in a civil war (Lebanon). Is
Indefensible. Nations in the Middle East all
believe their security lies in newer and better
w eapons, not in negotiated settlem ent of
differences.
An enforceable, generalized arm s em bargo,
not hollow pasturing, is the only wqy to put
an en d to th a t delusion.

JACK

ANDERSON

Does Navy pay more
when it could less?

ROBERT W ALTERS

Factory farms assemble abuse
SAN RAFAEL. Calif. - The calves specially
raised to produce a gastronomic delicacy
deceptively named "milk-fed veal" spend their
entire Uvea chained In pens leas than 2 feet
wide and 5 feet long.
Those stalls are so small the animals cannot
ever groom themselves, turn around or even lie
down In a natural position. They must walk In
their own urine and excrement, and Inhale the
ammonia gases, produced by their wastes.
To minimize muscle development and accel­
erate weight gain, they are allowed no exercise.
Instead, hundreds of calves typically arc
confined for their entire Uvea to a single
darkened building In which even the (low of
fresh air to restricted.
They have no access to their mothers' milk,
to solid food or to drinking water. Instead, they
are constantly fed a milky substance laced
with assorted antibiotics.
To insure that their meat will be the
premium "milk-fed” Ugh! color after slaughter,
they are kept In an anemic state through the
withholding of adequate iron from their diets.
That depressing description, acknowledged
by Industry officials to be essentially accurate,
to offered by the Humane Farming Association.
&gt;n baaed in the
a small but feisty organization
San Francisco suburb of San Rafael.
Dedicated to the elimination of "factury
farming." HFA also seeks to generate public
opposition to what It says are similarly abusive
practices in the commercial production of
other animals relied upon for food:
Of the 99 million hogs born in this country
every year. 80 percent Initially arc placed In
undersized cement pens or wire cages. When
the pigs reach a weight of 50 pounds, they are
transferred to equally confining finishing pens.
The hogs remain there, with only 6 square feel
of apace apiece, until they are fattened to a
slaughter weight of slightly more than 200
pounds.
The treatment of White Leghorns, the most
popular strain of cgg-laylng chickens, is
especially disturbing because the Industry has
no use for male chicks. The breed cannot be
raised os broilers for human consumption and
only the females can lay eggs.
"So half of all chicks hatched each year, the
males, are simply tossed Into plastic garbage
bags." says HFA. "Though some companies
gas them, most simply allow them to suffocate
under the weight of other chicks dumped oil
loV- Sometimes they are ground up for animal
food —while still alive.”
The surviving female* have their beaks
seurrd off by hot blades when they are I
month old. Slightly more than two months

later, they are packed Into wire "battery
cages” to begin their work as "layers’*
producing more than 250 eggs apiece per year.
Four or five hens typically are crowded into a
single cage whose floor dimensions are only
12-by-18 Inches. As many as 250.000 birds are
housed In a single building. When their egg
production starts to dwindle at the age of about
IVfc years, they are dispatched to slaughter­
houses.
Joining HFA in Its concern about such
unnecessarily abusive treatment are two of the
nation's oldest and most reputable animal
protection groups —
the Humane Society
of the United States
and the American
Society for the Pre­
vention of Cruelty to
Animals — as well us
th e C e n t e r for
Science In the Public
Interest, a widely
respected Washing­
ton. D.C.. organiza­
tion.
At a time when
“ a n im a l-rig h ts "
groups and causes
are proliferating at u ^ C a l v e s are
confined for
phenomenal rale. It
their entire
becomes Increasingly
l i v e s to a
Important to exam­
single dark­
in e th e m o tiv e s,
ened building. J
p rio ritie s and
credentials of organi­
zations claiming to
be dedicated to the protection of virtually every
known species of living creature.
Indeed, the unlmal-righls movement seems
to attract more than its share of fanatics. They.
In turn, have alienated many sensible people
who have no desire to become lifelong
vegetarians or who cannot endorse the wreck­
ing of scientific facilities tn retaliation for the
abuse of laboratory animals.
But reform of what HFA aptly characterizes
aa "cruel und despicable" practices in raising
the animals that produce our food Is a
reasonable and attainable goal.

LETTER S T O EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
must tie signed, include the address ol the
writer and a daytime telephone number.
O tters should lie on a single subject and be
as brief as possible.. Lctnrs are subject to
editing.

WASHINGTON — Some people have trou­
ble taking no for an answer.
SeavacInternational, a San Diego company
that scrapes barnacles from ships for a living,
has been trying for three years to win a
contract to dean the hulls for the Navy.
Seavac submitted a cheap bid. not realizing
that money to no object at the Pentagon. The
contract went to a higher bidder.
Seavac doesn't give
up that easily. The
company then sued
Its competitor who
got the contract, but
still hasn't received
Justice. After three
years and more than
$3 million In legal
fees, an ongoing feud
fb etw ?en th e tw o
companies refuses to
'die.'
............. .. 1
In 1988 and 1989.
we reported the first
round of Seavac&gt;
fight. The company C a h ongoi ng
lost out In the bid­
feud between
ding for a five-year.
the two com­
•56 million contract,
panies refuses
with the Navy for
to
die. ■
hull cleaning. The
c o n tra c t Is sm all
change In the world
of Pentagon procurement, but It can spell life
or death for the handful of companies In the
barnacle business.
The contract has been held since 1979 by
Seaward Marine Services of Fairfax. Va.
When the Seaward contract expired In 1986.
Seavac and some other small companies
decided to Jump into the bidding. Apparently
the Navy was confused by the notion of
shopping around for the best price. It took the
Navy 2 1/2 years to decide who got the
contract, and In the meantime. Seaward
continued the work on a temporary basis.
Then, in 1989. the Navy picked Seaward
again, the highest bidder. At the lime wc
asked for an explanation of that decision, but
Navy officials figured they didn't owe us or
the tax payers any explanations.
Seavac President Greg Dies felt his com­
pany's resources had been wasted on a torpid
bidding process that he thought was a
charade, and he didn't think Seaward was
offering the Navy the best deal. So he availed
himself of the False Claims Act of 1986. That
law allows private parties to sue other private
parties on behalf of the government If they
don't believe the government is watching its
backside well enough.
Seavac sued Seaward on behalf of the Navy,
claiming that Seaward had overcharged the
Navy for many of its services. For example.
Seavac claimed that Seaward was billing the
Navy for per diem expenses — an allowance
for lodging and meals for out-of-town
employees — when the employees actually
lived In the area where the work was being
done. Seavac also claimed that Seaward
billed the Navy for per diem and "mobiliza­
tion'' expenses on the same day. Mobilization
charges are the equivalent of per diem on a
day that the company moves to a new work
site. In other words. Seavac thought that the
Navy was paying Seaward's people to move
and to stay at the same time.
The federal Jury that heard the case agreed
with Seavac and In April concluded that
Seaward had submitted 886 false claims to
the Navy with damages totaling nearly $2.3
million. But the story doesn't end there. The
judge was supposed to set the final damages
for Seaward, but Instead, he overturned the
verdict saying that the evidence didn't
support it. in spile of what the Jury thought.
Seavac has now appealed the Judge's ruling.
Meanwhile, the Navy sits on the sidelines In
silence, unwilling to dirty its hands In
Seuvac’s lonely crusade. It wuuldn't be a
party to Seavac's suit despite the fart that tt
and the taxpayers stand to g^ln If Seavac
wins.
There was only one issue on which the
Navy was willing to answer our questions.
That was the Issue of Seaward President
Duke Armstrong and his other ties to the
Navy.

�4i&gt; C

-- ^f&gt;*j
c-, * i

Sinford HtrOd, asnfofS, FlortdB - FlMay, hhf 6,

■ c o lla g e o f g o ld e n d o te

••id."And not m notejr."
An Aitemoote nprtngi veoeei
com plained about poor via*
ibitthr.
"What we can te e ia OK," M id
Carol Conway. *1 think they

"I came to mo the real thorn,“
Dm Lender of Ortedo Mid. “We
can
do
|, n■„m
*• the Htde flieworha at
npvnc*
While many lad eome com*
plaints, eome o n e truly bn*
pressed with the Ughtehoer.
Laurence Bradley of Sanford
M i d he had seen many lire wort s
displays over the years and
thought last night's w a less

and Keith Marrow, Oatssn, did just that yesterday
ohda participating in a variety of festhdtlss In
lantord In honor of Independence Day.

S53 Patriotism showers celebrations

do a show and the o rg u tters
were counting an us to help pay
for the show, he acknowledged,
admitting that he had not do­
nated to the cause.

Joanne Klang of Lake Monroe
said the had sent a dollar to
R year was awful,
Steve Alford to help pay for the
said. 1guess thtoWM better.
celebration.

Capital
1A
their ultimate.” said U.S.
Rep. Pete Pelcreon of Marianna,
a prisoner of war in Vietnam for
six years. “ They gave their
lives **
Peterson read a list of 18
Persian Gulf casualties. A couple
of the relatives then called out
names and the congressman
walked over to them and took
down their information. After
returning to the podium, he
apologised and read three more
names. .
Chiles said a "freedom flame"
lit Thursday would honor not
only the Floridians killed in the
Gulf but all these who died for
freedom in the last 300 years.
"This flame is going to remind

and the annual hot dog-eating
on New York’s Coney

ManhfleM. Mo., before riding in
a parade In Orsnd Rapids. Mich.,
and then returning to the White

The nation's 3! 5th IndepenPresident Bush and hie wife,
dence Day w m m m uchabout Barbara, attended festivities In
the friih m Gulf War m the mm

In O ra n d R a p id s. B u sh

RcwjuuoMnr w«.» wo,. Em ergency—

marched and fireworks exploded
in the shapes of red stars and
yellow bowa.
In communities large and
small. July Fourth wm celebrat­
ed with a fervor unseen In years.
"I've never seen so many
ua
th
at
there
la
a
price
to
laASaiMH
people in a Uttle cow town like
ireeaom,*VmerfjkUaaauui
govci i&amp;oiji
th is. Everybody m ust have
The flame Ut Thursday
temporary, installed while de­ turned out, phis the dogs and
sign work continues on a per­ cats." Mid Ray DeArton. of
manent memorial. Organisers Can do. N.D.. population 1,800.
In Buffalo, N.Y.. Army Sgt.
planned to extinguish the flame
Thursday night and then relight Elaine Decker, a Oulf War
It In a few months when the medic, said "ibs Fourth has a
project m compieua.
new, special meaning when
After the .erremony, clowns you've been in a wjlt."
There w&lt;rr tvaJiea and parks
c a m e o u t w ith b a llo o n s ,
lemonade stands opened fur closed by state budget cuts, and
business and people staked out a scattering of arrests and pro­
tests, but overall. Americans
areas to watch the parade.
One parade watcher who w m c e le b ra te d T h u rsd a y w ith
taking pictures of plainclothes parades and picnics, barbecues
agents from the state Division of and carnivals.
A lc o h o lic B e v e ra g e s a n d
The festivities included rubber
Tobacco w m taken away In duck races In Miami. OUa.. arm
wrestling In Wiliamina. Ore.,
handcuffs.

Slovenia agrees to free POWs
has been spared army attacks,
partly because It has been far
more cautious in implementing
Independence plana.
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia Slovenia said today it had com­
Battles since July 27 between
plied with a federal demand lo the lightly arm ed Slovenian
lift the blockades at Yugoslav militia and federal troops backed
military bases In the breakaway by tanka and warplanes have left
republic and agreed to free about 90 people dead
federal army prisoners.
But the secessionist republic
defied orders from Yugoslavia’s
c o l l e c t i v e p r e s id e n c y to
withdraw its forces from combat
positions facing the federal army Q
IA
led by commanders from Com­
year as settlement of
munist Serbia.
brought by the former
In Croatia, more clashes broke aowlawsuit
ners, B renda P ro p erties.
out Thursday between ethnic Brenda
raid the authori­
Serbs and Croatian militiamen. t y 's p officials
la
n
s
to
e x te n d th e
Two guardsmen were reported expreMway through
their prop­
killed and five wounded.
erty
drove
away
existing
and
Non-communist Croatia and potential tenants. The authority
Slovenia, the two northernmost
republics, both declared In settled with Brenda officials in
dependence June 25. Croatia J^^^PW 'rchasing the center for
■»i
Assoclatad Ptsm Wrltar_______

Plaza

Slovenes claim.
A flurry of diplomatic efforts
took place today to resolve the
crisis.
The 33-nation Conference on
Security and Cooperation In
Europe, meeting in Prague.
Cxechoskivakla. agreed today lo
support a European Community
observer mission to monitor ihe
truce.
In other discussions. Biinton
Mid Florida Power Corp. officials
told him they won’t be able lo
use the expressway route for
their proposed DeBwy-to-Winter
Springs powerkne. He said of­
ficials told him there were too
many difficulties In croMlng
Lake Jcsup. Also, the U.S. 17-92
to In terstate 4 link of the
expressway won’t be built before
they need their powerline in
1996.

M ’ U y f r ■3 $ ’
WILLIAM N. COX
William N. Cox. 77. 100 East
End Drive. McMlnnviUc. Tenn..
died Wednesday in McMinnville.
Bom March 11.1914 In Madison
C ounty. Ala., he moved to
McMinnville from Florida. He
was a retired floor grader and a
Christian Fellowship minister.
He w m a Protestant.
Survivors are wife. Sara Jane.
M cM innville; s o n s. Frank.
Jam ea. Jim m y. Morris and
Donnie, all of McMinnville;
daughter. Martha Simmons.
McMinnville: step-son. Ray
C ru ise . A ltam onte. T enn.:
step-daughters. Teresa Cun­
ningham . McMinnville. June
King. Spencer. Tenn.; 17 grandc h i l d r e n ; 11 g r e a t g ra n d c h ild re n ; e ig h t stepgrandchildren.
Baldwfn-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary, in charge of ar­
rangements.

ange Avenue, Sanford, died
June 30 at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital Bom July I.
1946 in Sod us. New York, he
moved to Sanford 43 years ago.
He w m a machine operator for
SAH Fabricating and Engineer­
ing.
Survivors are daughter. April
Reynolds. Oviedo; mother. Mary
Lee H a y e s . S a n fo r d ; fiv e
brothers. Gordon Hayes. Charles
Hayes. Willie Hayes. Edward
Hayes. WUford Herring, all of
Sanford; sisters Brenda Hayes
and Bernice Hayes.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
ford. in charge of arrangements.

Johnnie Thompson. 64. 67
Redding Gardens, Sanford, died
Saturday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Born Oct. 19.
1906 tn Cyrenc. Georgia, he
moved to Sanford 46 years ago
from Tallahassee. He was a
Pcntacostal. He was a retired
truck driver.
LOUIS REYNOLDS
Survivors are parental daughLouis Reynolds. 45. 802 Or­

thanked “every American who
wore a ribbon or baked a cookie
or Mid a prayer" in support of
the troops during Operation
Desert Storm.

|

i

ter. Mrs. Mary A Guy. Sanford;
staters. Mrs Clara T. Travis and
Mrs. Eva T. Cummings, both of
B alnbrldge. Ga.; 19 grandc h i l d r e n ; 40 gr eat grandchildrens 10; great-great­
grandchildren.
Goldens Funeral Home. Inc.,
Winter Park, in charge of are
rangements.
' i

jfSjtr
’t' C---- ■

COX. WILLIAMS.
Funeral fttfvK tt tar William N. Coi. 11, el
McMInnvIlto. Tenn.. who p atted a»«y
Wodwaaday. will be haW Monday at Wa rn at
Oaklawn Park CemMary In Lafca Mary
F rtonda may vlall Sunday tram I t a t p n
and 1 to t p m. at Baldwin Fairchild Funeral
Home Oaklawn Park Chapel. Lake Mary
REYNOLDS. LOUIS

Plpteral

Leuit Rtynofda. as.

1 p m , at Victory
Church at Deliverance. Ml W 1*h Si.
Senior* Peeler Karan Cleveland. Officiating
Viewing will be today, tram a la * p m at
Sunnaa Chapel Buriat will be at Burton
SunrlM Funeral Home. San lord. In charge
at arranga manta

Hayes continued. "He slowed
1A
legs, a broken up. then he ran In front of me.
ind |passible injuries to He had to have seen me but he
left ankle and
the head and various Internal kept on running. I have no idea
of what he might have been
organs.
T he driver of the vehicle. thinking about."
S a n fo rd Police Lt. Mike
Identified s s Derrick Hayes. 30.
laoe W. 14th Street., said he Rot undo said that Seymour was
w as unable to avoid hitting apparently breathing on his own
Seym our. "H e was running and able to speak as he was
acroM the street." Hayes Mid. being loaded into the emergency
"an d I blew my horn and slowed helicopter.
up*" i
The extent of his Injuries

Horse
horse up to the society. Albers
Albers said veterinary b u t n* at the University of Flortin Gainesvlle will examine
the 12-year-old stallion Wednesday. Albers said veto have said
they will determine if the animal
can be saved and if so. how to
treat the leg. She Mid options
may Include rebreaking the leg
or amputating it and attaching a
prothesis.
If the animal to Mved. Albers
Mid the society will offer it for
adoption She said it could not
be riden again, but will be
offered as a pet.
Albers said the university has
agreed to donate services, but

r

the society needs money for local
medical care and for shelter. She
said the society’s hone stalls
have been kicked down. Tommy
Meadows la currently sharing a
A
_
Q r h A A l
w v llU W I
1A
tlonlng ducts
installed In the 1960b and 1960a
were covered with a sm all
amount of aabtatoa and paint
mixture.
He noted that some floor tiles
which have been carpeted over
for many years also contain
asbestos fibers.
"I've talked to the construc­
tion crews and we think things
a re com ing along n ic e ly ."
Pelham said.

L if lil Nolle##
iMTMiciacuiTcouar
OPTNEEtONTBENTH
JUMCIABCIRCUIT

aaBwaRB
CIRCUIT CIVIL

Caaa Mai n-aaai-CA -taa
RCSOLUTION TRUST COR
PORATION. a* Canaarvator tor
IM P E R IA L P IO E R A L
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION.
Plaintlff(a),
WALTER E. JUDGE. STEVEN
F O R S T E R . P / b / a STEVE
F O R S T E R a / b / a PAUL
STEVEN FORSTER. CHERYL
KAY ROSE, t/b /a CHERYL
FORSTER a/b /a CHERYL K.
F O R S T E R . W RAP MORT
GAGE CORPORATION, a Flor­
ida corporation. DOUGLAS P.
H O O K ER a n d BRITTA J.
HOOKER. Me w ilt. OABRIN
KINSCH, JU L IE TOOTLE,
W B/a TOOTLE'S LAWN CARE.
SWEETWATERCLUB
HOMEOWNER S ASSOCIA
TION. INC., a Florida nat ter
profit corporation. DEMBOVS.
INC., a Florida corporation.
su sa n e . ju d g e ; the
STATE OF FLORIDA. DC
PARTMENT OP REVENUE.
THE STATE OF FLORIDA.
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
AND EMPLOYMENT SECU
RITY. THE UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA, and JOHN DOE
and JANE DOE. Unknown T*
nan tv
Defendant (a)
NOTICE OP ACTION
PROPERTY
TO: Suaen E. Judge, whoae
term er realdence addreaa waa
IN Squire Hill Road, Langwood.
F lo r id a JJIJ* an d c u rra n t
eddreta la unknown
YOU ARE HEREBY NOT I
FIEO that enaction to torectote
o mortgage on tho following
property in Seminole County.
Florida; towll:
L o t ] , B l a c k E.
SWEETWATER CLUB. UNIT I.
according to tho Plat thereof aa
recorded In Plat Book II Pagea
M throupa H. Inctuaiv* ot the
PuMIc Record! of Seminole
County. Florida.
h aa been tiled againai you
SUSAN E JUOGE. and you are
required to larva a copy at your
w ritten dotonaov It any to It. an

however, were not Immediately
known.
Traffic was lied up for at least
two blocks from 9th Street to
11th on French Avenue. North­
bound lanes were reopened by
10:30 but the southbound lanes
were not reopened until after 11
a.m. some pyt on A helicopter
from the Orlando Regional Medi­
c a l C e n te r la n d e d on th e
highway.
.
* - -----Nit* Ptotfauf m d VkSl DaSermter ewrtrftuted to Ihla report

makeshift lean-lo with two other
animals. Albers said.
Anyone seeking to help the
shelter may call 323-8685.

"W e 'd been looking at a
mid-July date far the demolition
all along. If we don't hit that
right on. we're pretty close.”
A lu m n i o f S an fo rd High
School from 1927 through 1960
celebrated the end of an era last
month with a tour of the old
facilities and a party in the new
school.
Hundreds of Celery Feds at­
tended the celebration in what
was expected to be the last few
days of the old school.

L#gal Nolle#
Alvaro Ruli. laqvlro
RUIZ B SKELTON. P.A.
CyproaaWaet Building,
Suite IM
SJOIW Cyprea* Street
Tampa. Florida DM/
IIIIIM PPM
an or batara July IT. INI. and
Ilia Ihe original with Ihe dark of
Ihfe court either batara tervke

r Im

a default will be entered again*!
you tor Ww re! lot damended In
Ww complaint ar petition.
WITNESS my hand and aeei
ot aald court aa Juno 12. m i
(SEAL)
MAR YAMNE MORSE
Clerk Clrcuil Court
By; Cecelia V. Ekern
Clark
Pub!
June 14II. MR July S.
INI
DEG lil
M THE CIRCUIT COURT
O FT M IIM N T IIN T N
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE N a « -U W M P E G
INRE; Tho Marriage ot
KATHLEEN ALISON COATS.
Petitioner/WIN,
and
SCAN IAN MICHLESEN.

NOTICE OF A PUBLICN IAaiND TO CONSIDER THE
ADOPTION OP AN ODDI NANCE DY T N I CITY OP
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Notlca la hereby given that a Public Hearing will bo hold In the
Commlaafen Room at the City Hall In the City el Sanford. Florida, al
I M o'clock P-M on July B IN I, to conafdar Ihe adaption at an
ordtnenca by the City of Sen lord. Florida, aatoliowa:
ORDINANCE NO. M il
General Oeacription of the area to bo anna nod and map la aa
A PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN PROPERTY LYING BE
TWEEN W HTH STREET AND W. IfTH STREET AND
BETWEEN STRAWBERRY AVENUE AND MULBERRY
AVENUE j AS SHOWN ON THE MAP BELOW:

li t : Ir-n p v f i n p n

-a

rrm T iT m

K

NOTICE OP ACTION
TO SEAN IAN MICHLESEN
YOU ARE NOTIFIED ffiat a
Petition tor Ofaaatutwn at Mar
rlaga haa been Iliad again*! you
and you era raqulrad to aarvo a
copy ot your written detente*. it
any to It an Jamea K Freeland.
E aqulra. 1SS South Orange
Avenue. Sulla IXU. Orlando.
Florida S H I. Potlltonar/Wlte'a
attorney, an or batara JULY IT.
INI. and file the original with
the Clerk at tMa court either
batara terv k e on Petitioner'*
attorney or Immediately there
attar, oltwrwlae a default will be
entered agalntl you lor the
relief itemended In the Cam
plaint erM ttllen
Dated Wua llth day at JUNE.
INI.
(CIRCUIT COURT SEAL)
MAR YANNE MORSE
Clark at the Circuit Court
By. Nancy R Winter
Aa Deputy Clark
PuMlah June 14 II. M B July L
INI
DEG-IM

A complete daacriplion and a copy ot the ordinance than be
available at the office al the City Clerk tor alt perton* daalrlng to
a* am ina the lame
All partita In infer eat and clfuen* than have an opportunity to be
heard al aald hearing
By order at the City Comm it non at Ihe City ot Senior d Honda
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC It a per*on decide! to appeal a
daemon mada with reaped to any matter conaiderod al the above
moating ar hearing ho may need a verbatim record ot the
pcotoedingi. Including me teatimony and evidence, which record it
net provided by tho Oty ot Sanford IFSMOOIOS)
Janet H Donahoe
City Clerk
Publlah: June MB July S. INI
DEG

�•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, July 5. 1PP1

Thom as: Advocate of self-help
■ f JOHN KINO
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Raised by devout
Catholic grandparents and schooled by
nuns, Clarence Thomas was drawn to the
seminary. Hut In turbulent times for black
Americans, he was loo troubled to stay.
“Dogs were being sicked on blacks," he
recalled In 1985 of the South during the
1960s. "and the church was focusing on
what songs to play at services."
So he headed to Holy Cross College. The
.Jesuit school In Massachusetts had only a
few dozen black students, and Thomas soon
found himself a leader of the Black Student
Union.
Former classmates remember Thomas as

a reasoned voice of activism. He helped lead
a takeover of the administration building to
protest the lack of black faculty and black
studies, and a walkout to protest the
suspension of four blacks after an anti-war
protest.
"Clarence was always cool and even­
headed," said Eddie Jenkins, a Boston
attorney who was in the&lt; Black Student
Union with Thomas. "Clarence did not
believe in violence but believed In con­
structive tension. He knows conflict very
well."
Thomas, nominated to succeed Thurgood
Marshall on the Supreme Court, went on
from these early experiences to become a
self-help advocate with a disdain for af­
firmative action and other programs sought

by Marshall and many in the civil rights
movement.
Thomas, now a federal appeals court
Judge, makes no secret of his opposition to
hiring quotas and timetables, or to public
assistance that does not require work or able
Individuals.
**| don't think you could ever compensate
our race for what happened." Thomas once
said. "I think we are Just wasting a lot of
energy."
In his speeches and interviews. Thomas
derides minority set-asides, enterprise
zones, and the belief that government can
teach family values. He argues that unless
blacks help themselves climb, they will
indirectly encourage racism.

King museum honors soldiers
who fought civil rights battles
MEMPHIS. Tcnn. - On a
day when many Americans
paid tribute to veterans of the
Gulf War. some gathered to
honor Martin Luther King Jr.
and others whose blood was
shed in pursuit of civil rights.
T h u r s d a y 's c e re m o n y
capped five days of events
dedicating The National Civil
Rights Museum, on the site
where King was slain in 1968.
"As the rest of the country

U nem ploym ent
rate co u ld rise
despite grow th

pays tribute to the men and
women of Desert Storm, so do
we. But today, we also honor
the veterans of the civil rights
movement. Their btood was
shed pursuing freedom on
American soil," said D'Army
Bailey, president of a citizens'
group largely responsible fo£t
the museum.
The &lt;9.2 million museum
was built at the Lorraine
Hotel, where King was shot to
death by Jam es Earl Ray.

6

•

' •

_______

L!( &gt;H &lt;

r j
jw w rj

sr

Ht/t t ' \

ly R M IN U U

AP labor Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Hush administration, searching
for bright economic news to
confirm an end to the recession,
admits there's a chance the
nation's unemployment rate
could rise further even though
U.S. companies appear to be
hiring again.
Michael Boskin. the presl*
dent's chief economic adviser,
hus warned that the jobless rate
could go up. even If businesses
arc adding employees. That's
because payroll gains might not
keep pace with the growth In the
labor force, or the number of
people newly hunting Jobs or
returning to the work force.
"So we would expect the
turnaround in the unemploy­
ment rate to be later on in the
year: we don’t expect that to
occur quickly." Boskin said re­
cently. Still, he said It appears
the recession has now ended.
The White House and private
analysts will get their first look
at how th e U.S. econom y
performed in June with today's
release of the unemployment
rc|M&gt;rt from the Labor Depart­
ment.
In advance of the report, most
a n aly sts p red icted the u n ­
employment m tr probably rose
to 7 percent In June, up from
May's rate of 6.9 percent.
However, they were expecting
llial a separate survey probably
showed that U.S. businesses
adder! 50.000 Jobs or more In
June, which would be the sec­
ond consecutive month of Jobs
growth.
Before the May turnaround In
hiring practices, U.S. companies
had laid olf 1.7 million workers
since the recession started In
July 1990 — the worst stretch of
mass layoffs since the 1981-82
recession.

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■ P«oplt, Pag* 3B
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■ Clsssiflod, Pago SB

IN BRIEF
YOUTH FOOTBALL
SYFA to confirms registration
SANFORD — The Sanford Youth Football
• Association will register players for the upcomtag fall season every Saturday from now until
; Aug. 1 at Chase Park on Celery Avenue.
Registration will be available between 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m.
The registration fee Is $50. Parents should
bring a birth certificate. Children between theages
7 and 14 are etfgiBie to play in the
league.
Also, the SYFA is also looking for someone to
volunteer their services as a cheerleading
co-ordinator.
For more Information, call 321 -2012.
A1

Marlin souvsnlsre to go on ssls
MIAMI — The first game for Miami’s new
baseball team Is 21 months away, but the first
pitch —for souvenirs —will come much sooner.
"There** going to be a huge demand for
product, and we want to make sure we can
satisfy It." said Rick White, president of Major
League Baseball Properties. "Merchandise will
be on the marketplace two or three days after
formal unveiling of the team logo."
The T-shirts, caps and pennants may go on
sale next week; final approval of National
League expansion bids by Miami and Denver Is
expected today. The vote was delayed more
than three weeks by American League owners
unhappy with plans for next year's expansion
draft.
With the result a foregone conclusion, today's
vote could prompt more yawns than yahoos.
"Maybe the excitement peaked sometime
prior to right now," said John Cordrey. who
works for a group of prominent Miami civic and
business leaders. "It will be a fact now. versus
‘we think It's going to happen.'"
Official Miami's reaction Is further tempered
by the prospect that the team will not be named
after the city. Because prospective owner H.
Wayne Hulzcnga wants a strong regional
Identity. Florida Marlins Is the likely label.

AUTO RACINQ
Marlin on Papal pola poaltlon
DAYTONA BEACH — Sterling Marlin followed
his dad's advice alt the Way to the pole for
Saturday's Pepsi 400.
Marlin turned in the fastest lop in Thursday's
qualifying — 190.331 mph — to win a Winston
Cup pole for the first time In his career.
The performance at Daytona International
Speedway was no surprise; Marita's Ford had
been the fastest car in practice the day before.
That’s when he consulted with his father,
former NASCAR driver Clifton "Coo Coo"
Marlin.
"I talked to him (that) night and told him It
was running fast." Marlin reralled. "And he
said. 'Don't y'all mess it up.'
"I said. ‘We ain't going to touch It. We're
going to leave it like it is and go back out and
qualify.’"
Davey Allison will start next to Marlin in the
front row: his qualifying speed was IH9.909.
Harry Gant was next fastest at 189.865.

SOUTHBRN LKAQUB
Mahomes paces SunRays
HUNTSVILLE. Ala. - Pat Mahomes picked up
his eighth win of the season by striking out 11
and giving up four hits in eighth innings us the
Orlando SunRays beat the Huntsville Stars 6-1.
Orlando (41-40) opened up the scoring
Thursday In the third when Carlos Capellun
doubled and then scored on an error.
In the sixth, the SunRays scored twice more.
Cheo Garcia douhled home Shawn Gilbert and
later Bob McCreary scored on a wild pitch.
Huntsville (33-511 closed the gap to 3-1 In the
sixth on a triple by Scott Shockcy. who scored
on Troy Neal’s sacrifice fly.
Orlando scored Its final three runs in the
ninth.

Knights overtake Suns
FORT MILL. S.C. - Elvin Paulino hit a
two-run double in the eighth inning us the
Charlotte Knights topped the Jacksonville Suns
5-3 Thursday night.
Paulino broke a 3-3 tie when lie knocked In
Alex Arias and Kevin Roberson with his double.
Arias and Roberson had both singled.
Charlotte took a 1-0 lead In the third when
Mike Grace singled. Fernando Ramsey walked
and Arias scored Grace with a single.
Jacksonville came buck in the top half of the
fifth. Jim Bowie doubled und moved to third on
a groundnut. Jim Campanis scored Bowie with a
sacrifice fly, Jeff Wetherby's third homer of the
year gave the Suns a 2-1 lead
Cn*»ll»$ from wire and staff reports.

BASEBALL
C!8 p in — WGN. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis
Cardinals. (Ll
Comploto listing on Fogo SB

199 1

Softball celebration set
Horald Sports Writer
SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation Depart­
ment wilt hold Its first Junior/Scnlor Girls
Slowpltch Softball League Awards Ceremony on
Saturday. July 20. at Ft. Mellon Park.
Jim Adams. Recreation Supervisor and league
director, has set up a day of food, fun and
celebration for the sponsors, coaches, players
and fans of the revamped girls' softball leagues.
At the center of the celebration wfl be n
tripleticiRRa of gurtiTs «*Tthe fi. Mellon Softball
Field. The first game, scheduled to begin at 9
a.m.. will feature two All-Star teams chosen from
the Junior Girls League.
At 10:45 a.m. there will be a game between the
Team “A" Senior Girls League All-Stars and the
Team "B" Senior Girls All-Stars. That will be
followed at noon by a game between a team
made up of Sanford Recreation Department stafT
members and the league's coaches and a team
consisting of the parents of the league’s players.

The Team "A" Senior Girls League All-Stars
will be coached by Bob Howard und Lila Cox.
who led R.M. Howard &amp; Associates to the league
championship, and Teresa Walburgcr and Jackie
Suggs, who coached Longwood Murine this
season.
Named to Team "A" were Yolanda Cox.
Yvonne Cosby. Elizabeth Howard. Carmen
Ramos. Bambl Pate, Eureka Harkncss and
Angela Arnold from R.M. Howard A Associates:
and Marcia Riggins. Lashunda Anderson. Angela
Byrd. Lamika Harris nnd RbnJnnda Peterson frem
Longwood Marine.
Leading the Team "B" Seniors Girls League
All-Stars will be Willie Ingram, who guided the
Kiwanls Club squad, and Willie Robinson and
Pricllla Peterson, who coached the Optimist Club
of Lake Mary team.
Playing for Team "B" will be Rochelle Davis.
Lahonia Fayson. Sara Schaefer. Scnita Barnes
and Shanell Wynn from the Klwunls Club:
Sheneaka Peoples. Niki Jones. Marita Blake.
Keesha Bradley and Shannon James from the
Optimist Club of Lake Mary: Rosa Harkncss from

R.M. Howard and Associates; and Renee Farmer
from Longwood Marine.
The Junior Girls League All-Stars will be
announced next week.
Following the ball games wilt be an awards
ceremony. Each player will receive her certificate
of participation, the sponsors will be given
plaques, the coaches will be recognized and the
cham pionship team s — R.M. Howard A
Associates in the Senior Girls and the Optimist
Club of Sanford in the Jnuior Girls — will he,
awarded their tiUpiiies.
The awards ceremony will also feature the
official announcement of the start of the Fall
League. The Fall League will feature two leagues,
one for girls 12-and-Under and the other for girls
16-and-Under. with a scheduled starting date of
Saturday. Sept. 7.
After the awards ceremony will be a covered
dish picnic In Ft. Mellon Park. Each player is
encouraged to bring a covered dish to the picnic.
Several local businesses will supply the main
course and drinks.

Bullets lead
winners into
today’s play
Byl
Herald Correspondent

LONGWOOD - As the Bullets
took the field against Daytona
Beach Thursday night, many fans
expected the nightcap of the July
4th Invitational huscball tourna­
ment’s first round tobc a blowout.
Considering that the Daytona
squad had two Junior college
players and numerous high school
graduates on Its raster while the
Bullets' roster consists entirely of
Lyman High School underclassmen,
u tight game didn't appeur Immi­
nent.
And It wusn'I. the contest being
decided by the fifth Inning.
However. II wasn't Daytona that
crushed the ball around Lyman
Stadium or received any sort of
quality pitching. But the Bullets did
us they rolled Into today's second
round with an 11-5 ramp.
"We played well," said Bullet
coach Bob McCullough, whose learn
Improved to 12-5 with the win. "We
seem to play better against better
competition."
In o th e r first-ro u n d a c tio n
Thursday. Dr. Phillips shut down
Lake Mary 5-1. the Sanford Ameri­
can Legion Post 53 Orioles crushed
Lake Howell 9-0 and Lake Brantley
defeated Oveido 5-0.
Today's schedule opens with two
elim ination games. Lake Mary
playing Lake Howell at 11 a.m. and
Daylonu Beach tackling Oviedo at 2
p.m. Lake Bruntley und Seminole
will clash ul 5 p.m. before Dr.
Phillips and the Bullets take the
field ul 8 p.m.
Against Daytona Beach Thursday
night, the Bullets came through
with possibly their !&gt;esl perfor­
mance of Hie summer, spraying hits
( See Tournfcmeat, Page 2B

Nice catch
Jeffrey Williams of Longwood
had great success on a recent
fishing trip In Key West, earning a
cita tion from the Key West
Fishing Tournament for catching
this 46-pound sallfish. Williams,
who used 50-pound tackle to land
the fish, was aboard the Amorous
A.J. captained by Bill Robinson.
The Key West Fishing Tourna­
ment, an annual event that runs
from May through November,
offers trophies, citations and
plaques for catches like this.
There are also sportsmanship
awards tor releasing fish.

Photo court**, ol Ann McDonald. K « r W n l FitN n g Tournament

Little League A ll-S ta rs b e gin trek
By TONY DeSORMIRR
Herald Sports Editor

Talk about your shotgun starts. Or to b&lt;* more
precise, the opening of the Little League Baseball
District 14 All-Star area tournaments ibis evening will
be more like a scattergun start.
Since District 14 t acorn passes 22 leagues over lour
counties — Seminole. Orange. Volusia and Luke — and
that of those 22 leagues, four have American and
National divisions, resulting In a total of 26 teams, the
district tournament Is broken up Inlo four area
subtournaments In make ll more manageable.
And In attempt to "spread the wealth.” as it were, the
19 first-round games scheduled for lonlght lu the Little
(I I and 12) and Senior (14 anti 15) League age groups
will be played at 14 different sites over those four
counties.
Thai's not counting the Junior League 1131 division,
which doesn't tx-gln play until Monday.
Now for the good news.

The way that District 14 administrator Jim Hovlsaud
his stall have It worked out. a team does not play
against another team or at a field outside of Its assigned
area of the district until llie llnul round of the
tuuraanicnl.
For family, friends. Ians and sup|xirtcrs of Seminole
County's three leagues, dial means their teams will
play In Areas 2 and 3 of the district tournament.
The Altamonte Springs Americans and Oviedo
Americans will play In Area 2 along wllh Apopka-West
Seminole, Pine Hills. Rolling Hills and Windermere.
Area 3 Includes the Altamonte Springs Nationals.
Oviedo Nationals and Cusscllierry as well as the Deltona
Nationals. Dr. Phillips Nationals. Fusils and Mount
Dora.
Claying lu Area I are Clcrmoiit-Mliuieulu. Dr. Clillllps
Americans. Ocoee. South Orange. Southwest Orlando
and Winter Garden. Area 4 consists of DcLand. Deltona
Americans. Lake Helen. Northwest Volusia. Southwest
Volusia. South Daytona and St John's River.
See All-Stars, Page 2B

d o m m i m c Ii
mo m i
i —
i
t &gt;
Bull*It
H » ON ■ II
0 *
H o r n ,. Miller ( ] ) . and Le* ( « ) and Bran/
Stuckey. Good pallor U l and Beland W P —
Stuckey L P — H erne Save — Nona 38 —
D a yto n a Beach. M ille r. G o ltn tk i. B ullet*.
Stuckey 3B — Non* H R - Daytona Beach
Golimfct Record* — B u lle t in S

Dr. PMIlM*

| Mkf Msry

M

IN

•-

QQ0 g _

|

I

g

I

I

|

Fipp* and Chabot M cGellln. M aratta U ) and
Bullock W P - Fipp* L P — M cGotlln Save —
Nona 3B - Dr Phillip*. Fipp* IB - Nona HR -

Ovtede
OM 000 0 - 0
1 I
Lake Brantley
OM M l
- S
0 1
Black and F H erm er W armer and T «iq q * WP
— Black LP — Warmer Save
Non* ]B —
O n e d o . H u ll. Lake B ra n tle y . F H e rm e r.
Cattaldo IB — Non* H R — Non*

1

0

Lake Howell
000 OM
-&gt; 0
] I
SantorO
li t 101 a - 0
It «
D e ia b ra l* and H e rn a n d e i
M o rg a n and
Freeman W P — Morgan L P — D**abran S*&lt;*
- Non* 3B
San lord. Goche* IB — San lord
F r«*m *n HR
San lo rd Braden Record* —
Seminole If t

Stich puts sudden end to Courier’s European swing
l y ROBERT MILLWARD
AP Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON'. England — Jim Courier's
whirlwind European Tour ended Thursday when
be was blown oil Hie court by blg-servlug Michael
SUch In the Wimbledon quarterfinals.
Having won the French Open title on the slow,
red clay of Parts a month ago. Courier tried to
adapt Ills game to the luster grass courts ol
Wimbledon.
The fourth-seeded American buttled bis way to
the llnul eight l&gt;efore running Into SUch. the man
he Ix-ut In the French Open semifinals. Bill the
slxth-secded German served 15 aces and won
6 3.7 6(7-21.6 2.
"He was serving Just monstrous and his
returns were pretty effective as well." said
Courier, who was Ixirn In Sanford but now lives
111 Dade City. "It really was |usi a matter ol bun
Ix-utg Just more comfortable on the surface."
Courier was still upbeat about Ills show ing

"ll has tieni a bit of a whirlwind tills |iast
iiionUi und a half." lie said "It's really lieen
great. I had never gotten past the fourth round in
a Grand Slam.
"I couldn't lx- a whole Ini happier wtili bow
Ibis Enrnjieuii swing has gone. II you'd given me
Ihc option at Hu- Ix-gmuing ol Hit tournament
and said. 'Look, you can lake a quarterfinal right
now. or we ll put you In the draw and see how
you do.' I would have said Pm going to have that
quartrrlinul. I'm going home.”
Switching from clay to g r a s s in a mouth Is
probably the toughest transition m tennis H|nm
Itorg was the last man to win the French Open
and Wimbledon In the same vear. achieving the
feat fora third time lu 19HI
Courier said be was pleased with the way he
made Hit- switch
'Till pleased with the direction my game Is
heading." lie said. "1 feel I'm becoming a more
complete player I still have a tong way to go You
will never lx- a complete player, but you work on

jx-rfeetlng all your shots "
One ol five young Americans aiming lo replace
Slelan Kdlx-rg. Boris Becker und Ivan Lentil at
the top ol Hie world rankings. Courier sees a
bright lulure lor Ills country men.
Pete Sampras Is the U.S. 0|x-u champion.
Michael Chung also has won Hit- French title.
Andre Agassi has been In two Grand Slam finals
and David Wheaton on Thursday moved Into the
semifinals with Ills victory over Agassi.
' I think It's a really jxisltive thing lor the
tennls movement In America, to have a group of
players coming up." Courier said "And the ililng
that's really nice about our group is that we're
five very dlllcrenl Individuals.
“If you're a religious person, you can look at
Michael anti say. 'God. lie's inv Idol II you like
the show business side of II. you can sav, 'Andre.
•i great player '
'T in your blue collar kind ol guv,’ Courier
said. "They'd love me lu Pittsburgh lor sure

FOR THE BEST COVERAGE OF SPORTS IN YOUR' AREA, READ THE SANFORD HERALD DAILY

�S T A T S &amp; STANDINGS

■Bowing Juat two hit* In hta next
four innings of work.
Stuckey also helped hie own
cauec with two hits and three
mno scored in four at bats.
The B ullets responded to
Daytona's three-run outburst In
the first inning with two of their
own. Stuckey‘a double w as
■Ingle. Stuckey scoring on a Jeremy Chunat and get thin
u iiu v u i| w iw dj inc Bnonmop. su n eo . atniora Korea in m
Jack Beland ihcn doubled t o ’'u in ig except ibe fifth ,
right Odd before Doug ta rte r
Todd Braden highlighted t
drove In Baxler w ith'a sacrifice day with a homer and t
fly.
singles, cm—Ing the plate tht
From there, the fireworks kept times for the Orioles, who
coming.
creased their record to 17-5.
B obby M organ h u rle d
of his three stogies to start a three-hitter, whiffing five a
two-run rally in the second. Pour walking Just one.
consecutive w alks drove tn
• For Lake Brantley. Bret!
Ramtrei and Stuckey.
Black scattered just two hits aft
One inning later, the Bullets he outdueled Chad Wermer of
rallied far five runs to blow the O viedo. T he c o n te st B l o o d
contest wide open. They con­ Bcorc k — until Lake Brantley
tinued manufacturing offense scored two In the fourth followed
despite getting Just three hits tn by three in the dxth.
*

Hovts hope* to have the area
portion of th e to u rn am en ts
completed in time to begin the
district playoffs the week of July
15.

tts s rtiw ^ t
7 ML A W

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4 p jn . - WCPX A WmMm Opart. M r*

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1 p.m. — SUN. PatincSjm Champlenartp
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A r e a St T h e A lta m o n te
Springs Americans play their
first game at 7 p.m. tonight
against Windermere at Win­
dermere. The w inner comes
back Saturday afternoon at I
p.m. to play (tolling HiUs at
Oviedo.
Meanwhile, the Oviedo Ameri­
cana won't play their first game
until 3:30 p.m. Saturday, when
they will host the winner of
t o n i g h t 's g a m e b e tw e e n
Apopka/West Seminole and Pine
Hills.
Aiwa St While most local fans
would rather sec games between
intra-county opponents later in
th e to u rn a m e n t, th e re are
always going to be one or two
such clashes early In the pro­
ceedings.
T o n ig h t, th e A lta m o n te
Springs Nationals and Oviedo
Nationals play at 7 p.m. at
Altamonte Spring's Eastmonte
Park, the survivor advancing to
play the w inner of the Dr.
Phillips Natlonals/Deltona Na­
tionals game Saturday at 1 p.m.
at Southwest Volusia.
The loser of tonight's game
will also play again Saturday,
taking the field at Oviedo at 10
a.m. against the loser of the Dr.
Phillips Nationals/Deltona Na­
tionals game.
Casselberry opens play tonight
against Mount Dora In a 7 p.m.
gam e a t M ount Dora. The
winner moves on to face Eustis
at 6 p.m. Saturday at Oviedo.
Because this division includes
only one age group, leagues that
have two teams in the Little and
Senior League divisions have
only one team at this level. As a

result. Altamonte Springs is thf
lone Seminole County team is
Area 2 while Oviedo and Caasci
berry play In Area 3.
Aran St Altamonte Spring!
opens with Rolling HlUa in a 7
m. game Monday night at
illlng Hills. The winner ptay*

K

This year, Oviedo aid not have
the numbers to support both an
A m e ric a n and a N ational
Division at this level, once again
leaving the Altamonte Springs
Americans as the only Seminole
County representative In Area 2.
A r a a S t The A ltam o n te
Springs Americans are on the
road to Rolling Hills this even­
ing. where they will play Rolling
Hllfa at 7 p.m. In tonight's other
game. Apopka/West Seminole
plays at Pine Hlllsat 7 p.m.
Both of Saturday’s games will
be played at Oviedo, the losers of
Friday night’s contests playing
at 10 a.m. while the winners will
square off at 2 p.m.
A rea St Casselberry visits
Eastmonte Park to play the
Altamonte Springs Nationals
this evening while Oviedo takes
on the Deltona Nationals at
Deltona. Both games are sched­
uled to start at 7 p.m.
The winners of those two
games go head-to-head on Sat­
urday at 7 p.m. at Southwest
Volusia while the losers of those
two games will square off in an
elimination contest at 6 p.m. at
Oviedo.

rtuAa.
Mel Her. Mlrtmufcm . H ; Pplmrtre. T a u t.
M; CSIpken, Baltlm ere, Mi Cm m m ,
Oakland. U . WhlN, Taranto. U; Franca.
Taaaa. M; DHanSarearv Oakland. U

NIKI • I IO N I C • O U N l Of

Nanr Vark (Oaadm 74) a t FWiaSatprta
(Can 4 11.7:11pm.
Mm trial (OaJMerttmr P i) at FttHPurpA
IV rttayPIK 7:Jlpm .
Cincinnati (MammmS 4 1) at Haurian

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Michaal Sikh (4), Germany. Sri. Mm
•ariar U). OaSt CMy.ax 7 a (7 II. 41.
Urian CSSarp 111. Sweden, Sri Thierry
hamplan. Franca. 4 X 4 1 .7 1
Barit Backer (1). Germany, Sri. Gvy

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Lake Mary Cantra
364# Laka Emma Rd.
M i Laka Mary BlvtL
(NaxttoK-Mari)

GREYHOUND PARK
IITLEI

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PRINt

P R O K F N N E X • TAYl O R M A D F

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roDUi p o in ira oJuki
ui u m c

NnooHct Anonymous to mMt
M M transit worfctrs to gatfwr
The Mew York Retired Transit Workers meet at Casselberry
Settlor Center. 200 N. Triplet Lake Drive, the first Saturday of

The Celery City Cruisers, an antique and classic automobile
chtb In Seminole County, sponsors a display of old car* each
Saturday from 7-10 p.m. in the Wal-Mart parking lot behind
Wendy'S bn U.S. Highway 17*92, Sanford. Non-member* are
welcome to bring their old cars SP browse. For more
Informal km, call Herbert Partridge at 322*3697.

a new flag flapping in from of the
building, but It haa an extensive
collection of war memorabilia,
loaned to the museum for the
summer from the private colletlion of F. J . 'Bud' Tobin, who la
the man Dandle Sharf. museum
aid, conVr?*ed at the American

Nar-Anon, a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, meets at 8 p.m. Wednesdays and Saturdays at West
Lake Hospital. State Road 434. Longwood. and on Fridays, at S
P*m.. at Grove Counseling Center. Third Street and Oak
Avenue. Sanford. For more information, call 960-0364.
Alanon will meet at 8 p.m. Sunday at Christ United
Methodist Church, at County Road 427 and Tucker Drive.

Potto to talk vtrs«
First Florida Poets meet at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets are welcome.

Sanford Rotortons to moo!
. Rotary Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

He la the son of Bruce D. and
Carol
N. Damato of 317 Green
Michael T. Prater has been
promoted In the U.S. Army to Reed Road. DeBary.
The sergeant Is a 1967 gradu­
the rank of sergesnt.
He is a heavy wheel vehicle ate of Oviedo High School.
mechanic at AibUI Barracks,
Pvt lit ClMt Hsndriek
Germany.
P v t. 1st C la ss J o h n B.
The soldier Is the son of
William F. and Linda V. Prater of Hendrick has completed the
610 Devonshire Blvd.. Long- electronic warfare signal intelllgence Morse Interceptor
wood.
He is a 1987 graduate of Lake course at Fort Devens. Ayer,
Mass.
Mary High School.
The course Included Instruclion in International Morse code
and message recording and
P v t D r t w W o ttrin g
Pvt. Drew E. Wottrlng has forwarding equipment.
Hendrick Is the son of Lillian
completed the cavalry scout
D. Morris of 106 Drew Avc..
course at Fort Knox. Ky.
Studenta received basic com­ Sanford.
He Is a 1989 graduate of
bat and reconnaWsance training,
camouflage and concealment, Seminole High School.
communications, demolitions,
and first aid.
Wottrlng is the son or Jam es Capi TOfSflCO Sparks
Capt. Terence W. Sparks has
C. and Ann E. Wottrlng. 2291
been decorated with Ihe Air
Ekana Drive. Oviedo.
Force Achievement Medal.
The medal Is awarded to
airmen for meritorious acts of
Sgt. Richard Angel has been courage, or other outstanding
d e c o r a te d wi t h t h e Ar my accomplishments.
He Is a space systems staff
Achievement Medal which Is
s w a r d e d t o s o l d i e r s f or officer at Peterson Air Force
m eritorious service, acts of Base. Colo.
His wife. Jeanette. Is the
courage, or other outstanding
daughter of James 1. and Adele
accomplishments.
Angel is an Infantryman at Powell of 323 Forest Blvd.. Lake
Fort Richardson. Alaska.

4—
.

j

Tobin is fond of the signaturea
he haa collected. Including flying
ace Pappy Boytngton'a. An orig­
inal 13-star flag graces the
museum's wall. Sabres, pistols
and rifles are m ounted on
another wall. Hand grenades,
rarer* and strops, ana a hand
crafted day doll under glass fill
display cases, A new spaper
dated May 12. 1704, Is still
Intact.

Atanon nw nbt n to cooQfifliti

Overeaten 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.

n ts

JL
S 'i k i t B l i l ■ a k l l l f a M a
iFocn wooa
10 ■Qispiiy
military
uniforms. The dressed manne­
quins should be In place srtthln a
month, Tobin said.
"All of these are my favorites.
I t - M.A
jija
■ a M k u fc
ja A M lik l
Bui Ia oo
n iv t •om f Aspecial
favorites.” he said, pointing to
the 992 check endorsed In 1046
by Sgt. Ahrln C. York and made
out to Curt Hatfield, who was
« rrt of ttM&gt;,famous Hatfield and
McCoy feud. York recetvbd the
Congresslona) Medal of Honor
during World War t far capturing
and killing hundreds of the
enemy. Tobin explained.
f a —^

NarAnon to ofttr h«fp

Ovtrtators to wttgti in

cm

favorite memento* in the display
he and hi* son, Timothy, once
an aaalatant curator far a mill*
t* ry m u s e u m , l o v i n g l y
assemblrit far Whiting. They are

NanoUca Anonymous meets Friday at 11 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Are.. Sanford.

OM ears put in iinwOght

mmM *- *—

the emphasis on returning Des­
ert War troops,” Whiting said.
Tobin said he la pleased to
loan a portion of the collection,
which has never been on display
"There's a section In that
to the public, to the museum.
paper
that reports everything
*‘l came In here and saw how Congress
did dally fb a whole
great this place Is and how many week. It was no different In 1794
wonderful things are on display, than It Is now. They talk. talk,
and I decided It would be a good talk, refer things to committees
Idea.” Tobin said.
Tobln'a collection chronicles and no votes are taken.” Tobin
seven wars. Including the Revo­
Tobin served In the Marine Muaaum Curator Lorrains WhHIng
lutionary War. Civil War. Indian
War. Spanlsh-American War. Corps during World War II. His akin officer's hat, on display at
War of 1812. World Wars I and father, a World War I veteran. Muaaum this summsr.
II. Vietnam and Desert Storm, Joined again during World War II learn more about what their
and served with his son. Tobin's p a re n ts , g ra n d p a re n ts and
his latest target for acquisitions.
"T h at's what I'm searching three sons all served In Vietnam. g r e a t - g r a n d p a r e n t a w e n t
for.'* he said, even though he He said he felt, with patriotism through. Desert Strom was a
admitted his ‘War Room' at at an all-time high after victory great victory for patriotism. It
home Is full, right down to the In the Persian Gulf. It was time was fantastic the wsy the govemment and politicians allowed
bulging closet. ‘‘HI make room.” to share hta collection.
"I would like young people to the military to run the war.
he chuckled.

It s Nothing
IVrson.il
T E R M IN fX T O R

2

Those young men and women
now walk along with great pride
and I feel Just aa patriotic as they
do about my country. God bless
America.” he said, gesturing
-toward his collection that Is a
smalt glimpse of how II was kepi
free from Its enemies.

Parents

___
DCAM AM T: Our son has not
spoken to us In four years. He Is
our only child, and we live In the
same city. We had a misunderstanding over a petty Incident,
and he has Ignored us ever
since. He Is married and has a
teen-aged son.
We are not rich, but we do
have some assets that have
appreciated over the years. Our
son and his' family are our only
heirs. Wc are considering re­
writing our wills and leaving our
son o u t of it. As for o u r
grandson, we hardly know him
because we haven't seen him In
four years.
Wc would appreciate any
advice you can give us. We trust
yourjudgment._________

DEAB WITHHOLD: Either
write to your son or call him and
tell him you want to talk to him
about your will — that will
probably bring him to your door
In a hurry. If and when he shows

don't forget your local animal
shelter. Animals want nothing
from you but love.

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

up. try to settle your differences
peacefully, so you can be a
family again.
I hope he agrees to bury Ihe
hatchet, but If for some reason
he Is not willing, you would be
Justified In writing him off
Please don't punish your
grandson. He's the Innocent
victim of his father's anger. Give
him a chance to establish some
kind of rapport with you. and If
he Is a decent, caring young
man. remember him generously
In your will.
Otherwise, talk with your at­
torney about leaving everything
to your favorite charities. And

DBAS ABBYt My husband Is
attracted to a pretty waitress at
our favorite restaurant. We eat
there at least once a week. She
dirts openly with him and he
loves It.
I have tried not to let It bother
me. but she Is getting very
pushy. She compliments him on
his hair, his eyes, his smile, and
he eats It up. As soon as we
come In. she comes to our booth
and nays, "I have a new Joke for
you.” then she tells a dirty Joke,
and he breaks up laughing.
I suppose ll's my husband's
fault because he could tell her to
gel lost, but he doesn't.
I guess what really bothers me
Is the way he enjoys her com­
pany. He cheated on me once
and It really hurt me. and I don't
want to go through that again.
How do 1 deal with this
situation? Don't tell me that we
should stop going to that restau­
rant. It's very convenient, the
food is good and the price Is
right. Please help me.
DEAR WORRIED: Level with
your husband. Tell him you arc
hurt when he pays so much
attention to the waitress. Obvi­
ously she Is trying to be enter­
taining. but she Is out of line. If
she didn't get so much en­
couragement. she'd back off.

C H W / 1R Z E N G G G E R

and Bud Tobin discus* a baavar
tha Ssmlnofe County Historical

T « f lM o r 2
(R) 2.00 4:45 7:3010:20
Problem ChJM (PG13) P lus Woody Woodpecker
In Smoked Heme
1:45 3:45 5:45 7:45 9:45
R oM lH o o d
(PG13) 1:154:157:1510:15
8uburton Command (PG) 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30
C Sy SUckers
(PG13) 1:45 4:30 7:4510:20
Beckdratt
(R) 1:304:307:15 10:00
Sospdlsll
(PG13) 1:303:30 5309:0010:15
D o n l TeU Mom The Babysitter's Deed
(PG13)
2.-00 4:45 7:30 9:45
What About B ob ?
(PG) 2:304:457:4510:00
Dying Youno
(R) 2:305:008:00 10:30
M

No Passes

DEAR ABBY: I am a woman
who has enjoyed your column In
the Tampa Tribune for many
ycurs. I am In my mld-30n. stand
5 feel II Inches, weigh 155 ami
appear to be us strong us an ox.
so because of my size. 1 am
usked to do some Jobs you
w ouldn't usk a professional
mover to do without u helper.
I clean houses fur a living, and
my clients ask. "Would you
please move that hutch (fully
loaded), or the refrigerator, or
the king-size bed. or u huge
dresser, and clean behind It
today?" This has gone on for 10
yeurs, and until Just recently. I
never hud Ihe right answer to
give to these clods until one day
It hit me!

Now when I am asked to move
the piano or the refrigerator. I
ask sweetly. "Do you have
enough Insurance to covet any
injury 1 may get from moving
thW?" They gel the picture real
fast.
When I worked in an office In
my early 20s. I was asked io
move desks, (lllng cabinets and
haul In boxes that had been
delivered. No more! Sign me...
AIN’T NOOK
DBAS ADTT» Thanks for a
great letter as well as a valuable
suggestion for big women who.
because of lheir size, arc asked
to do more than th e ir Job
descriptions call for.
DBAS ABBTi My mother-inlaw's behavior is sometimes very
puzzling to me. She will bake (or
buy) some sort of pastry or
dessert to lake with her when
Invited to a get-together for a
special occasion. (Birthday, an­
niversary. housewarming, etc.)
When the get-together Is over,
she alwuys goes to Ihe kitchen
and packs up whatever is left
over from her "offering” ami
takes it home with her. Trying to
gel her to leave even a portion of
It is Uke pulling teeth!
I'm embarrassed when she
does this In front of my family,
or even her own children. My
husband and 1feel that whatever
she brings to the home of
another Is a gift, and she has no
right to lake home even a part of
It.
CONFUSED
IN MABV06A. CALIF.
DEAB CONFUSED: The lef­
tovers should be left — unless, of
course, the host or hostess
Insists that the donor lake them
home. And by the wuy. when
one takes a "goody” to the home
of another. It would lie very
thoughtful to bring It on a pa|&gt;er
plate, a box. or some other type
of disposable container that need
not tie returned.
(P ro M sm t? W rit* to O sa r Abby.
F o r a p e rso n a l, u n p u b lis h e d
rsp ly , s a n d a s s ll- s d d r s s s s d ,

PI Floyd Thsfetras

N rtM L S M m n t

jS o o S k o H J -S rtW fljJ j*

SUM M ER M O VIES
Tuesday and Wednesday Mornings
at 10:00 A.M.

3580 North Highway 17-92 - Lake Ma

324-0115

ow ell ^
P lace
"Catered Living For Seniors"
ACLF Apartments
Independent A Assisted Living
200 W. Airport Blvd, Sanford

322-7700

k A u M fM B a M iM H ta a a rf

J

OSCAR
u .T u .m .su N « « a&gt; l
W .F .S A T

no. sx&gt;

. .#♦*» «

�I

Yet, how meny of us make the same mistake
as we Journey through our fe e s.. .looking back­
ward instead of forward. We may lose sight o( our
goals, If we are Mnded by the fear of repetition of
Face the future without fear, trusting in God.
Psalms 3723-24 assures us saying, “the steps of

a man are established by the Lord;.. .when he
falls, he shall not be hurled headfong because the
Lord is the One who holds his hand.”
Make your decision to face forward with trust
not backward with fear, as you praise God this
week in your chosen house of worship.

EplBCOfHlI

C o n g n g a tlo M l

U n ite d C h u r c h
O f C h r tc t
CMNSTMN rsuowsnw
T o L is t Y o u r
Church Services
O n T h is Pago
C o nta ct Th o
A d ve rtising
D ept.
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

(Congregational • Chrtehan
Evangelical • RsNwmdi
Rev Donald Steedhr. Paalor
La*e Mary Community SM.
MO N Country C*u« Rd

To Advertise In
This Directory
Call 322-2611

LHt u&gt;y
Church School
StS M
Worehlp Celebration
tttOO
Nuraery Provided
FellowMMp Tima
1100
United Church Office
110 Polo Una
Sanford. Florida
323-31 IS

A llpaper

8TENSTROM, MclNTOSH
JULIAN, COLBERT
WHIGHAM ASIMMONS. PJL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW

•07)301171

Pom O t a Baa 1 W

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Arrangement* made In comfort ol
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BURIAL • SHIFFINO • CREMATION

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M ALTY
Herb Stenstrom and Staff

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Page. CaU 322-2611

�G Afitou Hui-W , i i . r t o r d . F k i.iJ e

i'M ■

**

:-i M

J uly 5. 1991 -

A.
.*# -■. ;*•' T- •
fc,*

‘

■ANFURD- The r im

Party at Holy Craw
SANFORD* Holy CroaaEptaco|iaI Church. 410 Magnolia Ave.
In Sanford, will be having an Independence Day party on
Sunday, July 7 beginning at 4:30 p.tn.
Church members will be performing In a talent show.
There will be a covered dtah cupper and. maybe even

Go to tlw n o with If* pastor
SANFORD — Youngsters who are membera of the Ftrat
Presbyterian Church. 901 Oak Ave. In Sanford, are being
Invited to aoend the the day with the paetor at the n o .
will meet at the church at 10 a.m..aand
go Ito
the
mThe
i p children
--------------------------------------------------n d ns
-----Zoolog
Central Florida Zoological
Park where they win spend several
hours and have lunch.

Saturday momlnQ mind control
LONGWOOD — Phil Phillips, a nationally-known expert on
child psychology, will apeak at the Wekhra Assembly. 167S
DUon Rd. In Longwood on Sunday. July 14 at 10:30 a.m.
Phillips has written a book called “Saturday Morning Mind
Control" in which he says Saturday morning cartoons reflect
religious undertones from Buddhism to Satanism. He also said
that advertising during Saturday morning cartoons should be
carefully screened by parents.
Phillips will offer advice to parents on how to buy toys for
their children.

c a n you image with
Just a lew moments the
af reaponare that you
ear an the streets of
County If a survey

I lovs to tsll a story
Shantl Mohabir, a vacation bibia school taachsr at tha Lutheran
Church ol tha Radaanwr in 8anford, raids storlas to the
klndsrgardsn class, Including har six ysar old dsughtsr Emily
Jans Mohabir.

^ T o d a y , C h r i s t i a n s oro afraid of
acknowMglng God
Jeeus
Christ and'th* ppwe^of

the

in public for fearof being sued,j

Ghost

Not only would the
be numerous but they
As we edebrata this
deuce Day we
birthday of the United

Swwhsnag
Doaro

the
of

The founders of the new na­
tion considered Independence
Day an Important
iahkL *1 am apt to
D tim re m at

n

w ui o r

cckvniico

great anniversary festival. It
ought to be commemorated aa
the day of deliverance, by sol­
emn acts of devotion to Ood
Almighty, h might to be solilfo i y y ||u . « s d
k a a J a
cm nura MiFim
po^up soo JpaiatiCt
with shows, gwnei, sports, guns,
bells, bonfires.
illumina­
tions. from one end of this
continent to the other, from this
P raise Ood J o h n A d am s
wasn't afraid of
Ood Almighty In ****
Today. Christiana are afraid of
acknowledging Ood Almighty
through Jesus Christ and the
power of the the Holy Ghost In
public for fear of being sued.
A good modern day example
be what happened to the

gwa^ntt^^Ms
I m a I lm b tn
_ __-g
ov in
u tm * icacnni,
u
students at 8CC who were offended and took a stand at the
showing of the Last Temptation
of Christ. It makes one wonder if
C h r is tia n a h a v e rig h ts In
America?
The last time I read the BUI of
Rights they stUl protected a
person's rig h t'to 'life, liberty.

iHawakdwraa ara **rilsar
M H aai
creitci
c a v iwaul
m present
danger” to society,
It would do all good to rend
Olbbon’a book. “The Decline
and Fall of the Roman Empire.”
In his book, he Hats th ree
reasons for the fell of Rome:
natural calamities, the Inner rot
^and
MaW
TOa dees
roamr^r^ajy
r of
—
»■ society, and rothe
llH1
a—
----s- __ *• m

Aa Americana we would be
t strongly encourage you aa a wise to take heed to this hJetortto read them too. The
You may ask why?
to the
A nation la only as strong aa
Constitution contain the fun­
w
u m m i rights
im h u an
damental
anda irecount
freedom ot
of »4 ptopfet The people STOonly OB
every cttlsen. Amendments 9 strong aa Its relationship and
“ ^ 7 10 M W ^
F
Which way America? What a
laws that would violate
tremendous challenge this
Supreme Court of the cuts for the Church today.
Psalm 80: 8-10 taOs t»
Hwh—t
h at hrtd that these
thing of the history of Israel, and
rights have some Hatha.
-For e x am p le, freedom o f It
speech docs not protect a person
npared to a
Israel Is here coma
who shouts "Fire" In a crowded
theater when there la no Are. Yet vine, and under this figure some
of her history are
the government must respect
to. This chapter brings
th e s e freed o m s In all b u t
extreme circumstances.
I. The Ood Almighty plant­
The Supreme Court has held
that freedom of speech may be ing the Church. (Verse 8)
a. “Thou has brought a
limited only when Its exerctae

-. .

vine out of Egypt”
II. The Great Progress of the
Church. (Verse 0)
a. "N lUls the land”
IK. The devastating failure of
the Church. (Verse lo f
a. “It bore no fruit”
IV. The mournful devastation
of the Church. (Verse 13)
a. “Ood withdrew His
oricntc irDfi) inevn
V. The earnest prayer of the
Church. (Verses 14-18)
8- “The church begins to
cry out of Ood"
VI. The devout promise of the
Church. (Verses IB)
a. “The church takes a
stand to persevere and praise"
Let Individual Christ tana and
ch u rch es take heed of this

sscaeivor ooo

emlly Worship Cooler. 3481 Airport Mvd . Sen lord
100dom Aiterribly ol Ood, 1815 W. 8th SI.. Sen lord
fokivo Assembly ol Qod, 1S73 On on Bd. Longwood
ARTIST
nltoch Beptlet Church. Oviedo
ehrory Seen HI Church. Crystal LoAe 8 3rd, Loke Mery
eeaetberry Beptlet Church. 770 Seminote Stvd.
entret Baptist Church, 3101 W- IM St.
huiuote Ftrat Bepiitt
leerwater Missionary Beptlet Church. Southwell Bd.
ounlrytide BeptlM Church, Country Out) Rood. Loke Mery
tret Beptlet Churcn, 81t Perk Ave.
in i Sept111 Church ol Aitemonie Springs. Rt 436 Altamonte Springs
m l Sept Iit Church ol F o w l City
in t BeptlM Church ol Oeneve
Ini Sept ttl Church. Mertham Woods
Ini Beptlet Church ol LoAe Monroe
int BopliM Church ol Longwood, Ml Seel SB 434
Ini Boot Isi Church ol Oviedo
Ml Beptlet Church ol Sentendo Springs
in t Shiloh Mieeionery Slptiel Church, HOI W. 13th St
in t iepttet Church ol Osteen
oontam Heed BeptlM Church, Oviedo
lope Beptlet Church, F o w l City Community Center. F o w l City
(dependence BeptlM Miss Civic Leegue Bldg . Longwood
ordervMlMionery BeptlM Church. BIO Upsete Bd
ighthouee BeptlM Church. MS Longwood - Leke Mery Boed
Neview Beptlet Church, 13B Lekeview Ave. Leke Mery
lecedonie Miseion Beptisl Church. Oek Hill B d. Oeteen
keeionery Beptlet Church. North Bd-. Enterprise
lommg Glory BeptlM Church. Oeneve Hwy.
It Morten Primitive Beptlet. ttOt Locust Ave. Senlord
I t Olive Missionary Beptisl Church, Saniando Springs Bd . Longwood
It Sinai Mieeionery BeptlM Church. 1*00 Jerry Ave
H Zion Missionary BeptlM. Sipes Ave
lew Bethel Missionary Church, tth SI. I Hickory Ave.
lew Ml Calvary Missionary Beptlet. HOB W I21h St
lew Belem Primitive BeptlM Church. 1308 W. 13th St
lew TeMemenl Baptist Church. Oueliaty Inn, North Longwood
lew Ml Zion Beptisl Church. 1730 Peer Ave
lew Lite Fellowship. 4BB1 E Lake Drive, Casselberry. FI 1370B
lorthtide Beptlet Churcn. Chuiuoie
eopie't Baptist Church. 1301 W First S tw t. Senlord
Insetset BeptlM Church. 11B W. Airport Blvd
veins Lake Baptist. Ridge Bd. Fern Pert
togrsss Missionary Beptlet Church. Midway
econd Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church Weil Senlord
myrne Beptisl Churcn. 330 Overbrook Or. Casselberry
lertighl Baptist Church. 190 Bahama Bd.
1 James Mieeionery Baptist Churcn. Bl. Bd. 415. Osteen
« Johns Missionary BeptlM Church. 309 Longwood Ave.. Aitemonie
Springs
4 Luke Mieeionery Beptisl Church ol Cameron City, Inc
l Paul Beptlet Church. 113 Pine Ave

4

A'

As Individuals, “do we have
the fruit of holiness In our life?”
In th is passage we have a
striking
•»- ~ analog of
. _ the
-—planting.
- j . l.
SVvUcf e^_5nd iw*gt«* « •**
Church. Let ua see to It that the
analogy does not become true as
regards to fruUkeaoese; for If It
should, bur defense will be gone.
be wasted and
If any have backslidden from
the ways of the Lord, let them
seek Him at once In repentance
and prayer.
Which way America?
That question depends upon
the churches response to Ood!
ms as*. rw*e

&gt;. a Swisr, rim
•WPart Amins.

spoken, that la most Important.
I may not have understood the
words at this service but I was
It wss like something out of able to catch the spirit. The
worda didn't matter. So often
the Old World.
When I parked in front of the they don’t.
1 of course had no idea what
little neighborhood confection­
ery across from the Croatian the sermon was all about, but
Catholic church at 9:45 on this there can be a certain fascina­
Sunday morning, small groups tion about listening to a lan­
of people were standing at the guage you don't understand. Its
bottom of the church stepe, very disconnectedness with the
ta lk in g and enjoying each world of all things familiar can
other's company.
tra n s p o rt th e lis te n e r Into
There were old people and another realm.
When the service was over I
young fam ilies with sm all
children In tow. Everybody was curious to see that effect the
same service In English would
seemed to feel at home.
I was church editor of a large have on me. 1 had a cup of coffee
metropolitan paper at the time. I at the confectionery across the
would attend a different church street and returned for the 11:30
each Sunday and report my
Impressions in a Monday column
The English service, which
called “ A Stranger Goea to had no music, was almost bleak.
I now understood every word of
Church."
The service at this Croatian the sermon. But I was dismayed
church was Just about to begin to discover t hat what had
when I realized I had come to the sounded so lofty and sublime to
Croatlan-language service. The me In Croatian was actually the
English service was at 11:30. priest giving a sharp scolding to
the congregation (particularly
But I decided to atay.
I don't understand a word of the men) for not offering to help
Croatian but I didn't have to. m o r e w i t h t h e c o m i n g
Worda can sometimes get in the weekend’s parish bazaar and
way when It comes to conveying picnic.
"Some of you don't lift a linger
a religious, other-worldly feeling.
It la the Impression a worship In this parish beyond going to
service makes on the worship­ masa,” the pastor told them. "I
pers, rather than the worda suppose some of you are saying,

'U you're going to talk like that.
Father, don’t count on me to
help.* Well. If that's the way you
fed. don't come."
U was a real old-fashioned
dressing down.

y

Aa the parishioners were filing
out when the mass was over. I
noticed that three people
still sitting In the church. I
wondered why they had atayed.
Maybe they too were tired of
words and luat wanted to be
with God and be quiet.

I thought of a story about a
peasant who used to come Into
the pariah church In his village
In Italy and sit for hours each
day Just looking up at Christ on
the cross.
One day the padre said to him.
“What do you say lo our Lord all
day. my friend?"
“I say just nothing at all.”
replied the old soul. “I only look
at him and he looks at me."
Sometimes words are unnec­
essary.

REVIVAL A T

CALVARY CHRISTIAN CENTER

JULY 7-12 „ S T ? m
PASTOR-EVANGELIST-TEACHER-MISSIONARY
A ktM try B lnm d With The G(jtsQf7Tv8jpt1t
mOWTLY

F O R M O M IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L 3 3 3 -1 5 1 9

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

IUAMCI CHURCH
ommunlly Alliance Church, 4813 Eaat Lake Drive. Winter Scringe
etghborhood Aillence Church. 301 Meridiem Woode B d. Longwood
onford Aillence Church, 1401 A fern Ave. Sen lord

M
I
.

Understanding the words in church
A ssocSsdPrtssW rlttf________

l

•______ —
**8 .

for your freedom s

Church of Hanford has

evcnte t S w S tatep L ee^n their
the month of July
On July 7. law
Department, the
County Are
Rtenta. the *ew
the Florida
Highway Patrol and tin
Commlaeton wltt be hone
10; IB a m . at the church.
July 14 wifl he I
la and health
am . on that day,
July 21 a r ia _____
;ftepreaentathree of the
___
•tonera UA Houw i f ftepresentattve*. the Florida State
Senate, the Stale Houae of Reprcaentattvet and Betty* Smith,
mayor of Sanfaid. wttl ah he honored by the church membera
at 10tlBa.ni.
July 38 will be recognited aa Sanford Merchants Day. Local
buaineaa men and women will be given certificates at the
chuiehat lOtIBam.

'

St John's Missionary Baptist Churcn. B30 Cypress Bl.
Springfield Missionary Beptlet. 13th B Cedar
Suntand BeptlM Church. 3S3B Palmetto
Temple BeptlM Church. Palm Springe Bd., Altamonte Springe
Victory Baptist Church. Old Orlando B l M Heeler Ave.
Westview Baptist Church. 4100 Paoia Boed MBA)
William Chapel Missionary BeptlM Church, Marti A William S t,
Aflvnonti Spring*
Zion Hope Beptlet Church, 713 Orange Ave.
CATHOLIC
All Souls Catholic Church, 90S Oek Ave. Senlord
Churcn ol the Nativity. Lake Mary
Our Lake ol the Lake* Cel hoiic Church. 1310 Meilmillen. Deltona
Si Ann e Catholic Church. Dogwood Trail. DeBsry
Bl. Augustine Catholic Church, Sunset Or., near Button Bd-. Casselberry
St. Clwe Catholic Community meets M Oeteen Civic Center
Bl. Mery Megadelene Catholic Church. Maitland Ave.,
Altamonte Springs
CHRISTIAN
First Christian Church. 1907 8 Senlord Ave
First Christian Church ol Longwood. 1400 E-t Williamson Rd. Longwood
Orace Chnslien Church. Wilson Elementary School. iPeoial. BBS Orange
Blvd, Senlord
Lekeview Christian Church. Beer Lake Rd . M Jamison
Horthside Christian Church. Florida Haven Dr . Maitland
Senlord Chnslien Church, 123 W. Airport Blvd
South Seminole Christian Church. 300 W SB. 434, Oviedo
CHRISTIAN BCttNCI
First Churcn ol Chnsl Scientist. STS Mertham Woods Bd. Longwood
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Churcn O l Christ. 1513 S Park Ave
Church ol Christ M Lake Ellen. U S 17 93. N Casselberry
Church ol Christ. 800 Palm Springs Or, Aitemonie Springs
Church ol Christ. Geneva
Church ol Chnsl. Longwood
Churcn ol Chnsl W 17th Si
Northaide Church ol Chnsl. Fla Haven Or. Maitland
South Seminole Church ol Chnsl, S4t0 Lika Howell Rd
CHURCH OF OOO
Church ol Ood. 303 Hickory
Church ol Ood. 803 W 33nd Bl
Churcn ol Ood, Oviedo
Churcn ol Cod Holiness. Lake Monroe
Churcn Ol Ood Mission, Enterprise
Churcn ol Ood. 1403 W tSin SI
Church ol Qod in Chnsl. Oviedo
Church ol Qod ol Prophecy. 3909 S Elm Ave.
Church ol Qod ol Prophecy. 1709 9- Persimmon Ave.
Church ol Ood ol Prophecy, 499 9 Centrsl. Oviedo
Church or Ood (7th Oeyl Deltona Community Center. Deltona (Sun Room)
Rescue Church ol Ood. 1700 W 13th S I. Senlord
True Church ol Ood. 3700 Ridgewood Ave . Senlord
CONOBffl8T*1Tf‘-1
Congregational Chnslien Church. 3401 9 Parti Ave. Sanford
IAAT1AN OBTHOOOX
Eastern Orthodoa Church. St Oeo&lt;ge. 3001 Dylan Way. Maitland
Eastern Orthodoa Church. Si Steven l M OCA, 1998 Lake Emma Boed.

Longwood. FL 33780
Eastern Orthodoa Church. SI John Orthodos, 3743 Country Club Road.
Senlord

Longwood Churcn ol Ihe Natarene, Weymen A Jessup Ave, Longwood
Markham Woods Church ol the Natarene. SB 49. 3 W MUes West ol 14
M the Wehhe River

All Saints Episcopal Church, E. DeBery Ave. Enterprise
Christ Cpiscope! Church, Longwood
Episcopal Church ol the New Covenant, ITS

Deltona Presbyterian Church. HoUand Bhrd. S Austin As#. Deltona
First Proebyierten Church ol Lake Mary
FirM Proebyierten Church. Oak Aw. * 3rd St.
First Proebyierten Church ot DeBery, E. Highland
Maikheit Woode PteebyMrtW Church, 8310 Martihem Woods Bead. Leke
Mery, FI.
Bl. Andrews Presbyterian Church, BB13 Beer Lake Rd
Bl. Marks Presbyterian Church, 1031 PWm Springe Rd. Atlemonle Spgs
TuicewWe Proebyierten Church. 3100 Weet Stele Rd 439, Oviedo Fla
Upseie Community Presbyterian Church. Upsafa Rd
Westminister Presbyterian Church, Bed Bug Rd.. Ceeeetberry
•IYEJITM BAT AOYENTtBT
Foreet Leke Seventh Day Adventlel Church. Hwy. 439. Forest City
Mars Hill Seventh Day Adventlel Church. 901 E 2nd S t. Senlord
Senlord Seventh Day Adventlel Church, 8815 N. Highway 437
Seventh Day Adventlel Church. Maitland Ave.. Altamonte Springs
Winter Springs Seventh Day Adventlel Church. 80 S. Moss Bd
OTH8R CHURCHES
All Faith Chapel. Camp Seminole. Weklve Parti. Rd
Alien a A M I. Church. Olive A 13th
Beardell Avenue Hoi mesa Chapel. Bearden Ave
Chuhrola Community Church
Church ol Jeeua Christ ol Letter Day Saints. 3315 Park Ave
Family Church Christian Center. 1844 Seminole Blvd. Casselberry
First Bom Church ol the Living Ood. Midway
First Church ol Chrtst, Scientist. Elkem Blvd and Venus S t. Deltona
First Pentecostal Churcn ol Longwood
First Pentecostal Church ol Senlord
Full Ooepel Church ol Qod In Chrtst. 1(20 Jerry Ave. Sen loro
Full Ooepel Tabernacle. 3734 Country Club Boed
Orace Bible Church. 3944 S Senlord Ave
Holy Trtnty Church ol Ood In Chrtel, 1814 Mangouatme Ave
Kingdom Mart of JehovNi'e Witness. Lake Monroe Unit. 1963 W Third SI
Lake Monroe Chapel. Orange Blvd. Leke Monroe
Ml OUve Hoimess Church, Oak Hill B d. Osteen
Neighborhood Alliance Church. 30t Markham Woode Road. Longwood
Pentecostal Open Bible Tabernacle. Ridgewood Ave. Oft 29m opposite
Seminole High School
Praise end Power Church, 111 W Wilbur Ave. Lake Mery
Rolling HU!i Moravian Churcn. SB 434. Longwood
Santoro Alliance Church. 1401 S Perk Ave
Senlord Bible Church, 2480 Senlord Ave
Second Church Ol The living Ood. 343S Bearden Ave. Santoro
The Full Ooepel Church ol Our Lord Jeeus Chnsl. Washington S t. Ca
naan City
The Sehrallon Army. 700 W 24lh St
Thumph. The Church ol the New Age. 1008 W «th Si
United Church ol Chnet. Altamonte Community Cnapei Altamonte
Springs
United Churcn ol Chnsl Chnslian Fellowship. 3*0 N Country Club Rd
Leke Mery
U C SS Spwuwal Centre. 13SA South votueie Ave. Comer ot Grates and
Volusia Ave. Orange City
Winter Springs Community Evangelical Congregational 219 Wade St
Win lev Springe _________________________________________

Holy Cross Episcopal, Part Ave. M 4th S t, Senlord
St. Peters Episcopal Church. TOO Rinehart Road. Lake Mery
St. Richard's Church, 5181 Lake Howell Rd . Winter Perk
The Church of the Good Shepherd. MMIlend, 331 Leke Are
CanaryChrtitianCareer.900W.ethSI .Senlord
Living Waters Cathedral. Weal SB 48 and Kennel Road. Senlord
Northland Community Church, 330 Dog Track Bd., Longwood, FL 33790
Outreach Deliverance Center. 3331 Si pee Ave., Sen lord
JEWISH
Beth Am Synagogue meeting at Comer ol Send Leke and County Line
Road. West 14
Temple Shalom. 1789 Elkcam Stvd, Deltona
LUTHERAN
Ascension Lutheran Church, Overbrook Dr. Ceeaelberry
Good Shepherd United Lutheran. 3917 S Orlando Dr
Holy Crote Lutheran Church ol Lake Mery, 790 Sun Drive. Leke Mery
Lord Ol Ule Lutheran Church, 3SB TuehAwtlla Bd . Winter Springe
Lutheran Church ot Providence. Deltona
Lutheran Church ol the Redeemer, 3939 Oak Avenue
Messiah Lutheran Church. Ootden Day* Of A Hwy 1793, Ceeaelberry
Si Lukes Lutheran Church. Rt. 429. Stevie
SI. Stephen Lutheran Church, 434 |usl Weal ol 14, Longwood
Barnett United Memonal Church. E DeBery Ave. Enterprise
Beer Lake Untied Methodist Church
Bethel A M E Church. Canaan Hgls
Casselberry Community United Methodist Church. Hwy 1782 Ptney
Rid99 Rd , CMlUNffy
Chnsl Untied Methodist Church. Tucker Dr. Suntand Estates
DeBery Community Methodist Church. W Highbsnas Bd, DeBery
First Unilsd Methodist Churcn. 4t9 Perk Ave
First Methodist Church ol Oviedo
First United Methodist Church ol Oeneve
Grace United Methodist Church, 499 N Country Club Bd. Leke Mery
Orani Chapel A.M E Church. Oviedo
Oekgrove Methodist Church, Oviedo
Osteen Methodist Church. Cor ol Carpenter S Murrey SI. Oeteen
Paoia Wesleyan Methodist. 8690 Wayside Of . Senlord
Pioneer Methodist Church, 1to N Poplar Ave. Senlord
Saniando Uruikd Methodist Cl-umh SB 434 end 1-4. Longwood
SI James A.M E , 9tn si Cypress
SI Luke M B Church ol Cameron City. Inc . Bearden oil 9 B 44 E
St Mary SA M E Churcn. Si Bt 4t9. Osteen
St Paul's Methodist Church. Osteen Rd . Enterprise
Sirs!lord Memorial Church. S DeBery
Fust Church ot the Hararene. 2991 Senlord Ave
Oeneve Church ol the Natarene. S R 49. Oeneve
Lake Mery Church ol me Natarene. 171 E Crystal Lake Ave. Leke Mery

i■

p k

fjV

;

�fiB - Sanloid H«raM. Sanford, Florid* - Friday, July 5. 1M1

Diet controls celiac
or gluten sensitivity
PETER
GOTT'M.D

ease la an Inherited aenalUvlty to
gluten. a cereal protein found In
wheat, rye. barley and oats.
Many p a tle n ta ex h ib it no
sy m p to m s, o th e r t h a n o c ­
casional bloating and diarrhea.
However. In some people, it
causes chronic diarrhea, pale
and malodorous stools, anemia,
weight lose. rash, abdominal
discomfort and malabsorption of
dietary nutrients.
The diagnosis Is suspected by
the symptoms land X-ray tests of
the Intestine), and confirmed by
a biopsy of the Jejunum (part of
the small Intestine).
T r e a t m e n t c o n s i s t s of
assiduous avoidance of gluten In
any form. This may be difficult
because the protein Is widely
used In processed foods, such as
soups, sauces and hot dogs.
DBAB DM. OOITt My daugh­
ter has cervical dysplasia. Please
explain w hat It Is and th e
recommended treatment.
OMAR UADBM t Dysplasia
means ceQs that are abnormal tn
stse, shape and appearance. Ap­
parently. your daughter had a
Pap test that showed dysplasia
of the cells of the cervix, the
opening of the uterus.
Such cells could in d ic a te
chronic Irritation or Infection —
or. In some cases, cervical
dysplasia may be a forerunner of
cancer. Therefore, when faced
with this problem, m o s t
gynecologists recommen d
further testing, such as a cone
biopsy. During this office pro­
cedure. part of the cervix Is cut

I SHOUlP HAVE REALIZE? X
WAS iN TROUBLE foAHT AFTER
MV WIFE AHPX WHS MARKER

'W f ATT i n

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WjtMJWUti/bj-AffUJU/Vl,

* IT ALMOST LOOKER LIKE
SOMEONE HAPTAKEN AfWfT
EACHCOOKIE, ANP LiCKEP
OFF ALLTHE FROSTING"

M in tto o n tfa .c c v lu &amp; r ,

th l. JkidhJiWL t i t C&amp;rnf».

