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                    <text>Sanford Herald
Serving Sanford, Lake Mary and Samlnolo County alneo 1908
83rd Year. No. 276 - Sanford, Florida

Soap Box Derby
begins Saturday

NEW S D IG EST
□ S p o rts

■ y VICKI DetONM IER

After a state title

Herald Staff Writer

SARASOTA — The first year Sanford Habe
Ruth All-Stars will go after a state title In
Sarasota beginning today.
See P age IB

□ P e o p le

Old cars on display
Fascination with antique and classic autos Is as
old as the cars themselves.
See Photos, Page 3B

□ F lo rid a

Tax exemptions reviewed

HereM photo by Owy Vogel

ORLANDO — Fading sales tax breaks on
groceries or even doctor b ills w on 't be
overlooked by the Florida Taxation and Reform
Commission seeking ways to overhaul Florida
taxes.
See Page 2A

Lad makes big spalsh
Otha Abney, 8, Sanford, has a few creative
ideas about what to do with his water-filled
balloon on a hot, sticky summer day.Sae
Story, More Photos, Page 5A.

SANFORD - The traffic that flows down U.S.
Highway 17-92 between I3th Street and 20th
Street In Sanford will Ik- a little different on
Saturday morning.
Rumbling trucks and autmnnhilcs will be
replaced by 22 sleek fiberglass contraptions
piloted by youngsters wearing fortified hclmels.
The Central Florida Soap box Derby’s staging
area and course will lake over the federal
highway for about nine hours beginning at 5 a.m.
The race Itself will last. If all goes well, from 8
a.m. to noon, hut time will be needed to set up
and then dismantle the course.
Sgt. Dennis Whitmire of the Sanford Police
Department, who Is In charge of the trafflce
control during the race, said that those needing to
travel north or south through Sanford will be
diverted to Elm Avenue or Lake Avenue during
the races.
Semi tractor traffic would lx- diverted to Airport
Doulevnrd and State Road 46.
"It's pretty simple." he said.

Lake Mary
pollution
investigated

New Tribes goes undercover
Racehorse euthanised
SANFORD — Tommy Meadows, the former
racehorse
with
a
hobbled
leg.
was
euthanised this morning.
The Humane Society of Seminole County tried
to save the horse by sending It to the University
of Florida Veterinary Seluxd where it was
examined by horse surgery expert Dr. Pat
Collahau Wednesday. Society director Diane
Albers said this morning Cnllalian told her the
Injury to the hoof was too old to try to restore
the horses' walking capability by rebreaking the
fused (Mines.
Albers said a money appeal last week raised
nearly ${KX). mostly from horse owners. She
said "one Orlando wom an donated money,
saying tl lom fflj' Meadows couldn't be saved
then use her donation to buy a bag of apples lor
him before he Is put to sleep. Albers said the
request was fulfilled.
Albers said atMint $250 will be needed for
Tommy Meadow's medical expenses. The rest of
the money will Ik- used for an emergency fund
for Injured horses. The society still needs up to
$3,000 to build horse stalls at the County Home
Road shelter. Allx-rs said.

By NICK PFBIFAU P

Herald Stall Writer________________________________ _
LAKE MARY — The waters of big Lake Mary arc
being checked for what could be serious con­
tamination problems, city offlclalos confirmed
today.
The extent of the hazard for humans, animals or
plant life has not been diAtirmvnxL pending the
results of several tests due perlnqis as soon as late
today.
Fnllow-ing complaints by homeowners who live
around the lake, preliminary tests gave reason to
believe water runoff being piped into the lake was
contaminated with raw sewage cmlnating from
Lake Mary Elementary School.
The lake is located directly cast of the school, on
the opposite side o f Country Club Road.
Lake Mary Mayor Randy Morris Is upset over
how this hasbeen allowed to happen.
"There are tini many questions without an­
swers." he said today. "W e 're going to go all-out In
[ See Pollution, Page S A

H to M photo* by 0*ry Vo**t

Tarpaulins are draped and pinned over the building.

Counterfeit caper closed down
LONC.WOOD - Richard Ansclowltz. 63. of
l 1408 Sandy Hill Dr. in Orlando, was arrested
on Thursday and charged with grand thclt and
theft of trade secrets.
Doth are felony charges.
He Is accused with allegedly manufacturing,
distributing and selling incrcliaudlsc bearing
counterfeit logos.
According to George Procsehel. public Infor­
mation with the Seminole County Sheriffs
Office. Ansclowltz. owner and president of
Promo Graphics. 1235 Dennett Dr. in Longwood, had Ih-cii the subject of an on going
investigation by the SCSO's fraud division and
Network Investigative Agency, a Tampa-based
private Investigations linn that specializes In
trademark Infringement cases.
According to Procsehel. Ansclowltz had
allegedly been m anufacturing and selling
clothing and other memorabilia bearing logos of
companies such as Nike. Coca-Cola and W.dt
Disney World ill Ills Longwood company since
•liinuary ul I DIM) lie was not licensed to do so.
He had allegedly also been manufacturing and
selling Items willicounterleit collegiate logos.
Procsehel estimates lli.il the value ol the
incrcliaudlsc in question was "hundreds ul
thousands of dollars.”
According to I’rocschel. Imnd lor Anselowitz
was set at $2.000at the lime ol his arrest.
He was taken to the John K. D»lk Correellon.il
Facility In Sanford where he posted bond
immcdialclv

IN D E X
Classified*....
Com ic*.......... ......... SB Nation..............
D«j»tht .
Dr. Q olt..........
Editorial.........
Florida...........
Horoscopa.....

.......... 3B
..........3B Poliea............. .......... 3 A
.......... SB
..... 4 A Talavialon......
..........6A

Increased chance of rain
Partly rlnudv with a
70 percent eh.nice ol
a 11 e r n no n t h ii n
derstoruis High in
the lower *MK Wind
west It) ti11 ill

F o r m ore w e a t h e r , s e e P a g e 2 A

City landmark debugged

Lo n g w o o d still
says no to taxes

By VICKI DeSORMIER
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — What was described as i In*
largest lumigatton tenting project ever in
Sanford begun Thursday at the New Tribes
Mission on Flrsl Street where termites are
tuktuga bile out of lhe building.
bulky yellow, red and blue tarpaulins were
hoisted up by cranes to cover the three story
headquarters building Dial once served as a
luxury hotel and. later, as a Naval Academy.
Extermination experts from Termlncx and
Walk l)p pest eontrol services surveyed the
massive structure to lltul the most clllclent
way of covering it A huge moving van. loaded
with more tarps was p.u ked In the driveway.
Outside, a handlol ol New Tribes employees
stood watelilug and taking pictures
"Tills Is Du- biggest lenling project ever
done In Sanford." Larry Drown, maintenance
supervisor al the headquarters, said.
See L a n d m a rk , P age 5 A

By NICK R FIIF A U F
Herald Staff Writer
LONGWOOD — The expectation ot no lax
Increase for the City ol Longwood next year Is still
holding strong. T o do It however, the city may
have to reduce previously planned spending, and
operate with fewer dty employees.
As currently prc|sircd. the pro|MM-d Fiscal Year
1991-92 budget provides for a General Fund
budget ol $6,972,714 and .h i Enterprise Fund
budget ol $2.148.931 Added to a budget ol
$I2.2(X) for the cemetery operation and $17,000
for the police education fund, tin- total is
${1,150,845.
The pro|Htsc&lt;l amount is currently $ 2 0 0 .(MM) less
than lIn* amount budgeted lor the present year.
See T axea, P age 5A

Workers prepare the front of the mission.

New county budget asks tax on utilities
By J . MARK BARFIELD
Herald Stall Writer

From stall and wire reports

Getting the road closed Is not quite as simple.
"W e have to start on this a year In advance."
said Mike Kirby of the Sanford Rccrcntlon
Department, who Is in charge of the Derby. "W e
started working on the arrangements for this year
ns soon ns wc wrapped tip last year's races."
Permission for closing the highway Is complex,
hut Kirby said the organization and cooperation
with law enforcement officers In the jiasl has
made tt easier to obtain.
"It's never caused a big problem." said Kirby,
though last year's torrential rains on Derby Day
did force the closure of the area for far longer than
had been previously expected.
"W e were out there nil day Instead of Just the
morning." he said.
The double-elimination races will lie divided Int
two classifications. There nre Kit Cars, construted
as the name Implies from kits, and the Masters
Division in which the cars arc constructed from
scratch by the entrants.
The winners o f the Sanford races will tie eligible
to participate in the All-American Soap Ikix
Derby In Akron. Ohio on Aug. 10.
□ S e e D erby, P a £ e 5A

SANFORD — Residents paving
property to Seminole Count) may
sec only a slight tax increase tu the
upcoming lise.il year. Inn the cost ol
making a telephone call or turning
on a light could be notlcably higher.
Seminole County manager Ron
Rabun released bis proposed 8251.3
million budget Thursday lor the
vear beginning (M l I 1991 and ii
requires a 13 percent Increase over
Iasi year's $222.7 million budget
The spending plan Includes 07
new positions, including 22 |hini
lions lor the shcrtlfs department
and 20 new positions lor puhlu
s lid e Seventeen ol Die new puhlu
salclv Jobs are lor the cnuiluucd
buildup ol tire engine (T e w s There
is an average ol about 2 percent
alloled lor salary Increase-, based
on merit reviews
Rely mg oil lire sab s tax passed l&gt;\
voters Tuesday and a new tax on
uiUncorjiurali-d resident s utilitv
lulls. Rabun lias held Die conn
tv wide lax increase lo 7 pen cut
over Iasi year s rale ol $5 53 per
$1 iMMiot taxable property

Tax rate explained
The proposed ad valorem or
pr ope r t y tax i n c r e a s e , if
approved, would bite your
pocketbook this way
The owner of a 5100.000
home with a $25,000 homestead
exemption would pay $443 78
under Ihe proposed tax rate
That amount is additional to
city, water district or special
taxes Last year the same
homeowner paid $415 07. or
$28 71 less d the appraisal
value was the same
The owner of a $75,000 home,
with the $25 000 exemption,
paid $276 72 last year This
year, the same homeowner will
pay $295 85 under the proposed
rate it the home s assessment
didn t qo up or down
I lie p rop osed i.ix r a le ol $.&gt; 92
In c lu d e s 25 i e n is to h e lp pay lo r a
82&lt;i m illio n bon d Issu e lo Imv
e n v ir o n m e n t. dly s e n s itiv e la n d s m

See Budget. Page 5A

Q

&amp;

A

County offers utility tax Information

9

What Is It?

A

A Public Service Utility Tax
Is a tax which can be levied by a
I o c a I "g o v e rn m r n t on t ti e
purchase of electricity, metered
or bottled gas. water, com
muntcntlon services, fuel oil and
other competitive services. The
Public Service Utility Tax Is
authorized by Florida Statutes
166.231.
-

9
A

Who levies the tax'2-

All municipalities located in
Seminole County currently levy
the Public Service Utility Tax
Casselberry. Lake Mary. Oviedo.
Sanford, and Longwood Impose
the maximum rate of 10 percent.

while the Cities of Altamonte
and Winter Springs currently
lm|M&gt;st* a rate ol H percent. Total
c o lle c t io n s for Fiscal Year
1989/90 from Dm- Public Service
Utility T a x Imposed by the
imiulcl|&gt;altttes was $8.5 million.
All seven cities located In
Seminole County also lin|&gt;ose a
Utility Franchise Fee. Total col­
lections for Fiscal Year 1989/90
from the Utility Franchise Fees
Imposed by Dm- municipalities
w a s $6.9 million. Seminole
C o u n l y only Imposes a
C a h lc v ls lo n Franchise Fee.
Esttnialed collection from Die
Seminole County Franchise Fee
tor FY 1991/92 Is $547,992
See U tility, Page 5A

�JaiM m angttf MtttoflMfrt
STUAR T — A m an w ho w aa briefly Ja
cigarette out hia car window wifl get a l i l
the Stuart Puttee Departm ent
Stephen KeUerman, 30. threatened to a i
imprisonment after the May 10.1990arrest
Attorney J eff Carfata claim ed M s client i
because he w aa driving through a high dn
nc v m iio p pra uy patrocman o m n nunrruu
Instead or ctUng KeUerman far Uttering i
Huffman searched the ashtray oCKegermar

T o day la aart o f the that step In saving the
r e ig la d ^ jM jld O w . Lawton Chiles. "W e have
C h ile s a n d U .S . A tto rn ey G en eral Dick
horn b u rg h m et T h u rsd ay to disclose the
p se r n a l signa ling an c ad to a 2Vfc-ycar legs!
p N betw een the h ueral an d state governments.
"T o d a y m arks a new day far the Everglades,"

JACKSONVILLE - A St. Augustine auto dealer has been
placed on five years* probation far tax evasion, an offense he
pleaded guilty to but doesn't rem em ber because o f a brain
tumor.
A s part o f the sentence. Ehrtn P. Yarbrough Jr.. S3, agreed to
stay at a mental-health treatment facility at M s own expense
for three to six months.
U.S. District Judge Susan H. Black also required Yarbrough
to pay 040.053 In back taxes phis the 05.000 coot of
prosecution *
Yarbrough pleaded guilty In January to attempting to evade
personal Income taxes far 1003 and causing his corporation .
Yarbrough Otdamobile Cadillac Inc., to flte a fraudulent
corporate Income tax return for the sam e year. Other charges
were dismissed.

1B07 and long-term goals reached by 3009.
Another m qjor com ponent o f the agreement
w ould require farm ers to cut discharge of
phoaphoroua Into the Everglades by 10 percent
by 1907 and 39 percent by 3009.

ConfttMd cop kilter In custody
police officer w as In the custody o f M etroftade police today
after he w as brought back from California, where he was
arrested on a parole violation.
Police have charged Mentt Alonso Sima. 34. with first-degree
murder, arm ed robbery and auto theft in the staying of officer
Charles Stafford.
Police say Sim a stole a battered Cadillac that Stafford
stopped along a lonely highw ay exit. The officer’s 9mm Otoek
pistol was m issing and m ay have been the m urder weapon
Detectives did not say whether State puffed the trtiffier or if
he had an accomplice.
"H e gave statements outlining his Involvement In the
shooting." Detective Don Btoch rr mdd shortly after Sims*
arrival.

Mfttktd gunman opofts fire
JACK SO NVILLE - A husband and wife talking In their car
were am bushed by a m asked gunm an w ho opened Are on them
without speaking, police said.
The 24-year-old m an. shot in the head and cheat, died at
University M edical Center about 14 hours after the Wednesday
afternoon shooting, and the wom an w as listed in fair condition,
hospital officials said.
Investigators don 't have a motive for the shooting and have
not ruled out robbery, although nothing was taken, said Aaa

Man skips bond, ssntsncsd to 75 ytars _ - *
W EST PALM BEAC H - A few unauthorised days of freedom
cost a Delray Beach man 75 years ln state prison for skipping
out on his bond after pleading guilty to auto theft and burpary
charges.
's s
Marvin Johnson. 26. pleaded gtiilty June 27 to auto theft and
burglary charges and face five years In prison. He w as set free
to get his affairs In order and never reported for his sentence.
In fact, he didn't return to court until police In Delray Beach
picked him up and charged him in another theft over the
weekend.
Circuit Judge W alter Colbalh lowered the boom Wednesday:
30 years for the auto theft charge and SO years for various
other charges.
“ I'm not even going to ask what happened or w h y." Colbalh
■aid, glaring at Johnson, w ho stood with hands on hips. "Just
good luck."
" I ’m going to need It." replied Johnson.

Judgo finds boy guilty
NEW PORT RICHEY - A 10-year-old burst Into tears when a
Judge found him guilty of crim inal miachlef for loosing a can of
dirt at a neighbor's window screen.
Bringing Ryan Ferro Into court over such a minor matter had
been criticised by his parents as a waste of taxpayers’ money,
but prosecutor* maintained it waa Important to teach the boy a
lesson.
After a two-hour Juvenile court trial. Circuit Judge Stanley
Mills said he rejected the testimony of all but the one neighbor
who heard the boy boasting of breaking a hole In the screen
last January.

MIAMI - Hsr* art tha winning
numbtrs Mlsctsd Thursday In tha
Florida Lotlsry Cash X 7-0-0
Winning number* tsisetsd in tha
Florida Lotlsry Ray 4 war*: 1-03-7

MWffiMRMNBBff1K B ffM R P f 1I T- . '^ _ T, M l,

la x

(OsUy 4 SunSsv)

PSona (407)322-2*11

O R LANDO — Politically touchy moves
such a s ending sales tax breaks on groceries
or even doctor M ils won’t be overlooked by
the group seeking w ays to overhaul Florida
Such exemptions have been won In the
Legislature through years of lobbying by
large and sm all Interests, Florida Taxation
ana Reform Commission member Jtm Bax
said.
"T h ere's no rhyme or reason." Bax said.
The state collects about 911 billion a year
in taxes, moat o f it through a 6 percent sales
tax on goods. But sales tax exemptions coat
it another potential 911 billion In revenues.
Bax said one possible approach would be
to end all exemptions, then resurrect those
for which a good case w as made. But
legislators view some, such as the tax
breaks on groceries and doctor bills, as

* We're going to bulldoze
the house ana rebuild it in
some kind of rational way. j
untouchable.
A commission committee first recom­
m ended closing all loopholes Including
those for groceries, housing and services
such a s doctor’s and lawyer’s fees.
But the committee later voted to set
standards so exemptions for necessities
w ould be retained.
If the full commission adopts the com­
mittee recommendations, it would represent
a m ove toward a sales lax on services, a
revision that collapsed under heavy opposi­
tion when last proposed In 1907.
Gov. Lawton Chiles has asked the corn-

"W e 're going to bulldoxe the house and
rebuild it In some kind o f rational w ay."
B ax. a business consultant and former
Health and Rehabilitative Services secre­
tary. said at the 35-member commission’s
m eeting W ednesday In Orlando.
Som e exem ptions are well known, such as
those for groceries, hospital coats and
medicine. Others benefit narrower Interests.
O as used for farm ing, aircraft sales to
F lo rid a -b a a e d c a rrie rs, fu els used In
m anufacturing, m achinery used In federal
procurem ent contracts, machinery used In
recycling, boats tem porarily docked in
F lorid a for repairs, and purchases by
non-profit groups are aales-tax exempt.-

Gay couple
challenge
adoption law
W E S T PALM BEACH - More
than thirty years after an unwit­
ting Arm y sergeant w as sub­
jected to experim ents with LSD
and other drugs, the Defense
Department dropped Its opposi­
tion to compensating him for
health problem s, lost Income,
and a aeries o f M sanc behavioral
changes.
The departm ent's turnabout,
declared In a letter to Congress
on W ednesday, rem oved the
only known opposition to com­
pensation for Jam es Stanley. 57.
“ I’m Just tickled to death over
It.” Stanley said afterward.
”1 think they threw in the
t o w e l. It h e lp s o u r c a s e
enorm ously." said Rep. Harry
Johnston. D-Weat Palm Beach,
who sponsored the MU to pay
Stanley 0035,000In damages.
Stanley, a Jail shift command-

SARASO TA A gay
couple are challenging a
Florida law that forbids
th e m fr o m a d o p t in g
children, claiming Inc law
violates their rights and
serves no driving slate In­
terest.
“ P ro h ib itio n a g a in st
adoption by homosexuals
Is without rational basis
and serves no compelling
state Intercat,'* the two
men said In a suit filed this
week In Circuit Court.
Jam es W . Cox. 30, and
Rodney M. Jackman. 26.
are asking a Judge to de­
clare the 14-year-old law
u n c o n s t it u t io n a l on
grounds It violates rights to
privacy, due process and
equal protection.

TH E W EATH ER
T od ay: Partly cloudy w ith
thunderstorm* likely during the
afternoon. High in the lower 90s.
W ind west 10 mph. Rain chance
70 percent.
Tonight: A 40 percent chance
of evening thunderstorms then
partly cloudy. Low In the m id
70s. Light west wind.
Saturday: Partly cloudy with a
good chance of thunderstorms
during the afternoon. High In the
lower 90s. Rain chance 60 per­
cent.
E x ten d ed forecast: P a rtly
cloudy each day with a good
chance of mainly afternoon and
even in g sh ow ers and th u n derstorms.

MisMtivsry S Mil

Tax reform group eyes exemptions

F
MONDAY
P U y C M y 01-7 3

TUUOAV
PU y CM y t l-7 1

W IO M S O A Y
P U y C M y 01-71

THURSDAY
M aty C M y 01-72

i n l y 11 a.m.. 7:55 p.m.: MaJ. 1:10 a.m..
1:40 p.m . T ID ffS t D a y t s a a
Bsacht highs. 8 0 6 a.m.. 8:38
p.m.: lows. 2:09 a.m.. 2.-01 p.m.:
i
R aw l a y r u ffs a e h : highs.
JaMw 8 6 8:11 a.m.. 8:43 p.m.: lows. 2:14
w a.m.. 2:06 p.m.: C m n ffsaeh :
highs. 8:26 a.in.. 8:58 p.m.:
lows. 2:29 a.m.. 2:21 p.m.

D a y ts a a ffsaeh ; Waves are
flat a n d g lassy. C urrent Is
slightly to the south with a water
temperature of 84 degrees. N aw
M a y r a s ffsaeh : Waves arc flat
and glassy. Current Is slightly to
the south, with a water tempera­
ture of 84 degrees.

i t . A u g u a tla e t s J s p tts r la ls t
Today: W ind west to south­
west 10 knots. Seas 2 feet. Buy
and Inland waters a light chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms.
Tonight: W ind southwest 10 to
15 knots. Seas 2 feet near shore
and 4 feet well offshore. Bay and
Inland waters a moderate chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms.

F R ID A Y
M aly C M y 0 1 -7 3

T h e high tem perature In
Sanford Thursday w as 88 de­
grees and the overnight low was
72 as reported by the University
of Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
period, ending at 9 a.m. Friday,
totalled 0 inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today w as 82 d eg re es and
Friday's overnight low w as 73.
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data.
□ T h u rsd a y 's high...............9 2

mmt

�m

Lawyer In hot
water after
playing tape
■how. The Crustn Custom s club o f Lakeland will
Investigative

11:30 p.m.

ISO and 17ft Jet skiers into the
In competition begin n ing a
morning and lasting for most at
Is one of severs! o f this type

Three Sanford youth were arrested W ednesday fright for
drinking beer after Seminole County deputies responded to a
complaint about alou d disturbance.
Deputies report finding the trio standing by the tailgate of a
pickup truck with a cooler frill o f beer nearby and em pty beer
cans. Charged with possession o f an open container o f an
alcoholic beverage by a person under 31 years o f a ge were
Lawrencew B. Sewell. 30.730 Bsywood Circle. Joaquin Perea.
19. 314 San Fernando Court, and Joseph E. W ebster. IS , 100
Hays Drive,

Fight toMte to «TM t
Henry Leon HunsucUe, 40. 430 E. W arren Ave., Longwood.
w as charged with aggravated battery and threatening a police
officer Thursday morning.
Longwood police report HunsucUe cut a m an's Up with a
xk et knife during a fight
pocket
light at flf-Bts on W est State Road 434. A
policeman reported HunsucUe threatened to "g e t" him when
he w as released from Jail. HunsucUe w as held on $4.000bond.
AjOABM JbtkgkMaAdl ufiOAn. jlgagM AAlldk

w in cnargid wiin oomasne viowncv

JelTery Dewayne Taylor. 30. 2945 Park Ave.. Lot 27,
Sanford, w as charged with domestic violence at Central Florida
Regional Hospital.
Sanford police report Taylor chased his wife Into a car
Tuesday shortly before midnight and sm ashed the car window,
■praying glass Into her eyes.

Midway woman raportadly rapod
A M idway woman reported she was raped by a m an holding
a butcher knife to her throat Wednesday. T he wom an said the
man w as visiting her In her W aters Street home when he
Jumped on top of her and held the knife to her throat while he
raped her. No arrest has been made.
*

rugitivas appvonanooa
r n n lH i.o o ■ n n ^ h s n r t a r i

* ' "* ~

"

The following fugitives have been apprehended:
•C h a rle s Alford Williams, 43. 1118 Pine Ave.. Sanford, was

-------------------------------------ORLANDO — The fam ily o f a
kidnap-murder victim can seek
both compensatory and punitive
damages from s television atation that showed the dead g irl's
skull on the day o f her frmeral. a
Judge has ruled.

ceremony scheduled outdoors at 11 a.m., Sun­
day. BUI W eekly o f Orlando, a custom car
enthusiast, will be m arried to W endy Muffin*, to a
ceremony conducted In a unique setting am ong
the aW ea o f cars and trucks.
The Holiday Inn will have Its barbecue grill
going outdoors from noon until 6 p.m . each day.
• i w Oft m irruuiuncut m •cncouica from ntuucii
groups ittciiMSUif. Kcggiic oy M Aitocii m a John
fiteKfcufe'a Key W est Style.
There is no charge for adm ission Mar the Jet ski
races, or the custom car and truck show. A ll of
the events will be held in the area surrounding
the Holiday Inn. on Lake Monroe.

T he fam ily o f Regina Mae
Arm strong. 8, Is suing Orlando
T V station WESH-Chartnef 2 for
sh ow ing (h e skull, Mound In
wood s near Oviedo, tn ■ report
an a frmeral being held for the
child.
C ir c u it J u d g e E m e rs o n
Thom pson said W ednesday that

the Orlando convention on
J a n e 37. M itchell Is a
m em ber of the board.
T he tape Is from the trial
testim ony o f an eld erly
M lsslsalppl w om an w h o
awoke one night to And a
man — —is»g next to her
bed. The wom an testified
in detail shout overcom ing
her assailant by grabbing
his genitals and leading
him outside.

a Jury could decide on both types
o f dam ages m a trial scheduled
lo r October,
The Armstrongs* suit claim ing
outrageous conduct had been
declared Invalid by a trial Judge,
but the Bth District Court of
Appeal overturned that decision.

Sanford to streamline
■ B H H B
Its special events policy fMORSE
/ iM
HAWVIT

SANFORD - A new policy Is
being drawn up regarding the
use of city property lor special
events. It Is designed to sim plify
and clarify the often-confusing
requirements and paperwork.
An Initial proposal w as created
through the combined efforts of
S a n fo rd C ity M a n a g e r B ill
Simmons. Parks Director Jim
J e r n lg a n . an d R e c re a tio n
Director Mike Kirby. The three
men took a close look at existing
policies and ru les In cludin g
those relatin g to o b ta in in g
permission to use or rent city
facilities and the closin g of
streets. The study covered both
non-profit and profit-m aking
special events.
W hile many rules and policies
have evolved over time, m any
appeared
in need o f
updatin g and con solid atio n .
S im m o n su g ge sted that ’-the
requirement for coordination by
organizers and the obtaining.of
necessary perm its be legally
established by ordinance."
In the new policy, specific
rules will be set up for events at
the marina, civic center, cultural
arts building and various park
facilities. They will also include
Information on Ihc preparation
of certain forms that w ill explain

all related needs for each Indlvtduui function. Including the
num ber of port-o-lets, clean up.
police protection, food prepara­
tion and serving, the use ol
alcoholic beverages, and other
needs.

Lessing of buildings and/or
reserving park facilities for families or sm all company outings
are not cllassM ed as special
events. These activities are serv­
iced and proceaacd by the city
department that administers the
fadlltlea requested.
The Special Events policy was
first presented to the members of
the Sanford City Commission
during the July I meeting. The
commtaoloa accepted the pro­
posal offered by Simmons, and
approved a motion to turn the
matter over to the city attorney
for preparation o f an ordinance.
"W e 're not trying to slop the
use of city faculties," Simmons
said,- "w e 're tryin g to hetp-the
people w ho use them ." He said
there have been some occasions
when certain requirements were
not met. “At the last minute a
problem would tum up regard­
ing some rule, and Hie people
would respond that they were
not Informed o f som ething." He
said."T h e new policy Is Intended
to make everyone aware of all
requirem ents."

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3249799

;

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I

as

‘'W e lc o m e s

Julie McGhee
•&amp;6 U U X

2419 S, French Ave«, Sanford 322-4172

C w n f y K lte k e a
W

PROUDLY PRESENTS
LIVE ON KEYBOARD

Singing Your ravont# Songs

'Craig Dlsrlam"
SJNOA-LONQA TALENT NIGHT
ONTHURS.

W aiters cover up; ladies-only eateries back in business
would be subject to arrest If (hey
continued to operate without a
license, said Sarubbl.
But Rockola Grille lawyer Bill
Sheaffer said the eateries, which
boast "W e Dare to Bare," signs,
do not need the licenses because
(hey are restaurants, not adult
entertainment businesses.
"It’s still my contention that
they do not fall under Ihc
provisions of the adult enter­
tainment ordinance." ShcafTrr
said.

ORL a NDO — A ladies-only
restaurant is back in business
after closing down for a night
follow ing a police raid that
arrested the four scantily clad
male waiters for showing (heir
buns.
In stead of G -strln g s. the
waiters wore bikinis to serve and
dance for female customers of
Rockola Grille on Thursday. The
owners also opened a second
restaurant, featuring the same
service, across town.
Patrons and management at
the first establishment were
shocked Wednesday night when
undercover agents of the Metro­
politan Bureau of Investigation
burst In and arrested the waiters
and the manager.

LUNCH

Hardwar
CWwy/W

-

&lt;— «*

Manager Dan Groff, 44. was
charged with operating an adult
entertainment business without
a license. The wallers were
charged with working In an

j

||

„

— tt/nm, M H +m .

MhaferMnwittanm*,

C H O IC ES FOR A C H A N G E

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I't

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^ -■■■-■ lla*

4A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, July 12, I N I

Editorials/ Opinions
-

W ILLIA M
300 N. FRENCH A V E ., SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-3011 or 831-9003

m rn *

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 M onths..................................||® (W

0 Months................................ *30.00
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Ml pay 8% adM Ma la
IN M «

E D ITO R IA LS

New capitalism
Im a g in e that th e South h ad w on the C iv il
W a r a n d th e cap ital o f the Confederate S ta te s
o f A m e ric a w a s R ich m ond. N ow . year* la te r.
N orth a n d S o u th a r e goin g to reunite. S h o u ld
R ich m on d becom e th e n ew national c a p ita l,
o r sh o u ld R ich m on d g iv e w a y to W ash in gton ?
T h a t’s th e situ ation the G erm an p arliam en t
faced recen tly In Its vote o n Berlin. S h o u ld
the gov ern m en t o f G erm an y stay in p ro v in ­
cial B o n n , nestled sleep ily o n the R hine, o r
sh o u ld It retu rn to B e rlin . G erm an y 's grea te st
c ity . Its fo rm e r n a tio n a l seat. E u r o p e 's
h isto ric al crossro ad s?
T h e B u n d e sta g voted to return to B e rlin ,
b u t Just b a rely , 337-320. It chose to retu rn to
the le g e n d a ry city o f B ran den burg, m a g n ifi­
cen t p lace o f lak es an d forests that n e ith e r
N a z is n o r c om m u n ists cou ld destroy. Y e s .
B o n n is a com fy little place o f natty b u rg h e rs .
m u c h a s R ich m on d Is, but It w as a lw a y s a
o ! o f th e
p ro v isio n a l cap ital, a lw a y s a sym bol
C o ld W a r . w h ich M o v e r.
T h e c o llap se o f com m unM m reunited B e rlin
a n d G e rm a n y a n d forced ths agon izin g c h o ice
on th e G erm an s. It w a s tough because, ru ra l
o r n ot. B o n n . In 4 0 years a s capital o f th e
F e d e ra l R ep u blic, becam e th e capital o f a
g re a t state.
A ll th e G erm a n in stitutions are curren tly In
B o n n — th e legislatu re, th e executive, th e
b u r e a u c r a c y ,. B o n n w ith o u t g o v e rn m e n t
w o u ld b e lik e W aah in gton without g o v e rn ­
m ent — a gh o st to w n , w ith w ind w h ip p in g
h o llo w bu ild in gs.
th ro u ghi 1
It's g o in g to b e a problem far Bonn, b u t a
sh ort-term one. L o n g term , returning th e
g o v e rn m e n t to B e rlin M good for G e rm a n y
a n d g o o d fo r E u rop e. E u ro p e 's task today M to
e x t e n d W e s t e r n p e a c e a n d p r o s p e r it y
e a s tw a rd , Into the form er com m unist state s.
T h e G e rm a n s a g a in can m ake their c a p ita l
the c ro ssro a d s to S la v ic Europe, a s it w a a
u n d e r th e H oh en zollem s.
In o u r sh o rt m em ories. B erlin Is asso ciated
w ith th e N a z is, w h ich is understandable. B u t
lo n g b e fo re the N a z is, Berlin w a s a n o u rish in g
city o f a rts, com m erce and liberalism . It w a s a
h o m e fo r E u r o p e 's p ersecuted, lik e th e
H u gu e n o ts; it w a s th e seat o f revolt a g a in st
E u ro p e a n a b so lu tism , a s in 1848.
T h e T h ird Reich w a s a can cer grafted o n to
B e rlin . T h e G e rm a n s should feel no q u a lm s
a b o u t retu rn in g th ere, now that the c a n c e r
h a s b e e n rem oved.

Back to the future
T h e d ecision o f th e voters o f L en in grad to
g iv e b a c k th e ir c ity its old n am e, S t .
P e te rsb u rg — even though Soviet au th orities
a rc not likely to m ak e tne change — s ig n a ls
a n em otio n al break w ith com m unism .
S t. P e te rsb u rg w a s founded by Peter th e
g rea t In 1703 a s a show case capital a n d
"w in d o w
o n t h e W e s t . " Its d e s i g n ,
arch itectu re an d a rt by great m asters o f
W e ste rn E u rop e m a d e It one of the w o rld 's
m ost im p ressive a n d beautifu l cities.
In tern atio n al read ers becam e fam iliar w ith
it th ro u gh the w ritin g s of Pushkin. T u rg e n e v .
D ostoyev sk i a n d T olstoy.
G e n e ra tio n s o f visitors have been c a p ­
tivated b y its g ran d m ain thoroughfare, th e
N ev sk y Prospekt, a n d such structures a s th e
S ts. P eter a n d P a u l Fortress and C ath ed ral,
the W in te r Palace, the T a u rld as Palace a n d
m an y oth er gracefu l governm ent b u ild in gs,
th eaters, cath ed rals a nid
d m
i useum s.
St. P e te rsb u rg 's g au d y , carefree, aristo crat­
ic so c ia l life in the late 19th and early 2 0 th
c e n tu rie s b e c a m e the b a ck d ro p fo r th e
se e th in g discon ten ts of Intellectual re v o lu ­
tio n aries. w orkers, so ld iers an d sailors, w h ic h
e ru p te d in on e revolution in 1905 an d th e
m om en tou s u p h ea v a ls of February and O c to ­
b er. 1917.
In 1914 the c ity 's nam e w as changed to
P c tro grad . In 1924. it w as renam ed L e n in ­
g ra d to h on or the d e a d Nikolai, aka V la d im ir
L en in , fo u n d er o f B olsh evism — the p recu rso r
o f S o v iet com m u n ism — and the Soviet state.
L en in w a s born V lad im ir lllch U lyan ov in
1870 at S im birsk . H e adopted the pseud on ym
L e n in in 1901 d u rin g his clandestine p a rty
w o rk after exile In S iberia. Sim birsk w as la te r
ren am ed U lyan o u sk In his honor.
D u rin g W o rld W a r II. the h eroism o f
L e in g ra d 's people d u rin g the long, h a rro w in g
G e rm a n siege becam e legendary.
T h e vote o f present-day Leningrad c itize n s
to ta k e b a c k th e c ity 's o rig in a l n a m e
d ra m atizes, a s m uch as an y other sin g le
e v en t. R u ssian rejection of com m unism .

LETTERS TO EDITOR
I • tiers to liu* editor are welcome. All lt-llcr» must
Ik* signed. Include the .iddrcv, nl the writer and a
daytime telephone number. Letters should lx- on a
single subject and lx- as brief as possible.. Letters
are suh|i-ci tm-dltlni*

A RUSHER

Conservatives gird for court battle
Now that President Bush has nominated Judge
Clarence Thom as to replace Thurgood M arshall
on the Suprem e Court, one can only hope that
conservatives aren't gstng to let the liberals deny
Jud ge Thom as Senate confirmation by default.
T h at's what w e (and. be it Mid. the bureau­
crats in the ItragMi White House and Justice
Deportment) did tn thc famous case of Judge
Robert Doth, whom President Reagan i
t19877 b
m agnificently qualified that hla supporters
(Including the present writer) made the ghastly
m istake o f aaaum ing that e n g ^ in g In hand-tohand combat with his liberal foes w ould be
counterproductive: that Bork's case would sim ­
ply be dam aged by dragging it through the
political arena.
T h e result w as that Norman Lear and his
People for the American W ay. and a score of
other liberal prnpaginds outlets, landed on Bork
with everything they had. and he w as left to
defend himself a s beat he could against one o f
the greatest onslaughts ever launched against a
Judicial nominee, w h en the smoke blew aw ay.
Robert Bork lay politically dead on the Senate
floor, with OaM hsda like Kennedy and Metsenboutn loom ing over him.
If w e hove to err. let’s err in the other direction
UiM time. Aa Reagan's longtime chairman o f the

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
C la re n c e T h o m a s &gt;-------------------------------stoutly cham pioned
the cause o f Individ­
uals w ho had been
d iscrim in ated
against, but stead­
fastly opposed race
?| u o ta s a n d " a f Irm a tlv e a c tio n .”
T h a t, o f c o u rse ,
m ade him anathema
to the ao-called "civil
r ig h t s e s t a b lis h ­
m ent." and It will
exert all Its strength
to block hla advance
to th e S u p re m e
Court.
f lf w t h a w to
So. conservatives,
•rr.M t’t t r r ln
let’s gird for battle.
thsotbsr
A n d le t 's tell the
direction this
W hite House and the
tlmre.jp
Justice Department
to get into this
aertmmage. too.
Are you boys with the mailing lists ready? Are
you prepored to galvanize conservatives to write
their senators (with special emphasis on the

fence-sitters)? And you gentlemen In the think
on the documentation o f
tanks: Are you
and pfenning to
the case for «1 _ _
the hands of every
m ake sure that it” gets
You conservative spokesmen, too — on
and television, and in the print media: Are you
ready to Insist, loudly and firmly, that the
question M whether the liberal Democratic
majority in the U A Senate M un w W ln f to let any
conservative at all reoiace Thurgood M arshall on
Let us. in other words, do battle for Clarence
Thotnas m if his confirmation by the Senate
mattered — a s tt moat certainly does. W e don’t
have to w allow In mud to make the case for him :
their tactics to public
Victorious over Judge Thomas, but exhausted
and psychologically in no shape for another
battle: facing, le w than a year before Election
Day. President Bush's nomination o f the first
Hispanic ever proposed for the Suprem e Court,
the Senate liberals will have no belly for rejecting
him. They w ill approve his nomination. Just as
they approved that of Anthony Kennedy, w ho
has turned out to be (If anything) even im ore
conservative than Bork.

JACK

ANDERSON

Democrats must
fess up on goals

ROBERT WAGMAN

Census may not be adjusted
W ASH IN G TO N - High-level sources at the
Commerce Department say that Commerce
Secretary Robert Moabacher will probably not
order the results of the 1990 Census to be
statistically adjusted.
T h e Census Bureau now admits that the
1990 enum eration waa by far the most
Inaccurate In history. A record num ber of
Americana, especially from among minorities,
failed to be counted. The remedy would be for
the Commerce Secretary to order the Bureau
to devise a mathematical formula baaed on an
estimate of the undercount, and then to apply
that adjustment formula to the results from all
50 states.
Immediately after releasing the results of the
general census enumeration in April, the
Census Bureau attempted to verify Its count by
m eans of a Post Enumeration Survey (PES). In
the PES. 175.000 randomly selected house­
holds are closely examined, and the results are
compared to the original general census results
for these households. If the results are
su fficien tly sim ilar, the already-released
num bers are considered final. But If the two
counts are off. Moabacher — under a court
order baaed on a suit from the 1980 census —
has until J uly 15 to decide whether to
statistically adjust the numbers.
Preliminary figures from the PES showed
that the 1990 count waa seriously flawed. Now
the final revised PES numbers have been made
available: It shows that the 1990 count waa
even more seriously flawed than first believed.
It w as widely assumed that there had been
an undrreount. and that most of that under­
count wus In major cities, centering around
black Inner-city populations. This was borne
out In the preliminary PES figures. But that
has changed significantly.
The biggest undercount apparently occurred
am ong Htspanlcs In the Southwest. According
to the revised estimate, more than 5 percent of
Htspanlcs were not counted. This percentage
far outstripped the estimated number of
uncounted blacks.
A principle use of the new census numbers Is
reapportionment of the U.S. House of Repre­
sentatives for the coming decade. As a result of
the original count. 19 House seats are to be
shifted among 21 states. Since December state
legislatures have been redrawing all their
congressional district boundaries based on the
original numbers.
It Is difficult to predict how statistically
adjusting the numbers would affect congres­
sional districts because the formula can be
computed In a number of ways depending
upon the PES results.
Six weeks ago. the best guess was that
California would gain eight — Instead of seven
— new House seats: Georgia would gain two.
not one: Montana would not lose one of its two

existing scats: Pennsylvania would lose three
and not Just two seats; and Wisconsin and
Oklahoma would each lose one. That has now
changed. The beat guess now Is that Wisconsin
will lose a scat to California, and Pennsylvania
will lose a seat to Arizona.
The unusually severe undercount among
Htspanlcs will also result In major population
adjustments within states. This will put
significant pressure
on many states to
com ply with court
orders and redraw
their congressional
boundaries to create
new m ajority H is­
panic districts.
The argument over
adjusting Is both sci­
entific and political.
On the scientific
sid e , so m e d em o ­
graphers argue that
the PES survey fig­
ures themselves were
( T h e 1990
"sm oothed" In the
count was by
period between the
farthe moat
In itial re lea se six
Inaccurata In
weeks ago and the
history. J
fin a l release. The
sm oothing process
could have caused
errors: and If the PES
Is oft. and is used to create a mathematical
formula for adjustment, the final result could
be as skewed In a different direction us was
the original count.
The political argument Is that states are
already so far along In the rrdlstrtctlng
process It would be unfair to make them start
over again from scratch. Moreover, adjust­
ments based on the apparent PES results will
cause fundamental political realignments
within some slates.
In a certain sense It does not matter which
way Mosbachrr decldrs. Whatever he does,
he will make many states and political
subdivisions unhappy. They in turn will file
suit or Join one of several suits already filed.
So the final answer will probably come from
the courts.
However. If Mosbacher decides not to
adjust. It Is doubtful the courts will act soon
enough to affect the 1992 elections. The new
district boundaries now being drawn based
on the Initial 1990 results will be allowed to
stand for the 1992 election, with the
possibility they will have to redrawn again for
1994 If the coi rts decree adjustment.
This will result In less upheaval. And. say
Commerce Department sources, that is why
Mosbacher Is strongly leaning against ad ­
justment.

W ASH IN G TO N Former M assachusetts
Sen. Paul T aon fM M the only Democrat w ho
adm its he M running for president, but the
llat o f stealth candidates la long and predict­
able. They want to keep the voters guesting
about their presidential aspiration*, but their
politicking betrays them.
Presidential wannabees who know w h at's
good for them are lavishing attention and
som e money on the two states with prim aries
that could catapult them to a nomination —
N ew Ham pshire and Iowa.
Rep. R ich ard
O e p h a r d t . D -M o.,
started early. Last
fa ll he d o n a te d
• 2 .0 0 0 f r o m hla
private political ac­
tion committee to the
N ew H a m p sh ire
Democratic Party. On
the tam e day he gave
•5 0 0 to Iow a's in­
cumbent Democratic
treasurer.
A sp o k esw o m a n
for Gephardt M id the
(o a b h a r d t is
con tribu tion s were
among
"u n re la te d to any
life sarloua
type of presidential
contandera
b id ." But the record
who won't
shows that he hasn't
admit so
d o n a te d to oth er
much as a
sta te p a rtie s and
yearning j
candidate*.
Gephardt is among
the serious contenders who won't even admit
so much aa a yearning for the W hite House.
W ith him In that category are Sen. Al Gore.
D-Tenn.. Sen. Jay Rockefeller. D-W .Va.. Sen.
Bill Bradley, D-N.J., and the Rev. Jesse
Jackson, a Democrat. Under the heading of
potential candidates who admit a passing
Interest, are V irgin ia Dem ocratic G ov.
Douglas W ilder, who concedes that he has
fired up an "exploratory committee." and
Sen. Tom Harkin. D-lowa. who says he Is
running a " testtng-the-waters cam paign."
O ur associates Jim Lynch and Scott Sleek
looked Into these pre-campaigns and found
them to be subtle, but persistent. Gore
produced a 28-mlnute video about himself
boasting of his impact,on millions of people In
Tennessee and across the nation. He also sent
thousands o f Christmas cards to people In
N ew H am pshire, as did G ephardt and
Rockefeller. Again, these non-candidates will
assure you this has nothing to do with setting
their sights on the Oval Office. Gephardt's
office explained that his Christmas list "Is
very large.”
There's more to this denial cam paigning
than the possibility that these Democrats w ill
stick their necks out only to have them
chopped off by a very popular Incumbent
president. Federal election laws place spend­
ing caps on each candidate. But those limits
aren 't Im posed until they declare their
candidacy, or at least concede they are
"testing the waters."
Federal election officials tdl us this year
cast of democratic hopefuls arc stretching tf
"I'm -not-runnlng" line to the snapping poln
If the stage-shy candidates don't announce t:
September, they run the risk of getting ini
the act too late. By then, the nation's ke
corporate fund-raisers will have commute
themselves to someone else. Tardy entram
also risk coming up short on the feder
matching funds that will become avallab
next January. To qualify for up to • 15 mlllla
In federal matching funds, a candidate mu:
raise more than 85.000 In private contrlbi
(tons from 20 different states.
The quest for federal campaign cash
explains why Wilder has dispatched cam­
paign veterans to Iowa and New Hampshire
a n d d isb u rse d fund-raisin g op eratives
throughout 28 states. It also explains why
Rockefeller picked this summer to go on a
nationwide stump tour promoting children's
Issues.
Some of the unrandldalcs are stacktr
thetr stafts with veteran campaign expert
Rockefeller, for Instance, hired Laura Quin
as his communications director.

�U «»a y §1411 Uhli_
n ifn o m «n w n iff
SANFORD — W ater la dropping off of Oeena
Louts* corn-rowed hair, her yellow t-shlrt and
her green shorts. But the eight-year old ta
uniting.
A red taytex balloon filled with water springs
at the ready tn her left hand.
iI'm
m gonna get him.
nun. she says with a laugh,
pointing at a young boy racing bettween a group
of squealing girls.
The balloon files, with surprising accuracy to
strike her target squarely on his rear end.
Instantaneously she Is gone, seeking
another liquid weapon to hurt at her opponents.
The youngsters were Involoved In the cool of
battle during Thursday's Sanford Recreation
Department's W ater Balloon Pest tn Ft. Mellon
Park.
" I like coming litre because we do this klnda
stuff." said Latrisha Jones. 8, o f the recreation
department’s playground activities.
“ It ain't never boring." she said.
In addition to the water balloon fights the
youngsters have spent the last three weeks
doing arts and crafts, learning about bicycle
safety, m eeting w ith Sanford Police and
celebrating Easter In July.
The activities will continue through Aug. 9.
A sm all boy ducked behind an unsuspecting
compatriot to escape a wobbly missile. The
exploding water sends three others running.
"I think this Is pretty dum b." Laurie Dunlop.

Landmark
The 1.500.000 cubic foot ten­
ting project win cost 431.000
and take at least four days to
complete.
. ....
"If the weather cooperates."
Brown said, "w e hope-to be back
In the offices by M onday."
The headquarters Is closed lor

t H ,M M 7 8

residents w ill be bolstered with
83.3 m illion from the proposed
utility tax.
Commies toneis are scheduled
to consider the utility fee July
30. It la a 10 percent tax placed
on ciGCinciijfi iiiticrcu or d o iiic o
gas, w ater and local telephone
sendees. P u d off win be taxed at
a rate o f 4 cents per gallon. It Is
expected to raise about 46
46.3
million during the fiscal year
beginning Oct. 1. the equivalent
of about 61.39 In unincorporated

Spectators will be able to park
on the streets running parallel to
U .S . 17-93 and alotag side
streets. They will then have to
walk to the viewing area.
The races win begin at 8 a.m.
and. If. all goes well, according
to Kirbv. thev will be over bv

Frederick S. Becker. 76. Sylvia
Drive. Deltona, died Wednesday
at his residence. Bom Sept. 19.
1914. In Ira. N.Y.. he moved to
Deltona In 1978 from Liverpool.
N.Y. He was a trouble shooter for
General Electric In Liverpool for
31 years and a m em ber of
Lutheran Church of Providence,
Deltona, and the Delaware Bap­
tist Church. Syracuse. N.Y. He
w a s a m e m ber o f G e n e ra l
Electric Spouses Retiree Club.
Daytona Beach, and a World
W ar II Army veteran.
Survivors Include wife. Julia
C. of Deltona; son. Lawrence J.
of Syracuse; daughter. Linda L.
of B ald w insvllle, N .Y.; four
grandchildren.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona, in charge of
arrangements.
IO W IB L L H I R 6
Lonzcll Beers. 59. 206 Hays
Drive. Sanford, died Wednesday
at Florida Hospital. Orlando.
Bom June 10. 1936. In West
Frankfort. III., he moved to
Sanford from Winter Springs in
1990. He was an accountant and
a Protestant. He was a member
of the NRA.
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e w ife ,
Martha; daughter. Colleen Dias.
Winter Springs; son. William
McMurrer. Sanford.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary, in charge of ar­
rangements.
M AR IK R . BLEDSOE
M arie R. Bledsoe. 55. 15
Merlin Court, Casselberry, died
Wednesday at Shands Hospital.
Gainesville. Bom Feb. 14. 1936.
In Salem. Mass., she moved to
Casselberry from Cocoa In 1975.
She w as a bookkeeper and a
m e m b e r o f the T u s k a w lllu
Assembly of God.
Survivors Include husband.

The unincorporated road tax
w ill Increase slightly, from about
79 cents per 41.000 to about 86
cento. Although R ab u n h a s
proposed using utility taxes for
rural road Improvements and
maintenance, a 38 percent drop
In gasoline taxes led him to
propose the property tax In­
crease. Rabun said. Q as taxes
have declined throughout the
state as auto travel dropped.

uniiiy
9. who w as trying to avoid the water balloons,
said. " I hate getting w et."
Jarrod Jam es. 7, felt that water balloons were
a great w ay to keep the summer heat away.
"I wish we could do this every day." he said.
" U 's so hot out here. It's awful."

business until the project Is
complete, but all ancillary build­
ings will be open as usual.
Brown said that termites had
alread y begun In festing the
building when they purchased
the structure In 1977.
"W e 'd rebuild and they’d keep
m oving d ow n ," he said. "It's
just got too bad.”

Derby
1A

residents' taxes.

The youn gsters w ill begin
weighing In their home-made
racers.
Business along the race route
wi l l re m ain o p en to se rv e
spectators, Kirby said.
Spectators might want to pro­
vide their own seating. Kirby
noted as only three grandstands
erected along the route.

Maurice; sons. Donald. Oviedo.
Michael. Tampa; sisters, Doris
Hogan. Salem. Muriel Campbell.
S a n M ateo. C a lif.: brother.
Edward Dube. Danvers, Mass.:
three grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld F u n eral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements.
ROBERT J. BOGAN
Robert J. Bogan. 45. 406
George St.. Winter Springs, died
Wednesday at Orlando Regional
Medical Center. Bom May 9.
1946, in Bridgeport. Conn., he
moved to Winter Springs from
Fairfield. Conn.. In 1968. He was
a supervisor for a trucking
company and Catholic. He was
an Army veteran and a coach for
the Seminole Pony Baseball
League.
Survivors Include mother. Lily
J. Boggans. Altamonte Springs;
wife. Joyce T.; sons. Richard.
P e te rs b u r g . N .Y .. R o b e rt.
Patrick, both of Winter Springs.
Patrick. Altam onte S p rin gs.
Kevin. Stamford. Conn.; sisters.
Teresa Zaffls. Apopka. Lily T yr­
rell. Lake Jackson. Texas. Ellen.
Winter Springs.
Carey Hand Garden Chapel
Home for Funerals. Longwood.
in charge of arrangements.
E L M A V . CH B88CR
Elma V. Chesser. 62. 302
H e r m lt e T r a i l . A lt a m o n t e
Springs, died Wednesday at Flor­
ida Hospital. Altamonte Springs.
Born June 2. 1909. In A n ­
dalusia. Ala., she moved to
Altamonte Springs from Col­
umbus. Ga.. In 1981. She was a
hpmem'*&gt;er.
S u r v i v o r s in c lu d e s o n s .
S a m u e l. M a it la n d . A l c u s .
Tampa; daughters. Montez V.
M etz. C a p e C o r a l. N a d in e
Johnson. Columbus: brother,
Vclmer Jones. Andalusia: nine
g ra n d c h ild re n ; three g r e a t ­
grandchildren.

The building, which Is on the
city’s list o f historic buildings
w as doomed unless the termites
were exterminated.
"It had to be done to save the
building." Bob Metsel, public
relations director o f the mission,
said. " I f w e didn't do this, w e'd
lose the b u ild in g "

“There Isn’t a bad seat out
there, though." he said, noting
that spectators would be pro­
vided with ample sidewalks and
curbs for watching the race.
Some spectators prefer to run
along the course to encourage
their favorite participant. This,
too. w ill be perm itted at a
respectable distance from the
track.

B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld F un eral
Home, Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements.
P A T R IC IA R EBE C C A D A V IS
Patricia Rebecca Davis. 31.
2214 W. 51st St.. Chicago, died
Saturday at Mt. Sinai Hospital in
Chicago. Bom June 20. 1960. In
S a n D ie g o , she m o v e d to
Chicago from Euatls in 1971.
She was a homemaker and a
Protestant.
S u r v i v o r s in c lu d e s o n s ,
Ramone. Geneva, Angel Luis
Perez. Chicago; daughter. Evie
Perez. Chicago: father. Ronald.
Geneva; mother. Evangellna.
Fort W orth . T ex as; sisters.
V irg in ia U rlas. M arta E lb a
Ramos, both of Chicago. Debra
Ute. Fort Worth, April Sue.
Harrisvllle. Pa.; brothers. Daniel
Quiroz. Gerardo Quiroz, both of
C hicago. Benjamin, G eneva.
Ernest. Robert. Ronald, all of
California.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld F u n eral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary. In charge of ar­
rangements.
PE D R O J . PA E O N
Pedro J. Pabon. 67. Lake
Helen-Osteen Road. Deltona,
died Thursday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. Born
Jan. 18. 1924. in Puerto Rico, he
moved to Driuma four years ago
from Sheffield Lake. Ohio. He
was a maintenance man for Ford
Motor Company and a member
of First Spanish Baptist Church
of Deltona.
Survivors Include wife. A n ­
tonia: sons. Lou and Robert,
both of Lorain. Ohio. Pete of
Sheffield: sisters, Maria and De­
lia. both of Puerto Rico; mother.
Marla, Puerto Rico; 14 grand­
children.
Stephen R. Buldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona, in charge of
arrangements.

0

W h y la the tax necessary?

A

The Stale of Florida Growth
Management Act (Chapter 163,
Florida Statutes, and Depart­
m ent o f Community Affairs Rule
9J-5) requires that the County
adopt levels o f service for opera­
tions and maintenance It pro­
vides and that the County dem ­
onstrate how it will pay for these
operations and maintenance ac­
tivities.
T he recently adopted Infra­
structure Sales Surtax, as pro­
m ised, can and w ill be utilized
only for M ajor Transportation
Im provem ents |l.e. capital ex­
penditures) and therefore is n et
a v a ila b le for Unincorporated
operations and maintenance for
raod and fire suppreasioa/rcscue
services.
T he Seminole County Com ­
prehensive Plan identified levels
of service for m inor collector
r o a d s , lo c a l r o a d s , fire
suppression and rescue response
time and service for the unin­
corporated area of the County.
The costs to maintain these
levels o f service over the next
five (5 ) years are expected to
exceed the amount or revenues
available to pay for these serv­
ices.
The Public Service Utility Tax.
or the alternative Increase In
Property Taxes, w ill be neces­
sary to provide the required
funding.
Q

W h o would pay the tax?

A

T h e proposed Sem inole
County Public Service Utility
T ax w ould be paid by all Unin­

Pollution

____________________1A
determining who was the
cause of this, and If necessary,
w e m ay even file crim inal
charges."
Morris said he believed the
problem Is connected to the
Mary Boulevard widening
project. "W c haven't determined
who did what." he said. "The
city thought the contractors
hired by Seminole County had
run a drainage line from the
school to an area near the
railroad tracks, where It could be
run Into the ground for natural
recycling. Instead, we found a
line running right Into big Lake
M ary."
The mayor said the line going
to the railroad track area did
exist. "But someone apparently
blocked off a 20 fool length of lt.
preventing the contaminated
water from going In that direc­
tion. Instead. It went Into the
runoff water line leading (o the
lake."
L a k e M ary P u b lic W o rk s
Director Rod Slroupe said I be
problem was first brought to his
a tte n tio n e a rly Hits w eek.
"W h en wc found oul about il, we
m ade an initial test of the
water." He said. "The results,
which wc got back the following
day. showed definale signs of
fecal collform in the water. The
amount shown to be In the water
w as twice the amount that Is
ullowed in the lake." He said

Lake

corporated residential and com ­
mercial utUUv customers. The
funds w o u ld b e utilized for
Unincorporated Road and Fire
Suppresslon/Reacue activities,
services that benefit custom ers
paying the tax.

&amp;

W hen w ill the tax go Into

A

If the Public Service Utility
Tax la adopted by the Seminole
County Board of County Com ­
m issioners July 30, 1991. the
..txx.wlU be im posed on service or
meter readings after Septem ber
I. &gt;991.

W hat sen der* will be taxed
ana how m uch money w ill It
provide?

A

The proposed Public Service
Utility T ax w ould place a 10
percent tax on the purchase o f
electricity, metered or bottled
gas, water, communication serv­
ices. an d other competitive serv­
ices. Fuel oil w ould be taxed at a
rate o f four (4) cents per gallon.
The tax Imposed on telecom­
m un ication s w ou ld o n ly be
against recurring local services.
In order to provide a "safety
net" for low Income households.
It Is proposed that the first 300
kilowatts of power usage for
each residential custom er be
exempt from the tax.
The Public Service Utility Tax
w ould provide an estim ated
4 6 .1 6 7 .2 0 4 In Fiscal Y e a r
1991/92 for the Unincorporated
Area Fire and Road Funds. This
equates to 1.3917 m ills In un­
incorporated area property lax
mlllage.

another, more extensive test, is
presently being analysed by
R ow er's' Labratory In Orlando.
"W e should get the results back
before the weekend." he said.
As soon as the Initial leal
r e s u lt s w e re d e te rm in e d .
Slroupe said Seminole County
officials immediately ordered the
school to stop pumping waste
into the system.
Morris said efforts will be
made to find answers for many
questions. "W h y was this sec­
ond line constructed? W ho did
II? Did they try to obtain proper
permits for this? Why w as the
original drainage line to the
tracks closed?" He said he plans
an all out move to find out who
did It and why.
One other concern the mayor
reported Is the drainage system
at the school itself.

Q

How will the money be used?

A

The following new and
continued programs would be
paid for through the Public
Service Utility Ihx.
2nd year of 3rd firefighter on an
engine; 12 Fire Technicians (6
months): 3 Battalion Chiefs (6
months): Fire Lt. ft Clerk (12
months); 4320.919. Aerial Truck
Stalling for Red Bug Lake Road
(S t a t io n 2 7 ). (6 m o n t h s ):
4172.467. Remington Park (Sta­
tion 4 5 ) staffing • 13 months),
4103.906. Reserve for Equip­
ment Replacement. 4887.056.
Reserve for Future year Operat­
ing impacts: Mideast Station
sch ed u led for FY 1993/94:
4460.000

Reserve for Future year Mainte­
nance Impacts: Shoulder Crew.
Retention Pond M aintenance
Crew, 4243.000; Local Road
Reconstruction .41.061.152

Q What will a typical home­
owner pay.?

A

The total lax will vary
depending on the type of home
heating utilized (electric, gas. or
fuel oil), charges for local phone
services (Including op tion al
features such as call walling)
and volume of water used (such
as for Irrigation).
Baaed on an average home­
owner utilizing 1.300 kllowalls
per month of clcclrlcty. the
Public Service Utility Tax at the
proposed rate of 10 percent for
Electrlcty. Local Phone Service.
Water, would be approximately
4112 per year.

Taxes
C os tin n ed from Pngs 1A
and over one m illion
dollars more Ilian the 1989-90
fiscal year.
The city commission held its
second budget workshop last
night, hearing from the Purchas­
ing Department, and Engineer­
ing ft Public Works. A third
presentation, from the Finance
Department, hud to be held off
until anolher meeting because of
time. The extra meeting w as set
for Thursday. July 18.
Lost night, die heads of I he
two departments presented their
fiscal year 1991-92 budget re­
quests to members of the com ­
mission.

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SA - Sanford Hereto, Sanford, Florida - Friday. July tz, IN I

By M V S I
Assoclstsd Press Writer
W ASH INGTO N - After months o f gloom, the
governm ent's economic reports are Anally offer­
ing some good news.
Consum ers are starting to spend again, albeit
cautiously, and Inflation la low.
Even the norm ally cautious chairm an o f the
Federal Reserve Board. A lan G reenspan, la
declaring that the recovery has begun.
“The evidence does suggest the economy Is

bottoming out and starting out o f the recession.”
Grrenspan toM the House Banking Committee on
Thursday, a day after President Bush announced
his rcappointiHcnl to a second four-year term.
"B ut.” he added. "It la m uch too early to make
a Judgment as to the dim ensions o f the recovery
or Its pace."
More win be known today with the release of
two economic reports for June. The Labor
urpanrnrni is rdCKBui® iybi r l iMjimdcr i"■Hue Iijoca,
which m easures the price o f goods wholeaalera
pay to producers such a s farmers and mamrfac*

Prospects good for nationwide
gun-purchase waiting period
Associated Prats Writer
W A SH IN G T O N Congress
took a giant step toward enact­
ing a nationwide waiting period
for handgun purchases when the
Senate passed a comprehensive
c ri me p a c k a g e w it h m a n y
features sought by President
Bush.
The bill, which restores the
fe d e ra l d e a th p e n a lty an d
extends It to 51 crimes, won
a d m in istratio n p ralae a s It
c l e a r e d the S e n a t e on a
bipartisan vote o f 71-38 Thurs­
day night.
The measure also contains a
five-working-day w allin g period
for handgun purchases, bans
nine types o f sem iautom atic
assault-style w eap o n s and
toughens the penalties for Illegal
use of firearms.
Bush signaled earlier this year

that he would consider signing
gun-control legislation only IT
Congress enacted crime legisla­
tion with the death penally and
made it harder for state prison­
ers to appeal (heir convictions In
federal court.
The strict new limits on socalled habeas corpus petitions,
used by state prisoners on death
row to delay thetr executions,
w as a key victory for the presi­
dent.
Bush foiled to win passage of a
provision that would give police
m o r e l a t i t u d e to c o n d u c t
aearchea without court warrants.
But Republican lawm akers and
A t to rn e y O e n e ra l D ick
Thornburgh praised the final
product.
“Thta bill contains the heart of
the president's crime b ill." said
Sen. Strom Thurm ond. R-S.C.
"T h ere are some troublesome
but they are out-

b y the tough provisions
Thurm ond said the
corpus restriction la "the
Important thing are d id .''
The bill contains most o f the
essential features o f the Demo­
crats' crim e package. Including a
•3.3 bltUon authorisation for aid
to local police an d other
enforcement programs.
But the administration
pleased with the results
Thornburgh pralae
vote fo r “ P re sid e n t B u s h 's
tough, an ti-crim e legislative
package."

During the Oral five m onths o f the year, prices
dropped at an annual rale o f 1 percent Much o f
the good Inflation new s h as been ^iterated by
energy coats, w hich rose after Iraq Invaded
Kuwait last August and then began railing after It
became d ear the Invasion would not disrupt
world oil production.

Saddam said
purging ranks
BAOHDAD. Iraq Fearing a coup, Saddam
H u aaetn h a s e x e c u t e d
scores o f top m ilitary of­
fic e rs an d th in n ed the
ranks o f the ruling Baath
Party in another purge,
fo re ig n d ip lo m a ts a n d
other i

Weicome
Newcomer!

It toour daata» tofiwkayou
Meow# and to
you with ear city.

sign that the em battled
dictator w a s seeking to
shield him self behind a
core of loyalists.
E x c e p t fo r t e le v is e d

" T h t a legislation w ill
strengthen the ability o f federal,
state and local law enforceme nt
to remove drug traffickers and
v io len t o ffe n d e r * from o u r
streets, on ce a n d for a l l . "
Thornburgh said In a statement.

Blacks in House oppose Thomas
Associated Prats Writer
W A SH IN G T O N Clarence
Thomas* shaky standing am ong
blacks la being underscored by a
near-unanimous vote o f black
House members urging defeat of
his Supreme Court nomination.
T h e C o n g re s s io n a l B la c k
Caucus announced Thursday It
will "vigorously oppose" Senate
confirmation of the black federal
judge to the nation's highest
court.
Some civil rights groups have
expressed concern o ver the
nomination of Thom as but have
not taken an official stand. Borne
w om en's righ ts grou p s h av e

race card for m em bers o f the
Congressional Black Caucus to
organise black politicians
around the country to oppose a
black Jud ge w h o h as been
nominated to the Suprem e Court
on the basis he does not have the
right Ideology," Danforth said.
Injecting race Into politics "la
something that threatens the
very fabric of thta country," the
senator said.
Rep. Ronald V. Delltims. DCalif., a form er chairm an of the
Such tactics have "been used Mack caucus, said some of the
very recently by Republicans,'' mistrust o f Thom as Is baaed on
said Danforth. who has tried to his record as head o f the Equal
forge a compromise on civil E m p l o y m e n t O p p o r t u n i t y
rights legislation with the White C o m m i s s i o n a n d p e r s o n a l
dealings between the nominee
'But It la no lean playing the and House members.

announced opposition to his
appointment.
The black caucus said It will
hold a news conference next
W e d n e s d a y to e x p l a i n Its
reasons and discuss plana for
m obilising black opposition.
But Sen. John Danforth. R-Mo.
— who twice hired Thom as for
his staff and is shepherding his
nomination through the Senate
— accused the caucus of engag­
ing In racial politics.

Am ong those reportedly
executed w as MaJ. Gen.
Y alch ln Om er. a S u n n i
Muslim and hero o f the
Irmn-lraq w ar who com ­
manded an arm y division
In the m arshlands o f the
so u th , the on ly re g io n
w here Saddam h as not
com pletely qu ash ed re ­
bellion.
Shiite Muslims, w ho rose
u p a ga in st S a d d a m In
April, make up 55 percent
to 60 percent of Ira q 's
population o f 17 million.
Most of Saddam ’s ruling
circle are members o f the
Sunni minority.

\QMitag S**ot &lt;9*c.
Homo Office
904-734-6031

? ? ? ? ? W h a t W o u l d Y o u L ik e T o K now ?????
CLUB, ORGANIZATION NEWS
Nows about social and service clubs and organiza­
tions In Seminole County Is eleglbie for publication.
Group publicity chairmen should submit typewrit­
ten press releases lo People Editor. The deadline
is noon three days prior lo an evonl.br as soon after
tha event as possible.

PEOPLE ITEMS
Items accompanied by pictures about the ac­
complishments of children and adult rasidtnts of
8am lnol« County are aliglbla for publication. Sub­
mit typawrlttsn or nsatly written items to People
Editor, Sanford Herald, 300 N. French Ave., Sanford,
Fla. 32771. Include name and daytime phone
number ol person who may enswsr questions.

REUQION
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. Subn.lt Items no latsr than noon
Wednesday prior to the day of publication lo
Religion Editor. Include the name and daytime
telephone number ol a person who may answer
questions.

Herald must submit tha appropriate form to the San­
ford Herald People editor. Completed engagement
forms must be submitted at least 20 days prior to
the wadding. Wadding form s should be submitted
aa soon attar tha wadding aa possible.
The forms provide the bests for information that
will appear in the announcement. The forms era
available at the newspaper office or by sending an
addressed, stamped envelope to Engagements (or
Waddings).
II desired, the completed forms may be accom­
panied by a photograph (professional preferred) of
any size lo be published In Mack and while with tha
announcement. The newspaper reserves the right
to reject any photograph that It cannot reproduce.
Photographs may be picked up after publication
or can be relumed by mail If accompanied with an
SASE.
Engagements and waddings are published In the
Sanford Herald Sunday sdition ol the People
section.

II you see somthing newsworthy, lei us know.
Coll the Herald and ask for the news editor as soon
as possible.

Photographs submitted lo the Herald for publica­
tion will be returned If that Is requested. An ad­
dressed 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 s re­
quest to save the picture has also been submitted.

Othtr Items Of Interest:
BUSINESS BRIEFS
Announcements ol new businesses in Seminole
County, changes In locations and personnel promo­
tions and awards or other business distinctions ore
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 daytimo telephone
number ol a person who may be contacted lo
answer questions. The deadline is noon Wednes­
day prior to the Sunday ol publication.

Organized events of 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 ol
publication. Submit typewritten contributions to
Weekend Planner.

i

Call our Circulation Department at 322-2611 to
find out subscription rates. Also call this number
if you would like your subscription service Inter­
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Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
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I Would Like To Eem Some
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ENTERTAINMENT

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322-2611

�Leister, Altamonte Americans cap Senior sweep
A P O PK A - T h e Aham onte Springs Americans
com pleted their sweep through the Area 2
bracket o f (he District 14 Senior (14 and IS )
All-Star tournam ent with a 9-5 win over Roiling
Hills W ednesday night at Apopka-West Seminole
Little League.

Aug. 1 at Chase Park on Celery Avenue.
Registration w ill be available between 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m .
The registration fee la 9S0. Parents should
bring a birth certificate. Children between the
ages o f 7 and 14 are eligible to play in the
league.
Also, the BYFA la also looking for someone to
volunteer their serv ices as a cheerleading
coordinator.
For m ore Information, can 321-2012.

Cuban Dafaetor
MIAMI — Am erican baseball officials say a
star pitcher for the C uban national team who
defected tn M iam i la "m ajor league m aterial."
Rene A rocha defected while he and his
team m ates w ere on their w ay back to Havana
after playing an exhibition against the U.S.
national team in Millington, Tenn.
The 27-year-old pitcher and the rest of the
am ateur team checked into the Miami Interna­
tional Airport Hotel late W ednesday night. But
Arocha d id n 't sleep In h u room and never
boarded Ihe T rans A ir Haiti flight back to
Havana, police said.

Robbiu Stadium Expansion
MIAMI — O w ners o f Joe Robbie stadium plan
to increase Its capacity by about 3,000 seats to
75,829 for football and 56.000 for baseball.
The addition w ill Include Ihe restoration of
almost 2,000 seats Dade County once ordered
removed because o f Insufficient parking.
Robbie Stadium Corp. also plans to add a
3.50O-space parking lot south of the stadium.
The ow ners want to add 2,829 seats scattered
from the clu b section to the far reaches of the
stadium . For football, most o f the seats would be
for auxiliary use. such ss m arching bands.
The stadium will becom e home o f Ihe National
League expansion Florida Marlins tn 1993.

9 Q U T H E H IIL E A O U E
Garcia mads SunRays
O R LA N D O — Cheo Oarcta hit a bases-loaded
single In the bottom o f the ninth to drive tn two
runs and give Orlando a 7-6 victory Thursday
over Carolina.
Ray Ortiz added to the SunRays* effort, going
2-for-3 with a triple, a home run. three RBI and
two runs scored.
W inning pitcher Orlando Lind (6-4) went two
innings, giving up no hits, one walk, and he
struck out one.
The loser. Victor Cole (0-2). went two Innings,
giving up three hits, two runs and two walks.

Marchant halps Suns win
JACK SO NVILLE - Kerry Woodson and Ricky
R ojas c o m bin ed on a flve-hllter to tead
Jacksonville to a 2-1 victory Thursday night
over Charlotte In the Southern League.
Woodson (1-2) went six Innings, allowing four
hits, no runs, five walks and he struck out one.
Rojas, who allowed Charlotte's only run on
Etvln Paulino's 19th home nm of the season
with two outa In the ninth Inning, recorded his
first save.
The Suns scored a run in the second Inning on
cx-Oviedo High School star Mark Merchant's
ground ball and then doubled the lead to 2-0 on
Fernando Arguciles' RBI single In the fourth.

Littl« Ltagut brawl
SOUTH W ILLIAM SPORT. Pa. - Little League
officials have suspended Ihe Bassett. Calif.,
senior division learn charter following a bench­
clearing braw l that Involved 40 people and
Injured two during a game.
The fight occurred Wednesday night In the
bottom or the sixth inning of a district
tournament loser's bracket game between
Bassett and Hacienda Heights, both of which are
near Los Angeles. The game was In the Senior
Division — forages 13 to 15.
According to Dick Ctanfrocca. a Little League
administrator who w a s at the game. Hacienda
Heights w as winning 5-2 when the catcher for
Bassett took off his helmet and hit the baiter
across the face.
As Ihe umpire tried lo separate the two. he
was hit wllhthtfbat.
Home plate umpire Ernie Arriola suffered a
fractured skull and w as hospitalized.
At Us worst, about 40 proplc. Including some
parents, were on the field In the shuffle.

It w a s Altam onte Springs' second win o f Ihe
week over Rolling Hills, having opened Hie
tournam ent with a 4-2 w in over Rolhng Hills last
Friday. O n Saturday. Altamonte Springs routed
Apopka-W est Sem inole 19-2.
After losing to Altam onte S p rtn a last Friday,
Rolling H ills earned Ihe rematch by eliminating
Pine H ills last Saturday and knocking off
Apopka-W est Sem inole on W ednesday.

early. Jumping out to a ftO lead In the bottom o f
the first Inning.
W ith one out, Leister reached on an error. After
N ew berry singled. C hris Lew is ripped a Ihree-run
hom e run to put Altam onte Springs ahead to
stay. T eddy Holler followed with a single, stole
second an d scored when Richie Alexander
reached on an error.
After Alexander stole second. Nell Bryant also
reached on error that sent Alexander to third.
Bryant then stole second before Katauskas hit a
two-run single, scoring Alexander and Bryant.
N ew berry led Altam onte Springs' nine-hit
attack w ith a 2-for-4 effort with one nm scored.
Substitute Denny AntoneUi w ss 2-for-2 w tth s
run scored, m aking him 4-for-4 coming off the
bench for the tournament.

Sanford squad
in chase for
Babe Ruth title
SA R A SO T A - For the first time
in several years, a Sanford youth
baseball team w ill go after a state
title w h en the first-year Babe Ruth
A ll-Stars play In the 1991 Florida
State C la ss " A " Babe Ruth Baseball
Tournam ent at Sarasota beginning
today.
Babe Ruth Baseball la for 13-15
year olds. Class “ A " was designed
for first-year programs or younger
(13 and 14-year-old) all-star teams.
Sanford will open play In the
11-team, double-elimination today
at 1 p.m. against Ocala. If Sanford
should win. It would return at 7
p.m. to face the Sarasota Nationals.
Other first round games sched­
uled for Friday will have Tampa
playing Miami LA . Tallahassee fac­
ing Miami SK and the Sarasota
Am ericans taking on Cape Coral.
Later today, the Tampa-Mlaml LA
winner plays Ft Pierce and the
T a lla h a s s e e -M la m l S K w in n er
s q u a r e s a ll a g a in s t K eyston e
Heights.
If Sanford should lose Its opening
game. It would n o l'p la y until* 10
a.m. Saturday. T h e tournament la
scheduled lo last until Monday or
Tuesday. If a team goes through the
tournament unbeaten Ihe tourna­
ment w ill end Monday. If the 'If
necessary1 game becomes neces­
sary. It would be played Tuesday
morning.
S a n f o r d 's 1 5 -m e m b e r team ,
which w a s picked In a poll of the
league coaches. Is managed by Oils
Raines, who led the Knights of
Colum bus Cardinals to the Sanford
Recreation Department City Cham­
pionship this season.
He will have four players from his
Cardinals learn that went 16-3 this
year. Nam ed from (he Cardinals
were Deon Daniels, T a m il Davis,
D em etriu s Jackson and C urlls
Peterson.
The team that lost the City
Championship Series to Ihe Cardi­
nals. the Prestige Lumber Expos,
had Its one-two punch of Todd
Braden and Andre Rawlings named
to the team.
Also on the team are George
Beasley. Chris Boone. Quentin Hunt
and Paul Renwlck from the Moose
Lodge Pirates: Eric Ingram and Eric
R oberts from Ihe Rotary Club
Royals: Donald Hunt from the
Hungry Howies Cube; Sell "R ay"
June from Ihe Pretty Punch Blue
Jays: and Craig Mcrkerson from the
Woodman of the W orld A's.
Sanford will rely heavily on Us
pitching and team speed to try to
win Ihe tournament. Among the
pitchers will be Daniels, Braden.
Petcraon. Rawlings. Roberts and
Mcrkerson.
Daniels, who handed Ihe Expos all
three of their losses this year, and
Braden, w h o gave the Cardinals two

If (ha flrst-ysar Sanford Bab#
Ruth All-Stars art abfo to do
anything at ths Class A stale
lournam anl this wssksnd In
Sarasota, they will probably be
led by Ihe trio of Tarrus Davis
(above left), Todd Braden (above
right) and Deon Daniels (sliding,
left). Not only ere Davis, Braden
and Oanials Ihe team's top three
pitchers, they are also the heart
of ths belling order. Davis and
D a n ie ls lt d the K nights of
Columbus Cardinals to the cily
championship over Braden and
the Prestige Lumber Expos.

of their three losses, will be the aces
of the staff. Both hard-throwing
right-handers played Junior varsity
baseball at Seminole High School
this season. Braden has been suc­
cessful pitching for the Sanford
American Legion team this sum­
mer.
T h e o th e r s t a r t e r s wi l l be
Rawlings and b re a k in g -b a l l
specialist Roberts. Peterson and
Mcrkerson will be used In short

relief. Mcrkerson also has high
school Junior varsity experience,
having played for Lake Mary this
past spring.
The catching will also be tn good
hands with Daniels. June or Boone
behind the dish. June was the star
of last year's Junior League AllStars while Boone was one of the
better hitters In the league this year.
Almost all of this year’s team has
prior All-Star experience on either
the Little Major or Junior Major

level.
While he has been pleased with
the team’s effort and hard work at
practice. Haines' biggest concern
has been trying lo find outfielders.
As with moat All-Star teams, many
or the players either played the
Infield or pitched.
As late as Tuesday. Raines was
still looking for someone to step
forward und show himself capable
of handling Ihe outfield.

Life saving rally
W est Seminole Maroon, Sem inole Central face Bronco showdown
FOREST CITY — Seven outs away from seeing
their season end. West Seminole Maroon rallied
to defeat Seminole Central 5-2 and force Ihe "If
necessary" game In Ihe Bronco (11 and 12)
district All-Star tournament at West Seminole
Pony League.

FO O TBALL
□7 :3 0 p.m. — SUN. Arena Football: Albany
Firebirds at Orlando Predators. (L)

T he Altam onte Springs Americans are now off
until next Tuesday, when they will begin play In
the District 14 finals at Eastmonte Park In
Altam onte Springs.
Eric L e M e r w rapped up Thursday night's win
In Impressive fashion, striking out three batters
In tw o innings to save the victory for starting
pitcher Eric Katauskas. w ho worked the first four
Innings.
Jim m y N ew berry pitched the fifth Inning for
Altam onte Springs but ran Into control problems
In the sixth, w alking the bases loaded. Protecting
a 9-3 lead. Leister cam e on and struck out the
side, but not b efore an outfield error allowed two
runs to scare.
Leister needed Just eight pitches to retire
Rotting H ills In the seventh.
Altam onte Springs took control of the game

Earlier Thursday evening. West Seminole
Maroon eliminated ihe Seminole Americans 10-0
In a game stopped by Ihe lO-run rule.
West Seminole Maroon and Seminole Central
will square off in a winner-take-all showdown at
7 p.m. Saturday night at West Seminole for the
right to advance to the state championship
tournament.

Seminole Central struck first Thursday night,
scoring two runs in the fourth Inning. Jimmy
Parsons and Mike Meadows opened the Inning
with consecutive doubles to chase West Seminole
starting pitcher Taylor Vlersen.
Lee Burke greeted reliever Kyan Bennett with u
single that scored Meadows. Bennett then retired
the next three batters to end the threat.
Seminole Central starting pitcher Jeremy Frost
curried the shutout Into the fifth Inning. But with
two away. West Seminole strung together a
sequence of hits that turned the game around.
Vlersen started things with a single. Tanner
Brock und Bill Vaughn followed with singles to
load the bases. Then It was Mark Rodgers' turn,
singling In Vlersen and Brock lo tie I he score.

Alter Frost walked Bennett to re-load bases.
Mike Halaychlck was brought In to pilch for
Seminole Central. But Just as Burke greeted
Bennett rudely. Matt Krot singled oil Halaychlck
to score Vaughn and Rodgers. On (be play. Krot
wus thrown out trying to stretch the hit Into u
double.
Danny Deleon udded a solo home run In the
sixth Inning for West Seminole Maroon.
Bennett, who threw three scoreless innings,
earned the win while Kyan Sullurd. who pitched
u scoreless seventh, was credited with a save.
Frost was the losing pitcher.
Offensively, Krot had two singles and two KUI
for West Seminole Maroon. Vlersen also hit two
singles for the winners.

FOR T H E B E S T CO VER AG E O F S P O R TS IN YOUR A R E A , R EA D T H E SA N FO R D H ER A LD D AILY

I

�S TA TS &amp; STANDINGS

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mean, T:N&gt; II. Bell ball. Oermany,
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Catlerama. 1:41: 14. Prederlc Vithai.
Prance. CaaSarama. t . * i IL Marta Lietti
Italy. ArMaa. 1:4a.

NASMVILLI S T A R S ^ I^ S TS h I llren*.
guard. Flared M*mn BodW, guard, on

Injuredreserve.

MIMPMIS ROCK l i t - Signed John
McIntyre, guard. Waived ■aikervllle
Holmes, forward.

FOOTBALL

W illiam s am ong holdouts as Dolphins open training cam p
MIAMI - The Miami Dolphins
opened training camp with high
hopes but m inus 17 holdouts.
Including an unexpected one.
Safety Jarvis Williams, who Is
in the option year of his contract
and seeking a new deal, declined
to report Thursday.
" I think that he feels by not
being here, he’s going to put the
pressure on u s." said Charley
Winner, the team's director of
player personnel.
Will he?
"N o ." Winner said.
For each day missed. Williams
will be fined the NFL maximum
of 61.500. Team policy forbids
negotiations with a player hold­
ing out while under contract.

"W e've had bod experiences In
the past on that, because it puts
management between a rock
and a hard place." coach Don
Shula said. "If a player violates
his contract and expects to
negotiate It ... the next day
you're going to have three guys
all doing the same thing."
Williams, a starter since his
rookie season In 1968. was not
at his home In Palalka. Fla., and
could not be reached for com­
ment.
The other holdouts are un­
signed. Among them are four
draft picks. Including top choice
R a n d a l H ill, w h o w a tc h e d
Thursday's practice with binocu­
lars from the stands.
Drew Rosenhaus. the Beet
receiver's agent, said he was
hopeful that Hill's holdout would

be brief. Only five of the NPL’s
27 first-round draft picks have
signed, which has made It dif­
ficult to determine Hill's value.
Rosenhaus said.
"It's everybody's fault collec­
tively that w e're all dragging our
feet and that we c an 't get
something productive done."
R osen h au s sa id . " T h e first
round Is really a mess right
n ow ."
Aside from Williams, veterans
w ho arc likely candidates for
protracted holdouts Include light
en d Ferrell E d m u n d s, nose
tackle Brian Sochia and cornerback J.B. Brown.
"T h e lough negotiations start
usually right now. when players
are required to be here." Shula
said. "In the offseason they have
all the time, and they never
seem to get anything done until

DOG RACING
Come to tie Track and register
to win a Valenti 170wth 115hp
Mercury Engine end trader from

NIKI

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his 29th season ns an NFL head
coach.
The Dolphins, who lost ut
Buffalo twice In the final four
games last season, return there
to open the season Sept. 1. In the
Interim Miami will play five
preseason games, the first In Just
two weeks at home against
Chicago.

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TWO ORLANDO LOCATIONS

MAMINE PRODUCTS

O N S A TU R D A Y NIGHT
JU L Y 13Ui

you get down to crunch time."
Before taking the field for the
first workout. Shula aald the goal
this year Is no less than a Super
B o w l c h a m p io n s h ip . T h e
Dolphins were 13-5 last season
and made the playoffs for the
first time since 1965.
"W e want to play and win the
last gam e." said Shula. entering

R E yH O U N D

PARK

5684 International
Drive
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(Kidman A Inti.)

8 1 0 0 S »a n g &lt;
Blossom Trail
(Ns«t to Patches, at

tramFlorida IM

I - PINC. •PALM S P R IN G S •PRO KLNNLX • TAYLOR MAUL

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Description of nasal spray stinks
Ladies Auxiliary are holding the second annual Ptssa Blast.
Saturd ay. July 13. starting at 3 p.m . w ith dinner r onatattng o f
a six inch p u n with a choice o f tw o toppings, salad, and
dessert for $4.90 served from the Ptssa Hut m obile unit. Pun
galore with the Dunk Tank ad afternoon: dunk your favorite
people, including Bdl Mayo. In the evening starting at 7 p.m..
ooreO b u y w lflb c held. A ll the proceed s are to go the the Post
Building Fund for more improvements.
Public invited. There win also be a Bake Sale by the
auxiliary. Donationa needed.
Call 097*1324 for Information,

while b ein g beaten by h er
boyfriend at a trailer park —
yelled loudly for help from her
neighbors, to no avail.
A young man also Uvlng In a
trailer park In Illinois heard a
muffled cry for help. He went
outside and saw a man on top of
a wom an wtth his hands around
her neck. He yelled, and the
assailant tried to escape on a
bicycle. But the young m an
chased him for almost a mile
over gravel terrain In his bare
feet. The man w ho w as caught
w as wanted by the police fo r
previous rapes.
W hen the police asked the

question s about m edications
p re s c rib e d fo r them. T h e y

a u s i
k s M M
rum on gegypi
10 Idm amown

m in i

a m

s m

The Seminole County Public Library System presents a PUm
Series for Adult Patrons beginning Ju ly 17. The first fUm win
be Egypt: Quest for Eternity. The w o g s m . at the Northwest
Branch Library. 800 Oracnw ay Btvd.. Lake Mary, win begin at
10 a.m.. Wednesday. July 17. This program la free and open to
the public. POr Information caU 331*3419.

youn g m an w h o caught the
alleged rapist w hat M s m otivetlon w a s . he re p lie d (w ith
b ru ise d a n d b lo o d ie d fee t).
"W h at If that girl had been m y
sister? I would hope aam sone
else would do the sam e th M g r

" B e e l o m e t b a i o n c
17.21-dtproptonatc toadtestcTof
beclom etbasone. a synthetic
h a lo g e n a to d c o rtic o ste ro id .
A n i m a l a tu d le a s h o w that
beclom etbasone dipropionate

M l f A D g n w T T Ig 11w « i i D W K f u H N I
ERA Advantage Realty Group netted over 01.000 for
Muacualar Dystrophy Association In the 1st ERA Advantage
Rcahy/Sport Court 3-Man Shoot-Out Basketball Tournament to
bratft MDA.
O vt. 30 teams participated In the tournament sponsored In
port by Pow erBurat A dvan ced Perform ance B everage.
Applebee's Restaurant and ERA Quality Improvement Process.
After a full day o f games, Advsntsge Reslty Group finished on
top defecting the team o f John Ventures. Mike Spahr, and Jon
Pierce'for the Division A title. In the Division B contest the
Bruins defeated the Playgrand Legends In a hard fought bottle.
The funds raised through events such as this support M DA’a
local program, patient care and research, and culminates with
the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon.

Gokton Yttre ••minor Mt
West Lake Hospital. 509 West State Road 434. Longwood. to
sponsoring a free seminar for the public and area professionals
on Independent Living to Total Care: The Golden Years or the
Golden Fears?
Speaker to David Emertck Brown. M.A.. Piper Counseling and
Training Services.
Registration. 8 a.m. Program to 0:30 to 10:30 a.m. Space to
limited, so call 200-1900 to reserve space by July 17.
The objective of the program to to develop an understanding
of some of the Issues that Impact the elderly, particularly for
those who make the transition from independent living to
assisted living to total care environments.

Narcotics Anonymous to moot
Narcotics Anonymous meets Friday at 11 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Nar-Anon tooffsr hstp
Nar-Anon. a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, meets at 0 p.m. Wednesdays and Saturdays at West
Lake Hospital. State Road 434, Longwood. and on Fridays, at 0
p.m.. at Grove Counseling Center. Third Street and Oak
Avenue. Sanford. For more Information, call 069-6364.

Alanon mambtra to congregate
Alanon will meet at 8 p.m. Sunday at Christ United
Methodist Church, at County Rood 427 and Tucker Drive.
Sanford.

Ovareatare to weigh in
Overeatera Anonymous meets at 7:30 p.m. each Sunday at
the Casselberry Senior Center. 200 Triplet Lake Drive.
Casselberry. Cali the center at 696-5188 for more Information.

Sanford Rotarlans to moot
Rotary Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

m in istration . T h ere w a s no
suppression of early m orning
plasm a cortisol concentrations
w h en beclom ethaaone dlpro*
ptonste w as administered in a
dose of 1.000 meg/day for one
month as an oral aerosol or for
three days by intram uscular
Injection."
Abby. there is much more that
I cannot understand, but this
should give you a general idea of
what 1mean.

exactly what you mean. Such
gobbledygook to Intended to
confuse a person not schooled In
Latin.
Don't be embarrassed. Ask
your doctor for Instruct Iona that
you can understand. And if there
are any questions in your mind
— ask for clarification.
D I A R A I I T i 1 am a
25-ycar-old woman who hap­
pens to have a very (air complex­
ion. I do not tan very easily. My
derm atologist Just rem oved
three precanceroua grow th s
from my arms and advised me to
wear sunscreen when I plan to
go out In the sun.
I get very Irritated with people
who tell me I would look a lot
better if 1got a little tan. Can you
suggest a snappy comeback for
these clods?
D B A S 0 U N - 8 H Y : S n ap p y
comeback? You need no snap­
pier comeback than the truth.
Try this: “ My dermatologist just
rem oved three precancerous
growths from my arm s.”
T h en notice h ow quiet It
gets...followed by a. "Gee. I'm

Litton to ttre htarttooit
Visitors to downtown 8anford wtrt rscsntly
Iraatsd to sn antique auto display sponsored by
the Celery City Cruisers. Top: Twile Bel lew
admires Edwerd McKIm’s 1906 Ford Cobra.
Bottom, from left: Rendl Lee, Steve Alford and

Arte Lee check out the heartbeat of an old car.
The car club meets regularly at WaiMart R ian
parking lot, Saturday nights, beginning el 7 p.m.
Cera ere displayed for browsing and Inspection.
Public Invited free of charge.

• W ELLvj Q

PLACE |a

’Catered Living For Seniors"
A C L P A p e r f ie ls

[ HW /1R ZE M E G G E R

R E S TA U R A N T &amp; LO U N G E
174* AND LAKfMAJIY BLVD. Q A I J C A D n

I! s N u l l u m

T E R M IN M D R 2

neiMJNomMvncA«oaus

O M

f lr U n U

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i
£
5
9

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nJ

DAILY LUNCH SKCIAIS
FROM...........
T m M fliM k lflM t
DAILY EARLY
SPECIALS FROM.....

I8*y* SeePytogYoungFR£Ey

i mum i n i
H A R R IS O N
FORD

SUMMER MOVIES

Jiu m rt v ffk n fU u

Tuesday and Wednesday Mornings
at 10:00A.M.
'f u u f t ta H u im

i

y

�BMMNWMI

(&gt;w small sailing veeeefsMs on tfw horizon, surrounded by th t vast*
The linrH beccirninn threatening. Its azure blue surrender*
7— — *— niii, iwtlatM a Ij u aadUa md| §-»I mpplri mmm Mire I a u u m Lm, SAh^m s a j i ami dBMNMhWuiMLA, jrmI
tng lo cnurmng pouot or m c k h m . no vonotf it m t m an ix p a n n or
Mould taoohiro. sosrklloa In tho tun. It h M b tcofht i rntoloolttivt ortv
monster, violently tossing the little ssMing ship with angrily waving arms.

nan of ihg m

Just as it appears that the tiny ship will forever become a prisoner to ihe
depths of the sea. a white cloud of billowing sails floats triumphantly from the
mast of the frenzied craft, and it begins its voyage back to ihe safety of the
shore.. .headed in the right direction.
We ail encounter storms and crisis at some lima in our lives. Yet, we
need not succumb to them, for like the blowing saiis, God it always there if
we ceil on him, waiting to rescue us. . .to head us in the right direction.
Look to God this week as you worship in your church or synagogue.

United Church
Of. Chrlet
CmmriAN FBI l OWUHP

Epitcopel

Timothy Hudson
Sunday School
Homing WoraNp
Eaantng terries
BIWt Study
Tuesday and Thursday

Congregetlonel

®

R.W.*twr{USNRel)

AS. Degree, Feat Corart

WINDSHIELDS •VEHICLE GLASS
• INSURANCE WORK

31SA FRENCHAVE.

407-324-7172
Dr DanM J. Flachar
Erangatlal
Mr*. Man, Flechar
Co Pastor
Mr. Mlchasl Vtlato
Co Pastor
Sunday Morning Worahip 1000 am.
Thursday Evening WoraNp 7 00 p m.
NURSERY PROVIDED

Morning Service
Poaar A Pfdae'

Menses havouhc
urns
t4 point

A llpaper

TBXACO FULL SCNVICC
TUNK A LUBI CAM
SANFOROAUTO MALL
H I T CONTROL
LOCALLY OWNED 1 OPERATED
RON RUSSI S STAFF

2020 Iroquois Av.

322*2070

STKNSTVtOM, MdNTOSh
JULIAN, COLBKRT
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•01 E. 2Sth SL

3234000

This Space
Available
Call
322-2611

PM ID CHICK1M
u a Pieces

u m e

p r ic e s -

2M1 A French Av.

323*1333

Arrangements made in comfort of

and Employees

Restaurant and Food SerWce
E&amp; p m a n t and Suppllaa
Party Good a and Papar Goods

STBNSTROM
M A L TY
m o u fo ii

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RADIATOR

2599 Sanford Ave.
W l M c C a lla y

322-0233

Thia Space
Available
Call
322-2611

Insurance

David Beverly and Staff

H e rb Stenstrom and Staff

323-3517

FIRST CHURCH OP
MLKUOUS SCM NCI
70S Edgewatsr Dr
Orlando. FLUP04
(coma, Edge* alar and W Cotontd
—aMock* W of M. downtown)
Sunday Sanricea
9110X
Jr. Church and Nuraary
FsttowaNp S Hawing
SsntcaWsd.
7:30 pm
Uataphyaical Book Stora
Dr. ElaieA Hipps
Ml malar
473 5571
"Dial in Idas '
$43-3243

Hama a* CaHary Ckapal
Waal SR 4Sand kannsl Road
Sanford

2710 S O R LAN D O OR 12
SANFORO F L 32773 407-330-13S0

318 W. 2nd 8L

ReUgloue
Science

LIVMaWATERSCATHIDRAl

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

tm pm.
S4S pm

Pastor
1000 am
1100 a.m.
*00 p.m.
7*5pm

Thia Space
Available
Call
322-2611

Q M Q O R V LUMBER
THUS VALU IH A R O W A R M
500 Maple Ave., Sanford

SUPPORT YOUR
LOCAL CHURCHES
$6.00 Per Week
To Adm ttarOnTUs
Pat&gt;* Call 322*2611

�IN B R I E F
f l i M l l i ------ —

iagfcM

“« i i rrM D y w n a n w i
to - RefMcr b m tor U
in August to the rtrai

* ktcfc off breattfeot far (h r
■m I Dm
d u ff
through Aug. to. t l«g |
The btbto

Ike

H H |

_____

trip to tfie ranroMBcntal study

om

d ry during the

SA NFO R D — Revival sendees, wtd
■t the Victory Temple o f Q od thto

R‘a a ctwtoua little name ■aalgnril to a
y m tauon o f chttdctn bora betw een 1945 —
IBM. Never before thoee years or since,
have there been ao m any babies bom than
ftoen IM S — 1B64.
W c bear and read about the B aby Boom
Understanding thto gracr*
they m y. and t believe I
d Into into because I. too.

| T r u « h a p p in e ss and
purpose for one's Ilfs cannot
be purchased or charged
with a card. Meaning, worth
and purpose are bom out of
having made their peace
with God tl

They cab u s the "Pepsi (
m y that w e're changing the U.5.
W e have a unique eet o f values, ltfcatyks.