WHV O OIT WEGOSOMLRACt
MORE flTtfSSnNG AND HAUL
A FEW IAUSHST 3GE1HEK?

He related In a 1963 Issue of
Bridge Magazine how he played
today's hand. At all 10 tables In
a Perth to u rn am en t. S o u th
ended In six diamonds. Only two
declarers made the contract.
Roscndorff and AN. Other.
Roscndorff won the club lead
in hand and cashed the A-K of
diamonds, getting the bad news.
He played off the heart ace.
crossed to dummy with a club
and led a low heart. He was

grateful to see East’s king ap­
pear. but stopped to think. There
were now three winners, the
club ace and the Q-J of hearts,
nestling In the dummy as dis­
cards for South's spade lasers,
but there was no dummy entry.
Roscndorff saw the solution.
He rufTed East’s heart king,
cashed the diamond queen and
exited with a trump. East had lo
win and concede access to the
dummy by leading away from
his spade king.
Roscndorff wrote. "No doubt
many British players would take
this play In their stride without
even thinking there was much In
it. but It gave me a proud thrill
and I am not ashamed or saying
so.'*
Either this was written tongue
In cheek or he greatly overrated
the average standard of play In
Britain.
(C11 9 9 1. NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

YOURBSTHDAY
JaJy 6 ,1 9 9 1
If the fruits of your labor are
slow to ripen in tne year ahead,
don’t be impatient. Time is your
ally, and you will eventually
harvest the crop that is due ynu.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Under most conditions, you are
a reasonably good financial
manager, but this weekend you
may nave trouble keeping your
accounts In order. Too much pay
for a little bit of play could be the
reason. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find It. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker in ­
stantly reveals which signs are
romantically perfect for you.
Mall 82 p lu s n long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, do this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland
OH 44101-3428.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 There
arc no shortcuts to success
today, so don’t bank your hopes
on wishful tactics or procedures.
What you do must be done
correctly.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sept. 221 Try
to see things from the other

guy's perspective today and not
Just from your own. You'll be
surprised by how much you may
learn from a fresh outlook.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Joint ventures could be of ques­
tionable value both today and
tomorrow. Be careful you're not
drawn into something where the
burdens disproportionately fall
onvou.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. 22)
Sometimes, whal we cannot
accomplish on our own can be
achieved with the aid of a
competent ally. Unfortunately,
neither case represents optimum
conditions today.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you lack expertise. It's best
not to Instruct another in how
something should be done today.
Your directions could make a
bad situation worse by adding
new complications.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Be on your best behavior in
social situations today or else
you may leave a poor Imprint on
several people you're anxious to
Impress.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
If you find the majority of your

For a country or some 15
million. Australia has done re­
markably well In international
bridge events. One driving force
In popularizing the game there
was Hans Roscndorff. who died
In 1083. His efforts were all the
more meritorious because he
lived In Perth, on the Isolated
west coast of the vast continent.
(It Is 3.694 miles from Perth to
Sydney.)

WUVAJSVMTMUUa
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HERE YOU ARE. GAR FI ElP. Mb PER
VOUR PIET, A SM ALL 5ALAP

Tilft is our
f'ARANOIA
l RAINING
CENTER

VIE FINDCWR AGENTS
WRFcPVi BEST IN A
TOTAL STATE OF j r f
c PARANOIA - /

H ttP tQ A

HEY) WHERE'S THE
FRENCH BREAP?/

CROUTON

VERY
NOT MJCU8LE N&amp;ENT ' «**&gt;.
FECWNfe PRTMO_&gt; AGENT
your c o m m ie
r T WWW!
Sitekick hepe ? j \ VERY,

CCNPltMENTC,

H O fttftH cN O N W R E

1 r JUSTAFLKH

Hum? trying H&gt;

ROUND. WITH
k LITTLE HOPE
FALSE SENSE , TMlNWG HE’LL

1LULL ME WTO A

OF SECURITY. J

S

\

huh? i —

”' V

TORSO

_

m noSroo\t
,

I U K £ TH'
WAY YOU PRESS. ,
I CHOPPER, M SN fST/
-J ITS JUST, f YOU'RE
S’WSCP TO fit AY

c M A im o * .: K

Opening lead; ♦ 4

friends disagree with your opi­
nions today, take time to ask
yourself, "Who is out of step? Is
It lor they?"
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your attitude might be a trifle
more negative than usual today,
and it's possible you may not see
too much to admire In yourself
or others. Lighten up.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19)
Economic pressures could heat
up a bit for you both today and
tomorrow. Buy only what is
essential, and try not to assume
any new financial obligations or
Installment payments.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Family members will have to be
handled with considerable tact
today in order to avoid petty
confrontations. If you get ofT on
the wrong track. It could be hard
to restore order.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Weigh your wards carefully to­
day; don’t unwittingly pass on
harmful Information about a
friend that Is predicated on
hearsay rather than fact.
1 0 1 9 9 1 . NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

-.1 WOIAPNY I hope you ear
UTXAY** PAID AIMHTY,
WAR8UCK6 CHARLIE/... CAJ6t
WITHOUT A Of VOS AOMfNT.
REASONS YOU’RE
,

U N iM H Q Y go/

�CLASSIFIED ADS
S o m ln o te
322-2611

O r la n d o • W in te r F
831-9993

a #*veIT# a a
TBMYKBI
_____ M l

ittfMeslMTUF*

Step Up Into A
Great Apartment!
S f B ig g f f

Come Home To
Country S tyle Living!

2 B edroom , 2 Bath

•
“ms""'

330-5204
apartment*
TACT 1T-SE N- u r n OUT

BWiaDHfl:MHII

«ntarAHU.*K

Cel, anytime, 344-5147

1, 2, &amp; 3 BEDROOMS
cen|ufwti^lhenrwli

RENTS S TA R TIN G F R O M

n e w Aid in pint Reek 33. Pay**
25 an* 34, PuWte Retards at
Seminot* County. Fkwkto
Th# aforesaid tala will be
maAa pursuant la an Amend*
Summary Judgment on Plain
titfo Complaint antaroA by -----th#
a a ----------- »■*— b -

71— Help Wanted

ra O n o rte ^ ^ p w x T o.

an July 1. i **i .
Tarrno at Sato: Catli or cashtor'i chock at the time at sal*.
Subtact to all lafal llano and
encumbrance*.
OATED mi* Jrd day ol July.

EMPLOYMENT

Rente From $430 A Month

i 323-5176

• Waahcr/Drycn in Select Units
•Seif Clean Oven

• |ccmaker
• Dishwasher

I

WM.

MARYANNE MORSE
C tarn of Ilia Court

AaDaputyOark
Publlih: J u t y ll J , ttfl
OEM J*

BMTtRMKS, UKMMCtO
Dunbar * Restaurant, I t f l
San tord. Call P aultH a m

N O TIC I OP A PUBLIC N IA B ING TO CONSIDER TH E
ADOPT ION OP AN oatH NANCE BY T H E C ITY OP
SANPORD. FLORIDA

Not let I* hereby 91van that a Public Hearing will ba held In tha
CommluJon Roam at ttw City Hall In tha City ot Santor d. F lor Ida. at
7:00 o'clecli P.M. on July A INI, to consider ttw adoption ol an
ordlnancvby ttwCIty ot Sanford. Florida, aolollawt:

IN TH E CO U N TY COURT
OF T H E EIG H TEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AN D FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO.: ft-Mtt-CC-M-D

ORDINANCE NO. 3*47
Ganaral Date rip Mon at ttw araa to ba annexed and map It a*
follow*:

A PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN PROPERTY LYING NORTH
OF LAKE MARY BLVD AND SOUTH OF HIDDEN LAKE DRIVE
AND BETWEEN DRIFTWOOO LANE EXTENDED NORTHERLY
AND ART LANE: AS SHOWNONTHE MAP BELOW

RALEY ROOFING CO. INC
Plaintiff.

v*

RUSSELL SWAIN. Individually
and RUSSELL SWAIN, d/b/a
THE SWAIN COMPANY,
Dtftndan!
N O TIC I OF ACTION

n
S
A complete datcrlption and a copy ol ttw ordinance than ba
available at ttw office ot ttw City Clerk lor all pertont datiring to
examine ttw tame
All parlle* In Inter#*! and c ltln n t thall have an opportunity to ba
iN nmhcI if ftiJtf hairing
By order ol ttw City Commission of ttw City ot Sanford. Florida
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC It a parton decldM to appeal a
decltion mad* wim raipact to any matter comidered at the above
meeting or hearing, ha may need a verbatim record ot the
proceeding*. Including the tetfimony and evidence, which record it
not provided by ttw City ol Santoro |FS7M 01051
Janet R Donahoc
City Clerk
Publish: June 104 JutyS. I t f l

D E G 7t7

O O I P V D
R O O R V E W K .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Thoa* who expect to reap the
blessings ot freedom must, kk# man. undergo tha
tatiguas of supporting It." - Thomas Jatfarson

TO RUSSELL SWAIN
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action lor breach ol contract,
ha* baan Iliad again*! you and
you a r t rtqulrad to tarva a copy
ol your written defantei to It on
David A Sim*, ttw PMIntlft'*
attorney, whote addra** I* 500
E. Altamonte Drive. Sulla 200.
A ltam onte Spring*. Florida
37701. on or batora 74 July. 1*41,
and Ilia ttw original with Iha
Clerk of (hit Court, either batora
tarvice on tha Plaintiff* at
tor nay or Immediately thereat
tar. olherwlie a datault will ba
antarad again*! you lor tha
rat let demanded in tha
Complaint
DATED on tha 17th day ol
June. INI
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE COURT
By Carrw Buettntr
Deputy Clark
Publl*h June 71. 79 A July S. 17.
Iftl
DEG 731
N O TIC I OF SALE
OF MOTOR VEHICLE
P u rt u a n ! to F S 713 SOS.
M id F L Lien Service*. Agent tor
L le n o rlt) w ill M il at Public Sale
lor cath. the following detcrlbed
vehicle!*) located at Lienor*
place to ta titty a claimed Men
lor labor and/or storage 1991
B A N K A H A D I B T E aaSS/Jenkin*
Indu strial M e ch/Llen or 4943
W o o d n l S p g * . Sanford. F L
31777/Ow ner/M idw ay Tru c k
ing. In c/Lien h olde r/U n kn ow n
Sale Date 7 77 91 at 10 00 A M at
4943 W oodnl Spg* Rd . San lord
F L Said vehicle may be re
deemed by satisfying the lien
prior to Sale Date You have ttw
right to a hearing at any time
prior to Sale Date by tiling a
de m and tor h earing in the
Circuit Court Owner ha* the
right to recover possession ot
vehicle by pcnling a bond in
accordance with F S 559 917 any
p ro ce e d s in access ot the
am ount ot the lien w ill be
Deposited with the Clerk ot the
C ircu it Court m the County
where vehicle is held
Publish Ju ly S. 19*1
O E M 57

Now hiring! Cook*, wailar*.
w a ltra m * . lor all *hilt*l
Eicallent employe* benefit*
and flexible hour* for lull or
p a r t tim e a m p lo y m a n t.
Former Wattle experience a
plu* but not rtqulrad
Apply In pertan. 1 4PM dally
4740 W SI. Rd 44. Sanford
EOE/M/H/H/V

Moving 4 Hauling
C O N C E P T On* Eater.. Inter
re n o v a te d l H o m o , o llic a .
kitchen, both! 134*347

Horn* Rapair»

SALESPERSON
Sale* (iparianca pralarrtd
Beneliti Apply in per*on
Monday Friday. A rlitocral
Volkiwagon. 4175 S Orlando
Dr. San lord 331 7777

Appliance*

Cleaning Service

R O N C O L L IE R 'S R nna«4ttagi
Carpentry, rooting, pain ling
” Na lab tea sm all!” T i l 4411
T H E H O U S E D O C T O R I A ll
home repair si Painl/Termit*
damage LM / lm
2132411

Land Ctearing
L A N D C L E A R I N O . III! d irt,
back hoa. loader work, hauling
and clean up Countrywide
Oevelopement. 407 1711715

Automotiv*
SECRETARY / RECEPTIONIST
E ip with construction ollica.
Clerical work Typing, book
keeping 4 filing Sand return#
4 r i t to P.Oi Ba&gt; 719,
laatard. FL33/779759
SECURITY

OFFICERS

weekly pay. *5 50 per hour to
ktart with regular rail** plu*
banatlt* For prestigious ulilt
ty company in DaBary HS
diploma. Ft* driver* licence,
good credit history and able to
pa** drug l**t Current Fla
guard licente or certificate
re q u ir'd Metro Security in
Orlando
I *51 i m

Lawn Sarvict
HEADLINERSI Mo*t car* *40
Wagon* *75 Vinyl lop* UO up
CarpatUOuo 114 55a*

B o o k k e e p in g
SMALL butineit bookkeeping.
accounting, tax and computer
M r vice* O n 'O ffu te 314*0*4

•ORRV A D A M S C O N C B IT B

Quality and cleanliness I*
guaranteed II yr* rttidantlal
atparlance 74/34134/330 5S17
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Beal 7 M an Quality Opera
Mon! 3301334/340 79*7

Building Contractors

THE SANFORD HE RAID
I* now accepting application*
lor pres* ca'cher* Reliable
transportation and telephone e
must Apply in person 300 N
French Ave. Sanford
NO PHONE CALLS P LEASE

puss.Me train Apply 11JO S
San turd A , * iantord ' H i m

SSSa/DAV P R O C E S S I N G
PHONE orders at hewn* Pro
pie call you la or car For into.
I 400 71511*7 E i&gt; 5*4

C O M P L E T E OaaM y Lawn A
Landscaping, Tree Service A
Irrigation, competitive rate*,
Ire* #sMm#l#s5unny'U77 7479
L A W N C U T T I N G A N D M A IN
TE N A N C E . LK. M AR Y,
C RO SSING S A R I A . 31115*3

* # GUTTERS CLEAHEDa*

Carpentry

Commercial Residential

Cleaning StrvT
B A B CLEANING SERVICE.
Office home Lie 4 Ins Pro
Irsuonal couple

111 4094

CATHY’S CLEANING SERV
ICC
Reference* reasonable
rales Licensed' Call 111 74/0

Painting
A A H E X T E R I O R P A IN T IM O
4 pressure clean SAVE IIS*
Lie /Irte e sll 114311*4
D IC K P IN O L A ’ S P A IN T IN G .
Quality w orkl In l/ E e l. Lie d
A Insured Freeeslt 171 5771

Past Control
• B IS H O P P E S T C O N T R O L *
Senior CiM/en Discounts!
Ily**r«eep*rience l 1744779

Plumbing
MOPRINS rLUMlING
A ll your plumbuxj needs' &gt;4
hours' rRF0057//0 )71 1*44

Pressure Cleaning

LAWN M A IH TE N A H C i
Cemmerual/ReMdewtlal. Lew
Rates 1 Call Tea*
113431*

D R IV E W A Y S . Roots Houses
etc
Low ra te s ' C om m e r
clei/Residential ju n to *

■ A N D Y 'S D U A L I T Y LA W N .
Com plete care, clean ups
Since I N I F re e e tl.l 111 SII4

P C M H o u m wash and pamtmq
" Q u o te s by phone” C e ll
Roqer. 3]4 eaaO 4AM 4PM

R E L I A B L E L A W N M A IN T E
N A N C E 1 SI ett tor 1*1 lime
evslam ertl H I *711

TELEMARKETERS
• Top Commission*
• Generous Bonuses
O Promotion Potential
O U n crowded Work At
mosphere
Call between I f 1373 *111

B A R H A U L IN O Yard trash,
a p p l. turn Cheap on tim e'
S I5 'up Call Ray 137 7H7

ST. A U G U S T IN E GRASS plug*
installed. 11* sq II Free
Estimates! SunMf Lawn Re
novations. Inc JO/ 4** *401

Secretarial 4
Typing Services
C U S TO M Typing/IW kSeep.ngl
D J Enterprises 'w il l E 15th
St Sentord J74 04/1 171

/ /*»?

Masonry

Sewing

T W P M A S O N R Y . Brick, block,
stucco, concrete Renovations
lie d A Ins 171-74*4/43*4117

F O R E X P E R T sewing needs, all
types Phone Ule G raham
1*471 111 47/4 San4erd

Home Improvement*

Moving A Hauling

Tree Service

* e ADDITIONS. All remodel
Ing Quality work! CGC03407/
lS y rs e cp Mel* * i l t l M I t

e e • H A U L I N G y a rd trash
appliances, furniture, trash ol
any km dl Richard.
17371*3

R U N Y A N S T R E E S E R V IC E
Tree work. Iighl hauling Free
estimates. Insured 111 141*

I t lr r r t i . s e ) o u r /Insincss / r r r v l h i \ l o r

I s I (nr

S /,7 / V r Month, t f i l l ( I n s s i / i r d. f'J'J ‘J t i l l

l.v

!

�.

■

*

183 Hstilif
SANPOND. 1 bOrm.. m baft*.
CHA. all apgilaneaa. m o me.
•toe MM tec. W IN *
1ANPOOO - I M rm. l bath.
appfiaiMLa'Ke w m e nvina anv
toning. ben. frent end bach
enctoee* perch. Itob/mo
HI e * » . a r tie r Stephen

WU/wheh»»m**m.3Il-en*7

H

i

1U— HSSIM
Unfvmislisd/Rffft

lUl enlTMVM
h A9 dB 9/ UV9U
Bm U
v ml i M
ATTRACT(VI I an* a M rm.
W/W carp et, eulet a re a l

H

M OM IN v t uaAte garage,
CHA W/W carpet, fireplace,
tern, ream i m rent. S3*
Plumoearv Sealer « f f lm T
SANFOOD Bran* new I M rm ..
garage ve-y prWMe. taw M l
K iiM ietU I breep WMOT

1991 Geo Prism

Epuel Houtlna Opportunity I

SANFORD

SANFORD

Sanford Court
Apartments
U 01 ». Sanford A m

t Bfe. Nenh (CU. UeryBM.

l,|

IM

Ingle t M f lludio, I A I H m A f C C

ieufttyMeSean**Or-»»ettanepre
••UrtngMKHfmMeh
Camea HMr*a (Met
&gt;
323-3301

£

ROSECLIFF
AP TS.

2

3

&amp; 'J T a'

4In

Sallpointa
Apartments
• M lM k iT M M

r m
aITi

t r r r 11

322-1051

W A R N IN G
Picture yourself driving a brand new
Volkswagen
1991 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER

/HI I

With Volksw agen's new flexible 1st time
buyers program.

Mo

tollege,Mo tredlt. Mo Hassles

--------- - -

Bring In a

1991 Plym outh
^ .S u n d a n c e

1991 Plym outh
C olt
___

•22 l«&lt;r 90 HCSFI Engine* T m M O lu i -Art
l i m a Reno •P e u n g e 5 C n o C e p m e •C
‘Outer Toned EiM u SfUem •DHn* A . Bag •
M^Dgin H udlgM t •Ounda Rama. U.rfwt
•BadrM* MoUngi •1 Pnm l« p 1 SMuUw

PASSAT

VANAGON, PLUS A
FULL LINE OF
USED CARS!

SIR, e DOOM

1991
Plym outh
_ _ _ L aser

COME IN AND
DISCUSS THIS
PROGRAM WITH
ONE OF OUR
CONSULTANTS...
MOST CREDIT
PROBLEMS
CAN BE
OVERCOME.

1991 Plym outh
Acclaim

1 I LITE RMP1 Engine
PaoHryet a Cage Co*a

*8900
*9591

PLYMOUTH
0 ™ = s-U9i:0 S&lt;« 322 ’335 tl

ssi ’535

1991 C a b rio let C a ra t

( r r n n i l l l o i i d u v O n ly l \\
• SERVICE

4113 Hwy. 17-92 •Sarftn

OVER 100 UNITS TO
CHOOSE FROM:
FOX, GOLF,
JETTA, GTI,
CORRADO, GLI,

1991 C o rra d o

.1

IW« furtondReof

. ----------------- L

HOURS:
SALES
M-F 8 30-9
SAT. 9-6
SUN. 12-5
SERVICE
7AM -6PM
M -F

\u lh o riz4 ‘tl Hotly S /io n
- PARTS

A R IS T O C R A T
V O L K S W A G E N , IN C .
4175 S. Orlando Drtvs (H w y. 17-92) Sanford, FL 32773

M
fa
T O ( A M w orn
♦ 19
~JW ~~SRG.—
lk m a r t

fm

jm
B

4M
il*

w
roomjueo

Sanford 321-2277 or Orlando 365-3300

~

�/

Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday. July 5, 1991 -

K IT'N ’ CARLYLEM by Larry Wr%fct
FORD. EFaeMlaa, ONI
Immantoto, ]
i.. 3 M h . 1 4 yard. Only
m e-M uatiaai..... a i - m t

cgynsSa

Kd

nearly 4N rental
UnalaCaanlil
CALLUS PtRSTI
NO RIALTT. t r e a t
t BATM. eutot laniard
' Cantral H/A.
h
•rew thlaaO
ponri Iin
wall

ly lM m i

y

MART, 3 Mrm., CMA,
I Na A rt I Rat
a ra n c a a r a |« l r a i . I l ia

141MH n M slirS ib

141— 1

arerenreret-aaa*______

LARI MARY. 1/ 1, Ntea areal
W/W carpet. CMA appllancw.

3

JJ4WS
Qretre-

..... ..... *'•*&gt;»

Lika now
Can CharNIto
Emaraan Ratoty

......Mamens

■XCNANDE OR S IL L yaur
Na Quality Hamaa In Saminal • /Or anpo/V at va Ia/L ak a
Caunttot.

NIC I N RIO N RO RN O O O f
Larpa * M rm . ptata parch.
carpal, na pata. u m piut

• 1/1
carpat. tan o d y a rd ..... U t.t
• 1/1Vs ■now real, carpat. paint,
tcraanad parch. Nncad yard,
parapa...........................SIMM
p i / 1 • an 3/a acre, naw paint.
Appllancaa. 3 car aarago,
renadC3-M3,SM
•1/1 - ranovatod I Naw carpat.
paint, real, carport, tancad
yard...-.........................saa.tta
03/3 . on 1/1 acral Now paint,
fpk. lamlly, living and dining
roama. Privacy tone*. 1/ 4. SCO

117— Mobil*
Homos/Wont

UKEMART, LESSTOM

■ LOIR SPR IN O l Oft Hwy.
O t. 1,1 A 3 badroama. STS-Wa
week. m -tts a er m-lMB
t ROAM. I MM. country ilia,
SIM par m onth plut SIN
. 3 i» « m ___________

• 1/1 - renovatad. now carpat,
paint, ap pllancaa, tancad
yard...-.........................U3. too
•3/1 - renovatad, naw carpat.
paint ap p lla n c a a . tan ca d
^ jard...
tretOO

-

,

■IWhSt-lOiHaOire)
Laa Ptohman, &lt;w las-aaa

ri*r* IbOTW HI

li r* i |i w
a n , i bnu r^ lv it ui wr

I4XM.1/1........................... BV.SBO

Grata. U t.tN par
In aaaatt. Sail
I. ue.eeo Will tlnanca
a , w M arh.9a&gt; 0P

r. m e ia o /H i-ire i

N 443//4U

n v iy m n a M

ii

central A/C. fNWCNfpBt.

Hwy. H and 1-4area......Siaa.NO
CaiRMbaFtoaN
v aaia ri t too— Rai.....m a m
N I I D I D . gaad crad lt and
ly Incamal Bamadakd 1
i. 1 MM in larpa c
N. 914343
tot.O ntyU FJM
.au

ONLY2YtAtS NEW!
3 bdrm. 1 balh spill plan with
cathedral calling*, double car
tow retool VXM
Day*. 33M33F Efda, » m i
AA Carnet, toe.

1/ 1. Wall kept home. AC.
la r p a earner toll SM.IM.
■ a rn a a l erica..........JH-3H1

2 DOOR, 4 DOOR

TWtd gkto, rodnlnQbucket
seots, tsbrici
W

153— AcrtaftLotS/SAk

H

G jG C D

OCALA N A T 'L F O R I S T .
WMRtd total SAME each, na
manay dawn I gn.ai manthly.

1 &lt;Mt i

v*

ANY CONOtTKMI
Naad rapalraT Bahind an
paymantal Call Oreg. 3 9 4/14

YOUR NEW SMYRNA
C O N N IC T IO N t la n iard

For SO#

3 bdrm . 1 balh, cancrato
block, tall real, recently d a

LARI MARY TBI L IV IL - 4
bdrm . 3 M lh In a auper
II Near country
tuna. Quality
I m I S147JM

ifcrfafcSMM

REPO - laxaa v i tpiit 1last)
SIMM

1991 Chevy C avalier RS

C e n tu ry

CaMwry n

14X40 ■ 1/ 1, Florida room.

; » ’ 1; 1 / hn i &gt;
11 1/ e, 14 v / /

_______ I ac»w 930______

Ml ACRIS all or pari, custom
panda, tonca. Will finance,
near Oatond.................3M-STW

MANAREKENT B BEALTY

mt-m-mvmmn

SMMDORR

114— Warehouse
S#oco/ Hoot

ty an thlt l / i two atory with
appllancaa. and Ilraplaca.
Fenced yard with paatf MAIN

DOW NTOW N BRICK
WARINOUSO SMC I 1AM
to 30.000 tp tt. Dock HT.
Sprlnklorod. Call Ml 0S4I.
_ t o a v e m j j a a |^ — _ _ _ —

PLUS
O WN E R P 1 N A N C I N O Plnacreat. 1/ 1. Hying, dining,
lamlly rm., aacwrlty tyttom ,
tancad yard.... Ml. ON
ST. J0NITS AND LX MONROI
- Sacraaalatot 4/1, ISMag. tt..
cuttom built, lire,NO
ALTAMONTI SPRINOS - ire
with retachad mottwr ln law
hemal Peat, privacy tone#
yard and kannata. tllF.WI

ft unit*, can ba
cna unit, m
C a H » ll* 7
_agJL
W I . C e n ta l------------------Mary - SM aq. ft. building. U »
par month, lin t and Im I plui
d w e lt. Call 333 td e _______

-

*

3/&gt;lcar-QUtETI
C utdaSac.Sam aflaire
CALL NUchalte Shattor

______

117— Commorcial
Rontolt

AT $J%^ IXI DI
Alaa Available Government
Rapaa And Ranh Faractoat rei

LMfl U| Nebw, 21/4 Aom

Trkkx / Want

MrtnsnnMsw

C»Q»/I&gt;k
Eatota..

kltchan and hath. Oarage and
i carpart are accatalbla
' allaya. Hvpa treat,
I. Methretod aallafi
aai.NA.... TampM U n ity toe.
dM/m-MSS

10X10 utility room. Cantral
hast and A/C. alinaw kitorin-.
N aw r a t r l f . a n d a ta v a .
W a th a r/d ry a r. Financing
C tu m u x
1 SDR ML MOBILE NOME 10
tt. aicaltont condl Han 111.080
m 0*71 arN » w &gt; pay

mm. MKM StoMBtoMNd

14X4* •ire split, carpart.. lia.ooo

i-tN it n w

IMSummarlln
Sartord/Mayfair
Wl Mach to Laka Maareat
1 bdrm I kWh. SUBMIT OF
FCRSI Family and dining

ealllnf Iana, 3 Air candl

SANPORO- L arpa t M rm .
Ctoan. appllancaa, haah-upa.
MM. Ran, VaMare I W a t
1ANFORO. I bdrm.. I bath,
kltchan apuip. Goad area, t t
alaa aac. t r e i m to. maa
SANFORD, lasary V I Are , all
appl.. parapa, tcraanad parch,
la n c a d .S t O aaaP ________
SMALL 1 M rm . I Path. A/C.
carpat. carport. Ideal far
tinBlt. MM tout dta. 933MB
t BOOM. I BATH. Sanford.
Appllancaa. No pata. t t / m o
alua »curitv.at»4B47totof i

\

Hues

CARRIAGE CQVR, MX* " " ?

SAVE MSI NEW IN I NOME SI
WHY PAT RETAIL! MXto.

laniard
SIMM with

322-74N

R ant with aptlan to buyl
l/nlqua prepdrty, park yaur
b e s t e n ISE t t . c a n a l
water front I Cloaod com muni
ly. F enced mobile home,
n e e d a w o rk . G a r a g e A
w a r k a h e p . C a ll c a l l e d

1M

•arspiM daeeait. Napata.
I ii- IME. toeae man a t
MOM 1V» OATH. Oretda
afa F torIda ream, t car
t

s t ilt in k s i d s i i ~

w ta tm

_MWL

Hwvwt/Sak

ion
Far yaur n
aaha. allay
city wator/w

157-M kM k
Homos/Sok

157-1

153— Aenof**
Lots/Stk

SI down tor Vatt
A little
more tor olhara Brand naw 3
be dr aem 1 balh hamaa with 1
car iw a g a i tram MM,
M
W rel1 an/wiTniy
h u u i M t l w pay man
^| iwif
uw aaetto NaaNy, MAtssa

A
re
V voeamg me nict nomae m
match wllhbuywa.

I. II

m

^hePYudenbel (jpr

m n iM K lt

I a a *—
-*
■I—
-- l u alaa

m m n a r ta im

i ^ n

141— HemtsFerSelt

RMT IS SOI ION NOMI?

NFORD/IANOEb, J/*.

w

141— Homes k r Sak

ISMSQUARKFOOT
Commar dal tpaca for rant.
Partact lor retail, orilca. vidao

•Tinted Glass
•Whoot Covers
•R oot Window Defroster
• Intermittent Windshield Wipers
• Locking Remote Trunk
Re lieeoeW/Key
•Remote Fuei Filler Door Release
•Body Colored Bumpers
•Moquetle Upoistery Full Carpeting
•Front Reclining Bucket Seals
•Aero Halogen Headlights
•Child Proof Rear Door locks
•Rear Seat Healer Ducts

alora .a tc.Ca ll..............3317 MO

ns—owlet

Soaco/ Rout
FR IST IB I O FFIC II K0 to
A t lq ft. Somo tumlihod. 1
blockt to City Hall.
_ C a lin a o sa a j« m m » M a j^ _

121— Condominium

Rogtoto
LAN! MARY - 3 fadrm 1 balh.
w a ih tr /d r y a r . Ilraplaca.
naulllua. am anltlaa. laka.
t t / m o W N W o rW S aK
ONI BEDROOM. w«h/dryar.
tcraanad porch, liorapa UM
plut Mcurlty. aaa.pai ait. Ill

PIN! 0I06Ecunt

1 bdrm. 1 bath, waahar/dryar
SS3S/mo. S E CM. Inc.. Uc
Raal Etlala Brokar. 45? SW
SANOLIWOOO VILLAS. I
bdrm. I balh S31S par month
pluadapoalt. Call i n Mia
VILLA W/LBASK 1/1 Appll
ancta Inc I Mayfair Maadowt
liSO par mo . ..............334-4443

141-Homos lor Sak
BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Raal E tla la Brokar
2440 San lord A vt

3214755.......... 3212257
IV0WMR
4/1 on pura li»a &lt;oi in lirw
neighborhood S w k tn family
room, pool P arlacl lor grow
log family I tt/.SOO 333 000/

|CAUONT IN A TRAFT IS tor
2nd and 3rd m ortgagtv Ffao
taractotura Info 331 4130

II VI I IU VI IV
STORY W/INOROUND FOOL
'4 bdrm . 3 balh. lamlly room,
country kltchan. tern porch.
A covered patio. Over 1.000 tq
II Sellar motivated
144.100
STORY DUPLEX! I bdrm
upttoirt. 1 down I On Hwy 44
'Zoned commercial!
SSJ.tOO

323-5774
ORANOI COUNTY 3/1 on
‘ eerrt. large barn 140.000
t.M alKtawtki. Realtor
m rta s

•It*

&lt;v\
k i \i l l \ 11

S TEN S TR O M
REALTY, INC.
a

-

W e Fast and tell
more property than
Anyone In the Greater
Sanford/Lafce M ary area.
LONOWOOD1 /1V) CONDO
Light bright townhouta All
amanltlaa. Idaal location at 14
A SR 434....................... 344 300

1991 A C C O R D 4 DR.

FACES FT. MELLON PARK
Lovtly hlttorlcal 1/1 on tupar
tilt. Baautllul oak lloort
Spec tout, loo!........... t4f,soo

CB754

PARK LIKE SETTINO • 1/1
Vary private on 1. acrat Ju t I
m lnutti to 1-4. Ownar la
motivated Now.......Ml.000
HAS I7MSOUARE FEET
Big 3/1 t lam. rm w/parqual
lloort Under maiatllc oakt.
Magic price, too .......134.100

*8,258

WILL KEPT ire VILLA
Nice patio, araa pool. Itnnlt.
park, laka Eat in kit, cath.
celling!. J u lt............. 134.300

• 4 Speed
• Air Conditioning
• 1.5 Liter 16 Valve
• Double Wishbone
ision

LK. MARY 3/1 Garden Villa
In uptcale gated area Fple,
wel b ar. w ash er, d ry e r,
micro Onettory NowM/.fOO
JESSUP AREAS/Hi
Country etlala w/pool on S
acrat Thlt home hat II all
Cailut today.
uta.soo
1/304 CASH TO MORTOAOE
Attuma no qualifying Nice
3/1 villa In Cattalbarry Fple
A more i l r a t ............ I/O NO

/f

87 HYUNDAI
4 DR. GLS
AUTO. AIR.STEREO m
CASS DIGITAL
A O C
CLOCK. LOW MILES M H T t J

1141 Park O r- laniard
141W. Laka Mary Bl- Lk. Mary

AUTO. AIR.
STEREO CASS
CLEAN LOW Ml

KENT TO OWNII

_
$ C ^ L O ^
J O
W tJ

89 FORD MUSTANG
AUTO. AIR
STEREO CASS.
LOW MILES.
MUST SEE
!

=
S T O O ^
# A / J

91 NISSAN PICKUP

AIR. STEREO CASS . SLIDE REAR
WINDOW.
_ _ _
BED UNER ) 1 A 4 Q K
V^SPORTPKG
IV / / 1 7 J

4

0 7 )

5 7 4 -

Tilt Wheel
1Full Wheel Covers
’ Front Reclining
Bucket Seals

COME IN AND SEE

87 HYUNDAI

AIR, STEREO
CASS , POWER
SUNROOF
ONLY 40K MILES

_
J O

T

J

87 HONDA
CRX
STEREO CASS
ONLV38K M

g C Q A C
J 7 T J

88 HONDA CRX
AIR, DIGITAL CLOCK
UPGRADE STEREO
s

r N,CE

85FORD
ESCORT 4 DR.

84 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA

*8195

87 NISSAN PATHFINDER
CD PLAYER SE - V-6
ALARM SYST
_
_
MINT COND .
511 9 0 C
LOADED
1 l fO T J

AUTO. AIR,
POWER WINDOWS
LOW MILES
PLUSH INTERIOR

,
5 0 K O H
A J T l J

88 HYUNDAI
4 DR. GL
5 SPEED, AIR
STEREO CASS
LOW MILES

.a * * * * * .
5 0 0 0 ^
J T T J

87 NISSAN
STANZA GXE4DR.
AUTO SPOWER
_
WINDOW LOCK
5 4 L O O ^
SUNROOF. LOADED O e ? T J

AUTO, AIR,
STEREO CASS
RUNS GOOD

JIMMY

BRYAN

S O I O ^
J I T J

;

86 HONDA ACCORD LX
4 DR. AUTO
FULLY LOADED
POWER EQUIPPED

U

_

_

_

O

T J

90 HONDA
CIVIC DX

l

AUTO, AIR
$ f lO O s

88 HONDA ACCORD
LXI
AUTO, AIR.
POWER WAL
ONLY 29K Ml

$

88 FORD MUSTANG

87 HONDA PRELUDE SI
AUTO, SUNROOF,
POWER WINDOW.
LOCKS. FULLY
LOADED

\

AIR, ONLY 19K
POWER EQUIPMENTLOADED
5 A Q Q S
NICE CAR
‘♦ T T J

511 K O h
I I ^ J T J

S

ues

o ivr D

*9895

89 TOYOTA MR-2
T-TOPS. AIR
5 SPEED
ONLY 12 K
5 H A O * ft i
MILES MUST SEE l l ; O T J J J

* P ATUEN tS BASED ON 40 MONTH C lO S ED E hO lEASE WITH |t COO OOWN PI US TAJ* TAO. 1ST P*JME NT.
HCfUNOAME SECURITY DEPOSIT hESOUAL *3433U WITH APPROVED CREOlT IO TA! PAVMENT0 »IO.Tto

Bhoukl own a home, Including youI

Skyline Homs, Inc

BEST

SELECTION OF CLEAN. DEPEND­
ABLE. PRE OW NED CARS AND
TRUCKS IN CEN TR A L FLORIDA

87 TOYOTA
TERCEL DELUXE

HnOur 35th Ytar*

Whilre ranting, you could b e planning to start your
new home. Call now. before Ihe government
changes their mind.

85 CHEVY
CAVALIER 4 DR.
AUTO.AIR.
_
LOW MILES.
S O I O
CLEAN DEPENDABLE l I T l J

322-2420
321-2720

THIS PROGRAM COULD BE FOR YOU!

* Air Conditioning
•AM/FM Cass.
Stereo
15 Speed Trans.

[Q U A L IT Y USED CAR SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK O N LYU j

CAU ANYTIME

A n yo u w is tin f your m onay,
•ml no m a r t s ?
Bad credit that needs fixing?
N e m oney for down paym ent?
Been told that yew don't
qu a lify for a m ortgage?

*13,367

Body Side
Molding
Rear Win­
dow Defrost
Tinted Glass

S

iare SO FT STORI • A/C.
a la rm , t i t r a a l SIM par
month. 3/M Country Club Rd_Santofdi C a ll» ria i ^ ^ _ ^

A

H w y. 17-92, S A N F O R D
2913 O rla n d o Drive
323-6100 S A N F O R D
831-1660 O R L A N D O
SAlES Mon Sal t 3b0• O e m •, « i » 7
SERVCE Mon Sal 1 30 7 PM

�7I

I ri

(

(

&lt;f

1

f

t (i *t

i

1 M - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Friday, July 5. 1991

. IIA T M ptoa I

291— Hanes

221-Cart

231-Cars

ABOVI AROUND FOOL. W
Ola. r Walk around . rx a*
Dock. Fump. Illtar A ec
ceaorlet Yaw dltataotnbla.

• •NAY FOR M L R I* • M.7S
koto. MS r r t . FRNCI MdR. B
R r td ir tia - a ttM M

TNREIP FilMUTS

caM air, NM pawar. p a r t k m .
new baftory. rum fraM I STM
o r k a tla r tr . 333-3M1
MM FbyMi' Car C to h r HM *

samaamaaskrti

M l— A ppU SN C M
IV
**

• BOV'S BIRR. 3

aacaRam c

II
d l l ■I
w/l
lit a
flCtftS
^ y n f| n ,
lu ra p * * " barm . ta t, blue
valval; m Cu FI. *id* by
•Ida fr lg /fra a ta r.
w/lca 4 w N r In drar;
r m n r 4 HF tM ncat; Idrakto
b e a t c a m p la ta ; a M alar
t o u c h , w h e a l. 345-11*4
awyWmal_________________
e a i o a o o M i i t • Fun a m

afteraPM.
T For
HARO TIMR
aa I wl
your
w/m
• am
and Ran returned. I deal with
buyers Ram all ew r US.
Cad FH BA 4----------SNOTOUN. Remington 11 pa.
Mapnum. In tarchanpaabla
chokes, used once. t i n .

LARRY'S HURT, a ll
Awe. Maw/Uaad turn, a
Bay/SaR/Trada—
aLAXV BOV ROCRIR R lCLINIR • Tan. nlca candlltanl
•asaasaw a_______________
RECLIHIRS.
sas;

HM CNARARRAL 117 XL. !M
M ercury black Maa. with
lantum traitor. SU M Must
r t l . Call aftor iPM. m-MU

219— Wanted to Buy

ALL STIRL
SUII.DIMOS
el
«------- «—
a a a a ^
a a a M

■BRm I71YVILR, Jddd IO JV.UBII

•O LD SMALL UOLV BOAT.
Under tM. It II Iteato. 1 will
buy III Ftoaaa rto e. ..333-MI5.

t«.n. caR am -iai-an c a rte l

H I-L lilH O lrtM l

222— Musical
Merchandise

PLANTS FOR SALS Ms and
up. Seclety pm Ik. day miles,
e y ita r. Iron plant. Quean
Palm* by toe teal. M3 15*4
TROY BUILT ROTO-TILLRR

■ M U ii

!|

Sm M

M i Cl

HM JR R F CHRROHRR «
dovr, 4 d M tl
im H
madil. ^ c y lln d w .^ l^ p a a d .
A/C. w ry w ry c h M . Mw
mlMt. "TNt Om V tu'vt t a w
WPIHnf F e rl” CaR X54M

u n v p p iw o n i
•xcaptlaa.tof.H H a.ato
1M7 CHRYY CRLIBRITY •
Auto. A/C. AM/FM a la rm
till. crulM . FS, FB Only
IMAM par mantht (M mantha
• H.V% AFR). CaRMr. Fayaa
Caartoiv M ad Can. M f-tm

» tV P tn S 'iT c ? r t n i c R
CLASSIC • Auto. A/C. ttorae.
Only SMl.*7per mantel
(M H tertte# » .•% AFR)
CaRNte. Npyaa
c m ps h p UMd c a n . MS-mi
1T73 DOOOR OANT • Slant a
anflna. S3M a r beat alter.

SNPONO TRACTOR■w t t o * *
**m ........................... ***!**-

AAAUTOSALVAGE

atOeBary
WC WHAN AND PATI
TepM*er|wdt.
Cars A Trucks.

RMLNSTJC m wod brldpaobto
IfYYi^p. r w raxr uprtrawv* w a r

a r tr . Aftor 4FM.3B35M*
•TOYOTA toff (rot* d n r with
t e a . s e a r brat a r t r 34FS413

IMS CHIVY Im pale, need*
Iran*., S3M a r bate liter. Brty
ULlltont. R»mal........ rt»NM_

235— Trucks/
•uses/Vans
mi
m
o wm m i un*.
p,J| ------ A -----—a tBBA ak.

llte r tu ra Sarto*. 17JM Orlf.
ml., todtesr Intor. w/ pkaaa.
M rtPlatT M l S7.JM. Mt-IWf
M NISSAN WafML au to AC.
mm lira*, bat. A brake*.
Or*a* rand. 1SNM Ml IN I
M RINAULT LB CM SunraM
Rum fM dl Rhton TLCI STM.
3M-I4M after 1FM.

ervtoa. air, topper, linar. llk-f
ml. MNSOBO MM4M a r t r s
HR* CHIVY St*. Rxcaltont
randlton. A3 liter wig., auto
AC AM/FM ttora*. tinted
a kid*n s m at im*r. Taka aver
-■ ——«m ta ir
H NISSAN pkh up truck, nrad*
warfc. Make after. 373H41
^ -II —
---vJil mIyThIWi

lir tt
HM HARLBY DA1
rider, lets at

Cad
artraPA LU AM M
*77 HONOA. 7MR I . . .
C reel lent certH W i. I I J M
C anm aPM M N M PM
a a a ____

n i — K K rM u e iw t

Vehictos/Cnw9W_
AYAILARLR SRLP ITRRARII
O utside storage M r R V sl
tnputre. M . M p TNl-M ts

2 2 3 — M isc tlfA O d O U S
FORR LIFT. MM LB.
work. Make otter, m s a a i
Call anytime.

RUV...........SILL..—..... TRAOR
HURV'S CROWN PAWR
__________ 333-e7*a__________
ADULT WNCRLCNAIR.
E sc e lle n l condition I SIM
Firm ........................... m i l C
• BOVS BIRR - Sears Free
Spirit BMX, escellenl cendi
Hen. New. II7T. Now only 155
__________ 3X10143__________
a CHAIN LINR FCNCR. IOP X
a ' w ith g ala. You mova.
•IM M .........................333-4793

in -P a ts 4 Supplies
CAPTAIN COOY Ika MACAW. 4
yrs. aid. Talks a W l Blue A
paid I Plus baaullkH decorator
cape IMM. m r n r a r H1-77U
OPRRR TO OOOO NOMR.
V ary a lle c llo n a la b la c k
tamale cal. apprsa. S months
aid......................- ......M1-S74S
NRRO INFO lo r M an tk ly

1.40 c a ra t Salllalro. Very
beaut Hull 1X750 OBO. may
trade. 331 3M4_____________
a DBA PCI. neutral beige, ell
lined, lor eliding glass win­
dows. Paid 1100. will ucrlllca
lor MS or host oiler. Escellenl
condition.....................333*17*
• FOR SALE. 110 gallon fuel
lank, 140 331 03W___________
• NOT WATER H R A T I R .
electric. 30 gallon. Scotty's
Thermo Flow. Works I
135.................................. 333 1503
• ITALIAN POTTERY - Service
tor ( and tomme additional
Idd pieces. HM cate. 333 5337
OMEN'S BIKE - 37 Inch. 10
speed Turlsmo. 125
________ Call 333 KM________
PORTABLE VCR with vide#
c a m e ra . Include! b attery
pack and carrying case 1450
or b ell oiler . 333 3313________
RESISTANCE Machine. (Solo
lloa typo) 1350; 3 drawer (lie
-•bloat IIS; 4 drawer dresser
135; 10 sp bike 140.
_______ 311-1791 Eves._______
eSLI OI NO glass deer wllh
f r a me end screen . 1X11.
Rollers recently replaced. 145
llrm ............................. m 7110

• 171 SIAMRSR. II yea pleats I
Kittens. Adorable little or Ian
lals. 1 mala. 1 female. SS each
10 LOVINO NOMR ONLY I 15
buys a lot of love I ........m i n i

I m Hi-mated anynmi.

195-Computars

209— R e g is t e r e d P o t s
OROOMINO AT ITS FINRST.
ever 2) yrs prolatsional asp.
Vet recommended. 315-1474

THIS W E E K S

ii

m m ii
Furniture A poll clubs, ate.
Thurt.. Frl. A Sal. Ml W INh
St. (Carwarat H art A lldt)

im v p p tw n n
NMMmM M M M ^b ^
a FUOUC AUTO AUCTION*
RV IRV TV M . AFRLFiM FM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION

•MRTAL TOOL BOX tor Pick
up T ru c k . J '3 " b p tla m
m**iuram*nt. Goad Condi
ItonlSM................ J3S4143
• FOUR T IR IS . blackw all
17f !3Go*d condHton. SIS
333-H54
• LUBOAOR RACK. Ram I t
Toyota Corolla IT ' X 43".

1W Machiwary/Toots

TV as” SLYVANIA Consola.
Gaad candlllcnl Dark weed.

Dark rm. equip , triple drast­
er w/mlrror. if. tlm clothes,
dishes, electronics, fam es,
lots ot mite. Books, beaks,
boaksl a-1 Sat. July Mh. m
FLAM!WOO DR.

NOMONRYOOWN
•ica p l la i.laf.IIH e.ek
HM CHIVY IFRCTRUM 4
doer, auto. air. pewar ttoerIng. ttoraal Only 1I3V.M par
month 1 (41 month* d H.f%
AFR)
CaRMr. FnyM
Caortory U»ad Can. 333-1133

FOOD ORAMAOA • HT7. A rare
And) ttory fM d MrtHtoP. r t
n r t . i s rtp*. JAMf mtto*.
II.M fC aH lTfM Il

237— Tractor* M d
T raitors

PIANO TUNINO. as low as
S3J-MI Lie 10 yrs- t i p R e
patrsoetra. Char He m i n r
PIANO. 13M Good condition I
bench Dark wood up­
..........................331*331

m a iM

SOFA 7 rt psM vatvat, cuvad
bach. Gaad crtOtton. SO

• COM FUY IR • Fanasonlc
hand held with micro printer
and carry mp cam. SIM or bast
K. Cell t u arm

T M I VPPURKHIS
NOMONRYOOWN
aiicapl lax. lag. Htto. etc
HM CHIVY CAVALIIR C l
Auto. A /C AM/FM ttoraa.
FS. FB. Only 1I3R.M par
month. (34 merriha d 1l t%
AFR).............. CaRMr. Faya*
C—rtoey Mart Can. 3P-3133

TMEVPP9MERn

i

VCR's. A/C and
aN aRmr aw iar a r t a a rtl
ap p lla a a a a . Sarviclag all
’ l. N% all H r malar
■an TV repairs aaty.

215— Boats onM
Accessories

191-

m il
•CHAIR. Living ream type
h i m w a r n _____________
a C O F F I R T A B U . Inlaid
walnut lap. wll
with mapailna
•nett, m im
m &lt;a n
rv. a r
candHton. SMM. WHfW
caiB -Jiiaary l in o
n e w ii/ i m
__________ a a ia a o
JIMMY’S TV’S. APPLIANCES
AHOA/C

IMt TOYOTA Tmc M. bright
green, auto tram ., run* wall.
WWHrm..................... MMNS

• ii

c h ail. a n n a r . cam lor tar.
ruffle a r t plltow sham*. SIM
» « 1&gt; _________
im iM ii
We B ay/tab Fa
ACat-

213— Auctiom

as”
m-sari

•ica g t to*, lag. Htto. ate
HM DOOOR OMNI • 4 d n r.
b la c k 1 A u to m a tic . A/C.
ttorae. power Itoarlng. Only
3R.SM ml toll Only llW .tt per
manlh (M maMht • lt r%
AFR).............. CaRMr. Fayaa
iwep
wrt Bv Wa a i#a

233-Aeto Parts
/ A c r tit r it t

231-Cars

i « y - i p B F ttm P o o d s

NEW THRIFT STORRI Frank
A Lori's! 3103 S. French Ave.
Samelhlnp lar Rearyanal
SALRI Satal Ilie dish (only)
Children's clothes, household,
queen so ltiid e w ale rb a d .
Sutukl 150 dirt bike, baby
Items. Frl. and Sat. I I. 1103
Sanford Are. Sanlord 330-1*71

(IIH T tM M IU U I

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY GOWN
escepl las. teg. title, etc
19M PONTIAC MM Auto. air.
stereo, power steering, power
brakes, cruise. Hill ONLY
•153.91 per month (41 months
O 1175% APR)
Call Mr. Payne
Courtesy Used Cars. 113-1111
a a Oene Burke Auto Seles e e
Low as 1177 down I Low pay
a a a a a a a 314-1417

1792 SANFONO AVE.
Sat. A Sun. t ? Wadding dress,
formal gowns, baby Items A
lots ol household stutt._______

MILLSMANSION!
A n tiq u e s , lu n q u e . baby
c lo th e s, m lsc. household
Items. Friday and Saturday.
t-A 701W. 3rd St. Sanlord

S FAMILYSALE
Saturday. 15. Books, consola
TV. stereo, king waterbed.
wall decor, household mlsc.
wheelchair. 1150 N. Cameron
Ave. Sanlord. (between Celory
andttwvet)

MOVING M U !
Frl.. Sat. A Sun. Household
turn.. TV. clothe*, toys. ale.
MSPOtNlRTTAAVP

•

•

231-Cart

**V A ID SA LE+*
Ml E 35th PI. Sanlord Oymneehes Belldlaa. Sat. Only * l,

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WEDNESDAY

NEWS DIGEST
Colts stay sive
C A R R O L L T O N . Texas - After scoring Just
two ru n s to an opening-game loss the Seminole
All-Stars rebdUnded to defeat Irving. Texas 16-7.

Bonappotlt
Even though Cook of the Week Missy Mullins
taught her m om to cook, she still cooks for her
m om . Colum nist Midge MycofT shares some
tasty roost meat recipes that won't heat u p the
kitchen.

N E W Y O R K — Paul Reubens* publicist said
his office was deluged w ith calls from parents
whose children want to write letters of support
toPee-wee.

beauty

County
L A K E M ARY — T h e Seminole C o u n ty C om ­
mission will apparently help pay for the Oateway
Corridor Beautification in Lake M ary. A s a result,
the County and C ity will w ork together In
financing the $753,308 project.
The Seminole County Commission and Lake
Mary C ity Commission met in a Joint workshop
Tuesday afternoon to discuss the proposal. A t the
conclusion. County Commission Chairm an Fred
Streetman called it. "a demonstration project that
could set a national standard.”
Seminole County will be responsible for paying
$330,507 of the amount, with Lake M ary paying
the remaining $532,701.
Th e overall project involves beautification.

Kelly and Bob Sturm favored authorizing the two

are we setting a standard for
other cities wanting our finan­
cial support?!

other needs, on Lake M ary Boulevard. T h e
multl-lantng of the boulevard from Markham
Woods Road eastward to C o u n try C lu b Road.
(C R -15). Is presently underway.
Although no official vote could be taken. 3 of
the 5 County Commissioners expressed support
of the p ro ject. In a d d itio n to C h a irm a n
Streetman's support. Commissioners Jennifer

agreement on the project.
C o m m W o n c r Pat W arren M id . " I commend
Mary for the project, and I would like to
help, but I cannot com m it m oney that could be
used somewhere else.”
Commissioner L a rry Furlong expressed cau­
tion. “ If we do this for Lake M ary, are we setting a
standard that will result In other cities wanting
our financial support In beautification?” He said
however that he w ould be w illing to finance up to
•70.000on the project.
Lake Mary City Commissioners also addressed
the matter. Commissioner T o m Mahoney said. " I
think It's rare that you will find a city like Lake
Mary willing to take over such a large percentage

Eckstein
smiling
broadly
Herald People Editor

Boy wins Stophon King choice
O M A H A . Neb. — Aaron Carmichael has never

Th e boy is educated by his mother at home in
Paplllion. Neb., near Omaha.

Squirt gun wtokter arrtsttd, Jailtd
H E A L D S B U R G . Calif. — She knew the gun
was loaded and. according to prosecutors. Carln
Llcberm an used "w illful and unlawful force or
violence” when she fired at two people.
T h e gun was loaded w ith water.
Lieberman was arrested and Jailed for four
hours on two counts of battery In the squirt-gun
attacks J u ly 6. If convicted, the Corte Madera
wom an could get up to six months In Jail and a
$2,000 fine. She pleaded Innocent Monday.
She was accused of firing on u wom an eating
in a restaurant and on a parking enforcement
officer outside.
Defense attorney Chris Andrian called the
charges unbelievable.
"It was a hot day and she was having a little
fun.” he said. "B ut come on. It was a Joke and
not a crim e.”
Prosecutor Peter Bumerts said. "Everyone is
entitled to be free of Invasions of their bodies.
A n y rude touching that la uncalled for la a
battery."
" T h e y were m inding their own business. They
co m p laine d they d id n 't appreciate being
squirted with water and being laughed at by the
w om an.” he said.

Whltey
SA N FO R D
. Eckteto M id
people have asked him w hy he
doesn’t smile more. He's grinning
now. from ear to ear.
Th e Sanford city commissioner
and his wife. Pat. have traveled the
road to Gainesville often this week,
as two of their five children. Kenny.
22. and Christine. 21. received
kidney transplants within days of
each other.
” Th e y're both fine." he said last
night Just after daughter Christine's
new kidney began functioning. She
was operated on yesterday m orning.
"It started working immediately.
And Kenny’s has started to pass
urine also. It’s a miracle. We're all
feeling g re a t.” E ck s te in s a id .
..Doctors had said it could be up to
n ii/ t f S iv t a t d t t o r t i i r y x w iH -to tW '
If Ihc kidneys were
icjected. Keiiny was operated on
Friday.
Daughter Susan, almost 20. re­
ceived her mother’s kidney in 1988.
Kenny and Christine have been on a
nationwide computer organ match
list for two years.
Eckstein said It has been difficult
for him and Pat to watch the
c h ild re n stru g gle th ro u g h the
dialysis they have had to endure
during the years they have been
plagued with nephritis.
"A s a father. I hated to see m y
kids In discomfort. Pat has been so
strong for all of us through this.” he
said.
Eckstein said the family had been
planning a vacation before the
phone calls came announcing the
donor matches.
We were going to have to pack up
Kenny's dialysis machine to take on
v a c a tio n . T h i s Is g
_ re a t!” an
animated Eckstein said.
Pat said Kenny had tried several
methods or dialysis. Each time, he
would thlrvc briefly and then re­
gress. necessitating the use of still
another method. He was hooked up
to a machine for 12 hours out of
□ • « « K ld n s y . Pag* 5 A

M I

Cloudy, wot, hot

Mostly cloudy with
the higli near 90 and
a southerly wind at
lO m p h.

S A N FO R D — Rural road repairs
and the buildup of county fire
engine crews could be the possible
victims of Seminole County’s cuts
to balance their 1992 annual budget
without a tax on utilities.
Although county commissioners
heeded the pica of about 75 resi­
dents Tuesday night to halt the
Increase in taxes and trim fat In
county spending, county oftlclals
said there Is little excess In slice
away.
County Attorney Bob McMillan
said the loss of nearly $6.2 million
from the tax and resulting budget
cuts could Jeopardize negotiations
with the firefighters union. County
Manager Ron Rabun said the cuts
ulso risk the county's ability to meet
state growth management rules.
C o u n ty Public Safety Director
Gary Kaiser said If commissioners
cut the $321,000 for the second
year to Increase the staffing of fire
engine crews from two to three
firefighters, cities may be unwilling
to continue to participate in firstresponse agreements. Seminole
County has the lowest stalling on

T h e p a in fu l tr u th : a vis it
fro m to o th fa iry c o s ts $1

From staff and wlrs reports

1 ftrtttT T tn f
1 P ear AM y ......
1 D aslks............

utilities killed

D E E R F I E L D . III. B ra c e
yourself: Rosemary W ells has
spent 20 years researching the
tooth fairy, and among her find­
ings — the going rate for a tooth
under the pillow Is one Infla­
tion-eroded dollar.
Wells, who runs a desktop
publishing business at home, has
assembled surveys, articles and
some 500 tooth-fairy Items —
including dolls, pillows, paint­
ings. cartoons and stories — to
understand the m yth of the
dental sprite w ho dispenses
money for molars.
"It's a rite of passage, a very
important time in a child's life."
she said.
„
Wells found out through a
survey of 2.324 dental patients
across the nation that 88 percent
of parents use or plan to use the
tooth fairy Concept with their
children. She ulso found that the
going rate is about $1.
O f course. Infla tion g u m s
things up. A buck In 1991 Is
w orth only 9 cents In 1930

d o llars, w hen a kid got an
average of 21 cents. Wells said.
No one knows what the tooth
fa iry looks like, but almost
everyone has Ideas.
” Y o u ‘ ve g o t y o u r b a s ic
Tinkerbell-type tooth fairy with
the wings, wand, a little older
and w hatnot." Wells said re­
cently. "T h e n you have some
people who think of the tooth
fairy as a man. or a bunny rabbit
or a mouse."
T h e Chicago-based American
Dental Association, after several
hours of brushing up on the
subject Monday. Issued a no­
comment.
T h e tooth fairy's origins are
obscure. Wells said. As far as she
can tell, tooth fairy , lore really
took flight around the turn of the
century.
” l t ’ s tied to the rig h t of
passage, a stage in growth of the
individual. Th e time when we
mark off the child's first tooth.
It's remembered In every culture
and predates Christianity." Wells
said.
" O u r cultures remembers It
□ ■ a u T o o th . Fags 3 A

Mlks Twyford: No
a ny full-time fire department In
central Florida. Kaiser said.
•
Another $1.2 million could be cut
to repair badly deteriorated rural
roads In the county.
Commissioners will meet Th u rs ­
d a y at 9 :3 0 a .m . to consider
Rabun's proposed cuts and set the
tentative coun tyw id c and unin­
corporated tax rates. Commission-

Jack Waitman: No
era authorized Rabun to keep Ihc
samr $3.13 tax rate for non-city
property owners as last year. C o m ­
missioners planned to cut the rote
to $2.82 along w lyh passing Ihc
utility tax.
Of the dozen speakers lust night,
none encouraged commissioners to
upprovc the proposed 10 percent
□ ■ a s U t ili t y . Page 5 A

School board adopts
budget with tax drop
SANFOR D W ith some en­
couragement from school board
c h a ir m a n J o e W illia m s , four
members of the public stood up to
ask questions before the district
budget was tentatively approved for
the 1991-92 fiscal year.
There were no hostile Jabs and
few protests.
"1 think that the public can sec
that we have been responsive to
their objections and the needs of
education In Seminole County."
S u pl. Robert Hughes said following
the public hearing.
T h e $312 million budget which
w a s te n ta tiv e ly a p p ro v e d for
advertising prior to the Sept. 11
final public hearing, calls for a slight
decrease In taxes.
Homeowners w ith a $100,000
home with a $25,000 homestead
exemption can expect to pay ap­
proximately $6 less on their tax bill
in the upcoming year.
T h e 1990-91 mlllagc rale for the
sumple home was 10.169 mills. The
proposed mlllage for this year would
be 10.089 mills, a decrease ot .08
mills.

Dick Rythcr of Sanford was liltmost o utspoke n of those w ho
upprouchcd the lecturn to address
the board.
Speaking on behalf of those in the
county who are living on fixed
Incomes. Ryther said that education
was not the responsibility of those
who did not have youngsters In
school.
Such a burden, he argued, was
more than some people could toler­
ate w h e n th e ir Incom es were
limited.
"It's getting to the point." he said,
"where we're going to have to tell
people 'If you can't afford to live
here, then leave'."
Jo h n n y Suarez of Casselberry
said that he agreed.
"Everyone has the right to an
education.” he noted, "but it is Ihc
parents' responsibility."
C iting that legally everyone musf
pay for education lest the tax
become a users fee. board member
Jeanne Morris added that the future
of this and all communities Is based
on having educated citizens.
"W e have to have tellers at the
bank who can do math and so on."
she said.
C See B u d g e t. Page 5 A

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v*r;&gt;Vr &lt; &gt;

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7 i
u

- 8*»fom H m M , Sanford, Florida -

Jury 3 1 , i l t i

N E W S FROM T H E REGION AND ACR OSS T H E S T A T E

C h ile s to u n d e rg o tests at M ayo
Man mangtod by alligator
D A D E C I T Y — A m an whose hand and leg were mangled by
an alligator aald from a hoopllal bed Tuesday be barely escaped
w ith hi* life, but state game official* think It was the other w ay
around.
Mark Allison, 25, said a stale game officer served him with a
*181 line Tuesday, claim ing Allison and his brother were
really trying to take the gatdr.
It's illegal to capture alligators in Florida except during
state-controlled hunts w hen trappers are permitted to lake a
certain lim it and sell the meat and hides.
Alllaon and his brother C la y Alllaon. 27. spotted the 7^-foot
gator In the middle of a dirt rand as they drove hi the predaw n
hours Monday.
T h e y stopped the pickup and the younger Allison got out,
waving his arm s to chase It away.
“ I never thought he'd come at m e." Mark said. "A n d I didn't
think he was going to let g o ."

TA LLA H A S S EE O ov.
Lawton Chiles was scheduled to
undergo tests at the Mayo Clinic
In Jacksonville today to get a
better look at a problem with his
big intestine discovered recently

paragraph a nnouncem ent re­
leased late Tue sd a y. "Chiles*
visit to M ayo la for the purpose of
further tests and analysis.*'
Tests on the 61-year-old gov­
ernor were scheduled to begin st
7:50 a.m. E O T this m orning.

n o w dealt w ith at the
state level.
Chiles w as still i
to keep that
educators, set
Gallagher i

He's had this medical hlato-

- *°
I ,
tentative
vc weekly schedule re­
last Friday, Chiles was to
the day today in

mss 1

''There
‘Last Friday. J u ly 39. during
a routine examination, the gov­
e rn o r's p h ys icia n s identified
n a r r o w in g o f th e la rg e In ­
testines.** read In part a four-

A n Inch-thick cofecttaa of 30
years of medical records Chiles
released last year during his
gubernatorial campaign docu­
mented chronic ulcerative col-

are

no alarm

bells

here." Mary Jan e Gallagher.
C h ile s * c o m m u ni li c a t li o n s
director, said Tue sd ay evening
after the M ayo appointment
announced.

ry.

•'a
ule for today Included a speech
to educators about new state
efforts to return to schools and
teachers some educational de-

B u t the dally schedule, issued
early Tuesday evening.
n__ *-____ «aa_
in f dados
uip to
io jB
tu o iiv u if.

Tourism down from laatyaar
T A L L A H A S S E E — Florida tourism In April (ailed to match
last year's record high, partly becauae of a change In the Easter
holiday, state officiate said.
In April, fewer than 3.8 million visitors came to Florida,
according to flrgures released Tuesday b y the state Department
of Commerce. In A pril 1990, more than 4 million people came
to the state.
So far this year, tourism figures are down 2.0 percent from
the 1900 figures. To u ris m in 1991, however. Is still above the
level set In 1969.

From A ssociated

Tooth1A
w ith the tooth fa iry . S o m e
cultures have a rat or mouse, or
they throw It to the sun o r they
might b ury It o r a m other keepa
It In her apron. T h e Japanese
throw It In the air. hoping the
new tooth comes In straight and
good."
Wells, a 00-year-old P hD in
English, began researching the
topic In the early 1970s w hen
she w a s te a c h in g scie n tific
1Ung at Northwestern U n ive r­
sity D e n ta l S c h o o l's d e n ta l
hygiene department.
Dr. Irene Goldcnberg, fam ily
psychologist In the psychiatry
department at the University of
California at Los Angeles, said
myths and rituals play an im ­
portant part in a child's development.

niBSPes^rSSaSXBg'

Gracing tha waMa
Battvd Raagan, laft, repre­
senting First Street Qaftary,
Sanford, prsaanls a painting by
local aritei E.B. Stow* to '
CHy of Sanford,
•ottyo Smith. T h t 11
ipo fit oils was donatsd
by Mrs. H.D. Hooter, a longt
Sanford resident. First Sti
w cw in y n#K] m on#*
man ahow faaturing Stows's
paintings.

"s h e said,
It's one of the move
m yths," Goldenberg
"T h a t's w h y we have the
*She still believes In
the tooth Dairy* and 'If y o u
believe In th a t you beUeve In the
tooth fairy.'"

^ B Scourse

T h e other pari of the tooth
Dairy's mission - the part that
m any dentists like — is promot­
ing proper care of teeth.
T h e Kentucky Dental Associa­
tion once act up a tooth Dairy
hotline that got so many calls
that officials had to give her
’*laryngitis" before the campaign
One folklore
p a re n ts are te a ch in g t h e ir
children the wrong lesson w ith
the tooth (airy.
"T h e tooth fairy Is modeled
after the exchange ritual of o u r
capitalistic society," said T a d
Tulejs. director of the under-

" T h i s one Is a n ice one
becausf it m akes som ething
. a n o f tlh a p p c r -J h im l anraethlftf..
th a t th tg h t h e p w tn f a l o r
frightening, and U.evehi makes A m h e rst"C h ild re n team tb jkk e
parent* foe! -b rtte rw h e n th e y d o
a part oiM elr
something to make a child feel body, and exchange for coins.'

Man in prison on drug charges
accuses agent, wife of an affair
J A C K S O N V IL L E - A federal
lawsuit (Ued by a m an Impris­
oned on cocaine and marijuana
charges accuses a federal drug
agent of having an affair with his
wife after first m aking sure he
mt bond.
was Jailed without
" T h e y b e tra y e d m e ."
J o h n Holland a id .
•be sentenced and this was going
. on. She sat tbere. and p a tch e d
me be sentenced and this was

going on.
" I Just knew something was
wrong. I never Imagined It was
1dm."
Holland, n o w In a federal
prison cell in Pensacola, filed a
•6 million lawsuit last week
against agent Carl Griffith, the
U .S . D ru g E n fo rce m e n t A d ­
ministration and a government
oroaecutar.
.
:. -: n a i l C u t r s i k r b - r i u r p - -a f -tiw lnvestigatlon that resulted in
Holland's five-year prison sen­
tenced

Holland's lawsuit claims G rif­
fith used love notes, Jewelry and
secret phone calls to woo Marcia
Holland — after making sure her
h u s b a n d w as b e h in d b a rs ,
without bond, according to a
story published Tuesday in T h e
Florida Tlm esUnton.
Holland Is seeking a reduction
of his prison term — as well as a
" T h is has ruined m y fam ily.'"
he said in an Interview with the
Jacksonville newspaper.

Vice m ayor linked to sex scandal, resigns
F O R T L A U D E R D A L E - Fort
L a u d e rd a le ’s v ic e -m a y o r, a
c o n s e rv a tiv e c r u s a d e r w h o
campaigned against wild spring
breakers, topless bare and adult
bookstores, resigned after his
name surfaced in a sex scandal.
Doug Danzlnger Issued a terse
letter of resignation Tuesday
after his name was linked in
news reports to the wife of a
Broward County deputy w ho
surrendered Tuesday on four
counts of prostitution.
Danzlnger said in his letter
that he was leaving "w ith deep
emotion and dedication to a Job
not yet complete ... w ith the
support of m y family and for
personal reasons."

LOTTERY
MIAMI — Hers are th# winning
numbers selected Tuesday In the
Florida Lottery:

Cash*
2 4 -8

Play 4
3-1F84

Dansiger'a name was included
In a list of Kathy WWets' alleged
clients kept by her husband.
D e p u tyr Jeffre
Je ff y W lllets. the
Sun-Senttnel of Fort Lauderdale
reported Tuesday, quoting u n ­
identified law enforcement a nd
courthouse sources.
Daiuriger, s SO-year-old con­
servative Republican, made no
mention of the connection to
Mrs. W lllets In his four-line
resignation letter.
But he told the Sun-Sentinel
for Wednesday editions. "1 have
no Idea about m y name (being
on a list). I didn't know Kathy
Wlllets."
Asked If he knew Julie, the
name Mrs. Wlllets used In her
9 0 0 -n u m b e r telephone a n d
cla s s ifie d ads In the S u n -

Sentinel. he said. "No. I don't
want to aay any more about It.”
M ayor J i m N augle said a
special election for Dansiger’a
position on the city commission
been tentatively scheduled
for Sept. 24.
" I feel I can speak for the
entire Commission In thanking
Doug for his hard work and his
m any contributions to the City
in the past and In wishing for
Doug and his family all the very
best In the future." said Nauglc's
statement.
E llis R ubin, w ho is repre­
s e n tin g the W llle ts e s . said
Tuesday he had no comment on
the rum ors that Danxiger was
Involved w ith Kathy Wlllets.
However, at a press conference
last Frid a y. R u bin said that

some of the people w ho allegedly
paid Mrs. Wlllets for sex are
p r o m in e n t . I n c l u d i n g " a n
elected official."
"W hen the names come out. If
they do com e out. yo u will be
shocked." R ubin said.
Wlllets. 4 1. was suspended
with pay last week after being
charged w ith liv in g off the
earnings of a prostitute, a felony.
He faces u p to *5,000 In fines
and five years In prison, and was
free on *1 .OOO bond Tuesday.
His 33-ycar-old wife faces four
second-degree m is d e m e a n o r
charges of prostitution, each
punishable b y up lo 60 days In
jail and fines of up lo *500. She
was released on a *2.000 bond.
Investigators said no charges
were contemplated against Mrs.

0
Today...Mostly cloudy w ith a
high In the upper 80s. W ind
south at 10 m ph. Rain chance
80 percent.

TH U R S D A Y

F R ID A Y

P t l y c l d y 9 3 -7 3

P tly cld y 93-73

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

P t l y c l d y 9 3 -7 3

P t ly c ld y 9 3 -7 3

Thursday...Mostly cloudy w ith
a high near 90. Wind south 10
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Exte n de d forecast...M ostly
cloudy Friday through Sunday
with rain chance diminishing by
Sunday. Lows in the mid 70*
and highs near 90.

EAST
J u ly 4

M g 11

Wednesday, July 31. 1991
Vol 83, No. 292
'ubliahed Oaky and Sunday, aaca,
Saturday by The laniard Herald.
Inc. 100 I t FrancS A m ,
Fla. 33771

Second Class Postage Paid at laniard,
Florida and addSJanal making
oHIcaa.
POSTMASTER: Sand i
la THE SAMFORO HE HALO. P A
Boi 1(47, Sanlord, FL 32773-1S47.
■ibecripttan Rales
Daily A Sunday)
nw delivery A Mall
3 Mentha.--------------------- Slt.SO
S Months.---------------------S3* 00
1 Vaar--------------------------- $7X00
Florida Residents must fay OX aataa
taa In addition io rales above.
Phone (407) 323-3011.

Investigators said Wlllets kept
a detailed list of more than 50 of
his wife's clients, noting- dates
and times, amounts paid and
explicit comments on their sex­
ual performance.
Danzigcr. who owns an Insur­
ance company, was appointed to
the commission In 1987 and
then won his 1988 election.

■ »!

Associated Press Writer
T A L L A H A S S E E - Oov.
Lawton Chiles said state
and N a vy officials agreed
on conditions Dor up to six
u n a rm e d T o m a h a w k
missile test flights a year
over N orth Florida, subject
to. Federal A via tio n A d ­
m inistration approval.
T h e T f o v y ar.d - the--state
Department of Com m unity
•Affaire -will drew u p an
agreement to subm it to the
F A A on how the state and
airports along the flight
path w ould be alerted to
the cruise missile testa.
Chiles aide David Ray said
Tuesday.
T h e Navy proposed In
May to use a 20-m lk-w lde
corridor crossing 20 coun­
ties for the tests. T h e
2 0 -f o o t -lo n g , 5 5 0 -m p h
Tom ahaw ks gained fame In
the Persian G u lf war for
streaking to targets.
T h e Aircraft Owners and
Pilots Association's Florida
re g io n a l representative,
Jo h n Reid, objected, saying
his group's 20,000 mem­
b e r s . n e a r ly h a lf the
licensed pilots In the slate,
fe a re d h a z a r d s to the
217,000 takeoffs and land­
ings a year from about 34
small airports along the
route.

TH E W EA TH E R

Tonight...Mostly cloudy w ith
rain ending. Low In the mid 70s.
Rain chance 40 percent.

lu m a i-M i

Wlllets' alleged customers.
Rubin said Mrs. Wlllets was
suffering from nymphomania,
and having sex with different
men Is an acceptable form of
treatment for the disorder. He
promised to "turn the courtroom
Into a classroom” to teach about
the effects of nymphomania and
the treatment, which he called
sex surrogacy.

Governor
agrees on
missile tests

City
Apalachicola
Pe&gt; tana lasts
FI Laud Saadi
Fort Myers
Geinmvilta
Jackionvllta
Kay Watt
Miami
Pentecoia
Seraeota
Tallaheuee
Tampa

Vero Beech
W. Palm Beach

S O L U K A R T A B L E : Min. 9:20
a.m.. 9:45 p .m .: Maj. 3:10 a.m ..
3:30 p .m . T I D E S : D a y to a a
Beach: highs. 11:36 a .m .. 11:44
p.m.: lows. 5:21 a.m .. 5:41 p.m .:
N sw S m y r n a B e a c h : highs.
11:41 a.m .. 11:49 p.m .: lows.
5:26 a.m .. 5:46 p .m .: Coco*
Beach: highs. 11:56 a.m..
p.m.: lows. 5:41 a.m .. 6:01 p.m.

HI LO Pet

u re oo

n n m
it n o*
m

it
17
*1
*1

is
n
71
77
77

.u
*03
.10
.00
.04

n 73 i n

m 7s i.i*
n 7S .04
U 71 1 11

W 73 00

U 71 11
» 71 10*
f t 74 .14

D a y to a a B each: Waves are
1-2 feet w ith a slight chop.
Current is to the north with a
wutcr temperature of 84 degrees.
New S m y rn a Bench: Waves arc
1-2 feel und semi choppy. C u r­
rent Is lo the north, with a water
temperature of 84 degrees.

St. A ognetlne to J x p lte r In le t
Wednesday and Wednesday
night: W ind southwest 10 to 15
knots. Seas 1 to 3 feet. Bay and
inland w ate rs a lig h t chop.
Scattered showers and th u n ­
derstorms.

P tlycldy 93-73

T h e high tem perature In
Sanford Tuesday was 91 de­
grees and the overnight law was
73 as reported by the University
of Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
p e r io d , e n d in g at 9 a .m .
Wednesday, totalled .15 Inches.
Th e temperature at 10 a.m.
today was 82 degrees and
Tuesday's overnight tow was
73. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

T uesday's high................. 9 0
l B arom etric pressure. 30.02
□ R elative Hum idity.... 79 p e t
Tl W inds.....Southeast IS m ph
[ R a in fa ll........................... tree*

Today's sonaot— 1:17 p.m .
[ Tom orrow's snarls* •■•a6:47

Temperatures taklca
us d W t
high and evendgN b * .
cay
Hi 1La 1Are o m
Atlanta
to 71 .03 tdy
Clr
Atlantic City
77 ei
73 as .41 d r
Chicaps
7* u
cdy
Clauatank
74 (7 a tdy
Caiumbia.SC.
n 74 .*i cdy
*4 47
dr
Deltas-Ft Vtarlti
Denver
tdy
*3 42
Dm Maine*
m
IS 17
Detroit
7* (2 .01 cdy
dr
Honeiuiu
■ 71 a
tdy
Inktanapeil*
44 17
Jeck*on.Mlu
•3 71 .43 d r
Juneau
14 4*
m
tdy
Kama* City
«l (1
104 •1
cdy
Lsa Vapat
73 41
Lee Anpataa
cdy
LoutevJta
44 70
AAa m nki1a
tdy
14 71
Milwaukee
cdy
74 »
dr
MpIfrStPaul
11 M
Naativllb
cdy
14 4*
Maw Ortaana
cdy
*S 74
Maw Verb City
11 4J
cdy
Norteifc.Va.
74 71 .44 cdy
North Ptatta
cdy
*S 41
Oklahoma City
IS M
dr
Omaha
M 41
cW
Philadelphia
dr
« 41
Phoenix
*1 77 01 d r
Port land.Maine
dr
71 14
Pori lend.Ore
17 a*
tdy
rrm to w c i
44
clr
n
Retaigh Durham
77 47 .n cdy
Rapid City
*3 4* S3 cdy
Seer amenta
104 47
dr
St Lault
11 to
cdy
m
Sait Lake City
to M
Sen Diego
70 44
cdy
clr
Topska
«l M
Tucxan
*4 70 .11 d r
Tul*e
dr
«e 41
Weening ton D C
clr
ao at
Wichita
W 44
dr
Wilke* Berra
7* V
cdy
Wilmington. Del
7* *3
dr

�Sanford receives report on
latest comprehensive plan
S A N F O R D — T h e Florida Departm ent of
C o m m u n ity Affairs has analysed Sanford’s
newest 5-year Comprehensive Plan. T h e D O C
no adverse com m enu or ooyeciiona, d u i
iu | | t t (f d certain rewording.
' Cities are required, b y law. to provide the state
w ith five year protections on a large num ber of

•Robert Frederick H uhner. 19. of Orlando, was returned
Sanford from the Lake Butler Prison. He was wanted In
un d isclosed writ signed b y Judge Newman Brock on J u ly 33.