-R a v. Tam Tkaahuk

that w e m arry later and
ofO od.001 Ptae Ave.tn
Rev.
C hurch in O rlando will be the
evening revival.
T he theme for the celebration w ill be 'I n

at the Friday
tor the

Ftret Biptlit honors hMlth ear* worittrv
SANFO R D — During the m onth o f July. P in t Bagttot Church.
Sanford, wtll be honoring tin
such a great place to live.
On Sunday. Ju ly 14. Special rsrogutlon wtB be |
■ ■ • ■ S H a a ia llU A a
— ——Si
itprcscn iniY cs irom alLkA,
uic aiocaj
Gam e and Fresh Water Ftoh Commtoaion tor “ L aw Knforcement Day.*'
Sunday, July 21. will b e "O ovenunent Worhera D ay ." W ith
special recognition given 10 representatives zrom m e ciiy ana
county conuntoalona, U S. House o f Representatives, Florida
S u te Senate, the S U te H o u se o f Representatives and the Mayor
of Sanford.
‘Sanford Merchant D ay "
be the theme tor July 28.

win

Everyone to Invited to attend throe special sendees.
Sunday School begins at 0 u s . and ths W orship Services
begin at 10:15 a.m . First Baptist Church to located at 510 Parti
Ave.. Sanford.
Rev. Floyd Blake Jr., pastor.

Sunday 8chool RoN Call Mt
LA K E M ARY - First Baptist Church Markham Woods. 5400
Markham W oods Road, w ill be having Sunday School Rot) Call
Day on Sunday. The Minister o f Youth and Evanatitom. Todd
Pope, w ill be bringing the m orning meaaage at 10:40
Vacation Bible School at First Baptist win begin ion Monday.
July 22. from B a.m . to noon.
A ll children ages two thru m ade six are welcome.
For more information, c a ll333*2085.

Youth Day to Km an tvtnf
SANFO R D - Reddick Memorial P in t Born Church. 3155
K ings Rd.. w ill bold its Youth Day on July 21 at the 11 a.m.
■ew lee-w ith-Brother O ary-C ham ber ond-The N e w Ineptrstion
as special guests.
The event is sponsored b y the Youth Department and all are
Invited to attend.

Rabbi Ftyor to bo guMt opoaktr
R abbi Zcv Hayylm Feyer wtU be the guest ipeaker at the 9:30
and 11 a.m. Sunday services o f Christ Church Unity. 503 S.
Orange Ave., Orlando, on July 14. He will share a Jewish
perspective on the teachings o f Jesus.
In the afternoon. Rabbi Feyer presents a program called “The
Teachings of Rabbi Jesus,” from 2*5 p.m. Admission lor the
afternoon program is 810.
For more Information, call 422*8555.

Lot ut know whot’o going on
The Sanford Herald welcom es new s about church activities'
and new s for publication In the Religion page each Friday.
The following suggestions are recommended to expedite
publication:
1. A ll Items should be typed or written legibly and include
the nam e of a person w ho can be contacted and a daytime
phone num ber.
2. The deadline la 11 a m . W ednesday before publication.
There ia no charge for publication.

sa I
on matertoltom. poaaeatoona. jobs and driv­
in g a ! BM W . W e often have unrealistic
expectations In bfc. which to w hy we
i m uch stress, anxiety, tension
A U.8. N ew s and W orld Reports article
reported that “ Boom ers " are the “ ultimate
instant gratification generation: w e want tt
Som etimes they call us the consumer
generation; a generation o f credit canto and
mat toad buyers.
“ T h e nam e o f the gam e to best. Buying It.
ow ning tt. using tt. wearing tt. growing It,
cooking tt, driving tt, doing whatever to tt."

genuinely worthwhile and fu n d
your dally life. I understand thto.
offer you the following for youi
cratlon.
T rue happiness and purpose tor one's life
cannot be purchased or charged w ith a card.
Meaning, worth and purpose are born out of
one having made their peace w ith O od the
Creator, based upon a relationship with
Jesus. His Son. our Savior.
Sins are forgiven. Guilt to lifted. And our
spirit is refreshed and at peace with the
Peacemaker.
W e arc accepted by our Creator, hence w e
can be at peace and accept one another. O ur
sense of worth, meaning and purpose now
takes on a new dimension, an a w e can
practically follow Jesus and Hto exam ple as
Hla Spirit enables us to.
The church becomes (he place where we
can commit and Invest our spiritual gifts,
energies, enthusiasm and dreams.

they mid.
In the church. “ B aby Boom ers" are
seeking family-oriented, goal-oriented activi­
ties where strong relationahipa can be built.
Elmer Towns said: “T h ey want to be sure
that what they commit them selves to la
genuinely worthwhile and functional in
their dally Uvea."
W e're a high tech, high touch, high feeling
generation, seeking practical aotutton* for
today's many feat-paced needs,
W e also comprise, in 1901, the largest
group of parents with fam ilies — ao I guem
we're the "Fam ily Generation" as well.
At any rate, these are only a few of the
many th ln p written and reported about the
Perhaps you're reading this and you find
yourself tucked Into the sentences of this
article. You want to be sure that what you

Herr Is where we find Ianting goals,
meaningful relationahipa. an enjoyable
Christian lifestyle for ourselves and our
families.
As a fellow "B aby Boom er," I Invite you to
commit to Christ and Hla lifestyle for He and
He alone truly gives self worth and inner
contentment!
Ths Rev. T a n Thstlwk It paaMr ef

ChristianChurch. M l f. Part Am .. tenter*

Reaching out
St. Peter’s celebrates completion of church in Honduras
LAK E M ARY - The grandest
structure m Quince de Enero.
Honduras, to Igtesa Episcopal de
San Pedro which w as dedicated
by the Rt. Rev. Leo Frade*.
Bishop o f Honduras, recently,
according to B arbara Chapm an,
public relations person for St.
Peter's Episcopal Church. Lake
M ary.
T h e entire m em bership of St.
Peter’s paid for the construction
o f the church by. tithing 10
percent of their tithes and with
apeclal donations. About 40 of
the parishioners o f San Pedro
participated in the construction
o f this simple church which has
n o electricity, no windows, but
has the first and only flush
toilets In Quince.
T he Episcopal church is not
only a worship center but will
serve hundreds o f peasant farm
fam ilies as the m eeting place.
O ver three hundred worshipers
cam e down from the surround­
ing hills to attend the dedication.
Holy Com m union Service and
Baptism o f 15 children and
adults by the Rev. Beveily L.
B arge, p astor o f St. Peter's
Episcopal Church. Lake Mary.
Sixteen m em bers of St. Peter's
recently returned from Hon­
duras where they attended the
dedication service, helped com­
plete the building, constructed
church furniture and experi­
enced Christian love and bond­
in g with these si mpl e but
beautiful people.
Representatlvea present for
the event were Fr. Barge and his
wife, Anne: Steve and Pal Israel

Igists Episcopal do San Padro In Quines da Enaro, Honduras.
an d their son. T o m: Dave
Norman and son, David; Ada
O'Neil; Norma Ragsdale; Bettye
and Ty Dednuui: Barbara and
“ C h ip " Chapm an: Alice and
"B u d " Moughton: Dave Dixon of
Ml. Dora and the Rev. Ronald
Brokaw and hla wife, Jean, of
Orlando.
Fr. Brokaw la director of The
Honduras Commission for The
Diocese of Central Florida and
served as interim rector at St.
Peter's In 1989.
Steve Israel has made several
trips to Honduras during the
construction serving as llason
and chairman far St. Peter's.
Following the worship and
dedication service, the towns
people of Quince de Enero cele­

brated with a festival for the
town and St. Peter’s repre­ program. There Is no charge for
sentatives. They roasted a pig.
the brunch but a "Love Offer­
served local dishes and enter­ ing" will be taken to purchase
tained with native customs.
additional folding tables for the
On Sunday, during the 9 a.m. church.
worship service at St. Peter's
SI. Peter's cordially Invites all
Episcopal Church, the Rev. Bev­ who are Interested In hearing
erly L. Barge and Steve Israel about the ministry of outreach
will present u slide und video and evangelism to attend this
p r e s e n t a t io n o f " B u i l d i n g
service and brunch. St. Peter's Is
Together in Christ."
located at 700 Rinehart Road
Following the service. Karen next to the U.S. Post Office
and Mike Martin, und their Sectional Center.
Bethany Family, will have a
For further Information, call
brunch to celebrate the outreach 4 4 4 LO K D .

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
Community Alliance Church, 4615 Em I Li U OrtM, Wlnlor Springe
Neighborhood America Church. X I Markham Wood* R d. Lon f ood
Sanford Alliance Church. 1401 S. Part A m , Sanford
Family Worship Cantor. 2481 Airport Btvd., Sanford
Froadom Assembly ot Ood, ISIS W. 5th S i . Sanford
Wafttva Assembly ot Qod. 1475 Otion Rd.. longwood

St. John's Missionary Baptist Church. S20 Cypress St.
Springfield Missionary Baptist. 121h A Cedar
Suntsnd Baptist Church, 2S2S Palmetto
Tample Baptist Church. Pawn Springs Rd , Altamonte Springs
Baptist Church, Old Orlando Rd. at Heater Ave
4100 Paoia Road (4«A)
as BaptietI Church.
I
William Chapel Missionary Baptist Church. Mark S William S I .

BAPTIST
Antioch Saptial Church. Oviedo
CaNary Saplial Church. Cryatal Lata S 3rd, laka Mary
Casselberry Baptist Church. 770 Saminoip B*vd
Central Baptist Church. 3101 W. 1st SI.
Chuluola First Baptist
Clearwater Missionary Saplial Church, Southwest Rd.
Countryaid* Saptial Church. Country Club Road, Laka Mary
First Btofittftt Church SIR P v t Am
First Saptial Church ot Altamonte Springs, lit. 431 Altamonte Springs
First Baptist Church ot Forssl City
First Baptist Church ot Qeneva
First Baptist Church. Markham Woods
First Baptist Church ot Laka Monro#
First Baptist Church ot Longwood. SSI Cast SR 434
First Baptist Church ot OvMdo
First Baptist Church ot Saniando Springs
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church, 1101 W. 13th St
First Baptist Church ot Ostssn
Fountain Hoad Saptial Church, Ortada
Hop# Saptial Church. Forssl City Community Canter, Forssl City
indapandsne# Baptist Miss. Chic Laagua Bldg. Longwood
Jordan Missionary Baptist Church. 100 Upsets Rd
Lighthouse Baptist Church. MS Longwood •lake Mary Road
lahavtew Baptist Church. 1M Latte*** A*#. Laka Mary
Macedonia Mission Baptist Church. Oak Hill R d . Osteen
Missionary Baplial Church. Honh Rd.. enterprise
Morning Glory Baptist Church, Geneva Mwy
Ml Moriah Primitive Baptist. 1101 Locust A n . Sanford
Ml. Otite Missionary Baptist Church. Saniando Springs R d . Longwood
Ml. Sinai Missionary Baptist Church. 1 X 0 Jerry Are
Ml. Zion Missionary Baptist. Stpee A m .
N «* Bethel Missionary Church. Mh St S Htcknry A m
N#w Ml Catvary Missionary Baptist. tlOS W 12th St.
Haw Salem Pnmiilv# Baplial Church. ISOS W t2th St
New Testament Baptist Church, Oualiaty Inn. North Longwood
N#w Ml Zion Baptist Church. I7 X Paar A m
New kite Fellowship. 4M1 E Lake On*#. Casselberry. FI 327QS
Nortnstde Baplial Church. Chuluola
People's Baplial Church. 1X1 W First Street, Sanford
Pinecrest Saptial Church. 11PW. Airport Bird
Pram# Lake Baplial. Ridg# Rd Fsrn Park
Prograss M.iuonary Bapuit Church. M k) . „
Second STMion Missionary Baplial Church W#Sl Sanford
Smyrna Baplial Church. 240 Overt*oo* O r. Casselberry
Starlight Baptist Chvircn. i n Bahama Rd
St Jamas Missionary Baptist Church. Si Rd 415. Osteen
Si Johns Missfonmy Baptist Church. SOS Longwood A m . Aliamonle
Springs
St Luke Missionary Bapnsl Church ot Cameron City, me
St Paul BepUsi Churcn. AIJ Pine Ave
51 M*im e*i Bapuit Church. Canaan Mail_________________________

«

Zfon Hope Baplial Church, 7t2 Orange A m

CATMOUC
AA Scuts Catholic Church. S02 Oak A m . Sanford
Church ot me Nativity, Lake Mary
Our LMte Of the lakes Catholic Church. 1310 Masimillan. Deltona
St. Ann's Catholic Church, Dogwood Trail. OaBary
S i Augustins CMIttHc Church. Sunset Dr., near Button R d . Casselberry
St. Clara Catholic Community moats at Osteen Civic Center
St. Mary “ - q — - — catholic Church. Maitland A m .
CHRISTIAN
First Christian Church. t K 7 S Sanford A m .
First QwtsuanChurch of Longwood. 1400 I E Williamson R d . Longwood
Grace Christian Church. Wilson Elementary School. (Paoiai. MS Orange
Lahavtew Christian Church, Bear Lake Rd . at Jamison
HonheMa Christian Church. Florida Haven Or., MalUand
I Christian Church. 132 W. Airport Btvd.
i Christian Church, 300 W SR. 434. Oviedo
First Church pi Chhet Sciential. ITS Markham Woods R d . Longwood

CMURCMOF CMMST
Churcn of Chnst. tst2 S p m A m
CnutcholChnst at Lake Ellen, u s 17S2. N Casselberry
Church ol Chnst, 100 Palm Springs O r , Aitemonts Springs
Church ot Chrtsl. Genovs
Church ot Christ. Longwood
Church ot Christ. W trite SI
Non hard* Church of Chrtsl. Fla Haven D r, Maitland
South Sermnole Church ot Chrtsl. 5410 Laka Howell Rd
CHURCH OP *****
Church ot Ood, 503 Hickory
Church of God. m W 22nd Si
Church of Ood. Oviedo
Church ot God Hounesa. Laka Monroe
Church ot God Mission. Enterprise
Church of God. 1402 W. tSth 81
Church ol Ood In Cnrtst. Oviedo
Church ot God of Prophecy. 240S S Elm Ave
Church Of God Ol Prophecy 170S i Persimmon Ave
Church of God el Prophecy 4M S Central. Oviedo
Church Of God (71h DayI. Deltona Community Center. Dviloria ibun Roomi
Rescue Church of God. 1700 W 13lh S t . Sanford
True Church of God. 2700 Ridgewood Ave . Sen lord
Congregational Christian ChuiCh. 2401 S Park Ave . Senlont
EASTERN ORTHODOX
Eastern Orthodoi Church. St George 2001 Dylan Way Memend
Eastern Orthodoi Church. Si Steven s ol O C A . 1895 Lake tmme Rued

Longwood, FL 12/50
Eastern Orthodoi Church. SI John Orthodoi. 2743 Country Club Road.
Sanford
EPISCOPAL
^
All Saints Episcopal Church, E. OaBary Ava. Enterprise
Christ Episcopal Church, Longwood
Episcopal Church ol the Haw Covenant, ITS Tuakawitla Road. Winter
Springe
Holy Cross Episcopal. Park Ava SI 41ft S I . Sanford
SI Peters Episcopal Church, 700 Rinehart Road. Laka Mary
31 Richard's Church. 5151 Lika Howell Rd . Winter Park
The Church ol Ilia Good Shephard. Midland, 331 Laka Ava
IN TE R M NOMINA TIOMAL
Calvary Christian Canter 500 W 4th S i. San lord
Living Waters Cathedral. West SR 44 and Kennel Road. Sanford
Northland Community Church. S X Dog Track Rd . Longwood. FL 32750
Oulraach Deliverance Center, 2231 Sipes Ave. Sanford
JCWISM
Beth Am Synagogue meeting M Corner ot Send Lake end County Lino
Road. West M
Temple Shalom. 1715 Elkcwn Btvd, Deltona
LUTHERAN
Ascension Lutheran Church, Overbrook D r, Casselberry
Good Shepherd United Lutheran, 2917 S Orlando Dr
Holy Cross Lutheran Church ol Lake Mery, 760 Sun Drive. Lake Mery
Lord Ot Life Lutheran Church, 396 Tuekswida Rd.. Winter Springs
Lutheran Church ol Providence. Deltona
Lutheran Church ol the Redeemer, 2525 Oak Avenue
Memsft Lutheran Church. Golden Days Or » Mwy 17 42. Casselberry
Si Lukes Lutheran Church. Rt 424. Stans
St Stephen Lutheran Church, 434 fust West ol 14. Longwood
M STN00M T
Samell United Memorial Church. E OaBary Are . Enterprise
Bear Lake United Mel nodi tt Church
Bethel U l l Churcn. Canaan Hgls
Casselberry Community United Methodist Church. Hwy 17 92 Pint,
Ridge R d , Casselberry
Chnst United Methodist Church. Tucker D r. Suniand Esteitk
DeBery Community Melhoditl Church, W Hlghbanks Rd . DaBeiy
Fust United Melhoditl Churcn. 419 Park Ana
First Melhoditl Church ol Onedo
First Untied Melhoditl Church ol Geneve
Grace United Melhoditl Churcn. 499 N Country Club Rd Lake Met)
Gram Chapel A M E Churcn. Oviedo
Oak grove Melhoditl Church. Oviedo
Osteen Methodist Church. Cor ol Carpenter 4 Murray St Osteen
Paoia Wesleyan Methodist. 5450 Wayside D r. Sanford
Pioneer Methodist Church 110 N Poplar Ave . Sanford
Saniando Untied Mvlhud.il Chech. &amp;H 434 and 14 It &lt;uaood
Si v a ie t A M E . 9ih at Cypreti
SI Luka M B Church ol Cameron City Inc , Bearden oil S R 46 F
SI Mary t A M E Chech, 51 Rl 415, Oslsen
SI Paul k Melhoditl Church. Otleen Rd Enterprise
Stratford Memorial Church. S DeBery
NAZARENE
F hs I L i &gt;u i ch 0 the Nararsne 2hOi Sanford Ave
Geneva Church Ol the ha/arene S R 46 Geneve
Lake Mary Chech ol Ihe Nuaivnt 171 E Crystal Lake Avv . Lake Mai,

Longwood Churcn ol the Nararana. Way man 4 Jet tup A m ., Longwood
Markham Woods Church ol Ihe Nuarene. SR 44. JVy Miles West of M
at the Wekiva River
PRESBYTERIAN
Deltona Presbyterian Church. Holland Blvd 6 Autlm Ave . Deltona
First Presbyterian Church ol Lake Mary
First Presbyterian Church. Oak Ava 6 3rd Si
First Presbyterian Church ot DeBery. E Highland
Markham Woods Presbyterian Churcn. 5210 Martham Woods Road, Like
Mary. FI
SI Andrews Presbyterian Church. 9913 Bear Laka Rd
St Marta Presbyterian Church. 1021 Palm Springs Rd. Altamonle Spgs
Tuscawilla Presbyterian Church. 3400 West Slslf Rd 424. Oviedo Ffo
Upsaia Community Presbyterian Church. Upsela Rd
Westminister Presbyterian Church. Red Bug R d . Casselberry
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Forest Lake Seventh Day Advenlisl Church. Hey 436, Forest City
Mars Hill Seventh Dey Advenlisl Church. SOI E 2nd S t. Sanford
Senlord Seventh Dey Advenlisl Church, 5615 N Highway 427
Seventh Dey Advenlisl Church. Midland Ave. Aliamonle Springs
Winter Springs Seventh Dey Advenlisl Church. 50 S Moss Rd
OTHER CHURCHES
All Faith Chapel Camp Seminole Weaiva Perk. Rd
Aliens A M E Church. Olive 6 t21h
Bearded Avenue Holiness Chapel. Beardel I Av#
Chuluola Community Church
Church of Jesus Christ ol Leu#' Day Saints. 2115 Pert Ave
Family Chuicft Christian Cenler. 1544 Seminole Blvd. Casselberry
First Born Church ot the Living Ood. Midaey
First Church ol Chnst. Scientist. Elkkm Btvd and Venus S t . Deltona
First Pentecostal Church ol Longwood
First Pentecostal Church ol Senlont
Full Gospel Church ot God m Chnst. 1624 Jerry Ave . Sanford
Full Gospel tabernacle. 2724 Country Club Road
Grace Bible Churcn. 2444 S Sanford Ave
Holy I r m l y Church ot Ood in Christ 1514 Mengouklme Ava
Kingdom Hall at Jehovah a Witness Lake Monroe Unit. 1542 W third St
Lake Monroe Chapel. Orange Blvd . Lake Monroe
Ml Olive Holiness Church, Oea Hill Rd . Osteen
Neighborhood Alliance Church 301 Maraham Woods Road. Longwood
Pentecostal Open Btbie t abemacle Ridgewood Ave . Olt 25th opposite
Seminole High School
Praise and Power Church t i l W Wilbur Ave . Lake Mary
Rolling Hills Moravian Church. SR 434. Longwood
Senlord Alliance Church 1401 S Pars Ava
Sanford Bible Church, 2460 Senlord Ave
Second Church Ot The Living God 1428 Beardall Ave . Sanford
The Full Gospwl Church ol Our Lord Jesus Christ Washington S t . Ca
naan Ciiv
the Swivwlion Am , 7U0 W 24tn SI
Tnun,ii the Ciiu'ch ot the Nee Age 1Uut&gt; W 61s Si
Umled Church ot Chnsl Aliamonle Community Chapel. Aliamonle
Springs
Umled Churrh ot Christ Cnrithan Fellowship. 260 N Country Club Rd
lake Mary
U C S S SomluM Centrw 125A South Volusia Av# . Comwvol Graves and
Vorutia Ave Orange City
Wmlev Springs Community Evangelical Congiegalvonji 219 Wade St
Winter Springs
_______________________________________

�C o n su lt M .D . about
a drug interaction
o f Coum adin per day for blood
clota form ed In. my leg 10
m onths ago after Having broken
m y ankle. My sister takes 7.5 m g
per day for clota In her lung, and
a friend takes 10 mg for clota
that formed several years ago.
My slater's doctor says she can
take an occasional drink, my
friend's doctor aaya she can take
aspirin and my doctor aaya no to
both — as docs the Information
that comes with the drug. I will
continue to foRow my doctor's
advice but w ould appreciate
your comments on throe vastly
dllfertng points of view.
D B A S B B A D B B t Before
tackling your question shout the
Interaction o f drugs. I'd like to
com ment on the Indicstton for
using Coumadin (warfarin), a
potent anti-coagulant.
People w ho must undergo
periods of enforced Inactivity,
such as bedrest following an
operation or curtailed walking
because of a fracture, are at
I n c r e a s e d r i s k for t h r o m ­
bophlebitis. blood clots that form
In the leg veins because of
sluggish circulation. This situa­
tion la dangerous because pieces
o f the dot can break away and
be carried to the lungs, leading
to chest pain, shortness of
breath and — In extreme cases
— death.
However, once the fracture has
been casted or surgically cor­
rected — or healed, usually
about eight weeks — the risk of
thrombophlebitis diminishes
and the drugs can be stopped.
Patients with pulmonary em­
bolism (blood data In the lungs)
are usually required to take
medicine, such as Coumadin, for
a year or so. Those people who
sim ply have blood dots In the
teg veins can ordinarily discon­
tinue medicine after a few
weeks, or once they are back on
their feet.
In your case, the doctor appar­
ently has you on long-term
uni (coagulation. The reason for
this Is unclear but Is something

I ivuj**

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about w h ich you m ight Inquire.
With respect to d ru g Interuc*
lions, not a ll the physicians you
mention a re com et. Aspirin srtlt
accentuate the anticoagulan t
properties o f Coum adin a n d
should b e avoided by any patient
on this d ru g .

you ’u

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ROUGHLY THIS
PERSON THE
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(0 1 9 0 1 N E W S P A P E R E N
TER PRISE ASSN._______________

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B y PfcllUp A id er
being m arked with the club king
Luckily for everyone, there are
no perfect bridge players: even and heart ace from the auction.
the g rea te st p la y e rs m ake However, you do have some
mistakes, but many errors go heart spots that can be put to
unpunished. Either the cards good uae. After ruffing the third
diamond (high. If you think East
don't make you pay for an
might h av e begun with a dou­
Inaccuracy, or an opponent
bleton). d ra w two rounds of
makes a faux pas in return,
trumps ending In hand, and
balancing the books, so to speak.
then run the heart 10.
Today's hand Is an example.
Cover the East-West cards and
East m a y win with the Jack,
plan the play In four spades. but what can he do next? If he
West leading the diamond king, leads a clu b, you win with
d ia m o n d ace a n d a n o th e r dum m y’s nine an d play the
diamond, and East echoing with heart king, taking a ruffing heart
the eight and two.
finesse to establish a discard for
Probably West should have your third clu b If Instead he
Ignored her partner's encourag­ cashes the heart ace, you ruff
ing signal and switched at trick and have tw o discards available.
two or trick three to a club, Finally. If he leads a low heart,
which would defeat the contract. you can establish two heart
But she was a trusting wife — tricks, th an ks to dum m y's eight.
she continued diamonds.
Did y o u see the necessity to
Even so. It still Isn't clear how
to bring home 10 tricks. East "finesse" the heart 10?

B y B ern ice S cd eO eol
TO UR B IR T H D A Y
J u ly IS . 1991
Making money Is not likely to
be one of your major problems in
the year ahead, but how you
handle your resources could be.
Strive to be prudent In all of your
financial affairs.
C A N C E R {June 21-July 22)
Your financial aspects are a
mixed bag today, and you could
gain as well as lose. Your losses
might come from either being
too cureless or loo extravagant.
Know where to look for romance
and you’ll find It. The AstroG rap h Matchmaker Instantly
reveals which signs arc roman­
tically perfect for you. Mall $2
p lu s a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Matchmak­
er. c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. OH 441013428.
LK O (July 23-Aug. 22) You
may knowingly let those in your
charge get away with doing
things they shouldn't today.
This could cause problems down
the line, when they try the same
thing uguln.
V IR G O IAug. 23-Sept. 22)

PETER
GOTT.M.D

WEST

AYRON VQWTID AY
ABILITY TO CARRY
OUT TOUR ffWANO.
MR. Z. HE A3K£0 fX
SKMf? A PgAVJNfTRAUQN,,.

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Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer North

Opening lead: ♦ K

Your Intuition Is reasonably
good today, provided you don't
permit y o u r imagination to run
rampant. If you do, you could
over-dwelt on the negative.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If
you can't afford to keep pace
with vou r high-rolling friends,
don't be embarrassed about find­
ing other things to do today.
You’ll a lw a y s be In their good
graces.
S C O R P IO lOct. 24-Nov. 22)
O b je c t iv e s that are of i m ­
portance to you today are woven
Into the Interests o f others as
w ell. W it h o u t h a rm o n y o f
purpose, though, none are apt to
succeed.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your experience and logic
won't lead you astray today.
H o w e v e r, fa n c ifu l th in k in g
could: it w ill cause you to draw
unrealistic conclusions.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) If y o u have to conduct
business with someone who has
a questionable reputation, be
extra careful today. There could
be solid reasons for this Individ­
ual's notoriety.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)

WHAT’5
SOtN’
ON,
HER!.

EAST

♦ J 10

You've heard that old saying.
"W ith friends like this, who
needs enemies?" Unfortunately,
pals with good intentions may
do you in today.
PISC E S (Feb. 20-March 20)
This Is not a goad day for you to
delegate critical assignments to
others. Those whom you depend
upon could be the least reliable.
A R IE S (March 21-April 19)
Feel lucky today? There arc
definite JustKIcatlons for this,
However, your luck does have Its
limitations, so don't press It too
far, especially in speculative
ventures.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Double-check your guest list to
be certain that you a ren 't
slighting anyone for your gettogether. If you do. you'll feel
worse than the person you
overlooked.
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20) It's
best today not to let someone
who ts rather emotional dissuade
you from doing something your
logic and reasoning tells you
should be done.
(0 1 9 9 1 . NEW SPA PE R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

...1 081Y

Syfttf

Bf SfNO'.NG 50*\fJN£
TO LOO* as WELL / k c r

mif j

I
4

�*4MI

CLASSIFIED ADS
Mitlnote

O rlando - W inter Park

22-2611__________ 831-9993
OASSIFICO DiPT.

................... ......

ComeHome To
Country Style Livingl

M oral* MR w FmBRc R o a r * *
Seminal* County, F lorid *,

1,2, ft 3 BEDROOMS
RENTS STARTING FROM

apartments
TAM 17-MNMRPOI

IMOMHU.

limited Time Offer

Step Up Into A
G reat Apartm ent!

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

Publloh: July I.t3. t*#l

n
part ot Gov't Lot I. toe. 13.
i MS. R 1} E. and • port ot
Wuth 330 tod ot ttw SIS* at
■ loot Sec. II.T w p .M S .ll.
I, Lak* County. Florida,
rtood m follow*: From ttw
comer ot ttw Soot to ot

om onoogod In but Inett ot
S IM * i. Altamonte D r.. f S L
Altamonte Spring*. tombwto
C ou nty, Florida, under the
Flctltlewo Nome ot I D U C A
TIO M A L S K IIV IC IS . and that I

N O TIC IO F
PUBLIC N I A S I M

Ttw SamInolo County Board ot
County Commlwlonort will hoM
a public Iwrkw In loom W 133ot
ttw Cowtty Servkot Bulldtog.
Senlord. Florida, on July JO.
toot, at T M F J* . or at teen
ttwreottar a* roooIMo. to conhot

bid run South ***4310" I at I
■ S O teat; thence South e**4'03"
W ait 534.00 loot; thence South
■ rS T 4 S " Eatt 100 teat; thence
South 10*33”10" Eatt 07.0 teat;
thence South 3I*4I'S3" Watt 330
teat, more or lett, to ttw watert
at Lake Yalei thence Southwatterly along and with told
watert ot Laka Yale to Intertect
the atoromentloned Point " A " .
P A R C E L •)
A part ot Gov't Lot 1. Sec. I).
Twp. 10 S. R. 35 E. and a part e4
ttw South 330 toot of ttw SEW at
the SEW ot Sec. 13. Twp. IIS . R.
3S E . Lake County. Florida,
described at follow!: From the
NW corner ot ttw Eatt v» ot
Gov't Lot I run Eetlorly along
•he North line ot Section 13 a
distance ot 33.0 teat; thence
North 0*03'»" Eatt 300 0 feet;
•hence South ***43'10" Eatt
parallel with the South lino ot
Section 17 a distance ot 3*4 3*
•eat to the Point ot Beginning,
thence South 0*04'04" Eatt
534.*t lo o t; thonco South
44*50”45" East 100 toot; thence
South 10*3Tir' Eatt 07 0 tael;
thence South 3l*4l'S3" Wet! 330
ot Lake Yale and a point hereby
designated as Point " A " ; Re­
turn to ttw Point ol Beginning
and run South **•43'10" Eatt
34* *0 fe a t; thane* South
0*10'40" West 540 Nat; thence
South 31*0*'10" Eatt 340 Nat.
more or lest, to the waters ol
Lake Yale; thence Southwet ter
ly along and with said watert ol
Lake Ya l* to intersect the
aforementioned Point " A " ,
at public tale, to Me highest and
best bidder, tor cash, at the watt
front door ot ttw Courthouse in
Seminole County. 301 N. Park
Avenue. Sanford. Florida, at It
a m on August A 1**l
D A T E D July 3. IN I
M A R Y A N N E MORSE
C LE R K O F TH E
C IR C U IT CO U RT
By: Jane E Jatewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish July 13. It. tt* D E H 100

K I I N U H

ire teew w e.

R ia U IS TS TO R I M N I
I. CMANTAL A. HICKMAN ( P I 0 I I 3 ) S U O M I R-l.
SIMOLI FAMILY S IS IO IN T IA L TO SP. RESIDENTIAL
FBOFISSIOMAL - Lot* 1. 1

and 5. Stock "D". Fern Terraco
Subdivision, FB It. FG II.
Section 1031)0. Furttwr do
tcrWod oo 3)7 a Brian Food. 17*
Atlantic Anne* Faint, and III
Vatancla Drive.
DISTRICT M
3 . M O S M V A B
KMOSNISFIBAN IF IO M II
BISO N! FROM B t A. SIMOLI
FAMILY aiSID SN TIAL TO
B F . B IS I O I N T IA L PBOFISSIOMAL. Its Grace Blvd.
Altamonte Sprint*. Ttw norm
7S’ at Lot 3. Stwdy Oaks. Flat
Book It. Faso 34. Section
1*3170
DISTRICT •!
Thote In ottandanca will bo
heard and written comment!
may bo Iliad with ttw Land
Management Dapartmant.
Haerlngt may be continued
tram lima la time at tound
neetttery. Further detail!
available by calling 33i ll30.

w

am engaged In but!nett at 3071
M ellenvllle Ave.. Bldg. 117,
Sanford. Seminal* County. Flor­
id*. undtr the FtctltWut Name
at JKL DATA PROOUCTS. and
that I intend la regular taid
name with the Sac ratary ot
State. Tallahatta*. Florida. In
accordance with ttw provitiont
at Nw FktltWut Nam* Statute.
Ta-WIt: Section 0*3 00. Florida
Slatvtea 1057.
JKL ENTERPRISES
OF SANFORD,INC.
Roe* W. Prather. Prat.
Publish: July 17.1001
O S H II*

NOTE: Portent are advltad
that It they with to appeal any

C ou nty. Flarida. under the
Fictitio u s Nam* at A A S
TR A N SP O R T, and that we in
land to register said name with
th e S e c r e t a r y a t S t a t e .
Tallahassee. Florida, in ac
cordance with the provitiont ol
ttw Fictitious Name Statute.
To W it Section (45 0*. Florida
Statutes 1*17
Cetostino Santiago
Arsania ArUmendl
Publish July 17. I*tl
D E H 1)0

f M M C I D S .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION T toqu e* « V y
man. Ha must Da handsome, ruthtaa* and
Dorothy Porker.

•
-

7 Month Lm

m
m

m o.

Only

Groveyord shift 0*331*074

Tallahaataa, Florida. In ac
cardence wIWi Pw provltlana at
the Flctltieu* Noma Statute.
Ta-WIt: Section aas.0f. Florida
Statute! t0S7.
William R. Miller
PuMIMl: July 17.10*1
DEH 114

Extension 7444

appeal It to be based, per
Section 3*4*103. Florida
Status**.
BO AR O O FC O U N TY
COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE CO UNTY.
FLORIDA
BY; HERB HARDIN.
DIRECTOR
LAND M AN AG EM EN T
O FFIC E
KOI E FIRST S TR E E T
SANFORD. FL 33771
Publlth July 13. l*»t
D E H II)

r m

THE GREAT AMERICAN
INVESTMENT

E L E A N O R E RAVE ALA. tt al.
Delendantt
N O T IC IO F ACTION
To : E L E A N O R E RAVEALA
last known reiidenct
4** Roaring Dr . «)40
Altamonte Springs. FL 33714
Pretent residence It
unknown
YO U AR E N O TIF IE D that an
action to foreclote the lien ol e
mortgage on the following prop
orty In Seminole County
Florida.
Condominium Unit No 340.
B u ild in g 7 IA . of H IO D E N
SP R IN G S C O N D O M IN IU M S,
according to the Declaration ol
Condominium recordtd on No
vember 15. If*4 in Official Rtc
ordt Book 13*4. pages 44* thru
7*3. Inclusive ol the Public
Record* ot Seminole County.
Florid*, and all amendments
thereto, together with ell eppur
tenancet thereto and an un
divided Interest In the common
elements ol said condominium
at tat forth In said Declaration
Including specifically but not
by way ol limitation ttw follow
Ing equipment
Refrigerator w/lcemaker.
rang*, microwave, dishwasher,
d is p o s a l, w a s h e r, d r y e r ,
fireplace, mirrored dotal duors
ha* been tiled against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ot your written defenses, it any.
to it on William M Colson.
Esquire. PlaintlH's attorney,
whose address it 13)0 S Myrtle
Ave . &lt;405. Clearwater. Florida
34414. on or before August 14.
I*tl. and hie the ongmel with
the Clerk ot this Court either
before service on Plaintitt s
attorney or immediately there
alter, otherwise a default will
be entered against you lor the
relief demanded in the com
plaint or petition
W IT N E S S . M A R Y A N N E
M ORSE, at Clerk of the circuit
Court, and the teal of said
Court, al the Courthouse at
Sanford Seminole County,
Florida
Dale July 10. I*«l
(teal I
M AR YA N N E MORSE as
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publlth July I). I*. 34 A August
7. t*tl
D E H II*

A B N I X T I R I O R P A IN TIN A
A pressure clean SAVE (Ot*
OICK PINOLA'S F A IN T IN G .
Quality work! Int/Eat. Lie d
A Insured Fre*estl 333 5733

&lt;bloaning S n rv k t

Clearing

NEW/USCD APPLIANCES
Buy/Sell * Recend/Ouarantead

HOME APFIIANCE ...322 3U 3

Automotiva
D E TA IL FEVER . Let your car
sparkle lor summer I Comp
detail service'
330 4733
H EAD LIN ER SI Most cars 540
Wagons 173 Vinyl tops 5*0 up
Carpet 540 up 334 &gt;54*

Coneraft
BO B B Y ADAMS C O N C R E TE
Quality end cleanliness It
guaranteed I* y rt residential
e.penance 7*7 3*3*/330 5*17
C A P TA IN C O N C R E TE. Wayne
Beal 3 Man Quality Opera
I ton I 33*I33B/)4A7**3________

Oantrel St v Icrs
Carpantry

a eO U T T IR S CLEAN ED
Commercial Residential
Call Tam
___________33

A N O C L B A R IN O till dirt,
backhoe. loader work, hauling
and clean up Countrywide
Oevelopement. 407 J33 *313

Lawn Strvic*
C O M P LETE Quality Lawn 4
Landscaping. Tree Service A
Irrigation, competitive rates.
lreeestlmatesSunny's333 7*3*

Ratos! CeH Tom
333433*
R A N O V 'S Q U A L IT Y LAW N.
Complete car*, clean ups
Since HQ3 Free est. t 331*71*
ST. A U O U STIN E ORA55 plugs
installed. 13s tq It Free
Estimates! Sunset Lawn Re
novations. Inc 407 444 *401

Handy BE

Moving ft

H a u lin g

^nJIULtSSTyarTT^
mg Quality work I CGC034037
It y r s e .p Mel* a a 47*Ml*
C O N C E P T One Enter. Gen

cerpanlryl Hem*, ollic*.
kitchen, bathl 3)4 03*7

1i h ' i T t i s c

HOfflNS PUNHMBC
All your plumbing need*I 34
hours! IBF0033770 373 3*0*
S P E E D Y PLU M BIN O I Abto
lutely tree est No trlps/tvc
charga LK./llSt. 331 4*«*

P rm u n C jH iiin |
D R IVEW AYS. Roots. House*,
etc Low ratosl C om m tr
oel'Residential 33)0404
PCM House wash and painting
"Q uotes by phone" Cell
Roger. 334 4440. SAM *PM

Secretarial ft
Typing Service*

Cleaning Service
B A B CLEAN IN O S ER V IC E.
Office home Lie A Ins Pro
tosstonet couple......... 331****
C A TH Y 'S C LE A N IN G SERV
ICE
References, reasonable
rates Licensed! Call 33) 7470

O BISM OPPSST COn I J m l
Senior Citiren Discounts I
H years esperlence I 334 *73*

A R HAULING. * r d trash
appi. turn Cheap on time'
513. up Call Ray 357 73*7

) n ut Hu sinrs\ I r r r \

S i n I ’r i

CUSTOM y yp*fbq/
fce^psuQ f
OJ Enterprises. 40IB E 13th
S I . Sanford 334 0471/333 74*3

lhi\ I nr

Mnnih. i a l l ( lussifirtl.

i-J

1% I n n
2d l /

�ACCOUNTS fA Y M U C U K
&amp; MERCRD RCCfPTKNtlST
Port llm i, FrM*v Monday
ISAM 3PM. Applications oc
crptadMon F r L* *

01 l i f t NT OtIVtR

Ota, m 1*17

For tractor traitor woodid.
Moot to D O T c irtttlod. Mwtday- F rid a y . C am yany
bonotlh. Apply In person:
Ports O ty . W l &gt; CorweoN NdL

* NCNTIK S(IVICt IMS *

E ip e r lt n c e orator rod. la

Hiring now! UploSIJ/hr.
Company t i y o i l ig Deafer
position* up to t*5/hr.For
immodiato Interview:

c a tn -m a a a m i

la now accoptlng applications
lor oiprrloncod poraona in tho
following Hold*. Service,
Cook/Prop Cook. Day and
night poalllant available.
Apply In poraon. 1501 S.
F ranch Aye, Sanford, I« P M .
Monday thru Thgraday. Enter
thru tho back d n r .
_
No phono cal la at toptad

vtlllHoa Include, ptuad^oalt.

MMH4erMMM7

I M O M ., 1 bo*. AC n# pat*
M
H I I lail. I M M * . 1
talk. turn. M S la* k (art.
1-2*2-7*21/3P-S171 ly.mag.

vtalDirectory

bath, family roam. CMA. tatty
Vardt Fomtfy Aroot» » »

Unfundtltad/ R u t
A * EM M H R AW

eotk CLIFF APARTMENT*

Sanford Court
Apartments

New 3 bedroom apartments*
for *31*. W/D cenrwcflent,
acrot.aod pot lot and oatro
alorago ctotal 11*7 aq. ft.
Located on Lb. Mary Blvd.

3301 3. Sanford A m
I 8Il North* Ik. Nary tad.

Sngle Story Studio, 14 1 M

Cat! ai-oaay

W Assrlw iitt

S A N FO R D

SANFORD

iaata.t1Wpar

CaMm W

tti Apia.

Equal Homing Opportunity I

Cowary Me M n g •O v a * Mwwpn

. Swing ■ » 14mtrm

1Story. 141
Aik about our..
"12 MeaRi Loose Ip ocie ir
U E IM M Y 1 H IM
SANFORD. N IC ! A S IA , larg
oat t bdrm. around I Largo
living room, anctoted tun
room, oil optionee*. Control
H/A, 1173/mo. plu* M O tocu
rlty..............
44*3473
lA N F O k O • CLEAN, qutot 1
bdrm. apartment, gpatalra.
0 7 37mo......................3 M J M
SANFORO • CLEAN, qulot 1
bdrm. oporlmont. upatalra.
4273/mo......................» m
SANFORD, 1 I DAM.. 3 both.
Scroonod polio, ralrlgarafor,
dlahwothor. CHA. F R E E
wathar/dryar. 1*00 month,
plus dmoslt. Doya 4*5-1*33 or
Eve* 4*3-432*

Corrw » Hoar to OAW

0

323-3301
2999 U k t

ROSECLIFF
APTS.

Seilpolnto
Apartments

Call 321-0594
A M O V tlN S fC C U lA
A R U T n m 14354455A
A lH U T C O T H K M lY A

|»aroaYaujMeAMY l o t

■ X a m w ^w h iu

UhMURMMddnddMWOil M
FOOUMOaaOMHOUC

5FIOOUS 2 MWM 2 14THS

m *£ .

1 AM SO. FTt
IM M E D IA T E O C C U FA N C Y II

322-1091

v&amp;w
’
®
FIRST TIM E BUYER?
k

With Volkswagen's new flexible 1st time
buyers program.

I &gt;i &lt;I N u n

II
\ 11 11 11 I

^ i » 11 I ) 11l i ’ I
111 \ s i r i

1111 \

nj

1991 C orrado

COME IN AND DISCUSS
THIS PROGRAM WITH
ONE OF OUR
CONSULTANTS...MOST
CREDIT PROBLEMS
CAN BE OVERCOME.

1991 Plymouth
r r aa=^ S u n d a n c e

$6 9 ir
1991 Cabriolet C arat

89 TOYOTA
COROLLA DX

90QEO
STORM GSI

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

$ Spd.. A/C, Power
Windows. Sunroof

Autom dtc, A/C.
AM TM Cm *.

S S p e e d A/C.

A/yfl Shi#

1991
Plymouth
Laser

89 VW
CABRIOLET

A u lo . A/C, Power
Window a. A U F M C a u

86 AUDI

86 VW
JE TTA GL

88 VW
JETTA G U

•9 VW
JE TTA GL

Automate, A/C.
Power Window*

5 Spd.. 4 Door. A/C.
AM/FM Cm *

5 Spd, A/C. Aloy

Automdbc, A/C, 4
Door. AM/FM Ce**.

lAJlba^Ui
ISAiMfwwtl
wwTieeMPi, o
u w iw i

*6400 *6600 *5995 *9500 *8995
I

\\

I u (hmiz-rd

•SERVI CE

I i tost*

\

1991 Plymouth
Colt
STKSD0B3*
•V I lire NPI Enpne-MMM Ruse •Rate 4 Pwen ewrtng •Pwwr fcPee
•Conuewdi Storage Bin ■Hk Jvv m Front laws •Fold Oown Raor | M •
SutWWaaa Storage CenperMara •Qonwiorv ,
sea WMow •Flora Wheat Ohm •Fup FM
Osar, ladunp * bower Upwng CoutMy

r *5995*

1991 Plymouth
Acclaim ^

*9348
i/ l A l . l h

l SI'.IM

All S A l.K

I'll I S W K K K

•7 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

U 0LDSMO6ILE
CtERALS

IB CHEVROLET
CITATION UFTRACK

»379T

*6991*

^ bo o *

*219577 CHEVROLET
CAMARO LT-TYPE

Hotly ^hoft

ikWMwuw,

“iSaassr

A R IS T O C R A T
VOLKSWAGEN, INC.
4175 S. Orlando Drive (Hwy. 17-92) Sanford, FL 33773

CHRYSLER •PLYM OUTH
truer met mommum reoumucnt*

O N ’I A

•7 DODGE

-PARTS

Sanford 321-3277 or Orlande 363-3300

\ 11 h u

A/C, AM/FM Cm *

5000

(.rntnil I h/ritfu s Only

I i 11111

tTKO 00174

*11,995 *8895 *7995 *9400 *11,900
86 AUDI
4000

I tnl h

.u

KB

•AT CMMSMng . A U f M ETR

88 MAZDA
MX-6LX

(

1991 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER

q •Derwaara•We WVWowa•

89 NISSAN
240 SX

i » 111 \ i \ I

GUARANTEED!

OVER 100 UNITS TO
CHOOSE FROM: FOX,
GOLF, JETTA, GTI,
CORRADO, GU, PASSAT,
VANAGON, PLUS A FULL
LINE OF U3ED CARSI

-

k i in u

I 'I \ 111u t 1111 \\ r

Mo Co/feffo, Mo Credit, Mo Hiisofoo*

anna

pata. Ref's. required, losoplua
aacurlty dapoalt. B M W

W A R N IN G

Picture yourself driving a brand new Volkswagen

YOU CANI1

Blv# SeiH^fB

4113rr.y 1TS2 Srtra

Denes - 544.92CQ- Srm. 322-1835 - A vp. S69-7535

M OLDS DELTA
ROYALE BROUGHAM

•m m m t

- J 599r
BB OLDSUOBILE
DELTA ROYALE
mm WTmCfaM, 4Dr,

*7491*
HOURS:
SALES
M-F 8:30-9
SAT. 9-6
SUN. 12-5
SERVICE
7AM - 6PM
M-F

l

�■

U T W C U L Y lM D U iq W ild i
IW M d

AOT:

i. m in )

c a m m m

bdrm 1 bath, W t m H parch.
MXW utility roam Contra)
hoot and A/C. all no* Interior
No* re lrlg . and stava.
Wathar/dryer. Financing
•oaMabta. Cali ntSiM

tSS

C laaw lO ntyf-

1 W fe o *D .

(4 0 7 ) 3 7 4 = 9 9 6 2

Appliance*. No pat*. MM/mo

^JjdtneglfjjiAasainftjr^

acral Family ream and ralted
patio. Hugo oak tree* I JJ.500
IM V IIT O R 'I IP IC IA L I
Duplex. } bdrm. w/central
H/A. and I bdrm., toncad.
UM/mo. Income. sii.NSI I

4 DOOR
C ED 3 5 5

323-5774

5 Speed

IT—Campartial
SAW FO ao - Commercial M X *
building plut olllc** with
■erg* tacurlly fenced lot.
| n d C l. Meet lor construe
Nbn company, etc. S U M per
dkonth......... .
Cell M l r«w
i 1.000 ig. It unit*, can be
id together. One unit. 100
tt.
Cell M b 11*7

S TEN S TR O M
REALTY, INC.
Wt list and sell
more property than
anyone In the Greater
Sanford/lake Mary area.

&gt; ISM SQUMHFOOT
Commercial tpece lor root.
PSefect tor retell, alike, video
*Wrc. etc. Cell.............M l IMS

Tinted Glass

m

Whaal Covors
Rear Window Oalrostai
Intarmittant Windshield Wipers
Locking Remote Trunk
Reaieaae W4&lt;ey
Remote Fuel Fier Door Release
Body Colored Bumpers
Moquette Upolstery Ful Carpeting
Front Reclining Bucket Seats
Aero Halogen Headlights
Child Prool Rear Door Locks
Rear Seat Heater Duds

Paint A Fabric Protector^
AlWFM Cassette Stereo ^
Power Windows
Power Locks
Dual Power Mrrors
Cruisa Control
Power Assisted Rack A
Piniun Steering
Adjustable Steering Column
4 Wheel Independent •Dout
Wishbone Suspension
Digital Clock

1991 PRELUDE S.I

1991 ACCORD4 DR

1991 CIVIC 3 DR.

CB754

n ia t n s o w

Preitlgtout 4/1&gt;» with UTS Sq
It. Big *creen enclosed pool
Quality feature* throughout

Ulf.000

ISTiei OFFICKS

100 to
00*4 H. Some furnished. 1
ickt l » City Hell.
Ml M e m , leave message

owfe S IM O O M . wash/dryer?
screened porch, iforage. U1S

P W tK u fliy SW UM 0*1.117

:[ FIMIIOMaUI!
7 bdrm 1 bath. wether/dryer.
td V m o S E C M Inc . Lie
Peel EUete Broker. *5? 5S04
F l d l R I O O I CLUB. 2 Bdrm. 2
bath. Rent or Ieat* with op
flan A ll appllancai. new
cArpat. Pool/Tennlt court.
Tafal main, treat *4*5 mo
m -f a tl See*, only.__________

SAM D L I WOOD VILLAS. I

F O O L IID I SPICK
4/1’y. Formal dining, eat In
hit. family rm , cebane. On ' j
acre Weht e deal I.....tlM .n o
PU
Terml*
ford S
ping A
*51400.

*8,258

T T Y 171 c o n 0 0
S poo) Between Sen
Lh. Mery. Near chop
but line. Let1* talk

Cruise
Control
AM/FM
Cassette
Lots More

5 Speed
Air Conditioning
2.0 Liter 16 Valve
4 Wheel Disc
Brakes

Purer idge Pealttd* Cende
Beautiful 2/1 All appliances
Ceiling lent Overlaokt pool
Now only...................... 145.000

[ Q

On big corner lol Spacious
Florida rm . fpic., dozens ot
itre t Call now
US.500

U

A

L

I T

Y

U

S E D

LOW MILES.
PRICED TO SELL

5 1 0 0 ft
I T T l #

85 HONDA
CIVIC DX

Super Sanford Place 1/1
Attume no quality Fpic in
great rm Eat In kit Lott ot
nice feeturet
i /s . joo

I V Y I Beaulilully maintained
1 Bdrm I balh w/tcreened
parch, appliance*, window
treatment* Lendtceped lot
•
Immaculate!
Smarten Realty Oraup Inc.

tteady income I Remodeled J
bdrm 1 bath on large corner
_ 'OL Only u e .iao 111*541

A\C, STEREO CASS—
CLEAN
RUNS GREAT
W O
i

¥ tJ

88 FORD MUSTANG
AUTO. A\C
POWER EQUIPMENT
FULLY LOADED
5 7 9 0 ft
LOW MILES
# S lT J

322-2420
321-2720

K X C H A N O f OR S I L L your
property located anywhere'
___Investees Realty. «1M*M

89 MITSUBISHI
GALANT 4 DR.

R

S P

E C I A

L S

F O

R

T H

I S

W

E

Tilt Wheel
Full Wheel Covers
Front Reclining
Bucket Seats

E

K

O

N

L

Y

! ! ]

AUTO. A/C
STEREO CASS
LIKE NEW

A U TO , Arc
STEREO CASS
LOW MILES

_ _
5 9 0 0 f t
JL T
T J

A U TO . AI\C. STEREO. j
^
CASS . LOW MILES 5 A O O A
PERFECT
M
T T J

87 HONDA
ACCORD LX-i
AUTO. A\C, FULL
POWER EQUIP
LOW MILES

5 f t .A O f t
0 4 T J

. _____ ,
5 7 0 0 ^
/ 7 7 J

A UTO . A\C. SUNROOF, DIGITAL
CLOCK. STEREO
. _
CASS//EQUALIZER 5 £ O O f t

88 HONDA ACCORD LX-i 87 NISSAN PATHFINDER
AUTO. FULLY LOADED. ONLY
FULLY LOAD SE - V-6
_

_

_

C D PLAYER
ALARM SYSTEM.
LIKE NEW

87 HYUNDAI
4 DR. GLS

BIST

87 HONDA PRELUDE SI

tSRSL *10,895

_

511 9 0 ft
l l #J b 7 « #

SELECTION OF CLEAN, DEPEND­
ABLE. PRE-OWNED CARS AND
TRUCKS IN CENTRAL FLORIDA

u v T iu ih o u s is ^ ^
:■ A N V C O N O ITIO N I
NSad repair** Behind on
| payments/ Call Greg, i l l 471a

match «irh buyer*

CsHBob Grttorj, REALTOR
I U I I U 4 **p*er 11) WO*

^

CO M i M AND SEE

POWER*SUNROOF 5 9 i f O f t
LOW MILES
7 V#

88 PONTIAC
PARISIENNE BROUGHAM

88 FORD
THUNDERBIRD COUPE

MINT CONDITION’
FULLY LOADED
LOW MILES

. _
5 f t O O f t
J 7 7 l l

87 HONDA
PRELUDE
0*Nm**m

5SPANC
SUNROOF
FULLY LOADED

5 f t lO f t
9 I 7 J

90 HONDA
CIVIC DX
AUTO . AIR
ONLY 11K MILES
LIKE NEW

5

88 HONDA CRX
A\C
? ' j r CA5S

*8295

91 NISSAN PICKUP SPORT

0 ^

O f t

W * + ¥

_

_

_

511 A O f t
1 l , U

AIR. STEREO, CLOTH
BEDLINER. SLIDE .
REAR WINDOW
5
ONLY 5K M l. MORE

CARPET
—
0 0 0
W

W

\

ft

W

91 HONDA CIVIC
4 DR. LX

89 TOYOTA MR-2
5 SP . T-TOPS. A C
LOADED
ONLY 12 K
MILES MUST SEE

J

AUTO. A\C POWER - _
,
WINDSOCKS. ONLY S A f t O f t
20K Ml. MUST SEE
U 9 7 J

7 l /

AUTO. A\C. STEREO.
CASS. POWER
519 lO f t
EQUIP ONLY6K Ml
lA ^ IT w P y

•PAYMENTS BASED ON (O MONTH CIOSEDINO LEASE WITH *1/000 OCNJN PLIAI TAX, ! M .1ST PAYMENT.
REFUNDABLE SECURITY DEPOSIT RESOUAl *4*M M WITH APPROVEOCRCOT to ta l PAYMENTS IH L ir t

'

Larft U| Hbrm, 2 1/4Acres

i

29K MILES

Sanford. IJIhSi iColdtborol
Lee Oithman, aO&gt; MS M il

Hw* 4* and I 4 arte
114*.*00
Call Make P W I
Venture I Preperliet
1H fate

A

87 TOYOTA
TERCEL DELUXE

N7S76MW/90I-77M035

tloert Santordarea... 11 ) 551*

C

85 FORD
ESCORT 4 DR.

85CHEVY
CAVALIER 4 DR.

LOON WNAT tat,*** WILL

N IR OS D. good credit and

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

HIDDEN LANK 1/1 VILLA

Mini condition Fpk.. other
ilre t. Pool, lennit. boating,
tithing, ale Only!
151000
Ottlce
bfpg Creel lor ell typet ot
business X » 5457,111 *4* 1454

Body Side
Molding
Rear W in­
dow Defrost
Tinted Glass

1/1 FOP BIO FAMILY
Met 17 X 10 bonut room On
huge lot Fenced You have to
tee Itllt! Now only!.
tSf.TCO

WATS RF PONT 1/1 CONDO

CORNSR ll/tl end W

4 Speed
Air Conditioning
1.5 Liter 16 Valve
Double Wishbone

* 13,367

Hw y. 17-92, SA N FO R D
2913 Orlando Drlv*
323-6100 SA N FO R D
831-1660 O R LA N D O
SALES Mgn Sat S30*-Openiun &gt;01
St HVC£ Mon 3d * 30 •/ PM

�2JS — V t W d M

2) 9 — M r t t r c y d M

Wm M

and n i t s
m s ka w asan i L t o m l o t *
moke a d M ll Oreet tto rlo r
bfko locrWIc* 4404 SO-TWO
1444 HONDA RRRSL HO. ltd.
edition. 174 mile*. WT7 Nortey

AA AUTO SALVAGE
olOoaory

Wf WEIGH AND PAY I

FOND ARANADA Io n . A rare
find! Vary good e•ndttlen No
rwot. no npe. a LOOO m llot.
S t.M Call 47A4413

TopSSNr|«nk.
Cert A Truck*

^ ^ h n e ? « M 5 m S n 5 d iH a ^

i i H M E w k e n i i t i ilM H ft •
Low 00 n n downit Low pay4 COMPUTER DCIK . IN . light

PIANO TUNINO,

SPORTY

FA M ILY

44 BUCK REGAL

Sft&amp;r

*3 9 9 5

48 OLD8 CUTLA88 ^

n r - * * *3 9 9 5
• rM IM lu ir

44 RENAULT ENCORE 8

&amp;SE#

*3 4 9 5

iU b r e ^ J S a v e t t l

85 OLDSMOBILE CIERA
m

WAGONS

S

T H IS W EEK S

*2 5 9 5

43 CHEVROLET MALjeU

SS*

*2 2 9 5

87 PLYM OUTHREUAHT
Auto.. M r,
AJWFM, Cruise

m M I M U U
01/3 SIAMESE. II you ptaatol
Kltton*. Adorable lltllo Orion
tal*. 3 moN. I lomalo. S3each
to LOVlNO NOME ONLY! S3

E v e r y t h i n g m u l t g ot
Furniture for every room.
Antlguo dining loblo A choir*.
Now kltchon appliances
goloro. Microwave, cappwchlno mochlno. ofc.. otc.
Baby *tufl golor* I Maternity
A brldol woor. Collectible*.
Hummelt. art work lowol* A
Iloon*. You nomo II wo’ro
tolling III DON'T MISS THIS
O N I I 1114 RIDGEW OOD
LANE. Sol. A Sun. A3.

S9 4 Q 2

CE.Otl Airport

HERE

84 ALUANCE

83 SENTRA XE

82 ZEPHYR Z7
81 FORD LTD
81 STARLET
78IMPALA
80 ACCORD LX
7 8 C A P R IC E _____

Clattlc. antlquo opprlatal
S33AA 44A00 original mil**.
Atkina 31wo. t t y m _______

r MO SMI
Saturday and Sunday. AT MM
Palmotto Av*. Sanford Varh
otyolHom tl

Friday aid Saturdayl SAM
until II ratno. 1031 Vllhon Rd.
Sanford. 3loroo. loon*, mite.

YMOSMI
Saturday and Sunday. * till 7
1107 Vomango. off Rotalla.
Plenty for everyoneI_______

2FAMILY SMI
Buy toll or trade. By ap-

Friday through Sunday. 04.
Evorylhlng tram A to 21 4011
School SI. Lake Monroe______

m i TOYOTA Tercof. bright
green, auto Iran*, runt well.

Largo appl lancet, dothot.
toyt. baby elothet. Saturday
SAM 3PM. 714 Winn Dr. San
ford (Sunland)____________

UUKI4 FMfILT SMI

Sat. 0 4. Furn . doth**, craftt
A tup. camping aqulp. mite.
Ig. A tmall. 17 Tompo A bool
alto I 1347 Cor Jot* a . Oil ol
Longwood Hill* Rd.. n**r
Hidden Ookt Subdlvltlon

MOVING SMI
IN I LOWE II FI. RIVER JON
on Highlander trailer. 7.3
Horae Mercury, Minn kola
trolling motor. 1 cuthlont. 1
rowing oart. Eic. Condition 1
I I 100. OBO................ H I 4400

From 1 ttory home In Genova.
Generation! ol collecllbletl
Emptying clot*It and cup
board! ol many old placet
Furniture, antique!, tllver,
much morel (SI. Rd 44 Eatl to
tit South. Follow tlgnt. Houte
on right.I 4133 31. Rd 414.
Saturday and Sunday. AS

1991 Toyota Camry DX

W ELCOM E

yg'SteS

PILE UP SALE

■

' ____

#732314

• Automatic • Power Steering • Power Brakes
• E C T Transmission • Overdrive
• Factory A ir • Cruise Control
• Tilt Wheel • Tinted Glass
• Power Windows • Power Locks
O fl

THIS Wlir S SPICIAI

‘8488

1990 Chevrolet Cavaliers

7288

5 To Choose From
#209833

* :Y !» » !l

1990 Pontiac Sunbird L E
utomatic • A i r • P o w e r Brakes
M /FM Stereo • P o w e r Steering
:vcral T o Choose From ......

‘6388
#210906

1990 Dodge Mini Caravan SE
LOADED • Power Steering • Till
• Power Brakes • Cruise • Power Win
dows • AM/FM Stereo • Air &amp;More

#223843

‘7488

1990 Oldsmobile Ciera
Tilt • Cruise • P o w e r Windows • P ow er
Locks • AM/FM Stereo • A ir Condi­
tioning • Automatic A M o re ....... From

AV/SCar Sales

II 8 8 8

Driven For
8988

’ When you buy Avis, you got protection you can count on the
remaindor ol the unetpired manufacturer's warranty (on Chrysler
products (hero it a $ 160 transfer foe) There are also comprehen­
sive service plans available lor up to 100.000 total odometer
miles on most cars Ask lor dotails

Hours: M-F 9-6. Sat. 9-6, Sun 12-5

5575 S. Hwy 17-92 •Casselberry
b Af O UHL)

1

S2 8 9 5 H

'J l .'.. .... ONLY

Bad*. IliMonko, blkot A
clotho*. Frl. A Sol. A3. 491
VIHLEN EO. Acrott from
Idy halldo E Nmontory.______

■EAGLE AT STUD. AKC trl
color. 11 Inch**. *73 No or SIS
A pick ol llltor. 1-103-3311

f

BUY HERE-PAY

SO CHEVROLET C A P M tt

IZ iZ E .

;
*2 6 9 5 H

86 CHEVY CELEBRITY

44 MERCURY COUGAR

ST*

*1 9 9 5 I

■

M
1

�</text>
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                    <text>S e r v in g S a n fo rd , L a k e M a ry a n d S a m in o la C o u n ty a ln c o 1 0 0 8
83rd Year, No. 297 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST
□ Sports
World Series starts
LAFAYE TTE . IN - The Seminole PONY
League Colt All-Stars will open play In the I99l
Coll W orld Series at 7:3o p in. tonight.
See P a g e IB

□ People
Making kids aware
Area children learned how to he safe at
Children's Awareness Day. held at Ft. Mellon
Park.
See P h o to s Page 3B

C ertificate of Need
Hospital a step
closer to open
heart program
By NICK PFKIFAUP

Herald Stall Writer_____________________________
SANFORD - HCA Central Florida Regional
Hospital Is another step closer to receiving a long
sought-after open heart program. The hospital Is
seeking a CON. a certificate of need.
The hospital had first applied for a CON over
two years ago. HRS denied the application.
Central Florida Regional Hospital then appealed

to the 5th District Court of Appeals requesting
that the matter be reconsidered.
The court Issued a ruling on June 6. which
declared the decision reversed, hill a 15 clay
window was left open for an appeal.
Now. word has been received that (he Court of
Appeals has overturned the earlier ruling by HRS
which denied certification. The Court denied a
motion for rehearing by Adventist Health
Syslcm/Sunbclt. Inc.. (Florida Hospital), filed
June 21. and declared Humana HospitalLucerne's motion for rehearing filed July 5 as
stricken.
The hospital's Director of Marketing Lisa
Schultz said the next possibility is for the other
two hospitals to ask for a ruling from the State
Supreme Court. "The question would be whether
or not the Supreme Court believes It has
Jurisdiction over this matter." she said. " I f the

BRIEFS

Court says no. then the must recent decision will
stand.”
Schultz said whenever the CON Is finally
granted, the hospital can sel construction of the
project Into motion by possibly as early as
Thanksgiving of this year, although the actual
start dale for the open heart surgery will still
have to be established.
Both o f the two Orlando area hospitals, Lueern
and Florida Hospllal. have CON approval for
open heart surgery.
If (he Central Florida Regional Hospital Is
granted the certificate of need. Schultz said. “ We
would he able to provide the people of this area
with open heart surgery, which will prvent them
from having to drive lo Orlando or some other
distant hospitals." She added. "Considering the
age of many people In Central Florida, this Is
□ Bee H eart, Page SA

I-4 lane closing for tonight

Heroes

ALTAM O N TE SPRINGS - The outside, right
lane o f Interstate 4 between State Roads 434
and 436 will lie closed tonight beginning at 8
p.m.
Crews will be placing beams across tin*
interstate for the Central Parkway bridge. The
lane will reopen al 6 a.m. the next morning.

Longwood honors
six for efforts

County road work underway

By NICK PPBIPAUP

Herald Staff Writer______________

SANFORD — Only two Seminole County road
projects are scheduled lo be underway tills
week.
Work continues on die $6.7 million widening
of Lake Mary Boulevard between Markham
Woods Road and Country Club Road. The road,
when completed In May 1993. will have four
lanes between Markham Woods Road and
Interstate 4. six lanes from I-4 to Rinehart Road
and four lanes from Rinehart Road to Country
Club Road.
W ork Is expected lo begin Ibis week to
rejuvenate the asphalt on Markham Road from
County Road 431 to Markham Woods Road. The
project will be complete August 9. It will cost
$260,000.

FHP plans checkpoints
SANFORD — The Florida Highway Patrol may
stage daytime checkpoints on area roads during
the next two weeks
T h e checkpoints are set up lo cheek driver's
registration and auto equipment. II criminal
violations are found, such as drunken driving,
arrests may he made. The checks could occur at
any tim e on any road scheduled lor the week as
lime and manpower allows.
T his week, through Thursday, checkpoints
may occur on the following roads: County Road
15. Gen. J.C. Hutchison Parkway. Marquette
Road. Orange Boulevard. Old Lake Mary Road.
State Road 426 and Persimmon Avenue.
During the week of Aug. 9 to Aug. 15.
checkpoints may occur at the billowing roads:
Airport Boulevard. C.R. 15. Markham Road,
Orange Boulevard. Osceola Road. Upsala Road
and Persimmon Avenue.

H a ra ld p h o lo b , Q »ry F Vogal

Sgt Stephanie Ryan, of the Lonqwood Police Department, receives one
ol six aw ards for outslaruim q service*. Irom Lon gw ood Babe Ruth League
President Sieve Palumbo, left, and Bernie Carbo, of the Boston Red Six,
right

LONGWOOD - Six area public
safety officers were honored In
Longwood Iasi night. Plaques
were presented for heroic efforts
d u rin g a recent Babe R u tlf
League baseball game.
Singled out for special honors
during last night' Longwood City
C o m m is s io n m e e tin g , w ere
Longwood Police Offlc i t s Sieve
Falk and Carl Strohsal and Sgt
S te p h a n ie R yan . L o n gw o o d
Firefighter \V. G. Ryan, and
Seminole County Deputies Capt.
Marty Lahrtislauo and Sip Dave
K. Smith
Awards were presented by
State Represetatlvc Frank Stone.
Boston Red Six baseball player
Bernie Carbo and Longwood

Commission
unanimously
votes on inn
By NICK PPBIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer

Woman claims age record
MENDOTA. Calif - An HH-vear-old woman
who said her husband had "n ever let me do
anything even close lo this" Is claiming a record
as I he oldest woman ever lo sky dive.
Hazel Stout, of Portland. Ore., parachuted
Irom .i plane ID.Fi(M) feel over central California
on Saturday. II her Jump Is accepted by the
Guinness Book ol World Records. II would
shatter tin- mark set by an HO year-old Briton.
Sylvia Brett, m 19H6.
"M y husband, when lie was alive, never let
me do anything even close lo litis." Stout said,
" lie wouldn't even let me cross the street alone,
lie's probably turning over in his grave right
now.'
Parach u tin g Is Jusl the most recent ol
numerous adventures Stout hits tried since her
husband died 1 I years ago
I ii recent years, she's gone Ice fishing, broken
a fool while body surfing in Hawaii and slid
alon g walerlalls that nimble over granite
shelves ill New Hampshire

H trtld pSoto b , Q*ry F Vogel

Jessica Twandell, from left, Mike Kirby, and Will Perry have good reason to smile.

S o a p B o x D erby w in n e rs aw ait
national c o m p e titio n in A k ro n

From stall and wire reports
B y N IC K P F E IF A U F
Herald Staff Writer

IN D E X
Cla as lfla ds............AB,7B
C o m l c a ......................... 8B
C r o s s w o r d .................. 6B
Dear A b b y ................... 3B
D e a th s .......................... SA
Dr. Q o t t .........................88
E d ito ria l....................... 4 A
F lo r id a .......................... 2A

H o ro a c o p a ..................8B
M o v l a . ..........................3B
Nation...........................BA
P o o plo .......................... 3B
P o llc o .................... .....3 A
*P°rt* .....................1B,2B
T a la v la lo n ................... 3B
2A
W a a th a r...............

Continued high temps

SAN Ft &gt;!&lt;l)
Ihc two winner** ol i In Soap Box Derby
races tit S.inlortl InIx l.t. ar&lt; iiou in Akron Ohio I lux
arc reported anxiously awaiting the start ol Bits
Saturday's National linals
Sanford O tv Recreation Director Mike Kirb\ lias
received word that both winners arrived in Akron
Mi &gt;11da \ I In two arc Will Pet tv I t i &gt;1 I'll tisvlllc who

F o r m o r e w a a t h a r , aaa P a g a 2 A

won the Masters Division ran-, and .Jessica Twandell.
1(), also ol I'itusvlllc. w ho won the Kit Cat Division
The two have already been given special honors in
Akrutt lor the excellent way III which their i ars were
prepared "It's called the V 1 P competition
Kirby
said "There arc many extremely speellle requirements
lor the various cars entered lit the national race They
check lor weight, height, balance, and many other
things, and only those cars that arc classillcd as pcrlci t

LONGWOOD Th e Long­
wood City Commission took ac­
tion loward considering a new
city hall lust night. It Is only the
first step however, tn what could
prove to be a rather tong walk.
The matter centers on the
possibility of the city purchasing
the old Longwood Village Inn. to
be used as a e ily hall. No
purchase price has been an­
nounced by die rlty or Ihr
building's owners, CNL Pro­
perties, Ine.
T h e com m issio n ers voted
unanimously on the first reading
of an ordinance that would
authorize the matter to be placed
on the November 5 ballot. In
making the motion lo accept the
first reading. Commissioner Rex
Anderson said. "I want to bring
this matter out. In order lo give
the citizens their right to decide
through their vote."
Anderson asked C ity A d ­
ministrator Don Terry.to explain
that the purchase, "Is In no way
Included In this coming year's
budget."
Terry assured the commission
It was not. "What this Is for."
Terry said, "Is so we can de­
term ine If wc can make a
purchase or lease-purchase
See Hotel. Page 5A

See Winners, Page 5A

ACB founder says county reducing board powers
By J. MARK BARFIELD
Herald Staff Writer

Partly cloudy with a
40 percent chance ol
m a i n l y a fte rn o o n
thunderstorms High
in the low to mid ‘ His
Wind west 5 lOmph

Babe Ruth Baseball President
Steve Polumbo.
During a Babe Ruth State
Tournament. July 12. at Longwood's Candyland Park, several
s t i l l u n id e n t ifie d p e r s o n s
manufactured explosive devices,
bombs, and placed them al the
ball park. Two devices exploded
without Injuring any persons,
however it third wan was located
Immediately following the Initial
explosions. The bomb was re­
ported to he active and contained
a liquid aeitl.
The law enforcement officers
and firelighters were able to
evacuate the area, and later
tiilcntloiially explode the bomb
without any damage or injuries.
The police then searched the
area and located the persons who
See Heroes. Page 3 A

SANFORD
\ ImindiT &lt;&gt;l Scmmolc (mmi\ *
Atiltti.il t'oiuml Board decries what she sax*, ate
ettorts to gut the jtowers ol the hoard that
overseeseouulx animal regulations
Win arc we changing something we know
has tutu Honed lur 16 years said Diane Albers
" l wrote this In copying portions ol various other
ordinances We didn't invent anything new
here "
Bui Bi&lt; tmmix oitie n i l s w tin oprr.it&gt; tin
Animal ( oiurol Department s.n tunes li.nu

ihanged
Before we dUln t have a good management
strut lute so W e needed someone to guide H l e l l l
said Frank Kirk acting animal control ollicia!
Now we tr\ to operate the department as a
business so wc do mil need that Input
In l ‘ l74 Albers helped create Seminole
County's animal control ordinance which has
since served as a model tor other ordinances
throughout the country B created the animal
control hoard to sit as judge and |ur\ tu
determine II lertam annuals are Melons and
should be destroyed
While i outtoversies raged throughout Bn

country about pit bulls the t minty s ordinance
■mu mut'd to luiu lion blindly Regardless ol Bittype .iiiltii.il th.lt lutes or input's someone these
animals arc reviewed by the board to determine
tl they are vicious and should be destroyed
The ordinance also gave the hoard the
authority to recommend new ordinances or
changes to commissioners recommend changes
m operations ol the animal control shelter and
animal control (unctions and review the annual
department budget The ordinance required the
hoard to met I al le.isi tour titties a year or
whenever the chair man i alls ,t meeting
See Anim al. Page 5A

�M PW wHM IffHHHM lVNHwW HM SiiiHHM HIiwPPI

/V
•A - Sanford HoraM, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, August 6, 19SI

N EW S FROM T H E REGION A N D A C R O SS T H E S T A T E

rise
Student facts expulsion overgun

F6RT LAUDERDALE - T h e number o f
Job discrimination complaints filed In Flori­
da is soaring to record numbers, with
10.700nrw rn m p ioinliln tbelaotyror.
Complaints against Florida employers
climbed steadily horn 2.218 In 1900 to
10.146 tn I960, the Sun-Sentinel in Fort

FORT LAUDERDALE — A high achool student who took a
gun from a troubled peer la (being expulsion for handling a
firearm in school.
Th e Broward School District’s firearms policy demands
automatic expulsion for anyone w h o handles a gun. Tuesday,
the school board will debate whether that applies to Ryan
Goldstein. 17. o f Ely High School.
Last week, board members diacuased revising the policy to
add a measure o f discretion.
“ W e h ave to do som eth in g." board member Diana
Wasaerman aald. "W e could affect his chances for college or
whatever. W e don't know."
The School Board cannot take aw ay his diploma, but they
can place a retroactive expulsion on his transcript.
On March 19, near the end o f Goldstein’s school year, a
troubled student went to him. Goldstein had served as a peer
counselor In the school for two years.
As Goldstein and the other student talked, the student pulled
out a loaded Colt .45-callber automatic pistol. Ooldstein said.
aM MnA a. A mS

. ■ dS

M JO -

* S l—.

— Jl

-

M.

- ■

JhO—1_ — W AS - -

The fiscal year ending in June brought
10.700 new complaints, according to the
Florida Commission on Human Relations.
The recession, recent U.8. Supreme Court
decisions and rhetoric about “ Job quotas'*
have contributed to the problem o f Job
discrimination tn the state, said Ronald
McEirath, executive director o f the com-

Gardner. 45, began work for
state government In June 1909
as a personnel technician tn the
TALLAHASSEE - With gov­ Department o f Administration.
ernment an d environm ental He had been executive director
leaders already discussing a suc­ o f the Department o f Natural
cessor. the head o f Florida’s . Resources since July 1.1987.
In announcing his resignation,
D epartm ent o f N atural R e ­
sources announced he would h e thanked Chiles and the Cabi­
net for their backing In disputes
resign this fall.
natural resources Issues
Though hla departure waa
‘always seem to infringe
rumored tn connection with In­
vestigations o f DNR's Florida o n s o m e o n e ’ s p ro p e rty o r
Marine Patrol, department E x­ perceived personal rights."
"T h e support has been there
ecutive Director Tom Gardner
said through an aide that those when It was needed," he said In
a news release.
probes didn’t hasten hts exit,
Gardner said he was resigning
He aald he would resign Oct.
22. and planned to become a because, "1 feel the need to
embark on a new career path
consultant for state agencies.
a

MELBOURNE — A Florida State Trooper was awarded a
plaque by a grateful family he rescued three times in one
evening.
Dave Holloway, a Melbourne resident, has been a state
trooper for six months. He first met the Brooks family o f Fort
Lauderdale when he helped them change a tire on Interstate 95
around 9:30 p.m. June 15.
At the first rescue Holloway told the Brooks, who were
traveling to a church convention In Oklahoma, that it was rare
for a trooper to show up so quickly.
"T h e y were lucky that I had happened to go by there because
wc only had five to seven troopers out there at one time and
they could have been there for a while.” Holloway said.
After changing the van's flat tire. Holloway tracked down a
reckless driver. Later, at a Cocoa exit, he pulled over to help X
disabled vehicle with a flat tire. He aald he had a good laugh
when he saw It was the same family.
"T h ey said ’Alter you told us the odds are slim that a trooper
would come by and find us. we just knew that we would be
here all night.” ' Holloway said.
After calling a tow truck. Holloway took three o f the five
passengers In his car to fellow the truck to the hotel.
Then the tow truck started acting up.

go|-M|,_

Some complaints prove groundless. Many
people complain, but cannot prove their
cases. An untold number o f others are
victims o f discrimination but never c o m ­
plain.
But the figures do at the least show a
rising tide of frustration.

Pregnant
woman killed;
man charged

with new challenges and new
opportunities."
Spokeswoman Shari NaftxIn fer said his departure wasn't
con n ected w ith th e M arine
Patrol Investigations,
"H e knew the press would see
a link, but there really wasn't a
link. He Just felt the time was
right.” NafUlnger aald.
S h e said O ardn er delayed
leaving until Oct. 22 because he
thought the Marine Patrol probes
would be done by then and
didn't want to leave before they
were completed.
She said Gardner wouldn’t
comment beyond his news re­
lease.

“ You only have to look at the
statistics to tell that we have a
problem," James said.

phone call is all tt would take for
local potter to gather key back­
D AYTO NA BEACH - U.S. ground Information that could
Rep. Craig T . Jam es announced protect an Innocent child,’ * said
Monday he would co-sponsor James. R-Deland.
A n individual convicted o f a
legislation to establish a national
computer network for tracking crime against children would be
permanently registered with the
child molestors.
The National Child Abusers Justice Department's National
Registration Act would make It Crime Information Center. Local
more difficult for convicted child day care centers, schools. Little
molesters to m ove from one state Leagues and other children's
to another, abusing new children organizations could then access
in each area, James aald In a the computer to verify that
statement from hla district o f­ perspective employees to do not
have prior child abuse convic­
fice.
“ Under our proposal, one tions.
**'tcc-'-'i ’’ iv
• ' ’ tv:

ST. PETERSBURG — A red tide has extended Its reach from
the beaches o f middle Sarasota County to southern Pinellas
County, researchers aald.
Thousands o f dead fish have washed up on shore as the wave
of poisonous, plant-llke organisms made Us slow crawl
northward. Beverly Roberts, a researcher with the state
Department o f Natural Resources, aald Monday.
The DNR has recommended no shetlflshlng In the affected
area. On Monday, they added Boca Clega Bay to that ban.
Red tide concentrations were first found last week o ff the
roust o f Manatee and Sarasota counties. A toxin Is released by
microscopic red tide algae when, it blooms, pften giving, the
water a murky brownish red-tint.
Shellfish can accum ulat^hlgh'^oncenlrations'bf lr d 'tide
toxin. When eaten by humans, the shellfish can cause serious
Illness. Red tide also kills fish and can be blown ashore and
cause respiratory problems In humans.

A study found that 74 percent
of Imprisoned offenders had one
or more prior convictions for a
sexual offense against a child, he
said. Another study found that
typical offenders m oleat an
average o f 117 children.
“ They can freely remain close
and have personal contact with
children without anyone learn­
ing the truth about their past,”
James said. "I think we need u&gt; *&gt;
change that." *
a j

M ILTON. F k . — A Florida
Panhandle man waa befog
held Monday on an open
count o f murder in the
beating death o f a woman
w ho waa about nine months
pregnant, authorities said.
T h e open count means a
g r a n d Jury w ill d ec id e
whether to Indict Jimmie
Ralph Archie and if so the
degree o f homicide for the
d e a th o f M arian A n ita
Jackson and possibly that
o f her fetua, which alao
died.
A rc h ie , 47. a laborer,
lived o ff and an with the
31-year-old victim at her
M ilto n ap artm en t, said
police Capt. Bob Young. He
waa unsure whether the
fetua had been fathered b y
Archie.
Paramedics were called to
Ms. Jackaon's apartment
S a tu rd a y afternoon and
took h er to Santa Rosa
Medical Center where she
w a s p ro n o u n c e d d ea d .
Doctors tried but failed to
save the baby's life.
Archie waa at the apart­
ment when paramedics ar­
rived and he accompanied
them to the hospital. Young
•*,« -

' r r

Stolen ears pass through Florida

Accused murdsrsr takes stand
ST. PETERSBURG - John C. Barrett, accused o f botching a
murder plot to kill a woman, testified Monday that he was only
standing by as four men at the scene were killed instead.
The 26-year-old Melrose man is accused of being hired by
Dorsey Sanders III to kill Sanders' mother. JoAnn Sanders, on
Aug. 3, 1990. Authorities believe Barrett Instead killed four
men at her Floral City home.
He could face death In the electric chair If convicted of
first-degree murder In the shootings o f Jerry Lee Clark, Robert
Hemingway. Lawrence Johnson and Roger WUson. Barrett also
faces one count o f conspiracy to com m it murder.
Assistant State Attorney Anthony Tatti concluded the atate's
rase Monday, after three hours o f testimony by evidence
experts.
One o f the most damaging pieces o f evidence presented by
the state waa a towel found In a search of Barrett's home. Blood
and hair strands on the towel matched those of Wilson.’
according to a report by the FBI. Some of the blood also
matched Clark and Barrett.
t2lfl
88

•The increase in complaints tiled Is not a
definite indicator that job discrimination is
an the rise.

Lawmaker would track child molesters

Rad tide crawls upcoast

«T,aa8w r ‘H

i

A S lO C iW tO rT O O l ¥ Y m f f ____________

Trooper awarded plaqua

m

employer groups, see discrimination today
as a series o f Individual exceptions, not a
systemic problem requiring class-action
suits.
that discrimination la
Supporters
T i m much o f K Is subtle and
indirect.

State natural resources director
announces October resignation

-

Ooldstein took the handgun away and unloaded It.
" T o this day. I still think I did the right thing, ti'a not
everyday someone has a Colt .45 shoved in his face." Goidatetn
said.
But his mistake was in not turning In the gun right away,
school administrators said. Instead, he hid It off cam pus.

I

“ Over the last eight to 10 year*, the
message has been that maybe discrimina­
tion is not as taboo as It used to be/*
McEirath said. "A n d when times are hard,
employer* look out for folks closest to them.
They identify with the ones who go to their
church, their country club — people like
themselves.
Those who Investigate the complaints say
minority and women workers are becoming
more aasertlve at a tim e when m ore
employers feel they can get away with
practices once deemed discriminatory.
In Washington and Tallahassee, civil
rights bills designed to help Victims o f Job
discrimination bring their cases to court
have spuryed bitter debates over what
constitutes discrimination.
Opponents o f the legislation, including

From A s s o c ia ttd Press reports

Roadways in the Island na­
tions o f th e C aribbean are
teeming w ith pilfered BMWa,
fully loaded Mercedes. Nissan
Pathfinders and Jeep Wagoneera
— many o f which came through
porta in the Sunshine State.
Estimates o f the number o f
stolen cars shipped through Flor­
ida ports, mostly through termi­
nals on the East Coast, range as
high as 3,000 a month.
"They're not Just Florida cars.
Some care from as far away as
New York and New Jersey are
stolen and transported down
here.'* Lt. Jacques DeRemcr.
head o f the Miami-based Auto
Theft Task Force, told T h e
Tampa Tribune tn an article
Sunday.
U.S. Customs officials say
crooks have capitalized on a
state decision in February to

save $880,000 a year by drop­
ping a program for inspecting
cars before they are exported.
Customs officials say they're
scrambling to fill the Inspection
gap. but the work Is timeconsuming and manpower Is
short.
The total value of stolen cars
shipped from Florida this year Is
exp ected to soar past $600
million, authorities say. Once
the cars hit foreign shores, their
values double, even triple.
The export o f stolen cars, one
Miami detective said. Is a "fabu­
lously profitable business."
It's also a highly sophisticated
one.
Thieves cruise neighborhoods
from Miami to New York, mak­
ing computerized inventory o f
ra r# th ey m a y la ter stea l.
Specialists doctor Identification
plates and supply phony titles
and bills o f sale.

Some cars are driven south by them back north.
In Miami, a multiagency group
couriers; others are trucked In.
Sometimes, th e y 're loaded h a s b e e n e s t a b lis h e d b y
ab o ard fr e ig h t e r s an d are Metro-Dade police that Includes
chained to the deck In full view. a g e n t s fr o m M ia m i. U .S .
At other times, thieves work Customs and the FBI to stop the
Row o f stolen cars.
under cover of darkness.
“ Late at night, with their tires
Miami detectives seized 75
screeching and their headlights late-m odel, four-wheel d riv e
out. an entire fleet o f cars can trucks In the last year, all stolen
race on board a ship and be around New York, all found
headed to the Islands an hour scattered In driveways an d
later. And there will be no one w a r e h o u s e s a rou n d D a d e
there to know the difference." County and all headed to the
said Zlggy Zablockl, a Broward Dominican Republic. Police in
County auto-theft Investigator May arrested Jaime Diaz. 40. the
who also heads the Florida Auto man they say masterminded the
Crime Intelligence Unit.
thefts. Diaz is being held in a
Some autos stolen lately In­ federal lockup on a $1 million
cluded BUI Cosby's BMW and bond.
Geraldo Rivera's Land Cruiser.
But while the bust netted $2
Both were stolen earlier this year
fro m th e g a ra g e s o f th e ir million worth o f autos. It caused
Manhattan apartments and were hardly a ripple In the flood o f
bound for the Islands before stolen cars passing through Flor­
police found them and shipped ida's ports.

—

.4

I

MIAMI - Hers are the winning
numbers selected Mondey In the
Florida Lottery Cash 3: $-$-8
Winning numbers selectsd In the
Florida Lottery Play 4 were: $ -l-$ -0
Florida Lottery Fantasy 9 num­
bers drawn wars: 07-88-13-81-03

IUSPS 4*11401

Tuesday. August 6. 1991
Vol. S3. No 397

Published Daily and Sunday, swap!
Saturday by The Sanlord Harald,

TH E W EATH ER
Today: Partly cloudy with a
c h a n c e o f a fte rn o o n th u n ­
derstorms. High In the lower to
mid 90s. Wind south 5 to 10
mph. Rain chance 40 percent.
T o n ig h t: W id ely sca ttered
e ve n in g thunderstorm s then
partly cloudy. Lows In the mid
70s. Light wind. Chance of rain
20 percent.
W ednesday: P artly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance o f
afternoon thunderstorms. Highs
In the low to mid 90a. Wind
south 5 to 10 mph.
E xten d ed foreca st: P a rtly
cloudy each day with a chance o f
mainly afternoon and evening
thunderstorms.
1
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3

Inc. 300 N. French Are, Sanlord.

Fla. 33771

Second Class Postage Paid at Sanlord,
Florida and additional mailing
ottlcee.
POSTMASTER: Sand address changes
le THE SANFORD HERALO. P.O
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(407) 323-2011.

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Oaytana Beach
Ft. LeudSaach
Fort Myvri
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SU N D A Y
P tly c M y 93-73

A Q A Q t M N J M i'’

I

H SR H d ayT
SOLUM A H TABLE: Min. 3:10
a.m.. 3:35 p.m.; MaJ. 9:15 a.m.,
9 :5 0 p.m . TID E S : D a y to n a
B eaeki highs. 4:40 a.m., 5:27
p.m.: lows. 1045 a.m.. 11:46
p.m .: N o w S m y rn a B o a ek t
highs. 4:45 a.m.. 5:32 p.m.;
lows, 10:50 a.m.. 11:51 p.m.:
Cocoa B ooth : highs. 5:00 a.m..
5:47 p.m.: lows. 11:05 a.in.,
12:06 p.m.
%
_____________
w

F

S t. A a g v s tln o to J o p lto r In le t
Tonight: Wind south to south­
east 10 knots. Seas 2 feet. Bay
and Inland waters smooth.
Wednesday: Wind south to
southeast 10 knots. Seas 2 feet.
Bay and Inland waters a light
chop by afternoon.

T h e high tem p eratu re In
Sanford Monday was 91 degrees
and the overnight low was 74 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
R ecorded ra in fa ll for the
period, ending at 9 a.m. Tues­
day. totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 81 d egrees and
Tuesday's overnight low was
76. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ M onday's k l0 u ................91
□ Barom atrle presaure.30.15
' Relative H um idity....62 pet
[j W inds.
Southwest 6 mph
R a in fa ll..... - ................. 0 tn.
□ T o d a y 's sonnet.... $: 12 p.m.
□T om orrow 's sun rise....8:80

9

Tamparaturoa indicate pravlsga day's
M|h and overnight lew to 1
O f*
Anchor*g*
44 *4 •1 edy
Aihevllle
M 47 •1 cdy
Atlanta
M 74 .13 eefy
Atlantic City
clr
14 •1
Betltmere
cdy
tt 40
Online*
f l 31 U cdy
Birmingham
n
72
cdy
Bitmercb
cdy
oi 41 «
Solve
H 40
cdy
Bootan
n 44 OJ c lr
c lr
71 41 J*
Burlington. VI.
f t 7*
Cherle**dn.SC.
cdy
rn
Char let ton. W V*
11 4*
Cherlette.N.C.
cdy
f l 74 »
Cheyenne
cdy
*1 33
Chicago
73 41
edy
Cleveland
73 30
cdy
CoiumbU.SC.
t7 73 04 cdy
Concord. N H
7f 41 .14 c lr
Dalle* Ft Worth
cdy
f* 74
Dvnver
13 3* .17 cdy
DviMoinM
41 41 15 cdy
Datroil
cdy
11 37
Honolulu
clr
f* 77
Houtlon
M 74 33 cdy
IndUnapoil*
cdy
7? •4
Jackion.MIu.
cdy
f7 71
K m u i City
D 34 05 cdy
la * Vaga*
dr
MO 71
little Rock
edy
n
74
Mdmghlt
cdy
too 74
Mllmsuk—
70 43
cdy
Mplt SI Poul
77 30
cdy
cdy
TUthvllle
*5 71
New O lM flt
cdy
n 74
*4 4*
New York City
c lr
Oklahoma City
f t 71
cdy
Omaha
40 43 .If cdy
17 47
Philadelphia
dr
Phoanii
dr
10* •4
Pittsburgh
cdy
tt 37
Portland.Orv
74 41
cdy
it Lout*
It 44 45 cdy
Salt Laka City
ft 3B M cdy
Seattle
dr
7* 41
Wathington.D C
17 70
cdy

�Swiford Hm M , Sanford, Ftodds - Tuasday, August 8, 19»1 - SA

O fficer narrowly m isses
injury, suspect arrested
SANFORD — A Sanford pottoe
officer reported narrowly mlsaIn f Injury when a man Bred a
idle at him Monday night. His
squad car received a wounded
fender, however.
Officer Oregory Smith reported
he arrived at 216 Justin w ay at
about 9:45 p.m. after police
received a complaint about an
intoxicated man. Smith reported
that when he rang the door bell
and stood at the aide o f the door,
an explosion shattered concrete
and damaged the door. The
bullet pierced the front fender o f
his squad car. Smith wrote.
Smith wrote he looked inside
the window and saw Patrick H.

H ull was arrested and charged
w ith attempted murder o f a
policeman and use o f a firearm
during commission o f a felony.
H e waa taken to the Joh nB . Foot
Correctional Facility and held
without bond. Smith reported
H u ff told him police had been
haraaalng him since an incident
s evera l months ago an d he

520 kids attend
‘Super Saturday’

Honesty reward
for woman who
returned $23,000

found $29,000 in bar car and
returned It to a vacationing
couple.
Anril Bodcy. 21. discovered a
burgundy travel bag in the back
seat of her car w hen th e arrived
home from a Tupperware party.
Inside were f t 2.500 in cash,
f 10.SB0 in traveler's cheeks and
two Colombian passports.
Fearing it m ig h t be drug
money, she called Pompano
Beach police.

HARVEY

MORSE

D ow n Under." and popcorn,
followed by tunch aboard the
' Empress Lilly" Rlverboat be­
fore returning home Saturday
afternoon.
W a l t D is n e y W o r ld h a s
sponsored the weekly trips for
low-income children. Trl-County
drivers volunteer their tim e to
pick up the kids and take them
to the Super Saturday locations.
T h e program was organised by
Sem inole County Commissioner
Jennifer Kelley and other TriCounty authority members as a
w ay to orient children to bus
t r a v e l . T ri-C o u n ty la a ls o
sponsoring the "Dime T im e "
program for children.
School-aged children can use
each dime ticket to ride any­
where in the Tri-County Sem i­
nole and Orange County service
area. Books of 10 tickets can be
purchased from area schools.
rying so much cash

K m D t l m r i y

Two fathers keep promises
PROVIDENCE. R.l. - Nearly
five years ago. when he burled
his son. Joseph Vise Ido pro­
mised he would track down the
person who killed him.
'T v e never broken a promise
to that kid (n m y life." ViseIdo
said.
Last September, after Vlacldo
provided what police say was
invaluable help, Carl Stephen
Roaatl was Indicted on charges
o f murdering 26-year-old Joseph
Vlacldo Jr.
It was then that Carl H. Roaatl
made a vow to his son: He would
do everything he could to prove
his Innocence.
Florida authorities aay Roaatl.
31. and Peter Dallas forced their
way into the younger Vise Ido's
Deerfield Beach apartment In
October 1966 to steal cocaine.
During a struggle, Vlacldo. a
champion surfer, was shot In the
head.
Dallas. Indicted with Roaatl.
has pleaded guilty to seconddegree murder. He Is expected to
testify against Rosatl and a third
man. Peter Rousoonlcoios. when
the case goes to trial.
Rosatl maintains he was in
Rhode Island, running his health
spa and planning his wedding,
when Vise Ido was killed. Twen­
ty-two witnesses corroborated
his story in court, but six
witnesses placed him In Florida.
Vlacldo and the authorities
have released few details about
the case. But police have said

I

6^ «-

they believe Roeeonicolos set up
the robbery end Dallas and
Roaatl were the gunmen.
T h e Rhode Island Supreme
Court on Tuesday ordered Roaatl
extradited to Florida for trial.
T h e order ended an extradi­
tion battle that spanned nearly a
year and took its toll on both
fathers.
T h e elder Rosatl. 64. was
hospitalised for five weeks with a
heart condition. The prominent
Rhode Island developer has sat
through 20 court appearances
during eight months of hearings.
I f his son Is convicted, he
could be sentenced to die In the
electric chair.
In May. Rosatl'a father ap­
pealed to U.S. Attorney General
Dick Thornburgh to Investigate
th e w a y Florida au th o rities

handled the case.
"For the last 240 days of our
Uvea my wife, our son, our
daughter, and 1 have been vic­
timised, persecuted and terror­
ised by the Am erican 'Judicial
system.'" he wrote. "M y family
has spent the last eight months
living this nightm are."
Vise Ido also speaks of the
nightmare he said began when
he lost his on ly son. At one
point, he said, he was driven by
grief to playing Russian roulette.
" I put a gun to m y head and
pulled the trigger." he said from
his waterfront hom e in Pompano
Beach. Fla. " I Just couldn't live
without my son ."
He said he learned o f his son's
cocaine abuse three months be­
fore he was k illed and had
persuaded h im to undergo
treatment.