Ta ils haaarr on April 1 of this year.
T h e results of the department's review and
suggested **»*ftg— have now been sent bock far
farther action, f h e changes were requested only
In certain Items and In moat cases. It was a
matter of the way In which they were worded

C ounty Sheriff's deputy investigated a
son In the parking lot of the A B C store

presen t the suggested changes to the city’s
Planning and Zoning commission, during a
meeting scheduled for this Thursday. "P A 2 h a s
been working on the plan since the start. T h e y

T h e main subjects recommended to be In need
of revising were Identified as the city's Traffic
Circulation Plan, the treatment of environmen­
tally sensitive lands, conservation areas and other
natural resources, and the city's treatment of
drainage Im provements and stormwater m anT h e East Central Florida Regional Planning
Council has also checked Sanford's Comprehen­
sive Plan far Items connected w ith their areas of
concern. A m o n g Item , the
ing: In respect to
housing; location o f group homes, relocation
houatng and rehabilitation of substandard hous­
ing.
Others Included: emergency water conserva­
tion: regional aquifer protection, stormwater
manage m em 'and location of Industries that
produce hasardoua waste; flood control; protec­
tion of wetlands: protection of natural hlbttats;
control of a ir pollution and land use decisions and
the protection of natural resources.
H arder said some of the suggestions for
changes are very m inor, and Involve situations
that do not even pertain to Sanford In any great
depth. "F o r some of their other suggestions."
H arder said. "W e will have to take some action."
O n e of the areas he mentioned are the need for
T h e Planning and Zoning Commission has
scheduled a workshop on D O C 's response this
Thursday, at 6:30 p .m . In the Sanford C ity Hall

C A S S E L B E R R Y - Lightning
•truck twice In the same block,
burning a hale In the roof at one
house one day and causing a
m inor explosion two doors down
the street • day later.
Fire officials believe at least
4.500 volts of electricity struck
the house of Rick Hernandez,
slicing through electrical cables
and opening a hole In the roof
Sunday night.
Hernandez said the rubber
shoes he was wearing probably
saved his life because he. "felt
the electricity flowing through
m y belly."

Worksession
planned to

SANFOR D Seminole
County comtnlsaloners will
h o ld a w o rk se s sio n In
August to consider their
response to the state's
56-page critique of their
co m p re h e n sive develop­
ment plan.
the worksession A ug. 36 to
re v ie w th e c o m m e n ts .
T h e y w ill hold a second
review A ug. 28 If needed
and adopt the revised plan
Sept. 9.
H o s t s tin g in g o f the
comments by the reviewers
of the Florida Department
of Com m unity Affairs was
th e ir o b je c tio n to the
county allowing one home
per acre In agricultural and
other ru ra l areaa. State
reviewers said the housing
density was inconsistent
w ith rural areaa In neigh­
b o rin g O ra n g e C o u n ty ,
w h ic h a llo w s o n ly one
home on each 30 acres of
C o u n ty comprehensive
planner Frances Chandler
said county consultants are
p re p a rin g d e ve lo p m e n t
options for the eastern
areaa of the co u n ty to
present to residents Aug. 5.
Chandler said the possible
changes to rural housing
densities w on’t affect sub­
urban areaa on Markham
Woods Road and west State
Road 46.
W ith moat other com­
m ents. co u n ty planners
proposed to modify word­
ing or clarify statements In
the county’s plan to re­
spond to state comments.

HARVEY

M O RSE
324 9 7 9 9
What a sight to aaa
Cousins Cody and Danisils Millar of Sanford paar intently
through I ha ftnea behind which Sanfont Middle School's old
campus la bslng demolished. Their grandmother Helen Millar,
also of Sanford, studies the view, too.Mars Photos Page FA.

Space agency’s ’midlife
crisis’ being examined
W A S H IN G T O N - Shortly be­
fore N A S A launches Its 42nd
apace shuttle flight In Florida on
Thursd a y, a congressional panel
w ill be a sk in g witnesses In
Washington w h y the agency has
had so m any failures.
T h e tim ing is coincidental and
ironic, brought about by the fact
that the shuttle Atlantis couldn't
be launched last week because
an engine com puter did not
work.
T h e House Science. Space and
Technology Investigations sub­
committee w ill examine the Na­
tional Aeronautics and Space
A d m i n i s t r a t i o n 's " m i d l i f e
crisis,’* said an announcement
that referred to the agency's
failures'
"m a n a g e m e n t fa
ilu re s " and
"loss of leadership."
"Th e re 's a buildup of frustra­
tion among the members of the
committee that N A S A doesn't
seem to be able to do simple
management-type tasks." said
Jam e s Paul, a committee staff
m em ber. " I f you don't have
confidence in management, you
don't have confldence In the
program ."
T h e hearing follows a spate of
bad news for N A S A . Th e Hubble
space telescope doesn't see well
enough; the G O E S weather satel­
lite program Is 143 percent over
budget; the space shuttle has
constant flight postponements:
and the Galileo space probe's
Jammed antenna threatens to
cripple Its 1995-1997 explora­
tion of Mars.
O n top of that. Th e Washing­
ton Post reported In today's
editions that N A S A officials were
considering an emergency shut­
tle mission to repair gyroscopes
that control the Hubble tele­
scope. But Janet RufT. an agency
s p o k e s w o m a n , told T h e
Associated Press she was un­
aware of such planning.
Worse for N A S A , from Ihc
standpoint of space supporters.

Atlantis heads
into final hours

HOURS:
| Mon. - Sot. 1
1lam| 9:30 pm |
1 SUNDAY |
| 4 pm-9 pm j

CAPE CA N A V ER A L N A S A headed Into the final
hours of the countdown for
T h u r s d a y ’ s la u n c h o f
A tla n tis w ith a shuttle
communications satellite.
Th e countdown, begun
Monday. Is N A S A 's second
attempt to get Atlantis off
the ground. T h e first was
halted hours before liftoff a
week ago because of a bad
engine computer. T h e unit
was replaced.
F o r e c a s te r s p u t th e
c h a n c e s o f f a v o r a b le
weather at 80 percent.
"W e ’re not tracking any
problem s." test director
Mike Lelnbach said. "T h e
ship Is clean. T h e crew Is
ready, and we're anxious to
get on with this launch."
A m a jo r h u r d le w a s
cle a re d T u e s d a y w h e n
N A S A gave the final goahead for an 11:01 a.m.
Thursday IlftofT.
Th e y cleared Atlantis for
flight after reviewing data
from a test shuttle engine
that was damaged during
g r o u n d t e s t i n g In
Mississippi last week.
Is Ihc debilitating fight over
whether a space station should
be built at an enormous cost.
The House and Senate agreed to
spend m oney on the space
station — but only after heated
and som etim es b itte r a rg u ­
ments.
Th e G O ES crisis threatens to
leave the country without Its
m ain weather satellite. T h e
current spacecraft Is falling and
N A S A Is three years behind
schedule .

Si-ffLDWtySptCfaf

• Tax D eductible BUI C onsolidation Loans
• C om p letion Loans F o r H ouses U n d e r
C o n stru ctio n
• H o m e E q u ity/H o m e Im p ro ve m e n t Loan s
• C o n s tru c tio n to P erm anent F irst
Mortgage Loans, o n ly one closing.
• Lo t Loans
• F irs t Mortgage Loans - Purchase o r Refinance

•Daytona Baach Aroa
788-7110
•Orlando Arm
740-8885

•DaLandAraa
774-4404
•Oranga City Araa
774-4404

• C a s h O u t investor Refinances
• S w im m in g Pool C o n stru ctio n Lo a n s
• 9 5 % E q u ity F in a n cin g Loan s
• C o m m e rcial Loans
• Mobile H o m es W ith la n d U p T o 3 0 Ye a rs Finance
• 8 0 % Purchase Money O w n e r O c c u p ie d Fixed
Rate W ith N o Income.

•Deltona Area
574-4070
•Sanford /Laka Mary
574-4070

KM 0UM CUSTOM NS CCNVtNiNCt. PliASC CONTACT OUR M l IONA O f f C f TWOjQH VOUN LOCAL ANCANUMCN L«T(0 ABOVS ON CALL COUICT.

�-•»*••

m m + r*

***•-+*+**%,' . m »«svi

Sanford HsraM, Sanford, Florida

r. M y 31, t l t i

H M H

V- v t • “TT

BEN

WATTENBERC.

was the year
It Is ju st
m om ent w he n Ira q
“ J r . It Is the
what has

that watershed
Into Kuw ait,
moment to see

And

ED ITO R IALS

M ilking profit
T h : n e t w orth o f th e av erafe dairy form er
In th e U nited S ta te s Increased by 50 percent
betw een 1987 an d 1990. So w hy la Con
considering raisin g price supports for

Into a
N O W : Am erica Is i
coming out
o fa
|tt m ight we6 be the only recent
the unemployment rate does not
7 percent)
threat TH EN :
'T h e y ’re buying u p A m
" NOW : "Th e y're
not Investing in Am erica.
Nation w ith rem arkably high per eaptla
Income — T H E N : Kuwait..N O W : Net Kuwait.
Judicial question of the m o m e n t.— T H E N :
'W ill David Souter he confirmed, making the
Suprem e C o u rt conservative?*' N O W : "W ill
he confirmed, making the

p ro d u c ts ?

T he pow erful dairy lobby h a s prom pted
law m akers to re-exam ine th e m inim um price
that m ilk, cheese and b u tte r com m ands a t
the local superm arket. If previous congres­
sional deliberations on th is subject are an y
guide, co n su m ers should begin to guard th e ir
pocketbooks.
U nder federal law . th e governm ent se ts a
price floor w hich gu aran tees dairy
will not Call below th e level th a t
decrees. T he U.S. D epartm ent o f ,
c u rren tly b u y s su rp lu s d ry m ilk for &amp; cen ts a
pound, b u tte r for 96 c en ts a pound, an d
c h e e se fo r 61 .1 1 a p o u n d . O nce th e se
p ro d u cts get to m arket, how ever, th e prices
a re considerably hig h er because o f processing
costa.
T he fed eral d a iry su rp lu s program Is
costing con su m ers m o re th an 66 billion a
y e ar. T h e re a re m ore th a n 6 0 0 federal
em ployees w ho ad m inister the volum inous
ru les cm mHk production and m arketing.
U nder th e 1986-87 D airy T erm ination
Program , for instance, 114 form ers w ere paid
m ore th a n 61 m illion each to take a five-year
vacation from m ilk production. One central
C alifornia dairy form er received a w hopping
62 0 m illion to aend h is herd to sfougnter.
A lthough th e dairym an w as m aking a good
living, he couldn't afford to p ass up th is
federal bonanza.
The average full-tim e dairy fan n er Is w orth
m o re th a n 6500,000. In C alifornia, w hich
m a y s o ^ M tiu p a s a W isconsin a s th e n atio n 's
leading dairy producer, th e cash receipts for
m ilk la st y e a r am ounted to m ore th a n 61
m illion Tor each dairym an.

i *4 r *.

—

:•
:

_ thought - T H E N : Earth Day.
N O W : Whatever happened to Earth Dny?
Salute of the m onth — T H E N : Nelson Mandela
prataing Fidel Castro. N O W : F ld d Castro praising
M
s ^ h u i slmulals
iwCOTvl
WuiOCUl,
argument — T H E N : A budget deal will
(won’t) help us. N O W : T h e budget deal has
(hasn't) helped ua.

Biggest domestic polltlcsl football — T H E N
quotas. E?*v : quotas.
Where Am erica was — T H E N : about SO-SO on
t
h
"rig h t-tra c k -w ro n g t r a c k " s c a le , a c ­
c o r d in g to p u b lic
o p in io n a u r v e y a .
NOW : about SOSO,
a c c o r d in g to the
same aurveya. (tn the
Intervening year the
ratio went to almost
3-to-l w rong track,
and then to almost
3 -to -l rig h t track,
and n o w back to
where it waa original­
ly)Characterization of
O c o rg e B u a h —
fit’stlmdfor
T H E N : " w im p ."
•Hotter
NOW : "w a rrio r."
contest. £
P o p u la r T h ir d
World revolutionary
leader. T H E N : Yasslr
Arafat. N O W : Not Yaaalr Arafat.
Chances for Middle East peace — T H E N :

JACK ANDERSON

For now, good news
about steel industry

T ltc -to c ie a s tn g r • w w th * -u f~ A m w rU a rt‘f U t r y "
f a r m e r s . sterns |h la rg e p art fro m th e ir

dim in ish in g num bers. Since th e 1930s, w hen
the federal governm ent got Into th e pricesu p p o rt b u siness, the num ber of dairym en
h a d decreased 9 6 percent.
E nhanced productivity h a s m ade it possible
for far few er dairy form ers to supply con­
s u m e rs . Yet th ese form ers are am ong th e
m o st protected o f A m erican producers. Ac­
c o rd in g to th e International T rade Com ­
m issio n . th e U.S. q u ota on whole dry m ilk la
the equivalent o f a 161 percent tariff, th e
b u tte r eq u al to a 190 percent tariff and som e
cheese q u o tas a re com parable to a 172
p ercent tariff.
W h e n e v e r C o n g re s s d rive s u p the cost of
m ilk , th is inflates the d a iry form ers' cost of
p ro d u ctio n . H ig h e r d a iry prices not o n ly h u rt
c o n s u m e rs b u t also red uce d e m a n d for d a iry
products.
T h e d a iry lo b b y c o n te n d s federal su pp o rts
a rc needed to e n s u re the p ro m p t d is trib u tio n
of these perishable p ro d u cts w h ile p re ve n tin g
w ild price fluctuations. It sh o u ld be noted,
ho w e ver, that eggs share m a n y o f the sam e
m a rke t cha racte ristics o f d a iry prod ucts. Ye t
co n s u m e rs have not suffered because there Is
no federal price su p p o rt p ro g ra m for eggs.
D u rin g the last 3 0 years, eggs have been
readily available a n d th e ir price adjusted for
inflation has declined a bout 5 0 percent.
M c u n w h llc the inflation-adjusted price of m ilk
has ch a n g e d little despite a sh a rp delclne In
p ro d u ctio n costa.
Incre asin g d a iry price su pp orts w o u ld n ot
serve the lo n g-term Interests of co n su m e rs o r
farm ers. President B u sh should veto a n y
congressional a tte m p t to d o so.

B erry's W orld

ELLEN GOODMAN

B ootstraps: myth and reality
B O S TO N — I am not surprised to find that
picking yourself up by your bootstraps ts still
the favorite Am erican spectator sport. We have
always ehsered those who attempt this gravi­
ty-defying Test.

adults, children, parents, citizens. What part of
our character and achievement do we owe to
others? W hat Is Idcntlflably ours? What part of
the self Is manufactured b y an aaaembly line of
parents, teachers, friends, bosses and what
pari Is Indeed self-made?

Th e Image of the self-made man. the notion
that talent, wile, energy. Intelligence are more
important than birth Is what brought people to
our country. Europe had Its aristocracy. Asia
its caste systems. But tn America moral
one-upa-manship went to the underdog. And It
still does.

W hen T h o m a s w as introduced to the
country, this believer in self-reliance thanked
his grandparents and the nuns who were
"adamant that I make something of myself."

T o this day. the m ythic American story is
about the trip from the bottom — the Illinois
log cabn, the Inner-city housing project, the
China Seas boat — to the top of the class or the
country. Th e prize goes to the ones who did it
alone.
T h is time the star In the tournament of the
self-made is Clarence Thom as. From the very
moment he stood on the president’s lawn, the
m an w ho was b om Into Southern poverty and
segregation presented a compelling version of
the story.
T h e Thom as nomination has provoked a
long and searing debate about racial politics.
But It has also kindled a more subtle dialogue
about helping hands and bootstraps, self help
and self-esteem.
Those who adm ire his life story talk of the
distance the judge has come and the odds he’s
overcome. But even those who criticize him
use the ideology of the self-made man.
T h o m a s , say som e, suffers Iro n : I he
syndrome — amnesia about where he came
from and those he left behind. It’s a disease
that aflliets m any who make it.

M U L T lC O M M A l
Re v is io n is t
H K S T O R V 101

Th o m a s , say some, is ralher less the
Amerieau archetype than meets the resume.
His law school admission may have come from
an afflrmatlvc-actlon program. He didn’t make
Bush's list on merit but on race. He’s not his
own man. but the const-natives' kepi man.
Ironically, proponents of affirmative action
also chip away at Thom as’ credibility by
calling him a son of affirmative action. They
oiler unwitting evidence of the nominee's belief
that such programs undermine the prizes that
Americans award for Individual success.

9 mtbvftCA a*

on
quotas.
Geopolitical cliche of the mom ent — T H E N :
T h e Oennans w ill be the next powerhouse.
NOW : T h e Oermana are tn trouble.
Moat popular person In the unhrene — T H E N :
Barbara Buah. N O W : Barbara Bush.
Entries should be submitted to this columnist
do this newspaper: or do Newspaper Enterprise
Association. 300 Park Ave.. New York. NY
10106.

All of this has churned up duimant question-.
In our culture. Questions that we deal with as

His definition of self-help includes family but Is
wary of government. W hat of others who m ay
have found less help at home and need more
from the government? W h y 1s one sort of help
right and the other wrong?
All but the most narcissistic of us know that
no one ts truly self-made. And all but the most
foolish know that everyone must make his or
her own life.
Th e "seir" is un Infinitely complex product.
It's "m ade” through un Interaction of biology
and e n v ir o n m e n t,
chances that come
our way und those
we take, coincidence
and free will, reality
and attitude. But us u
s o c i e t y it Is the
bootstrap narrative
that resonates the
must, that gets the
Gold Mcdul In our
national competition.
■- &gt;
It's so central to the
way tliat we think
about ourselves.
So, we go on collec­
tively nurturing peo­
f lH e 's not hls
ple in the belief that
ow n m an, but
they ure self-reliant.
the
As parents we sacri­
conservatives'
fice m uch to raise
kept m an. J
children w ho are told
to be Independent of
us. Asa group, we
value Individualism.
Sometimes. Ihc result of our lopsided view is
that we end up living in a com m unity that
praises how little people need. We forget how
much easier It Is to grab hold of u bootstrap
with a helping hand

LETTERS TO EDITOR
(x lle rs to the editor are welcome All letters
must I n * signed. Include the a d d r e s s u! tire
writer a n d a daytim e telephone num ber.
Letters should I n oil a single suh|eet and In . is hi le i as | n &gt;s s i Ii U . Letters aic subject to
editing

W A S H IN G T O N - Most im a ll boys dream of
hitting a grand alam In the W orld S e rin ,
■coring a touchdown tn the Super Bowl,
■burring as a m ovie hero, or roaring to M an.
Young Joe Cannon wanted to ow n a steel
m ill.
Before he turned 40, he made hta dream
come iru e , but he took a strange route th ro u g h the E n v iro n m e n ta l P ro tectio n
Agency where he enforced clean-air laws
during the Reagan administration. Now. as
the owner of the Geneva Steel works in Provo.
Utah. Cannon, a Republican, la thinking
about going bock to Washington, this time as
a senator.
Some m ight con­
sider working In the
Reagan E P A as good
training for the steel
Industry, but Cannon
is a certified envi­
ro n m e n ta lis t w h o .
during hta' tenure at
-..yTs
•-SPArw urked t t r c h n n r f up the air that steel
m i lls p o llu t e . -A s
head or the E P A ’s
air-quality division In
the early 1980s. he Is
credited w ith getting
the lead out of gaso­
line and tightening
th e r u l e s on
emissions from In­
d u s tria l s m o k e ­
stacks.
Cannon's success
story deserves to be
told tn this era of
econom ic bad news and environm ental
pessimism. W e normally devote this space to
delivering that bad news and pinpointing
those who are responsible for It. To d a y we
recognize someone who Is going against the
tide.
As a' steel magnate. Cannon ts striving to
remove Ihe pollutants from hts own smoke­
stacks. Hls (list move after taking over the
Geneva furnaces was to appeal to hls
blue-collar workers to help him clean them
up. Th e y showed him how It could be done,
and then helped him do it w ith an en­
thusiasm that he Infused.
Not only has Cannon Introduced environ­
m entalism on the factory floor, he Is
installing equipment that will dramatically
reduce Ihe soot billowing out of the plant.
These environmental accommodations will
cost more than 980 million — almost double
the original purchase price of the mill.
Yet. Cannon ts transforming an old smoky
plant into an environmental model without
short-changing his stockholders. Not only lias
Geneva Steel generated a profit every month
since he took over, it also is swim m ing
against the tide of Imports com ing to the
United States from Japan. Cannon sella steel
to Ihe Japanese at cheaper rates than they
can produce It themselves.
T h e distinguished British publication The
Economist wrote of Cannon's acquisition of
ihe old mill. "Am erica’s Geneva Steel (is) one
of the few steel makers in the world with a
good environmental reputation — and one of
the world's most profitable."
Cannon Is nothing like Ihe hard-eyed
tycoon that one might expect to be sitting In
the executive offices of a steel mill. He is an
amiable fellow, round-faced, blinking through
glasses, with the knowing look of an owl.
There Is also an unpretentious, next-door
neighbor quality about him . He dropped by
our office, unannounced, for a visit. Because
all the chairs were taken, he sprawled on the
floor while we talked politics for two hours
He said he wouldn't m ind relu m in g in
Washington us the next senator from Ulan to
fill the spot of retiring Republican Jake Garn.
Th is summer he Is testing the waters, not by
polling, but by biking with his son from llutop to the bottom of Utah, thus combining
political probing with physical fitness and a
father-son outing. Last week. Cannon an­
nounced he was stepping down from running
the day to-day operations of Geneva while he
explore the Senate race.

�• 9 #«*

* *- *

—

tetfoflt Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wsdnawfay, July 31, 1SS1 - M

»'

name m uddied
S A N F O R D - Central Florida environmentalists
• tetter-writing campaign agalnut a
to b m m Ike Keel c m Beitway the
Q u ite honestly. F m IneuKed b y It." aaid Allen
Audubon Society
jciety and
of the Sem inole C oun ty Expressway Authority
environ m en tal advlaory group. "W e need to at

Utilityu
tax on electric­
ity and other utMItka.
" W h y in a rrceaoion. when no
m a n y people are out of work,
that you would have to raiee
taxes," asked J im Wilkes. " T h e
county manager should have the
expertise to go through and cut
h d tax.'
"
the need“ for this
“ W e've lost all reaHxatlon of
w hat this country stands for
said Ja ck Waltman, who Uves
near Longwood. "It's for the
poor people aa well as the rich
people. We're spending an awful
lot of money and getting very
little In return for It .T m worried.
I'm retired and money has been
'I believe this taxation has got
to stop somewhere even If we
have to give up some jprtvlleges." said Fred Harris of San­
ford. who has fought the county
for over a decade to prevent the
tax from being imposed. " I
recently got two brochures in the
m all telling me If I voted for the
one-cent sales tax. no other tax
Increases would be needed. Now
you ask for this."
Commissioners plan to use the
439.S million raised annually
from the additional 10-year
penny sales tax to ease conges­
tion on roads. One utility tax
program was to rip up deterio­
rated roads and replace them
w ith recycled asphalt to extend
their life, but not their ability to
move more traffic.
After the meeting, Harris was
stunned by the commissioner's
3-2 vote against the tax.
" I don’t b e lie v e 'll." Harris
Com m issioners Bob S tu rm
and Fred Strertman^supported

t j

H m in

-_

the tax.
“If I had m y druthers. I’d
rather not have to vote on a ny
new ta x ." S tu rm m id . "B u t w ith
s ta te g r o w t h m a n a g e m e n t
mandates and rogttteEmciits h y
inc if u m u fo re m m e m , wc n tv c
no ch o ice b u t to fin d n e w
revenues o r to g o to som e
existing source, such aa the
Sturm called for the
vote to favor of the tax. n o
commissioner w ould approve it,
so c o m m i s s i o n c h a i r m a n
Streetm a n passed hto gavel to
I O K 'd the vote.
Pat W arren and Jennifer Kelley
opposed the tax.
Furlong aaid he d id n 't oppose
a utility tax a t m u ch aa he
opposed Rabun p rop osing a
county spending plan that in­
cluded a tax increase without
commtoatoner's approval.
W arren aakl she also didn't
oppose a utility tax. but she aaid
the co un ty should not raise
taxes d u rin g a recession. Kelley
said sh e also d id n 't fin a n ­
cially-hurting residents can bear

Beauty1A
of the coat, when you
c o n s id e r th is la a c o u n ty
w a y ."
n February, a Joint agreement
had been tentatively but not
officially agreed upon. Since that
time how rcLr, a portion of It
involving a separate project to
rtp b c c a c u rv c io n -

tf!

be financed by the County, will
not.be replaced d urin g the next

M em bers of the advtoory group united Tuesday
to oppose the name selected b y Seminole and
Orange expressway agencies and Oaceola and
Lake C o u n ty oflletals lo name the route that m il
eventually encircle the greater Orlando area.
"Oreenstays” are nationally-recognised trails
and corrid ors that are ghren that name by a
national organisation In Virginia. T h e Wekhra
River w as citd aa an example of a green way In an
edition of "National Geographic" last year.
Environm ental committee m em bers decided
they w ill write m em bers'tit the Orlando-Orange
C oun ty Expressway Authority and the Florida
Department of Transportation expressing their
opposition to the name.

"It’s not Important w aht you call It until you
g d Into th is ," Clark answered. " T h is name to
part of a national program .”
Road officials have decided that the commonly
known nam e of the "Eastern B eltw ay." which
Includes the Seminole C o u n ty Expressway, was
easy lo confuse wHh the East-West Beltway, the
Eastern Extension of East-West Behway. the
Southern Connector and the Western Bdtaray.
which are all part of the same toll road network.
Th e expressway's official name to "State Road
417."
SCEA director Gerald Brtnton said a committee
of focal officials, including S C E A chairm an and
Sanford m a yor Bettye S m ith , originally decided
lo recomment the name o f "Greenew ay" lo honor
former Orange County expressway chairm an BUI
Greene, w h o promoted the Idea of a totlroad
around Orlando from Sanford to what became
Disney W orld.
But Brtnton committee members then deckled
people w ould be confused b y the spelling of the
Greeneway name and decided to drop the last
H
r
« r r •*
Although the expressway authority endorsed,
and F O O T had budgeted, a $4 million landscap­
ing scheme for the 12-mtle expressway In
Seminole C o u n ty, group members said that falls
short of qualifying the rood aa a greenway.
"It's still going lo have fences on It," aaid Fred
Hardin, president of Friends of the Wekiva River
Inc. "Th e y 're going to plant a few trees, sure. It's
Just unfortunate they chose this name. It means
something else entirely."

a ne w tax.
A m ong the other comments
from m embers of the audtece
B u t a n o t h e r 8 C E A a d v is o r s u g g e s te d
who opposed the tax;
"O re en w ay” was a pleasant alternative to other,
" T h e utility tax la really dou­ more realistic options.
ble taxation on the dltoens of
" D o yo u want to can It a btockw ay?.’ " asked
u n i n c o r p o r a t e d S e m in o le
Charles
B renner, a member of the 8 C E A citizen*
t o u n ij i Mua narosa Nicppsiu.
advisory committee.
" T h e roods arc getting worse,
;
the m oney to getting tighter and
we’re being asked for more and
more,
C la y Jackson, rep&gt;e horn
resenting the
homeowners of
Palm Springs, a subdivision near
" I don't know w hy the guy
inole. Osceola and Volusia coun­
Altamonte Springs.
ties Bayy they m ay start checking waa out doing this." aaid the
Rev. M ark Matheaon. pastor of
" Y o u 'r e r i g h t ." answ ered
O R L A N D O — A t least a dozen u p more closely on the sad
the Flrat Baptist C h u rc h In
vMiiMiMwQIICr r ICu 2111CviiiiAili churches in four counties — , stories they're hearing. And the
" T h e y are getting worse and Including houses of,w orship In bad experiences may cast u n ­ Windermere. "H e could have
been out selling Insurance or
thal'a what we are trying to deal aanfard and Lake Mary — re­ necessary suspicion on the tru ly
cars."
w ith ."
cently have been ripped off by needy, they say.
"1 smell a skunk In Ihe closet." con m e n . a n d p a sto rs a n d
Matheaon was approached by
" It’s been going on for years,
said Mike Tw yford, who Uvea church officials aay this to put­ but it's getting m uch worse and . a young m an who told him hie'
near W inter Springs. “ A lot of ting a strain on Christian chart- . . unfortunately, behind a lot of waa about to be evicted and that
hto pregnant wife waa confined
poor people are making probably ty.
It to the d ru g problem a nd
less than 15 an hour. Children
crack." said Andrea Evans, fami­ to bed.
T w o p e o p le h a v e b e e n
arc going to starve because of charged, and police are looking ly emergency services director at
this 4120."
for a third. But Investigators are the Christian Service Center In
“ If you were In business, you 'd not sure that all of the schemes, Orlando.
be fired a long time ago." said netting a total of more than
But some churches won't stop
1A
Bud Tinsley, w ho Uves near 42.900, were pulled off by Ihe giving from their doors, despite
Apopka on the Orange-Semi note same suspects.
the problem of not knowing w ho
every 24 prior to receiving the
County Une.
they're dealing with.
*
kidney of a m an In hto 50a.
" T h e r e ' l l be a d d itio n a l
" O u r policy to as long as
charges, no d oubt." said De­
Christine waa able to cleanse
tective Robert Guilfoyle of the somebody's In need, we're going
her ow n system four to six times
Orange C o u n ty S h e riffs De­ lo help th e m .” said P eggy
a day. She said last Friday she
Brooks, parish administrator of was happy Kenny had received
partment on Monday.
fiscal year.
the call first.
Some churches have stopped St. Clare's Catholic Com m unity
T h e purpose of yesterday's giving money to people w ho
In Deltona.
"H e wasn't doing as well.” she
Joint meeting was to determine come to their doors and instead
"If we have to do 99 people said.
whether or not the County still refer th e m to social service
that don't need something In
Christine received the kidney
wished to continue ahead with agencies. But others sav they order to get to the one person
of an 18 year old boy.
the overall beautification matter.
will not cut off funds In fear of that does, wc will continue to do
“ A a a s c h o o lte a c h e r.' It
that,” she said.
Both Commissioner Kelly and neglecting the truly needy.
especially touched me to see a
Many church officials Involved young boy give m y (laughter life.
A favorite scam In putted off by
Chairm an Street man brought up
incfiLdon't give money to Imagine, ho , wa3. Just a boy,
the February tentative agree- a clcan-cul co g m a n .
r-b v V/4*e-«*»n w ho - W f 'r e ••M-.ngrsrtcftrh1'- Cc&amp; hvtn—
nwtoFvVWjPJfWfe l i r a ninnm i.*-— .la. have..*. 4
-nanashake to help fund- tftlft**- w i p f e — ......
j t o ,p p c n t h e i r
said. "A n d l*m smiling again.
Kelly said. "We don't want to can t p s v hto bills.
kbooka were particularly You'll arc me smile a lot more.
•break that faith now ."
- T h e churches- In Orange. Sem ­
inctitg.
W ci'an be a family again."

Church officials taken in by con men

Kidney

Budget1A
M A U R IC E A C C A D
M a u ric e A c c a d . 7 8 . 2 2 0
Wlndmeadows Lane, Altamonte
Springs, died Sunday at Florida
Hospital. Altam onte Springs.
B o m Nov. 12. 1912. In Cairo.
Egypt, he moved to Altamonte
Springs from there In 1989. He
was a retired manager In the
banking industry and a member
of St. Margaret Mary Catholic
Church.
Survivors Include sons. Rafik.
Altamonte Springs. Nagy, Foxboro. Mass.. Fouad, Morocco;
two grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fu n e ra l
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
R O B E R T B. F O X
Robert E. Fox, 65. Carmona
Court. Deltona, died Sunday at
Florida Hospital. Orlando. Born
Aug. 20. 1925. In Penn Van.
N .Y.. he moved to Deltona in
1990 from Colombia, Md. He
wan a communication engineer
for Ford Aerospace C o .. In
H a n o v e r . M d . a nd an
Episcopalian. He was a member
of Naval Cryptologic Veterans
Association and V FW Post 8093.
DcHary. He was a retired Navy
lieutenant service In World War
II. Korean Conflict and the
Vietnam War. tie served 14
years as an engineer for National
Security Agency.
Survivors Include wife. Mary
D.: sons. I). Kirk. Seaggsville,
Md.. Paul L.. Ilyaltsvlllc. Md.;
d aughter. Diane E. Benson.
Laurel Md.; stepson, Michael S.
F e b rr y of D u rrcsto w n . M d.:
brother. Alfred W .. Geneva. N.Y.:
mother. Mary llullohaugh. Green
M e a d o w s, N . Y . : I I g r a n d ­
children.
Stephen H. liuldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona. In eharge of
arrangements.
D O N A L D P A U L HESS
D onald Paul Hess, 71. of
Elizabeth Court. Sanlord. died
Monday at Florida Hospital. Oi
Ian do. Horn Sept. 2H, 1919. in
Danville, III.. In- moved to San­
ford from Miami 11 years ago.
He was a retired detective of Ihe
Miami Police Department and a
member III First United Methodtsi Church. Sanlord. He was a
golt pro and tanner owner of
Sanford Airport Golf Driving
Range III was a mrmto-r of Ihe
Tim acuan Golt Club. Lake Mary.
Survivors incluilr wife. Jean

E.; daughters. Roberta DavtoT
Durham , N.C.. Sandra Snider.
Maitland. Patricia Martin and
Jane Reed, both of Indianapolis.
Ind„ Patricia Wlndbigler. Red
Bluff. Calif.; 13 grandchildren;
four great-grandchildren.
W inter Park Memorial Funeral
Home. W inter Park.

Joseph Benjamin Hicks. 86.
989 Orlenta A ve .. Altamonte
Springs, died Tuesday at Life
Care Center. Altamonte Springs.
Born A ug . 4. 1904. In H ar­
risburg. Va.. he moved lo A lta­
monte Srplngs from DeBary in
1989. He was an automobile
service station ow ner and a
Marine Corps veteran. He was a
member of Masonic Lodge No.
323. Rockport. Texas.
Beacon Cremation Service of
Central Florida. W inter Park. In
charge of arrangements.

BERNICE E. MeCARROLL
Bernice E. McCarroll. 77. 1087
Crystal Bowl Circle. Casselberry,
died Tuesday at her residence.
Horn Oct. 10. 1913. in Palmyra.
N.Y.. she moved to Casselberry
from Peekskill. N .Y .. in 1979.
She was a teacher.
Survivors Include sons. David
G.. Mlddlcport. N .Y .. Paul R.
DeBary.
Central Florida Funeral Serv­
ice and Cremation Society, O r­
lando. In charge of arrange­
ments.

Andrew Perdomo. 30. 1382
Landry Circle. Longwood. died
Sunday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Aug. 24. I960. In Bogota. Col­
ombia. he moved to Longwood
from Miami In 1991. He was a
c o n s tru c tio n w o rk e r and u
Catholic.
Survivors Include parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roberto. Longwood:
wife. C heryl; brothers. Dario.
Jupiter. Javier. Los Angeles.
Roberto. Daniel, Germ an, all of
L o n g w o o d . H e rn a n d o . L o n g
Island. N .Y.; sisters. Magdalena
Thresher. Long Island. Bibiana.

Longwood.
Carey Hand Garden Chapel
Home for Funerals. Longwood.
In charge of arrangements.
4 TS P H A M A R O BE 40EOLSK1
Stephan la Rose Sokolskl. 94.
Hope Avenue. Deltona, died
Monday at her residence. Bom
J u n e 2 7 . 1897. In L o m z a .
Poland, she moved In Deltona 10
years ago from Stamford. Conn.
She was a homemaker and a
member of St. Clare's Catholic
Com m unity Church. Deltona.
Survivors Include daughter.
Claire Nemchek. Deltona: son.
Joseph. Southport. Conn.: five
g r a n d c h i l d r e n : six g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona. In eharge of
arrangements.

JENNIE E. "DOLL" WILLIS
Jcn r le E. "D oll " Willis. 92.
921 O ld DcLand Highway. D rBury, died Tuesday at her resi­
dence. Born Feb. 19. 1899. In
Grand!. Ga.. she moved to De­
Bary from Lake Monroe In 1932.
She was a homemaker und a
mem ber of the First Baptist
Church of Lake Monroe.
Survivors Include grandson.
Ja m e s O. Boston. J r .. Luke

Monroe; granddaughters, Diane
E. Hum gardncr, Paola. Janice E.
Boston. Lake Monroe, and Julie
A. Boston. Sanford: six greatg r a n d c h i l d r e n : one
great-great-grandchild.
Urtason Funeral Home. San­
ford. In charge of arrangements.

M i l l . DONALD M U L
Memorial W fvlcn tor Mr. Donald Saul
Hen. 71, of Santord. will bo held Thurtdoy.
Aug I. •» Itw First United Mtttwdltt Church
in tontord at 4 p m. Donatiom may be made
to the Florida United Method!*’ Children'*
Home. P O So* O h DelMna
Winter Park Memorial Funeral Home.
Winter Perk
W IU .lt .J E N N I E I . "DOLL”
Furwral w rv lc n tor Jtnnl. ''Doll" Willi*
will bo 10 a m Friday al Britton Furwral
Horn* Chapa! with Raw. Clark Adam* ofdelating. Inlarmant will follow In Eworgraan
Ctmolory. Sanford Frland* may wl*ll from
l i p m. Thurtday
Britton Furwral Homa. Sanford, m 11JI.
In char ga ol lacvlcwt
WATHKM. BARBARA KVBLVN
Mm * ol Chrltilon Burlol will bo colkbralkd
tor Evalyn Watfwn Friday. Aug. 7, al 1 p m
in All Soul* Catholic Church. Sanford, with
tha Raw F r Thom** J. Burn* a* calabranl
Inttrmant will lollow In All Soul* Catholic
Ctmalary A Rotary will ba racltad Thur*
day. Aug. I, al * p m in tha Britton Furwral
Chapal Frland* may call at Itw furwral homa
Thurtday fromAunttltp.m.
Arrangamantt by Britton Furwral Homo.
Sanlord. 172 J ill

In an effort to balance (he
proposed budget the school dis­
trict has. among other things.
Increased Ihe teacher-to-student
ratio by hiring no new teachers
despite an Increase of more than
2 ,0 0 0 students district-w ide;
deferred donations to outside
organizations such as United
Arts and Grove Counseling; re­
duced travel budgets by 2 0
percent; frozen all equipment
purchases al the district level:
reduced supplies Inventories;
deferred textbook supplements:
cut back on writing nnd Satur­
day School programs; done uway
with the seventh period day und
eliminated science festivals und
academle tournaments.
"T h is Is us lean ns we can
get," Hughes sukl.
Dan McAlurney- of Casselberry
asked why the board had mil yet
instituted impact fees, recently
declared legal. In order to solve
their budgeturv woes.

Th e C ity of Oviedo to already
collecting Interim fees.
W illiam s noted, however, that
the collection of the fees will not
solve all the budget problems.
" T h is only Impacts new devel­
opm ent." Williams said. " II to
misleading to think that Impact
fees will be our Golden E g g ."
Dana Rocca or Oviedo asked
w hy the district did not show
substantial savings due In die
Institution of year round school
at Luwton Elementary School.
It was explained that to show a
su b sta n tia l savings, a large
num ber of schools must be used
year round.
" W e a rc w o rk in g to w a rd
th a t," board m em ber Sandy
Robinson said.
As the meeting concluded.
Hughes said that the biggest
problem facing the distircl to the
"antiquated, primitive lax laws"
with loo m uch emphasis placed
on sales tax and properly tux.

Williams noted dial the d is­
t r ic t Is w o r k in g w ith th e
municipalities in Ihe county on
drafting ordinances to muke
Impact fees "tru ly legal."

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Personal service to one o f Ihe th in g s th a t m a k e s Brtoson
F u n e ra l H o m e special, T h i s to O re n " S h o rty ” S m ith . S h o rty
h a s been se rvin g the people of S a n fo rd for m o re th a n 5 0
ye a rs from th is funeral
fu
hom e.
C a rin g people to what y o u expect a n d w h a t y o u get at

322-2131

B R IS S O N F U N E R A L H O M E
905 LAUR EL AVE.. S A N FO R D
Sponsors of itw MEMORJAJ G U A R D IA N PLAN
(Insurance Funded Prearranged Funeral ITogram)

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�Pee-wee’s
friends
begin rally
N e w Y O R K - Paul Reubens,
the comedian w ho plays Pee*wee
Herm an, la In trouble, but both
he a nd P ec*wee have friends.
J o a n Rivera. C vn d l Lauper
and B ill Cosby apoke u p for the
actor on Tueaday. In California.

W A S H IN G T O N House W ays and Means Committee
approval of a Democratic bill helping the lone-term unem ­
ployed puts Congress one step closer to a showdown w ith
President Bush.
In near party-line balloting, the panel voted 24-12 Tuesday to
provide up to 20 weeks of additional unemployment checks to
people who have exhausted the regular 28 weeks of benefits.
T h e House m ay consider the bill Thursday.
A similar bill seemed unlikely to move In the Senate until at
least Friday, and perhaps for even later because of procedural
stalling by Republicans as Congress drives to begin Its sum m er
recess at week's end.
Democratic leaders said that w ith 1.6 m illion Americana
having depleted their Jobless benefits so for this year, they
wanted lo send the measure to Bush.

K C U u C Tl* p ilD lIC B I I I K I n M OVIICC

waa dehifed w ith c a lk from
parents whose children want to
write letters of support to PeeReubens. 38. is charged w ith
exposing himself In an adult
m ovie theater In his hometown
of Sarasota, Fla. Free on (2 1 0
ball, he Is In seclusion and faces

W A S H IN G TO N — T h e House approved a list of 34 m ilitary
bases recommended for closure, effectively ending debate over
an Issue that forced lawmakers to throw thousands of people
out of work In exchange for billions of dollars In coot savings.
B y a vote of 384 to 00. lawmakers sgreed late Tuesday to the
cost-cutting recommendations made by the Defense Base
Closure and Realignment Commission. Th e panel also called
for realigning 48 facilities.
A Senate vote Is optional because both houses of Congress
had to disapprove the package in order to kill It. Senate
Majority Leader George Mitchell. D-Maine, has not decided
whether to bring the issue to the floor for a sym bolic vote, a n

c e le d S a t u r d a y m o r n in g
c h ild re n 's show . "F e e -w e e 's
Playhouse." and Dtaney-MOM
Studios in Florida dr opped a
Pee-wee video from a theme park
tour.
" I ’ve been his friend for nine
years. T h is Is terribly, terribly
sad." — 1
fo Miss Rivers.
She sold she had spoken with
Reubens since his arrest Friday.
"H e w as an adult and he was in
an adult, heterosexual movie
theater at the tim e." she said.
Rock singer C yn d l Lauper. a
longtime friend, said in a state­
m ent that Reubens "has already
been u n f a irly trie d b y the
m edia."
C o sb y, speaking through a
publicist, said. "W hatever he
m ay have done, he hasn’t done
that to the children."

T h e House vote was on a motion to reject the package.

" If In feet Peter Paul Reubens
Is guilty.- if In fact he needs
treatment, the cost to our society
in taxes Is going to be far. for
less m oney than what will be
required to clean up the banking
Industry, the oil spills In Kuwait,
our nation's homeless situation
or the A ID S e p id e m ic." the
"Cosby Show ” star said.
In L o s A n ge les. R e ub en 's
publicist. Richard Grant, said.
"W e 're getting deluged w ith
calls from parents who want an
address for their children to
write Pre-wee.”
■ O rrO R 'S N O TE : Letters to
Pee-wee Herman should be tent
c m .0 1 M O L WiiaWm flbM M kiita
620, Baw rty Htlie, Cent., ( n i l .

CLUB, ORGANIZATION NEWS
News about social and servica clubs and organiza­
tions In Seminole County ie eiegibte lor publication.
Group publicity chairmen should submit typewrit­
ten prate releases to People Editor. The deadline
ie noon three days prior to an svent.br as soon after
the event aa possible.

PEOPLE ITEMS
Itema accompanied by pictures about the ac­
complishments ol children and adult residents ol
Seminole County are eligible for publication. Sub­
mit typewritten or neatly written items to People
Editor, Sanford Herald, 300 N. French Ave., Sanford,
Fla. 32771. Include name and daytime phone
number of person who msy answer questions.

RELIGION
Items about religious services or social activities
sponsored by a church or synagogue In Seminole
County are eligible for publication on the Religion
Page each Friday. Submit items no later than noon
Wednesday prior to the day of publication to
Religion Editor. Include the name and daytime
telephone number of a person who may answer
questions.

u ^ l fro n t

lamlnatoCaunty. PtorIda.
THIS REQUEST I S FOR AN
appeal'tVfha g e a ra o l Ad|u»t

man! dtcltton «Mch dantod a
variance roRueat ta lectien
M A i at tha Comyrahanalva
Zoning Coda to oltoiv butlnaM
operating haun to aotond to
MiORM.

‘ *T H V ‘ W f JiLtC " H i i X V i M .
W ILL SS MSLO to tha City

* -—«—*-

C a n ty C w m m m to Santoro.
F torM l a t U:M AM., an ttw
m w a a y rf AufMt. m i .

WltiMM my hand and tha taal
at thisCawrtanJuty t*. mi.
(MALI
MARYANN! MORSE

'

On* at thaCircuit Court
By: S/Oarathy W. Safton **
Dayvty Ctorh
roM St-jw ricn.Tw i------------

Herald must submit tha approprlata form to tha San­
ford Herald People editor. Completed engagement
forms must be submitted at laaet 20 days prior to
the wedding. Wedding forme should be submitted
as soon after the wedding as possible.
The forms provide the basis for information that
will appear in the announcement. The forme ere
available at I he newspaper office or by sending an
addressed, stamped envelope to Engagements (or
Weddings).
If desired, the completed forms may be accom­
panied by a photograph (professional preferred) of
any size lo be published in black and white with the
announcement. The newspaper reserves the right
to reject any photograph that it cannot reproduce.
Photographs msy be picked up alter publication
or can be returned by mail II accompanied with an
SASE.
Engagements and waddings are published in the
Sanford Herald Sunday edition ol the People
section.

Photographs submitted lo the Herald for publica­
tion will be relumed it that is requested. An ad­
dressed envelope large enough to accommodate
the picture and carrying suflicient postage should
be provided. Pictures may be picked up at the
newspaper within two days of publication if a re­
quest to save the picture has also been submitted.

It you see somthing newsworthy, let us know.
Call the Herald and ask lor the news editor as soon
as possible.

Other Items Of Interest:
BUSINESS BRIEFS
Announcements of new businesses in Seminole
County, changes in locations and personnel promo­
tions and awards or other business distinctions are
elegible lor publication in the Sunday Business
Briefs column. Submit typewritten items lo the
Business Editor along with a picture II appropriate
and include the name and daytime telephone
number ot a person who may be contacted to
answer questions. The deadline is noon Wednes­
day prior to the Sunday of publication.
Organized events ol an entertainment, recrea­
tional or leisure nature in Seminole County are
publicized in the Weekend Planner each Friday. The
deadline is noon Tuesday prior to the Friday of
publication. Submit typewritten contributions to
Weekend Planner

How Do I Announce A
Wadding Or Engagement?
People wishing to have their engagement or wed­
ding announcement published in the Sanford

Can I Buy A Back Issue Of
The Newspaper?
Back Issues are available for up to one year prior
to current publication date. You can purchase back
copies In person at our Customer Service desk or
order by mail (payment must be enclosed). Call
322-2611 to place your order.

Ceil our Circulation Department at 322-2611 to
find out subscription rates. Also call this number
If you would like your subscription service inter­
rupted for vacations.

Is There Anything I Should
Know About Writing Letters
To The Editor?

Simply call 322-2611 between the hours of 8:00
am lo 5:30 pm Monday through Friday and one of
our Classified Advisors will be happy to help
you.

Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
should be typewritten or written legibly, signed and
include a mailing address and a daytime telephone
number. The letters should be on a single subject
and should be as brief as possible. Letters are sub­
ject to editing.

To Place an ad in any other section ot this
newspaper, call 322-2611 and ask lor a Retail Adver­
tising Representative, who'll help you in design,
layout and wording ol any size ad you wish.

I Would Like To Earn Some
Extra Money As A Newspaper
Carrier.

ENTERTAINMENT

garhat claiming by, through,
underor agonul him dhtml.

How Can I Receive Home
Delivery?

RETURN PHOTP POLICY

How Do I Report A Nowe Tip?

TO: lUK WAN KONC nJkii
MIN JRH MONO, and UN­
KNOWN IPOUtl. It marrtod It
atlvt. and/or toad hi* tthalr)

Our newspaper carriers are made up of all types
of people ot all ages, who enjoy being outdoors,
meeting friendly people and making extra cash.
Stop in our office at 300 N. French Ave.. Sanford
to file your application. We ll notify you when a
home delivery route becomes available in your area.

Sanford Herald
300 N. French Ave.
Sanford, Florida
3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

\

*

•

�V tan d through th t oohimnt tafcan from tho oM
building and mataMad In tha now administration

Gorbachev,
Bush sign
arms accord
M OSCOW - Presidents Bush
and Mikhail S. Gorbachev sign a
historic anna reduction treaty
today — the first time the taro
p o w e rs h a v e c o m m itte d
themselves to cutting their most
lethal weapons.
Yet U.S. and Soviet officials
already are looking down the
road to further weapons accords.
"T h e business Is not finished,"
Soviet Foreign Minister A lex­
ander A . Bessmertnykh a d d
Tu e sd a y. T h e United States
agreed tn principle, but W hite
H o u a e sp o k e s m a n M a r lin
Fltxwater said any agenda for
further talks would be “ pre­
mature.”
— Both sides trumpeted today's
presidential signing ceremony of
i S . Y i t f g f C A J r M t - ftttfUfctidh
Treaty, nine yean In the m ak­
ing. It will confine thousands of
the deadliest nuclear anna to the
scrap heap and establish a
comprehensive system of m ak­
ing sure neither side cheats on
the treaty *s terms.
In the end. Moscow will cut its
stockpile b y 35 percent and
Washington by 38 percent.
Before signing the S T A R T
accord. Bush and Gorbachev
were discussing the future of
’ arms control at the Soviet leadter'a dacha today. And Fltxwater
;sald the two sides would have
•further discussions In Uie fall.
I T h e S T A R T accord, to be
?implemented over seven years.
;sets an overall celling of 4.900
;lo n g -ra n g e b allistic m issile
•warheads and requires the Sovi­
e ts to halve their stockpile of
Ih e a v y g ro u n d -b a s e d S S -1 8
; missiles from 308 to 154. No
•U.S. missiles are In the same
^category.
It requires that both sides
[destroy hundreds of missiles
; carrying thousands of nuclear
•warheads. Th e superpowers will
[be required to cut the number of
; their bomber aircraft and sea;and land-based missile delivery
•systemsto l,600each.
) Yet. for all the reductions, the
[tre a ty le a ve s a b o u t 9 .0 0 0
[warheads on the U.S. side and
•about 7.000 for the Soviets.
W h ile the United States will
;have a numerical advantage, the
[Soviets will have an edge in the
numbers of ground-based In­
tercontinental ballistic missiles
!— th e h e a v y b lo c k b u s t e r
[weapons.
In 1987. the two sides banned
'in te rm e d ia te -ra n g e n u c le a r
missiles.
; But there has been no compa­
rable headway on chemical and
•biological weapons or on tactical
•arms In Europe. Th e United
[States has resisted imposing
'lim its on chemical weapons or
•restricting space-based defenses.
| It was Bessm ertnykh and
Gorbachev's spokesman. Vitaly
Ignatenko, who have said the
gallon s' other arsenals now d r1serve prompt attention.
[ " I don't think the time is over
[for arms control.'* Bessmertnykh
[said.
"W e should have a totally new
pattern of mutual security."
Ignatenko said, "...a new stage
t h a t w i l l go b e y o n d t h e
framework of containment."

building, tha damoHtlon ot Sanford Middto
iitiMMii ffumbtad i Ao m th li w nk. On Tuw dw .

tha final front placa of tha 1181 adtfaca tumblad

^

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wiwig
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mwimwivg wigginiifwin

ramnanta wHt baiM ad In construction of tha now
achool on tha praaant atta.

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•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Wednesday, luly 31 1991

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FARMERS FURNITURE
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2440 s !F re n c h A v e ., Sanford
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Sun. Noon - 5 PM

■* v

OUr
N

ts i

�/

WEDNESDAY

Sanford H erald

July

Sports
r. ■

SCC Camp correction
S A N F O R D — T h e re w as a m isprint In
Sunday's article on the BUI Payne/Semtnole
Com m unity College Basketball Camp.
Members of the 3-on-3 championship team Tor
the older (12-14) age group were Jacob Fisher.
A m y Rawls. Jam es Kozlowskl and Greg Pcgram .

SOFTBALL
Um pires c lin ic
SA N FO R D — T h e Sanford Umpires Associa­
tion will hold an American Softball Association
(A S A ) certification clinic August 17 and 18.
T h e clinic will start at B a.m . both days and
attendees will need to be there both days.
Sanford umpires who already have their A S A
licenses are encouraged to attend.
Cost will be 820.
T o register or for more Information contact
Rocky Elllngsworth, Sanford Recreation De­
partment Superlntendant. at 330-5897.

B

■ Ptopla, Pag* 4B
■ Classlflad, Pag* SB
■Comic*, Pago SB

Seminole Colts
fire up offense
C A R R O L L T O N . Texas more like II

That's

After scoring just two runs In
their opening-game loss of the
P O N Y Baseball Colt (15 and 16)
League South Zone tournam ent
Monday night, me Seminole AllStars exploded for 16 runs. 10 In
one inning, to defeat Irving. Texas
16-7 In an elimination game Tue s­
day.
T h e South Zone covers 11 slates
and Mexico.
Tuesday's victory advances Sem ­
inole to another elimination game
tonight against the loser of Tu e s­
day’s game between Baytown. T e x ­
as and host Carrollton. O n Monday.
Baytown scored three runs In the

seventh Inning to defeat Seminole
5-2.
Seminole benefit led from some
sloppy play by the Irving squad
Tuesday, taking advantage of five
errors and four walks during the
10-run third Inning alone.
Mall Dlemer started things for
Seminole In the third by reaching
on an error. After Mall Freeman
walked. Jerem y Chunal singled In
Dlemer and Robert Bologna singled
In Freem an. Mike W erner then
grounded out to third, advancing
Chunat to third and Bologna lo
second.
J o h n L u g e r ln g fo llo w e d b y
reaching on an error that allowed

□ * •« C olts, Fags SB
Inrtaf, T t u i

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lint) m ■ - It II 1

MUrcon. Brutuf (II. Wood til and Jack,.
KtMlor, Carr (4), Dtamar (5) and Frooman WP
— Carr. LP — Mar con Sava — Dtamar IB —
Irving, Jacks; Sam(no*. Tooka, Chunat. IB —
Samlnota, KttiJar. HP — Irving, Birdwtll.
Bacards — Samlnota M , Irving 0 j

Oviedo Seniors
follow DiTore

on getting his confidence level back
up.
Then. In last week's sectional
tournament. DiTore was pressed
Into action after Oviedo suffered Its
first loss and was faced w ith playing
three games In three nights. Dt^orc
responded by pitching four strong
In n in g s, he lp in g O vie do defeat
Navarro.
When Oviedo lost Monday and put
Itself In a position where It had to
win four games In four days to claim
the slate title. D iTo re went lo
Manager T o m Ferguson and asked
for the ball.
Against Coral Springs. DiTore
threw 105 pilches over six Innings,
allowing Just four hits
and an

LAKE WALES - It's am azing
what a little confidence can do.
Rich DiTore. m aking his second
start of the All-Star season, led
Oviedo to a 12-2 win over Coral
Springs In an elimination game of
the Llltlc League Baseball Senior
Lcuguc All-Star slate tournam ent at
the Lake Wales Little League com ­
plex Tuesday.
The win earns Oviedo a rem atch
with Dunedin (which lost lo North
Brandon 4-0 Tuesday) tonight at 6
p.m- Dunedin rallied past Oviedo
6-5 in nine Innings Monday night.
According to his father. DiTore.
who had been bothered by a sore
left elbow In the spring, received his
doctor's clearance lo pitch a m onth
and a half ago but has had to work

□I
C * r* ltfM ft
MS M l I - 1 7 *
OvtoSi
M I M a - It I I •
Yamall. Cucuiia (4) and Yonorer. DiTore.
Duncan 17) and Hynre. WP — DiTore (101. LP —
Yamal I. Sava — Nona. IB — Coral Spring*.
Burton; Ovtodo. DiTore. IB — Nona. HR — Nona
Rocord* — Ovlado 111.

State Market
goes up by
two games

Organizational moating
SA N FO R D — T h e Sanford Recreation De­
partment will hold an organizational meeting for
the fall leagues W ed., August 21 at 6 p.m . at the
Downtown Youth Center. 300 N. Park Ave..
First Floor of C ity Hall.
For more Information call 330-5697.

S A N FO R D — State Market Res­
taurant bested Bccr:30 9-7 for Its
third victory this season over their
nearest competitors and regained a
two-game lead In Sanford Recre­
ation Department Tuesday Night
Men's Sprlng/Sum m cr Stowpllch
Softball League action at Chase
Park.
Th e other games, which were
originally scheduled for April 23.
were offensive shows as the Re­
gu lators h a m m e r e d Monroe
H a rb o u r M a rin a 21- 7 and the
K o k o m o R c c y c le rs o u ts lu g g c d
Klitcu 25-13.—
................- « —
W ith -four more rain outs I d make
u.p State Market Restaurant Is 10-1
and Beer:3U Is 8-3. Follwlng the
■-■ItAiIcra— ate* -the 'Rirgu’. nhwAMnnroc H arbour Marina and Ktncu
(both 3-8) and the Kokomo Kccyclers (2-9).
Th e league will make up another
rain out. from May 21. this T h u rs ­
day night at Chase Park. At 6:30
p.m.. the Kokomo Rccyclers will
play Ihe Regulators, at 7:30 p.m.
Monroe Hurbour Murlna will face
Slutc Market Restaurant and al 8:30
riB ce M e n . Page 3 B

Gator Club Tournament
L A K E M AR Y — Th e Gator C lub of Central
Florida will host the 1991 SportsChannel Gator
C lu b Challenge Golf Tournam ent on Friday.
Sept. 27 at the Tim acuan Golf &amp; Country Club.
T h e tournament fee Is 8100 per person, which
includes lunch, dinner and prizes. Am ong the
prizes will be a car for a hole In one. low net
winners and low gross winners.
T h e golf tournament Is the first event In a
weekend full of exciting activities for visiting
G ator fans. A pep rally will be held at Universal
Studios Friday night, a brunCYl at the Hylton'
Saturday m orning •^ — football game LetAeen
Florida and Mississippi In Orlando at 12:30 p.m.
Saturday and— t h e -B o c la -H o w l post game
celebration at Roatc O 'O r s d y V
\
For more Information contact: T o ri A lw lll at
(407)888-1036.

SOUTHKRN LKAQUK
Lookouts odgo Suns
JACKSONVILLE — Rick Allen hit a solo hom e
ru n In the eighth Inning to break a 5-5 tie and
lead Chattanooga to a 7-5 Southern League
victory over Jacksonville T uesday.
Jacksonville took a 2-0 lead In the fourth
Inning. But C hattanooga took the lead during a
four-run seventh Inning to take a 5-3 lead.
The Suns tied the gam e In the bottom of the
seventh when Jim C am pants hit a two-run
hom e run.
But Allen answ ered with his home run. Then
Eddie Rush scored an Scott Pose's double to
give the Lookouts their flnul 7-5 margin.
Victor G arcia preserved the C hattanooga
victory by striking out all three batters In the
ninth Inning, his fifth save of the year.
Will Schock (3-1) pitched two innings for the
win. He had four hits, three runs, one walk and
no strike outs.
Ricky Rojas (1 -3) went one Inning, giving up
five hits, four runs, one walk and he struck out
one.

FOOTBALL
Bucs make roster cuts
TAMPA — T he T am p a Bay B uccaneers
reduced their uctivc roster to 78 players on
Tuesday, waiving rookie running back Hyland
Hickson and placing defensive linem an Robert
Martz on Injured waivers.
Hickson w as a lOth-round draft choice from
Michigan Stale who had not practiced during
training cam p because of a viral Infection. A few
hours before he was released, he said he didn't
fear getting cut before he could show the
couching staff what he could do.
*’l haven't really thought about th a t." the
5-foot-9. 220-pound running back said. "I've
been trying to do everything I can to get m yself
back on the field ... I feel 1 can compete with the
other guys In cam p."
Hickson rushed for 1.196 yards and scored 14
touchdow ns as u senior at Michigan State.
The Bucs signed Mariz on Ju ly 24 after a
siring of Injuries depleted the team of depth on
the defensive line. He hurl hts knee In practice'
the next day.

B E S T B E TS ON T V

BASEBALL
□ 7 :3 0 p in . — ESPN. Pittsburgh Pirates at
Atlanta Braves. |L)
C «iipl«l« llattnf on F ofo 2B

1991

Doing it the hard way

IN B R I E F

□

31,

How do you play this gama again?

HwaM photo* by Ofry F. VufM

That's probably the way Ihe participants In Ihe
Sanford Recreation Department Tuesday Night Men's
Softball League telt when they finally got a chance lo
play again last night after being rained out two weeks

in a row and three times in the Iasi live weeks. In a
game between the league leaders. Jim Smith (letl)
and lirsl-place Stale Market Restaurant topped
Robert Kerr(righ) and second-place Beer:30,9-7.

Fre d ’s Law n, Greenleaf
share w o m e n ’s league lead
H*rc*r
Fred*, Law s Irevlre
•(him Buch
OrrenlMt U n d u ip in ,

IM 110 • — 4 It
700 M l 7 - I 14

M l M l ■ - 7 11
1M M l ■ - * 11

■rev*ten

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SANFORD — After a two-wcek layoff
because of rain, the best race In Sanford
softball heated up again al Ptnchurst
Park Tuesday night.
In Ihe only head-lo-hcad competition
between Ihe four front runners. Fred's
Lawn Service scored two runs In the
bottom of (he seventh Inning to edge
H a rc a r 5-4. T he o th e r c o -le a d e r.
Greenleaf Lanscaplng. outscorcd Bikini
Beach 19-11 while Intcrgalactlc re­
m ained a gam e off the lead, picking up a
7-0 forfeit victory from Beer:30.
With two more weeks rem aining.
Fred's Lawn Service and G reenleaf
Landscaping are both 9-4 while Harcar
and Intergalacllc arc both H-5 ahead of
B eer:30(3* 10) and Bikini Beach (2-11).
Next w e e k 's sc h e d u le , originally
scheduled for Ju ly 17. has Fred's Lawn
Service playing Bikini Beach at 6:30
p.m .; Intcrgalactlc facing G reenleaf
Landscaping at 7:30 p.m .: and Harcar
taking on Becr:30 at 8:30 p.m.
Fred's Lawn Service look a 2 -1 lead in
the first Inning, but H arcar took control
of the game with a single run in Ihe
fourth inning and two In the fifth.
The winners cut the lead In half wit it
a run In the sixth Inning and claimed
the win tn the seventh.
Doing the dam age for Fred's Lawn
Service were Tina Roberts (triple, two
singles, tw o runs, one RBI). Rosa
Williams (two doubles, one single, two
RBI). Edith Chester (two singles. RBI).
Nlccy Wheeler (two singles, two runs).
Patrice Brown (two singles). Kundicc
Grooms and Ltsa Thom pson (one single
each) and Tam m y Bailey (one rui»|.
Pacing the Harcar offense were Renee
Lanzu (triple, single, one run. KillI.
Teresa W alburger {triple, single, run
scored). J a n Santslow (two singles, one
ru n , one RBI). Abby DrAlba (two
singles). Connie Thom as (double. Kill 1.

Brer: M
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&gt;41 71 -

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40,000 M ILE W A R R A N TY

Debbie Leigh and Dawn McCall (one
single each). Terri Maim (Rllll and
Jackie Suggs (one run).
The second gam e was a singles! Irnm
the get-go. After Greenleaf Landscaping
took a 5-1 lead after the first liming, the
gam e w as tied 9-9 after the second
Inning and 11-11 after the third liming.
But uftcr holding Bikini Beach score­
less In the top of the fourth Inning, the
w inners pul a seven on the board to go
ahead 18-11 und added an Insurance
run In the filth inning before the game
was called by the time limit.
C ontributing to a 21 -till Greenleaf
Landscaping offense were Paula Sottger
(two doubles, two singles, three runs,
four RBI). L attnle M onliollen (four
singles, three runs. RBI). Michelle Cooke
(three singles, two runs, four RBI) anil
Jill Kovuclk (three singles, two nm s|.
Also contributing were Gwen Kdlingsworlli liwu singles. Iwo runs. RBI).
Annette Brown (two singles, two RBI).
Shelly Harley Isingle. two runs, three
RBI). C hristina llall (single, one run. two
RBI). Antonia Burns (single, run scored)
am i Sue M augham (three runs).
Providing the offense for Bikini Beach
were April Flowers (three singles, one
run. three RBI). Bonnie Chaplin (three
slngles. one run. two Kltll. Crts Siapp
(two singles, three runs) and April
Rivers li wo singles, one run. one RBI)
Also adding lo the offense were Lori
Poe (double, run scored). Mindy Estep
(single, two runs, two RBI). Lynn Moonaud Valerie Wilks (one single and one
RBI each). Becky Bcckncr (single, run
scored!. Tamm! Penis (Kill) and Carol
Dick (one nm )

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Ju n io r Olym pics ready to crank up
T A L L A H A S S E E — After three days of mostly
prelim inary events, the 25th annual A A U Junior
O lym pics now gets started In earnest.
Full-scale competition In most of the 13
A m ateur Athletic Union sports begins today, with
evening opening ceremonies featuring 1076
O lym pic decathlon champion Bruce Jenner.
P re lim in a ry basketball and baseball play
wound up Tuesday, while early wrestling m at­
ches and soccer games continued.
C hris Webber, who was USA Today's top prep
basketball player Iasi season, scored 38 points
Tuesday to lead the Detroit Superfrtends to a
121- 115 victo ry over the Arkansas Wings.
Webber, a 6-foot-O forward, will play for the
University of Michigan next year.
Corliss Williamson led Arkansas with 37 points.
Another future Wolverine. 6 root 8 Jalcn Rose,
scored 30 points as Team Michigan remained

I

undefeated In preliminary play with a 110-100
vic to ry over the St. Louis Eagles. Voshon
Leonard, who will play this season at the
University of Detroit, scored 32 for Michigan.
Te a m North Florida, led by Florida Slate
University signer Ray Donald's 20 points, fought
off possible elimination from the 16-team A A U
tournament by defeating the Music City Players
95-89.
T h e Players, from Nashville. Te n n .. were led by
David Vaughn's 26 points. Vaughn, a 6-foot-9
forward, has signed to play for Memphis State
University.
T h e field for the tournament was to begin play
today, w ith a championship game scheduled for
Saturday night. Today marks the start of a
double-elimination baseball tournament as well.
T ra c k and field events also were scheduled to
begin today, before the Junior Olympics' opening
ceremonies featuring Jenner as master of cere­
monies. About 5.000 athletes aged 8 to 18 will
compete In the games.

‘I

�Anderson claims End of the Month Late Modal championship

Law rence Inadvertantly tagged and apun

8411a, who could not match the speed of the
w inner's Mercury Cougar in the main event,
Rounding out the top live were Sherman Walker,

Seniors
DtTore also aided his own
mse by contributing s three*
in double during an eight-run
rally in the alxth Inning.
With one out. Ted Brown and
Tim Slavik both walked and
Mike Ruglentus was hit by a
pitch to lo ad the bases. Todd
BeOhorn then singled tit Brown.
An out later, DlToce doubled to
d ear the baaes. He later scored
on Andy Hynes' single. Hynes
taking second on the throw to
the plate.
After Hynes advanced to third
on a balk and Brion King walked
to put runners at the comers.
Andy Taylor aingkd to score
Hynes. King going to second.
Brown followed with a single
that brought In King.

In the lop of the sixth, but
Oviedo responded w ith the
eight-run explosion In the home
half of the frame to put the game
on Ice.
BeQhorn paced Oviedo's 10-hit
attack by going 3-for*3 with four
RBI and two runs scored. DtTore
added his double, four RBI and
one run scored.
Alao chipping In were Brown
(single, two runs scored, two
RBI). Slavik (single, two runs
scored). Ruglenlus (single, two
runs scored). King (one run
scored) and Taylor (single, run
scored, one RBII).
Thanks to DtTore. Oviedo now
h aa King. B e l l h o r n a n d
Oviedo took a 2-0 lead in the Ruglenlus — the three pitchers
bottom of the first when Brown that canted the team through
reached on an error and Slavik the District 14 tournam ent —
was hit by a pitch. After the two available to pitch tonight and.
advanced a base on a ground out h o p e f u l l y , a g a l n a t N o r t h
by Ruglenlus. Bellhorn singled Brandon. Both Bellhorn and
Ruglenlus were hit by pitches
them home.
T h a t lead was stretched to 44) Tuesday night but stayed in the

w ith

tw o ru n s in

the third

Doing the dam age for the
cgulators were J o h n Kelger
ne double, three singles, two

Marina challenges State M arket^
Restaurant; and at 8:30
the Regulators square off with
the Kokomo Recyclers.
T h e g a m e b etw ee n State
Market Restaurant and Beer:30
was everything it was expected
to be. State Market took a 2-0
lead after the first Inning but
Beer; 30 scored two in the second
inning, one in the third and four
In the fifth to take a 7-2
advantage.
State Market Restaurant then
allowed w hy it has the best
record out of all of the Sanford
leagues by scoring four runs in
the bottom of the fifth inning to
cut the lead to 7-6. then striking
for three runs In the bottom of
sixth Inning to pull out the
victory.
In the bottom of the sixth
inning. T o lly Frank and W .L.
Gracey led off the inning with
b a ck -to -ba ck singles to put
runners on the comers. Mic
West then lifted a sacrifice fly to
score Frank w ith the tying run.
Bill Gracey walked to put run­
ners on first and second before
Don Anderson singled in W .L.
Gracey w ith go-ahead run. To m
Gracey added an Insurance run
w ith a sacrifice fly.
Providing the offense for the
winners were Anderson (three
singles, two runs scored, two
RBI). Bill Gracey (one double,
one single, three runs scored).
J im Sm ith and Mike Laubert
(two singles and one RBI each).
Frank and W .L . Gracey (two
singles and one ru n scored
each). Dan Gracey (one double).
West (one single, one run scored,
one RBI) and To m Gracey (one
run scored, three RBI).

A lso h i t t i n g w e re S c o tt
Murphy (three singles, one run
scored, two RBI). Frank Ran­
dolph (three singles, two runs
scored), Cary Keefer (one double,
one single, two runs scored, one
RBI). Jeff Kruger (two singles,
two runs scored, one RBI). Bob
Rowe (one d oub le, one run
scored, tw o R B I). R a n d y
Middleton (one single, one run
scored, two RBI) and Jeff Futrell
(one single, one RBI).
Doing the hitting for Monroe
Harbour Marina were R. Lilly
(two singles, two runs scored).
T o m Nave (two singles, one RBI).
Jo h n Lucarelll (one single, one
run scored, two RBI). Ron Fava
(one single, tw o runs scored, one
RBI). Jeff Terre ll (one single, two
RBI). Walt Gilfedder and George
Denton (one single and one run
scored each) ana Brian Volk (one
single).
The Kokomo Recyclers used a
10-run third Inning to gain an
advantage they would not re­
linquish in the w in over Klnco.
Th e game featured 13 doubles
and four triples a m o n g the
teams' combined 45 hits.
C o n t r i b u t i n g to a 2 9 hit

(unearned) the rest oi the way. one run and drove In another.
striking out two and walking Keaaler (Lake Mary) tripled while
Bologna (Lake Howell) had a
two.
Chunat. a rising Junior a t
Seminole High School, led Sem*
Inote's 12-hit a tta c k w ith a
double, two singles, four RBI and
a run scored. Freem an, also from
Seminole, added two singles,
three RBI and three runs scored.
Dlenier. who goes to Lake Mary ACTION TODAY
High School, c o n trib u te d a

M*nee*l:fiOpm
Evening • 7:45 pm

on the ball hit by Chunat.
Given an 11-2 lead to work
w ith. Seminole manager Rod
Fergeraon elected to lift starting
pitcher Chad Kessler, who haa
been bothered by a sore back.
Mike Carr, who gave up three
runs In his one Inning pitched,
w as credited with the win while
Dtemer, who worked the final
three Innings, picked up a save.
Kessler allowed two runs on
two hits in his three Innings
while Carr was touched for three
runs on three hits In one Inning.
Diemer gave up a home run on
his first pitch, but quickly set­
tled down and only allowed one
more hit and one more run

Kokomo Rccyclcrs attack were
Allen Peterson (one triple, one
double, two singles, two runs
sco re d, three R B I). J e rry
H e r m a n ( t w o d o u b le s , tw o
singles, three runs scored, three
HHlJL. .IsmesL BH1 tone.double.three singles, two runs scored.'
three RBI) and Nate Murphy
(four singles, three runs scored,
one RBI).
Also contributing were Keith
Acree (three doubles, four runs
scored, three RBI). Greg Hensley
(one double, two singles, three
ru n s scored, four R B I). Bert
H erring (one double, two singles,
tw o runs scored, three RBI).
Aaron John s (taro triples, two
runs scored, one RBI). David
G raham (one double, one single,
(w o runs scored, two RBI) and
E ric Luce (two runs scored, one
RBI).
Pacing a Klnco 16-hlt offense
were Randy Bryant (one double,
two singles, one run scored, two
RBI). Craig Toss! (one triple, one
single, two runs scored, two
RBI). Kelly Denton (taro singles,
one run scored, one RBI). Keith
Denton (one double, one run
scored, tw o RBI) and Chris
W argo (one double, one RBI).
Also hitting were Keith Red w ln e (one single, one run
scored, two RBI). Bud Harris.
D o u g W o llv e i* a n d R a n d y
Scribner (one single, one run
scored and one RBI each). Joe
Delucln (one single, two runs
sco re d). K e n n y Meeks (one
single, one ru n scored). Emmit
Davis (one single) and Bobby
Hanson (one ru n scored).

Tooke (Lake Mary) doubled.,
sin g led an d sc o re d a ru n .
Perguaon (Sem inole) singled,
scored three runs and had an
RBI. Eckstein (Seminole) scored

h /i /

imi

H

■ k S M M tM l

I U

I I U

FREE

! Leading the Beer:30 offense
were WUI Bland (one double, two
singles, two runs scored). Robert
Kerr and Jeff Joyce (one double,
one single, one run scored ana
two RBI each). J im Heaflngton
(two singles, one run scored).
Steve Gray (one single, two runs
scored). Ja ck Heame and To m
Bledsoe (one single and one RBI
each) and Chris Wire (one RBI).

It's a n easy way to pay for your Classified ads a n d it
gives you an extra m onth to pay.
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j T h e Regulators broke a 8-5 tie
w ith a nine run second Inning
and went on to the easy victory
for their four straight win. to
continue their late season run at
lh e league title.

Please be prepared to give u s your account n u m b er
a n d expiration date. Billing will appear on your next
charge card statem ent.

X PR E S S
THE GREAT AMERICAN
INVESTMENT

Kreuger. resulted tn (Tying flats, with Kreuger
wisely keeping his helmet on to save his none and
teeth. As a result. Stuta was suspended far four

�Loom during M#ur#tlm#
Lctiure Programs at Seminole Community College an­
nounce* that the fotlowtng classes will begin during the week
of A ugusts, 1901:
A lilr t lf * R stattoasM fS - Thursdays. 8/8-8/22.7-10 p.m.
Focuses on developing an understanding of addictive rriaUonshtps, why we stay in them and how to get out of them.
Special em phasis Is placed on the reality of addictive
relationships, common power plays and the hope for moving
from an addictive to a healthy peraonal/profesalonal lifestyle.
Coat: SW person.
P vsasraaU nstlan vs. j u i s tlM ly — Saturday, 8/10, 9
a.m.-2 p.m. Kaplalns r easons w hoso many of us procrastinate,
"How to" steps will be given to change this behavior. Time will
be spent on good tim e management, motivation techniques,
and goal setting exercises. Cost: 9 HVperson.

an
. j m---------------------------------» « ------ a O H A S n f f m V a fw f C f ln C f f f M l l f l l l l
Support Hope. And Recovery (8HAR). a self-support group
for cancer patients , meets every Wednesday at 5:00 p.m.. at
1631 W. First S t. Sanford, For Information, call Mary Lynne
G »y.323*3740r322-77SS.
a u s s

family.”
After placing her casserole In

her son are staying with her
parents until Nancy has fuHy

M*C OVcn I I J9 U

fOr MDOUt OYvC

rfCW CftU liUm fCCCfii I w j p f j i

hour, M ullins explained that
"canned cream of mushroom
soup may be &gt;used in place of
your own sauce."
Our Cook of the Week said the
kids In her tonally "always did
the cooking. With 10 kids, we
had to lake turns cooking and

She la presently the chief cook
and bottle washer for the family,
Our cook said, "everything
doesn’t always turn out perfect.
When I tried to teach myself to
make biscuits, it was a horror
story. The Arat batch was hard,
the next batch was hollow, the
next time they burned and then
they wouldn’t rise. My husband,
Johnny, kept encouraging me to
keep trying. His mother finally
taught me how to do It right. I
also learned to cook acme from
his younger slater. Actually she
taught me a lot about cooking."
■he revealed.
Mullins greatest concern about
cooking la writing her recipes
down for the paper today as she
said. "1 never wrote a recipe
before. When I cook I use the
taste test method and a shake of
this or that. Also, I'm used to
cooking for 10 to M people and
It’s difficult to reduce the recipes
and cook for 2."

Stomp#n to hold dub mooting

The Old Hickory Stam pers clogging group holds club
meetings every Wednesday from 6 # p.m . at the Knights of
Colum bus Hall 2504 8. Oak Ave., Sanford. For more

chemical

dependence lectures free to the public each Wednesday from
7-8:30 p.m. at 711 Ballard S t. Suite 200. Altamonte Springs.
For more Information, can 331-7190.

S ssso S Stgkt, b y Charles M cO arry, a Dutton Book. 1991.
C attin g M g*, fay Jo h n H arvey. Henry Holt and Company.
1991.

IsaaaM a, by Orson Scott C a rd . A T o m Doherty Associates
Brink, 1901.

FrtvBagstf In fa n n stlsn . by Stephen White. Viking. 1991.
__L ast A st. by Clive Egleton. St. M artin's press. 1991.
K ik a n a a A A H t M s Ufa an d th a t*
Sim on ft Schuster. 1961.

by Thom as Hauser.

T sa r r s s s s s ls n k sa ik sa k t haw fta th rlv s sa d profit
dartag hard Urns*, b y Stephen M . Pollan. William Morrow and
Com pany. Inc., 1961.

T hs O atlaw S ta ts: Saddam Huaaeln's quest for Power and the
0 offCt IxU.'b/tifcJittrSckriir.o.-woluv W Ucy A-Scn*. Incr.lOOl-.-------Trlaatpk la th s D sssrt. b y Peter David. Random House.
1001 .

A a n a sl B a sr fy Bartow 1 6 6 0 . by Energy Information
Adm inistration. Government Printing Office. 1991. (Documents
Room)

for the night. Som etim es It
needed more spice or less of
something else, but we helped
each other to be better at It. We
always take pride in our cooking.
I think we taught mom how to
cook.”
Although her m other didn't
cook much. Mullins says It was
understandable aa th e was sick
a kit and still worked fall time.
"Mom ,Jiad to rest up so she

could-Work, that left a lot for all
the ktda to do. Dad doesn't cook.
He probably doesn't know s O L D - r A l l l O N I D
frying pan from a casserole dish
1 medium onion, chopped
and he does m iss m y oldest
Oil to cover bottom of pan
sister w h o Is a professional
1 whole garlic clove
baker. He loves dessert, any­
lT b s p . aidt
thing baked such aa homemade
Dash pepper
bread, plea, cakes and custards."
1 Tbsp. Italian seasoning
Mullins smiled aa she cut a
sample of her homemade u p ­
V* lb. sweet Italian uusage
s i d e - d o w n c a k e t h a t w a s and Vi lb. ground beef
2 (28 os.) cans tomatoes
m cU -ln-your-m outh moist and
delicious.
1 can tomotato paste
Mulllna and all her brothers
Brown onion and nuaage and
a nd sister* attended the old meat in pan. Add remaining
Ingredients and bring to a boll.
Sanford Middle School.
and
.cook said. " A ll of the kids —T■u
«'» r n■»i »-Idown
f
■«»
8.'******simmer
—»«*« tl«»* two*
attended "that scbooT and It's hours. Servcao-8.
h a r d tn see It come down. W e
have memories of days that will
1 whole chicken
never be again. M y son. Chad Is
1 onion
7, but he w on't be able lo attend
1 chicken bouillon cube
m y old school. It's sad.”

Uncover and cook for another 10
minutes. Serves 6 to 8.

1 Tb sp . garlic salt
Vi cup m ilk
5 cans of Biscuits
In a large pan bring chicken.
onion, bouillon cube and eg,; to a
boil. Boll for one hour. Remove
from heat. Ta k e chicken out. let
cool. R em ove ch ick e n from
bones and put back Into rem alnlng broih. Add mushroorn's, ‘

Combine:
1 cup sugar
3 Tbsp. cornstarch
4 Tbsp. strawberryJello
1 cup water
Bring to a boll while stirring,
C o n tin u e b o ilin g for a few
minutes. Remove from heat and
place In a pan of cold water or In
yo u r ’f ln k r 'C o o T slightly ' and"

■ a l t . p e p p e r , g u r l l c t ta l l a n d m i l k ,

re frig e ra te

B ring to a bell, keeping It at a
boll. Pinch you r biscuits up into
small pieces and drop In broth.
Cover and cook for 10 minutes,

Th e n add about one quart of
fresh strawberries,
Pour Into baked pic shell and
top with whipped cream.

fo r a b o u t o n e

h o u r..

A growing favorite, pickled peppers are a popular pick
entrees, pickled peppers are perfect tn omelettes
or on top of bacon and avocado sandwiches.
American* m ay be slowly clim bing out of their
"pickle ru t."
E ven though pickles aren't as trendy as
sun-dried tomatoes or radlcchio. the pickle
industry is keeping ita eye on the pickled pepper,
as U continues to grow tn popularity.
Folks tend to stick w ith a favorite pickle year
after year. Leading, in order of popularity, are dill
ikies, aweet pickles, pickle rellah and bread and
Her pickles. But peppers have moved into fifth
place.

K

T h e rising Interest In foods from the Southwest
Is leading more and more shoppers to drop a Jar
of pickled peppers Into Ihelr shopping carts.
Delicious w ith tacos, burrttoa or otl

Marriage

''
I

SSLi

DEAR A M T : I am 21V* years
old and was married when I was
20. I thought at the time 1 was
doing the right thing, but now.
after a year and half of marriage.
I realize It was a mistake. I was
to young to get married.
My husband and I disagreed
on too m any things, so now we
are getting a divorce. He doesn't
want tt. but he u y a if 1 pay for it.
he wilt sign all the required
papers. We have nothing to
divide. No house, no car. no
m oney and no kids. Nothing to
light over.
Now for m y problem: I went to
a legal clinic and they told me
th e re w a s n 't a n y "n o -fa u lt
divorce” In Cook County, III.,
w hich la were we live. T h is
means I will have to go to court
and claim "m ental cruelty."
A b b y. there was no mental
cruelty, so w h y do I have to go to
court and lie — especially since
m y husband agreed to cooper­
ate? Isn't there some place that
we could go and Just sign some
papers and be divorced? W hy
m ust I point a Anger of blame at
a perfectly nice m an? The m ar­
riage was m y mistake.
Also. I w ould like to know why
a divorce should cost so much? I
was quoted a figure of 41)70.
The re Is nothing to divide up.
and m y husband Is not going to
contest the divorce. Isn't then- a
cheaper and easier way?
NOBODY'S FAULT
DRAB NOBODY'S FAULT: A
cheaper divorce w ould be avail
able th ro u g h y o u r legal aid
society — only If yo u are u n cm -

Th e peppers come in m any varieties, and there
are both hot and m ild to suit most palates. These
include hot Mexican, tabasco and Jalapeno
peppers and the milder banana, cherry and
plmlento peppers.

1 pound ground chicken
1/2 cup fresh whole-wheat bread crum b*
1 small carrot, peeled and grated
1 scallion, minced
2 tablespoons pickled Jalapeno pepper, seeded
and minced
1/2 teaspoon salt

4 kaiser rolls or hamburger buns, split
Fresh Tom ato S a in (recipe follows)
Grilled Potato Wedges (recipe follows)
Heat grill or broiler. • In large bowl, combine
ground chicken, bread crumbs, carrot, scallion,
Jalapeno and salt. Shape m ixture Into four
1-Inch-thick patties.
Place patties on hot grill rack: cook 6 to 8
minutes on each aide until golden and cooked
through. Toast buns, split side down, during last
5 minutes of cooking time. Serve burgers on
toasted buns with Fresh Tom ato Salsa and
Grilled Potato Wedges. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes 4 servings.
• T o broil: Arrange chicken patties and potato
wedges on broiler pan. Broil, 6 Inches from heat
source. S minutes on each side until cooked
through and golden.

be a costly mistake

ployed.
A c c o r d in g to D o ro th y B.
Johnson, attorney at law and
chairperson of the Chlcagp Bar
Association M atrim onial Law
Committee:
"Since Ju ly 1. 1984. there has
been another ground for dis­
solution of marriage In Illinois,
which you and your spouse may
find more suitable: ‘Irreconcila­
ble differences.'
" A s for the cost of your
d ivo rce , the rate yo u were
quoted is not out of line for the
greater Chicago area."

DEAR ABET: Th e letter from
a wuipan who had witnessed a
father abusing his young son In
a department store, and she
didn’t know what lo do or say,
bothered me. You seemed to be
sympathetic with the abuser and
suggested that she could have
said. " ! know how you must feel
— shopping with children Isn't
easy." which would seem to give
approval lo the father's actions.
The other day. I witnessed a
sim ilar situation Involving u
young mother In u checkout line

In a supermarket. H er child had
obvtoasly misbehaved and the
mother was berating him with
some harsh words that can hurt
a ch ild m ore tha n physical
blowsl
A woman In line In front of
them turned around and deliv­
ered what I thought was the
perfect remark: " H I give you a
dollar for h im !"
T h a t one sentence reminded
the young mother of the value of
her child.
I wish 1had H id it.

SYLVIA B., LOB ANOBLES
DEAR A M T : 1 have never
written to you before, but after
reading about the old gentleman
w ho Is still m aking love often at
th e age o f 8 5 . I took the
newspaper out of the trash can
three limes lo make sure I hod
read tt ocrrectly.
I would sure like to hear his
wife’s side of this story. I'll bet
she is sick to death of It. O r
maybe she Is like me. going
through the motions and faking
it.
t am a 65-year-old woman
m urrlcd lo the most wonderful
m an the world, and I have been
faking It for years. How m any
letters have you gotten on this
one? I would lovr to know.

25th wedding anniversary party
for a special couple we all love.
Th e friends who are planning
the party want all the other
f r ie n d s o f t h i s c o u p le to
participate. Would it be consid­
ered tacky to pul on the invita­
tion: " In lieu of a gift, please
make a cash contribution to help
defray the cost of catering'?

FBB6B TOMATO BALSA
2 medium-sized ripe tomatoes, chopped
1/4 cup pickled Jalapeno pepper, seeded and
finely chopped
1 scallion, thinly sliced
1 clove garlic, minced
1 tablespoon fresh parsley, chopped
1 tablespoon lime Juice
1 teaspoon lime peel, grated
Com bine all ingredients In a medium-sized
bowl until well-mixed. Serve salsa over Spicy
Grilled Chlcken-Jalapcno Burgers.

GRILLED POTATO WBDOIS
C u t 2 large Idaho potatoes Into 10
Brush with vegetable otl. Sprinkle with
-pepper. Place on hot grill rack; cook
minutes or until potatoes arc tender,
once.

P Floyd Th— trot
O W ELL ^
P LA CE
'CateredLiving Foe Seniors‘
ACLF Apsrtawata

n aSOAFOtSH
m gBP*

"US" Of BALTIMORE
DEAR "US": Yes. it would be
tacky. If the "very close friends"
want to plan the party together
and split the cost, fine — but do
not ask the Invited guests to chip

wedges.
salt and
5 to 10
turning

litch field

WMTlgS . W l O llf

ln(Ff*Msms? Writ* 10 Osar Abby.
For a porsoM l, unpublished
reply, sand a sstt-sddresssd.

m HBW?

• ' B ’ • IN D A L L A S
DEAN "B": T h u s far. only a
few. but I would welcome letters
o r p o s tc a rd s (u n s ig n e d , of
course) from other females who
have been "faking II" for years.

DEAR A M T : Some very close
friends are planning a surprise

7/3047/31

PIPwT ^ S ^ K B

gS

�■

America's

Its tot content, today, however,
pork Is 50% leaner than It was a
tew y e a rs ago and It Is a
nutritional bargain. AO park cuts
are tender and tt Is easy to
nUcnawave to usually leas than
I

Mtcnm a vc this park roast In
about 38 m inutes. M arinate
overnight tor wonderful flavor,

a o iil

OLASBD

K

p o ll

M A ST

*2 lbs. boneless pork lotn roast
3Tbap. honey
2 Tbap. lemon Juice
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 doves garlic, minced
Salt and pepper
2 tap. cornstarch
m

chicken tests done.* Let stand in
bag 5-10 minutes before carving.
■Juices run clean and bones
move easily in Joints.
L e ss
braised
m aking
ilavorful

MIDGE
MYCOFF

1 small onion, chopped
14 cup celery, chopped
14 cup margarine
4 cups cubed bread
V4 c u p c h o p p e d w a t e r
chestnuts
2 tsp. parsley flakes
114 tsp. poultry seasoning
V4 tsp. salt
V4 tsp. pepper

■

te n d e r c u ts ca n be
w ith the m icrow ave
a lender meat w ith
pan Juices.

BEAMED HUMP BOABT

pepper— W is h -jih io k e n -a n d llghllv pat dry. Stuff cavity w ith
dressing mixture. Secure openIng with loothplcks. Sprinkle all
sides of chicken with browning
powder. Place chicken In a
regular sl*e cooking bag. Secure
bag wilh siring. Place bag In a
12 x 8 - I n c h b a k i n g d i s h .
brcasi-sidc down. C ui six W in c h
slits In bag. Microwave on 100%
power 5 minutes. T h e n ,
microwave on 5 0 % power 15
minutes. T u rn chicken breastside up. Microwave on 5 0 %
power 14-16 minutes or until

3-4 lb. boneless rum p roast
14 cup hot water
2 tsp. Instant beef bouillon
1 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
2 large stalks celery, halved
1 m e d iu m o n io n , c u t In
eighths
Ptcrcc meat thoroughly with
fork. Place In cooking bag. Add
wat er, b oui l lo n and
Worcestershire sauce. Close bag
l oosel y, l y i n g wi t h s trin g ,
•JW cm JW W . onLQOAuf)0ycr..3Q:3h
minutes. T u r n roast over. Add
v e g e t a b l e s . R e c lu s e b a g .
Microwave 35 to 45 m.nules. or
until meal Is fork lender. Let
stand In bag 10 minutes beofc
slicing. Slice meal thinly across
the grain and serve with cooking
Juices.

Do you hovo a quaeBow or
•upgostlon about microwatt
cooking. Mtdga Mycoft wM km
her column to cncwor. Addraac
lattara to: Mtdga Mycoft, t enfold
Herald, 900 N. French Avt.
Sanford, 32771.

L_«_J

CELERY
1ITMST.
17
H

1?

K

1$

k

SANFORD
MI0DLE

i

\ ~

T h e follow ing babies were
bom at Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Sanford.
J u ly 16 - Camille A . McGill.
Sanford, girl: Lorraine O. A
Bryan P. Howe. Sanford, girl;
Tin a S. Runkle and Keith A.
H u d g k ln . Altam onte Springs,
boy.
J u ly 17 — Erkrka N. Hatcher.
Sanford, girl.
J u l y 10 — K aren G a llu p .
Sanford, boy.

44 \

i

4

aSTHST.

Our list can help you do ths other things you
on your Ust. 8uch as buy a
car.. .estimate social ascurtty.. .start ths
diet.. .check out investments.. .
Our list is the Consumer Mbrmsttan
Catobg It’s free and lists more then 200
free and low-coet government booklets on
employment, health, safety, nutrition,
housing. Federal benefits, end Iota ot ways
you can save money.

9 JO

10 00

11 00 11 JO
Omg
Tme*
ttm
Mm

I tl a U i lH

NCim
■*V*"*g

iw r a f t *

~~TTWI— »»»-, llWtMlnUi-Rlf y_

□ns

t l0***

|1W1)J*&gt; Sum t.

tM»iitH kotln D»iw

For 24-hour TV liftings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday July 26

State-licensed and registered
pharmacists
Convenience: have your prescription
filled while you shop
We accept PCS, PAID, BC-BS
MEDIMET and MEDICAID
Computerized prescription records
We carry a full line of FDA-approved
quality generic drugs
Prescriptions are easily transferable.
Just bring in your refillable prescrip­
tion and we’ll contact your physician
and take care of all the details.
i

�-ill! f

iI J I W

if llf r

iir i,f V i

f i

M r ti, t t n

n

T 1 -H X D W D W 9 D 4

CLASSIFIED ADS

TMB^ K N t T BF
It U f T BBWTN JURR
■

V

n t m m r I
m w u im N m r ,

S «m tn o t*

■ H Id
F lo r id * *
prevision* M MM Flctmeue
N m M M Te-WM: Sertton
DbBMaM: M f It . 1001
M tfm

M rygf
[llW
jH ftL -________
| R H—
dapbllftsM
aftw H■
i^gaat--^WTvfJVW ia|
f VNf
rUTHliVV

M H-M 1

DC H I

R H W W T IM M ftK IU

■ ALL IN T IR B IT ID F IR BOMB A M MOTIF It O T H A T :

R A N C B O ITO M M O R T O A O I
CORPORATION
v*.
ftM UCI F. WASHINGTON. Of.
el..
W i l d- u
It
M a
Final
at
hereto. I will MR too
In laminala
..FHrtde.deecrtBados:
■ toofN W toef Bloch ft Tier
t f FLORIDA LA N O ANO COL
O M IZ A TK M CONU ANY. I T .
O RNTRUOE'S A O O ITK M T O
T H i TOWN O F IA N FORD,
accarWM M too ptof Riaraat. aa
recer*dtoPletfeetk i.a f pepe
it*, of « • nuMh

t .r
t Cmmtf
Florid*, at tl:M AJM. an too
Snddbytf,Aupuof. NPI.
W I T N I U my M M and
Mclal aaal al aaM Caart M a MM
Fay a* July, M l .
ICourt Seal)
M A R Y A N N ! M O R S!
Clark al Ma Circuit Caart
B y: */DeratoyW. Batten
A* Deputy Clark
PbWMi: July IA S I. Iftt
DC H-111

NOT 1CI
The |l. Mata River

x r •;

v .'t

I H f t C F , M R M m Ip Rip
Clrcvtt Caart M r lam leato
CjteRfy. « • !b M N » (fw M dH e
c/p l am bmto County Caart
, Fund* a m .
Iff MB

tR .Te
S :Jvlylt.tft1

c e lv a d an application far
W f -f U n i
RODNEY G R EE N . U l»
W R IT BROADWAY, OVIEDO,
F t 111*1, A p p l i c a t i o n
i i h i t m w *. an M i n t . TMa
prelect I* toceSad m lam mala
County. lacMan to, TanraMp I I
SautM. Ranta I I la »». TMa
applicant la Mr a IIN O L I
F A M IL Y SUBDIVISION M Ma
known aa M f AOOW C R IS T
SliftOIVIIION. TMa racaMnp
be#y N L A K iJ I M U F .
W A T K IN S A S I O C I A T I O
DEVELOPERS. F.O. BOX 17M.
A TL A N TA . OA MJ71. «aM(ca­
tion i n m a a tlA . an 7/S/tl. TMa
prefect N McaMR In
County, ladMn 1* Tewmhlp II
South. Ranfa I I Baal. TMa
application la M r a IHO FFIN O
C C N T IH M Ma hitman aa UNI­
V E R S ITY P A L M ! IH O FFIN O
C C N T IR . TMa rocalvtop watar
bony I* L I T T L I BCONLOCK
H A T C H C I R IV IR .
C IT Y OF A L T A M O N T C
S F R I N G t . l l S
N B W IU R Y F O R T A V I . A LT A M O N T I 1FRGS, FL S M I.
application I11117MMA0. an
7/1/01. Tha pro)act It located In
Ca j h i u l *
ta t I t ■
Wa f l |
ntfnllwV IwOUWy,
tVCVNll toIa m
Township II SautM. Ranpa I f
Baal. TMa application It N r a
RECREATIONAL PARK M Ma
known at LAKE LOTUS PARK.
TMa racalvlnp watar body la
L IT T L E W IK IV A R IV IR .
tin yti
p^rae■ ^^w laMawaMn
lv*(mvWw^*^A l^a
Wl
any at it* liitad application*,
you tMauM contact ttta It. JtMno
Rivar WaNr Manopement Dlatrk t at F. O. Boa I S t . Palatka.
FlarMa SITS-1410. or In parton
al IN attka on State Highway
IPO Wail. Palatka. FlarMa.
W r i i t t n a b la c tla n la iMa
application may ba maM. but
should ba received no latar than
l* days Irani tha data at publica­
tion. Written objection* thowM
Identity tha ohlector by name
and aAtrtu. and fully dtacrtbe
tha ab|actltn to tha application.
Fllinp t written ablactlan b n
not entitle you to a Chapter tit.
Florida SUtutat. Admlntitretive
Hearing. Only that# portent
wheat tubttantial interest* are
altadad by lha application and
who lilt a petition meeting tha
re q u lra m e n ta ef Section
ta C -t.S I. F A C., may obtain an
Admlnltlratluo Hearing. All
tlmaly MM written obteettena
will ba prnan tad to lha Board
lor cantldtratlon in Iti dsiiberp
lion an lha application prior to
tha Hoard taking action on lha
applkatian.
Shannon H. Barkan
Senior Record* Technician
Civilian ol Racordt
Publish July SI. m i
OEHM

M

t t &amp;

R

&lt;*
IM B M ___
Caart
W IT H IN T H I L A T E R O F
T H M I MONTHS A F T IR TH C
D A T ! O F T H I FIRST F U R IICATKJM O F TMI1 N O TIC I OR
TH IR TY M V S A F T IR THR
D A T ! O F IIR V IC I OF A
COPY O F T H U N O TIC I OH
THEM .

SR wham g OFF &lt;
M mrved wtlhm
laftoallrat
ef to* iwfko muet
•Mm «Hk MM t o r t
W IT H IN T H I L A T E R O F
T H R U MONTHS A F T IR THR
D A T ! O F T H I FIRST PUBLI­
CATION O F THIS N O TIC I OR
TH IR TY DAYS A F T IR THR
D A T ! O F S IR V IC t O F A
COPY O F THIS N O TIC I ON
TH US.
Of IMb

W ITHIN
T H R U MONTHS A F T IR T H I
D A T ! OF T H I FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE.
A L L CLAIM S, D IM A H O I
ANO OBJECTIONS NO T SO
P IL ID W ILL B l FO R SV IR
BARRIO.
TMa i m p at Mb Mnt puMkaiNn at MM NaMca N July K
MARY JOAN O i n
l « f *or t lh p im &amp; V r a »
Lake Mary, FlarMa SUM
NR R. S TIFM IN tO N
’. FLS7IM77I
:(*•!) SSF71II
FlarMa Par Na.:
MARYANNS MORSE,
CN rt. Circuit Court
■V: Petrkie Thatcher
M F U T Y C L IR K
S fM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
FwMNM: July S4 SI. Ittl
DCH-SSS
N O TIC I OF SA LI
Tanl Harr tan
A S ftA f
Caiiatto Davit
AM
Imaat Leering
17
Dwayne MJhchrll
BIS
J.W. ScMattNUwMa
BIS
BaBartWgdWum
B IT
Bart Tucker
CS
Denrt* Mitchell
CM
FaulFravInoa
17
Marvin Devte
IN C
Donnie TMa i* i nan
FI
ludHI Richard*
F it
Jean William*
Ft*
at furniture,
lamp*, dra ta a n. clothing,
electronic*, iwduatriai

Facility Act,
All Hams *r
l
miau
atol
A
m
bhb
IIlw
bU
b •
m*
A
) IfWPJr wm BB R
rw^M
^^W
Security Starap*
JSS S. Airport Btvi.
laniard, FlarMa S771
Pubiidi: JulySlBAugutt I. lt d
D iH -a n
N O TIC I OF
FICTITIOUS NAMB
I f- W
- .i.
ibpi TnW
fh a
I Ip
|T
IHWl
undersigned. desiring N engage
In bualnaM gnWr Ma IktttNue
name at FlarMa Star Construe
tlan Company, M* Florida
Central Parkway, Langwaod.
County at SamlnaN. State at
Florida. btkanfc N ragkNr thi»
fktttlaua name with lha Sacra­
lary at Slate. Tailahaaaaa. FNrFLORIDA STAR
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
Fra*ldant
B E . MULLINS
CONCRETECO.
Pubiith: July
IN I
DEM )ta

CX

0

O V I I X D D

T K J J F H K K N
CX

OO

SO

S T X

W V F , *

M I F

OK
FZ

70

K C Z K V F K V D
Z X V «
—

O N R X O S 1 R
D S S J J K Z X .
-----------------------------------ay you know a man until
PR EV
IO U S S O L U TIO N : ---------------"Navar aay
youi fiiv
hav f o m o w i n m n trn in c i wtifi i
— Johann
Caaparl

. . . IB S if t p

* ..........B i t i f t i

raidtacattalm
, Pay only tor day* your ad
i lor taatoat taaidtt. ( t p i m t i

Aa d a rk at Pm t o r t
By Nancy R.WMMr
AaDapwtyOarh
RbBRM: A d y BA St ft Aapaat 7,
lA H S t
OIH-SBI
—
^ ’1IMP CIR CU IT CPURT,

m

IS IA L )
M ARYANNS M O RSI
C L IR K O F T M I
CIR CU IT COURT
Ry: Nancy R.WInMr
Deputy Clark
FuMNMi Jaty K SI ft
RW 1
0CH-SS1

A R B TO N R B LIAB LS A N D
NARBPfOB R IMPI You'll Mm
MBRRY MAIDS. Weakly pay.
M an-Frl.. day Mavra. Car
‘ ‘ ................ - J l t M tl

2 7 -N w m r y f t

CM M Cw nt
SMALL D A Y C A R I. TLC tor
ft toddtora. HM maart.
M ............JS M IM
T A M M Y 'S T D D D L B R S I
Daycare In my Mama. I m .
Mammy 1LaMat TLC . JM-IM*

caunMilng, private
rpMmltvtngi

Riparian
tarred but will irabi. I
available an alt S okltti.
Apfllcanta c anald»rad far

M

f — rit l N

b H cb s

X

Far Detail*: I SM433 43V)

i bl your MM
and IMa IIM al ettwnl Came
lolnourtlaWI Apply:
MO Mottony11la Ava Santord.

41— L p f i l S trv k fts
'•BANKRUPTCY I
"DIVORCR Nam STS"
K. NawetkL Altomay, *4*m e

3 2 2 -t M t ,
JL Q lL / N
- C O N S T R U C T I O N JO B S ”
Arabs. Caymaaa. Bahama*.
Jamaica.................. TaMl/HR
1-4*7-447 IIMTolaal I

49— M is c t l la n D o u s
BAHAMAS C IU IS B . S d m hotel paid. Goad till May ol *1.
3 people. *330.1300704
T IB K D al tow bank IntorwtT I
will pay you double I Secur ,d.
. aato. Bill 333 1717

Mutf ba neat, clean, latl and
eiparlancadl Saatond knowl­
edge helpful. Apply la paraant
M il t»*t Mato Read 4* M -F,
II-3FM.

2 7 -N u r u r y *
7,

IN T N I IM N T B B N T N
u n c u rr court
I N BBM M O LB COUNTY.
FLORIDA
P R O B A TI DIVISION
C A S IN O : tl-SBFCF
IN R l : B S T A T IO F
JAMBS R. M ULLINS
N O T IC I
F L I A S I TA K E N O TIC I that
at July, m i .
■ ■ ■
In
&gt;at
Jamaa R. Muillne. dacaaaad, m
at P1.M. SaM fund*
at Rm aaaata due M:

H a it i
at tin t publication at
will M
M IMa Start at Fieri
da. panuant *a Florida Statvtaa
r a i l* .
IN W I T N I U W H IR SOP, 1
hav# *at my hand and affklal
teal at SanWrd, FlarMa. IMIa
13rd day at July, m i .
IS IA L I
M A R V A N N I M ORSI
Clark at Mo Circuit t o r t
By Jana I. Netlhe
Deputy Clark
July I I ft Auguit 3*.

IN T N I CIR CU IT COURT.
■ W t t T I I N T N JUDICIAL
CIR CU IT, IN ANO FOR
S I M l N O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
C IV IL ACTION NO.
tl-m a -C A M -K
LINDA W. TANGCMAN
BLOUNT,
Ftalntllt.
va.
W ILLIAM C. STINSON,
adnplaman.
N O T IC I O F ACTION
TO: W ILLIAM C. STINSON
HarrteClly Raad
Woodbury. GA Ja m
W ILLIAM C. STINSON
PaatO N kaBanM
Weadbury, GA JBJ*3
YOU ARB H IR B B Y HOTI
FIBO that an action *a tarectoeo
a martgapa an tha iaitawing
praparty In Samlnali County.
TMa Waal a*v« Mat al South
TIVy Net at Lots. Block 7. Tier e.
al IMa City at SanMrd. FlarMa.
M I . R. Trattord'e
lharaat at record In Flat
1 1. Fapea P H and l i t HX
IIS. II*. and 117, Sam I(vote
County. FlarMa.
TMa ( w l IS Mat at Rw South
71S tart ot Lot S. Stack 7. Tier *.
and IMa SaulM TPS Mat at Lat 4.
Black 7. Tier «, | . R. Traftard'*
Map el SanMrd. FuMk Rocard*
at Sam Mart County. FlarMa
Mae keen tiled apainal you and
you ara required la verve a capy
ot your written detente*. II any,
to II an JAM ES A. BARKS.
Attorney tor Plaintiff. Fact Of
flea Boa I Sea. lantord. Florida
23777 13*#. and file lha original
with lha Clerk ot lha above
Court on or betore September 3.
ittl; otharwlia. a Judgment
may ba entered agalntt yau tor
tha relief demanded In tha
Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and at
tidal teal of tbit Court, an Ihlt
3*th day ot July, IMt
(SEAL)
MAH YANNE MORSE
C LER K O F THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Ruth King
Ooputy Clark
Pubiilh: July 31 and Auguit 7.
14.11. IMI
DEH 3tS

S5— B u s i r m s

C M M C a rt
A-1 CHILD CAR I. On IdyllwlMt
Dr. Sato ft laving environment
- “ie, yMV'dkW.. M W ' W l T
wk. Far CMMcara lad la aaly
ptoaoo cab.......„aa-7W
P. m y banter*
C N IL P

O p D D f t im H t D S

jmsNanmr
R A N T. Financing tourer*
paaalkla t a r Ira n c h la a
. Doug Ktoy ar Sandra

33*133*
tank and
C H IL D C A R I, la my
pigweed Elam. Intent*
il 1 * to. 7 day*. Rao*.
rata*, rotor n ao. EM-Till
D A Y C A R I AVAILABLE In my
Hidden Lk. home. Lat* ot
t l c L k J E T O n ........ sn -*ia
MOTNER-FATM EP toem, our
SanMrd kerne. Oeed rate*.
QravayardmittOK.niW7*

R IS TA U R A N T/FIZ Z IR IA tor
rani, with equipment Seat*
*4. Ready to open. Comer
t7Kland3Sth St. Sanford.
Call enytlmo, 14* 5143

l i e . ra ft I CFR trained. Hat
.T L C IC N im S IS *
SMALL D U A LITY HOME LIKE
D a y c a re ft P r e ic k e e l.

111-(35-1110

ptapreml Flat
He'd! LkJ4 a * 1 ....

It FaNy
.sn-Ttis

COM
**Fart"Hnnr," Huut*puvtttqn-.Hurting homo taper knee daaired. Longwood ftoalih Caro
...........
......................... POP

MIVCRS RtlOID
A G C A R R I E R S , a w e ll
aalabllihad and prowlnp
central Florida bated com­
pany offer* you:
0 Semi Annual Fay Increase*
a Stop Off Pay
0 Unloading Pay
a Vacation Pay
a Safety Bonua
BSpoute Riding Program
P Average Trip S-7 Day*
P Lata Modal Conventional
Tractor*
II you have 1 year* out ol itato
tractor-traitor aiparknca and
a good driving record, call

59— F i n n i c i l l
S trv ic p s
b IM M ID IA T R

F U N D IN P b
No Credit.,No

41— M o n t y t o L t n d
M U O C K O IT t
None bad bankrupt 7 Need a
car, boat or home loan? No
dawn payment lean* a r­
ranged, laaben* Ltd. MMM*

an IN F
al DaBery
WttM Wft M
care and aarvka* M (killed
potlent* to. ventilation b*wi
|FVW •
variety *1 alhar aarvlca*
ueuaily oitorad In IM* acute

F R O F R S B I O N A L
waaPMWbaaMp in m y I
Call a fto rlP M .g r TOM
a a a TR E R TR N H M IM fta a *

91— A p a rtm tn ts/
H o u s e to S B a rt
M Mar*

iirabto but will trabi. CampatHive isla ry and bonallla.
Excaltont working environMM.

, 17- n

aRO UTESALES*
Get an fM* read M auccaul
Deliver to atlaPlltMod ac­
count* and Build rautol UnllmItodaamlngal Benoflttl
AAA EM PLOYM ENT
7MW.SPMH.m-SI7t
S IC U R IT Y O F F IC E R S •
weakly pay. tS-M par Meur la
ttert with regular ralaea glut
benefit*. Far prmttglou* utili­
ty company In DaEary. HS
diploma. Fla. driver* Iicon**,
goad credit Mittory and obi* to
gat* drug tool. Currant Fla.
guard Ikanaa ar cartlltcaf*
required. Main Socortty In
Ortondai..................m t-S TW
ePESTCONTROL*
--------- ftJS C tW lC M tU .----------Leam a trad* that thrive* in
F torIda! W.M train! Cali now!
AAA IM PLO YM RN T
M W . M M t . M H m ____
POSTAL
Itl.lS/Mr. New open. Far
•um and application call
MI-3***

RUL UTAH KSOCUTIS
Money talks.,** doe* our
“ W*% compontslion plan"11
He monthly drtk to* ■ Full
company wpgart in advartlaIng, brochure*, phene, etc.
Full time istot manager with
14 yn . aip arknca In tuccata.
Work with the beat! Contldentlolly. Sfu Mac Dade. 3 »n o o .
Lake Mary. Lara talk.

FU R N IS H E D ream, kitchen
Htmtto*
S S S / w k S IS a a c u r I f i
.......... Call m i
H IS TO R IC A L O A B LB S
H O TEL. Ml Magnolia Ava,
Fum. affc. Color T V . mkra.
ratrlg, util. Included. Maid
aarvlca. Quiet convenient
tocatton. Baatonabi* rate*.
_________CaN Ml-IMP
LABOR FURN.
an trance w/beth. No petal MS
a weak. util. tod. 3S1-SS11
I In prlvpto
ham* to nan-*meb*r. *4* par
, Callus-IMP
ROOM IN FOOL
house prlvltdgo*. In Hunt
Club ara*. S4*a month, pay*
I.„
iv.i
ROOM with bath, kitchen privilog**. US/wk plus deposit. 07
NeeailaDr. lentord,,3t&gt;-ltl&gt;
s u m m SR iP a ciA L t v . cm**,
d lice o a lsl Clean r t t a i ,
TV . (71/wOi
T R U C K IR 'I SPECIAL. Prlv.
antrance, i big mom, bath
end piece to perk rigl,33ia?n

97—Apart mDfiH
F u m H lM d / R t f it
Sa n f o r d - 1 barm, atudi*. its
M# m m | b |i*« ftJQQ
Include* util 11k*. Call 331-11**
BEDROOM living room, kitch­
en end bath. Ilia par week,
utilities included, plus deposit
3314114 er 144-S*17
N IC ! C01VI STUDIO APT.with
goad t i n kitchen. laniard
Historic District. *37Vmo plus
p. 3230*51

LET A

SPECIALIST
.4 DO IT!

' "'t

S JT

,

% «■

I . E V E R E T T I HUSKEY: and
UNKNOWN TENANTS OF LOT
D . RIVERCRCST PHASE I;
W ARR IN ARNETT. IN C, A
F torIda Corporation, YOUNG
LANDSCAPE NURSERY. INC,
A Florida Carperation; and JOE
K N IG H T doing bu ilnon ai
K N I G H T ft A S S O C IA T E S
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS.
N O TIC I OF
FO R IC LO SU R ISA LE
N O TIC I IS H C R E IY GIVEN
puriwant la Summary Final
Judgnwnt Ot Faroctoaure dated
July IS. m i , and entered in
Caw No. t lC J M C A U G ot lha
Circuit Court al toe Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit in and tor Sami
noto County. FlarMa. wherein
FIR ST FED E R A L SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
O S C E O L A C O U N TY 11 lha
Plaintiff and It will Mil to tha
MgMoat bidder tor caah at tha
Waal Front Dear al tha SEMI
N O L I CO U N TY C O U R T­
HOUSE. M l N. Park Avenue,
laniard. Florida 33771. at 11:10
o'clock A M. an Iho 10th day ol
IMI, the following
property at w l forth
in told Summary Final Judg
mant Ot Faroctoaure. to wit:
Let 41. RIVERCREST PHASE
I, according to the Plat thereof
aa recorded in Flat Book 3*.
Pagaa 11 through 17. Publk
Record* ot Seminole County.
FtorMa
LEU
Begin at the matt Eattorly
comer el taM Let 43 and run S
37*07"10"W along the Eattorly
lino o&lt; laid lot 43. ft 3* toot,
thence run S *t*44 l*" W along
the Southerly line ot laid Lot 43.
tO 33 toot, thence leaving uid
Southerly line run N r r i r i l ’ E
II.
71 fe e l, thence run
41*I S OT ’E *154 tael to the Point
el Beginning
D A TED thl* llth day ol July.
IMI
MARVANNE MORSE
AS CLERK OF THE
CIRCUITCOURT
BY: t/Oorothy W ftollon
I Deputy Clerk)
Pubiilh July 34. 31. IMI
OEH33S

to da wHM

tog Mr
i d a*

Call MS-tOt

Ltgal Notlcas
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H E I I B H T I I N T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN ANO FOR
S IM IN O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA
C A S iN a «ip a a -C A i4 0
FIR ST FE D E R A L SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
OSCEOLA COUNTY. A Feder­
ally Chartered Saving* and
Loan * i toe latton.
Plaintiff,

M. Franck Ava.

7M W .SW BN .N M IM

WrnM

Wa ara currently leaking
Cethkr* lor a
tiara oparallan. Apply In
paraan M a n d a y - F r l d a y ,.
la m
a p m a l :
S P C IO W A Y /S TA R V IN
M ARVIN. 47M W. IR 4*.
Santord. FI. 31771 ROB

B l A Lkaaaad CaMractor, Gen
arai/BuiIdar/Raaldanlfal. CaN
MrM*ai-Ma-t»-iaM

July SMM, IMI.
ft Loray Brawn, J r , n
I . NerHMMe O r., Battle
OtaM. M l wait_____________

(FlaV lblaf Fa y A y Cammrtrtn. Te apply: SMp By
weekday*. I-4PM, aak Mr

J

*1 CantactCMartana
SM IMS between 1AM11
eaaVOLTaaa
TEM PORARY SRRVICRS
Cat I

35— T ra in lu fl
A C d v c a tiM

A N Y C R IM T O R S al Laray
Sr.,

a O FFICE ASSISTANT*
MAa
YNYmij ufta* .B
*^*e
A twiM a* Pda •a win# #» MMl
•kills

Fart Hma and I fun tbno. &gt; lt

EX PC I T PIANO IMP* HIM, in
itudt IM-M
your hama ar' my afudM.
l Raault i
Inatruclion. F a r all
lavart B tty lea. Summer ft
Fall claaaea new available.
CaN Baa Fakana SM-MU

C IN t Sm I T

datault and altlmaM Final
Jadpmant wttl M antarad N r IMa
ra«at dnnandM In Ma M M a n.
W I T N I U my hand and Ma
aaal at Pda t o r t an July S t

*
« *
«
Full lima. M F . H . Will train.

F U U TIM S
CsP Tidy I

S I— P r lv a f *

AUG UST S*. m i . and
at yaar drtanMa
at MM t o r t
a llh a r Ba ta ra aarwica an

Tum--TMora.1P3.BOE

IMaali wIMM Ffar
Ida. CaN «7 A C * ____________

¥ BR

H r t lt f B Y N

T H I S TA TS O F FLORIDA
TO :
W ILLIAM STU A R T KIRK BY
IrM ldar w anhaawal
YOU A l l N O TIFIB O Mat an
lat

K B H N B TM V
■SQ U IR I.

(iN M ItS P M ftS W
W AN T T O P E T RfCNT MMH
tovairtPwwaytodaNI

WTBrlRBRSCNM

and cdmpanlantMlp. Lika
mart/tomttt In I
"tHWBaka." F A

KIRKBY. Maa Maan Mad and yau
' ' M ta n * a capy at

val W ill train Hop rlppf

MSW.SRBSLSMPWP *

TMa Dap
i:SO fji *.

» m w M W M ja w
dtM kM v n r a B H M M rTBpM
a
S l . t a t o bl­

M TH R M A TTR R O F:
CMangMp Manama at
SCOTT A LA N KIRKBV.
a mMar child
M
SCOTT A LA N VOUNft

■ark bt
C a ll,,.

CALL A L C H NNH
CaaMfYtll

C R ID IT S : M

A O lU tT M IN T t

ft "0"

SaWN

APB N TV -R E A L B IT A T ■
N B R D IX F R R IIN C B D

&gt;n ftMtall.aOcMh

IS

BINDERY, D B U V f B T ARO
F R IIS OFBRATORS
N RB RB D Fu « and part flm*
•ark availakla. Apply In
7S7 N. Mwy I7 M.

W K tf llC X IV K IM B *
Mbtofnawl UpM ItS/V.
0MVIp8&gt;V|f
D M lif
paollian* up fa wi/Nr.Fer

(SCALI

D IM S
Mo MM N r cadi at
publk M b an Auauat 17, l«*t at
IS:M PAL, al M i a odWaoe M

rodw teba daauaaR

N Z J F

»w potman,
PnTHCSB m y Mm M and Ma
Mai at MM Caart an JU L Y a .

m

4 S S B B S

mS

lacttano B u t tRMN

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

*OT X

IT

§f fftf

m MARGARET MILL-

T.P.R .. S
i_e |#
MM4aaAI^Mh
UnBICMI
liwTIrvilBn
b p i p*rt*m and Labm Its
rapubad. Apply: Fkit Fader,
ai al SawKwla. SIS W. M . I I .
jo t

P R IV A TE P A R T Y RATES
...................D p i M b
TO: O ANIR L RAYMONO
K A R IL B
YOU A M H IR B B Y NOTIF I I D Mat an A c Nm N r Mama
CManaa at M a mMar child.
JOBRFM RAYM OND RARBLB,
Mm Man ttMd apaMat yau and
Ida ara tppalradM *anm a capy
at yaar arM an aPtactMna. N
any, M H an T H C R l U M A R II
H U N T , F a tltla n a t. n h a ta
N J I W BMpna t o r t ,

I

DAILY FRY

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED D V T .

A U S U S T SB H p T
K A V A N A U O H P A R M S ft
M M ttt,
M M M
It c r M f y M I M a T(
Flerfdo. M
pee* I*ton* of MM Fktttteee
Mania ItaMa. Te-Wtt: lection

DAILY

O r la n d o - W in t a r P a rk

3 3 2 -3 6 1 1
SUPREME M i l l ft SRRVtC I. mM that | mom ! to ratoe-

googw orkbrs nbrdbm

v y)

C O b C tP T Owe Eator. C a T
carpentry I Homo, attic*,
kitctwn. bath i m a u ;

f

■ C S S S R R S rR fl
p w
w
f .i T dirt.

A p p ItR IK E * "

CtPBniMD SprviCE

NIN/U5I0 Aff UARCI3

SPRING CLEAN IN G BLUEST
Rato* bam U S ft up. Ceil Jay I

Bay/laUORacand/Ouereatoad

HOMt APPUABCjLJ?: 3133
Automotiv#
D ETA IL F IV E R , U t your car
•parkk tor summer! Camp
dtlell tervkel............ N M M
HBADLINIRSI Mott cm* *40
Wagon* 175 Vinyl top* MO up.
Carpet IMub 3M-SS44

Building C ontractors

L ftW d B C D D iW

BOBBY ADAMS CONCRETE •
Quality and ctoanllntt* I*
guarentoad, ift yrv residential
aiparknca. 7*7 304/3343417
CAPTAIN C 0 4 K R E T I. Wayne
Baal 3 Man Quality Cpara
Hon!]

NEW. BIM OO R L. REFAIR
H O M IL OFFICES. STORKS
Ail type* censtrvrtMM. R«*/C*m
3U-4C3 &lt; 0. B a W M .C tO r
• ADDITIONS. Al! remedrting
OapRty warkl T ri vOltdwelt
Reference*. Mai a a *70441*

E lo c trio l
M A S TIB I L I C T t ICAR. L k. ft
In* Rewiring, addition*. 34
hr*. *vc. call*..............lift 7171

CftrpRwtrv

IW X IF T fB C T n m a t#

BUILDING, ramodtling ft re
pair*. Deck*, dock*, door*.
u rn encl Lie *404414______
C A N FC N TIN All kind* el hem*
repair*, painting ft ceramk
til* Richard Or***......n i M71

Ckaning S r v lc t
CAT NY'S CLEA N IN G SIR VICE Retorenca*. raatenebk
Nreto*. Lkentedl Call 373 &gt;470

SAVEMOREY! CAUUS!
Mona-aiM

\ t i m ti\r

’ work, hauling
and ctoan up. CountryWW*
Davatopemant. 407 333 (33S

work law M l Fra* •»* Wood,
chainlink ft repair* 3334*11

GEWtral Se t v Ice * I
EXPERT ?TA H ^n»tru ctto!^n
your hem* or my studio Sift Ie
wkly teuton Result oriented
leaching. For all age*, kvei*
H p n d y Man
MASON A R Y
painting and tik work. Free
eiiimetot Liac’d C a U m -* m

a a J ft S C Y P R IU * a. Mulch
or pin* bark 114 yd. picked up.
Can deliver. Cypres* lumber
ft Fence material cut to ardsrl 4 mile* west el Wafclva
River Mwy a* to*30-MM
Lew

is

B ft R HAULING. Yard traah.
appt, fum.
F iT r
A ft N CX TIR tO R PA IN TIN G
A preuure clean. SAVE IMS
Uc./traaratl i m i i 4 4
DICK PINOLA'S PAIN TIN G,
(ktallty warkl Int/Eil-.-Lk'd
ft Insured Fraeestl 313 5713
E X P ER T PAINTING ft Pres*.
Watbiag. Repairs, Inl/axt.
Freaett. llyr* 7*7 p4S3 • ‘
MOUSE P A I N T I N G , Inlarl
or/e i tor lor, pressure ckenIng. traaestlniatosl 331-4417

T iR R s n n r a s T R rr ’

S e r v ic B

COMPLETE OeatNy Lawn ft
Landscaping. Tree Service ft
IrrigaliOL competitive rate*.
ha* atllmatotSunny'*313 7(34
LAWN CARE. Ira* estlmato* U
and up. Senior discount*.
Troth removal 30-3711
LAW N M A IN T E N A N C E
,1 CaN Tam .
RANDY'S Q U A LITY LAWN.
Complete care, dean up*.
Since 1*43. Fra* 4*1.1 331 471*

Senior Cltiian Discounts!
I I years eiporkncal 130(714

All your plumbing need*I 34
hour*I fRFMS377(3a MM
SPEEDY PLUMBINGI Abtfr
lutely he* e*t. No trlpa/*vc
charge. U c J tot, Min
f r r p w r t O tp iH n g
PCM - Haute wath and painting
"Quala* by phono". Call
Roger. 3344*48. PAMJPM

Masonry

itc r tti r ia l A

TWF MASONRY. Brick, black.
Stucco, concrete Renovation*
Lk'd. ft to* n i M V O M IS l

T y p in g S R r v i c i s I
s a s n S M a c a

OJ Entorprltat. tfllB E. 3Jth
S I, Santord. P4 0471/333 70*3

Moving A Hauling

T rt* Sarvico

* * • HA ULIN G ,y a rd trash,
appliance*, furniture, trash at
any kbidt Richard.......37&gt;77U

■UNVANS TR EE SERVICE
Tree work, light hauling. Fra*
eslimetos. Insured. 131 143*

) t u n /&gt;»/%//!#*&gt;h / r r l \ l h i \

s /.7 /'/■/• \ l a t 1 1li. ( n i l ( I n w l f i n i .

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• security. lantord

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P M tTttC I M K t i

nr.AniMmmut.mTm
P 1 N IR I0 M • &gt; bdrm. &gt; bath
can*, all appliance* IncludInf wether/dryer. SSOO/mo
plut teeurlly. 121-1011 «f

M4-1414________________

322-2420
321-2720

113—P arliifif Spec*
piuUMOdepaen.m-nw

FeeRnt

DOW NTOW N SANFORD
NCAA COURTHOUSE.
________CALL MI-TOM

let* &lt;1 N* buttBerta) large
oak* 1/7,we..... ..... MI7M4

MTO per month. 144-710/

ANY CONDITION!
J l * « l . .TRRAJO?, JJfJSIOd .on.
povmentiT Call Greg, 1M47I4

S T U N I bdrm a p lt. 140 par
.week..WUidM...ii'lli/&gt;«.\...yc.- .
pat*. Call MOMII___________

•tlufi •*■« !•!

lY 'Y C A . Cj » u » Nwmttraw.
F R II1 S R , A**traM7cu. M.

wyiain.imoso.avNM

Plut tecurlty depotll. M T IMP

•m

Florida Realty w
N M T TO S (U TOUt HOME?
Family rm, fireplace, eecurlty
hart, fenced bach, tool chad.
Owner relocating, priced
right I SIM M

DORCHESTER APIS
Single Story. M Bdrm.
A rt about our....
"Laata Special....
......A l eaterdteceawtr
M f 4-1: Open Weekend*
LAKE MARY M0-«W&gt;

I am looking tor nice heme* to
match wllhbvyort.

Crfft*Cnf*y,RULTOe

211751.......... 121*2257
W l N I S O Seminole County
home* to rant! For tree quota
lion HP R SALTY. H I WOO
1 BDRM. 1 BATH, older family
home. L a r ge y a r d,
Chlldren/pett OK. Deltona,
U40 per month..... 407 7117744
1/1. CO IY H O M I In home-

S A N F O R D . quiet t bdrm.
garage apt. UJS/mo plot da
poelt. Call M l 1471__________
SANFORD, modern 1 bedroom,
duplex CHA, appliance!, mini
blinds. Nice Area. UTS month,
u
04*4114

Step Up Into A
Great Apartment!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

55

A S S U M I NO Q U A L I F V I 1
bdrm.. central H/A. Large
corner lot - tread ONLY
SANFORD - 10X40 building plut
oftIcat w/lg. tecurlty lanced
lot. Zoned C l. S I.I U per
month................. Call Ml Tiff

41,100

COUNTRY A TM O SP M IR II 1
bdrm. I bath on almo*t I/]
acral Family room and retted
patio. Huge oah treat I U.SOO

QOIRLS B I K I W
New hre*. M S W C T W
Government Repoe A Attuma
No Quality Hornet In Semi
nole/Orange/Volutla/Lake
Countlee.

S M F M M U lfS S T H M
$M NM NN
• 1/1 IIreplace, new paint and
carpet, fenced yard. 030.400
•l/l'.y. 1,700 tq ft. with hot tub.
appliance!, fireplace SM. 400
ei/U v tpllt plan, appliances.
garage, lanced yard. US.400
Ql/I - renovated I New carpel,
paint, root, carport, fenced

1, 2, ft 3 BEDROOMS
RENTS STARTING FROM

•1/1 on 1/1 acral New paint,
fplc. family, living and dining
room!. Privacy fenca. 174.300

’*17AW deem, attuma no quali­
fy on thlt two ttory 1/lVy with
appliance* end fireplace.
Fenced yard with pool I Wt.M0

OWNRR F I N A N C IN O

147* C H IV Y Pick up. 4 cylinder.
1 tpeed. Good work truck 1400
O B O ........................... » 4 7471

Pinocretl. 3/1. living, dining,
family rm . lecurlty tytlem.
lanced yard... .M7.WQ
ST. JOHN'S AND LK MONROK
S acre etlalel 4/1,1900 tq. f t.
cutlom built, 1174.400
A LTA M O N TI IF R IN O t
1/1
with detached mother In taw
home I Pool, privacy fence
yard and kennel*. 1114.400

limited Time Offer

Com e Home To
C ountry S tyle Living!

LEASE VITM OPTION
Senlord. 1 bdrm. 1 bells,
central A/C. all appliance*
mlnit and vertical* Ian* te
curlty tytlem. wood lance
111.000 17 000 down. lU0/mo
Call Ml 1471

2B&gt;— Registered M i

TW O LOTA toned R I (Real
denllal tingle family) S San
lord area City water avail
able Convenient to tchoolt.
churches and stopping
130.000 llr m tor both
Serlout Inqglrlet call collect
_________4M 7717140_________
111 ACRIS all or part, cutlom

brown A while Itl A lnd
shots Dewormed Perenli on
premltet MSP MO..... P4 1140
TO Y POODLES. ARC 1 month!
eld with health certificate end

MAUT0 SALVAGE

A p a rtm e n ts
Cable T V
Washcr/Drycrs in Select Uniu
Sell Clean Oven
Iccmaker

Dishwasher
Garbage

POOL, TENNIS COUNT,
VOLLEYBALL COURT
EACH APARTMENT INCLUOES
•New Carpaang •New AapOanoat mdudh j Nukigurator, Hang*. Dithwaeher. Gar
bage Qapoaaf •Waahar A Dryert nttalad
n una kv an adddonai montfUy laa •24
hour emergency manwnance tamce

raniffM l

Pool
Clubhouse
' w T l i X l^ T
2450 lla rtw tll A&gt;t., Sanford
MON.-SAT.9 -6 - Sen 12 - S

324-4334

ol DeBary
W t WEIGH AND PAVI
Top I t tor |unk.
Cart A Truckt
R fg 44A40M tor quart.

J apartments
TAXI 17as M. AMPO*

241— Recreational
V e h icle s/C a m p e rs

Qu inn Realty Inc
SANFORD
1 bdrm I bath,
pottlble Ird bdrm New
carpel, new paint, new A/C.
new dithwetherl Excellent
neighborhood! Price al bank

215—Boats and
Accessories

* * * REAL NICE * * *
1 bdrm . 1 belt* home Ntce
Hac ream I Complete privacy
fence, wall to wall carpel A
CHA H I 000 a e •111 (1(1

AVAILABLE SELF 1TORAOEI
Oultlde tloraga tor RV’tl
laqutre. 11. M -F. Ml 1411

YOUR NEW SMYRNA CONDO
C O N N E C T IO N ! Sanlord
native Drende, Ownby Real

1 RORM. mobile home, you
move loft Senlord Ave I
Need! loma TLC t/M 171 1104

�without peptic ulcers f
DBAS ML OOVVi My friend from TM. the technique can
ha* arthritis and developed an reduce -the unhenlthful come-

PETER
GOTT.M.O.

. -

f;-

cause gastric irrita tio n th a t
sometimes leads to peptic ulcers.
This complication of treatm ent
exists Irrespective of how the
drugs are a d m in is te re d .
Therefore. I do not believe that
rectal suppositories are an an-

J V W

these prescription arthritis medictnes are not available In this
form. For patients unable to
swallow plla, suppositories —
such as aspirin — are available
without a prescription.
However, patients w ith Intes­
tinal sym ptom s from th e se
compounds may find relief from
the prescription drug Cytotec. a
new medicine that, when taken
four times a day. will usually
prevent the ulcers caused by

mnzvbjoimmsM*

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O R M O U '.

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anti-arthritis drugs.

L—

by O w riw M . S driril
IP I D H A D IT. I
W OULD N'T HAME M ISSED I T !

LUCY, IF YOU M IS S O N E
M O RE FLY S A I L , Y O U 'V E
. M A P IT!

fiO L P U S ' THE 5CUETLUOU
15 &lt;3006 THKXGHTHE JAME
P f &amp; O M S T m A ia C F O jR .

(U ftU T A
G K m u rr

\

M UO GFUm KSEARPA

a jm v .

V

— q------------------ r l a S i v ?
- J

suggestion for T M to reduce
stress. I've been practicing tran­
scendental meditation for IB
years and can honestly say it has
made m y life healthier, h a pp ier
and more productive. Keep u p
the good week.
D t A R B B A IM B t T h a n k you
for the com plim ent a n d for
sharing your experiences w ith
transcendental meditation.
No one really know s how T M
works, but It Is h e lp fu l In
relieving stress and anxiety. I
take issue with proponents w ho
claim they can levitate w ith T M .
However, for the average person,
who doesn't expect m iracles

io x &lt; L x x t r x a * T K X )/
/

.____ _

)

DBAS DB. OOTTt I w as
pleased recently to read of your

7

U JV M T
tu n ?

7

J U I E R P P ^

"TRUST T H A T

( eoassiusw

By P hillip Alder
Early In 1070. Control and
Kaos, those well-known spy organizatlons. had to forgo operattumr -after - financial *-cutback©:—
Instead o ' spying, they contlnued their light — goodness
and niceness vs. evil — at the
bridge table.
Th e first rubber began well for
Control. Maxwell S m art. Agent
86. brought home a grand slam
on deal two. Kaos had a chance
to recover ground on hand three.
Shtarker becoming the declarer
In f o u r h e a r t s a f t e r a
straightforward auction. (T h e
positions have been shifted so
declarer can be South.)
Max. West, led the spade
queen. Shtarker won in hand

they i
spade
clu b t
the tw
queenThe
his pU
w ith tl
but pc
of clul
get a
the sit
played
Shu
the C l
return
king,
heart j
his ac
Max *
the dl

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A S b fP T H i P i£ T t C lA N
fO ft A O A T F , R u j

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$HC S A * P S h e W A S
L O O K IN G FOR
S o W T h lN G
A

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C A f f T B p lA

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f i| v )

MIXED BREED

u ir r t£
w e

HIS MOTHER WAS
A BEAGLE
J

h ig h f t
fo o p

up

c h a in

.

AN0 MIS FATHER
WAS A BRICK

V\ P A v r s T S l

Some very u n u s u a l o p ­
portunities might develop for
you In the year ahead that could
be of benefit to you both In your
career and In you r finances.
T h e y m ay come fro m least
expected sources.
L B O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Some­
thing in which you re presently
Involved has a greater profit
potential than you m a y realize.
Re examine this endeavor to
determine its true w orth. T ry in g
to patch up a broken romance?
Th e Astro-Graph M atchm aker
can help you understand what to
do to make the relationship
work. Mall $2 plus a long,
self-addressed, sta m p e d
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428.
Cleveland. O H 44101-3428.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
there is someone you recently
met whom you w ould like to
know better, stop wasting time
on reasons w hy you shouldn't
get together. T a k e p o sitive
m easures to set u p a re n ­
dezvous. *
LIBRA (Sept. 2 3 -O c t. 23)
Things left to their ow n devices
could have a way of w orkin g out

to your ultimate benefit today.
Strive to flow with the tide of
events rather than go against
them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You will have a strong influence
on individuals you’ll be Involved
w ith and they, in turn, will leave
their mark on you. It’s Impera­
tive you associate with upbeat
people today.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) There could be a window of
opportunity for you today that
will affect your finances as well
as your career. You must capital­
ize on It prom ptly, though,
because It will be of a fleeting
nature.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You m ay have to deal with a
situation today that is similar to
o n e y o u d id n 't handle too
s k i l l f u l l y r ecent l y. Y o u ' v e
learned from this experience,
and you won’t make the same
mistakes twice.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
It’s seldom that inside informa­
tion can be relied on. but today
m ight be an exception. If you get
a tip from a reliable Insider, at
least check it out before dis­
missing It.
PISCBS (Feb 20-March 20|
One of your friends may not

have been completely honest
w ith you lately. However, you'll
get the tru th you’re seeking
through another pal w ho m ay
spontaneously volunteer the In­
formation.
*
A R I S S (March 21-April 19)
A m b itio u s objectives can be
achieved today, provided you
use your Ingenuity and resource­
fulness. D on't be afraid to takew
chance — if the stakes warrant
It:■&lt;
T A U B U S (A pril 20-May 20) Jf
things have been a bit dull tqr
y o u socially of late, break away
from your usual routines today.
D o so m e thing different w ith
fresh faces rather than familiar
ones.

GEMINI (M a y 2 1 -Ju n e 20)
T h e real facta could surface
today in a development that has
kept you confused. Once you
understand the underlying efe-'
m ents. It can be dealt with
effectively.
CANCER (June 2 1 -Ju ly 22)
Q u ic k decisions cannot always
be relied on. but this m ight not
b e t r u e t o d a y . Y o u r f ir s t
thoughts and Impulses could be
y o u r best ones.
;
(01991. NEW SPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN .
b y L— n a r d S ta rr

j

I SEE YOUR Y.RAWWOOD,
APARTMENT \ BRICKS, GUN
IN A RUGGED I RACKS, LONG
WESTERN /HORN SKULLS..

f

ACTUALLY, I WAS/ S L E E K ,
THINKING MORE
IN TER M S OF \ STYLISH,
ITALIAN IWO&amp;ERn XHJGH TEC H

MASERATl EN G IN E/ LET'S
PARTS BOLTED TO j START
^ YOUR WALL... i K b N N .

M W C W D rrc A W .

...A u r n UPHfAPfpBMg.
WITH A fm tit-tomatfM VJL?
NO-. THEM'S A

W AfiOUT
7H/6 0 7 »e *

WAHtUCKAA8D fk' FSUM/VHCh
AgA RJUOWiN’ L00KJN6 FOB
THATTRAIL, 60... , r 'm s ... 7 * t
C O iA T U M t ^

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30 Cents

THURSDAY

August 22, 1991

a n

fo

r d

H

e r a ld

• m in t Sanford, Loko Mary and Samlnofo County olnoo 1 SOS

.

83rd Year, No. 311 - Sanford, Florida

Free food
for poor
to return

NEWS DIGEST
ifAVA»■
■ l . :

. i

*^v•-•

1MM

a

Klein back in the saddle
SANFORD — Bill Klein, who led the Seminole
boys' basketball team to a 4218 record and two
S A C titles during the 1985-86 and 1986-87
seasons. Is the Tribe's "n e w " head coach.
IB

Hsrakl Bteff Writer
SANFORD — A multi-agency effort could allow
free food distribution for low-income families to
resume this winter after a hiatus o f more than a

Kids are cooking
S tu d e n ts at S u m m er K id 's C a m p , an
extension of the Pre-School C r o p Program at
Seminole Community .College, experience a new
adventure every day.

□ Nation
Bush may raalign Soviet policies
WASHINGTON — Officials say the Bush
administration may realign Its policies toward
the Soviet Union as a result of the aborted coup.

•M BPS
Accident ties up 1*4
LAKE MARY — A car and buck accident tied
up westbound early rush-hour traffic on 1-4 for
several hours this morning. For a brief time,
traffic was backed up for as iar as six miles to
the north, beyond the Lake Monroe Bridge.
The accident occurred under the Lake Mary
Boulevard overpass, where highway construc­
tion is underway. An automobile reportedly
struck a section of the concrete retaining wall
used to separate traffic from the construction
area. The Impact reportedly moved the concrete
structure out Into the traffic lane where It was
then struck by an oncoming truck.
Lake Mary Police, who Investigated the
accident, were able to keep one westbound lane
open during most o f the time, with the
exception o f a short period when bucket loaders
were called In to move the concrete retainer. All
traffic lanes were reopened at approximately 7
a.m.

Man chargad with DUI death
SANFORD — Clarence Anthony Flowers of
Sanford was charged Monday with causing an
accident In April that led to the death of
five-year-old Sara Sims.
Sanford police say Flowers was drunk when
he struck the car driven by Sims’ mother Debra
Sims of Sanford on April 17 at the Intersection
o f Old Lake Mary Road and 25th Street. Sanford
Police Capt. Charles Fagan said blood tests
revealed Flowers had an alcohol content o f . 16.
Sims died May 5 o f complications from the
accident at Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children
and Women in Orlando. Debra Sims and two
daughters were also injured and treated at area
hospitals.
Flowers was taken Into custody at his home
Monday morning and charged with manslaugh­
ter while driving under the Inlluence of alcohol.
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility and held on $ 10.000 bond.

Angry wife helps set up dealers
PENSACOLA — The angry wife o f a crackcocaine addict became an Infonnant and helped
set up a sting operation that caught six people
accused o f selling drugs to her husband, police
said.
"T h ey were messing her and her husband's
life up/' Escambia sheriffs Investigator Mickey
Jeffcoat said Wednesday.
The woman went to police last Friday after
she had been beaten up by her husband.
Jeffcoat said. She showed Investigators more
than 815.000 In canceled checks allegedly
written to the six suspects for cocaine In a
three-week period.

C e ra a llsd frsiii staff and wire r— rts.

Bridge..............
ag .yg
riaaaHlgJfl
....... SB
....... SB
IU ar Akkw
...SB
.............
Dr. Daft....................§B
Kdlterlsl...........
Florida......................* *

Mevlee........
Ration.........
Feeele....... .
Felice.........
Television.
...................

Cloudy and wet
Mostly cloudy with a
70 percent chance ol
thunderstorms likely
mainly during llie
afternoon. High In
the low 90s. Wind
southeast 5 to 10
mph.

For moro weather, see Fago 2A

Teachers at Sroford Middle School ate e hearty
breakfast compliments of the school's P TA In the
school's new cafeteria In preparation for Ihe start

of the year. Connue Wllle, Debby Whitmire, Steve
Frankenstein and Helen Goodson dig Into the fruit
selection.

Teachers push Lundquist as
principal of Seminole high
By VICKI OetOmilBR
Herald Staff Writer______________
S A N F O R D - E lg h ty -fiv c
employees, most of them teach­
ers. at Seminole High School
believe they know what Is best
for the future of the school.
The group has signed a peti­
tion asking Supl. Bob Hughes to
nppolnt assistant principal Rob­
ert “ Bobby" Lundqulst lo re­
place Wayne Epps In the top
administrative position at the
school.
Epps will lake over as prin­
cipal at Oviedo High School
when Charlie Webb retired
there.
Lundqulst said he Is flattered
by the show of support.
"It makes me feel like I am
doing a good Job as assistant
principal." he said yesterday.
."No matter what happens. I
know that 1am doing a good Job
here."
The faculty and staff at Semi-

y&lt;U&gt;was September 1990 when the Salvation Arm y
atopped their food distribution program because
the program became too expensive to operate. But
now county officials hope the program can resume
providing food for residents by Nov. 1.
The food la offered by the federal government,
which provides a maximum of 20 percent of the
food value for operations expenses. Other agencies
considered offering the service, but found expenses
or start-up costs too high.
Under a tentative agreement between Seminole.
County and the Retired Seniors Volunteer Program
(RSVP). the county would provide $15,000 for
expenses for the first two months and RSVP would
operate the program. A storefront In the Zayres
Plaza, now owned by the Seminole County
Expressway Authority, will be available for $380
per month, said SCEA director Gerald Brtnton.
Irene Quintana, county social services officer,
said RSVP officials have asked the county school
board to donate two refrigerators for preservation
of butter and cheese. Quintana said the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Food Commodity Pro­
gram currently offers butter, com meal, flour,
peanut butter, beans and honey. The available
Items vary, she said.
Qulntdna said she Is drafting a proposal for
commissioners' consideration next month that
would provide RSVP $15,000 In county revenues

Lance Abney, a Sem inole
High teacher who serves on the
com m ittee w hich w ill help
select the new principal for the
school, did not sign the petition.
□See Pood. Page BA
They added that as a part of
the Sanford community and a
graduate o f S em inole H igh
School. Lun dqu lst was the
appropriate person to fill the
position.
" S e m i n o l e Is a u n iq u e
school." Mary Michalak, who
helped organize the petition
'
drive, said. "W e arc a close By NICK PP1IPAUF
community. Probably 40 (of the Herald Staff Writer___________________________________
approximately 120) teachers
LAKE MARY - Lake Mary Is losing Public
here are Seminole High School Works Director Rod Stroupe to Mt. Dora. Stroupe
graduates."
has submitted his official resignation and will be
Sherry Kltncr. who works In leaving In three weeks.
the discipline office at Seminole,
After serving In Lake Mary for almost four years.
said she signed the petition Stroupe said he was looking forward to his new Job
because she couldn’t think of as Public Services Director In Mt. Dora. "I think It
any one better to be principal at will be a great challenge." he said. "It's a more
the school.
"Bobby Is the most com pe­ established city rather than Lake Mary which Is
tent person for the Job.” she still new and growing."

Lake Mary loses
one city official

Robert Lundquist
nole said they support Lundqutst for the Job because he has
"proven to be an Invaluable
asset to Seminole High School
through his hard work and
dedication."

□See Principal. Page 5A

□Bee Lake Mary. Page BA

Sanford annexation-pact review due
By J. MARK BARFIILD
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD - Seminole County
and Sanford commissioners will
meet Tuesday lo review a landmark
agreement that formally ends the
annexations bailies of the 1970s

and 1980s.
The agreement. If approved by
IniIIi panels In September would
coordinate development at the fr­
inges of the city, end opposition lo
city annexations and set up a
method for problem resolution. The
agreement would I k * In effect for five

years unless extended. The Joint
review Is scjcduled for 6 p.m. In the
county commission chambers.
The foundation for the agreement
was laid in 1989 when the two
commissions met and agreed to
pursue resolutions lo bickering and
coordinate land planning and utility

servles. Former county manager
Ken Hooper and former city manag­
er Frank Faison met regularly and
drafted a memorandum dated June
6. 1989.
The two executives agreed to
resolve annexation and road Impact

□Bee Fact, Page BA

W ater restrictions may
be needed, report says
&gt;i$n
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — A resumption ol
three-day-per-week lawn watering
and other measures may be needed
to preserve drinking water supplies,
a county study suggess.
When county commissioner Larry
Furlong demanded a preliminary
copy of the study last month,
county officials released II. saying
Ihe study was preliminary and the
results could Ik- “ potentially m is­
leading.”
Rut the final report prepared by
Camp Dresser anil McKee Inc. and
released by the county Tuesday,
states the county Is using 15 lo 27
million gallons per day (mgd) more
than Is being restored to ground
drinking water supplies from rain­
fall.
Commissioners will review Ihe
report Monday at 1:30 p.m. In the
county commission chambers.
The county's drinking w ater
supplies can maintain between 28
mgd and 40 mgd. Currently. 55
mgd is being withdrawn from the
ground by the county, cities and
private utility companies. By 1995.
67.5 mgd will be consumed at
current trends and by 2005. 85.4
mgd will be used, researchers
found.
As Iresh water is used up. salty
undrinkable water replaces It. the
consultants found, reducing Its abil­

ity to hold freshwater. If the
water-use trends are allowed lo
continued, the study predicted
Sanford’s Number 2 wellflcld north
of County Road 46 A and Seminole
County's Country Club Heights
west o f County Road 427 could be
threatened with saltwater by 2005.
"S a il water Intrusion poses u
serious threat lo the long-term use
of groundwater resources In Semi­
nole C ou n ty." researchers con­
cluded " A portion o f Ihe Floridan
a c q u lfc r u n d e rly in g Sem inole
County contains unusable sail
water."
The study also found that public
wells In Oviedo. Winter Springs and
Longwood. along with Sanlundo
Springs and Weklva Springs appear
to b e s p r e a d i n g s a lt w a t e r
throughout the county. Researchers
found the line o f underground
saltwater had stretched nearly five
miles during the last 15 years at one
local Ion.
To stave off the onslaught of the
saltwater threat and conserve up to
20 mgd. the consultants recom­
mend reinstating a two- or three-day
per week lawn watering restrictions.
The St. Johns River Water Man­
agement District removed three-day
watering restrictions last month
after normal rainfall returned to
central Florida. Seminole County
and the entire water district are
allowed to water lawns seven days a
See W a te r. Page 5A

In the swing of things

HwM p M * bf Qtn F- V*

Ashuwa Richardson, 3. of Sanford, flives a push to Jessica Najanick.
4, of Sanford, a newly-found friend The tire swing that brought them
together is at Park on Park

�r

*

•A -

Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday, August 22, 1991

N E W S F R O M T H E R E G I O N AND A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

\

Southern Bell sued over refunds
Associated Prttt Writer_______________________

Eldariy man accuaad of molaatlng boys
PENSACOLA — An elderly man children called "Grandpa
G u s " or "Captain G u s" has been charged with molesting a
half-dozen young boys.
"T h e children thought he was a wonderful man. not a bogey
m an." said ‘Escambia County sheriffs Investigator Michele
Peavy.
•. Augustus Rawls. 68. has been In the Escambia County Jail
since Aug. 8. when he was charged with engaging In a sex act
with a child. Ten more counts of the same charge and one of
making a lewd and lascivious assault on a child were filed
Tuesday.
The new charges Involve five more boys between 8 snd 15
years old.

Mail cantor sutp«nd«d
HOLLYW OOD — A mail carrier from Hollywood has been
suspended without pay by the U.S. Postal Service until officials
complete an Investigation Into how hundreds of pieces of mail
ended up In his car trunk.
Hollywood police found about 800 pieces of undelivered mall
in Samuel Berkman’s car on July IB. said Bob Orudek. a
federal postal inspector. The car was parked In a lot at
Berkman's trailer park.
Berkman says he la Innocent, and that anyone could have
put the mall into the trunk, which Is broken and does not lock.
Grudek said the letters — an assortment of first*, second- and
third-class mall — were postmarked between December IBBO
and June 1991.

TALLAHASSEE — T w o customers have
sued Southern Bell over alleged denial of
refunds for telephone outages, also a subject
of state Investigations..
A West Palm Beach resident. Roger
Qutoenbery, and a mental rehabilitation
center. Sunrise Communities, filed the class
action bn behalf of any Southern Bell
residential or commercial customer denied
the refunds.
Slate regulations require the rebates when
service is out for more than 24 hours. They
typically amount to about 36 cents a day.
The suit estimates that hundreds of
customers haven't received them, Barry

Alleged rapist arrsatad
FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. — A m an w h o (led West
Virginia before he could be sentenced for raping a mentally
retarded woman w as arrested by FBI agents.
A warrant had been Issued in West Virginia for the arrest of
Jamaladecn Azeez. 38. on a charge of unlawful flight to avoid
confinement for third-degree sexual assault.
Azeez appeared Wednesday before U.S. Magistrate Lurana
Snow In Fort Lauderdale and was ordered held without bond.
Azeez w as convicted in 1987 on a charge of raping a
mentally retarded 29-vear-old woman who was a patient at a
local hospital In Beckley. W.Va. At the time. Azeez was
working as a lab technician at the hospital.

Whalas ratumsd to aaa
i
M H fl

KEY LAR GO — Tw o short-flnncd pilot whales, pail of a pod
of 18 that became stranded July 21 off Key West, were
returned to the sea after a month of rehabilitation.
Eight other whales swam away after volunteers pushed them
interopen wtfey, andjeight more whales didn't survive thft
beaching.
The surviving whales, nicknamed Trlsh and Alex, were
nurtured back to health by staff and volunteers at Dolphins
Plus, a Key Largo-based marine mammal research center.
The 12-foot-long Trlsh. who weighed 1,200 pounds, was
treated with antibiotics and a dewormlng medication to aid her
fight against acute bronchial pneumonia and parasites In her
lungs and liver.
On Wednesday, the staJT and volunteers loaded Trlsh and
Alex, who Is 10 foot long and weighs 700 pounds, onto
Inflatable rafts and towed them 16 miles Into the Atlantic
Ocean.

F m stress I n i haunts woman
FORT LAUDERDALE — Bernadette Stevens said the "fre e"
15-mlnute heart stress test she took at her local health club
came back to haunt her a month later — In the form of a 9793
bill.
“ Things like this arc what make my premiums go higher."
said the Davie stockbroker whose insurance company paid part
of the bill.
Stevens Is one of hundreds of Scandinavian Health Club
members who took the tests at clubs In Palm Beach. Broward
and Dade counties. She said she was misled about the test and
thought it was given by the club's employees.

From Associated Prsts reports

LOTTHY
MIAMI
H a rt arc lha winning
numbars salactad Wednesday In
the Florida Lottery:

C asks
8-30

7433

tusraeai m i
Thursday, August 22. 1991
■ Vol. S3. No 311
Published Dally and Sunday. euapt
Saturday by Th* Sanford Herald,
Inc. MOM. French Are., Seniors,
Fla. &gt;3771
Second Cues Poetage Paid at Senford,
Florida and additional malting
POSTMASTER: Send address change*
to THE SANFORD HERALD. P A
S o l 1SS7, Sanford. FL &gt;3773-1*47.
Subscription Rates
(Dally A Sunday!
Hama Delivery S Hell
&gt; Manilla.--------------------- H I M
S Months...................... m o o
1 Year--------------------------- 17*00
Florida Roaidonta must pay Ilk isles
tea In eddaien la rales above.
Phono (407) 333 3*11.

The state Public Service Commission
voted in May to probe whether Southern
Bell had withheld the refunds.
The company bad assured the com­
mission that earlier problems with (he
rebates were taken care of. but commission
staff evaluations later showed some custom­
ers still hadn't received them.

And The Miami Herald reported'earlier
this month that Southern Bell employees
were questioned by a statewide grand Jury
on whether customer service records were
falsified and millions of dollars In refunds
withheld.
While state authorities look at whether
legal or regulatory action should be taken,
the lawsuit addresses customers’ concerns.
Richard said.

of possessing hundreds o f pho­
tographs of nude children w as
placed on live ye a n of probation
for possessing chll
p o rn o
graphy.
John Shaver. 57, pleaded no
con test W e d n e s d a y to the
charge. He had faced up to one
year in Jail on the third-degree
felony count.
Highly publicized child sexual
abuse cases In recent years
caused an atmosphere of hyste­
ria after Shaver's arrest in J an u­
ary 1990. said defense attorney
David Bogenschutz.
"This case to like the month of
March — It went In like a lion
and went out like a lamb,” said
Bogenschutz. who added that
his client was relieved It was
over.
In sentencing Shaver, Broward
Circuit Judge Robert W . Tyson
noted that hp was a first-time
offender and withheld adjudica­
tion. which means Shaver will
have no criminal record.
But his arrest will be listed In
national crime computers so If
he tried to work In day-care
again, a backgroun d check
would show It. said Assistant
State Attorney Brian Trehy.
Shaver had faced 29 felony
c h ild p o r n o g r a p h y -r e la t e d
charges after police say they

fou n d photographs o f nude
children at hla home across the
street from his now -closed
Rainbow Learning Center.
But Tyson last year dropped
a l l b u t o n e c h a r g e a ft e r
Bogenschutz d ied a recent state
appellate court ruling that said
defendants can only be charged
with one count of pornography
despite the number of photo­
graphs.
None of the children In the
photos found by police was Iron.
Shaver’s day-care center. Police
also said they found no evidence
to support a child-abuse case
against him.
Three children from the Fort
Lauderdale day-care center Ini­
tially tested positive for gonor­
rhea of the throat but later testa
were negative. Shaver tested
negative for the sexually trans­
mitted disease.
Some parents remain con­
vinced that Shaver sexually
abused their children.
"W h at he was finally con­
victed of had no bearing on what
he did to my kid. or other kids,"
one of the parents attending
Wednesday's court hearing told
th e S u n - S e n t i n e l In F o rt
Lauderdale.

Shaver's day care license was
revoked after, his arrest. He
previously was forced to close a
day-care center In Hawaii after
allegations that he Improperly
touched children there, but no
charges were filed.

Heather Fulghum, 3, Sanford, allows htr playmate to squeeze by
her on the playground al Park on Park yesterday while he lakea
(he opportunity to practice male-female maneuvers.

Congressmen hire lobbyists to protect territory
TALLAHASSEE - Members of
Florida's congressional delega­
tion are looking ahead lo the
redrawing o f boundary lines
next year, and two have hired
lobbyists to look out for their
districts.
When the Legislature con ­
venes In January in a reappor­
tionment session required every
10 years after a census. It will
divide the state Into 23 congres­
sional districts as opposed to the
current 19. It will ajsu redraft all
■late House and Senate districts.
U.S. Rep. Larry Smith o f Fort
Lauderdale hopes lo put a plan
before state lawmakers that all
19 o f Florida's current U.S.
represen tatives en d o rse. In
1982. he was a state legislator

who helped draw the lines for
the congressional seat he now
holds.
"T h ere's a whole passel of
them getting ready to run for
Congress,” Smith told the St.
Petersburg Times.
Ten years ago, U.S. Rep. Sam
Gibbons had to file suit against
the Legislature to force the
creation o f his congressional
district and he hasn't forgotten.
" I know how little attention
they pay to the Incumbents."
Gibbons said. "I had to bring
suit to get them to give me a
district. They weren't doing any­
thing and It waa coming right up
to election time."
G ib b o n s , a fo rm e r sta te
l a w m a k e r h i m s e l f , s a id
legisla tors alw ays are more
concerned with their own dis­

tricts and eventually get around
to redrawing congressional dis­
tricts.
Reggie Garcia has registered to
represent the Tampa lawmaker.
Steve Fisher o f Miami will repre­
sent U.S. Rep. Dante Fasccll of
Miami.
Lobbyist Guy Spearman said
Tuesday he w ill donate his
services to help U.S. Rep. Jim
Bacchus of Belle Isle. Bacchus
represents the state's most popu­
lous district and Is fared with the
loss of more than 275.000 voters
when the lines arc redrawn.
A t le a s t a h a lf- d o z e n
legislators. Including Senate
President Gwen Margolis, al­
ready are looking at u 1992
congressional race.
"Y o u can't protect Incum­
bents." Margolis. D-North Miami

Beach, said. "You have to draw
minority scats first and work
around that. We arc not In the
Incumbent-protection business.
We have to do an acceptable
plan that will pass Justice De­
partment review."
Margolis has drawn fire from
some legislators for circulating a
proposal that would create a new
black majority scat and save a
seat for herself while preserving
a seat for Incumbent U.S. Rep.
William Lehman.
T h e m a p . c ir c u la t e d by
Margolis last week. Is Illegal,
according to state Rep. Peter
Dcutsch. D-Tamarnc.
"It's outrageous that Gwen is
drawing congressional districts
without any public Input and
refusing to make the maps
available," Dcutsch.

THE W EATHER

□

Play 4

*

Southern Bell spokesman Spero Canton
■aid the legal action w asn't necessary
because the state was already Investigating
the refunds. He said the company wouldn't
comment further.

Public Counsel Jack Shreve. who repre­
sents rate payers before the PSC, said
Wednesday he's taken depositions Tram
form er and present p h on e com p an y
employees In connection with the probe.
Attorney General Bob Butlerworth's offlrc
also to Investigating the refunds.

Former day-care
owner on probation
in child porn case

Football player charged in slashing
PENSACOLA — A Pensacola High School football player has
been charged with slashing two teammates In a school locker
room, police say.
Mark Antonio Sapp. 18. was arrested Monday and charged
with two counts of aggravated battery.
Sapp, a senior safety, cut the two other players while the
team was preparing for practice, coach Charlie Arm strong said
Tuesday. He added that he has kicked Sapp off the team.
Chris Stallworth, one of the two 16-year-old victims, said
Sapp started pushing him around, according to a police report.
He told police he thought Sapp was kidding until he pulled out
the knife and cut him on the arm.
Sapp then fought with another teammate. Tony Mallory, who
received a cut on the lower back that required 13 stitches to
close, the report stated.

Richard, the attorney for Sunrise and
Qulsenberry, said Wednesday.
The suit waa filed earlier this month In
Leon County Circuit Court.

Today: Mostly cloudy with a
good chance o f afternoon thun­
derstorms. High near 90. Wind
southeast 5 to 10 mph. Rain
chance 70 percent.
Tonight: Partly cloudy with a
good chance o f thunderstorms.
Low In (he mid 70s. Light
southeast wind. Rain chance 50
percent.
Friday: Mostly cloudy with
thunderstorm s lik ely mainly
during the afternoon. High near
90. Wind southeast 10 mph.
Rain chance 60 percent.
E xten d ed forecast: P artly
cloudy with a chance o f after­
noon thunderstorms each day.

City
Apalachicola
Day Iona Boach
FI Laud Boach
Fort Myert
G*ine*vllte
Jacktonvllte
Kay Watt
Lakeland
Miami
Pmtacoia
Saraiola
Taiiehauee
Tampa
Voro Baach
W Palm Boach

La Pet
7a »
71 00
7S 00
n 71 74
•t 73 00
n TO 00
« oi .00
u 74 oo
u 7* 00
i« 70 00
fO 74 01
f l 40 00
to 71 40
94 71 14f
H 71 H I

NATIONAL T IM M

l

i

s

t

THURSDAY
MUy cldy 89-71

P

7 1JU
FRIDAY
Ptly cldy 93-74

---------- *

SATURDAY
Ptly cldy 93-74

SUNDAY
Ptly cldy 93-74

MONDAY
Ptly cldy 95-74

STATISTICS
FRIDAY:
BOLUNAB TABLE: Min. 4:25
a.m.. 4:40 p.m.; MaJ. 10:30 a.m.,
10:50 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
: highs, 6:23 a.m.. 6:47
p.m.: lows. 12:23 a.m.. 12:15
p.m .: New Smyrna Beach:
highs. 6:28 a.m.. 6:52 p.m.:
lows. 12:28 a.m.. 12:20 p.m.:
Cocon Beach: highs. 6:43 a.m..
7:07 p.m.: lows. 12:43 p.m..

HI
•9
90
90

Daytona Beach: Waves are
1-2 feet and semi glassy. Current
is lo the south with u water
temperature of 79 degrees. Now
Smyrna Beach: Waves are 1 foot
and glassy. Current Is slightly to
the north, with a water tempera­
ture of 79 degrees.

St. Anfustine to Jnpttor Inlet
Tonight: Wind southeast 10
knots. Seas 2 feet. Bay and
Inland waters a light chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms. Friday: Wind south­
east 10 to 15 knots. Seas 2 to 3
feet. Bay and Inland waters a
moderate chop. Wind and seas
h ig h e r n e a r s c a t t e r e d lo
numerous showers-

T h e high tem perature In
Sanford Wednesday was 90
degrees and (he overnight low
was 71 as reported by the
University o f Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center. Celery Avenue.
R ecorded rain fall for the
p e r io d , e n d in g at 9 a.m .
Thursday, totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature al 9 a.m.
today was HO d egrers and
Thursday's overnight low was
73. as recorded by the National
Weather Service al the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

□Wednesday's htfh.........92
G Barometric pressure.30.03
□Relative Humidity....79 pet
□W inds......Northeast 7 mph
□ Rainfall.....................0 in.
□ T o d a y ’s su n set.....7:58 p.m.

□Tomorrow's sunrtss....6:5B

Temperature* Indicate proviso* day'*
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North Platte
97 10 11 d r
Oklahoma City
to 49 1 73 d r
Omaha
clr
93 44
Philadelphia
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Phoenia
101 U
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Portland.Maine
44 17 143 cdy
Portland.Ore
fl 40
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Providence
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Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, August 22, 1901 - M

Warrant arrest

Suspended Hearns brings arrast
Reginald Leroy Grant. 26. of 211 25th St. In Sanford was
arrested on Tuesday.
He w as charged with driving with a suspended driver's
license.
Grant w as stopped by Sanford Police for a traffic violation
when an officer spotted that one o f Grant's headlights
Inoperative, the arrest report i
A computer check of his Identification revealed that his
license had been suspended In July when he failed to pay fines
for previous tickets, police said.
He waa transported to the John E. PWk Correctional Facility
where he w as held in Ueu o f 8100 bond.

Drunk man arm tsd for actions
Jose Villa, 34. o f lOVk Pineda Ave. In Longwood was arrested
on Tuesday.
He waa charged with disorderly Intoxication after police said
they found him asleep In his car.
The arresting officers said that when they awakened Villa he
became verbally abusive and he Tailed to follow their
instructions.
According to the arrest report. Villa was arrested when he
refused to stay In his car as ordered and when he urinated on
the road.
He was transported to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
where he w as held on 8100 bond.

Protection violations charged
. William Casanova Bradley. 18. of 59 Lake Monroe Terrace In
Sanford, w as arrested on Tuesday.
He waa charged with violating his probation on previous
charges of burglary to a conveyance, of grand theft auto and of
sale of a controlled substance.
Police offered no further details of the violations.
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility where
he was held without bond.

Steve Warren of 405 E. 8th St. In Sanford was arrested
Tuesday.
He eras charged on an active warrant on charges of first
degree battery, police said.
Warren was arrested at his home and transported to the
John E. Polk Correctional Facility where he will be eligible
el
for
release on 81.000 bond following his first court appearance.

Unvaccinated animate cause arrMt
Phillip Stephen Burt of 286 East Stale Road 434 In
Longwood was arrested on Tuesday.
He w as charged In connection with four Orange County
warranto (hat charge he railed to have his animals vaccinated
against rabies, the sheriff's department said.
He w as transported to the Oviedo Police Department and
then to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility where he waa
being held until proof of vaccination was obtained Tor each of
the animals.