Woman struck, killed
by train is identified
SANFORD - The Seminole
County Sheriff's Department has
determined the identity o f the
woman who was struck and
killed by a CSX freight train In
Longwood Monday morning.
A c c o r d i n g to S h e r i f f ' s
spokesman George Proechel. the
woman has been Identified as 22
year old Kirsten Sumrall. o f
3100 Old Winter Garden Road.
O rla n d o . Proechel s a id the
w om an was originally from
Marietta. Georgia, and had been

in Central F lorid a fo r three
months, employed by Universal
Studios. "S h e was reportedly
last seen at JJ.Whispers, at
12:30 Monday m orning," Prochel said, "and w e found her car
on Miller Road In Longwood. a
quarter-mile from where she was
killed."
Prochel s a id the reasons
behind the death have not been
determined as yet. An Investiga­
tion Into the Incident Is conti­
nuing.

C O N G R A T U L A T I O N S TO O U R A M E R I C A N H E R O S
E X T R A l O , D I S C O U N T W I T H ID C A R D

WINGS
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1106 S. French Are., Sanford

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(407) 3234*50

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4A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuaaday, August I, 19t1

W I L L I A M A. R U S H E R
iin ^ i an gm
300N. FRENCH A V K . SANFORD. FLA. 33771
Area Code 407-322-3011 or 8314003

BUBBCMPTI0N RATE:
9 Months................................ BIBJ0
6 Months.............................. 990.00
l Y o s r ................................... STSlflO

s a r a r ®
EDITORIALS

iDeal with the devil?
The dJocloMire that the fo re rn ro e n t o f
South A frican President
F .W . de Klerk
secretly provided financial b ack in g to In*
katha. the m oderate black political party, to
troubling fo r several reasons.
h is . C h ie f am ong
o
these la that It renew s fears that the white
governm ent h a s sought to underm ine the
legitimate s t r u g fe o f South A fric a 's black
population to obtain freedom an d dem ocracy.
Moreover, de K k rk 'a clandestine Interfer­
ence on Inkath a'a beh alf sows ad ded mistrust
between the governm ent an d the African
National C o n fe s s , which la the country's
largest political m ovem ent and a bitter rival
o f Inkatha. T h is only further clouds the
prospects fo r negotiations on a n e w constitu­
tion to extend political rl^ ita to all South
Africans.

De Klerk fosters democratic forces
Suppose Gorbachev's critics In
dtocovered and revealed that his
n ia
secretly osid $ 100,000 to the no
R eform Movement, lau n ch ed by E duard
Shevardnadze and others, to help H lobby far
Western financial ski to the Soviet Union. Does
anybody doubt that this would be taken as
vunner proof 01 u u iu m j ic v i ocicnutfMtion 10
strengthen and work through the country's
nascent democratic Institutions, and scored to
Yet when H transpired that the South African
government ov i iw o c n i •
o r W f i i m r e iiy
rr a roughly equal sum of money to C h ief
thelezi's (Zulu) Inkatha Party, for

B

aitpCI

oy me ouwoe wocio, iiDcnus promptly
treated me aitcioture n aaocrraiuioie to ootn oe
Klerk and Buthekii.
The distinction. In the tibevato' eyes, to that
Netoon Mandela and hto African National Con­
gress wear white hats, whereas Chief Buthelezi
and Inkatha wear black ones. We have had It
drilled Into us by the media for yean that the
A N C Is the sole legitimate political representative
o f South Africa'sbtocks, and that “democracy"
wilt come to that country when the present
regim e turns power over to It. Inkatha, as well as
spokesmen for numerous other black, colored.

Aslan and white constituencies, have been
ignored wncrever p o m o K , ifM a w n iM e a con
tcmptuously as
o f the white regime
when they had to be
discussed at all.
The troth, howev­
er, to tor otherwise.
Inkatha Is every bit
a s o p p o s e d to
ap a rth e id a s th e
ANC. But It also op­
poses the ANC (far
reasons discu ssed
b e l o w ) , a n d
fu rth e rm o re h a s
opposed sanctions
against South Africa,
arguin g that they
f l n k a t h a 1$
hurt the country's
•vary bit opMack population first
p o •a d to
and worst. If there to
aparthaid as
to be true democracy
thaA M C .J
In South Africa after
Ita blacks get the
vote, Inkatha must
werful part of the process.
As for the ANC, It to, despite the wonderful
press It gets In the West, by long odds the most

JACK

Vlok has adm itted b e oversaw donations of
nearly $700,000 to Inkatha. w h ich he said
were necessary to help end political violence
and to oppose trade sanctions that were
Isolating S o u th A frica. Inkatha w a s the
leading black political organisation to oppose
the sanctions Im posed by the U n ited States
and other nations.
A s it to. M andela warned, the tw o aides are
on a "collision co u rse" that could u n do m uch
o f the progress that has been m ad e In recent
months,

South A frica h a s m ade much p ro gress In Its
m arch tow ard m ultiracial dem ocracy. The
path that lies ah ead for the white governm ent
and the black m ajority to fraught w ith m any
obstacles an d untim ely diversions — like the
revelation o f covert paym ents to Inkatha. But
It rem ains In the best Interests o f a ll parties to
set aside these differences and b egin negotia­
tions prom ptly on a new and Just constitu­
tion.

President gets around
George B ush has logged m ore travel miles
than any other president In history. Including
trips to 32 foreign countries an d nearly every
state In the union, i T he president's foreign
travel has helped to make him a master
player on the w orld scene. But at hom e, he
might as w ell be flying around the country
with the shades draw n on A ir Force One.
Bush’s dom estic policy, or lack thereof, shows
that his travels have taught him very little
about what Am erica needs.

ANDERSON

Scandal looms
at Pentagon

The A N C 'a deputy president, W a lte r Stsulu.
asserts that the disclosure confirm s that the
v io le n c e in th e b la c k t o w n a h lp s w a s
"perpetrated b y this governm ent In cahoots
with In k ath a." A N C President N elson M an­
dela dem anded that L aw and O rder Minister
Adrtonit W rit a n d Defense M inister M agnus
Malan resign a s a condition for talk s between
the AN C an d the governm ent on a new
constitution.

It rem ains to b e seen exactly h o w dam aging
this scandal w ill be. President d e K lerk said
he ordered paym ents to Inkatha stopped last
year follow ing a n internal investigation Into
covert governm ent operations. In k ath a leader
M angosuthu Buthelezi Insisted that neither
he nor other party leaders knew abo u t the
payments, although h e said h e w o u ld "d eal
with d e v il" if It w ould bring S ou th African
peace and dem ocracy. And M andela suggests
the AN C m ay b e m ollified if V lok an d Malan
step down.

dangerous obstacle to black democracy tn South
Africa. A few years ago the U.8 . State Departmeat ofltetoBy cunflrmed that more than half of
the members of the ANC's executive committee
were members o f the South African Communist
Party.
At its recent reorguttoatlon meeting the ANC
Ithe executive committee, retiring some
tlnctudtag a few Communists), sqd
m ones (also including Communists). 1
i able to find a tally o f the total
o f Comm uniats on the new executive
w York
a i n as Times
a u n v * correspondent
W im jr v iiu u ii
committee, but New
Christophs r W rcn. In
tn a sadly
m gy misplaced attemj
attempt
that they wtU probably make
the
more efficient.’’ Indeed they
wtXL
fo r decad es virtually the entire financial
support o f the ANC. to the tune o f many millions
of dollars, has come from abroad — primarily
from the Soviet Union and China of course, but
atoo from sympathetic Weetem governments and
such addled organizations as the W orld Council
of Churches. W e may be sure that these
subsidies have Increased enormously since
Mandela's release from prison.
Now It transpires that the government of
President de Klerk has given far sm aller sums to
Inkatha.

HODDING C A R TE R

It’s time for clampdown
It 's not hard to understand why the
president spends ao much time on foreign
policy and foreign trips. He’d be a fool If he
d idn ’t, given the great events that have
accompanied the formal end o f the Cold War.
Those memorable embraces with old enemies
and stirring plans for new cooperation are good
news, plain and simple, and the moment
should not be lost.
But what the two-faced god o f history has
been giving with one hand overseas, he has
been taking away with th e other here at home.
T h e results are becom in g steadily more
apparent, results that raise questions and
demand activist reaction from our extremely
active president.
At root, the most Important question Is
alm ply this: Has Washington paid strict heed
to the performance o f the Institutions that
matter most? And. a related question, has its
long love affair with deregulation proved anew
that nothing Is so blind as love?
The answer to the first question is no. T h e
answer to the second question ts yes. From the
Department o f Housing and Urban Develop­
m ent to the Central Intelligence Agency, to the
savings and loan Industry, to major domestic
banka, to that extraordinary financial bandit,
the Bank of Credit and Commerce Interna­
tional. the publicly acknowledged Ust is packed
w ith examples of criminal misbehavior that
went unwatched and unchecked until It was
too late.
What to particularly disheartening Is the
thought that for every executive suite crime,
every swindle and every breach of the rules
that la publicly known, there are probably a
dozen Just below the surface. A s with icebergs,
what you don't see Is usually what can hurt
you the moat, and the tips that have already
loomed Into view are spectacularly large. And
Uke the Titanic, we arc not as Invulnerable as
we thought we were.
What we have aeen ts one rip-off of the
public, or looting o f the public (rust, after
another, each one seem ingly larger or more
expensive than the last. The HUD scandal was
sm all potatoes, relatively speaking, probably
involving no more than a stray billion or two.
T h e common thieves and bent officials con­
nected with that debacle were penny ante
performers compared to the intimate coconspirators in the savings and loan robberies.
There the price tag seems to go up an
additional $10 billion every three months, so
that today everything from the unexpected
spike in the record federal deficit to the long
frccfall In housing starts can be and is blamed
on the SAL mess.
There are those who say that the banking
In d u stry's Im plosions could soon m ake
everyone forget the S &amp; L ’s. Stupidly greedy
real-estate loans competed with the big banks'
curlier stupidly greed Third World loans for the

i

Beat-ln-Class Blue Ribbon for arrogant selfdeception. Even while the records are being
assessed and blame apportioned, more banka
are failing, merging or pulling In their horns.
About the CIA. let it simply be said that
Congress, the public and the agency Itself arc
Uke (he Bourbons o f France, forgetting nothing
and learning nothing from the past. Every
seven years or so. It replicates whatever
previously brought It Into disrepute. That
happens because Its watchdogs, h avin g
learned nothing, accept the premise that It
must be freed from the "crippling restraints”
that are said to be choking It to death. Once
free. It's off to Iran-contra or whatever other
extra-legal fun and games present themselves
as essential to national security.
As for BCCI. the
meets and bounds o f
its depredations arc
yet to be measured,
but there is good
reason to believe that
they will prove to
have outdistanced all
o th e r s , past a n d
present. In more than
6 0 countries. T h e
p lu n d e r w a s I m ­
m e n s e ; th e I n ­
vol vement of
allegedly reputable
m en and th e
f Has W ashing­
sre-no-evll attitude o f
ton paid strict
a lle g e d ly v ig ila n t
head to th e
government agencies
institutions
w e re In c r e d ib le .
that m a t t a
What ties all o f these
most? J
examples, and many
others, together Is
t h e y o c c u r r e d In a p o l i t i c a l
climate that guaranteed them. Unregulated
power, whether political or economic, makes
corruption Inevitable. A supposedly con­
servative Ideology that Ignores the most basic
o f all conservative Insights — that man Is not
pcrfectable and man's Institutions arc not
trustworthy — Is an Invitation to evil. The
JRstlce Department, the Federal Reserve, the
Treasury Department, the bank examiners.
Congress and the presidency Itself all deliber­
ately averted their eyes. And evil Is what
emerged, evil that stole billions, evil that
corrupted thousands, evil thal declared Itself
outside and beyond the law.
Regulations alone cannot contain wrongdo­
ing. but without intelligent regulation, rigor­
ously enforced. It Is utterly predictable. W e’ve
had our fling with deregulation and It was a
disaster, economically, politically and morally.
It's time to put the clamps back on — hard. It's
something the president ought to consider
during those brief Intervals hr Is In Washing­
ton. Congress might try the same thing.

WASHINGTON - An FBI Investigation of
bribery allegations may split open yet
another Pentagon procurement scandal, this
one exposing contractors who don't do the
work the taxpayers pay them to do.
The. early focus of the Investigation to on
Sooner; Defense o f Florida, which took $11
million In advance payments from the Army
to build detonation devices, and gave excuses
In return.
W e re p o rte d In
1989 that the Army
kept tabs on Sooner
money and business,
despite m any in ­
d icators th at the
small com pany
not delivering on its
end o f the bargain.
By t h e t i m e th e
Pentagon got wise to
Sooner, the firm was
liquidating its assets
In bankruptcy.
Pentagon in­
vestigators Initially (p a n t a g o n in ­
reported that Sooner
vestigators
had b een cheating
initially re­
the government. The
ft o r t e d
FBI nas since discov­
thatSooner
ered that the Army
h ad b e e n
weapons in sp ector
c h a a tln g the
assigned to monitor
governm ent j
the Sooner contract
m ay h a v e been
r e l u c t a n t to blow the whistle
on the com pany because Sooner was giving
her gifts.
Army contract specialist Bonnie K. Hurd
has admitted tn court that she accepted an
array o f gifts from Sooner executives. In­
cluding hotel rooms, meals and entertain­
ment w hen she made 35 trips to the Sooner
plant In Lakeland, Fla., over a three-year
period., Hurd also admitted that Sooner's
chairman bought her son airplane tickets to
go to Tam pa for spring break tn 1985, and
also paid hto way to Disney World and Busch
Gardens.
Hurd’s attorney says Hurd was not manipu­
lated by Sooner, and Sooner officials say they
weren’ t trying to get anything from Hurd, but
Hurd w as convicted last month o f accepting
bribes. A s part o f her plea agreement she Is
cooperating with the ongoing investigation,
which sources td l us is spreading fast.
The Justice Department's "Til W ind" In­
vestigation exposed how som e top-level
Pentagon officials used their Insider leverage
to the benefit o f the highest bidders and the
nation's big defense contractors. The Sooner
Investigation means that the little people
were getting tn on the act too — small
contractors and rank-and-file federal workers
all the w ay down to plant Inspectors.
Pentagon sources told our associate Jim
Lynch that there have long been tales of
bribery and gratuities floating around the
Army munitions agency in Rock Island. III.,
— the agency that supervised the Sooner
con tract. T h is procurem ent hub deals
exclusively with small munitions manufac­
turers. T h e Pentagon often gets a better deal
working with the little guys, but sources close
to the Pentagon’s procurement process tell us
that some small contractors get good at
conning the military Into believing they can
complete a big contract.
Sooner first began making fuses and other
small munitions for the Army In 1982. One of
Us first Jobs was to build safety devices for an
artillery round. The Arm y paid Sooner
1524,471. but the company apparently never
delivered the goads.
The tack o f return on Investment didn't
stop the Arm y from giving Sooner more
contracts. In 1987 the company got an $8.7
million contract to build fuses for 25mm
shells on Bradley Fighting Vehicles. At that
time. Sooner had already failed to complete
five prior contracts.
Before the Army stopped paying Sooner In
March 1988. the company had received $12.1
million for six contracts, and there was no
return on four of those contracts. Last
December, a Sooner official pleaded guilty to
participating In a scheme to give the Army
fraudulent test results.

(

�Sanford Harafd, Sanford, Florida - Tutaday, August 6, 1991 - M

Winnei
are

X ■
bv ■\

■01IA
given the V .I.P .

Kirby
qualify for V.I P..
of our
but Sanford la the only d ty la
the entire nation to have noth
It's winning entiles
that way.”
luruy waa nappy ootn
w n e declared In perfect
Uon. *Thoae with V.I.P. n U n fi
can relax and a guy thaawaNea.
Kirby eakl. "T he others wtfl be
spending a lot of time working to
get their c a n up to standards.”
Over 170 champions from
throughout the United States
and several foreign countries win
competing out S A n ra y in
Akron. The ynungUrrs sre lhrlng
at Dwrbytown. a YMCA camp
near Akron.
Today, the drivers will be
officially w eighed then each arm
be allowed to make a test run on
the 904 foot long Derby Downa
hill.
Perry will be competing for a
9 5.000 sc h o la rsh ip , w h ile
TwandeQ win be trying to win
the 93.500 scholarship given to
th e w i n n e r s o f t h e t w o

DtoM Alters tainted tte Animal Control

Animal
11A
It was through the oversight
provisions o f the ordinance that
allowed Albers and other mem­
bers to call Tar Investigations
Into the Animal Control Depart­
ment operations twice during
the 1960s, leading to the resig­
nations of two previous animal
c o n t r o l o f f i c i a l s for
mismanagement and questions
about mistreatment o f animals.
The proposed changes drop all
provisions to meet except to
c o n s id e r v i c i o u s a n im a l
hearings. The changes also drop
the board's oversight powers
and limits It to making recom­
mendations on changes to stale
animal control laws and county
an im al c o n tro l ord in an ces.
Thoae recommendations must
be m ade to P u b lic W orks
Director Gary Kaiser, not direct­
ly to commissioners.
The new ordinance also drops
the board’s ability to call meet­
ings. meaning aO meetings must
be made at the request of the
animal control official.
Kirk said the ol&lt;tt-.crdiiuincc
was used by some members of

DEATHS

the board to attempt to run
day-to-day operations o f the de­
partment.
"O n e Individual has always
been making decisions without
the concensus of the board,"
said Kirk, refusing to Identify the
person. " I lust want everybody
to play o ff the same sheet of
m u sic."
Kaiser said the changes were
to make the board answer to
county management, not the
commission, because the Semi­
nole County Charter makes the
county manager responsible for
county operations.

Heart-

Correction

Tor com m issioners to re v ie w the

changes.

‘

W ILLIAM A LLE N HOLBROOK
William Allen Holbrook. 75. 20
Jasmine Drive. DeBary, died
Monday at his residence. Born
March 23. 1916, In Prestonburg.
Ky.. he moved to DeBary from
Sanford this year. He was owner
of Bill’s Tavern. Sanford, and a
World War II veteran.
Survivors Include son. Gerald.
Sanford; b roth ers. Leonard.
G r e e n w o o d . In d .. C e c il.

The actual race wtO get un­
derway at 11 am . adjacent to
the Akron-Putton M unicipal
Airport and the University o f
Akron R ubber Bowl. Unless
there are any problems caused
by weather, the race la expected
to take three hours to complete.

1A
certainly something
that la greatly needed In the
Sanford area."
Schultz said she has no word
K ir k said the f iv e board
on when the State Supreme
members present at a June 13
m eeting unanimously endorsed Court will announce whether or
not It feels as though it holds
the proposed ordinance changes.
He said they did not see the authority In the situation.
ordinance prior to the meeting,
nor was the ordinance published
on the agenda for the meetln.
Kirk said the meeting had been
Ms. Ella Beasley, whose home
resch ed u led from th e re g u ­
larly-scheduled meeting a week at 1613 Olive Ave. in Sanford la
before. Albers said she was being reconstructed by Habitat
unable to attend the meeting.
for Humanity, waa mistakenly
raiae
No hearing date has been set attributed with helping

«&lt;! .A VfC

'

JOeCPHUUE B. C A R L DIO
Josephine E. Carllno. 82. 522
Spring Oaks Blvd.. ■Altamonte
Springs, died Sunday at Winter
Park Memorial Hospital. Bom
Sept. 30, 1906. In Brooklyn.
N.Y., she moved to Altamonte
Springs from New York In 1975.
She was a retired garment
worker for the clothing Industry
and a Catholic.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e son.
M athew. H o lly w o o d . C alif.;
daughters. Santa Lopez. Alta­
monte Springs. Sister Santa
Marla, New York. Joan McCall.
Buckingham. Va.; seven grand­
children; one great-grandchild.
B aldw in -F alrch tld Funeral
Home. Forest City, In charge of
arrangements.

• a n S i l All-American Soap
Box Derby w tl get underway
Saturday with a Champions’
parade down the Derby D
T r a c k , f o l l o w e d djt t h e
Celebrities Oil Can Trophy Race
held In over-stsed Derby Cara.

Marshall. Mich., Isom. New Or­
leans, Cash. Knox. Ind.. Harold.
J u d s o n . Ind.; s is te rs . O m a
W right. Lima. Ohio. Emma Jean
V a n n . Battle C reek. M ich.,
Virginia Woolscy. Huntington.
Ind., Madlyn Rausch. Winamac.
Ind.. Jolenc DcGood. Warsaw.
Ind.; stepmother. E lsie Poe.
Salyersvllle, Ky.: three grand­
children.
G ra m k o w Funeral H om e.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.
E UNICE B. JENKINSON
Eunice B. Jenkinson, 81. Os­
teen. died Monday at Regency
Nursing Facility, DeBary. Born
April 30. 1910, In Willlston, she
moved to Osteen In 1941. She
was a cashier for Roumlllat Drug
Store and a Protestant. She was
a member of the hospital aux­
iliary.
Survivors Include daughters,
Janette K. Pell. Osteen. Ruth,
Crystal River: six grandchildren;
eight great-grandchildren.
Brlsson Funeral Home, San­
ford, In charge of arrangements.
E LIZABETH CHARLENE
Elizabeth Charlene Moore. 41.

‘ t 13

Caring Personal Mention
Gramkow
Funeral Home
130 W. A irp o rt Blvd.
Sanford, FL 32773
K T T tX O R A M K O W

am i

322*3213

Halback top choice for
DeBary Hall renovation
n tra w oitTT w n tir
Although DeBary H alils on the
northern side of Lake Monroe,
many Sanford area residents are
connected with the proposed
remodeling of the old building.
The latest Is Fred Halback. a
former graduate of Seminole
High School, who will be very
deeply Involved.
H a l b a c k . o w n e r of
Herbert/Halback. Inc.. Orlando,
h as been approved by the
Volusia County Commission, to
create the restoration site plan
for DeBary Hall. Ray Sage, who
Is on the DeBary Hall, Inc.,
Executive Board of Directors,
said the total project has been
estimated at 91.3 to 91.3 mil­
lion.
The entire restoration project
la expected to take several years
to complete. The actual start
date o f the work has not yet been
determined.

Vl;Vci

V

; 'Zf/W

S
1

Sage said, “ The State o f Flori­
da has had money budgeted for Fred Halteck ready to
with commlaalon
this project but haa held onto It
In
the four.” She said If all the
profit support group. “ Halback’s
for the past five years. Now.
site plan will become the work­ ar-.ingements can be worked out
they’ve turned over 9350,000 to ing document that will be used with Halback. the firm will be
three c h ild re n . T h e w id o w liv e s
the Volusia County Parks and
by the contractors who will officially hired. If there are any
alone In her Golcfcboro home.
Recreation Department for use
handle the actual remodeling problems, the firm identified as
In the project."
work.”
second choice, which was not
The building Is presently the
Immediately named, would be
property o f the state, who Is
Smith said nine separate firms selected.
leasing It for 90 years to the from throughout Florida applied
DeBary Hall, formerly known
DeBary Hall. Inc., for $1 per for the position. "Our group
as Dcbary Manor, was built in
year.
selected four of them, and the
813 Orchid A w ., Casselberry,
1873, and was used as a private
According to Edle Smith, pres­ Volusia County Com m ission
died Sunday in Apopka. Bom
resident by County Frederick
Jan. 29. 1950, In Paris. Ky'., she ident of the DeBary Hall non- picked Halback as number one Dcbary for many years.
m oved to Casselberry from
Cincinnati in 1960. She waa a
waitress and a member o f St.
P a g a lA
ballot where It would, require Vice President o f C N L Pro­
Charles Cathedral. Orlando.
commitment for the future with approval from a majority o f the perties. that he may Invite the
Survivors Include daughters. C N L Properties."
voters. Additionally, methods o f citizens to examine the structure
Tammy Lynn MeHale, Cassel­
Before a purchase could take financing such a purchase would
In the near future, If there Is any
berry. Candace Lynn McHale. place, a sale price would have to have to be worked out and
uesllon about the 103-year old
Cocoa Beach; son, Mark A n ­ be established and agreed upon, agreed upon. Some city officials ?«
ormer hotel’s use as a city hall.
thony O'Shea Swan go. Orlando; the matter would have to gain believe It could take several
The matter will have Its sec­
mother. Helen Frances OUboy. final approval o f the Commlaalon years.
ond reading and public hearing
C asselb erry; brother. W illie In a public hearing. It would
Terry said he had been In­ at the next m eeting o f the
Sylvester Swango. Akron. Ohio; then be placed on the November formed by Gary Ralston, Senior Longwood C ity Commission.
three grandchildren.
Beacon Cremation Service.
Winter Park. In charge o f ar­
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
rangements.
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit,

Hotel-

Circuit judge to plead
guilty to bribe charge

NA TH A NIE L TANNY
ROBINSON
Nathaniel Tanny Robinson.
80. 93 Lake Monroe Terrace.
Sanford, died Sunday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. Born Jan. 7. 1911, In
Longwood, he moved to Sanford
in 1930 from there. He was a
laborer and a Baptist.
Survivors Include wife, Louella
K.. Sanford; sons. Willie Lee.
Sanford; daughters, Geraldine.
Gloria and Mary Robinson Perry,
all o f Sanford; seven grand­
children; one great-grandchild.
Wllson-Elchelberger Mortuary.
Inc.. Sanford. In charge o f ar­
rangements.
''

With pre-arrangement you &amp; your family
have peace o f mind knowing prices will never
increase. In times o f need it's comforting to
know your decision making Is complete and
the needs and desires
'* entire family are
ires o f the
met. v V ;
3
[r J

Vtow b le k o e lo A a B e e u U a S |w L u a —
a —.
I n v n w v N iv u v M r y n w i is to n y u u i u u v to * lE v n o o v iin y

HOI SHOOK, W IL L IA M *. "BILL**
Funeral u r v k n lor Mr. William A. “ B ill"
Holbrook. 75. of DeBary. lormorly of Sanlird.
who died Monday, will bo II o'clock Thursday
morning ol Oromkow Funeral Homo Chapel
«im Rov. Bob Klckkghler otlkioting In
lormonl will bo In Oakfawn Pork Comotory.
Frlondt moy coll ol Oromkow Funorol Homo
Wednesday ovonlng from I I p m Mr.
Holbrook It survived by Ihroo grandchildren.
Gloria Joan Holbrook. Sanford, Gorold
Marshall, Son lord, and Linda Choudofn.
Genova.
Arrangem ent* by Gramkow Funorol
Homo. Sanford.
SMALL, DAVID
Gravosidt service* lor Mr David Small. A3,
o l 73/1Wotvr St.. Sonfcrd. who died Saturday
will bo hold II a m Ttursday at Iho Ganova
Crmofory with Iho Rov. Matthew Jackson
olllclollng Friend* moy coll at Iho funorol
hometrom af p.m Wednesday
SunrlM Funorol Mono. WO Lacini A v o ,
Sanford. 371 7303. In ch*rg« of arrangement*
WASHINGTON. JAMES NKWT
Funeral services tor Mr. Jama* Newt
Walking Ion, OS. of IMS Southwell R d .
Sanford, who died July JO. will bo hold II a m . .
Saturday at Zion Hope Missionary Bopflot
Church with Iho Rev. RoOMvoll Groan
olflclallng Inferment to follow In Evorgroon
Cemetery. Sanford. Frlondt moy coll at Iho
funorol homo from O f pm. on Friday.
Sunme Funorol Hone. fO# Loculi Avo .
Sanlord. 373 71*3. in charge of arrangemen li

MIAMI — Dade Circuit Judge Roy T. Gt-lbcr.
one of five current and former local Judges under
investigation for corruption, will plead guilty to u
single charge o f taking bribes, a newspaper
reported.
Gelber agreed Monday to u plea bargain deal
that will Include his resignation from the bench
and full cooperation with federal Investigators
working on the two-yeur-old federal probe dubbed
Operation Court Broom, the Miami Herald
reported In today's editions.
The Herald quoted unidentified sources us
saying Gelbcr's attorney. Cloud Milter, and
Assistant U.S. Attorney John O'Sullivan on
Monday reached "agreement In principle’ ’ on the
plca from the 4 1-year-old Juror.
Gelber. according to the report. Is expected to
surrender "one morning later this w eek" In
Miami at the U.S. Marshal's office, where he will
be arrested and booked. He then Is to lx* taken
before a federal Judge here to make Ids plea.
The Judge was expected to plead guilty to once
count of violating the federal Hobbes Act. which
prohibits the taking of money "under color of
official right.” the sources totd the Herald.
Without such a plea. Gelber reportedly could
face several racketeering charges from a federal
grand Jury hearing evidence In the 0|M-ration
Court Broom cose.
It he were to plead guilty to a single Hobbes Act
violation count, the sources told the Herald. I InJudge could face us little us five years In prison.
Instead of a possible life sentence If convicted on
the possible racketeering charges.
Gelber waa elected to county bench In I OHO.
Tw o years later, he successfully ran for tin- circuit
bench.
An unidentified lawyer told the paper that
Gelber could expect to receive favorable treatmen I from prosecutors If tie were to go through
with the reported deal.
"Once you plrad guilty In a federal case, you
arc no longer Public Enemy Number One." tinlawyer auld. "You become government exhibit
Number One. You are no longer treated with
disdain."

Legal Notlcti

IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE NO. » l *041 CA 14 K
CARTERET SAVINGS BANK,

FA..
n

Plalntllt,

CHESTER R. ELLISON and
JANICE ELLISON, hi* *11*. •»

*1.

Defendant!*)
NOTICE OF SALE
Nolle* It hereby given IS*!,
pursuant to th# Order or Final
Judgment entered In thl» causa.
In th* Circuit Court ol Somlnol#
County. Florid*. I will tell IS*
property d u eled In Seminole
County, Florida, descrlbad a*'
Lot U. Lett the W**l 3/1* leel.
Block B, CARRIAGE HILL.
UNIT FOUR, according to plat
In Plat Booh IS. Page* X end St.
Public Record* ot Seminole
County. Florid*
et public **l*. to th* high**! end
belt bidder, tor c**h. at th*
WEST FRONT DOOR ol th*
SEMINOLE County Courthouse
tn SANFORD. Florid*, at II 00
A M , on September J, ittl
MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By Jane E Jatewlc
Deputy Clerk
Dated July 30. I**l
Publish Augu*f *. IX m i
DEI 33
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
INRE FORFEITURE OF
It.t/ IM U S CURRENCY
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
PROCECOINO
TO Pater Hell
toot beer lake Rd
Apopka. FI 33713
and ell other* who claim an
inter**! in the tollowing
property
Sl.fttOOU S Currency
Sherill Donald E stinger. ol the
Seminole County Sharin'* Dept.
Seminole County. F lorid *,
th rough h i* o l t l c e r * . In
v**tig*lo»* or agent*, veiled the
above p r o p e r on April 14. Iffl.
at or near Bear Lake Roed.
Semtnoi# County. F tor id* and it
prttenlly holding u .d property
lor the purpose of forfeiture
pursuant to Section* til 701 704.
Florida Statute*. *nd will RE
QUEST that an Honorable
Judge ot the Circuit Court.

L«gal Notlcts

Seminot* County. Florida, luuo
a Rut* to Show Cause why th*
above proparty theuld net be
forfeited to the above agency.
Thl* request will b* mod* by
MAIL tomotlm* around Aug. tt.
left THIS IS NOT A HEARING
OATEI You will b* tent a copy
ot th* Rule to Show Couto once
It It signed by th* Judge and It
will advlt* you hew and when to
retpond to thl* request tor
forNItur#
I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT
a true and correct copy at thl*
Notice w *t **nl to th* above
named address** by U S reglt
tered mall, return receipt re
quested, thl* 74th day ot July.
Ittl.
NORMAN R WOLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
By: Philip Archer
Aulttant Stela Attorney
700 S. Park Av*
Titusville. FI 77/M
(407) 704 1730
Attorney lor Plalntllt
140X33
Publish: July 30A August*. Iffl
DEM J7S
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am engaged tn business ot UIO
S US Highway It&amp;ei. Suit*
100. Maitland. J77SI. Florida,
under the Fictitious Nam* of
FRAZIER CARPET A
SUPPLIES, and that I Intend to
register said name with the
Secretary ol Slat*. Tallahassee.
Florida, in accordance with th*
provision* ol the Fictitious
Nam* Statute. To Wit Section
MS Of. Florida Statutes 1*17
Tony Lee Frailer
Publish August*, tetl
DEI A4
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given that I
am engaged In business el TfSl
West Osceola R d . Geneva. FL
J77J7, F lo rid a , under th*
Fictitious Nam* ot MR LAI'S
GARDEN SERVICE, and that I
Intend to register said name
with the Secretary ot Stale
Tatlahesse*. Florida, tn *c
cor dance with th* provisions ot
th* Flctltiou* Nam* Statute.
To Wit Section MS 0* Florida
Statute* test
Hop Van Lai
Publish August*, m i
DEI Tt

‘

�to oppose
AUSTIN. Tea. — State House
m em bers approved p a y in g
welfar e recipients to acquire a
surgically Implanted Mrth con*

S u p rem e C o u rt nom inee
Clarence Thomas In a vole so
close that h is supporters

Judge to rule how videotape of
alleged rape will air in court
The proposal w ould have
cxireciw ine i c i a i uepanmcni
of Human Scrvtcea to set up a
program In which those recetvIng Aid to Families with De­
pendent Children would receive
•300 if they acquired an un*
der-the-skln Mrth control Im­
plant. If they retained the ton*
nt for live years, they would
paid an additional MOO.

B

the Flood and Drug Administra­
tion last December. Once In­
serted on the underside o f a
w om an's upper arm. the eta
silicone. matchstlck*slm rods
s lo w ly release a sy n th etic
horm one that proventa pre­
gnancy for up to five years. Its
m ajor aide effect la Irregular
menstrual bleeding.

a n o th e r A ssem b ly o f O o d

'1 don't feel this has to be
shown to the p u b lic ." the
29-year-old woman said In The
D etroit N e w s on Monday.
"They're literally raping me

..t_i i t T n i u ni\t . i l u h M
• f ® w r ow l neat m oots on
C n t T R S (A CTHYIIim U K a i h U w a r
______

handy has recommended
y ^ ^ in d the video to the Jury in
j u u n i --- --- — , , U n - ..i-ifc-f- — a..
coun on ft monitor t u id k ovuy

d r f S E t . WbO H W k Ih .

lOU,OT
Deborah Servltto. a Macomb
County circuit court Judge, said
she wants to balance the m an's
right to a fair trial with the
wom an's right to privacy.

20 *mlnute videotape with a
hand-held cam era, said the
woman consented to the act.
The woman, however, told police
that her fo rm er b o y frien d

We offer

T h ro u gh ou t the m arriage

ends o f the front row in state
ujoutci court.
Oorm an In 19M provided
Orleans prostitute. That led to
•w a g g a rt's ouster from the
Assemblies o f Ood. the nation’s
largest Pentecostal denomina­
tion.
Earlier In the trial, missionary
Roger Myers testified that a
Swaggsrt Ministries official told
hton Ckwinan "had ongoing af­
fairs with more than 100 women

the F irst Assem bly of O od
Church In New Orleans In 1966
•Iter admitting to one adulterous
affair. He filed suit against
Swaggsrt In 1967.

“Budget B U U af can
even out yuur month-tomonth d cctric bills. Ybu pay a
“ rolling average,” or roughly

tips to ways to hold down

tricky? Let an FPL specialist

your electrical MIL Phis,

com e over to And o u t W t ll

FPL will

that prevented so much as a taxi
rids to B r o o k l y n w i t h o u t
The form er Philippine first
lady had been required to get
U.S. Justice Department ap­
proval 48 hours before leaving
The restrictions. were lifted
Friday, two days after Philippine
President Corszon Aquino re­
versed a BVk-ycar ban on Mrs.
Marcos’ return to her homeland.
Her lawyer. James Linn, sold
he had advised her against
returning to the Philippines —
where she faces tax-evasion
charges — because she might be
prevented from leaving once she
is there.
The U.S. travel restrictions
were Imposed In June 1969.
when federal authorities de­
clared Mrs. Marcos a security
threat. Her husband, deposed
Philippine PreWdent Ferdinand
Marcos, died In In exile In Hawaii
in September 1969.
Mrs. Marcos now may leave
the country without permission,
but because the Philippine gov­
ernment has her passport, she
would need permission to return
to the United Stales, said Im m i­
gration and Naturalization Serv­
ice spokesman Duke Austin.

they’ll be more predictable

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�V*

TUESDAY

S anford Herald

August

B N

i *

Road weary Colt All-Stars
go after World Series flag

VUInlir i(gnupt
FIVE POINTS - Registration fe» Winter Ball
naaebaH play will be coming on Saturday.
August 17 and Saturday. Auguat 34 at Semlnefc
PONY Baaeball.
Reglatration will be held at the Five Point!
Baaeball Complex on Highway 419 from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. each day.
Regietration la open to all players agea M 3 .
Prospective players will need to bring copies
irth certificates and a registration fee of ga
birth
Players muet be age live by August I. Play Will
beglng In September.

Board maattng
of the
FIVE POINTS - The annual
Board of Directors at Seminole PONY
Inc. will be held at the Five Points Complex on
Highway 419 on Sunday. August 36 at 3 p.m.
The: inicking will be held ini the meeting room at
the baseball fields. All Interested parents and
people are Invited and encouraged to attend.

UP

1991

B

N g » *M

One more step to climb

IN B R I E F

PRO FOOTBALL

d»I|,

6,

Aits-Pacific
representative
p bplay
» thethe
Asia-Pacific
represen
tath
and then wrap up pool play Satur­
' LAFAYETTE. IN. - Their Is no day at 5:30 p.m. against the North
Zone champion. The two beat teams
rest for the weary.
With only four days at home since from each pool will play In the
July 8, and only one since July 19. semtnflnals next Monday with the
the Seminole PONY League Colt two winners of Monday’s games
to cmnb that advancing to the finals next Tues­
All-Stars will attem pt-----------------last w rung in the ladder and day. August 13.
become the second straight Florida
It has been quite a summer for the
team to capture the Colt World
15 and 16 year olds from Sanford.
Series starting today.
T he World S eries haa been Lake Mary and Winter Springs.
divided Into two four-team pooh
M anager Rod Fergerson and
with the top two teams from each coachesi Bob Can- and Jack Dlemer
pool advancing to the final four. have put together quite
diverse
Seminole will open play against the group that has won
w
mainly with
Host Area Team at 7:30 p.m.
tchlng and a strong declutch
Thursday at 5:30 p.m. they will 9mse.
ibera of the team Include
R m a M fe S M B

Robert Bologna from Lake Howell
High School. Dave Eckstein, Scott
Fergerson. Matt Freeman. Jeremy
Chunat. Robby Morgan and Corey
Gochee from Seminole High School

They lost their opening game 5-2
to Baytown. Texas and stared elim­
ination squarley In the face.

Back in June the team traveled to
St. Louis and won the Hinny-Mtnny
Invitational Tournament, going
undefeated. They then won the
Florida Stale Colt Championship by
coming out of the losers bracket to
sweep a doubleheader from defen­
ding World Series Champion Forest
Hills of Tampa July 14.

But they battled back to win five
games in four days, including a
doubleheader sweep on Thursday
behind the pitching of Morgan and
Chunat. and then a 9-2 revenge
victory over Baytown In the finals,
thanks to another pitching gem by
Dlemer, to wrap up the 'Hat Trick*
of three tournament Utica.

With the state title In hand the
team hit (he road for Marietta.
Georgia and the Southeast Regional
Tournament. They rallied late to
win their first two games and then

Having won 12 of 15 games Ihe
stars will now try to take that last
step to complete the qulnelta and
bring a World Series Championship
back to Seminole County.

F8U •IgnN hurt

Jax loses third straight
JACKSONVILLE - Julian Yan hit a two-run
double in the Blue Jays' four-run sixth Inning as
Knoxville (28-17) won 6-4 Monday, their third
s tra ig h t S ou th ern L e a g u e v ic to r y o v e r
Jacksonville (18-24).
Rob Wlshnevskl (5-8) earned the win after
allowing nine hits, six runs, three walks and
striking out live In five and 1-3 innings. The
loser was Kerry Woodson (1-4).
Knoxville's Mikr Maksudian led olT the fourth
Inning with a homer to give the Blue Jays a 2-1
lead. It was 6-1 after the sixth.

Tony Zara, 10. of Sabai Points, looks down the course
confidently sariy in his round as he watches ths flight
of his drive (Left). But he shows ths frustration of

k p iw f.h is
missing a putt as Its Jumps up as ths ball Just lips out
on ths 15th hols. Zara had a tough opsnlng round In ths
JGA’s saason-andlng toumamant shooting a 51.

LAKE MARY — Many players In
the Junior Golf Association have
watched the Sunday afternoon
charges of Jack Nlcklaus and Gary
Player. cnvtLoning themselves one
day bird icing that last hole for the
tournament championship.
Well tomorrow, 280-plus competi­
tors will have the chance to live out
their fantasies in the final round of
the JG A 'a season-ending two-day
tournament, which concludes today
at the Grand Cypress Resort.
Monday’s first-round action at
Heathrow Country Club featured a
college player chasing a high-school
Junior coming Into his own and
some strong piny In Ihe middle
f l i g h t s , s e t t i n g up t o d a y ' s
show dow n on the treacherous
North-South course,
Lake Brcntlcy Junior Michael
Berzovlch blistered the long.- de­
manding layout at Heathrow with a
three-undcr-par 69 to g r a b a
three-shot lead In the first flight.
Among those chasing Berzovlch la
Keith Grassing, a second-year
player from Florida International
University. He and Mark Robinson
each trail Berzovlch by three shots
after even-par 72's. Kevin Ach
stands In fourth after a 73. Lake
Mary graduate Rob Dazey la In fifth
(74). Jeremy Anderson sixth (75).
□ — G olf . Paga 3B

Calico Jacks wraps up
Monday Night League
SANFORD — The Sanford Recre­
ation Deportment Men's Monday
Night Sprlng/Summer Slowpitch
Softball League came to a close at
Plnehurst Park with Calico Jacks
unseating the Tim Raines Connec­
tion as champions o f the league.
TRC had a chance to win Its fifth
straight Monday night title by either
w inning a doublet,cader or by
h a v in g C a lic o J a c k s lo s e a
doublchadcr.
TRC's hopes were high as they
stopped Calico Jacks 6*1 in a Ihe
completion of a game that was
suspended from July 29.
But when TRC dropped an 8-3
decision to the Orlando Softball
Club they needed a loss by Calico
J ack s for them and Lam bert
Erectors to get Into a tic for the lead.
But Calico Jacks ended Ihe sus­
pense by scoring seven runs in the
top o f the first inning and going on
to hammer the Orlando Softball
Club 18-3.
The final standings show Calico
Jacks with a 12-3 record with TRC
and Lambert Erectors Just behind at
12-6 and 11-6, respectively. While
all three teams could end with six
losses Calico Jacks clinches the title
because of head-to-head copmetltion.
The remainder o f the standings

found the Boom town Boys finishing
3-11 and (he Orlando Softball Club
2-14.
TRC led the game with Calico
Jacks 4-1 when rain forced a
suspension after three Innings. TRC
added a pair of Insurance runs In
Ihe fourth inning on a single by
Mike Galloway, a double by Ernest
Shuler, an error and an RBI double
by Keith Acrce.
The only other hits Monday night
for TR C were singles by Tony
Dunkinson and Burnett Washing*
ton.
Calico Jacks was only able to
com e up with singles by Pete
Harrison. Scott Farmer and Trey
Brasaure over (he final four Innings.
The Orlando Softball Club made
its season by holding the perennial
front-runners to only three runs and
three hits. It was the first on Ihe
field victory for the Orlando Softball
Club. Its other win coming on a
forfeit by Calico Jacks.
Doing the damage for the Orlando
Softball Club were Joe Burdenskl
□ 1 s t Plaeknrst. P sgs 2B
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Paul Hughes tossed a three-hitter and helped his own cause at the plate
with two singles and two runs batted in as the Orlando SoltbaH Club
defeated the Tim Raines Connection 8-3 al Pinehurst Park Monday night.

Seminole Mobile Radio takes over Thursday Night lead
B A SE B A LL
□7:3 5 p.m — WTBS. San Francisco Giants at
Atlanta Braves. (L)

L"

i:
&amp;■

By BSSBMI STOCK
HfahJCofTSspoodtnt_______________

COLLBQK FOOTBALL

ORLANDO — Orlando scored five runs In the
third Inning without the benefit o f a hit en route
to an 8-3 victory over Chattanooga Monday,
sweeping their four-game Southern League
series.
The Lookouts 119-27) led 2-0 in the top o f the
third after Reggie Sanders homered and Manny
Jose tripled and then scored on a sacrifice fly.
But Orlando (27-14) came back In the bottom
o f the third and racked up live runs after loading
the bases with seven walks, a sacrifice fly and a
fielder's choice.
Cheo Garcia led the SunRays hitting, going
2-for-4 with a double and three RBIs. Rafael
DeLlma went 2-for-3 with two RBIs and Jose
Marzan went 2-for-4 with a double and scored
twice.
Rusty Richards (4-4) was the winner, allowing
eight hits, two earned runs and two walks while
striking out three In seven Innings. Chat­
tanooga’s Rodney Imes (1-2) lasted two and 2-3
innings, giving up one hit. five earned runs, six
walks and no strikeouts.

t

take
to the links
In J Q A finale

MIAMI — Miami Dolphins Pro Bowl tackle
Richmond Webb tore ligaments in his left knee
In Saturday's 19-17 victory over the Los Angeles
Raiders In Tokyo and will be out for three to four
weeks, the team announced Monday.
Webb, Miami's first-round draft choice from
Texas AAM, didn’t miss ■ snap in a stellar
rookie season. The Injury, which does not
require surgery, puts his status for the
season-opener Sept. 1 against Buffalo in
jeopardy.
Shula said that either Jack Linn, Jeff
Delknbach or Gene Williams will take Webb’s
place on the line. Miami allowed an NFL-low 16
sacks In 1990 and Webb, who started at left
tackle, was held accountable for only two of
them.
Meanwhile. Shula expressed deep concerns
over the continuing logjam of unsigned players.
Including 10 veterans and No. 1 draft choice,
receiver Randal Hill.

]

I

280-plus

Dolphin Injured

EOrlando wins again

I
_ It'

spilt a doubleheader with the host
East C obb All-Stars to become
Southeast Regional Champions and
earn another long road trip to
Carrollton. Texas for the South
Zone tournament.

and Matt Dlemer. Mike Werner.
Brian Milner. Jay Black. Mike Carr
and Hank Tooke from Lake Mary
High School.

• ■* I

TALLAHASSEE - Florida State slgnce For­
rest Conoly underwent reconstructive. Juice
surgery Monday, said FSU trainer Randy
Oravetz.
Conoly. at 6 feet. 7 Inches and 341 pounds.
Injured a ligament In hla right knee during
conditioning drills Saturday. FSU team physi­
cian Dr. Tom Haney performed the operation.
A graduate of Berlin High School In Berlin.
Conn.. Conoly was a first team Parade AllAmerican and considered one of the nation's top
high school prospects. Oravetz said that the
surgery was considered a success but that
Conoly would be out Indefinitely.

r.

SANFORD — Seminole Mobile
Radio swept u doubleheudrr to
leapfrog over Gator's Dockside into
first place after make-up action in
Sanford Recreation Department
Men's T hu r s da y Night
Sprlng/Summer Slowpitch Softball

League action al Chase Park Mon­
day night.
It was a great night for tight,
com pel Hive, low-scoring softball
action at Chase- as all three games
were decided in the last Inning.
S e m in o le M obile R ad io edged
Gator’ s Dockside 2-1. First Baptist
C h u rc h stjn cek cd b y G a to r's

Dockside 6-4 in eight Innings and
Seminole Mobile Radio outscored
First Baptist Church 6-5.
With one more night o f make-ups
left there is Just a half-gam e
seperuting (he tup spot us Seminole
Mobile Radio Is 10-3 and Gator's
Dockside 10-4. Lee's Dockside is
See Chase, Page 2B

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14

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�M - Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Tuaaday, August a, IIS I

Buccaneers win preseason opener

S TA TS &amp; STA N D IN G S

C H U C K N
I*arta W rite r

IL YIR

CLEVELAND After their
first Preseason game, coaches
Bill Bettchlck and Richard
WllBamaon were In agreement
on one point: They're glad they
have three more weeks before
the gam es count.
WUItemson's Tampa Bay Buc­
caneers beat Bellchtck's Cleve­
land B row ns 23-10 M onday
night aa three different Bucs
quarterbacks directed scoring
drives.
*'l thought overall w e got
accomplished what we wanted
to accomplish." said Williamson,
who la running his first tralttirig
camp after taking over the Bucs
for the final three gamea last
season. "It la obvious we have a
lot more work to do. but we have
three weeks to do It In."
B e l l c h l c k . the def en si ve
c o o rd i n a t or for the S u p e r
B o w l - c h a m p i o n New Y o r k
Giants last season, didn't see
much that he liked.
"Certainly there were a lot
more mi st ake s than great
plays." he said. "W e had one
good drive In the third quarter.
We kicked the ball off OK. We
had some spots where we were
just too Inconsistent."

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•: M p m — WWN2AM (78). Spert*T*lh

and recenBy-crowned Flor­
ida Junior Invitation champion
Rex Holland seventh (76)
Defending champion Charlie
Hanrelaon poateda 78.
John Haddock leads second
flight by two shot* over Ryan
Stead after a first-round 77.
Lampke. who won the
night title
i
earlier this
'inter Springs, atanda
■t Wlnte
within striking distance follow
Ing an 81. Brian Hunicke 81 slat
■hot 81. Danny Day. Ryan
Dtnklage. and Jvdan Jones also
have shots at catching Haddock.
They each shot 83.
William Lovett streaked out to
a six-shot advantage In third
flight with an 63. Michael
Burden. Brian Grassing, and
Chris Shorettc will lead the
charge at Lovett after their
rounds of 89. 90. and 90 respec­
tively. Allen King and Mark
Harkins can ■till win the title
following their rounds o f 93.
Brian Smith stands in seventh
(94).
No lead, no matter how large.
Is safe at tlie stick-green, weltb u n k e r e d track at G r a n d
Cypress, which hosted the W orld
Cup. won by England. Just one
year ago.

next at 8-6.
First Baptist Church finishes
8-7. The Olive Garden Restau­
rant finishes 5-10 and A A A Tree
Service Is 1-12.
The Seminole Mobile RadioGator's Dockside game was a
scoreless affair Until the sixth
Inning when Gator's Dockside
broke on top with a run on a pair
o f walks lo Derek Pike and Jeff
Deen and a sacrifice fly by Barry
Hysell.
Seminole Mobile Radio came
bock with a run o f its own In (he
bottom o f the sixth Inning when
Gary Uttrel reached on an error
and later scored on a single by
Jeff Wilson.
Gator’s Dockside tried lo break
the tie in the top o f the seventh
Inning by loading the bases with
no one out. But the next batter
popped up for the first out and a
fly out for out number two
turned into a double play when
the runner from th ird was
thrown out at the plate at­
tempting lo score.

Sieve Laurence of Flret Baptist Church M is himself for a Qroundbaii
at ChAse Park Monday night. Laurence had three hits, scored one
run and drove In another aa the Baptists split a pair of games 8-7.

P a u l B ru ck e n a n d D ave
Milllron led off (he bottom of the
seventh Inning for Seminole
Mobile Radio with singles. Keith
Wallace also singled but Bracken
was cut down at the plate trying
to score the winning run.
Gator's Dockside looked like It
might force extra Innings when
the next batter popped up. but a
grounder by Doug Burleson was
booted for an error and Milllron
scooted home wllh the winning
run.

BO-yard drive late In the first
with a 6-yard run and dhre for i
touchdownt Carlson threw
15-yard scoring paw to John!
Harvey In the third quarter.
Kendall Trainor added a 43-1
yard field goal In the fourth [
quarter.
Cleveland scored on a 36-yard I
field goal by Matt Stover tn the
second quarter and a 3-yard run
b y rookie free agent A rch ie
H erring In the third. H erring, a I
longshot to make th e team,
played at nearby Youngstown |
State University.
"T his is the team I grew up I
with, with the Kantac Kids of I
Brian Slpe and Doug Dteken and
a ll those guys. I lo v e the
Browns." Herring said.
Ocorge Hemingway, a rookie
prospect from Colorado, act up
Herring's touchdown with runs
o f 31 and 7 yards.
Other than that, Cleveland
accomplished little on offenae.
B e r n l e K o i a r s t a r t e d at
quarterback but completed only
2-of-5 passes for 13 yards.
Hem ingway gained 46 yards
rushing and Derrick Gainer was
next with 16 yards.
Overall. Tampa Bay outgalned
Cleveland 294-133 in total of­
fensive yards.

In fourth flight action. Mark who won the East Central Chap­
Thlesen holds a six-stroke lead ter tournam ent e a rlie r this
over Andrew t o m a n after a season, is three behind the
tint-round 96. Ben Katterfleld leaders. Amle Girard occupies
(104) and Scott Adelman (108) fourth place after an 88 while
also plan to make a run at Megan Breen holds dow n fifth
Thelaen. Chad Ankney la fifth following an 89. Kelly Donovan
(109). Bnran Stevens sixth (110), la In sixth (102). Kristin Close
seventh (105).
and Brian Plrkie seventh (115).
Rick Siodysko, who has placed
Anne Schols Jumped out to a
In four toumArnenta this sum­
three-shot lead In the girl's
mer. leads a pack o f contenders
12-and-under division. Her 59
In fifth flight following a 43,
waa three bettor than Bronwyn
Scott Mankovlch trails Siodysko Kohn's 62. Julie Komurke 69,
by Just one shot. Tommy Finwall
who has triumped In six of her
stands two back. Justin Biggs seven starts this summer, stands
and Matthew Brennan are within
10 back o f Scheir. Rounding out
shouting distance after they
the flight were Jennifer Keefe
each shot a 46 on Heathrow’s
(78), Terra Traeder ( 88), Sarah
front nine. Jason Traeder Is In
Braddock (90), Katie Donovan
sixth (47), and Brian Craver and (95). and Angela Katterfleld
Chris Bogdan are tied for sev­
(109).
enth (45),
Craig Craver edged out to a
The pee wee division stands
one-shot advantage In sixth log-jammed after the first day of
(light after his 67 on Heathrow's play. Zach G rehike and Chase
finishing nine. Joshua Johnson Freeman each shot a 13 to tie for
stands' one shot back. Bo Mor­ the lead. Freeman posted an 11
rison and Dave Hensch are last week at Tlmacuan while
within two of the leader. Also Grelnke has finished in the top
within striking distance: Scott ■even four times this summer.
Hogeboom (60). Craig Buchanan Brian Rosier Is two back after a
(61). and Thomas Brundace (63).
IS while Joel Roycik 16 and
Adrienne Bailey and Robin Merrick Ann Park each posted a
Rhein are tied for the girl's
16. Bill Dukes (17) and Dustin
13-and-over flight lead following Ankney (18) are also In reach of
rounds of 84. Heather Holkamp. the lead.

Pinehurst
_ _ I* ■
(double, two singles,
run scored, two RBI). Paul Toupa
(double, single, three RBI) and
Oreg Stull (tw o angles, (w o runs
scored. RBI).
A lso h ittin g were w in n in g
p it c h e r P a u l H u gh ea (t w o
singles, tw o RBI). Brian Michaels
(two singles, two runs scored),
Dan Browne (two singles, run
■cored) and Jim Rawlings and
Jeff Burdenaki (one single and
one run scored each).
Pacing the TRC offense were
Ed Jackson (triple, two runs
scored. RBI). Billy Griffith and
Robert Stevens (one single each).
E rn e s t S h u le r and J lm m e
Stuckey (one RBI each) and Rod

Chasetla a e d frees R age 19

Vlnny Tes ta ve rd e
quarterbacked Tam pa Bay's flret
two series, using a no-huddle
offense that waa effective but
that stalled before II got to the
end tone. Steve Christie finished
off both drives with field goals of
44 and 20 yards.
"I felt very comfortable.” said
Testaverde. who area 4-of-4 for
44 yards. " I waa on target with
my passes. 1 felt good about
running the no-huddle offense. It
was very effective, and it wilt get
better.”
He and Williamson decided
earlier in the day they'd try the
hurry-up If the situation was
right. Good field position — their
first two drives started at the
Tampa Bay 43 and the Cleve­
land 44 — convinced them to
give It a go.
"I don't think there was any
breakdown by the Browns
because of the no-hudd|e."
Williamson said. “ I don't know If
they were expecting It or not.
Vlnny dkl a good Job of making
some good calls. The disappoin­
ting thing Is that we had an
opportunity to put It In. hut they
■topped us."
Backup quarterbacks Chris
Chandler and Jeff Carlson, how­
ever. each got the ball Into the
end rone. Chandler capped an

Providing the offense Tor Sem ­
inole Mobile Radio were Milllron
(two singles, run scored), Greg
W ells (tw o sin gles), W ilso n
(single. RBI), Bracken, Wallace
and Ted Freycenet (one single
each) and Burleson (run scored).
Doing the hitting for Gator's
Dockside were Jason M iller
(double, single). Mike Kirby (two
singles). Hysell (single. RBI),
Decn. Lloyd Wall and Jerry
Crutchfield (one single each) and
Pike (run scored).
Th e First Baptist ChurchGator's Dockside contest was
Just as exciting with the game
bwlng tied 3-3 after seven In­
nings.
It was another two out rally
that proved to be the difference
as First Baptist scored three runs
after two were out In the eighth
inning. Jack Eltonhcad and Bob
Barbour singled ahead an RBI
single by Jeff Bethany and a two
RBI single by Robert Jones.
Gator's Dockside scored one
run and had the tying runs In
scoring position In the bottom of
the eight with one out but once
again could not get the clutch
hit.
Doing the damage for First
Baptist Church were J o n es
(three singles, two RBI). Bethany
(three singles, run scored. RBI).
Eltonhcad (tw o singles, run
scored. RBI). Sid Brock (two
singles. RB1|. Steve Laurence
(s in g le , ru n sco re d . R B I).
Barbour und Billy and Tom
Grarey (one single and one run

Turner (run scored).
The last game o f the season
turned Into a rout quickly. With
Roger Lacroy on first with a
single and tw o outs the flood
gates opened. David 8 evens
singled and Scott Fanner ripped
a two-RBI triple. Rob Parker
singled In Fanner and Bnusure
ripped a two-run home run.
W illy Harrison doubled and
■cored on a Tony Flores single
and Flores scored on a double by
Chris Tlghes.
The Orlando Softball Club
came back with three runsin the
bottom of the first inning on a
two-run double by Dan Browne
and an error. But the champions

■cored each) ai.td Lon HOwell
(single).
Pacing the Gator’s Dockside
offense were Crutchfield (two
■Ingles, run scored, RBI). Jerry
Herman (two singles, two RBI).
Kirby (two singles, two runs
scored). Wall and Curtis Tabor
(one double each). Miller (single.
RBI). Hysell (single, run scored)
and Harold Beasley and Tracy
Slltt (one single each).
The last game featured a little
more offense but It was Just as
close as (he other two games as
(he score was lied 5-3 going Into
the bottom o f the seventh Inn­
ing. Sem inole M obile Radio
pulled oul the win however as
Bracken. Milllron, Wallace and
John Hewitt each singled to
score the winning run.
Contributing to a 18 hit Semi­
nole Mobile Radio offense were
Jim Speake (double, two singles,
run scored, tw o RBI). Wells
(double, two singles). Freycenet
(triple, single, two runs scored).
Burleson (tw o singles. RBI).
Wallace (two singles, run scored)
and Milllron (tw o singles).
Also contributing were Hewitt
(single. RBI). Ltttrcl and Bracken
(one single and one run scored
each) and Wilson [single).
Leading th e First Baptist
Church offense were Brock (tri­
ple. double, tw o RBI). Billy
Gracey (two singles, run scored.
Kill). Laurence and Bethany
(two singles and one run scored
each). Tom Gracey (single. RBI).
Jordan Beckner (single, run
scored) and Howell |run scored).

answered with five more runs in
the third to put the gam e out of
reach.
Braaoure led the Calico Jacks
attack with what should have
been a 5-for-5 night. But his
second home run o f the night
w as called an out because the
team had already reachd the
three home run rule. T h e hard­
hitting lefty still finished the
night with one home run. one
double, two singles, tw o runs
■cored and three RBI.
Helping Braasure contribute to
the 22-hlt offense were Farmer
(hom e run. triple, single, three
runs scored, four RBI). Stevens
Itrtple, two singles, three runs
scored, two RBI). Willy Harrison
(double, two singles, tw o runs
scored. RBI) and Lacroy (three
singles, three runs scored. RBI).
Also contributing were Tlghes
(double, single, run scored. RBI).
Parker (two singles, tw o runs
scored, two RBI). Pete Harrison
(home run. run scored, three
RBI) and F lo ra (single, run
scored. RBI).
Providing the offense for the
Orlando Softball Club w ere Grieg
Stuff (two singla, run scored).
Browne (double, run scored, two
RBI). Toups (double), Rawlings
(single, run scored). Paul Hughes
(RBI) and Jeff Burdenaki (rim
■cored).

GREYHOUND PARK
Central Florida's Center
For
Wagering Action
SPECIAL
FAN APPRECIATION

PERFORMANCE TODAY
(Tuesday Evening)

Post 77m* - 7:45 pm
FREE ADMISSION
Grandstands Clubhouse
Reservations and Information

(407) 099-4310

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday. August 6, 19R1 -

People
Fishing toumamsnt foryouthptannsd
i fishermen betwwen the apes of 0 and 13.
Calling aillyoun
young
T h e Winter Spring* V FW 5405 and Ladies Aux
uxitiary will be
holding
„ the
■ flsrl fishing
„ tournament
___________ l)or yout: ha at Sunshine
Parti on North Edgemon Avenue besident he post home at 430
N. Edgemon on Thuscaday mortng. August 15 fro 0 a.m.
Bring fishing gear and try to win one of the trhee top prises
being awrdedPu for all an dhot dogs and drink wil be served to
all contestants.
For more Information call 327-3151.

Clarification
In a story about Lisa's Animal Clubhouse. Sanctuary and
Aviary, which appeared Sunday In the Herald. the phone
number of animal rehabtl
rehabllltator Lisa Tanner w as inadvertently
omitted. For more Information about the birds and wOdtifc
housed there, or to donate btrdeeed, cages, pens or building
materials needed for other shelters, call Tanner at 3344)007

Seminole Community College (8CC) Toastmasters Club
•6581 have assumed a summer schedule and will meet the
first and third Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. at Seminole Community
College.
Contact Roeella Bonham at 333-0284 for more
Information

Making kids safe
Missing Childran Awaranass
Foundation hostsd a pienle
and Fun Day for ktda at Ft.
Mallon Part In Sanford rao a nt l y . Top l a f t : S h a w n
Tlllotaon, Sanford, accapts
popcorn from Kavtn Dtwnarch,
a voiuntaar for tha foundation.
Top right: Saphanlo Chrzarzcy
ax plains tha safaty program to
araa kids as Sanford Sacraatlon Dapartmant counsalor
Troy Dappsn looks on. flight: A
rousing gams of baakatbail
gava tha kids a chanca to
stratch Ihair lags tflsr foaming
about ertmaa against children
and how to pravant thsm.

Ovaroatars to gather

m

rj

A regular meeting of O vereaten Anonymous Is conducted on
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Florida Power and Light. 301 Myrtle
Ave.. Sanford. For more Information, call Carol at 322-0657.

TOPS chapters to moat about sating
Take O ff Pounds Sensibly Chapter FL 79 w ill meet Tuesday
at 6:15 p.m. at Howell Place. 200 W. Airport Blvd., Sanford.

Nar-Anon to offer help
Nar-Anon. a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Orlando General
Hospital. For more Information, call 869-6364.

Comoro club to hold mooting
W INTER PARK - T h e Orlando/Wlnter Park Camera Club
meets 7:30 p.m. on the first Tuesday of each month at the
Crealde School of the Arts (Aloma Avenue and St. Andrews).
Anyone who enjoys photography is Invited.
Details, call 679-3339 (dayl and 898-2604 (eves).

Dead son’s fiancee is family in fact

SHAR formod for conctr potlonto
. Support. Hope. Ai)d Recovery ISHAR). a self-support group
for cancer patients, m eets every Wednesday at 5:00 p.m.. ‘at
1621 W. First St,. Sanford. For Information, call Mary Lynne
Gray. 323-9374 0r322-7785.

Sanford Optimiota to moot
Sanford Optimist Club meets at noon each Wednesday at
Shoneya. Sanford. Anyone Interested Is Invited to attend or call
Bud Tobin at 322-7886.

Rotarians to rise for mooting!
Casselberry Rotary Club meets at 7:30 a.m. on Wednesday at
the Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive,
Casselberry.
Sanford Breakfast Rotary Club meets at 7:30 a.m. every
Wednesday at Christo's Restaurant In Sanford.

Sanford Kiwania to have lunch
Sanford Ktwanls Club meets at noon Wednesday at the
Sanford Civic Center for luncheon and program.

S a n fo r d H e r a ld

C ircu lation Representatives W ill Help
You Start Your Home Delivery Today!
C a ll 3 3 3 -M 1 1

D B A S A W T i Four years ago
our son. "AT.- got his girlfriend.
"T a r a ." pregnant. Tara was 15
and A1 was 18 at the time. A
week after our grandson was
bom . Tara's parents kicked her
out o f their house, so we took her
and the baby Into our home
where we lived happily as a
family.
As time went on. Tara got
pregnant again — also from our
son — and when she became of
a g e to m arry w it h o u t h er
parents' consent, she and A1
selected a date In September
(1990). Al was a college student
living at our home with Tara and
the babies.
One month before the wed­
ding. Al was killed in an auto
accident. During his funeral, we
treated Tara as his widow.
Tara has since reconciled with
her parents, and she and her
children have moved back with
them. She Is now 19. but she
doesn't date yet because she's
still grieving for Al. W e hope that
one day she will have n normal
life but she Is not Interested yet.
She attends ail o f our family
functions, birthdays, weddings.

TUESDAY'S PRIME TIME

For 2 4 -h o u r TV listings, see LEISURE m sgazlnt of Friday A ugust 2.

*-.Su

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

Christmas. Easter. Mother’s Day.
etc. Just as though she were A l's
widow.
Abby. w e feel that It may be an
embarrassment to her when we
Introduce her as "Tara, the
mother o f our grandchildren."
Since she and Al were never
married, she Is not technically
our daughter-in-law. So. how
should she be Introduced?
A L '0 FA TH ER IN GEORGIA
D B A S FA T H ER : Introduce
her as "T ara, the mother o f our
grandchildren." Your family and
close frien ds w ill know the
background, and casual ac­
quaintances and strangers do
not need to know her history. Or
ask Tara how she would like to
be Introduced and abide by her
wishes.
D B A S A B E T : My heart went
out to "G u ilty In Antlgo. W la."
— the smoker who was made lo
feel like a leper by society
because she smokes.
I am not a smoker, but my
mother was. 1 have Inhaled my
share o f secondhand smoke,
which. In turn, may have made
me more tolerant of smokers
today, but non-smokers should
check th eir own bad habits
before looking down their noses
at smokers.
Put m e next to a smoker
anytime on an airplane. In a
restaurant or theater, before you
put me next to a squawling baby
or a loud, obnoxious person!
Most of m y friends who smoke
go outside lo do so out o f
consideration for non-smokers,
but how muny people do you see
actually leaving a restaurant or a
theater when their child acts up?
What I'm saying Is. we all have
habits and/or actions that may
annoy others.
If smoking is the only bad
habit "G uilty In Antlgo" has. I'd
love to have her over for coder
and a cigarette sometime. If she
can handle my nail-blllng and
gossiping. I can handle her
cigarctle-smoking.
NOT PERFECT IN
W ESTM INSTER . CALIF.
DEAR A B B T : You recently
published a letter signed "'K ra i'
Adoptive Parent" from a mother
who was upset by Insensitive
questions. My wife and I are the
parents o f three girls: one. an
adopted Korean-born c h ild :

another, a blraclal child; and one
who Is our daughter by birth.
We belong lo a local adop­
tive-parent support group where
we have heard every Imaginable
story about encounters with
prejudice and Insensitivity. Wc
nave also learned how to handle
such questions.
When asking what seems to be
an Impertinent question. It Is
best to assume that (here was no
harm Intended.
For exam p le, .o n e woman
asked If my Korean daughter
was "m ine." When I responded.
"Y e s ," she asked. "H ow much
did she cost?"
When asked. "W hat happened
to her 'real' m other?" a good
response would be. " I have been
married to her for more than 20
years."
When asked. "A re they your
natural children?" I say. "W e
don't use any preservatives or
artificial Ingredients."
By answering good-uuluredly.
and with a little humor, parents
cun communlculc two very Im­
portant lessons to their children:
how they can one day handle
such questions, should the need
arise: and at the same lime
dem onstrate thut since the
purents arc not embarrassed by
their family, neither should the
children be.
ROBERT BLAHN.
PRESIDENT.
RAINBO W FAMILIES.
TOLEDO. OHIO
DEAR ROBERT: Thunk you
for your helpful suggestions, as
well us your cyc-opcnlng letter.

Families Interested In informa­
tion about adoption can contact
Adoptive Families of America.
333 Highway 100 North. Min­
neapolis. Minn. 55422. You will
be provided a free Information
packet upon request. No selfaddressed. stamped envelope Is
required.
D EAR ABBTt I am praying
that you can give me some
guidance. My husband o f many
years uses credit cards con­
stantly. He has no pension and
has never believed In life Insur­
ance or having a savings ac­
count. Social Security Is his only
Income.
I have learned that he owes
approximately $8,000. I believe
he pays his monthly dues from
euch o f his credit cards. In turn. I
have no Idea how many cards he
holds, uric I have never signed
for any o f h is credit cards.
Wc cuch have our own check­
ing uccountt at different banks. I
am forced to work full-time
beeuuse o f ihe many times I
have hud to come to his financial
aid. He Is now past 80. I am 69.
My concern Is that In Ihe event
thut he should die before I do.
would I be held responsible for
his debts?
W ORRIED IN CALIFO R NIA
D E A N W ORRIED: Because
you are living In a community
property state you are Indeed
responsible for your husband's
debts If he predeceases you. You
would Ik- wise lo consult an
uttorncy.

J l l 0116

w ssm j,

u.'iiJ
REGARDI

r. i *

LfTCHFdlO THEATRES AMO MCOOMAUH' PRESENT OUR RUMMER *X&gt;SHOWS EACH
TUCtOAY AMO WEDNESDAY MORMNO AT 10 00 AM COME AMO REE TOUR RAVOATTE
MCOOMALOCAMO CHARACTERS "E AC H WEDNESDAY MORMNO AT M O AM.

8/6 &amp; 8/7

C A R E BEARS

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6*322-2611TM

PUT

YOUPBUSINESS ON TH E MOVE

AUTO SALES
HAS M O VED 1

"Whata Ya Waitin Fer"...Come'
The Cattle Ranch Steak House
p h n I jes' found The proper name to The Cattle
Ranch nm ify Steak Houae, but from what I hear
tel, tofcajea' calla It’Cattleman's".It* been here tn
these parts for more than seven years, but some
folks doot seem to know "bout It yet
I'm Jes’ not one to back down on a dare, so I tea'
had togbe the Cattle Ranch ”6 Pound Challenge"
a try. They say for folka to come on In and find out
If they are a cowboy or a green hom. The bet la to
see If you can eat a atx pound steak, with all the
flxln’s, salad, potato and bread. In one hour and
fifteen minutes. And If you can. your vtttka to free.
I ten you that to some eatinl Weil. I was able to
doom the whole thing, and ya know what they gave
me? An authentic certificate to show the wodd that
I whooped the ”6 Pound Challenge". There's even
pictures on the wall ahowln1all the 185 folks whose
given Ita by. I hear tell there was a tiny little thing,
a girl only 114 pounds who ate the whole thing and
then had two desserts afterwards.
WfcB. anyway, let me ten ya some wore about the
restaurant.
moat popular Item to
Is the CowOtri
Cow Girt
restaurant Thetr most
T-Bone, a mere 16 ounces. They also have the Cow
Boy Porterhouse, 32 ounces, a strip, filet and fried
shrimp. For the UtUe cowpokes, they have ham­
burgers and cheese burgers. And if you have a
hankerin’fora burger, theyVegoU double Rancher
(burger) for any cowpokes.
The Cattle Ranch only serves aged beef, cut on
the premises and never frozen. Everythin'to cooked
over a good ole wood fire, uatn'orange wood, and all
•teaks are accented with a secret recipe special
seasonin'. There's even a guide on the menu on
how to order your steaks cooked, and your dam
tootin', how you order It la how your gonna get It.
Ya can even wet your whistle at the Long Horn
Saloon, where you'll find a full bar, "assorted WUd

Sanford
Antiques
im» wf w mw ism iFTWif

Somlnoto County, Florida. one It
proeontty holding u M property
lor tho purpoM Of forfeiture
purtuanl to Section* VO.701 70*.
Florida Statute*. and
R f.
QUEST that on H onorable
Judea of tho Circuit Court.
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit.
Seminole County, Florida, laauo

at City Hall ln_lho Community
Davotopmant Daportmont ond
may bo Imported by tho public
dur irtg normal but! not* hour*.
t h e im a M c P h e r s o n ,
Acting City Clerk
Oatod thl* J itf day ot July,

102 E. Lafca Mwv fitat

Unique We Seek'''
Antique Gift &amp; Thrift
im

D otiun

JbOZX. VIN

uNtHZiuifxpiMn

Intorotl In th# tot lowing
"T tfY w
O o t h o r , V IN
IJJAMOTM
Shorltt Oonold Etllngor, ol tho
Somlnoto County Shorltf't Dopt.,
Somlnol* County, F lo rid a ,
through lilt o t t l c o r t . In
vottlgitort or ogonts. taliod tho
obovt proporty on May ]t. loot,
*1 or noor Wetton Strool. Soml
nolo County. Florida, ond it
protantly holding told proporty
tor tho purpoM ol tortolturo
purtuonl to Soctlont « 1 701 70a.
Florid* Statu***, ond will RE­
QUEST that an Honorable
Judo* ot th* Circuit Court,
Elghlaonth Judicial Circuit.
Somlnoto County, Florida. Ittuo
o Ruto to Show Cowt* why tho

It It Ugned by tho Judge and it
will adviM you how ond whon to
rotpond to thlt roquott tor

forfwlturv

I HEREBY C E R TIFY THAT
o true ond correct copy ol thlt
Nolle* *&lt;&gt; tont to tho above
named addretie* by U S. roglt
torod moll, roturn rocotpl re
quottod. thlt Mlh day ot July.

Itll.

NORMAN H WOLFINCER
STATE ATTORNEY
By: Philip Archor
Auittant Stato Attornoy
n»S. Part Avo
Tituiviiio.Fi m a o

(*o;i jaa ura
Attorney tor Plalntlfl
raatau
Publlth July JOB Augutl*. 10*1
OEHIOt
NOTICE OF APPLIC ATIO N
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that C B Franklin, the
holder ol th* tallowing certilic
a l.lt) hat tiled told cortitic
t l . l t ) tor a tai deod to bo Ittuod
thereon Th# certificate numb
e rltl and year(t) ol ittuanco.

Sheriff Donald Etllnger, of th#
Somlnoto County Sheriff* Oopl.
Somlnoto C ounty, F lo rid *,
through h i t o f f l c e r t . In
vo*l 1* 0tort or agent*. toltod tho
•bovo proporty on May JO. Iffl.
at or naor County Road off.
Somlnoto County. Florida, and It
prttanlly holding told proporty
lor tho purpooo of tortolturo
purtuonl to Soctlont OM.JOt-TOt.
Florida Statute*. and will RE­
QUEST that an Honorabla
Jud*o *1 th* Circuit Court,
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit.
Somlnoto County. Florida. Ittuo
a Rut* to Show Caoo* why th*

m

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W anted To Buy

M* _ '

W

Good quaMty ito fM i A
coUectMeu WetpecieUte
V &lt; T M
Inflndlnggoodhomesfitr
f l.
your treuiurtt. G m /s s ^ J l l -i teed highest pricei peid.

chburg Lemonade and Tennessee Mud (when
available). You can even keep the glass when you're
dons with your souvenir drink.
I guess It ain't hard to see why folks come from all
over to eat at the Cattle Ranch. Owners Hank and
Marilyn Gallagher are such friendly Salks, they
make cvcijronc foci Hke family, even fattenwho come
all the way from Titusville. Spemkin's family. Jes'
bout everyone who works there la family, or may as
well bel Now let's see III can recall all of those folks
names. There's Hank and Marilyn; then- children,
Vicki. Cindy. Rhonda and David; Marilyn's slater.
Joyce, and her daughters, SuzJ and Marla; Hank
and Marilyn's sons-in-law, Oil and Rick; and future
son-in-law. Billy. Even Russell and Birch have
been with the "family" since they opened the place
seven years ago. You Jes' bout cant get more
hometown than that Hank and Marilyn say, "we're
the kind o f place where you dont have to get all
guaatod up tn a suit and tie to enjoy a great meat"
Seems to me everyone ought tojea'run right over
to The Cattle Ranch Family Steak House Jes' to see
what's gotn' on. If you have a lot o f folks you want
to feed, like s party, group banquet business
function or a bus tour group, why not give them a
call, at 331-5761, for details. They can be very
accomodating. The Cattle Ranch opens seven days
a week at 5:00 ran. Week nights they close at 10:00
pm; Friday and Saturday (hey are open ‘till 11:00
pm. If you want to take the "6 Pound Challenge",
you beat call ahead (34 hours) cause that piece of
meat to so big It could take all day to cook It (A
$15.00 deposit to also required for the ”6 Pound
Challenge".) The Cattle Ranch Family Steak House
to located at 3700 South Sanford Avenue, on the
"west" aide. Wee Doggiest

hr! Insliml ( uMi
.. BEST PAWN &amp;
* JEWELRY INC.

4

3 3 0 4814

in #m
l monss
tLmU'm numysng
u- 9—
joy

MUST HAVE COUPON
EXPIRES 1/12/11

i’

mmSPSfmmmmamem-^1
i. r s a n fo r d * . ^ 9 2 2 7

NORMAN R. WOLFINCER
STATE ATTORNEY
By: Philip Archor
Aultlant Stato Attorney
tWS. Park Avo
Titutvilla, f i . n n o
(4B7IM4UJQ
Attornoy tor Plolntlll
Publlth July JOS Augutl*. 1*11
DEH174

O N LY

HENDRIXANTIQUEStnd
FURtPIURE REFMSHING

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am angagod In butlnott at to 10
S US Highway I ta n . Suite
lea. Malllond. JJ7SI. Florida,
undtr th* F Ictltlout Name ol
GLENN'S KUT A KURL. and
that I inland to roglttor uid
name with tho Secretary el
Slat*. Tallohatto*. Florida. In
accordance with th* provlttont
el th* Flcllllowt Homo Statute.
TeWII Section tot Of. Florida
Statute* IMF
Glenn R. Falcon
Publlth Augutl a. if f l
DEI I )

‘c fty a M s

PER
INCHES
TALL.

EXAMPLE: 60" Tall x $8.40
50" T a ll. $7.00

365*3740

(Maximum $9 Man • $10 Woman)

Gtva Your TooU Tha
Cutting Edga, Hava
Tham Sharpened

S h o r te r Is B e t t e r a t
LA S E R D E V IC E S *
M O D. F A -4

$ 1 A A 9 5
#I T T

NJ.L.E.S. GUN RANGE *
TRAINING CENTER
il ISSOHS

toois

rr4l,t S

A«7S

4700 S. Mwy. 17-02
CssMlbdrry • 834-2242

M

[JSSmi H R

mERLE nORflWI
COSMETIC STUDIO A SALON

1554 8. French A re, fo a fc rd
W in . DUto M arket Placa
La d d .
3 2 3 -6 5 0 5

,
j
&lt;3

MENTION THIS AD FOR FREE GIFT

_________

Expire* 8-31-91

i

�&amp;

ijrfyfHVwiiojdm\£&amp;&amp;L^

Ssnfoni HwaM, lantortf, PtartSR * Tube(My, August 6, ift i -

Oi H' vl i mi i i M' l i i i ' j I I ' l i l n

tSRtorS, Florida M rit. Tha
• at
IN R E P O R P E ITU R IO F

ttoiPosoTiuca i

lacttona lhat cholic
M a t BN wML toe
• Bn pananai n

A a 3 2 2 * 2 6 1 1 4 W
PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE

___M—i __ ■ __1st m

tool P s rS T r u c k , V IN
OEM
IBMagw.aflhO
Semineto Cswtfy, I
tkrevgh his s lt lc s n . la-

^ p m . f f i - 1 % Parr m w iii s ie u e tT

cf ns

Circuit Court, I ink Trent*

Jadlclel Circuit, lamlaato
Carey. Ptortsa to re s Ssto to

■nawtp SMS nat is tartoM
a Ms stow agney. Thu rs
swat wM to mess by MAR
oomaHmt arenas Aml to »W».
THIS II NOT SMEARING
OATIt Vto wst to MS» s ore
•l (to ton to tore Cam m
m m M t o Mr a » &gt;*toi are si
pMaSvtoaymhaw M atos toI
PBBSSWtf |g ||||gm
m----- ~—'—
I HCffISV C IR TIP V THAT

riopytoM a
to «w store

ihyU.3

MN M h toy «• M y .

" G ro w th W ith H o n o r" A t P a g e P r iv a te S c h o o l

NORMANR.WOLPINGER
STAT1ATTONNCV

i started In a private house In Loa
in 1000.
Mflttaiy Academy was the result o f an
o f boy student* at the Pane Seminaiy {a
nd day school for young fadlea) founded
in lB 0 6 b y Emma B. f
In 1000 by R obot A. O
(Headmaster 10061042) hi
luaband of Delia P. Ofofas.
In 1014 (1O14-10AO) the school moved to a new
In 1080. great changes were taking place. While
building a new campus which was to be named
Page Day School - an opportunity came up to
acquire the Drown Day School in Beverly Hills,
which Mr. and Mrs. Earle Vaufhan
Vaughan immediately
Immediately
purchased. This acquisition imode possible a dream
come true. It had long been a dream o f Earle and
Edith Vaughan (Superintendents, 1037-1077) to
establish a co-educational school.
Mrs. Della Page Oibbs died In 1947, Major Robert
Adams Gibbs In 1062. They were succeeded by
...........................................- - R and Edit
their
son-in-law and daughter, Earle
G. Vaughan. Both had attended Page and were
graduates ofthe school Mrs. Edith Vaughan passed
sway In 1077. and Mr. Earle Vaughan retired the
foUowtngyear. Thetr children, also graduates o f the
School took over the running|o f the schools and
the carrying out o f the original purpose. Mr. Russell
Vaughan is Superintendent In California, and Dr.
Charallne Vaughan Luna to the superintendent of
the Florida Page Private Schools. Mr. Charles
Vaughan became President, succeeding hto tether,
with hto office based In the new administration
building at Costa Mesa. California.
The Seminole Campus was founded In 1066. at
the former site o f Grace United Methodist Church,
on Airport Boulevard. This campus has recently
completed a 6.000 square fo o l ten classroom edi­
tion which will accomodate an additional 200
students.
The University Park Campus was established In
1980, located on University Boulevard, west o f the
University Boulevard, west o f the University o f
Central Florida campus. University Park Is com*
pleUng a new. nine--classroom building that will be
operational for the fall term.
There are a total o f four California campuses and
two Florida campuses.
Page Private Sclwol, Inc. Is grateful to Central
Florida for their wonderful reception since they
came to this state.
The fo lly accredited school has teachers who
are also certified in CPR. First Aid and Water Safety
Instruction.
Page School accepts children from age 2 to grade
6. Basic academic subjects are taught In the
traditional departmentalized system. This means
that grades 1 through 6 change classes, tike In high
school to a teacher that teaches his or her own
specialty, including Spanish, computer and swim­
ming in the private on-campus p ool Instruction to
on an Individual level with 15 to 18 students to a
class. Teachers and admin, work closely with the

•y:

MSM.HWY. 17-Ot, LONOWOOO 380-1004
A AUTO (’ HO AllTOMOMVt INC

development One strength la
p o s itive self-esteem th ro u g h th e ir m a n y m ot lv a -

m 1 Part Aue
TlhteRN.FI.1

* ch Include i

ton Msi

sMy a s Aspata itn

M H -W
M TN S CINCtHT COUST

0STM6 IMNTIINTn

COMMONWfALTH
MONTOASS COMPANY OP
AMS RICA. L.P..
OILBISTO CONTISLOPEZ
andNYDIA C O S TI LhtowMa.
N O T K It
IV C L IB S O P
cia cw rr c o u n t
u6
ifhMl
tvs 1
Clark ti Ms ClrcsM Cast at
Emtoi to Carey, FNrida, wtii.
•n toe tlth day at SepNmSer.
at H:tB AAA. at Ms Wan
Pranf Saar *4 Ms lemlreto
County Courthouse, In the CHy
ei tutors. Ftortda. t o r Nr
sole and m i at gubik eukry It

m
PERM SPECIAL pmssres
BOOV W AVE 660 s m «
Rclaxer virgin...............650 He*, ass
' ■
Retouch.
C u rb ...

$ 6 6 and u p

kNtor N lha WNwinf wrtlfk

6

A SMIll

■ ■ ■ ■ ■

HINT NGHISKCM1
M IM &gt;

OfCM ICISf M JO AVAELA8U

JONES' Country Kitchen
i tot, i o m mnm . ntnea « * n
11SI
H* Bu-Th T AM■3 PM. FA 1AW•930 Pit, Oeead Sal

A g e s 2 Through G ra d s 6
sO p e n 6 :3 0 A M • 6 :3 0 PM

'OFENV

/Ugntiami

I
tO ukO H M s
a Individual Altcnlion
A Strong Curriculum
* Traditional 3 R i
* Hot Lunches

* Small Claases
* Complete Apple HEComputer
* 10 A cts Campus

A Air Corel. Buildings

25

H. «

B 2557 Pork Drtvo, Sonford 321-CUTS M

Clarence Scott M.D.
Specializing O n

Quality Education with
C E R TIF IE D Tcachen

o n

11Jilh in

■&gt;lu tl .*n l . 1 &gt;m »

V

j ih

I li

)

u n iv e r s it t p a k k

|

V yA C E A U T O R A D I A T O R /

m
1
f

w•\
l* 1 \

•Nil) hM (INS m M cartlflc
■Nil) Nr a Isa SMS N M Ih u M
Rmeen Tha eartlllcaN numb
arm ana yaartil at Nwwnca.
lha Satcrlpilan at lha prasarty.
•nd lha namatil In which II wai
l u am dk/araaaNINwi;
CarhtkaNNa.ua
Vaaratliiuanca: IfM
DaKrlpINn at Praparty: E H
OP LOTI 1+ 1+ ] BLK II TR H
TOWN OP LAHPOSD PB I PG

IIS

Namai In which attattad
Harry C. Malfhawt, WHIN M.
Ail at UM proparty baing In
lha County ot SamlnoN. Slot* of
PNr Ids
U n ltu luch cartlllcatali)
•hall ba ritoamid according to
law. lha praparty dater toad In
•uch carllTIcaNlil will ba m M
N lha hlghait biddar ai ttw wail
Irani dear, Seminal# County
Courthouta. Sonlord. F lorIdo. in
ma INh day ot AuguN. INI, al
IIAM
ApprealmaNly H U M coth
tor Nat li ratyulrad t o ba paid by
lha tuccettful biddar ai lha tola
Full payment at an amount
■guel N lha hlgheii bid ptvt
applkobto documonlory tlomp
looai and recording Nat li due
within 14 h au n altar tha
•dvorlliad lima at lha Wk. All
•nNad Intlrumanl, mod* pay
M N N lha Clerk at lha Clrcvll
Caurt.

THE HAIR EMPORIUM IN C

711 French A vs., Sanford • 322-0239

* and more...

118 W. Airport Btvd.
10250 University Btvd.
Sanford • 323-6771
Orlando • 657-7277
. R caaon ab ie ra te * a Accredited b y A I3 P . C F A N 3

.. .,*. . .

Do-H-YounmU A/C Porta Avs/tohto A f
m Pttoaa •Fra* Cooling Syatam Chock

* After School Program
* Field Trips
S Extended Day Care

A Swimmini Pool
CELEBRATm Q OUR NSW EDUCATIONAL BUILOtNOSI
: ■ .) Mi
im

%

IS YOUR ENGINE
OVERHEATING?

Ik w a t
Sum m er
S t r esse d
B a ir !

Got Rssdy For Hot Wsstfwr Driving

io u s e

* Phyticsl Education

HOT?

Si

NOT 1CI OP APPLICATION
POS TAX OB 10
NOTICK It H K I I B Y
GIVIN. M C l Pranklln, thv

I

Fall Enrollment Now In Progress

I

property situsMS In flnmlnaN
County, PlarMn. W-wM:
L O T S . B L O C K S.
W B A T H im P IIL O M B IT
ADDITION. ACCOSDINO TO
T H I PLAT THIBBO P A t BE
COSM O IN PLAT BOOK II.
P A G It M ANO U. PUBLIC
R lC O B D t OP I1 M IN 0 LK
COUNTY, RLOS IDA.
•a Ms Hire a c r w P
In a c m
panStaa In m M Caurt. Ma ttyN
N which la: COMMONWIALTH
MOSTOAOB COMPANY OP
A M E R I C A . L . P . . VI.
G ILB IB TO C O ST!* LOPEZ
M N Y O IA C O S TI t. Ml WIN.
W IT N Itt my hanS end M
tlclal Mil at m M Caurt IMi lilt
My N July.
M ALI
ItBALl
By: Jw aB . Jswwk
Oiawty CNrk
PuSIMl: AuatalA tX INI
OUST

SERVEDWITH

a
n____ &gt;—a toAfl
Founded
1000 Co-Educational

I

■

.0_ 4_ 0R r g S u
4s
S

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
■ mm u a

W ith Y o u r N ew S ty le F rom

”

Caurt are rigulN d N AN their
aSlactlani with tkli Coart
W IT H IN T H I L A TE R OP
T H R U MONTHS AFTER T H I
OATS OP T H I PIRST PUBLI
CATION OP
IP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY OAVt APTER THE
DATE OP SERVICE OP A
COPT OP THIS NOTICE ON
THIRL
at lho Sn admt
i having cNtmi

i attar the dNa at the tint
puMtcattoi of toll attics meat
MR M r dSlito with IMa Caurt
W IT H IN T N I L A TE R OP
TH R Et MONTHS AFTER THE
OATS OP T H I PIR IT PUBLI
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OP SERVICE OF A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All other stadHwi at
ntolheir

____ _ u n rip :

THREE MONTHS AFTER T H I
DATE OP TH E PIRST PUBLI
CATION OP THIS NOTKB
A LL CLAIMS, OEMANOt
ANO OSJCCTION1 NOT SO
P ILID WILL BE PORIVIR
BARRIO.
Tho SaN at aw tkit puMkaINr at Me NNka to July Ml
Fan
NtNa:
tow
R U tSILL J. LEASE.
KURT RIXFORO and
GUY RIXFORO
pl u n i

bnpnwement In any area.
One o f Page’s strengths la
They take an active role In their child's academic
and sodal growth. There to over 100% parent par­
ticipation in their school programs.
In National Stanford Achtevment Testing. Page
students generally test above grade level.
Page School oners a well-rounded curriculum
from the basic three R i to Spanish, Hlstoiy, sci­
ence and dance.
The Spanish program starts at age 2. Computer
begins at age 2 also.
Tutoring Is available at no extra charge. Excep­
tional students ore constantly challenged with
new studies, individual attention and sAer school
tutoring for the students.
The page School has both an academic and
While Held trips areachtduled once a mont during the school year, these
activities are
month In the
summer and
day train trips
orld and Wateimanta.
Page School to open from 6:30 AM to 6:30 PM.
Academic hours are from 8:30 AM to 3:48 PM.
Part-Ume and full-time programs are available as
wellas pre-school and pre-kindergarten. The school
day begins with an assembly period which In­
cludes the "Pledge o f Allegiance" and any an­
nouncements. The children receive a nutritious,
well-balanced hot lunch, if they do not bring their
own.
Kindergarten through 6th grade wear the Page
School uniform. It takes the mind set away from
who’s wearing what and puts that energy Into
positive academic development and encourages
IndtvtdualizaUon through other avenues, not to
mention being a convenience for the parents. This
saves parents Ume and money on the purchase o f
new school clothes year after year.
The family atmosphere at Page to most special
When you enter Page you enter (he Page (amity.
There are two mottos held by Page Schools: Growth
with Honor and Academic Success with each child’s
potential realized.
And then there to the dedication of the stafT. The
average faculty member has been with Page four
years and the school has been here Qve. Charallne
to going Into her 20th year with Page.
Page Schools rates are so reasonable that some
parents are probably paying as much at an estabdaycare as they would for their chUds'
education and daycare.
For more Information on Page Private School and
what It can mean to you and your child, contact Dr.
Luna at the 323-6771 or come by and visit them at
thetr open house, Saturday, August 10, from 10.00
AM to 12 Noon, at 118 W. Airport Boulevard.
Sanford.

BEADS WILL TURN.

Page Private School

I N T I R I I T I D F IB W N 1AR IN O TIP IIO TM AT:
All

•High Blood Pressure
a • Heart Disease
I *Thyroid Disease
. strokes • Diabetes

•Ulcers

• High Cholesterol
North Side I nternal M edicine
309 W. First St., Sanford
324-5035

Dotod Ihli Mh day at July.
INI.
M ALI
Moryanno M ono
Clark ol lha Circuit Court
SamlnoN County. F lor Ido
By TlnoM. Taylor
Deputy CNrk
Publish: July 14. 11. M. A
AugutIA IN I
DEH IN

IN T H I CISCUIT COURT
FO B IIM IN O LK COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PR O SATI DIVISION
FIN Number II-M i CP
IN RE ESTATE OF
RUSSELL JUDSON LEASE

Dacaotod
NOTICE OP
AOMINIITBATION
Tha odmlnlttrolton ol tho
rttoto ol Button Judton Loot#,
doc t oi od. Fi l e Nwmbi r
II lit CP. It ponding In tho
Circuit Court lor Stmlnala
County, Florida. Prebolt
Duition. the oddrttt ol which it
» l N Pork. P O Drawer ”C".

St..
fl am

M
AtNraayNr RhM
MANEWINCKEL
JAMEBH. THOMPSON. PA.
M W . DaarNamSI
lngNwead.PL to m
TaNphant: BU/4F4UN
Florida Bar No.: 4MIS
PuMtoh: July MA Augusta. TNI
DEH-llt
HI T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I ■ r e t a i l NTH
iU M C U L CIRCUIT.
BRMINOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
IN R I: FOAFIITUREOP
UJS4.NU.B. CURRENCY
N O TKB OP FORFEITURE
PROCEED! NS
TO: PatrklsMunei

INK. Urdu.

i »•

i

If

(anted. PI. w m
and all atoan who claim an
ktorest In me tallawing
NJS4.N U S . currency
(harm Donald Eaiinger, ol lha
lamlnaN County Ihurllf ■ Deal..
Samlnalo County, Florida,
th ro u gh h i * u t l i c a n . Ino r i gantt, talMd the

;

gragarty an May a i n i
Caunty. Florida, and li g
•ntty haldlng Mid gragarty
me purgeaa ot NrNttvra gwrtu
ant N (actIons nt-FU FM, Ftor
Ida StahrNa. and will REQUEST
that an Hanarabla Judge at n *
C irc u it C ou rt, E lan lten lh
J u d icial C ircu it, Samlnalo
Caunty, Florida. Iteue a Rule to
thaw Cause why me ahava

PFoperry tnouw pet 06 VlfWiPio
N lha above agency. TMt ra
guail will ba made by MAIL
tamatlma around Aug. M. INI
THIS IS NOT A HEARING
DATE I Vow will ba tent a copy
al lha RwN N Shaw Came once
II ii Ugmd by me Judge and it
will advtoe yaw hew and whan to
roigend to thli raquatl lor
torN l lure.
I H E R ESY CERTIFY THAT
a true and correct copy of (hit
Netks waa tent to the above
named adtoeetet by U S. ragi*
Nred mall, return receipt ra
aueetod. mi* jam day ol July.
INI.
NORMAN N. WOLF INGE R
STATE ATTORNEY
By: Philip Archer
Awiitant Stale Attorney
IMS. Park Ava.
Tllutvilla. FI. D IN

lent maina

Attorney for Plaintiff
Publish: July » A Augutla. INI
D IH 171

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP THB RIGM TIINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
SKMINOLI COUNTY.
PLORIOA
INRE: FORFEITURE OF
N MWU S . CURRENCY
NOTICE OP FORFEITURE
PROCEEDING
TO: Panny King

ana Wottgato Or
Orlando. FI H tll
and all olhari who claim an
Intorrtl in lha toilowing
grgparty
H M N U .S . Currency
Sharlll Donald Etlingtr.el lha
SamlnoN County Shoritl'i D tp l.
Samlnalo County, Florida,
th ro u gh h it a l l l c a r t . In
vetllgetort or ogantt. tailed the
above groperly an May A INI.
al or near Allomonlt Springs.
Somlnoto County. Florida, and It
preoontly holding told property
Nr ttw purpose ol tortoilurt
pursuant to Sac I tons *11 i l l tot.
Florida Statutes, and will RE
QUEST fh a l an Henorabla
Judge el tha Circuit Caurt.
Elghteanlh Judicial Circuit.
Somlnoto County. Florida, luua
a RuN to Show Causa why lha
above proparty should not ba
forfeited to tha above agency
This roquet! will ba made by
MAIL tornetlma around Auq n.
IN I THIS IS NOT A HEARING
DATE I You will ba son! o copy
ol lha Rule to Show Causa onca
II It llgrwd by the Judga and it
will advita you how and whan to
respond lo Ihlt roquoil lor
tortoiluro

I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT
a truo and corrtcl copy ol mu
Notice was tint to the above
named addresses by U S rtgn
••rod mall, return receipt re
quetted. Ihlt lith day ol July.
INI
NORMAN R WOLF INGE R
STATE ATTORNEY
By Philip Af char
Attittant Stale Attorney
NOS ParhAvo
Tllut*ilia. FI JltiO

1407)114 » »

Aftornay tor Plamllll
aabsan
Publish July 10A AugustI. INI
DEH 17]

Be-.