Contamination in Volusia
County wells, Seminole OK
S y M M II
Herald Staff Writer
Although the HRS Is caution­
ing well users In Volusia County
about possible contamination In
private wells. Seminole County
does not appear to have any
problems.
The Volusia County Public
Health unit recently found an
Indication of high nitrate levels
In a number of private wells.
Sem inole County authorities
however, say they have not
detected any problems. Sem i­
nole County HRS Director John

Cochran said. "I've contacted
som e of the HRS people In
Volusia County and they say
that out of 1.500 wells, they
found only 1.4 percent of them
were at a higher than acceptable
level." Cochran said he did not
expect similar problems in Sem­
inole County.
Volusia County authorities
suspected their problems were
caused by the heavy rainfall
w h ich c a rrie s surface area
p o llu ta n ts d e e p e r Into the
groundwater. Health warnings
were specifically aimed at pre­
gnant women and infanta-

correction
Due to an error, a police Item in the Aug. 16 Sanford Herald
reported a girl who was the victim o f an alleged sexual assault
by Donald Gene Vance five years ago stated Vance threatened
her with physical violence If she told anyone about the asaaull.
According to police reports. Vance'threatened a boy with
violence If he told anyone about an alleged assault on him.

PfllifMtto burautir antitad

S

• • l l l i w l l w If W ^ p lIW R

Guillermo Antonio Garcia. 43. 1311 Palmetto Ave.. Sanford,
was charged with the burglary of a Sanford home Aug. 9.
According to Sanford police reports, a policeman spotted
Garcia crawling out of a window on Palmetto Avenue at about
6:30 p.m. The policeman said the window kppeared to have
been pried open with a screwdriver and he found a window air
conditioning unit on the floor of the home. Because the owner
was not home. Garcia was allowed to leave, reports state.
The owner told police she had not allowed anyone to enter
her home on Aug. 11. Garcia waa arrested at his home Monday
and charged with burglary and grand theft.

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Drug business
earns family
stiff sentence
i i VICfCM
Herald Staff Writer
SANFO R D U .S . District
Judge G. Kendall Sharp put a
Sanford family out o f business
yesterday.
Three members of the Jackson
fam ily, of 1121 7 th St. In
Sanford, were sentenced to life
In prison for their parts In
running a crack cocaine produc­
tion and distribution operation
In west Sanford.
Other members of the family
were sentenced to between 1914
and 4 0 years In prison.
According to Sanford Police
Chief Steve Harriett, the family
was accused o f distributing more
than 50 pounds of crack cocaine,
mostly In their west Sanford
neighborhood between January
of 1990 until their arrests (n
March of this year.

School &amp; Home

The Sanford Police Depart­
ment worked with the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Admlnlstation and
the Seminole County Sheriff's
Department on an 18 month
Investigation that led to the
arrests of Robert Jackson. Sr..
43: Ethel Mae Jackson. 41. and
Robert Jackson. J r.. 19. In
March.

tw rjrv s
CBS/FOX

HOME ALONE
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1 6 * 9 9 everyday Lew Price

According to Harriett both
Robert Jackson, Sr. and his son
had several drug convictions in
the past.
Ethel Mae Jackson's brother
Alphonso Junior Jackson, 34. o f
Sanford was sentenced to 40
years behind bars: her daughter
April Gordon. 24. of Sanford was
given a 19V4 year sentence and
Eddie Williams. 41. was sen­
tenced to 20 years In prison.

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coupon. This coupon can be used in
conjunction with a manufacturer coupon.
Void if copied or transferred, by " M F R "

Jurisdiction over
students after
class discussed

&gt;i.

f i T i * * *
M— d Products

BINDERS

Sportt Graphic*

S AN FO RD - T h e School
Board of Seminole County will
meet In a work session tonight to
discuss what Jurisdiction the
schools have over students dur­
ing non-school hours.
There Is currently no district
policy outlining what school
administrators may or may not
do In the area of disciplining
students for Infractions of the
district code of conduct when
they are not in school.

Trapper Super
Shades/Fasttanes.
Trapper Ksspsr, Red
Dog Trapper Keeper
or Keepin Tabs Folio
Binder.

WIZ TOO JR.
LOCKERS
Ninja
•inijw Turtles. WWF.
Disney or
Tiny Toons.
1
Little IMermaid.

A laddinfThorm os

Bach

LUNCH BOXES
Mickey Mouse. Minnie Mouse
Ninja Turtles. Little Mermaid,
W W F or Barbie.

Interest In the subject peaked
several months ago when Lake
Mary High School parents pro­
tested the school's anti-drug
policy which extended to parties
that happened off campus and
not on school time.
The "Just Say No" policy was
the only one o f Its kind In the
district and parents felt that the
district should either ban Lake
Mary's policy or make II a
district-wide one.
The board will meet tonight at
7 p.m. for the work session the
the district board room. 1211
Mellonvlllc Ave. In Sanford.

HARVEY

MORSE

ORLANDO

. INVESTIG ATIONS .
' . |J.-I n-l 11 i

l N , ',

628 1500

E. Altam onte Dr.

Herndon Ave.

(Acroaa from AKamonle Mall)

(N e il to Orlando Fashion Square Mall)

DAYTONA BEACH
n

State Road 192 and Irwin Ave
(East of Melbourne Square Malt)

ORLANDO-fLORIDA MALL
(Neal to the Florida Mall)

SATURDAY 9:30 AM - 9:30 PM; SUNDAY 11:00 AM - 9:00 PM

\

�- A ? .......
I
7 i

&gt;Afr- i

.

4ft • Saotord HmM, l mletd. Florida - Thuraiar. Anpai H , t99l
■-I
■

(Ion from the NAACP.'
They

c a n 't

be

In previous yean .
T h e J o u rn a l haa
n e v e r b e e n th in
M ack com m unity's
o p p o s i t i o n to
S u p rem e C o u rt
Justices w h o have
documented records
ofractam.

EDITORIALS

Health care

o f qwhtte

uly 3 — The Journal
t a g front page story
a M ack Republican, a
ead editorial (“Justice
■me page, a fawning
id a 31-Inch report on
unlttee 1990 hearings
to the U.S. Court of

For the m oat p a rt, th ey a re n o t p o o r en o u gh
to qu alify fo r M e d ic a id , th e g o v e rnm e n t
health p rogram fa r th e poor. Y e t n eith er th ey,
nor their em p lo yers, c a n a ffo rd to p a y fa r
private health In su ra n ce .
TO patch th is h u g e c rac k in th e n atio n 's
health care sy stem , a p resid en tia l ad v iso ry
council h as reco m m en d ed b ro a d e n in g th e
federal-state M ed icaid pro g ra m to pw v id a
hospital care a n d d octors s e rv ic es to the
uninsured w o rk in g p o o r.
T h e cost o f acc o m m o d atin g th e addition al
recipients c o u ld a m o u n t to s o m u c h a s 9 9 .3
billion a year. A t p re se n t. W a sh in g to n alrea d y
co n trib u tes 941 b illio n a n n u a lly to th e
program . T h e sta te s c o n trib u te an o th er 9 9 0
billion*
W h e th e r th e W h it e H o u s e u ltim a te ly
em braces th is p ro p b a a l wi n h in g e in p a rt on
w hether P resid en t B u s h v ie w s A m e ric a 's
health care c risis a s a to p dom estic priority.
T he adm in istration s o fa r .h a a n ot sh o w n an
inclination to in v est th e a d d e d s u m s o f m oney
for health c a re th at th e a d v iso ry coun cil
proposes. F o r th at m atter, th e adm inistration
h as offered fe w fre sh id e a s o n th e p roblem o f
health dare, c e d in g th e In itiative to C on gress

The Journal's mast recent editor!
s have been used to plead the case

In 1 0 3 0 , t h e
N A A C P mobilised a
stren uous national
c a m p a ig n a g a in s t
President H o ov er's
n o m in a t io n o f a
North Carolina a p ­
pellate court Judge.
John Johnaon
Parker, who opposed
blacks In politics “as
a source or danger to
both races."
During the cam pi
commentary dismiss
cem lng negroes (sic.)'

their backs on the civil-rights orguUxaUon that
h as been most effective In breaking down racial
barriers.
Yet there Is one Irreversible value to the

at IRS seminars?

If i
I
T__
I
n ;I
I _n
% H

1

.1

siphon the fu n d s fro m oth er dom estic p r o ­
gram s or raise ta x e s . T h e fe d e ra l deficit,
estim ated at 9 3 4 8 b illio n fo r n ext year,
already la fa r to o la rg e to accom m od ate a
huge n ew sp e n d in g p ro g ra m w ith ou t the
added reso u rces to p a y fo r It.
D eborah L . S te e lm a n , w h o ch aired the
13-m em ber a d v iso ry g ro u p a n d w a s director
o f d om estic p o lic y fo r M r B u t h 'o 1968
presidential c a m p a ig n , h a s m a d e a good case
that som ething m u st b e d o n e fo r the m illion s
o f A m ericana b e lo w th e p o v e rty lev e l w h o
have n o a cc ess to h ealth c a re . “ It’s not
socially a ccep tab le: It'a not m o ra lly accept­
a b le ." sh e o b serv es.
T h at sen tim en t la sh a re d b y m an y In
C ongress, w h o In cre a sin gly v ie w the health
care d ile m m a a s a n a tio n a l c risis. R e­
publican s a n d D em o cra ts a lik e a re p u sh in g
for legislation to h e lp the w o rk in g poor
acquire health In su ran ce.
T he proposal th at M ed icaid b e e x p an d ed to
encom pass m ore p o o r A m e ric a n s raises a
critical qu estion th at n eed s to b e decided
before W a s h in g to n se ts a s id e a d d itio n al
billions o f d o lla rs fo r h ealth care. N am ely,
should the fe d e ra l go v e rn m e n t b egin an
Im m ediate piecem eal ap p ro ac h to the crisis o r
hold o ff for a c o m p reh en siv e solution?
For Instance, b ro a d e n in g M ed icaid to In­
clude the 35 p ercen t o f p oo r fam ilies w h o
currently lack c o v e ra g e w o u ld h e lp 10 m illion
A m ericans Im m ediately. B u t th ere still w ou ld
rem ain an oth er 2 0 to 25 m illio n nonpoor
A m ericans w ith ou t h ea lth In su ran ce.
These q u estion s n eed to b e th rash ed o u t b y
the Bush ad m in istratio n a n d C o n gress. But
the debate o v e r A m e ric a 's In ad equ ate health
care system m u st b e m a d e a to p priority right
now — not o n ly b y C o n g re ss b u t a ls o by
President B u sh .

LETTERS T O EDITO R
Letters to the editor are welcome. AU letters must
be signed. Include the address o f the writer and ■
daytime telephone number. Letters should be on a
single subject a n d I k - u s brief as possible.. Letters
are subject to editing.

Berry's World

"...Y o u rh o n o r, m y cMont’t d u h t m

EVERYBODY DOCS ITT"

fe

•

•

W ASH IN G TO N — It's tough to open our
mall these days without finding at least one
a n o n y m o u s t ip a b o u t y e t a n o t h e r
e x t n v a p u t trip by Internal Revenue Service
employees traveling on the taxpayers' dime.
Collecting all that tax money apparently has
warped the agency's sense or thrift. Easy
come, easy go.
The latest getaway involved a flock of IRS
lawyers who spent four days at s tropical
resort In Fort'Lauderdale. They simply had to
remove themselves from the distractions of
the office for an educational seminar that cost
the taxpayers about 9100,000.

4

•

1

ROBERT WAGMAN

Will U.S. foot college bills?
W ASH IN G TO N — it's the lime of year when
millions of parents all down to write out college
tuition checks, while wrestling with myriad
loan and financial aid forma for their children.
It's also the time of year when there tame
parents moan. “There must be a better w ay!"
Now a group of congressmen, led by Reps.
Thom as Petri. R-Wls.. and Sam Gejdenson.
D-Conn.. believe (hey have a belter system.
First Mine facts: College, graduate, pro­
fessional and proprietary school students in
the 1991-92 academic year will borrow about
ilO biU lon .
The 1.8 million four-year college students
will borrow an average of 92.480: the 360,000
graduate and professional students will borrow
an average o f 95.800; and the 950,000
proprietary school attendees and community
college students will borrow an average of
A small part of tnls borrowing la directly
from the federal government through the
Student Loan Services program. The majority
la from commercial lenders, federally guaran­
teed under the government's Stafford program.
Currently, .there la about 950 billion In
student loans guaranteed by the U.S. taxpayer.
It la estimated that a quarter to a third of (here
loans will end up In default, with repayment
falling to the taxpayers.
So any new tending program must make
money more readily available to students,
batter guarantee repayment and cut costs to
taxpayers.
Under the Pctri-Gejdenaon plan — called
“ ID EA." for Income Dependent Educational
Assistance — a student would borrow directly
from an agency of the federal government. It.
In turn, would get the money to lend by selling
bonds. Repayments would be collected by the
Internal Revenue Service in annual amounts
(led to a student's forecasted future earnings.
Over the years, a student could borrow up to
a maximum of 970.000 — 929.000 for four
years of undergraduate school, plus another
941.000 for four years of graduate or profcaafonal school. Interest would begin accruing
Immediately at a rate of either 10 percent or 2
percent more than the average rate of 91-day
Treasury bills — whichever is less.
Repayment would not begin until after a
student haa graduated. Then the amount
repaid each year would be pul on the
borrower's tax return Just as If It were income
tax owed, with the annual repayment depen­
dent on the balance owed and the former
student's Income level.
No loan repayment would be due In any year
In which a student has earned less than the
threshold amount for paying Income tuxes
($6,050 for an individual. $10,900 for a Joint
return). Repayments would be capped at u
maximum o f 19 percent of income In any year.

K

If a former student had not repaid his entire
debt within 25 years of graduation, the balance
would be forgiven.
The numbers Involved are complex. But the
plan's designers estimate that the average
student would repay his loan balance In about
12 years. And the total amount repaid to the
government would not be much different than
It is now under the Stafford program.
The average student b orrow s
9 I 4 ,0 0 0 o v e r a
four-year undergrad­
uate career. Under
the current Stafford
program, he would
be required to repay
9189.74 each month
at an Interest rate of
8 percent, for a total
r e p a y m e n t of
915,638.
U n d e r ID E A the
to tal re p a y m e n t
w ould be 9370.82
more, but he would
have a longer period
The actual
of repayment: and he
borrowing
would have the pro­
would be
te c tio n o f no r e ­
much easier
payment or very low
repaym ent In any
year that his Income
fell off significantly.
Also, the actual borrowing would be much
easier because the student borrower would not
have to find a commercial lending Institution
willing to lend him the money. Another
benefit, and one that can be appreciated by
both student and parent, la that paperwork
would be much reduced.
One drawback to this program Is that former
students with high earnings will effectively
subsidize borrowers whose low incomes re­
quire no or very low repayments. This feature
troubles many in higher education. Including
Art Hauptman. a financial aid expert with the
American Council on Education.
"I like many of the features of this plan,"
says Hauptman. “ It makes borrowing easy and
lakes the banks out of the equation. It makes
more money available to students. It will cut
wuy down on defaults, and It will save the
taxpayers money.
"T h e one thing I don't like is that It will
unfairly punish students who. immediately
after school, develop relatively high Incomes. I
would like to see a modification of the plan to
allow a student to choose between straight
monthly repayment and Income-contingent
repayment."

Before w e expose .
the sordid details, we
^
must note that the
IRS Is reviewing Its
'
' m i
wanderlust. Our re- g i
cent c o lu m n s
.‘‘1 J
exposing a few of K 4 i m
m M V
th o se t r i p s enc o u ra g ed them to
tig.
M
think twice about
;■
scheduling fancy re', E
treats for employees.
In Tact, a two-day ■
■
meeting for managH
mm
era. originally acheduled last month at a
f a n c y h o t e l In
M aryland, w a s refe T h a lR fila
located to spartan
mvlawinn Its
Andrew s A ir Force
JJJM M L, ■
Base. So. instead of
w an o an u w . j
being put up at the
hotel for 970 a night.
the 63 participants i n _______________________
the meeting commuted to the base from their
homes for two days.
But It was only two weeks later that 150
IRS attorneys threw public opinion to the
wind and hauled for the Pier Sixty Six Resort
and Marina in Fort Lauderdale, our associate
Scott Sleek has discovered. They were there
for further education. Including discussions
of new developments In tax court rules and
procedures.
It sounds like serious work, but It's hard to
swallow the all-work-no-play line from the
IRS when the hotel. In its own brochures. Is
described as “ lush," with private balconies
overlooking the water, telephones In the
bathrooms, dally cruises to the Caribbean
islands, waterfront tennis courts, a worldclass marina. porasalUng. anorkellng. yacht­
ing. massages and free shuttle service to the
beach.
The IRS claims It holds these events at
getaway hotels when work needs to be done
without the constant Interruptions of the
office. Apparently the IRS haa never consid­
ered a conference room with a lock on the
door, a box of donuts and an order to. “ Hold
all calls.”
The IRS also claims that the participants
are kept so busy that they have little or no
time to enjoy the lavish offerings the hotels.
We have to assume then' that the IRS Is
squandering money on amenities that It pays
for and never uses.
Although the IRS la reviewing Its standards
for scheduling such retreats, they will still be
h e ld I f d e e m e d n e c e s s a r y , an IR S
spokeswoman told us.
W e have already reported on other trips the
IRS has deemed "n ecessary" in recent
months. There was the ethics seminar,
costing at leaat 9124.000, put on last winter
in a cozy West Virginia mountain resort. In
June. 100 Internal auditors from the IRS
headquarters in Washington attended a
computer-training meeting at a beachfront
resort in Ocean City. Md.. at a total cost or
934.600.
Just a few days later, lop IRS managers
from Philadelphia put their noses to the
grindstone at a seminar at an elegant — but
who had time to notice? — golf resort In the
Pocono mountains. If the IRS employees
hadn't been so busy, they could have used
one of two championship golf courses, tennis
courts, swimming pools, a sauna, a trap­
shooting range and a Nautilus fitness center.
That getaway coat taxpayers about 988.000.
not Including travel expenses.

�Sanford Hm M, t antent. Florida - Thursday. August 22. I09t - SA

m
StfLAM ABi
Eula Mac Arnold. 44. 84 Lake
Monroe Terrace. Sanford, died
Friday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital Sanford. Bom
July 23. 1947. In Sanford, she
relumed here from Live Oak In
1968. She was a nurse’s aide
and a Baptist.
Survivors Include lather. O.B.
R o c h e ste r, N .Y .: d a u g h te r.
L a u r e l S ta tH a m . S a n f o r d ;
b r o t h e r s . D a v id . S a n fo r d .
Sam uel and Robert, both of
Tam pa. John. Miami. Eddie.
R o c h e s te r; s la te rs . E m m a,
Rochester. Martha Wilson. Coma
Leonard, both o f Live Oak.
Sandra. Tampa. Brenda. Mon*
ticcllo.
Wllaon-Elchelberger Mortuary
Inc.. Sanford. In charge of ar­
rangements.
m t m i w
u
r
Nellie Ruth Berry. 73, West
F ow ler D rive. Deltona, died
W e d n e s d a y at D e lt o n a
Healthcare Center. Bom Oct. 21,
1917. In Macon. Ga.. she moved
to D e l t o n a In I 9 6 0 fro m
Gainesville. She w as a home­
maker and a member of the
Deltona Presbyterian Church.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e -s is t e r .
Martha Brunet. Deltona: several
nieces and nephews.
Stephen R. BaldaufT Funeral
Home. Deltona. In charge of
arrangements.

Dorothy Rose Brueckhelmer,
76. 74 Hickory Hills Circle. Lake
Placid, died Tuesday at Florida
Hospital. Orlando. Bom Nov. 16.
1914. In Chicago, she moved to
Lake Placid from Clermont in
1985. She waa a homemaker
and a Lutheran. Survivors In­
clude husband. Wilbur: daugh­
ter. Caryl Iracleanos, Lake Mary;
two grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld F uneral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary, in charge of ar­

rangements.

H erm an

H e rsh b e rg er.

72.

1360 Elkcam Blvd.. Deltona,
died Tuesday at his residence.
B o rn O c t . 26. 1 9 1 8 . In
Walnutcreek. Ohio, he moved to
Deltona from Wadsworth. Ohio
in 1965. He was a retired teacher
and fo o t b a ll c o a c h a n d a
member of First Presbyterian
Church. DcLand.
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e w ife ,
E lizabeth; brothers, James,
Edward and Loten. all of Holmes
County. Ohio.
B a ld w ln -F alrch lld Funeral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary. In charge of ar­
rangements.
HAROLD W . H O W ELL

Harold W. Howell. 78. 2061
Palm View Drive. Apopka, died
Tuesday at South Sem inole
C om m u n ity H ospital. Longwood. Bom April 10. 1913. In
Odon. Ind., he moved to Apopka
from Bedford, Ind.. In 1990. He
was a retired civil engineer and a
member o f the First Church of
the Nazarene. Orlando.
Survivors Include wife. Grace
L.: sons. William. Altamonte
S p r in g s . R o n a ld . A p o p k a ;
daughter. Vicki Gennett. Indian­
apolis; six grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home, Longwood. In charge o f arrange­
ments.
JACK EUGENE
KLINGELSM 1TH

Jack Eugene Kllngelsmlth. 65.
East Union Circle. Deltona, died
Tuesday at Florida Hospital.
Orlando. Born April 30, 1926. In
Barberton. Ohio, he moved to
Deltona In 1980 from there. He
was a sergeant for the Barberton
P o lic e L ^ cp a rtm en t and a
member o f Our Lady or the
Lakes Catholic Church. Deltona.
He was a Navy veteran of World
W arll.
Survivors Include wife. Rose
E.: sons. Brent E., Houston.
Texas. Jack D.. Clinton, Ohio.
Jeffery D.. Barberton; daughter.
Susan B. Cucknhr. Barberton:
brother, George D.. Akron: sis­
ter. Charlotte E. Rosenbenry.
Mesa. Arlz.: live grandchildren.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona. In charge of
^rrungements.

In 1985 from fttossanr mm Long
W and. N.Y. He v m a teller
carrier for the U.S. Poat Office for
30 y e a n and a member o f Our
Lady o f the Lakea Catholic
C hurch. Deltona. H e w aa a
member of Vince Lombardi Sons
of Italy: Knights of Columbus.
Brooklyn. National Aaaoctatlon
of Letter Carrtem and an Army
veteran of World W a r B.
Survivors Include wife. Lina of
DeBary; sons. Anthony of (slip
Terrace. N.Y.. and Joseph of
West Babylon. N.Y.t daughters.
M rs. M ic k ey B . M ln g n o n e ,
Bethpage, N.Y., Mrs. M. Grace
Alderman. DeLand, Mrs. Dolores
R. G lam petruxsl. Levlttown.
N.Y.. Mrs. Bernadette K ellf. De­
ltona: sister. L ib b y Vorm an.
Miami; 12 grandchildren.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona. In charge of
arrangements.

TM08IAR J.H B A L
T h om as J . N eal. 83. 450
Marker SI., Altamonte Sprtngs,
died Wednesday at Park Lake
Healthcare Center. W inter Park.
Bom July 1, 1908, tn Dublin.
Ga.. he moved to Altamonte
Springs from there In 1936. He
was a retired citrus worker and a
member of New Bethel AME
Church. Altamonte Springs. .
Survivors Include sons. WUlie
T.. St. A lban s. N .Y .. Eraell
Mason. Biloxi. M as.. Carl Sim­
m o n s. A lt a m o n t e S p r in g s ;
daughters. Mary Ann Thornton.
Janice Simmons, both of Alta­
monte Springs; sisters, Mattie
Lou Vam adore. M ary W ells,
both of Jacksonville; Mothers.
Rev. Tony T.. Freddie, both of
Jacksonville; 17 grandchildren:
20 g re a t-g ra n d c h ild re n : 10
great-great-grandchildren.
Brinson’s Funeral Home. Or­
lando. In charge o f arrange­
ments.
Jack A. Pierce, 68. Highland
Drive, Fern Park, died Wednes­
day at hta residence. Bom Feb.
5. 1923. In LeMars. Iowa, he
moved to Fern Park from Dav­
enport. Iowa. In 1959. He was a
quality engin eer for Martin
Marietta and an Air Force veter­
an. He was a member of the
R A M M R a d io C lu b . H A M M
RAMM Radio Club. LAM ARS
Radio. Orlando Moose Lodge
766, and American Legion Post
53, Sanford.
Survivors Include wife. Mar­
jorie. sons. Rex. Deltona, Daniel
Decker. Winter Springs: dsugh-

m

-

Pact
'

ters. S h aw n S w e n so n . Fort
Lauderdale. L eslie T isch ler.
Barbara Hollar, both of Orlando,
Cathy Smith. Longwood; stater.
B etty D a u re r. T a v a r e s ; 14
g ra n d c h ild re n ; th re e g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld F u n e ra l
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arran^m ent#.

Ralph Harlow Stevens. 74.159
Williams Rd.. Lake Mary, died
W ednesday at his residence.
Bom Aug. 1. 1917. In Holly.
N.Y., he moved to Lake Mary In
I960 from Madison. N.Y. He waa
a retired central office sw it­
chman with the W inter Park
T elep h o n e C o m p a n y a n d a
member of the W in ter Park
Church of Religious Science. He
w a s a m em ber o f the C arl
Galloway Chapter o f Telephone
Pioneers of America and the
Lake Mary Seniors.
S u r v iv o rs In c lu d e w ife .
P a u lin e ; sons, T h o m a s R ..
Ogden. Utah. W alter E., Fern
Park. Mark A.. Sanford. Timothy
B.. Madiaon. Ohio; daughters.
Margaret S. J en n in gs. A lta ­
monte Springs. Lynn A. Pace.
Longwood; aeven grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home. Long­
wood. In charge o f arrange­
ments.
Lester Lee Wilson, 72. 854
Douglas Ave.. Winter Parti, died
Tuesday at ' Florida Hospital,
Orlando. Bom July 10, 1919, tn
M organ . G a .. he m oved to
Winter Park from Orlando tn
1960. He was a truck driver and
a member of Bethel Missionary
Baptist Church. He w as an Arm y
veteran of World W a r It. '
Survivors Include wife. Ida B.:
son. Daniel Aykcs, Germany:
daughters. Barbara J. McGowan.
C o lu m b u s , M is s .. A g n e s
Leonard. Sanford; sister. LUIte
Mae Jackson, Lakeland; eight
g r a n d c h ild re n ; n in e g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Golden's Funeral Home Inc..
Winter Park, In charge of ar­
rangements.

WIAVI«.DON*LO&amp;
Visitation tor Mr. Donald O Waavor. 57. ot
Lafco Mary, who died TuosSay. will bo this
ovanlng (Thursday) from ( I p.m. at
Gramkow Funeral Homo Chapel Graveside
services and Interment will bo at o later date
In Salem. Cteo.
Arrangements by Gramkow Funaral

'ACE IS THE PLACE”

Hardware
IBACK TO SCHOOL N A M

Principal'
1A

fee battles, coordinate
land planning, fire protection
and utility service in fringe
U tittles and to
the etty more Input into
widening plana for the
Subsequently, the city and
county ended the road Impact
fee conflict in 1909 and also
signed a ffrat-mponse Are pro­
tection agreement that year. In
1990. they signed a utility serv-

1A
said. “ He has the respect of the
stair, the parents and the stu­
den ts. A p pointing him w ill
m ake the transition so much
Hughes said that the petition
91 be put la Lundqutet's flk
and wfll be contedered with his
“ W e wtfl consider H as pan of
his Ole." Hughes aatd. “W e have
to chose the beat per m for the
jo b . W e wfll look at the school's
*
*
*
* that

county or the city to provide

m e In m out of the etty.
The joint purchase of Lake
Monroe Utilities waa not pursued
an d the county bought the

“ K S r'L'.’ t .n ,
agreement, both the etty and
county will review development
plana that occur from Interstate
4 and Lake Mary city boundaries
on the west, along a straight line
that includes Cadillac Street on
the south. Lake Jesup and the
8t. Johns River on t h e ---------- *

Water
1A
week.
but not between the hours o f 10
a.m. and 4 p.m.
T h e study also encourages
reuse of reclaimed water. San­
fo rd , the c o u n ty , at th e ir
Greenwood Lakes wastewater
facility, and Altamonte Springs
are pumping treated wastewater
to irrigate lawns and landscap­
ing. The county's nonfunction­
ing Yankee Lake facility can
pum p treated wastewater for
reuse, but no return lines were
Installed when the facility waa
completed a year ago.
Consultants also recommend
charging large water users a
h ig h e r ra te to d is c o u r a g e
excessive use. It also recom­
m e n d s b u ild in g c o d es be
changed to require water-saving
devices and encourage low Irrig a tio n “ x e r is c a p ln g "
landacpaing methods.
T o the future, the study re­
c o m m e n d s c on sid erin g the
purchase of water from neigh­

Lake Mary1A
Stroup joined the Lake Mary
staff after nerving In a similar
rapacity In Apopka. ‘1 still live
there.” he sold. r'and It will be a
•nofiCi uTivc 10 worn ewen cmjt*
“T h e time I’ve nerved In Lake

W hen Lake
wimu nc
remember moat about Stroup's
service to the d ty. the mayor
smiled and responded, “I recall
one time when Rod actually
wore a pair of socks with his
loafers.’’
The m ayor commented that
to
work to already in
City
find a rcjjwMccmcfit-1
Manager h as already advertised
to flu the position, and I un­
derstand several responses have

111reaay o w n received,

aom i

said he expected a replacement
will be found In the near future.

There are nine applicants for
the Job. They arc:
B i ll M o o r e and Dec
Schum acher, both assistant
principals at Lake Mary High
School: Saleem Momary. an
asalatant prin cipal at Lake
Brantley High School; Gretchcn
Shapker. an assistant principal
at L y m a n H ig h S c h o o l;
Raymond Gaines and Frank
Duncan, both assistant prin­
cipals at Lake HowelL High
School and two candidates from
out of state.
Michalak said that some peo­
ple w h o signed the petition were
concerned (hat the district
would appoint a woman for the
Job simply because there had
been pressure an the dfstlct to
make a woman the principal at
a high school.
“That la the wrong reason to
m a k e so m eo n e p r in c ip a l."
Mkhafah said.
The faculty and staff believe
p u ttin g anyon e other than
Lundquist in the position would
be counter-productive, she said.

Food
1A
to begin the
program. She said the money
would allow RSVP to pay rent,
rennovate the vacant store for
the program, pay Insurance and
pay operating expenses for the
first two months until the costs
are reimbursed under the federal
R SVP officials could not be
reached, but a receptionist said
the proposal Is being negotiated.

boring counties and desalina­
tion.

r

NOTICE OFESTABLISHMENT OF
CHANGE OF A REGULATION
AFFECTING THE USE OF LAND
Notice it hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Seminole
County, Florida, inlands toholdthasecondoftwopublichearingsto reviewforrec­
ommendation an ordinance entitled:
AN ORDMANCE AMENDING TH E LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA; PROVMMNG FOR WATER AND 8EWER STAN­
DARDS AND ATTACHM Q THEM AS APPENDIX F; PROVIDING FOR PUBLIC
8AFETY 8TANOARD8ANO ATTACHM Q THEM AS APPENDIXG; PROVIDING
FOR INCLUSION M LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE; PROVIDING SEVERABIL­
ITY AND PROVDMG AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
TH E PUBLIC HEARMG WILL BEGIN A T 7:00 P JL, OR AS SOON THEREAF­
TER AS POSSIBLE. A T ITS REGULAR MEETING ON AUGUST 27,1991, IN
ROOM W1220FTHE SEMINOLE COUNTY SERVICES BUILDING, 1101 EAST
FM ST STREET, SANFORD, FLORIDA.

S EM IN O LE C O U N T Y

M A R IO M A M M A N O

M a r i o M a m m a n o , 71.
Urnkenshlrc Drive, DeBary. died
Wednesday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Sept. 12. 1919. In Caltanlssctta
Sicily. Italy, he moved to DeBary

Parsons aro advised ta t. i tw y doddo to appeal any daemon mate at h i hoonng. thoy will nood a record ol tho
procoodngs, and, tor such purpoos. tw y may nood to intore tud a vorbaam record ot tho procoodngs is mado. which
record indutes t w toslmony and tvidanca upon which t w appeal io to bo based

SEAL
PROFESSIONAL
P R O P E R T Y TAX
ASSESSMENT
REVIEW
C a lL

3 2 1 -3 0 6 5

t f l rc h h o ff
* * f i!£ p s o c ia t e s
toa w
Suita 204 Sanford

MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk to the Board of
County Commissioners of
Seminole County, Florida
•t

_

By: Is/ — ^
Deputy Clerk

�86 - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday. August 22. 1991

Gorbachev back; rebels arrested
thanking Yellsin. the man who
had frequently criticized him In
the past but who led the fljftit for
M OSCOW - Boris Yeltsin to­ his return.
T h e c o u p c o lla p s e d on
day trium phantly Ird 100.000
jubilant supporlers In a rally Wednesday, when the plotters
marking the end of "three dark dropped from the sight and
days” of the hard-line takeover. army tanks began to withdraw
A weary Mikhail Gorbachev re­ from positions nround Moscow.
"Here Is m y respect to the
turned unheralded to his capital
and swiftly moved to purge and Soviet people, and specifically,
punish those \vho had briefly to Boris Yeltsin, the president of
Russia." Gorbachev told Soviet
deposed him.
C h e e r in g d e m o n s t r a t o r s television.
Tens of thousands of Soviets
waved Russia's pre­
revolutionary. whlle-blue-and- had answered Yeltsin's call to
red flag as Yeltsin spoke outside strike nnd rally in opposition to
the Russian Parliament, which thr coup.
Gorbachev also provided the
was the nerve center of na­
tionwide resistance to the hard­ first glimpse at the fury he felt
toward those w h o held him
line coup.
Yeltsin denounced the failed under house nrrest for 72 hours,
coup as an attempt to plunge the s a y in g t h e y h a d t r ie d to
country Into an "abyss of vio­ "m orally break" him .
"I was certain at the time that
lence." saying It violated "every
they w ouldn't succeed." the
moral standard."
Before dawn today. Gorbachev 60-ycar-old leader said. " T h e y
Rcw back to Moscow from the lost."
In h i s T V a p p e n r a n c e .
Crim ea, where he had been
confined to his summer home Gorbachev looked weary and
during his brief ouster. He began haggard, unshaven, with deep
the task of forging a new rela­ lines a ro u n d h is eyes and
tionship with the vastly popular mouth. Yeltsin, b y contrast,
Yeltsin and cleaning house In exuded his c u s to m a ry c o n ­
fidence as he rallied the crowd at
the Kremlin.
Emerging from three days of the Russian Parliament.
T h e c ro w d ro a re d w h e n
Isolation — cut off from his allies
a t h o m e a n d a b r o a d — Yeltsin a n n o u n ce d that the
Gorbachev wasted no time In Russian legislature had voted to
j.
Associated Press Writer_________

Bush likely
to support
republics
ByRUTH SINAI
Associated Press Writer_________
W A S H IN G TO N - Th e aborted
coup In the Soviet Union Is likely
to spur the Bush administration
to realign Its policies toward the
S o vie t U n to n . c u rre n t and
former officials say.
The main thrust of the change
Is expected to mirror the altered
balance of power In the Soviet
Union — shifting U.S. support
from Its almost exclusive focus
on President Mikhail Gorbachev
to take Into account the growing
power of the country's constitu­
ent republics.
T h is is a course the a d ­
ministration shunned until very
recently, despite clear signs and
intelligence reports that the
center of power was moving
away from Gorbachev to In­
dependence-m inded republic
leaders like Russian President
Boris Yeltsin.
Now, the administration will
have little choice.
"W hat has happened Is It's a
clear Indication that the center
has lost control," said Rep. Dave
M cCurdy, D-Okla., chairman of
the House Intelligence Commit­
tee.
The coup also might loosen
purse strings in Washington.
S in c e last w in te r, the a d ­
ministration has approved $2.5
billion In guarantees for Soviet
purchases of U.S. farm goods but
only small amounts of direct aid.
President Bush said Wednes­
day in Kennebunkport, Maine,
that he would "look at" the
possibility of direct economic aid
to the Soviet Union In the coup's
aftermath. "W e will certainly, if
things work out in a satisfactory
fashion, get back Into the busi­
ness of furthering the economic
recovery” In the Soviet Union,
he said.
"I think if the reform measures
come — and I think they will
come now — that both technical
a s s is ta n c e

and

f i nanci al

assistance will be forthcoming
because it will tie in the long­
term Interest of our government
to do so." McCurdy said.
But Jack Matlock, who last
weekend returned from a liveyear stint us U.S. ambassador In
Moscow, cautioned that "money
Isn't going to help them until
they reform their economic
system."
Bush might hue a tussle with
Congress over Just how much
support to give the republics.
" I t 's cle a r today that the
Gorbachev era Is over and we
usher in now the Yeltsin era and
the era of the Soviet people,"
M cCurdy said.
T h e president is unlikely to
abandon Gorbachev, a man for
whom he feels (icrsonal admira­
tion and warmth.
A senior administration official
said that while Gorbachev Is
likely weakened by the coup, he
still will retain control over the
Soviet military and foreign |N&gt;ll
cy and will lead the central
government — albeit one with
diminished significance.
"H e will still Ik * the ollicial
address for our dealings with
that co u n try." said the official,
who. like the others quoted,
spoke only on condition of ano­
n ym ity.
A c le a r s ig n ot a m o re
cvcuhuudcd U.S |Milicy came
during the two day coup, when
Bush spoke twice by Iclcplioitc
with Yeltsin. Shortly after the
coup ended, he spoke for the
first time w ith Gorbachev

adopt that tri-eolor banner In
place of Russia's red C o m m u ­
nist-era flag.
" H u r r a h for R u s s ia !" he
shouted, and the crowd chanted
back: "Russia! Russia!" before
beginning n trium phant march
toward the Kremlin, about a
mile nway.
F o rm e r F o re ig n M in is t e r
Eduard A. Shevardnadze, who
resigned In December w ith a
warning that hard-liners were
pushing the co u n try toward
dictatorship, told the crow d the
ruuntry must honor the people
who were killed Tu e sd a y In
clashes with troops near the
Parliament building. Between
four and seven people died.
"It's terrible that young people
have perished — young people
who died In an unequal battle.

Th e y should be buried at the
Krem lin wall. If there Is no room
there, there arc some people
there who can be dug up.” he
said. Th a t was apparently n
barbed reference to the Com m u­
nist luminaries who are burled
there.
Earlier today. Yeltsin told the
Russian Federation's legislature
that police under his control had
arrested four of the eight coup
leaders.
A Russian official reported that
a fifth. Interior Minister Boris
P ugo, com m itted suicide ns
police arrived to arrest him.

N L L L

A______
nmy

n io K

Annoying
Dwtlwmies

Other reports said he was grav­
ely Injured but alive.
A sixth mem ber of the con­
spiracy. Prime Minister Valentin
Pavlov, was In a hospital under
guard, and the other two were
reported to have parliamentary
Im m unity.
Yeltsin told reporters he had
s p o k e n by p h o n e wi t h
Gorbachev and agreed to meet
w ith him Friday to discuss the
formation of a new "government
of national trust."
T h e plotters held some of the
most Important posts in the
Soviet Union.

I W ill

1/
i/
sf

Sanitre bathrooms and mMte
f a n sparMs.

Ctsan kitchens sod Risk# I wt
shin*.
Mska your Hying room a Joy to
com# homo to.
Spotlessly d e a n nightmare
fa —

u R p m ii

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Sanford Herald

Augus t

THURSDAY

Sports

1991

IP«opl«, P$g# 3B
iCIattifkd, Pag# 6B
IComics, Pegs SB

Back in the saddle again

IN B R I E F

H SCB LLA M lO U i
Booster Day at SH8
SANFORD - The Seminole High School
Athletic Booster Day will be Ftiday. Aug. 23.
from 8:30 a.m. to 1p.m.
S em in ole High School athletes w ill be
canvasing the city seeking Athletic Booster Club
memberships. Family memberships are • 10.
For more information contact the Athletic
Department. Seminole High School. 322-4352.
extension 151 or 152.

SOFTBALL
Last day to antor
SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation De­
partment will hold the first Summer Blowout,
double-elimination softball tournament this
weekend at Chase and Plnehurst parks.
E n try Is $110 and tw o ASA-approved
softballs.
Deadline for registration Is today at 5 p.m.
with drawing at City Hall at 6 p.m.
The tournament will be played under ASA
Class " C " rules. Team s will be limited to league
rosters plus tw o pick-ups.
Awards will be presented to the sponsors of
the first, second and third place finishers,
individual awards to first and second place
teams and the tourney Most Valuable Player.
For additional Information call: the Sanford
Recreation Department at 330-5697.

TRIATHLON
Olive Garden finals at Heathrow
HEATHROW - The Olive Garden Sprint
Triathlon has been scheduled for Saturday.
Aug. 31. at the Arvlda community of Heathrow.
The race will start at 7:30 a.m. at the Heathrow
Racquet Club.
Participants will compete in a 1/3-mlle swim
and a 12-mile bike ride before finishing with a
three-mile run.
Awards for the winnersln 14 different age
groups from 14-to-18 to 80and-0ver will be
presented Immediately following the completion
o f the event.
Individual registration for the event is $25
through Saturday. Aug. 24; $30 from Monday,
Aug. 26. to Friday. Aug. 30: and $35 on the day
o f the race. Team entries o f three people, each
competing In a single phase o f the race, are $40.
$45 and $50. respectively. Early entries can be
made In person or by mail to Track Shack. 1322
N. Mills Avenue. Orlando.
Race packets can be picked up at the Track
Shack between Aug. 28-30 or at the race site on
race day.
For more information call 896-1160.

I

Klein takes
over Seminole
hoop program
Herald Sports Editor
SANFORD — Bill Klein Is the new
varsity boys basketball coach at
Seminole High School. . . again.
Four years after handing over the
reigns o f the Tribe hoop program to
Greg Robinson. Klein Is taking them
back. Robinson stepped down this
summer to become the dean of
students at Jackson Heights Middle
School.
"A t the time (four years ago). I felt
that I wanted to get out of coachng
and stay in teaching." said Klein.
"But then I learned that I missed It
(coaching). I was lucky enough this
opportunity came up."
How Klein got the Job was one of
those happy sequences of coinci­
dences. Upon returning from a trip
to visit his mother In Pennsylvania.
Klein asked a friend If anyone had
been found to replace Robinson and
was told that no-one had been hired.
The next day. that same Individual
spoke to then-principal Wayne
Epps.
"W ayn e asked them Is Bill Inter­
ested in the Job? If he Is. have him
come by and sec me.’ " recounted
Klein. He was. so he did.
"It was a combination the fact
that there was a freeze on hiring.
Nobody new could be hired. Wayne
wanted to get someone into the
position and I happened to be
available."
In Klein. Seminole has one of the
most experienced coaches in the
county. He sturted his career as a
football and basketball coach at
F. v e r e t t H i g h S c h o o l i n
Pennsylvania. From 1967 to 1973.
he was the head football coach,
b a s k e tb a ll conch and ath letic
director at the old Sanford Naval
Academy.

During th# 198546 and 1986*67 $$$$on$, Bill Klain coached tha Triba to a 42*15 record.
"From there. I went to Oviedo,
where I was an assistant football
coach for two years and the head
football coach for two more years."
said Klein. "T h en I got the Idea thut
I wanted to be a businessman, so I
got out of teaching and tried to go
Into business."
But that didn't last long and Klein
soon found himself as the football
coach and athletic director at the
Crooms Ninth Grade Center. Four
years later, he moved over to

Seminole, where he assisted head
basketball coach Chris Marlcttc.
In 1985. Klein became Seminole
High School’s head basketball coach
for the first time.
Over the next two seasons. Klein's
teams won 42 games. During the
1985- 86 season, the Semlnoles were
17-9 while winning the Seminole
Athletic Conference championship
with a 9-1 SAC mark. During the
1986- 87 campaign. Seminole went
25-6. sweeping to the SAC title vlth

Valencia schedules fund-raiser
ORLANDO — The Valencia Community Col­
lege Athletic Department Is sponsoring the
second annual "M a ta d o r Scram ble" golf
tournament on Friday. Aug. 30 at the Walt
Disney World Resort’s Palm Course.
Registration for the event, which serves as a
fund-raiser for the VCC Athletic Department,
will be at 1:30 p.m. Play will tec off at 2 p.m.
The entry fee is $65 per person.
For more Information, contact VCC Athletic
Director Don Rutledge at 299-5000. ext. 1408.

SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Baxter sinks SunRays
ORLANDO — Jim Baxter hit a two-run homer
In the eighth Inning to break a 6-6 tic as
Memphis beat Orlando 8-6 Wednesday night.
Orlando took a 2-0 lead in the second on u
two-run homer by Dan Mastcllcr. The SunRays
added four runs in the fifth on a fielder's choice,
four singles and a triple by Mastcllcr.
Memphis closed to 6-4 In the sixth inning and
struck for four more runs in the eighth.
Including Baxter’s home run.
Winning pllclier Jlpolito Pichardo (2-11) went
two innings, giving up one hit. und he struck out
two. Steve Slowed (1-1) got the loss despite
pitchjing little more than one Inning.

Woodson leads Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE — Kerry Woodson allowed
five hits and Just one run over eight Innings to
lead Jacksonville to a 4 -1 victory over Greenville
Wednesday night.
.Jacksonville scored a run in the first inning on
Bret Boone’s RBI single and held the lead until
the seventh inning when the Suns added their
final three runs on RBI singles by Bobby Holley.
Reuben Gonzalez and Ron Pezzonl.

Compiled from wlro and staff reports.

B E S T B E TS ON TV

Atlanta Braves at

a 10-0 conference mark.
Both seasons. Seminole was de­
feated in the district semlBnals.
W hile K lein did resign from
coaching the Seminole varsity team
after the 1986-87 season, he kept
his hand In coaching. Most recently,
he coached the Seminole freshmen
basketball team during the 1989-90
school year.
"O f the (varsity) team coming
back. I coached the ones who will be
l ’See Klein, P age 2B

Signed Lee to
battle Turner
for nose job

GOLF

BASEBALL
□ 7:30 p.m, — W TBS.
Cincinnati Reds. (L)

22,

Picking up the hardware

HwaWptoteftyOwyF. Vo#»l

Sanlord Recreation Department supervisor Jim
Schaefer (center), who oversees the city's men's
softball leagues, handed out the trophies to the
spring?summer league champions Wednesday night.

Representing their teams were, from left, Dan Gracey
and Mike West of Stato Market Restaurant, Florida
Manor's Jerry DiBartolo, Schaefer, Mark Blythe of
H O . Realty and Seminole Mobile Radio's Greg Wells.

MIAMI — Shawn Lee practiced
with the Dolphins for the first time
Wednesday after signing a contract
reportedly worth $315,000, but he'll
have to beat out his good friend for
the starting nose tackle Job.
While Lee was holding out. con­
verted defensive end T.J. Turner
stepped In and excelled. After sit­
ting out the first preseason game
following a two-week contract dis­
pute. the six-year veteran had two
sacks, nine tackles, and a fumble
recovery In the last three games.
"W hen Turner walks In the door
he even looks like a nose tackle."
Dolphins couch Don Shulu said in
praising Turner's overall play.
Lee. at 6-2 und 297 pounds,
started at nose tackle In 10 games
last year, accounting for 34 tackles
und I 1/2 sucks. The four-year
veteran, acquired by Miami In a
trade with the Atlanta Falcons in
Sept. 1990. said he's tired of having
to prove himself.
"Coming Into the league I was a
blue-collar worker, small school,
sixth-round draft pick so I was
never given anything unyway. It's
Just another cliallenge for me like
my whole NFL career has been,”
Lee said.
Turner said that competition was
See Dolphins, Page 2B

Kresge hopes to close amateur career with a win
By ROBBIE BTOCK
Herald Correspondent
ORLAN'DO — Although Rick Clonnlnger Is tindefending champion, all eyes will lie on Cliff
Kresge when play begins Friday in the Orlando
City Am ateur Championship at Dubsdread
Country Club.
It's not that Clonnlnger. who won last year's
event with a 4-under par 212 total at DeBarv
Plantation, won't Ik - able to conquer the layout at
Dubsdread: It's Just that this is the last
tournament of Kresge's spectacular amateur
career which Is lH-tng played at a course that
used to be his front yard.
"I'm going to go out and have a good tim e."
said Kresge. 24. who now plays out ol Longwood's Sabal Point Country Club "W hatever
happens, happens.”
Two years ago. Kresge blistered Dubsdread
and the Held with rounds of 66 and 69 to win the
rain-shortened I9H9 Orlando City Amateur The
tournament was moved to DcBary last year when
tlie Dubsdread clubhouse was torn down and

rebuilt
Hut Kresge. a former All American at the
Universltv ol Central Florida, doesn't think

another title will be easy, though very possible.
"I haven't played well this summer." said
Kresge. who grew uj&gt; across the street Irom
Dubsdread. "I'm Just starting to play well again.
" I learned to play the game at Dubsdread. I
know tin- course like the back of my hand The
only thing that will slop me Is my head."
F'or Kresge. a victory would make up for a
rough summer in which lie struggled constantly.
At the Men's Slate Amateur championship at
la-canto s Black Diamond Country Club in June.
Kresge shot 75-79-72-72 to llnlsh well buck In the
field.
He also failed to qualify for the United States
Amateur and Western Amateur events. In the
latter. Kresge was one of 22 players involved in a
playotl for tlit* last two spots in tlie field. He
.idvailced to the lillli hole before being elim i­
nated He did qualify tor the United States Public
(.inks Championship but lost Ids first-round
match to defending champion Michael Combs on
tile 17lb hole.
"One shot here or there and I'd lx- doing
lietler." said Kresge. "But that's the way goll is "
in order to capture another Orlando City
Amateur title. Kresge said lie must puti well on
Dubsdreud's s m a l l greens Despite ihc course's

lack of distance. Dubsdread challenges golfers
wltli narrow fairways and tight approach shots.
Two holes down the stretch — the IHO-yard
par-3 15lh hole and the 40O yard par-4 16th —
could determine the champion.
"T h e tee shot Is the big key there (at 16)."
explained Kresge. who played the Dubsdread
course repeatedly as a member of tlie Kdgewater
High School golf team. "You can easily double
IlMigev) the hole."
In 1989. Kresge and Lake Brantley graduate
Paul Tynan each came to 16 at 5-under par. but
Tynan's second shot went out of hounds and he
suffered a triple bogey.
Regardless ol Ids performance tills weekend.
Kresge will turn professional and begin playing
on the Central Florida Mini Tour tills tall He's
considering I r vi ng to earn ills PGA Tour Card
later in the year.
And Kresge. who won the UCF Budget Classic
and tiie Vanderbilt Music City Invitational during
Ills collegiate career. Isn’ t looking for instant
fame lie's ready to pay Ins dues
"I'm going to take it step by step." said Kresge
"I just want to 1m- successful."

FO R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P 0 R TS IN Y O U R A R E A , READ T H E S A N FO R D HERALD D A ILY

�SB - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, August 22, tfSt

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Franco Toe
107 Of M 144

Pet.
140
334

Just part of the t&gt;amc ami
that both he am) Lee would gel
plenty o f playing time.
"W e work out together and if
either needs help the other's
there." Turner said. ‘ ’It’s tough.
Hut we both can play other
positions like end. so we ll get lo
p lay."
M ea n w h ile. Urlan S o ch la .
Mluml's nine-year veteran nose
tackle and sometime-defensive
en d . con tin u ed his holdout
Wednesday.
A n d Marc Logan. M iam i's
third-year running back who

Signed Alan

A s s o c ls t s d P r s s s W r it s r___________

C O L S V -IA te V ia - Hamad Sill Wamkan
wanwn't baakatbaii caach and tparta Intar
mattan dkactar.
C A U F O a MtA — Namad Mark Zambach

C H IC A G O — B o J a c k s o n
swung his bat in the batting
cage at Comiskey Park as If he
had something to prove.

DART M O U T H - Named Rab Bruna
ft
cotch,
P K M M U N PI IIIC 8 Hmmi DtvM
f IlSdhSlWIlM smw»n
agaJslMlI men v hsAbdlhAll
a u Ii
tatte^weffw
eesseteett jleein

BWfftS ftItMlIl CMth&lt;

M A W - Pramatad Mkhaai BMInakl ta
#«*lit4wt btfetattc dkactar tar buiinati af­
fair*. Mamed I d Denefrle man'# and
waman # lancing caach; Martin Stana Intartm
ataman*# craw caach; Michael Hughes itw Yi
lightweight craw caach and Oarlanna
Back lard a tiltla n f tparta infer mallan
SACRED H E A R T - Hamad Gary Rah*
ataaclata dlrtctar at attitalks; Ja* McOuigan
waman’t taccar coach; and Llia Ptaban
waman’t aaaittant baahatball caach.
M M PRAHCI4CO — Annaunctd that
Travlt Ska, baakatfeail guard. It trantarring
tram UNLV.
S lIP P B R Y SOCK - Hamad B*4 Ogarauc
l a a t p a n d w ^ M S m m ta k m l a t a t l a w -— ^ m ta n
wt •
g IwHrmllgg gPE BlfWg
TU LA N S - Hamad Jim Stark, aaaaclat*
athtattc dkactar tar Mfeilnlitrattan; Sandy
Barbaur. attaclata athletic diractar tar
camgilanca; Scan Davtnt. aatittanl aftviatlc
diractar tar tludant llta; Tam Petar*.
attaclata alMatM dkactar tar axtamai at­
tain; Tarry Tirrabwww. attaclata altitatk
diractar far davatapmant; and Lanny
U u u iliiM a

tSfe^wam
wkl
- * ——
wwrtFjsiPwr# aua^wrltak
ipWnni ILm
wwwt
TvMnMMV QWFECIOr.

iT M M im
L I 2 5 9 B .
AUTO RACING
1 :D a m. — ESPN. NASCAR Champion
Spark Plug 4M
1:30 p.m. - ESPN, Llttta League World
lW
i tf
BVVIVB*
^aS^^Ee^^P^^W^^Ef^^Pp 4
s p.m. ESPN. Lima l
Serial U S. champtantNg. (L I
7 :D p.m. — 14. St. Laula Cardinal* at Naw
Yark Mata. I D
7 :D p.m. — T S X Atlanta Erava# al
Cincinnati Radi IL )

FOOTBALL
I p.m. - ESPN. NFL aahlbman. Houtton
O ttartvi Lo# Angata#Rami I D

WATER POLO
P A L M B EAC H G AR D EN * - Scertt
Wadnatday attar tfpw tacand round *1 Itw
PGA Junior Champtanthlp* piayad at Itw
par TIPGANattanal Golt Club Court*:
Chip Spiron. Gold!boro N C.
David Daw ley. Chandd r. Okie
Scott Jotv.ion. Konntwtck. Wath
JoehuaCupp. Roma, N Y .
Ju»lln Root, Conway. XC.
Roger Pineda. Alharten, Calif.
O. La feelie. Mount Plaaaant. Mich.
M. Wilton. Monomonoo P alli Wli.
Chrlt Riding. Wetl Jordan. Utah
Paul Hinkle. Cotta Meta. CalIt
Jan Manor, Hilo. Hawaii
B ra d ^ lH td ^ Pdatantvlllr. N Y ,
Cregg Watner, Wetlfieid. N J
Jim Duka. Potomac. Md.
OUtt Otvddw
Kellee Booth. Cota do Cota. Calif.
Julia Brand. Alder Creek. N Y.
Athll Price. Morrlttawn. Term
Becky Stahl. Keokuk. Iowa
Crtatta Karr. Miami
Skyll Yamada. Sandy. Utah
Jo Jo Reborfton. Rotwell. N M.
Jeong Min Park. Alameda. Caiit.
Leanne Wang. Lo# Angtlet
J. Erdmann. Llttla Chute. Wit.
Nokia Davit. New Or dam. La.
Jody Niemann. Rigby. Idaho

7171-14*
7*73— 147
71 77-144
7471-14*
71 7#— I4f
74 7 4 -ID
73 7*— til
7477-ID
74 74— ID
7474-ID
74 74-1*4
7474-ID
7441— ID
7174-114
41 77— ID
4474— ID
7*74-14*
K 7 I -I 5 I
77 7 4 -ID
7477-ID
7474-111
1474-14:
74 7 4 -ID
7 4 H -ID
74 7 4 -ID
7144— ID
II 7 4 -ID
D 7 4 -ID
7474-ID
1474— ID
T i l l — ID

G R E Y H O U N D PARK

LIVE RACING ACTION
Greyhounds
Evsning - 7:45 pm

Thoroughbreds from Calder
t - 12:30 pm
i B u b , r i w w i p i • (407)4*44910

l : S p m . — SUN. Wwtd Cltamptanthlp

BASEBALL
7 p.m. - WMJK-AM 11134). FSL. Fort
Laudardata Yankaat al Oacaala Attraa
7:09 p.m. - WHOOAM |«D). Sautham
Laagua. Mamphlt CNcfct at Orlande SunRay#
MISCELLANEOUS
4 :10p.m. - WWNZ-AM (74#). SporttTaik

LpflBl N o tic f
IN TN I CIRCUIT COURT
OF TN I ItGNTtlNTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOB
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE MO. f 1-1444CA-14K
C A S FA M ILY C R ED IT. INC.
n/k/aC A S S O V R A N C R iO IT,
CORF.
Flalntlff.
CAROLE L KEN N ED Y. J R.
E T T E R .T R U S T
M ETR OPOLITAN
MORTGAGE CO
N O TICE OF ACTION
Ta OafonEant, CA R O LE L
K EN N ED Y tafeo#* last known
rttManct#:
ID Falti Tarraca.
Maitland. FLD7S1
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D that an
action to toractaaa a mortgage
on the tallowing property In
Seminole County, Florida
L O T 14. N O R T H W O O D
H E IG H TS . ACCORDING TO
THE PLA T TH ER EO F AS RE
CORDED IN P L A T BOOK 14.
PAGE M. PUBLIC RECORDS
OF S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA
hat boon Iliad again*! you by
CAS Sovran Credit. Carp ,
Plaintiff and you are ragutrod to
**rv« a copy at your written
datantai II any. ta it on ERIC
G R U M A N . E S Q U IR E . 1404
W**l Kennedy Boulevard.
Tampa. Florida 3140*. on or
before ttw loth day ol Sap
tambar. mi. and III* ttw origi
not with the Clark at Ihit Court
aittwr before tarvico an Plain
lift-* attorney or Immediately
Itwroattar, oltwrwlM a default

n u a iw f o g
rt^^Wv W lN rl

to a 17«§ finish and ttw Saminois
Athletic Conference ehamplonsM p during lha i M B t l season,
when we attend some clinics
later In the year."
This year. Seminole play in
3A-Dlstrlct S along with Flagler
Palm Coast, Daytona Beach*
S c a b r e e a e . L e e a b u r g . N ew
Sm yrna Beach. Edgewater and
Jones.

Sarasota the next stop
on the Iona road back
for White sox’ Jackson

c a u is a
— Hamad Mark Zbmbedt
man'» craw caach
C A TH O U C U M IV IR S iTY D AMERICA Hamad Tam CalamwH. Interim athtattc

4 p.m. — USA, World Wf let at Golf, tint
round, (L ). *1*0*1 II pm.

Dolphins-------ended his holdout Tuesday, satu
he's excited about the chance lo
stail at halfback, with Sarnmle
Smith sidelined with a knee
Injury.
If I come out and run for 100
yards or 200 yards the first
couple o f games. It's definitely
something they'll have lo con­
sider.” Logon said. " I guess I
timed ll right."
L o g o n a n d L ee r e c e iv e d
two-week exemptions, which
means they don't count ugulnst
the 60-man roster until Shula
decides lo activate either for
Saturday's game against the
New Orleans Saints.

B U L LS -

SOLF

Koltay Rlchardton. Macon. Ga
Llta Pontkt. Bath dtwm. Pa.

C o n t in u e d fr o m I B

i

w

It*

tia

W
a

is

■i i

At every pitch. Jackson took a
mammoth swing. Some balls
cracked off his bat and flew to
the outfield wall. He missed
others, overdoing the follow*
through and sometime* softly
muttering a curse Into the dirt.

" H e 's from this area and
people around here are pretty
excited about having Bo back."
said Joe Scrivner. the Barons’
g e p e ra l m a n a ge r. “ I'm not
greedy. I'm Just thankful to have
him here for however long he'll
be here."
Getting there, and perhaps
moving up to help the Sox In the
team's pennant race against the
American League West-leading
M in n e so ta T w in s , is w h at
Jackson Is focusing on these
days.

With Jackson poised to start'
'If I could be going full speed.
hit com eback In the m inor
ties this weekend, he obvl- I'd be playing here." Jackson
y had hitting on his mind ■aid as he stood in Comiskey
Park. "But you've got to walk
before the Chicago White Sox*
before
you run. and I'm Just at
Detroit Tigers game Wednesday
the walking stage right n ow ."
night. Bo is scheduled to be the
designated hitter for the White
S ch u cler w as tight-lipped
Sox' Sarasota farm c lu b In a b o u t an y p la n s to b rin g
Florida State League gam es Sat­ Jackson up to the majors. He is
urday and Sunday.
currently on the W h it Sox'

a

Surrounded by reporters and
photographers after battin g
practice. Jackson said: "I think
the media la making more hype
out of this than I am. I'm Just
going out there to play ball. Once
I get there, it won't be Bo
Jackson p lay in g a b a se b all
game. It'll Just be a baseball
game."

Jackson. 28. said he's about
50 percent recovered from a
devastating hip injury he Buf­
fered Jan. 13 when he was
playing football for the Loa
Angeles Raiders. No longer the
self-confident two-sport star.
Jackson Is somewhat like a
rookie trying to prove his talents
to management.
"H e's got lo go down there and
prove he can do these things.”
White Sox general manager Ron
Schucler said. "I'm not going to
activate him Just because he's
Bo Jackson. If he can't help the
ballclub. he's not going to be on
the roster."
If all goes well this wrekchd.
Jackson will move up on Mon­
day to the Class A A Birmingham
Barons, a club that just might
feel like home.

Legal Notices
will b* onfarad again#! you tor
lha rail*! demanded in tha
Complaint ar Petition.
DATED Augutll Iftt.
(Court Soal)
MAR YANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE COURT
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clark
PubIKh: Augutt X t l 11. » .
mi
D EI M

IN T N I CIRCUIT COUNT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
FMtNM*arf1 344CP
IN RE; ESTATE OF
JOHN I . FOLK.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* admlnlitratlon ol tha
otiafo ol John E. Polk, do
coated. Fit* Number ft *04CP.
I* ponding In Nw Circuit Court
tar Samtoot* County. Florida.
Probata Civilian, ttw addrot# of
which it Clark •&lt; ttw Circuit
Court, Probata Divltion. P O
Drawer C. Sanford. Forido
13771 Th* name* and addrattat
of ttw partonal raprotontatty*
and tha p # rt* n * l ra p ro
tentative'* attorney ar# tat
All Inlarattad partant ar*
required to tit* with IN* court.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE' ID oil claim*
agaimt th# atlata and (1) any
oblaclion by an Inlarattad
parton on whom Ihit notice It
tarvod that challenge* ttw valid

60-day disabled list.
Schueler said It's too early to
know whether the White Sox
made a good deal in acquiring
Jackson after the Royals re­
leased him. ‘i n a week or two,
that question will answer Itself,"
he said.
The Royals' management isn't
having any second thoughts.
"W e did what w as In the best
In terests of the b a ll c l u b . "
Kansas City general manager
Herk Robinson said. "W e never
said he wouldn’t play this year
or he couldn't play this year. It
w as the recommendation of our
people that he shouldn't play
this year."
In Sarasota, meanwhile, team
officials are expecting 6.000
people to attend Saturday's
game at the 7.500-seat Ed Smith
Stadium. Weekend crowds there
normally average 1.300.
"W e're excited." said Sarasota
general manager John Browne.
"W e're hoping he can do some
things, not only for us but for the
White Sox. W e’re in the middle
of a battle to win our division,
and it would be great to ice him
do well."

Legal Notice! j Legal Notlcst
Ity *4 th* wilt, the quelIfkatlent
at the partanai ropenon tally*.
v#«x&gt;*, ar (urltdktlan a ttw
cewrt
A LL CLAIMS ANO OBJ 1C
TIONS N O T SO F IL E D WILL
B§ FOREVER BARRIO.
Publication o4 M# Notice hat
begun an Augutt IX iftt.
Partanai Rapratantallvo:
DOROTHY J. POLK
&gt;0#Laurel Drlva
Sentord. Florid*33773
Attorney tar Partanai
Raprmntetlvo:
GERALOS. RUTBERG. Etq
M U S. Highway 17 f l
P O. San 110*77
r i m taarry. Florida 971# 0*77
Telephone (497) 434 4774
PufeHlh: Augutt IJ, 9 . iff I
OKI 147
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT,
IN ANO FOB
SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASS M X ft- I114CA 140
U N I T E D C O M P A N IE S Fl
NANCIAL CORPORATION.
Plaintiff.
vt
LEONARO WILLIAMS. JOHN
O O E . unknawn tpout* ol
K A T R IN A L . W IL L IA M S .
B A R N E TT RECOVERY COR
PORATKM . a Florida corpora
lion. SUN SANK. NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION. BERNARD T.
L E E . d/fe/a S E R N IE L E E
TRIO, and any unknown tw in
dovltoo*. grant***, creditor*,
and other unknown partant or
unknown tpouttt claiming by.
through, and undtr any at lha

TO

NOTICS OF ACTION
JO H N D O E. unknown

t p e u io of K A T R I N A L WILLIAMS, and any unknown
ta n and any
t r unknawn
by, through.
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN.
YOU ARE HER EB Y NOT!
F IE 0 that an action to fortelot*
Mirtgigt covering lha toitawing
real and partanai pr^orty in
SamInote County. Florida, ta

wit:

Let *. Block C. WASHINGTON
OAKS SECTION TWO. accord
ing to the ptal thereof, at
record* In Plat Soak 14. Pag**
•* and |7, Public Record* #f
Samlnota County, Florid*,
ha* bean Iliad agaimt you and
you art required to tervo a copy
a your written datantai If any.
ta If an Robert H Hatch. Jr..
111! E. RabInton Street. Or
landa. Florida 0441. and file Itw
original with tha Clark of Itw
tbevt tty tad Court on or batar*
th* fih day a September, m i.
otharwlaa a Judgment may b*
entered again*! you tor th*
In Pw Com
WITNESS my hand and tool
of laid Court an the Sth day of
Augutt, 1441.
IC O U R TS IA L )
MARYANNS MORSE
C lE R K O F T H E
CIRCUIT COURT
l y : Ruth King
OoputyCtarh
Publith Augutt A IX 73. If.
Iftt
01144

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, August 22, 1901

v

People

■

-• V\rt*■-J*-

IN B R I E F
U m n O C f ill

4-v

■

:
/,■. .‘'-hav h fe j? r &amp; 2 r : . ~ j g p

|

&lt;1
&lt;\

Lai’s cook

to m##t

The next meeting of ‘T o d a y ’s Democrats" will be held
Wednesday. September 4. 7:30 p.m. st the Seminole County
Central Branch Llbnury. 2 15 N. Oxford Rd.. Cametbeny.
C an 683-3112 for more information.

conjunction with tho

B «biiihoppeis hsvkig fun
The Society of Barb erahoppera. Orlando Chapter, says It’s
members are haring fun.
Why? Brreiiar they have a male chorus o f 80 voices and
eight registered quartets that sing the greatest music this side
o f heaven, Barbershop Harmony.
The group la hosting a guest night. August 37. and all men
who like to sing are Invited to Melody Manor. S13 Montana St.,
Orisndo.at8p.m .
Bring along your wife or girt friend and another singer If you
wish. Refreshments win be served at this fun-filled event.
Call Ken Bragg at 894-4966 for more information.

Em I-Wm i Khrafe to gattwr
East-West Sanford KiwsntsClub meets Thursday at 8 p.m. at
Friendship Lodge. Seventh and Locust.

City sponsors Mrobies
The Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics clssarsst
the Downtown Youth Center, lower level of city hall. 300 North
Park Ave. C lasses are held Monday. Wednesday. Friday and
Saturday mornings from 9 to 10 and on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings from 5:30 to 0:30. Cost Is 82 per class. Exercise mats
will be furnished. For more Information call 330-5897. All
non-Sanford'residents will be required to pay an annual 610
fee.

Swsst AdtHnss to rshtsrst
Sound of Sunshine Sweet Adelines women’s barbershop
singing group rehearses every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Prairie
Lake Baptist Church. 415 Ridge Road. Fern Park.

Narcotics Anonymous to moot
Narcotics Anonymous meets Friday at 11 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill, 317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Old cars put In IlmsUght

opponunity to pucomp scinwy
Involved In their chfkTs proschool experience while In­
corporating the information
learned In the parenting
Di
onwldN
vcl—s t ar Tht
arw p
evoonm
xbpuov-h®
"™V
*'up*
an outstanding curriculum and
la designed to develop each
child's creative potential In
addition to providing him or
Information, call 8CC at 3231450. ext 575 or 321-4882
Monday throufpi Friday 830
am . to 4:30 p.m.

The Celery City Cruisers, an antique and classic automobile
club In Seminole County, sponsors a display of old c a n each
Saturday from 7-10 p.m. in the Wal-Mart parking lot behind
Wendy’a on U.S. Highway 17-92. Sanford. Non-mcm ben are
welcome to bring their old c a n or browse. For more
Information, call Herbert Partridge at 322-3887.

Nar-Anon to offar halp
Nar-Anon, a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, meets at 8 p.m. Wednesdays and Saturdays at West
Lake Hospital. State Road 434. Longwood. and on Fridays, at 8
p.m.. at Grove Counseling Center. Third Street and Oak
Avenue. Sanford. For more information, call 869-8364.

Mom’s new marriage is
split by daughter’s spite
(IM T O r t NOTIi ASSy I* wi I twwwMfc

Publicity procedure
The Sanford Herald welcomes organisational and personal
news. All Items submitted for publication to the People section
must Include the name of a contact person and daytime phone
number.
The following suggestions are recommended to expedite
publication:
1. Type releases double-spaced in upper and lower cose, and
write In narrative style (third person).
2. Do not abbreviate.
3. Keep releases simple, but Include necessary details—club or
person name, date and time of event (if applicable), place, cost (If
any any), etc.
4. Submit organisational releases no later than two weekdays
following the event.
5. Submit advance notices at least one week prior to the
preferred publication date, and requests for photographer at
least one week prior to the event.

' .. ■

__ ""

vacation. Following i« a tatoctlon at oomo at
hor favor Itwoaot lottoc*. J

a d v ic b

DBAS ABBTi Judy and I have
been married for one month, and
I have already filed for divorce.
This is the second marriage for
both of us.
T h e p r o b l e m Is J u d y 's
16-year-old daughter, Lynne.
Lynne told her mother that If she
stayed married to me. she'd go
live w ith h er father. J u d y
doesn't want Lynne to live with
her father because he drinks.
Also. Lynne threatened to get
pregnant Just for spile.
Judy Insists that she loves me.
She says she doesn't want a
divorce and the solution would
be for me to move out and get a
separate apartment near here for
two years until Lynne is 18.
Abby. I love Judy more than
any woman I've ever known, but

T7

_______________ ;_____ ■

&amp;
ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

M O V If I A N D

DRIVE

ANUC M m s m

ROMM HOOD

ILL
g
IFjLOOKS
j
COULD KILL

JACK RUNNINGER. ROME.
OA.
what kind o f marriage would we
have living In separate apart­
ments?
Please tell me what to do.

UNHAPPY IN Vm onflA
DBAS UNHAPPY: Move out.

(Problems? Write to Door Abby.
For • personal, unpublished
reply, send e sell-addressed,
stamped envelope to
P.0.
Calll.

Bui as long os you love Judy,
don't push for a divorce until
you arc positive (hat you really
want one. Lynne Is blackmailing
her m o th er, w h o c a n 't be
blamed for doing what she
thinks is best for her daughter.
Both (he daughter and mother
need counseling. I recommend
II.

DEAR ABBY: My husband
and I have been Invited to a
wedding. My husband Is unable
to attend, so I am luklng my
16-year-old cousin. She docs not
know the bride.
At the lust four weddings this
cousin attended, she caught the
bride’s bouquet. Maybe I should
tell you that she Is a very large
and athletic girl who ts fust on
her feel.
I feel that because she Is only
16 and tius ulreudy caught four
bouquets, she should not make
an all-out effort to rutch this one.
Don't you think she should
give the bride’s friends and
relatives u chance to catch the
bouquet?
NO BOUQUBTB FOB NORA
DEAR NO BOUgUBTB: If you
want to risk telling a ‘‘ large,
uthlellc girl who's fast on her
feel" what to do. gouheud.

*****"*

DEAR ABBY: I don't un­
derstand what you mean when
you tell girls: "Save yourself for
I he man you marry.
How does a girl know WHICH
man shr's going to marry? I
have gone with five different
guys at five different times, und I
i hough 1 I was going to marry all
of them, but I'm still single.
Will you please explain what
you mean?

For 24-hour TV listings, ses LEISURE magazine ol Friday August 16.

yourself for tlu- inau vnu marry

k O w dl ftMl Es-r frl#ISjMdrpiaaaa jl%4 MyUTOfl

— not the man you may marry.
DEAR ABBY: In regard to
your recent letter from the bride
who found that their honeymoon
suite contained no bed. I heard
o f another bride who had the
same experience. When asked
what her reel Ion was, she re­
plied. "I was floored I"

S T IL L S IN G LE
D EAR S IN G LE : I mean, save

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ASSOCIATION (V OKJAOIA. I I D O U M d
f c ^ OA O t ^ f O ^ I O N ^ IT A T l J

MACHO N O N !' SWAffTOT H I I W M M M M
SOUTHS AST INVEITCR1 L T O .T S
P « i w M ; ANALTSTTN SAN K M
BANKRUPTCY COURT F O R TN fJ
PINNLYLVAMIA. CASS I

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m. ANO M, FURLIC RECORDS
OP IIM IR O L B COUNTY.

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Car eer oNonj JO tm C A EbB R , U P iti I»| 'tad ta Trustee;
LAW S! N CI H. BIRRYj IT S SHAN I I BERRY: DEAN GROVE.
MARY PRAM Cll GROVE: C ITY COWIUMIR 91R V K II OP
FLORIDA- INC , SUMNS SHILL T ONIS IQ— IHOM S OSNNINS
ASSOCIATION, IN t.a P lw M C w im M m M M R K M I

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LO T S I . O L O C R I * ,
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PARR SECTION ONE, AC
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CONTAINING 1144

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TO : 7N 0S I AB O VI-H AM ID OB PENDANT* ANO T O ALL
FA N TIIS ClAIM INO IN T IR IS T BY. THNOUOH. UNOSR ON
AGAINST THS HAMID DEPENDANT!: A M ) TO ALL F A N TIIS
HAVINO ON CLAIM MO TO HAV I ANY N M N T, T I T L I ON
IN T IR IS T IN THS PROFCRTY D IS C N IN D B S LOW.
Am Imtaonl D*m M Petition. togstaer wMh IN DSCNraNM W
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PARCEL NO. IBS

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PAMCEL NO. ISO

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M B BOB LANS ROAD*PHAM IS
LANS TO

THE NORTH SO.DO FE E T OF TH E RO OT! TO .O B F E E T
OF THE WEST 170.94 FEET OP TH E M E T 4 1 7 .BO
FEET OP THE MEET SOBB.00 F E E T OP TE E
1/4 OP THE NORTHWEST 1/4 OP SECTIO N I I ,
SHIP 31 SOUTH. H U M ! 30 EAST, S D H ROLE 0H m i ,
FLORIDA,

MAST°aS U « J
CLERK OP T N I COUNT
BY Diana R. Brummatt
Oapul; Chi b
WBIHk: Ausaat I, A IL « . M l
O B IM

at Mto Court an Mia 4M day at
Aepuot, Wfl.
(Caurt Baal)
MARYANNE M O R U
CLERKOF T N I
CIRCUIT COURT
By: CaaaRa V. Ibora
Deputy Ctorb

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a r s K r t . - .
at Mto Caurt aa Mia SHh M y at
AuauM.tWI.
(SEAL)
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CAOBNOift'M PCA'tSO
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N ITY ASSOCIATION, IN C.

Zbnmar A AaaedatoA Me., d/b/a
CaaPRnabtocb A Aweclabw. PlatottR
VA

Huttoy Van Syl lama. In c.l
Security Tea Warrant

COMMENCE A T THE ROUTMMEST
DU CAISK O ABOVE; M M THENCE R .B S* lB &gt; B 3 aS.
ALONG THE NORTHERLY RIGHT OP NAY L IN E OP M B
BOO LAKE BOAS A DISTANCE OP 3 7 .0 0 P IE T T O T N I
POINT OF BBOSHNINOf T — WE H . 9 9 * 9 9 'B l aS . A
DIBTANCE OF 3 0 .00 F E E T/ 1HB E I 0 .0 0* 0 4 * 0 0 " H . A
DISTANCE OF 3 0 .0 0 F E E T ; TW B C S S . •••••'B3aH . A
SI STANCE OP 30.00 F E E T ; THENCE S .O O * 0 4 'O S al . A
I I T ARCS OF 3 0 .00 F E E T TO TH S P O IN T OP BBOXMH IM .
CONTAIN IN S 1013 SQUARE F E E T NONE ON U S E .
PARCEL HQ., I p i . , , , . M B BOB LARS NOAS-PNASS I I
AimlHti' O lS r L A N E T O TU EK A H ILLA ROAD
•"
..
PEE SIMPLE
THE NORTH 17.00 F E E T OP TH E SOUTH 7 0 .0 0 PEST
OP TH S WEBTcS/Sr QP TH E OOUTMEAOT 1/4 OP TE E
NORTHEAST 1/4 OP EflCTXON 3 3 . TONNSN1P 31
EOUTN, RAROR 30 EA ST. SB U N D LE COUNTY, FLO R I­
DA.
CONTAININO 0.100 ACRES HORS ON LESS,
to g a tha r WISH
PARCEL NO. 704
BM&gt; BOO LAEB ROAD-PHASE IS
AUttBB O U R LAME TO TU EK AH ILLA ROAD
THE NORTH B .0 0 PEST o r THE SOUTH 7 0 .0 0 F E E T OP
1/1 OP TH E SOUTHEAST 1/4 OP THE
1/4 OP SECTION 3 0 , TOWNSHIP 31
30 EAST, 1B IIH O LE COUNTY, P L O N IOA,
t c f t har w it h
A T THS HONWMEHT OONMBR OP TH E PARCEL
AROVB; RIM THSRCS N .B 9 * 9 9 '9 3 aS .
ALOHO TH E NORTH U M E OP S A ID PARCEL, A D IS ­
TANCE OP 330.01 T E S T TO A P O IN T OP BHOIMMINO)
THENCE M .00*04*00”M. A DIBTANCE OP 1 0 .0 B P EST;
THENCE M .00*00*03*H. A DISTANCE OP S O .00 P EST;
THENCE S.0O *04*0i*B . A DISTANCE OP 1 B .0 0 P E R ;
THENCE S .B 9 * a il B3aN . A DISTANCE OP SB.BO PEST
TO TH E POINT OP BBB1BHIBO.
CONTAINING 3SS0 SQUARE PEST NONE OR U S E .
PARCEL NO. 107
BED M M LAKE ROAD-PHASE I I
AUTUMN O U R LAMB TO TUS3LMULLA ROAD
PER SIMPLE
TH E NORTH 17.00 F E E T OP TH E SOUTH 7 0 .0 0 PEST
O f TH E EAST 3/3 OP TH E SOUTHEAST 3/4 OP TH E
NORTHEAST 1/4 OP SECTION 3 3 , tO N N M U P 31
SOUTH, RANGE 10 EA ST, SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLO R I­
DA.
CONTAINING O .S S t ACRES ROSE OR L E M .
PARCEL NO. 134
RSO BUB LAKE ROAD-PHASE 11
AUTUMN G U M LAMB TO TUSEAM1LLA ROAD
PEE SIMPLE
COMMENCE A T THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OP TH E NORTHEAST 1/4 OP SECTION 33, TONMSKIP 31 EOUTN,
RANGE 10 EAST, SB U N O LS COUNTY, FLOR ID A; M M
THENCE N .00*43*43"N. ALONG TH E BAST L IN E OP
M I D NORTHEAST 1/4 A DISTANCE OP 3 3 .0 0 P EB T;
THBNCE S . M * 0 1 'S l aW. PARALLEL WITH TH E SOUTH­
ERLY L IE S OP M I D NORTHEAST 1/4 A DISTANCE OP
7 9 .0 0 FEET TO THE INTERSECTION OF THE E X IS TIN G
NORTHERLY RIGHT OF WAY L IN E OF RED RUG LAKE
ROAD WITH THE E X IS TIN G WESTERLY R IGH T OF HAY
LIN E OF 0000 ROAD AND A POIN T OP BEGINNING;
THENCE CONTINUE S.S «*0 1 * S 3 ” H . ALONG TH S E X IS T ­
ING NORTHERLY RIGHT OP HAY L IN E OP RM&gt; RUG
LAKE ROAD A DISTANCE OP 9 4 9.4 0 PEST TO THS
EASTERLY LIN S OP TH E NEST 3 0 .0 0 PEST OP TH E
EAST 1/3 OF THS SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF TH E NORTHEAST
1 / 4 ; THENCE N .00*0«*41aN. ALONG M I D EAST U M E
A DISTANCE OF 37.00 F E E T; THENCE N . I S a01*03aE .
A DISTANCE OF 10.40 F E E T; THENCE N .4 4 a01*93aB.
A DISTANCE OF 3S.3S F E E T; THENCE N .4 S a01*S3aB.
A DISTANCE OF 4 0 .0 0 F E E T; THENCE S .4 9 aSE*07aE .
A DISTANCE OF 34.30 F E E T; THENCE N . S t a01*S3aB .
A DISTANCE OF 4 3 4 .SO FEET TO TH S E X IS TIN G
WESTERLY RIGHT OF WAY LIWE OF DOOO ROAD;
THENCE S.0 Q *4 3 '4 3 * E. A DISTANCE OP 3 7 .0 0 PEBT
TO TH E POINT OP BEGINNING.
CONTAINING 0.917 ACRES MORE OR LESS.
PARCEL NO. 134
RSO RUG LAKE ROAD-PHASE I I
AUTUMN GLEN LANE TO TUBKAMILLA ROAD
FEE SIMPLE
THE NORTH 37.00 FEET OF TH E SOUTH 4 0 .0 0 FRET
OF TH E NEST 140.00 FEET OF TH E SOUTH 7 1 0 .0 0
FEET OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF TH E NORTHWEST 1/4
OF SECTION 34, TOWNSHIP 31 SOUTH, RADGE 30
EAST. SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
CONTAINING 9113 SQUARE PBET MORE OR LESS,
to g e th e r w it h
PARCEL NO. 134A
RED BUG LAKE ROAD-PHASE I I
AUTUMN GLEN LANE TO TUSKAWILLA M A D
PEE SIMPLE
COMMENCE A T THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OP TH E NORTH­
WEST 1/4 OP SECTION 34, TOWNSHIP 31 SOUTH.
RANGE 30 EAST OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA; RUN
THENCE N99*93, 1 9 "E ALONG TH E SOUTH L IN E OF
SAID NORTHWEST 1/4 A DISTANCE OF 1. 111. 43
F E E T ; THENCE NOO*17I 4 ) " E A DISTANCE OF 3 3 .00
FE E T TO THE E X IS TIN G NORTHERLY RIGHT-OF-W AY
L IN E OF RED BUG LAKE ROAD AND A P O IN T OP
BEGINNING;
THENCE CONTINUE NOO*17*43aX A
DISTANCE OF 37 .00 F E E T ; THENCE N&gt;9*93*39aE A
DISTANCE OF 41.13 F E E T TO TH E EAST L IN E OF THE
SOUTHWEST 1/4 OF TH E NORTHWEST 1/4 OF SECTION
3 4 ; THENCK 991*14»10"R ALONG SAID EASTERLY
LIM E A DISTANCE OF 3 7 .0 0 F E E T TO TH E E X IS TIN G

KWAN YUEN and MU■ ION
CM ANVUIN,
T O M V S W bbM URKM CNANVUIN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
F IBB Mat an actton to lorn Itot
a Claim at Lton an Me toltoatng
t o i

PLAT THBRBOP
•B, PUBLIC
M l M M YHBACB BBB*BS*S4*B
LIMA OP LO T 1 A OXBIANCt DP 1 T4 .B B
«0 A
PO IN T OP CUAYATUBB OP A CUAYB COHCAVB BOUT B W|BT§ALY H U I M A BBOXOB O P IO k B B P B W jT A M K S
b o u i h b a b t e a l y a l o a s b a x o OBAVB a DXBTMSCB o p
3B .3B 1 W
THROUGH A
CMFIHAL AMBLE OP
40*10*11* TO A PO IN T OP T A M A K V ON T N I EAST
L IN E OP t a t - X t YHM W E 040*07*40 "H ALONG BAXO
EAST U S E A DISTANCE OP 1 4 .GO P E A T; 1NMWE
N44*00*49*H A DXPCANCt OP 4 B .S3 V B B tl THENCE
fl40*OS*3t*H A DISTANCE OP 17G.3B FEET TO THE
WEST U M E OP LOT I f TA M M S N04*04*13a8 A
DISTANCE OP 10.00 PEBT T O TAB P O IN T OP AAB1NN1N0.
CONTAINING 3314 SQUARE P EST NONE OA U N ,
PARCEL NO. 140
AM
XX
AUTUMN G U N LANS TO

H t n I i art affected By Nm
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M any; la ) A
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pVTITIAPIV*
€0090 warrant reversal ar
nwdtfkatton at the Cano n!
OM w; |0 A MoMmaM to oMkh
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Ian4t ra g u lrt reversal at
medlfkattan at Mw Canaan!
Ordw: If ) A statement 0 Bm

FflWI lf¥fSl Vf ■fllliPIfTi

stettogpradleaty taa action
pCtliiMlf1
la Ma
la lalw &lt;
II a petition la tiled. Ma
* * £ £ M*
may fea
mMAan

THE SOUTH 1 7 .0 0 F I S T Op TH S BOHYM 0 0 .0 0
OP TH S BAST 1/3 OP TH S BAST 1/4 OP 1
H IS T 1/4 OP TAB SOUTHEAST 1/4 OP EOCTXOM I I ,
TONHMUP 31 BOUTN, BANOS 14 B A S T, -----------------CONTAIN1N0 3S13 SQUARE F E E T
W ith
PARCEL NO. 74S
A W AO
T N I WEST 1 0 .0 0 TE S T OP TA B
OP TH E SONIA 3 0 0.0 0
1/4 OP
1/4 OP PACTIO N S B ,
- j0 — —
DA.
CONTAININO 1900 SQUAB! F E E T HONS OA U S B ,
t o g e t h e r w ith
PARCEL NO. 949
BED BUB LAEB AOAD-PHASE 11
AUTUMN B U N U M E TO TtM K A M lLU l ROAD
P tS SIMPLE
THS SOUTH 1 0 4.0 0 TE S T OP TH E NORTH 9 0 4 .0 0 P U T
OP TH E EAST 1/1 OP TA B BAST 1/4 OP TAB BOATS
NEST 1/4 OP TH E SOUTHEAST 1/4 OP E S C n O A 33,
TOWNSHIP 31 SOUTH, RANGE 30 B A S T, B M U B O U
COUNTY, FLORIDA ( I N I T N I EAST 3B.OO FEET
TH ER EO F).
CONTAININO 0.B 9B ACRES NONE ON L E E S .
&gt; BUG LAKE HOAD-PAASS XX
PARCEL NO. 799
LANS TO TUBRAN ILLA ROAD
1BA SYADCTI0H IA S M U ST
A T TH E SOUTHEAST COSHER OP TR ACT "■ * ,
_ X ACCOAOIAB TO IA S PLAT
IN P U S BOON 3 1 , PABBB 9 0 -9 3
OF TWO PUBLIC RACCOON OP B M U N O U COUNTY,
PL0B1DA; M M TW H C B fl.SB*BB*B3aH . ALONG H U
SOUTH LIMB OP TRACT aBa A DISTAN CE OP 340.44
FE E T TO TH E POIN T OP BEG IN N IN G ; THENCE CONTIN­
UE S .9 9 * 9 9 'S3*W. A D ISTAN CE OP 1 0 0.0 0 P E S T;
THBNCE N .3 0 * 9 3 * llaB . A DISTAN CE OP 3 B .1 4 PEEP;
THENCE N .4 0* S S *l3 aB . A DISTAN CE OP T O .M PEEP;
THENCE B .31*01*47*B . A DISTAN CE OP 3 9 .1 4 PEST
TO TH E P O IN T OF B S0UM 1H 0.
CONTAININO 3139 SQUARE F IS T HONE OA L E U .
PARCEL NO. B B I
ROD RUB LARS M AD -P H ASE I I
AUTISM Q U A U A B TO TIM K A N ILLA BOAS
OP LO T 4
A T THE
a r m a c c o r d in g t o
W1LLA SPRINGS
IB P LA T BOON 3B,
THE P U T THBRBOP
PAGE 99 OP H U PUBLIC
op bb u bo ls
N.S9*91*34*B.
COUNTY. FLORIDA; M M
ALONG H U RODIN U N B OP LO T 4 A DIBTANCE OP
1 4 0.4 0 P U T TO H U P O IN T OP B U X W 1 M ; THBNCE
N .3 7* 0 7 * 0 «aB . A D ISTANCE OP 1 1 0 .0 1 PEST TO THE
EASTERLY L IN E OP S A ID LO T 4 , S A ID P O IN T ALSO
LYIN G ON A CURVE CONCAVE N O N H UASTERLY; THENCE
m ON A TANGENT B IA SIN G OP S . 14*34* 13*0. AIM
SOUTHERLY ALONG S A ID EASTERLY LIM E AMO AN ARC
OP SAID CURVE HAVING A RADIUS OP 7 0 .0 0 PEBT.
A DISTANCE OP 1 4.01 P EB T, THAOUON A CENTRAL
ANGLE OP 37*40*13a ; THENCE N. 17*07'0 4 * H . A
DISTANCE OP 4 7 .70 PBET TO H U SOUTH U H B OP
LO T 4 ; TMBMCR S.SB*S1*34*M . A 01 STANCE OP
3 9 .1 1 PEBT TO H U P O IN T OP RSO INN I NO.
CONTAINING 1731 SQUARE P U T NONE OA L E U .
Each Defendant it
tor an Ordsr at Taking baton Ma Itonaraila Rafearl B. McGrtaar.
on* ol Ma Judgm at Ma abwvwttykd Caurt. on Ma MM 4ar at
Itpkmbor. IWI, at I N p m , In Ma l emlntH County Courthouse,
Santor4. F tor14a. In accordance wlto lit Chclaratian at Taking
htfatotora Ittod in tak cause. AJI Defendant* to this suit snd all sMer
Intorattod parties may reguest a hearing on the Petition tor Maardtr
ol Tabinf at Ma lima and piaca designated and ba hoard Any
Oatondant tailing to lit* a reguest tar haarlnf than atolvd any rlfh'
to Miact to Ma Ordar at Tabln*.
AND
Each natondart and any ataar partana claWtonp any MtoraN in Ma
proparty daterMad m Ma Palttton In Ma ahavatfytad Emlnant
Domain procaodtng It horohy raquirrd to tarya arlHan ttotontat. II

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HOME SITE 173. at IEM IN O il YY0009. Ftortda. te­
at racard

I tmtoill County. FkrldB;
particularly dNcrtbad to BthMW**A**attached hereto.
EH M B ITMAM
SEMINOLE WOODS
HOMESITE m
Lanai Dtacdptlan
TH AT PART OF:
The SW to at Ma SW to at
SECTION )t , TOWNSHIP »
SOUTH, RANGE N EAST, lam
Inak Caanty. F torIda.
H rA adi

Eto rAM «a paHHan to Nacama a
party to Mia pracaadtop. Tho
ipMHNHNflMi iVMMVi vmtimm
ttMt
arJba'htod VrtSJm dHHM tnTJ
AMAm^^ta^ ilr
UOfO ^ 0
Ma Otltca at Oonaral Caamat at
Ma ahava addraaa at Ma 0 9
aaa tna A t an- «a----pftTnWW. rM W v W ^itlWY

dflrtlWn ftftpftlv®cil ftfty
haarlnf'undar laetton i» .» *
F .L . and to partlclpata aa a
party to Mta 090909$. Any
inMaatotant Intorvanlton *111
anty 9a at Ma approval at Ma
ptaaldtat atth
Hltft m nuM t
PA .C T
A party
aNadadby Mia
anNHad to Judicial
want to laetton

ana ca n at a Matka at
N **MMa Apwicy Clarb at
1Hi* Hale P^lftfiftft
at Bnvtranmanlal
and a taend capy. *
by lUMp toot praitrAad by law,
arlta Ma Olatrlct caurt ut Ap
M l. FlrN DtoWict, ar *IM tha
Dtotrict Caurt at Appaal to Ma
Appallato Dittokt
party raaUba. Tha Natka at
Appaal muat ba Mad aHMto N
dayt at randWkn at Ma Ordrn to
AupuaULW i
M IA 9
V IN tC L l AUCTION
w m
atOtovy
IGIAONPIB JI3NM
II PaupMt VFM AtlFTBSlIIU
V im
HChavy IQlAWItXICNttaat
McCannail
TawInf A Racovary
lAva
i At11:ta
Vkw Ona Naur Prkr
Ta tala
Publtth: Awfutl a . 1911
DEI 1M
VIN ICLB AUCTION
TM t auetkn will ba bald an
SaptombaJ L Iftl N N i l a m.
at M l Alotoy* Trail, Ovtoda.
FI. Praapactlva Wddart may
Impact vahlctot an tho day
batara. toam I N a m. until 4:tb
pm . Tarmt ora caah ar cartlftod
lyndt anly Tkb lltt Inc/Atomo
Samaran Tawtop ratarvat tha
rtfht accapt ar rt|oct any and
allbldt.
H Ford PintoYYhlto bTiiVUM M
bl Chavratot Chavutto YMdto
iO TAB ta»»B A»fi»;
tl Plymouth Champ Btuo
JP M EU JlB U U tM l
$4 Chavrotot Carol tor 1/W Bluo
iGiADUPUJtonta
PuMith Auyutta. m i
DEI 141

to

at Ma Pamanant

lug Ma tW earner at
S t c l l e n I t j run thanca
N4d*l3*I7*'W alent &lt;ba W.
boundary Ibw Maraat iH 4.tr to
tha Permanent Relaranca
at Ma tw to at MaSW to
at tald lactlan tl; thanca
M af*ir«3'*S along Ihg N.
boundary Ibw Maraat ta w to
Ma POtNT OP BEGINNING;
canttout thanca M N IIW B
taM N. boundary Una
MBWNYP^w |l
M*
line, S itn a ’J F ’E
I4I.SF to Me N ly R/W line at
O e c a a la D r i v e ; tbanca
u r u u w atone i
•Tly
R/W Hna M JT to Me
at a ckcukr curve
Me I'ly havtof a
a a .tr: Manca YTIy oto .
trty R/W Una and Ma arc at
to d curve Mraufh a central
onfto at t t n n r n .w to a
petot an bald curve; Manca.
laavtaa Mid N'ly R/W Una.
N tM trs rw a tA F ta Ma Paint

yeu are raputoad to tarva a copy
at ya v written datanaaa. It any.
to It an RICHARD X. TAYLOR.
JR .. ESQUIRE. Ptototllt*' at
tormy, whata adtrou la S)&gt; Dap
Tract Read. Peat Office Baa
H I), Lin| hi nd, Flarlda JWU
1117, an m batara SayNmbir t,
1191. and Ma Ma aripinai with
Me Clarb ol Mk Caurt either
batara w rvka an Plaintltta’
offer; attwrwtaa a datauit will
ba antorad apalmt you tor Ma
rottot dmtiwdad to Ma Cam

DATE Dan July)*. IWI.
(COURT U A L )
MARYANNE MORSE
Clarb at Ma Circuit Caurt
By: NaaMir Brunnar
Ac Deputy Clarb
Pubiiah: Aufuot I. A IS. n . IWI
D C IM

NOTICE U N M R
PICITITM USNAM E
STATUTE

TO WHOM ITMAV CONCERN:
Natka l» hereby pl»an Mat Ma
underIlpnad, punuanl to tha
-Flclillo u t Noma Stblulo".
Ctwpkr ast a*. Florida Statute*,
will retktor with Mo Secretary
at Slate. Taltahaawe. Florida,
upon receipt it preal at the
publication at Ml* nolle*, tha
tkllttou* name, towil: TAC
undvr which I am m p p i In
butorwu at W* Dauota* Avanua.
Alternant* Spring*. S*mln#l*
County. Ftortda U H L

That the party &lt;ntora*tod In
Mid bu*tn**» antorprtM to a*
tottown AMMAR C MAHAN t
Dated at Attamento Spring*.
Sami not* County- Florid* on
July l. IWI.
Pubiton Augwttn. IWI
OEI-3);

State#* FtorldA Ptotoatt
VA
Huttoy Van tyatoma, Inc..
County Court
Samlnato County.
■unly, Florida
Camlft/atMCCMH

Barnutt Racovary Carparatton. Piaintift
v*
Huttoy Van Syatonw. Inc., Thoadwe Huttoy and
Oarrkb L. Huttoy, DaOaidmt
NOTKI OF SHERIFF'S SALE
/ g n iC E IS HEREBYQjVlM Mat by; vtrbwaflbaM Cgtoto Hhlto
MXACw?)MHi MM
m*D WMw
Iy vHDT ^DFiwfn
Writ at laacutlan towed aut at and yndir Ma Mat at Ma County1
Caurt at Samtoato Cawdy. Ftortdaupanattoto ludgmdntranMrad to
Maitora cold caurt an Ma tod day at June A m
ft^i—
ww.
am to Mol curtain

CBBVfmlltfi AwrTMTl NRVYfrr WflrRMA PiWTlTI Ta nWIWy Tin
1iiiImTn
tia
In#
—■
pybM
ai ir
awi.t •iwbrnby rtYttwy &lt;
&lt; ■—
which atari**Id Writ at laacutlan i
County, Flarlda and I I
tlMaW van irw p n ii inc.*
pripwiy w n M wf U
nvnty
being tocatod In Samlnato County, Flarlda. mar*
partkutorly dwcrlbadaa toitoat*:
Ona 1974Kant TL. Vto f4WH
Ona ltof KV TR . Vto m m Oaing itorad at &lt;

a* Sheriff at Samlnato Qwnty. Flarlda. will *i
tt:YP A M . an Ma Hh M y at September A.O. tWI. attar tor aato and
tall to Me Mghaat Mddw. FOR CASH. Mbtoct to any and ail aatoltog
liana, at Me W nt Oaar, at Me atoga. at Me Samlnato County
’T T U m . .
laacutlan.

to taitoty Ma torme at Mid Writ* at

IwUato
fw
,w
.iv
.i rEU
WtYYYYMYAY
toW
UN
YTylT
MplAg
FIOA
Pubitohad: Aupuat IA XL 3f. Sapt. A
m i.
OBI-HI
PYMUC NOTICE
U.S. Envbanmantoi Matu llan Agency
Raglan IV
Wator Manapamant Dtotolan - FbcWNto* Partormanca Branch
USCaurHandHraat, N .l.
Atlanta. OearglaJOJU
(4*i) S47JW4
Pitolk Natka N*. flFLW l
Auauatftmt
N O TKE OF FROPOUB R ItiE M N C I OP A
NATIONAL POLLUTANT DISCNANAI ELIMINATION
SYSTEM PERMIT
Tha U.S. Invlrennwntai Pratocllwi Apmcy (IP A ) Inland* to
rtiuu* a National Pollutant Discharge lllmtoatton Systom
(NPOCSI permit to Ma City at SantorJT Mat OTtka Baa I77A
Santord. Flarlda a m . tor Mair lacllity tocaW at m Narta Papiar
Avanua. Samlnato Cacnty. Santord. Ftorlda. NPOES Parmll Na
F ^ u i.H w ta clUto ^ w w t o t M^dto^argaat t r a y j a totary
Rlvar. At Ma painl *1 dtocharpa. Ma racaiytop waton era ctoMittod
aa CtoM III wator*. tultohio tor rocradlan. prM«|aUwi W
at a healthy, watobaiancad papulatian at flab and
Tbo prapaaad NPOES permit cantobw IIma*&lt;Ian* an Rw amaunh
at paihitanttaUmwdtobadtocharpMwidwMWattod to accordance
Ma pravtotona at Ma Clean Wator Act (31U. AC. laetton m i at
I and 0 lm lawhi standard* and rapUNtona. The pailwtant
parmll candlttona are tontatlva and open to
----------- .wishing to eammant upon or eb|«t to any aapacto at i
*F*tlfk permit ratoaumc* ar wtohtng to raoNsl a pubik hearing,
a rt tovltod to submit Hm* to writing wlMln thirty (U t day* at Mil
natka to Mo Office at Pubik Attain. Environmental Prelection
*9**yy. tat Caurttand Slraat, N.E., Atlanta. Georgia *341
A TT E N T IO N : Me. Alice Craaby. Pursuant to * CPR ISLtA any
parton whe bettorn* any candUtan at Ma permit la toMpraprlato
muat ratoa ail ratoanabty atcartatoMto Naua* wto submit ail
re Manat ly aval labia wgumanto In M l. l uppailng Mair paaitton. by
the ctoaa at Ma comment par lad Tha pubic natica number «M
NPOfSnumbor should b* included In too tint pap* of cammtotto.
All eammant* racaivad within the today partod will ba cwtolWraf
to Ma tormutotian et a final detorminetkn njtodtop Me permit
***Y mtamtod panan may rapuato i
Fubik hoar tog. Where ttwra is a significant iNgna et pubik totormi
to e prepewd permit nisi uence. Me EPA Itaftonei Administrate
will tchaduto and held a pubik hearing which wgwto ba Iwmally
announced to accordance wIM 40 CF R 114.» ato 114. t*.
AN*r ceneidwetton to ail written comment* and toe rewUrementi
end pelkie* in Me eel end epreprieto retutoBem. Me IPAReatonel
Administrator will rnaita datermination mgeding Ha parmll

rvissuance II Me dshrmtoetkn Is sutatarttaily unchwimd tr
Met announced by mi* natica. the EPA Reeiwal Administrator wll
M notify ell parson* submitting written comment*. It It*
determination I* subdantlaliy changed, rtw EPA Rawianei A*
ministratar will lu«a a public notice indkettop the rwvlt*
daterminal len Repued(s) tor an evidmtiery hearing may he file
attar Me Regional Administrator mate* ttw tonil toirrlln
datarmtoatkn* N* Isaws shall b* raised by any party I
submitted ta ta* e*n til strative record a* gat to Ma preparation &lt;
and eammant an ta* dratt permit, unless goad causa I* shewn tar M
lailur# ta submit Mem in accordance with « CFR 124 7* Add Non,
information regarding an evidentiary hearing I* available to to CP
Pert 134, t toperI E. or by centacting the Otfke et Regional Caune,
at tha adWeu above eral|«4l 347 t w
The administrative record. Including applcstien. tact sheet &lt;
statement et basis, dr tot permit, a sketch showing the eeaeft tacatie
at the discharge (si, canments received, and adtotlenai inkempt ic
on hearing procedures It available by wrftlrg Me EPA ePtom
above, or tar review end copying el 3*S Court lend } treat. N E
Atlanta. Gaergia. between ttw hours at 1 11 am. and 4 M p m
Monday through Friday. Capiat wll ba provided et a minimal ca
‘" p S S bring the tomgeing to Ma atHntioi el portent whe ye
know will be interested in Mi* matter II you would like ta bd &lt;
to our public natka mailing list, submit your name end i
addrou ta Me Office to Pubik Altaic* et EPA'sedWooagiven i
Publish August Tl. IWI
DEI )

�* * * * * Hm M , 9 m ***, H o ***

- THwwUr. *»*■ * *t Hi* - • •

E J ^ T V lO r t ifiZ M K ,

•S U M .

NOTICE OF A P U B L IC M U R IN G TO CONSIDER T N E
ADOPTION OP AN ONOtNANCE BY T N E C ITY OP
IANPORO. f LORIOA
No*it# I* hereby given mol a Public Hearing will ho hoM lo mo
Cemmluion Room a* mo City Hail lo mo City of l awNr A f lor No. at
I N o'clock P M. an Auguei M. IN I. to canal N r Mo eMptton Of an
orOlnanco hy Itw City af SanNrO. f larIN. M NHoam:
OOOIMAMCI MOl W l
Conoral Deacriplien at mo aroa N ho annaaoO anO mao •• oa

Mtowe:
A PORTION O f THAT CKRTAIN PROPERTY LYING NORTH
OP ANO ABUTTING M IADOW D R IV I ANO B ETW EEN A R T
LANK ANO DRIFTWOPO L A N ! EX TEN D ED NORTHCRLVi AS
SHOWN ON T H I MAP BELOW:

to g e th e r w ith

COMMBUCK AT THE INTERJECTION O f TNI SOUTH LINE
OP RAID NORTHMEAT QUARTER O f LOT 133 WITH THE
EASTERLY RIGHT-OP-MAT LINE OP STATE ROAO 43B,
FOR A POINT OP REFERENCE; THENCE RUN NORTH
1 1 '1 1 'U * e a s t , along th e bajo r ig h t - o p - may
LINE, 301.49 FEET TO TNB POINT OP BEGINNING;
THENCE CONTINUE NORTH 3B*43*4B" EAST, ALONG
SAID RIGHT-OP-WAY UNB, 13B.00 FEET TO THE
POINT OP CURVATURE OP A CURVE CONCAVE SOUTH­
EASTERLY; THENCE RUN NORTHEASTERLY, ALONG SAID
RIGHT-OP-HAT LINE, ALONG THE ARC OP SAID
CURVE. HAVING A RADIUS LENGTH OP 90.00 PEST, A
CENTRAL ANGLE OP 17*27*27», AN ARC LENOTH OP
19.32 PIET, A CHORD LENGTH OP 1 9 .IB FEET, ANO
A CHORD BEARING OP NORTH 47*37•39- EAST;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 31*30*43" NEST, 4 4 .SB FEET;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 43*19*00" EAST, 111.OB FEET;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 3 i* 4 3 '4 9 " WEST, 43.90 FEET;
THENCE RUN NORTH 99*34*11" WEST, 4 4 .IB PENT;
THENCE RUN NORTH 73*49*01" WEST. 43.77 FEET TO
TH I POINT OP BEGINNING.
THE ABOVE 0ESCRIBED PARCEL OP LAND LIES IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA, ANO CONTAINS 10,434
SQUARE FEET, MORE OR LESS.
RSO BUG LANE ROAO
PARCEL NO. 939
TUSKAMILLA ROAO TO SR 434
PEE SIMPLE
A PARCEL OP LAND LYING IN THE SOUTHEAST QUAR­
TER OP SECTION 17, TOWNSNIP 31 SOUTH. RANGE 31
EAST, BEING A PORTION OP THE EAST 440 FEET OP
LOT IB ANO THE WEST 70 FEET OP LOT 30. “ THE
SLAVIA COLONY COMPANY'S SUBDIVISION", ACCORD­
ING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT
HOOK 3, PAGE 71, OP THE PUBLIC RECORDS OP
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA, BEING MORE PARTICU­
LARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS;

A complete ancripiion and a copy ol mo ordinanca mail ha
available at Itio otliee ot mo City Clerk lor all poraana doalrlng to
eremlne me u n r
All partiet In intoreal and citliona mall have an opportunity la ho
hoard al W d hearing
By ordrr ol mo City Commlaalen ol Ihe City at San lord. Florida.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC It a perten decide# la appeal a
dKitlan made aim reaper! to any manor conaidered at Ihe above
mealing or hearing, ha may need a verbatim record ol Iho
proceeding#, including Iho loatlmony and evidence, which record la
not provided by ihe CHy ot Sentord iFSJhaeiOS)
City Clark
Pubiim Auguai i l n . if»i

�T F •■* •'

• ■'#-' •'■•'- ■

r a

M - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thuraday, August 22, 1M 1

IN TN C CIRCUIT COURT

(
i

NOTICE IS H ER EB Y OIVCN
that Oy virtu* of mat certain
Writ of Cmwtlon Stood out of
and undu Ma tool of Ma County
Court of tomlnoto County, Flor­
id*. Coo* ro o w a x e n upon a
final judpmant rondorod m Ma
atorooaM Court on III* lata doy
ol April A.D. If « l. In t a t
cortain com onttttad: Bomott
a
m
----------■
, IN.IIIT
tint
RlCOWff
v
O
rpOFflT■IOn. W
F|M

FLORIDA
PRODATE OfYISfON
FHaRMaBarfMM-CP
IN R E: ESTATE OF
L IL L IE MAC RIM RIL

NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION

v». Allan J. Boftiof and Janaf It.
B o ltio l. Dotondant which
afereoald Writ el Baecwfio* wee
dtflvorod to mo ao Jhorlft of
Saminok County. Florida and I
have levied upon all Via rloftt.
title and Inforoot of* Ih# dawndam. Allan J . Boltiol. In and la

JACK FOSTER. ETAL.
OCFENOANTIS).

Pool Oflka Orowor C, Santord.

TO :
JA C K FOSTER

iwaftor
t S tModal*
t a xof.Mohrs!
1
I MM fwtlce moot
IN took claim* sHM m m Court
W I T H I N T H E L A T E R OF
T H R E I MONTHS A FTER THE
D A TE O F TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A FTE R THE
D A T E O F SEEVICB O F A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
TH EM .
A ll other creditor* of Mo

IN THB CIRCUIT COURT ~
of t m i eio im eo rrN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.

IN R B; FO R FB ITU R R O F
11.000 00 U S. CURRENCY
N O TIC I OF FORFBITURR
F R O C IIO fN O
TO: Andrew Helnrtett
MSI Howell Creek Dr.
CoteoMorry, FI. 21200
and all oMera who claim an

claim* wtM MM court WITHIN
T H R E E MONTHS A FTER THE
O A TS O F TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
A L L CLAIM S. DEMANDS
A N D OBJECTIONS NOT SO
F IL E D W ILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
The dato of Mo first pubikallonof this Notka to August IL
tm
Personal Itopraow toftvo:
DONALD RAY KIMECL
list A Norte Street
L im n i l l FLB7W
Attorney tor Poroonaf
waprasamanva.
RICHARD D. DAVIDSON.
E squire
HNCMh A Barclay
l l l NorM Orange Amnu*. M7S
O r lands. Florida 22(01
Tolopfwna: (4*7)422010
Florida Bor No. ilSOIS
PuMtsfl: August IL».t* * 1
ppi.irs____________________
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
FRODATE DIVISMM
FNo Nmnbor ft-lto-CF
IN R E: ESTA TE OF
DAV ID P. HARTMAN.

inifl III 111TWrWIIwWIttg
l e t o e w a t tan Etoa Amltaaalte^tes

11.0*0.00 US. Currency
Shorltt Donald Bailnatr, of the
Seminole County Sharin'* Dept,
Samlnole County, Florfda.
through h it o ffico ra . Inalligators or apanti . atIred the
above arapsrty an Juno A tt*1,
at er near S.R. 04. temlnele
County, Fterlds, end I* proa•fitly holding told property far
Itw purpeao ol lertoitura purswanl to Sectlent *23.701-2*0. Flor­
ida Statutes. and will RBQUCST
that an Honoroblo Judge of Itw
Circuit Court, eighteenth
Judicial C ircu it. Seminole
County. F lor Id*, luuw o Rule to
Show Ceut* why th* above
’ Mould not ba tortolled
agency. Thla re­
quest will ba made by M AIL
sometime around (/I3/(1. THIS
IS NOT A HEARING D A TE I
You will bo tent a copy of ttw
Rule to Show Caueo once It la
signed by Itw Judge and It will
‘advise you how and vdwn to
respond to thla roguoat tor
lertoitura.
I HEREBY C E R TIFY T H A T
a true and correct copy of thla
Notice was tent to Ma above
named addresses by U.S. regis­
tered mall, return receipt re­
quested, this *M day at August.
Iftl.
NORMAN R. WOLF INGE R
STATE A TTO R N EY
l y : FMNpArdwr
Assistant Slate Attorney
700S. Park Avo.
Titusville, FI.227M
(4071200-020
Attomay tor Plaintiff
Publish: August 1X 0. 1*11
DEI MO

sx*.

NOTICE OF
AOMINtSTRAT ION
Th* admlnttlratlon of th*
•slate at DAVID F. HARTMAN,
d o c o a o o d , F ile H u m b e r
(IS tf-C P , Is pending In ttw
Circuit CourtI tor Sami
C o u n ty . F lo rid a . Prabata
Division. Mo adOrtM ef which Is
P. O. D r a w C. Sander*. Fierida 27772dSlO.
Ttw nomoo and odWosoo* of the
personal rogrosontotlm and Mo
personal representative's at­
tomay are oat tortobotnw.
A L L IN T E R E S T E D PER ­
SONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All
n i lm
r w la
rn w
11
|acttons Mat challenge Ma valid­
ity at Itw will. Me QuaWflcahane
of Mo personal rsprowntottvo,
venue, or jurisdiction of Mis
Court or* required to tile their
objections with this Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
TH R E E MONTHS A FTER THE
D A TE O F TH E FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS AFTER THE
D A T E O F SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
TH EM .
All creditors of Itw docodwit
and other persona hovesg claims
or domands against decodint's
estate an whom a copy of this
notka to served within throe
months after th* dato at Mo first
publication of Nils nolle* must
tllo their claims wiM Mis Ceurt
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
TH R E E MONTHS A FTER THE
D A TE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A FTER THE
D A T E O F SERVICE OF A
COPY* OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM .
All other creditors ot th*

IN TN E CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H E IIOM TBBNTM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLOR ID A
IN RE: FO R FEITU R E OF
117* INTER NATIONAL TRUCK
NOTICE OF FO R FE ITU R E
PROCEEDING
TO: Andros Torres
2Shady Willow Dr.
ando.FI
Orlando.
FI.
and all othart who claim an
interesl In ttw following
properly:
1*7* International Truck
VIMlAAlOIJHBltoM
Shorltt Donald EsJInger. ot ttw
Seminole County Sheriffs Dept,
Seminole County. Florida,
through his o lllc s r s . In
vet Ugators or agents, wired ttw
above property on Juno IX 1*01.
at or near Fern Park. Seminole
County. Florida, and Is pros
enlly holding sold property tor
Itw purpose ot tortolture pursu
enl to Sections 712.701 7W. Flor
Ida Staluies. and will REQUEST
lhal an Honorable Judge of ttw
Circuit Court, Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit, Seminal*
County, Florida, issue a Rule to
Show Causa why I ha above
property should not ba forfeited
to ttw above agency. This re
quest will be made by M AIL
sometime around »/ 12/fl. THIS
IS NOT A HEARING D A TE )
You will be sent a copy ot ttw
Rule to Show Caws* one* It Is
signed by ttw Judge and II will
advise you how and whan to
respond to this roquast tor
tor tellur*
I HEREBY C E R TIFY T H A T
a true and correct copy ol this
Notice was sent to ttw above
named addresses by U.S. rtgls
tered mail, return receipt re
quested, this fth day ot August.
I*fl.
NORMAN R. WOLF INGE R
STATE ATTORNEY
By: Philip Archer
Assislant State Attorney
700 S Park Ave
Titusville, FI. 07*0
(407J 2*4 1230
Attorney tor Plalntltl
Publish August IS. a . Iftl
DEI 170

claims or
decadent's oetoto must tllo Itwir
claims with this court WITHIN
TH R E E MONTHS A FTER THE
D A TE OF TH E FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
A L L CLAIMS. DEMANDS
A N D OBJECTIONS NOT SO
F IL E D WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
Ttw dato ot ttw first public*
lion of this HotIce to August 22,
10*1.
Personal Representative:
Nancy W Hartman
417 Ledashore Drive
Mai Iland. FL 22711
Attorney tor Personal
Representative:
Charles H. Stork
Zimmerman. Shull laid.
Kiser 4 Sutctllto, P A.
P O. Boa 2*0*
Orlando. FL 72*02
Telephone: (4071*257010
Florida Bar No. :422M
Publish: August77,2*. I**l
D EI 211

C ELEB R ITY CIPHER
CeteteHy C «n * r cryptognme w e treated Son. q u o u w M
(woote past end present
la cii utter *. me cqftar
enotne, TotUy i cfee U equate J

PRB

I M X H F Z ,

P Z * HR

M F C

Z X I Z
Z H

f E F C K U . '

CASE NOt OI-teaF-CA-14-N
SEMINOLE WOOOS COMMU
N ITY ASSOCIATION. INC..
Plaintiff,

4

V K
—

S H M X

V P A A P C O M .
PREVIOUS S O L U T IO N "I’m not out to win prizes —
that * lor dogs and horses." — (director) Werner Herzog

14. Ready to opan. Comer
I7 B and ISM St, Santord.
Call anytime, ***■*147

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
hours
M R M T

Rp— m a s p w

YOU A R I H E R E B Y NOTI
FIED Mat W actton to Nrattoq
a Claim af Lton m tha toftoaring
^rajHjrty M tombwto Caunty.

SAJH FDR toTOX-bdt
0 S Larkwaod O r. * * ■
S2M*g. Ltr^. MSg. brabar

out juris.

YOU AXE HEREBY NOTI
FIED RWI an a tF O T h a a jy
H . NNawtog r*H pap—* *—------ -• - -*

LOT to. QUEEN'S MIRtOR
A D D I T I O N TO C A I S I L BERRY, ACCORDING TO THE
FLAT THEREOF, RECOROED
IN FLAT BOOR A FAOE MOF
THE FURL 1C RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
SOUTH W I N T R R FA RR
DRI VE. CASSELBERRY.
FLORIDA W tf.
Thto
a espy tf year
N any. to H an
BHAFIRO A FISHMAN. At
tsrnays, whs*« address Is
FL 2MSF. an
0 , t**t. and flto Nw
original wtM Mo Ctork of Ml*
Court

lAte
W ITNESS my hand and seal
ef Mis Caurl w Me ISM day ef
August. t**l.

(SEAL)
M ARYANNS MORSE
Circuit and County Courts

^Deputy Ctork
It I

OEI-tdt

IN T N R CIR CUIT COURT
O F T N I E tB H T E IN T N
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT,
M
C A S I NO) tt-IOW-CA-ISK
SEM INOLE WOOD* COMMU
N IT Y ASSOCIATION. INC.,
Ftolntlff,
v*.
R W A N Y U E N end C H A N
Y U E N MUR ION,
N O T IC I O F ACTION
TO : KWAN Y U E N and CHAN
Y U E N MUR ION, hutband and
wild
YOU ARE H ER EB Y NOTI
F IE D Mot on action to tor* else*
a Claim af Lion an Me toitewing
In l ominolo County,
H O M ESITE 0, of SEMINOLE
WOODS. Florida, according to
that survey of record rocardid
In Official Hoard* Book 110,
Pages a n through tgx gf ttw
Public Bacardi af tom Inoto
County, Florid*: more partku
torly dot crlbod In Inhibit "A "
EX H IB IT " A "
SEM INOLE WOOOS
HO M ESITE*
Legal Description
T H A T F A R T O F:
Tha NW to at the SW to at
SEC TIO N 21. TOWNSHIP M
SOUTH. RANGE 0 EAST. Sam
Inals County. Florida.
Being more portkutorly de­
scribed at tol tows:
Commence at Mo FUrmarwnt
ing tha SW corner ot sold
S o c t la n i t ,- r u n th o n c *
N M «4 2 ‘44"W along tha W.
boundary lino Moraol 1127.27’ to
th* Fo rm a n o n l Roforonc*
Itw SW
(fW k a fM a
SW Ik of Soctlan j l ; csntmu*
•0’4 frw along «
W. boundary lino Moroof 12*7.27'
to MS P O IN T OF BEGINNING;
continue thonc* N*0*47' 44"W
along said W. boundary lino
t e a r to Me Ptrm eant RotorNW cantor ol sold NW Ik of Me
SW Ik; thonc* Na***S'02"E
•long th* N. boundary lino
ffwroaf 220 k*'; Nwnco. leaving
s o ld N . b o u n d a r y lin o ,
S27*J*'2*"E 1*7».2g* to th*
N W ly R/W Il a of Wiidrldgi
D rive ; thonc*. $S1*M'2I"W
along said NW'ly R/W lino
1*0.17' to M* beginning of a
circular curve concave to Mo
S E 'ly h aving a radius of
1020 O T; thonc* SWly along said
NW’ly R/W ( l a and Ma arc ol
said curve through a central
angle of gi*24'to" H O T to a
point on said curve; Mane*,
leaving said NW'ly R/W Iin*.
Nlt*Sl'S3"W U7l.il* to th*
Point ol Beginning
Containing *.04 acres, more
has bean filed against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written dr tonset. It any.
to It on RICHARD S TAYLOR.
JR .. ESQUIRE. Plalntltl*' *1
tornay, whoa address Is lit Dog
Track Road. Post Office Bo&gt;
1117. Langwood. Florida 0712
1117. on or before September *,
i**i. and III* ttw original with
ttw Ctork ol Mis Court either
before service on Plaintiffs'
attorney or immediately there
after; otherwise a default will
ba entered against you tor ttw
relief demanded in th* Com
plaint
D A TED on Ju ly7*. M l
ICOURT SEAL I
MARVANNE MORSE
Ctork ol th* Circuit Court
By: Haalhar Brunner
As Deputy Ctork
Publish: August t. X I*. 0 . I*tl
D EI 17

N

irattortall.Wcnshdaauwftorprsniplpayiar
tog may Imludattoisld Ad. ■rtlsar m Me cost ol an addhlunal day. Cancel
i you gat rasuhs. Fay only tor days yeur ad runs of rote earned.
dsscrlpMen tor tostast remits. Copy must teAew occaptobia

ja.

IfiAvmemY
[323-S17S

N E W . MW •».
• • • V O LT***
TEMPORARY BR RVKES

A DO TO YO U # MCOMR
AVON! SELL IK t N -t G SOFT
C A L L 02420 m

ADJUSTMENTS AND CRIDITSi M Nw dVtfH * an
dciDT In BNRtf, NW Sm BbtE NartM wM fedrasRMBlMd far
NW Nrtf WaarNM BRlF M tf rnIe I d NW RxibRl RfflW CdBt
wwd*

N

CO1

OCA0UNM
thru Friday 12 Naan T a Day Before Publication
Sunday And Monday S:SO P.M. Frida
... O F
to of Ma SW 1* and
Mo N tost M a te to o lM a lW to
af SECTION 21. TOWNSHIP »
SOUTH. BANOH a BAST. Smftlo N County, Florida.

K

Ea rnkp N S M .il hr.
We Train!
Hiring new tar local area:

CaNt-auaBs-nsi

w f if

APPLY NOW! Orlvars. security

at Ma

help
(Will
tram:) S iS F O a Faa.
M
AUTO MECHANIC N E E D E D •
Enpar knead only n o d apply.
magel opan. l i f t Calory Ave,
Santord.____________________

^ rm e rwnt

Ing ttw IW car a r of sold
B o c tla s l i t r u n th a n c a
W I I T 'E atony Ma 1 Baundary H a Swra f tltX M ' to Mo
iwotI

dsdanaftny Ma IE c a ra r
• fD w S W to a fM a S W to a t
Sactton 0 ; R a m N * P f r0 " W
•tong Ma B . Bauadary H«w

M1
a I-

teIA
r e T W M rl

Frao map cal care, transpor­
tation, counseling, private
dacN r plus Itving i spansai.
Bar R T I I I CM Altonwy Jahn

Supgart a medical
paid. Catl A ttys: Weston
Sfgmand B Natotto Shasta
I W aiW B ill FL Bar (07HIU

^Pw-rtrs^» V*is

Ma IW to of told Sactton It ;
cantina Mane* Ngr4Tt2"W
atoa said R. boundary Ito* af
M a s * to af Ma SW to a a r to
Ma X R/W Itoa a* said Sam lata
Weeds B a u la v a rd ; thanca
S B P II'frW atong stod N. R/W
Itoa N1.W; Mane*, tomring said
N. R/W lliw . HM*dS'*4"W
fit.IS*; thanca N4t*4»'42"E
4*7.*t't thanca S 1 7 * »rif"B
in .W 'i thanca NS2toa'2t"E
2 M .lt ' ta tha P O I N T O F
ESOINNINO; contlnua tfwnca
NSPirtrE 771J4' to a patof m
a circular cured cancavi to th*
w ty having a radtoa af llix a r .
said pstot batog an Me W ty
R/W Itoa af '
.................
N a r z r i r i tram Me cantor af
said curve; thanca S'ly atong
said Wty R/W line and Ma arc
•f said cure* though a central
angle of 0*14W* S N A ’ la Ma
and af said curve; Mam*, leav­
ing said W 'ly R / w lin e ,
S7S*t*'tr'W 7*0*0'; thanca
M r z r s r w s*s.w leaf t* ttw
Paint a* Beginning.
Containing 10*0 acres, mere
tiled
yeu e a raqHrad to serve a capy
of yeur wrltton defense*. II any,
10 It OT RICHARD S. TAYLOR .
JR.. ESQUIRE. Flototllfs' at
tarnsy, wtwee address is U l Deg
Track Read. F a t Office Bos
1117, Langwood, Florida 2 0 0
HIT, an er before Saptombs r *,
IWt, and file Ma original wiM
Ma Clark ef Ml* Court either
before service an FlalnllHs'
•ju yu g u u . M 1m m imsil wt o I &gt;i |b ■ ■ ■
W
em^Er^^^ 'SOT frrVv¥^^^^W^EPEv|r f^mavlw
after; adwrwl a a dstault will
ba antarad against you tor t a
relief demanded In Ma Com
DATEDon July 0 , M l .
(COURT SEAL)
MAR YANNE MORSE
Ctork afMa Circuit Court
By: HaaMar Brunner
As Deaulv Ctork
PuMISh: August t, A IX 22.1(*1
M L U I_______________________
IN TNE C IR C U IT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A
FRODATE DIVISION
FIN Rum ba 0-S72CF
IN RE: ESTATE O F
RUSSELL L E E PO FF A/K/A
RUSSELL L. F O F F ,

N O T IC I O F
ADM INISTRATION
T a sdmlnlstrallen at t a
•stoit of RUSSELL L E E POFF.
de cea se d. F i l e N u m b e r
*1 472CP. Is ponding in t a
Circuit Court tor Samlnola
County. F la r ld a . Probata
Division. Nw address af which Is
Samlnala County Courthouse,
Santord. Florida 17771.
t a noma* and addresses ef Ma
personal representative and tha
parsaneI representative's at
foray are sat forth alow .
A LL IN T E R E S T E D PER
SONSARE N O T IF IE O T H A T :
All persons on whom Mis
iectlens Mat chaitonga Ma valid­
ity at Ma will. Ma qualllkatlem
at t a personal representative,
venue, ar jurisdiction of this
Court art required to (lie their
objections w ith this Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R O F
THREE MONTHS A F T E R TH E
DATE OF T H E FIR S T PUBLI
CATION OF TH IS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS A F TE R TH E
D ATE OF S E R V IC E O F A
COPY OF TH IS N O TICE OH
THEM.
Ail creditors ef Ma decedent
and other person* having claims
ar dwnands against decedsnt's
estate an whom a copy af this
notka Is served within three
manta eitor t a date ef Ma first
pubikatlan of this notka must
Ilia their claims with Pits Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R O F
THREE MONTHS A F TE R T H E
DATE OF TH E FIR S T PUBLI
CATION OF TH IS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS A F TE R THE
D ATE OF S E R V IC E OF A
COPY OF TH IS NOTICE ON
TH E M
All other creditors of t a
decedent and persons having
claims er demands against t a
decedent's estate must tile Melr
claim* with this court W ITHIN
THREE MONTHS A F TE R THE
DATE OF TH E FIR S T PUBLI
CATION OF TH IS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIM S. D EM A N D S
AND OBJECTION S NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
T a dato of t a first public*
flan et this Nolle* Is August 0 .
M l.
Per seal Represantalive:
Laann* Reft Nash
MS Queen* Mirror Clr
Casselberry. FL 0707
Attorney tor Personal
Representative:
Tony M Nardella
Florida Bar No 141174
TONYM H A R O E L L A .P A.
t ill AdentenStreet. Suit* 111
Orlando. Florida 27&lt;04
Tetophoa l« 7 ) 42P U7S
Publish August 22. 2*. M l
DEI 10

Call H I , Monday- Friday.

________24#-i4*a_______

Black 4 fan mala

P U P p r*

V K M U iy

Of

Ifln r P r B

Paat Offka. Sunday meming.
REWARD!...........

Loqil Wotlcoo
IN T N E CIRCUIT COURT
OP T H E IIB M Tf IN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SIAM N O LI COUNTY.
F LOR I
IN R E : FORFEITURE OF
• m o a u .x CURRENCY
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
PROCEEDING
TO : Devtd Creme
» 4 Lillian Dr.
Fam Port, FI. J27*7
and all ethers who claim an
Interest to Ma tollowing
HS0.M U.S. Currency
Shorltt Donald Etllngw, of t a
Samlnola County Sheriff* Dept.,
Samlnola County. Florida,
th ro u gh his o H Ic a rt, In ­
vestigator* er agents, seized t a
above property on J u a 74, M l ,
at er near S R 4*0. Samlnola
County. Florida, and Is pres
enlly holding said property tor
t a purpose ol forfeiture pursu­
ant to Section* (0.7*1 TSi Flor­
ida Statute*, and will REQUEST
Mat an Honorable Judge at t a
C irc u it Court, Eighteenth
Ju d icia l Circuit. Samlnola
County. Florida. Issue a Rule to
Shaw Causa why t a above
proparty should net ba fortol led
to M* above agency. This re­
quest will a made by MAIL
sometime around f/ll/ft. THIS
IS NOT A HEARING D A TE!
You will a sent • copy of f a
Rule to Show Cause once It is
signed by to# Judge and II will
advls* you haw and when to
respond to this request for
tortolture
I HEREBY CERTIFY TH A T
a true and correct copy of this
Notice was sent to to* above'
named addresses by U.S. regis­
tered mall, return receipt re­
quested. Mis (th day ot August,
M l.
NORMAN R.WOLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
By: Philip Archer
Assislant State Attorney
TOSS. Park Ave.
Titusville, FI. 0710
(407) IS* 173*
Attorney tor Plalntltl

F IN E T U N I PIANO SERVICE.
1* now offering an Intreductor y SS ^tff piawe ^ls^si^s^i ^Re^c^n^^sf
with this Pd. Spwclal In­
cludes miner key repair* and
f r a * h u m i l i t y c e n tra l
•slimeta*................... 04-I4M
THAN K YOU
ST. JU D E
J.A .
1 AM ERICAN AIRLINR. 1 way
llckats from Syracuse, NY
Orlande. FI. AAust ba used by
X2X Best offer 1774(2**

BE AN IMAGE CONSULTANT!
To consult on beauty, fashion
‘ ‘
-1................ .MS-011

m uf'Off
^—tej.—— m
te Inff
.State ICn
*OO#
*
rOr

program. Must ba 11 yrs. ol
apt and O va F L drivers lie.
Apply In person i Tea w. M M
SI. Santord. M-F (AAS-1IPM

to

Local/CarIba an Island*

AG C A R R IE R S , a w a ll
astabllshed and growing
central Florida based com­
pany attars you:
a Sami Annual Pay Incraasaa
• Step Oft Pay
• Unloading Pay
• Vacation Pay
• Safety Banus
a Spousa nidirv: Program
a Avarage Trip X 7 Days
a Late Model Conventional
Tractors
II you tave 3 years out et state
tractor traitor experience and
a good driving record, call

27— N u rw ry 4

C hild C a rt
ARC SAAALL DAYCARE. TLC
tor babies A toddlar*. Hot
meals. E«c. Refs........TO41U
CH ILD CARR In my home,
toddlar* to 4 yr*. HRS
cartlllad. 01*811___________
C H ILD CARE, family salting.
•II shifts. Nag. rale* Fenced
yard, hoi meals. 01 W74_____
DAYCARE AVAILABLE in my
Hidden Lh. home. Lots el
T L C . LkJt7 C 4 0 ........01-410
EX P E R IE N C E D CHILDCARE,
good home, good maalt, great
coral 7:l*toX M -F. 01-0(0
M O TH ER ot 2 will babysit
afternoons and ave*. my San
lord home. 01-14*0
SHARON'S Adarabla Stinkartl
Eve. rat's I CPR trained. Hoi
meals. TLC I Call 20 *114
SMALL Q U A LITY HOME LIKE
D a y c a r* A F ra t c h a a l.
Open I age l Meals, learning
pregram I Playground I Fatly

DRIVE!
Auto broker needs person to
a ip with driving and auto
detailing. Part time. 7 » « 3 2
BARN SMa-itaaa w r e k i stuff
invslspas at Kama, (to c a ll
SEND SASE to: ftoldw Dis­
tributor*. PO H u 27IJ2S-C,
Carpus Christ), T X 7140110

EXPUIERCED MEOiUiC
Diesel A gas equipment.
Welding exp. help'ul. AAust
a v e own tool*. For Inform*tlon call 777014_____________
GOOD WORKERS N I E O I D I I
DAILY WORK D A ILY FAY
Call Bah.........70-7111 attor ipm

He'd! U t ffR L ...... 01-2411
WILSON A R E A Childcare, all
•gas. Days/Night*. Reason
able rates....................ITO-lttl

E seel lent Opportunity I
SOUP TO NUTS: Call Sammi*:
SH a m a r l:l* -lp m . 014714
G R IA T MONSV Distributing
patented nutrition products.

33— Training
t Education

PskblsAAsrtot........04-011

H A IR S T Y L IS T
H ilr -A
Rangers. Needed newt 272
0510or after 102 *311

BE A Licensed Contractor, Gen
eral/Bullder/Residential. Call
tor Into l-aaa-10-iaM

Mature woman to provide
housekeeping, meal* and
chlldcara, In Professional
couple's horn*. Ptoasa sand
resaws* to: Baa IX Dsiary,
FL0711-MIS

43— Ltgal Swvlcts

Bar 1405472

"B A N K R U P TC Y trww S IM "
"D IV O R C E Inns U S "
K. MawacbL Attorney, 44»7M4

Publish: August IX O, M l
D EI-14*

UVCM M pW v
Ta hafp dtvarcad maftar wtM
one child. Room and beard +
UQwh. must drive 7 0 (7 0
L t V I IN Ta care N r Sldorty
waman. S o t « « t l - »■ &lt;-----wk. 2P*wa nlUtti B wbaa
M A T U I I IsdtvtdaH. w/car.
ret. incara apparhnHyl
train I t-40-27&gt;70la«t. t m
MEDICAL

Accepting applicatkns to
Cartiiwd (dining
mMattonvMto A w Santord.

MM. TECH
B spar lanced. Lakp M a ry
era*. 014*
“
(04. "ta t J

OmCf iM M KR
Ground

&amp;

.04-104

POSTAL M _
_m
•I3.il.hr. Maw apen. Par
•earn and sppikatton call
01 7554 _______

**mmuan**

Santord area. Start ItIJB/hr
and Into CHI l-lk -04-42*7
Tam HawtTday*.

MHO P H D M IVIES
Needed Immediately! Ask tar
................Cal I *20-4442

Rstoraa** Manunwa an Ma S.
R/W H a of Samiato W ads

L O S T!I

K U W A IT/IA U D I JOBS
hiring man/waman many
RoMS; aeoltonl pay w/trana.
p a id . C a ll far d a t « I U
IM lU a M M E lt. K-U7

RENMVICRUSirNNC

7 1 -B

(DP*

and such af Ma

»4 N * N N d N W N ...IM iN i

T o &lt; x s &amp; z ,&amp; r

D e f e n d a n t ( * ) i an# th*

fondants and ouch of th*
Ow

Interested to doing Military.
Fadwal ar State contract*.
Can.............. .............. 04-7017

p r iv a t e p a r t y r a t e s

M R kJL • icM P JL

G f RAROCURRIN.

H O M ES ITE IB. af SEM I
HOLE WOODS, Florida, accardtog *s lhaf sssrvay af
n u idN In Official »
Bask INF, Fayas o n
R U H R n &amp; k Rw

August a
12. 10*1

Orlando - Winter Park

id I full lima. A l l
shirt. Pertoct sdssdutlng tor
samlretlrad hamamskar leak­
ing tor something to da wtM

lh
, ■, IWeS^ng
-— --tap
l
iUOW
lvai^aJoauM
K^^IRTTIRTlr
LFN N KEM D
Full time. tl Tshift
Come |oin aur toam at OaBary
Motot . an SNF wiM suhacuto
unit providing car* and aarv
leas la skilled patients It.
vOTtlktton dependant. We aka
provide a v t .. fy af attar
sarvkas usually offered In Ma
acuta care setting. Era*- '------desirable but will train
Excellent working environ
D lB A R T MANOR
4 * N .H w yi;m
Daiary.M-F, SAAA-4PM...-.BOE
ROOF IP X Aprentk* A labor

....jm-sm
SECURITY OmCCRS

tkn....

Santord area. CHI 74P4B4B

JTYIIST
With same tallowing, com
mission er rental 1224(4*4
TBLIAAARKETERS
A SUPERVISOR: Expanding 11
yr. old company naadt part
lima telemarketers working
eves. Hourly pay and bonuses,
experience not necessary It
you a v a a good phone voice
and era quick to toam. Call BJ
70 S**) tor Interview.________
In ou
toads and pay auilliU* Il yas*
are professional and tava a
good voice wa’II tram yaw ta
make ISSPSSO plus par wofcl
CHI Lisa ISAM to 4PM tar
4 .1 0 ISM________

WUTRE33ES
Dunbars Restaurant Santord.
_________ 02-4(1)__________

WarthousR/Orivtfs
120 225 weekly + benefit*.
(Will train) 1-W1-2NX *

I MV TECH
For busy orthopedic ott Ice.
Contact Sharon............. 747-U3S

73-E m p teym #nt
W onttd
IRONING W ANTED. Shirts
11.50 ta F r a pick up A dH. II
pfu*. Phea anytime....2022*4
W ILL DO lawn mewing at
raasanabkratas.
04-7414

LET A

SPECIALIST

A

DO IT!

S*^&gt;L' 1 ^ v4 i

Corpom ry

A ir Conditioninfl
o m T ^ ^ T fls tta m ^ ^ T y
sarvka. All mkkei Free esl *
47Y Id A 74hours. 7day*

S S

CARPENTRY. Hama repairs,
ramedal. Decks. Sheds A
Garages QUALITY I 0 I -0 H

CArpGt/Fioors

NCOS

REN/USEOMPUAMES

ADEPT CARPET CLEANING.
Circular dry loam sys dry in I
hr Summer discount S*f &lt;725

Buy/SHI • Recsnd/Guaranteed

H0MERPPilMCE-322'3tt3
AuTowotlvr
D E TA IL F IV E R . LH your car
sparkle tor summarl Camp.
datHI service 1.......... 11*4211
HEADLINERS! AAost cars 1*0
Wagons U l Vinyl tops MO up
Carpet 140 up (W 44()*H

CltAfiinq S*frvict
C A TH Y'S CLEANING SERV­
ICE Ratorancet. reasonable
rates. Licensed! Call 017*70

THE CtEIN TEEM
CLASSIC CLCANINGI
FOR CLASSY CLIENTSI
Call t a Clean Teem
(•S-70S4M

Building Contractors
• A D O ITIO N xTM U O Tw dH ilT
Quality warfcl Traufctostaatl
Retorences AAel«e40M t(
NEW. RIAAOOIL REPAIR
H O M IX O F F IC S L STORE!
All type* censtrvctwn Res/Cam
CBCHSOM

Concrete
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Baal 2 Man Quality Opera
tiont 10 2721/2*4-7*02

F tn c t

Cjrpcrrtry
CARPENTER All Smdsol home
repairs, painting A ceramic
111*. Richard Grass-.....Ill 1(71

\tlrri(is r

SHARP

T

h

Masonry
TWP MASONRY, Brkk. btack.
stucco, concrete Renovation*.
Lie d A In*0 I-2444/U44IS7

M onth.

SIS/up Call Ray 257 71U

* * a HAULINO.yard

trash,
appliances, furniture, trash ef
any kind! Richard......27777*1

Homo Improvement

Peinting
DICK PINOLA'S FAINTING.
Quality work! Inl/Exl., Llc'd
4 Insured Freeesll 20 5723

th e

Horn* Repairs
Houfl bottom Jl”

horn* repairs! Palnl/Ttrmfte
damaqe Ik./In* .... 10 Mil

humming
HOPKINSPUMIIM
All your plumbing needs) 7*
hours! IRFOO5777O20 MW

Lawn iervica

f*ressure deaning

COMPLETE Qualify Lawn 4
Landscaping. Tree Service 4
Irrigahan. competitive rales,
tree**llmaksSunny's30 7«2*
LAWN CAREI U A UFI Free
estimate* Senior discount*
Trash removal
013711
L AWN M A I N T E N A N C E '
Cammtrctal/Prudential. Law
Ratost Call Tem
0740*
■ANDY'S QUALITY LAWN.
Compute care, clean ups
Since l f « Free est.l 014714

PRESSURE CLEANING MAN House wash/painling s*5 and
up Roger, 0 * **40.1AM IPM

-R h :

) n u r H u sin rss

Moving ft Hauling
B 4 R HAULING. Yard trash,
appl. turn. GMp/en lime 1

CONCEPT On* Euler. Gen
carpenfryl Horn*, olllce,
kitchen, balhl 044247

work Law SSI Frea ast Wood,
cainlink t repairs. S0 **21

s 1.1 l * n

¥

f T n Ce T

Hontfy Man
ONE CALL DOSS IT ALLI
Painting, masonry, welding,
mewing, etc. 11PH. 04-1771
BEST PRICSSI Quality w«rh.
Anyt hl ng/ Evar yt hl ng.
Homes/Ofllce Total repairs.
Improvements. 1 do It all!
Frea ESI. Anytime. 04 Till
CARPENTRY. MASONARY
painting and III* work. Fra*
estimates. Llsc'd. Call 02410

1

Y I C Z M

A H C O

Z H

S I C

CONSTRUCT IVR SERVICE

GOT*

RESTA URANT/FIZZS RIA tor

O

I C O

Swminole

to
ityoTtto
of Mg'

That told win la — _ _ --------to aatlafy Ma krm s of two OWN
of Eaacutkn.
Donald F. Esllngar, Sheriff
Seminole County, Florida
PuMktad: Aufuat t t *0. Sep­
tember A 12. wiM Me tale an
Saetamfeara Htt.
D l l -I l l

K C H E O X

OfVISKM

F E D E R A L NOMC LOAN
MORTOAOC CORPORATION
FLA INTIFF,

The administration of the
• s ta te g f L I L L I E M A E
K I M E C L . docooiod. File.
Number (1-M4CP. topondtogtn
M* Circuit Court tor temtoeto
C o u n ty, F
^Fro bol*

oi Mo J B B L . ,
m m . or Iwrtodtofton of this
Court arg ropltgd to Rto Mofr
•bloctians wIM Ml* Caurl
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
TH R E E MONTHS A FTE R THE
D A TE O F TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION O F THIS NOTICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A FTER THE
D A T E O F SEEVICB O F A
COPY O F THIS NOTICE ON
TH EM .
of Ma

CLASSIFIED ADS

OF TH E ItN N T R E N T H

332*2611_______________ 831 9 9 9 3

C A B IN * f t O N

ta rayara aatil^tataw*
A L L IN T B E S S T E D PERBOMS ARC N O TIFIf D TH A T:
All

On* l(4i Toyota F K . Vln.
4J T * H N H R IE M M J M halng
stored Of Altornomo Tooi*wg
and th* undtraHnod ao Merit!
of Seminal* County, Florida,
will of 1100 AJW on Mo tlM
day of ioptwnaar A D . m t .
otter lor aaft and aatl to Ma
hlfhett bidder, FOB CASH IN
HAND AND SUBJKCT T O A N Y
AND A LL KXISTING LIBNS. at
Itw From IfMaat) Door, at Ma
itop*, of Ma laminate County
Courthouse In '

V I Z

IN T H E CIR CUIT COUNT
O F T N R N T N JU f C I A L
MCIRCUIT
B M V OP
F 1I M I B L

T a ’ n m a Tw W w o r m s of Pw
porswwfraprooomoRsn and Mo

In Seminal* County. Florida
more particularty

•A P L K

7 i - m i»w»wVo&lt;

Ltqrt Notfc—

Ltgal Notices

/ m

&gt;• D a y

I nr

SGcretarialft
Typing Services
CUSTOM Typng/toe*keeping!
OJ Enterprises. *01B E. 25th
SI . Sanford 040471/10 7*0

Tree Service
hUNTANS TREE SERVICE
Tree work, light hauling F ra
estimates. Insured 01 left
RICH'S TREE REMOVAL 24
hr service. Ira estimates.
b*stprices!77*ms

Is l o i r

( u l I ( h i s s i f i m l . .1 2 1 / J‘ d l l

Is

�K IT *N * C A B L Y L E # By L o n y W right

CMngctt^Fuam)
v m

t t o n m

P .

SMRRRRRR tPflCUU.1

FURNISHED EFFICIEN CIES

i WThP fWW^WW* •®S*MWP

u w m

&gt; n ,,m

i!

|l&gt;ClllHRf&gt;MMM«

ALTAMONTE
T v .t7 »-u B .w M iTr

1 BEDROOM
MOVE IN
SPECIAL

E*uelH*geingO&gt;pgrtuwltvt
CROWN SQUARE

Single floor with private
ontronco. Studio*, t A t
bedrooms, many extra* In­
clu d in g tto ro g o ip o co .
QuWt.caiy community. NIC*
londKogtagON UTI
MAMADBRSW M OCAEIII

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

Step Up Into A
Great Apartm ent!

W e Nit and tell

more property than
anyone In the Greater
Sanford/lalw Mary area.

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

ASAUMf NO QUA LI F T 1/1Vy
Townhomo In lot* M ory'i
Huron Cove/Cresslng*. Up
tcotodoroo. Soeurlty... *00. NO

m.*
G n tu »K

oeouN D f l o o r t / i i n o
Northloho Villa unit. Owner*
highly motIvotod That'* why
price lionly................ IS*. *00.
SPECIAL LK. MARY 1/1
Immaculatol Rig groat rm.
w/fplc. Ovor Tlmucan. Xtres
abundant I Now only...*10*.*00.
EX ECUTIV E TR I-LE V E L* /}
On about 1 aero*. Near l a A
Truly* stunner I...... *110.000
AIO LOMAWOOO */&lt;V*
On on* aero near Heathraw.
Guest quarter*. Pool A mar*.
Nearly JOOOtq. ft....... (1*0.000
1/1M O R ILI O N I ACRES
Genova area. Partly cleared A
lanced. Creative financing.
Bring horse*............ .**7.*00
BRIONT/OPENl/l
Spilt plan. Cathedral celling*.
Near (cheat*. shopping, modi
cal. Now only..............***.700
1 bdrm., ample star eg*,
central H/A, carpet, fenced
yard, utility roam w ith
w asher/dryer hook ups
freshly pointed. S47Splus dep.
Call m iso a, teav memo*
SANFORD-MAYFAIR ■l bdrm.
1bath, C/H/A. II replace, large

(1stMonth Only)
A p a rtm e n ts
C ab le T V
Wssher/Drycn in Select Units
Self Clean Oven
Ice maker

Dishwasher
G arbage
Disposal
pool

C lu b h o u s e

rayiyw

, &gt;Tl

IMMACULATE V I a POOL
Shows Ilk* a model In Oak
Forest. Owners motivated!
Lafsofxtrasl Ju st (11*.*00

l¥ f

2450 Hartw ell Ave„ Sanford
M O N .-S A T.9 -6 • Sun. 12- 5

1 Bdrm, 1 both. CHA. IS7S
Month. Socurlly doposlt
negotiable. U l H M / m r m
1 BDRM. 1 BATN spacious
country homo I Lakefrant on *
ocro*. A 1.1700/mono 7IS7
1404 M V R TL R A V I . S A N ­
FORD. 1 bdrm. 1 bath. Fla.
rm/]rd bdrm. Canlral H/A.
celling Ian*, carport, kllch.
appliances, redecorated 1/fl.
Quiet neighborhood, sajo/ma.
plus *3*0dep *01 371 74*1
1 BDRM. I both, appliance*,
fireplace, fenced yard U0*
Vsnture I Properties. 11147*4
1 BDRM. I BATN. Santerd
Fenced. *3*0/mo Call 091421
days *30 &gt;057. eves/weekends

105— DupiRX-

T r ip le * / R frt

* “ LI,B O B #B M M k BtBMIRMi' MB' BMNBlI*

SANFORD, met 1 Mtm.. AC.

N I C K • ( LEAN • A F F O R D A B L E

*1, 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom s*

$100 O ff

F I R S T

M O N T H S

R E N T

Carpal A Vinyl, Calling Fan, Verticals A
Minis, Pool, Ttnnls Court, Clubhouse A
Laundry Room

r s

-

m

caryet Dishwasher, laundry
rm . carport (410 me. MO-7010

TWO BEDROOM. 1 Bath. CHA.
wash/'dryer hookups Wall to
wall carpel
MI 7N7
17 S3/LAKE MARY area I
bdrm 1 bath, completely
ramadstadl *303/mo 337 3*17

fy an this two story 1/}!* with
appliance*, and fireplace.
Fenced yard with pool I (M.300

OW NER FIN AN CIN G
PInterest V I . living, dining,
family r m . security system,
fenced yard *43.100
DELTONA 1/3 on I acra. scr
porch, carport. 143.too

mrrmt icmr

II down for Vets • A little
more tor ether*, grand new 1
bedroom 1 bath homes with 1
car garages from *510.
total monthly payment*.
UMvoreaf Realty, OU-ma

POLICE ACADEMY, Collector,
shooter, paint gtxvwr or ad­
venturer. Call PEAA tar soma
of th* best price* around I
atMM-MO*

l t f — O ffic * SuppJkt

/ Egulpm tnt

Pays**
QOOD USED TIRES • All s lm
from U and up. Mounting aha
available Mon Frt. AS. Ill*
Celery Aye. Sanford_________
aTRUCK B IO LIN ER -N r IIO
to t*«7 Ford Ranger. U0

t i l 1. SANFORD AVE Office
building. Approx. 1.000 *q. ft.
Covered parking. Opposite
Chamber of Commerce bldg.
By owner. SfO.OOO 407 (411400
or 1100 1*11400 __________

O C A L A N A T 'L F O R E S T .
W**d*d lets! U.fW tech, no
money down 1171.41 monthly
________ tJiM W JM * ________

e-r r* I BUT HOUSIS *■* tS

03/1 - renovated, new carpel,
paint, apptlancas. fenced
yard .............. ....... U l. ICO
bVt
renovated, new carpet,
paint apptlancas. lanced
yard.............................(40,*00

1 bdrm. 1 bath. Ig. mattor. Ig.
liv in g and dining area
w/tlreplace. Wood dKh. Ig
tree*. Privacy and locurlty.
Extra room tor attic*. hobby
or pou. Jrd bdrm. Twmlt and
pool privilege*. tff.tO*
Day*. m -M U
tves/weebendx, m-l***

ABOUT * ACRES on Sanford
Aye In Lk. Jesup area near
proposed beltway. (70.000.
(Nostrum Realty 3731*1*
NEAR M AYFAIR Colt cowrsa.
nicely wooded l0MI*Stt*.S00

Government Repo* A Assume
No Quality Homos In Semi
nolo/Orange/Volusla/Lak*
Countie*

#1/1 • on 1/1 acral New paint,
fptc. family, living and dining
roams. Privacy fence *74.300

TNCOMS/SMTOtO
RMSAU BYONMR

ANY CONDITIONI
Need repairs* Behind an
payments? Call Grog. 014714

ALMOST NOTHIK DOWN!
ALMOST M CIOSIM COSTS
GOVERNMENT HOMES
NO GIMMICKS
Special Buying Incentive* Now
MUST QUALIFY

1S5— Condominiums
Co-Op/Salt
Motivated seller I Call Drenda
Ownbv Real EstaNW* *17 7*»
W I N T K R S P R IN G S . Th*
Highlands. 1 bdrm Iv /dining
rm U X II I t , Ig sem porch,
fully equip kil Tstutit. peel
all emaMlMt. Owner will li
nance *31.300
11* 4711

2IS— Boots and
Acccssorits

WAOOMBER 4 wheel drive.
VA lull power and air Locally
owned. 1 owner. Very very
clean Service record* avail
abN *4.***
Call m 4301

217—O arq g t Salts
FRANK A LORI'S New A Used I
1101 S French Ay*. Thrift
Star*. Clip this ad Nr U % ONI
SUMMER SALEII Fantastic,
hug*, brand name consign
merit shop Designer samples,
plus a great selection ol
clothing from top notch
ladies' GOING ONCE/GOING
T W IC E C O N S IG N M E N T.
Providence Plata. Providence
Blvd . Deltona NO 13*1 O P IN

AAAUTQ SALVAGE
olDeBery
WE WEIGH AND PAYl
Tap M Nr |unh.
Cars A Truck*

Cdl Mite NwN
Venture i Preterites
4*? 774*40*
LOCH ARAOR 1 story 3 bdrm
It* bath Sunken living rm ,
fireplace, sal in kilchen. pool,
scr porch. • yrs old Double
garage PITI U U mo *11.000
down to assume 133 171*

E. ORLANDO 1/1 mobile. 1 car
garage and guasl apt (av.300
W. MalictawshL Realter
333 7*03 _________

M A X I O ff!A Ter Quick Sait!
Your opportunity to Own a
prestigious eider 3 story home
on boautltui double corner lot
In s u p e r S e n l o r d
■wiQhborhood Large rooms.
Ilreplace. CHA. irrigation
system plus many other
leatures Price *117.W0
BUT MAKE AN OFFERII

107 AIOSOALE a.
Windsor Manor. Oil 414 Long
wood Wed . Thun . Fri . **
VCR Tapes, wheelchair,
walker and odds A ends!
PLEASE KNOCK AT DOORI

2 FAMILY SALE
34X43

1/3 split Nice family

Toys and a little bit ol every
thing Friday and Saturday.
* I 3*10 Park Ct Senlord

2 FAMILY S A W !

14X33 3/1 split, lew all electric

Pinecrest area Oil of Airport
Blvd 113 W. COLEMAN CR
Toy*, doth**, m ist A also Ig
womans S3 Sal * 3 __________

339— Motorcycles
and Bikes
• MOTORCYCLE T R A I L E R .
Eicallent condition! Casts
*300 Sailing (100 Cash only I
13*4034____________________
II HONDA CB7M F , Real nice!
Must i#o to believe I t*0B OBO
331 0114 alter 4 PM__________

241— Recreational
Vehicle* / Campers

O n ly *3100

�•Mfottf Herald. Sanfcxd. Florida - TTturaday, August 72, I f t l

Fresh air could ease
difficult breathing
o v e r - t h e - c o u n t e r antihiotamlne/deconfeatant d ra ft,
such as Act lied. Dtmetapp or
Naldecon. These agents would
alao exert a drying effect on your
bronchial passages.

H Eft^S JOE COOL S16NIN 6
UP FOR A CLASS IN
FIGURE DRAWING...

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respiration: nasal congestion
and excedb bronchial mucus.
The two m ay be related.
A a you have surmised (In
attempting to reduce air pollu­
tion by using an air cleaner on
the IVimacp). part of your dif­
ficulty may be caused by mate­
rial In the air you breathe. This
could be a s simple as an allergy.
Such Inhalatlonal allergies are
quite common — even In the
elderly — an d m ay represent an
o v e r -s e n s it iv t t y to p o lle n ,
allergens from a feather pillow or
a horse-hair mattress, or sub­
stances excreted by dust mites,
tiny parasites that live In house
dust. T h is sensitivity causes
allergic rhinitis — stuffy nose,
watery eyes, cough and In­
creased bronchial secretions.
O n the other hand, some
people react badly to other
substances In the environment.
Cigarette smoke, wood smoke,
sm og and soot are common
culprits. Reactions to these sub­
stances are probably not true
allergies but. rather, the conse­
quences o f air pollution.
Obviously, avoidance of these
triggering substances w ou la
h e lp y o u r b r e a t h in g . A n
allergist, by using skin and blood
testa, could Identify them and
advise you how to avoid or
overcome them. If you choose
not to see a specialist, you still
might be helped by using an air
purifier/humidifier in the house,
discouraging smoking (and wood
fires) In the home, purchasing a
hypo-allergenlc plUov and mat­
tress. using non-wool bedding
and trying one of the many

''A U - STUDENTS SHOULD
BE PREPARED TO SHOW A
SAMPLE OF TU 6IR U)ORK

co sou ccuoe
u f t fs n a i w a t m ?

PETER
GOTT.M .D

line of play would require hearts
W e seem to have spent the (o be 4-3 and trumps 3-2.
After a fourth-best club lead,
w h o le w e e k s t r u g g lin g to
overcome vicious distribution, there was a safer path available.
but when key suits divide 3-2 or Having won the first trick with
3-3, hands are quickly forgotten. d um m y's club queen. South
Only when the breaks are bad Is cashed the club king and heart
a deal likely to And Its way Into ace.
W h y cash the heart ace?
print.
Declarer
w as planning to end
Today's hand Is no exception.
If you haven't sneaked a peek at with a crossruff. and when one
the East-West cards, decide how adopts that approach. It Is good
you would play In six spades. technique to cash the side-suit
winners first.
West leading the club two.
N e x t d e c la r e r p la y e d a
North show ed some 18-20
points with his two-no-trump diamond back to his ace and
rebid. Once South found out cashed the club ace. discarding a
about the 5-3 spade fit. he diamond from the dummy. Fi­
named the contract he thought nally South cast ofT with a
he could m ake. It m ay be diamond.
East won with the diamond
unscientific, but rubber-bridge
king
and returned a trump, but
bidding tends to be like that.
South's Immediate impulse d e c la re r w o n in h a n d and
was to ruff two hearts In hand, crossruffcd in diam onds and
establishing the heart eight as hearts.
his 12th trick. But luckily, sec­ (C J1991. N E W S P A P E R E N ­
ond thoughts prevailed. That TERPRISE ASSN.

By Bsrnlos Beds Ossl
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Ang.29.1S91

w e TW ^TO
-N
J

IffANP T

t4 A /tf W M N T r o /‘ N O W
. n o w

y o u / v e /

A to o r

v C e f f - w e r IW T iW f .
6 -2

There are strong Indications
that you may be involved In
something that will bring you
before the public In the year
ahead. Your conduct could make
It either very successful or a flop.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Your chances of getting others to
do things for you today which
you should be taking care of
yourself aren't too encouraging,
T o avoid rejection, be selfsufficient. Get a Jump on life by
understanding the influences
governing you In the year ahead,
Send for Virgo's Astro-Graph
predictions today by mailing
$1.25 p lu s a lon g, selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
vour zodiac sign.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be
more se c uri ty - mi nd ed than
usual today w here your
possessions are concerned. If
you have to shop at several
stores, don't leave valuables in
your car without making sure to
Inrklt

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
you're too Insistent upon doing
things your own way today.
severe problems could result,
others will cooperate with you
only If they feel you're prepared
to do the same with them,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Think your moves through
carefully In advance today or
else you might box yourself Into
u comer. Above all. however,
don't let an old grudge Influence
your thinking.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Long-term financial corn­
mltments require serious consldcration today. Think carefully
before tying up your resources or
future earnings.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
If you fall to do things in a logical
s e q u e n c e today, o b je ct ives
you've set for yourself aren t
likely to be achieved. Strive to be
both methodical and pragmatic.
PIBCR8 (Feb. 20-March 20)
It's best not to pry too deeply
into the affairs of a close friend
today. There's a chance you may
misinterpret something you're
better off not knowing,
ARIBS (March 21-April 19) If
you recommend an Individual

Opening lead: + 2

certain about to friends today,
the results could return to haunt
you. To be on the safe side,
endorse only known quantities.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You may be a bit more vulnera­
ble to manipulation than usual
today. Be w ary of developments
where you could be used by
another for a selfish purpose.
OBMINI (May il-J u n e 20)
Dealing e ffectively with co­
workers today might take all the
diplomacy you can muster.
There's a chance that one who
always creates problems will be
up to old tricks ajgain.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Tread cautiously in any type of
situation today that has strong
speculative elements. If you're
not disciplined, you may risk
more than you should on some­
thing foolish.
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22) An old
issue that previously generated
friction between you and your
mate might surface again today.
Try to treat It more Intelligently
this time around.
( 0 1 9 9 1 . N E W S P A P E R ENTERPR1SE ASSN.

by Leonard Starr
Th;5 5IIENCE 15 VKV

COME WlT WE
IFF
WANT
. TOUFF...
r
ARNOLD

.SCHWARIENEC6 ER?

NQ IU A TERMINATOR-WU HAF
A CHIP INZlDE HbUR BRAIN THAT
h a in t b een in v e n te d v e t -.
ANUDDER TERMINATOR HA*
BEEN ZENTT TO

1 X IT DOEZN'T NUtTfcRDCtl'T WHO NEEDZ A PLOT WEH
UNDER- WOV'VE GOT REAUV
STAND.) SPEZIAL &amp;VECTZ7 )

r ip it o w t

AND OWE IT Y\ . J P r V
TO TEXA-Z.
INLTRUNIENTZ. J
(.

I

CWS.rO'J CXCU5C * e AX£ &amp;.A.HIN3 M t t WOJI.P YPV
FJR. S0*£TWN3 a J STOP TH' CAR
THAT... 1 B v I S PI.eA5S.A5P...

F A lM fi/C

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                    <text>3G-Centsv

THURSDAY

Ju ly 4,*4991

Serving Sanford,. Lake Mary «nd Seminole County elnee 1S0 S
83rd Year. No. 269 - Sanford. Florida

Fireworks tonight

NEWS DIGEST

■ y (NCR N F8 IFA U F
Herald Staff Writer__________________

□ Sports
Lym sn sits of toum sm snt
L O N O W O O D - While m any will turn to the
skies to enjoy fireworka today, baseball players
from across Seminole County will look to make
some of their own as the 4th of J u ly Invitational
at Lym a n High School opera with four games.

I m Pi m I I

□ People
To o n honoftd for original video
Lake M ary High School graduate. Ju lie
McDonald. 18, was named one of five natlnal
w in n e rs at the RespecTeen " S tr a ig h t to
Parents" Aw ards Gala In New York City. J u ly 1.

M ount Trashm ore envisioned
K E Y W E S T — Artists In this often wacky
resort city want to give the local landfill a new
look by sculpting four famous faces on the
mountain of refuse dubbed Mount Trashm ore.
W hile Mount Rushmore honors four presi­
dents. these artists envision faces from the city’s
history Including author Ernest Hem ingway,
playwright Tennessee Williams and Capt. T o n y
Tarracino. m ayor and former bar owner.
T h e fourth is still undecided, but singer
J im m y Buffett and county mayor W llhelm lna
Harvey are leading contenders.
S tu d io ow ner Robert Kennedy says his
proposal Is likely to elicit laughs.
"It's a little bit tongue-ln-cheeklsh. but I’m
serious about It.” he said. "If they could do II
anywhere, they could do It in Key W est."
He said the faces would be built on the ground
out of chicken wire shaped with wood and
stucco. Then they would put a blllboard-llke
structure on the mountain to hang the faces on.
T h e landfill site, on city-owned land on Stock
Island. Is scheduled to close In 1993.
Others In town have already been thinking
about uses for the mountain.
” 1 thought It would be a great water slide."
said Assistant City Manager Ron Herron. He’s
also considered a 100-foot tall giant conch shell,
III up at night, of course.

S A N FO R D — Be at the Sanford
lakefront this evening, and enjoy
the fireworks. T h e local Indepen­
dence Day fireworks display will
climax the local observance of the
nation’s 215th anniversary.
T h e 2 n d a n n u a l P e o p le s
Fireworks display Is scheduled to
begin at 9 p.m . T h e event's primary
organizer. Steven Alford said the
total spent for fireworks this year
was $5,000. a thousand more than
last year. T h e total fireworks pro­
gram will last slightly under a
half-hour. "W e are going to launch
the fireworks one after the other.”
Alford said, "so we can really put on
a display. We don't want to let time
elapse between the shots, so people
c e rta in ly w o n 't be b o re d ." He
added. "W e promise, no stalling In
the launches." In all. there will be
500 aerial rockets.
T h e fireworks launch site will be
on the northern side of the New
Tribes Mission headquarters. Alford
said the best location for watchers
w ill be at Fort Mellon Park, from the
C iv ic C e nte r eastward. Persons
wishing to have a more comfortable
scat m ay consider taking lawn
chairs to the park.
During most of the days events,
certain sire d areas will be closed lo

-JulyFourth

traffic. Th e extreme northern end of
Mcllonvllle Avenue, from First St. to
the lakefront will be closed, as will
San Juan, on the eastern end of Fort
Mellon Park. Seminole Boulevard,
along the lakefront from the Civic
Center to Its eastern end will be
closed all day.
A portion of cast First Street will
be closed only during the parade,
scheduled to begin at 6 p.m . this
evening, as will a portion of north
Sanford Avenue near the Chamber

□ Bee F ire w orks, Page 7 A

Fu rlo n g says ‘N o ’ to sales tax hike
M ILD
Herald Stall Writer

Village to fight toilet order
F IR E ISLAND . N.Y. - T h e Village of Ocean
Beach, known as "the Land of No." Is likely lo
keep up Its fight against public pottles. Its
luwyersays.
A court says the village — known for Its strict
and sometimes peculiar rules — has committed
another "no no.
T h e court, after a five-year battle, has ordered
Ocean Beach to build public restrooms. Frank
Isler, the village’s attorney, said he believes the
village board will vote Saturday to appeal —
again.
In the late 1970s. officials In the neatly kept
seaside community barred eating cookies on the
sidewalk. T h a t was declared unconstitutional
after a widely publicized trial.
Other village prohibitions are still enforced: no
eating or drinking on the beach: no bicycles,
anywhere, during the summer, no ball playing
on sidewalks. And women must cover their
swimsuits once they leave the beach area.
In recent years. Ocean Beach officials have
resisted court orders to Install public toilets,
apparently because they wanted to discourage
tourists.

Correction
A $2,500 scholarship recently given to
Seminole High School was donated by Mary
G lenn. In memory of her husbund. Norman. The
award was presented by Mary's brother Bill
Glenn and his wife Betty, of Sanford. Th e
scholarship was given through C O M SA C a lu m ­
ni-student group. The nam rs of the donor were
Incorrectly reported In the Positively Sanford
supplement on Sunday.