�Sanford HaraM. Sanford, Florida - Tuaaday, August 6, 1991

CLASSIFIED A D S

Stfninol*

O rlando - W lntor F

323-2611

dhHAB- Prl vaN I M H M I

831-9993

Club area. SMB month, pay*
J3*-tt*7

am-------- ............

DOHCMl STf K AIMS

MNf f ien* —sins* you.
If y*u h*v* question* con­

cernInf fMt mailer, pirate
contact Me Building Depart­
ment at \W) US SAM. SHOULD
YOU OBCIDI TO APPEAL
AMY MATTIR COMSIORRIO
A T T N I ABOVI HSARINQ,
YOU MAY N M D A VBRBATtM RICONO OF T H I PROC lID tN O L TESTIMONY AHD
IVIOCN CI WHICH RSCORD
IS NOT FROVIORD RV T H I
C IT Y OF SANFORD (F .S .

m m im ).
Publish: July It .23. M S Augutt
«,te e i

OEH-isi

■ X P I R I I N C I R TR ACTO R
TSAI L I ■ OR IVS R e m M
Ida. Call 27**2M

F IR S T RATE C L E A N IN G
SERVICE, and Mat I Intend to
repltter taid name with the
Secretary ot State, TallahaMee,
Florida. In accordance wIM the
p revalen t ot the Flctltloue
Name Statute. To-Wit: Section
■SS.ee. Florida Statute* tfS7.
Debra L.Cralpo
Publish. Augutt*, ie*t
DEI II

IWIII train) 1-201-:

IN TH I CIRCUIT COUtT
FOR SIMJNOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FIN Number fl-471-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
SAM LEE DIXON,
a/k/a Sam L. Ol ion.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The administration ot Iho
oetate ol SAM LEE DIXON,
a/k/a Sam L Dlion. Orerated.
FIN Number tl 473-CP. M pend­
ing in the Circuit Court lor
Somlnolo County, F lorid a .
Probata Division. Mo address of
which I* Sem inole County
Courlhoute, Sanford, FL 32771.

law. tha preparty detcribad In
auch certificated) will be laid
te M e higher* bidder at Me wett
front door, Seminole County
CourMouee. Sanlord. Florida, on
Mo teMdoy ot Aupuel. left ot It
AM .
Approximately 1121.00 co*h
tor N ee la required N be paid by

anteed Instrument, made pay
abN lo the Clerk ol Me Circuit
Court.
Dated Ml* 3ttt day ol July,

mi.
(SE AL)
Mary anno Morse
Clark of Mo Circuit Court
SemlneN County. Florida
B y : MlchatI* L. Salerno
Pgputv Clock
Publish: August! Ittl
DEI 54

utlve week* In the Sanford
Herald.
WITNESS my hand and M e
tool at thl* Court on M * 2nd doy
of Augutt. INI.
MARYANNE MORSE
A t CNrk of the Court
By: RuM King
DEPUTYCLERK
Publish: August 4. 13. 30. 27.

mi

O EI«2

mooting, to which all parson* are Invited:
DATE: Wednesday. August t l, m i
TIM E: 3:21PM
LOCATION: StmlnoN County Service* Building
Commission Chamber* (WI72)
1101 East Fktl Street
Sanford. Florlde 37771
G E N E R A L MATTER TO BE OISCUSSED: The proposed
expressway In SeminoN County.
Additional Information may be obtained by contacting:
Gerald N. Sr Inton. Executive Director
Sam Inote County Expressway Authority
Phone (4«7| 331 1170. extension 777*
PERSONS ARE ADVISED THAT IP THEY DECIDE TO A P P E A L
ANY DECISIONS MADE A T THESE MEETINGS/HEARINGS.
THEY WILL NEED A RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS AN D
FOR SUCH PURPOSE THEY M AY NEED TO ENSURE THAT A
VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE WHICH
INCLUDES THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH
THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED, PER SECTION 2** OIOS.
FLORIDA STATUTES
Publish: Augutlt. INI
DEI 10

H D I V

N Z D N P .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "T h e old believe everythi
mid d le BBBd suspect everything, the young
------^e.i
ft
A tr a r UfilrU

pertone I repretentallve and Me
pertonal repretentallve'* at­
torney are tel forth below.
ALL INTERESTED PE RSONSARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All parsons on whom Ml*
notice It terved who hove ob­
jection! that challenge the valid­
ity of Me will, the qualltlcelMns
ot Me pertonal representative,
venue, or |ur ladle I Ian ol Ml*
Court art required to IIN thalr
ob ja d lo n t with Ih l* Court
W IT H IN THE L A T E R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY OAYS AFTE R THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All creditor! ol Me decedent
and ether par ton* having claim*
or demand* against decedent't
estate on whom a copy Of Ml*
notice I* terved wIMIn three
month! alter the date ot Me first
publication ol Ml* notice must
IIN Itwlr claims wIM Ml* Court
W IT H IN THE L A T E R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTE R THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All olhor credltort ol the
decedent and parson* having
Claim* or demand* against Me
decedent * estate must IIN their
clalmi wIM thl* court WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
The date ot the tin t publico
lion ot Ihlt Notice I* July 30,
lt « l
Pertonal Representative
VERNICE MILDRED DIXON
CONRAD .
510 Derby Drive
Altamonte Spring*. F L 327U
Attorney tor Pertonal
Repretentallve
THOMAS A SPEER
Of SPEER * SPENR. P A
P O B o ilW
113Magnolia Ave
Sanlord. FL 13773 13*4
Telephone 1407)377 04*1
Florida Bar No 07*4/3
Pub|lth July 30 A Augutt *. let)
OEM 777

SANFORD * large 2 bdrm. with
tcreened perch, complete
privacy. SIM per week plut
OObtecvcIty. Cell 222-22*0
t BOOM, ONLY B71/MONTH
plu* 1200 tecurtty. Jtnlord
area. Call 322 220*

aval laOM today I

EARN EXTRA MONEY

prepr— il FNyg
Bc’ d lU c J N M .

Opwortuwttlts

Homo im provciM fit
p p em

9lOr Qen
CONCEPT Owe S9
carpen try! Home, otllce!
kitchen, bath I m a s t 7
Pwst Control’
* BISHOP P i t T CONTROL*
Senior Cltlten Discounts I
II year*experience! 3141771

HOflIRS PUJMSJRC
■AN D Y’ S Q U ALITY LAWN.
CompHte car*. cHan upt.
Since HB2. Free *N. 1331071*

Cwicftw
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Baal 3 Man Quality Opera
non I 33*-tl3*/3*e7tei

e i^ t r C T

a ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR*
Fun tpoll Plan all actlvlliet
hr Ihl* nice complex I
AAA EMPLOYMENT
TtQW.atbSt, g &gt; t!7 * ____

All your plumbing noedll 24
hour*I IRF*B5277B2223tg
SPEEDY PLUMBINQI Abie

E rw s u r* O w n in g
CM House wash end painting
"Q u ota* by phona". Call
Roger. 33* 4*40. SAM IPM

ic c r g ta r fil*
og SfvicR S

m m fySing/loeCCeepM
gt
T r — StrvicQ

No axpatience nacattary. paid
training Benalih packe t*
*7 22 hour N alert Apply at

Ii l r r r t i s r

) oiii

s /i I'n

l l u \ i n r \ s I rr/ i l h i \

M m i 1/1. ( i l l I I h i s s i / i r t l

�*■

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, August 6. 1991 - f l

K IT'N * C A B L Y U E # fcy Lftfvy W ifahi
urnvrnvMira § Rev

R m talt

'SBWoa1
k im E
on

o tm T M N tn s .

c a t

r

Artmg(I X

m an

1 b d rm ., i

b a t h . AC .

iwntinsBi

A utility

MC
AMw If. living rrn. &gt;|
bath. Wall la noil
&gt;CHA, wart*
after Auf.1tl.tmnw.
a«MW«arl-Wf-mt

I aittltrrm iffi rranwia
In Ssnferd. Claan, Quiet!
priced rtrttt M U

t M i i m w .» I
______
same wlllltlaa. u n ma.

LAKE MART, t I R i IN., CHA.
■tot
M Rn
SANFORD-TWO DC
Carport, twsrthr opdews. M i
ktt.. dtoeevwtod(3SE:
SANFORD 1 brtm &gt; brtto, rtt
agpt, tonesd. garage, *cr.
perch, MSI »tv*dsg.S3eMS7
. Ctesn t
kldb/prts
M.'tMFtoSdNLtM
SANPODto 1bdras. A C carpet.
(FWWw^PrtTl HNPMTg Ffnep
carport. I4M me..........m t o t i
CHA.
WMIta
JS H O Tft
SL
1/1 RM S (ram 17-ei and Lb.
Mary It. I bdrm. 1 bam.
fencad yordl ceilinf tana. A/C

M nkgparhl

R b a H M

T tv lM M O R n S If f
SIMMs.-CA L L AlChtadl j
■ CaaNty tt D M M M I

181—

AIR COWDiTKMENS - L W
BTU window unit*, like new.
Nam V i ; Spill unlit. Its Tan,
•US; Candanslngunits.lands
ton, from m 3 3a»MM
C O M P L IT R A P A D T M IN T I
Living, dining A badream
furniture. Mint cendltlenl
u w g u .a s m .M M (M
g i K T I D T A I N M I i r r Carter.
wall unit. Walnut. 7 com
pertmento. T y X s T *.
MAM33F47U
a KINO sag bed, be&gt; spring
MO. orbestoffer. M »S M (
LAR R Y*! MART. 113 Santord

CORNER 17/n and « F . OftVce
■ Otort Hr Ml type* af

141— Hm un s lor Salt

STENSTROM

g mis* tan. tw.

Ave. Naw/Ueod turn. A aapl.

IE ALT V, I NC.
^ n s ^ T n ^ iiR jr

towdaiwA n*t/ma. a w dopMR.Camsa-TfNU
1 M M . Maw

■ S S S . 'U

CALL US FIRST Hr lap Seminala Cewtty tingle lam tty ana
duptox rental prNwrttotl
NPBEALTTY w M M I
M ID A S B O * M .a r)D d n n . m
0BLT0NA7 Lara* wtot ltenl
PRHKABY REALTY... S H j m
CL BAM J fcArm. l bath. can*a!
H/A. screened parch ana
deck. Nice neighborhood.
w ^ w - ..............

■ ARAM. I SATbt,
ptuetecvritr.aeewoaf
l SIMM. 3 iu ttL ptua I
I IMA.
1
MML NMr
Nm t HNl
ttth St;
R IH
em. H M 0 n e 4 e i7 eiief e

AR N IVA I bdrm. CHA.
Petti SOS mo. ptue
p td d lw o lM i
__________ him - BARtoAIN
rent, gulal neighborhood.
SANFORD-PAOLA A R IA . 1
bartaam on prtonbg lea. (3M
month give SSSf eeewrity.

W

M M . A t wiaPor/parboge.
Pence/covered potto. No potit
&gt;34*-t-BSawt. 333-1*17

MITOMIKCUTIVI TTFl
3 Mrm., t bath; CHA, all
atoctrk. Ovtr V fl. FI. rm.. If.
laundry rm. A tool shad.
Corner lot. I arporti. No
fatal MH mo.
&gt;74-110
F IN N PARK t/m CHA Naw
paint, carpotWM mo.
(cborso Rostovtri-iMF.
M ID M N LAK IL Immaculate
vacant l Mrm. l bam. control
A/C. an caiy private cut aa
aac. Lf. yarn. M W mo pluo 1
mo. aacurlty. No pita plaaaa.
337*347, Nava mig._________
L A K I MOMKOI. 3 bdrm., I
bam. Lf. arts. AC Fpic.. 1373
mo. piu»dw**H. B H M t
LA K I MARY - 111 lot St, Claan
3 barm. I bath, cantral H/A,
hoohupa. traahly painted, U U
Dart, Vaotaro I, 774-PW
LA K I PICK I T T CT„ on nlca
claan Iaka. Fishing. thing,
tolmmln,. 3 bdrm. 3 bath.
Split plan, alarm tya., CHA.
carpeted I car garaft. thedon
1 plja acre. Iota ot privacy.
trwmo.....................ao-m e
UNMWOOA Hery W . 3 bdrm.
t bath, newly returblahed,
MfVmo plut tocurlly. 33» 1300

Sm

F trR a n t
DOW NTOW N S A N F O N D ,
NIAR COURTHOUSI.
CALL 331-'

111— OHict
Spict/ R u t
PR ■t r i a l OFF ICRS • 3M to
4AM tg. It. torn* tumlthod. 1
Mock* teClty Hall. Call
334034A.......CROthAt SQUARE
SANFORD-73*. 1.0*1.
and 1.430tguaro Nat.
Call m 7004
121— C o n d o m in iu m
________ R ttrtA ls ________
HI DORN LAN IS . 1 bdrm. I
bath, I9M par month. *300
tacurlty d**o*lt. 3R3-0I34

NRCRIKICUNI
3 bdrm. 1 bath, wwt har/drytr.
U3S/mo. J.I.C.M. Inc.. Uc
Real E title Broker, 057 1504

M 0V H N SKC U 1
1 ) MONTH LCASC ONLY

Eff.,1,2, ft 3 ft
Townhouse* Available

182— Tt4tvis4in/
» 8di8/&gt;l»rti
t.7W eg. ft. wffh DM h*.

appliance*, fireplace (SAM
gvm wilt plan, appilance*,
•arofe- taneodyard, m m
et/l • rsnevotedl Now carpet.

LARI MANV 3/1VILLA
At the Crossings! L o o m
purchase possible. In up
proded pehd are#......m m

OWifi W fi C*rp*rT« M U M
yard.»•*•»•*»••*««*••*•-**••*»*&gt;**349*455
* M •an 1/1 acre I Ntw point,
fpk, family, living and dMng
room*. Privacy tence. 174.SM

CUTIACADRAAV MANOR V I
Hat new window*, door*,
point, rest A will have new
carpel. A ileal at........VW.SOO

SSTitil i gulpped

Separate
drlveweyt. Big yard....S3(JM.

.

CALLANYTIME

321-2720
322-2420

a v i • renovated, naw carpet,
paint, appliances, fenced
yard............................m m
aV l • tonovatad, naw carpet,
pslnf appliances, fenced
yard.-...........
**17,4(0dawn.
fy on Ihl* two story 3/1 V* with
appliances, and fireplace.
Ftnced yard wftti paoll m m
PLUS
OWNIR F I N A N C I N G •
Plnecretl. V I, living. dMng.
family rm.. tacurlty system,
fencedy a rd ....m m
ST, TOSttrS AND LK MONROf
•5acre etfafol An. MM *g. ft.,
custombuilt. n7P.m
ALTAMONTI IPDINDB - 1/1
with detached mother-In law
hemal Pool, privacy fence
yard and bonnets. H M .m

WITH 3100 DOWN
ANOtATItPACTORY C R ID IT
J and 4 btdroom home* avail­
able until Inventory's soldi
Possible bond money alto
available with low lliod ratal.

m Sortie St. 4 bdrm. 1 both.
CHA. ksnee. lamWy rm. cew, agpt, Mtf/mo. 1st
msec, (g a m KILLS • Ae you
»Wy new
i (erontty
y*u. With
ltsanclenloabs.1_________
w/deed restlctlens, and

prtvocy - you'll know you're
hemal Cesrw and isa. you'll
It LOTS, (11.7M
HOMI1W/LOTS FROM
4 M T H J M A 7 M I IBTdli iMtlil

TM ’B -

i *’ i

i n

\i

n

A SIU M I N O D U A U P V I 3
bdrm., control H/A. Largo
comar tot-treat l
ONLY 4).NO
COUNTRY A T M O S P tfiril 1
bdrm. 1 bath on almost 1/1
acrel Family room and raised
petto. Hi m oak trees I S i m

323-5774

WWWKALMd***
jJMrm.. 1 beShNam*. Mae

WHY M Y H K 1 1
Hr Vets • A little

c

2 bath hemes with t
car garages from K it,
IrU
fhM
AjKI
mMifblu pDfTTIDilie.
mmiswiiwnTa
NnTSKRIff
UMveesol RwoWy, 0*3-1 »«

•AMKIC-P0
I*sctout 1 bodraom. 1 bath
homo. Fresh paint InsMs and
out. with new reef. Bank will
help with finance, with offer ot

dCMsimonmii*

Cal Jasst MantHeM
Day*. 333-1334 Ives. 133-7371
AA Cense*. Inc.

4 Apartments PLUS house!
Recently renovated. Good ran
tal neighborhood! Potential
gross Income m T b t per year I
•iiMag
W. aansen

O n f u iK

CaNCbrtottl-MM

CAUAAKTICALTY
&gt;22-7481
141 Cfiwmtrciftl
Prodp rty/Sate

Step Up Into A
Great ApartmentJ

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

ISORAL I OATH on V4 acre otl
Sanlord Ave 3 car garage,
workshop, groat lor small
145.000 373 (

i l l — Invostmont
Proporty / Sd Io
# W YOftSK MALTY * W

O NLY

SANFORD - a unit apt. house
ettored at tacrlfkal L k inted.
In Historical area. (70.(00
Caiim-asTt________

*435,

153— AcroftfOLot*/Solo

7 and 12 Month I

Come b y and see your netv
home at Geneva Gardens,
You 'll be glad you did!

Availabio

ISOS W .2 S U IS L , Sanford • 322-2090

Hours: Mon.-Frt 8:30 - 5:30 • SM. 10 - 5
Hmeged bydngeto Oerten Property Hwpnw*

C o m e H om e T o
C ou n try Style L iv in g !

1)5— Condominiums
Co-Op/Spit
VOUR NEW SMYRNA CONDO
C O N N E C T I O N ! Senlord
native Drende. Ownby Real
^ tia iw ^ ^ ^ ^ o s s iT ia u

1,2 a 3 Bwjraofn

i
)

M o ve-In
(1 st M onth O n ly)

Apartm ents

•Cable TV

■ Washcr/Drycri in Select Units
• Self Clean Oven
• Icemaker
• Dishwasher
• Garbage
Disposal

• Pool
• Clubhouse
w T i r u iT T l
2450 Hartwell Asc., Sanford
MON -S A T.9 -6 • Sixi. 12 -5

3 2 4 -4 3 3 4

*299

•A IR L A DINS 3*'* tingle weed*
Naw llree. S U M 313 SKM
HARD T IM * aalllAj guntf For
•mwli foe I will sell your
weeper- within SO days or to*
and gun returned. I deal with
buyers from all ever US.
CaWFEAA4W-tTV-a*eS

1ft— Offk«SuMM(igs

TOTAL ^
M O V E -M I

POOL, TENNIS C O U N T,
VOLLEYBALL C O U N T
EACH APARTMENT IN CLU DES
- New Carpesng •New Appliances mdudmg Hetngeralar,Range, Ostneoahar, Gar­
bage Disposal •Washer A Dryers staled
VI urns tor an addsonai monthly loo •24
hour amargency mgntonance service.

3 3 0 -5 2 0 4
@ O U K &amp; U f

apartments
TOM 17et m smponr otva t u im w is t
DM OF A MLA NON ON MCMT

157-Mobll# ~
Homts / Sd Id
(.ORLANDO 1/1 mobile, leer
gareg* and guest apt 1 st. too
W. MeikMwshi. Realtor
_________ 331-7103__________

MID SUMMER SPECIALS
1ANFORO AREA MOBILE
HOME COMMUNITY
34X40
3/3. all electric,
excellent location, many
••Ira*..........................IIS.000
3IXU

1/3 tplit Nice lamll)
..... .....................114.000

UXU
V I. gas and atoctrlc
home
tl.300
UXU 3/1 split. IS
homo

I all slectrk
113.300

(raker, m0lee/*3ll/*3
IAVI sail NEW ISSI MOMEll
WHY PAY RETAIL? MX IS.
HAS* 34X7*. SIS.*** 343 370S

K u S R S / V lf t S
• M I T A L TO O L BOX ter
pickup truck. Black, aster
greet. 3*3“ . ill. 3314*43

NO MON I T DOWN
excapt lev. teg, title, etc
1 ttaa NTUNOAIS
steering end brakes. A/C.
Rcanemlcalt Only SITS S3 par
month (41 month* a 1SS%
APR}..............Cell Mr. Peynt
Cev b s r UsadCers. O TITP
e P U D LK AUTO AUCTION *
■ V IN V T U IS . A PRI. 7tK PM
DA VTOHA AUTD AUCTION

May. S3.1

S n | | ^ MkIn C i
tSrt WRANOLIR LAREDO ■
Auto. A/C, tow ml let 1113.790
________ Cell 3 » aa _______
ISTi C H IV Y Ptcb sp. * cylinder,
3 speed. Deed work truck. I r t
OBO.................... ...... 314 7373
K M FORD PtM 300* cylinder,
auto, A/C. longtoed with step
bumper. 43.000 miles. M.900
Vaagerd Arse* hot aster
pressure washer, ltg volt,
mm........................... 30 m m
K M M RR C U R V TRACER
STATION WAGON Auto. PS.
PA. A/C. exc. cond. 13*90OBO
Cell 377 *341 after 4:31
a w e ijS v u v
B n i ■* t M
..
A aviiRa
WfORDEyi, JnyTIrTTw
W
ltEETECT.
'TT PLYMOUTH VAN. Auto.
itbk . runs great, clean, good
shape.! cyt.lt, 1*5.37340*5

lit

T M d rn n ftin s
excagt tax. tsg. tltto. etc

rm C H IV Y SPECTRUM 4
door. auto, air, pawsr stoer
Ing. store*I Only lllt .n per
month! (41 month* p IS.S%
APR).............. CaNMr. Peym
CearSesy Used Cars. 333-lltl

b

TM f i f P4TMCKT1
NO MON I T DOWN
excagt lex. tsg. tltto, etc
1( 17 O L D S M O B I L I •
Automatic. A/C. stsraw Only
SI4S.SS per month (4S months
• )(.(% APR).Cell Mr. Payne
Courtesy Used Cars. 3311173

W a n ttd
M A U T O SALVAGE

of Deflery
WC WHOM AND FAVI
Top M tor |unk.
Cars A Trucks.
ItorgxeN.

excapt tax. tag. tltto. etc
M V CNt VV CluRBRITV A/C, automatic, store*, tilt,
cruise. Only 31SSJS per month
13*months • » . ( % APR)
Cell Mr. Payne
Courtesy Used Cars, 333-3133
e a e a I SAS L I N C O L N
Towncar, LeadedI Esceltont
^ s n d jM J P L W M ia ^ ^ ^

22f— Moforcycks
and Klfcts
’(7 SUZUKI 140* MTRWDER
AIM miles, runt grsstl 31.400
^kaj/newaccetortosKlMli^

222— Aulo Parts
ti

241— RtcrofttitMl
V p k ic lt / Camptrt

POD SALR •33B Racket Engine
with s barrel carburetor In­
cluding transmission, 14(0
PRO tabes ell. 331*441
• S A D I N A W four spssd
transmission with cast Iren
bell housing. Asking IIM obo
33AMI7. Iv. msg.
4 Ml CD I LIN tores, PHI’S and
chroma modular who
Bronco 11.31(03*173*

II c

AVAILABLE SILP ITDRAOII
Outside storage ter RV'tl
legetre. M .M -F . 3313411

I.V. HANTIOI!
Will trade 3 acre* weedrt sit*.
Lb. George area Cell PI-Till
RV RENTAL tots. Its] me. Incl.
water, sewer A garbage
Park Ave. tortile Ft. m-istt

Tolc

Smith Cerene. Priced to Sell I

Iff— N H K K mkkUh
•a k c d o l d r n r e t r i e v e r .
FRRR. P R I I . F R R It 1 yrt.
aid. tomato, spayed. Forced
Into giving up I (Apartment
Realtor) 33IS77B____________

VA AM. AUTO.
STXtWO. (MEAT
LOOSOSSO, CXAF

AUTO, ETC« a

esOto^LOOK*
aooa runs
ancAT

•888

1878 CMCVV NOVA
CPI.
tTIREO.V(
Aura, a m

CATS. CATS, KMtoaal I yr. eld
Female, gray tabby A cute
kitten*. FR R 1H 333-4*17
•COMB DRY A CAT 11 Ages 3
month* to 1 yr*. FREEH
Sbendened near my hem*.
Ftoea* give them a GOOD
hemal....................... P43153
L O S T !I Alack A tan male
puppy. Vicinity et Sanford
Peat Office. Sunday morning.
REW AR D !............... 333*3*1
N E R D IN P O fo r M aatbly
Newsletter 1 paw Prlrt Neon.

1

1M1CHSVY CITATION

1*79 AUDI 80001
TRL8?TJl^7yp*wrH*r

m o

228— Vehicles

TMENP NTKIIIT5

^ .
$ A g ^

1888 K M O K 1 S O VAN
CLtoTOSS, CAFTAMk
CHAM, AM. AUTa— . ......

•688

G OOD CREDIT?
N O CREDIT? B A D CREDIT?

VfE CAN HELP1

r $2 0 0 mo.

******

240— R flsftrtd Pftl

.T

TOT P O O D L IA AKC 3 months
old with health certlllcel* end
first shots 444 &lt;777

201— Horsgs
e e H A V PON M L I t e e 33.73
bale. *25 roll. FENCE bldg. A
Repekl 333-311levee________
NORSE ROAROINO
lot* ot
trail*. Personal attention *1 a
reasonable price. New barn.
Alia horse* tor tel*. 34S lisa
* W E S TE R N SADDLE. 13"
seat. Brown, w/ped end bridle

211— Antiquts/
CollRCtibiRS

WL

1M 7VW FO X G L

1884 N O S A N PICKUP
M Xt

•1188

NCECAR.AM
STEREO, 4 DR.
LUXURY
LOCAL OWNER

CM CVV BEAUVILLE VAN
DUAL AIR AUTO.

4 DOOR SEDAN

AND

DRIVES
OREAT

MTEMCM.
AND MORE

•3888

1882 DOOOE ARIES K

CS. CUSTOM

203— Livestock and
______ Poultry
CHICKENS. I rooster, J hentl
Brehames. Bull Cochin A
White Bock 335*30 345 7150

$ 3 l° °
— —

•1888

*1488

Ken 'Rummel
M.Vy

1/ t.' - S.II-l'lMl

,

«'■ MNK

3217800 Of 628 97/9

M'S COLLRCTORS ITEM
Grundlg stereo end radio in
solid teak cabinet 377 1 : »

215— BoAtsTnd
Acctssorios
IN I BAVLINER. modal l t »
Eagle II. ollslior* ■ It beam,
low hour*, custom trailer tn

O*F0«C(0SAUl**
10 agricultural sere* In O*
teen. Reduced *10.0001 MSN
A take over m tg.l Now
I3I.N0- URCENTI
WywmwRwwitvieg-ieas
OCALA N A T ' L F O R I S T ,
weadtd twtll U.S50 each, no
money down I 071.41 monthly
_______ l (BOffl 1014_______
IIVBN PLUS ACRIS In Jttsup
area. Reduced to 150.000 Ideal
tor horses. Great Buy I
Itoaalrom Realty 333 3 «»
Ml ACRRS oil or port, custom
ponds, fence. Will finance.
^n e a ^ to Jw n d j^ j^ ^ ^ M lN *

g e tje v a g a rd e n s

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom

i *) i j i

STALKS PBOflRTT

i i m i

HUOM DVARM KLQSUKS

M M C N M iS u k lM
IW IN M g p R H M

MANADRMRWT BRRALTV

•In Our 35th Y«ar*

• n S S l i T c O L O R TV I i r '
cable reedy. A t cendlttonl
J n rtjw m eS eliiaa. 3n*3S3

117— S p ftinf OddMs

tones, wail la wall carpeTb
m o w e ] ----------

3U5 Pm h Dr., Sanford
Mi W. Lake(Rory At.. Lb. Mary

OOV'T MOMII •Almost nothing
down, almost no doting cost*.
No glmmlcksl Call Mlha
PWvM.Vl.P. 77*-sste_______

T h e M u d K n M ^

cha. m

RENTS STARTING FROM

Limited lime Offer

2217257

Dry/SeN/Trede........ 33H1I3.
•M A P L E I N D T A A L I w/an*
drawgr. L k * new (33.333 3337
4 R IP R H IIR A T O R . OR 14 cu
H. W hite, works S U PIR .
Large fre e ie rl Frost fret I
IM A 30-1171_______________ _
f W A S N I R , Ken m ere, very
RbWtRaNt MSA 333-«37»
AWASMRR, O f . gold cetar.
Vary Owed cendllknll 3140
333-3134_____________________
SWASNER. Maytag, oceltonl
cswdlhwnaiae. 3734744

SUPIR IAN FORD PLACR VI
Quality Fpk. In
froal rm. Cat In hit. Lot* M
nice teeturee.,
...STfJM.

l.MO-Ut* eg- n . with or
without A/C office*. Storting
ft»1 r»yntn*i Point, WP-irat

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Airport Blvd. frontage
CaW&gt;tb MeKoo 333-1130
TWO 1At* *o tt units, can bo
utad log*mar. Ono unit, too
tg.1t.
Call 33DI3S7

M i-m i.... .....

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lltMnf, ale. Only.........S3*JM.

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Croat ana lor family
Near icheol*. shopping, bus.
Nlca lot New...............UV.JOO

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NIOOtN L A K I 3/3VILLA
On Mt camor lat Ifoclaua
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xtra*. Call naev........

KAVW00O V I KNOCKOUT
You'll be lleorod when you tee
the teem A big lot. Fpk;,,
appliance*, tog........... .371.Ml.

1.330. U33, 3,1(0
itotoretaotavaHrtlo.
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SiMor^take Mary art*.

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WARINOVSI S F R C I-3 N N
IS .100 to It. Doch H T .
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RantToOwnl
3 bdrm., A/C. St.NO down.
1430par menm. aaa73«y
SANFORD1 RIDMOOM. IV)
Bath, ecreen porch front and
back, garage A carport. AC,
Nncod back yard. SJOO eachlat. tael A tacurlty. Available
Aag.um.a»taaa__________
SANFORD • 3 bdrm. I bath,
wood floor*, built ine, tana.
yard, WVmo 3347173, Agent
SANFORD. 3 bdrm., 2 bath.
CHA, family room., fenced
beck yard. IU0 month, plua
1300dap. Ivealeat 333-mi.
3 BDRM. IH RATH rant. *433
depotIt 1373. Sanford. Altar
3PM. 331-1113______________
3 fORAL I both, appliance*,
fIreplace, fenced yard. SUN
Paul and Bem Otborae
Venture I Proper! I**, 3314744

141

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menfele # a e e # etKitsr

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157— AAaMit

CHEVROLET
CAVALIERS
4 DR.

217— OprRflR SrIrs
FRANK A LORI'S New A Uwd?
1103 S French Ave Thrill
Iter*. Clip thlsedlor ItXOHI

NEED SALE ITEMS
★ FOR BENEFIT*
Cell Relphlor Pick upl

223— MiSCRllAIWOUS
* AQUARIUM
JO gel aim
hood end ec castor lei 3100
___________ 331 toW___
BAKKIE CAR. I yr old Cor
vtlte With battery chergsr.
like newt MS 00______ 330 0130
CHILDS Power Wheels Jtep.
battery powertd wictiergsr.
enellent shape. 1100 333 1343
SCOKE M A C H IN E .' I B**r
Cooler) * ft ♦ upright, tide
door 130QBO 333 M7I
S D IC T IO N A R Y lor youth.
Treasury ot Learning JO »ol
ume llluttreted set Sect&gt;ont
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memmels Eicellenl condi
lion 330 373 4134 ___
* F U I L TANK 13* Owl Skid
mounted, heavy duty SM
OBO 333 3044 _____
O P R O P A N E 3 burner
cempstove/tenk 340 331 »l*t _
43EOA OEN1IS Cerlrid** IS
bit Super Thunder Hi.tde II)
never uwd 310 00*4
S WE STERN SADDLE
15
teat, not fancy but good tov
every do, A bargain for 340
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•3999*

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90

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SHADOW

209463

Air, Power Steering. P. B ,
Air Bag. AMFM Sloroo

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NeaFerreus Metals....... ..Glen
KOKOMO.............
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good condition1 Rsetoneblt
price!............... .
333 7SSS

2177U

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Air, AM FM Stereo

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91

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Cruise. Power Locks

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Lew Mtlui

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CUTLASS CIERA

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J.R . Lewis
Doug McCord

Steve Williams
Charles Smith

5575 S . H w y. 17-92, C assal barry, Florida
H o u rs M on.-SaL 9 •6 • S u n . 12 • 5

_____ 331-3837

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PETER
G O TT.M .D .

WHERE A R E
TOO 6 0 IN 6 T

|'M STARTING SUNMMIN6
. LESSONS TODAY.. J

yet her doctor put her on an » *
anti-depressant for ah Ingles.
W hy was this done?
&lt;*)
O S A R RBADBRi You got me. bel
I’ve never used anti depieaaanta «*«
to treat shingles, nor have I me
heard of anyone who has.
*«
Shingles, an acute, painful
virus infection of certain nerves ”
In the skin, may cause de­
pression because the disease Is
I
so uncom fortable. H ow ever.
«
Zovtngc (acyclovir), an anti-virus
g
drug, is the preferred treatment.
Sometimes prednisone, a type o f It
cortisone, is used to reduce
'*
inflammation that is unremitting 14
and severe. But anti-depressant
drugs will not affect the herpes j|
virus that causes shingles.
{I
P e r h a p s y o u r d o c t o r Is
g
experimenting with a new ther- I I
spy. Ask about this because, in
my opinion, your wife would be "
better served by taking other p
medicines.
Because untreated shingles
ft
can be complicated by chronic.
knife-like pains called post­
herpetic neuralgia. I am sending
S4
you a free copy o f my Health
*»
Report " Ma n ag in g Chronic
Pain."
_
D B A S M L OOTTi I've expert"
enced a change in the sound of
g
m y voice and h a v e b e e n
diagnosed as having a paralysed
V
vocal cord. I’ve seen an ENT
do n 't bother LEARNING
specialist, yet I would like Infor™
tJTME CAT PADDLE.. &gt;
motion on how I got this condi■
tlon.
■
DEAR READER: Each of the
|
two vocal cords is activated by a
nerve. When this nerve is In■
jured, the vocal cord becomes
_
— /n
p a ra ly s e d . T h e r e fo r e , y o u r
I »V
d octor must In vestiga te the
/7 » - i L-L.
cause o f the paralysis, which
r w 'i 1 ' v * "
c o u l d be d u e t o t r a u m a
'* '
(especially after surgery on the
b y H aw k tc h n ild a r thyroid gland which lies close to
■ ~
'
E
the nerve), a tumor (pressing on
W PvTBL tO O R , )
the nerve) or a neurological
J: EOS 'CM 7 y
disorder (such as m ultiple sclerosis or stroke) A d d ition al.
mechanical causes o f vocal cord
p a r a ly s is In c lu d e a o r t ic

BXBCOTITE
•UlTB

AMD OUR BED DIVER

J lf t T f t U M X M )/ A

B y Phillip Alder
In most sports these days, the
top performers get younger and
younger. But not In bridge.
T e e n a g e rs win g ra n d slam
tennis titles, but when was the
last time someone as young as
that represented the United
States In a world bridge champi­
onship? Never.
The key reason Is experience.
There is so much to bridge that
It takes many, many years to
clim b the ladder o f success.
Even world champions come
across situations they haven't
met before. However, everyone
has to start somewhere.
Would you have found the
right play as East on today’s
deal? North's two-spade cue-bid
showed al least a limit raise In
hearts. This is a modern treat­
ment that is used more often by
experts than the old-fashioned
game-forcing cue-bid.
After West leads the spade

l o o m

OUft T A x e s A fif
r fO fN C

HERE WE ARE OVERLOOKING THE
QRANP CANVON

Up

A G A IN

WE L05£ MORE
TOOMIftTS
.TH A T WAV 1

Nl&gt;pOE

ANNIE

|&amp;YFlKSTNl6HTlN&lt;aOWBE,I
HfopERCD WITH IS- JANE

600W M LL AND WASDELfeMTED
BY HER TALES OF PRINVME

W O T IN THE BACK OF MY MIND, I
CONCERNED THAT PERHAJ5
A ll THESE. YEARS OF FIELD WORK
HAD AFFECTED HER ADVERSELY.

C?HEA/j

much to my r elief , s h e
e x p l a in e d h e r e x p e r im e n t
involving CHIMPANZEE MASKS

II

1

king, how do you plan the
defense? At the time, the spade
king was covered by the four,
two and six. West continued
with two more top spades. De­
clarer ruffed in the dummy,
cashed the Q-J o f hearts, crossed
to hand with a dub. drew East’s
two remaining trumps and led a
diamond. West went in with the
ace to save the overtrick.
" I had hoped to score a trump
trick." said East ruefully.
" W e ll, m a y b e you cou ld
have." responded his more ex­
perienced part-ner.
"H ow ?"
"By playing the spade eight at
trick one. Declarer would think
you were echoing with a dou­
bleton. so probably he would ruff
the third round o f spades high.
Then you would score a trump
trick, and we would defeat the
game."
This is the type o f deceptive

ity today through a unique
arrangement In which you're
presently Involved. If you don't
Aag. 7.1091
There arc strong Indications receive your rewards now. you
that you may get involved In a will shortly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
profitable joint venture In the
year ahead. Your counterpart Although you may have to deal
will be enterprising and have with a number o f different Indi­
viduals today, you'll single out
good business acumen.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If there one person to whom you'll
Is something special you need devote moat o f your attention.
from unothcr today, don’ t be too It's an important relationship.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
direct. Present your case in a
21)
Be alert at this lime for
way that makes It seem os If the
other party originated the Idea. possible participation in a Joint
Leo. treat yourself to a birthday venture. This will be an en­
gift. Send for Leo’ s Astro-Graph terprise that could become quite
predictions for the year ahead by exciting for all concerned.
C A PR IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
mailing $1.25 plus a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope lo 19) A friend with an unresolved
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper. problem might come to you for
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH udvlcc today. This Individual
44101-3428. Be sure to state couldn't have picked a wiser
counselor. Y ou 'll draw upon
your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl. 22) your own experiences to provide
Your behavior w ill win you I he answers.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
udmlrallon from friends today,
If
you have the possibilities to
because of your fair way uf
dealing wllh them. You'll be open a channel that might bring
generous In Instances where you In additional earnings at this
time, give It the serious altention
needn't be.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Fi­ II deserves. It could be good.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If
nancial gain is a strong prnbabllB y Berates B ade Oeol
TOUR BIRTH DAY

IT

Wv;

______________

(XCHANtfP

NOT WITHOUT

PUAjANWtt, THAT C R A Z Y
LOOKIN' WMTfVgft*
ee on y a * r IT-15, CHOFFIR/
WAY, RATf— J

1l^o ^

m

|e*

^ Af

play that always works — unless
you hold your cards badly

Opening lead: A K

you're arranging something o f a
social nature today, restrict it to
those who get along well with
one another. Make a point to
exclude dissidents.
A U M (March 21-Aprll IB)
This Is a good day to finalize
situations that have been left
hanging. You're a strong closer,
and it will prove to your advan­
tage to put the clinch er in
wherever you can.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Your enthusiasm ts contagious
today, and your ideas w ill In­
spire companions. Even those
who are generally lethargic or
slow on (he uptake will have
their thinking elevated.
O B M U fl (May 21-June 20)
You’ll know how to make ac­
cumulation an art form today. If
there Is anything to be gained by
having something, you'll figure
out a way to acquire it.
CANCBR (June 21-July 22)
Your greatest gift today ts your
ability lo Initiate activity. You'll
be especially adroit at originat­
ing endeavors that will benefit
both you and yours.
(0 1 9 9 1 . NEW SPAPER E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.

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                    <text>Sanford Herald
S e r v in g S a n fo rd , L a k e M a r y a n d S a m in o la C o u n ty s in c e 1 0 0 8
84th Year, No. 4 - Sanford, Florida

a a n a r s•■V*
s -I

.'k i ;

N E W S -D IG I

•'S

City-county truce OK
included annexation, land development codes, posals would la- based on contiguity, that is.
County land which touches some part of C ity
and future land uses.
County Commission Chairm an Fred Strcetman land. T h e County will not oppose annexations
explained. " T h e next step Is to have our that occur cast o fl-4 and cast of the I-4 Industrial
respective staffs move forward to prepare materi­ Park, northwest of the city.
Sanford C ity Manager Bill Sim m ons said. "T ills
als for rn rh presentation, then have them
will be iiniquily liencflclal to property owners,
approved at regular meetings."
Previous meetings had already established especially those wishing to annex In order to get
som e'of the objectives of the overall plan. As a city water and sewer services." He added. "It will
result, the two governments have entered into eliminate m any problems."
For land use. cooperative codes arc lo he
agreements on problems such as water, sewer,
transportation Impact fees and m utual ald/flrst established, especially In areas designated for
future development. In all cases, transportation
response.
A number of changes will come about when all Impacts will be considered, and Joint reviews will
matters receive final approval. Annexation pro­ ClSee T ru c e . Page B A

B y N IC K PPKIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer

□ Sports
New recruits hit town
S A N FO R D - Seminole Com m unity College
men's basketball coach Bill Payne greeted 14
players to the Raiders' first team meeting, only
four of w hich return from last year's squad.
See P ag e I B

□ People

S A N FO R D — Seminole County and the City of
Sanford will work together In solving some of the
major problems in Hie area. Government lenders
say residents will benefit.
Members of the Seminole County Commission
and Sanford City Commission met Tuesday to
finalize plans for a formal Interlocal agreement on
Joint planning. Following brief discussions on
several m inor details, the two groups agreed that
It was beneficial to both sides and all area
residents.
Preliminary projiosals agreed upon Tuesday

Cook this way
W ith sum m er at an end and schedules
becoming more hectic, quick treats and simple
recipes come in handy.
See P age 4 B

] County boosts
road’s beauty

Seminoles new leader

□ Local
Chalk talks set for schools
L A K E M ARY — Sandy Robinson, a member of
the Seminole County school board, has sched­
uled four Informal sessions with the public over
the next seven months In an effort to break
down the communications barriers that m any
perceive to be between the public and elected
officials.
See Page 3 A

L a k e M a ry B o u le v a rd w in s
m o n e y in 3-2 sp lit o f board
M ILD
Herald Staff Writer
S A N F O R D — Seminole County
commissioners on Tuesday formally
p l e d g e d $ 2 3 0 , 5 0 0 f or t h e
landscaping and beautification of
Lake Mary Boulevard.
C o m m is s io n e rs voted 3-2 to
approve an agreement with Lake
Mary agreeing to spend S I03.757
for iandscaping. $80,000 lor fancy
signal posts and $46,750 lor In­
tersection Improvements between
Markham Woods and Country Club
roads.
Lake Mary commissioners will
consider the proposal In a special
meeting Thursd a y night at 7 p.m. In
City Hall.
County commissioners Pat W ar­
ren and Larry Furlong opposed tin­
spending plan.
Furlong said it represented a
landscaping standard the county
couldn't afford lo meet on other
roads.

□ Nation
Bad news for the economy
W A S H IN G T O N - T h e U.S. economy shrank
at a slight 0.1 percent annual rale in the
A p rll-Ju n c quarter, the government said today,
casting doubt on whether the nation has
emerged from the recession.
See Page 7 A

]
Homeowners can air gripes
S A N FO R D — Local homeowners will lake
their gripes about rising property assessments
and more taxes to city and county officials
tonight and Thursday.
Tonight at 7 p.m .. a group of downtown
Sanford residents will meet with Seminole
County Property Appraiser Hill Sober and
county commissioner Jennifer Kelley to protest
the costly Increases. T h e meeting, which will he
held in the C ity Hall commission chandlers, was
called by Sanford Commissioner Lon Howell
who has argued large assessment Increases on
Ills properties were unjust.
Th u rsd a y, a group of west Sautord homeown­
ers w ill meet with Kelley and Sillier separately.
The group, who lives outside city limits will
protest Kelley's proposal to pursue a -I percent
tax on unincorporated residents' utility hills.
They will also meet with Subcr to protest the
property assessment Increases.
T h e meeting with Kelley Is scheduled lor I I
a.m. in the third floor conference room at the
northwest corner of the Seminole County
Services Building on First Street. The meeting
with Sulicr is scheduled lor 1 p.m. In his lirsi
llixir office In the services building

Deputy manager seat filled
S A N F O R D — Seminole County Manager Ron
Rabun filled the last deputy county manager
vacancy Tuesday.
C o u n ty co m m issioners alftrmcd Ills a p ­
pointment of Charlotte County assistant ad­
ministrator Jo h n Kevin Grace. Grace. 31. will be
paid $70,000 annually. He will begin Ids duties
m Sanford Nov. 4
"He presided over the single largest utility
acquisition in the stale ol Florida." Rabun said
"H e ’s had experience In streamlining the
building permit process and has worked in the
private sector so he knows the balancing act ol
profit and loss. He's a mover. Ile'sa comer
Grace will oversee piddle service departments,
such as development review and construction
perm itting.

"I think it ts a wonderful Idea to
pro vid e landscaping along
roadways." Furlong said. "Hut we
are setting a standard that we won't
he able to live up to on other roads
we will build."
W arren said she opposed the
spending because she believed tl
was u city project. Commissioners
Boh Sturm . Jennifer Kelley and
Fred S trce tm a n supported tinproposal.
Under the agreement. Lake Mary
will contribute $307,500 towards
Irrigation and other beautification
measures. Th e city Is also consid­
ering using alMiut S I . 3 million from
a proposed $5 million bond sale lo
pay Florida Power C’orp lor the
expenses of burying powerlines
along the roadway.
The city and the county failed lo
force FP C to pay for the burying
expense in a li.ittlc th.it reached the
Florida Supreme Court.
The total $I. H million bcaullflcaSee B e a u tify , Page 5 A

HvraMphotob, Oary F. Vogel
G re tc h e n S c h a p k e r is n e w p rin c ip a l of S e m in o le H ig h S ch o o l.

S e m i n o l e ’s f i r s t w o m a n
p r in c ip a l a s s e s s e s j o b
By VICKI DaSORMIER
Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD Gretchen
Schapker. the new principal at
Seminole High School, doesn't
have any plans lor big change al
llie school
"I want i » gel to know the
faculty, i In* students and lfit*
com m unity bclorc I make any
plans." Schapker said yesterday
prior lo being approved by the
si b o o l b o a r d

Schapker s a i d s h e is Impressed
W illi lilt- s e n s e ol e o i l l l i n i t l i t y 111
t h e Sanlord s e l i o o l
" li is Sanford s school." said
S ch a p ke r. who had been an
assistant principal at Lyman High
School in Longwnod liclore gel
ling the lop |ob al Seminole. "At

Lym an there arc students Iroiii
Lon gw n od . A llm o n le Springs.
Casselberry. There Isn't the same
sense of eom m im ity that there is
at Seminole."
Schapker. the tirM wnwmaii to
he principal of a high school In
Seminole County, said sin- h o p e s
lo w o rk closely with parent
groups oil im proving the school's
poor public image.
"Th e re arc a lot ol positive
things about Seminole dial no one
ever focuses on ." Schapker said
She has met with out-going
Seminole principal Wavne K pps
and said that he has promised to
assist her In any way she needs
during the transition period.
Schapker said s h e Is a discipli­
narian and she is not alrald to
See P rin c ip a l. Page 3A

Sanlando Utilities buy
w in s county clearance
M ILD
Herald Staff Writer
S A N F O R D — Seminole County
has opened the path for Longwood-area customers of Sanlando
Utilities Inc. lo purchase the com ­
pany and eventually turn It over to
Seminole County.
U nder the terms of t Ik - deal
approved by commissioners Tu e s­
day. they would authorize the sab­
ot up lo $32 million in utility bonds
to tie repaid Irnm customer rates
Th e new owners. Wektva Utilities
Inc., would he operated by a hoard
ol directors to include homeowner s
reprcsentlllves and the county's
chief utility oiflcial
When the b o n d s are repaid in 20
or 30 years, the comity would own
the water and sewer treatment
faeilitles and I lie supply li n e s Until
then, the county would review

annual operations budgets nl the
company.
The sale nl Sanlando Utilities lias
been ail uu-agaln. oil again all.iir lor
several years The eompany pro­
vides water and sewer service to
H.HOO customers, including about
500 tu (he city ol Longwood Most
Sanlando customers live west ol
Interstate 4 m Sweetwater and other
communities
The county. Altamonte Springs
anti Longwood have all considered,
then refused, oilers liv Sanlando
owners Greater Construction t'orp
because the price was Iihi high
A recent consideration bv Long
wood to acquire I lit- eompany was
opposed bv
"W e don't want a city in which
we can't vole lo at quire us tllcrclnrc
disinlranclilsing u s ." said Dick
Harris, president ol Wektva Utilities
See Sanlando, Page 3A

S h o w d o w n o v e r s c h o o l g ra d in g p o s tp o n e d
By VICKI OoSORMIER

Compiled from otaff and wtlro reports._________

Bridge..........................8B
Classifieds......... «B ,7 B
C o m ics........................BB
Crossw ord..................BB
Dear A b b y...................5B
Deaths......................... SA
Dr. O otf.....
Editorial....
Florida......

Horoscope................8B
Nation........................ 7A
People.................4B,5B
Police........................ 3A
School Menu............3A
Sports..................1B-3B
•vision................. SB
athar.................... 2A
rid ....................... 7 A

Sticky hot

V

u

1
£

r Partly
r
(
Cloudy
_________

Partly cloudy with
the high III the low
•His and an easterly
wind ai In lo la
itiph

2A

Herald Staff Wriler
S A N FO R D - llie expected clash between the
parents ot tlntd graders and the Seminole County
School District administration did not occur
liit-sdas evening apparently because ol a clerical
siialti
I lie mallet was postponed until Sept. 24.
Willie several parents sitll approached the
podimn and sp ok « no action was taken on the
p u p i l p r o g n - s s i o i i plan because notice ol the public
hearing w a s nov appropriately advertised
"I'm not sure what happened." Dr Hortense
Evans, .idiimiisirallve assistance to the supcriutendent said Evans' ollice is responsible lor
ensuring that all puliln hearings are advertised
at curdltlg lo Florida law
I he pupil progression plan includes a proposal
itiai would ch.mgi ilu- grading system tor third
graders to S and \ ("Satislactorv and Not
Satist.u torv l rather than standard letter or
number grades
Parents argue dial the tvvolcllcr system cii­
i outages mediocrity In tailing to give students an
,ii i mate assessment ol tlit quality ot their work
Several parents i tied dci lining test scores at the
second g.adi- level where the "S and N system
was initiated last year
Many ol tin parents who arrived lor last
See G rades. Page 5A

M«(»idpHoiobr 0»r»f Vugti
Karen Long and tier daughter Erica found out the
school hoard would not he taning action on the
pupil progression plan at last night s meeting

when they saw the sign on the front door They.
liHe many others had come to address the hoard
on the suhiect

�N E W S FROM T H E R E G IO N AND A C R O S S TH E S T A T E

T h e H e n ^ llhehwi Bsnford
iMhr biM Ubraqr sr^I ibiutuBi
S » I . First Btioot, is Mpsefod
to look Mbs tMs toft) kt s few
yssre. A m oM oflho MMfcg,
with all future oxponslons

FO R T L A U D E R D A L E - Plans lor the stale's new Department of Btderly Affairs are going smoothly. Oor. Lawton1 Chiles
aakt st the annual conference of the Florida Council on Aging.
Th e governor told tits audience of about 800 Tuesday that he
would use the new agency, w hich he fought to get approved b y

laaliidad
muuuvu, w n

Sanford City Commission
Monday afternoon. Present
ometruction work wWt add s

eanlihft
^▲|A|k win ■
MClPOn WTHCTl
IfV

Existing arses of the

were "p re tty poaMhre." said Oerald
Buchert. president o f the advocacy group.
But the governor also acknowledged the state had " a long
way to go" In handing, according to Buchert. head of the 8 t.
Petersburg d t y office on aging.
The Florida C oun cil on A ging, an organisation of people w h o
work with the elderly, didn't take a position on the department
when It w as being fiercely debated In the Legislature.
people who w o rk In the held were opposed to removing sendees
for the elderly from the state Department of Health and
Rehabilitative Services.

ProMeulori Mound of

h
u llf U f in w in ire t ^ r e w w ^ w Irwt
ntrtntwtTiM

batter use. When the entire
PTOfPCI IP CvfTifrePiPO, V M VOfPl

mueeum win be tteeMei in
•lie. with a greet deal of
additional space to bo added,
Including a irrapora^f sxMbh

undo ooth

PSC swears in new commissioner

MIAMI — A federal magistrate has accused three prosecutors
at lying u n d er oath about their Investigation at a m an *
by law enforcement authorities as the “Great Corrupter
Corns
of
Maleah."
U.S. Magistrate Lura na Snow on Monday set ball for Alberto
San Pedro, w h o Is awaiting trial on drug trafficking and perjury
charges, at S I m ilhon. T h e govern ment la appealing that

o u t." Suaan Clark aald after being sworn In

TALLA H ASSEE

" I know what decisions w e ’ve made
previously, i

TA LLA H A S S E E A
prepared b y an advisory citizens’
group set up by Gov. Law ton
Chiles has Florida prosecutors
worried that they’re going to lose
money to children's programs.
"T h e y don't know what th
tlxe y
are doing." aald Lawson Lam ar.
Orlando state attorney and a
longtime Chiles’ supporter. " I f
'right-sizing' Florida means w e
have to sacrifice the safety o f
this current generation. 1 d o n ’t
think the pubUc
will agree.'
ibUcwlIli

A)l«g«d marijuana kingpin santancad
FO R T L A U D E R D A L E - T h e man dubbed the "klngftah" of
Palm Beach C o u n ty’s largest family-run marijuana ring has
been sentenced to the m axim um of 30 years In federal prison.
Claude A vo n Pinder. 91. blew his nose and wiped away a tear
before reading n statement to a hushed courtroom of more than
a dozen relatives Monday.
Pinder. w h o w as arrested In 1968. denied leading a
Bahamas-Florida sm uggling ring. He scoffed at the "ktngflsh’*
label agents gave h im more than four years ago when a task
force was created to Investigate what was dubbed the "P ind e r
Cartel.’’
r « n
Nine m en w t » p k s g d « l l t y i c Importing 15.000 pounds of
marijuana in 1986 testified that Pinder helped head the ring.
A federal ju r y r o n v k ir d Plndcr Ju n c 13 of distributing a h V
conspiring to Im port the 15.000-pound load. He was acquitted
of the actual Importation.

Right-sizing Is the term used
by Chiles to describe his plan of
redesigning government to b rin g
It closer to tne people and m ake
It more efficient. Chiles set u p a
group called the B y the People
Commission to make sugges­
tions on how to do that.
A spokeswoman for the gover­
nor said the report was ju st a
draft version. Julie Anbender
aald her boas and the committee
both are commuted .to .keeping
hardened criminals in prison as
well as making children's needs

CMMtury vandalism!

ly M M S a A R T N « S
Associated Praia Writer

T A M P A — Was a m asked
gunm an who robbed a grocery
store at gunpoint and then aped
off in a hail of gunfire last fall
a ctually Gainesville s la yin g s
suspect Danny Harold Rolling?
Th a t's the question a Jury w as
asked to think about as testimo­
ny got under way In a case the
defense argues Is one of m istak­
en Identity.
But prosecutors have already
presented the only eyewitness
who claimed he could Identify
Rolling and a fingerprint expert
w h o lin k e d R o llin g to th e
getaway car.
Today, (he state was to put on
other experts who contend hair

From Agaoc laiad F ra u reports

—
Today...Partly cloudy w ith a
high In the low 90s. W in d cast
10 to ISmph. Chance of rain 50
percent,
Tonight...Partly cloudy w ith a
low In the mid 70s. Lig ht w ind.
Thursday...Partly cloudy w ith
a high in the low 90s. W in d cast
1 0 to ISm ph.
Extended f o re c a s t...P a rtly
cloudy Friday through Su nd a y
with a chance of m a in ly after­
noon and e ve n in g sh o w e rs.
Lows in Ihe 70s and highs In the
low lo mid 90s.

t u r n m im s i
Wednesday. August 28, 1981
Voi. 84, No. 4

tOCTMASTlR: Send i
to TNI SSNFOSO H ilU U ). PA
Saa 1(87, laniard. FL 3X773-1*47.

krtaartatlan Xatoa

£ X £ f lL

They don’t know
what they are doing.

apriority.
Last week, moot of the 20 state
attorneys and other law en­
forcement officials met with Jo n
Moyle, a West Palhi Beach at­
torney w h o heads the co m ­
mission’s Public Safety Com ­
mittee.
" It wasn't designed aa a meet­
ing to roast M oyle." Lam ar aald.
"B u t their product la really
terrible. T h e y brought In a Anal
report while they claim they are
still tryin g to get public Input. I
think the hearings may have
been window dressing. I hope
that Isn’t true."
T h e committee
it has
nas scheduled
through Sept. 26
townn meetings tl
but produced Its
its "final report"
on A u g . 16 after tw o of 10
meetings. j _*
Moyle said he didn't Intend for
the report to be "sacrosanct.’’

but merely a draft.
H e also aald hta committee
never Intended to suggest that
m oney be diverted from current
law enforcement programs but
that the state needs to "enhance
tax revenues'* to deal with the
overall problem.
"1 understand their concerns."
Moyle aald. " It la something that
Is n e w a n d u n til they u n ­
derstand It, their reaction la
understandable."
Moyle told the St. Petersburg
T im e s In a story published
Tuesday that he la correcting
some of the errors that pro­
secutors pointed out In the
report. B ut he said some of their
critic lama stem from “ misin­
formation or lack of Informa­
tion ."
Prosecutors say the report
does Include some good sugges­
tions but contain a number of
fundamental errors. Including a
clause Hist - i n d icates the slate
has been "spending more and
m ore m oney ,to solve- the. pro­
blem of crim e by putting more
offenders Into prison for longer
periods of tim e."

found on the gunm an's aban­
doned ski mask la similar to that
of Rolling.
Rolling. 37. Is charged with
robbery, attempted robbery and
aggravated assault on law en­
forcement officers In the holdup
of the north Tam p a Save and
Pack store a few days after the
la st b o d ie s w ere fo un d In
Gainesville.
T h e charges, which carry a
possible life sentence, aren't
directly related to the student
murders, but authorities say the
c a r R o llin g was d riv in g In
T a m p a waa stole n fro m a
G a in e s v ille student housing
complex two days after the last
bodies were found.
O r o c e r y sto re e m p lo ye e s
te s tifie d T u e s d a y how the

masked gunm an ran through
the front door at twilight last
Sept. 2. threw paper bags at the
cashiers and demanded they fill
them w ith cash. T h e man then
fled w ith the money to a tan
Bulck parked in a nearby alley.
A Hillsborough County Sher­
iff's deputy testified she con­
fro n ted R o llin g In a tense,
guns-drawn standoff.
"L a d y . I don’t want to shoot
y o u ." C p I. T e re s a Jo h n s o n
quoted (he gunm an as saying.
"L a d y , don’t make me shoot
you .”
T w o other deputies testified
they were forced to open ftrr
when the gunm an sped towards
them In hla getaway car. The car
waa found a short time later
riddled w ith 17 bullet holes.

Babysitters
charged in
tot’s death
AUBUR NDALE An
autopsy on a toddler w ho
died of head Injuries suf­
f e r e d while under the care
of a baby-sitting couple
Indicates the child waa
abused and tortured before ’
her death, authorities said.
J a c k O r a y and M a ry
C a r w l l e . b o t h of
Aubum dale. were charged
Tuesday w ith third-degree
m urder and child abuse In
the death of 19-month-old
A m y B o n e y . aald P o lk
C o u n t y s h e r i f f s
spokesw om an Lynne
Breidenbach.
C a r w ile ’ a 1 3 -y e a r-o ld
son. Danny Montalvo, faces

■fn-st-degree m urder-and-"
a gg ra vate d c h ild abuse*
charges lh A m y ’s death. :.-**
Montalvo allegedly
Jfegedly told
I n v e s t i g a t o r s t h a t he
ram m ed A m y ’s head Into a
dresser w hen she would
not stop bouncing up and
dow n on a bed, sheriff's
Maj. Grady J u d d said.
A m y died three d ays
later at St. Joseph’s Hospi­
tal. where she had been
hospitalized since an am ­
bulance was called Aug. 21
to the couple's home by
C a r w i l e 's 1 1 -y e a r -o l d
d a u g h t e r . B re id e n b a c h
said.
G ra y, 48. and Carwlle.
43. who are farm laborers,
were each jailed In lieu of
8 2 .5 0 0 s u re ty bond o r
•750 cash, while Montalvo
w a s In th e cu sto d y of
Juvenile authorities.
" T h is Is a very bizarre
case.” Sheriff Lawrence W .
C row J r . said. " I will. If I
liv e to lO O . never u n ­
derstand this.’’

i u m

M ONDAY
M t l y s M y 90-72

m

i .

TU ESD AY
P t l y c l d y 9 3 -7 4

m

w
to
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VI
VJ
to
to
V3
VS
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to
to

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74
74
to
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71
74
77

Pet
to
to
to
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to
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.14
to
a
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01
01

W EDNESDAY
F t l y s id y 8 3 -7 4

TH U R SD A Y
P t ly c ld y 9 3 -7 4

_____________________

•OLUNAB TA B LE: Min. 7:55

€
Ml La
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.

J 4 VO*'!1*’

——

o»»
Apalachicola
Daytona Baach
FI. Laud Baach
FortMyari
Gainatmlla
rtomftrasu
Jacktonvllla
K«y Wttl
Lairland
Miami
Pantacoia
Saratoga
Tallahatta#
Tamp*
Vrro Orach
W. Palm Saadi

I—

Tamparatarta indict* prrvloua dty i

o i

ME*SDRMi FfwaX Aire*| ggnfOCEi

Th e commission discussed telephone and
other issues In a daylong meeting. Including
rules Intended to rein In children running
up huge phone bills for aex-Une calla.

THE W EATHER

Play 4

4 W W Daily and Sunday, h

Commlaafonrr Betty Easley concluded an
exchange over cellular telephone
le regulation
by tetttng Clark: ’RcapecthiUy,. I disagree
w ith you. Wi

Rolling’s defense: Mistaken identity

O R AN G E P A R K — Vandals have struck In Magnolia
Cemetery here, destroying o r damaging 33 headstones, m a ny
of them more than 100 years old.
"It just leaves y o u with a sick feeling that they had no
respect for the dead or the feelings of their families." Gloria
Neely. Orange Park’s director of general services, said as she
surveyed the damage Monday.
The vandalism was reported to police over the weekend.
It looks like Just plain old meanness." said Orange Park
Police Lt. Jam e s Botvin, w ho added there was no evidence
or
den
any satanic or cult-related activity, survivors of the dead whose
headstones were vandalized.
"Many of these are over 100 years old. Their families m ay be
dead now. too. or m ay have moved away." aald Ernest Jones,
park superintendent.
The seven-acre cemetery, deeded to the town in 1866. holds
the remains of some Civil W a r aoldlera. Including the grave of
Gen. Joseph T a r r Copeland, a Yankee officer who moved to
Orange P ark In 1885 and died In 1893. His grave was not
disturbed.

0 0 -2 3

T h e meeting that followed made It d e a r
her experience aa a PSC attorney, including
three years aa Its general counsel, w on’t

Clark. 42. replaces Gerald Gunter, who
died of a heart attack In Ju n e . About 300
commlealon personn el crowded the hearing
room to watch one of their o w n take a place
on the five-mem ber panel.

Safety report upsets prosecutors

MIAMI — A Metro-Dade Judge who was preparing to take a
gun safety course said the accidental discharge of her revolver
In her chambers points out the Importance of such courses.
" I always said I w ould never carry a gun. never use It until I
took a course a n d 'l learned how to use. which I’ve never done
obviously." Ju d g e Nancy Pollock said Tuesday about the
Incident tw o weekaago.
"Now I know that people should not be carrying guns unless
they do know how to use It."
Pollock said she had brought the ,38-callber revolver to her
office to have It cleaned by one of the bailiffs. She was am ong
court personnel planning to get concealed weapons permits.

Caaba
tu

F lo r id a ’s new est

11

Judge's gun aeddantly dteehorgao

Hare are Iha winning
numbers salactad Tuesday In the
Florida Lottery:

-

years aa an attorney for the u tility regulat•land Iher I
Ing panel will stand

Yet any chances a t San Pedro’s quick release had been
dashed late Su nd a y when a warrant was Issued for his arrest
for allegedly killing an associate In a drug-running scheme.
In her order M onday. Snow said the three federal prosecutors
gave misleading statements about their InvestIgstlona at San
Pedro In late 1900a nd early 1991.

tOTTMIY

p w v ii la
tu inp

Aag. 17

sytaia
Waves are
1-2 feet with
w
a slight chop.
Current is (o ihe south w ith a
water temperature of 82 degrees.
N o w Saayraa Bench: Waves are
2

feet and choppy. Current is to
the south, with a water tem pera­
ture of 82 degrees.

a .m .. 8:25 p.m .: Maj. 1:45 a.m..
2 :1 0 p .m . TID E S : Daytona
S t a c k : highs. 10:25 a.m.. 10:39
p .m .: lows. 4: ip a m .. 4:38 p.m.:
N a w E a s yra a le a c h : highs.
10:30 a.m.. 10:41 p.m.: lows.
4 :15 a.m .. 4:43 p.m.: Cacoa
B a i d u highs. 10:45 a.m.. 10:59
p .m .: lows. 4:30 a m .. 4:48 p.m.

Bt. A ig ia tla e to Japiter Inlet
To n ig h t: W ind east 10 knots.
Seas 1 to 3 feet. Bay and inland
w aters a light chop. W idely
scattered showers and thun­
derstorms more numerous south
part.

F R ID A Y
P t ly c ld y 0 3 -7 4

• T A T IT IO
T h e h ig h tem perature in
Sanford Tuesday was 91 de­
grees and the overnight low was
73 as reported by the University
of Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
R e corded rainfa ll for the
p e r io d , e n d in g at 9 a . m .
Wednesday, totalled 0 Inches.
T h e temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 85 degrees and
Tue sd ay’s overnight low was
76. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ T u e s d a y 's high.................. 9 1

[ Barometric pr«M art.30.18
□ Relative Hum idity....75 pet
[ ,W ills ...... Norths as19 mph
□ R a in f a ll..........................0 3 l i .

□ Today's soaaot 7:83 p.m.
□Tom orrow 's su riM ....7 ri&gt; l

cita
Atlanta
Bo«tan
Chicago
Cleveland
C«tanthla.S.C.
Del lea-Ft Worth
Danver
DeaMolnea
DaIroll
Hatana
Honolulu
Indianapolis
Jackten.Miu.
Junaau
Kenaaa City
La* Vagat
Lot Angtlat
Louisville
A*-----*-■vwmprii
Milwaukee
Mpls St Paul
Nashville
Naw Or Want
Naw York City
Nor talk. Va.
North Platta
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
Phoanla
Richmond
Sacramanto
SI Loult
Sail Laka City
San Juan.P.R.
Stall *
STiravaport
Stoua Fall*
Spokana
Topafca
Tix ton
Tulsa
Washing ton.D C.
Wichita
Wllka* Barra

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�Chalk talks set for schools
questions and concents. Be In---■ ------ a tt
ToiiOQ.
T h e meetings wfll be held in
L a k e M a r y . L o n g w o o d and
W inte r Springs, the areas in­
cluded tn Robinson's residential
district, but she Is encouraging

appeared to be a h r e a r m 'H a hip pouch.
W hen the pouch was eeScbed. police sakl they found a s m a i
amount of m arijuana and a gun tn the pouch.

Mm chargad with battery, burglary
Dalton J a w . 33, g| Wifeem d a r k Court. Sanford, was
charged w ith b u rg la ry and battery by Sanford police

n

~

" " ‘■“ '’■"Z"” :
■MW y S H M M
old cttv hall buUdtnd In Lake
Mary.
"Everyone to welcome." she
aaid. "P arents, teachers, administrotors, students and conce rn e d c itlte n s . B rin g y o u r

the com m un ity." Kuhn said.
Th e other ’'Chalk T a lk " meet
ings win be on Monday. Nov. 11
at 7 p .m . In the Com m unity
B u i l d i n g In L o n g w o o d : on
Monday. Feb. 10. 1SB3 at 7 p.m.
at W inter Springs Elementary
School and on Monday. April 0
at 7 p .m . tn the old city hall
bu ilding In Lake Mary.

S A T scores
buck trend
S A N F O R D - White the
national trend In scores on
the S ch o la s tic A p titu d e
T e s t ( S A T ! have show n
declines tn the lost few
years. S e m in o le C o u n ty
scores have risen steadily.
T h e 1991 scores, re ­
ceived b y the district yes­
te rd a y a fte rn o o n , sh o w
that the average student in
the d is trict d id s lig h tly
better again this year.
T h e 433 points averaged
on the verbal portion of the
test was tw o points higher
than last year.
T h e average score on the
m ath test remained u n ­
changed at 487.

MILLIONS TO LEND
Arraot follow otruggla
Walter Martin. 19. 3000 E . T w in St., Sanford, was arrested
by Seminole C ounty deputies Monday on drug charges.
A deputy reported seeing Martin place something In his
pocket then he fled w hen approached. Following s struggle.
Martin was apprehended, the deputy reported.
T h e deputy reported seeing Martin throw something Into
nearby bushes that later proved to be cocaine, reporta state.
Martin was charged w ith poseesslon w ith Intent to distribute
cocaine, restating arrest and tampering w ith evidence.

Mm chargad with rvtlitinQ Most
Major Wheeler. 36. 1811 W . 19th St.. Sanford, was arrested
for resisting arrest Monday after he refused to respond a
Sanford policeman's order to stop walking away from him .
reports state.

Warrant orroatt
T h e following wanted people have been apprehended:
•Jackie Cornell Moye. 37. 337 Bradshaw, Sanford, waa
arrested b y Lake Mary police Monday on two 1967 Volusia
County warrants for an alcohol-related offense.
• Th o m a s Raym ond Church. 43. 3S-B Sail Pointe Apts.,
Sanford, waa arrested Monday by Sanford police on a May
warrant for failing to appear at a hearing to answer to driving
w ith a suspended license charge.
•Sherrell Monea Williams. 38. 31 Higgins Terrace. Sanford,
waa arrested Monday on a warrant for falling to appear at a
hearing for battery charges.
' •Matthew Marie. 34. 600 Longdate Ave., Longwood. was
arrested Monday on two 1969 warrants for obtaining property
w ith a worthless check charges.

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Frt. 830to5:00
774*4404
974-4070
790-7110
84.14091230
• Orange QtyAraa
• Sanford /LakaMvy
• Orlando Ana
LicensedMorijjaQS
574*4070 *
7109999
1»waouaajeToe«ieccwwwewM.mMicowTacrouaaa.rowiwv«iTHWPueMW)ueuxauwimufuenoaeeeeecmcouacT.
va

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s

New wing for classrooms
opened by Page schools
S A N FO R D — T h e Page Private
Schools. 118 Airport Blvd. In
S a n fo rd o p e n e d th e ir new
claasoom w ing to students on
Monday, but their wlU be an
official ribbon cutting tomorrow
m orning.
To g e th e r w ith the Greater
Sanford Cham ber of Commerce,
the students, ranging In age
from two years old to sixth grade
w ill m ark the beginning of a new
era at the school.
T h e facility, w hich opened In
1966. has an enrollment of 175
youngsters.
"W e ’re a small, non-sectarian
s c h o o l." said D r. C h a rla ln e
Luna, principal at the school.
L u n a said the school em ­
phasises Individualised attention
for their students and offers
classes In dance and Spanish for
all students beginning w ith the

two year olds.
Luna said that her school Is
geared toward the .fam ily with
working parents.
"W e have extended hours for
those w ho m ust d ro p th e ir
children off early and pick them
up late." she said.
T h e new facility will contain
10 classrooms Luna said.
"W e have small classes, but
large classrooms," said Lun a of
the square-foot addition.
T h e Page School has addi­
tional schools In Orlando and In
California, Luna said, though
each is run Independently.

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1

BEN W A T T E N B E R G

Cold War lessons in a hot place
EDITORIALS

B igge r better?

i

In agreeing to a merger that win create, at
leaat for the moment, the nation's second
largest hank. Bank*America Corp. and Securi­
ty Pacific Corp. have joined the wave of banks
wagering on consolidation as an answer to
the Industry's challenges. The wisdom of that
s tra te g y w ill n o w be te ste d In the
marketplace.
Th e current recession has helped underline
what has gradually become apparent over the
last decade: There are simply too m any banka
chasing too little business.
Th e nation's 12.800 comm ercial banka
have found themselves scrambling for profits
and growth aa other companies — securities
firms, savings and loam . even Industrial
companies like Oeneral Electric and Pord —
have taken away depositors and loan customera. Over the last three decades, the banks'
share of the assets held by financial institu­
tions has steadily' shrunk and In the last
several years bank failures have risen
sharply.
Consolidations are theoretically a logical
way to deal w ith that overcapacity. The
recent string of major hank mergers Including
marriages between Manufacturers Hanover
and Chemical Bank and between C A S Sovran
Corp. and NCNB Corp.. to Intended to permit
the new banks to eliminate duplicative
operations, close overlapping branches and
cut costs.
Unhappily for hank employees, most of that
cost-cutting means getting rid of Jobs: bank
analysts say that the Bank America-Security
Pacific merger could result In the layoff of
20.000 people. But In a shrinking Industry,
i to Inevitable.
lnevl
Job loss’
It to far b etter th a t It
com e th ro u g h m ergers th a t have the promise
o f cieatlag-JM U cifcapitaltoed a n d sounder
b anks th a n through th e collapse of ailing
institutions, .. . , ^ . * *
Aa a m a tte r‘ tx public policy, leaner and
m ore diversified b an k s are to be welcomed.
W hen th ey a re ru n well, geographically
d iv e r s if ie d h a n k s like th e m e rg e d
BankA m erica Corp.. w hich will operate In 10
states, are leas vulnerable to local economic
dow ntu rn s su ch a s th o se th a t san k many
b anks in Texas an d New England. When
b anks spread risk s a n d cut costs, th e bank
deposit Insurance fund an d th u s the taxpay­
ers are also b etter protected ag ain st kiss.
But in banking, a s in a n y th in g else, bigness
is no guarantee of success. Som e b an k s that
have grow n by m erg er h av e prospered,
particularly w hen they have been able to keep
their focus on cu sto m ers’ needs; o th ers have
foundered th ro u g h m ism an ag em en t, poor
strategic decisions and a n Inability to achieve
the cost savings th a t m erging prom ised.
The logic of th e m om ent m ay tell bankers
t h a t big g er Is b e tte r, b u t th e ultimate
J u d g m e n t will be m ad e, a s alw ays, by
m illions of c u sto m ers m aking day-to-day
choices about convenience, price an d the
quality of service.

LETTER S TO EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must
be signed. Include the address of the writer and a
daytime telephone number. Letters should be on u
Mingle subject und he as brief as possible.. Letters
arc subject to editing.

Berry's World
i Ve g o t
a h id e a le ts

IAERGE1
w h a t ’s t h e

POINT? WE CAN’T
LET A BUNCH Of
PEOPLE 60.

shortage never did come about, despite 380.000
new Soviet Immigrants. The aertoua. problem
now — and the topic of a subsequent column —
Is how Immigrants win get productive jobs tn the

f AmarieadldIt
therightway.■
Curiously, the thought Is roughly the tame.
Oeneral Artel Sharon, both a general and
poiiiicsj icsocfi N e t m evance to w rsti in me

way the Cold War ended. Sharon may well be —
simultaneously — the moat w*—
* and moat
detested man In laracl. •Hta view la worth
understanding because he it pr esents one Im*

Sharon beMevea that the lack of democracy Is
not just a political bet. but a military concern.
Democracies, with built-in checks and balances.

JACK ANDERSON

Did the ‘octopus’
kill journalists?

ELLEN GOODMAN

A tale of 2 w orlds - and life
C A S C O B A Y . Maine — Dawn came with an
om inously heavy rain and we turned on the
radio for word of Hurricane Bob coming up the
Maine coast. What we heard, however, hadn't
been predicted by even the most knowl­
edgeable expert. There was news from the
East. W inds of change. T h e Soviet Union was
suddenly as unstable and dangerous aa any
tropical storm.
In the cove, fishermen secured the last data
and dorries. working together tn their decelptively unhurried way. O n shore, we followed
their lead, stashing the chairs and hammock In
the bam . taping windows, pausing regularly to
listen to the updates from Moscow as well as
Portland.
T h e speculation about damage, the snippets
of information mixed w ith opinion, the memo­
ries of past upheavals, came Interchangeably
from meterologlsts and Sovietologists. There
was more speculation from the Kissingers than
the National Weather Service.
As we went about our business, moving the
wood on our neighbor's porch, checking
windows, bolting the door, we were mindful of
the uncertainly of the world. O u r double vision
focused on G o rbachev a n d on Bob. on
revolution and on the search for the hurricane
lamp. la this, we mused, what the environmen­
talists mean when they say. “ T h in k globally,
act locally"? We dug out flashlights and
candles.
B y lunch the lights were gone, by 3 p.m the
phone was out. O u r contact with the world
ofT-tsland was down to one battery operating a
single headset radio. Eve ry half hour It
delivered the news that Gorbachev was “ sick."
that a “ committee" had declared itself In
com m and, that Bob would hit with the high
tide. A n d that all we could do now at this
shoreline was wait and sec.
As the winds bent the maple trees as If they
were bamboo, and the rain came In great
sheets across the bay I thought about that
other sea change. I had been tn Moscow Just
weeks after Gorbachev had taken power. Th e
most remarkable images were brought Into m y
hotel room and Into Soviet homes by the
evening news.
A new fare, a man not yet familiar to the
world, was strolling through the city square
talking to ordinary citizens one night. T h e next
night, he was In a factory, arguing animatedly
and ulso — this was extraordinary — listening.
Th e Soviets I met those weeks, weathered
und cynical, were not quick to believe In
change or. certainly. In Its permanence. Yet
under this curly surface there was something

*

akin to hope. Even m y Interpreter, the w om an
1 came to call A nna the Flake because she
made a farce of K G B efllclency. admitted that
this m an was different. After a string of old
m en propped Into the president's chair,
something new was happening.
Evidence of the Th ird World econom y
abounded. T h e hotel I was In served soft-boiled
eggs at 7 a.m. and hard-boiled at 7:30 a.m .
B uyin g a loaf of bread — the one thing in
abundance — required standing In three lines
before three surly workers. And those were
“ the good old days."
T h e m oat useful
w a y f o r a
beleaguered Journal­
ist to confront Soviet
red tape was with
one Russian phrase
that means, “ this la
c r a z y ." Uttered tn
desperation to clerks,
to bureaucrats, even
to s o c io lo g is ts In
Leningrad. It brought
a know ing smile and
help. Everyone knew
th e a y s te m w a s
crazy.
So m uch happened
In those years. So
m uch more seemed
possible. T h e world
breathed more easily.
Eastern Europe more
freely. But tn Russia,
the system remained
crazy. W hat happens now? There to no forecast
to rely on.
Playing Scrabble at the kitchen table by
kerosene lamp, we pass the news back and
forth. T h e early work coming through the
battery-powered headset to that "hard-liners"
have taken over and that the seas ure 20 to 30
feet.
We live tn these two worlds, one natural, the
other manmade — one as locul as a single cove,
the other os global us the satellite bcumtng Its
news from one continent to another. But our
lives depend on both.
B y 10 o'clock at night, the hurricane moved
on. more gently now. to other coves.
But manmade storms are not so selective nor
so short-lived. So we stand at the eastern edge
of the country, at the end of one storm and the
beginning of aitolher. From hen. the ocean
seems deceptively peaceful.

W A S H IN G T O N - Joseph Daniel Casolaro.
the free-lance Journalist who thought he was
on to the biggest story of his life — a sto ry he
called "th e octopus" — is not the only
Investigative reporter to die while chasing the
tentacles of that octopus.
Caaotaro's body was found Aug. 10 tn a
Hotel room In Martlnsburg. W .Va.. his wrists
slashed w ith a broken bottle. On M arch 31.
1090. the body of British Journalist Jonathan
Moyle was found hanging from a closet rail in
his hotel room In Santiago. Chile.
Although Casolaro
and Moyle were pro­
bing different leads,
the ir investigations
Involved aome of the
aame people. Both of
their famlllea are ad­
amant that each of
them was the victim
o f fo u l p la y , n o t
s u i c i d e , a a
a u t h o r it ie s f ir s t
thought In each case.
C a so la ro 'a death
attracted a flurry of
m edia attention to
the story he had not
f On the
y e t f in is h e d . H is
surface,
octopus theory was
neither men
that several of the
had evidence
biggest news stories
worth killing
of the last decade
for. |
were linked In a huge
master plot, but the
flies he left behind provided no sm oking
guns.
A key part of Caaotaro's theory focused on
the eight-year legal battle between the Justice
D epartm ent and Inslaw, a W a sh in g to n
computer software company. Inslaw claims
that Reagan administration officials pirated
Us software and sold It to law enforcement
and Intelligence agencies around the world.
According to sources who worked with
Casolaro. he believed that some people
Involved In the alleged software theft were
also involved In the Iran-contra affair, the
arm ing of Saddam Hussein before the Persian
G u lf W ar and the delayed release of Am erican
hostages so Jim m y Carter would lose the
1080 presidential election (the "O ctober
surprise"). Casolaro also apparently was
trying to prove that outlaw Bank of Credit
and Commerce International, or B C C I. was a
conduit for money In some of these opera­
tions.
Casolaro believed that the conspirators he
w as In ve stiga tin g arranged for Inalaw
software to be sold to Iraqi Intelligence
through an arms broker In Chile. Moyle, the
editor of “ Defense Helicopter W o rld " In
lamdon. was in Chile last year to attend an
International air show. As we reported last
August, while he was there he was looking
Into weapons sales to Iraq by the same
Chilean arm s broker.
Moyle was more Interested In allegations
that the broker was buying used A m eri­
can-made civilian helicopters to outfit them
as attack helicopters for Iraq. Moyle's notes
also referred to “ hellos." an advanced missile
guidance aystem. which led many to suspect
that Moyle was Investigating other goodies
Iraq was shopping for In addition to helicop­
ters.
Over the past year. Casolaro contacted us
several times to talk about sales to Iraq, but
he appeared to be no further along In the
story than any other Journalist. S im ila rly, the
details Moyle was chasing about the helicop­
ters were well-known In defense circles. On
the surface, neither man had evidence worth
killing for.
But members of Casoluro's family say he
was upbeat and excited about hto story, and
had received threatening phone calls In the
weeks prior to hto death. Moyle's father also
said hto son was excited about his w ork and
hto upcoming marriage. Drugs were found In
Moyle's body, causing authorities in Chile to
reopen the case and rethink their conclusion
that It was suicide. That case to still open.

a

�Sanfofd H w M, 8 m toed, Florida - Wsdntsduy, August M , i t t l - SA

Bonds may build schools
available from the two
In property taxes for
Ja c k Koegel. the banker on the bualnesa
advisory board, said that the bonds w ould allow
the district to bulk! at least a Tew of the schools
that are needed to ease overcrowding in the
district.
"It certainly won’t allow us to build all that we
need." M ary Chamber*, assistant superintendent
for business and finance, said. "B u t we have to do
something. W e don't bsve sny choice."
Koegel sold that the board needed to hire a
financial planner to offer the district expert advice
o n how to pursue the project.
" W e are knowledgeable, but w e are not
experts." he said.
T h e bualnesa board said they have "slgntAcant
contacts" and could contribute m uch to the
evaluation and Implementation of the bond I
If that la the path they chose to pursue.

P f w i v VrTSO wiwi in P n wnvw

Principal'

in England to study their school system. The

1A

vm ivn iV K n ira w#f# DOOOTM Dy in# 8CR00V

boerd si lost night's meeting.

Local teachers observe English
schoolroom in exchange program
l y M
*«

N

^ H

| | «-i* —
n tr#■o-*iia
o iin
w n itr

S A N F O R D — L o u is e
Btsckwelder. a second grade
teacher at Oeneva elem entary
School spent three weeks In
England this sum m er sitting
In c l a s s r o o m s a n d o c ­
casionally teaching a class.
For the last few weeks, the
couple with w hom she lived
In England has been staying
In her Sanford hom e and
o b se rvin g h o w A m e r ic a n
schools operate.
'T h e one thing w e all real­
ise d ." she said w a s that
children are the sam e every­
where. " T h e y have the same
problems, the same Joys, ev­
erything.”
Blackwelder said she would

lo v e to t r a v e l to o t h e r
countries to see how schools
operate.
" t haven't had m uch oppor­
tunity to travel." she said, "so
an opportunity like this la
T h e teacher exchange la
part of a program established
several years ago by Charlotte
O u ye r. reading coordinator
for the district.
Ouyer went to Orest Britain
to begin the exchange pro­
gram in 1968. Teachers, gen­
erally from schools In the
eastern part of the district,
h a v e been t r a v e llin g to
England and accepting British
teachers In their homes since
then.
"It Is a fantastic opportunity
to learn and travel and

h o w o th e r people li v e ,"
Blackwelder said.
B a lc k w e ld e r s a id th a t
f ln a n a d a l assistance was
available to one teacher In the
district w ho was participating
In the program to defray the
coot of the airfare.
" I didn't get It." she said
w ith a smile.
O le n d a L o t h , a n o th e r
Oeneva Elem entary School
teacher and Susan Kelley, an
Oviedo H igh School teacher
also went to England In June.
" I loved staying In their
hom e." Blackwelder said of
the Porteous household where
she stayed earlier In the
sum m er. " It was wonderful to
talk to them, to see that their
reasons for getting Into the
profession were the same as
m ine."

enforce the rules. She said she
Win not let the fact that she la a
w o m a n d e te r her from dis­
ciplina ry duties.
" I ’ve certainly never let that
stand in m y w ay." she said.
" I'v e been In education for 20
years. I've taught In an kinds of
different schools, I've been a
dean where I've been In charge
of the school's discipline. That's
nothing new to m e."
Schapker w ill spend her first
full day at Seminole H ig h School
today.
" I 'm really looking forward to
the challenge." she said. "N o
tw o schools are exactly alike and

SanlandoH a rris said negotiations are
not complete for the purchase
and declined to discuss details.
H e said he hopes completing the
deal this fall while bond rales are
still low. lowering the cost to
rate-payers.
" W e pay the lowest rates In
F lo r i d a ." H a rris sa id .

there's alw ays a challenge In
working w ith new students.”
Schapker hopes to become a
part of the Seminole com m unity.
"I w ant to be able to work w ith
those people who a rc concerned
with helping the school." she
S c h a p k e r. 4 7 . earned h e r
bachelors degree* In English and
journalism from Florida Atlantic
JDiversity in Boca Raton. She
University

received her masters degree In
administration and supervtson
from Barry College In M iam i.
Despite the fact that 85 stall
members at Seminole signed a
petition In support of another
candidate for th e p o s itio n .
Schapker said she doesn't feel
she will have any trouble w ith
the staff.
" I can't see that there’ll be any
problems." she said.

Tracebe held for future code
updating.
The o ve ra ll Jo in t p la n n in g
agreem ent, basically assures
that the C ity of Sanford and
Seminole County, are agreeing
to w o rk together to resolve
problems that effect area resi­
dents a n d property, and elim i­
nates a considerable amount of
p a p e rw o rk a n d t im e d e la y
normally experienced between

requests and approvals by the
two government*.
Sanford Mayor Bettye Sm ith
was pleased with the Intent of
the agreem ent. " W e started
working on this four y e a n ago."
she M id. "W e hoped eventually
we could do something like this,
and n o w I ’m p leased if la
happening.”
Specific Joint agreements will
be brought up before each gov­
e rn m e n t b o d y as t h e y are
oaroared.

Beautify-

Grades
evening's meet­
ing left when they saw the notice
posted on the front door of the
district offices that announced
tha t Jh e . session h a d been
postponed.
["w h y wait through the whole;
meeting to talk If th e y aren't
going to do anything until next
month." Kendra Bond of W inter
Springs said after reading the
sign. ‘T U come bock on Sept.
24."
Th e public hearing and vote
will be the first Item on the
agenda for the second meeting
next month.

Nancy Walk of Lake Mary sat
through two hours of the meet­
ing before finally giving u p and
going home.
T ? l l be 11 o'clock before they
even get to the Issue." she
predicted. ' W hy should fw a lt? "
tembermeeting.' •
■
"Although I'm not sure w h y ."
she said. "They've already made
up their minds."
D e b b ie H a lle o f W i n t e r
Springs, who has taken on the
responsibility of Informing the
public about the Issue, argued
the district had done little to let

people know about the planned
change.
It was Halle, district officials
adm it, w ho brought It to their
attention that the advertisement
.a n n ou n cin g the m eeting.had
never appeared In the paper.
Haile said T h a t while some
m a y say the postponement of
the Issue buys her some time to
get the word out to the public,
she does not want the time
because It Is hurting the stu­
dents.
"W h at are they supposed to do
In the meantime for grades." she
asked. " I want the Issue re­
solved."

1A
llu n package repre­
sents a dramatic scale-down of a
beautification scheme boulevard
p la n n e n originally estimated
co u ld coat $5.4 m illion. Th e
orglnal figure Included an In­
flated estimate for burying the
powerlines, believed to cost 62.9
m illion.
Original plana also called more
extrnalve landscaping, fancier
Intersections and a pedestrian
crossover at Country Club Road
for children allending Lake Mary
Elem entary.

M

..

RoomA/C
Nettie Lee Morgan. 77. 1406
West 13th St.. Sanford, died
F rid a y at M e m o ria l Medical
Center. Jacksonville. Fla. B o m
February 26. 1914 In Sylvester.
Ga., she moved to Sanford from
Moultrie. Ga.. In 1945. She was a
housewife. She was a Methodist
who was a member of Allen
Chapel A.M .E. C hurch. Sanford.
She was a m e m b e r of the
Stewess Board *1 at Allen C ha -

A LIC E ANN M U S TE R
Alice Ann Shuster. 103. 523

The Family Of

REV. ERNEST R. RUCKER
Wishes to express o u r tincere appreciation for all acts o f
kindness shown and especially for the food, cards,
flowers and y o u r prayers. T h e y have all been a tremen­
dous source o f strength. M a y G o d forever bless each o f
you.

Special Thanks From His Wife
M rs. Everdena Rucker

Prearrangement
Makes Sense

W . Plantation Blvd.. Lake Mary,
d ied T u e s d a y at Longw ood
Health Care Center. Bom August
16. 1888 In Tamaqua, Penn..
she moved to Lake Mary from
Long Island. N.Y. In 1988. She
was a homemaker. She was a
Protestant. She was a member of
the Eastern Star In Long Island.

mm

NEW KINDERGARTEN PROGRAM
Limited Enrollment
• Providing Individual Attention

With A Christian Touch

•199

Mrs. Sue C h a p in , Corrective Reading Te acher has
1 6 ye a n experience w ith Kindergarten. A w ell-rounded
pro gra m stressing reading readiness and social skills
especially suitable fo r the 5 year old. M eadow s E le ­
m entary is located in a beautiful, quiet country setting
o n 13 acres o n C .R . 427 approximately 2 m iles north
o f 17-92 in Sanford. "Th e Meadows" also has open­
in g s in the 3 rd , 4th, 5th and 6th grades.

Uasa 116* 6000 ETU’a

Jean Carbon, Principal

Survivors Include, daughters
Edith Llebcrt. Kissimmee and
Grace Gulhell. Lake Mary: five
g r a n d c h i l d r e n : six g r e a t ­
grandchildren.

'BxcdUnct for Stonily'

G r a m k o w F u n e ra l H o m e.
Sanford, In charge of arrange­
ments.

M IS N. County Rond 427
Sanford, FL 32773

HENRY PAUL WAGER, m
H enry Paul Wager. III. 17
days. Holbrook Avenue. Deltona,
died Monday at Arnold Palmer
Children's Hospital. Orlando. He
was born August 9. 1991 In
Sanford. He is survived by his
parents. Henry P. and Wendy.
Deltona: maternal grandparents.
T h o m a s and Jean Ju d g e .
Greensville. S.C. and Dominic
and Joun Mlggllacio. Trenton.
N .J.: paternal grandparents. Dr.
und Mrs. Henry Paul Wager.
Kansas City. Mo.
Stephen R. UaldaufT Funeral
Home of Deltona In charge of
arrangements.

322-7910

The,

2307 8. FRENCI

HRS: M-TH 9-6, F-SA9-7. SUN 9-2

10 LB. BOX OF

LONDON BROIL or

ALL MEAT
HOT DOGS

TO P SIRLOINS

Rsg. Six*. Bsly Buatws, or 10*

%

*1 4 .9 0 .

LABOR DAY
• AM - 2 PM

O U R O W N EX TR A LEAN

You can help lighten the burden on your loved ones
a Iby
making all the decisions and arranging the details for lyo u r
funeral In advance.
r
O ur professional and caring staff will help you iarrange
everything at coals you'll feel are appropriate, assuring that
111 yo u r
wishes will be met without undue stress to your family.
We Invite yo u to contact us at your convenience for an
appointment.

P R O F E S S I O NA L
PROPERTY TAX
ASSESSMENT
REVI EW

322-2131

C b lf c 3 2 1 -5 0 6 5

B R IS S O N F U N E R A L H O M E

I r l fchlioff

9 0 5 L A U R E L A V E.. SANFORD
Sponsors of the M EM O R IA L GUARDIAN PLAN
(Insurance Funded Prearranged Funeral Program)

* * &amp; £ p s o c I a lc s

106 W.
Sulla 204 Sanford

. . .

\Auto-Owner*
insurance
life. N
. fa r. R is la n . Oar aaaw u t t ll all.

SPECIAL BUT
pel.
Survivors Include, sons C lyde
H o llo m o n . Ja ck so n ville a n d
Claude Hollomon. Rochester.
N .Y .: d au gh te r. E m e ly Lee
Lam ar. Rochester: 12 g ra n d ­
c h ild r e n : seven g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Wllaon-Eichelberger Mortuary.
Inc.. In charge of arrangements.

7 I •«

HAMBURGER
PATTIES
*1 .9 9
GREAT FOR THE O RAL

COUNTRY
STYLE RIBS

I P -I I

1™
&gt;

W
a

•MEATS
CUT TO
ORDER
•EVERYDAY
LOW PIRCES
•DELI
PLATTERS
•FOOD
STAMPS
ACCEPTED,

*2 .9 9 i
DELI S T Y L E
Potato Salad,
Macaroni Salad or
Cola Slaw

*1 .1 9
D ELI F R E S H

TURKEY
BREAST

•

*1 .5 9

P in
suam-

*2 .9 9

PER

�t

i

1*
T **

M - Sanford HaraM. Sanford, Florida - Wadnaaday, August 28. 1181

Ltfld Notfcts

liQ il Nollctt
IN T H E CIRCUIT COUVT
OP T U B N T H JM N C IA L
C IN C U IT O F PLOBIBA.

\U

• IM IM O il COUNTY
C A M n o .t r -in *
o c N K N A i ju r is d ic t io n
F E D C R A L H O M I LOAN
M ORTGAGE CORPORATION
P LA IN TIFF,
CHARLES D.DOM OEV,
ETA L.
D EFC N O A N T(S).
N O T K 8 O F ACTION
CO N STR UCTIVE M O V ICS
TO :
W ORLDWIDE CO LLECTION
SERVICES. INC.
Inclwdlna any unknown
•Mha aaM Oe n p Om N . W
both ta ttad
halr i . dovlsooo, grant***,
aaatfnaaa, cfadriata. Honors,
and truataaa. and all other
claiming fey.
O a f a n d a n t l a l i a n d Ilia
alerementlaned name* Datandanm i and such a« th*

Reprasenlatlv* and at the
Parmnat Raprsmntatwo'i at
tamay are n t NrM baips.
All Intartatad aersan* or*
rigslrsd ta WN wtMMt* Caurt:
U&gt; AH ctatnw aastaal Ma sitata
W ITHIN T H R E l MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
TH IS N O TICE and (bl any
abltctlsn by an Intsraatsd
ta

Caurt WITHIN THE LATER OF
TH R E E MONTHS A FTER T H E
F I E S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
TH IS N O TICE O E T H IR T Y
O ATS A FTE R TH E O A T I OF
SERVICE OF A COPT OP TH IS
NOTICE OF TH E OJbBCTINO
* A U ° C U U M S ANO OBJBC
TtONS NOT SO FILED W ILL
E E FO S IV IB B A R B E D .
at MN ttatks st
Aem taSEHri.
JE A N C. CUNNINGHAM,
aa P p w d Oaptatantatlm
at IRa Estata at
DONALO J.CUNN INOHAM
iF w k Ortas.
Attamanta Springs. FLSm *
KEN N ETH F.M UEEAH
OtMurranattaDtyMFA.

•din ^EMltSoLs'CaJnty,
Ceunty. Ftorl

t

L O T U f . W BK IV A H U N T
C L U E FOX H U N T SECTION L
ACCORDING T O TH E F L A T
TH E R E O F AS RECOEDSO IN
P L A T BOOR IS, PAGES 14
TH R O UG H ft, PUBLIC RRCO R D S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY , FLORIDA,
mars cammanfy known aa Ilf
H O L D S R N I SS D R I V E .
LONOWOOO. FLORIDA M77*.
Thi* actlan has
qukeD la larva a espy al
written Satan**, if any. N if an
SH A PIR O A FISHM AN. Attarnsys, who*# addrasi l i
i ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
Tampa. FL i wo. an ar
f apian Am i I t IW1. and fIN Ms
artfUia! wtM Ms Clarii aI IMa
Court alMar feaNrs aarvks an
Plaintiff's attorney ar ■— t r
ataty tHaraaWar; aMarnlaa a
Satault will fea anNrad f aInal
you tar too raliaf damandad In
MaCamplalnl.
W ITN ESS my hand and aaal
at Mta Caurt an Itia IM day at
A f u a t .n n .

(SEAL)
MABVANNIMOBM

Circuit and County Caurt*
By: Patricia F.Haata

StS?”**

Publish: August 14 SI, SB A
r 4 IN I
DBMSS

ynM H H H H H B

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
M ANOFO R
SEM IN OLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE N O .tr-SUS-DR-tl-A
IN R E : T H I M A E R IA G I O F '
W IL L IA M F .M ta K E tttl* .
CH A N T AL L. M a c K It U II.
N O TICS O P I
T O : C H A N TA L L .M a c K IN Z IE
Kaiafeaiua. C.P. II. JOX 1X0
Y O U A XE H E R EB Y NOTI­
F IE D Mat an aettan tar dtaaoiwllan at marrlapa Ha* baan fii*a
siMrsd ta *arva a easy st ysur
wrlttan datanaa*. If any, ta It an
JO H N A. BALDWIN, at Batawtn
A Merrltan, P.A.. Attamayt at
Law. 7100 S. Highway 17-os.
Farn Park. Florida 31734 and
tils Ms original wHh Ms d ork at
Ma afeava atytod court at Ma
Soml not* County Caurthouaa.
Sanford, Florida )S77t. on or
bafsrs Saplambar tt, loot,
oMorwIto, a ludpmant may bo
antarod as* Inil you tar ttw
relief demanded in ttw Petition.
T H I S N O T I C E ahall bo
published ones each weak tar
lour (a) canaocutlva wsok* In
if**1 suitora n triW i jonforo*
Florida.
W ITNESS my Hand and taal
of said Court on Me htd dey ef
August, loot.
(S E A L )
M ARYAN HE MORSE
C LER K OF TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
Ry Diana K. Brummatt
Deputy Clark
Publish: August 7. 14. SI. 14
loot
DUES
IM T H E CIRCUIT COURT
OP T H E RIGMTBRENTH
JU D ICIA L CIRCUIT.
SEM INOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
CASE NO.01M7-CP
IN R E : Estataat
DONALD J, CUNNINGHAM.
NOTICE OP
ADMINISTRATION
The administration at the
Estate al DONALD J. CUN
N INGHAM. Deceased, File No.
01 M I CP 1* ponding In Iha
C irc u it .C o u rt el Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo rid a . Prebala
Division, ttw address of which l»
Semlnol* County Caurttwuso.
M l North Park Avanuo. San
lord, Florida M771. THo nanw*
and odd****** Of ttw Personal

ANSI
O B I*

file Mo

tatao^taoroaftor )"stawrwito*i
Rrtauft will Rt antarad against
Uta
fwllbi *teV8^R*EMM' llv
|a
•ites
i^Pr U
N EWItel

M TH E CIECUIT COVET
OF TH E N TH JV O K IA L
CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA.
CASE NO. St-t4t4CA-t40
C O L O N IA L M O E T O A G E
COMPANY
PLAINTIFF.
NANO T. NGUYEN. I T AL.
O EFIN O AN T(S).
NOTICS OF ACTION
COm TEUCTtVESEEVICB
TO:
NANG T.N OUYBN
If l l v l f
»l

baM at aaM
Hslra. davlsoot. grantasa.
atil|iwai. creditors. IS
and tr uslast, and all
claiming, by, Mrsugh.
O a f a n d a n t l a li and
afsramentlsned namad
tandant(s) and such at
ataramanltanad unluwwn
fandanla and such at
ataramanltanad unknown
ss may ba

at Mo
■M j
PNrWaaf tLEBo'ctacfc
al Saw

taMFIrwi Judgment. tawH:
Lot m . HILLS OP LARK
MARY. PHASE TWO. nctard
Ing ta Ma Plat tharaat as
rscardad In Plat Eaah 3d. Pages
» 3 L Public Bacardi al Saminata Cavnty. FNrldb
nEvR^ E IriWt ^ * v w ™ ■
34t Si Ivor Ftno Drive. Lake
Mary, Florida N7N.
Together wiM all Interest
which Oorrosor now baser may
In ar ta m W
Frw*tfy and M and ta: (a) an
oaaamenta and rights at way
■aertanent tharaat; and (b) ail

thereon. Including, but net
IlmHad ta, anapparatua and
aRkfENNhS, adwBwt r t Md p h is
lealty afflaad ta Ma land nr any
SuitdMfe. vwd ta pravldt of
supply ak csallng. air catudnew s, hoot, gas. water, light,

camataMtar pattttan.
D ATE Dsn Augusts, m t.
(SEAL)
MARY ANNE MORSE
IV R U T H R IN O
Aa Dagut) Ctark
m
Publish: August 14. II. M A systems.
‘ iNm barAIW I
1-141
dTspaiTa'nd drapary^raSsi

P.O. Baa ta*
Wlntar Park, Florida HUB
Tstaptwne. (4B71444*1

at ttw said

nata Caimty. FNrldb eMaratn.
HM*a Savings at Adwrica, F A .
id WWlam 0 . Pr­
ill and KritHttJ. Prlngta.
latN. andJudMhK.
UaydL immarrlsd are Me Dawlll sail ta Ma

th e
DaMa
Dathe
De­

suilurls.
YOU ARE H E R IB Y N O TI­
FIE D Mat an ectlen Hat baan
ta Ssractms a marti Ma taUawwg real prep*g4y
Gtok^D^RMwi «U||w4
P lit If**
MIVMC
ad In S IM IN O L I Ceunty. Flori­
da. mere particularly
LOT ft. BLOCK '•H*', NORTH
ORLAND O TER R A C E S E C ­
TION POUR OP UNIT OWE.
ACCORDING T O TH E P L A T
THBBSOP AS EICOROED IN
P L A T BOOK 17. PAGE M .
PUBLIC RICORDS OP SEMI
HOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA,
mere commonly i f l m aa 4R7
SOUTH lOOEM ON AVENUE,
W INTER SPRINOS. FLORIDA

am.

This actlan Has kssn Iliad
guksd N serve a espy at yeur
written drisna*. If any. ta It an
SHAPIRO A FISHMAN. Atternayt. whstt sddrstt la
Baypart Flats. 4 * Caurtnay
II Causeway, Suita MS.
FL ma. an ar batara
it, tall, and file ttw
original wiM Ma CNrfc at Ml*
Caurt titaer batara service on
Plaintiff's attorney tr Immodlri otherwise a
MaCampiaint.
WITNESS my hand and taal
at Mis Caurt on Ms IM day at
August, Ittl.
(SEAL!
MARYANNS MORSE
Circuit and Ceunty Courts
By: Patrkle F. HaaM
Deputy Clark
Publish: August IL II. M A
Septembers. Ittl
D ll-M i
IN TNB CIRCUIT COURT,
IR AMO FOR
SIMINOLB COUNTY,
FLORIDA
C A S IN G tt-m a C A -140
H A I HOLDING COMPANY.
PlainllN,
L Y O N IL PIERRE WOOLLEY,
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: LYO N IL PIERRE
WOOLLEY
YOU ARE NOTIFIED Mat an
action to torselots a mortgage
on the following property In
Seminole County. Florida
REGIN A T A POINT ON TH E
SOUTH LINE OF THE SE to
OF THE NE it OF SECTION
M. TOWNSHIP 10 S O U TH .
RANGE U EAST. SEMINOLE
CO U N TY. FLORIDA, *31.01
F E E T NORTH Of DEGREES 34
MINUTES M SECONDS W EST
OF THE EAST to SECTION
CORNER OF SAID SECTION
M , RUN TH EN C E N O R TH
IMS41 F E E T TO THE NORTH

IN T H E IM tV TEEN TM
J U N K IAL CIR CUIT
S T A T E EP FLORIDA.
PRORATE DIVISION
CASE MG St-MPCP
I N R I : T H E E S TA TE OP
E T H E L P L A TT WOLKOV

T O A L L PERSONS HAVING
C L A IM S OR D E M A N D S
A O A IN S T T H I A B O V E
E S T A T E AND A L L O TH ER
PERSONS IN TE R E S TE D IN
T H E ES TA TE :
YOU A ES H E R E B Y N O TI­
FIE D Mat Ms administration at
Ma Batata at E T H E L P L A TT
W O L K O V , dacaaaad, P lls
Humber SI Nt-CP la pandtaa In
Ma Circuit Caurt tar Sambwta
Caimty. PtarWa. Ma address at
which la: Prabata Dlvltlan.
l•fmirtpg
u g l u ^ u w i f fwBtialtiAaibA
vniioite t
SantarG PI 3P71. Ttw Paramal
TR EEH a'

' K A v V rB w !!
It: 31S Magnalla
PI 31771. Ttw
nama at ttw attamay la aat tarM
Ml

a

having claims or

ra g u lra d W IT H IN T H R E E
MONTHS Ram Ma data at Ma
iifNT psitciTMn p m il npicv ID
til* wIM Ms Clark at Mt above
Caurt. a wrlttan atatamant of
any dabn w dwnand May may
have. Each claim must ba In
Me claim, Ma nama
at ttw craditar ar
arrwunt claimed. It Ma claim la
net yet due. Ma data wtwn it will
became due than ba staled^ It
ttw claim Is contingent ar unllRuldatad. tka nature al Ihe
uncertainty Mall ba slated. It
Ma claim It tacurad. Ma securi­
ty shall ba described. The
claimant shall deliver tvfflcant
eaglet at Ma claim la Ma Ctark
at the Caurt ta enable Ma Clark
ta m a ll ana copy ta aach
pertenei representative.

.M l partene Interested In Ma
estate ta wham a copy at Mis
Netlce at Administration has
baan mailed a re ragulrad
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
from the data al the first
publlcetlen at Mis make ta tile
Mat chellongs ttw validity at Mo
dteadint's Will. Me guallltcatlent at Mo Peraerwl Repre­
sentative. ar the venue ar
lurladktHn at Ma Court.
A L L CLAIMS. D IM AN OS.
A N O OBJECTION S NOT SO
P IL l D w il l b e f o r e v e r
BARRED.
Data at Ma first publication at
Mis Notice at Administration:
August II. INI.
TREEM AA. K A Y E . ESQ.
3iiMa|mfiaAve.
Sanford. FI t i n I
Personal Representative of
The Estate at E T H E L P LA TT
WOLKOV. dscaaaad.
TR E E N A A . K A Y E , ISO.
IIS Magnalla Avo.
Sanford. FL 11771
Publish: August SI, N . Ittl
OBI-115
IN T N E CIR CUIT COURT
OP TH E E IG H TE E N TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
C A S B M G fl-ltll CA-I4K
Hama Savings al America. F.A.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
William I . Pringla. Ill and
Kristin J. Pringle, husband and
wlta.atai.,
Defendants.
NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y G IVEN
Mai pursuant ta a Final Judg
ment al laraclesura dated
August 11. m t . and antarod In
Casa No t M lil-C A -U K of Mo
Circuit Court of Mo I IahMonth
Judicial Circuit In and tar Sami

and attached cabbwta:
9 P l
Mat such Items be conclusively
dnmod ta ba afftasd ta and ta
ba part at Ma root property t
(O N I
(nhofher ar not appurtenant)
and dwres of stack pertaining ta
rights.
•W
EflfCTl MPOT
(d&gt;
pmpsrty
incama. IIssues and pretita at i

T DSAtT EJ D
AlMMi*1

Ihlt lis t day of

IYANNB MORSE
MARY
dark at lha Circuit Court
by: JanoE.Jatawk
Ctark
August ja h September
Atari
D E I*

«

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
FO E SEMINOLE CO UN TY,
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
FNa NanWart r i-m -C P
IN E E : ESTATE OP
BICHAROH. WELLS.
NOTICE OP
AOMIN ISTRAT ION
The administration at Mo
Estata at RICHARO H. WELLS,
d a c aa sa d, P ile N u m b e r
fl-US-CP. Is ponding In Mo
Circuit Court ter Seminole
County. F lo rid a , P roba la
Division, Ma address at which Is
Prabata Division. Sam Inala
County Courthouse. Past Ofllco
Drawer C. Sanford. Florida.
31771-0431. The names and
at the Personal Rapsat terMI
A L L IN T E R E S T E D P E R ­
SONS ARE N O TIFIE D T H A T :
All parsons on whom Mis
Notice It served who hava ab­
jections Mai Choi longs Mo valid­
ity of Me Will. Mo guaiIficotlans
at Me Personal Rspcassntsilv*.
venue, ar jurisdiction of Mis
Court are ragulrad to file their
objections with this Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T I N O F
TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R TH E
DATE OF THE FIR ST PUSLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY OAVS A F T E R T H E
O A TS OF SER V ICE O F A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM .
All creditors at Mo dscadent
and other parsons having claims
or damands against dacadent's
estata on wham a copy el Mis
Notice It served wIMIn throe
months after Ma data of ttw llrsl
publication of Mis Notice must
file their claims wiM Mis Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R O F
THREE MONTHS A F TE R TH E
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS A F TE R TH E
D A TE OF SER V ICE O F A
COPY OF THIS N O TICE ON
THEM.
All other creditors ot the
decedent end persons having
claims cr demaod* against Ma
dicodent's estata must file their
claims with Mis Court W ITHIN
TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R TH E
DATE OF THE FIR ST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
A L L CLAIMS. D EM A N D S
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FIL E O WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
The dale ol Ihe first publica­
tion ot Mis Notice Is August IS.
taft.
RICHARDN. WELLS.
Persons! Representative
1MS Cotonisl Drive
Machotney Park. IL411II
BRUCEM .W IGLE, III
Florida Bar No. 1*1934
MurrihA Doyle. P.A.
MO Weil Morse Boulevard
P.O. Boa IMS
Winter Park. Florida lin e
leOtl 44i NOT
AHamay lor Personal
Representative
Publish: August IS A September
4. tat I
D E I*

b A A A A A d &amp; A A A A A A A A A

A A A A i

EWEOMYHADAVOUMT
FOREVBdr HOUSEWFVEEl
House of ter house. Block after bock. A non-profit partnership called NeighborWorks
has been rebuilding housing and restoring pride. To lend a hand call 1-800-325-6957

'N etghbwW orlu
is. — t—

* i aa

HI TU B CIDCtafT OWfDT ,
E iRIfTE BWTH JffDf^JAL
CIR CM T. N l AND POD
CASE N G tf-W B C * -t4 R
FARMERS SAVINGS. A
FE D E R A L SAVINGS ANO

M E LA N IE ANN BEBRSE.
s/k/g RM LANIB A.
W H iTA R E E, JOHN DOB.
utauwam m u s s at M ELANIE
ANN B EEkSE. a/k/a
M E LA N IE A . W HITAREE. H
mm ttaSL JOHN DOE II. Twwwt.
JA N E DOE. Tenant. JASON W.
ALLISON, mwsnys

ALLIANCE MORTGAGE
eftarido

it a s S l t e k a s i
YOU ARE HB EB B V NOTI­
FIED Mat a Pahttaw * A R *
filed Ip ta t

RICHARD M. FARNINO; of al..

OR (-MB
a lt a r n a y . E B N N B T N W.
MclNTOSH. flSQ UIBB. Peat
Ptaff
Oftk

rterkef ftwCYcuit
_ _ * n.

SEPTEMBER *
A .G * 1 . If you *

YOU AR E N O TIFIED t e *

to du ms a

tS, twt, and
wHh ttw ctark at

C

landanta and aacfe a l I Ha

awl lurk.
Y O U ARE H S R I8 V N O TI­
F IE D Mat an acttvi Ha* baan
i a marl

L IN E OP SAID SS M OP TH E
N E ta. R U N TH EN C E NORTH
m D EG R EES 40 M IN UTES SI
SCCONOS WEST ALONG M ID
NORTH LIN E. SIAM F E E T .
BUN TH EN CE SOUTH 1MAS4
F E E T , RUN TH EN CE SOUTH
m D EG R EES » M IN UTES BE
SECONDS EAST. t*M F E E T
T O SAID SOUTH L IN E OF TH E
SB ta OP T H I N S tk. RUN
TH E N C E S m D EGREES 34
M IN U TES m SECONOS EAST
ALOStG SAID SO UTH LINE
4E4S P B B T TO T H E PO IN T OP
BEGINNING, SU BJECT TO AN
EASEM ENT OVEN TH I
SOUTH IM S F E E T ANO T H I
S O U T H W B S T IB L V l l . l t
F E E T POE EO A O AND
U T IL IT IE S , ALSO KNOWN AS
L O T 7 OP TH E UNRECORDED
PLA T OP COCKRAN FOREST
IlM N^PT El^*i saalnit uNi
you are required to sorve a i
at yaur wrlttan dstawaoa. If any,
fp If a n M A R G A R E T A .
W HARTON. PtatntIff a attamay,
la P .O . Da* 1174

Ltqrt Notic#

Ltqal WoUc—

*i

tworsng arant. Koouung p m .

RESIDENCE UNKNOWN.

TOU ABE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED Mat am

Club,

ta Ma

Ns. B -ls t
Iflp
si

P o tlt la a a r , R O D E N T E .
MEEKS. * dWMNd * Eto
a d te w ta fELN .
RATED af lawtard. Sambwta
Caaafy. Florida. M s MR Ray of
August. A O . tori.
MM1
By: N M fy N .| |
AeDMufy Ctark
'■“ ii Aaguaf 1A « . ■ 8
A t*
o c t-u a

two Bm r END by * PtabsMf
pgakwi you aad etoer* ta Me
c m im 'iiin! |Wi
IT t a i P la ltH ttfi attar nay*.
SMITH G SIMMONS. US W W
Adams street, Salta IM S,

B f T W E W TW
CIRCUIT INI

Public RscarBi st Seminole
C o u n ty . P la rld a . and rerecar*d Septamber m ta * M
Official Bacardi Baak t * .
Papa I4S1 PuMlc Racerds of
Seminole County. Plarlda,
Limited Canmwn I I
In a * Declaration of
Candamlnuws ta ba an apta M a M va C a n d a icsordMB ta *
Plat thereof as rscardad M Plat
Bosk K PapM M Mrough W.
inclusive. Futile Records of
tublact ta
flans, snd limitations ot record
and In Me Declaration of CanIn Official
11*7. Pag
Public Racarda at Samuwta
C a u n ty , P la rld a , and re ­
recorded laptambor * t f * In
Official Records Beak l * .
Pane 1443. Public Racarta at
Seminole County. Plarlda.
oa iom ontt of Ingres* and
egress, crass easements and
aa Ma tame may appear In Ma
Public Records at Seminole
Caunty. Plarlda. and tocel ton­
ing ordmancao and teas* tar Mo
year taS3and subasguant years,
has baan filed against you and
you ere required to serve a copy
at yaur wrlttan datanaas. It any.
to It on Robert H. Hatch, Jr.,
I11S E. Robinson Street. Or­
lande. Florida 3 * 1 . and file Ma
original wiM Me Clerk at Ma
styled Court on or ketare
day at laptomkor. Iftt,
a Judgment may ba
antarad against you tor Ma
relief dsmsndaS In Ms ComWITNESS my hand and itel
ot said Court on toe fM dey of
August. 1*11.
(COURT
IR TSEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
C LER K O F THE
CIR CUIT COURT
By; RuMKIng
Deputy Clerk
Publish: August 14. II. IS A
5*0tombar «. ISSI

DEI IN
IR TN B CIRCUIT COURT
OP T H I B IG H T IIM T H
JU D ICIA L CIRCUIT,
IR ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
CASEN G ri-SN -CP
IN RE: The Estate ot
L Y L E G E O R G E BOSSEN.
NOTICE OP
ADMINISTRATION
The admlnlstralien al lha
E tla le ot L Y L E G EO R G E
B O S S E N . dacaasad. F ile
Number ri-N ACP. Is pendtag In
Ma Circuit Court tar Seminole
C ounty, F lo rid a , Probata
Dlvltlan. ttw address ef which It
Prubeto Division. Pori Office
Bo* "C ". Sanford. Florida 31771.
The names and addrstw* ot Me
Perianal flapratanlatlva and
Ma Partonal Raprssanfatlvo't
attorney are sat torto baton.
A L L IN T E R E S T E D P E R ­
SONS ARE N O TIFIED THAT:
All persons on whom Mis
Not lea is served who hava ob
lections that challenge Ma valid
Ity of ttw Will, lha qualification*
of Mo Personal Representative,
venue, or jurisdiction al Ml*
Court are required to file Ihalr
objections with this Caurt
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R O F
TH R EE MONTHS A FTE R TH E
D ATE OF TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS A FTER THE
D A TE O F SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM .
All creditors el Ma docedsnl
&gt;having claim*
•gainst decedent's
estata on wham a copy ot Mis
notice It served within throe
months altar lha data of Ma llrsl
publication of Mi* notice must
Ilia their claims wiM Ml* Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
TH R E E MONTHS A FTER THE
D ATE OF TH E FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS A FTER THE
O A T E O F SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
TH EM
All ether creditors el the
decadent snd persons having
claim* or damands against the
decadent's estate must file their
claims wiM Mis court WITHIN
TH R E E MONTHS AFTER THE
D ATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE
A L L CLAIM S. DEMANDS
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FIL E O WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
The data el the llrsl public*
lien ef this Netlce It August II.
Iff I
GRACE HUGHES.
Pertenei Representative
Attorney tor Personal
Representative:
TERRANCE H DITTM ER.
ESQ
Florida Bar (2IOS7I
U* Versailles Drive. «100
Post Ottice Bo, 141**0
Maitland. F lo rid a n m lew
(eon see m e
Publish August i i . » . m i

DEI

m

CASE MG t IM M 7 C JLM G
DENNIS C .D 0 W G
a married t
HOME TECHNOLOGIES OF
O ELAN O G IN C R/h/d
TOUCHSTONE
DEVELOPM ENT
CORPOEATION.aPtarlRs
caryarafton; STEEPLECR BST
HOM ES.INC..aFtartM
caryarafton; ANDREW P E TE R
ZGURA; RONALD N.
W IB B IR i R .J.K IE L T Y
PLUM BIN G IN C a Plorida
csraora.'ton; PLORIDA NOCK
IN O Uim ilBS. INC., a Ptarida
csryaraftan; and CLAIRE
MILLIGAN.

AvjHW CfMf’tVSiCRi
SC m t A and A L L OTHERS
WHOM IT M A Y CONCERN:
YOU ARE N O TIF IE D Mat an

R E S O LU TIO N TR U S T CO E
PO R ATW N , aa UsMtagp Mr
P IO N E E R SAVINGS BANK.
P.S.B.. f/k/a P f O N IIB FED R E A L SAYINGS BANE, f/k/a
P IO N 8 IN F E D E R A L
SAYINDE A N O LOAN ASROCt^
A T ION. l/k/S CLEARW ATER
FED E R A L SAVINGS 4 LOAN
ASSO CIATIO N . *f/k/B PA R E
F E D E R A L S A V IN GS A N D
L O M ASSOCIATION. I

TOT ARAM SINGH, af al.
(II.
TO : H E IR SINGH
LAST KNOWN A D O EISS;

Im m e d ia te ly IfearoBltarj
■Hwrwiao. a Wtault will ba

c u r Rb r t a o o r

rSta^

his/her respective unknown
hairs. dovlMd*. trenlaas.

mwiDM CT*ttaTcam-

^RRri w DwvvriDfw

WITNESS my band aad aaal
al Mta Caurt aa Mt* tlM day of

E SS:

claiming by, tarm^h. wader
egatnst ms ss^se4 (^less^v^s^t^vi,
' TOO A R t W O TIF|IO I

(Court tool)
MARYANNE MORSE
Ctark af G ra ta Court
By: Patricia P. HaaM
“
“ (Ctark
August 14 It. »
'A ta ri

4

IM44
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT,

C L A IR E M I L L I G A N.

UtO Wistf

c m tA c n m
IE HELM-MM CAM

IIMi
ta Re: Ttw Marriage af
■ R E TT JL RANK,
n W N te ^ T 1 l* * t

PAULA J.ltAN K .
County. Florida:
Wtto/I
L a t 11*. C A R E I N O T O N
NOTICE OP ACT
U N IT II. accardlng ta
TO : PAULA J. RANK
-* ■VCNTMt
awdWwWsR
Sw
M
Iff
M B South Mistreat
E , Pegs* * and *
Public Records of Seminole
NOTICE la hereby given Mat
County. Florida.
Mara la paadtag In Ma Circuit
Caurt la aad tar Seminole
you are required ta asrue a capy
Caunty. Florid*, aa actlan en­
el your written dt tawtot. If any,
titled In Re: Ttw Marriage al
ta If an Rabort E. Minor, Itq .,
Bran A. Rank. Husband, and
ot Millar. Grace. Ili ig lm l A
Paula J . Rank. WIN, wherein
Ourkst. P.A., Plaintiffs' at­
Me relief taught Is a dtosatuttan
torney whose address It; *
at Me marriage. Mo primary
Douglas Avenue, Altamonte
n il tanftat central of Oar tana
Springs. Plarlda 3 PM an or
Alice Rank and Richard An­
■ntewf 'ItePteTTItew M8* IWIi **0
trim Rank. Ma two (1) minor
« ! « . - * a . - - * - » ------*,
* ■
‘
TW IW0'VPipWilWwlwl M vMPfHOf
children af said marriage, and
Mi* Court, either i
Iteitetei-----*---- * 4
HHrWJF rWSpHnK*
&gt;^,
w
dlatafy
irittan ru p in ii to
Ma
default
wiM Ma Clark of
you tar Mo raliaf
styled caurt and to
Ma Amended Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and seal
than the nth day af SEP•« Mis Caurt an August IT. tori.
T E M i E E, tori an_ the Pali(CO UR TSEAL)
tloner's attamay, Gordon V.
MARYANNE MORSE
Frederick. Attamay at Law. 114
Ctark of Circuit Court
ftarih Park Avenue, Sanford.
By: RuMKIng
FtaridaBTTt.
Deputy Clerk
Should you tall la da so a
^welisal
Publish: August 14 l i . a A
H IM rT Iriwy * • » ! * * 0
B « i» l
tori
O f l ies
you tar Ma rallat requested and
Mo causa pracood a* parts.
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
D A TED Ml* SM day ef August
OP T H E MTH JUDICIAL
A. 0. If*!.
CIRCUIT OP PLORIDA,
M *ubfU * UaySa
IN ANO FOR
at Ctark afMa
S (M iN O L I COUNTY
Circuit Caurt
C A S IN G f M M A C A -IA l
In and tar
G EN ER AL JURISDICTION
Seminole County,
D iV IfK M
Florida.
S E C U R IT Y P A C IF IC N A ­
By Nancy R. Winter
TIO N A L TR U S T COMPANY,
As Deputy Clark
A STR U STEE
Publish: August 14 II. to 4
PLA IN TIFF.
September 4 m i
— vs—
OEMS!
M ICHAEL J. JAMES. E T A L .
O EFEN O A N T(S).
NOTICE OP ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
ST. JOHNS RIVER WATER
-P R O P E R T Y
MANAGEMENT OISTRICT
TO:
SANDRA L. LOCKE
IhI m M AfBacy Acfti*
Residence unknown, whose
The Dislrkt gives nolle* ot IN
last known mailing address was
Intent ta Iteua a permit ta Me
P.O. Ba* riSISA Lan gw Sid.
tallowing appikant(i) on S#w
Florida. II living Including any
tomkar 14 tori:
unknown spouse of the said
C IT Y OF A LTA M O N TE
Ostendants, if aimer has re­
S P R I N O S .
11*
married and It either or bath of
NEW BUR VPOR T A VE. AL
TAMONTE SPRGS. FL Stol.
respective unknown hairs, de­
appl leal ton I l l lttOOSSAG The
visees, grantees, assignees.
project it located In Seminole
It
'‘ ‘
Caunty. Section 11. Township 11
and all other parsons claiming,
South. Range 1* East. The
by. Mrough. under ar against
•palkalian It tor a RECRE­
Ma named Dstandant(s); and
ATIONAL
PARK to ba known as
Ma elorenwnttanad namad De­
LAKE LOTUS PARK. The re­
fendant! i ) and such af ttw
ceiving water body I* L ITTLE
aforementioned unknown De­
W EKIVARIVBR.
fendants and such af the
The *14*4*1 containing aach el
afor•mentioned unknown Da­
Me above listed application fit
bs Infants.
•rs available lor inspection
Mende r Mrough Friday aicspt
DA||i lUflli.
tar legal hoiMays. I SO a m to
YOU ARE H E R E B Y NOTIS:ggpm altaaSt. Johns River
FIEO Met an action has been
Water Manege ment District.
commenced to foraclaaa a mart­
Highway IM West. Palatka.
en Me tallowing real prop­
erty. lying and being and situat­
The District will taka action
ed In SEMINOLE Caunty, Flori­
an each permit application
da. mere particularly described
listed above unto** a petition tor
an administrative proceeding
“ a r t C H E S TN U T H ILL,
(hearing) la Iliad pursuant to Me
ACCORDING TO T H E PLAT
praviakna of taction no.si. F.S..
TH ER EO F AS RECORDED IN
wid section 4PC-I.S1). F A C . A
P L A T BOOK If . PAGES 74
parson whose tubslsnllal Inter
THROUGH 74 INCLUSIVE. OF
«*H are aftoctod ky any of lha
THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF
Districts proposed permitting
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
decisions Idmtlftod above may
FLORIDA.
patltlen
tor an administrative
mere commonly known es ISSS
hearing
in accordance with sec
B A V W ATER CO UR T, LAKE
tton I3B47, F.S Petitions must
MARY. FLORIDAP744
comply wiM Ihe requirements el
This ectlen he* been filed
Florida Administrative Cede
against you and you are re­
Rules 40CI.III and 4001 SI I
quired to serve a capy el yaur
and ba lltod with (received by)
written dr tons*. If any, to II an
ttw District Clerk. P O Bo*
SHAPIRO A FISHM AN. A t­
141*. Pelethe. Florida » m
torneys. whose address Is
141*. P a t m a n s ta r ad
Raypert Pleie, 4 * Courtney
mlnlstratlv* hear Ing on the
Campbell Causeway. Suite NO.
above appikettonU) must bo
Tampa. FL 3 * 7 . an ar batara
tiled wIMIn tourtoen (14) days el
Septamber 14. Ittl. and tile Me
publications el Mis notice or
original wlto ttw Clrrk ef Mis
within tourtoen (14) days el
Court either b tto rf servtca on
actual receipt el this intent,
Plaintiff* attorney or immedi­
whichever first occurs Failure
ately thereafter; otherwise a
to file a petition within this time
default will ba antarad against
period shell constitute a waiver
you tor the raltol demanded In
ef any right such parson may
the Complaint
h a v a la request an ad
WITNESS my hand and seat
m lnlttrallve determination
ot this Court on ttw t}M dey el
(hearing) undsr section IN 57,
August. Ifri
F .S . concerning the subject
ISEALI
permit application Petitions
MARYANNE MORSE
which ere net Died in ec
Circuit end Caunty Courti
contents with the above pro
By Patricia F. Heath
viston* ar* subtect to dismissal
Deputy Clerk
Publish August 14 lt*l
Publish: August 14 It. to 4
DEt 1*1
September 4 l*tl
D E I-143

IIMINOLB^CpurSy.Tlp
Laf 44 ef TIB E R O N COVE, a
SubdivNIan, accardfng ta M*
Pita Manta, aa t star did In Pita
Booh S3, page* IS and to. of M*
Public Racarda ta Seminole
Ceunty. Florida.
INCLUDED IN T H E VALUE
T H E FOLLOW)HO:
Oonoral B toefrk Range
General B lacfrlc Head
Oantata Ita ctrk Ok
Oonoral Electric
York Furnace
York Air CandHIansr
a* boon Mod agoMal you and
you a n required tatarvo a copy
ta your wrlttan dataneta. If &lt;
ta It an Michael J. Echevarria,
P la ln tllt'i attam ay, whae*
a d d ro s t I t ESI la y i h o r o
Eaulavard. Suita 7J4 Tampa.
Plorida 33fd4. on or batara
Septamber II. )0ri. and M* Me
original wiM fhN Caurt altfwr
service on Plaintiff's
aftart aMarwIaa a default will
if you tar Mo
In Ma C*mplelnterpalltlen.
This notice ahall bo pubilshad
utlva weak* in the Sanford
W IHESS my hand and M* taal
ta Mia Caurt on this ffh day el
August. Ifri.
M ARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ta Mo Court
Byh: Petrkla P. HaaM
Aa Deputy Clarii
Publish: August 14 11. M 4
September 4 19*1

DEI-log_________________

IN TH E C IR CU IT COURT
OF TN B W TN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OP PLODIOA,
IN A N O POD
SEM IN OLECOUN TY
CASE N G *1-I417-CA-14-K
O B N IR A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
F E D E R A L N A T IO N A L
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION
PLA IN TIFF.
— vs—
BOOKER T . BEACHAM. JR..
ETA L.
OEFEM OANTISI.
NOTICE OP ACTHNI
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
-P R O P E R T Y
TO :
B U IL D E R S T R U S T S E L F
INSURERSFUND
W E S TE R N WORLO INSUR
ANCE COMPANY. INC.
BANKS SUPPLY COMPANY
Residence unknown, II living
including any unknown spews*
ta Mo said Defendant*, if either
hat remarried and If either or
both ol said Defendants are
dead, their respective unknown
h a irs, davlsaa*. grant***,
assignees, creditors, llaners,
snd trust***, snd all etlwr
persons claiming, by. Mrough.
under or against lha named
D e f e n d a n t ( s ) ; a n d the
aforamantionad namad Da
tendont(i) and such of th*
aforementioned unknown De
tendents and such ol lha
aforementioned unknown O*
fondants es may be Intents.
Incompetent* or otherwise not
suilurls.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIE D thel an action hat baan
commenced to foreclose a mori
gag* on lha following real prop­
erty. lying and being and sltust
ad In SEMINOLE County. Fieri
da. more particularly described
as tel lews:
LOTS 4 7 .4 10.11. II AND 13.
FIRST ADDITION TO SYLVAN
LAKE. ACCORDING TO THE
P L A T T H E R E O F AS RE
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK 4
PAGE 14 PUBLIC RECORDS
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA.
more commonly known a* 1501
EM M ET AVENUE. SANFORO.
FLORIDA JJ771.
This ectlen has been filed
egeinsl you and you are ra
qulred to servo a copy af yeur
written detons*. If any, to It on
SHAPIRO 4 FISHMAN. Al
lornays. whose address is
Baypgrl Plata, a m Courtney
Campbell Causeway, Sulla m
Tampa. FL 33*07, on or batara
September l], m t. and hi* the
original with lha Clerk ot Mis
Court either before service on
Plaint Ilfs attorney or immadi
atoly thereafter; otherwise e
default will be entered egeinsl
you for the relief demanded In
the Complaint
WITNESS my hand end seel
ol Ml* Court on the Ith dey ot
August. I*tl
(SEAL)
M A R YA N N E MORSE
Circuit and County Courts
By Patricio F Heath
Deputy Clerk

Publish August Is.
September 4. let)
DEI Ik

J l.

M 4

�-tf-x»*.T

**■1,

:-

r^s. " j * 4 •■

Sroford HmM, Sanford, Florida - Wadnaaday, August 28, I N I - 2A

' ...r

d news for the economy
By M V II
Associated Press Writer________
W A S H IN G T O N T h e U.S.
economy shrank at a slight 0.1
p ercen t a n n u a l rate in the
A p rtl-Ju n r quarter, the govern­
m ent said today, casting doubt
on w h e th e r the nation has
emerged irom m e rccessiofi*
T h e Com m erce Department
said the gross national product,
th e m o a t w i d e l y w a t c h e d
measure of economic health,
posted a third consecutive nega­
tive quarter.
Economic activity slumped a
sharp 2.8 percent In the first
quarter of this year and declined
1.6 percent in the lost three
m onthsof 1990.
T h e s e c o n d - q u a r t e r d ro p
marked a sharp revision ftom
th e g o v e r n m e n t ' s o r ig in a l
e s t im a t e o f a 0 . 4 p e r c e n t
advance, w hich was greeted last
m onth as evidence the economy
was clim bing out of its first
recession tn eight years.
T h e r e p o r t w a s seen as
strengthening the argument of
some economists w ho belie
the economy is in
lapsing into a so-called
dtp recession. In which a brief
period of revival Is followed b y a
fresh d ow n turn . In advance,
moot analysts expected little

•M M , Iff hurt In flaw Vaifi subway
M EW YO R K — A autnray train Jumped the tracks and
•dammed into a pillar today, killing at leant live people and
Injuring 171. official. said. T h e motorman was reported
miaatng far hours, and sources aaid a crack vial was found In
thecab.
T h e 12:15 a.m . accident occurred as a 10-car downtown
train was approaching Manhattan’s busy 14th Street-Union
B q w e station. T h e crash sheared the lead car In half, and
paasenners were trapped In the twisted ateelfor hours.
T h e train's m otorman. who left the accident scene and was
missing far several hours, waa later located by police and teas
bein g questioned, said L I. Robert Nardoxa. Authorities
withheld the r

i n o m as w in y p n H M w m w n o u s #
W A S H IN G TO N - T h e W hite House soys It Is happy w ith the
m id-level rating o f "q u aH fle d " that the American bar
Association bestowed o n Supreme Court nom inee Clarence
Thom as.
But Thom as' critics say the appraisal by the nation’s largest
lawyers' group undermines President Bush’s asawllon that
Thom as is the best m a n for the Job.
When Bush picked Thom as, w ho Is black. In J u ly to su cceed
retiring Justice Th u rg s o d Marshall, the high court's only black
member, the president denied he was filling a racial quota on
the court. H e described Tho m as so the “ best qualified’'

From

Q o rb a c h B v
g a in s b it
o f s u p p o rt

revision In the earlier estimate.
T h e department attributed the
r e v is io n to w e a k e r-th a n *
expected production of goods for
inventories and a more modest
asm in consum er spending than
first thought.
T h e first change, on inven­
tories. could turn out to be a
favorable development for the
e c o n o m y . L e a n I n v e n t o rie s
mean any pickup in sales wffl
quickly translate into Increased
p ro d u ctio n at factories a n d
eventually into more jobs.
H o w e v e r, the 2 .8 percent
growth In consum er spending,
instead of the 3 .6 percent growth

Ju n e period,
___ the lowest level
since the third
thlr quarter of 1989.
However, the drop w as less
severe than the 6 .3 percent
decline In the first Quarter.
ir the recovery has begun —
despite the negative second
quarter — m any economists are
predicting it will be the moot
sluggish since the 1930a.
“ T h is recovery is going to be
the weakest one we ve seen In
more than BO years. It's going to
be pretty lam e." said economist
B r u c e S t e in b e r g o f M e r rill
Lynch.

In a d d i t i o n to c o n s u m e r
spending, other areas of increase
In th e second quarter were
housing, u p 3 percent, and
governm ent spending, u p 2
percent. Commercial construc­
tion. however, plunged 13.7
percent.
To d a y's G N P report said that
inflation, as measured by an
index tied to the ONP. showed
Im provement, rising 3 percent In
the second quarter — the same
as the advance estimate —
following a S.2 percent rate In
the first quarter.

more seriously, even though the
department attributed some of It
to a shift of car arid automobile
purchases from the consumer
sector to the business sector.
C o n s u m e r sp e n d in g repre­
sents two-thirds of all economic
activity and its revival Is consid­
ered the key to a n y lasting
economic recovery.
O n the positive side, the de­
terioration in the trade deficit as
measured b y the O N P was not ss
sharp as originally estimated.
In another sign of the re­
cession’s im pact, the depart­
m ent said that after-tax profits of
U .S . corporations feU 1.6 percent
to 6163.7 billion in the April-

ABC BEATS ALL LOCAL ADVERTISED LIQUOR &amp; WINE PRICES
VOOiA
6U8N T

EDO

Associated Proas
MOSCOW T h e S o vie t
legislature, backing Mikhail S.
Gorbachev's bid to stem the
collapse of central authority,
voted today to send a delegation
to the Ukraine to discourage the
b re a d b a s k e t r e p u b lic 's
secessionist drive.
Gorbachev put his political
future on the line Tu e sd a y,
threatening to resign If the
Soviet Union cannot somehow
be preserved and Indicating he
would settle for a loose alliance
of sovereign slates.
Seven of the 15 Soviet re­
publics have declared outright
independence. In c lu d in g the
Ukraine, the second most popu­
lous and wealthiest republic
I'afler' Borls N. Ye ltsin 's vast
Russian Federal ion. •&gt;
.... . rYeltsin has vastly expanded
his authority since last week's
failed coup. He has recognised
the Independence of the three
Baltic republics but Is generally
backing Gorbachev’s efforts to
m aintain a union of w illin g
republics.
Fallout from the botched coup
continued as Anatoly Lukyanov,
the ousted speaker of the na­
il o n a I S u p re m e S o v ie t
legislature, denied charges that
he Inspired a nd helped the
eight-man committee that tried
to seize power law week.
“ I am not going to repeat that I
am not guilty." Lukyanov said
in h is first s p ee ch in the
legislature since he resigned
under pressure on Monday.
Lukyanov denied charges by
Yeltsin and others that he was a
driving force behind the con­
spiracy.
Before Lukyanov spoke, the
'legislature voted 397-6. with 16
-abstentions, to send a fourperson delegation to Kiev to
|persuade Ukrainian officials to at
-least remain In an economic
•union with the other m ajor
^Soviet republics.
&gt; Th e Ukraine’s legislature de­
clared Independence over the
[weekend. but the move is sub■Ject to a Dec. 1 republic-wide
ireferendum.
G o rb a c h e v h a d a p p e a le d
Tuesday for concerted action to
he tain at least a m ilitary and
[economic alliance.
But even as he spoke to the
national legislature. Moldavia
became the seventh Soviet re­
public to declare outright in ­
dependence.
’■ “ Th e main thing is to preserve
Ihc union. I put it so categori­
cally because I am convinced
Dur country and the entire world
itught to know it." Gorbachev
d reporters after an all-day
e s s i o u of the n a t i o n a l
gtslature.
He suggested he m ight be
tiling to settle for a two-tier
ion: an economic and prebly a military alliance of all
5 republics, and u political
ion of some of them.
Russia has lo n g p ro vid e d
up oil and other raw materlfor resource-poor but Induslized republics whose proctlon has been geared to
vict needs.
All the republics have said
y want to continue economic
since Iheir Industries are
tly linked and would suffer
m a break in trade.
Also Tuesday, the European
immunity formally recognized
independence of Lithuania,
via and Estonia.

u

52

52

nm.

MR

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�- Sanford Hrsld, Sanford, Florida - Wtdrvaaday, August 28, 1981

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WEDNESDAY

Sanford Herald

A ugust 28,

1991

■Ptopli, Pag* 4E
■Clastiflad, Pag# OB
■Comics, Pago 8B

IN BRIEF
Qrggnvillg blanks SunRays
O R L A N D O — Popeye Cole went 3-4 with two
RBIa and scored a ru n to lead Greenville to a 4-0
victory over Orlando Tuesday.
It was a pitchers* duel Into the sixth Inning,
when Greenville scored two. T h e Braves added
two more runs in the eighth on Edwin Alicea’s
pop fly double.
Ben Rivera (11*7) earned the win while Judd
Johnson notched his sixth save. Pat Banglson
(11-11) was the losing ptlcher.
Th e game left Orlando's magic number at six
with 10 games to go In the Eastern division. The
SunRays lead the Braves by Tour games going
into a Tour-game stand In Greenville.

FOOTBALL

W M J.LV .I

Bucs add Manlsy, two ottwrs
T A M P A — Th e T a m p a Bay Buccaneers
continued reshaping their opening-day roster
Tuesday, acquiring defensive lineman Dexter
Manley and two other players through waivers
and trading Ervin Randle to Kansas City.
Coach Richard Williamson said the team
received a conditional flTth-round draft choice In
1992 for Randle, a former starter who was
unhappy w ith his role as a backup.
T o make room for Manley, the Bucs waived
veteran defensive end J im Skow. Rookie free
agents Maurice C rum and Dale Joseph were also
released to create openings for defensive tackle
G e ra ld N ic h o ls a n d c o rn c rb n c k A lo n z o
Hampton, w ho were claimed on waivers.
T o HU Randle’s spot, the Bucs re-clalmed
linebacker Maurice Oliver.
In other news, three players were signed to
the developmental squad. Wide receiver Te rry
Anthony, quarterback Pat O'Hara and defensive
lineman A1 Chamblee were with the team
during training camp but were let go Monday.

Raiders get into town
Ten new faces on
SCC hoop squad
By BBAN SMITH
Herald S p o rts Writer

S A N F O R D — The re an* two limes a year that
Junior college coaches arc the moat nervous. And
neither of them have to do with a big ball game.
One of the anxious times Is In mld-Dreember.
when the first term's grades come out. The other
is the first day of school when the coaches see If
all of their hard work during the offseason pays
olTand all of their new recruits show up.
Seminole C om m unity College men's basketball
coach Bill Payne was happy to greet the 14
young m en who showed up for Sunday night'a
first team meeting. B ut there was concern on his
face when none of them had to duck to get Into
the m eeting room. In fact, the 6-foot. 4-inch
Payne only had to raise his head to look a couple
of players In the eye.
Still, as the Raiders have proven the past few
years, height 1s not everything In the game of
basketball, proving that athletic ability and hard
work can be more Important.
"W e m ay not be the most talented or tallest
team when we play, but we work harder than
anyone else," Payne promised his team. "Every
coach wc play against comes up to me and
comments on how hard we play and I lake pride
In that."
Last y ca .r SCC looked as If It was going to have
one of Its best season's ever. But a rash of serious
Injuries late in the year decimated the starting
five and left the Raiders with Just eight healthy
players at season's end. The result was a 17-15
record and S C C 's first finish out of the top four In
the Mld-FIortda Conference standings In Payne's
nine years at the school.

Raiders, Page SB

Last year, Mike Merthle (No. 40, right) and Jason
H am elin com bined to give the Lake Mary High
S c h o o l Rama a formidable backcourt. This year,

they hope to help the Seminole Com m m unlty
C o lle ge Raiders get back above the 20-win
plateau and into the F C C A A state tournament.

Burners

Dolphins put Smith on IR
MIAMI — If Sammle Sm ith Is to reach his goal
of 1,000 yards rushing, he’ll have to do It in 12
games Instead of 16.
The Miam i Dolphins placed Sm ith on the
Injured reserve list Tuesday because of a knee
Injury he suffered 2Vi weeks ago In a preseason
game at Ta m p a Bay. T h e rosier move means
S m ith c a n ’t be activated u n til after the
Dolphins’ fourth game Sept. 22.
Sm ith w as one of the best running backs In
the N F L at the end of last season, rushing for
289 yards In Miami's final three games.
Sm ith's role will be filled by Mark Higgs. Marc
Logan and rookie Aaron Graver In Sunday's
Important opener at Buffalo.
Sm ith said he suffered a tom medial collateral
ligament in his left knee. Th e original diagnosis
determined surgery was unnecessary, and he
was expected to miss four to six weeks of action.
That estimate was reaffirmed In an examination
by doctors Saturday. Coach Don Shula said.

anta
From Staff Reports
C A SS ELB ER R Y -r Last year, the
F.C. United Burners had such a
good time at'the Ford/Pcle' Labor
Day Tournament In Atlanta that
they thought they'd go hack again
this year.
After looking over the Burners'
application, the organizers of the
tournam ent granted the leum 's
wish and Invited them back.
Th e Burners, an Under-14 select
b o y s s o c c e r t ea m b a s e d I n
Cassleberry. now have the opportu­
nity to go buck and lake cure of
some unfinished business. Last
year, the Burners swept through the
tournament before getting beat 3-2
by the Atlanta Steamers 78 In the
championship game.
While the Burners fell short of
winning the Ford/Pele' title a year
go. the success they enjoyed there
was a taste of what lay uhead. By
the end of the 1990*91 season, the
Burners had won the prestigious
C le u rw u le r Kicker lo u ru u m c n t:
finished llrsl In the Thanksgiving
Plantation lournamenl: took the
title In the Seminole Memorial Day
lournamenl: and finished third In
the Florida State Cup.
Coach John Burns has a nucleus
of seven players returning from that
squad, including Jason Tlsd rll and
Paul Biggins of Longwood. W inter
See Soccer, Page 3B

COLLIQR FOOTBALL
Memorial of upaat still fresh
C O R A L G A B L E S — Memories of a year ago
remain fresh for the Miami Hurricanes as they
prepare to open the season Saturday at
Arkansas.
In last season’s opener. Brigham Young upset
then*Nn. 1 Miami. 28-21. The loss likely cost the
Hurricanes their fourth national title since 1983.
"Th e y know that for us to have u successful
season, they've got to win that first game."
coach Dennis Erickson said Tuesday. "Th e y all
know what happened last year, and they all
remember what that plane ride back was like."
Miami blasted Texas 46-3 In the Cotton Bowl
to finish 10-2 and ranked No. 3 last season.
Miami is No. 3 In tills year's preseason poll.
A victory by Arkansas would be a bigger upset
than B Y U ’s win last year. The ^Kaznrbacks arecoming off a 3-8 season and are pteked by many
to finish last In the Southwest Conference.

BASBBALL
Henderson to attend Miami
MIAMI — Pitcher Kenny Henderson, the fifth
overall selection In Major League Baseball's
draft of amateur players, said Tut-sday that he
expects to play for the Miami Hurricanes, not
the Milwaukee Brewers.
Henderson, a 6-7 right-hander. Is set to begin
classes Thursday at the University of Miami.
The Brewers must sign him by then or lose his
dralt rights.
Henderson said Milwaukee's latest olh-r was
8500.000 too low but would not reveal what he.
is seeking. He Is believed to want SI . 2 million
for three years, (he Miami Herald reported lor Ils
Wednesday editions.
Henderson was 11-1 with a 0.52 earned-run
average at Klngold. G a .. High School last year.
He struck out 154 In 69 Innings.

frem wire and staff reports.

CO LLEG E FO O TB A LL

D 9 p.m. — W O FL 35. Klekolf Classic. Georgia
Tech vs Penn State. ILI
Com plats listing on F a g s 21

back

n

. ,

‘ •-*a r*-.

H*&lt;*M pKoloa by Gary F. Vog#l

Ground assault
One thing that Seminole High School football teams
never seem to lack Is speed. This year's Fighting
Semlnoles should be no different with the likes of

Willie Williams (lefl) and Bruce McClary (right) In the
backlleld. Seminole opens its 1991 season on Friday,
Sept. 13, at home against the Lyman Greyhounds.

Bowden: Time for Seminoles
to see just how good they are
B y S A I N T K A L U S T AD
Associated Press Writer
TALLAH ASSEE Florida Slate
coach Bobby Bowden says It's time to
find out If his Semlnoles arc Indeed the
nation's best learn.
"W e’ve talked about how good they
are." Bowden said Tuesday before the
team lefl for Thursday's season-opener
against Brigham Young and Helsman
T ro p h y w in n e r T y Delm cr In the
Pigskin Classic. "N ow we're about to
lind out."
For the second time In four seasons.
Florida State moves into a season as the
nation's top-ranked team. Bowden
hopes to avoid the fate that greeted his
198H team when Miami destroyed the
Semlnoles 3 1 0 in the season opener.
"In I9HH. they picked us to be No. 1 ...
I'd never been there, m y players had
never been there ... w c didn’t know how
to act." Bowden said. "I hope now we
know how to act.
‘ You have to learn to he No. 1." added
Bowden, w ho said this year's club
should iH-nefit from the 1988 experi­
ence.
"There is no reason this team Isn't
ready to p la y." lie said, adding that, ' ll
m y kids don't know they're in lor a
struggle, dadgum m lt. I'll probably be

retiring a lot sooner than I thought I
was."
Detmcr goes Into his senior season
needing 4 26 yards passing to become
the N C A A career (Kissing leader. He
already holds 44 N C A A records.
Florida State, w hich practiced at
home Tuesday before boarding a (light
fur the game at Anaheim . Calif., goes
Into Us game against (he 19th ranked
Cougars nearly at full strength. Of­
fensive linem an Mike Morris, out with a
foot injury, is the lone starter not ready
to go. Linebacker K irk Carruthers had
Ihc flu M onday but Is expected to tic
ready.
Bowden Is concerned about the
number of new players In the BYU
lineup. T h e Cougars lost 14 starters oil
last season's 10 3 team.

Bridgestone

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Florida State returns 17 regulars trnm
last year's team which won Us linal six
games to finish 10-2.

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"I know as little about their team as
any team w e’ve opened with in years."
he said.
"But they've got enough good players
back to scare you to death." he added
"We're having to do a lot of guessing
about how they're going to line up land)
what they're going to do."

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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 YO U R A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A IL Y
|

�S TA T S &amp; STANDINGS

Helene M e n IIS), Ctecheeievehto. AH.
Jeeelce Kmmem, Temge. Arli., H , U I I ;
Amy Praetor, Rethaitor Hills. Midi.. AH.
Clare Weei. Britain. AH 7Gt?-t).
So t * ' ! CetcMni, Italy, dH. Manlgw Jevtr.
Britain, M ( M ) . A lt Jena Nevetna It).
Ciiy.O W etH .ea.a-i.
Lavra OIMameistor, Peru. AH. NItele
Jaferm aa. Netherlands. M 17-4). 4-4;
Marlaan Ae Swardt, South Africa, Aef.
CaNwrlnatelre. France,At,4-7 (A M ),4-1
Rochet McQwlHan, Australia, AH. tyWIle
Ntoe-Chetoeu. France, a * U a#; Peanut
Lewie-Harper. Ian Francisco. AH. Marianne
WerAH. Fate Alla. Calil.. u 1-7,44.
Natalia Zvereva, tevlef Union. a h . WllfrvA
Areas*, Germany, a i, M (71); Arantia
Senchei V leer to (4), Spain, Aef. Kalla
PkcaHM, llahr.aa.at.
Mary Jee FemeaAex. ( I ) , M M , AH.
Larisa Savchenko. Soviet Union. AS. AS;
Katerina Maleeva (II). Bulgaria. AH.Manen
Benetraf. NHherlands, AS. A A
Anha Hwher (14). Germany, AH. Anne
Mlnter. Australia. A I. A4. A t; BrenAe
Schulti. Netherlands. Aef. Aklko Kl|lmwta,
Japan. S-A AS. AS.
Neftiatle Her reman. France. Aef. CleuAla
Kohde-Kltech. Germany. 4*. AA AS; Leri
McNeil. Houston, Aef. Robin While. San
Diego. A A AA
Catarina LlnAqvist. 1 weAin. AH. Reno
Alter, CanaAa. AS. AS; Elena Brtoukhevets.
Soviet Union. AH. Lisa BenArr Krrlu. lever
ly Hills. Calif.. A A A I.
JuAlth Wleenar, Austria. AH. Alexia Do
chaume, France, 44. AS. 4-1; Debbie
Graham . Fountain Valley. Calif.. Aef.
LlnAeay Davenport. Palos Verdes. Calil.. AA
AS.
Kimberly Pa. Rolling Hills. Califs Aef.
Elite Burgln. Belli more. AA At; Andrea
SfmaAeve. Ctechetlevakla. del. Claudia
Pen*Ik, Germany, A A AS.
Martina Navratilova (4). Aspen. Colo.. Aef.
Patricia Terablnl, Argentina. AA A l; Con
chlfa Martinet II), Spain, Aef. Cecilia
Dahtman. Sweden. At. A l.
Zina Garrlean 111), Houston. AH. Sabine
Appetmana. Belgium, 7-1 A4; Flerencla
Label. Argentina, del. Nathalie Tautlet (14),
France. M A4
Pam Shrlvor, Lutherville, MA. AH. Rika
Hlrekl. Japan. A l. A l; Man* Pierce. Tampa.
AH. Laura Oarrone, Italy. A l A l 7417 71.
Kristin Cabridge. Australia, del. Elltabath
Smylla, Australia. A l A4; Yaywk Baeukl,
Indonesia. AH. Audr a Kaller. Memphis,
Tarm., A 4 AA
Anne Smith, Dalles, vs. Petrs Langreva.
Soviet Union, ppd, darkness; Magdalena
Maleeva Bulgaria, del. Karin Kschwendt.
Luxembourg. 71 (7 1 ), 4 1 AO.

Oant, Atlanta. S7i Me Reynolds. New Verb.
17; ZolN. St. Lewis. M; draco, Chicago, St;
WClert. tan Frenetic*. M; TOerytm. San
D N p e .ll
Triples
Lankford. St. Louis. IS, TGwynn. Sen
Olepe. it; FMey. I lewsten. « ; LOenutoi.
Houston. B; Ortseem. Montreal, 7; Van Style,
Pittsburgh, 7; WClerk. Sen Franc lees. 1
Kruk, Phlladllpkle. A; CinieoN. HausNn, 4;
Fewer. Sen FrewcHrp i
Oant, Atlanta. 17; WClert. Sen Franclsce.
Si; Johnson. Now York. St; McOrlff, San
OW pl IS; MaWl llleme. San Franc le d 34;
KvMitcholl, tan F r a r t d t d 14; ITN tlll.
Cincinnati. H.

WOAneeAey's Nature metcbse

n r .( m in tTTTTT

h im

m illr

SeddMbreab. ve. Petra Ritter. Austria;
Stolen Edberg (2), Sweden, ve. Jell Tarango.
Manhattan Beech, Cell!.
7:14 p.m.
Gabriele Sebetlnl IS). Argentine, ve.
Barbara Paulus. Austria; Michael Sikh (J).
Germany, w Jimmy Brown. Large
M onica Seles I D . Yugoslavia, vs.
Emanuela Zarde. Swltierland; Michael
Chang, Cote da Cere. Calif., vs. Todd
Wltsken. Carmel. Ind; Ivan Lendl (I).
Ctechoetevekle. ve. Patrick Kuhnen.
Germany.
7:Mp.m.
MellVal Washington. Swart; Creek. Mich..
vs Omar Cemporase. Italy.
Other test ed Ptarers

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Helena Sukova 111). Crechcsiovakie. vs
Erika da Lone. Lincoln. Mass.
I Fourth match)
Jena Novotna (*). Czechoslovakia, vs.
Peanut Louie Harper. Sen Francisco.
Ceerlta
I First match)
Guy Forget If), France, vs. Jan Siemtrink.
Netherlands.

(FeurM match)
Mary Joe Far wander IS). Miami, ve.
Brenda Schultt. Netherlands.
Court 17
(First match)
Goran Ivanisevic 111). Yugoslavia, vs.
Goran Prpic. Yugoslavia
(Feurth match)
Sargi Bruguara &lt;tl, Spain, vs. Javlar
Sanchar. Spain
CaurtlS
I First match)
Leila Meskhl I IS). Soviet Union, vs. Laura
Gildemefstor. Peru
CeurtM
(Third match)
Katerina Maleeva ( I I ) . Bulgaria, ve.
Mariaan de Swerdt. South Africa

LOW. LOW FACES ON AU D T K A TRUCK
4 RV TIRES. TC3I
NO C8RRV OUTA NO DEALERS
BASEBALL
Amertcea League
C H IC A G O W H I T I SOX - Recalled
Sammy Sosa, outfielder, from Vancouver el
the Pacific Coast League Pieced Mike Hull,
outlieIder, on the IS day disabled list retroac
five to Sunday. August IS
Malteaial League
CH ICAG O CUBS - Activated Frank
Castillo, pitcher, from the IS day disabled
list Optioned Scott May. pitcher, to Iowa el
the American Association
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
D ETR O IT PISTONS - Signed Charles
Thomas. Roy Marble, and Oreitl DeVteui.
guards, and Mark Bredtke. forward canter

(VDMRMUL

DISCOUNT

OGAND RAPIOS HOOPS Tyson, forward

Signed Sean

Placed Hick Ftnney, fullback, and Matt
VanAsrbesh and Carlos Jenkins, linebackers,
on Inlured reserve. Signed Scott Adame,
attentive tackle; Ivan Caesar, linebacker;
Terry Oboe, wide receiver; and Scott
Beegan, dstensive tecklo. N the practice

§qu#d.

NEW IN G LA N D PATRIOTS - Agreed N
terms with John Stephens, running beck, on a
tour-year contract. Claimed Rob Carpenter,
wide receiver. H I waivers.
N IW YO R K J I T S - Claimed Ken
Whlssnhgnt. light end. eft waivers.
PM ILADILPNIA K A O L B S - Placed Jesse
Campbell. seNty. on the In lured reserve list.
Reclaimed Kenny Jackson, wide receiver.
PN O IN IX CARDINALS - Pieced Eric
Swann, dstensive lineman, and Greg Amstsr.
running bach, on in|ured reserve. Reclaimed
A mod Field and John Jackson, wide re
cel vers, ott waivers.
PITTSBURGH S T I I L I R t - Agreed to
terms with David Little. linebacker, on a
three year contract. Placed Gary Jones,
lately, and Dalton Hall and Sammy Walker,
cornerbacks, on the In lured reserve list.
Signed Jar rod Johnson, center. Garry Howe,
nose tackle. Ariel Solomon, ottensive tackle,
and Ron Fair, wide receiver, to their practice
rosier.
SAN FRANCISCO 4SIRS - Pieced Joe
Montana, quarterback; Ricky Watters, run­
ning beck; and Harry Boatswain, attentive
tackle, on injured reserve. Reclaimed Rail
Mo|sieienko. punter; Tom Neville, offensive
guard; and Dean Caligulre, center, ell

wtlytyt.

S E A TTLE SEAHAWKS - Reclaimed Paul
Skantl, wide receiver, end Darren Comeaux,
linebacker, ott waivers. Pieced Kelly Stout
ter. quarterback, and Joe Tefflemlre. center,
on Injured reserve.
TAMPA BA T B U C C A N IIR S - Traded
Ervin Readto. linebacker, to Me Keweas City

WASHINGTON REDSKINS - Reclaimed
Gerald Riggs, running bock; Stephan Hobbs
and Joa Johnson, wldo receivers. Mark
A dlcktl. offensive guard; end Sidney
Johnson, defensive beck, ott waivers
Claimed Terry Orr, tight end. ott waivers.
Placed Cary Conklin, quarterback; Ray
Brown and Mo Elewonib!, offensive tackles;
A J. Johnson, defensive beck; John Settle,
running beck; end Don Warren, light end. on
Injured reserve
HOCKEY
IMeraettenel Hockey League
SAN D IEO O G U L L S - Named Don
Waddell coach and Andre Lacroix associate
coach.
SOCCEN
Meier Soccer Lupua
BALTIMORE BLAST - Signed Domsnic
Mobil to. forward, to a one year contract.
ST. LOUIS STORM - Announced the
resignation ol Den Counce, vice president
and general manager Named Denny Bend
Interim general manager
CO LLEG E
AOELPHI — Named Meddto Cunningham
softball coach and assistant to the athletic
director
AUBURN — Announced the retirement 3t
Bud Marsae. women’s gotI coach, effective
Sept t Mar see wilt remain as part lime
assistant to the men’s and women’s golf
teams
C O K IR — Named Greg Grissom, men's
assistant basketball coach.
JOHN JAY — Named Ulana Lysniak
women’s bosklibel I coach
MONMOUTH. N J. - Named John Para
due director ol sports media and promotions
and marketing
SOUTH ALABAMA - Named Dawn Marsh
women's assistant basketball coach
W K1TERN CAROLINA - Named Bill
Jarman assistant baseball coach

�6B88E8BHHHi8B8il6to6^8S6iB6BS66S6B66fll8b8***9HeB88B

Sanford Harald. Sanford. Florida - Wadnadday. August 20, 1to1 - *4
i _

i

. _

_

_
—

way to third Budweiser Twin 100 series victory

ll

i &amp; £**4
- a

NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Otck Anderaon
•ucceaaftilhr'defended Ms Budwrterr Twin 100
FABCAR Late Model champfanahlp Saturday
night at New Smyrna Speedway.
Anderson, who won the aeries la IB M and
1000. barely held off atrsas rwaalag Brie Orr to
win the second leg of the fourth annual event,
which la sponsored by Wayne Densch Dlatrtbut
Ing. He also won the first half of the t

On lap IB. a *
wall banger turned Into a Mg break far Orr. who
had been boxed In behind slower cars. When the
race was restarted on lap 91, Anderson pabbed
the second spot and took the point thret laps later

im p f e

1. Dtek'Andareon, Wildwood, 100; 2. Fete Orr,
Moatvsrda, 100; 3. Stan Eads, Tltusvllls, 100; 4.
Ricky Mwshsfl, Malabar, M , I. Jeff Barton,
Laagwaad, OBs 0. Duka Southard, New Smyrna
•each, 07.
7. Soon Bramiett, Orlando, 04; &amp; Tom Fann,
Offends, 0B; t. Hal Ferry, Mims, 87; 10. Bmcs
Lawrunos, DtLand, 70; 11. Granny Tatroa,
12. Joa Middleton, So.

On lap 30,Onr came out on top of a fierce duel
with Lawrence to move Into the
Prom that point, he applied contl
on Andereon aa the two dueled to the end.
The caution flag Sew on lap 71
engine oiled turn three enough to cause a mamlve
pile-up In which third-place
his car and his hopes deetroj
Only nine of the original 34
the restart flag. Anderson gotoi^on to win over
Orr and Eads. In fourth and Mlh wave Ricky
Marshall (one lap down) and Jeff-Burkett (who
completed M laps).
Division winners were Mike Kubanek (Limited
Late Models). Joey Stuts (Sportsman). Mike Fitch
(Florida Modlfleds). Bobby Seam (Mini Stocks)
and Darren Oould (Bombers).
ORLANDO — When the big money is on the
line, you can expect veteran FASCAR Late Model

Raiders*
IB
While the Raiders did lose starting point
guard Dexter Vanxapt to Rollins College and
center Leslie Cephus to the University of
Mississippi, a lot of experience la bach.
SCC will return Sanford's Robert Moore.
Billy Freeman. Darnell Robinson and Brian
Nason, all of w hom were starters moat of
last season and contributed a great deal to
the team's success.
Nason, a 6-foot. 4-Inch guard from Mem­
phis. Tennessee, led the team tn scoring last
year at Just over 20 points per game and la
also a good rebounder despite his slim build.
Moore (6 feet. 3 inches) led the Raiders In
rebounding last year despite missing the
last month w ith a broken hand. He la a
tremendous athlete who can run and Jum p
with the best.
Robinson (6 feet, 3 inches) from Anderaon.
Indiana, was fourth on the team in scoring
last year. He was the second beat scorer —
behind Nason — for the Raiders during the
last two weeks of the season despite playing
with a bad th u m b on his shooting hand.
Freeman (6 feet. 6 Inches. 280 pounds)

-*
T
.
Morgan Hoovar, Now Smyrna Beach, 64; 13.
Im la H

S p r in g s ' A l a n K i n g . D a v id
Kinsley and Charles W hitm ore of
Casselberry. W inter Park's Jeff
Solstman and Randy Jenkins of
Orlando.
New players on this year's
team are Kris Lecnlm of Lake
M a ry . L o n g w o o d 's R lo n
Weldeman. Garrett K lzcr and
Leo Mejia of W inter Springs.
Casselberry's Ben M cK ceb y.
John Biggs of W inter Park and
Orlando'sDusty Relneke.
Last y e a r 's F o rd / P e le ’ s

«i

IS .

(10 laps) . 1. Betoy
2.
Brandon Hack,
Parmann, Fort Flarea; 4. Chris Ambts,
imiPWiiff O. "ICn DnBlOv, wflBsrOO.

Sportsman teafera (IB laps) 1. Joey Btutz,
DsLand; 2. Dove Savlckl, So. Daytona; 3. BM
driver Dick Ancirraon to be in top form. He was
just that Friday night at Orlando SpeedWorld as
he won the first leg of the Budweiser T w in 100 In
convincing fashion.
After a persistent rain shower delayed the start
of the evening'a festivities and washed out the

from Albany. Georgia, did not gel eligible
until Christmas last year but did a very good
job once he became a starter late In the
year. He will be a very Important player for
the Raiders this year.
Payne .has recruited some very talented
yers to go w ith the returnees and also
i several good local high school players
walking on that could help this season.
Am ong the recruits Is Lake Mary graduate
Mike Merthle. w ho was last year's Seminole
Athletic Conference Player of the Year.
Merthle. a 6-foot. 3-Inch. 185-pound guard ts
a good all around player w ho will do what
his team needs to w in . whether It be
•coring, rebounding or running the ofTcnse.
On of Payne’s most prized recruits Is
8-foot. 9-tnch Phillip W illiam s from Norfolk.
Virginia. Th e point guard Is extremely quick
and will remind locals of Dorris Gallagher
with hia play m aking skills.
Also adding to the back court strength of
the Raiders w ill be T o n y Knight from
Tallahaasee-Llncoln H igh School. A 6-foot.
3-lnch guard. Knight can play either point
or shooting guard, handles the ball well and
is a good long-range Ju m p shooter.

a

■

tournament attracted over 300
teams — Including 50 from
outside the state of Georgia and
two foreign entries — In several
different divisions. •
T h e Burners, who were led by
tournament MVP Sean McSorlcy
of Oviedo, finished second tn a
division of 16 teams last year
with a 4-1 tournament mark,
outacorlng their opponents 19-9.
O f the seven returners on this
year's team, scoring goals In last
y e a r 's to u rn s a m e n t w ere
Solstman. Tisdell and Whitmore.

w

i

ORLANDO 8FEEDWORLD
Friday, Aeg. 13
FASCAR Lata Madaia feature (100
1. Dick Anderson, Wildwood. 100; 2. Pats
Orr, Montvanfe, 100; 3. Ronnie Roach, Orlando.
100; 4. Burks Hammond, Orlando, 100; 5. Ricky
Marshall, Malabar, M , 6. Bob Acksrbioom,
Ortando, 08.
7. David Bhowsrs, 8t. Augustine, to; 8. Don
Fann, Union Park, to; 0. Wayns Marshall,
Malabar,
04; 10. Wayne Southard, New Smyrna
Eustis;
3. Karl
Beach, 04; 11. Hal Parry, Mims, 02; 12. Granny
Tatros, Ormond Beach, 84.
13. Scott Bramiett, 8t. Cloud. 74; 14. Ed
Mertdlth. Sorrento. 00; 18. Jim Crewe. West
time trials, the luck of the draw put Anderaon
near the back of the field while division point
leader Bob Ackerbloom drew the pole.
J im Crowe blew hia engine on lap 32 to bring
out the first caution period. O n the restart, both
Pete O rr and Anderaon blew by Ackerbloom and

. w -’

j (18 taps) 1. Scott
MeDads, Deltona; 2. Bentley Mead, Titusville; 3.
Wally Fatferson, Bcottsmoor; 4. Ray Smith,
Ortando; B. Jon Compagnona, Orange aty.
(IB taps)
1. Batov
. 2. Skip Honater, Titusville; 3.
Dave Barnett, Veto Beach; a . John Roberta.
Ortando; B. Dan Rogers, Titusville.
•smtors feature (IS taps)
1. Dwayne
Waddell, Melbourne; 2. Butch Pierce, Ortando;
3. Darren Gould, Cocoa; 4. Ravin Sheppard,
Deltona; 8. Ted Hoay, Kissimmee.
Raa-A-Baufe feature (IB taps)
1. Jim
Robinson, Tltusvllls; 2. Marv Smith, Ortando; 3.
Robert Marzal, Ortando; 4. John Didlego,
Titusville; 8. John Smith, Ortando.
Fan FartWpartmt Owl Drags
1. Danny
Prestige, Amarillo, Texas,

began a lengthy crowd-pleasing duel for the lead.
Anderson trying everything In nls bag of trtcjia to
get around O rr's "H o rte n ' Around Farm s car.
Th e lead pair ran that way until a lap 72
caution flag flew when Ackerbtoom. still running
third, was punted Into the tnfleld b y a lapped car

SCC also landed 6-foot. 5-Inch Craig
Stallings from Long Beach. Mississippi.
Stallings averaged 21.7 points. 6.3 rebounds
and 3.8 assists while earning second team
All-sSate honors. He was also the District
VIII. Class 4A Player of the Year and played
in the Mlsslsslppl-Alabamn All-Star game.
Th e other two S C C frrshm an signers are
both from the Cleveland. Ohio area.
D e o n G a v i n Is a 6 - f o o l . 4 - I n c h
guard/forward w ho averaged 24 points. 12
rebounds and six assists his senior year. He
was a two-lime Most Valuable Player In the
Cleveland City Cham pionship game and
earned All-Slate honors.
Tro y Bruenlng Is a 6-foot. 2-Inch guard
who is a pure Jum p shooter who averaged
21 points, seven rebounds nnd four assists a
game as a senior.
Among the walk-ons arc 6-foot. 6-lnrh
Patrick Strong from Miami. 6-ruol. 5-lueh
Robert Walker from Dade City and 5-foot.
10-Inch Jason llam clln from Lake Mary.
Hamcltn teamed with Merthle the Iasi two
years to give the Rams an almost unstop­
pable backcourt and the duo hopes they can
do the same for the Ruldcrs.

_

118COAMNQ TO AN END
ON MONDAY NIGHT

DON'TBESHUTOUT
Baniora FREE
At AN I
FROMCALDER
12:30 PM

1:00 pm
Evanlnga*7:4Spm

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Sanford Herald
•« a » » i

J L » — ■—

,H a

J

*

Palm Beach, 20; 16. Duka Southard, New
Smyrna Beach, 24; 17. Jeff BmtoW. Laagwaad,
11; IB. Rosa EWrtdaa, Orlando, 3.
Lfedfed Left Modsfe toofem (11 feps) 1.
Oonnfe Narmors, Mslbouma; 2. "Tank” Tucker,
Melbourne; 3. Allan Rhodes, Palm Bay; 4.
Chuck Stanley, Ortando; 8. Georgs Dsasa,
Ortando.
(IS taps) 1. Rick Johns,
Ortando; 2. John Potts, Christmas; &amp; Jehu
4. Joey Stutz, DsLand; 5. John

/ ^ N ^ A c l^ ^ C ^ W H ER E^O R LA N ^D

U.S. SAVINGS BONDS &amp;
THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT

11.

h P ^ W W V i

Craig Raynolda, Titusville, 62; 16. Paul
Orlasbauar, Wausau, W l„ 01; 17. Chuck
BurkhaMer, Orlando, 43; 18. Lamar Knightor. St.
Auguatlna, 22.
10l Chuck AbaH, Klselmmaa. 17; 20. Wayne
Marshall, Malabar, 12; 21. Ross Eldrldga,
Orlando, 1% 22. Russ Whittaker, Deltona, 0, 23.
Eddy Ferry, Mims, •; 24. Jim Groff, Fort Flares,

Soccer
Caatiaaodfrwu IB

| ------------------

W v H w V lt

*‘ .

Langwaad; 4. Rick Johns, Orlando; 5.
Ray Luchko, Fori St. Lucie.
Florida MartfU da foatwra (11 taps) 1. Mike
Fitch, Edotwater, 2. Danny Rally, DsLand; &amp;
Mars RMsy. Oslssn; 4. Wray Shaffer, Lake
Helen; 8. "Booty" Boatwright, Fruitland Park.
Bamtors taafara (IB bps) * 1. Darren Gould,
Cocoa; 2. Mark Goebel, Bo. Daytona; 3. Tad
Hoay, Kissimmee; 4. Roger Favreau, Orlando; S.
Douglas Jr., Ortando.
lad Lets Madsto taafara ( I I tapd . 1.
wfc, Langwaad; 2. Chuck Stanley,
Orlando; 3. Sherman Walkar, Tavares; 4. Rudy
Rudnlckl, Christmas; B. Ed Msrldlth, Borrsnto.

M W SMYRNA SPflDWAY

Outside front row alerter Stan Eads led the
early goings with Bruce Lawrence challenging.
Starting halfway down the 24-car field after the
u n rrn orcw toe pnouiooB. AnorrBoci V M tn truni

%

�- Salford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Wednesday. August 28. 1991

People
Mom shared kitchen secrets
■y JOAN KINO
Herald Correspondent

S A N F O R D — Colleen Finch*
Cham berlin has been a Sanford
resident since 1968 when she
moved here from Jacksonville.
She has one daughter. Storm y.
17, a senior at Deltona High
School.
Cham berlin said. "M y mother
is a coun try-style cook who
taught me. T h e first thing I
learned to make was popcorn.
Don't laugh. It should be done
right so It doesn't b u m or have a
lot of kernels. Moat people put
the skillet on the fire and heat
.he oil until it’s hot: then they
pul in the com . T h e best way is
to have a hot pan. cotd oil. and it
will never stick or b u m ."
O ur cook remembers when
she was 14 and made her first
pan of tjlscults. She was so
proud of her accomplishment
that she wanted her father to try
them immediately. However, her
father was playing cards with
her uncle Just two houses away.
She carried the biscuits over to

the men Just as proud as she
could be. When they picked up
the hefty morsels they played
tiddly winks with them. At 14. It
was devastating to fall and she
was hurt.
"It taught me something. I
was bound and determined to
never fall a g a in ." she said
laughing.
She shared her m other's secret
for getting her dad to take her
out to eat.
" M y entire fam ily is still
laughing at those first biscuits.
Every* time mom wanted to eat
out she told dad that I was
cooking and he took her out to
eat. It worked every time. Daddy
is a typical dad in the kitchen, a

complete failure but no one can
beat him on the barbecue grill."
C h a m b e r lin spoke of her
m other's love of proper table
s e t t i n g s a n d t he f a m i l y ' s
exposure to fine dining.
"M om made sure we had a
proper setting several times a
year w ith tablecloth, plates,
glasses, silver, etc. I get m y love
of service from m y mother. She
taught me to please the patron
and never serve any person In a
way that would not be pleasant
to me. I always try to please m y
customers, whether It's at Tex
M cx ( w h e r e C h a m b e rlin la
employed) or wherever I may be
working. T h e customers here are
always so pleasant that It makes
m y Job easier."
Cham berlin is a Joy to behold
as she works with finesse serv­
ing drinks conversing with cus­
tom ers. answ ering questions
and writing out recipes. She is
totaly unflappable. As her shift
ends at the Mexican restaurant,
she continued to be pleasant and
helpful.
A patron had car trouble and
she offered to help. Chamberlin

i-mdl.

quickly called upon her former
hu sb a n d Roger w h o arrived
shortly and fixed the car of the
damsel In distress.

DANDELION BALAD
1 lb. dandelions or any greens
(fresh)
1 egg (hardbollrd. cut Into
small chunks)
1 small onion (cut Into rounds)
14 cup mushrooms (chopped
or sliced)
W ash greens, drain on towel.
Arrange greens on salad plates.
T o p w ith m ushroom s, onion
rounds and boiled egg chunks.
Dribble hot dressing over all and
sprinkle w ith salt and pepper.

HOT DRM M NO FOR SALAD
Vi lb. bacon (cooked crisp,
drained, crumbled)
1 green onion (chopped fine)
1 raw egg
Vt clove garlic (minced)
V4 cup vinegar
After bacon has been cooked,
saute garlic In bacon drippings.
Add salt &amp; pepper to taste, add
vinegar and remove from heat.
Add raw egg and wisk until fully
Incorporated. Dribble over salad
greens and serve Immediately.

f v
__ -i

(M l

/a M ra

Cook C o lton Flnch-Chomborlln

It’s time to fill the requests
for kids’ a fte r-sch o o l treats
Inch square microwave brownie
pan. Microwave on 70% power
(m ed-hlgh) 6-7 minutes or unttl
surface Is dry. Cool slightly,
sprinkle with powdered sugar.
Cut Into bars.

School has started.once again
and w ith it. requests from hu n ­
gry kids for after-school snacks
and lunchbox treats. Following
are recipes for bar type cookies,
muffins and sandwiches to fill
some of these back-to-school
needs.

■r • %
/

Encourage your children to
Join in the fun of fixing these
recipes.
For mothers w orking outside
the home, banana-oatmeal m uf­
fins and pizza burgers can be
prepared ahead and refrigerated
or frozen. W hen the kids arrive
home from school, they can pop
one of these In the microwave
and have a hot snack without
any danger of burned fingers or
an oven left on.
K e e p a s u p p l y of t hese
sa ndw iches in y o u r freezer.
Everyone enjoys this snack.

PIZZA BURGERS
114 lbs. ground beef
1 small onion, chopped
1 c a n (1 5 o z . ) p i z z a o r
spaghetti sauce
3 cups shredded Mozzarella
cheese
1 Tb s p . parsley flakes
I tsp. ground oregano
12-14 ham burger buna, split
Crum ble ground beef and on­
ion in to a 2- qt . ca sse role.
M icro w a ve on 1 0 0 % power,
uncovered, 5-6 minutes or until
no longer pink, stirring once to
break meat into small pieces.
Drain and set aside to cool. Stir
in pizza sauce, 2 cups Mozzarella
cheese, parsley, and oregano
until well blended.
A rra n g e buns cut-side up.
Spoon about 2 tablespoons m ix­
ture on each bun half: spread
evenly. Sprlnle with remaining
cheese, about 1 teaspoon per
sandwich. Place 8 sandwiches
on a glass plate. Microwave on
lOO% power, uncovered. 2-2I4
minutes or until heated and
cheese melts. Refrigerate or
freeze remaining sandwiches for

MIDGE
MYCOFF

later use.
About 28 sandwiches.
These tuna sandwiches are
similar to the pizzu burgers.
Ready in minutes.
T U N A -C H E E S E S A N D W IC H E S
1 can (614 oz.) water-packed
tuna, drained
3 Tbsp. mayonnaise
Dash of pepper
4 E n g lis h mu f f i n h u lve s .
toasted •
14 cup shredded C h e d d a r
cheese
Combine tuna, mayonnaise,
and pepper and m ix well. Divide
mixture among English muffin
halves, spread evenly. Arrange
on microsafe s e rv in g plate.
Sprinkle w ith grated cheese.
Microwave (1 0 0 % ) uncovered.
1-1 Vi minutes or until cheese
begins to melt.
Keep cool while m icrowaving
these bar type cookies. T h e y are
moist and pack well for lunches
or a snack on the run.
C H O C O L A T E -D A T E B A R S
2 eggs
44 cup packed brown sugar
1 cupchopped dates
Vi tsp. vanilla
1 cup all-purpose flour
I tsp. baking powder
Vi cup semi-sweet chocolate
chips
Powdered sugar.
Deal eggs: blend in brown
sugar, dales and vanilla. Add
flour, baking powder and choco­
late pieces; mix Just until com ­
bined. Pour into ungreased 7-

IN B R I E F
Labor Day events planned
T h e Winter Springs Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5405 and
Its Ladies Auxiliary are planning a Labor Day barbecue on
September 2 at the post home at 420 N. Edgeinon Ave. from
noon until 0 p m. Come out and enjoy a dinner of chicken,
baked beaus, cole slaw and rolls for a donation of $5. For
details call 327*3151.

Local drummer helps MDA
Sanford drummer To m Miller will participate in the third
annual Drum a thou to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy
Association Miller and other drummers plan to begin playing
Sunday. September 1 at 5 p.m. and play until Monday.
September 2 at 5 p m at the Wal-Mart Plaza on S.R. 17-92 in
Sanford.
Miller, the originator and coordinator of the event for the past
three years is excited at how It has grown. Friends and
businesses In tin- community have all pitched in to support the
d ru m m e rs’ efforts to raise money for Jerry's Kids.
T h e event is part of MDA's yearlong clfort to raise funds,
culm inating with the .Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon.

Join the Puppet Guild
Central Florida Puppet Guild welcomes new mem bers
S u nd a y. September 1 at 11 a.in. Workshops in all phase’s of
puppetry arc scheduled Meetings are iteld at 1700 Sunset D r..
Longwood. which is the Sunshine Artists Hutldiug.
C a ll Jo a n W ahl at 3 23-631&lt;*for more details

These bars are sure to disap­
pear quickly. Th e y remind me of
an expensive bar cookie found in
the freezer of the grocery store.
F U D G E B E T W E E N BARB
44 cup butler or margarine
44 cup packed brown sugar
1 tsp. vanilla
I *4 cups quick-cooking rolled
oats
1V4 cups unsifted all-purpose
flour
■4 tsp. baking soda
'/«tsp. salt

Pilling:
44 cup sweetened condensed
milk
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate
chips
1 Tbsp. butter or margarine
Vt tsp. vanilla
■4 cup chopped nuts
Mi c r o w a v e ( 1 0 0 % ) b ut t er
*4— Vi minute or until softened.
Blend In brow n sugar until
creamy. Beal in vanilla. Add
oats, flour, soda and salt: mix
until crum bly.
Press 44 of mixture evenly Into
bottom of ungreased 8-Inch
square gross baking dish. M/W
on 100% power, uncovered.
214-3*4 minutes or until bubbly
and puffed th roug hout. Set
aside.
C o m b in e condensed m ilk ,
chocolate pieces and butter in
2-cup glass measure. Microwave
( 1 0 0 % ) u n c o v e r e d , 114-2
m i n u t e s or u n t i l s l i g h t l y
thickened, stirring once. Stir in
vanilla and nuts. Spread over
base in pan. M/W on (100% )
remaining crum b mixture, u n ­
covered, 1-114 minutes or unit)
puffed. S tir until texture Is
c r u m b l y . S p o o n by s m a l l
spoonfuls onto chocolate layer.
Microwave (10 0% ) uncovered,
3V4-4 minutes or until bubbly
throughout. Coo) completely.
Cut Into squares. About 20 bars.
T h is batter keeps well in the
r e f r i g e r a t o r for br eakf ast s
on t h e - r u n or after school
snacks.
B A N A N A - O A T M E A L
M U F F IN S
I cup milk
1 Tbsp. vinegar
2 cups quick-cooking rolled
outs
Vt cup packed brown sugar
'4 cup rooking oil
2 eggs
44 cup mashed ripe banana
I cups all-purpose flour
I tsp. baking [xiwder
'4 Isp. soda
Mi (sp. salt
(-4 Isp. cinnamon
Combine -milk and vinegar In
m i x i n g b o wl . Let st and 5
minutes. Add rolled oals. brown
sugar amt oil: mix well. Beat in
eggs. Blend in banana. Add
Hour, baking powder, soda, salt
and cinnamon. Stir Just until
Binooth.
Spoon into paper-lined
microwave muiliri cups, filling 4«
full. Microwave on 100% power
6 muffins al a time, uncovered.
1-W-2U m inutes or until no
longer doughy, rotating pan
once or twice. Serve warm or
cooled.
About 24 muffins.
Butler can lx- retrlgeraied lor
up to 5 days and cooked as
nredru. Increase lime to 2*4-3
minutes for chilled baiter.
Muffins freeze well loo.

WE G U A R A N T E E
To Ma tc h Or Beat A n y o n e ' s Price On
14 Kt G o l d Rope and H e r r i n g b o n e C h ai n s
Call Your Local Friedman's Jewelers Today To Apply For Your
Own Charge Card Over The Phonel tt's So Easy!
wot’
-rjx s r*

S e m in o le C entre
A lta m o n te M all
W in te r Park M all

�/
i v r

■'

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday. August 28, 1991 -

W E D N E SD A Y ’* PRIMB TIMfc
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For 24-hour TV listings, t n LEISURE magazlns of Friday Auguat 23.

FULL
SERVICE i
PHARMACY.
U0ULAR

PHARMACY HOURS

Divorced couple are still
in love and ready to live

TO R N

D E A R T O R N : Your Jo h n is a
man after m y own heart. Re­
m arry him and move away from
both your families. Don't worry
about your unmarried daughter.
She’s probably due to leave the
nest soon anyway. Enjoy your
lives. It's always later than you
think.
D E A R A B B Y : When 1 travel. I
like to take m y dog with me.
w h i c h pr esent s a p r o b l e m
because not all hotels allow
dogs.
1 recently stopped at a hotel
where I was made welcome with
m y pet. and I saw this framed
"notice" hanging In the lobby. It
tickled me. and if it tickles you.
maybe you'll run it In your
column.
"Dogs ure welcome in this
hotel. We never had a dog that
smoked In bed and set fire to the
blankets. We never had a dog

MOVIELAND DRIVE-IN
ft.Vt I *

S inf *1

I . ' lin

(100EACH MMM.

M B * ROBIN HOOD
IF LOOKS COULD KILL

%

TOYS •GAMES •FIGURES
STAR TREK'" •STAR WARS'"
SUPER HEROES •MISC. TOYS
•METAL LUNCH BOXES

IS

ADVICR

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

who stole our towels, played the
T V loo loud or had a noisy fight
with his traveling companion.
We never had a dog that got
d r u n k a n d b r o k e u p t he
furniture. So If you r dog can
vouch for you. you're welcome,
loo."
DOO LO VER
D E A R D O O L O V E R : I've been
tickled by a version of that
notice, but In case- some readers
haven’t. I'll m n It. Tha nks for a
well-deserved tribute to m an's
best friend.
D E A R A B B Y : M y husband
went on a 10-day business trip
recently, and he wrote me three
letters. He addressed the flrsl
one to "M ary S m ith ." the second
to "Mrs. Mary S m ith " and the
third to "Ms. Mary S m ith ."
I have a friend who studies
psychology, and she told me that
m y husband's addressing me as
he did — carefully avoiding
using "Mrs. John S m ith " — was
Ills way of "dow ning" me.
I should add that when m y
husband returned from the trip,
he was as affectionate and loving
as ever, and he certainly didn't

’’Catered Living For Seniors"

I
A C L F Apartments
I Independent &amp; Assisted Living
1 200 W. Airport Blvd^ Sanford

•

322-7700

(Problem s? Writs to Dear Abby.
F o r s p e rso n a l, u n p u b lis h e d
re p ly , send ■ sell-addressed,
stamped envelop* to Dear Abby,
P .9 . Box 69440, Los Angolas,
Calif. 90069.

• •

CELERY AVE.

SANFORD
MIDDLE
SCHOOL

2STH ST.

PHARMACIST JERRY LIGUORI
PHONE: 407-321-6626
11 pm

DARTS ★ POOL ★ GAMES *
2469 Airport Btvd., Sanford •324-7552
Winn Dlxla / Country Club Squara

FREEwin*DRAFT
an

I itchfield
c
. j j 4 one.
mb

*• | ,i«^li«LJ I u*ui t I h« nrr*

•KMWT.IMiLMlaMT

&lt;*

&lt;|

r

t

ADJACENT TO SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
1001

m

H

m

cmsuims

m
200400
•00

DALMATIANS

I

D E A R A B B Y : In a courtship
between a woman 65 and a man
67. who should offer the first
kiss?
Please don't think this Is a
Joke. It isn't. 1 am a widow and
lie is a widower, and we are
getting very close to where I will
need the answer to the above
(pics! Ion.
tf he should make the first
move In that direction. I want to
know If I should uct coy. or
should I respond? O r am I the
one w ho s h o ul d m u k c the
advance to let him know I am
not adverse* to a romantic rela­
tionship? (I am not. hut I don’t
want to push for It.I
Women used to sit hack and
let the m e n ma k e all the
overtures, but perhaps women's
lib has changed all that. Or has
It?
PROPER B U T PU ZZLED
D E A R P U Z Z L E D : If you feel
like kissing him. go ahead and
kiss him. He'll probably meet
you halfway and beat you to the
iinish line.

• Uv« Music Fftdty A Saturday
-Ladies Night Wed. 7pm
9 p m *??
top 40-s rock s r o il
30c Draft
Featuring t!» STEEL CROW •FREE Poof on Sundays

***•101

Fn J3LACE"

WE GlADl'

DARTS • SUN0 DRAW TOURNAMKNT
WEDNESDAY 4 THURSDAY 7:30 PM
$200 PRIZE MONEY (Minimum 20 Players)

.*12

^ C lO W E L L ^ j

CLOSED SUNDAY

1514 S. FRENCH AVE

A W * 1 2 th T O m i p i

A to Z Collectibles

9 AM - 6 PM

"d c-w ifr" me then.
What do you think of m y
friend's theory?
PER PLEX ED
D E A R P E R P L E X E D ! Not
m uch. And if I were you. I would
"de-friend" her.

(ID IT O e ’ l NOT I : Abtoy It on a h w n m h
vacation. Following It a taitclion of toma ol
har favor Ita pail lattari.)

DEAR ABBTt Jo h n and I were
married in 1970. It was the
second time around for both of
us. Because of interfering rela­
tives. including eight children
and in-laws on both sides, who
did everything they could to
break up our marriage, we were
divorced three years later. The
problem is. we still love each
other.
Despite all the unpleasantness,
we forgave each other and con­
tinued what has always been a
wonderfully loving relationship.
We are In our mld-50s and feel
ridiculous sneaking around to be
together.
Jo h n says. "Let's say to heck
with everything, sell our houses,
move 1,000 miles away from all
the relatives and enjoy the years
we have left!"
Neither of us bus to work, and
our financial situation is good.
Should I put myself first for once
In m y life and remarry John? Or
keep up a house for m y remain­
ing unmarried daughter?

BOMMV-SATUROAV

m m m

’ ss«

b*jwmil
r m im

200400
74$ 10:1$

M iu r iin t w *
n f .t u i U M m v

1:1(1305 4S74S 10 00

DINGOL
Ml ™
I f 11 T W t /

m

REGARDING

msiio-

HENRY
HA1IM1I0ID

g53J

AITC

5:30 ra iij^ I:t5 3.30 5(45 7:159:30 ggj3

jr i .L '1 'u ijU U .u .i- S " .

* State-licensed and registered
pharmacists
* Convenience: have your prescription
filled while you shop
• We accept PCS, PAID, BC-BS
M EDIM ET and M EDICAID
• 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.