From staff and twlrs raports

Classifieds...........$8,78
Com ic* •••••••••••••••••••8
D e a rA k k y .................. $8
Deaths.........................$A
Kdltorlal......................4A
Florida........................ SA
Moroeoope................. 88

M ovies.......
Nation........
Feople.......
Nolle#........
Sports........
Television.
W eathor....

-4 8 .
.IB -

Hot and humid

Partly cloudy w ith
the high In the low to
m id 9 0 s a n d a
southwesterly wind
at lO m ph.

F o r m ore w e a th e r, see F o p * 2 A
wm

U B S C R IB E T O T H
.

.

•

K s tlt Palum bo, 7, strlkts $ patriotic poso with Am erican (lags.

Haraid Mtotob, Tommy Vlncwit

Seminole County Commissioner Larry Furlong was in the audience Tuesday
night during the debate on the proposed one-cent sales tax Increase.

S A N FO R D — Seminole County
Commissioner Larry Furlong said
Wednesday he Is opposed to the
proposed one-cent sales tax.
T h e explanation, he said. Is that II
Is based on projections of too high of
population growth and tics up a
penny sales lax that may he needed
to solve a possible drinking water
crisis.
Bui all four of his fellow commis­
sioners disagree, saying the mad
improvements are needed and the
sales lax Is (he fairest way of paying
for them.
Next Tuesday, residents will de­
cide whether to Increase the sides
lax by a penny for 10 years to pay
for $300 million of a $450 million
transportation Imrovcment program
for the next 10 years. Th e tax would
apply to purchases less than $5,000
and would automatically end In 10
years.
Furlong said the tax-financed road
program encourages population
growth, rather than controls It.
"H o w can we ask the people lo
vole for a road program that's
driven by a comprehensive plan
(hat Is likely not lo Ik - accepted by
the state?." Furlong said. "I think
we need to scale down ihe plan,
then maybe we can look at ihc sides
lax. hill we should also look al all

sources of revenue."
Furlong residents who think If Ihe
sales tax Is approved. It will elim i­
nate (he need for a property lax
Increase should think again.
"People are being misled If (hey
think If (he sales tax passes, there
will be no property tax Increase for
10 years." Furlong said Wednesday.
"T h a t isjust not going to happen."
Furlong ulso said the recent re­
lease of a preliminary county study
that shows drinking water In San­
ford und other locations around the
county could be threatened with
saltwater within 14 years Indicates
the county shouldn’t give up the
sales tax option If It faces a water
emergency.
" If we get some years down the
road where m any of our wells are
pum ping hrueklsh water, we’re go­
ing to have to have some way to pay
to replace those wells." Furlong
said. "Conservation Is not going to
solve the problem ."
But Furlong's fellow commission­
ers disagree. All four commissioners
said Ihe tax Is Ihe fairest, least
painful way to solve a real problem
of congcsied roads.
"M ore people pay for It than Just
those who live here." said com ­
mission chairman Fred Slreetman.
" T h e road list w on’t stimulate
g r o w th . It a cco m m o d a te s the
growth that will I k - here. Even If we

S ee Tax h ik e, Page 7A

Bill of rights - for kids
Teachers’ Union chief calls on Bush to endorse children’s welfare
B y L K K M I T O A N O
AP Education Writer
MIAMI B E A C H - T h e head of Ihe
n ation ’s largest teachers union
called on President Bush Icntay to
embrace a "children’s hill of rights”
a I m e d at a s s u r i n g t h a t a ll
youngsters come to school healthy
enough to learn.
" I n spite of the rhetoric. In
America, children arc nut a priority.
Because children don’t vote." Keith
Geiger said In remarks prepared for
delivery before H.500 delegates
gathered here for the National
E d u ca tio n Association’s annual
convention.
He called on the federal govern­
ment to endorse a five-point "hill of
rights" guaranteeing children am ­
ple nutrition, medical can*, a secure
place to live, a quality education,
a n d adequate safeguards from
abuse, violence or discrimination.
Geiger, a former math teacher
running unopposed for a second
term as president ol the 2 1 million
member N EA . accused Washington
of skewed priorities He said the
nation’s leadership is w illing to fund
questionable foreign aid or savings
and loan bailouts, but unwilling to
adequately fund successful early
childhood development programs
such as Head Start
-

Geiger’s address marked a con­
tinuation of recent efforts by the
union to shift the s|K&gt;tltght of the
school reform debate away from
problem schools or teachers to
aiding problem-plagued families.
"I can guarantee our fellow citi­
zens that schools are Improving. It’s
childhoods that are not." he said.
In an Interview . G e iger said
teacher delegates were also likely
this week to consider a resolution
crystallizing the union’s opposition
to President B ush’s call for a
voluntary system of national testing
as a means of increasing school
accountability.
Union olTletals said the conven­
tion would also discuss the worst
threat lo teacher Jobs in more than a
decade. Th e threat ts p osed by
budget problems lacing more than
30 states.
Geiger's remarks also tocuscd on
the failure ol President Bush and
the nation’s 50 governors to take
steps to achieve the Itrst of six goals
agreed upon at an education sum ­
mit nearly two years ago: that by
the year 2000. every child will begin
school physically, emotionally and
academically ready to learn.
"Tha t ts only a wonderful dream
unless the government gets In­
volved." Geiger said.

AMERICAN DREAM
The following table shows how poll respondents rated two
dozen elements o f theAmerican dream, ranked according to
the percentage who considered them very important
E L E M E N TS OF T H E DREAM
V E R Y IM P O R T A N T
97.8%
Having a happy home life
Giving your children a good education in high school
( V s1
Having competent, atfordable health care
S A l.6
Having enough savings
Owning a home_______
Sending your children to a good college
Living well in retirement
Being free of debt_______
Having enough free lime
Having a job that pays well
Having children__________
(ietting ahead on your job
Being able to work av manv vearv as vuuA ;
Owning your own business
Owning a late-model car
Owning a vacation home
Saar&lt;«: M e a t,

1! !

64.0
23.0
10.7
7.0
N E A Graphite

Matters concerning children, including their education, were rated high in a
poll among people in Ihe United States as Key elements in achieving the
American Dream
i H

�M

• San lord Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday .July 4, 1991

NEW S

FLORIDA t^ ! \
BRIKPS
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FROM

TH E

AND

A CR O SS TH E

S TA TE

Poignant reunion
After 45 years, adopted son locates birth mother, siblings

Bridge demolition to begin
S T . P E TE R S B U R G — It will lake workers 18 months to
dismantle and dynamite the Old Sunshine Skyw ay Bridge In
what could be the largest bridge demolition project In the
country.
Work began Wednesday to remove the Tour miles of the
bridge's two spans, made up of 12 m illion pounds of steel and
64 concrete piers.
"It's kind of like coming In and sweeping up ... w ith a very
large broom ," said Joe Blasewltz. who w ill oversee the 88.1
million project for the state Department of Transportation.
Th e span between St. Petersburg and Manatee C ounty has
stood for the past decade as a mangled, rusted rem inder of one
of Florida's worst maritime accidents.
In May 1980. a phosphate ship crashed Into part of the
southbound span, sending 35 motorists to their deaths in the
storm-tossed waters of Tam pa Bay. A modernistic replacement
bridge was built In the mid- 1980s.

BRANDON. Fla. — More than 45 years
after he was put up for adoption. David
Hurley's six-month search for his natural
mother culminated In a name, a num ber
and a nervous telephone call.
"W ho Is this?” snapped the 69-year-old
widow w ho answered. " W h y are you
looking for me?”
The caller said simply. " I was bom on
Nov. 5 .1 9 4 5 .”

There was a pause on the other end or the
line. Th e n a softer voice replied: "I had a son
who was bom on that day. And I wonder
every day of m y life how he is and where he
Is."
Tears came to Hurley's eyes as he told his
newfound mother. "Y o u can slop wonder­
ing ."
T h e Brandon engineer said he was at first
apprehensive about the search, afraid he
would hurt his adoptive parents or he would
be his mother's worst nightmare coming

back to haunt her.
"B ut I suddenly realized that she was
getting old. and If I was going to find her. I
should do it n o w ." Hurley said.
Over the Fourth of J u ly holiday. H urley,
who was raised as an only child. Is to meet
mother Lucy Ballengerof New Castle. Ind.
T h e reunion Is set In Burnside. Ky.. where
one of his three newfound half-brothers
lives. There also Is a half-sister.
During his first telephone call with his
mother. "W e spent 20 minutes cryin g ,"
Hurley said.

Cameras do
not disrupt
courtrooms

W om an convictad for drowning bar sons
J A C K S O N V IL L E — A Jury will return J u ly 12 to determine If
Veronica Perdue should die In Florida's electric chair for the
murder of her two young sons.
A Jury deliberated only two hours Wednesday before finding
Mrs. Perdue guilty of first-degree m urder in the Feb. 10. 1990.
drowning deaths of her sons. Devin, 4. and Corey. 2.
Mrs. Perdue. 24. lowered her head and began crying when
the Jury returned Its verdict.
"W e never doubted this woman was gu ilty of killing her two
children." said Assistant State Attorney Fra n k Ashton.
During the penalty phase the ju r y will recom m end to Circuit
Judge Peter Dealing whether Mrs. Perdue should die In the
electric chair or receive a life sentence. Jud ge s are not bound
by the Jury's recommendation, but usually follow It.
Prosecutors speculated the woman killed her children for
Insurance money, but grandparents had stopped paying the
premiums on one policy and her claim was rejected In the
other.

G A IN E S V IL L E - Cameras In
four state criminal trials did not
distort news coverage of the
trials or disrupt the Judicial
process, a University of Florida
study showed.
T h e f in d in g s re le a s e d
Wednesday could foreshadow
the results of a federal experi­
ment that began this week, said
Sherry Lee Alexander, a U F
Journalism researcher.
U p to 45 states allow some
form of camera coverage In the
courtroom. Beginning J u ly 1.
eight federal courts will follow by
allowing cameras In civil pro­
ceedings as part of a three-year
experiment.

DUI conviction rosults In prison term
W E S T P A LM B E A C H — Jo h n Gaslorowskl Is a three-time
loser as far as Florida's legal system Is concerned — and he will
pay w ith a seven-year prison term for his latest drunken
driving conviction.
Gaslorowskl drove drunk once In 1983 and was convicted.
His license was suspended for six months. He did It again three
years later. T h is time he killed someone and Injured four
others.
T w o months ago. out of jail and driving without a license, he
rolled a friend's car Into a canal. His blood alcohol level was
0.24. more than double the legal level or Intoxication.
" T h e man Just cannot learn his lesson." Assistant State
Attorney Greg Coleman said Tuesday. “ He Just keeps drinking
and driving."

"After intervlewlngjudges and
attorneys, surveying Jurors and
analyzing T V and newspaper
coverage. I found no examples of
Inaccurate coverage." Alexander
said. "Most people I spoke to
before 1 began the study pre­
dicted I would see distorted
coverage."
" O u r s tu d y suggests that
courtroom cameras m ay have
been a scapegoat for the disrup­
tion In the Lindbergh kidnap­
ping trial, which led to the
original courtroom camera ban
more than 50 years ago." she
said.

Mtdals awarded 46 years later
SPRING H IL L , Fla. — Forty six years after he was Injured In
combat and Imprisoned by the Nazis. Francis Hengesbach was
finally awarded his military medals of honor.
Hengesbach. 78. an Arm y sergeant during W orld W ar II. was
given the Bronze Star. Purple Heart. Prisoner of W ar Medal and
six other military awards In a presentation Wednesday by U.S.
Sen. Bob Graham.
Th e retired auto dealer said he said he didn’t start thinking
about the medals until a few years ago. as his 12 grandchildren
began growing up.
” 1 decided for posterity reasons. I should a pp ly." he said in
an interview last week. " I ’m no hero by any means. I did what
cvervone else did and had to do."

Alexander studied broadcast
coverage of four first-degree
murder trials In Florida’s Eighth
Ju d ic ia l C irc u it in A la c h u a
County In 1989. She watched
the proceedings from ju ry selec­
tion through sentencing, and
conducted Interviews before and
after the trials.
Her research Is believed to be
the first such study of the actual
behavior of broadcast Journalists
In the courtroom.

From Associated Press reports

T h e C ity C o u n c il voted
u n a n im o u s ly T u e s d a y to
adopt an em ergency o rd i­
nance m aking It Illegal for
youths under 18 to be out In
public after 10 p.m . Sunday
through Thursd a y and m id­
night on Friday and Saturday.
It took efTect Immediately
and expires Sept. 1. when the
council will review its ef­
fectiveness.
Parents whose children vio­
late the curfew face fines

Getting the jum p on summer
City of Sanford Recreation Department sponore
a summer youth activities program at Lee P.
Moore Park. Participating in the program are,
Above from left: Tony Guerra, 10 and Richard
Wiggins, 9, who coordinate jumps to skip rope
together while Patricia Royster, 10, holds one
end. Right: Tiffany Cornett, 10, and Am y
Manning, 9, jump in unison.
Herald Phase ky Tommy Vincent

Study: Cremations on the rise

North Florida town tries curfew
G R EEN C O V E SPRINGS A summer curfew for teen­
agers is being Imposed by this
North Florida community to
see If It has any effect on
crime and violence.
" T h i s c o m m u n it y has
asked for this and we are
responding to their needs. I
don’t go along with a perma­
nent curfew, but this will let
things cool down for a while.
We m ay have to extend It.”
said Mayor Don Fullerton.

R E G IO N

A ssociated F rees

ranging from (5 0 for the first
ofTense to (5 0 0 for the third
and subsequent offenses.

C O R A L G A B L E S — More Floridians arc choos­
ing to be buried where they died rather than
having their remains shipped to their original
hometowns.
T h e statistics on burials in Florida, compiled by
the University of Miami, show that m any elderly
people are now considering Florida their homc
and feel more people will In- attending their
funerals here.
T h e decision on what to do with the dead is
closely related to religious values. Income, rare,
ethnicity and the rural or urban nature of the
area, said Ira Sheskin. a UM professor who
directed the study conducted by graduate student
Lisa Medav.

Police Chief Gall Russell has
been asked to closely monitor
the curfew and report back
monthly to the council.
The curfew was proposed In
May by a group of students at
R .C. Bannerm an Learning
Center, where an estimated
60 percent of the 156 stu­
dents have either seen some­
one killed or know someone
who was killed.

" T h e fact that the percentage being shipped is
on the decline means we're reaching the point
where the family of the elderly are living In the
state." said Sheskin.
Sheskin said a survey of the demand for
cemetery space in South Florida led him to
prepare the unusual survey.
Th e study also showed that cremations are on
the rise while the rate of burials has decreased.
Statewide figures for 1980 to 1988 show that
burials were down by 12 percent, shipment of
bodies for out-of-state burials decreased by 16
percent, and cremations increased by 73 percent.
Dade County varied som ewhat from the
statewide pattern. Dade was one of only four
counties to show increasing burial rates, as well
as Gadsden. Hamilton and Holmes counties.

THE W EATHER
NATIONAL T IM M

U T IN D 1 D OUTLOOK
Today...Partly cloudy w ith a
high in the low to m id 90s. W ind
southwest 10 m ph. Chance of
afternoon thundershowers 50
percent.
Tonight...P artly cloudy with u
low in the m id 70b . Light wind.
Saturday...Partly cloudy with
a high in the low to mid 90s.
W ind southwest 5 to 10 mph.

(U S P i M l &gt;M)

E x te n d e d fo re c a s t...P a rtly
cloudy Sunday through Tuesday
w ith a chance of afternoon
thundershowers. Lows in the
mid 70s and highs in the low to
mid 90s.

Thursday, July 4, 1991
Vol 83. No 269
Publi«hed Daily and Sunday, aicapt
Saturday by The San lord Haraid.
tnc. MO N. French Ave. Sanford,
Fla. 13771
Second Claaa Poeiage Paid ai Sanford,
Florida and additional mailing
office*
POSTMASTER Sand addraaa changta
to THE SANFORD HERALD. P O
•oi 1M7, Sanford, F L 13773-1MT.
Subscription Ralaa
(Daily A Sunday)
Homo Delivery A Mail
] Month* .... ........l i t M
639 OQ
6 Monlhs
1 Yoar...........
m oo

Florida Roaidanla mual pay Its aalaa
laa in addition to rataa abort
Phono (407) 133-3411

cay
Apalachicola
Daytona Beach
Ft Laud Beach
Far tMyer*
Galneiville
Homestead
Jackionvtlie
Key Weal
Lakeland
Miami
Pensacola
Saratoga
TaUaha****
Tampa
Vero Beach
W Palm Beach

HI
to
t4
91
91
91
9J
94
90
9)
92
9!
•9
94
91
9J
92

La
74
74
74
7k
74
74
71
41
74
7*
74
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71
77
74
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----------1

THURSDAY
P tlyC ld y 9 1 -7 2

V -y jv v ----------- *
FRIDAY
P tly C ld y 9 1 -7 2

SATURDAY
P tly C ld y 9 1 -7 2

SUNDAY
M tlyC ld y 9 1-72

STATISTICS
LAST
J u ly 4

C

FIRST O
J u ly I S

FRIDAY:
SOLUNAR TABLE: Min.

NEW
J u ly

j U U .
26

a.m .. 12:15 p.m .: MaJ. 6:05 a.m..
6 :3 0 p .m . TIDES: D a y to n a
Beach: highs. 1:51 a.m .. 2:42
p.m .: lows. H;0tt a m .. 8:56 p.m.:
N ew S m yrn a Beach: highs.
1:56 a.m.. 2:47 p.m .: lows. H :1 1
a.m .. 9:01 p.m .: Cocoa Beach:
highs. 2:11 a.m .. 3:02 p.m .:
Iowa. 8:26 a.m .. 9:14 p.m.

Pel
42

11
42
tr
o;
00
00
00
01
00
00
14
It
If
00
00

MONDAY
Maly Cldy 9 1 -7 2

BBACN CONDITIONS
D aytona Beach: Waves are I
foot and flat. Current is to Hunorth with a water temperature
of 84 degrees. New Sm yrna
Beach: Waves are 1 foot and
glassy. Current is (o the north,
with a water temperature oi 84
degrees.

DOATINO
S t. A u gu stin e to J u p iter Inlet
To n ig h t and Frid a y: W ind
south (o southwest 10 to 15
knots. Seas 2 to 4 feel. Huy and
Inland waters a moderate chop.
Scattered mostly allernoon and
evening thunderstorms

The temperature at 8 a.m.
today was 77 degrees and
Wednesday’s overnight low was
77. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

W ednesday's high.............93
Barom etric pressu re.3 0 .0 0
R elative H um idity....9 7 pet
W inds...............South B mph
R ainfall....... - ................3 0 In.
Today's su n se t..... 8 :2 6 p.m.
Tom orrow's su n r ise ....6:33

Temperature* Indicate previous day'*
high and overnight low
City
Hi La Prc Otlk
Atlanta
n
73
cdy
77 49 30 cdy
Atlantic City
Baltimore
41 73
cdy
Boiton
73 44
cdy
Chicago
clr
*1 47 34
Cleveland
*3 49
cdy
Dalla* Ft Worth
*4 7S 41 cdy
Denver
SI 71 clr
U
Dei Moinei
■ 1 4S
clr
Detroit
H
17 as cdy
Honolulu
clr
If 73
91 47 04 cdy
Indlanapollt
Jackion.M tu
♦4 73 44
rn
Juneau
S4 SI m cdy
Kanuai City
IS 4S 34 cdy
L a i Vegai
Ml 79
clr
Little Rock
94 70 as cdy
l o i Angelei
40 11
clr
louiivllle
90 70
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Milwaukee
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M pli St Peul
73 44 13 cdy
Naihville
41 49
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New Orleeni
90 74
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New York City
77 44 03
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Oklahoma City
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Om jha
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Philadelphia
74 73 01 cdy
Phoenn
104 14
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Portland Mama
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Providence
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Richmond
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Sacramento
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St Louis
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Seattle
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�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 4, 1991 - 3A

POLICE BRIEFS

Sheriff contender expresses doubt

Habitual offandar arraatad

Herald Staff Writer

Michael Joseph Matuszuskl. 43. 1480 N. Oregon Street.
Sanford, was arrested Tuesday by Altamonte Springs Police.
According to a police report, when his pickup truck was seen
slopped In a fire lane at the Altamonte Mall parking lot. he was
asked to move It. After the vehicle was seen driving In a
dangerous manner. It was detained, police said.
Matuszuskl was charged w ith driving under the Influence of
alcohol, driving while his driver’s license was revoked, and
being a habitual offender. A check of his drivers license
Indicated It had been suspended 16 times.

SA N FO R D — A one-time contender for
Seminole County sheriff may remove his hat
from the ring.

Thaftrasolvad
Bobby Washington. Sr.. 38. 323 Station Street. Altamonte
Springs, was charged Tuesday with burglary and theft by
Seminole County Sheriff's deputies.
Washington was in confinement at the Jo h n E. Polk
Correctional Facility at the time, on a separate charge. T h e
latest case Involved the theft of an auto battery. T h e Incident
occurred June 22 at Johns Auto Repair. 102 Brewer Street In
Altamonte Springs. Finger prints taken at the scene were
reported to have matched those of Washington.

Man turns himtalf in
When Sanford Police were called Ju n e 24 to Investigate a
Busupcctcd domestic dispute at 732 Cherokee Circle. Sanford,
they reported finding serveral drug related Items.
Tuesday. Philip Gregory Overbec. 35 of that address, turned
himself In at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility. He Is
charged with possession of cocaine, and possession with Intent
to distribute cocaine. He was held under 85.000 bond.

Multiple theR charges lodged
Sean Clement Murray. 19. 207 Sanora Blvd.. Sanford, has
been placed In the John E. Polk Correctional Facility after
reportedly trying to escape arrest.
According to three separate case reports. Murray was first
seen driving a 1977 Dodge statlonwagon on Elm Avenue near
13th Street In Sanford. T h e vehicle was Identified as having
been stolen, and an officer gave chase. Th e car reportedly
stopped at 20th Street and Elm ., with Murray attempting to
escape.
A report made by a second officer reported that Murray
apparently stole a bicycle at 2100 Oak Avenue during his
escape attempt. He was finally stopped at 25th Street and
Magnolia Avenue.
Charges made against Murray Include grand theft auto,
reckless driving, fleeing In an attempt to elude, and driving
with a suspended license. Connected to the bicycle Incident he
was also charged with burglary and petty theft.
Th e statlonwagon has been Identified as one reported stolen
from James Wilson, while parked at the Midway Commerce
Park. 5449 Benchmark Road. In Sanford.

Warrant arrests
Th e following persons have been arrested on outstanding
warrants:
• Linda Scrim a Abbott. 45. 308 W ild Olive Avenue. Th e
Springs. Longwood. was located at her home Tuesduy. She wus
wanted on a warrant Issued In Pinellas County Court, on
charges of grand theft and exploitation of the elderly. She Is
being held at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility awultlng
transferral.
•Jam es Bachoffer Robinson. 28. 229 Acorn Drive. Longwood. was apprehended Tuesday, during a suspicious person
check by Sanford Police, at 1st Street and Luurel Avenue.
»■*Sanford. He was wanted on a warrant Issued for violation of
parole.
• Edward Louis Gordon. 21. 508 Cedar Creek Circle.
Sanford, was arrested by Sanford Police Tuesday. He wus
wanted by his probation officer on charges of violation of
parole, connected to a charge of battery.

Mein Office:
251 West First S t
Sanford, FL 32771
(407)330-5190

Seminole

National

Bank

Ed DcPuy of Sanford said he Is devoting
more time to his Job with a Tallahassee
lobbying firm which Is keeping him out of
Seminole County except on weekends.
"F o r many years. I’ve wanted to sheriff of
Seminole County and I believe I could do n
good Job." DcPuy said Wednesday. "I had
actively sought the appointment and had
people supporting me. Now. I’ll Just keep m y
options open.”
DcPuy Is a former Seminole and Brevard
County deputy and former Seminole County

DcPuy said he Is spending more time with
the firm of Hebrock and Associates, a firm
that lobbies the Florida Legislature on
business Issues. T h e firm Is also the
national fundraiser for the Adam Walsh
missing children foundation and Is an uctlve
fundraiser for political campaigns. DcPuy
said he has worked for the firm for several
years, but has recently become more active
in It.

A ir Force officials said they
wanted to make sure they u n ­
derstood the problem, and could
prevent recurrences, before re­
suming the 88.5 billion program.
Th e 865 million satellite sepa­

rated fro m the booster 25
minutes Into the flight. Joining
10 advanced Global Positioning
S y s te m s p a c e c ra ft a lre a d y
circling the world. Its final orbit
will be 12.530 miles high.
Military offlclnls said the GPS
n e tw o rk w as In v u lu a b le In
helping U .S . forces navigate
during the Persian G ulf War.
Troops tuned In to the network's
radio signals with receivers us
small as a hand-held telephone.
Th e spacecraft guided them with
an accuracy of within 50 feet
and sometimes 10 feet.
The A ir Force plans to have 24
Navstar satellites In orbit by
1994. three of them spares. Th e
first Navstar wns launched In
Fcbruury 1989.
Ed Parsons, n spokesman for
the A ir Force Space Systems
Division, said the problem with
the satellite sent up Nov. 26 was
traced to one of two electronic
units thnt operate the solar
panels.

Commissioners also would like
the city of Orlando and Seminole
County to put up 81 million each
to Improve services. The do­
nated land Is valued at 815
million.
The department Is considering
e ith e r O r u n g c . B re v a rd o r
Volusia counties for the facility
to be completed by 1998. The
project also may Ik * split, with
the hospital In one county and a
smaller clinic In another.

banking needs a t one of our
convenient locations.
Like many banks, we're a full-service bank. That
means we offer many services such as checking
accounts, loans, safe deposit boxes, savings
accounts, insured investments as well as financial
and retirement planning assistance.
But there's one important difference. We're lo­
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means convenient caring banking.
That's right, caring banking. Because we're your
local bank, we're concerned about you as a friend
and a member of our community.

FOR MEN

* - 339-2022
628 1500

0 ALL MENS SOCKS FROM
STAFFORD,* HUNT CLUB*
STAFFORD EXECUTIVE*
AND CITY STREETS*
0 ALL MENS UNDERWEAR
FROM STAFFORD *
TOWNCRAFT.* LEE
WRIGHT* AND BUGLE BOY.*
0 ALL MENS DRESS SHOES
FROM STACY ADAMS.*
STAFFORD.* STAFFORD
EXECUTIVE* AND GEORGIO
BRUTIN I*
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FROM HUN f CLUB.* ST
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SOCKS.

2 5 7 - 4 0 7 0FF
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SHIRTS FROM STAFFORD.*
STAFFORD EXECUTIVE* AND
VANHEUSEN*

2 5 ° ° - 5 0 % 0FF

This notice is to inform the residents of Seminole county that the Seminole
County Board of County Commissioners has amended its 1990-91 (5th
year) Final Statement of Community Development Objectives and Pro­
jected Use of Funds under the Community Development Block Grant
(CDBG) Program. The following four activities have been added:
South Seminole Christian Sharing Center Purchase and
installation of shelving for walk-in freezer ($1200).
Better Living for Seniors, Inc. Medical Transportation for
Seniors: Purchase of 15-passenger, wheelchair-equipped
van ($25,057).
Winwood Park Improvements: Purchase of materials to
construct pavilion: purchase and install lights for basketball
court; purchase bleachers and benches for basketball court
and softball field ($17,400).
Casselberry Senior Center Expansion: Provision of supple­
mental funding to expand senior center ($3,788).
A total of $47,443 of funding from reserve funds will be transferred to these
activities.
The Seminole County planning Department will submit this amendment to
the U.S. Department ol Housing A Urban Development (HUD) after seven
(7) days following this notice. Any questions or comments should be
directed to:
Buddy Balagia, CD Principal Planner
Sominolo County Planning Dopartmont
1101 E. 1st Street
Sanford, Florida 32771
407/321-1130, extension 7384

0 ALL SHORT SLEEVE
SHIRTS
0 ALL SOCKS. UNDERWEAR
A PAJAMAS
0 ALL COORDINATES A
CASUAL PANTS
0 ALL DRESSES AND
DANCEWEAR FOR GIRLS
0 ALL DENIM JEANS FOR
GIRLS AND BOYS

‘previously
reducedmarked
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ownon*m
erchandise
yto'•dteheed or laggad

0 ALL NEWBORN LA YETTEWEAR. SLEEPWEAR
AND FOOTWEAR
0 ALL GIRLS DRESSES.
BOYS DRESS UP APPAREL.
UNDERWEAR. HOSIERY.
SLEEPWEAR. DIAPERS.
BEDDING. PLUSH TOYS.
ACCESSORIES
0 ALL SEPARATES TOPS A
BOTTOMS AND COORDI­
NATES CHOOSE FROM
OKIE-DOKIE* CHEROKEE*
LITTLE LEVIS* AND MORE

2 5 %

2 ( j * O FF

0 ALL FABRIC AND VINYL

0 ALL NEWBORN APPAREL
0 ALL CASUAL. DRESS AND
ATHLETIC SHOES

FOR W O M E N
2 5 %

O FF

CASUAL SEPERATES

m

3 0 % OFF

2 5 % O FF

WOMEN A THLETIC SHOES

1990. JC Prnrvy Company. Inc

TAKE AN
ADDITIONAL

INFANTS 4 I ODDI FHS

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251 West First St.
Sanford, F L 32771
(407)330-5190

£53

PUBLIC N OTICE

FOR C H IL D R E N

2 0 7 - 4 0 7

ATHLETIC SHOES

2439 Airport Blvd.
Sanford, FL 32771
(407)322 0921

ROKflirrurca
ti
ATTORNEY A T LAW

Th u rsd a y* Friday * S aturday* Sunday

2 5 * O FF

0 SELECTED SPORTCOATS
FROM TOWNCRAFT* AND
STAFFORD*

Seminole National Bank

r m liCT1MKS - NOON, UTUKMVf

4thof July Sale
4
4 Q X . O FF

Convanlant
Branch:
2430 Airport Blvd.
Sanford, FL 32771
(407) 322-0921

• H ITF O R YOU?
FEDERAL LAW MAY M L P -

IN V E S T IG A T IO N S

July 4th - July 6th

Meet all of your full-service

BANKRUPTCY
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Affairs for Ihc 470-1&gt;cd hospital.

O R LA N D O — Orange County
and private landowners are offer­
ing a 820 million package of
land, public services and Im ­
provements to attract a new
veterans hospital to the Orlando
area.
Th e county commission voted
Tuesday to put up $3 million In
road, water and sewer services
to assist one of two landowners
offering to donate sites to the
U.S. Department of Veterans

Also said to be considering a bid Tor sherlfT
Is Te rry Jam es, who ran for Orange County
sherlfT former Seminole County captain
Harold "B ea u" Taylor.

HARVEY

Seminole asked to assist
financing Vets’ hospital
Aasaolatad Frass

Th e only Democrat considering a sheriffs
bid Is David Locker, an Orange County Stair
A ttom cy’s Office investigator. Locker has
opened a campaign account but Is not
actively seeking the office. Locker said
Wednesday evening he Is gaining support
and m ay be prepared to announce whether
he will seek the offlre In Jan u ary. Locker
cannot run for sherlfT without resigning his
Job.

If DcPuy decides not to seek the sheriff's
office In 1992. the Republican primary field
will be narrowed to two announced can­
didates. Private investigator Harvey Morse
has staged an active campaign and former

Delta rocket launches
navagational satellite
CAPE CANAVERAL An
unmanned rocket' roared Into
space Wednesday with the latest
In a scries of advanced naviga­
tio n a l s a te llite s , e n d in g a
seven-month hiatus In building
the military constellation.
Th e Delta rocket blasted ofT
from Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station at 10:32 p.m. E D T. The
13-story booster lit up the sky
for miles os It rose and streaked
over the Atlantic Ocean.
It wns the first lime the A ir
Force sent up a Navstar satellite
since November. The launches
were put on hold because of an
electronic problem with the last
Navstar placed In orbit.

Seminole County deputy Larry Connlff has
been building a prim ary bid for the offlre.
Con n lff ran an unsuccessful campaign
against former sheriff Jo h n Polk In 1988.

State Attorney's Office Investigator. He Is
active In Ih c Seminole County Republican
Executive Committee.

■ y J . HANK BARFIELD

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FOR W O M E N
O FF

HANDBAGS OR TOTES ($18 A
UP)
0 ALL WOMEN S SOCKS
(BUY 6 OR MORE PAIRS AND
SAVE 30%)

Sale*499J1(F9
0 SELECT SUMMER
SHORTS AND TOPS FOR
LADIES. REG $9 99 $22

JCFfenney
Fashion com es to life’”
Sanford Plaza (Hwy. 17-92)

RED
TAG
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W H IT E SALE

SAVE ON
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it ALL PILLOWS
it ALL BLANKETS
it ALL COMFORTERS
it ALL BEDSPREADS
it ALL TOWELS
+ ALL BATH
ACCESSORIES
prua •Utceve tfvwjgh %apm*+mt t )•&gt;

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�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 4, 1991 - 8A

4A - Sanlord Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Thursday. July 4, 1991

2 Floridas remained loyal to Britain in 1776

Big Red One: Defending freedom in 4 wars
EDITOR'S NOTE —

Getting there first is a
proud tradition of the 1st Infantry Division, the Big
Red One, a fighting force th?t has served
honorably In four wars this century, from the
trenches of France in World War I to the sand
dunes of Iraq in Operation Desert Storm. Now
back home in Fort Riiey, Kan., the division will get
a special salute this Fourth of July.

■ y O B O R O I IS P B R
AP Special Correspondent
F O R T R ILEY. Kan. — Tho warriors of the 1st
Infantry Division, the fabled Big Red One. today
arc celebrating the nation's birthday among
family and friends and hospitable surroundings
far from the din of batllc and horrid sights of war.
Less lhan five months ago. the latest generation
of the division broke through Iraqi defenses in
Operation Desert Storm, the first troops to breach
Saddam Hussein's bulwarks and minefields.
It was apt that it was the 1st Division to blaze
the path for others, since it was life first outfit to
go overseas In World W ar I. the first American
fighting force to reach France In World War II and
the first A rm y division In Vietnam.
Home from its latest war In the Persian Gulf,
the division will be honored at Its home at Fort
Riley and In neighboring Junction City and

Manhattan with parades and sundown salutes on
America's 205th birthday. Its homecoming cele­
bration.
The ceremonies will honor 1st Division veter­
ans. from 91-year-old Clinton Dattcl and Max
Ottenfeld to 19-year-old Raphael Crews.
Th is Independence Day stirs memories of
another parade 74 years ago. On Ju ly 4. 1917.
troops of the 1st Division's predecessor, the 1st
Expeditionary Division, marched to the adoration
of the French along the boulevards of Paris to the
tomb of Lafayette, the French nobleman who
fought with the rebel colonies against the British
In the W ar of Independence.
T w o days later. America’s first division was
bom when the expeditionary force was re­
designated the 1st Division. It Included the 16th.
18th. 26th and 28th Infantries and the 5th. 6th
and 7th Artillery, all handpicked by Gen. John J .
Pershing, com m ander of the forces sent to
Europe.
The division's ranks span four generations and
four wars, from the trenches of World War I to the
beaches of World W ar II. from the Jungles and
mountains of Vietnam to the rolling desert sands
of Kuwait and Iraq.
Th e only war the division missed In the past
century was Korea. In the early 1950s. and only
because It was on occupation duty In Germany
afterWorld War II.

H E A LTH C A R E C E N TE R

Associated Press Writer

"We had men who were dedicated." says Max
Ottenfeld. 91. of Chicago, who enlisted In World
War I right out of high school. He fought at St.
Mihlel and Meuse-Argonne. was gassed by the
Germans and suffered shell shock.

PENSACO LA — Florida and southern portions
of Alabama. Mississippi and Louisiana will Join
the nation in celebrating Independence Da&gt;. but
they didn't share that revolutionary spirit 215
years ago.
On Ju ly 4. 1776. two of the 15 British colonies
now part of the United States remained loyal to
the crown while the other 13 declared their
freedom.
The Loyalist colonies were East and West
Florida. They stretched from the Atlantic Ocean
to the Mississippi River, separated by the
Apalachicola River In what is now the Florida
Panhandle.
Their continued fidelity to Britain prim arily
was a matter of dollars and cents, said BUI Coker,
chairman of the History Department at the
University of West Florida In Pensacola.
"East and West Florida were In a different
financial relationship with England than were the
other 13 colonies." Coker said In a recent
Interview.
The British Floridas. formerly a single Spanish
colony, were funded by parliamentary grant.
Therefore, they did not face the Issue of taxation
without representation that became a battle cry
of the revolution.

"Th e y were proud of whut they had ac­
complished." Ottenfeld adds. "W e were never
withdrawn trying to make an advance. We made
all our objectives."
Clinton Dattel. of Southampton. Pa., also 91.
was among the first volunteers for World W ar I.
"We broke through every battle." he says. "W e
were the first ones to do the fighting and we did
the first breakthrough of all the fronts. After we
broke through, the other divisions would come In
and hold the places that w c conquered."
Cantigny was the first victory of the war In May
1918.
It has been on continuous duty ever since and
in August 1942 It was again redesignated the 1st
Infantry Division. Again In World W ar II and
Vietnam, the division was the first Into combat.
On D-Day. Ju n e 6. 1944. the Big Red One
spearheaded the biggest allied offensive of the
war. the Invasion of Norm andy, the cataclysmic
battle of World W ar II.

"Th e y had some taxation, but It was not to the
degree that the other colonies were" taxed. Coker
said. "If they Joined the rebellion here they’d lose
their parliamentary subsidy, which In essence
pretty well paid for most of the governmental
operations."
West Florida was the biggest of the 15 colonies
In territory, covering all lands south of 32
degrees. 28 minutes north latitude to the G ulf of
Mexico and west of Georgia to the Mississippi
River except New Orleans, which was Spanish.
Pensacola, a wilderness trading post, was West
Florida's capital. The colony Included what now
are Mobile, Ala.. Baton Rouge. La., and Natchez.
Miss.
East Florida's capital was St. Augustine, but It
had few other settlements. Deerskins, naval
stores. Indigo and oranges were economic
mainstays of the two colonics.
The other 13 colonies made overtures for the
Floridas to Join In their revolt, but they weren't
very strong overtures and received little response.
Coker said.
"E a rly on they discovered the people of East
and West Florida were not Interested.” he said.
"Th e y didn't have the same complaints as the
others did."
Another factor was the Floridas were Just too
faraway, he said.
The Floridas were still frontier colonics popu-

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SANFORD

" T h e B ritish at Natchez were not very
latcd not Just by Englishmen but a diverse
sympathetic to the cause because W illing took
mixture including free and enslaved blacks.
their slaves and their cattle and everything he
Indians. Spanish. French. Creoles. Cubans.
could lay his hands on ... and took them all down
Italians and Greeks. There also was an influx of
to New Orleans" where they were sold. Coker
Loyalists from the other colonics after the
said.
revolution began.
At St. Augustine. Patriot heroes Samuel Adams
Although the Floridas didn't Join the revolution,
and John Hancock were hanged In effigy, wrote
they may have played a part In the outcome.
Marjory Stoncm an Douglas In her history.
When Spain declared war on England In 1779.
"Florida: T h e Long Frontier."
Bernardo dc Galvez, the Spanish governor of
In 1777. Button Gwinnett. Georgia's military
Louisiana. Invaded West Florida, capturing Baton
com m ander, sent proclamations across the
Rouge and other Mississippi River outposts In
border urging East Floridians to rise In revolt, but
short order.
nothing happened. He then Invaded East Florida
but was unsuccessful. His Georgia volunteers and
Th e following year, he took Mobile and In 17 8 1
Continental troops failed to meet as planned. Th e
captured Pensacola In the biggest battle of the
Invaders were attacked by Seminole Indians and
campaign, ending British control of West Florida.
m any of the volunteers deserted.
"If they had been able to Just turn loose
Meanwhile, the East Florida Rangers conducted
everybody here and send them over to Yorktown
raids Into Georgia to capture cattle and .
and places like that .... I'm not saying that the
p a rticip a te d In several battles. In c lu d in g
British would have won. but you leave the
Yorktown. on the British side.
question mark there." Coker said. " A couple
Th e Patriot threat to East Florida disappeared
extra thousand troops at Yorktown might have
In 1778 when Loyalists und British soldiers
had some bearing on It."
captured nearly all of Georgia. W .B. "W oody"
Skinner and W. George Gaines wrote In "A d ve n ­
East Florida remained British throughout the
tures In Florida History."
war but was returned to Spain by treaty In 1784.
Continentals also made an Incursion Into West
Thousands of Loyalists left for other parts of the
Florida In 1778. A force led by Jam es Willing, a
British Em pire, prim arily the Bahamas and West
captain In the U.S. Navy, captured Natchez.
Indies.

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Th e division Is rich In tradition. Its heritage as
old as the Am erica It protects. One of Its units.
Delta Battery. 1st Battalion. 5th Artillery- Is the
oldest In the A rm y , organized In March 1775 by
Alexander Ham ilton.
Its feats arc volumes of history, a roll call of 32
Medal of Honor recipients. America's highest
honor:
Barrett, Bondstcel. Brow n. Colyer, D r Franzo.
Durham . Edwards. Ehlers, Ellis, Henry, Hlbbs.
Law. Leonard. Lindsey. Long. McGraw. Merit.
Miller. Montelth. Morelock. Parker. Peterson.
P ln d e r. Reese. R o b in s o n . R ogers. R ubio.
Schaefer, Stryker. Thom pson. Warner. Will.
More than 14.000 of Its men and women fell on
the battlefields that live on in history and In the
minds of surviving old soldiers of the division
who gather once a year In reunion to perpetuate
the legend.
Cantigny, Solssons. St. Mihlel. Mcuse-Argonne
of W orld W a r I; Norm andy. Omaha Beach, the
Battle of the Bulge, of W orld W ar II: the Iron
Triangle. Bau Bang and the Mlchclln rubber
plantations of Vietnam.
While It Is a Joyful homecoming for the warriors
of Desert Storm . 17 comrades-ln-arms. one of
them a w om an, are mourned, fallen along the
howling desert sands:
Belas. C a rr . Collins. Dam ian. Daugherty.
Douthlt, K a m m . Miller. Morgan. O'Brien. Perry.

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�SA - Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 4, 1SS1

Sanford Herald
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■ la

E D ITO R IA L S

National
pasttime
O p e ra tin g o n the th e o ry that m ore la better,
the N ational League is o n the verge o f g ivin g
M ia m i and D e n ve r expanM on m ajor-le gue
baseball fran ch ises in 1903. T h e re ’s n o
q u a rre lin g w ith the fact o f m ore: 0 1 9 0 m illio n
in franchise fees from the n ew cities to be
d istrib uted a m o n g 'ba se ba ll's ow ners, and
m ore jobs, a t a m in im u m salary o f $100,000.
for players. B u t better?
E xp a n sio n w ill m ake baseball greener and
g ra ye r. E x p a n d in g b y tw o new team s m eans
a d d in g to b ig league rosters SO players w ho
w o u ld otherw ise be in the m in o r leagues o r In
forced re tire m e n t M ore players post their
p rim e w ill s ta y a ye ar too long before hanging
u p th e ir spikes: m ore rookies w h o ca n 't bunt
o r h it a good cu rve w ill show u p In the big
leagues a ye a r too soon.

CH UCK

A global trend toward bigotry?
One of the hlppeat ja zz album s In the past 40
years Is the Count Baste band rom ping behind
Frank Sinatra. It swtngs w ith an awesome
majesty, and the power of two Jazz legends
up a storm
i't dimmed
ned with the
tf
In contemplating the current Ideological mood
in world affairs. I thought of one of the
fastest-paced num bers In the Basle-Sinatra
album. “ Looking at the W orld w ith Rose-Colored
That's because no amount of rose-colored tint
could elicit optimism about a global trend that
seems to be giving aid and comfort to bigotry:
neo-conservatives In Am erica, young neo-Nazis
In Germany and Japan-baahera all over.
Neo-conservatives w ill take immediate um ­
brage at any saw sapient that remotely ties them
to neo-Nazis and Japan-bashers, and I don't
blame them. After all. neo-conservatives ought to
fall within the protected reciprocity of civility
that has always governed discourse in our
democracy.
John Stuart MU! put tt nicely In his discussion
of “ Intemperate discussion, namely invective,
sarcasm, personality and the like." then went on
to lament: “Th e worst offense of this kind which
can be committed by a polemic la to stigmatize
those who hold a contrary opinion as bad and

Immoral m en."
Th a t sentence has
nagged m y con­
science for decades,
because I have never
been mature enough
to avoid sinking Into
th e d i a l e c t i c a l
q u a g m i r e of
a r g u m e n t u m ad
h o m ln e m . U n lik e
moat of m y co n ­
servative adversarics* nowcvcr, i sin
not convinced that
all of m y opinions are
unassailable. (O nly
f Th a w orst of96 percent!) But bear
f a n s * la t o
with me. I believe
•tlo m a tis a
there la a legitimate
th o a a w ho
connection.
h o ld a c o n ­
When 2.000 young
trary opinion J
neo-N azis recently
m a rc h e d th ro u g h
Dresden. Germany,
sporting Adolf Hitler mustaches and chanting
“ Sleg Hell!." it may not have been considered a
cause for alarm among some people. After all.
they make up only a minuscule percentage of the

ti t o l _ _____
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m e a o c t m iR s T V ,

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AMD VDOSTILL SPEND
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(OELL.MAVBET WE CAM
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a m &gt; i' l l r ip Hour
throat our.

\
id
m

Still, adding two new franchises brings
baseball an opportunity, if owners seize it: the
possibility of realigning its leagues to create
so m e n a tu ra l riv a lrie s . W ith 28 team s,
baseball co u ld have fo u r leagues of equal size
a lign ed geographlcaly. In the W est, the five

California team s would be direct competitors,
and fans would see the Giants playing the A's
Instead of the Atlanta Braves. Toronto vs.
Montreal. Houston vs. Dallas, the Mets vs. the
Yankees. Those contests might even be
enough to make fans and the sports pages
forget fights over big salaries and even bigger
egos and pay a little more attention again to
the game.

So’s your old umlaut
The road to European unity is often a
bumpy one. whether it's about agreeing on a
common foreign policy or. less cosmlcally.
bickering about the use of diacritical marks —
accents which. In many languages, are placed
above, below or sometimes through letters as
a guide to pronunciation.
Case in point: a lot of Spaniards, including
the foreign minister, took umbrage over what
they saw as an attempt by the European
Commnlty to take away their tilde, that
squiggly little thing placed above the letter n
that changes the pronunciation of the word
underneath — os. for example. In Espana.
w hich Is pronounced Ess-PAIIN-ya and
m eans Spain.
It turns outs that the Eurocrats weren't
really trying to ban the tilde. Just objecting to
Spanish regulations requiring Imported
computer keyboards to have a tilde, u rule
viewed in Brussels as protectionist. Madrid is
amending the regulation, but Spaniards still
wonder why the tilde shouldn’t be us
routinely included on keyboards all over
Europe as the french cedila and acute, grave,
and circumflex accents, the German umlaut
and those thlngamabobs used by the Danes:
the little circle above the letter u and the
diagonal line drawn through the o. both of
which make the word virtually unpronoun­
ceable for a foreigner.
Good question! And for that matter, why
don't most American firms including news­
papers. use keyboards with ull those funny­
looking gizmos so that we don't have to
employ an artist to explain what we're talking
about? New* world order, indeed!

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letter* to the editor are welcome. All loiters must
be signed. Include die address ol the writer ami a
daytime telephone number. Letters s h o u ld I n - on a
single subject arid In - .is hrlcl as possible.. Letters
rue subject to editing

total population of Germany. But a similar small
cadre of young tanaitrs In the 1920s paved the
way for Hitler’s rise to power In the early 1930a.
I don't think M ill's concern about labeling
dissenters as "bad and Immoral m en" would
apply to neo-Nazis. Nor would It apply to those
who sweeptngty indict an entire nation because
of Its obnoxious trade policies.
W hat's so disturbing about opposition to
‘a xcnophobkrally inspired restrictive trade
i la that opponents in both the United
and Europe teem more Indent an Issuing
idling denunciations of Japan than on seeking
negotiations to resolve the conflict.
A recent contract report written far the C IA
calls the Japanese, “ radat" and “am oral." Edith
C retao n . the b lunt-talking Fre nch prim e
minister, accused the Japanese of staying up
nights, thinking of waya “ to screw the West. ’
Lee Iacocca has repeatedly warned of Japan’s
threat to American economic stability. Western
corporate and political leaders frequently decry a
“Tokyo economic war plan."
A Eurocentric civilization still cannot accept an
Aslan nation controlling Its economies. But we
have yet to hear similar howls of Indignation
when a Western country exerts economic power
In Latin America. Africa or Asia.

JA C K

F u d d y -d u d d y s — th a t's s o m e o n e o ld
en o ugh to rem em ber pre-expansion baseball
o f th e 1960a — a lre a d y c o m p la in that
baseball's e a rlie r expansions have diluted the
talent and low ered the q ua lity o f p la y. In
1993. yo u n g e r fu d d y-d u d d y's w ill Join the
ch o rus.
E xpa nsio n to m ile -h ig h D enver also w ill
create novelties. Yale Professor Robert K .
A d a ir, w h o m the late B a rtle tt O ia m a tti
appointed p h ysicist to the N ational League,
has calculated that a b a ll struck ha rd enough
to fly 40 0 feet In New Y o rk o r O a klan d w ill
tra ve l 44 0 feet in D e n ve r's th in a ir. Hom e
ru n s w ill be cheap, cu rve balls w ill break less,
fastballs w ill get to batters an in sta nt quicker
and visitin g outfielders w ill m isjudge line
d rive s and fly balls. A ll that w ill be m ild ly
a m u sin g but It w ill m ake purists crin ge .

S TO N E

RO BERT

W A G M A N

Not all went well in Gulf War
W A S H IN G TO N - In the weeks following the
successful conclusion of hostilities In Iraq and
Kuwalf. we were bombarded with glowing
reports from the Pentagon on how perfectly
men. equipment and systems performed.
However, now that the m ilitary services and
Joint staff are conducting a more thorough
review, stories are beginning to seep out that
not everything worked as well as Initially
Indicated.
As was the case with the conflicts In Grenada
and Panama, the biggest U.S. m ilitary problem
continues to be Interservice rivalries. Accord­
ing lo one analysis prepared for the Joint
C h ie fs. Desert S to rm c o m m a n d e r G e n .
Norman Schwarzkopf spent as m uch lime
refereeing interaervice disputes as he did
planning to fight the Iraqis.
Each service Insisted that it be given Us fair
share of the workload, and Us fair share of the
glory. As a result, m any decisions were mude
not on th* basis ol m ilitary necessity but to
placate service heads.
Th e Joint com m and structure Schwarzkopf
headed had been designed to prevent this.
However, problems arose nonetheless, such as
planners from one service refusing to believe
that another service’s weapon systems could
be trusted to accomplish a mission.
One example Is that A ir Force officers,
planning the air war. refused to believe that
the Navy’s new Tom aha w k missile would
work. At first they sim ply refused to Include
the To m a h a w k am ong available weapon
systems. When the Navy came running lo
Schwarzkopf, he ordered the planners to
Include Tom ahaw k strikes. But they were still
so unsure of the missile's reliability they
ordered two to three times the num ber of
Tomahawks fired at each target as the Navy
thought necessary.
In the end the Navy was proved right. Th e
Tomahawks hit their targets 85 percent of the
lime. But with each missile costing almost $2
million, one Navy estimate Is that a half-billion
dollars was wasted In shooting Tom ahaw ks at
targets already destroyed.
A ir Force planners were also unsure that
Navy aircraft were suited for the kinds of
bom bing missions needed. So most key
missions In the air war were given either to A ir
Force pilots or A rm y attack helicopters. Th e
war ended so quickly that the Navy and the
Marine Corps ended up having only minor
rules.
Now the Navy is said to be downplaying the
results. Adm . Frank Kelso, chief of Naval
Operations, tuts reportedly circulated a long
■nemo within the Pentagon railing the Gulf
conflict “ unique*' and warning that it should
not be used “ as a model for all future
operations."
There appears to be general agreement
within the Pentagon that the three biggest

difficulties encountered In the G u lf were
communications, transport and intelligence.
T h e most famous story from the 1987
Grenada invasion recounts how an A rm y unit
found Itself pinned down, wanting to call In a
fire mission from a Navy ship offshore.
However, the soldiers could not communicate
with the ship. So an officer crawled to a pay
phone, made a cred­
it-card call to the
operations officer at
his home base In
Georgia: he in turn
called the Navy at
the Pentagon, which
tn turn radioed the
ship to order the fire
mission.
Th e Pentagon has
Insisted such com ­
m u n ic a t io n s p r o ­
b le m s no lo n g e r
exist. But one prelim­
inary analysis of the
^ T h e b ig g e s t
G ulf conflict asserts
m ilit a ry p r o ­
they not only still
blem c o n ­
exist, but they may
tinues lo be
be worse then ever.
in te rs e rv ic e
O n c o u n tle s s o c ­
rivalries. £
casions. A rm y and
A ir Force units could
not communicate
with Naval ships, and A ir Force pilots had
difficulties communicating w ith Naval pilots
they encountered In the skies over Iraq and
Kuwait, using secure, scrambled com m unica­
tions.
Things got so bad that A ir Force com m and­
ers In Riyadh — who were unable to send dally
targeting Information directly to Navy com­
puters aboard carriers — rrsorted to hand­
delivering floppy disks with the information to
each carrier every night.
Th e transportation problem has long been
known. The buildup took m uch too long. On
the day the land war began, after six months,
some units' equipment had still not arrived.
One analysts says that If the war had lasted
even four weeks — instead of four days — tt Is
likely that critical shortages would have
occurred.
A s for the inte llig en ce fu tlu re . G en.
Schwarzkopf has already told a congressional
committee that much of the Intelligence he
was given “ was so watered down that It was
essentially useless."
Less critical, that ts unless you were a soldier
In the field, the A rm y nuw admits that Its
much-heralded MRE — Meal Ready to Eat —
didn't work as a way to feed large numbers of
troops over an extended period. An order lias
gone out to find a better way to feed troops In
the field.

AND ER SON

How the military
disguises playing
W A SH IN G TO N - You won't And anything
In Congress' budget for the A ir Force that
m entions a state-of-the-art go lf course
sprinkler syMem or a reflniahed bowling
alley. Nowhere does It specify qiendlng
•21.000 on Inlaid carpets for the officers' chib
or $772,000 on a skeet-shootlng range.
B ut the A ir Force feels free to spend the
taxpayers' money as it choores anyway. A s a
scathing interna) audit reveals. A ir Force
officials routinely Ignore congressional wishes
on how to spend money.
Congress has tried
to tighten the purse
on m ilita r y recre­
ation programs and
make them pay for
themselves, but the
A ir Force dodges the
new rules as easily as
It evaded Iraqi anti­
aircraft fire.
In s te a d o f c o m ­
plying w ith the new
spending guidelines,
tne A ir Force has
kept on funding Its
pet projects w hile
disguising them Ir C c o n a rs M hzs
the spending reports
t r i e d
t o
as essentials. Th e A ir
t ig h t e n the
Force misspent $7.7
purse on mili­
million on Ill-advised
tary recreation
re c r e a tio n a l f rills
program s. J
o v e r a th re e -y e a r
period, according to
the audit report obtained by o u r associate
J im Lynch.
Alm ost no base could resist siphoning off
funds to improve its golf course. Auditors
found more than $1.6 million had been
Improperly spent on military golf courses.
Another 8459,500 was doled out for bowling
alleys In violation of the spending guidelines.
Myrtle Beach A ir Force Base in South
C arolina spent almost $600,000 on 21
separate golf course projects. In 1989. base
officials even used military prisoners as
laborers to maintain the links. T h e base also
blew the wad on lobster cookers, crab traps,
bicycles, sw im fins, s w im m in g m asks,
snorkels and badminton acts.
Wright-Pattcrson A ir Force Base in Ohio
spent $446,068 on golf course projects
including a deluxe sprinkler system. Tyn da l
A ir Force Base In Florida spent $313,109 on
golf course amenities Including a pro shop
and score board.
At Eglln A ir Force Base In Florida, officials
somehow managed to convince themselves
that tennis courts fell under the heading of a
“ mission sustaining facility." and spent
$ 103.775 without alarming anyone.
Officers' clubs loom as a favorite rat hole for
pouring money down. At Mildcnhall A ir Force
Base In England, a $70,000 club project
mushroomed Into a $2.2 million renovation
without congressional oversight. T h e club at
Scott A ir Force Base In Illinois Is undergoing
a sim ilar race lift, this one costing $2.4
million. Th e auditors said that the work “ was
not accomplished In the mast efficient and
cost effective sequence.” T h a t's an u n ­
derstatement. T h e new floors and carpet were
put In before the ceiling was tom out for a
sprinkler system. In one room the decorators
chose Inlaid carpet that cool $20,823 for a
12-foot-by- 18-foot piece. Th e A ir Force
explained that the fancy carpet was neces­
sary to "enhance the aviator Image." We
hope the aviator Image holds up longer than
the carpet, which Is already fading.
In a bit of creative bookkeeping at Tinker
A ir Force base in Oklahoma, officials tried to
use money from the B-2 bomber program to
relocate and expand a skeet-shootlng club.
Only 24 of the 7.000 active duty personnel at
Tin k e r arc members of the skect club, but the
base was ready to spend $772,000 on the
new club when the auditors arrived.
A ir Force hasc commanders defend their
actions saying that the spending guidelines
are too vague. Most of them maintain they
luve done notiUng wrong. Sources told us
that the A ir Force hopes the post-war
euphoria and pride In the military will help
bury this audit.

�Herald, Sanford, Florida

party, Chiles predicts
cauntyy Is going to see Iraqi equipment." the
governor said.
Th e events were to begin with the dedication of
a "freedom flame" memortal and will conclude
Will* IUCWUVU.

In between, there w ill be a parade of 00 military
unite aa well aa a free luncheon at the mansion
for an estimated 0,000 veterans and their
Camilles.
Families of soldiers killed In the O ulf W ar and

. t
hBE

i m
; K
*

n
r §H
People who traveled to Tallahassee for the
diday would be able to see captured Iraqi
ilhtary hardware. Chllcaaald.
" I think that's the Aral time anybody In the

rj

:• I

Celebrations honor veterans
a Fourth

Angeles was expected to be
lammed. The forecast was for
h o t w e a t h e r , an d a h u g e
fireworks show was scheduled
for dawn.
An explosion at a fireworks
show in Chicago Heights, 111.,
In ju re d at least 11 people
Wednesday, authorities said.
Several were hospitalised. In­
cluding children ages 1 and 2.
After the allied victory over
Iraq. Bush urged Americans In
March to make Ju ly Fourth "a
day of special celebration for our
returning troops ... a holiday
they'll never forget.”
Columbia. S.C., did Just lhat
on W ednesday. More than
00.000 people lined the capital's
main thoroughfare In a sea of
red, white and blue to honor
returning troops.

ongnM
tho Third Party for M
uafr1
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T iw n Tiv t it Mil* Iw Ttri

n w l f f f i w im ffw f rw w i SnO tlM O n o

Americans heeding President
Bush's call to make this Fourth
tit Ju ly a tribute to veterans of

Th e celebration began early.
with a number of marches and
fireworks shows getting under
way on Wednesday. Many more
.were planned for today.
In Tallahassee. Fla., captured
Iraqi equipment was to be dis­
played at a parade. "W e said we
were going to have a shindig,
and I think It's going to be a
w ln g-d an g-d o ." Oov. Lawton
Chiles said Wednesday aa he

xatlona in the Sanford and Sem­
inole County anas.
It w ill begin on north Sanford
Avenue between the Cham ber of
Com m erce building and the
Civic Center, then move to the
lakefront. It w ill travel east to the
end of Seminole Btvd.. head
south to First Street, then west
on First back to the Chamber
building.
Appreciation for the fireworks
and for the arrangements for the
various events of today, should
be extended to a num ber of
people. Including Alford, who
Instigated the firs t Peoples
Fire w o rk s display last year
through the use of public funds.
Th M year. Alford was able to
obtain enough additional con­
tributions and public support to
I n c r e a s e t h e a m o u n t of
fireworks, and make the overall
day’s event almost double In stxe
and participation.
In C a s s e l b e r r y , a n o t h e r
fireworks display w ill take place
th is evening. T h e Sem inole
Greyhound Park w ill have It’s
annual fireworks display at the

adopted 210 years ago, parade
organisers made last-minute ar­
rangements for today’s activities
after Kuwait came through with
010,000to help cover the coat.
Vietnam veterans planned to
exchange POW-M1A (lags with
their Desert Storm comrades.
"T h is solemn passing of the
m ore m ean in gful than any
other." said parade coordinator
Robert McMahon.
Across the country, millions
also prepared for a round of good
o ld -fa s h io n e d fu n . w ith
barbecues and trips to the beach
the order of the day.
Santa Monica Beach near Loo

Bush urges reflection on freedom
Remember the
eacrifices
SPR IN G FIELD . Mo. (API President Bush, celebrating "an
extraordinary Independence
D a y." exhorted Americana to
reflect on the sacrifices thst have
won their freedom aa they celejiyu lr initaj’s *~
Bush waa marching In'Fourth

be sent skyward Immediately
following the 7th race, with
additional displays during the
remainder of the evening. The
Grand Finale of the fireworks
will take place after the 13th
race. The display will be set up

Th e best views are expected lo
be from the grandstand, al*
though there will be limited
viewing from outaide the park.
T h e Seminole Greyhound Park
is located at 2000 Seminola
Boulevard. Casselberry.

and commitment that forms our
national soul.” Bush said.

... has been at w a r." he said.
He called It a time for "loving
tributes to the men and women
of the gulf, of Vietnam, of all our
national efforts to promote
freedom and Independence.”
. But be said this Ju ly Fourth
"m ust also be something more.
For all Americana It must be a
day of reflection and rededlealion."
"W e pray that In the example
of those who stood strong so that
others may live in freedom and

B u s h h e lp e d th e M o u n t
Rushm ore Preservation Fund
la u n ch a 040 m illion fund­
raising drive to repair the cracks
on G u t x o n B o r g l u m ' i
monumental sculpture and im­
prove facilities for the 2 million
tourists who trek to the Black
Hilts to see It each year.
Sixteen of the original stone­
cutters as well as Borglum's
d a u g h te r a n d three g ra n d ­
children were on hand for the
colorful ceremony, capped by a
fly-by o f a B -I bomber and other
Jets.

idea, a protest, a deep love
W ASHIN GTON "Our
country, right or w ro n g" Is what
American naval hero Stephen
Decatur said In 1816, but the
c o m m o d o r e w o u ld g e t a n
argument today.
One hundred political liberals,
asked to think about patriotism,
came up w ith a lot of Ideas. But
all rejected Decatur's lock-step
l o y a l t y . A n d some asked
whether patriotism Is even pro­
per anymore.
"W h a t they call patriotism
d o w n the re in W a s h in g to n
stinks to high heaven of brain­
lessness. racism, greed, fear and
hatred of the common people."
fumed novelist Howard Fast.
T o observe the nation's 215th
anniversary and Its own 125th.
T h e Nation magazine asked Its
c la n — " l i b e r a l s , l efti sts,
anarchists, war reslsters and

C H A ftL E S O W D TS
Charles Owens, 91. of 1711 W .
15th St. In Sanford, died Tu e s­
day at Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Bom In Ridge land, SC
on Feb. 14. 1900, he moved to
Sanford from South Carolina In
1922. He was a laborer and a
member of the New Ml. Zion
Missionary Baptist Church.
He is survived by his wife
M a r y ; h is d a u g h te rs E d i t h
Jackson of Sanford and Ella Mac
Cooper Owens of Rochester. NY:
his sons Curtis Owens of Sanford
and Eddie Owens of Rochester.
N Y ; his brothera Allen Owens of
New York City and Myer Owens
of New York C ity; 25 grand­
children: 40 great-grandchildren
a nd 20 g r eat g r e a t grandchlldren.
B a ld w in F a irc h ild Fu n e ra l
Home. Oakelawn Chapel. Lake
M ary In charge of arrangements.

Horace D. Rucker. 77. of 311
Nebraska Ave. In Longwood.

others frequently accused of
being unpatriotic" — what pa­
triotism meant to them. Th e
magazine, a liberal bastion, runs
the observations In Its forthcom­
ing Issue.
Unsurprisingly, there was dis­
agreement. Some proclaimed
their patriotism while others
challenged the very roots of the
concept.
"W h y Is It nobler to love your
own country than lo love some­
one else's?" asked playwright
Wallace Shawn.
"In due course." said novelist
Gore Vidal, "the Idea of the
nation-state may become as ob­
solete as the nation-state. In fact,
already Is. Russia Is more a
m irror of us — or we of It — than
either cares to adm it."
"Nationalism is archaic." said
actress Margot K idd e r. A n d
Sandy Close, executive editor of
the Pacific News Service, found
patriotism provincial.

uiea lucsoay at m e MartinAndcrsen Hospice House In O r­
lando. Bom in Jacksonville, F L
on Ja n . 26. 1914, he was a
longtim e resident of Central
Florida. He was a Methodist and
a veteran of Worth W ar II. He
was a member of the Rolling
Hills Golf Club.
He Is survived by his wife
Dorothy; his sons Robert H. of
Tem pe. A Z . John L. of Oviedo;
his daughtger Jeanne Anthony
of Chattanooga. T N and seven
grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home. Longwood. In charge of the arrange­
ments.

Owens. Charles
Funeral services lor Charles Owens. *1, at
Senford who passed SM y on Tuesday, will
bo conducted on Monday at 1 p m at the Now
Ml Zion Missionary Baptist Church with
Reverend Jamas Lynn officiating Informant
wilt follow at Oeklawn Pork Cemetery
Visitation for Iriendt will bo Sunday from t to
1 and 7 to * p m at the Baldwin Fairchild
Funeral Homo. Oak lawn Park Chapel. Lake
Mary. FL

H is ca se : **ln an e ra of
worldwide migrations and trav­
el. with lives in flux, borders
coming down, m ultiple
homelands and cultures, a world
economy. International plagues
and global popular culture." the
sense of fierce loya lly lo a
h o m e la n d h a s b e c o m e an
anachronism.
As commonly
practiced, patriotism Is evil, said
fo rm e r A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l
Ram sey C la rk , " a p rin cip a l
cause of war and exploitation."
"W hen ll proclaims nationalist
superiority over others. U Is
racist." Clark said. “ When It
compels absolute obedience lo
govern m en t a u th o rity . It Is
fascls'.”
Erw in Knoll, editor of The
P rogressive, a n o th e r liberal
magazine, recalled In his essay
what his friend. Milton Mayer,
used to say — "It's a great
country" — and what he used lo
then m utter under bis breath:
“The y're all great countries."
“ T h a t." said Knoll, "sum s up
the trouble with patriotism: It's
an absolute claim In a world
where few absolutes make any
sense."
On the other hand, the Rev.
William Slounr Coffin, a leader
of anti-war sentiment during the
Vietnam era. said he was un­
willing to accept blind love of
country, but still willing to love
his land.

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" I 'm supporting the taxes
because the choices are so
limited.” said commissioner Bob
Sturm . “ It Is either the sales tax
or the properly tax.”
“ Even if we could use the gas
tax. It would have to be more
than a penny to raise the kind of
money we need," said com m is­
sioner Jennifer Kelley. “ I think it
w ill help us to keep up with
where we have to be."
" If the voters will show they
have confidence In the board to
solve the road problem, then the
board and I will be very frugal In
o u r other spending.” said com ­
missioner Pat Warren. "I believe
this is the most painless way (o
pay for II.’*

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W ASH IN G TO N - Th e m oun
ting paper trail of Suprem e
Court nominee Clarence Thom as
•uggeata he eupporta oahool
prayer. Hla writings ako Include
a pointed attach on the m an he
hopes to replace on the high
co u rt - J u s t ic e T h u rg o o d

including several they interpret
™ to^katlng he would vote to
.ref*£*e the court a 1073 decialon
k p h a to g abortion.
hew attention ako Is being
kcuaed on Thom as’ remarks on
other controversial subject* ine lu d in g school prayer. T h e

In a 1087 commentary in the

I

Appto-IBM Pact C o n flm iM Trend
SAN JO S S . Calif. — Th e decision by rivals Apple and IBM to
share technology is the latest strange-bedfellows alliance in a
computer Industry struggling to standardise its products so
that they can be mixed and matched.
Industry analysts said Wednesday’s agreement Is a step
toward eliminating the way one company’s software often is
Incompatible with another’s computers.
“ We are at a stage where no one. including IBM. Is strong
enough to fend oft the competition and dominate any sector of
the industry.’* said Peter Kastncr. an analyst with the
Aberdeen Group Inc.. In Boston. "There’s a growing realization
that nobody holds all the technological cards.”

rs
locomprehenatbk" thof Marshall
had criticised the cekbratlon of
the bicentennial of the Oouatltutlon.
Marshall, citing the failure of
the ConsOtutkm to prohibit »hnrery. had said he did not (tad "the
wisdom, fareatght and sense of

Other speeches, rm a yi and
In te rv ie w s g iv e n b y the
ca lle d fo r a constitutional
amendment showing voluntary

Axel Rm # flings e#HInto trouble
M ARYLAND H EIG H TS . Mo. Police weighed charges
against Ax! Rose over a hot witnesses said broke out after the
lead singer of the rock group Ouns N* Roses leaped oflhtage into
a crowd and tried to take a camera from a fan.
A spokeswoman for the band’s record label said Rose and
other members of the heavy-metal rock group complained that
security was lax at Tuesday’s concert at Rtverport Amphii!te­
ster. where the melee left 80 peopk Injured.
Concert promoters and witnesses said that Rose demanded
that security guards take a camera from a concertgoer, then
Jumped Into the audience and fought with the fan. Th e band
then abruptly exited the atage.
Thousands In the audience responded by tearing up chairs,
destroying the stage and smashing the band’s equipment.

year, there is no shortage of
pre-confirmation com ment by
Thom as an Issues that m ight
come before him as a Justice.
Th e rocord Is being scoured by
m w w fl f r t And ooooocfitA Alike
fpf Tftitertfil f o f i t flffu tf
hearings for Thom as, w hom
President Bush nominated to the
high court this week.
th e retiring Marshall was the
court's (bet black Justice; Th o n v
as would be the second
W ith Thomas almost certain to
steer the court further to the

«*■ ■■ »• support far_a const!
***■■* amendment. "She may
nth*- IkUglon to certainly
source of positive values s n d 1
need as many positive values
th c ic h o o iiiiw c c in flrt*
i " inomaa nomination n
civU rights groups In
quandary. Many leaders of su
groups wanted a black to repU
Marshall — the staunchest cl
rights ally on the court - but e
at odds with Thom as over
" " n a t i v e action and oth
PoW m &gt;

'Welcomes
Joyce Clark
&amp;
Julie McGhee
M I» S. French At* . S u fo n l 322-1172

Boy held in 5 savage deaths
BALSAM LAK E. Wls. A
family of five whose charred
remains were found In a burned
car had been shot and dismem­
bered before they were torched,
according to documents released
Wednesday.
The bodies of two adults and
t h re e c h i l d r e n a ls o w e re
mutilated and at least one of the
three children was decapitated,
the documents show. In addi­
tion. body parts were scattered
in the car. a duffel bag and near
the family's trailer.
A 15-year-old boy was taken
Into custody in the deaths and is
being held in Juvenile detention,
authorities said.
There was no confession or
comments in the documents
fr o m th e t e e n -a g e r , o n l y
circumstantial evidence linking
him to the crime, according to
W C C O -TV In Minneapolis.
Pulk County

leased the docum ents late
wcunceoay oy oraer 01 circuit
Judge James Eaton. They were
reported on by W CCO. K S TP -TV
In Minneapolis and the Saint
Paul (M inn.) Pioneer Press.
R ick B reniier. his live-in
girlfriend. Ruth Berentaon. and
three children, ages S. 7 and 10.
were reported missing April 23
by Brenlxer'sson. Bruce. IS.
Th e family's remains, charred
beyond recognition, were found
May 11 in a wooded area about
three miles from their home.
Th e documents reportedly in­
dicate the family was killed by a
rifle at their trailer home be­
tween April 22 and April 26.
when neighbors observed smoke
in the area where the burned car
was found.
Th e bodies had been dis­
membered and put Into the
family car. which was driven to a
wooded area and set allre. the
news media reported.
A rifle believed to have been

used to kill the fam ily was
re co ve re d b y s h e r if f 's I n ­
vestigators In a pond, the docu­
ments sold.
A report from D r. Kenneth
B e n n e tt, a U n iv e r s it y of
Wisconsin anthropologist, con­
cluded that all five victim s had
bern dismembered snd the body
ports had been badly burned
and cut In small pieces.
Th e family was last reported
seen A pril 22 before leaving for a
shopping trip in the nearby Tw in
Cities.
A hearing is scheduled Tues­
day on prosecutors’ request to
move the case Into adult court.

Pursuant*) Chapter 102.141 (2), Florida Statutes, N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N that the Seminole County Canvassing Board will meet at 2:00
P.M. on July 9,1991, in the Supervisor of Elections Office, Seminole
County Services Building, 1101E. 1st Street, Room N249, Sanford, FL
to canvass the absentee ballots for the 1% Local Option Sales Surtax
Referendum Election.
For additional information contact Sandy Goard, Supervisor of Elec­
tions, at 321-1130, extension 7707.

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Starts Today

�on tap
Bullets to host tournament
H s s th io w 's Ford takoo first
C A M ILLA . Ga. - Gavtn Fbcd. the Director of
i C Tin v i i inc ncainiuw Kacquci v ia awini
C lu b . Antabed A n t In Ihe 150.000 Lite Southcoot Pro InvtUttonal Tournament played June
30-33 at the Mitchell-Baher Service Center.
Th e tournament is the larfeat Senior Pro
tennta benefit played in the United States and
invites only the top 33-and-Over players from
throughout the country.
Ford, a top-ranking member of the 35+
circuit, was one oT only 30 pros invited to
participate in the tournament, a yearly event
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lkuK&lt;n H o naa4Iiw
m inm
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Capriati to play to Du Pont
A M E LIA ISLAN D — Jennifer Capriati Is the
latest entry In the D u Pont A ll American Tennis
Championships, which wilt be heM Sept. 1M 4 .
It was announced Wednesday.
Capriati, currently ranked No. 13. Joins
previously announced defending champions
M ichael Chang and Kathy Rinaldi In the
•100.000event.
Capriati on Wednesday became the youngest
wom en's semi-final 1st in Wimbledon history
when she defeated nine-time champion Martina
Navratilova In the quarterfinals.

LO N G W O O D - W hile many w ill
turn to the skies to enjoy flrewotks
on the 315th anniversary of the
unstra states, ossepan ptayers iron)
across Semtnote County will look to
make some of their own In the 4Ui
of Ju ly Invitational at Lym an High
SCflOQIi
Th e boat team, the Bullets (com from Lym an High
round out the tourney's
m t m y or competition witn a game
at B p.m . against Daytona Bench.
Other ftnt-round games today
Include Sanford American Legion
53 playing Lake Howell at 11
. Lake Brantley tangUng w ith
Oviedo at 3 p.m . and Laked 1
facing D r. Phillips at 5 p.m.
" If everybody has some fun. we’ll
stick w ith It," said Bullet coach and
tournam ent organiser Bob M c­
Cullough. " It’s an opportunity to
have some Am . “
McCullough tried to start this
com petition last year after his
squads had traveled to DeLand for
Fourth of Ju ly games too m any

Th e Bullets, currently rhbag a hot
streak, look to be s pre-tournaaient
fevnrtte Is the eyes of m any Ama but not McCuOough. who thinks
Daytona Beach Is the team to beat.
Unlike the other teams, Daytona
Beach carries college as weft as high
school players on Its roster.
No matter who looks the best
entering the four-day. 14-game
win win the tournament.
"Good pitching always w ins,"
said M cCullough. "G ood-hitting
teams and defensive-oriented ball
chtba are often eliminated. You can
only score so many runs."
McCullough takes a deep rotation
into Use competition* incDOvra oy
starters Kevin Stuckey.and Jason
And despite the fact that his
■quad must dash with Daytona
“ ich tonight. McCullough la looktn g forward to the games.
When you play this kind of team,
you move up a little hit (in playing
level).'* commented McCullough.
Th e Anal la scheduled for 5 p.m.
on Sunday.

Hornets swatted by Bullets
m m -H
• t
■a • - a • a
W.OMW MwUimS

Hamid Correspondent
LONG W OOD - By the time Ihe
sixth Inning rolled around In
Wednesday night's contest be­
tween the Bullets and Bishop
BBOOv t , I D C n O f M i S COBCfICS V C fC

playing the lottery on the mound,
searching for anyone who could
throw the ball over the plate and
maybe even get some batters out.
Th ey never found their man.
Five hurfers from Bishop Moore
struggled in a three-hour mara­
thon st Lym an High School,

O V IED O Marcus Bullock,
making his first pitching appear­
ance since (he spring of I960,
threw five innings of two-hit ball
to lead Lake Mary to a 10-1 win
over Oviedo In a National Ama­
teur Baseball Federation game
Wednesday at O viedo High

Soma you snag and somg gat away
Florida Manor first baseman Rick Poors mads a ntes
play (above) to retire O.C.C.'s Mika Srodsricks (No.

17), but couldn’t corral an arrant throw a law Innings
latsr (below) as Donny McCoy reachad basa safety.

Marlin turns fast lap

8 S MS

D ues sign draft pick Chamblaa
T A M P A — T h e T a m p a Bay Buccaneers
announced Wednesday the signing of 12throun d draft choice Al Cham blrc. a linebacker
from Virginia Tech.
Chamblee. who was a three-year starter as a
defensive end in college. Is the first of 13 draft
picks to come to terms with the Bucs. The terms
of the agreement were not released.

□ 6 .3 0 p.m . — W GN . Chicago While Sox al
Seattle Mariners. (L )

FO R

TH E

BEST

walking 11 batters and gtvtng up
nine hits as they were routed by
the Bulkts. 16-3.
With the win. the Bullets im­
proved to 11-5 on the season
heading Into their 4th of Ju ly
Invitational tournament ached□Si

M) MS Rfetart.
OMMtM It). M W trsMUn i •&gt;.

a t
r t

M). T r a p * &lt;•) M S t a w . WP -

IMI. U» - M m . In* - Mw. M •

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School.
Both Lake Mary and Oviedo
will be back In action today,
□ ■as l ak e M ary . Fags S B

Bussard’s,
H.D. Realty
keep pace

•Knights ovartaka Suits— —

bn —

» -f

111

w m i . m
■a tw • - i

H U N TS V IL L E . Ala. - Apotlnar Oarcta pitched
a five-hitter as the Huntaville Stars topped the
Orlando SunRays 0-3 Wednesday.
G a rd a (3-3) give up five hits and two runs
w hile striking out three and walking one. He
retired the last IB hitters In a row.
In the second inning, the Stars (33-90) took a
3- 0 lead as Craig Paquette walked and Mike
Conte was hit by a pilch. After Kurt Abbott
walked. Paquette and Conte scored on a single
by Jorge Brito. Abbott came in on Kevin
Dattola's single.
Orlando (40 4 0 ) cut the lead to one run by
scoring twice In the third. Bob McCreary singled
and scored on a groundout by Shawn Gilbert,
and Ja y Kvasnicka singled and scared on a
sacrifice fly by Rafael Dellma.
In the third, the Stars Increased their lead to
42 on a homer by Tro y Neel. The Stars added a
ru n in the fourthandoneln the seventh.

D A Y T O N A B E A C H — Sterling Marlin turned
the fastest lap Wednesday In practice for Ihe
Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
M a rlin 's speed was 190.864 m ph. Ken
Schrader was second-best at 190.331.
Pole qualifying will be held Thursday, with
the race scheduled for Saturday.
Practice speeds were well shy of (he 195.533
m p h lap (hat won Greg Sacks the pole last year.
D avcy Allison, who won Ihe Daytona 500 pole
In February, had a practice lap Thursday of
189.986. Geoff Bodlne reached the same speed.
Jo e Rultm an was next at 189.765. and Ernie
Irvan , this year’s Daytona 500 winner, hit
189.681.

ll). Ww m um . tkSsrf Mt.
(S). Hwm* M) i

-Lyaw. IF —V

Bullock sharp despite layoff

■ O H T IIH I L E A O U B l
Start tcllpta SunRays

i F O R T M ILL. S.C. — Alex Artaeuextcndcd.hls
hitting streak to seven games with a four-hit
performance, and Elvln Paulino hit his league­
leading 17th home run Wednesday night to lead
the Charlotte Knights to a 0 4 victory over the
Jacksonville Suns.
Je ff Wetherby's two-run home run in the
second Inning gave the Suns a 3 0 lead.
Paulino led off the bottom of the second with
his home run off Jacksonville starter Dave
Evans (4-7). Billy White and Jeff Baldwin
followed with singles, and after White scored on
a fielder's choice. Ariag stroked a two-run
double to lead Charlotte to a 4-3 edge.
W hite's run-scoring single In the fifth helped
the Knights raise their lead to 5-3. The Suns
came back to within 5 4 on Jim Bowie's two-run
hom e run in the sixth.
T h e Knights fought off the threat with White's
tw o-run homer In the seventh and a two-run
shot by Kevin Roberson In the eighth.

i» .
141.

Florida Manor rallies past D.C.C.
us

S A N F O R D — Je rry Dibarlolo and Curt Renegrr each
scored a ru n In the top of the seventh as Florida Manor
rallied for an 8-6 win over D .C .C . In a battle for first In
the Sanford Recreation Department Wednesday Night
Men’s Softball League at Chase Park.
T h e other two scheduled games were forfeits.
Hopkins Meats picking up a 7-0 win over Hall’s Stucco
and S m ltty’s Plum bing taking the 7-0 victory over the
Sanford Police Benevolence Association.
Florida Manor (8-2) now has a one-game lead over
both D .C .C . (7-3) and Hopkins Meats (7-3). Hall’s Stucco
(4-7) holds down fourth ahead of Sm ltty's Plumbing

m

OCX.

mi
im

i -

• -

• «
* i*

(3-7) and SPBA (2-8).
Next week's schedule will be a highlighted by a
second-place showdown between D .C .C . and Hopkins
Meats at 8:30 p .m . In other games next week. Hall's
Stucco plays S m ltty's Plum bing at 6:30 p.m. while
SPBA takes on Florida Manor at 7:30 p.m.
On Wednesday night. Florida Manor took a 3-0 lead in
the first inning as Joe Ferpes. Kyle Brubaker and Brian
Hartman, the first three hitlers In the Florida Manor
lineup, all reached base and scored. Ron Lcsuge also

SANFORD - Ed Bussard’s Pro
Baas Guide Service and H .D . Realty
took different routes to victory as
the two leaders In the Sanford
Recreation Department Wednesday
N ig h t M e n 's S p r l n g / S u m m e r
Slo w pltch Softball League at
Pinehurat Park remained a halfgame apart In (he standings.
Ed Bustard's Pro Bass Guide
Service had to come from behind
twice to edge Regency Mazda 8-7
and H.D. Realty crushed Ensley.
Inc. 20-0.
In the other game, Bikini Beach
moved Into third place with a 6 4
victory over the W recking Crew.
The standing remain close w ith
Ed Bustard's Pro Bass Guide Serv­
ice atop the league with an 8-3
record. Following ihe leader la H .D .
Really (8 4 ). Bikini Beach (6 4 ). (he
Wrecking Crew (0-5). Regency
Mazda (5-6) and Ensley. Iric. (0-11).
Bikini Beach broke a 4 4 tic wtth
two runs In Ihe top of the sixth
Inning. Bobby Driver led off with a
double and scored on a double by
Jerry Dick. Mike Dick followed with
a single to score the Insurance run.
Doing the damage for B ikini
Beach were Driver (double, two
singles, run scored). Am le VanZyll
(three singles. RBI). Al Sumner (two
singles, two runs scored. RBI). Mike
Dick Itwo singles, run scored. RBI).
Richard Barry |lwo singlet). Je rry
Dick (double, run scored. RBI), Tim
D u lm s tra (single. R B I). B illy
Wamock (single, run scored). Jim
Troxell (single) and Mickey Helms
(RBI).
Pacing the Wrecking Crew offense
were Bill Marino (two singles. RBI).
Sieve Cooper (two singles, run
scored). Stacy Bilz and Harry G arri­
son (two singles each). Steve
Pridgen and Heath Short (one triple,
one run scored and one RBI each).
Tim Winkle (single. RBI). To m
Kelley (single, run scored) and
Konnie W lrtn. Jim Slern and Pat
Hupp (one single each).
II.D. Really scored six runs In Ihe
bottom of Ihe first Inning, then
lacked on 10 runs in the second as
they routed Ensley, Inc.