�• Sanford Htraid, Sanford, Florfda - WEdnasday. August 28. 1991

Ltqal Nolle—

Ltgal Notlcts

Ltgal Noticts

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am angagad In business al
70*3)3 Creek water Terrace. Lk.
M a ry . FL‘-3174«. Seminal*
County, Florida, under the
Fktltlou* Nam* ta UNIVER­
SAL CABINETS INO.. and tool
I intend to regltter taM name
with tha Sacretary at Slat*.
Tallahassee. Florida. In ac
cardanc* with Ih* provisions ta
the Fktltlou* Nam* Statute.
Ta Wit: Section **107. Florida
Statutes 1*57.
C. Mike McCauley
Publish: August»1771
DEI 135

LEBAL ADVERTISEMENT
BIOITgm -71

bbaiw
la*itoiEwy pwn k
topkwv
fwttviAti
m*v

NOTICE II NRRCBY
tV E N . that the Ct*y M Switord.
Florida will receive seatod MB*

ore tnooEld In BuMnwO of Hwy
17*1. FtoOWorld. Santord. lem­
mata County. Florida, under Ih*
Fktltlou* Noma of HEAD'S
SILKS B CERAMICS., and toot

up to 1:10 PAS. on Tuesday.
September 14, 1*71 In the Pur­
chasing Office. Room t*t tor Rw
following Itome:
AUTOMATBO
WASTEWATER SAMPLER
ARMd* ore to be delivered or
mailed to: The City el Sawtor 0.
Purchasing Offko. 3*0 N. Pork
Avenue. Santord. F lorIda any.
The taotod AM* will bo pubtkty
opened later that tamo day at
3:M P M . In tha City Com
mlttkn Chambers. Roam 117.
Santord Clt

ot State.
Tallahassee. Florida. In ac
cordonco with the provisions of
tho Fktltlou* Nome Statute,
To-Wit: Section **107. FlorMo
Statutes I7S7.
WonddAL Head
Jams*A. Hood
Publish: August ML 1771
O il If*
IK THE CIRCUIT COURT
IN AMO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,

ore available, of no
cost, In tha Purchasing Offko,
Room Mt, JW N. Pork Avenue.
Santord. Florida. (« 7 ) 330M l]

CASE NOi 71-llfS-CA-IAK
C A R D IN A L IN D U S T R IE S
M ORTOAGE COMPANY. An

wlllnafbti
The City of Santord rooorvoo
the rl
or oil
causa, to waive tochnkailtlet or
to occopt the Md which In If*
ludgtmonf boot a r m the Intorest of the City
CITY OF SANFORD
Woltor Shearin
Purchasing Agent
August 33.1771
Publish: August M. 1771
DEI 171

Plaintiff.
N ORMAN L. H U L L and
SHERYL L HULL, hi*wile.
NOTICE OF SALS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
T H A T , pursuant le Final
Judgment deled August It. tttl.
I n C a t o N u mb e r
fl-tStoCA-IAK. ot tho Circuit
Court of Somlnolo County. PierMM IN whkh CARDINAL IN
DUSTRIIS MORTOAOE COAL
FANV, An Ohio Coraoroften it
top PUtoWt and NORMAN L.
HULL and SHERYL L. HULL,
hk wife, are tha 0*tond«nti. I
will tall to tha highaat bM*r tor
total at tha West Front door of
tho County Ceurfhouo*. Santord.
Florida. 1I:M am., an Sep17, tout, too fallowing

-------IN TW EB f7f f t « fiTk ------CIRCUIT COURT
FORSEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
CASE NOt 7MM-CP
IN R l: ESTATE OF
JAMES I . MULLINS
NOTICE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE Nut
on Ih* TJwd dey sf July. I7»t,
ill In

tho Final Ju
SCH ED ULE"A "
Thai parcel of land lying In
Section 14 Township 70 South,
Range a Iota. Semlnota County

SunBank. N.A. Mr the
Jam** E. Mullins,
the amount of P I.71
ore oil sf
UNKNOWN

Beginning at tha Nor Ihwell
comer at to* Norfheest quarter
of Section 14 run S. o r 14'74" E .,
3 ta .fl fool: thence run S.
OtaWM" €., 377 14 fata; thence
run N. g r s r s r ' I . 440 W toot;
thence run S. 00*07'0*” E .,

assets remain unclaimed.
Unless tald fundi are claimed
on or bolero six (t) month* from
the del* of first puttketlen sf
thlt notice, told fund* will he
torwsrdod to the Stato of Flortdo. purtuonl to FlorMo Sfatufs*

1700.00 toot': thenco run S.
00‘ 10'z r’ l „ 1UI.K7toot to too
Feint of Beginning; thence run
S. 00*to'13" I .. 33110 toot;
thence run S. italT4T ' W..
330.00 foot; thonco run N.
JtaSTM'' W.. 1*3.00 Iota; thane*

713.11*.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I
have tet my bond and official
tool sf Santord. Florida, this
33rd day of July, 1771.
(SEAL)
MARYANNS MORSE
Clark at theCircuit Court
By Jane I. Nettko
Deputy Clerk
Publish: July 31 A August U.

run N. 0**04'I*" W., 43100 f*of;

thonco run N. orlO'23" W..
177.0* foot; thonco run N.
g r o w l.. 10* 31 toot; thonco
run S. *taI0*3l»" I.. 17.73 toot;
thonco run N. M*4r i 7" E..
*44.00 foot to th* Faint ol

1771
DEH-MO

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNE SIRMTBENTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INAROFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 7M I74CA-3AN
Home Saving*of America, P.A.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Siemens. Doon.otol..

Tho above described parcel
contain* 100 acres more or low.
Tho above described parcel It
*ub|oct to o 33 foot Ingress—
EgrdM easement of toe Easterly
lino of sold parcel. taM line
having a bearing and distanca of
S. OriO'73" E., 331*0 Iota; on
the SoutherInline ot said parcel,
said Una having a bearing and
distance of S. tria e * " w ..

NOTICE OP
F O R I CLOSURESALE
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN
that pursuant to a Final Judg­
ment at torociotur* doted
August 11. 1701, and ordered In
Cote No. fllU * C A -1 4 K of ih*
Circuit Court of the E ighteenth
Judicial Circuit In ond tor Seminolo County, Florida wherein.
Homo Savings of America, F.A.,
Plaintiff, and Slaman S. Doan,
Lite Doan, spouse *1 Slaman S.
Doan, and Alary K. Curtis (Te­
nant) and John Dee I Tenant)
are the Defendant*. I will Mil to
the highest and best bidder tor
cash at the West (rent door sf
the Seminole County Courthouse, In Santord. Florida at
11:00 o'clock A.M. on Ih* 34th
day ot September, 1701, the
following described property at
M l forth In told Final Judg­
ment, to wit:
Let 41. NORTHSHORI RE
PLAT, according to the Plot
thereof a* records* In Plot Boob
II. Fags* to ll. Public Record*
ol Seminole County, Florida.
Having a street address ol:
*7] Northshore Circle. Cetaalberry, F lor Ida 32707.
Together with oil Intoretl
which Borrower now hot or may
hereafter acquire In or to tald
property and In and to: la) Oil
easements and right* ol way
appurtenant thereof: ond lb) all
buildings structures, Improve
merits, fixtures, ond appurte­
nances now or here*tier pieced
thereon. Including, but not
limited to. all apparatus and
equipment, whether or not phyt
ically affixed to the land or any
building, used to provide or
supply air cooling, sir condi­
tioning. hoot, gat. wafer, light,
powtr. refrigeration, ventila­
tion, laundry, drying, dishwash­
ing, garbage, disposal or other
services: and all watte vent
system s, antenna*, pool
equipment, window coverings,
drapes end drapery rods,
carpeting and floor covering,
awnings, ranges. Oven*, water
heaters and attached cabinets;
II being Intended and agreed
that such Items be conclusively
deemed to bo affixed to and to
be part ol ttw real property; and
(cl all water and water rights
(whether or not appurtenant)
and thartt ol stock pertaining to
such water or water rights,
ownership ol which allectt said
property, and (d) Ih* rants.
Income, issues and profit* ol all
property
D A TE D thlt 71st day ol
August. Ittl
MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By Jan* E Jatewic
Deputy Clerk

Publish August 7t * September
4.1711
DEI 741

Iln* of taM parcel.k taM Una
hov tog o boar Ing and tostance of
N. StaST'M" W,. 1*3.00 toot; amt
on too Southerty lino of told
parcel, having a bearing and
distanca ta N. 0**44'1*" W..
433.04 toot.
Doled this 21*1 day ta August.
1*ft.
(Court Seed
MARVANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY Jens E. Jaeewk
As Deputy Clerk
FuWIth: August H A September
41771
D EI 3*7
I N T N I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CIVIL OIVIIION
CAS« NO. 7M 7U-CA140
O L IN O A L E F E D E R A L BANK.
FED ER A L SAVINGS BANK.
Plaintiff.
THOMAS L. HALL. BARBARA
S. HALL, hi* wlto. RUSSELL L.
DEVORI.a/k/a RUSSELL
DEVORE and BRIDGEWATER
NEIGHBORHOOD
ASSOCIATION. INC.,
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : THOMAS L. HALL
BARBARA S. HALL
RatMMkc* Unknown
• P.O. Sox 14002
Orlando. Florida 33*14 4003
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D that an
action to toractaM a mortgage
an the fallowing described prep
arty In Semlnota County.
Florida'
L O T 24. EA S T CAM OEN.
ACCORDING TO TH E PLAT
TH ER EO F AS RECORDED IN
P L A T BOOK 34. FACES 17
THROUGH 4*. PUBLIC REC
O R DS O F S E M I N O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA,
has bean Iliad against you and
you art required to serve a copy
ot yaur written defenses. It any.
la It on E N G L I S H . Me
CAUGHAN A O'BRYAN. P A .
Plalntllt's attorneys, whose
address it Fast Oftlca Bex 14414.
Fart Lauderdale. Florida 31307.
on or baler* September 33. l*fl.
and flta Ih* original with the
Clark ta this Court either before
service on Plaintiff's attorneys
or Immediately thereafter;
otherwise a default will be
anfarad against you lor Ih*
relief demanded In the com
pieinlorpolltlon.
D ATE Don August It. Ittl.
MARVANNE MORSE
A t CNrkol Ih* Court
By: Jane E-Jatewic
As Deputy Clerk
Publish August 31. 31 4 S*p
lember 4 II. 1*71
D EI 771

CELEBRITY

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Thera la hardly anything In
world that aonta m in cannot maka a intto worte and i
a Ittto cTMdpdr " — John Ruakin

CLASSIFIED ADS

Semlnota
333-3611

Orlando - Winter Fork
431-9793

n -H tip W M -g

ST. JOHNS RIVER WATER
MANAMMERTDI STRICT
The D k h k t^ Jm n e tk * ta Its
intent to issue p permit to to*
fellawing appfkanf(t) on Sep
•ember 14.17*1:
ALAFAVA PALM VALLEY
ASSOCIATES. CWS ACTING
A G E N T S . 314# M A ITL A N D
CEN TER PARKWAY. SUITE
10S. M A ITL A N D . FL 37711.
appllcatlen iatt74417AM3. Tho

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CV IV lOCaifG
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ntnomn
Tuesday tons frtday 13 Neen Tha Day Before PubltwNen
Sunday And Mendey 3 30 F.M. Friday
ADJUSTM EN TS AND C i l D f T S : M N » evw N * sr

jw

County. Section 34 Township It
South. Rang* 31 East. The
application it ter a 4.441 acre
A D D I T I O N O F M O B IL E
HOMES to ba known a* PALM
V ALLEY EXPANSION. PHASE
IV. Tha racatving water body It
ECONLOCKHATCHEE RIVER.
CUtSSIH.
ORLAND O -LAKE FOREST
JO IN T VENTURE. POST O F­
FICE BOX 7MSM. LOTTOWOOO.
F L 33741, a p p l l c a f l a n
M-II7KMSAM3. The prelect It
located In Seminole County,
Section 10, Township 17 South.
Rang* 30 East. The appllcatlen
is tor 33.4 acres to dear and
mulch a 10 toot wide path to ba
known a t LA K E FO R EST,
SECTIO N 41. Tha receiving
wafer body It M M SMITH
CANAL. CLASS III.
SEM IN OLE CO U N TY. 174
BUSH B O U LE V A R D . SAN
FORO. FL 37773. application
44-117 OMtAGM. The prajact It
located In Seminole County,
Section 7* 31. Township I* South,
Rang* 30 East. The application
I* ter 43.100 acre* ta ROAD
CONSTRUCTION to be known
at R I N E H A R T ROAD
EX TEN SIO N . The receiving
water body It LO C K H A R T
SMITH CAN AL
OAVIO R. SPEAR. SEMI­
N O L E C O U N T Y SC H O O L
BOARD. 1311 M IL O N V IL L E
A V E -. SANFORO. FL 31713.
application i* l)7 0311AO. The
prelect I* located In Semlnota
County, Section 07,-Township 11
South. Rang* 3* East. The
application It for a OSS acre
M ULTIPURPOSE BUILDING
to b* k n o w n as L A K E
B R A N T L E Y HIGH SCHOOL
MULTIPURPOSE BUILDING.
Tho receiving water body I*
LAKE BRANTLEY. CLASS III.
C IT Y OF A LTA M O N TE
SPRIN G S. 27S N E W B U R Y PORT AVENUE, ALTAMONTE
SPRINGS. FL 33741. application
M117 0I14AG. Tha project I*
located In Seminole County,
Section 11, Township II South.
Rang* 17 East. The appllcatlen
Is tor a 43.400 acre PARK to be
known at LAKE LOTUS PARK.
Tha receiving water bodies are
L IT T L E WEKIVA RIVER 4
LAKE LOTUS.
Tha District gives notice of Its
Intent to deny Ih* request lor a
permit by Iha following appllc
anils) on September 10.1771;
B A Y S IO E IN V E S T M E N T ,
1I1S S O U T H F E D E R A L
H IG H W A Y . F T . L A U D E R
DALE. FL 3331*. application
•*1I7 00UAMY. Tha project It
located In Seminole County.
Section it. Township 71 South,
Rang* 13 East. Tha application
is lor 0 *34 acres ot CON
STRUCTION to ba known as
RIVERWOODS
M A R G A R E T CA M M A CK.
2*00 F O R T L A N D ROAD.
GENEVA. FL 31733. application
1*117 0143A. The project It lo­
cated In Semlnota County. Sac
tlon 35. Township 30 South,
Rang* 31 East. The application
It for a 3*7 000 acre SUBOIVI
SION AND RECREATIONAL to
be known at ST. JOHNS YACHT
AND TENNIS CLUB ON LAKE
HARNEY. Tha receiving water
body It LAKE HARNEY.
M IC H A E L A N D B R IA N
MORRO. 313 ROLLING WOOO
T R A I L . A L T AMON T E
SPRINGS. FL 33714 application
*4 117 017IA. Tha pro|*cl is lo
calad In Seminole County, sac
lion 33. Township II South.
Range 3* East. Tha application
Is lor a 1.130 acre ROAD CON
STRUCTION to be known at
LAKE TRANQUILITY SUBDI
VISION
TH O M A S M U R R A Y . 4102
ILEN E COURT. ORLANDO. FL
33*04. application «4ll7n*SA
Tha project I* located In Seminol* County, Sections 31. 33.1*.
77, Township II South. Rang* 31
East. Tha application It lor a
447 *00 acre SINGLE FAMILY
RESIDENT' *.L to be known at
CHULUOTA PROPERTY ONE
The receiving water body Is
ECONLOCKHATCHEE
The lltalsl containing each ol
tho above listed application!*)
are avallabla lor Inspection
Monday through Friday except
for legal holidays. 100 a m to
3 00 p m al tha St Johns River
Water Management District,
Highway 100 West. Patelka.
Florida
Tho District will lake action
on aach permit application
listed abqv* unless a petition lor
an administrative proceeding
I hear mg I is tiled pursuant to the
provisions ol section 130.37, F S ,
and section XOC 1311. F A C A
person whose substantial inter
ests are allecled by any ol Ih*
Districts proposed permitting
decisions identified above may
petition tor an administrative
hearing in accordance with sac
lion 130 37. F S Petitions must
comply with the requirements ol
Florida Administrative Cod*
Rules « C 1 III and « C I 331
and be hied with (received by)
tha District Clerk P O Box
1437. Palatka. Florida 33174
147* P e t i t i o n s lo r ad
minislrative hearing on the
above applicationlsl must be
tiled within fourteen 1141 daysol
publications ol this notice or
within fourteen 1141 days ot
actual receipt ol this intent,
whichever first occurs Failure
lo til* a petition within this time
period shall constitute a waiver
ol any right such person may
h a v e lo re q u e s t an ad
m lnlstratlva determination
Ihearlngl under taction 130 37.
F S . concerning the sublect
permit application Petitions
which are not tiled in ac
cor dance with tn* above pro
Visions are sub|*ct to dismissal
Publish August 27. 17*1
DEI 773

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Accepting applkptton*
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went* you to start today I
AAA EMPLOYMENT

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paid. Call A tty*: Wattoa

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l-PW-SSMUl F L Bar I474414S
4IP7N443__________________

I KC0MAB0TMV

For Details: I 4W 4314334
ywyi— —P— ry — b^ w ^ i

■ k a U a I t a h a t i * - - - - &gt;^ wx------1

* a Tn ebiFnIIm T a *
W e need at l a a t t a
"PROPOSITION i n Plus an
•cross tha board 14% REDUCT KM. Call:

TOM CARPENTER m -PM

BE A Llteassd Cuwhactor. Gen•rat/Buildsr/RetldentlaL Call
tor tata 14*433314*3

Flee* wk. pay. MM HaUdayt
•M Vacltan. HMHk A Oataal
Im w m ca. Apply in Person:
3340Otd Mary Rd.___________

27— Nurstry A **~
Child Curt
ARC SKULL DAYCARE. TLC
tar bUtat A toddtars. Hal
meals. Esc. Bars....... 3334114
CHILO CARR In my ham*,
leddlars la 4 yra. H R S
cartllled. 331 N )3 ___________
CHILO CARE, family setting,
all shirts. Nag. rates. Fenced
yard, hat meals. 331-477*
CHILO CANE, at my heme.
150/wk. day or night. Any ago.
Hiddtn Lake are*. 3314*71

"BANKRUPTCY In•miter'
"DIVORCE hemSTS"
K.Mewachl. Alton*ay. *447104

Ltgal N o llc tt

RESTAURANT/PIZZERIA tor
rent, wlto equipment. Seats
44. Ready to open. Corner
17*1 and 35th St. Santord.
Call anytime, 34*3)43

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 400
Northern Way *1447. Winter
Springs. FL 3370i. Seminole
County. Florida, under the
Fictitious Name ta LIBER TY
SYSTEMS, and that I Inland to
register said name wlto to*
Secretary of Stato. Tallahassee.
Florida, in accordance with tha
provisions of tha Fictitious
Nam* Statute. To-Wit: Section
4*3 07, Florida Statute* 1*57.
Edmond DIRuua
Publllh: August 34.1771
DEI 143
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In butlneu al 3*7*
Beni Hickory Cr„ Lengwaod. FI.
Seminote County. Florid*, under
the Fktltlou* Name ol SPREAD
T H E WORD, and tool I Intend to
regltter told name with tha
Secretary of Stato, Tallahassee,
Florida, In accordance with the
provliloni Ot the Fktlllout
Noma Statute, To Wit; Section
MS (77. Florida Statute* I7S7.
Carolyn M. Pottlcrow
Publllh: AugutllS, 177)
UEI 7*4
NOTICE OF
F IC T.'IO U S NAME
Notice It i reby given that I
am engaged in butlnett at 733
Longwood Markham Road.
Santord. Florida 33771 (315.
Seminole County, Florida, under
the Flctllloui Name ol FLOYD
COVE NURSERY, and that I
Intend to rogltter tald name
with the Secretary ol Stato.
Tallahattao, Florida. In ac
cor dance with the provlilont ol
the Flctltlout Name Statute.
ToW II Section 0*107. Florida
Statute* 1717.
Patrick M. Stamila
Publllh August 30. 1771
DEI 3*1
NOTICE
Notice It hereby given that
The School Board ol Seminole
County. Florida, at the regular
meeting on September I*. 17*1.
m the Board Room ol tha
Admlnlitratlva Olllcet. II11
Mellonville Avenue. Sanford.
Florida will adopt tha following
manual* and procedurat
P U P IL P B O O R IS S IO N
PLAN Tha purpota of tha Pupil
Progression Plan It to ensure
uniformity whereby pupil*Ol the
district progress from one level
ot the curriculum to Ihe next It
is the m*ent ol this plan to
ensure that each pupil l» pr°
video the maximum opportunity
to succeed in school this plan
reflect* minor cherjat that
were neerssary to comply with
stato requirement*
Copies ol these documents are
available tor inspection at the
Administrative Oltices ol the
School Board at 1311 Mellonville
Avenue. Santord. Florida
Joseph Williams. J r ,
Chairman
The School Board ol
Seminole County Florida
Publish August 7*. I**t
O H 317

I AMERICAN AIRLIN E I way
tickets tram Orlando. FI. to
Syracuse. NY. Mutt ba used
by 434 Eastefterl 33*7?7t

Fulltime. 11-7 shift
Com* join our loam al DoBary
Manor, an SNF with tub acute
unit providing car* and torvIcot to skilled patient* la.
ventilation dependent. Wo alio
provide a variety ot other
tervlcot utually ottered In the
acute care totting. Experience
tMirebto but will trato. Com
petIII ve talary and bonelltt.
Excellent working environ­
ment. Apply;
DENARY MANOR
M N. they 17/01
OsBary, MP.7AM-4PM— I O I
• SHOP W ELD ER *
Top pay tor your tkllltl Stable
company will hire today 11
AAA 1 M P LO Y M IN T

Ttew.wbM.nt-iiTt

sttust
With tome tallowing, com
minion or rental I neM A i

SJ— Busin— b
O p p o iiu n r t k B

In our Santord ottka. le t!
lead* and pay available. II you
are professional and have a
‘ voice we'll train you to
maka 1334330 plua per week I
Call Lite ItAM to tPM tor
eppelaOmiet. 33H37*________

UUUBUSMUSIS

Warchousc/Driwfs

Interested In doing Military.
Federal or Slat* contracts
Call............................ .33*7037

*234723 weakly &gt; bonelltt.
IWIII train) 1-341-

1-tATTiCH

41—M— y fg L—d
MJTOCMMT?

For buty orthopedic ottlce.
Contact Sharon.............. 7*7 3333

I3N/MI PMCtSSIM

Nona-bad bankrupt 7 Need a
car, boot or ham* loan? No
dawn payment loan* atranged, l enien t Lid. 44* 7*4*

PNOM I ORDERS.
People call you to ardor. Will
Train. I M b 7314170 Ext. S40

ALTAMONTE SPRMRS - Hugo
1 bdrtn. I bath, wothor/d
tMt/me. 4S44223__________
APT. FOR LEASE. Ratorencet.
Moar- downtown. Off tf. park
top. 333 t»7»er 3334773

KTTIITNM AMOTIL

Room tor rant by day , week
or monthI Coodratotl

muotocourrami
**MMONtW**

R0S1CLIFF AFARTMUTS
New 3 bedroom apartments,
tor SSIO. W/D connections,
tcreenod pallet and extra
ttorago clotef. 11*7 sq. ft.
Located on Lk. Mary Blvd.
Call m i t u
Equal Homing Opportunity I
CLEAN I BDRNL. t bath, no
pelt. Reference!. S33S mo. ,
1334dap. 373 1073__________
EFFICIENCY at Kallet Land
Ing. 1310/mo. utlllllet In­
cluded. Free canoe uto. no
peft............. ...............333 4470

EXTRA clean 1 bdrm J bath.
Wather/dryer, tcreenod patio,
dlthwather. S400/mo plut 1300
tec Small pet OK Atawt
OARAOE APT., 1Bdrm.. cut* A
clean. AC. Water paid. 1331
plut dap.................. 3P-IHI

JUSTLIKEAHOME
Single floor with private
entrance. Studio*. 1 A 1
bedroom*, many extra* In
eluding ttorago space.
Quiet, cozy community. Nice
landscaping ON SITE
MAMAOSHI
IS WHO CAR I I I

SMFOtOCOMT....3234311
LAKE JE N N IE APTS. Under
now managomontl Call ut
about our move In tpecialt
tram 0*71 Broker. 133(734

LET A

SPECIALIST
.'fi.

D O IT !
HandyMin
B IS T FR IC B II Quality work
A n y th ln g / E v o ry th ln g .
Homos/Otflca. Total repairs.
Improvement* | do It aill
Fret Est. Anytlmo. 334 7I»)

CARPENTRY. MASONARY

Air Conditioning
B H — H i—
OCI A/C
Fast same day
service. Allmeitet. Freest!'*.
477 If 14,74 hours. 7dev*

AppUbik —
RIW/IISIOIf FliMCIS
Suy/Sefl a Recead/ Guaranteed

NOH! AFFUMC£~322-3SS3
Automotiv*
D E TA IL F IV E R . Let yaur car
sparkle for summer! Comp
detail service I .........33**713

painting and tile work Free
estimates Llsc'd. Call 373 433*

CwxRfitry
CARPENTER All kinds el home
repairs, painting A ceramic
Ilia R kM rd Press 331-3773
CARPENTRY. Home repairs,
remodel. Decks. Shads A
Garages Q U A LITY!...nt-»*7

1rptf/Floors
ADEPT CARPET CLEANING.
Circular dry loam ty* dry In I

*47 433)

C*r—t Cl—iiIiiq
CAEFCT/UPLHOLS1EEV
Cleaning, repair*, installation

^^TckyjstCta^imjasiOtt^^
C l— n lis a S E r v l c t ~

l^lU Ing Uo
ABLE BUILDING Atavers. toe.
Buy Sell. House* to be moved
Leveling. Foundation repair
The Sal* Head Feepta 3314144

Building Contractors
• ADDITIONS. All remodeling
Quality werkt Trivblssitastt
Reference* Met • • *74*417
NEW. REMODEL. REPAIR
HOMES. OFFICES. STORES

Ail types camtrvcttaxi. Res/Cam
13S4SJ3 10. Selinf. CBCHTSM

CATHY'S CLEANING SERV­
ICE References, reasonable
rates Licensadt Call 33J 7470

Coiicr&gt;t&gt;
CAPTAIN C O N C M Ts Tw a T!*
Beal 3 Man Quality Opera
tlent 334-t!lA/7*e77*1
TC n3yTO &gt;
ONE CA LL DOSS IT A LLI
Painting, masonry, welding
mowing, etc II PH. 33*1770

Bovlng 4 Hauling
B A R NAULINO. Yard l i «
appl , turn Cheap/an tim
SIVup Call Ray M7 7307

• • •NAULINO,yard tret

appliances, furniture, trash
any kind! Rktsard.......373-77

Horn# ImprowiwRnt*

Tainting

C o S c iF ^ e ^ B w ^ J T

carpentry! Home, ottlce.
kitchen, batht 33*03*7

Homo Rtpairi
THE HOU1I DOCTOR! All
homo repairs! Point/Termite
damage Lk./ toe
333-7*11

Lawn iRrvicR
COMPLETE Quality L e w n T
Landtcaping. Tree Service A
Irrigation, compafitivo rales.
tree estimatesSunnv UT? 7*7*
BRUCE'S Lawn Metal*nance
Call Bruce 331 711*
U O tI lor new customers)
LAWN CANE I U A UFI Free
estimates Senior discounts
Trash removal
333-1711
LAW N M A IN T E N A N C E
Commercial/Residential Lew
Retest Call Tern
333*33*
RANDY'S Q U A L ITY LAWN.
Complot* car*, clean up*
Sint* 17*3 Free at*. 1331*714

1tli ‘t •/■//sf • ) o u r llu ^ i n r nn / r n \
S / t /'#•/ \lnlilh

to n ry
TW P MASONRY, triek. Modi,
stucco, concrete Renovation*
Lk'd. A ins R 1 M M N 4 W

lhi\ I ni

DICK FINOLA'S FA IN TII
Quality workl Int/Ext.. LI
A Insured Free est1333 &lt;73
IN T IR IO R / fK T E I
HOUSE PAINTINQ.
exp Freer*) 1301*7)

NumbJr
HOMES PUJNBIEC

All your plumbing naadst 34
_hoursl fRFC013770 373 3*00
P r — B u ra O t a n i n a
PRESSURE CLEANINO MAN
House wash/painting |41 and

^J^RogarjMiaMOOAAMPM
^ U c n ia rta i 4

rypingSfyicts

r » n &lt;Tm
. S
O T vy SUS/T ^B kB Z
DJ Enterprises. MIB (

St. Santord 3340471/13

Tr— Sarvict
NICN-S T i l l REMOVAL “
hr tervie*. Iraq estimates,
best prices! 774 M il

Is I m r

( till ( III s s///f’ll. .I'J'J 'Jlill

I

Is

�K r t W CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

h**«*£,

W W y a it p
XSAWSfrl*.

TAU I f N IK X T I
MOMOWI? DOWN
except tax. tag. ttH*. ate
W C H IV Y SPfCTBUM - 4
IdY
OfT P^kO^ST **aOY«. etaraat Only S1JF.N per
VMM (41 flMflUM « »♦.*%

UN D O D O . If. 1 bdrm. »*S/wk
fhN O ff Mcurlty or IMS/mo.
t bdrm. |4U/mo or 1110/wk
Pool, laundry. A/C. mmo

It. Jotwfe Doolty, *7104173
1 IDRM . IV, PATH, control

*1taper month.
femily rm. w/fpk.. If. utility

bldg.. now carpaf ft point. tstt
Ntao a form, a both. Control
H/A . prlvoto fanctd yd.
StoJ/ma, tttO locurlty
Result*
-----------------Really.
t.................C1-144P

month.......................JPM 41.
V I I I M O O f U N O In profrooo.
Como ft tool CuN and clean
(olm otM l I4IS p lut dtp.

STENSTROM

REALTY, INC.

No Quality Homo* In Seminolo/Oronfo/Volutia/Loho
Cocastlat.

103— Houses
Unf urnlshdff/ Rent

Wr Rst and led
moat property than
anyone in the O u te r
Sanfod/lake Mary area.

near high school. 311113*
1 BDRM. DUPLEX. carport.
Mcurlty system, lull kitchen.

niffaa.dlKauntod.MtS

a BDRM l&gt;t BATH, Sanford. All
a p p lla n c o t. A/C.
weshar/dryer hooh-wpt. no
pott. MOO/mo i f f 7400 attar 4

ova
O DNIR it/tl and an. Ottko
bldg Croat tor all typo* at
buSIna**. m 107/1134401454

- on 1/3 ocrol Now point,
fpic. family, living and dining
room*. Priyacy tanco. S74JM
IM E M M T .U S S 1 N M

|3,ON DORN
• V I • renovated. now carpot.
point, appllancot. loncod
yard.............................111. NO

1 BEDROOM
MOVE-IN
SPECIAL

'tr.aoo dawn, attomo no qeeitly on thlt two llory 1/1', with
appliance*, and fireplace.
Fenced yard with pool 1144.300

OWNER PINANCINB •
Plnocrttt. 1/1. living, dining,
family rm.. wcurlty »y»tem,
fenced yard... 141.tOO
DELTONA 1/1 on I aero, u r
porch, carport. 143.*00

W IL L M P T 1/1 VILLA
Nice patio, area pool, tennis,
part, lake. Eat In kit. catti.
colling*. Ju»t............... W H O
J EM U P AREA l/ l’ v
Country ettate w/pool on S
aero*. Thlt home ha* It all.
Call ut today............. Utf.MO.

liv in g and d in in g area
w/tlrvptaco. Wood dtch. If.
traot. Privacy and Mcurlty.
Eitra room tor ottlco, hobby
or poet 3rd bdrm. Ttnnlt and
pool privilege*. tft.SOO
Day*. SU-t*M
Bvet/wttbondt. OT-HW

• E L E C T R I C Typ o ia rllo r.
Smith Corona. Priced to Sell I
n o ............................. a n m is

Courte*y Uwd Car*, m i l l l

ASSUME »V,% MORTOAOE
No quail lying Great rm.. oaf
In kit. Skylight*. V.000 down.
17,000 downl............... 174.100-

1»S— Machinery/Toots
t TON VALE HOIST. 1 77 FI.
A lu m . W alk Board*. 1
Sky climber motor*. 1 chop
sew*. t electric hacksaw.

V I HALF OF DUPLEX
Equipped kit. vaulted colling*,
Indoor utility, panfry. Can b*

t i l S. SANFORD AVE Ottlco
building Approx 1.000 I* ft
Covered parking Opposite
Chamber of Commerce bldg.
By owner, tff.000 *07 1411400
or I tOO 3*3 3400

Come Home To
Country Style

153— AcreageLots/Salt
FIV E ACRE Lk. Harney corner
lot Horae* ok. Security gate,
boat ramp. 110.000

m -P g ts 4 Supplies
■LACK lab/ft Idea retriever
ml* oupt. 130 So* 41PM at
1104 Rudder Circle, Sanford
(No* ftp Sanford Airport I
COCIt ATI IL . talk* ft whistle*. 1
yr* old *30 w/cago QUAKER
PARROT, talk* tom* I yr old
1100 w/cage 111 4311 Day*.
FR EE BASSETT MOUNO. 1 yr.

333— Auto Parts
/ Accessories

from U and up Mounting alto
available Mon Frl. IS. Ill*
Celery Ave, Santord_________

O CALA N A T’ L FO R E S T,
WOaded left I S3.*30 each, no
money down I *7141 monthly.
1100*07 3074________

POOL. T O — N COURT,
VOLLEYBALL COURT
EACH APARTMENT INCLUDES

Cable TV
Washcr/Dry in Select Units
Self Clean C
kemaker
Dishwasher
Caibage
Disposal
Pool
Clubhouse
2450 Hartwell Ave., Siaford

•New Corpelng •New Appllancot Includ­
ing Refrigerator, Range, Dihwoaher. Oarbage Disposal •Wbaher ft Oryere instated
n unto tor an addbonal monthly too •24
hour emorgency maintaranca tarviee.

330-5204
&gt; a p a rtm e n is

21/2 K R IS
SUPER R U TI 1 bdrm I bath
home. Iliad kitchen and
la u n d ry room , vaulted
calling* Neatly landKtped lot
w/iprinfcler tyiltm Include*
1 shed* w/runnlng water end

Zoned county A 1 Already
split into 1 building alia*.
Close to town B B T T I E
HURRYI Priced to M il at
*11.300

c u u n ru o u u
Wednesday. Thursday. Setur
day 73*5 W St Rd 44 4 mile*
w**t of 14, I milt beyond
Vaughn Nursery * *

MON.-SAT.9-6 • Sun. 12-9

T A U troo K AMFOWT BLVP TURNOUT
l t d OF A MLB, BWN ON WONT

215— Wanted to Nuy

3 2 4 -4 3 3 4
W A T I R F R O N T I Comlem
porary 1 bdrm 1 bath home,
light and brlghl Spa. wood
deck, side door entrance. 1 car
garage Ttrrltlc
price at........... ........... S7f.N0

Step Up Into A
G reat A partm ent!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

217— Oerage Salts

W A T E R F R O N T CO N D OI 1
BORM 2 BATH, *73.3001
Motivated Mllar I Cel I Drenda
Ownbv Real Estate *04 *17 7*33
’l l CH IV Y 1/1 ten rick Up
Good condition 4 cylinder,
custom wheel* 37 000 J » *4*1

U DO0 0 1 RAM
1/4 ton. A/C. 4
30.000 original
newI Trade tor
upor *3.300

I01SS Volusia Ave
OengeCity. FI

504-7754035

** * I BUT HOUSIS

223— Miscellaneous

*

A N T CONDiTIONI
Need repalrsT Behind on
payments* Call Greg, 337 4714

14X43

230— Vehicles
Wanted

1/7 split Nice family

AA AUTO SALVAGE

LESS THM RENT!
7 and 12 Month Lease
Available
• Bwwnmng pee* end Igtoed

* BONOHONEY 7 3 /4 % *

*1, 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms*

$ 1 0 0 O ff

F IR S T

M O N T H S

R E N T

Carpet A Vinyl, Calling Fan, Variicals A
Minis, Pod, Tannis Court, Clubhouse A
Laundry Room
bAfttOHU

* J2l-0bd4

SHSsl* Call80-ltt

30 year fuad rata lor 7.1 and 4
bedroom homes. In Seminole.
Volusia and Orange counliet
OOV*T ASSISTANCE
W/DOWN PAYMENT
ANDCLOSINO COSTS.
(HAP FUNDS) ‘Mutt have
salitlaclory or no credit

heavy duty.
tp. AM-FM.
miles Like
smaller pick
7*1 703*

ot OeBery

14X34
1/1. get and electric
home
ft 300
14X31

1/1 spl't. '**&lt;&gt; an electric

11X11 1 bdrm double roolover
Ig screened rm end shed
Adult park *3 000 371 31*7

W I W EIOHANDPAVI
eGARAOC DOOR O P fN IR
Sears 1/1 HP let* car remote
S730BO
_________374 0033
OGAS LAWN (D O E R 7 HP
Briggs A Stratton, rebuilt
e n g i n e N e w tun* up
Goodwheelt E ,c stupe tiOO
Firm MS Caialina Dr San
lord 3710431 __________ __
OGLASS COLLECTION Imita
l.on milk and carnival glass,
assorted colors tlOOtekesell
331 M30

Top *1 tor iunk
Cars A Trucks
■ mg *4t MM tor gusty

235—Motorcycles
and Bikes
O M OTORCYCLE

T R A IL E R

E ic e lle n t con dition' Costs
*300 Sailing *100 Cash only'
3*4 4034

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

�IV

O’

r

*

i » . i •

' '

- r

PETER
b GOTT.M.D.

'M

* -

n5

•

be seen In conjunction w ith
ctes. A d d is o n 's disease.

w hen ecsema — s common skin
inflammation — heals, the new
akin m ay remain lighter In color
than the surrounding tissue.

WHAT HAPPENS IF A PERSON
REFUSES TO 60 TO SCHOOL?

Finally, scars are often de­
pigmented.

THE SHERIFF COMCS AND

Th e re is no way to prevent the
skin manifestations of albinism
o r vitiligo. Post-traumatic de­
pigmentation is best treated b j
plastic surgery or the avoidance
of Injury.

6ET5 YOU. AND THROWS YOU
IN A PUN6C0N WITH NO POOD
AND WATER FOR TIN YEARS!

'

T o give you more Information.
I am sending you a free copy of
m y Health Report "Ecsema ft
Psoriasis."
D I A I D M . O O T T t I 'm
plagued w ith large wrinkles and
bags under m y eyes. I’ve been
told people in show business use
Preparation H for this, yet I've
been afraid to try the remedy.
W hat do you think?

SCCICTVOUJES A VCBSP
lAGGfc CX&amp;T T O T H t
.
JAMES BROTHERS.

l

KAUfAM

m

APOm M N?

■ ■

j

*

I

AoaAKm w
w o u u M TH u rr
fife Office/ &gt;

WMAfb WRONG WITHMY DON'T I 00
^^ATTlfijpft ___ ,

MVM.~

f/m ftojJv

0UT MMIV SUfPMiD
V j j D UK* IT/

It's no good If a defender has
w inners In his hand unless he
also has an entry to that hand so
that he can cash those winners.
Cover the West and South
cards. Against three no-trum p,
yo u r partner leads the heart
Jack. Declarer tries d u m m y's
king, but you. East, win w ith the
ace. A t this point. South's spirits
noticeably sag: he Is expecting
the whole suit to be run. But
after cashing the heart queen,
despite hunting assiduously for
another heart to play, you can't
find one. How do you continue
the defense?
N orth m ight have reversed
w ith two spades on the second
round, but there isn't m uch
point to that bid. It Is correct Just
to shoot out three no-trump.
Y o u know that your partner.
East, m ust be holding at least
fo ur heart w in n e rs.'b e ca u se

E
kdIHBill

m
."n
tiu m
MB
v*

m

Ppm

a

: z a |F ff
kduIR
!■ ■ ■
a im
!■ ■ ■
hdM S
!■ ■ ■
. . .

South w ould have M d one heart
over one diamond artth a fourcard suit. B ut how c m West get
on lead to cash those winners? It
seems unlikely he has an entry
card.
There Is one chance: West
m ight have the club queen. H er
majesty w ill be an entry If. at
trick three, you switch to the
club king.
Probably declarer w ill w in
w ith d u m m y's d u b aee. cross to
hand w ith a spade a nd take the
diamond finesse. Y o u w ill w in
w ith the king, lead a d u b to you r
partner's queen, and alt back
while he cashes his four re­
m aining heart winners to defeat
the contract by four tricks.
T h is play, sacrificing an honor
to establish an entry for partner.
Is called the Dcschapeltcs Coup,
after G uillaum e DeachapeUes. a
famous whist player.

IsoUl

Wnt

Nsrtfe
IS

I NT

Pass

3 NT

But
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: U J

A f/ A

l

• (T A IN IC

Yo u r chances for success In
the year ahead look extremely
promising. Your ambition and
drive will be supplemented by
Lady Luck at various critical
stages.
V I X O O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you neglect your responsibilities
and duties until the last minute
today, you could create pro­
b lem s for yourself. U n fo rtu ­
nately. yo u r agenda has its
limitations. T ry in g to patch up a
broken romance? T h e AstroG ra p h Matchmaker can help you
understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mail 92
p lu s a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Matchmak­
er. c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. O H 44101­
3428.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If
you're going to take any gambles
on anyone today, take them on
yourself — and your abilities.

*

f p f C lA L lZ lN G

IN
A l.f p T o N * A * * lA
1

W

Y o u r mate w o n 't be totally
without blame today but could
be falsely accused of something
you caused. T r y not to use loved
ones as scapegoats for yo u r
mistakes.
• A O R T A R I U B (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) T r y to attend to yo u r moat
important matters early on to­
day. T o w a rd sundow n, y o u r
thoughts m ight not be as crisp
as they were m the m orning.
C A P R I C O R N (Dec. 2 2 -Ja n .
19) You must be very careful
today when It comes dow n to the
final stages of consum m ating a
business deal, tf you're going to
blow it. it w ill happen then.
A Q U A R IU S U a n . 90-Feb. 19)
Usually, you're a rather coope r#
live person. B ut today you m ight
be so focused on doing things
your way that you'll be oblivious
to the concerns of others.
P IS C E S (Feb. 20-March 20)
S i n c e w e a re n o t p e r f e c t
ourselves, it is pure folly to
expect perfection In others. If
you want to be accepted as you
are. accept others as they are.
A R I E S (March 21-A p ril 19)
C o n d i t i o n s In g e n e r a l a re

reasonably favorable for you
today, w ith the exception of your
financial Involvements. Make an
effort not to spend more than
you should.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
U'a Important that today you
return the favor to Individuals
w ho have gone out of their way
to help you. Without acknowl­
edgment. they may not be eager
to h e lp a second time.
O E M D f l (May 21-Ju ne 20)
G uard against the inclination to
negatively prejudge situations
today. If you anticipate defeat or
trouble, you m ay behave in such
a w ay that brings them into
being.
C A N C E R (Jun e 21-July 22)
Don’t use your participation in a
social Involvement as a forum
for discussing business today.
Reserve that far another lime
and place.
L E O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Even
(hough concerned friends may
offer you constructive sugges­
tions today. It is highly probable
you'll ignore what they have to
say a n d do something you know
is wrong.

by Laonard Starr
C'AON, I PttHAPd THIY A U

PlEASE.lFHWCAN
HEN) WY PRAYERS,
WANT ME MY
. FREEDOM

o tn u M fc
NOUiDbNK

.

I

YOU?

,

• nr/ y m \v * hmp*4 x&gt;Np

U | g

a cttftf AH* W M 6 THAT
d O A J R O W W f ...

I------------

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                    <text>S e rvin g Sanford, Lake M ary and Sem inole County since 1908
83rd Year. No 275 - Sanford. Florida

Boat speed law hit
Sanford businessm an appeals
state reductions on St. Johns

Three-legged race at Chase
S A N F O R D — Only two games separate the top
three teams alter league-leading Florida Manor
won by forfeit ami DCC* beat Hopkins Meats In a
battle for second at Chase Park Wednesday.
See Page I B

percent decline In Ills large boat motor sales, he
said the rule may he contributing lo the recession
and high taxes as reasons m any people are not
buying larger bouts.
Meadors said Information sent him by the
Florida Department of Natural Resources con­
tained no statement nl financial Impart for the
rule
He Is asking the stale to delay or dismiss the
rule uriitl a detailed analysis of rule's affect on the
boating Industry has been assessed.

B y J . M ARK B AR FIELD
Herald Stall Writer
S A N F O R D — A Sanford boat dealer has
challenged the state's new manatee protection
rule dint limits boat speeds throughout much nl
the S r J o h n s R iver from La k e Monroe
downstream.
Steve Meadors, president ol Ahoy Marine, said
today that die 25 m p.h. anil lower speed llmil lor
many sect Ions of the river have caused a 20 In 25

□ People

Officers installed
Rotary Club ol Sanford Installed new officers,
named the Holarian ol the V’ear and announced
Paul Harris Fellows at a recent meeting
See Photos. Page 3B

Schools to weigh
planning advice

Heads up

□ Florida

Tax troubles studied
O R LA N D O — A proposal that would give
lawmakers greater latitude to consider new
taxes. Including a perron.d income tax. was
studied hv members nl a eoinmlllee created l&lt;&gt;
lilt the stale out nl Its lax it nobles
See Page 2 A

By V IC K I DaSORM IER
Herald Slab Writer
S A N F O R D — The Business Advi
soi y hoard lH A H l. which w as
formed to help the Seminole t'nunt\
School District make wiser business
decisions, has recommended ih.it
the district contract with ni lure a
land planner
T h e hoard unanimmislx agreed ti&gt;
discuss the matter during hiulgci
hearings over the next two motiihs
T h e school distli-i Is nirreutlv In a
hiring freeze Dianne Kramer, a land
planner who serves on die advisory
hoard, told the hoard dial they
could expect lo have In pnv a
m inim um ol $3(&gt;.(XM) annually lo
secure tile services lit a gualllleil
land plaimi'i no a lull lime lusts
I jii-se are changing limes, said
John W IKi'.vvM. BAH chairman
•'The school district li.is changing
ii'ipitrements."
According n&gt; Kiamci school ills

BRIEFS
Burglaries plague Silver Lake
F ive ear a n d hom e b u rg la rie s In the Silver
L a k e s s u h d lv lilu n ol I he C ro s s in g s near Lake
M a r y were reported t&lt;&gt; S e m in o le C o u n t y depu
lies W crlncsdnx
A b o u t $ 5 0 0 in l i n n s were taken I rum two
vehicle s, deputie s reported I here w a s evidence
d ia l on e o t h e r ear a n d tw o h o m e s had been
en te re d , hill n o items were i r p o n n l m issin g. All
ol die hurglaties were reported l»%• W ednesday
a l l e r n n o n . a l t h o u g h m o s t w e r e r e p o r te d
W’n h u -s d a v m o r n in g
I he v i c t im s said their
v e hic le s a m i homes were s e i i m die previous
night
A w o m a n on Sliver Rose C o u r t reported
h e a r i n g a noise ill aliool 1 3 0 a m a n d though
shi- lo uiid i-videnci sotiii o m h ad • nii u il hi i
v e h ic le n o th in g was trussing she reporletl in
.ii'iM o o s
r i . i- w o ii i m i s o i-iid ilio r ii-|n»rieil
s o m e o n e hail n i l tin srn-eii iln m in ttri-n lionie
s o rn e lim e between 10 p m I t u s i l a v anil about
7 3 0 a . m W e d n e sd a y, hut n o t h i n g w a s l a k n i
A total ol $-IHd hi items were la k cn Irom a van
p a r k e d a i a S h r i v e i s r m u l h o m e h eiw i en 12 30
a n d 7 3 0 a m Wi ihiesilav A persuii huusi-s!l
l i n g a nearby home disenvi-n-il a patio si n-i-ti
d oor had I h t i i Mil s o i m i i i m l» -lw e c ii 0 p m
I itesdav a n d 3 p m W id n e s it.ix 1ml nothing
a p p e a le d m issin g
A resilient nl Stiver wood lain r •-purli'd Ills
station w a g o n I tail h e rn e n i r n - d a m i a S i t ) ladai
detector am i a $3 i oil ol i|iiai ti l s w as m is s in g

n h i l.itul planner would coordinate
wlih iln- goverumcuial bodies In the
I'ounlv and in each ol the cldcs in
die 1 1 &gt;tiiiix They would help direct
die si In&gt;ul district In matters ot
m in urreiH V and growth managem ini
Unwell and Kramer pointed out
that die illsirlci will save money hv
having die advantage nl expert
ath ii e in planning matters.
For exampli " Kram er said,
sites Inr lullin' schools could be
seli-cli'i 1more elledlvelx
Unwell s.uil lie believes die curii-i 11 lacilies and liuanci &gt;i.ills nl die
disim l an overworked and could
uni hatliII'' iln- ailtlil Innal burdens nt
l.illil plaimmg
I In BAB ri'pii-scniallves said dial
they believed using the miinev lot a
i.uiit p|.mm r rather that h&gt;r enrrn u
Inin needs wnulii lie acceptablc
tii ertTisi' nl iln savmgVdrr-V/uu!d iv i m ii .111x ptnv I'li
See Advice. Pnge 5 A

School board plans to
erase courtesy busing
By V IC K I DeSORMIER
Herald Stall Writei

Shows win humanitarian awards
L O S A N C iK I.K S
Ian kx Dav
an A R C
m o v i e ahoul a lela rdeil w o m a n w h o w in s tinlo lt e r v . am i episodes ol d m i \ s o m i-d iiu g and
' T h e W o n d e r Neats i n &gt; i m it H m n .m it a s Pri/es
Ii i i e lirie h lllg leli i Isnin a mill m i s

Htialcl Kftoto by Tommy Vlnc»nt

Pat Burkfitte. teacher at the Seminole County School District s
Environmental Study Center helped local students prepare tins
morning for sate viewing ot today s tprnoon s partial solar eclipse The
e upse to last a bit more than two hours was to begm at 2 40 p in

I he w in n e r s wi i •
• 3 0 - M m i l l e 1 a l l gni \
'
,\H C 's
H u - W m ii l ei N ' . o

"I'm tccling It and a Ini ol people are l.liking
selling their larger Imat." said Meadors lilts
morning. " I 'm not a animal hater. I think we need
a speed limit, hut let's not he ridiculous."
Meadors said barges and oilier large river boats
provide more danger lo manatees than small
sport and lishliig boats more affected by the
speed limits. He said with further study, a
propeller guard could he developed to protect
manatees from prop cuts and hut would not affect
boat handling.
Meadors said he llled the appeal yesterday. A
DNR official said this morning the department
has not received any appeals of the rule approved
by the Florida t 'ahlnei June 25
The rule sets a speed limit of 25 m.p h.
See B o a tin g . Page 3A
u ImiiiI

•iillm
e p i s o r l * ol
w iiiienliv liiu n \

SANFORD
Speaking Im tin
c h ild r e n a n d parents nl Lake M arx
C h a rle s La u d e rd a le
d lr e c im
nl
p u b lic s.ilclv Inr die ell\ ill L a k e
M a ry , asked die Semln nli ( n i m n
S c h n n l Bo.ilil In cnlllltiui' c n u rlc s v
liu s ln g Im snim' Lake M.ux Lit m n i
lar \ Scllnnl si ililenls

I'he 111sii ii t I iiiw i -\i 'I plans in
■Ii i i i i i m Ic all ciiurtesy Imsing h\ tin
si. ill ill dii I ‘ I**2 ‘ 13 si In ii 11v *ai
&lt; n iillis y lllislllg |S a service
i tur- mix pirn iilcil in vniini’sii-is
villi. 11VI less ill.Ill two null's tllllll

dii ii ...... ... schnnl

I he stair- dues

I Ii il p i n v i d c l l l l l d l l l g Ini

si l l h s c r v

II I S

In nulei in savi mnni-y tin-district
w ill In n structuring mutes to use
buses mure clltclcnilv during the
|«»»*| ‘12 schnnl veai ami will chin!
ll.lle all cnurlcsv Intslllg
\|&gt;III I S will III sent to tile parents
nl .ill s iiidetils w h o aie lrans|M&gt;iled
|»\ c n uitcs v hustnii tills \ r.ir telling
t h e m that tile SI n ll i s Will l&gt;c
i limliiated
D i n i n g tin set m i d Ni-mesiet nl
in xt vi at pulilli h e a t lim s will In
III III In III at till llllh v lllu .il I .ISI S III

S r r Busing. Pnge 5A

w in n e r Boh Brush
• l i t ) Ml l l l l l i t . l l i g o i v

Si I Mi ni I.l i n k

Case closed on Deputy Polk incident

&gt;|i|sni|i

■it AIM s
d i u t v s o iu e ilu u g
u i i m u ti\ Ann
I i w Is I l.m 1111■iti
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Bulk s luihl w ith his sisti i h im

B rid g e ............... ......... 6B
Classifieds..... 4B.5B
C o m i c s ............ ........6B
C r o s s w o r d ..... .........6B
Dear A b b y ...... ......... 3D
D e a th s............. ......... 5 A
6B
Dr. G o t l ..........
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M o vie s......... ........... 3B
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Sp o rts........... .....i n,2B
T ele visio n ...
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F o r m o re w e a th e r, see P a g e 2 A

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See Closed. Pnge 5 A

Highest, lowest voter turnout in Sanford
|

Much of the same

K
2»&gt;

\\ .IS III Itllglll 1*11 III s||CSS .Hill Ills

Fro m staff and wire tepotls

IND EX

i\ Bulk will in.i I H • a m disi 11&gt;1111.it\
a&gt; linn

Dy J. MARK BARFIELD
Herald Stall Wotei

By J. MARK BARFIELD
Herald Stall Writer
S \ \ | I l|d I
\ S.ll lint it I ii m il lint I Ii .mi I ' . i l l . . t
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lllll,nil 1 MU tx s S,|p. . SMt Ml
S.|| •tit ( ..&gt;.it 1
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dti x..t •|S XX. .111.11. .1 st Im IIi .Is
See 1 u t n o u t . Page 5 A

**'*o'oby Tommy V.nr*n»
inmnio Cnnniu nniiwnrkers Helen Banman. Jean Mueller and Betty Payne, left

�IA - Sanford Htrstd. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 11, 1901

NEW S F R O M THE R E G IO N AND A C R O S S THE S T A T E

Study: Overhaul tax structure
Rolling Indicted tar bank robbery

ORLANDO — Members -of a committee
created to lift the state out of Its tax troubles
Wednesday studied a proposal that would
give lawmakers greater latitude to consider
’ idlngaa personal Income lax.
new taxes. Including
Th e Tax and Budget Reform Commission,
whose 29 members ore business leaders,
lobbyists and lawyers, met In Orlando to
consider Its tong-term goal of overhauling a
tax structure that falls abort of meeting a
growing state's needs.
"When
you’ve got a tax s
system that's
When you've
y-rlgged — kin d of like a house — it's
ter to bulldoze It.*' said Commissioner
J im Bax. "W hat w e’re doing Is fiddling
around with It. kin d of like painting the

T A L L A H A S S E E — Th e prim e suspect In last sum m er’s
slayings or five college students In Oalnesvllk has been
charged w ith robbing a bank there the day before the last two
victim s were found.
T h e Indictment Issued Wednesday by a federal grand Ju ry In
Tallahassee charges Danny Harold Rolling with three counts
stem m ing from the armed robbery at the First Union National
Bank on Aug. 27.
T h e federal charges are significant to the murder case
because of the timing of the bank robbery and the proximity of
the bank to the murder scenes, according to John Joyce, a law
enforcement spokesman In Gainesville.

C

S*ttl«m«fit ntar In pollution suit
M IAM I — Settlement of s landm ark federal environmental
lawsuit against the state over pollution of the sensitive
Everglades Is likely next week, sources said Wednesday.
Officials were unwilling to com m it themselves because talks
have reached crucial stages before without result. But speaking
on condition of anonymity, they were confident enough to
predict a formal announcement next week, possibly as early as
Monday.

T A L L A H A S S E E - Gov. Lawton Chiles named Orlando
law yer Jam es Heekln J r . to a state Board of Regents seat
Wednesday.
Heekln Is a partner In the Orlando office of the Holland A
Knight law firm and held a key position In Chiles’ 1990
campaign.
He serves on the boards of Ju n io r Achievement of Central
Florida and the Florida State University Law School A lu m n i
Association.
T h e Cabinet and state Senate must approve the appoint­
ment.
Hcekln’s appointment gave the board overseeing Florida's
nine state universities a Central Florida representative.

A t le a s t 1 8 o f t h e 8 B
la w m a k e r s w h o l e f t t h e
Legislature in the last five years
— more than one out of five —
went on to high-paying state
Jobs that can double o r triple 'he
value of their pensions.
"1 don't want to create a
system to encourage people to
abuse our pension system ," Rep.
Jam es Hargrett-Jr. said. "W here
there are abuses, w e need to take
a took at It and w hether they can
be corrected."
Hargrett. D -Ta m p a . chairs the
House Employee a nd Manage­
ment Relations Com m ittee.
Years of legislative service
make many legislators experts
in policy areas a n d prim e can­
didates for high-paying senior
management positions. Hargrett
said. But he said lawmakers
shouldn't get the beat Jobs sim­
ply because they’re legislators.
"If they hire unqualified peo­
ple. of course tha t's abuse.”
Hargrett. a nine-year veteran of
the Legislature, said. “We ll take
a look at U.'.'.
Hargrett said he didn't know
how long the prelim inary Inqui­
r y Into possible re tire m e n t
abuses would take. B ut w hen It's
over he said he hopes to have a
clearer picture o f how such
abuses occur and ho w to prevent
future abuses.

K E Y W E S T — A no-drug, no-alcohol concert sponsored b y
the Monroe County Youth C lu b has drawn at least two
complaints about a performing group’s rap lyrics.
T h e rap was by Poison Clan, a M iam i band billed as the Baby
2 Live Crew after the sexually graphic rappers w ho were
arrested last year and triggered a national debate on obscenity.
Most of the group’s perform ance Saturday night was not
obscene, said some of the 371 youngsters who paid t l 1 each to
hear the concert. But an Improvised rap about women In the
audience was sexual.

Hot dog vendor* agree on draw cod# &lt;
W E S T PALM B E A C H - Hot-dog vendors wearing skim py
bikinis have banded together and agreed on a "dress code" to
try to defuse a drive to have county commissioners adopt a law
to regulate their attire.
Under the proposed guidelines, the hot-dog vendors have
ugreed to wear bathing suit tops with straps — not pasties —
and bottoms with at least 2 Inches of cloth In back.
...^ S k im p y thong bottoms still would qualify, a ACLU attorney
explained Tuesday.
"Roadside vendors have agreed voluntarily not to engage In
any lewd or lascivious acts, motions or gestures." he said,
adding the proposed code went beyond the requirements 'M r* )
recent U.S. Supreme C o u r t r u lln g ...............................................!. _*,
Assistant County Attorney Lee Rosenthal, who Is researching
whether the county should adopt a law. said he couldn't
com m ent on the proposed dress code.

From Associatsd Prats reports

W E S T PALM B EA C H - Th e
w o m a n a lle g e d ly raped by
W illiam Kennedy Smith should
not be subjected to character
assassination through evidence
of her sexual history, her at­
torney said Wednesday.
A tto rn e y D ouglas D u n c a n
urged Circuit Judge Mary Lupo
to adhere to a strict Interpreta­
tion of Florida's rape shield law
to protect the woman.
" T h e rape shield law is to

ensure that rape victims do not
suffer a second rape by coo­
perating In a criminal prosecu­
tion of her assailant.'* Duncan
said In a court memo.

Privacy w a n te d at
N oriega h e a rin g

Under Florida's rape shield
law. evidence about the victim 's
sexual past can be used In court
only If It is deemed relevant to
the Issue of whether she con­
sented to the sex.

MIAMI — Attorneys for Munucl
Noriega have usked the trial
Judge to bar the government
from a closed hearing J u ly 19 on
classified documents the defense
wishes to Introduce In the futlen
Panamanian dictator's trial on
drug charges.
But prosecutors said Wednes­
day they arc entitled to be
present at the hearing and have
no plans lo com p ly w ith the
defense request.

Sm ith's attorneys w ould use
the woman's sexual history to
establish a "pattern of conduct"
that could lead Jurors to believe
she had been In sim ilar situa­
tions before voluntarily.

L O TTE R Y

Florida Lottery Fantasy 5 num­
bers were: 1 -3 4 -3 4 -3 1 -1 9 .

(USPS4SI MS)

Thursday. July It . 1991
Vol. 83. No 275
Publishes OeUy snS Sunday, eases*
Saturday by The Sanford Hants.
Inc. 300 N. French A vs, tentarS,
Fla. 32771
Second Class Poatags Paid si l an teed.
Florida end additional mailing
offices
POSTMASTER: Sand address changes
to THE SANFORD HERALD. P.Ol
Bos 1SS7, Sanford. FL 32773-1407.
Subscription Reiss
(Deny A Sunday)
Homs Delivery A Mail
3 Months__________ H I M
S Months. ............... $3400
1 Year......... .......... - .... 17400
Florida Residents must pay I S salsa
las In adds Ion to rates above.
Phone (407) 322-Mi 1.

Th a t at least "gets us off dead-center."
•aid Steve Uhlfelder. a Tallahassee lawyer
and tob'jylst.
Th e state collects about 911 billion a year
In taxes, m ostly w ith the 6 percent sales tax
on goods.

SAN FOR D
The Alamo Torch run passed
through Sanford Wednesday, on a 480 mil# route
from Miami to tha Sunshine State Games in
Brsdanton. Passing tha 8anford Police station
on French Avenue, Alamo runner B ill Peterson,

(center) of Gainesville, was ioined by Police
Lieutenants Ralph Russell, (left) and Bill Hasson,
(right, carrying the torch). Tha two officers ran
approximately 5 miles of the route, to the south
city limits.

Daughter’s complaint leads
to lawsuit over H R S listing
TAV A R ES A bogus com­
plaint about child abuse made
by a 13-year-old girl has led to a
lawsuit b y her parents against
the state agency that listed them
In a child-abuse registry.
The couple want their names
removed from the computerized
listing and compensation for
possible lost earnings.
They contend the Department
of Health and Rehabilitative
Services has damaged their rep­
utations and m ay hamper their
careers b y disclosing the Infor­
mation.
But an agency spokesman said
the suit Is groundless because a
new law provides for deletion
from the (ties of all unsubstan­
tiated eases. A lw y n Cassll said
HRS reveals Information only
about confirm ed abusers.
The parents are Identified In
the circuit court suit only us D.A.
and M .E.A .
"I'm not a child abuser and
neither Is m y husband." the
woman said Tuesday.
The m other said the problem

began in November 1969 when
her daughter became Infatuated
w ith a 17-year-old boy. T h e
w o m an told her daughter not to
see the boy and later discovered
the girl had disobeyed her.
W h e n the daughter learned
she would be punished, she and
a friend made up a story and
called the H RS abuse hotline,
contending that the girl was u
v i c t im of c h ild abuse, the
w om an said.
W he n the woman got home
from work one day. two H R S
child-abuse Investigators were
w aiting. Th e y quizzed her and
tried to block her access to her
younger child, u 5-year-old girl,
she said.
T h e teen-uge (laughter first
c o m p la i n e d she had b e e n
abused and then recanted her
story, the mother said.
Before leaving, the HRS in ­
vestigators said the girl needed
counseling but that they hud no
reason to believe she hud been
abused.

Ku Klux K lan
will march in
B o ca Raton
Associated Press
B O C A RATON - Officials
In exclusive Boca Raton
say they had no choice but
to give the Ku K lux Klan
permission lo m arch In the
city the weekend before
Halloween.
Richard Ford of Lantana.
leader of the F ra te rn a l
White Knights of the K K K .
m et w ith city o ffic ia ls
Tuesday morning to dis­
cuss details of the Oct. 26
march tn Mlzncr Park.
Ford said members of his
group plan to wave A m e ri­
can. Confederate and Klan
Hugs and make speeches.
"T h e American way Is
going to be the theme of
our speeches." Ford said.
"W e didn't do It to stir up
unybody. We just did It to
let people know that we are
here and we're going to
fight for our white rights.*'

THE WEATHER

MIAMI - Hsrs are Itts winning
numbers selected Wednesday In
the Florida Lottery Cash 3:O-9-B.
The winning numbers selected in
the Florida Lottery Play 4 were:

e-e-o-s.

However, the commission stopped short of
approving the plan. It only agreed Wednes­
day to have a committee of five flesh out the
Idea and tr y for a vote next month.

T A L L A H A S S E E A
legislative committee w ill look
Into possible abuses of the state
r e t i r e m e n t s y s t e m by
-lawmakers, the com m ittee chair

Rap music draws complaints

AsssslaSsd Frs ss

prohibition against a personal Income ta x ."
sold Slade. "W h e n you do that, yo u have to
tell the people that they're going to get
something In return. If you don't do that,
you don't have a snowball's chance In hell
of passing It ."

Pension
system
probed

Orlando
lawvar
oats
board
Dost
W M V M 1 W lO
VVVwl p
w lv W
V9W p
w vv

La w ye r u rg es rape
s h ie ld law prevail

garage."
T h e proposal by Commissioner T o m Slade
of Jacksonville would couple a limitation on
state spending with greater latitude for the
Legislature to consider new taxes.
Sla d e has proposed a constitutional
am endm ent that would lin k the following
concepts:
— A limit on annual Increases In spending
by lawmakers, guided by such factors as
state population growth and Increases in the
annual coat of living.
— Removal of state constitutional restric­
tions against certain taxes, such as the
personal Income
h is w o u ld not enact
ome tax. Tm
an Income tax.
ix. but give law m akers power to
consider It as»part
|
of an overall tax reform,
"Y o u 're tall
iking about the removal of the

NATIONAL T U P S
T o d a y : Mosllv cloudy w ith
afternoon thunderstorms likely.
High near 90. Wind west 10 to
15 m ph. Rain chance 70 per­
cent.
T o n ig h t : B ecom in g p a rtly
cloudy. A chance of m a in ly
e ve n in g showers a n d t h u n ­
derstorms. Low In (he low to mid
70s. Lig ht west w in d . Rain
chance 40 percent.
Friday: Partly sunny w ith a 60
percent chance of afternoon
thunderstorm s. H ig h In the
lower to mid 90s.
E x te n d e d forecast: P a rtly
cloudy each day with a chance of
m ainly afternoon and evening
show ers and thunderstorm s.
I

p

l o

m

b

cify
Apalachicola
Daytona Beach
Ft Laud Beach
Fort Myers
Gainesville
Homestead
Jacksonville
Key West
Lakeland
Miami
Pensacola
Sarasota
Tallahassee
Tampa
Vero Beach
W Palm Beach

a

t m

p

n

fl
tl
It

La
73
74
70

19

li

to
tt
to
tl
tl

70
74
71
It
75
70
74
74

HI

91
91
to
tt
It
t4
04

ro
75
74
74

Pel
n
14
»
14
00
00
15
00
03
104
00
00
00
00

00
It

PtljrCMjrBl-72

TUESDAY
Ftljr Cldjr 91-73

WEDNESDAY
P tly C ld y 91 -7 2

THURSDAY
M s ly C ld y 9 1 -7 2

F R ID A Y
M s ly C ld y 9 1 -7 2

STATISTICS

(f....
LAST
July 4

0 S .O

80LUNAR TABLE: Min. 6 20
J u ly 11 a.m., 6 :5 0 p .m .: MaJ. 12:05 a.in..

FULL
J u ly SS

Daytona Beach: Waves are
flat and gla ssy. C u rre n t Is
sflghtly to the north w ith a water
temperature of 83 degrees. New
Sm yrna Beach: W aves are I foot
and glassy. Current is slightly V&gt;
the south, with u water tempera­
ture of 83 degrees.

12:40 p .m . T I D S 8 : Daytons
Bssck: highs. 7:12 u rn .. 7:45
m.: lows. 1:13 a.m .. 1:05 p.m.:
ew S m y rn a Beach: highs.
7:17 a .m .. 7 :50 p.m .: lows. 1:JH
a.m., 1:10 p.m .; Cocoa Beach:
highs. 7 :22 a.m .. 8 0 5 p.m.:
lows. 1:33a m .. 1 :2 5 p.m.

^

8t. A ugustine to Jupiter Inlet
Today and tonight: Wind west
10 lo 15 knots. Seas I lo 3 feet.
Bay and Inland waters a light
chop. Scattered to numerous
showers and thunderstorms

T h e h ig h temperature I
S a n fo rd Wednesday was 9
degrees and the overnight lo'
w a s 70 as reported by th
U n ive rsity of Florida Agrien
tu ra l Research and Edueatio
Center. Celery Avenue.
R e co rd e d rainfall for th
p e r i o d , e n d in g at 9 a .n
T h u rs d a y , totalled .06 of a
inch .
T h e temperature at 10 a.n
to d a y was 85 degrees an
T h u rs d a y 's overnight low wu
76. as recorded by Ihc Nation:
W eather Service at Ihc Orland
International Airport.
O th er Weather Service data:

C W ednesday's high •o#ooa*«sss8
Barom etric preasara.30.0
'
R elative Humidity....72 pc
- W in d s....Southwest 10 mp
R ain fall...... .................0 8 li
' T oday’s su n set.....8:36 p.n
Tomorrow's sunrlse....6:3

j

Temperature* Indicate previous day's
high and overnight lewtolp m. EO T.
HI La Prc Ottk
City
rn
Anchor age
41 51 01
Atlanta
»1 73
cdy
i ; 41
cdy
Atlantic City
dr
Baltimore
a 44
clr
at 43
Billing*
Birmingham
*1 7t n cdy
w S3
Bismarck
cdy
M 53
clr
Bo im
44
44
Boston
cdy
Burlington. Vt
74 »
cdy
17 40
cdy
Charleston.} C
Charleston.* Va
11 4} .14 cdy
«4 74
cdy
Char lotto. N C
44 J7
m
Chicago
43 40
cdy
Cleveland
*4 74
cdy
Columbia.} C
t* 74
Dallas Ft Worth
cdy
Denver
44 St 33 cdy
11 44 34 cdy
Oes Moines
44 43
cdy
Detroit
41 73 07 clr
Honolulu
ts 71
Houston
cdy
n 43 1 45
rn
Indianapolis
*4 74
Jackson.Miss
clr
SO 71 .10
m
Kansas City
clr
tot 71
La* Vegas
*4 77
clr
Little Rock
11 41
Los Angeles
cdy
44 71 3 tt
rn
Louisville
Memphis
91 74
cdy
Milwaukee
19 45
cdy
Mpit }t Paul
41 43
cdy
Nashville
ft 7t at cdy
New Orleans
91 75
cdy
New York City
clr
44 44
•4 75
Oklahoma City
cdy
Omaha
74 44 M cdy
44 47
Philadelphia
cdy
Phoenn
clr
104 13
Pittsburgh
dr
ai 43
Portland.Mame
dr
41 53
41 H 1 ]0 cdy
}t Louis
14 44
dr
Veil Lake City
Wattle
70 54
cdy
Shreveport
dr
f l 73
Washington 0 C
40 74 01 d r

�*****

Sanford Harald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 11, 1091 - $A

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UFO invasion?
Alien craft scheduled to arrive in Orlando this weekend

Th re e i t p a n t c h o a w la the Lcagwaod area were reportedly
entered aometlme tote M onday night o r early Tuesday
m orning, according to Seminole C o un ty Sheriff's Department
reports.
A n estimated $300 cash, ptua a large amount of personal
taken from the home of Th o m a s Long. 1409 North
D rive. Long reported the m oney
a taken from his
t and his w ifra pune during the “ *-*■
Nearby, at 1400
Lake
deputies found
attem pted to enter a house by cutting
through the screen wire on a ‘ or. Nothing was reported
missing
T h e third home, at 1304 South Ridge Lake Court, was also
entered d u rin g the night. Deputies reported no signs of a forced
entry, but the home owner. Karen D . Servtas reported
approxim ately $ 100 In cash waa m issing.
Investigators from the Seminole C o un ty Sheriff's office are
handling the case as all three o f the homes are located Just
outside the Longwood city limits.

L A K E W O R TH Palm Beach County
residents are bussing about a glowing white
cigar-shaped saucer w ith pulsating lights
that seemed to hover In the night sky.
before streaking away.
Lake Worth police Sgt. Sue Pulls saw It.
" It had a thin saucer shape. I thought.
•What th e ...? '"
Sim on Rablzon saw it Friday on the w ay
home from jal ala!. “ Il looked four or five
blocks away. W hen I stopped. It stopped.
When I moved. It m oved. I don't believe In
UFO s. It just seemed very peculiar to m e."
" It had lights (lashing. I thought I

CCIB makes drug arrests
M em bers of the joint City/County Investigative Bureau
focused their attention on Altamonte Springs Tuesday. T h e
undercover operations produced taro separate arrests. J o h n
Burgess. 20. of Altamonte Springs was arrested on Jackson
Street, near Dunbar, and charged srtth the sale of crack
cocaine. In the other case, Charlie Ham ilton. S3 of Altamonte
Springs, eras arrested on M ercury Street, and charged w ith
attempted sale of crack cocaine and possession of d ru g
paraphernalia.
B oth Burgess and Hamilton have been placed In the Jo h n B.
Polk Correctional Facility.

S A N F O R D ~ T h e Sanford
Historic Downtown Waterfront
Association will have a special
program called "Florida Main
Street" Tuesday m orning at 8
a.m . Th e event w ill be held al
the First Street Gallery.
Featured speaker for the pro­
gra m will be K e rry Hassen.
director of DeLand's Main Street
project. It will follow (he regular
S H D W A meeting at 7:30.

Loitarar chargad with drug violation

C hris Cranlas. president of the
organization said, " T h e program
is scheduled at 8 a .m .. allowing
us to complete our business and
allow time for guests and m em ­
bers to discuss the state-wide
program with Ms. Hassen."
Business owners and citizens

Outstanding warrant a m t s
T h e following persons have been placed In the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility, on outstanding warrants:
Talm a dg e Virgil Metis. 26. 2 1 2 Vinewood Drive. Sanford,
was arrested at his residence Tuesday. He waa wanted on eight
charges connected to a violation of parole. He had been
previously convicted on two charges of grand theft and one of
cruelty to animals. He waa serving five years probation issued
M a rch e . I9 6 0 .
W illia m Rivera, 31, of Orlando, was transferred to the J o h n
E. Polk Correctional Facility from the Orange County J a il.
Tuesday. Rivera was wanted In Seminole County on a charge
of grand theft auto.
Daniel Maurice Taylor, 29. 0 0 7 East A Stree;. Sanford, has
been transferred to Seminole C o u n ty from the Florida State
Prison in Raiford. Taylor was wanted locally on charges of
grand theft auto, failure to appear to answer charges of grand
theft auto, and violation of parole for a previous case of grand
theft auto. T a y lo r was serving time In Raiford prison for an
a
unconnected convict km.

Suspicious vehicle chscksd
A suspicious vehicle was reported to a Sanford Police officer
early Wednesday morning, by tw o ambulance drivers. T h e
vehicle waa reportedly parked In a wooded area west of
Hartwell and 24th Street In Sanford. Before the officer could
check, the vehicle was seen entering the parking lot of Cedar
Creek Apartm ents, and was Identified b y the two attendants.
Follow ing a check of the vehicle and its driver, police
arrested T o m m y Shayor Ham pton. 18. 2370 Center Street.
Sanford. He has been charged w ith poaalon of cocaine, and
possession of under 20 grama of cannabla. Hampton was
confined at the Jo h n E. Polk Correctional Facility.

"O u rs Is lighted from the Inside, giving It
an ellptotd appearance." said Ray Mclver.
director of marketing for the blimp com*
pany.
T h e craft's tallflns are unlit, but strobe
lights sit atop the hole and beneath the
gondola. " T h e y could appear to be revolv*
Ing." Mclver said.
T h e airship is only two-thirds (he length of
the 200-foot Goodyear craft and can move at
5S m ph. lightning-quick for a dirigible.
T h e a irsh ip has set off U F O alerts
wherever It's appeared since It was Inflated
In May.

Main Street program planned
H traM Staff Writer

Seminole County Sheriff's deputies checked on five persons
seen loitering near 19th Street a n d Southwest Road In Sanford
Tuesday. W hen they arrived, four of the persons reportedly ran
away. T h e fifth man. Identified as Shaamle Okeilh Riggins. 10.
1701 M cC arthy Avenue. Sanford, was searched by deputies,
who reportedly found a plastic bag containing cocaine In his
pocket.
Riggins waa arrested and taken to the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility. He has been charged w ith possession of
cocaine w ith Intent to sell.

going to wreck m y car," said Palm Beach
Sheriff's Office Com m unication supervisor
Jo hn n ie Keating.
Chances are the object waa the Virgin
Lightship. $ smallish, relatively quick blim p
that Is stationed at the Lantana Airpark.
It's been In the area since Ju n e 22 to
promote the Rooftop Gardens nightclub —
about the same time sightings began.
It leaves for Orlando on Saturday.
Putts and Keating figured what they saw
waa the airship.
But the Virgin Lightship Is different from
the m ore fomUkur Goodyear blim p.

who are interested tn the re­
v i t a l i s a t i o n o f S a n f o r d 's
downtown area are Invited to
attend the program , regardless
of whether o r not they are a
member of S H D W A . Director
Kay Bartholomew said. "W e've
tried to In v ite everyone we
thought m ight be Interested, but
anyone else la also urged to
attend."
"Florida Main Street” Is not a
grant program , but rather a
technical assistance project. Bob
Trescott. coordinator for the
state-wide program said. "It Is a
self-program. T h e Bureau of His­
to ric P re s e rv a tio n su p p lie s
technical aid but the credit and
responsibility for success rests
with the m any com m unity lead­
e rs w h o o f fe r I h e t r tim e ,
expertise and enthusiasm to
revitalizing their dow ntow n."

T h e local aim of the program
■rill be to revitalize downtown
Sanford. Effective solutions will
be sought to the problems of
deteriorating buildings, loss of
business and the waning eco­
nomic strength of the downtown
area, all of which are critical to
the survival of the city Itself.
" T h is Is another program In
our series by which we attempt
to address problems, offer solu­
tions. provide information and
seek the positive aspects or our
c o m m u n ity , p articu larly o u r
d o w n t o w n .'* a c c o r d in g lo
Cranlas.
T h e m eeting, open to the
public, will begin at 8 a.m. at the
First Street Gallery. Inc.. 203 E.
First Street in downtowrf San­
ford. For further information,
phone 323-9178.

Hanna to visit the zoo Saturday
HtraM Staff Writer
SA N FO R D — Guests from the
north often visit the Central
Florida Zoological Park. T h is
Saturday however, some of the
visitors will be anim als In addi­
tion to people.
T h e w o rld 's fastest la n d
mammal, Ihe Cheetah, and a
tiger cub from the Colum bus
Zoo will be on display for the
delight or hum an-type visitors
this Saturday, but on ly between
10 and 11:30 a.m. T h e animals
are part of a special display
being brought to the area by
Ja ck Hanna, former director of
the Sanford zoo. and present
director ol Ihe Colum bus zoo.
Hanna will ulso be on hand ut
the Snnhml park d urin g the
same time period to uutograph

copies of his book, "Monkeys on
the Interstate: A n d Other Tales
f ro m A m e r i c a ' s F a v o r i t e
Zookecper." T h e book m ay be
purchased at Ihe zoo.
Hanna Is know n nationally for
his guest appearances on the
Good Morning Am erica show, as
well as J o h n n y Carson and
David L e tle rm a n T V shows.
Locally how ever, he la also
known for his w ork In helping In
the creation of the present
zoological park.

4. A d u lt s adm ission Is $5.
children 3-12 are $2. children 2
and under, as well as members
of the Zoological Society are
admitted free.

HARVEY

M O RSE
. INVESTIGATIONS

S h e riff’s cars
not for sale
at used car lot
HeraM8t$ff Writer_________
S A N FO R D - Ray Lash
said he has had a lo t'o f
Inquiries from people w an­
ting to buy the Sheriff's
Department cars, but they
aren't for sale.
Lash, manager of J im
Lash's Blue Book Cora, said
that Ihe cars, complete
w ith the department In ­
signia are sim ply being
stored In Ihe com er of the
dealership's lot while the
electronic equipm ent la
b e in g re m o v e d . T h e
equipment removed from
those vehicles Is being In ­
stalled In the new cars
purchased recently by the
department.
" W e 'v e ha d a lot o f
people come In here want­
ing to buy one of them ."
Lash said this morning.
"B u t we're Just holding
them here."

■ » IT ROM YOU? |
FCDCRAL LAW MAY M l* •wre our oma •tavvast raorearv
•C0M 0U M T1M 1J
•STOP COLLECTION THHUT1

*•aros roam ooM Ma u n aurra

Fin LICTURB*MOORSgfMMVS
M

M

I

—

Hanna la In Central Florida to
serve as guest of honor during
the second annual fundraiser.
"Black Tie on the W ild Side.” to
be held Saturday night at the
W alt D isn ey W o rld Dolphin
ttolcl.
Th e Central Florida Zoo Is
located al 3755 Highw ay 17-92.
Just east ol exit 52 on Interstate

■ »* —

3 3 0 -2 0 2 2

MalnOfflcs:
291 Waal First SL
Sanford, F I 32771
(407)330-5190

C ity refuses to impose
im pact fees schools w on
From staff s im I v b s rspsvts
S T . A U G U S T I N E - Three
months after w inning a Florida
Supreme C ourt battle on a plan
to Impose Impact fees on devel­
opment to help pay for new
schools, the St. Johns County
School District may have lost the
war.
Th e S t. Augustine City Com ­
mission has refused to Impose
the fees — a position the state
Supreme Court Indicated would
bur the district from collecting
them at all. anywhere In the
county.
Th e com m ission's 4-1 vote
Tuesday could mean a loss of a
potential $500,000 a year to a
d is t r ic t s t r u g g l i n g w ith a
burgeoning classroom popula­
tion.
Seminole County hud to put
the Imposition of Impact fees on
hold until the resolution of the
St. Jo h n 's County case, but now
plans to Implement them.
O viedo has already set In
motion the steps to begin col­
lecting Impact fees In that city.
Im p a c t fees a lre a d y are
assessed In St. Johns County's
unincorporated areas to help |&gt;ay
for schools roads, public build­
ings and parks. Th e educational
Impact fee on the average new
single-family home Is $381.
Since Imposing the fees In
1988. the county has collected
$1.2 m illion for schools. None of
It has been spent because of the
lawsuit.
Th e A pril 18 Supreme Court
ruling was hailed by rducatlon
olflctals as a way lo help keep
pace w ith the number of new
students flooding the state's
schools. It was decried by devel­
opers w ho say It will raise the
cost of new housing.
The ruling stemmed Irnm a

The Secret ToSuccess

suit filed against Si. J o h n s
C o un ty In 1988 by the Northeast
Florida Builders Association and
A le c L a w s o n , p re s id e n t of
Lawson Homes.
At Ihe circuit and appellate
court levels. Judges ruled in
favor of the builders, saying It
was unconstitutional to charge
im pact fees lo pay for new
schools.

At Sem inote National B ank we
know it takes hard work to su c­
ceed today. And we know our cu s­
tomers w ork hard to provide for
them selves and their fam ilies. At
Sem inole National Bank w e work
just as hard to meet our custom ­
ers' financial needs. After alt it's
what you can expect from your
local com m unity bank.

The Supreme Court
overturned those rulings but
Imposed one caveat. It said that
the educational Impact fees
c a n n o t be c o lle c te d u n t i l
“ municipalities containing sub­
stantially all of Ihe municipal
population of St. Johns C ounty
have entered Into Interlocal
agreements with the county for
the collection of the Im p a rl
fees."
In St. Jo h n s County, that
means St. Augustine.
Despite lobbying from the
School Board, city commission­
ers said they voted against
Impact fees to keep down the
costs of housing. And they said
that adding Impact fees could
lead to pressure to Impose sim i­
lar fees for other purposes, such
as building roads.
''One thing is going to lead lo
a n o th e r." said Com m issioner
Noel H clm ly.
O n ly Mayor Tracy Upchurch
sided with the School Board.
Th e city has rejected Ihe fees a
num ber of times In recent years,
but one backer said the school
board hasn't given up hope.
" I d o n 't think the school
system will give up on the City
Com m ission." said David Toner,
assista nt su pe rin ten d en t ol
ope rations.
County Attorney J im Sisco
said Ihe county has gone twek tn
the Supreme Court asking tliai it
take away the "veto power" ol
Si Augustine.

Convanlant
■ranch:
243$ Airport Bivd.
Sanford, FL 32771
(407) 322-0321

i B

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LAKEMARY
PUtUX SHOPPING CTR.

Seminole National Bank
2439 Airport Blvd.
Sanford. FL 32771
(407) 322 0921

ru n
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t ii

251 W a al First Si.
Sanford. F L 32771
(407) 330-5190

i t

330-6519

i7ow.$.8.4M
339-4113

Hardware
o rt* SUNDAY I

2oata$a»$T.

�Sanford Harakf. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 11, IF tl

(IM F IS M M
300 S. FRENCH A V E .. S A N F O R D , F L A . 33771
Area Code 407-322 2611 o r 831-0903

Why South Africa faces ethnic chaos
the freedom struggle acme kind of private

clptlned apparatus

IF P 's m ost urgent
task.
A lt h o u g h Z u lu
Chief ButhetesTs 1FP
(Maying no roie in

ED ITO RIALS
Party (V P ) vs. the
U S. Supreme C o u rt Ju s tic e A n to n in Scalla
recently took on th e issue o f prison reform .
T h e case. In w h ic h th e A m e rica n C iv il
Liberties Union a n d the B u s h adm inistration
were on the same side, sh o u ld have been, as
th a t su gge sts, s t r a ig h t f o r w a r d . S c a lla
nonetheless found In It an o ther opportunity
to unm ake a few precedents o f earner courts.
T o point out that h e accom plished this w ith a
great flourish of s e m a n tic fpunesm anshtp Is
o n ly to say that h e d id It h is w a y . T h is Justice
revets in tw fcting p la in w o rd s enough to
w rin g all practical m e a n in g o ut o f them .
S in c e the E ig h th A m e n d m e n t to the
C o n stitu tio n fo rb id s "c ru e l a n d unusual
pu nish m e nt." he w ro te fo r the m ajo rity, there
Is no prohibition on c ru e l a n d unusual
conditions in prisons unless someone proves
that prison officials Intended those filth y,
overcrow ded, u n h e a lth y conditions to be
punishing.
If yo u have followed h im this far. you w ill
un de rstan d that e ve n if officials at an
apparently h o rrifyin g p riso n have ignored the
Inhum anely pu n itive effects o f th e ir policies,
that's still not en o u gh . T o get at the required
elem ent or intent, S calla says, a law suit
w ould have to s h o w th a t officials had acted
w ith "deliberate In d iffe re n ce ."
Seal la's new sta n d a rd is so vague that
prison reformers a re n 't even sure w hether to
be upset about it.”
Dissenting Ju s tice B y ro n W hite , however,
probably came closer to ths real effect of thia
decision when he com plained that the new
Intent requirem ent is n o t o n ly " a departure
from precedent, it lik e ly w ill prove impossible
to apply in m any cases. Intent sim ply Is not
v e r y m e a n in g fu l w h e n c o n s id e rin g a
challenge to an in s titu tio n such as a prison
syste m ."
B u t Scalla is n o t one to h a rk back to a leas
clever era when p u n ish m e n t that was cruel
and unusual w as s im p ly considered to be
cru e l and unusual p u n ish m e n t. He had to
concoct a whole n ew legal theory to reverse a
lo w er court’s no tio n th a t the courts could
ord er awful prison co n d itio n s corrected only if
proof were offered that prison officials acted
w ith "persistent m a licio u s cruelty.**
O n the distinction betw een this and “ delib­
erate indifference" to c ru e lty , the courts w ill
now occupy them selves for y e a n . No one b ut
S ca lla could be lo o k in g fo rw a rd to the
exercise. And. m e a n w h ile , even the most
intolerable of priso n co nditio ns probably w ill
not have to be altered.
B u t Scalla takes no responsibility for the
real-w orld effects of h is verba) prestidigita­
tio n. T h e Constitution m ade him do it, says
the un tirin g sem antlcist.
" T h e source o f the Intent requirem ent is
not the predilections o f this court, but the
E ig h th Am endm ent itse lf."
Th e shock Is th a t fo u r o ther Justices bought

Th is historic 48th A N C conference, the flrat
wtthtn South Africa In 30 years, la being forced
to make another politically pnlnftil decMon: How
m ucii oc i iiDrrBuofi movement can it remain
b e fo re a cce p tin g th e Im p e ra tiv e to be
tm n Mbrmed into a pohtical party. Youthftil
firebrands baaed m Soweto w ith tm k education
and no experience in governance atiO consider

S o u th A frica's P a rlia m e n t h a s stripped
a w a y the last legal vestige o f apartheid: the
Population R e gistration A c t. b y w h ich a ll
people were classified b y race a n d w h ich in
tu rn determined w h e re th e y c o u ld live, w o rk ,
go to school and sp e n d th e ir leisure tim e,
even w hom they c o u ld m a r r y . T h i s is tru ly a
m ilestone. It's a lso b u t a p artia l step tow ard
racial justice.
A s in the United S ta te s after p o st-C ivll W a r
constitutional c h a n g e s gave blacks form al
e q u a lity, South A fric a re m a in s a n inequitable
a n d unjust society. A lth o u g h n e w b o rn S o u th
A frica n s are no lo n g e r registered according to
racial classification, the list o f those a lready
registered will re m a in u n til it's abolished In a
n e w constitution.
A n d u n til the con stitu tion
is adopted, desegregation In both h o u sin g a n d
education Is a m a tte r of local o p tion , m e a n in g
w h ite option. W h ile m a n y schools and som e
residential areas h a ve a lre a d y desegregated,
m a n y others have not.
Most im portant, the black m a jo rity still
lacks the vote, w h ic h again depends on a
constitution gra n tin g u n ive rsa l suffrage. B u t
s u b s ta n tiv e c o n s titu tio n a l ta lk s betw een
b lack and white leaders have yet to take place
a n d are overstiadowed b y c o n tin u in g violence
betw een rival b la ck factions.
M any S o u th
A fric a n s , black a n d w h ite , accuse go ve rn ­
m e n t security forces of sid in g ‘ w ith , a n d
a rm in g , the Inkatlm Fre e d o m P arty, a rival of
th e A frican National C o n gre ss. In an attem pt
to prevent black u n ity a n d to persuade the
o u tsid e world that b lack s a rc not capable of
d e m o cra tic se lf-governm e n t.
F . W . de K le rk d e s e rv e s p ra is e
rem arkable progress m a d e so far.

President
for th e

Young Mack m ilitants in all polltlca] cantpa

f But both sldss
srsplaguadby
sthnocsntrfc
dhrialvsnsw.9

In a booklet published on Ju ly 4 by the South
African Institute of Race Relations, “ Man Mailing
the Media: New Censorship for the New South
Africa." eight caaays by black South African
reporter* CQUOfii puDtievtefB c n u c i tn a poem
present a gra p h ic lita n y of Instance# of

the A N C 's ability to

JACK ANDERSON

Scowcroft liked
Iraqi businesses
W A S H IN G TO N — Brent Scowcroft. Presi­
dent Bush's national security adviser, wai
bullish on Increasing business ties with
pre-war Iraq at the aame time hi* formei
employer. Henry Kissinger, was pushing foi
more commerce and more conciliatory rela­
tions between the United States and Iraq.
bes to m any of Kissinger's foreign policy

Protect your pets

Fight phone firm for refund

To da y (Ju ly 3) I saw the killing of a beautiful
sable dog. hit by a car on busy Route 46 In
Geneva.
It s a d d e n e d a n d a f f e c t e d me .
Please...remem ber yo u r dog's life is In your
hand*. Keep It leashed or fenced in. Enjoy your
pet for Its natural lifetime.
I wonder bow the owners w ill feel when they
discover their pet's fate and the driver, how he
m ust feel, perhaps feeling anxious all day.
You are your dog's best friend. Don't let him
o r her down.
Betty Rudiaill
Geneva

T h e telephone company has been ordered to
refund 90.60 to consumers. T h e Public Service
Com m ission has not yet forced them to
com ply.
Instead, the PSC la thinking about allowing
them to use you r refund money as "Invest­
m ent capital." Th ia type of m oney la generally
raised either b y borrowing (and paying Inter­
est). or b y selling stock (and paying dividends).
T h e PSC needs to know whether you want to
receive you r 99.50 refund or not.
tf you want to get your 99.50 refund let them
know. T h e ir toll-free number Is 1-800-342*
3552.
Pat Ryan
West Palm Hcach

A letter to Steve Alford:

Paper justice in S. Africa

mgjer of becoming Moves to a new version of an
d disease ~ the tyranny of censorship.

th e A N C 's fu tu re
b e c a u s e o f th e
In the townships for
w h ic h th e IF P Is
alm ost com pletely
re sp o n sib le . U n til
Buthetezl gets his fbl-

months ahead — a Patriotic Front Conference
(PTC ), which win tend to an Att-Party Conference
(A P O to form an Interim Government (IO ).
which arlfl oversee elections for a Constituent
Assembly (C A ) that wtn write a new South Africa
constitution.

Dear Mr. Alford:
I ju st wanted to let you know that the display
of fireworks you made possible last night was
the beat I have ever seen In Sanford. I told my
husband that It was nice that, for the first time
ever, when people were leaving you heard
comment* of “ great," “ w o w ," and “ really
good."
I. like you. have lived in Sanford all m y life. I
a m a second generation Sanfordite and my
daughter la a third. It's really Important to me
that Sanford makes Its m ark aa a community
where people still have spirit and care. With
Lake Mary's “ progress'- and growth, Sanford
has been kind of pushed to the sidelines and
It's reaffirming to know that a community,
encouraged by one citizen, can make such a
"b a n g " in show of support and spirit.
Mr. Alford, your w ork Is m u ch appreciated. I
a m sure after the display of last night, a lot
more Individuals In the com m unity will be
w illin g to contribute to y o u r "P eople’s
Firew orks." i for one will be among them.
T h a n k you again.
Gayle Hardin Loughlln
Sanford

Sharing Cen .ter clarification
T h e article concerning the South Seminole
S h arin g Center was very well presented.
However. I would like to clarify one remark
w hich was made.
W ith all due respect to m y friend. Angle
Romagoaa, 1 would like to point out that the
Sanford Christian Sharing Center has been In
existence since 1977 and for m any years
served the needs of the entire county. Since the
South Seminole Sharing Center came Into
existence, we have limited our service lo
northern Seminole C ounty (Including, but not
lim ited to. Sanford. Lake M ary. Geneva.
Chuluoia. Oviedo and W inter Springs.)
Th a nk s for giving us this .opportunity to
make this correction.
Mrs. Irene K. Urown
Volunteer Director
Sanford Christian Sharing Center. Inc.

L E T T E R S T O E D ITO R
Letters to the editor ure welcome. All Idlers
must be signed. Include the address of the
writer and a daytime telephone num ber.
Letters should be on a single subject and be
as brief as possible.. Letters are subject to
editing.

precepts. T h e re is no evidence that ScowcroA
acted out'of a profit motive, but he m a y have
been too well trained In Kissinger's agenda.
S co w cro ft ow ned
thousands of dollare
In stock In m a ny of
the companies that
stood to benefit from
certain export sales
to Iraq. A n d m a ny of
the c o m p a n ie s he
owned stock in were
i n v o l v e d In th e
U .S .-lr s q B u sin e ss
Forum . B ut, he sold
his shares In those
firma In 1990, ac­
cording to his finan­
cial disclosure report.
T h e House Bank­
IProbing tna
in g C o m m itt e e ,
Scowcroft and
c h a ire d b y R e p,
K lssln g tr
H e n r y G o n z a le s ,
connections
D -Te x a s, has been
to U .S . foreign
p r o b i n g the
policy. ■
Scowcroft and Kiss­
inger connections to
U.S. foreign policy-making. Committee In­
vestigators have linked Kissinger to Banca
Nazionale del Lavoro, an Italian bank that
gave more than $4 billion In unreported
loanaalong w ith a delegation of corporate
executives to Iraq In 1989 to meet Saddam.
Kissinger's consulting firm has served as a
farm system for high-level government posi­
tions. and Scowcroft apparently subscriouse
Banking Committee, chaired by Rep. H enry
Gonzales, D-Texas, has been probing the
Scowcroft and Kissinger connections to U.S.
fo re ig n p o lic y -m a k in g . C o m m itte e I n ­
vestigators have linked Kissinger to Banca
Nazionale del Lavoro. an Italian bank that
gave more than 94 billion In unreported loans
to Iraq, a portion of which Saddam siphoned
for m ilitary purposes. Kissinger was a paid
m em ber of B N L 's consulting board for
International Policy during a period when the
bank's Atlanta office was lending billions to
Iraq. Several of Kissinger's clients were
beneficiaries of B N L largesse to Iraq.
Both the Reagan and Bush administrations
have had a blind spot In dealing w ith Iraq.
T h e y Ignored w a rn in g s from the U .S .
Export-Im port Bank that Saddam was a poor
credit risk and could be using the financial
assistance to boost his military. White House
officials and business leaders claimed that
forging business ties with Iraq would Improve
relations and moderate Iraqi behavior.
White House sources told us that Scowcroft
and Lawrence Eagleburger, a top State
Department official who formerly worked for
Kissinger, argued within the administration
for a more appeasing policy toward Saddam
before his Invasion of Kuwait last sum m er.
Even afterward. Scowcroft argued Internally
against helping the Kurdish rebels overthrow
Saddam. Scowcroft claimed that the breakup
of Iraq would spread Instability throughout
the Persian Gulf.
T h e advice only served in the end to benefit
Saddam, w ho continues to threaten world
peace despite his temporary defeat. He's the
same ruthless dictator who derives power
from the barrel of the gun. and retains power
through a police state. Intelligence sources
say he Is even reviving Iraq's claim to Kuwait.
In his International dealing!, he's as u n ­
trustworthy as ever. He routinely violates his
promises, must notably those relating to his
nuclear bom b-m aking capabilities.
Saddam Is stalling on the cease-fire and
rebuilding his military might, even as he Is
permitted to retain the fruits of his aggression
by hanging on to billions of dollars worth of
stolen Kuwaiti property.

�Sanford H-wald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 11, 1991 - *A

triers reject citizen
borrow pit hearing

Water rules loosened

Longwood budgot hearing tonight
ii|ij .aidgtalf
M H

i

the district from January

-.
n ifw o oiwn vanI9i

m enu win bring their 1901*02
budget requirem ents up for

fiscal year. " It m ay require did any draw serious object***
certain reductions from various b y the commissioners,
departments" Te rry said, "but I
T $ t thud budgrt hearing has
think we can hold the rate been scheduled for • p .m .
dow n."
Monday. Ju ly 22. Should an
Te rry explained that costs of additional meeting be required,
the operations of Longwood have it w ill be held on Ju ly 29. Th e
been lower recently due to a city hopes to have the full
num ber of vacant positions on budget ready to bring up for
the city staff caused by retire* final commission approval with
tnents or other em ployment - its Aral and second reading and
changes. Whether or not the pu b lic hearing scheduled to
positions w ill be filled during begin In late August. Pinal
this coming year remains un* approval to required b y Sep*
decided. ” 1 think we might be tembcr 90. for the the fiscal year
able to work this out to the best beginning October 1.
advantage of the city." Te rry
Although the meetings are
■aid.
workshops, and designed for
Th e first budget workshop eras departmental presentatlona to
held Monday night. At that time, the city commission, they are
d epartm ental budgets w ere open to the public. Tonight's
presented by the Longwood Fire meeting w ill begin at 6 p.m .. at
Department. Police Department, the city commission chambers of
C it y C le r k a n d C it y Ad* the Longwood City Hall.

"I'm disappointed but I'm also

J tL were counted by 6:30 Tuesday
^

flight. " U p "Hhid about O p.m ..
moot precincts were reporting a
10 percent or worse showing. I
was te rrib ly concerned. But
around 6 p.m ., people started
coming In and several of the
preclncU Jumped up to arounf
20 percent."
Sanford-area residents were
divided in their support for the
lO-year tax. while preclncU that
take In Lake Mary and Long­
wood all suuported the tax.
Geneva and M idw ay voters
narrowly turned down the tax —
by two votes in each precinct.
Sanford Precinct 32. south­
west of the U.S. Highway 17*92.
29th Street intersection, showed
the greatest turnout for the

ClosedPolk.
According to reports in the
investigation fife, Sanford police
and firefighters responded to a
report of a fire at the 106 Laurel

Advice-

Turnout
___ happy," Ooard said after ballots

Las P. Moore Park In Sanford had Handing water following rain that
has bean relatively abundant thla year.

"Starting now. there can be
m oney saving advantages to
having someone on line in that

referendum. A third of the 664
voters registered in Precinct 32
participated. Th e y narrow ly
supported the tax by a 111 to
107 vote. Prectnl 32 votes at
Pine Ridge Clubhouse In San*
ford.

"N ot one member questioned
the resolution on that basis.V.
Howell said.
£ M i « someone who
Th e BAB has suggested that if m ight volunteer their services
the school district can not afford for the Job. Kram er suggested
to hire a full Ume land planner II that she might help out. but that
Precinct 21. which votes at should consider entering Into an
a full time employee was needed.
Alton Chapel AM E Church. 1203 interlocal agreement w ith the
Superintended Robert Hughes
OUve Ave.. Sanford, turned out county planners or using the
was not at the board meeting
the low est show ing In the services of a consultant.
and no other school staff official
county. Less than 6 percent of
T h e y contended, how ever, commented on the proposal.
the 811 voters registered In that that a county planner would not
precinct participated In Tues­ have the beat Interests of the
day's election. Th e precinct, school district in mind.
which Includes areas west of
Joe Williams, chairman of the
U.S. 17-92 north of 13th Street, school board, a id that he sees
again narrowly supported the the need for a land planner, but
referendum, voting 27 to 20 In that budgetary demands w ill
groups w ho believe
favor.
courtesy busing la needed for
make decision more difficult.
reasons of safety of the children.
A ll three preclncU that Include
"W e will have to evaluate U ,”
Lake M ary and all 10 preclncU he said.
“ W e can h a n dle co u rte sy
th a t e n c o m p a s s L o n g w o o d
Kram er said that the sooner a b u s in g this y e a r ." R ic h a rd
supported the referendum.
decision Is made, the better.
Wells, assistant superintendent

Busing-

for transportation, said,
w ith 1.500 new students
year and 1.800 the year
that, we Just can't do that
this year. ‘
Edith Helen Bybee. 81. 406 E.
H ig h la n d S t .. A lta m o n te
Springs, died Tuesday at Meridi­
an Nursing Center. Longwood.
Born J u ly 4. 1910. In West
Irvine. K y .. she moved to Altamonte Springs from Irvine. K y..
In 1990. She was a homemaker
and a Methodist. She was a
member of the Order of the
Eastern Star.
Survivors Include sons. T ro y
E.. Altamonte Springs. Virgil M..
Louisville. K y.. Donald L.. O r­
a n g e P a r k ; s la t e r s . M a r y
S m lt h e r s . S e m in o le . L a u ra
Williams. West Irvine. Easter
H o rn . W in c h e s te r. K y .: 11
g r a n d c h i l d r e n : s ix g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home. Long­
wood. In charge of arrange­
ments.

da Regional Hospital. Sanford.
B o r n N o v . 10. 1 9 3 5 , I n
Biackahear. Ga.. she moved to
Sanford In 1959 from Waycroas.
Ga. She was a homemaker and a
m e m b e r o f F ir s t S h ilo h
M is s io n a ry B ap tist C h u rc h .
Sanford.
S u rv ivo rs Include husband.
W illiam R. J r .. Sanford: daugh­
ters. Melissa. Pamela W hite.
S h e ila V e rn lc e . A n d ra a n d
C h e r y l, all of Sanford. A n tonlnelt Washington. Ft. Myers:
m o t h e r . Rose Lee R e i d .
Waycroas: brothers. Leon. Ft.
Lauderdale. Lclon Reid and U l­
ysses Reid. Waycross: sisters.
A r m e t h a D a v is . W a y c ro s s .
Lillian Dandy. Richmond. Va.;
10 grandchildren.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
ford. in charge of arrangements.

BARBARA DOBOTRY LIN*

BARBARA P. ELLIO TT
Barbara P. Elliott. 47. 242
W agonw heel C o u rt. Sanford,
died Wednesday at Central Flor­
ida Regional Hospital. Sanford.
B o rn J u n e 15. 1944. in
Greensboro. N .C . she moved to
Sanford from there In 1975. She
was a stenographer for Shelby
Insurance Co. and a member of
the Christian Fellowship United
Church of C h ris t Longwood.
S u rvivo rs include husband.
R o b e r t : d a u g h t e r . H e le n a
LaAnn. Sanford: stepdaughter.
Roberta Gardner. Jamestown.
N .C .; stepson. Jeffrey Wayne.
Greensboro.
B a ld w in -F a lr c h ild Fu n e ra l
Home. Forest C ity. In charge of
arrangements.

CAROLYN R. J 0HN90M
Carolyn R. Johnson. 55. 127
Academ y Ave.. Sanford, died
today. J u ly 11. at Central Flori­

Barbara Dorothy Llnnehan.
71. 964 Vincridge Run. A lta­
monte Springs, died Wednesday
at Florida Hospital. Altamonte
Springs. B om Feb. 23. 1920. In
Seattle, she moved to Altamonte
Springs, from Carmel. Calif.. In
1989. She was a homemaker.
Survivors Include daughter.
Marsha Church. Apopka: son.
A rth ur. Silver Spring. Md.: three
grandchildren.
Beacon Cremation Service of
Central Florida. Winter Park, in
charge of arrangements.

GERTRUDS M. MILLIGAN
Gertrude M. MlUlgan. 64. 131
Triplet Lake Drive. Casselberry,
died Tuesday at Florida Hospi­
tal. Altam onte Springs. Born
O ct. 10. 1 9 2 a in Pittsfield.
Mass., she moved to Casselberry
from Costa Mesa. Caltf.. In 1976.
She was a homemaker and a

Methodist.
S u rv ivo rs Indude husband.
G o rd o n B .; brother. C h a rle s
King. Richmond. Va.
A ll Faiths Cremation Service.
Casselberry. In charge of a r­
rangements.

DALE FRANKUN SUTTON
Dale Franklin Sutton. 80. of
W est Patlin Avenue. O range
C ity, died Wednesday at Fish
M e m o ria l Hospital. D e L a n d .
B o r n M a rc h 3 0 . 1 9 1 1 , In
Jackson Township. Indiana, he
moved to Orange City 2 0 years
ago from Union City. Ind. He
was a machinist for Black Stay
Welt Com pany. Union C U y and a
Christian.
Survivors Include wife. Agnes
Mildred: son. Robert. Union C ity:
daughter. M. Marie Bush. De­
ltona: five grandchildren; 10
great-grandchildren.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Hom e. Deltona, in charge of
arrangements.

“ but
this
after
after

No new routes w ill be added.
T h e 80 students Lauderdale
w as speaking fo r live near
C o u n try Club Road between
Evanadato and Pine Tree.
"T h e y must w alk though a
heavily traveled area w ith no
sidewalks." he argued.
T h e area Is reportedly traveled
by more than 10.000 vehicles
p e r d a y . a c c o r d i n g to
Lauderdale. He m id that num ber
will likely Increase as construc­
tion on Lake Mary Boulevard
approaches the area.
Wells m id that the district
would have to look at Individual,
temporary courtesy busing situ­
ations. but emphasized that all
current courtesy routes would be
eliminated and no new routes
would be added.
Wells promised that with the
money that would be saved by
the elimination of courtesy bus
routes, high schools could be
relum ed to the 7:30 a.m . start­
ing times.

V -/ffering the finest in service and facilities with pre-plan­
ning through The Simplicity Plan™. Your only "hometown"
cemetery and funeral home combination.

BALDWIN - FAIRCHILD
( k k lu v n j f o k
Cam twry and Funeral Hom e

SR 46A at Rblnehart Rd.
Lake Mary

322-4263

Drive. Sanford home of former
sheriff Polk at 11:22 p.m . When
firefighters and police arrived,
they found the stove fire had
been put out.
Parker was In the household
a n d J o h n K . P o lk . " J o h n
Ju n io r." arrived at about 11:35.
according to a written report by
Sanford p o lice m a n M a rk L.
Nichols. Nichols wrote that he
told Polk everything was O.K.
‘ “ “ said he would enter the
rtbch eck onh is mother,
short tim e later, Nichols
heard an arguement between
Parker and Polk and he entered
the bar area of the home where
he saw Parker slap Polk, he
wrote. Polk grabbed him sister by
the throat and struck her two
limes, the report states. Nichols
wrote he and Sanford Police Li.
Ralph Ruaaell had to force the
couple apart after talking with
him "a couple of m inutes." Polk
released his sister's hair.
Parker w as treated at the
scene and asked to be taken to
Dr. Benjamin New m an's office
for observation, (h e reports
state.

Russell wrote after calming
Polk, he said he was wrong and
sorry a n d told him It was a
family problem that "had been
building up over a period of time
and It finally came to a head."
In Russell's statement, echoed
In the investigation report, he
wrote. "U p o n talking with John
Jr., his m other Mrs. Polk, and
Cheryl, it was the opinion of this
supervisor that this was a family
matter brought on by the added
stress of their father's death and
that no other action needed to hr
taken."
Nichols wrote Parker did not
want to p r e » charges against
her b ro th er. In a memo by
s h e riffs Internal Investigator
Thom as Johnson, he wrote he
called Parker on J u ly 3 and she
told h im she did not wish lo
make a formal complaint or
make a formal atatemenl. but
would give a written statement
of that position. On Ju ly H.
Johnson wrote (hat Parker con
(acted h im and told him her
attorney advised her lo makr no
written statements of the Inci­
dent.

‘Designing W om en' hits
top spot lor the first time
LOS A N G E L E S - "Designing
Women" lopped the television
ratings lust week for the first
time In the series' five-year
history and helped push CBS
Into a tie for first place In the
overall standings.
Here are the top 10 shows,
their network und rating: "D e ­
signing W om en." C B S. 13: "60

Minutes." C B S . 12.7: "Northern
Exposure.” CB S. 12.4: "In UnHeat of the N igh t." NBC. 12.3:
"M urph y B ro w n ." CBS. 12.2:
"Kum lly Matters." ABC. 11.9s
"U n s o lv e d M ysteries." NI1C.
11.3: " A B C Sunday Night Movie
Movlc: T h e To w n B ully." 11.2:
"Full House " und "2 0 2 0 ."
ABC. (H r) 10.0.

BoatingCaatiassd f n a Pags IA
throughout m uch of
the river close to the bunks, with
a 30 m.p.h. limit In the center of
the river. River tributaries have
speeds as low us 5 m .p.h. The
rule takes effect 20 days uflcr It
wus recorded with the Secretary
of State.
Donna Bcntzlcn. a DN K envi­
ronmental speclullst overseeing
Ihc rule's udoptlon. said the
stale recognized the speed limits
would affect the boating In­
dustry. but the specific impart
could not be determined.
"W e found there would likely

be udvcrsic Impacts but the data
was In c o n c lu s iv e ." Bcntzlcn
said. " A ll w c 'rr required to do it
do our best to assess Ihc loi
pacts."
Bcntzlcn said DNR officials
accept some murine businesses
may end because of the rule, bul
she said some business owners
may see their type of customers
change.
" T h e y m ay see a different type
of boating business." Bentzlrn
said. " T h e y m ay see more family
boaters because of the slower
speeds, for example."

IM p M

�P M M p jp‘F

M

B

'■~'

~~i11»»i^»«iitewHi)SBMiHiiii

M - Sanford Hanfd, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 11. 1W1

House kills Bush China policy
a m o c i«

«

q h im

democracy oevnovtM rsiofi l l
Tiananmen Square two years
agx a series of (actors — human
rights concerns, weapons pro­
liferation and a growing trade
imbalance In Beijing's favor —
have hardened CongreM* feel­
ings toward C h in a and put
lawmakers in direct conflict with

|4I&gt;4Sa «
n m r

W A SHINGTON An
overwhelming House defeat foe
President Bush s China policy
turns Intense pressure on the
Senate, the focus of White House
lobbying where a crucial vote Is
expected to the next few weeks.
Th e House voted 313-112
w ra n c M iy 10 impose m o t con*
ditlons on most-favored-natlon
trade status for China when It
ics up for renewal next year.
The runaway vote was well over
the two-thirds majority needed
to override a presidential veto.
But the matter Is much closer
to the Senate, where the ad­
ministration needs Just 34 votes
to sustain a veto and forestall
enactment of the conditions.
Bush renewed Beijing's K PN
status, which confers the lowest
possible tariffs on im ports Into
the United States, without con­
ditions effective this m onth. T b s
status was first granted China to
19S0 and to subject to annual
renewal.
The president, a former U A
envoy to China, has argued that
keeping open trade ties between
the two countries hokto out the

"Th e re w as a tim e when
China seem ed to be leading the
way toward reform to the com­
munist btoe.” said Rep. Gerald
Solomon, R -N .Y .. sponsor of a
competing and harsher measure
to cut off M FN status immediate­
ly-

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best hope foe
dem c n tlc in d ec
But the House strongly dtoa g r a td W e d n e s d a y a fte r a

u w t Yinneu inc D tuin|
ship tor human rights i
t tn r a it trade, the proliferation
—
of
and nuclear

and the use of petoon labor to
produce goods for export.
"To d a y we aay to C h ina:
You've |ot one year of open
with Am erica to dean up
your act." said M ajority Leader
Richard Oephardt. D-Mo.
Since the k illin g s of pro-

Reappointment of Fed’s chief
economic satabilizing influence
November 1992” — Election
D a y. said e co no m ist J e r ry
Jordan of First Interstate Ban­
corp, in Los Angeles.
Bush and his senior advisers
have fre q u e n tly u rg e d the
central bank to more vigorously
stimulate growth by sharply and
quickly lowering Interest rates.
But Fed officials have resisted for
fear of causing resurgent infla­
tion.

W A S H IN G T O N Alan
Greenspan's reappointment as
Federal Reserve Board chairm an
la o ffe rin g the A m e ric a n
economy a oose of stability as it
recovers from the recesalon.
" It certainly should be a
reassuring signal not only to
domestic markets but to world
markets," President Bush said
Wednesday in announcing his
nomination of the 65-year-old
economist to a second four-year

K^p

T h e president acknowledged
th e te n s io n s b u t p r a is e d
Greenspan's skill in juggling
competing economic concerns.
term.
"H e has done an outstanding
T h e appointment is subject to
jo b ." Bush said. " ... He'a been a
Senate confirmation. No sub­
fierce fighter against Inflation,
stantial opposition is a n tic i­
but I think he also is as strongly
pated.
committed to g ro w th ."
"T h e markets would have
"Th a t Isn't to say that you're
been really, really upset if he A la n Q r ttn tp a n
never going to have diflercncea,'*
hadn't been reappointed.'
Ihe president added,
in Washington.
economist Jay Goldlngcr of Cap­
Greenspan, w h o se cu rre n t
Since economic growth lapsed
ital Inalght Inc. to Beverly Hills. last sum m er, the B u s h a d ­ term expires A ug . 11. appeared
C a lif . “M a rke ts lik e p re ­ m in is tra tio n has fre q u e n tly in the White House briefing
dictability, and. a new Fed chair­ feuded with the Independent room with Bush and hia top
man would have brought a lot of central bank over the conduct of economic advisers — Treasury
uncertainty Into the economy.”
monetary policy. But currency Secretary Nicholas Brady. White
The Federal Reserve, as the and securities traders in the House economic adviser Michael
controller of the nation's money United States and abroad have Boston arid b u d g e t" director
T h e Fed
supply, has the most direct viewed Ihe Fed as an anti- Richard Dam ian.
chairman
offered
reporters
his
inflation
bulwark.
influence over the economy of
" T h e world wants monetary most optimistic assessment of
any government agency. Its
chairman Is sometimes called policy in firm hands that can sec the economy since the start of
the second most powerful person beyond Ihe second Tuesday of the recession.

Th o m a s sm oked marijuana
White House: nom inee’s
admission insignificant
By aM M M M M N M N
Associated Press Writer_________________________
W A S H IN G TO N — Suprem e Court nominee
Clarence Thomas "took several puffs" on a
marijuana cigarette in college — and perhaps
again In law school — but the White House hays
the matter is "Inconsequential."
T h e conservative appeals court Judge “ believes
It was a mistake and never repeated it." the
White House said in a statement Wednesday
night.
T h e statement said: "Ju d g e Thom as took
several puffs on a marijuana clgurelle hi college
and perhaps once in law school."
"Ju dg e Thomas fully disclosed this Information
on the FBI form and Interview which were
provided to the Senate Ju d icia ry Committee In
connection with the Judge’s nomination to the
court of appeals." said the statement rend over
the telephone by White House spokeswoman
Ju d y Smith.
"W e view this matter as inconsequential." Ihe
statement said.
Ms. Smith satd she could not Immediately
provide Information beyond the statement but
suggested that questions ubout dates and places
might be cleared up today. Th o m a s Is a graduate
of Holy Cross College and Yule Law School.
T h e statement w u» prepared In response to u

Thomas risks
race betrayal

RESTAURANT &amp; LOUNGE

H O U S TO N - The Rev. Jesse
Jackson says Supreme Court
nominee Clurrncc Thom as must
show some contrition for his
stance on affirmative action or
be considered a traitor to his
heritage.
Jackson, speaking Wednesday
at the B2nd annual convention
of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored
People, complained that the
D istrict of Columbia appeals
court Judge Ukl not embrace
a ffirm a tive action p ro g ra m s
from w hich he liad benefited.
"S o m e of us have come to
w h e re w e are w ith o u t the
benefits of a government lob.
Ju d g e Thom as nos not asked for
o u r su p p o rt, Indeed h r has
s h o w n d is re s p e c t fo r o u r
heritage." Jackson said.

query b y T h e Washington Post.
Another Supreme Court nominee in recent
years was tripped up by marijuana smoking.
Federal appeals Judge Douglas G lnsburg was
selected by President Reagan for a Supreme
Court seat on Oct. 29. 1987, after the Senate
defeated the nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.
But G ln sb urg withdrew nine days later after
adm itting he had smoked marijuana while a
professor at Harvard Law School.
Meanwhile. Bork said In an Interview w ith AP
Broadcast Services thal political reality forced
Bush to use a quota system In picking Thom as
for the high court.
" T h a t kind of a choice Is forced on B ush ." Bork
said. " I f he nominated a white male conservative,
there w ouldn't be a chance that he'd go through.
T h e Senate Judiciary Committee has forced u
quota system on Bush.”
T h e president denlcu Wednesday that he was
filling a racial quota by picking Thom as to
replace the retiring Thurgood Marshall. Ihe
court's only black Justice.
Bush called Thom as' nomination "the right
thing at the right time’* and predicted he would
w in confirmation.
Th o m a s Is continuing his visits to key senators
at their Capitol Hill offices und is preparing for his
confirmation hearings scheduled for September.
Bork said Thom as Is "probably not" the best
legal m ind the president could find for the court
|ub. "B u t he may be the best legal ruliul he had u
chance to get confirmed." Bork said.

i T - ttys
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a M p o n n
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X U

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R I I

1*4.951
CATFISHM
CRAB LEGS...a*— a a a * jjjjjjj* *12.95

...Plus Many Mora Daily Specials
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D A IL Y E A R LY

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But reform efforts have been
exposed aa "p a th e tic , half­
hearted a n d m e a n in g le ss ."
Solomon said. "Th to regime is
fundamentally illegitimate, and
we help to prop It u p " with
favored trade status.
On a vote of 223-204, the
rtoutc ipproveo ootofnon i mo*
lutton for an abrupt M FN cutoff.
But that m easure was given no
chance of surviving a certain
presidential veto and m ay not
even be co n sid ered In the
Senate.

Billboard ow ners upset
over priest’s acquittal
to keep the Roman Catholic
priest from damaging any
C H IC A G O B illb o a rd
owners aay they fear for their
signs fotkmtng the acquittal
of a priest who defaced ada for
alcohol and cigarettes.
A Ju ry last week acquitted
the Rev. Michael PflMer of
crim inal destruction of prop­
erty for painting over such
biliboardN in hia poor Chicago
n e ig h b o rh o o d . O ne ju ro r
called Pfleger's act a "moral
statement.
Ronald W . Waggener. exec­
utive director of the EightSheet O utdoor Advertising
Association in Bhw Springs,
n o ., ana m e Vfruici opera
the door for an awful lot of
very dangerous thlnro ."
"Here’s a priest wno should
be setting an exam ple^for hit
NAfS Ha s become
I Craig Heard,
m ay Outdoor
Advertising Co. In

d is c k

neignDornooaso ne w u

placed on otx months' proba­
tion.
In New Y o rk , the Rev.
C a lv in B u tts has defaced
billboards in Harlem and has
indicated he la w illing to go to
jaU.

N J.

O n Tuesday. Getaway, one
of the nation's larger billboard
operators, sued In an attempt

director of the National Aaroc in u o h for inc AOviDccmcm
of Colored People, aald the
N A A C F hasn't taken a posi­
tion on Pfleger’s action*. But
ha added, "F d prefer to call It
not defacing but cleaning
up.

Ltgal Notto—

Liflll Nolle—

IN TNE CIRCUIT COURT,

MIBBl W
aaiSR
fllw
v lwas
l

Nonce is N ia ie v stvsn
•hat tot Oty af Sanford. P torto*
«Ui meat** m M MW up Is
1:to M L an T u n s * . Jufy »
m h M Purchattoa OMca.
Sawn M l tor tha tallowing

RAMMER
A N M uar* I
w is e to: Thu City W !
b r c t o t o i O N k », m N. Part
Avanwa, laniard, Ftortoa JJT71.
Tlw MRtoi Mis wlN to pufeticty
•pinto totor toat m a m toy at
t ; N PM. to tto City Cam

-

1W)

•ra available, at na
caat, In to# Purchasing Office.
Sawn Ml. JW to. Parti Auanua.
laniard. Florida.
a S M ix
wlllnatkai
Tto City al laniard m a n a t
tto right to accapt ar r*|*ct any
or alt MW. with ar without
cauia. to waive technical m#» ar
to acctpt tto SW which In lit
ludpomont tool oarvoo tto intar•at at Iha City.
CITY OP SANFORD
Walter Shear In
Purttoolnp Apont
Jufy 4 Iffl
Publtoh July II, m i
DKFfMI

IN T N I C IS C U IT COURT,
I Ife N TIIN TM JUD ICIAL
CIRCUIT, IN AMO POO
IIM l N O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
C A iito 0 .n -m a -C A -i4 «
P IO R R A L N A T IO N A L
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,

•mangawadto

f iiit H if f t a t f iis t

•ANKATLANTIC, a PaSwal
tavtoaa Bank, f/k/a ATLANTIC
PIORRAL lA V IN G t AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION O f POST
LAUDS RDALI,

EDWARD W. JON EL at ua, af
al.

Nonciaa
FOaiCLOMMIMLI
NOTICE I t H i a i B V O tV IN

CA 14ft at tot Circuit Court *f
to* ItofetomSi JuWclat Circuit
In ana tor l amlnato County,
F l i r l i i w f e t r a l n
■ANKATLANTIC. a P a * ra l
Saving* Sank, ate.. Plaintiff,
•to EDWARD W. JON IS . at ua.
at al, a rt DiNnSanto. I will tall
to tlw tugtoil an* fea»t feWa*r
tor caifi In Ito Siwlnala Caunty
CaurtoauM In Santor*. l amina la
Caunty, Ftortoa at 1 1 :» o'clock
A.M. on to* lim day of Augwtt,
Iffl, toa following SMcrlfeaS
*rapart? a* aat torto in aaM
Fkwl JuXgnwnt, to wit:
Lai I I . W I K I V A C L U B
E S TA TE S S E C TIO N F I V E ,
•ccurding to Sw Plat toaroof, at
ru t rdid In Plat Bank IS. Pag*
N and It, at to* Public Bacardi
ol S*mInal*Caunty. Florida.
DATED IM* 1st day at July,

mi.

MABYANNE MORSE
Ctorfc af tato Circuit Court
SyJanaE. Jatawlc
DaputyCtork
PuWItfi: July II. 14 m t
OEH-a?

JU 0Y0W 1N MON ROC. atal.,
N O T IC I O P IA L I
Nolle* It htrtfey fivan mat,
purwant la a Summary Pinal
Judgmant al Foraclaaur* an
torto toroln, | will tall Ito
prtptrtY UtuatoP In tamlnoto
County. Ptor to*, daacrlbed to:
Tto la tl 43 00 toot ot Lot I )
and Ito Waal 4MR toat of Lot 14.
■lock 0. U N LAN DO SPRINGS
SOUTH to OP TR A C T NO. 14
SIC0N0 R K P LA T, according
to Itoolto ttorool m rat ardW In
Plat latk *. Papa L ol Ito
Public Racordt al Soml noto
Counly, Florida.
at puMto Mto. w too highaat and
hati bldtor tar caah. al tto Watt
Iron! tntranca. Samlnato County
Courttout*. Sanford, in Sanford.
P lorIda. al 11:00 A M on Ito
UnddoyMAufutt. Ittl.
WITNESS my hand and of­
ficial wal of Mid Court told It!
day ol July. m i .
(Court tool)
MARYANNC MORSE
Clark of Ito Circuit Court
Ry: Jan* R. Jaaowlc
At Oapuly Ctorh
Publtoh: July II, II. Ito)
DEHN

NOTICE o r
FICTITIOUS K A M I
Nolle* to toroby given that I
am ingagod In butinou al 141?
Sw ttltlr* C l.. Apopka. PL
a? II. lomlnolo County, Florida,
unitor tto PIcllHout Nam* ol
TR A N SIT A U T O SA LES A
LEASING, and that I Inland to
regtotor Mid nam* with to*
Socroltry of Slat*. TaJIahaiiao.
Florida. In accordance wlto to*
provlllont ol Iha Flcllllou*
Nam* Statuto. To Wit Sacllon
MS Of. Florida Slatutol Its?
Ranald H. VudoM
PuWiih: July n . m i
DEH 104

N O TICE OP
FICTITIOUS NJLME
Nolie* to toroby glvon mat I
am angagad In bu«in*M al Ja*
Nobraika Ava., Longwood. Fla .
Somlnoto County. Florida, undtr
to* Flellllou* Nam# ol RICH
ARD BROTHERS PLUMBING
4 IRRIGATION, and tool I
Intend to rogtolor Mid nam*
with Ito Socrolary ol Slal*.
TollatotM*. Florida. In ac
cordanc* wlto toa provision* ol
to* Fkllllout Nama Statuto.
To Wit Section atSOt. Florida
Statuto* t«?
Richard E Broltor*
Publlth July II. m i
o e h no

IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OP
IDA MAE HUGHES.
PattltonarTWIto.

EIALPROPERTY
PROCEEDEDAGAINST
Ttil STATE OP FLORIDA TO:
CLISTER HUGHES, wltod
YOU M l HEREBY NOTI­
FIED tfegt a Petitton Par Dtoaaluhan ha* boon Mad
you and a prtyor

WlIrtHT IflV rVTITffn n

Court to pwwi
property owned by you

Wlto, IDA MAY HUGHES, aa
tonant* by IhaantIntto*. toeatod
at WIT Hughey Street, SantorG,
Florida, and mar* particularly
Lot ■ at P.T. Marlwaattor'*
Surypyaf Waalana-toHafSauth
ot Stoat ana-half af
ana guartor at toa

IfliHIMMrlVfi
a Tawnddp If SouM. I
la*t. Plat racardW In
l » . Papa 4H, Official
to af lamlnato Caunty.
Florida
la y a u r w lfa , ID A M A I
HUGHES. •• lump mm alimo­
ny, and you ar* ragulrad ta
aarvp a copy ol your Raipanaa
or Pleaping an W ILLIAM I .
R E IS C H M A N N , J R . . E S ­
QUIRE, Pallhanar'* attorney.
whaaa addrau I* P.O. baa 4R44
Sanford, FL UJ7I4M4 an or
bator* July a. mt. II you M l to
da to. (udgmant by datoull will

IH TN B CIRCUIT CO UR T
OP THE E IS N T IIN T M
JU0ICM L CIR CUIT
INANOPOa
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NUM BER:
t t n it-f A -arP fa
IN R E: THE MARRIAGE O F :
EAR SARA J. CAPLE.

DATED Ihl* IMn day of June,
al Sanford. Samlnala
Caunty, Florida.
(SEAL)
M ARYANNI MORSE
Ctorh af toa Circuit Court
by: HatonSlanditor
DaputyCtork
Publtoh: June 1 4 1? 4 July 4. tl,

NMi

D E G II?

Pallflonar/WIto.

SICHARON.CAPLE.JR..
Raapandwit/Huaband.
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: RkhardN.Capto, Jr.
iFardtomCIrcto
Pua»to.CaNradaHOM
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D toat an
actton hai kaan fltod agalnal you
and you ar* raqulrad to tar va a
copy ol yeur wrltton dofont**, it
any. ta PAUL V . M O V E R .
ESQ U IRE, Pollllanor’a A l
tomty. who** addrii* I* Ml?
W**t Slat* Raad 414. Langweed.
Florida mt*. an ar batera July
n . Ittl, and flla toa original
wlto Ito Ctorfc ot toll Court
alitor bator* tarvlca an Plain
lilFa AHarnay or Immadlatoly
Itoreattar. or a dafaull will to
anlarad *g*ln*t you far Ito
r*ltot domandad In to*
Complaint
WITNESS my hand and M*l
at tol* Court an ih* Itto day al
Juno. m i.
(SEAL)
MABYANNE MORSE
C L E R K 0 F TH E COURT
By: MaryLou Brown
Deputy Ctorh
Publlih: June » . 1? 4 July 4. II.

mi
D E G -Ill

CITY OF SANFORD
PARKS D EP AR TM EN T
rU IL IC M E E TIN G
RE NOVATION OF
LIGHTING SYSTEM
PINEHURST
ATHLETIC FIE LD
There ttoll be a public hear
log told In toe Sanford City
Cemmlulon Chamber* al m
North Park Avenue an Tuatday.
I 00 P M . July » . r n i Tto
purpo*« al tot* meeting will be
la record public commen I* on
to* plannad renovation ol Ito
lighting tytlam ol to# Pinahurti
alhtotta Ilaid located al 1000
Wetl lath Stral. Sanford.
FloridaThota parwn* lnt*r**fed In
*ipr**ilng opinion* an Ih*
plannad ranavation of toa light
lag lyitam el ito Pinahurti
aiMallc toll Hold Mould alland
HU* matting
PubllM July II. 14 IS. lf *1
OEH III

THINKING OF BUYING
O il SELLING A CAR?

RIMS.

County, Florida.

PktHtoM NMto af THE FOOO
SOURCE, and Mat I tatand to

C L IS T E R HUGHES.

rallaf dwnandad In to* Patman.
Thto nolle* ahall ba puMtohod
one* a weak tor tour (ft canaacutlva weak* In to* Sanford

va.

C h eck O ut O ur d o u b le d
ta g *i B efore You D ecide

V

surfaced In other parti of the
country as actlvteta resort to
breaking the law to counter
what they aay are threats to
m inority comm unitlea.
In Texas. Dallas County
Com m issioner Jo h n W iley
Price was convicted last year
of whitewashing alcohol and
tobacco billboards in mostly

im i.

mi

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I II G N T I I N T H
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT,
INAMOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. i ft-aN4CA-t4-K
TH E CITIZENS4 SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK OF
FLORIDA.
Plaintiff.

v*.

STEPHEN K. SMITH and
KATHRYN A. SMITH, hit wlto:
KARLA T. CAMPBELL;
STATE OF FLORIDA
DEPARTM ENT OF
REVENUE, and A OUDA 4
SONS. INC..
NOTICE O f ACTION
TO KARLAT. CAMPBELL
la*t known addrau
I0SHS.W. SI Strati
Cooper City. Florida 1MM
All parti#* claiming Inter#*!*
by. through, under ar again*!
KARLA T. CAMPBELL, and all
parti** having ar claiming to
have any right, till* ar Inter**!
In ttt# property h*r»ln

described

YOU ARE NOTIFIED to*! an
action to toraclot* a Mortgage
an to* toltowlng property In
Seminal* County. Florida:
Lai V . Black A. CHAR TER
OAKS UNIT TWO. according to
to* plat thereof at racardad In
Flat Book 14. Pag* tt. Public
Record* ol Samlnato County.
Florida.
ha* bean Iliad again*! you and
again*! all attendant* named
above and you art ragulrad to
t*rvo a copy al your written
d*tontat. ii any. to It on HOW
A R D S. MARKS. E*gulr*.
Graham. Clark. Pehl 4 Jon#*.
Perl Oft.c* Drawer lata. Winter
Park. Florida. H H 4 Plaintitf*
attorney, an ar haler* July ISIh.
IMI. and III* toa original with
to* Ctorh al tolt Court either
before tarvlca an PlalMIH't
attorney ar Immadlatoly thar*
after: atoerwite a dafaull will
be entered againtt you tor Iha
raitof demanded In the Com
plaint or Petition
DATEOon JgnalL Tftt
(SEAL)
MARVANNEWORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Ruth King
AaOaputyClark
Publtoh June 1? 4 July A II. 14
IMI
DEG M0

prgylblaM at tha Ftollftau*
Hama Statuto. TpWH: Sactton
M M 4 Ptortdi Statuto* m?.
Publiah: Jw ty ll.m i
D E H -H i____________________
HOT ICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
U.
A-. . - ■
|iv| .if |
M PWfwPy
'pifwi rtlwf |
In bwwewa# III

tom . Samlnato County, Ptortd4
undor Iba Fktlttoga Nama af
L E T ’S T A L K CRUISES, and
Ih&amp;l |
^ pwwla^a ..Ito
nama wllti tha Sacratary at
Stato. Ta lH h im a , F torId*. In
ac car dance wlto to* pctvtoton*
*1 too Ptetlttoua Nama Statuto,
T a in t : Sactton MS.M, Ftortoa
Statu*#* Its?.
OwmaM. Barttott
Publtoh: July 11. tMt
O E H -H I____________________
IH T H E CIRCUIT COURT
O P T N E E M N T IE N T N
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN M B FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL DIVISION
CASBM &amp;fl-tro-SRdS-B
IN RE TH R MARRIAOI O ft
Janaman Ray ball
Huaband/Ratpandanl
and
Kathryn Lynn Kaitoy
Wlto/Paltt toner
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO : Jonathan Ray Ball
N R Ml? (A 4 K Traitor Park
LatM)
Spirit Laka.lA SUM
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
F IE D toat an Actton tor Dl*•afutlan al Marrlap* ha* been
fltod again*! you and you are
ragulrad ta torto a copy af yaur
wrltton datonaaa If any, to It an
Kathryn Lynn Kaitoy. Patlttonar, whaaa addrii* to P.O.
Ran t m . OvtoOa. Ftortoa B?U
an *r batora Augwf 4 m t , and
flla Iha original with Iha dark af
thia court althar batora tarvlca
an Patltlanar or Immadlatoly
thaveaftor. If you toll to da ta. a
default will ba anlarad againtt
you tar Ih* raitof domandad In
fhaaatltton.
WITNESS my hand and Iha
•aal of Ihl* Court on July I. INI.
M A R Y A N N I MORSE
A* Clark af tha Court
■y Nancy R. Winfar
A* Deputy Clerk
Publtoh: July 4, II. 14 IS. m i
PEHS4_____________________
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
OP T H E EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
FOR T N I STATE OP
PLORIOAINANO FOR
SEMINOLECOUNTY,
FLORIDA
Ca**Na.M~UMCAI4K
SOUTHEAST IA N K, N A.. *uc
cauor by merger with SOUTH
EAST BANK FOR SAVINGS,
form erly known a* FIR ST
F E D E R A L SAVINGS AND
L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N OF
JACKSONVILLE.
Plaintiff.
v*.
OSCAR ROBE RTS. #1*1,
Defendant*
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
EV CLERK OF
CIRCUIT COURT
Nolle* I* hereby given that tlw
undartignad Maryann* Mar**.
Clark of Ih* Circuit Court el
Samlnato County- Florida, will,
on the ljfh day of Augutl. IMI.
at ll:0 R A M .allha W*»l Franl
deer at Iha Samlnato County
Caurthauaa. in Iha City af San
lard. Florid*, oiler lor tato end
tall at public outcry la the
high**i and bail bidder lor cath.
the tallowing dttcribad preparty
t!tutted In Seminole County,
Florida, to wit:
LOT II. (LESS THE NORTH
U F E E T THEREOF) ANO ALL
LOT 11. BLOCK II, BEL AIRE.
ACCORDING TO THE PLAT
TH ER EO F AS NECOHOED IN
P L A T BOOK 1. PAGE It.
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI
NOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA,
purtuanI to Iha final decree ol
leradoaur* entered In a cat*
ponding in tato Court, Ih* tty I#
*1 which i i : SO U TH EA ST
BA N K . N A., tucctttar by
m erger with SO U TH EA S T
BANK FOR SAVINGS, formerly
known at FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCI
A T ION OF JACKSONVILLE,
v*. OSCAR ROBERTS.*! at
WITNESS my hwta and of
llctal teal at tato Court Ihl* M
day af July. IMI
ISEAL)
MARVANNE WORSE.
CLERK
By: Jan* E. Jaaowlc
DaputyCtork
Publtoh July II. 14 IMI

OEH M

�-7?

THURSDAY

Chase a throe-toam race

IN B R I E F

Florida Manor leads
DCC, Hopkins Meats
8 t Petersburg dieses MslfWfi
S E A TTL E — Seattle Mariners owner Jeff
Bm ulyan rebuffed a S t. Petersburg group
seeking an interest tn the franchfee. But he said
"W e're been told they’re dytoig to buy the
whole thing or a n Interest in tt. anything we
w ant," Smutyen aatol of the arproech from an
unidentified Intermediary for tne Florida group.
"There have been no exchange with anyone
but I can't te l you they haven't talked to
"A t thla point, w e've oaki n o ."
Smutyan said Tuesday he thinks the St.
Petersburg g ro t? win make an offer for the
American League team, noting the Florida etty'a
ID year effort toflet a N i p r Leagie team.
St. Petersburg's m ain hire Is the 2-year-old
6136 m illion Suncoast Dom e, which has

SANFORD - League-leading Florida Manor
an d second-place D C C both posted w ins
Wednesday to keep atay a flame apart In the
standings of the Sanford Recreation Men's
Sprtng/Summer Softball League at Chase Park.
After Hall'a Stucco opened the evening's play
srtth a 10-5 romp of Bm ttty's Plum bing. Florida
Manor picked up a 7-0 forfeit w in over the
.Sanford Police Benevolence Association. DCC
then turned back Hopkins Meats 12-5 to gain sole
control of second place.
Florida Manor, winners of three tot a vow. Is
now 9-2 while DCC Is 8-3 and Hopkins Meats Is
cloae behind at 7-4. That trio la trailed by Hall's
Stucco (5-7). Smltty's Plum bing (3-6) and SPBA
12-9).
Nest week. Hall’s Stucco Is scheduled to play

SPBA at 6:30 p.m . DCC and Sm ltty's Plumbing
w ill tangle at 7:30 p.m. before Hopkins Meats
Spencer Baggett was 3-for-3 w ith a triple,
double and three runs scored to highlight the
13-hit attack of Hall's Stucco while James
Th o m pson was 2-for-3 with a triple, double and
three runs scored. Blake Sm ith added two singles
and three runs scored.
Also chipping In were Freddy Moreno and Bob
B u m p m c r (both with two ainjpea and two runs
scored), Brian Sprinkle (three runs scored), Jim
Han (single, two runs acocedL Bob G am er (single)
and Mike Shuttuck (one run acored).
For Sm ltty's Plumbing. Jo hn ny Haddock hit
three singles and' acored a run. George Ponig
doubled, singled and acored a ru n while Bob
Weds and
id Chad RoU both singled twice and,
a run. A.W . Imes also had two singles.
Jim m y Jenkins singled and scored a rud. Jam es
Sm ith and Curtis Wolff each singled.
In the battle for second dace. D CC exploded for
seven runs In the lop of the Drat Inning and were
never headed by Hopkins Meats, who didn't get

on the board until the deficit had reached ID O .
Donny McCoy led D CC with a triple, single and
three runs scored while Mike D'Am ico added a
triple, single and two runs scored. Roger Klnnard
singled twice and scored twice. Mike Brodericks
doubled, singled and scored a run. Thad Brooks
hit two singles and scored a run.
Also chipping In were Sonny Eubanks. G u y
Brewster and Jim m y Ramos (each with a single
and a run scored) and Arthur Barnes. Solomon
Hardy and Ira Hall (one single apiece).
Tom Shanley launched a home run along with
s pair of singles to lead Hopkins Meats. Shawn
Wyman added one triple, double, single and run
scored . Andy Dickens. Kay Robinson and Mark
Bolton each h it two tingles while Charlie
Hatcher. Ron Prager and Robert Burgesa each hit
a single and scored a run. William W ynn and
Olen Burgess both singled.

The city fought bard to get one of two National
League expansion teams earlier this year, but
lost to Miami and Denver. At lead 25,000
season ticket ptvchaacs have been pledged, and
luxury stadium writes are already being sold.
If Smutyen decides to sell the team, he must
offer it first to a local buyer. He paid 676 million
for Ihe Mariners in 1969 and the asking price for
the National League expansion franchises w
665 million.

Pinehurst
leaders
scrape by
FroroflSoWRoeoWo_____________

and lucky
While It doesn't hurt to bo either
good or lucky, sometimes it takes a
combination of th# two to gat the
lob dono. Ae m example, take the
home run hit by H.D. Realty's Brian

It’s not a playoff, but ifa cloaa
MIAMI — It could be the best thing that's
happened to New Year's Day since the Invention
of aspirin.
A powerhouse lineup of four major bowls, two
conferences and Notre Dome said Wednesday
they've formed ■ coalition to Improve the
iked te
chance that the nation's two top-ranked
teams
w ill meet each Ja n . 1.

jo n M ■ n n m u r i! f w i n t a n f io iy
ntfJfVl* JO flM CfflBfiiy IpPUOUO I01Df

good enough to hit the bell over the
left field fence. But he still needed a
bit of luck as a Regency Mazda
outftakfer was able to gat back to
the fence end get Me glove on the
bell, but couldn't hang on.

T h e alliance w ill include the Orange. Cotton.
Sugar and Fiesta bowls, as well aa the Atlantic
Coast and Big E ast conferences. Negotiations
began last February on the affeement, which
takes effect with th e 1902 season.
Under the agreement, the Big Eight Confer­
ence will continue to send U s champion to the
Orange Bowl: Southw est Conference-Cotton
Bowl and Southeastern Conference-Sugar Bowl
affiliations will also continue.
After the Big E ig h t. S W C and S E C champions
are determined, the other slots for the four bowl
games will be filled'by a five-team pobl.' which
w ill Include Notre Dam e, the champions of the
Big East and A C C , and tw o other highly ranked
at-large teams. T h e at-large teams could be
Independents or conference members.
T h e highest-ranked team In the pool will be
Invited to the bo w l that offers the highestranked opponent. F o r example. If Texas Is No. 1
and bound for the Cotton Bowl, the highestranked team In the pool w ill be Invited to play tn
Dallas on Jan. 1.

Holyfltld to fight Tyson
N E W YO RK - Evander Holyfleld. with a big
assist from George Forem an, knocked out
rhetoric, stopped one-upstnansMp and now will
defend the undisputed heavyweight champion­
ship against Mike T y s o n .
"T h e fight Is done — Nov. B al Caesars
Palace." Don K in g . T y s o n ’s promoter said
Wednesday after closing a deal with Don Duva.
Holyfleld's promoter.
King, who has said "w e don’t need Hatyfield."
made a major effort to m atch Tyson and
Foreman, the 42-year-old folk hero, but aa of
Tuesday It appeared Holyfield would fill Ihe
Nov. 8 date with a rematch against Foreman,
w ho he outpointed over 12roun&lt;bon April 19.

1

■ U T M T S ON TV
B A S EB A LL
□ 7 :3 5 p.m. — W T B S , St. Louis Cardinals at
Atlanta Braves. (L)
□ B p.m. — W A YK 56. W G N . Houston Astros at
Chicago Cubs. (L)

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Bucks to follow M o u s
M ILW A U K EE — T h e Milwaukee Bucks signed
center Moses Malone to a two-year contract on
Wednesday.
“ Moses Is an Intense competitor with the
heart of a lion and the spirit of a thoroughbred."
Bucks coach D d H arris said. "H e will give us a
big lift in our rebounding and Inside game."
Malone, a ID y e a r veteran, became an un­
restricted free agent when the Atlanta Hawks
declined to sign h im for the 1991-62 season on
J u ly 1.
That's also the date the Bucks cleared 61.6
million from their salary cap by not picking up
the option year at J a c k Slkm a’s contract.
T h e Bucks did not release terms of the deal,
but USA Today had reported earlier the Bucks
and Malone were w orking on a pact that would
pay him 61.6 m illion for the first season and Just
over 62 million far the second.

S A N F O R D — There were no easy
winners Wednesday night In the
San dord Recreation Departm ent
M e n ’a S p rln g / S u m m e r S o ftb a ll
League at Plncnurst Park.
T h in g s got started w ith secondplace H .D . Realty having to ha n g on
to b e a r R e g e n c y M a x d a 6 -4 .
League-leading Ed Busaard's Pro
Baaa Guide Service then used a
four-run fourth Inning to d ow n *
B ik in i Beach 5 -0 . F in a lly , the
W recking Crew needed nine Innings
to overcome Ensley Inc. 8-7.
B u sa a rd 's (9 -3 ) m a in ta ln a its
half-game lead o ve r' H .D . Realty
( 9 4 ) while the Wrecking Crew (7-5)
la Just tw o games back In third.
B ikini Beach 166) la tn fourth ahead
of Regency Mazda (5*7) and Ensley
Inc. (a very deceptive 0 12).
Fa r H .D . Really. Mack Th o rn e ’s
tw o-run triple tn the second and
Brian Jones* two-run home ru n tn
the third were the btg blows as
Regency Mazda out-hit the winners
by a 13-8 margin.
Jon es also had a single to gp w ith
hts home run. Bob Kelly added two
singles and a run scored while C hris
Dapore. C h ryst Doney and Carl
Th o rn e each singled and scored a
run . Duane Carlson also scored a
run.
Keith Sparks tripled, singled and
scored a ru n to lead Regency Mazda.
Carl Lee and Jerry Brussel bolh
added a double, single and a run
scored while Jeff Sladek singled
twice and acored once. Bob Borake
and W ayne Kelly each hit two
singles Scott Pensala contributed a
single.
Fo r Busaard's. Jo h n Wilks was
3-for-3 w ith a triple to lead a 13-hit
attack. Jeff Bergman. Ed Buasard
and T o m W ilks each added a
double, single and one run scored.
Reggie Robinson singled and scored
a ru n . T o m Wilks. Duane Goembcl
□ 9 m P taeharal, Page 3 1

m

Good hitting, pitching has Oviedo Seniors on roll
A P O P K A — Casey Stengel once said that good
pitching beats good hitting and vice versa.
T h e Oviedo Senior League (14 and 15-yearolds) All-Stars have both.
O n Wednesday night. Oviedo won Its third
stra ig h t game In the D is tric t 14 Area 3
tournament at Apopka-West Seminole Little
League, defeating the D r. Phillips Nationals
Ail-Stars 10-0 on a one-hitter by 14-year-old Todd
Bcllhorn.
In those three games. Oviedo's offense has
accumulated SB runs on 3B hits while Ihe
pitchers have limited opponents to one earned
run on four hits.
O n Wednesday night, the Dr. Phillips Nationals
squandered a chance to get to Bcllhorn early.
Alexis Gonzalez led ofT with a hit. but was
quickly picked off first by Uellhorn. A n out later.
Jason Moore walked and the next batter reached
on an error, putting runners at first and second.
Uul Uellhorn. showing the poise that earned
him a spot on Ihe Oviedo High School varsity
team us a freshman this spring, struck out Ihe
next batter (Ihe first of I2| to kill the threat. H r
then retired the next 15 butters tn a row before
Dr. Phillips* lt-ud-o(T hitter tn the lop of the
sevrnth reached on an error.
Meanwhile. Ihe Oviedo offense struck for three
runs in the first Inning, one in the second, four In

the fourth and two In the sixth.
Leading the 15-hit Oviedo attack were the top
four hitters In the Oviedo batting order — T im
Slavik. Mike Ruglenlus. Bcllhorn and Mark
Metcalf — who combined for 12 hits In 15 at bats
with a triple, two .doubles, seven RBI and eight
runs scored.
Slavik, the lead-off hitter, was 3-for-4 w ith a
triple, one RBI and two runs scored while No. 2
hitter Ruglenlus wus 4-for-4 with u double, three
RBI and three runs scored.
Bcllhorn. the No. 3 hitter, went 3-for-4 with a
double, one RBI and two runs scured. Metcalf. Ihe
elcan-up hitter, was 2-for-3 with two RUI and u
run scored.
Also contributing was Ja y Uussc, who went
2-for-2 with an RUI.
Oviedo Is now off until Saturday, when It will
play the survivor of the losers' bracket in a 10
a.m. game at Eastmonte Park tn Altumonte
Springs.

L U tls League
E U S T IS — Shaun Child turned In a com­
plete-game pitching performance and led a
balanced offensive attack us the Altumonte
Springs Nationals eliminated Casselberry 10-2 In
u Little League ( I I and 12) District 14 Area 3
All-Star game Wednesday night.
Ttie Altamonte Springs Nationals will attempt
to continue their Irek through the elimination
bracket when they face the team that knocked

them Into the losers' bracket, the Deltona
Nationals, ut 7 p.m . ut Casselberry Little League.
Deltona defeated Altamonte Springs 8-4 on
Monday.
To earn the rematch with Deltona. Altamonte
Springs used five hits, 14 walks and three
Casselberry errors enroute to Its win Wednesday
night. Leading 5-2 after four Innings. Altamonte
Springs scored five runs on Just one hit In the
fifth to put the game on Ice.
Child, who struck out nine uud walked three
while allowing three hits, led the Altumonte
Springs offensive effort by going 2-for-3 with two
RBI and two runs scored. Kevin Nuas scored
three runs while Michael Felker and Billy Parker
each had two RBI.
F O R E S T C I T Y — Jim m y Parsons broke a l - l
tie with a tw o-run double to give Seminole
Central a 4-3 w in over West Seminole Maroon
Wednesday n ig h t in the Bronco I I I and
12-year-olds) All-Star tournament being played at
West Seminole Pony League.
In Wednesday's curlier gume. the Semlnolc
Amerlcuns edged West Semlnolr Gold 3-2.
With Ihe seore lied 1-1 In the fifth Inning,
winning plleher Aaron Black hit a two-out infield
single. After Phillip Eubanks singled Black to
second. Parsons ripped the next pitch to deep
center field for a double that scored Bluck and

□ S ee All-Stare. Page 2B

F O ^ 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

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TatheMk, punter: Dave Baird, wtda re
celver: Baul Me Go nan. linehacker; and
Jerry Meat, dttentlvt linemen. Signed Scat!
Kowalkowtkl, linebacker, to two one-year
contract!, and Dan Flocki. pitc titleher, and
Cited Fortune, tight and, to one year con
tract!.
FHOENIX CARDINALS - Slgnod John

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T H E G R E A T A M E R IC A N IN V E S T M E N T

MISCILLANIOUS
4: It p m. - WWNZ AM (740). SporttTalk

DOG RACING

l )c ,&lt; ' m in M u to t &lt;k

30 HD. 40 HD
10 W 40 or
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MawYark

Should the winner of the 5:30
p.m . game knock olf Seminole
Central, the two teams w ill play
again Friday at 5:30 p.m . for the
right to advance to the state
tournament In lake W orth.

DALLAS T E X A N S - Sutpended Carl
Alkena. wlda recelvw datontive beck, ter
dtietoNnery reat ene.
NEW ORLEANS N IO H T - Signed Robert
Allan. wUa receiver-ddantJ ve back.
ORLANDO B R ID A TO R S - StRted Lae
McCenekt and Duane Nath, wtda recelver-detontlve hack*. Blacad Relth

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■A!H A L L
7 p.m. - WMJK AM (1770). FSL. Bm 0 » I I
City Royplt at Otcaola A»tro*
7 0 p.m. — WHOOAm 1(40). Southern
Laagua. Carolina Mudcati at Orlando Sun

T h is evening, the Seminole
Americans will play West Sem i­
nole Maroon at 5:30 p .m . In an
e lim in a tio n gam e w it h the
winner having to come right
back and play Seminole Central
at 8 p.m .

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FOOTBALL
II p.m. — SC, Arana Laagua: Tampa Bay
Storm0 Datroil DrIvo
OOLF
4 p.m. — ESPN. US. Woman’s Opan, llral
round, (L), alsoat 1:10a.m.
BOCCIR
11 p.m. — UNI, Amsrlca’s Cup: Braill va.
Uruguay

V p.m. — ESPN, Alas Garcia* va Jsrry
GoN, haavywalptita, (L)

Eubanks.
I*nr»on» then scored on Mike
Meadow's single.
West Seminole Maroon scored
single runs In the sixth und
seventh inning to cut Into the
lead. With two out In the sixth.
Drlan Salford singled and stole
second. He then stole third and
came home as the catcher's
throw went Into left field. In
seventh. Taylo r Viersen singled
and eventually scored on pass
ball.
But Just when It looked like
West Seminole Maroon m ight
force the game into extra In­
nings, Seminole Central came
up with a big defensive play on a
ball hit between first and second.
T h e ball eluded the Seminole
first baseman but was caught by
Parsons, the second baseman,
who made the throw to Black
covering first.

Miller, freelatoty.

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HOUSTON O ILER S - Signed Kevin Donnattoy, tackle, and Gary Wellman, wlda

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M IE N BAY BACKUS - Slgnod Johnny
Walter, wtda rocalvw. Announod ttte r*
ttramawt 0 J.J. Wteronga. Attentive end.
Waived Mark Hall, attentive end. Relin
guiWted Ike right* to Mike Wtddlngton.

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MacKanttaAral Hat caatti.
TEXAS RAMINS - Activated Mario
OUt, UAaMar, from tm 17day dteabted Hat.
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ranklln Tkamaa. tlgN and: Darryl Mlltoum.
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Th e next batter popped up to]
end the game.
ij
Black threw a complete game
to earn the win. allowing four
hits w hile strik in g o u t six,
walking walk and g ivin g up
three runs, two earned.
Parsons led the offense with
his double, single, tw o runs
scored and two RBI. Eubanks
finished with two singles and
one run scored.

C o otin ocd fro m I B

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PinehurstC M tla u E f fN ilB
and
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Jim Bussard scored a run.
For B ikin i Bench. A m le Van
Zyll hit a pair of singles. T im
Dulm slra. Rich: d Barry. Bobby
Driver a n d J im Troxell each hit
one single.
In the nlghtm p. Ensley Inc.
made a valiant bid for Us first
win of the season, taking a 4-1
lead In the bottom of the first
Inning and leading 6-4 after
three.
The W re ck in g Crew scored
single ru n s in the fifth, sixth and
seventh Innings to go up 7-6. but
Ensley Inc. forced extra Innings
by lying the score w ith a run In
the home halt*or the seventh.
After a scoreless eighth, the
W re c k in g C re w 's Stacy Bllz
drew a tw o-out walk In the top of
the n i n t h u n d s c o re d the
game-w In n in g run on a double
by Steve Pridgen.
Pridgen also hit a pair of

singles and scored a run for the
W r e c k in g C r e w w h ile B llz
finished w ith three runs scored
and a d o u b le . Ronnte W lrth
contributed a home run. single
and two ru n s scored. H arry
Garrtaon had a triple, single and
a run scored. BUI Marino tripled
and doubled.
Other contributors Included
Heath S h o rt (double, single),
Tom W ink le (two singles, one
ru n s c o r c d l. S te v e C o o p e r
(single, one run scored). Jim
Stem (two singles) and Pal Hupp
and T o m Kelley *(one single
apiece).
Sean G o u ld led Ensley Inc.
with a hom e run and a single.
Chris Boyles chipped In with
four singles while Steve Barnes
had three singles and a run
scored. B illy Sweat. Mike Klauck
and Shane Grass each single
twice a n d scored on ce. Erf
Micholawskl singled and scored
a run. D e n n y Evans hit two
singles. R ick Pettis singled and
Donny Ball scored a run.

Fra#
Testing
L IF K T IM M Q U A H A M T U

Starters and Alternators
&amp;

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44”
49”

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Most U S &amp; Import

S (« &gt; 3 5 !

P ric e s

XSWo 45!
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CASSELBERRY

U S 17/S2 S State Strrei
2923 Scum OrUnOo Drive
321-1899 Cc«n 3 9

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5300 S H$n*ay 17/92
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CURRY FORO ROAD 1 *36

DELAND
B«restora A*« MoocUna 9 :.&lt;2
734-3921 Own 8 9

5637 Curry Ford Bead
2*2-0572 Ctten 7-11

ORANGE CITY

FOREST CITV

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775-1931 Cc«n 3 9

1 Bin N Slate Rd *3*

APOPKA
St Be 136 3 Thompson B j
)20i East State Bead 436
•16-4433 Often 3 3

S ta rt A t W

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SANFORD

1(55 M»gftway *36 iVesi
77*-873l Open 3 9

GORE I O0T
955 S Orange B««cm Trj.i
423-0171 Cc«n 7-3

0

I One Y ts r
iGuarants*
O P E N S EV EN D A YS A W EEK

Q
V

9

7 fCars 4 Trucks

w/exch 3

9 .M , ,o 7 9 M

17*1 3 2 ”

Mod u S
C io t
S t it t ly&lt; true*! I

H urry, Sale End* J u ly 1 6 ,1 9 9 1 1

08T

KISSIMMEE
\VK (0 Scut* s
1606 Norm Man Street
847-9077 Cc«n 7 11

2 Biccrj Scun at Ca» P d?e
6210 S Orange B csscm Tr

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385-9297 O p n 3 9

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H*y *3* i May 17.92
275 Sdum Mqr*a, 17.92
695-0621 Open 3 4

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859-6171 Cc«n 5 3

UNION PARK
Ccicmai I Aia'aya
U£G0 Eat! Cs.cnai O' .e
653-9433 0p«n 3-9

WINTER PARK
5*10 S i.er Star Bead

293-3230 Opan 7 11

A.era 1 Sercran
3C93 A«ra A*enuv
677-5*1* 0p«n 711

�t

Sanford Harald, 8anford, Florida - Thursday. July 11, 1991 •

People
IN BRIEF
MADD cares
Mothers Against D runk D rivin g will hold Its m onthly "Care
and Share" Victim Support Group meetings In J u ly on
Thursday. J u ly 18. 7:30 p.m . for Injured and bereaved victims:
and Thursday, J u ly 25, 7 p.m . for young adults ages 13-25.
Location for the meetings Is the M ADD office. 1720 South
Orange Ave., Suite 301. Orlando. T h is Is a free service.
For more information, call 422-6233.

Sanford Rotary
honors its own

Swaat Adelinas serenade
Th e Sweet Adelines. Central Florida's championship chorus
of Florida for 1991. recently gave two performances at the
Disney Village. Lake Buena Vista. Many selections were sung,
with some unwanted accompaniment from lightning and
thunder. Florence Korgan. publicity co-chairman reports.
Director Nancy Lewis has molded and shaped the group of lady
barbershop-style singers Into the championship chorus that Is
enthusiastically practicing toward the International Competi­
tion In October. '92.
Three more performances are scheduled for Disney Village:
J u ly 14. J u ly 21 and August 11. Showtlmesare 7 and 8 p.m.

Sanford Rotary Club Initallsd
offlcars for next yaar, chosa
Rocky Ford aa Rotarian of tho
Ya a r and announcad Paul
Harrla Fallows at a racant
m e a lin g . T o p : Paul H arris
Fallow s, from laft: Stanley
Rosier, Randy Roberts, Greg
Ganas, Ruasal A. Heinle Jr.,
Scott Larson and Dr. Jim
Quinn. Bottom: New offlcars
for 1991- ‘92 are, from left:
Ruasal A. Heinle Jr., treasurer;
Dr. Jim Quinn, vice president;
Randy Roberts, president-elect,
Rocky Ford, president; Greg
Ganas, sergeant-at-arms and
Bob Kuhn, secretary. The ob­
ject of Rotary Is to encourage
and foster the Ideal of service
as a basis of w orthy en­
te rp rise , m ain tainin g high
ethical standards In business
and professions. Rotarlans are
united In the Ideal of service to
personal, business and com­
munity life.

Play bingo tonight
Th e District 18 Veterans of Foreign Wars Color Guard Is
holding a fund-raiser bingo at the Winter Springs V F W Post
5405 and Ladles Auxiliary at the post home. 420 N. Edgemon
Ave.. tonight. J u ly 11. starting at 7 p.m. T h is will be a 50/50
bingo and the proceeds are to help the color guard defray
expenses to the national convention in New Orleans August
16-23.
At the recent department convention held In Kissimmee, (he
District 18 Color Gurard won the state competition and will
now be competing for the national trophy.Thc public Is Invited
to attend and back the color guard.
For more details, call 327-3151.

Develop successful business
American Women In Radio and Television Inc. will host a
luncheon show on developing long-term customer relations,
hiring, motivating and retaining stafT. and the practice of
management control In business, on Wednesday. J u ly 17.
11:45 a.m. at the Altamonte Springs Hilton. Cost Is 815 for
members and 920 for non-members. No shows billed. Guest
speaker Is Sandy McGovern, senior vice president of the
Discovery Channel
RSVP to JoA nne Moss at 645-2222 by Tuesday. J u ly 16.

*T&lt;

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

City sponsors aerobics
Th e Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics classes at
the Downtown Youth Center, lower 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 5:30 to 6:30. Cost Is 92 per class. Exercise mats
will be furnished. For more Information call 330-5697. All
non-Sanford residents will be required to pay an annual 810
fee.

Right attitude aids job-hunting teens
D E A R A B B Y t It's summer
vacation time, and many high
school graduates probably are
still out looking for Jobs. Tw o or
three years ago. you published
some good udvicc for young
people on how to dress, how to
act and what to say when
applying for a |ob. I cut It out to
save, and now I can't find It. I
have a grandson I want to send It
to. Please print It again. It could
help me and a lot of young
people. Th a n k you.

D U LU TH G R AND PARENT
D E A R G R A N D P A R E N T: The

Publicity procedure
Th e Sanford Herald welcomes organizational and personal
news. All Items submitted for publication to the People section
must Include the name of a contact person and daytime phone
number.
Th e following suggestions are recommended to expedite
publication:
1. Type releases double-spaced In upper and lower case, 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 organizational releases no later than two weekdays
following the event.
5. Submit udvance notices ut least one week prior to the
preferred publication date, and requests for photographer at
least one week prior to the event.

advice to which you refer first
appeared In William Raspberry's
colum n. He quoted Karen Rak. a
high school English leuchcr In
Strongsville. Ohio, who com ­
posed u letter from an employer
to let youthful Job seekers see
themselves us they arc seen. I
am plcused to print It again. Il
deserves us much exp&lt;isure us It
can get:
"D E A R K ID : Today you came
to me for a Job. From the look of
your shoulders us you wulked
o ut. I suspect yo u 've been
turned down before, and maylxyou believe by now that kids
your age can't find Jobs.
"H ut I hired u teen ager today.
You saw him. What was so
s|&gt;eciul about him? Not ex|H-rl-

§

ADVICE

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

cnee: neither of you had uny.
Attitude, son. A T T I T U D E .
He did his I r - s i to Impress me.
That Is where he edged you out.
"H e wasn't dressed like Easter
Sunday, but then that wasn't
necessary. Ills clothes were
clean, and he had gotten a
h a ir c u t . He fille d out the
application form neatly and
completely. He did not ask In
borrow a pen. He carried Ills
Social Security card, had basic
IdemllleatIon and did not ask.
'W hat'sa reference?'
"H e didn't start to chew gum
o r sm o k e w h ite b e in g i n ­
terviewed. He didn't keep look­
ing al his watch, giving me the
Impresslon that lie had some­
thing more im|&gt;ortniil to do.
"H e took the time In find out
how we 'operate' here and wlial
Ills day-to-day tasks would Im-. I
think he’ll keep Ills eyes open

THURSDAY’S PRIME TIME
Sgl. Eric Saunders
6 00 I 6 30 I 7 00 I 7 30 I 8 00 I 8 30 I 9 00 I 9 30 I 10 00 I 10 30

11 00

11 30

E ric M. Saunders, a com ­
m u n i c a t i o n s s p e c ia lis t at
Schollcld Harrurks. Hawaii, has
been promoted In the U.S. Arm y
to the rank of sergeant.
He Is the son of Penny I.. Wade
of 47-108 Sunlakc Circle. Lake
Mary. T h e soldier Is a 1985
g ra d u a te of Sem in ole H igh
School.

and work for me like he'd work
for himself.
"lie was willing to start at that
|R&gt;lnl where I could afford to pay.
Someday, perhaps, he'll get to
the point where he'll have more
authority over others and a
t w

r t^ ^ y e l w

o k

.

'

— You know. kid. men have
always had to get a Job like you
get a girl: case the situation,
wear a clean shirt und try to
appear reasonably willing.
"M aybe Jobs aren't us plentiful
right now. but there arc Jobs.
You may not believe It. but all
around you employers ure look­
ing lor young men and women
smart enough to go after u Job In
I he old-fashioned wuy.
"If you have even the vaguest
Idea of what I'm trying to say. let
It show the next time you ask for
a Job. You will be head und
shoulders above the rest.
"F o r Ih x Ii our sakes. get eager,
will vou?
T H E BOSS"
D E A R A B B Y : I'm , getting
married this fall, and I am faced
with a dllfieull question. I am
having a large formal wedding,
bul I do not know who should
walk me down the aisle. My
lather died when I was very
young, and I am not really close

of 956 Forest Ridge Court. Lake
Mary.
He Is a 1989 graduate of
Oviedo High Schuol.
11 Flo y d T h — t f a
l l l l f t

C p l a z a T W P f5^

HWY. 17-92 -322 7502

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HOME
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OSCAR

Pvt. J o h n W atson
P v t. J o h n G. Watson has
completed basic training al Fori
Jackson. S.C.
M U V ll l A N U U l
' ’
I- - «2l
During the training, students l U O O I A C H
received Instruction In drill and i R g g V NAKED OUN 11/1 rWTTlj
ARACHNAPHOBIA
7
c e re m o n ie s , w e a p o n s, m ap V
r ea di n g, tactics, mi lit ar y
courtesy, military Justice. Ilrst
aid. and A rm y liisiory and tradi­
tions.
Watson Is the son ol Carrie II
Watson ol 2031 McCarthy Ave..
Sanford.
lie Is a 1976 graduate ol
Seminole High School.

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For 24-hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday July 5.

Pvt. C h a d Lee
Pvt. Chad I) Lee has com
pIeted an aircraft arma
ment/mlsslle systems repairer
course at Fori Euslis. New|H&gt;rt
News. Va
Th e course was designed to
train students to repair missile
a r ma men t systems by Iron
hlcshootlng and repairing solid
stale circuitry .uid mechanical
devices.
Lee is ltic son til Martha .) Lee

to any other male family mem­
bers.
Would It be appropriate for my
mother to walk me down the
aisle? If not. w hom would you
recommend?

K .K . IN B O U LD E R , C O LO .
D E A R l| .K .: Of course your
mother m ay walk you down the
■aisle. O r you might consider
walking hallway down the aisle
alone — the groom could meet
you In the middle, and together
you could make the Irek to the
altar.
D E A R A B B Y : I enjoy reading
yo u r c o lu m n In the Tim e sPlcayune. but I’ve never written
before.
Your quoting of Ogden Nash is
not ucccptuhlc. He wus a true
versifier:
"Sure, deck your lower limbs
In pants.
"Y o u rs art- the limbs, my
sweeting.
" Y o u look d iv in e as you
advance.
"H ave you seen yourself re­
treating?"
Now. that's |RR-lrv!
T H O M A S C. T E W S ,
N EW O R LEAN S
(Problems? Writs to Dear Abby.
For ■ personal, unpublished
reply, send a self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Dear Abby,
P.0. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90069. All correspondence
is confidential.)

AAJACtWYtO I

IB COMMUNITY C A LEB

g M u n a is C M S
ruRiitv ;3rr-Yrnwiim tsta
UIWWI.1M * HTTPA

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flb

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u

i i f t t a a i c o M iM M iv o u M M o m
, d o m

( m u c t i m * I te m M M

7/16 A 7/17

I I II

UNCLE BUCK

Verticals
W ith Display S hell
• F R E E In home estimates

• Large selection to
c Iio u k from
• Prompt. Friendly Service
• Quality Workmanship
• We Do Replacement Slats
• Custom Valances

For the finest in vertical blinds and m ini-blinds, call

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750 W ylly Ave., Sanford
(Ns»f lo Ssntord IrrlQsiloo)

I

1

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sPRRYR ■

�- Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 11, 19S1

L«g«l Notices

f o r t N o tte f
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
O a T N Iim t J V W C U U .
CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA.

tN TN R CIR CUIT COURT
■ IG N T IIN T N JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT

U U M X IH M
GENERAL JURISDICTION

FLORIDA
itahOO-mo-CA-ll-K
CHRISTOPHER HALLo/b/o
CHRISTINA HALL, a miner.
Ptalntlth.

F E D E R A L N A T IO N A L
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION
PLAINTIFF.
S T E V E N M. COOK A N D
U N O A D . COOK. HIS W F E
DCFINOANTS.
N O TIC I OF S A ll
NOT ICC IS H C K E S T OIVCN
pursuant !• an Order re ­
scheduling foreclosure Mia
dated Jena Ml N tl, entered to
Civil Caw N r
or Ih*
Circuit C w r t t l the 1ITH
Judkirt Circuit in and Nr SIM l N O L I C o o n ly , F lo rid a ,
wherein FCOCRAL NATIONAL
M ORTOAOI CORPORATION.
Plaintiff and STKVCN M COOK
ANO LINOA D. COOK. HIS
W IF I or* detandwitd). I will
•oil la No Mghett and boot
bidder tar caab. A T T H I W IST
FRONT DOOR OP T H I SEMIN O L I C O U N TY C O U R T­
HOUSE. SANFORD. FLORIDA,
at 1I:M AM. AuauoMl m i . Itw
following dotcrlbad property aa
Mt forth in taM Final Jude

O Pontiac
M Toyota

,

a in ^ u ^ e ^ i i ^

| Iw li

let TBin VDTTmTnnTI M ml (iOlfn

at ChrltHna Hail and tar an
Moment of Itw claim ot
me Final J udgment at
Tfli i __
No. QCP-M1417, ClrcuH Court,
County, Florida la deelgllla Mat Hall at ma legal
guardian and Querdlen Ad
LHom of ChrNHna HoR. The
Motion Id Compel loftlomonl
and Motion Mr Apprmial at
SettNnwnt and Appatotmont af
Ouordlan Ad Lltam wll be hoard
before Itw Itonorohli Robert R.
McGregor. an Wbdnoodiy. Juty
St, r n i at 0:3B A M. In Cham
boro, l omlnoN County Courthouee. Sontard. Florida.
D A TED Ihlt sam day of June.
A.O.. m i .
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
Ry: Rum King
Deputy CWrk
PuMNfi: Juno 17 A July A 11 B
mmi
DEG -N l____________________
IN T H E CIR CUIT COURT
OP T N I IH tM T IE N T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANO FOR
SEMI MOL EC O U N TY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL OtVtSMN
Cooe No: tM74A-CA14K
O L IN O A L I F IO C R A L BANK.
PSSt/b/a
O L IN O A L I F IO E R A L
SAVINGS ANO LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plolntin.
-vtROY 0. SHAND. WINSOME H.
SHANO. FORO MOTOR
CREDITCOMP ANY,

AN ORDINANCI OF T N I
CITY OF SANFORD. FLORIOA. A M IN D IN G SICTIO M
It It AND MSS OF T H I SAM
FORO C O M BY ESTABLISH
ING N IW W A TER RATES
ANO SEW IR R A T H : PRO­
VIDING FOR SEVERABILITY.
CONFLICTS AND EFFECTIVE
DATE.
A copy than bo available at
Itw office at the City Clark lor
all partana desiring ta oiamtaw
the tame.
All partlat In InNretl and
citiient thall have an tppartunlfy to bo hoard oltaid hearing.
By order ot the City Com
mittien ot the City ot Sontard.
F lorMo.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: II
a parson decide* to appeal a
docltion made with respect to
any matter cantldtrtd at ft*
above mooting or hearing, ho
may need a verbatim record ot
the proceeding!, Including the
toil lmany end evldtnce, which
record It not provided by the
City ot Sanford. |F S M.S1M1.
Janet R. Donohoo
City Clark
Pubilth: Juty II. m i
DEH 107

NOTtCEOF SALE
Hotke It hereby gluon that,
purtuant to a Final Judgment ot
Forecloture entered In the
above ttyled caute. In the
Circuit Court of Seminole
County. Florida. I will Mil the
property tituetatf In Somlnoto
County. Florida, and being more
fully dncrlbed at toltowt:
Lot M l. MANDARIN SEC­
TION EIG HT, according to tlw
plat Ihoroot ot recorded In Plat
Reek 17, Paget St end is. Public
Record! ol Somlnoto County.
Florida.
at public tale, to the higtwtt and
bttl bidder, for cash. at the
Well front ttept ol the Sem’nnle
County Coun Houto, ■( Sanford.
Florida, at 11:00 A M. on Augutt
M. m i.
WITNESS my hand and the
tool el thlt Court on Juty 7. m i .
MARYANNE MORSE
Ctorkef Circuit Court
By JarwE. Jaiewlc
Deputy Clerk
Pubilth: Ju ly1 l.lt. m i
DEH-tP

N O TIC I OP ACTION F IL IO IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H I EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIBCUIT,
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE CO UNTY.# LOR IDA
RELATING TO QUALIFICATION PO* ELECTION
TO TM IB O A R D O F COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
OP SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA.
CASE NO. fl-MST-CA-10-O
SANDRA S. GOARD. at l upervltor ot Itoctiont In and tor Somlnoto
County and SEMINOLE COUNTY, a political tubdlvltton ot the
Statert Florida,
Plaint IItt/Pell Honort.
JOHN DOE and MARY DOE, ropro tenting all proepectlve
candidate! tor atoctlon or reetoctlon to Itw public off lea ot Somlnoto
County Commltttonar torvlng on the Board ot County Commission
art
ot Somlnoto County; T H I SEMONOLE COUNTY DEMOCRATIC
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE; and TH E SEMINOLE COUNTY
REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
_ _ ______
Defendant*/Respondent*.
TO : THOSE ABOVE NAMED D IP E N D A N TS /R IS P O M O IN TI
WNICN INCLUDES ALL PABTIBS WHO CLAIM ANY IN TEREST
AS A PROSPECTIVE U N D ID A T E FOR ELECTIO N OR BEELECTION TO T N I OFFICE OF SEM INOLI COUNTY
COMMISSIONER.
A Complaint/Petition, reeking a declaratory lodgment with regard
to Section 1.3 A ol the Semlnoto County Homo Rule Charter hat been
tiled in the above ttyled Court. The portion ot Itw Somlnoto County
Homo Rule Charter et Itaue readaat lotlewt:
"(•lath candidate tor Itw Office et County Commlutonor thall
within the dlttricf from which toch candidate teakt election at
the lima of qualifying to run tor that offIce...”
The ittua In the e r a It the conttltutional validity ot the provitton In
light ol doclttont rendered by the Florida Supreme Court.
Each Defendant/Netpendent In the above ttyled proceeding It
hereby required to terve a copy of the entwer and written defenses.
It any you have, to the Compteinl/Petltlon heretofore Iliad In thlt
caute on PlalntllH/Petltionart' Attorney, whote name and eddrett It
thown below on or before July 14. tool, and to tile the original Ot your
written entwer and dttontet with the Clerk ol mil Court timer
before tervlce on the Plaintiff!/PetIllonert' attorney or Immediately
thereafter, to thaw what right, title. Intormt you or any of you have
or claim in at to the matter detcrlbed In laid Complaint/Petltlon. If
you fall to antwer or defend, a default may be entered agalntt you
lor the reliet demanded in the Complaint/Petit Ion.
WITNESS my hand and leal ot tald Court on the 10th day o&lt; June.
Iftl
(SEAL)
MARVANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE CIRCUITCOURT
IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNT Y.FLORIOA
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Ro b e r t a . McM i l l a n
County Attorney
tor Semlnoto County, Florida
Florida Bar No OlOMU
Seminole County Service! Building
1101 Eatt Flrtt Street
Sanlord. Florida J777I
(407) III 1130. Eat 71S4
Attorney lor Plaintifft/Petltionert
Pubilth: Junon.I7A Juty4.lt. rn i
DEG lie

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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N I K I F 0 2

CLASSIFIED ADS

$«mfnol«

Orfondo •Winter Pork

3 3 2 -2 6 1 1

Ingrweerd.
LW QRNryPtartNMb
A P U N W TN M *

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

W

W m f R »»IC «R S .
-|y j a y . M JS per boar »

C lA S S in tO H E F T

N O T IC I OP ACTION
TO: RUDY L. HALL

facto guardian at Chntfinn Hall,
a minor will apply ta tap Circuit
Court tar an wder apprpvtap a

ADOPTION OF AN
O R M R A N C SIV
THR CITY OF
SANPORG FLORIDA
Notice it hereby ofvon mat a
Public I tearmy will ha hold m
the Commitiion Roam at the
cih Hall to the City ot Sanford.
Florida, at 7;M o'clock P.M. on
July XL m i . la cantldtr the
adoption at an ordhtanco by Itw
City ot Sanford. Florida, title ot
which it ee tallow!:

•n

It Chovrotot 10IAB4071BJkl&gt;4t*7
TJChevrotot
CKUM7F1
(7Fsrd
If

SEM IN O LI CO UN TY SCHOOL
BOARD and ALRKRT
McGOLDRICK,

lather ot Chritllna Hall, a
minor, and Ella Mat Hall, aa

NOTICI OF A

and pi»iinl

7mm

71— H t f r

n — M B 9 f f (f r N &gt; » f t

tTmmmCm* nmL
f R R R b R -B ...f &gt; » B f c B
1

JTSAE
mortgagM. F o in t a w i lota.

LOT a . O V IID O T IR R A C I.
A C C O R O IN O T O P L A T
T H IR IO F AS R IC O R D IO IN
PLAT ROOK tl. PA O I A OF
T H I PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEM INOLI COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
D A T ID at SANFORD. Fieri
da, IM« M b day of June. m i.
MARYANN! MORSE
CLER KO f THE
CIRCUITCOURT
SEMINOLI County. FNrIda
By: JaneE. Joaewk
Deputy Clerk
PuMtah: Juty 11.1*. m i
DEHta

N it

V E R t C ll AUCTION

JM 1FBV40W M7N
HLAMtlWW
MNteean JN lP B tlM U IS tfM
MOtdWnsbIW
SJSTRsRl

Hatoot City, F torIda
(leetaddret* known)
T H A T YOU ARC H IR IO V
ADVISED that Itw School Beard
ot Somlnoto County, Florida.

Mud'll,
1TWY1T, nrwlla

p

Lfrgal Notte—

T M H
C T E A G E .

PR EV IO U S SO LU TIO N : "For me the best drama is one
that deals with • man In danger." — Howard Hawks

117Marker It.
M N f lU lf ?

I A T to m AM
VIEW t HOUR PRIOR
7SToyota
TIR14IR 7
71 Yamaha
Altamanto Tawing
STM Orlando Or.
n

SALI REBMMATIOiMAM
VIEW 1HOUR PRIOR
Pubilth: Jufy It. m t
D EH M
N O TIC I T O T H E PUBLIC:
W hortay gtvon Wwf Rw
IAd|uetmortrtHwCMy
a |
w l |l I m U m a t e J a p
wvw
ep
mooting on Jufy aa m i , in Nw
Ctty H i t Commteuton Owmburt
at ll : » a .m . ta order to conttaor a roguoal tar vartonco In Rw
Zoning Ordbwnco at it portabw
ta Front, IMs A Rear Yard
variance rtoulromontt in an
MR-ldtatrtaton:
e w^N
aS
ti Ivrw
I m o'vRPm
u d l im
fR
rw
l fW
i i Hi'
lliWPWp(| ^M
w* md

A Ad), the I. ta of the tsr of Lai
41 Bloch K ot A O . Chappell's
Subd. of Blocks O. C B J tl
Cildtasrs Subd ond/sr Add, ta
Itw City of Sontard. Somlnato
County, Florida
Being mere specifically de­
tcrlbed aa tacatad: llig W. lata
Short
Ptanrwd wea of ttw property it
to construct a tingle family
dwelling.
WJM. Philip*. Chairman
Board of Adluetment
AOVICC TO T H E PUBLIC: If
a person dectoot ta appeal a

NOTICE T O T tM PUBLIC:
Stark* Is hortay given tart Itw
Board of Adjustment of Ifw City
of Sontard will hold a regular
meeting on Jufy M, m t . In Itw
City Hod Comm Itoton Chambers
of 11:10 a m . In order to cant Id
or o request tar variance In the
Zoning Ordinance at If partafnt
t o Side B Rear Yard tafback
requirements in an SR-IA dis­
trict on:
Lot 14. Bloch I Highland Pork
P I 4 PO a n recorded In
Sanford, Somlnoto County, FlorMa
Being more specifically de­
scribed aa located: SM Arcadia
Road
Planned ute of the property to
to construct a tingle family
dwelling.
W.M. Philips. Chairman
Board ot Ad|utlmonf
ADVICE TO TH E PUBLIC: II
o person decide* to appeal a
8*.'.u ton '••gje with rrspref to
any matter considered at the
above mooting or hooting,
he'the will need a verbatim
record ol the proceedings in­
cluding the testimony end evi­
dence. which record It nol
provided by Itw City of Sanford.
(FSStaOIOS)
Pubilth: July tl. 21. m i
DEH 40_____________________
NOTICE
NOTICE It hereby given that
Itw Board of County Commis­
sioners of Somlnoto County,
Florida. Inlands to hold o public
hearing to consider the enact­
ment of an ordlnence entitled:
AN OROINANCE IMPOSING
ANO LEVYING WITHIN TH E
UNINCORPORATED AREA OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORI­
DA A PUBLIC SERVICE TAX
ON T H E P U R C H A S E O F
E L E C T R IC IT Y . W A TE R .
M ETER ED OR BOTTLED GAS
(NATURAL LIQ U IFIE D PET R O L E U M GAS OR
M A N U F A C TU R E D ),
T E L E C O M M U N IC A T IO N
SERVICE. F U E L OIL ANO
OTHER SERVICES COMPET• TlV E W IT H T H O S E
ENUMERATED: PROVIDING
THAT THE RATE OF SUCH
TAX SHALL BE UP TO 10% OF
THE PAYMENTS RECEIVED
BY THE SELLER OF TH E
TAXABLE ITEM OR SERVICE
FROM TH E PURCHASER TOR
T H E PU R CHA SE ON A L L
TAXABLE ITEMS ANO SERV
ICES E X C E P T F U E L O IL
WHICH SHALL BE TAXED AT
FOUR CENTS IS Ml PER
GALLON; PROVIDING TH A T
FOR TELECOMMUNICATION
SERVICE. THE TAX SHALL
BE IMPOSED ACCORDING TO
O N E O F T H E O P T IO N S
S P E C IF IE D IN S E C T IO N
144 211. FLORIDA STATUTES:
PROVIDING TH AT THE TAX
SHALL BE PAIO BY TH E
PURCHASER TO THE SELL
ER FOR THE B E N EFIT OF
THE COUNTY: PROVIDING
FO R T H E M A N N E R OF
COLLECTION AND REM IT
TANCE TO THE COUNTY BY
TH E SELLER ; PROVIDING
FOR THE KEEPING OF REC
OROS BY THE SELLER AND
FOR THE INSPECTION OF
SUCH RECO RD S BY T H E
C O U N T Y : P R O V ID IN G
C E R T A IN E X E M P T IO N S :
PROVIDING THAT THE TAX
MAY BE COMPUTED ON THE
A G G R E G A TE AM OUNT OF
S A L E S ; P R O V ID IN G A
PEN ALTY FOR VIOLATIONS.
PROVIDING FOR COOIFICA
T IO N IN T H E SEM IH O LE
COUNTY COOE. PROVIDING
FOR SEV ER A BILITY; PRO
V ID IN G AN E F F E C T I V E
DATE.
al 7:00 p m . or at toon thereat
tor at possible, at lit regular
meeting on he loth day of July,
m i , al the Seminole County
Services Building. HOI East
First Slreal. Room W 111. San
lord. Florida Persons are
advitad that. &gt;1 Ihey decide lo
appeal my decision made al this
hearing, they will need a record
ol the proceedings, and lor such
pgrpota. Ihey may need lo
Insure that a verbatim record ot
the proceedings Is mad*, wtuch
record includes the testimony
and tvidmee upon which the
appeal Is lob*based
MARVANNE MORSE
Clerk to lha Board ol
Cormty Commissioners ol
Seminole County. Florid*
By Cerylon Cohen
Deputy Clerk
Publish July II. Ittl
OEH 71

F e ^ W a te r Parb/Sanlord
FWWTrwN-'ini'

d oMco Data I M
Caootf j o G it a o .
irt r lliw ir n

- H r t u m iffr t

CW StaaoaataOHMTfi
a TV P i l l #

rt work taW hargl Any
parlance tforTt id i tt^Tf I

In
Fun caI

AAA EMPLOYMENT

Tuesday A nt Friday I t Moon The I
bandog And Monday M B PJ L Ftftay

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A O JM S TM tM Tl A N D O l l O f f l i IR

m m .w m m .a m
^ ^ ^ w v w e ^ w v w o i e tw e te u e v ta ig W

A A J A ftlIR f B N ID G B f l
B GAILY PAY
S E M ,

n -W

a iir A ?
M M I

iM U iu tia m w a T
■ a a l ■*K a lM ta i J A m J a h
rw n TVVIIV# rtiM
F'IIM TM Tf

*1NORMS RE I M O
Yugoslavian Htab School
ttudorti- CaN R H .

S S to d N U ^ F W ^ * ”

or Proounf FamHy rvtat of
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Don't Talk I

U q «t N o llc ti
V EH IC LE AUCTION

tm n t
CJAMC ICMCAOMVDRIIIMB
ft Ford
0FASFS20MB
M Chovrotot
OS MW 11*17
77 Chovrotot
1LMU7SW341
77 Chovrotot
1NWOWWMB1
7VChrysler
THOGrtUBS4M
74 Dodge
W P lTO tA im n
71 Plymouth
VLWC9MM47
70 Ford
IMAHH7BMS
TO Ford
OtM TSMOn
73 Ford
1P#1P1**B
B Ford
1F A BFIJ40OW1*7111
HDotoun JNIMN04S7CMB1NBS
■1 Dotson
IPM tStRM M UM
I I Plymouth SBK44B3BF1MS7I
Altamanto Towing
lllMorfcor It.
Altamonte Spring*
M L R B E G IN ! A T N t « AM
VIEW I HOUR PRIOR
77JOOP
J7AMMNBSM1I
7t Chevrolet
tZVUBRatim
- Altamento Towing
17)4 Orlando Dr.
S A L I BEGUM A T M i* AM
V IE W )H O U R PRIOR
Publlsli: July It. 1*1
D B H tl_____________________
IN THR CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H E EIG H TE E N TH
JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SE M IN O LIC O U N TY ,
CASE NO. gt-IMbCArW-G
BRT R R A LTV TR U S T. 0
Massachusetts business trust.
Plaintiff,
T H E HAMPTONS OF HEATH
ROW D EVELO PM ENT. INC., a
Florida corporation, ALAN H.
GINSBURO and H ARR IET F.
G IN S B U R O . h it wlfa. and
R O B E R T C. R O H D IR and
BARBARA ROHOIE. hit wife,
and W ILLIAM P. BROWN. In­
dividually. and 0 laudato FE D ­
ER AL SAVINGS AND LOAN,
and W ALTER V. PIERCE and
OAR LYN F. PIE RCE. hit wlfa.
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO ; W ILLIAM P. BROWN
suOrtondo Avenue
Ocoee. Florida 127«l
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D that an
action to toreclooo a mortgage
on the following property In
Semlnoto County. Florida:
Condominium unit A t of THE
HAMPTONS OF HEATHROW I.
a Condominium, according to
Itw Declaration of Condominium
thereof at recorded In Official
Records Book 1471. page 0011.
Public Records ot Somlnoto
County. Florida, together with
an uitolvidtd Interest In the
common elements appurtenant
ttwreta
has been filed against yog and
A L A N H . G IN S B U R G and
H A R R IE T F . G IN S B U R O .
R O B E R T C. R O H D IE and
BARBARA ROHDIE. G LE N ­
D A LE F E D E R A L SAVINGS
ANO LOAN, and W ALTER V.
P IE R C E and O A R L Y N F.
PIERCE, and you are required
ta serve a copy ot your written
defenses. It any. to It on Bruce
B. Blackwell, plalnlltl'o at­
torney. who** address It 2$ East
Pine Street. Orlando. Florida.
37003 1431. on or before Augutt
13. 1771. and til* the original
with the Clark ol this Court
•lltwr before service on Plain
lltl't attorney or immediately
thereafter; otherwise, a default
will be entered against you tor
th* reliet demanded In the
Complaint or Petition.
DATED on tth day ot July,
1701.
MARYANNE MORSE
Ctorkot the Court
By: JeanBrlltanl
At Deputy Clerk
Pubilth: July It. II. U 4 Augutt
1. 1071
OEH 100

J7 — N v r t a r y A
C M frlC f
A-1 O NLGCA R E . O t tayHwHdu
Op*8889A 18918889vlf99989l
fpr y u r M * . M m ,
8
MiW O N lIl CO*........I H H f t
CNN* CAM
rotao. Non tmofcor. M H W
CHILDCARE. In my
. Coll
SD-MITJeAnn
DAYCARE AVAILABLE In my
Htddwi U . homo. Lota ot
T L C .L N M F O M .-.....- R M *
M O TN IR -FA TN R R

E m . roTtl CPR I
moota-TLCICoWNMISt
SMALL DAYCARE. T L C tor
SMALL Q U A LITY NOME-LIKE
D a y c a ra G P ro o c h o o l.

ft E iu c a t b n
■ rn i5 a o o y 7 o 3 ro rto r. Gon■ orot/Bulldor/RoiMintlrt. CoR
to rb w tirta m w to

"GANKRWPTCV boot tNO**
-O t V O R C IR o M W IK .I

i

Rto

m

RLVI
l: B M W . Id II.

potTtont up* to*iil/hr,For
lnunoM wAn jntarbtawi •
W H tS G im i
AVONI SELL SKIN SO-SOFT
C A U R H R 7 P IIH IM
A G E N TS -R EA L ESTA TE
N EE D EXPERIENCED
R E A LTO R B -I
CALL ALCHtOOl
Caotary « Chtadl
___________ » a a
o ASSISTANT*
o M C IP T M N IE T *
Pro* d n k l Moot and
putar. FrtonWy a I ____
K wfital Hurry. Ifitarygul
AAA EM PLOYMENT
N B W .M R H L N M T *
aaaV O LToa*
TEM PORARY SERVICES

Make o dtftoronco In your Ufa
r t * Rw llto of otwrst Como
M n our item Apply:
TWAtalWnvilto Aval
LOL/H
• • CO N STR UCTIO N JO B S '*
S J M J A IJ H lT R ^ i

..ToStf/NR

M ER IT &gt;1

CoONHIM tarUdirm rttan
SANFORR t bdrm. | bath.
S b d y ta o l/ L lO -W I

Pull tlm# tar buoy
modtelm office In Lrtw M ary,
M L The Sontard Horata. PO
Baa 1dd7. Sontard FI 3073-1007
CortHcation dotbobta hoi wWI oMow
up ta 4 month* i t tatata
certlftcatton. I k . working
candlttant A bonrtlto. Im
nwdtata ogontagi on 7 3 A 3-11
tiffs. Port Hnw atao availabtal

HISTORICAL GaOtat ItaOrt. « 1
Maoadla Ava. T V , m kra.
ro Trlg . U til. Incld.
Rtoewiwkty ratatl J311J74 or

.ai-gg.

laundry
ta haak
*377*4
IA N P G R O . tla a p ln g rm .
Prtvata art. Wadi/dryar, kit.
r lT ilff " * SUMMER S P EC IA U Sr.ctttaan
dlogaoatol C le a t roam s.

Port WlM. 7AM-3PM. P in t
AM G CPR
rt; Adrtf
Cantor, H »
A D U LT POETS R SPONSOR - In

it : MAM A N

88818 C8P8. for 9M9rfy 88d
tfmMbf 8tei8ted » 1 7 4 8

For a Atarttol practica In
Sanlord. Madicrt Moniger
computer aspartanca praterred. Saad na u n a ta Ran
, FLN77S-1W*

9 7 -A p a r f riM n ti
A B w jg A

P U fTN B N G N r SENm
SANFORD • 1 bdrm..