□
■MMSmcS
Wrtckk* Cr*w
Im .

H.D. Rm Nv

M l «M • Ml

* I*
»»

• • • • -• S
MUM 4 - M tl
M

Ml 1 - I II

■ M W filM iO M ib n lw III Ml ■ - • t

□I

Babe Ruth All-Star state tournaments set to start
L O N G W O O D — T h e a n n u a l Babe Ruth
Baseball J u n io r Bam bino's Division |9 8 10 year
olds) slate championship tournament will be
played J u ly 5-9 at Ihe Fred Stover Sports
Complex in Tavares.
Eleven teams will vie for the slate champion­
ship with Seminole County being well repre­
sented by Longwood and Soul beast Seminole.
T h e tournament w ill kick off Friday, J u ly 5. at
1 p.m . w ith Longwood playing Flagler County
and Jacksonville Beach taking on Keystone
Heights. W inners' and losers' bracket games will

CO VER AGE

OF

SPO R TS

IN

YOUR

be played each day w ith the championship game
set for 10 a.m. Tuesday. J u ly 9.
Admission for each day w ill be g l for udult*
and 8.50 for children. Passes good for all days of
the tournament will also be available.
For further details, contact To m Tcn kry al the
City of Tavares (904) 742-6221.
Representing the Longwood All-Stars In the
tournament will be Aaron Brown. David Canfield.
Mike Carper, Nalhan Chichester. David Driggers,
Steve Florey. Jo h n H oyt. Adam Kurtr. Jeff
Malray. Kevin Mellllo. Brian Montgomery. Ryan
i'retlien, Corey Troxell. Jo h n Vitale and Corey
Williams.

AREA, READ

TH E

O V IED O — The Southeast Seminole Babe Ruth
League of Oviedo and Tuskawllla has announced
Its All-Tournam ent teams al three levels of play.
They will begin with state competition this
coming weekend with Ihe Jun ior Bamblnos lages
9-10) playing In Tavares. Ihe Bamblnos lages
11-12) playing In Longwood and the Babe Ruth
All-Stars (ages 13-15) playing in DeLand.
The Ju n io r Bamblnos. under manager Don
Bledsoe and coach Mike Zelancs. arc composed of
Brad Bledsoe. Jason Thom as and Brian Mullen of
the Cubs: Jerem y Zclancs. Nate and Ja ck

Sea All-Stars, Pag* 28

SAN FO R D

HERALD

D A ILY

I

iI

■
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- Sanford HaraM. Sanford. Ftorfda - Thursdpy. July 4. 1«S1

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
BUT

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Naw Yark A Mantraal 0
Atlanta I. Cincinnati t
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I G M a M a M l.liM p .
Mao Yarn (Wiviehw*» *4) at MentraM
(Bem*a03).7:05p.m.
SI. Law* iTawfcsbury A t) at PtataGMphta

Ilnaman. TraNa* Carl Alton*, wta* r»
caivar-pafantiv# Sack, ta tha Albany
FlraMrKalor JoWNooLIMowiaa.

(MuawitanaA4).7:Mpm.

Cincinnati IKI.Oraaa )•*) at Atlanta
(P. Smith I I ) . M ly i » .
L m Angola* (Marfan PS) at San Dtago
(G Harris 1-1). IP O Ism .

Haw York at PhlliOoNhli. 7:31p.m.
Montreal M PI ttoburWi. 7:31p.m.
Cincinnati at HawaNn. 0:30 p.m.
Chtcapa at St. Lawl*. I : IS pm .
Atlanta at Lm Ansato. N :N pm .
SanDtafsstSanFranctoP N :IS p m .
AME BICAN LEAGUE

Detroit
Nav Yark
Milwaukee

Calltamla
Minnetota
Ta ia t
ChlcafO
Oakland
Seattle
Kanvac City

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Detroit 4 Baltimore 3
New York 3. Cleveland 3
Toronto A MknasataO
Boston L Milwaukee 3
Oakland L T c i m O
Calltamla 4. Kan*M a ty 3
Chicago X Seattle 3. Q Innlnf*
Ttortday't Game*
Minnetota (Watt 001 at Taranto (Kay I f 31.
13:35pm.
Baltimore (R Smith A I) at Nav Yark
(J Johnson I 3), 1:05pm.
Detroit IMeechem 101 at Boston (Darwin
3 51.4 OSp m
Chicago (Hibbard *4) at Saattto (Da Lucla
* 51.4:11pm
M llvagkM (Hunter s i ) at Cleveland
(Nagy 3 f). 7:SSp m
Oakland (Meor* *41 at T o m * (Alaaandtr
411.0:35 p.m.
Kantas C lty'lA ppvr 47) at Calltamla
IMcCasklll7«).«pm .
Friday's Seam
Baltimore al Nev York. 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at Bm ton. 7.35 pm
Mllwaukeeal Cleveland. 7 35p m.
Minnesota al Chicago.! 05 pm
Oakland at Kansas City. I 35p m
Calltomla at Teias. S: 35p m.
Toronto al Seattle. 10.15pm.

Pci. at
4 3 4 4 43* 3 .545 1
7 344 3
7 .344 1

l

Charlotte (Cubs)
7 4
Orlands (T v m s )
7
a Greenville lBrvsI
*
Cerellna (Pirates)
4
Jack senvUte (Mrnrs)
4
Wetiem Otvtston
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7
Memphis I Roy Alsl
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, til Marrt*. Cincinnati. Iti i t
. IS; SarattadwtNill.
TG vynn. San Dtopa.1; Lank lard. St. Lout*.
*i Patdar. San Franclac*. 4i LGsnistox.
Houston. 5; Kruk. PMlOMahH. Si
New Yark. Si MTtomoMn. St. Lawk. S.
i York, t*; Gant. AManto IS;
a to m . Cincinnati. IN McGrttf. San Dtapa.
IS; ORML CMcaaa. IS; Larkin. Cincinnati.
14. WCIark. San Prandscp 13. Mitchell. San
Prancl*ca. II;
Chlcapp H i
i Yark. 12.
Nlaan. ANanto 4P; Grlaaam, Mantraal, 271
Da Shield*. Mantraal. 24; C«l*man,
Yark. 25; Lanktord. S i Ldwl*. III
Mantraal. to OSmlth. SI. Ldwl*. 34
(7Datotaaa)
jm Anpeta*. It 2. .70*. IM .
Carpenter, St. Lauto 7 3. .770, 121; Rl(aCincinnati. 4 1 7«A 144i Olavlna. ANanto
II A .721 2.04; l ampan. MantraaL P L .714
471; Oman*. PMladdplito P A .714 174
Palacto. Pittsburgh. P L .714 I N ; Bmews
In*. Cincinnati. N 4 .714 174; A fM to St.
Louis. P L .714144
Can*. Nav Yark. to . Gtavlno. ANanto to
GMaddua. Chlcapa to- Gaadan. Nav York.
Ia nD top o.il;
*3; RI|o. Cincinnati, to
Hamltch. Hautton. TA
La Smith. SI. Louts. 2); Dtbbto. Cincinnati.
22; Franc*. Nav Yark. 17; DaSmllh. Chic spa.
14; BLandrum. Pittsburgh, is.- Lettorts. San
Dtapa. 14 MlWilliam*. Philadaiphi*. I I

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Mentor Mil
Joyner Cal
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Puckett Min
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Palmeiro Tea

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1. CM Rlpton. BsHtmar*. IM A to ; 3. O nto
Guillen. CMcsb p *31153; X Manual L m .
Taranto 4)4.17*; 4. Watt Wato. Oakland.
53441*,- l Alan Trammatl. Detroit, 47*MO; p
Kurt Stlltwatl. Kan*M City- H IM l; 7. Greg
tonewta. 35A***; A Jatt Huaan,
Teas*. MAMA- 0. Alvar* Bigtna ia. N av
Yark. ) 7 M » N. Dick SetotNIA CM ltam to
I71.1M; It. Omar VUsael. Saatttt. 1S3.0M; 13.
Rill Iptar*. Mltwawtoa. 12141*; 12. PMIa
Farm In. CNvaland. SAAB; 14. Luis Rivers.
t. Kan OrlMty Jr.. SaatN*. 3.3443**; 1
Dav* Mandaraan. OMland. I474J07; 1
Rkkay Handeraan. Oakland 1,477430; 4
Kirby PwcboN. Mtenawto I.IW .N I; 1 J* m
Canaaca On* land. 1,04454 A Ja* Carter,
T aranto 1M 7M 4 7. Rwban Sierra Taaaa
741.130; A Devon WN to. Toronto 4340**
«. Darn WbtHato CaUtomla S3A*tl; W.
klo W lton. Toronto 44L4H; It . Ttm
Neap. OtoOto 11 Juan Oani atai.
Taaaa 41AM7; I I Kirk C lbaan. Kansas City.
Jto lN i Ml Rabm Vaunt. MltvaukM. 23*4If;
I I Ttm Brunansky, BMton. 33AN0; I
Omanvall. Baaton. 3*7741.
17. Sammy Sa*4 Chlcapa 154353; I I
BarData Nav Yark. 344413; If. Albert Bat!*.
Cleveland. 33SM1; &gt; . RaB Osar. Datratt,
10f.7t7; 31. Lida Patanto CMINmto 307.271;
23. Dm Gtaddws. Mbwtaaato 101.543. n
Brian McRaa. K«t*M City. 1MM7; 14 Kill*
Burka BaaNn. MA771
31 Dav* Parkar, CMINm to 177,1*4; 24
Jack Oaw*harty. Tosaa I71M4 17. Danny
TartaBull. KantM City. 143.444. 34 Roberto
Kelly. Nav York. 134*14. 1*. Shane NUck.
Mlnneaota. 147710; 30. Dwloht Iv a n * .
BMNmom. 114345; 11. Chris James. Ctove
land 125MB; 21. Lane* Jctmaan. Chicago.
115.345.
21 AMa Cat*. Cleveland. 131775. 24 Mike
Devemaua. Balllmam. 112.3**; 25. Ja y
Buhner, laattta. 131455; 14 Crop Briley,
leattto. 114445; 17. Uayd MaaaBy. Detroit.
111345; 14 Franklin Stubbs. M llvautoa.
104425; 2*. Candy Maldanada. Milvoutw*.
104134 44 Tany Philip*. 07.507; 41. Hensley
Meulens. Nav Yark. 01.734; 41. Randy
Milligan. BMtlmam. 73M4

Llndslrnm . Hill Luw and Ryan Dcdclow of (h r
Cardinals; T im Ganger. Sieve H urley. Josh
Larew. Mall Tu lip and Graham Howell of (he
Yankees; Eric IHmder. Mail Hom er and Derek
Sprlngham of ih r Mels: and Jurod Peer of (h r
Pecwee Mels.
T h e Hambinoh of manager Je rry Golsleyn will
be made up of K rvln and Dan La Pol la. Nick and
Chris Caldwell. Adam Carter and Ma(t Tu cke r of
league champion Mels; Don Werner. Mall Sum m ill. Mike Galone and Ryan Bledsoe of the Cubs:
Matt Golsteyn. Rick Plotrowskl. E m il Mohablr
and Frank Perez of the Cardinals; and Ashley
Scott. Alan Walker. Ozzle Aguilar. Randy Ganger
and D .J. Richards of the Yankees.
J o h n F u lts. m anager of the Babe Rut h
All-Stars, will have at nis disposal. Mike House.

fn'-r '

Guy Forgot (7). Franca, dat. Tim Msyatto,
Rm damaa. a t (A 7 ). 7 1 A t P 4 Andr*
Apaaai (5 ). La* Vagaa. dM. Jacc* fltmgh.
Nattwrlandt. A l 1 4 A l P 4
■aria Backer 13). Germany, dat. Christian
Bergstrom , leaden. A 4 A7 (A 7 ). P I. 7-4
(7 3); Thtarry Champion. Franca, dat. Der­
rick Nmtagna. Pacific Palisades. Ceill . AT
111 14). P L A 1.14 P I
John FI tigerato. AuMrMto and Anders
Jerryd (1 ). Sweden, dat. Mark Kratcmarm
and Simon Yaul. AuatrMto 74 (7 1 ). P 4
Tadd WaamrlOpa and Mark Waadterda (I).
AuatrMto dat. Brant Hayparth and Bymn
Ta lka t.S a u N iA trka .A LA l
Pabla Alban*. Arpantlna. and SBatby
Palm
Coast, and Brat Garnett, Columbia. 1 C .. 74
(7 31.41

(*).
Martina Navratilova 13). Aspen. Cote , 4 4
7 5. Gabrieta Sabatlnl (1). Argentina. dM.
Laura G lidemelstar. ttoru, A L A I .

I. Sandy Alomar. OevetanL Ut7.734 3Carisen Pith. Chicago. fto3M; 1 Tarry
Garrison (41. Houston. dM. Gaby CeemnpM
Steinbeck Oakland 4140*7; A Tany Pan*. and Am y Van Buumrt NothatI andr A ). A l;
Boston. 507.351; 1 PM Border*. Toronto
A/antma Sanchai V karto Spam, and Helena
5*3431 4 Lane* Parrish. CMltamto 344201;
Suhova (3). Ciechostovekta. dM. HMIe Clotfi.
7 Brian Harper. Mlwwamto. 234M4
, Louden. Tann., and Amy Pratlar. Rochester
4 Matt Neka*. Nav Yark. 341177; * Gan* Hills. M k h . 4 4 A I . 4 l .
Petr#111, Tames. 11404A 10 NUckay TattieSon.
TMrdRaoad
Datroll. H IM *; II. Ntoa Madarlana. '
Kathy Jordan. Pale Alto Ceill . m i Lari
City. 1717**; 11 DavaVMI*. SaatN*. 13
McNeil (5). Houston, del Repina Rajchrtova
I I B-J. Surhott. MlhaaukM. 131*44; 14
and Andrea Stmadava. Ciecheetavakla. A l
Melvin. Baltimore. 744*3.
7* (73). Gratchan Magars and Rabm White
17). San O iapf- det Sbaaa Staltord.
Gatwaaottto and Tamt
I. Benito Santiago. Son DiogA 1.751.3*0: 1.

All-Stars
Coatiauod from IB

(Taranto), to t.
Id tp a (Atlanta), ana Matty Atou (Pit­
tsburgh), I*t4
Mart ana Wathar ta p e r (batta St. Laut*.
N L). tto t t « a
J*e (N e v York. A L ). m i Dam OlMagpi*
(Baaton. A L ). 1*41, 1*4*. 1*50
Carla* (Chlcafa. A L ). ana La* May
(Cincinnati, N L). to*.
G aytan (San Franc Ik s . N L). m i Jim
Parry (Mtanaaeta. A L ). It* .
Dial* (Pittsburgh. N L ). and Harry Wad
(St. Louis and PMtatotpMa.NL). Ifio. 1*47.

Kenny L ys U k . Em ilio Mangual. Jason Nichols.
Ken Schellenbarg and Chris Tu lip of the Y&amp;nkees;
and Jeff and Chris Spies.-Doug Ruscitll. Tra ce
Wilson. Ryan Brockman and Steve Lalca of the
Mets.
A L T A M O N T E S P R I N G S -T h e 1991 Altamonte
Springs Major National League All Stars that w ill
begin play In the Area 3 bracket of the District 14
tournament this Friday will consist of:
Ricky Bennett. Kyle BerryhilL Shawn C h ild .
Mike Felker. Josh Hazen. Charlie Lytle. Matt
Malloy. Kevin Mass. Lance Odom. Billy Packer.
To d d RadcUfT. Chris Ramirez. Regan Russell and
Steven Scheiber.
T h e manager of the National All-Stars will be
Pat Mass and Doug Berryhlll will serve os the
coach.

Stapiwn Olaaton. Australia. a*f. Tttsuya
Cham. Japan. 74 (D -N ). 7a (7 4 ); Kannath
Carton. Danmark, PM. Sata LaNta*. Nlptato
A A 57. A ), NUto Madapan. Britain. aat.
VuhJ#v*nark.Vu#estavtoALP7(57).A4.
Grant Dayla. Auekralta. aat. Sarawwtti
Yanfckantanaaakul, Thallana. a t , a i t
tttotoB

TOttOtrroAM
OS- Pto2?,Tfum
*in*

Jehnaen ana RanKy Marrlatt. via* receiver*,
enawiueawiaaaiist.
- tn t
hockey

USA M O CKIY — Name* Bab Johnson

-a- ■IttoOi ^wf&gt; Ik M
M V
MOttif

Britain. I t a it to rlila O sOwln. South
A trie*. BH. Gabriel SItotal*In. CM la. a t a t
Vincent lyaBaa. B an Batan. Oaf. Paval
Gatoa. Caochostavakia. I t act Atoanaar
RaKwtaacu. Germany, aat. In rto ia Abaraa.
Moilca. a t l it H yaena Kaun Sana. Sautti
Kara*, aat. Jama* Croanholoh. N ev lealana.
a t. a t
Sarpli Sarpalan. Sovtot Untan, dat. Joshua
Capto. Australia. 74 (7-1). 43; Scott Gossnar.
O o r m a n y . Po t. D u s a n P r c h l i k .
Citchaslevakto A t, A l; Jam la Holmes.
Australia, dat. Benny W1|*ya. indanasto 74
171).P7 (P7). 4 4
Johannas UwtatBor p r. Austria, dat. Jama*
Bally. Britain. A 4 71; Andmt Madvadav.
Soviet Untan. dat. Mark Schottoto Britain.
4 4 P I; Mam Navarra. Italy, dat. David
Prmaall. Germany. A A P 4
Grant DayI*. AuatrMto dat. Bryan Owm.
■randan. 4 4 4 3 ; Michael Joyce. Los
Anpstto dat. Karim Alaml, Maraces. 5 4 7 1
A L Crop Ruoodaki. Can ado, dat. ProdOy
Satlawan. Indanaato A L P I.
Paul K lld trry , A uttraila. dat. Mil**
Maclapan, Britain, A L P7, A*. Kenneth
Cartean. Danmark, dat. Jan Loach. Laguna
Beach. Cant . A L a l P4- Hyaanp Kaun
Sang. South Kama. dat. Hidafcl Kanaka.
Japan. P L 7 1
Ykim M Ipadaa. Baca RalaN. dat. Navlll*
Godwin. South Africa. 74 (7-S). P I; ThamM
Cnpvlst. Sweden, dat. Ntcatas Klachkewlti.
Pranc*. 4 4 7-3; A lacandor Radulescu.
Germany, dat. Juan Ignacio GarM. A/gen
Im*. 1 4 A3. A A
Ptrot
Barbara Rlttner. Germany, dal. Ma|a
M urk. Vugaslavto A a P I; Marta Jot*
Goldano. Arpantlna. dat. M arla Ale|an
Ouaiada. Chile. A l. A l; Iv * Martlncova.
CtachaMavakto dM. Iva MMMI. Yupaatavta.
A1A4
Joanna Llmmer. Australia, dat. Cindy
Summsn. Saeth A tr k i A l. 7 5; Rosanna Da
La* Rtai Paraguay- KM. Heather Matthew».
Britain. A l A l; Lind* N lemonIsvordr lot.
Notharlands. dM. Angle Waalcack. Australia.
P I PA
Joanna Farto PhUlppinai dM. Karan
Cm t4 Britain. P I 4 4 P 4 Julia Pullln.
Britain. dM. Catherine Barclay. Australia.
A A 7 5. liana Makarova. Soviet Union. dM
Atari* Ctantegna. Arptatbto A 1 P 1
Anna Smashnova. Is/aol. dat. Kstolta
Covers. South Africa. P I. P3; Chandra
Rubin. LMoystta. La . dM. Mami Oenosh.ro.
Japan. 1 4 PA P L Al SugJyama. Japan. dM.
Shirll Aim SiddaiL Britain. P L P0Pam Holton. Albuguergue, N M . dal
Joelle Schad Dominican RapuMk. 41. P I.
Stan Haul Park. SeuOi Korea. dM. Llmor

P A IR P IIL D — Named Mark CMxanetN
man's part time assistant basketball
coach
tall coach.
NORTH P LOR I DA Rkh Zvaaec
PttORNIX C O L L I O f - Named Julia
Hank* woman's basketball coach aid Fred
Maere apart* Inlarmatton dimeter.
TK M P LI tent toatbail coach.

a u t o r a c in g

7:30 p.m IN

SUN. NASCAR Grand National

B A SIB A LL
I p.m. - ISP N . WAYK 34 Baltimore
Or let** at New Yark Yank***. ( L)
) p.m. - WON. Pittsburgh Pirates at
ChkaooCubs. (L)
4 3 0 p m . - WON. Chicago Whlto So* at .
Seattle Mariners. (L )
7 p.m. — WAYK 54. SI. Louis Cardinals at
Phltadtlphta Phillies. |L)
7 p.m. — ISP N . New York Mats at
MentraMKipos.IL)
7:05 p m . - W TB1 Cincinnati Rads at
Atlanta Brava*. IL)
10 p.m. — WAYK 54 Houston Astro* al San
Francisco Giants. (L )
10 p m. — ESPN. Las Angeles Dodgers at
San Diego Padres. (L )
GOLF
4 p m. — USA. Western Open. Ilrsl round
ILI
II p.m. — USA. Western Open, tirst round
TIN N IS
t pm . - WESH 7. Wimbledon, women s
single* semifinal
5 p m — HBO. Wimbledon, woman's
singles semifinal
11:10 p.m . - W ESH 1, Wimbledon
hlghllpht*
11:45 a m. - WESH 1. Wimbledon,
woman's singles semifinal
BASEBALL
13 50 p.m. - WWNZ AM I7M). Pittsburgh
Pirate* at Chicago Cub*
M ISCELLANEOUS
4:10 p m - WWNZ AM 1740). SportsTalh

�Sanford HaraM, Iwiford, Florida - Thursday, July 4, ts tl - M

Lake Mary*

Meanwhile. Ms teammates were taking advan­
tage of the wildness of Oviedo starting pitcher
C h ris Stokes. Ja so n Rasmussen and T . J .
Hamilton both drawing walks and scoring during
Lake M ary's thre e-run first In n in g . Scott
Johnston drove in one run during the Inning with
a double and later scored the third.
Jose Gaoxafex relieved Stokes in the first Inning
for Oviedo and labored Into the sixth Inning,
giving up two runs In the second and one in the
fifth aa Lake Maiy buth a 6-1 advantage.
Th e wheels came off In the sixth inning as

____ ,___ ,
ptajrlng in Lym an's 4th of Ju ly
Invitational tournam ent. Oviedo takes on ’

SSg,?K!L"'
Buflocto whose prim ary position Is catcher, had
pitched only one other time In his high school
career and that was a one-inning stint last spring.
It seemed that the long layoff between appearances dkhi t have an adverse effect as he allowed
only two hits and one unearned run.

Chase'
Brodericks. Joe Lipscomb and
J i m m y Ram os s trin g in g
t o g e t h e r f o u r co n s e c u tive
singles. After Roger Kinnard
walked, Ira H a ll and Mike
D'Am ico each delivered a sacri­
fice fly. McCoy and Aaron Johns
then added two more singles.
Florida Manor tied the a
w ith a run tn the sixth. Hartman
reaching bate on a fielder's
choice and scortngpn singles by
C liff Partiow and Blake Murray.
•That set the stage for
D .C .C . tried to rally las the
home half of the seventh, Hal)
stroking a two-out double and
D 'Am ico following with a single,
but Florida Manor was able to

get the third out before any more
Jo e Ferpes and Hartman each
singled once and acored twice to
lead Florida Manor’s nine-hit
offensive. Kyle Brubaker. Nick
Ferpes and Reneger each hit a
single and scored a run. Partiow.
M urray. Leaage and Rick Poore
each hit a single while
Dibartoto scored a run.
Fo r D.C.C.. which out-hit Flor­
ida Manor 12-9 but hit Into one
double play and stranded eight
men on base, was ted b v McCoy.
w ho collected thtfee htta and

Plnehurst

L e a d in g the R e g e n cy M a zd a
offense w ere K e n P e rry (th re e
sin gles, three R B I), W a y n e K e lly
(tw o singles, ru n sco red , tw o
R B I). G re g R egister (tw o singles,
ru n scored, R B I), J e f f S la d e k
(s in gle . R B I). C a rl Lee (s in g le ,
tw o r u n s s c o r e d ) . D o n
C a u s s e a u x a n d J e r r y B ru ss e l
(o ne s in gle a n d o n e r u n sco red
e a ch ) a n d K e ith S p a rk s (r u n
acored).

Put Our Ust
On Ybur Ust

utrd to begin today.
"W e got aome pitchers that
needed to throw a little b it." said
Bullet coach Bill McCullough.
"W e are learning to think for
But from there It got even
ourselves.”
stranger aa the Bullets sent 14
Th e Bullets certainly came up men to the plate tn the sixth
w ith some creative ways to cram Inning, the first eight batters
the plate. In the third Inning, scoring tn what seemed little
they scored two runs on a Kevin more than batting practice.
S t u c k e y double an d three Chad Sterner. Jeff Bouley and
grounders to the third baseman. Kevin Scott each singled home
stuckv
Stucky tw
twice escaped rundowns, runs In the inning. Four walks, a
m and
an d a dropped fiy
including ducking under the tag hit batsman
ball also contributed to the
r f S b t o X breu en route to third.
outburst.
•
Tw o innings later, the Bullets
The Bullets' Mike Lyons flirted
had Just one hit — a dribbler

For the Bullets. Stuckey. Scott
and Doug Porter each smacked
two hits In the contest. Bouley
walked four times and added a
single while Sterner drove In
three runs.
Th e Hornets grabbed two runs
tn the fifth inning, using an
error, a walk, and a base hit by
Shane Howat.

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with a no-hitter for four Innings
before being replaced by Tim
Ruckdeschei and Jason Good*
pastor. Lyons allowed just one
nit — a bfoop single by Rusty
Stephens Church — tn picking
up the w in. He struck out two
and walked four.

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which barely made It halfway to
third base — but still managed
four runs, thanks largeIto to five
walks, two coming w ith the

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f w Oviedo. Chris Roacoe brake up Bullock's
bid for a no-hitter when he singled tn the third.
Kevin T v i m wrecked the shutout when he
singled In Stokes, who had reached base on an

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and one run scored while Chad Ebbert and Chris
Shade each had a single and an RBI.
Also chipping in were Dan Anson. Brent
WUmqnt and Chris Barfield, who each hit single
and scored a run. Rasmussen and Hamilton
acored a run each In the first inning.

Bullets

WINTER G A R D EN

IB

Contributing to the 19-hlt H .D .
R e a l t y o ffe n s e w e r e J i m
Schaefer (hom e ru n . trip le ,
single, two runs scored, six RBI).
Mack Thorne and Mark Blythe
(one home ra ti two singles,
three runs scored and four RBI
each). B rian Jones (double,
single, two runs scored, two RBI)
and P h il Hancock (double,
single, two runs scored!.
Also contributing were Chris
Dapore and Bob K elly (two
singles, two runs scfcred and one
RBI each). Chryst Doney (triple,
ran acored. RBI). Carl Thorne
(single, two runs scored. RBI)
and Mark Morgan (run scored).
Doing the nittlng for Ensley.
Inc. were Chris Boyles (double,
single) and Richard Bcckner.
Sean Gould and Barry Sweat
(one single each).
T h e game b etw ee n Ed
Buaoard'a Pro Bam Guide Serv­
ice and Regency Maxda was a
defensive straggle for four In­
nings with Bum ard's holding a
1-O fead. But the bats woke u)&gt; in
the fifth Inning for both teams as
they scored four runs each.
Regency Maxda scored a ran
in the top of the sixth inning to
tie th e score at 5 - 5 . B u t
Bumard's answered with three
runs in the bottom of the frame.
John W ilks' two ran single being
the big blow.
Again Regency tried to come
back In the top of the seventh aa
they scored two runs. But a
ground out ended the effort.
Providing the offense for Ed
Bumard's Pro Bam Guide Serv­
ice were Jeff Bergman (double,
single, three RBI). John WUks
(double, single, run acored. *two
RBI). Ray Roacoe (ftlntfle. run
scored. RBI). T im W ilks. Ed
Bustard, Duane Goembel and
BUI Roacoe (one single and one
run scored each). Calvin Bryant
(two RBI) and Tom W ilks and
Rick Roscoe (one run scored
each).

Oviedo tried four different pitchers — including
another effort by Stokes — to keep the game
close. G oniakx started the Inning and was
followed by Stokes. Chris Roacoe and Louie
Traeger to the mound as Lake Mary iced the
game with a four-run rally.
Ben Rovito came in to pitch for Lake Mary In
the bottom of the sixth and worked a pair of
scoreless innings to close out the win.
Johnston led Lake M ary's eight-hit attack with
his double, RBI and two runs scored. David
Hudtck and Matt Delmer each added a single. RBI

�Bw ifll tpofts Olid show coming
Th e P in t Benefit Card Show for Second Harvest Pood Bank
w ill be held Sunday. Ju ly 21. from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m . at the
Ramada Inn. Altamonte Springs. Interstate 4 and State Road
436. Buy. sell, trade. Gtvaways every one half hour. Including
an *86 Donruia Rookies Set to be given away at 11 a.m.
Admission la 81. h r more Information, contact L e n a Putver
at 323-1013.

Bingo to benefit MADD
Bingo games, to benefit Mothers Against Drunk D riving and
their com munity programs, wilt be held Saturday, Ju ly 3D. at
10:30 a.m . and at It30 p.m. at Flea World. U.S. Highway 17-82
In Sanford.
Coat la 88 for 10 games with cash prises.
For more Information, call 422*6233 In Orlando.

OvcfMtcrc to wdgh In
A meeting on spirituality in relationships in Overeaten
Anonymous Is conducted on Thursdays at 7:43 p.m . in the
cafeteria at West Lake Hospital, Longwood. h r information,
call Charlie at 323-8070.

East'Wctt Klwonic to gather
East-West Sanford Ktwanls C h ib meets Thursday at 6 p.m . at
Friendship Lodge, Seventh and Locust.'

Th e Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics classes at
the Downtown Youth Center, knrer level of city hall. 300 North
Park Ave. Classes arc held Monday. Wednesday, Friday and
Saturday mornings from 9 to 10 and on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings from 3:30 to 6:30. Coat la 82 per class. Exercise mats
w ill be furnished. For m orojnform atlon call 330-3807. All
non-Sanford residents will be required to pay an annual 810

LA K E MARY - Julie
McDonald. 18. of Lake M ary, was
named one of flve national win*
n e r a at t h e R e a p e c T e e n
‘'Straight to Parents5, Awards
Gala in New York C ity. Ju ly I.
JuMe la the daughter of Helen
and Daniel McDonald.
Julie, a June graduate of Lake
Mary High School, waa chosen
from 3.000 students across the
United States who created video
and print Public Service Adver­
t is e m e n t s ( P S A s ) o ff e rin g
parents Ups on better relating to
cate with their teens. Her PSA
wlU be distributed to media
nationwide aa part of the 1B01
ReapecTeen p u b lic service
campaign..
"Parents often complain about
how difficult It Is to relate to
their teenagers, but they tend to
forget that teenagers arc a valu*
Charles DeVries, RespecTeen
in the

JIM # M 0 P 8 M M , O M of

I listen

york university, Nancy Garfield
of the G irl Scouts, Ben Jones of
Saatchl and Saatchl. David Gray
of Saatchl and Saatchl and
Suxanne Holeton of the A d
Council. "Th e PSAs were well
scripted, well thought out and
right on target." said Calvin.

sed on
orign . and
by a
udges,
including: Jam es Calvin if New

national w in n o n o r s n iw s p a o i— n com p an won.
“ P.m am axe d at the selfconfidence In these students."
The RespecTeen "Straight to
Parents" PSA competition is
part of a nationwide program
spon sored b y L u t h e r a n
Brotherhood called "ReapecTe e n : Helping Parents and

Sw ill AM ivm to voVioovm

Building tho fund

Sound of Sunshine Sweet Adelines women's barbershop
singing group rehearses every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Prairie
Lake Baptist Church, 413 Ridge Road, Fern Park.

Raprssantatlvas from CUSO,
Inc., racantly praaantad a
1618.75 check to Stm inola
Work Opportunity Program to
aid them In building thair naw
facility, which is currently
undsr construction. C U 8 0
employs** raised the monay
donated b/ hosting a commu­
nity car wash. S.W.O.P. Execu­
tive Director Bill Poa, second
from left, accepts the chack
from (I to r) Kathy Cox, Linda
Woodworth, Pam 8cott and
Joe Barrlsro.

Jo hn ny Fault. Fern Park, girl:

/ ii
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Teens Respect Each Other and
T h e m s e lv e s .” " S t r a i g h t to
Parents la cosponsored Tiy the
A d Council and Th e National
Collaboration for Youth,
Lutheran Brotherhood is a
fraternal benefit society with one
million members nationwide.

emf ntfttf btinda caU

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Indtvtdual'e exemplary duty perAtr Force Staff Sgt. Janice A.
Shackelford, a communlcaUon

™ iSMUICCe JP ® WWIWMTIlJp* ICRCI*

erehlp qualitlca, significant
eetf-lmpromnent and other ac-

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Sarifsrd, Flo;.is

■

Te ch. Sgt. D em is M.
604 Bridges
M adM t M r
Judeon
Force Base
of Geneva.

Pvt ItfClaMDivte

He la assigned with the 1923th
C o m m u n ic a tio n s C o m p u te r
Systems Group.
Leopard la the s
i one of Carolyn
u. Leopard of 900 N. Volusia
A ir Fbvee Base. CtoUf.
A re ., Orange CUy, and retired
Shackelford to the son of Chief Petty Officer Henry B.
WSttam A . and Elizabeth P. Leopard of Maryville. Tenn.
Th e sergeant Is a 1972 gradu­
Shackelford of 304 Weklva.
ate of Lym a n High School.
He la a 1978 graduate of
Seminole High School.

Pvt. 1st Clam C onatance V.
Davis haa completed the wire
systems tnataBcr course at Fort
Gordon, A ugusSa.Oa.
Th e course provided tnatructlon fo r soldtera to In atall.
operate and perform operator
and organisational maintenance
checks and sendees on v o lta ^
and current protection devices,
te le p h o n e s and a u x ilia r y
equipment.
D avis the the daughter of

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A ir Force Airman Dennis M.
:. Henry B. Marks J r., an apprentice com_____
imed___
first muntcattons-computer ayatems
for the A ir operator, has arrived for duty at
at W arner OoodfeDow A ir Force Baee. TexGa. Th e as.
on the
Marks Is the son of A ir Force

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Standing, ft to r) Chartana Hampton, Lott Colima,
Math Wright, 8uei McNeil, Suala Smith, Lois
JoaNn and Tammy Froyttmuth all ptaaantad
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R u i m II Halnts, far right, atappod into a
confatanoa room at Kampf THio, Sanford, July 1
m o g p n t r v Q IO l U r p f l N n fm
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Fo r 2 4 -h o u r listing*, so* L E IS U R E m sgailno o f Friday, Ju n o 28.

nm n m n t w

rrviN O worn Dtc m i f n t wOfKt

Woman finds that pillars
of church have feet of clay
D B A S A B S T i Your advice to
the Arizona woman whose fami­
ly waa banned from the church
was right. You told her to
complain to someone higher tn
the church. However. I hope she
had better luck than 1had.
I am a m e m b e r o f th e
Evangelical Lutheran Church of
America. The new pastor of m y
church did not know me. but she
refused to speak to me: tn effect,
she ostracized my children and
their terminally III father from
their congregation.
Apparently my “ aln'* was
providing shelter to another
pastor who had two children, no
job. no place to live and very
little money. When I complained
to the btshop, I was told that
since I had given Ihc appearance
of having "traduced** (defamed
or slandered) my marriage vows,
in y family could be treated
w h ic h e v e r way the pastor

— to the nearest exit, and let
them know why you are running
away.
R IW J IM IT
D B A * NBW JB B flB Y t Whal
an eye-opener m y mall haa been
this week! Most of us were raised
to believe that all members of
the clergy are somehow closer to
Ood, and therefore superior
beings. But, alas, they too arc
only human.
wanted.
Th e head of the church refused to comment on the matter,
saying thta waa a local Issue, and
he chose not to get Involved. The
local aynod council did not
respond at all.
Abby. please tell your readers
that all clergy are human beings.
By definition. 80 percent nrc
below average, and somelimcs
you hit the bottom 10 percent. If
the clergy do not practice what
they preach, run — do not walk

CONFIDENTIAL TO YOUt
Make this holiday a happy one. If
you're drinking, don't drive. And
If you're driving, don't drink.
P.S. Happy birthday. Slsslc!
(Problems? Writs to Dm t Abby.
Fur a portoiw l, unpublished
reply, send o self-addressed,
•tamped i w i t v t la D ttr
.
F.O. Bex 4*440, Lee Angelas.
Calif. 40044. All correspondence
is confidential.)

?????What W ould You LikeTo Know??}??
Wt’d llto to mato it seller for you
to tato advantage of the many ojh
ponunmao wa oner in ma newep**
par, tot you may not knowwho to

CLUB, O R G A N IZA TIO N N EW S
News about social and sarvlce club* and organiza­
tions in Seminole County is elegible for publication.
Group publicity chairmen should submit typewrit­
ten press releases to People Editor. The deadline
is noon three days prior to an event.br as soon after
the event a* possible.

PEOPLE ITEM S
Items accompanied by pictures about the ac­
complishments of children and adult residents of
Samlnole County are eligible tor publication. Sub­
mit typewritten or neatly written items to People
Editor, Sanford Herald, 300 N. French Ave., Sanford,
Fla. 32771. Include name and daytime phone
number ol person who may answer questions.

RELIGION
Items about religious services or social activities
sponsored by a church or synagogue in Seminole
County are eligible for publication on the Religion
Page each Friday. Subr.iit items no later than noon
Wednesday prior to the day of publication to
Religion Editor. Include the name and daytime
telephone number of a person who may answer
questions.

Herald must submit Ihe appropriate form to the San­
ford Herald People editor. Completed engagement
forms must be submitted at least 20 days prior to
the wedding. Wedding forme should be submitted
aa soon after the wedding as possible.
The forme provide the basis for Information that
will appear in the announcement. The forms are
available at the newspaper office or by sending an
addressed, stamped envelope to Engagements (or
Weddings).
If desired, the completed forms may be accom­
panied by a photograph (professional preferred) of
any size to be published In black and white with the
announcement. The newspaper reserves the right
to reject any photograph that it cannot reproduce.
Photographs may be picked up after publication
or can be returned by mail if accompanied with an
SASE.
Engagements and weddings are published In the
Sanford Herald Sunday edition of the People
section.

Photographs submitted to the Herald for publica­
tion will be returned if that is requested. An ad­
dressed envelope large enough to accommodate
Ihe picture and carrying sufficient postage should
be provided. Pictures may be picked up at the
newspaper within two days of publication If a re­
quest to save the picture has also been submitted.

If you ses somlhing newsworthy, let us know.
Call the Herald and ask tor the news editor as soon
as possible.

Call our Circulation Department at 322-2611 to
find out subscription rates. Also call this number
il you would like your subscription service Inter­
rupted for vacations.

H ow Do I P lic a A Claaalfied A d ?

O th o r Itomo O f Intorost:
BUSINESS B R IEFS
Announcements of new businesses in Seminole
County, changes in locations and personnel promo­
tions and awards or other business distinctions are
elegible for publication in the Sunday Business
Briefs column. Submit typewritten items to the
Business Editor along with a picture if appropriate
and include the name and daytime telephone
number of a person who may be contacted to
answer questions. The deadline is noon Wednes­
day prior to the Sunday of publication.

I t T h t r t Anything I Should
Know About W riting Loiters
T o Th e Editor?

Simply call 322-2611 between the hours ol 8:00
am to 5:30 pm Monday through Friday and one of
our Classified Advisors will be happy to help
you.

Letters to the editor are welcome All letters
should be typewritten or written legibly, signed and
Include a mailing address and a daytime telephone
number. The letters should be on a single subject
and should be as brief as possible. Letters are sub­
ject to editing.

To Place an ad in any other section ol this
newspaper, call 322-2611 and ask lor a Retail Adver­
tising Representative, who'll help you in design,
layout and wording of any size ad you wish.

I W ould Liko T o Earn Som o
Extra Monay A s A N sw spsp sr
Carrier.

E N TE R TA IN M E N T
Organized events of an entertainment, recrea­
tional or leisure nature in Seminote County are
publicized In the Weekend Planner each Friday. The
deadline is noon Tuesday prior to the Friday of
publication. Submit typewritten contributions to
Weekend Planner.

Back Issues are available for up to one year prior
to current publication date. You can purchase back
copies in person at our Customer Service desk or
order by mail (payment must be enclosed). Call
322-2611 to place your order.

H ow Can I Racaiva Hom e
Dalivary?

RETURN PHOT.O POLICY

H o w Do I Roport A N ew s Tip ?

Can I Buy A Back lasua Of
T h a Nawapapar?

How Do I A n n o u n ce A
W edding O r Engagem ent?
People wishing to have their engagement or wed­
ding announcement published In the Sanford

Our newspaper carriers are made up of all types
of people ol ait ages, who enjoy being outdoors,
meeting friendly people and making extra cash.
Stop in our office at 300 N. French Ave.. Sanford
to file your application. We ll notify you when a
home delivery route becomes available in your area.

Sanford Herald
300 N. French Ave.
Sanford, Florida

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

�M - Sanford Harakl, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 4, 1081

n - H H t W a p iti

Head-first
diving

CLASSIFIED ADS

SGminol#

O rlando - Wintor Pork

3 2 3 -2 6 1 1 ______________ 3 3 1 -9 9 9 3
ORLANDO — There wit) be no bunfee Jumping
in Orange County deaptle the effort* of two
commiastonen to persuade their V»tleague* to
allow people to dive head first off a 330-foot

CLASSIFIED DEFT.

HOUIIS

• 4 9 A JL -M 9 P JL *

crane.

"It's a nuisance to area homeowners." Com­
missioner Hal Maraton said. “I’m sure there
would be some unusual noises coming from It."
Ms. Carter ar#*ed that noise shouldn't be a
problem "unless It's a loud splat."
But that w asn't funny to Tom Wanchlc, the
company's operations manager.. He said his
company had invested more than 900,000 to
bring the sport to Orlando.
"They thought It w as funny, b ut this la
serious." Wanchic said. "TO* is a woildalde
recognised form of entertainm ent."
For 960. patrons are elevated to about 330 feet
and. with bungee cords attached to their ankles,
dive from the platform. The cord la designed to
snap the diver back before he hits th e ground.
Thomas H. Maxwell Jr., the com pany's con­
sulting engineer, said the sport has a detailed set
of standards and regulations developed In New
Zealand.

" It's no more dangerous th an m ountain
climbing and actually uses some of the same
equipment." Maxwell said.
L f f g il

N

o

IIc

L t g g j

g s

HOT ICS UMOSS
FIC TITIO U S HAMS A C T
Nolle* It hereby (Iv tn mot th*
undorilgnod pursuant I* ttw
"Flctmou* Nam* Act." Chapter
•U.W Florid* Statute* will r*giitor with ttw F lorMo Daportmont of Slot* upon receipt at
prod ot ttw pubiketton m this
nolle*, ttw llet Itlow* name. to
wit: ISAM H I A L T H C A S I
SYSTEMS unStr which wo
•xpoct to anaap* In H t M a ot
5111*7 E . SanLanPa Spring*
Drlva. Long woo*. Florida OTBB.
BAXTER SYSTEMS INC.
By: 0. Mortholl Abbey,
Vic* President
HCPG CORPORATION
ly : Mark Elliott,
Ex. Vic* President
Publlihi July i, m i
DEH-J3

N O TIC E OF
FIC TITIO U S NAME
Nattco to hereby given that I
am engaged In business al 4371
Atom*, Svtto I I H X . Winter
Port, 337*3, lemtooto County,
Florida, undor the Fictitious
N om * o l L I F E S T R B A M
ASSOCIATES, and that I Motto
to roolitor aato name with the
Stfenwory ol Slalo. Taltolwaaoo.
Florid*, m accordant * with tho
provision* of ttw Fictitious
Nom* Status*. To-Vnt: Section
NAM. Florida Stotutos 1*57.
RsBorto A. Corson
Publish: July 4. m i
DIN-SI
N O TIC E OF
FIC TITIO U S NAME
Notice it hereby given that I
am sngagod in butinots at 4M
Flnosong Or., Cotoolborry, FL
137B7, Somlnolo County, Ftorldo,
undor ttw Ficttttou* Nom* *1
SENSUAL SENSATIONS, and
ttwt I Intontf so roglttor sato
name with ttw Secretary of
Stato. Tollohaaaoo. Ftorldo. In
accordance with ttw provlttont
*1 ttw Fictitious Noma Statute.
To-Wit: Section BUM . Florida
Statutes 1*57.
Susan Bumaida
Publish; July 4. IMI
DEH-U

N O TICE OF
FICTITIO U S NAME
Nolle# It htroby given that I
•m engaged in bustotu at 151
St. Rtf. 43*. I IMS. Altomonto
Spring*. F t 13714, Somlnolo
County, Florida, untfor tho
F ic llllo u * N om a of A C ­
CESSORIES FOR VIDEO, and
ttwt I Intend to roglttor told
name with tho Secretary of
Stito. TollohotM*. Florida. In
accordance with ttw provlttont
ot ttw Fictitious Nom* Statute,
To Wit: Section *45 0*. Florida
Slaluto* 1*57,
Philip Vlalra
Publlih: July 4, Iftl
OEMJO

IN T H E CIR CU IT COUNT,
IN A N D FOR
IIM IN O L R COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE N a tl-IM A D R -M -K
IN RE: T H E MARRIAGE OF
IDA M A I HUGHES.
Potlttonor/Wlto.

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF T N I E IO H T E IN T H
JU D ICIA L CIRCUIT
IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE N a n -lflS -D R -M -R
IN R C T H IM A R R IA O E O F :
Jonathan Roy Boll
MutAontf/Rotpondont
and
Kathryn Lynn Kalloy
Wllo/Patltlonor
N O TICE OF ACTION
TO: Jonathan Roy Ddl
RRS0I7 (A 4 K Traitor Perk

CLISTIR HUGHES.
NOTICE O F ACTION
WITN DESCRIPTION OF
R I A L PROPERTY
• P R 0 C 1 ID R 0 AGAINST
THE S TA TE O F FLORIDA TO
C L IS T IR HUOHES.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED ttwt o Potttton For Dtohlod against
prayer conlalnad
Caurt to award (hot certain
property owned by you and your
wife. IOA M A Y HUGHES, at
feMMml
LMoPwmj
hi» M
ko GfTTirSTIVBt
—
i---W
TTW
fOCG»fGO
at Ml* Hughey Street. Sanford.
Florida, and mar* particularly
dasertoadoa:
Lot ■ ol F .T . Morlwoattwr't
Survey el Wait one hail of South
live acres *1 West one hail ol
Southwest on*-quarter ot the
Northwest onwquarter. Section
XL Township 10 South. Rang* 31
East, Plat recorded In Dead
Book IT*. Pop* 4M, Official
Records ot Somlnolo County.
Ftorldo.
to yo u r w l l o , ID A M A E
HUGHES, as lump sum ellmo
ny, and you or* required to
serve a copy ol your Response
or Pleading on WILLIAM E.
RE IS C H M A N N , J R .. ES
QUIRE. Potlltonor’s attorney,
whoa* address to P.O. Sea 4BM.
Sentord. F L 327734* on or
botor* July 33. IMI. II you (all to
do to. ludgmont by dtfoull will
be taken against you tor ttw
rtltol Wmandod In ttw Potltwn.
This nolle* shall be published
once a week tor tour 14) cansac
utlve weeks in the San lord
Herald.
DATED this lath day al June.
If t l, at Sanford, Seminole
County, Florida
I SEAL I
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark ol ttw Circuit Court
by: Helen Standi ter
Deputy Clerk
Publish Juno JO. 77 4 July 4. II.

Lot Ml

Spirit Lake. lAjtjao
YOU ARE HEREBY N O TI­
FIED that on Action tor Dis­
solution ot Marriage hat bean
tiled against you and you are
required to Serve a copy ot your
written detente* II any. to II on
Kathryn Lynn Kallay. Peti­
tioner, whose address It P.O.
Bos 15*7, Oviedo. Florida 17745
on or belor# August 5. IM I, and
hit the original with ttw clorfc ot
this court either before service
on Petlllorwr or Immediately
thereafter. II you tall to do so, a
default will be entered against
you lor ttw relief demanded In
ttw petition.
WITNESS my hand and ttw
seal ol this Court on July I, IMI.
MARYANNE MORSE
At Clark ol ttw Court
By Nancy R. Winter
At Deputy Clerk
Publish: July*. II. It .25. IMI
DEM 54

U .S .

N o t t c f

^

SAVINGS
THE GREAT AMERICAN
INVESTMENT

mi

DEG 217

CELEBRITY CIPHER
CeWOntv Cipher cryptogram* are creeled hem quotations by lentous
people peal and present
la d ) Niter in We cipher wands lor
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Q P C C P U I A W .

PREVIOUS S O L U TIO N : " I'm roolty a very humble man.
Nol * day potsot that I don't Itvarvk Ood for my look* and
my re lent" — Ty Hardin.

5 S 3 S C ' ,,S l C
T M M M 9 W « M s !!iir a g f e S

&gt; ssrasss9w iM s...9fesftn
IB tf lS B f e

T O : LOUIS C. P A P A FN U
P A P A his m o m * II married.
E IL E E N REOMt. FNU REOAN, bar spouaa If marrtod II
a im . and/or dead his (their)
parttoT claiming by. through.
orapoMdtUm IRwml.
YOU ARE N O TIFIED ttwt an
Action tor foreclosure ol a
merhgeps ttw tollpelne orogorty
to SEMINOLE County. Ftorldo:
Lal IT*. OAKLAND VILLAGE
SECTION THREE.

MO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

B a M ig a

troWoctoStJ04oN&gt;Dscouwtlorp»amgtao*mtot.lik gtol
tog may kotodoNtodUAdiwtoii otttw rest olanatoWind day. Consol
Fay only lor days your ad i
Copy mw

serve a copy
at your written totom es. If any,
t* II OR SPEAR ANO H O FF­
MAN. Attonwys. whoa* I
to IBS South Ditto HI

l

mmu

M H u tw m m

umfS

S S

a

•r BoBn s MM Em ol July, m » .

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a M k agu
ra f?W D m P l f l n i l w lm D w

Ctork ef KM*Ceurt either betore
• a rv lc a an S P E A R A N D
H O FFM A A effOHWfS or Immoothorwis* a default will bo
entered against you lor ttw
rollot tomandsf In the CompPVGWVTI Or

m

Full tuna Mr buoy tnMrnal
“
In Lab* Mary.
M: BROS Dm
Heraid. PO
Ttw
33773-10*7

TII TraRir

WITNESS my hand and teal
al this Cdurt an this Itth day ol
June. mi.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
A* Clark of ttw Court
By: Patricia F. Heath
A* Deputy Ctor*
Publish: Juno 13. M. 37, 4 July
a mi
DB0-1S3

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
OP TH E EIG HTEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN ANO PON
SEMI N O LIC O U N TY,
FLORIDA
C A M N At tM NPCA-W -K
T H E C ITIZIN S A SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK OF
FLORIDA.
Plaintiff.
STEPHEN K. SMITH and
KATHRYN A. SMITH. Ms wife:
KARLA T. CAMPBELL!
STATE OF FLORIDA
DEPARTM ENT OF
REVENUE,and A. DUO AA
SONS, INC..
DoUndent*.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: KARLAT.CAM PBELL
1A5S0S.W.JI Street
Caspar City. Ftorldo 13331
All portlat claiming Interests
by, through, under or against
KARLA T. CAMPBELL, and all
parties having or claiming to
have any right. IIII* or inter**!
In ttw property herein
dtuflhod
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to Nrectoa* a Mortgage
on ttw fallowing property In
Somlnolo County, Florida:
Lot 37, Block A. CHARTER
OAKS-UNIT TWO. according to
ttw gtot thereof a* racer dad In
Flat Book 14, Fog* *3. Public
Records ol Somlnolo County.

1 you are required to
servo a copy ol your written
defenses. It any. to It on HOW­
A R D t . MARKS. Esquire.
Oroham. Clerk. Pohl A Janos.
Pool OttVca Drawer 14*0. Winter
Park, Florida. 337*0. Plaintiffs
attorney, on or botor* July JJth,
m i . and flla lh* original wllh
ttw Clerk al this Court either
botor* service on Plaintiffs
attorney or Immediately there­
after: othorwis* a dtfoull will
be entered against you for the
reitof tomartoB in ttw Complaint or Petition.
DATEDon JunolS. l*fl
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLER K O FTH E
CIRCUITCOURT
BY: Ruth King
As Deputy Clorfc
Publish: Juno 37 A July 4. It. IR.

mi

DEG1BB

Certlf
ft evtll
up fa 4 month* fa obtain
certification. E«c. working
condition* 4 banotlts. Im
modi*** opening* an 7-3 4 H I
sifts. Part time ala* aval labial

aW to JM
K V f1323-5173

w m m am M
* jjjj&amp; a

L t q a l

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
R IO M TB IN TN JUDICIAL
CIR CU IT
SEM INOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Co m No. SAMBACA-tl-R
CHRISTOPHER HALLo/b/O
CHRISTINA H A LL, o minor,
Plalntllt*.
v*.
SEMINOLE CO UN TY SCHOOL
BOARD and A LB E R T
McGOLORICK.
Defendants.
N O TICE OF ACTION
TO : RUBY L. HALL
1IM Avenue "M ".
Halne* City. Florida
&lt;leaf address known)
TH A T YOU ARE HEREBY
ADVISED ttwt ttw School 6o*.-J
ot Somlnolo County. Florida.
Christopher Hall, as the natural
father ol Christina Hall, a
minor, and Ella Mao Hall, as
paternal grandmother and defacto guardian of Christina Hall,
a minor will apply to ttw Circuit
Court tor on order agoroving a
certain settlement ol ttw claim
of Christina Hall and tor an
order approving a certain sotllomont ot ttw claim ot Christina
Had and tor an order modifying
tho Final Judgment of Dissolu­
tion of Marriage *ntored In Ceoe
No. GC-F-BB-1419. Circuit Caurt,
Polk County, Florida to desig­
nate Ilia Mo* Hall as lh* logoi
guordlon and Ouordlon Ad
Lltom of Christine Hell. Tho
fee Pam^al a . u i u B i ^ ^ . s
IP9WH If
kmigVI WTTWImtl
and Mat lan lor Aporwal ol
Ouordlon Ad Lltom wil bo hoard
WfrePrG ¥Hm ^vGuIWr'BBfG teteBtevT 9■
McGregor, on Wodnsidoy. July
3t. IMI at 1:30 A M. In Chambar*. Somlnoto County Court
houw, Sanford. Florida.
O ATED this 34th day ol Juno,
A.D., IMI.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk el ttw Circuit Court
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Juno 37 A July 4. II A

N o t lc t r

IN T N I CIRCUITCOURT
OP T H E IIG N T IE N T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOPOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CAIR NUMBER:
S3MI3CJL43P/B
IN RE: TH E MARRIAGE OF:
BARBARA J.CAPLE.
Pet11toner/Wl t o ,
afM|
RICHARD N.CAPLE. JR.,
Respondent/Husband.
N O TIC IO P ACTION
TO : Richard N.Capto. Jr.
I Fordham Circle
Puoblo. Colorado HOBS
YOU ARE NOTIFIEO that an
actum ha* bean Iliad against you
and you are required t o serve a
copy of your written defenses. II
any. fe PAU L V. M O YER.
E S Q U IR E . Petitioner's Attorney. wheat address it 1437
Mtott Stato Road 434. Longwood.
Florida 1377*. an or before July
22. m t . and III* ttw original
with ttw Clerk of this Court
either botor* service on Plain­
tiff's Attorney or Immediately
there*tier, or a default will be
entered against you for tho
rehet demanded In ttw
Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and tael
af this Court on ttw tBth day of
Juno. m i .
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLER K O P TH EC O U R T
By: Mary Lau Brown
Deputy Clark
Publish: Ju n a J U .r 4 J u iy 4 .i l,
mi
O IG -lIB

IV O R K I R I NERDS Oft
DAILY WORK DAILY PAY
CoRDTO........ .m -TNfaftorlpea
Hiring new I Uptolll/hr.
Company
positions
potlllans up fa B4S/hr.Por
laiuwwdUte
IflnvV^^MroWlesb
Itip*

csMt-at

ADO T O YOUR INCOME
AVON I S E L L M I M i a i O P T
CALL M3-B4BB*r 3334333

« R l Hwy. I7-*I
MSP, 9AkS-4Wl(l

.BOB

General afftcaduttaa. Hours 13
PM to* PM............
Money talks...so dee* our
Ian"! I
- Full
^
In advortlslog, brochures, phono, etc.
Full-lime sal** maetagor with
l* yrt. aspar tone* in success.
Work with ttw basil Conflden
Hally, Stu Mac Dade. 333-33BB.
Lake Mary. Lot's talk.

m ggyigjiyygd^iwg,

B M TIN O U l IV flK R C fD
Dunbar’s Rastawant, |7-*l
Sanford. Call Paul H U M S
* a aV O LT** *
TEM PO R AR Y SERVICES
BO R ED , B R O K E . B L U E ...
House of Lloyd need* you I
Earn extra money and fra*
kltl No Investment. Call local
supervisor today: Jonl, 373
4117, Sanford; Darren*, JJ4BBS*. Lake Mary_____________
Make a difference in your life
and the III* of ofwrsl Cam*
lain aur staff I Apply:
MB MoltonvIltoAwt Sanford.

-LOX/H

U29M1.

-• C O N S T R U C TIO N J O E S .TatfBJHR
I-4S7-4S7 tm r atonl BaltoersFae

wwf ppm om

Dunbar's Raslaurant, 17 *1
Sentord. Ceil Paul 3334*35
Far Iracfar traitor
Must ha D O T carftflad. AAand a y -F r ld a y . Com p a ny
banoflft. Apply In parson:
Parts City. N1 B Camwail Rd.
v d .F l.......
KOI

to privacy,
uea Mcuri

MM security. 123-31B*
Salas experience preferred.
Benefits. Apply In parson
Monday-Frlday. Aristocrat
Volkswagen. 4175 S Orlando
Dr. Sentord, 2313777________
IA L B S P E O F L E ■ Hara s a
sm alt ad w ith a strong
massage. Would you Ilk* to
make S2.0BB par month part
tlmaT I'll shew you hew. Call
*573.1
Dale Hans, 3344

UCtCTM T / KCfPTKMIST
Exp. with construction ottlcs.
ctorleal work. Typing, book
keeping 4 filing.
4 rat. fa: P .a Rax 7SB.
Sealer d. FL 3377B47BB
S E C U R IT Y O F F IC E R S •
weakly pay. SS.JB par hour to
start with regular raise* pius
benefit*. For prestigious utili­
ty company In Oeiary. HS
diploma. Fla. drivers Ikonst.

(MB security. « 3 B M

t o jg * ^ * t o / j/ )* y js j* £

njTjwj I ■ ■ d l l b l i W l I -----4 - 4 - ‘- 4m

pUUw 5^9911 W a^ffy 9H 9 ^9f9 re

pot* dreg leaf. Currant Fla.
guard llcana* ar cartifkato
acvrtty In
..i-BBi-im

is. mi

DEGM I

NOTICE OF ACTION F I L I D IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF I N I E IG H T H NTH JUD ICIAL CIR CUIT,
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
RELATINO TO QUALIFICATION FOR ELECTIO N.
TO THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM M IISIONINS
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, F LOR IOA.
CASE NO. 5I-IU7-CA-IO-0
SANDRA S. GDARD. a* Supervisor ol Elections In and tor Seminole
County and SEMINOLE COUNTY, a political subdivision of ttw
Slot* of Florid*.
Plaintiff*/Petitioner!,

vs.
JOHN DOE and MARY DOE, representing all prospective
candidate* tor election or re*lection to the public office ot Somlnolo
County Commissioner serving on ttw Board ot County Commission
or*
ol Somlnoi# County; TH E SEMONOLE COUNTY DEMOCRATIC
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, and TH E SEMINOLE COUNTY
REPUBLICANEXECUTIVE CO M M ITTEE.
Defendant*/ Respondent!
TO: THOSE ABOVE-NAMED O S F IN O A N T t/ R E IP O N D IN TS
WHICH INCLUDES A LL PARTIES WHO CLAIM A N T INTEREST
A t A PROSPECTIVE CANDIDATE FOR E LE C TIO N OR RE
ELECTION TO TH E O FFIC E OF I I M IN O L I COUNTY
COMMISSIONER.
A Complain l/Ptl ItIon. seeking a declaratory ludgmont with regard
to Section 1.1 A ot ttw Somlnolo County Homo Rule Charter ha* been
tiled In ttw above styled Court. Tho portion ot ttw Somlnoi* County
Homo Rule Charter at issue roads as follows:
"(slach candidate tor ttw Office ol County Commissioner shell
reside within ttw district from which such candidal* seeks election at
the time ot qualifying to run for that oftlea..."
The Issue In ttw case Is ttw constitutional validity ot ttw provision in
light of decisions rendered by ttw Florida Supreme Court
Each Defendant/Respondent in ttw above sly tod proceeding is
hereby required to serve a copy ol ttw answer and written dtltnses.
II any you have, to ttw Cemplaint/Ptlilton horstolor* (Hod in Ihrs
cause on Plaintiff*/Petit toners' Attorney, who** name and address it
shown below on or before July 24, m i . and to III* ttw original ol your
written answer and datense* with Ihe Clerk ol this Court either
before service on ttw Plaint Itl*/Pol Ittoners' attorney or Immediately
there#Iter. to show what right, title, interest you or any ot you have
or claim In a* to ttw matter described in said Complaint/Petition It
you fall to answer or dstond. a default may be entered against you
tor ttw raltol demanded in ttw Complaint/Palilton
WITNESS my hand and seal ot said Court on the-lttts day of June.
I**t.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOF THE CIR CUITCOURT
IN ANO FOR 1EMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
ROBERTA McMILLAN
County Attorney
tor Somlnoi* County, Florida
Florida Bertie 01(3451
Seminole County Service* Bui 'ding
1101 East First Street
Sentord. Florida33371
1007} 171-11JO. Est 7354
Attorney tor Plaintiff*/Petitioner*
Publish Juno 21.17 L July*. II. ISt I
DEG It*

M oving! Hauling

Hm m REpairs

A p p URRCDE

c

L

bn

U

Itrv k R

ROM COLLIER'S Rimsdillagl
Carpentry, raaftog. painting.
"Ms tob Im small r 3114471
T N I NOUSR DOCTOR 1 All
horn* repairs! Paint/Tormll*
damage. Lk./tot.......133 Mil

Land C laarina

NIW/IOCO AffllM Cf$
4uy/SaflbRi i and/Ea»r*nto»d

HOME tffU M C L 3 2 2 H &gt; l
A u to m p tlV

beckhoo. loader work, hauling
and clean up. CountryWIdr
Devolepement. 407122 C2X5

D ETAIL FEVER. Let your car
sparkle tor summer I Comp,
detail sarvkal............5204325
HEADLINE 111 M at cars |4B.
Wagons S7S. Vinyl top* MB up.

SMALL business bookkeeping.
accounting, lax and computer
tervices On/I
/OffPto 3744BB*
B u ild llB R CoRtrpcfefi
NEW. R EM O OIL. REPAIR
HOMES. OFFICES. STORES
All type* canatrvcfton. RosJCom
3334B33 . S.G. Ealtof, C4CIHBBB
e e ADDITIONS. All remodel
tog Ovality work! CGCB3S077
U y r n r e Mala a *47M*M
C ifp tR trv
CARPENTER All kinds of homo
repairs, painting 4 ceramic
^ J t o R J r t w d O r e a ^ J lM t n

Cltsnirsg Ssrvks
■ 4 • CLEARING SERVICE.
Office/home L k 4 Ins. Pro
tosstonpl couoto
IfldBM
CA TH Y’S CLEANING SERV
ICE - References, reasonable
rata* Licensed I Ceil 3317*70

\il m

BOGEY ADAMS CONCRETE
0u4llty and claonllnass is
guar antoed IS yrs. residential
tiaartonca 747 2WS/l»5ai7
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Weyrw
Peal. 1 Man Quality Optra
Want

F tfic t
1NARP F B N C B l Isl Rat*
work Law M l Fra* est Wood.
J w ijt t t o k 4 r e g jt t ^ m a * l^
^ E g t r ilS D r w t ^
T T g UTYERS CLEANCDa e,
Commorcial Rosldontlal
Call Tern

H andy M d i
CAR P EN TR Y, M A S O N A IV
painting and III* work. Free
Worn# i m pr o v m u t "
CONCiPT
rsnavstadl Hemp, office,
kitchen, bath) 33*43*7

(i\r ) mil
s / » I'm

Lawn S r t v I c r
COM PLETE QvaHfy Lawn 4
Landscaping. Tree Serv.ce 4
Irrigation, competitive rales,
tree esf 1matesSumy’sJ22 Ttl*
LAWN CU TTIN G AND MAIM
TB N A N C E . LK. M A R T.
CROSSINGS AREJL 322 55(2
Cammarctol/RasMawfial- Law
Retort CaN Tam.........323422*
R A N D Y ’S Q U A L ITY LAWN.
Camplal* car*, clean ups
Sine* ISM. FreeeW.t 311421*
R E L IA B L E LAWN MAINTE
NANCE 1 U aft tor 1st Hus*
evstomerit 321 *7t2
ST. AUGUSTINE GRASS plugs
installed, tit sq II Free
Estimates! Sunset Lawn R*
novations. Inc 407 004 SMI

—

n

r a

f t

—

A G N EXTERIOR PAINTING
4 pressure cloan. SAVE MM
Llc./freootll 1BS57IS4
OICK PINO LA* PAINTINO.
Quality workl Int/Eif..- Lk'd
4 Insured Freeatll 2235723

Pvst Control
Senior Clllren Oiscounfsl
IB years axpertortca 132* (72*

Plumbing
H0N 1R3 P U M II9 9
All your plumbing naodtl 14
hoursl IRF0B5377O322 3SBS

P ro tsu rt OM nlng
ORIVEWAVI. Roofs. Houses.
•Ic. Low rrtstl Comm#/
clal/Retidenflal B3 0404
PCM House wash and palnttog
"Quotas by phona". Call
Roger, 3344440. (A M (PM

SGcrttarlalA
Typing StrvicEs
CUSTOM T y a W l l l U i i p l a i i
DJ Enterprises. N IB E. ISIh
SI., Sentord . 3140*7t/jn 74*3

M asonry
TWP MASONRY. Brick, block,
stucco, concrete. Renovations
Llc’d 4to*311 IN4/S3MII7

FOR EXPERT sawing needs, all
types. Phono Ut* Graham
(M3) 3114374. Saafard

Moving A Hauling

Trot S trvict

* * a M A U LIN O .ya rd trash,
appllancat. furniture, trash of
anv kind! RkltorsL......17377(1

BUNVANS T R IE SERVICE ;
Tree work, light hauling. Fret
atti mat**, insured 33I-I4JB

I h i ^ i n r ss / r r l \ l h i \

\I m i l h

D G D HAULING, Yard traah.
appi . torn. Ckaap/an tlnwt
(11/up CaN Ray 157-7107
1

i

"I know there are Idiots out there who want to
Jum p ." County Comm!**loner Vera Carter argued
Tuesday. "I know because I was an Idiot In my
younger years, and I probably would have
jumped too."
But Ms. Carter and Commlaatoarr Mable Butler
were on the losing aide of a 4-2 vote on a request
from Scan Group Partners to let adventure
seekers drop, bounce and dan£e a t the end of an
elastic bungee cord.
Th e company w anted to set up shop next to
Shooters Waterfront Cafe, a popular Orlando bar.

PftVATl PARTY RATES

( t i l l ( It i n sijiml .

I ol

Is l o i r

U J J h 11

Is

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thuraday, July 4, 1901

w m sf*

a / E H R ti brew4 **N*tl f

M W T &amp; * it !

N* QueRfy Mamaa m S*m»nat*/o**«*g*/V*iu»i*/Lak*

central A/C. now carpet.

Q n tu iK

a i l bar. wather, d ry e r,
mkro. Ona alary..Naw &gt;17,*00
JESSUP A R IA S/3*y
Country aalala w/pool on S
atrat. TMa home hot It all.
Coll ua today..............eat.MO

aata. Call naatn

ama c a s h t o m o r t g a o i
Assume no qualifying. Nlca
3/3 Vl'la In Caaaalbarry. Fplt.
Amaraatraa............. 470*00
PLANTS m
M i l ■ a t ana
up. Society aortic, day nitiaa.
oyatar. Iran plant. Quean
Palme by the Net. 3771Mi

log family! W7,

ASSMKHOfKMiT t%

U O H C M i STEF? A P I S

W l N M D SamInala County
home* to rant I For free quota
tlon •HO M A L T Y , 1H MM
3 BDRM. I BATH. «ilat Sanford
neighborhood. Control H/A.
SANFORD
CLEAN, quiet I
bdrm. apartment, upstairs
t37S/ma..............333-*53*

COUNTRY A TM O SPHIABI 3
bdrm. 3 bath on olmoal in
acral Family room and ratted
patio. Hugo oak treat I SXMS
INVR STOR'S S P I C I A L I
Duple*. } bdrm. w/central
H/A, and I bdrm.. fenced
SlSb/mo. income. UI.M SIt

3/l.Mayfatr. Fpk.. skylight*,
tana, vertical*. naw carpal.
Nntedyd^ MetIvatodt S77J M.

IfS-M icN ntry/T-H

fN fW w ld-lda

323-5774

Catlanjtjmr
C A R R IA O I COVf, MAT*. 3
bdrm 1 bath, onetoted porch.
N X N utility room. Central
heat and A/C. all naw Interior.
Naw r e f r i g. and atova.
Washer/dryer. Financing
available Call 377 SIT*

u i an

4 BDRM ivy BATH. Ovaldo.
Huge Florida roam. 3 car
garage. Sprinkler ayatam, *
calling tana. 3 A ir condltlonara. StSO/mo. 3*5 3155

^

Step Up Into
G reat
Apar
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

medal * cyllndar. J tpaod.
power ataarlnf and brake*.
A/C. vary vary clean, love
ml lea "The Ona You've Bean
Woltma Far I "Coll OT 43*3

Come Home To
Country S tyle Living!

I N UTH O U SES^

ANY CONDITIONI
Need rapalra? Behind on
payment*? Call Greg. 337 4714

ftorkta Rvatty

TMKUf PAYMENTS
N O M O N IY DOWN
•*capt to*, tag. title, etc
1**7 C H I V Y C A P R I C I
CLASSIC Auto. A/C. atareo
Only SI a*.*7 par month I
It*month* m !*.*% APR)

HACIENDA V I L LA OI . adult
park. Winter Spring* 74X53.
7/7. living and family room*.
Lot* ol atoraga. 7 screen
porchat. utility room Secure
area and choice loll Recently
redecorated. Amenities.
*47.WO Warren. 377 U7I

333 &gt;03*. evening* only

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories

LOOKING FORA NOME?
Plaata lei me help

C * M C r a p * REALTOR

• METAL TOOL BOX tor Pick
up T r u c k . 5 ' 3 " bottom
mee*uremant. Good Condi
llonlSt*......................373 4*03

(417) *34 «*aaer33353aa
carport.

34X45 3/3 split, carport *10.000

213— Auctions

orm SUNDAY1-5
114 Summerlin
Sanford/Meyfalr
1/3Mach la Laka Mearaa t
3 bdrm J bath SUBMIT OF
FERSI Family and dining
room* plu* tastefully updated
kitchen and bath. Caraga and
double carport are accessible
tram rear allay* Huge treat,
double lot. Motivated seller I
tt3.N0..... Tempiei Realty Inc.

apartments

43* 4410/1*V 1555

TAXB IT-® N AIRPORT N.VD TURN WEST
7/WOF A H U . RON ON RHMT

lw|B La| Hbrm, 21/4 Ikrts
Hwy. 4*and I 4 area
*14* *00
CaHMtkePteeH
V«w*are I PragarHea
7?aaaaa

l*a* CHAPARRAL 147 XL. 300
Marcury black Ma*. with
Ian turn trailer. SAM* Mutt
tall. Call alter tPM. 33* 3*35

CLEANINGSERVICE
Grot*. *V&gt;.000 per year guar
anteed (70.000 In attatt Sell
tng price. *30.000 Will finance
Ask lor Mark. 374 7057

235—Trucks /
Busts/ Vans

219— Wanted to Buy
Call anytlma

THIS W E E K S

1. 2, &amp; 3 BEDROOMS

PIANO TUNING, as low a*
S73 501 Lk. 30 yra. tap Ra
pakaaitra QMrMo331 0*40

RENTS STARTING FROM

S#t#ct unite with woohGf/dryGf
hookup#
Conventenllo schools A shopping
confers.
Bus stop located noar ronlai office

S A Lkl saiem le Oisn loniyi
Children * clothe*, household,
queen to fttid e waterbed.
Surwkl 750 dirt bika. baby
item* F rl and Sat 1 3 &gt;103
Sanlord Ave. San lord UO 1473

23B—Vehicles
Wanted
AAAUIO SALVAGE
olDeBary

WE WEIGH AND FAY I
Top5S for |unk.
Cart A Truck*

Rents From $430 A Month

239—M otorcycles
and Bikes

• Washer/Dryers in Select Units
•Self Clean
MILLS MANSION!
A n tiq u e * . |unque b a b y
clothe*, m ite household
item* Friday and Saturday
*4 7*1 W 3rd St. Sanlord

•clubhouse

^ T * ip n rr«T i

2450 Hartw ell A v e ., Saaford
M O N . - S A T . 9 - G • Sun. 1 2 -3

MOVING SALE!
F r l. Sat A Sun Housahold
turn. TV , clothes toys, etc
1574 FOINSBTTA AVE.
NEW T H R IF T tlO R E I Fran*
A Lori s' nor S French Ave
Semrltungtor Everyone!

5 FAMILY SALE
Saturday. • 5 Books, console
TV. stereo king waterbed
wall decor household mite,
wheelchair ItM N Cameron
Ave. Sanlord (between Celery

snd M* r M)

• ORAFCS. neutral beige, all
lined tor sliding glass win
dowt Paid *100. will ucrltke
for (3* or best otter E acelienl

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

�P ET ER
G O TT .M .D

cases, nerve surgery (to prevent
arterial construction) and am­
putation may be required to save
life/ Surgery, such as bypass

f u r K1MIM0S4

m l j i H*r»rrwH»&lt;H H A i«

n tflD ftACH L IF E

~

io lu u t n m

a r o in t

JOMff RAIN
M U S T B ALL.

MARGE ANP TATTYUXIL
APPRECIATE E6TTIN6
v THESE COOKIES... J

6ON6T0CAMP
HUH?YOU6UY5 ARE
. 60NNA HAVE FUN..

(UHAft *TH£
eCTU«IU ARMSCCMIfcX
v

NX&gt;a u u &lt; p u r a x ?

OOTTAGO THAAJKNOD
AU. UEftr'MUCH

exclusively In cigarette smokers.
Th e disease begins gradually
aa tT&gt;fl*rrirrmttr&gt;*1 of the lining of
the arteries and veins, which
causes blood clots (throm bi) to
farm , thus propeastvely blockbig the blood vessels. Patients
usually experience coldness.
num bness and pain in the
extremities, leading to death of
tissue (gangrene) and ulceration
of overiytng skin. Fingers and
toes tingle and turn blue. Artertsi pulsations are diminished or
absent. Th e disease progresses
proxlmalty. meaning that arms
and legs are eventually affected.
Th e diagnosis is confirmed by
arte rio gra p h y, special X -ra y
studies of the arteries showing
m ultiple blockages of small and
medium-sized arteries.
Therefore, patients must stop
smoking, stay warm and avoid
Injury to tissues (from chemicals
such as Iodine. Infection, tightly
fitting footwear, and m in o r
traum a). In the early stages,
patients are encouraged to
exercise (to stimulate circula­
tion); however, in severe cases,
bed rest m ay be necessary.
Hands and feet may need pro­
tection w ith bandages and
foam-rubber booties.
D r u g s , s uch as c a lc iu m channel blockers, may Improve
circulation, but other medica­
tions. such as cortisone (to
reduce inflammation) and an­
ticoagulants (to prevent throm ­
boses) are not effective. In some

1$
“
n
aS
tt

g
M
u
N
S
«
p

RfcStfXUT.
It is well-known that on J u ly 4.
1776. the Declaration of In dependence was signed. Less
w ell/know n Is the fact that
afterward four of the signers
d id n ’t go out on the to w n
celebrating. Intensive research
reveals that John Adams. Ben­
ja m in F ra n k lia Jo h n Hancock
and Thom as Jefferson retired for
a gam e of cards bearing a
re m a rk a b le resem b lan ce to
bridge. Toda y's hand Is the first
one of the evening.
After Adam s opened one club.
Franklin made an Imaginative
overcall by psyching one heart.
Jefferson knew a Juicy penalty
w hen he saw one. so he doubled.
T h i s w a s p assed b a c k to
Franklin, w ho exposed his psych
by bidding his real suit. T o
clarify matters for his partner.
J e f f e r s o n -J u m p e d to th re e
h e arts. W h e n H an co ck p re ­
empted to four spades. Jefferson

Jw ly B , 1 M I

AS S*ot* AS W f fiN '/H
N / THIS

Of

INPtr*NI*NC*,
m S T t

L t r 's

v o T f

W \ ouxsiMS a
2

| k

to r

f a ' s* !

{
■

A t ON A GRAPEFRUIT
HOW S I L L V . . . ^ ^ .

... V E T
EFFECTIVE

Bonds w ill be strengthened
between you and the one you
love In the year ahead. C on­
versely. If there has been a void
In your life. It could soon be
filled.
CAMCBR (June 2 1 -Ju ly 22)
Business and pleasure make a
compatible m ix today. Take the
Initiative to promote a light
diversion as a prelude to a
serious discussion. Get a Jum p
on life by understanding the
Influences which are governing
you In the year ahead. Send for
C a n c e r’s A stro-Graph predic­
tions today by mailing 91.25
p lu s a lon g, self-addressed,
stam ped envelope to Ast r oG raph. d o this newspaper. P.O.
B o x 9 1 4 2 8 . Cl ev el and. O H
44101-3428. Be sure to state
you r zodiac sign.
LBO (J u ly 23-Aug. 22) In
order to advance your personal
interests today, you may have to
be a trine assertive. If this is
required, do so with a dab of
hum or to lessen the sting.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Th e
greatest pleasure you can derive
today will be In spending time

West led the spade 10: Jack.
queen, heart two. Declarer drew
cashed dum m y's A -K of clubs.
However, when West discarded
on the second m und. Jefferson
paused, seeing that the club suit
was blocked.
He could play on diamonds,
hoping to have only one loser
there — an approach that was
destined to fail. But Instead
Jefferson led the spade king
from the dum m y ana discarded
a blocking club Cram his hand.
East won with the spade ace
and switched to a diamond, but
declarer won w ith the ace and
then cashed d um m y's three club
w in n ers, discarding his two
diamond losers.
It isn't recorded whether Jef­
ferson felt happier about this
tour de force or about the earlier
signing.
(0 1 9 9 1 . NEW SPAPER EN ­
T E R P R IS E ASSN.

w ith the one yo u love and
admire. Don't spoil It by letting
others into what should not be
shared.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct. 23) You
could be quite fortunate today In
dealings with clubs or large
groups, especially if you’re try­
ing to put something together
where you have to draw on the
m any resources of their m em ­
bers.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You should be able to find lime
today to perform a labor of love
you've been putting off. It might
be Insignificant to others, but
when heart and m ind gel. things
take on Importance.
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Developments that m ay be
chancy for associates could turn
nut to be suitable for you. as long
as you don't push your good
luck beyond reasonable limits.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Ja n .
19) T h e results should be lasting
and pleasing in regard to any
beautification projects yo u 're
involved In at this lime that
e n h a n ce y o u r r esi dence or
workplace.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Your sex appeal is quite strong
today, however not In the physi­

cal sense. W hen It comes to your
demeanor, though, members of
the opposite gender will find you
attractive and Irresistible.
PUCKS (Feb. 20-March 20)
Y o u r probabilities for material
acquisition are very good today
— If you are strongly motivated.
If there Is something you truly
want, you'll figure out a way to
get It.
ARIBS (March 21-Aprll 19) In
addition to your customary at­
tributes of personality, you'll
have an extra dash of boldness
and excitement about you today.
T h is will make you even more
charismatic.
TAURUS (April 2 0 May 20)
W hile others might ignore the
plight of an unfortunate friend
today, your conscience won't
perm it you to do the same.
A dm irably, you're likely to do
whatever you can — and without
any fanfare.
GBMINI (May 2 1 -Ju n e 20)
Everyone is pleased by com­
pliments. provided they're sin­
cere. Someone you're closely
involved w ith, who has recently
done something notable, will
welcome comments from you.
(01991. NEWSPAPER EN­
T E R P R IS E ASSN.

A N N IE
...YOU TDLP THIS
M * .Z A d O U l
ANNIE AN£ r t
CHARLEY? HE r
INTENPS TJ
L

gEMX’ THEM?

H-N£*IU « . . .
CSNOSOAlbOW.
M-MR.A5P...
— ~\ SOMESOOV

I SHOUtOVt MAtTCP
fOKVXl UP ON TH'
MAP. CUOPPtR..ITS HARP TPARX
7He LIMO ON TH’ H
6FWS5... r r r * * 2

Y A A V Y B4RK
THE5E H IA P 4/
rA N C M O A

THEM/ I non

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THERE’S JUST
MORE THING...

YOU’RE

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�</text>
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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>The Sanford Herald, July 04, 1991</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on July 04, 1991.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
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          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="234175">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="234176">
                <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;, July 04, 1991; &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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          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="234177">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="234178">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="234179">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="234180">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
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    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