PE ST CONTROL

M W TO cyrtfy.m N *
A TTR A CTIV E I bdrm. quiet
t a ils Hr. + Benefits. (Will
train) l-S W -N ta -....
Par tractor traitor naodod.
Muet bo DOT eortlftod. Mon­
d a y - F r ld a y ■ C o m p a n y
benefits. Apply In perion:
I City, *1 R Cornwall Rd.
r d .F I......................EOE
e OR WTAL RECEPTIONIST*
Need A .LA .P I Set appointtito
R U
ot Call now l
AAA EMPLOYMENT
701OLIIta SI. W3-II74
EAR N NtaSWOO WEBKI Staff
eoeotapM ol homo. No caitt
B IN D U S B to; GoMoo DM
trtbatari. PO ■ « 171130-C.
CtaOUOCbrtoM.TXTB*P-HN

Eapartonca prttarrad. but will
tram. E acel lent potential I
_______333440)_____________
r a u A &amp; ic o M a m
Worker* w/concrete and
farming •aparlanc*. Praamptayment physical w/drog

REM. ESTATE ASOCMTES
Monty folks...ta dots our
"100% compensation plan" 11
No monthly doth loo - Pull
company support in advertis­
ing. brochures, phono, ale.
Fulltime
to yrt. experience In
Hally. Shi MacOado, 1133m
Lake Mary. Le ft talk.

dMOSH-CrtlMI-OMI
BEDROOM, living m m . kitch­
en and bath. SIN per weak,
util Itie* included, plus depot) I.
B H lM g J ftW L
CUTB A CLRANI I
(Jtlimes petal SITS plus dope*
H. Avail. 07/IS............ 333*11
SANFORD - 1 bdrm. excel lent
totalton, complete privacy,
f * par ewob plus S3C0 tecuri
ly. Coll 3330*7_____________
privacy. SMS/ma plus
aacurlty. 311117*
SANFORD • I A 1 Rdrat. Apts I
Furn/Unfurnl S M A Up plu*
I I * IOC. dM- IO-M47/I74-7P**
SANFORD • Hugo 1 bdrm..

----- -U --X In
e tln ffT.
x i PvOrnfriftf
m a la ta
VlalWir
Mi-XftTN

privacy. SIM per week plus
I M security. 3138*0________
1 DORM, I beta. AC no pots.
M B Id A last. I BDRM.. I
hath. (urn. CMS 1st A last.
1-17377N/3D-S17I Iv. mto.

C O N C EP T Oao Eater. Gen.
carpentry 1 Horn*, a lik e ,
kitchen, bathl13*03*7

A d d iir n c g b '

C lG R t r iN t S t f V lC G

R C ff/ U K O R m U M C tS
Buy/Saw a p t coed/QuorsatatO
f t f f lt v t f t I T T T t t l

C A TH Y ’S CLEARING SERV­
ICE • References, reasonable
rate*. Llceneedl Call 333 7470

A u t o m o V iv o

"

D ETAIL F IV E R . Lot your car
tparkto tar summer I Comp.
detail torvice i ..... 310 QIU
H E A O LW EA II Moil cart S40
Wagons s7i. Vinyl tape I * up.
Carpet M im -lt a U M

accounting, la* m l computer

3334033. LQ.B*IUd. CBCOdM
e a ADOITfONL All remodtl
•ng QeeWty warkl CGC034027
« &gt; r t exp. Met * e *4730417
______ C i r f u t r y
C A IP IN T E R ^ T k ln S o r h o m
repairs, pomtinp A ceramic
C ta A tiin f S ir v iC G
B A B CLEANINO SERVICE.
Office/home L k A In*. Pro
tossional couple......... 3317074

MAI

Mm
R e a A a l A w a a —■
—■
—M-*Raw
N"Pft»
rwffW 8w
wWPoTw8* 18

sTySJo rt*rtrk5frAl ,tl11

Grevevord thlftOK. m-0074

NEW, REMOOSL REPAIR^
HOMEL OFF ICEL STORES
Alt fu el inaibacWu Res/Corn

American
RedCroes

N S tM N R E LIE W ITB

Hfrtwgtwwl UptoiH /V.

t l— i

Frog
J )H
tat Ion. tounooHng. private

a a d c o s to m o r o a ru lc a l
"UCaHtadoyl

cantor my ly r-o M i
ta your homo. M n -F ri: M
Ho Auq t t

U JU U

fro m o th o r lo r o p t a n
countries; Japan A South

Q V v I liin rTlwHw w u n m p V C T TV

any mattar canstdorod at lha
above mauling or hearing,
ha/the will need a verbatim
record of the proceeding! In
eluding the letflmony and evi­
dence. which record Is not
proiltad by Itw City of Sanford.
(P IM .I1 M )
Pubilth: July II, I I . m i
DEH-N

______

\Jrriti\r
S

SMfHOMV! CALL ll$t
SPRING CLEANING BLUEST
Rotas from IIS A ta- Call Joyl

C o tic rifr
BOGGY ADAJAS CONCRETE
Quality and cleanliness It
guaranteed II y rt residential
experience. 747 3*7/3331017
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Bert. 3 Man Quality Opera
I ion 1337-mt/Mt-fTtt
F tf lC t
S H A R P P B N C E I isl Rato
work Lew Ml Free est Wood,
cheinlink A repairs 313 0411

H G N SG K R D R lrB
RON C O L L l i r s tawMdeUngt
Carpentry, roofing, painting.
"N* tob tea tatoMr 331-4433
T H E H O USE DOCTOR 1 All
home repairs! Pafnt/Termlto
damage. Lk./laa.......3331011

H S R S g
A S H EXTERIOR PAIN TIN G
A prosauro clean. SAVE 70*0
Lk./free est 1 107S2174
DICK PINOLA'S P A IN T IN G
Quality workl Inl/Est.. L k ’d
A Insured. Free eel 13331733
EXPER T PAINTING A Pres*.
WatMag Repair*. Inl/aat.
Free est. iiyrs.7tf 7*11
f f n f C o n tro l

L a n d C lG R r iR f l

• BISHOP PEST CONTROL*
Senior Cltlien Discounts!
IS years taper lenct 1314 4777

L A N D C L E A R IN G . fill dirt,
beckhoe, loader work, hauling
and clean up. CownlryWId*
Devs too*meat. 407-331 0711

P lu m U n f

L a w n S g t v Jc r
COMP L E T ! Quaffty Lawn A
Landscaping. Tree Service A
Irrigation, competitive rates,
free estlmatotSumy’t J ll 7(1*
LAWN M A IN TR N A N C R

H O rU R S rU M M iG
All your plumbing needs! 24
hourtl IRF0OS7770371 3100
SPEEDY PLUM Al MO! Abto
lutafy tree est. No tripa/svc
charge. Lk./tat. SI-4M7

Ratatl CaN Tam ....... 3134330
R AN D Y'S D U A L ITY LAWN.
Complat* car*, clean ups.
Sine* 17*3 Free est. 1311-771*
ST. AUGUSTINE QRASS plugs
Installed. 11* tg. ft. Free
Estimates! Sunset Lawn Re
novations. Inc 407440 7401

P r o B S u r a C t o a n in f l
DRIVEW AYL Roofs. Houses,
•tc. Low rates! Com me r
clal/ResMentlal. 173 0404
PCM House wash and painting
"Quote* by phono". Call
Roger. 33444*0.0AMIPM

M a s o n ry
O w s t f i l S t r v ic G B
a •G U TTER S CLEA N ED **.
Commercial Resitanlial
Call Teat............... ........33341M
Handy M ad
I ^ r V? m a s o n a r y
painting and llto work. Free
estimates Use d Call 1334310

carp

S e c r e t a r ia l f t
T y p i n g S a rv ic o s

TW P MASONRY. Brkk..Mocfc.
stucco, concreto. Renovations
Llc'd A ins « f 3444/034711/

CUSTOM Typtag/RoiObiiplegl
OJ Entorprltet. d l l E. ISth
SI.. Sontard.. 334 M71/371 7401

M o v i n g * H a u 4 in «
. a .H A U L IN Q yard trash,
appliances, furniture, trash of
any kind! Rickard.......17377*1
G A R MAULINO. Yard trash,
appf. turn Cheap/on time!
tll/up Call Ray 3S7-7307

) n ur llnsinrw I rr r\

lhi\

I in

T r e t S trv ic a
sU U V A lil T i l l I K I U ic k
Tree work, light hauling Free
estimates. Insured. 31! 1430

l

•&gt; I o i r

Is

t ~i V r r Mnn ill. I nil ( li i s s ///#•&lt;/ r j j J b l I

1

�5S&amp;U

Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 11, 1SB1 - 8M

KIT'N * C A 1 L Y L E # hjr Larry WriflM

1««1s

m taum w a .
»W M »

L ir p

I

ApiMMCBBb M i mH. 141/ff

C432145S4
* K &gt; M | O H «*
w U M D TM M U *
S fS D M Z M ItM M

1 J M M .F T I
UNM IPUTEO CCW FANCVlf

nsfe/Orsnpa/Valusla/Lsk*

STENSTROM
M A L T Y , I NC.

Vsrdl Family AegstlttlWB

,rK-

a 1/1 •flraplata. iw n paint and
carpal, tanead y a r d . . 884
R V1H •near raal. carpet, paint,
acraanad parck, tancod yard,
parapa..........................s u .N l
a V I •an V4 aero, now paint.
AppUancaa. 1 car parapa.
aanadCl----------

•SJL____ « * » » « *

oin

C U T ! ACAORMV MANOR V I
H at new wlndawa. daara.
pamt. roar 0 will have new
carpet. A ataoi at....... .se.ua.
DU FLEX O EACH UNIT V t
Occupy ana, rant the other.
Bath kit atulppad Separata
driveways. Rip yard....U t J t

uuwm .im rm

S42S par month aha mewlty.
4*42*81 Sf 2242448

• V I • ranavaladL now carpet,
paint, appllancaa. fancad
yard............................. SS3.8M
• V I - renovated, new carpet,
palnl appllancaa. tancad
♦•ntaaa dawn, aiiawa na f a l l fy an M a V I two alary with
appllancaa. and tlreplaca.
Fenced yard mm peel I tea. too

• la n . H M p a r m s n lh .
A L S O .. .D I BAR V, nan I
barm, s baths with &gt; car
parapN. from M ta/me. Call
avr aa*acla«a Jaanna, MB5M4
Tnnpyn
n ^m
O S TIB N •1 bdrm *pts.. 88B par
waefc Includs* u tility . No
paN. Call m a i l

rtmsnt*. OuM andwewo.
par month. n o oacurlty.

« 1W _______

IT M NOM I •I bdrm. 1 bath,
•Inter Sprint* araa. Lika
ia«. Foal and Iannis. S47S/mo
C a iia m w i_________

DOHCHESU R APTS
I Slory. I A 1 Bedroom Apia.
A*h about our.....
“11 kNalb Laaia fpaclall"
LAKK MARY SM822

PLUS
OWNER F IN A N C IN G •
Fmacreal. 1/2. living. dlnlnp,
family rm.. aacwrlty ayatom.
fenced yard U2.*M
ST. JOHN'S AND LK MONROE
•I acre ealaNI an. l a p op. It.,
cuatam built, t m . W
ALTAMOatTE SFRINOS
VI
trim detached mattwr In-lew
hemal Reel, privacy lance
yard Mid kennalt. Ilia ,IN

SANFORD. W ll l M , O N I
YKAR Kami Immacufato, 1

SANFORD 1 bdrm. 1 bath. M O
par month plus dsposlt.
_________C a iim sw s________

KA YW 000 V I KNOCKOUT
You’ll fca fleered whan you aaa
the room G kip tot. Fpk.,
appllancaa. tea...........V M M
COUNTRY V t
On 1 acre*. Waal at Isntord.
Mature traaa, completely
fancad. Call nawl...
W ELL LOCATED V I
Great araa tar
Nice let. Now..

..14*.!

LOCH ARBOR V I • FOOL
Alao an lake. Enjoy natural
Fplc.. family rm., laundry
appa . datk A m o ra l...Illim .
P R E TTY ID Y LLW ILD EV !
Juat redecorated Nicely landtcapad. Owner will hold tame
r.........................I1U.W8.
JIM W ALTER 1/1
In
weekend retreat. On S acre*.

A L L AREAS Looking lor your
Uraam Soma7 Call a pro
leaaienel who kiwwa your real
Call me today I

322-2420

SANFORD. NICK A R IA , lerg
aal I bdrm. aroundI Largo
living room, anclatad *unroom, all appllancaa. Central
M/A. *»S/mo. plm 12SO tacu
rity....................
taasan

HtiOvr 35tk Ynr*

SANFORO
CLEAN, qutot I
bdrm. apartmant. upstair*.
SITS/mo.....................127 SS3*

IIUT HOUSES* *

SANFORO - CLEAN, quiet 1
bdrm. aparlmant. upatalra.
ttlVm o.....................n u n

ANY CONOITIONt
Need rapalraT Behind an
payment*? Call Grad. IB 4714

323-5774

Th e P ru d B n tM l(£
Florida Really

Step Up Into A
Great Apartm ent1
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

Limited lime Offer

r399
7 M onth Li

LOOSING FOR A HOME?
PlaaM let mt help.
CaN M Crtfaty, REALTOR
M W t M M M » a r»W W

Lir|i LagHnm , 21/4 km

ONLY

(1st Month Only)

2 S '3 Bedroom
Apartments

MO

O nly

• C o b le T V

•Waiber/Dryers In Select Units

•Self Clean Oven
aIm u l^ f

•Dishwasher
•Garbage
Disposal

•Pool
•Clubhouse

P R IM E 41 A C R I Slla an
Lenpwead L k . m a ry Rd.
almoat nest to Lk. Mary High.
IMP If. read trentap*.

YOUR NEW SMYRNA CONOO
C O N N I C T I O N I Sanford
native. Drmda. Ownby Real
Esldta...................80*422 14S1

1544 Fork Or.
441W. Lake Ntary PL. Lk. Mary

157— Mobile
Hemet /Sole
C. ORLANOO - S/t mobile. 1 car
parage and puoat apt. S4MM
W. Molin awai t. “ “
n rts g j
SAVI SMI NEW 1881 HOMESI
WHY FAY R ETA IL7 &gt;4X7*.
MAS*. MKTS, tlM S* M4-I7M
»X S I 1 BDRM New wall*. 1 X J
stud*. In bedroom, llvlnp rm A
hall. New FVC pipes A break
er baa. SINS OBO........W-47S1
1 BDRM. M O B IL ! N O M I - 40
ft. excellent condition I SION
2 2 4 S 1 7 IO T * 0 4 4 0 2 0 0 2 5

145— Duplex h r Isle

Hwy. 44 and I 4 araa...... ll4t.N0
Call MM* Pt**H
11 Prapartlee.... 774*444

2 BDRM. 2 BATH ptat 1 bdrm. 1
hadt Naar nth SI. Income
two *S50M*** 4547 after*

U A S I OR S A U
705 Sarlfa SI. 4 Bdrm 1 b4lh.
CHA. lance, family rm . ca
ramie Hear. appl. U » mo. Ill
Alaat. S2B&gt;*ac. IN*) MI-SSM
LIK E BRAND NfWI This 1
bdrm. 1 btlh home hat bean
com plalaly redone! New
carpal and paint, new appli­
ance*! Family room with tree
standing fireplace Priced to
MllaltSS.no
Emarten Realty Grave lac.

111— Appltenets
/ Furniture

997-574-9SW/9Oi-77M03S

P A N T IO U I T A B L E . Early
INF*. SIM Or Bast Oftar.
________ MFMRdPjf_________
O IEO RO O M S E T
Full tilt
bad wim heedbord. matching
chatt. d rtita r. comlorlar,
rulfle and pillow thami *100
___________m a m a ___________
OCHAIR. Living roam typo,
tit 00 222 1/44

TH IS W E E K S

M O N .-S A T .9 -6 • Swt.13- 3

324-4334
116SAU

*Jtntnec/ui/c ffccu^umcy
1, 2, ft 3 BEDROOMS
RENTS STARTING FROM

Frl A Sat *4 Something lor
everyone! 1*7 E. COLEMAN
CR.Ott Airport____________

FRIDAY THRUSUNDAY
» 5 Olnlng. bedroom end
kitchen furniture, boot (gulp .
toy*, tool*, bike pert*, eppll
ante*, dithe*. etc 750 W 24th
Place, laniard
HU6C GARAGE SAU
TV*, furniture, collectible* t
too much to 11*11 1*11 S.
Orlande Or. Fri .Sat A Sun
* 1 NO EARLY SALES!

HUGE SAIL
hookups

‘ Convenient loachoetaS shopping
centers.

• Sus slop located near rental office

%
SM ^bSkii

330-5204

(fawtnty

a p a rtm e n ts
TAXI 17-03 M AiWORT SLVO TURN WIST
7/10OF A IdU. SMM ON AGHT

Q e q e v a g a rd e n s
1S09 W. 29th SL.Senlerd • 322*2090
Hours: Mon.-Fri 8:30 •530
Maraged byArpala Gbrdan l"npa/ty IkM p w W

TARE Ilf FAYMfRTS

I f f — P tti ft Supplies
BOX1R/AUST. SHEPARD. 8
wk. tamale. Tall docked that*
and warmed. 125.......l-m -S in
ERF. 00R T R A IN IN G .
Bahevtartpeciell*!.
Frlvata A group cfaaaas.
CaWTkaKa— el............ H U M S
F R E E CATI Neutered. All
chat*. Head* adult family I
Atae Black kitten* 12D IMS
N E E D IN F O to r M onthly
“
“ 1“
----• F IT BULL FaFFy. •
aid.
Healthy and Baautltull STS.
22117*0
• F U F F IIL Pupal**. Fvp p llll
ADORABLE I Shepard ml*.
114 M EACH. 311 8741
ai/1 SIAMESE. It yea ptaawt
Kittens. Adorable little orientali. 1 mala. 1 tamale SS each
la LOVING N O M I O N LVI U
buy* atotol loval.........224-12*4

20S— Ktsiitered Pets
B I A G i l AT STUD. AKC frl
calar. II Inches. VS Na or SIS
4 pick «f litter, l-182-im
BROOMING AT ITS FINEST,
aver 22 yrt professional Sip
Vat recommended 2SS 2474

281— Horses
a a MAY FOR SALEI a a *1.71
Sait. US rad. FEN CE Mdp. A
I 222 71111

211— Antiques /
Collectibles
■ R A S S A N O IRON
HEADBOARD double Great
condition! V I 214 227V

INOIANARTS’ CRAFTS
Buy Mil or trade By ap
pointmen! only A24 I15S______

313— Auctions
TOYOTA Tercel, bright
green, auto Iran* . run* wall
ISM firm .................. 214-SS1S

in i

215- Beats and
Accessories

245S Hartwell

Come Home To
Country S tyle Living!

NO MOHR V DOWN
eicapt tax. tap. tltta. ate
IVIT C H I V Y C A P R I C I
CLASSIC Auto. A/C. »torso.
Only 1148.87 par month I
(IS month* o lt.8% APR)
Cad Mr. Payaa
CsurNiy UwdCars, W i l d

CNLLIART REALTY
32279RR

Co-Op/Sale

321-2720

T A il UP PAYMENTS

1 Large building tats on Rauta
44 naar Lake Harney. Tefal 14
acres toned A -t. Includes
water mater. New prked at
114,fdO with owner farms
aval labia I

r pert.
Will finance.
naar Poland.. ............N U N S

CMLMTTHK
SANFORD. 4 Bdrm., 1 bam.
CHA. 24 ft. AO pool, fancad
v d a u a p iu * » ^ .a ii* T i

m o a n Neva

Tool*, loyv mini blind* A lot*
mi*c Item* 440 EDITHA CR.
Ott o lTOin Sat Only IS ?

MOVINGSAIL
f rom J Itory home In Geneva
Generation* ol collectlbletl
Emptying cloMt* end cup
board* ol many old piece*
Furniture. *ilver. much morel
(St Rd 44 Ea*t to 424 South
Follow *ign* H o u m on right)
4122 St Rd 424 Saturday and
Sunday, t S________________
NEW T H R IF T STOREI Frank
A Lori’*! 2102 S French Ave
Swathing tar Everyonet

TREASURES A TRASH
Thur*
F r i A Sat
PSI M F T T O A V E * *

11*1

TARO S A U
Mite. Furniture, houtahoid.
baby. Frl. A Sat. 84 it*
SATSUMA DR. 272 0043

YARD SALE
Saturday and Sunday. • T 3SM
Palmetto Ava. Sanford Varl
atyol Itamsl________________
TARO S A U
Bed*, flthtank*. bike* A
clothe* Frl A Sal *1 411
V IH LKN RD. Acrot* from
Idylwtlde Elamantary

YARD SALE
Friday and Saturday! »AM
until it rain* 1021 Vllhan Rd.
Sanford Stereo, jean*. mi*c
2 FAMILY S A U
Sal • 4 Furn . clothe*, cratt*
A tup . camping equip mite
ig A email 87 Tempo A boat
alto! 1247 Car latu Cl Oft ol
Longwood Hill* Rd . near
_Hidden Oak*Subdlvl*ion
2 FAMILY S A U
Baby Ham* and mite houw
hold item* *4 Frl A Sat 124
GRANO VISTA ST. OH af
Dwklan In Qatary ____
7399 CANAL D «.
Ott ot Lk Markham Rd
Houtehold Hem*, baby Item*
tidicioth.ng *4

M DM DNIV
RS T BOWK
RFNF^W
eicapt tax. tap. tltta. *te
1W7 OLDS • 4 door. A/C.
ttaraa. pawar ttasrlnp. 4 cyl
Indar. » MPG Only 1148.88
par month. (24 month* •
18.8% APR).... Cad Mr. Payne
Ceorteey Uaad Car*. H H IM
1844 F O R O O A L A X Y 144,
Clastic, antique apprlasal
*2500. 44.8M original mile*.
Asking II8M. 0*4*24________
l t d C H IV Y Impel*. n*ad*
trans., S2M or bat) otter. Body
excellent Run*!........W-7M1
I8PI T O Y O T A T I R C I L
Automatic, run* wall I MM
ca*h.......................... naosis
IW I FORO LTO. Power Steer
Inp, Air Conditioning, new
paint. I25M OBO........ 222 82*4
14 FORD RANCHERO. Red 4M
v 8. Auto. PS. PR. AC. Stereo
SllWcatft Call Bab2M4N8
28 BUICK R IO A L Blue. 1 dr.
Auto. PS. PB. AC ltarao IlfS
down Call Bab 22* S4M
•2 REN AU LT L I Cm Sunroof
Runt pood, given TLCt WO
210 1440after 4PM__________
a M ERCURY CAPRI RS. S
•pood. SO w/ 41.OM ml AC,
PS. PB......................222*222
B4 PIERO. Red Auto. 4 cyl .
ttorso A AC Sharp IStS down
Call Bob....................284MB8.
M CHEVY C M IV IT T E . Whit*
Auto. PS. PB. AC Starts. SJfS
down Call Bob 274 *4*V

233— Auto Parts
/ Acctssofits
• F O U N T I RE S. blaekwaH
120 12Good condillon ,)S
___________222 *858__________
• LUOOAOE RACK, from II
Toyota Corolla 11" X 42".
P S M ...................... 220 1850
• TOYOTA lalt front door with
J la * ^ 4 0 o ^ * t t 0 M * M 4 ^ 4 ^

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
Busts / Vans
FORD PICK UF
INI Run*
good Good work truck 11.000
OBO 321* 115altar 5 10PM

5 SMfori IMor Co.

IH2 LOWE 12 Ft. RIVER JON
an Highlander trailer 7 S
Hor»e Mercury. Minn kot*
trolling motor. 1 cuthton*. 2
rowing oar* E ic Condition I
SUM PRO................. 21244N

1888 J E E P C H E R O K E E
LAREDO
4 door. 4 wheel
drive, lull power. A/C. 7.000
milt* Dark blue I Priced to
Mil
Call 222 a w
•1 DODGE Work Van. run*
good New paint ItNO Will

32FT. HOUSEBOAT!
Fiberglatt. great live aboard'
Sleep* *1*. new bottom *7500
Will tlnanca NS2SAN7V

230— V th ic lts
Wanted
___

219— Wanttd to Buy

AAAUIO SALVAGE

Cans..
New Farraue Metal*.....— Ota**
Kotcoaso..................... 2h - i i m
POLD SMALL UOLY BOAT.
Under UO II it Moat*. I will
^ .c jM t ^ jM M ^ r ln j^ ^ lM lill^

333— Musical
MtrchendlSR___
PIANO TUNINO. at low a*
122 Ml Lie M yr* e«p Re
pe.rteitre Charlie 111
323— M iS C B llR tW O U S
BUY..........S IL L .......... TRADE
HUEV'I CROWN FAWN

________ 222VS*

_

A D U L T WHE E L C H A I R .
Cicellent condition! S1SO
f i r m _____________

111 1347

■IKE. ladiet IS tpaad Schwinn.
MS. WIOOIMG GOWN/veil.
*)&lt;• 4 8. Empire ttyle. putt
tleeve*. Ifem *40 274 47S7

ol OaBary
WE WEIOHANOPAYt
Too It lor |uni
CartA Truck*
Cell ******* er peel!

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
INS KAWASAKI LTO 15* Let *
make a deal’ Great itarter
bike Sacrifice *550 271 72M

2eT— Rpcrational
Vahiclts/Campers
AVAILABLE SELF STORAOEI
Oult.de Itorege lor HV'tl
ln g w .S S .M F . m s * IS__
*•77 CONCORD 11 tt Cl#** C.
Motorhome 4 new radial
lira*, new brake*, tune up
Ceb air S roof air 2400 KW
au&gt; generator other eit'a*!
Eicellenf condition1 *7500
without Generator *7200
111 Ollier 221 4744

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pDgm
Ir-n■

JJWP

add; patients receiving vitamin
BO usually do not show complete
o r s u s ta in e d Im p ro ve m e n t.
However, p v e n your mother a
age. th is sim ple therapy la

Like a ll great
w riters, i have
known suffering.

IT 3 W

TD O P h*,

-

&gt;

UW 5KEY*

9 0 LD 7 S U JO Z ?

flATUUUM? &gt;
O A U V ?

given to people with significant
kidney Im pairm ent. Dyaslde
causes m any potential side ef­
fect*. Including diabetes, potas­
sium Imbalance, rash, nausea,
v o m itin g , m u sc le c ra m p s ,
weakness, fatigue, renal failure
and anemia. It can cause anorex­
ia (loss of appetite).
If yo ur m other has no edema. 1
believe she would be better off
without the Dyaslde — or she
could use It lor short periods
when she experiences fluid re*
tentIon. Ask her doctor about
this. In m y experience, people

Th e result on some hands Is
almost Impossible to predict. As
an example, look at all four
hands In today's diagram. What
do you think w ill be the outcome
In four spades, given the club
Jack lead?
East's Jum p to three no-trump
was slightly sporting, but If his
diamond suit was running and
dum m y tabled Just the d u b ace.
he would have nine running
tricks. Here three no-trum p was
destined to flntffi two down, but
rather than risk Its making.
North sacrificed In four spades.

with the club ace. played off
three rounds of hearts, discard­
ing one of dum m y's diamonds,
and led a trum p to the queen
and ace.
Surety the beat East could do
was to take his two m inor-suit
winners. However, he was made
of sterner stuff. IVue. he cashed
the club king, but then he led a
low diamond.
If only South had been awake,
West m ade an unfortunate
lead. G iven his hand and the he w o uld have p la ye d the
auction, he should have deduced diamond Jack ana made an
that h is p a rtn e r h e ld solid overtrick. But he didn't ruin a
diamonds. A lead of that suit good story — he put In the eight.
would have killed the contract So West won the trick wtth the
for sure. But the J - 10-9 sequence d ia m o n d 10 a n d ga ve h is
lured West Into leading his top partner a club ruff for one down.

11

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Im provem ents In yo u r finan­
cial position are likely In the year
ahead. However, you'll have to
guard against the Inclination to
speculate o r take m o n eta ry
risks.
CAMCSB (Ju n e 2 1 -Ju iy 22) If
there has been an improvement
In yo u r financial affairs recently,
you'd be sm art not to talk about
It In front of a friend w ho has not
yet repaid yo u an old loan. Get a
Jum p on life by understanding
(he Influences governing you In
the y e a r a h e a d . S e n d for
C a ncer's A s tro O ra p h predic­
tions today b y m ailing 91.25
p lu s a lo n g , self-addressed,
stam ped envelope to A stro G raph. c/o this newspaper. P.O.
B ox 9 1 4 2 8 . C le v e la n d . O H
44101-3428. Be sure lo state
your zodiac sign.
LEO (J u ly 2 3 -Aug. 22) Rather
than make waves today, you
may make some concessions to
someone w ith w h o m yo u 're
closely Involved. But be firm
when necessary.
VIBGO (A u g . 23-Sep l. 22)
You're not likely to lack India-

live or Industitousneas today,
yet you m ay not accomplish
your objectives; there's a chance
you'll use the wrong tools or
procedures.
L O O M (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Th e
right types of social Involve­
ments could do a world of good
for your attitude today. Howev­
er. associating w ith n e g a t i v e
companions w ill take the edge
ofT your optimism.
• C O M B O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) if
you challenge someone whose
views and opinions are contrary
to yours today, nothing of value
Is likely to be gained. Neither
you nor this Individual has the
power to change the world.
• A O IT T A B IU B (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your Cslth in yo ur philoso­
phy of life might be tested and
found to be lacking today. It
might be wise to ask yourself.
•'Who is wrong. I or m y beliefs?"
C A P B IC O U f (Dec. 2 2 -Ja n .
19) A Joint venture In which
you're Involved could work out
O K. provided there Is parity In
all things. Neither should be
expected to Invest more than the
other.

A0UABIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You may request advice from

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several people today, then do
what they told you not to do —
In spite of their unanim ous
opinion. Don't blame them If It
doesn't work out.
m e n
(Feb. 2 0 -March 20
Yo u r productivity w ill be predi­
cated upon the w ay you sched­
ule your tasks today. T h e worst
thing you can do Is pul your
most duflcuU Jobs last.
A im
(March 21-Aprll 19)
You may be put In an awkward
position today where you have to
defend an old friend regarding
an Issue you don't tru ly support.
Do the best you can. even If your
heart isn't In It.
TAUBUB (April 20-May 20)
It's very Important that neither
you nor you r mate air your
domestic differences In public
today. If you do. both of you
could severely tarnish yo u r im-

^GEM IN I (May 2 1 -Ju n e 20)
Something you feel enthusiastic
about should not be discussed at
this time w ith an associate who
la notorious for expressing nega­
tive views. It could dam pen your
outlook.
(0 1 9 9 1 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TER P R IS E ASSN.

by Leonard Starr
AS A VULCAN, I ALViAVS CONSIDERED
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»***.

r71Ur*•»*» *

August 5, 1991

,' -

JK|33iI!K355M
Vm, * f^v rig j

' /jfE, .'W J -

S an fo rd H erald
It r v in i Sanford, Lake Mary and Samlnda County mine# IG O i
83rd Year, No. 298 - Sanford. Florida

NEWS DIGEST
□ Sports
Locals at Jr. Olympics
TALLAHASSEE - Lake Mary s D.J. Lewis led
a local contingent of runners at the A.A.U.
Junior Olympics.
8 m Page IB

□ Paopla
Lons armadillo can roak havoc
They're shy and cute. They're not Just In
Texas. If you have an armadillo doing damage
In your yard, he's probably not thinking about
moving. For help.
See Page SB

First Street Gallery display open
SANFORD — The First Street Gallery's latest
display Is now open to the public. Seven
prominent area photographers are displaying 21
separate works of art.
The gallery's first Invitational photographic
show was opened during a special reception this
past Friday, attended by over 200 persons.
Among photographers displaying their works
are Anna Tomczak of Lake Helen. Bob Eglnton.
Patty Margerum. Steve Vaugh, Randy Smith.
Linda Bulmer and Peter Schreyer. While most of
the works are In the photographic area, some
Include painting on photos, which add a
different character to the works.
The display is now open to the public, from 10
a.m. until 5 p.m.. Tuesdays through Fridays,
and 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. Saturdays. There is no
charge foradmlssslon.
The First Street Gallery Is located at 203 E.
First Street. In the heart of the downtown
Sanford historic district. For information on the
gallery, phone 323-9178.

Growth versus environment
S C O prof takes
a look at future
through video
By VICKI DeSOMHM
Herald Staff W riter

Dr. Pat Fitzgerald who heads the honors
program at Semlnlole Community College takes
his Job very seriously, but he has a lot of fun with
It Just the same.
"I really enjoy what I'm doing." he admitted.
Before he arrived at SCC four years ago from
Logan Community College In Cartervllle 111.,
school administrators had relegated honors
classes to the status of options to be added to the
regular curriculum.
'That's how It Is done at most community
colleges.' Fitzgerald said.
Fitzgerald worked with Barbara Hunnlcutt to
develop a full honors curriculum using the
Integrated team approach.
I ’m a charter member of the Florida Honors
Council and I'd have to say that our In­
terdisciplinary approach to teaching Is looked
upon as exemplary.' Fitzgerald said.
He said that he leaves much of the day-to-day
operation of the honors program to Hunnlcutt so
□ Bee Video, Page 5A

imw wots if T— vW an
S C C students are In the process of producing a
video of the com m unity, 'A matter of Eternal
Vigilance.’ Preparing for an Interview are, from

Longwood to
air Village
Inn purchase
By NICK FFBIFAUF

LONGWOOD — Would Longwood voters
approve the city's purchase of the 103-ycar- old
Village Inn hotel for use as a city hall? The Item
is on the agenda for tonight's Longwood City
Commission Meeting.
L a s t week, t i l e c o m m i s s i o n e r s met In the l o b b y
of the historic building, to hear a presentation
from Gary Ralston. Senior Vice President of CNL
Properties. Inc., present owner of the building.
The meeting was designed to explain the amount
of reconstruction that has been accomplished In
the past few years, as well as the present physical
condition of the structure.
According to some City Commissioners and
staff members, the Longwood City Hall, located
Just west of the former hotel, has outgrown Its
usefulness during the pasl years, and a larger
structure Is desired to better serve the nubile.

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS — The outside, right
lane of Interstate 4 between State Roads 434
and 436 will be closed Monday and Tuesday
nights beginnings 8 p.m.
Crews will be* placing beams across the
Interstate for the Central Parkway bridge. The
lanes will reopen at 6 a.m. the next morning.

Beasley house taking shape

H«f *M Ptwto by Tommy Vlncont

‘Saturday Afternoon at the M ovies’ it on exhibit at Lake Mary C ity Hall

Batman, dinosaurs on
display in Lake Mary
By NICK FFIIFAUF
Herald Staff Writer

LAKE MARY — A new art cxhllili is on
display In the lobby of the Lake Mary City Hall,
li is highly unusual hut for many. Ignites the
memory to various levels.
Jeff Henley, who uses the professional name
"Kyle", is displaying eight of his mixed media
works. They combine painting und sculptures.
In presentations that dcplrt present us well as
past television adventure programs.
The exhibit Is part of 20 In a series referred
to by Kyle us "Saturday Afternoon Movies."
Shown In the Lake Mary display are Batman.
Flat Top A Itchy from the old Dlek Tracy
programs, and several others that range from
prehistoric dinosaurs to futuristic spacemen

such as those In the work entitled "The Man
from Planet X".
Kyle presently lives and works at the
Maitland Art Center, where he Is employed as a
caretaker. He recently graduated with a degree
In arts from the University of Central Florida.
"I hope to eventually gel my Masters of Fine
Arts, specializing In Palming and Sculptur­
ing." he said. “ Bui at the present time. UCF
doesn't offer It." He said lie Intends to remain
In Central Florida until such a course heroines
available. "I love my Job here at the Maitland
Center." he said, "li keeps me In direct contact
with top artists In the area and provides me
with Ideal working conditions." Eventually, he
wauls to leach at the university level.
Kyle, who has been working In arl for the
□ See Exhibit. Page 5A

F ro m wire re ports

Classifieds........ 4B.8B Horoscope.

Comtes........
Crossword.... ......Movlot.............
Door Abb* .....SQ People........
Deaths..........
Dr. Oott........
Editorial.......
Florida......... .....2A Weather..... .
Hot, humid and dry
Partly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of
m ain ly aftern o o n
thunderstorms. High
In the low to mid 90s.
Wind west 5-10 mph.

For mors w sA h sr , so o F ags 2A

'

Herald Staff W riter_________________________________

1*4 lane closings

SANFORD — Twenty volunteers, who are
employees of four Seminole County branches of
Barnett Bank spent the day Saturday helping
build a home for Ella Beasley.
Thanks to those volunteers und the Habitat
for Humanity organization. Beasley's new
home, built on the same property as her present
dilapidated home, will cost her nothing.
The volunteers converged on the site, at 1516
West 16th Street, to work on the walls and roof
of the new house.
Beasley, a disabled widow who is helping raise
three children, lives In a structure next to the
new house.
Her present house, which was built some time
before 1949. will be torn down when the new
one is completed.
Habitat for Humanity in Seminole County is
dedicated to "removing all the shacks" from the
county, according to Don Nolt. who heads the
local effort.
Beascly's house Is one of two projects
currently being undertaken in Sanford.
The projects arc provided for by volunteers,
like those from Barnett Bank who are working
on Beasley's house and supporters of Habitat for
Humanity.
T ic k e t s o ld in M ia m i w in s ja c k p o t
TALLAHASSEE — A single ticket purchased
In Miami has won the estimated 86 million
Jackpot from latest drawing of the Florida Lotto
game, lottery olflclals said.
Computer records showed that ticket was the
only one sold for Saturday night's Lotto drawing
that matched all six winning numbers —
6-8-34-44-47-4H. Lottery Secretary Marcia Maun
said.

left, Veronlque Bole, Julie Esbjom, Dave Brodle,
student producer, Belly Castor, Com m issioner of
Education, and Dr. Pat Fitzgerald.

Woman killed
by train
By MICK FFBWAUF

No price has been asked however. The most
recent appraisal of the hotel listed It at
$925,000.
Tonight's meeting agenda calls for (he first
reading of an ordinance that would place the
matter on the November 5. 1991 ballot. It is not
believe however, thut the city would alletnt a
purchase In the Immediate future, as no money
for a new city hall Is on (he fiscal 1991-92
budget. The sale price wanted by CNL Properties,
(he city's counter offer, and liow such u sale
would be financed are all matters that would
remain lo be decided.
Tonight's meeting If the Longwood City
Commission will begin at 7 p.m., at the
Longwood City Hall.

Free basketball clinic open
to com m unity youngsters

Herald S ta ll Writer

LONGWOOD - A so-far un­
identified person, believed to be
a woman, was killed when she
was struck by a CSX train this
morning near Longwood. The
death occured near S.R. 427 east
of Magnolia Avenue.
According to reports. Charles
W. Cooper, a worker on board
the train, and brakeman Ronnie
Sallle. said they saw an object on
the tracks In front of the train,
but did not realize II was a
person until ihe train was only
10 feet away. They said they
a t t e m p t e d to m a k e an
□ Sea Train. Page 5A

The hotel, built In 1887. Is a three story
structure, located In the heart of the area
considered as historical downtown Longwood.
Ralston explained the many rooms In the
building would be ideal for the various depart­
ments of the city government.
During last week's meeting. II was that If the
city purchase the building, one of the rooms
could be used for a Longwood Historical Center,
to be a public museum with displays of Interest
to the citizens as well as (he visitors. Commis­
sioner Clancl Keith expressed her support for
such a museum.

By VICKI OsSORMICR
Herald Stall Writer

SANFORD - "Defense? Defense? Delens* !." shouts
Gary Mathews to the pair of young boys shullliug
across the eonerele b.iskcth.ill in the gymnasium ol the
West Sanford Boys and Girls Club on Persimmon
Avenue. In Sanford
He gives a short blast on his whistle and the two
scurry track to the line and another duo takes oil on a
defensive drill
Mathews said that as crutch ol the Hoys and Girls Club
teams, he has noticed that while a lot ol youngsters
want to play the game, most lack the hash skills
Mathews has started a month long Saturday basket­
ball clinic for youngsters 14 and under.
"We wanted to give these kids the basic skills so they
could learn lo really play the game." he said
Mathews, assisted bv former Scrntuole High S&lt; bool

basketball player Robert Moore, is starting Iroin scratch
with the klrls
Moore, who will play lor Seminole Community
College next year, demonstrated to the youngsters how
to dribble, how to defend against an opponent and how­
to shoot the hall
"We're offering t hem discipline too." Mathews said
Those youngsters who failed to adhere to the simple
ground r u le s set down by Mathews were made to run
laps around the gym Loud whistle blasts were
frequent.
Mathews' gentle voice and Moore's demonstrations
and words ol encouragement helped give the ten young
hoys who were In attendance on Saturday morning the
start they needed in learning to play the game.
Mathew s said he hoped to have more youngsters each
week and tl the program were successful enough, he
hoped lo continue w ith It next month
See Clinic. Page 5A

/

�NEW S FROM T H E REGION AND A C R O S S THE STATE

protest benefits
Saturday for changes' in the
NAPLES - Florida's workers’ state’s workers’ compensation
compensation law Is fine In
The demonstration was orga­
.principle, but In reality. Injured
employees are being denied nised by a grass roots Woup.
benefits they should be getting. w hich collected nearly SO
signatures on a petition for
In the state's workers'
"These people don't have the
money or resources to effect (be
Injured Workers of Florida
lejpaietorB," tak) Naples attorney
Dale Kraut. "They're the least plana to set up chapters in
vocal people out there, the least variou s areas, said Trudy
likely to create waves. (Cutting K in n e y . K in n ey and her
benefits) sraa potentially the caw- husband. Parry Kinney, an lnJured worker, helped spearhead

M ist Florida fianwd
DAVIE — Sharon Bekfcn. a 35-year-old actreaa fend model
who appeared on^The^New l^
^ o t o i v c y Show" aa
^Mias Befoen.^North*Bay Village, beat out S3 other"finalists
representing clllea throughout the Mate Saturday night for the
chance to become the 1992 Miss USA next February.
"I’ve been preparing for this pnmant for aknost a year... It's a
dream come true." aaid Mho Befcfen. who la majoring in
Interior design at the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale and
wants to become a yacht designer upon graduation.
Mias Belden will get more than 160.000 In cash and prises.
Selected as first runner-up was Julie Qagt of r_
Rogers from Orlando was the
Mack from Yalaha

Parents of transfusion-infected
baby want identity of AIDs donor

TALLAHASSEE - Tom Gardner, the embattled chief of the
Department of Natural Resources, has lobbied Gov. Lawton
Chiles to consider hiring Ids top assistant to replace him If he
Virginia Bass WethereU sraa summoned to a private
15-minute meeting with Chiles at the governor’s mansion
Friday after Gardner told Ms staff she was Interested In the Job.
"I’m Interested and t would put In an application If and when
U opens up.” said Ms. WethereU. adding that Gardner has
encouraged her to seek the position and told her he thinks she
would do a
She told
. Tribune for Saturday's editions that the
no commitments and Indicated there were

I L miJ

s— •—
rooa n y t *incur
Infant AIDS is likely dead.
T hey w ant to know th e

But state law says th e
parents don’t have the right to
know who donated the pint of
blood that Infected their In­
fant. They aren't even entitled
to And out for sure If the donor
has since died.
. Baby John Doe and h is
parents ran Into the law In
1989 when they filed suit In
Palm Beach County against
the American National Red
Cross, the South Florida Blood
Sendee and three hospitals —
two of them later dropped.
For two years, the su it
bogged doom as attorneys re­
peatedly collided with con­
fidentiality requirements.
"The Does should be able
ask this person, eyeball to
eyeball, bow good the screen­
ing process was." said at­
torney Jeffrey Llgfio. who

Nomlntts for PSC vacancy nam*d
TALLAHASSEE — Two former state senators and a
government lawyer have been nominated for a state Public
Service Commission vacancy created by the death of longtime
commissioner Gerald Gunter.
The nine-m em ber PSC nom inating panel on Friday
forwarded the names of John Vogt. Pat Frank and Susan Clark
to Gov. Lawton Chiles, who has 60 days to make his choice for
the MO.OOO-a-vear position.
Vogt,- of-Merritt Island, was Senate president from 1087-88
while still a Democrat. He switched to the Republican Party
after leaving the Legislature and ran unsuccessfully In 1990 for
Congress.
FrankTTromTampaT served hi the state House for two years
and the Senate from 1978-88. In 1990. she ran for lieutenant
governor on a ticket with George Stuart — now secretary of the
Department of Professional Regulation — before Stuart
dropped out of the governor's race.
Clark, of Tallahassee. Is currently the PSC's general counsel.
The five-member PSC regulates Florida utilities. Including
electric and telephone service. Gunter, who had served since
1979. died In June following a heart attack.

Lawmaker accepted help
to finance speaker bid

MILTON — A judge has followed a Jury's recommendation
and sentenced a Florida Panhandle man to life In prison for
murdering a state attorney's Investigator.
He could have received the death penalty.
Circuit Judge Nancy Gilliam ordered the sentence Friday fo r,
Patrick "Sonny" Salgat. 38. for the June 18. 1990 shooting
death of Investigator Steve Bolyard In the Gulf Breeze home of
Salgat’s former girlfriend.
QUllam sentenced Salgat to life without parole lor at least 25
years for first-degree murder to be followed by two concurrent
unlimited life terms for attempted murder of the ex-girlfriend.
Charlotte Blevins, and burglary of an occupied dwelling. She
also sentenced him to 15 years for shooting Into a dwelling and
use of a firearm during a felony.

From Agtoeteted Fr$$$ reports

a .A r

■ ■-

(U in S M M I

Monday, August S. 1991
Vol. S3. No. 296
liSSshad OaSy and SunSay, ascaat
Saturday fey The Santord HaraM,
L»ian ,k A“ , HftNnw,
■M.s a a uR&gt;|FfinCft
Fla. 33771
i e cewd Claaa P aata aa Said at Santord,
Ftehde and additional a n tin g
POSTMASTER: Sand I
teTHE SANTORO HERALD. P CX
Boa 1SS7, Santord. FL 33773-1447.
Suiacrlptlon Salop

S

...314.SO
t i t 00
..STS 00

t Vi
Florida Residents
ta iln id d R Iin te

I pay Itb salao

tiara.

Phone («07) 3Z2-JS11.

there who wouldn't let thetr
children play with the Doe
child or even go to the same
school, if this came out. These
people ate deathly afraid of
that
t&lt;
" ‘happening
bJltothem."
hieRays.
of Arcadia, were
The
Raya, or
ostracised when It became
known In 1986 that their three
hemophiliac sons contracted
t h e A ID S v i r u s from
transfusions. A public school
tried to ban the boys, and
burned the family's
house. In 1987. the family
moved to Sarasota to escape
the hostility.
The Doe child, like the Ray
brothers, contracted the dis­
ease when govemfnt.it regula­
tion of blood products was Just
beginning. Until 1965. blood
was screened with the ELISA
te st, which was extremely
sensitive to AIDS antibodies
but also produced many false
results.
T h e U .S . g o v e rn m e n t
licensed a new. highly accu­
rate test — the Western Bkft —
tn the spring of 1985 and
ordered blood suppliers to use
It.

‘Morey kilter*
horns ono ysar
FORT LAUDERDALE - It's
been a year since so-called
Mercy killer Roswell Gilbert
came home a free man, and

Gilbert
prison term on Aug. 2. I960,
after politicians and an ex­
prosecutor agreed that he didn’t
need to die in prison for killing
Ms wife. Emily. 73, who suffered
from A lsh elm er’a and oaBut
friends. Gilbert. 82. remains a
risoner of age. health and
onellnesa In his retirement
condo In South Florida.
"Any widow or widower can
tell you that you can die of
loneliness in these apartments."
said one good friend. Lillian
Irvin. "They are another type of

r&lt;

Gilbert, a retired electrical
engineer, still lives In the 10thfloor condo he shared with Emily
for 18 years, until he put a pistol
to her head as she slept.
"He talks about Emily all the
tim e,’’ said Jackie Rhodes,
another close friend.

Tw o lawmakers: Politicians and businessmen

Judg« follows jury** rocommsndatlon

- -

represents the Docs In the suit,
transferred last week to Circuit
C ourt In Broward County.
“But the Supreme Court says
they can’t."
In 1987. the court ruled that
protecting donors' names is of
the "utmost public interest,"
overriding other concerns.
U g g to a n d th e Doe family
discovered recently — through
unofficial means — that the
unnamed donor is dead, pre­
sumably from AIDS. But even
with the donor's death, they
are stymied at nearly every
turn by a system designed to
protect the Identity of blood
donors at all costs.
"This is the leprosy of our
g e n eratio n , bu t we’re up
ag ain st th is conspiracy of
silence." Ltgglo said. "Il’a
made things extremely dif­
ficult."
The family has Invoked Us
own shield of anonymity,
fearful of the rejection that
public disclosure has brought
others In the paM.
"The Does don’t want to be
another Ray family," Llgglo
“There are people out

WEST PALM BEACH - The
of Baby Doe aren't

MIAMI — Attorney Etta Itubtn plans to defend accused
prostitute Kathy WIDeta by showing she’s a nymphomaniac
who needed many sex partners and now says there were other
factors.
Rubin says her husband Jeffrey, who allegedly pimped her
services, is Impotent.
”1 did not make this up,” the Miami attorney said. “Jeff had
spells of tmpotency, and Kathy was hypersexiud. You can
Imagine what went on.”
Rubin reached his conclusion after Interviewing the Tamarac
couple Friday and after doing research that Included reading
Masters and Johnson's Human Sexual Inadequacy.
Jeffrey WlUets. 41. a suspended Broward sheriffs deputy,
often spied on Ms wife in bed. The men she entertained were
surrogate partners, and watching them was therapy for him.
Rubin said.
"What happened to the WUletses was right out of the
textbooks, and they didn't read any of the textbooks." Rubin

MIAMI - Hsrs ars ths winning
numbers astactad Sunday in ths
Florida Lottery Cam 3:4-0-1
Numbsrs M lactad In ths Florida
Lottery Ptay 4 wsar. 4-7-1-8
Ths Florida Lottery Lotto num­
bsrs drawn 8aturday wsrs:

the rally. The chapters will m erce In T allah assee who
he
gather statistics and work to helped draft the law.
thought It was "working
change the laws, said Kinney.
L aw m akers rew rote the
Premium rates were
workers' comp law In 1989. then
by 25 percent
revised It again In 1990 and
1991 In the wake of skyrock­
; It
eting workers' compensation
Yt be the 80 to SO
premium rates. Some employers
were shelling out move than 50 Inertoar that might have
cents In premiums for every
dollar in payroll, and the costs
Insurance
were threatening to put some
"We never Intended to
Jtm Drstnerd. an attorney with somebody who’s looking Ipr o
the Florida Chamber of Com- lob."

TALLAHASSEE - A federal
program designed to steer busi­
ness st airports to minorities has
led to lucrative contracts with
companies owned In part by two
slate lawmakers.
TALLAHASSEE - The
B ut th e tw o D em o cratic
Panhandle lawmaker In line
legislators said political clout
to become Florida's next
didn't have anything to do with
House speaker accepted more
the business deals.
from special Interests —
"I think the story is that Jim
$65,000 — than either of his
Hargrett runs a company tn the
two predecessors In his bid for
finest airport tn the world, that
the leadership post.
Marriott-Host has a hard time
Rep. Bolley "Bo" Johnson.
keeping up with." Rep. Jam es
D-MUton. said running for
Hargrett of Tampa said.
House speaker Is expensive
"My contribution was to be the
because It entails flying
local partner because of my ties
throughout the state to meet
to the community." Rep. Also
with lawmakers, which racks
Reddick of Orlando said. "My
up bills for air fare, hotels and
prominence gives credibility. In
entertainment.
terms of winning the contract. It
"It got to a point where
played no role."
expenses came to an amount I
Hargrett and Reddick have
could not afford, and I didn't
stock in airport concessions In
want to charge them to the
their cities valued at 8140.000
sta te ." Johnson told The
and $500,000, respectively. In
Tampa Tribune In a story
Hargrctt's case, his Initial In­
published Sunday. "I felt for
vestment In 1986 was $3,500.
me to gain support. 1 would
Reddick said he Invested no
have to (ravel more. It wasn't
money.
Paul Curtis of Tampa, a re­ concern about the way the
gional representative of the Na­ lawmakers prospered.
tional Association of Minority
"I can't help but ask If these
Contractors, expressed some are the perks that come with the

always pleasant ... but I was
willing to make that com­
mitment."
But a government watchdog
said the fund-raising method
used by Johnson in his bid for
the leadership position lacks
accountability and Increases
the corrupting Influence of
money on politics.
"The horror Is In how much
money special Interests are
giving to those people and
what they’re doing with that
money." said Bill Jones, ex­
ecutive director of Common
Cause of Florida. “ I have
serious problems with that."
Johnson'a account ol his
expenditures satisfies state
law. Jones said, but he says
the law needs to be changed
to provide greater account­
ability.
"T he book needs to be
rewritten." he said.
Job of lawmaker." he told The
T am pa T ribune In a story
published Sunday,
In Orlando. Reddick said he

invested no money and Isn't
responsible for the $1.7 i^UJIon
loan to start Concessions In­
ternational of Orlando. He was
made vice president of the com­
pany when It was formed In
1986. The co-owners operate
concessions elsewhere and are
responsible for the Orlando
business.
Reddick said he had no pre­
vious experience tn the restau­
rant business, but he's now
planning to open a sandwich
shop In Orlando.
The 1990 financial disclosure
form Reddick filed aa a state
lawmaker shows he owns 250
shares of stock In Concessions
International of Orlando valued
at $500,000.
Reddick said Concessions In­
ternational Inc. asked him to be
their local representative In re­
turn for an interest at the
Orlando airport.
Bill Jennings, the airport's
operations manager, said Con­
cessions International hires a
local businessman to represent It
at each of the company's other
operations.
"The fact that they have Alzo
Reddick ... didn't bring a lot to
the table." he aald. "Concessions
... had the best proposal."

TH E W EA TH ER
l

—
'
Today: Partly cloudy with
chance of mainly afternoon
thunderstorms. High in the low
to mid 90s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Tonight: Becoming fair. Low SATURDAY
In (he lower to mid 70s. Light P tlycldy 93-73
wind.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy with a
ch an ce of a fte rn o o n th u n ­
derstorms. High In the lower to
mid 90s. Wind south 5 to to 10
mph. Rain chance 40 percent.
Extended forecast: P artly
cloudy each day with a chance of
mainly afternoon and evening
thunderstorms. Lows In the mid
70s south. Highs mainly In the
lower 90s.
|m

F lO m O A l
City
Apalachicola
Daytona B«*&lt;h
Ft LaudBaach
ForlMyert
Gametvllle
Hornet lead
Jacktonville
Key W«H
Lakeland
Miami
Pentacoia
W iu l &lt;
Tallahattee
Tampa
V.ro Beach
W. Palm Beach

Hi
fO
fa
n
u
»
n
u
tl
H
ri
71
tj
H
fl
fj
«

La
«
n
n
IS
14
n
71
r»
71
71
74
7f
71
71
71
77

*P
•UNDAY
Ptly cldy 93-73

TUESDAY
P tlycld y 93-73

Daytona Beach: Waves are
flat and glassy. Current Is
slightly to the south with a water
temperature of 76 degrees. Naw
Smyrna Beach: Waves are 1 foot
and choppy. Current Is to the
north, with a water temperature
of 76 degrees.

-

Ptly cldy 93-73

T h e high tem perature In
Sanford Sunday was 95 degrees
and the overnight low was 73 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
weekend, ending at 9 a.m.
Monday. totalledO Inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 81 degrees and
-------- L----- -------------------------Monday's overnight low was 76.
'J •
as recorded by the National
St. Angnsttno to Japitsr Inlet Weather Service at the Orlando
Tonight: Wind southwest to International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
south 5 to 10 knots. Seas 1 feet.
Hay and Inland waters smooth. □ S u n d a y ' s h i g h ........................ 9 3
Widely scattered evening thun­ □ Besom#trie pressure.30.07
□ R elative Humidity ....SB pet
derstorms.
West S mph
Tuesday: Wind southwest to □W inds.
□
Rainfall
••••••»«•••••••••••••••
*0 lo.
south 10 knots. Seas I to 2 feet.
Bay and inland waters a light □Today’s sunset.....3:13 p.m.
chop. Scattered showers and □ T o m o r r o w ’s s m a r i s o . . . . 6 : 4 B
thunderstorms.

SOLUMAS TAH.K: Min. 2:15
Aag. lO a.m.. 2:30 p.m.; MaJ. 8:20 a.m..
8:55 p.m. TIDSSt D aytona
Beach: highs. 3:31 a.m.. 4:24
p.m.: lows. 9:41 a.m., 10:50
p.m .; Raw Saiyraa Roach:
FULL
highs, 3:36 a.m.. 4:29 p.m.;
3 8 lows. 9:46 a.m.. 10:55 p.m.;
Cac ao Reach: highs. 3:51 a.m..
4:44 p.m.: lows. 10:01 a.m.,
11:10p.m.

□C te O ~
Pci
02
00
00
00
00
00
00
.14
01
00
.11
00
00
00
00
00

P tlycldy 93-73

Ttfn##r#tvirts tntf
M Say *
Mfh m i •MMnOfM tow to • p.m. 8 DT.
ON
M iM fn • m
Anchor a p t
cdy
a
n
Aehovllto
n 41
coy
Atlanta
n 73 44 cdy
cir
Atlantic City
47 73
dr
Baltimore
«i 74
BilUnfi
m M
*4y
Birmingham
M 74
c*y
Bltmarck
cdy
u 47
Boita
fT 73 » cdy
Baaian
a* 44 .13 cdy
Burltnfton.Vt.
m
74 4S 47
CharWttan.SC
cdy
M IS
Charlattan.W.Va
N IS .44 cdy
CtvartaTta.NC
f i IS
cdy
Chayanna
as u .M d r
Oil d p i
7a 41
cdy
cdy
Ciavatand
77 47
Colum6ta.SC.
f t 73
cdy
Concord. N H
cdy
n 44
Dolioa-Ft Worth
ws 74
cdy
Denver
n IS .44 cdy
Det Moinat
m
m 41
Detroit
cdy
m 45
Honolulu
cdy
n 77
Houttan
n 73 47 cdy
Indianapolis
u 4S 41 cdy
J action.Mi ta.
n 73
cd*
Kantaa City
m
74 45 41
Lot Voeat
Ml 7»
dr
Lima Rack
cdy
ta 77
Lot Anpeiet
cdy
74 43
Memphlt
f t 74
cdy
Miheaukaa
cdy
71 43
Mpit St Paul
77 55
cdy
Nothviito
fa 73 41 cdy
New Or Want
f4 74
cdy
New York City
cdy
« 70
Oklahoma City
cdy
f t 74
Omaha
tf 54
cdy
Philadelphia
dr
n 75
Phoanle
dr
m 45
Pltttfcurgh
u a t .41 d r
Portland. Maine
44 40 1.44 cdy
Portland. Ora.
U 44
cdy
SlLaui*
n 71 .13
m
Sail Lake City
dr
f» 41

‘I

�Secretary faces grand theft
Woman admite she
took about $3,000
from county funds

AM M i M l l w d a10— me ------ Acronung
police
report. uuinreo
ytn th i

SCC boosts televised class offerings
........ . being offered during
the fall semester range from
The concept of a televised
campus la not a new one. It has
In to m e p l a c e s w h e r e
overcrowded classrooms have
fo rc e d c o lle g e s to s e e k
alternative spaces for teaching.
Bob Ledford, who coordinates
the program from SCC'a satellite
campus In Hunt Chib, said that
the coat of Uie classes la the
as that of attending in

Jam es A. Ooemmer. 38, of Sanford, was arrested Friday and
charged with disorderly intoxication .
According to the arrest report Sanford M ice officers
determined that his loud, violent outbursts outside the Wareco
store on French Avenue showed that he was not safe to himself
or others.
He was taken to the John E. Folk Correctional Facility and
held on 9100 bond.

Zoo announces
August schedule

Woman,
aranddauohtar
arraatad
• • wllieMIJ spl
WrsVs^WsgvI«W SRI
w w lW for
IVV Shaft
$e^V$S

•f

Pair jailad on marijuana chargaa
Cynthia Marie Pratt. 41. and Steven Kenneth Smith. 28. both
of 242 Ibta Drive. In Longwood, were arrested Saturday.
They were charged with possession of one pound of
marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, cultivation of
marijuana, and possession of marijuana cultivation equipment.
A search warrant was used to gain access to the residence
where the drugs and plants were found, police said.
The pair was transported to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility were they were each held on 83,000bond.

Marijuana growar arraatad
Jesse Eugene Moore. 51. of 501 Old Monroe Rd. In Lake
Monroe waa arrested on Friday and charged with maljuana
cultivation and possession of 25 grams of marijuana.
Moore had two five foot tall marljauna plants growing In his
back yard, police said. The plants were observed by officers
doing aerial surveillance of the area, the report noted.
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility where
he was held on 83.000 bond.

Opan container ordinance violated
Terry Wilson Llmbaugh. 32. of 615 Park Ave.. In Sanford,
was arrested on Saturday and charged with violating the city
ordinance against having an open container of alcohol.
He left the Wareco store on French Avenue with a 12-ounce
can of beer and proceeded to walk down the street drinking It.
the police report said.
He was transported to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
where he was held on 8100 bond.

Bolting girlfriend loads to arrest
Anthony Reed Eden. 20. of 2017 French Ave. In Sanford, was
arrested on Saturday. He was charged with aggravated battery.
According to the police report. Eden got into an altercation
with his girlfriend when he was told by a third party that she
wanted to sever their relationship.
The report stated that while the couple was discussing their
differences, the girlfriend attempted to slap him and he
countered with a fist to her mouth.
He waa taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility where
he was held on 84.000 bond.

Grand that! auto chargad
Tommy Shayor Hampton. 18. of 2207 Greenway. In Sanford,
was arrested on Friday. He was charged with grand theft auto
and was arrested at the Kings Inn. 4750 State Road 46. In
Sanford, when he was found driving a 1900 Honda with
Virginia license plates.
•
A check of the plates revealed that the car had been reported
stolen In Virginia. Hampton's brother. Ronald, of Virginia, was
also In the car and was arrested as well.
Both were transported to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility where they were held on 84.000 bond.

HARVIY

MORSE

Each of the classes being
offered this semester la a threecredit class. SCC charges 830
per credit hour for their classes.
While Mudents can listen to
lectures from the comfort of their
easy chairs, they are required to
be on campus for the mid-term

Disordady Intoxication eftargod

Dorothy Bush Hodges, 47. of 50 Castle Brewer Court, in
Sanford, waa arrested n Saturday and charged with retail theft,
child abuse and resisting arrest without violence.
She was taken Into custody at the Winn Dixie on Airport
Boulevard In Sanford.
Hodges' 11 -year-old gronddaughcr was also arrested for retail
theft.
There were several Items from the store In both their purses,
police reported.
Further checks of their vehicle revealed that there were
many Items from an area Wal-Mart store, but no store redepts.
the report said.
When asked her name. Hodges gave a false name, police
said.
Hodges was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Center
and held on $2,000 bond.

required

. I N V l SI IG AT I O N c* •

&lt;*&gt;78 T y O O

Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD — Special events
and money saving admission
highlights the month of August
at the Central Florida Zoological
Park.
From now through the end of
September. Florida residents
may receive 81 off the adult
admission price. Residents must
present proof of residency for the
discount.
,
The big events include Phase I
of the Animal Adventure. De­
signed for children of all ages,
the first phase features an array
of domestic animals. Including
pigmy goats, chickens, a llama,
a calf and m iniature horse.
Children will also find easy to
read species signs, and enjoy
feeding the adventure animals.
August la also Purina Big Cat
Survival Month. Zoo visitors who
can show proof of purchase of a
Purina cal food product, will
receive a large cat poster suit­
able for framing.
One of the m onth's special

D row ning
victim
found
The body of Paul Creel of
Longwood was recovered from
the St. Johns River near State
Road 44 Sunday.
Creel's body waa found after a
two-day search. He had appar­
ently fallen off the bow of a
motorboat at about 2 a.m. Sat­
urday morning, said MaJ. David
Starling, of the Florida Game
and F reshw ater Fish Com­
mission. Starling said the body
had propeller marks on II. sub­
stantiating the stories of the
other two occupants of the boot.
Starling said the accident was
reported at about 3:30 a.m. and
waa believed to have occurred at
about 2 a.m. The search was
complicated because the boat
o c c u p a n ta w ere u n c e r ta in
exactly where the accident oc­
curred between the Showboat
Lounge at SR 44 and Lake
Beresford. a 4WmUe section of
river.
An In v estig ato r w ith th e
Volusia County Medical Exam­
iner’s Office said this morning
the cause of death la not known
as yet.
Starling said preliminary in­
vestigations revealed the boaters
had been drinking. An in ­
vestigation Is continuing. Starl­
ing said.

events will be the 17th birthday
of Maude the elep h an t, on
August 17. Special elephant
related activities are planned
from 10a.m. until 1 p.m. on that
day. with an extra large birthday
cake to be served at 11a.m.
The Central Florida Zoo Is
located at 37S5 Highway 17-92.
Just east of 1-4. In Sanford.
Admission la 85 for adults. 82 for
children 3-12 and 83 for Senior
Citizens 60 or older.
F o r In fo rm a tio n o n th e
Zoological park or any of Die
events, phone 323-4450.

K ImWktrt
T CSemeNtH*iSGoodM
ImAlm ns CooUa “
111 Palmetto Avc^ Sanford
324-7J88.324-7382 orders

GEgg

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�SARAH

OVERSTREET

tppier?

Will workers of future be

EDITORIALS

Space dividends
T he Freedom space station has survived for
at least another year. The Senate h a s turned
back an attempt by Dale Bum pers, D-Ark., to
slash Freedom's funding for the 1903 fiscal
year from 92 bfllton to 0 1 0 0 mlQton. Had
Bumpers succeeded, he w ould have dealt a
possibly fatal blow to th e natkm'a m anned
space program and jeopardUed a num ber o f
m ultinational blg-adence projects In th e
process.
T h e space station la th e centerpiece o f
NASA's plana for the d ecad e. T he agency
already h as sunk $5 billion Into th e prefect
and expects to spend a total o f 9 3 0 bUUon
through the year 2000, w hen Freedom la
expected to be ready to accom m odate a
four-person crew.
Several other nations h a v e signed o n to the
space station. Japan, for in stan ce, h a s begun
construction on a 93 b illion laboratory that
would be attached to Freedom .
T he credibility o f the U nited ST ates as a
partner In blg-adence projects waa on the line
w ith the Senate vote. T okyo h as warned that
if th e United States abrogates Its agreem ents
on the space station, the J ap an ese w ill not be
inclined to participate In future joint prefects.
W ashington currently Is seeking Tokyo’s
backing for ic v a a l exp en sive scien ce ven­
tures. Including the 910 bUUon supercollider.
Once Freedom Is aloft, it w ill provide
advances In basic science that shortsighted
c ritic s like B um pers c a n n o t foresee. "I
guarantee you," said Sen. Jak e G am , R-Utah.
a space station supporter, "we w ill have
additional discoveries th at are beyond our
Imagination now If we a re w illing to Invest In
th e future."
And that Is precisely how th e Freedom
space station should b e viewed — a s a n
investm ent in America's fu tu re. If th e United
S ta te s is to retain its w orld lead ersh ip In th e
sciences into the n ex t cen tu ry , ft m u st
m aintain Its primacy in ap ace.

I'll admit t didn’t like It. but I adjusted. I
figured, this to the way things are these days,
and at least modern workers have Jobs. My father
and mother, who Hved through the Depression
with only half a Job, had reminded me of that at
least a baxllllon times. So IJust got used to tt.
Plants toy off older workers Just before they've
had their 20 years tn ao the company won't have
to pay them the retirement they'd planned thetr
futures wound? Hey, I understand. It’s nothing
huainew . "Bottom Une. you know,
heh-heh. If we don't thaw a decent
---aa£
profit
thta year, our necks'll be on the block,
nee-he
-bee. Don't forget to turn In your washroom
key on the way out."
h it more and more work on fewer and fewer
workers, then reduce our insurance benefits? No
problem. We know there are new college
graduates willing to work our Joba for lots lets,
because you’ve brought them tn and act them
right doom next to ua. And you'd like ua to sort
or Ignore the tabor laws, too, tn the spirit of being
a team player? You got It. I got a wife and three
Then Just when we're all getting acclimated to
fewer and fewer employee righto, the business
pages start profiling businesses which are
becoming "worker-oriented." operating under

and make great products. At the Tandem Corp.,
there are Friday-night beer parties. Wang
L a b o ra to ries has i
abolished the "Us"
__
and "Them" camp*
by l e t i l n g any
employee who wants
to attend any com■ p f l j |l
pany meeting. And
— any of you too
'v ' P f
c o m fo rta b le w llh
Indentured aervttude
better atop reading
now. or risk a potent l a l l y h e a l t h - ------------------------------threatening shock —
the United Servlets
*
Automobile Assortsfe Put more and
tkm has created a
more work on
veritable employee
fawarand
heaven of its 386
f«w*rwofkara.B
flowering acres in
9
San Antonio. Texas.
There are tennis
courts, jogging trails,
------- ■
lighted softball fields, picnic groves and a
stocked fishing take for employees. In addition,

The West avoided rep eatin g two historical
m istakes In London.
T he first mistake was m ad e by th e French
in the early 1900s. w h en they provided
massive economic aid to czarlst R ussia. T he
uid did not save the czar, a n d the French lost
all their money In the R u ssia n Revolution.
The second mistake avoided w as one m ade
at Versailles In 1918. R a th e r than prom ise to
help rebuild a defeated G erm any a n d relnteratc it Into the W est, th e Allies forced
erm any to pay m assive reparations, a policy
th a t spawned German rev an ch ism and led to
th e death of Weimar dem ocracy.

S

This time, the Soviets w ere given a lesson
in economics: Do y o u w ant credits and
Investm ent? Fine. T h en create a good eco­
nom ic climate and the m oney will come. That
m ean s reforms in the following areas: m arket
prices, property rights, th e m oney supply,
governm ent expenditures, privatization and
civil law.
Hut the West offered G orbachev more than
a lesson In economics: By prom ising him
technical assistance fro m th e W orld Bank.
International Monetary Fund. Organization
for Economic C ooperation and Development
an d Bank for R econstruction a n d Develop­
m ent. the West is m ak ein g available the sam e
tools that helped create W estern! prosperity.
Ironically, they are th e sam e tools Josef
Stalin was offered a fte r World W ar II. and
which he rejected.
Half a century later. G orbachev came to
London to avow the m istake. He can now
begin to make up for h a ir a cen tu ry of wasted
time.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
hellers to lhe editor are welcome. All lellem must
be signed, include the address of the writer and a
daytime telephone number. Letters should he on a
single subject and is* as brief as possible.. Letters
,ue sulijeel to edit lug

gurus are drumming the shine
lutry, president of the publishing

the wards "love" and "profit," and they'd reap a

laid, and youH see better results.
Someday, he told The Associated Press, Jobs
will be more plentiful than workers, and ‘‘people
arm simply not work In places where they re not
well-treated, where they don't feel a sense of
connection and community." Speaker*' bureaus
a ll over the country are sen d in g forth
missionaries to speak on the virtues of using
exhorting corporate types to
humor In t
lighten up.

JACK ANDERSON

Physician-owned
labs under fire

"We have an application for a federal grant that would be used to
damage to taxpayers caused by silly federal grants."

The Russians, the Allies
T he pace of economic aid for th e Soviet
Union decided a t the L ondon su m m it w as
exactly right. Those w h o claim th e W est
m issed a great opportunity In London first
need to answer two questions:
W hat If massive M arshall Plan assistance to
Moscow resulted in sh o rin g u p com m unism ?
W hat If, following su b sta n tia l W estern credit
a n d investment to reform ers, com m unists
regained control?
Mikhail Gorbachev got a s m uch In London
us he expected. In Just s ittin g dow n w ith the
w orld's leading capitalists, h e m ade h is point:
He w ants to join the W estern capitalists* club.
And he was told he could, after a slight
waiting period. First, th e re are a few tests he
m ust pass.

Me digits two decades ago to

S

MARTIN SCHRAM

Bush loyal to the Company
George Herbert Walker Bush Is. above all
else, a Company man.
In the mld-‘70s, he won high marks from the
Company professionals at the Langley. Vs..
home office for being a CIA director who stood
firm when critics attacked.
G.H.W. Bush pays off In loyalty to those who
loyally serve. And that goes a long way toward
answering the question that has even (promi­
nent Republicans scratching their heads: Why
would Bush shatter his uneasy Iran-contra
truce with Congress by forcing upon It his
In-your-face CIA nomination of Robert M.
Gates — who had been tied to Iran-contra, and
whose confirmation hearings would surely
force a new look at the old scandal?
To understand Bush's decision on Gates, we
need only recall his decision on another ex-CIA
man who loyally served — Donald P. Gregg.
For Ihe careers of Bush. Gates and Gregg are
wound with common threads.
Gregg and Gales arc Company men who
served loyally but became stained by that
snafu. Iran-contra. In the administration of
almost any other president of our time, Gregg
and Gates would have been honorably but
quietly discharged to sanctuaries In private
enterprise.
Not so under Bush. These men who took
their hits for his honor were rewarded with
promotions — damn the torpedoes, full speed
ahead!
Bush's reward for Gregg waa the U.S.
ambassadorship to South Korea. In 1989. In a
honeymoon mood at the outset of the Bush
presidency, a supine Senate confirmed Gregg's
ambassadorship In the face of evidence that
still makes Democrats cringe, knowing they'd
baldly abdicated their consent role.
That abdication In brief: Gregg, then Vice
-President Bush’s national security adviser,
sent a memo to Bush saying one of Ollic
North's key operatives In the Illegal operation
was coming In to talk to the vice president
about the "resupply of the contras." Whoops!
— that was Illegal and Bush has publicly said
he never heard anything about It. Gregg
blithely explained this must have been a
secretarial typo — the memo meant to say
"resupply of Ihe copters." not "contras."
Right.
Senators pretended they believed that one.
Otherwise, they'd have to conclude that our
new ambassador was just an old liar —which,
of course, would bring up the question, too
tacky to broach during a honeymoon, of
whether our new president was one as well.
ITherr Is. in fact, reason Tor the Senate to
take a new look at Gregg. Former Carter
national security aide Adm. Gary Sick says
sources of questionable reputation have Iden­
tified Gregg as having accompanied Reagan
campaign chairm an William Casey to a
meeting in Parts wllh Iranians, in an effort to

l

WASHINGTON - Florida to ■ land of
opportunity If you happen to be a doctor who
Isn 't above referring your patlenta for
frtvotoua tests so you can get a legal kickback
on the fees
A soon-to-be-rrteaaed report on medical
aelf-referrals exposes the slemxy profits
doctors cam by investing in medical labs
where they tend their patients for overpriced
and naadtoas procedures.
The doctors who
l i n e th e ir ow n
pockets this way aay
the proliferation of
m e d ic a l la b s I n ­
creases the patent's
access to proper care,
especially In rural
a r e a s , B ut th e
statistics from Flori­
da tell another story.
The research was
done by Jean Mit­
chell and Uton Scott,
two associate pro­
fessors at Florida
S ta te U n tveratty. f Raaidante in
Florida are
Their report has not
balng bllkad
et been released,
through
u t o ur associate
doctors’
Scott Sleek baa ob­
Mlf-reforraJs. J
tained delate of the
contents. It shows
that residents In the
sunshine state are being bilked through
doctors' self-referrals. The only other expla­
nation for the data to that people In Florida
have more complicated ailments than the rest
of us.
The most attractive Investment tool of the
'90s for Florida doctors to the Magnetic
Resonance Imaging machine; or MRI. They
are as numerous as street-comer vendors in
Florida. Mitchell and Scott found that nearly
all of the centers In Florida with MRI
machines are owned by doctors who refer
their patients there. And nearly all of the
exams conducted at those facilities are done
on people with insurance. We have to believe
either that people with Insurance need more
complex diagnostic procedures, or that poor
patients are not being run through the same
hoops becauae they can't pay for it.
The number of billing* made to patients
covered by Insurance contradicts the claims
of medical ffoupa such aa the American
Medical Association and the Florida Medical
Association that doctor-owned labs and
clinics promole better care for the poor.
The three tabs In Florida that are not owned
by doctors da far less business than the
doctor-owned MRI labs.
The researchers found that MRI machines
are overworked, hut certainly not underpaid
in Florida. The study compared urban
Broward County Florida with Baltimore,
which has two medical schools but almost no
doctor-owned MRI facilities. The rate of MRI
procedures in fkoward County was about 38
for every 1.000 residents compared to 12.3
per 1,000 In Baltimore. And the average
charge In Broward County Is 6783 compared
to 9400 In Baltimore.
The Health and Human Services Depart­
ment has announced new rules to curb
self-referral abuses by doctors. HHS wants to
allow doctors to atay In the business, but with
limits set on the percentage of the business
that comes from self-referrals. The rules are
timid and would require a nightmare regula­
tory setup to make sure doctors weren't
skirting the law with hidden ownerships and
bogus billings.
Rep. Fortney "Pete" Stark. I&gt;Callf.. wants
to take tt a step further. He to considering a
bill that would forbid doctors from referring
their patients to any medical lab In which
they have a financial Interest, plain and
simple. The doctor lobby claims that Stark's
bill punishes the entire profession for Ihe
greed of a few. But Stark Is sticking to his
guns. He thinks aelf-referrals are a scam
resulting in overcharges. Including tens of
millions of dollars sucked from Medicare.
The stories of questionable referrals aren't
hard to find — like the 18-year-old patient
who underwent a 91.000 MRI exam. The
diagnosis was that he had bruised his thigh.

delay Ihe release of Americana held hostage
until after the 1980 election. Gregg, though a
Bush loyalist, was on loan by the CIA to the
national security council staff of then-Preaident
Carter. Gregg says he was at the beach with
his family on that October day and produced a
photo as proof — but
weather experts say
the picture couldn't
have been taken an
the day In question,
because the weather
was too chilly and
c l o u d y . Maybe
someday an official
body will chase Ihe
clouds away on the
Gregg affair.I
P e r h a p s B u sh
hoped to recapture
his honeymoon bliss
when he sent the
(T h e r e m a n
S e n a te h is la te st
who took their
loyalist. Bob Gates.
hit# lor his
He m i g h t h a v e
honor were
slipped Gates
rewarded with
through If It were not
promotions for the new evidence
damn the
revealed by cx-CIA
torpedoes, full
official Alan Fiers, a
speed
Gates subordinate,
a h e a d )J
who ju s t pleaded
guilty to Iran-contra
crimes. Now the
Senate can't Ignore mounting evidence that
suggests while Gales was No. 2 at the CIA.
there was lawbreaking going on ail around him
— by his subordinates and his superior.
But those my stiffed by Bush's decision to
choose Gates and taunt the Senate Into
probing anew would do well to remember how
Bush was willing to stick with Gregg — even If
he had to stick It to the Senate. That also
wasn't smart politics. It was Just Company
policy.

"S orry about getting so aggressive there. I
guess m y testosterone levet is a little
elevated . "

»

�■■■■

Sanford Hm M. tanford. Florida - Monday. August 5. 1901 - tA

Former nun defends X-rated
stores as criminal attorney
DEDHAM. M ass. — R egina
Quinlan was a nun taring in s
convent 23 years ago. but now
she la a lawyer defending stores
that tent X-rated Alms and sell

MOO of ctmrcti and state. I don't
■ee any
where I &lt;
I
wh*
***;
. r
“ .
„ , - - —
—
P.g d h ,in
o b sc e n ity

•At one time I had a vocation.
&gt; » « * U*
Now I have a profcraton." said • ****** °*®*- Joseph in 19S1 at
Quinlan, a criminal attorney *j* l g| * *
heeauoe a t a

r—

tr e T tmjjlh t'h CT^ tn -.! k J m

2SSJST&amp;

w&gt;« C raduatedfrom Regia

. .
...
whools far several years. But
I have full respect for a after eight years, she left the
p e rs o n to a a v lo o rn o a is p h ic r

terlalslaiw • i n f f i ^ f l K u i d be
She took night courses at
avoided. But I recognise that not Suffolk University Law Schboi

Z2V&amp;&amp;3LX

gg** »—

— '
"In representing clients, M’s
__________________
not my position to make moral g f clients In the adult enter
gt ra5d w hS e !r

she said. "As a lawyer. I have respect

w o rk

h a 2s

Train
but It could not
be stopped in time. The report
said the tram went far approxi­
mately 200 y arte before it could
George Prochel, Sem inole
County ShertfTe spokesm an
said. "The S c a r height train,
was h*fdfd north at approadnmtely BO m ika per hour. The
dckj

on

ocr

km

at her courtroom

Woman shoots self
at couple’s wedding
vows at 8«. Vincent de Paul
Roman Catholic Church when
PE R R Y V IL LE. Mo. - A Korsndo began firing.
women who began firing a gun
at the wedding of two former
schoolm ates an d then shot
herself to death apparently never
got over a crush on the man,
police said.
Sherry Ann Korsndo, 29. shot
"We're Just getting started.'
herself In the head Saturday and
died shout five hours later at s
Mathews said that he believed
that learning to play a sport was
hospital.
No one else a t the wedding of a good way to keep youngrtere
Jeff Flentge. 28. and Deena out of trouble.
"It gives them something posi­
Petot. 28. was injured, police
tive to do." he said.
■aid.
"It looks like It was possibly
If the basketball cam p proves
one of those ... the way the to be successful, he hopes to add
groom described It. It was a more coaches, including some
cru sh ." police MaJ. William college coaches.
"We'll have to aee how it
Jones said.
be said.
"She was never a girlfriend of
The camp la free to all who are
this boy. they never dated, they
never went out." he said. "She members of the West Sanford
wss acquainted with the bride Boys and Girls Club. Mem­
and groom only in the foot that bership dues are $1 per year.
The camp runs each Saturday
they went to school together."
The couple were exchanging from 10 a.m. until noon.

Exhibit
past 8 years, has a
total of 40 paintings of th e aise
shown at the Lake Mary City
Hall. Only 20 are of the televi­
sion adventure series. He has
only been doing this style for
slightly over a year.
The others are from previous
aeries and groupings he has
done. "I've Just finished working
on one called "Emerald City .
Kyle said. "It’s almost 3 feet
high and 1M feet wide. In It I've
put every one of the characters
In the Wizard of Oz show."
His works will continue to be
on display in the lobby of the
Lake Mary CUy Hall for several
more weeks. Each of the paint
and scu lp tu re d isp lay s are
named and contain Kyle's phone
number. "I hope some people
will be interested in them and
phone me," he mid. "after ail, I
don't want to become what ia
referred to aa a starving artist."

C Video
Eternal Vigilance,* Is entering
the final editing stages this
week.
Cablevlalon of Central Florida
donated equipment and editing
facilities for the Mx-week project.
The title of the film, which
takes a look at how development
is effecting the environment of
Seminole County. Fitzgerald
said, was taken from the answer
given by an environmentalist to
the question of how are will be
able to aave the planet for future
generations.
F itz g e ra ld s a id th a t h is
bachelor'* degree In the aria
arlth a concentration on photo­
graphy and his doctorate in
philosophy make him uniquely
qualified to lead the project.
We are looking at the human
aide of this Issue as are did with
the others,' he noted.

LIF8 iMSUft*
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.

F R ID fR K K L. R LfllfL af an,
afaL
M T K ^ S M M O V G IV O N

Students Interviewed a dozen
subjects, ranging from Randy
Morris, the mayor of Lake Mary,
to Department of Environmental
Regulations officials to Wally
T e m p le w h o d e v e l o p e d
Tuskawllla.
Fitzgerald said the Interview
era got fascinating insights from
a number of Seminole County
experts about how change,
brought on by growth has ef­
fected the environment.
Fitzgerald, who lives In De­
ltona with his wife and two
children, said he enjoys working
at SCC because the administra­
tion "encourages Innovation."
That freedom to explore the
doors to learning with his stu­
dents is Fltagerald’a motivation.
"My work la always a new
challenge," he aald.

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C A M N A fM tC A -t+ S
CONAL O A B III FIDCSAL
SAVINGS ANO LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
riV IR K T T IH U S K IV .
ITAL..
NOTtCI OP
PONICLOSUMSALI
MOTICt IS H IN IIV OIVIN
pursuant I* a Summary Final
Judgment af Foreclaaur* deled
July M. m i and entered in Caae
N s fl WCA-1+O af the Circuit
Ceurt af Om MTM Judklel
Circuit In and Nr lemkwto
C aunty, F la rid a . w herein
CONAL GABLES FEDERAL
SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCI­
ATION. P la i n ti f f - a n d f .
■VERKTTI HUSKEY, I T AL.,
t n i .andants, I will Mil to fha
highest bidder tar cm * al to#
Watt Frant Dear M to# lamlnoto
Caunty Caurtheua*. laniard.
FlarWa, af IIW e'cNcfc AJULm
M»t UN S ty at StpNmS tr, Htt,

R2sRpRHTigj QBwCFKm*ppF^^BRYTjf

aa aat facta la aalS Final
Judgment, ta s tt:
LaN 7. V. i t IA IA 17. M. M.

sa a. sa a. ja it. ia. it. a. n.

14. I S , I t . 17. t n S 41.
RIVIRCREST PHASE II. accar S ob W m* Flat Waraaf aa
ratarSaS In Ptal Bath M. m m
n tro u g h N S IN Public
RocarSa af lamlnoN Caunty,
Flarida.
DATED IMa IMS Soy Of July,
IWI.
MARVANNI MORSE, CNfk
Circuit Court
By: J a n a l . Jaaawk
D*pvty Ctork
Publish: Augual A 12. Iftl
OCI-W
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
■ IRffTI I NTH JUOfCtAL
CIRCUIT. IN ANO FOR
SBAUNOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO ff-IHSCA-M-a
KISLAK NATIONAL BANK
Plain llh.

charge of arrangements.

Rusacll A. 'Rusty* McAllister.
45. Warren. Ohio, died Thursday
at Allegheny General Hospital.
Pittsburgh. Bom Feb. 13. 1946.
in W arren, he grew up in
Sanford, moving back to Warren
in 1968. He was a Warren City
Police Officer for 22 years. He
was a U.S. Air Force veteran,
serving In Vietnam , and a
member of FOP Lodge *34.
Survivors include parents.
Arils D. "Mac" and Betty I.
San do McAllister, of Sanford;
wife. Carolyn A.. Warren; son,
Mark A.. Warren; daughter. Lisa
M.. Warren; mister. Melissa C.
Fryer. Sanford: brother Samuel
D.. Youngstown. Ohio. He is
preceded In death by one sister.
Jesse Frances.
Rob't H. Roberts Memorial
Home. Inc.. Warren. Ohio. In

Jam es Sherman Mcdill. 67.
211 Adair Ave.. Longwood. died
Saturday at Florida Hospital.
Altamonte Springs. Born March
30, 1024, In Independence.
Kan., he moved to Longwood
from Falla Church. Va.. in 1978.
He was a retired attorney for the
U.S. Senate and a Catholic. He
was a Navy veteran of World
War II and a member of the
Miniature Society. Phi Delta
Theta. Delta Theta Pi. Orlando
Opera Guild and the Orlando
Civic Theater.
Survivor Includes sister. Victo­
ria Kulig. Harrisburg. Pa.
B aldw ln-Falrhclld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

Miami in 1971. He was a retired
plumber and a Catholic.
Survivors Indude wife, Jean;
daughters. Mary Ann Enaey.
Enterprise, Jean Moore. Tampa;
sister. Josephine Belotto. New
Yorks four grandchildren.
Carey Hand Garden Chapel
Funeral Home. Longwood. In
charge of arrangements.

Tommy S. Sites. 60. 116
Eastwlna Lane. Fern Park, died
Friday at Florida Hospital. Or­
lando. Bom Dec. 8. 1930, In
Bluefield, W.Va.. she moved to
Fern Park from A ltam onte
Springs In 1977. She was a
homemaker and a member of
Community Alliance Church.
Survivors include husband,
Donald K.; sons, David K.,
Starkvtilc. Miss.. Matthew T„
Clermont; daughter, Deborah K.
Rey R obert M iranda. 26. Gray. Apopka; sistera. Ruby
940-100 Framtingham Court. Worth, Bluefield. Betty Krall,
Lake Mary, died Friday. Bom Cedar Key; seven grandchildren.
Dec. 26. 1964. In New York, he
Banfleld Mortuary Services.
moved to Lake Mary from Winter Springs. In charge of
Miramar In 1977. He was a arrangements.
construction worker.
DAVID SMALL
Survivors Indude father, Rey.
David Small. 63. 2371 Water
Jensen Beach: mother. Dolores. St.. Sanford, died Saturday. Aug.
Lake Mary: sister. Leslie. Lake 3, at Central Florida Regional
Mary.
Hospital. Sanford. Born July 24.
B aldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral 1921. In Geneva, he was a
Home. Forest City. In charge of lifelong resident of the area. He
arrangements.
was a retired citrus worker and a
Baptist.
MICHAEL FERRETO
Survivors include brother.
Michael Perrettl, 79. 490 Orlenta Point. Altamonte Springs, Willie Butler. Winter Garden:
died Saturday at Florida Hospi­ sisters, Claudia Mae Green and
tal. Altamonte Springs. Bom Jessie 11tilery. both of Sanford.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
Dec. 18. 1911. In Italy, he moved
to A ltam onte S p rin g s from ford. In charge of arrangements.

NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: JOHN E. KNAPP
RISIOC NCI: Unknown
LAST KNOWN M AILING
ADDRESS:
INONE 141*1 Straaf. I MM
North Miami Roach. Florida

2)141

TO: DEBORAH A. WILEY
RESIDENCE: Unknown
LAST KNOWN M A ILIN G
ADORE SS:
74N Mtoaton ClrcN f 9 t
SomlnoN. F NrMo 1444)
TO: any unknown hair*. devlaaaa, grantota. aaalgnoaa.
Honor*. creditors. trustees. or
oRsr cloimonlt claiming by.
through and undtr JOHN E.
KNAPP and/ar DEBORAH A.
WILEY
RESIORNCS: Unknown
YOU ARE NOTIFIED I M an

MTitjn ro w

kkw

m i morr^lfl

oncum barlng tho tallowing
pragorty In SomlnoN County.
Lot IS. Block I. THE RE­
SERVES AT THE CROSSINGS
PHASE TWO. according to to*
plat thereof aa rocor dad In Plot
Book » . Pagta f t through U.
Public Rocarda al Samlnoi#
Caunty, Florida. TogaRwr with:
Wall to Wail Carpet
Iliad by mo Plaintiff
mi and oihart In to*
a rt required to serve a copy ol
your wrlttan defenses, II any, la
II on DONALD L SMITH.
Plolnlltra attorney. Ill Waal
Adoma S lraal. Sulla 1114.
Jacksonville. Florida J7J0J, on
or bolero Augual Tl. l t d , and
III# tho original with tho Clark ol
Ihi* Court olttwr boloro service
on Plolntlir* ottornoy or Immo
diotoly Ihereefter. olhorwlto, o
dtloull will bo onltrod again*!
you lor tho roliol demanded In
tho complain! or petition
WITNESS my hand and tool
ol thl* Court on thi* ltth day ol
July, l t d
(SEAL I
MARYANNE MORSE
Oark of the Circuit Court
By Joan8rlNont
Oaputy Oark
Publith July n . I» A Augual 1
IT. Iftl
DEHJOO

f, Mach M TIER 7.
FLORIDA LAND ANO COLO
N IZ A T IO N C O M PA N Y
LUMTID 1 .0 . TRAP FORDS
Map a t Ma T oss af

af

y.

thura
Ftortd*. af
rKIWI,

M P M 0Mb 1.
04 NKMeNo. Public
gf SamNaN County.

le t tu a lp N p
___ M Ma County af
, StaaaafFh
i r t k a l a r l y d a tc rlb a d aa

Florida
AMo b n ass aa IN Elm Sheet,
Stnftr A FNridaNTTI;

Lat t l . HOWVLL I STATE I
SUfOtVIStON RIPLAT. ac

Nr caah. gf Ma
otM tSam bwN
M IN . P a rt
A m w a. SanMrdL FNriSa af
IIS ta m a n la p N m b a rL HOI.
■fRcW a aal?M N Caurf on Jufy
ia. m i .
M ALI
MARYANNS MORSE
CNrh af Circuit Court

'a l
MARYANMf MORSI
CMfhafMa
CircuN Caurf
By Jana E.

11 mi
O f 1-47

0y: Janal.

ta. nn

M in

Auchan Af:

LARKY A. MfRSM fV and
LINDA L. ME RSHIV, Ma wtto;
an d FIRST UNION M0RTGAGfCORPORATKML

FhaOudwSmnH

tx m i
O f MO

r a T m ClWCtlYT COvVT
GPTNClfGNTfCNTN

IN R l: 1STAT
H f L f NG PALZON
M T N f CIRCUIT COURT
FLORIDA

CASCNOLiff-NfS-CAMG

MONFEO RANK, a fad*rat
v.
MARK M. HALLMAN and
DAWN Ol HALLMAN, o/k/a
DAWN L. DOCONER. Ruing or

ii

‘ “ -

a th u r c la im an t* , claim ing

H

IlalMsn
and
nm
NT^R* ww

D. HaNnan. a/k /a Dawn

NOTKE OP ACTION
TO: MARK H. HALLMAN, m i
DAWN O. HALLMAN, a/k /a
DAWN L. OOLONER, If Hying
few ^V^fwR
C.swams^Ft
agotnol N?
twin aronat
an
known tu b a i
aNua, whalhar aaM ur
partite claim aa I
granfaoa.
cradU art. truafaaa af olhar
claim ant* claim ing agalnaf
Mark H. Hallman and Dawn O.
H a llm a n , a / k / a Dawn L.
Oalgnon
RISIO RNCti Unhnovn*
* YOU ARE NOTIFIED Not an
aeftan fo faracfaad a mortgaga
on Iha toHowlrig_ preparly in
Sam MaM County. F torIda;
Lof 40, EUREKA HAMMOCK,
a aubdlvlaJon according la Iha
plat tharaal aa racardad In Plat
lo t h 1. Pag* NO. of Me Public
Rocarda af t amlnali Caunty,

ha* boon Iliad onolnol you and
you ara rasuirad la *ary« a capy
af your wrltfon dafanaaa. If any,
on JACK C. McELROY. al
M A G U IR E . V O O R H IS A
WELLS. P.A.. altomoya for
Plaintiff, wheat id d ra n I* Pool
Offko Nan OIL Orlando. Flarida
tho d ark al No
• I Augual. m i ; alhorwi**
ludgm onl m ay ba onlorod
agalnaf you far No ralM do
mandWWthacamplainl.
WITNESS my hand and taal
of IM* court Mia Iam day of
July, Iftl.
(SEAL)
CNrh at Iha Circuit Court
By: Haafhar Srunnar
Aa Oaputy Clark
PuMHh: July » . I f * Augual S.
II. IWI
DEHM7

JOHN E. KNAPP. H al..

Helen Curtis Lucas. 71, 460
Forest Trail. Oviedo, died Satur­
day at AMI Medical Center,
Orlando. Born May 30. 1020. In
Kennebunk. Maine, she moved
to Oviedo from Cross Creek In
I960. She was a homemaker
and a Methodist.
Survivors Include ions. Rob­
ert, H am ilton. Ohio. David.
Manaaaas, Va., Ray. Oviedo;
daughters, Nancy Garwlck, Orl a ndo, Marilyn Neely.
Winnsboro. S.C.: brother. Harold
Curtis. Madison. N.J.; three
g r a n d c h ild r e n ; one g re a tgrandson.
Woodlawn Funeral Home. Or­
lando, In charge of arrange­
ments.
RUSSELL A ." RUSTY"

ALAN MfKAL LAWTON and
TAMARA 0. LAWTON. Me wtN.
FRANCIS J. WALSH m d

NOTtCI IS M R I I V OIVCN

deportment ia m ndurttng an
mveatiptian Into the
and was aW mdring the Identity
of the woman aa of 10 a.m. this

IA
he can persue several special
project* at the college.
Teaching several classes In the
humanities and a section of
Television Programming takes
up quite a bit of Fitzgerald's
time.
For the th ird consecutive
Bummroer, he is assisting the
Television Programming clam In
the production of a video baaed
on the community.
Money had. in the past, been
provided by a grant from the
Governor's office. Those videos
recorded the oral histories of
various ethnic group* in Semi­
nole County.
This year, though the grant
money was cut by the state, the
college supported Fitzgerald's
program.
A video, called 'A Mailer of

SAVINGS OF
AMERICA, F A ,

CIVILaCTMNM l

NOTICI N

a n d a n fa r e d is C a ts Ns.
VMNSCA-MK af Om OrtsM
C sw t a l Om MTM JudklM
d r a w in as* N r to o * s to
C a s a t? - F la r id a . w herein
CORAL O A B III F I D U A L

rlAiCM raTf

FLORfM

IIMMMSE CSMNT
G M L IS FIDflRAL

2w o n M*t h ie ­

Clinic

IN THE CIRCUIT

OFTWRtfTN JUDICIAL

AMO LOAN
"She's very well-versed on
Issues of obscenity law." said
Brett Vottero. a Hamden County
aaatstant dtstrtct attorney. He Is KILL0ARW COMntUCTMU
trying to bon one at her clients. ANDXCAt I ITATI. INC. IT
Video Expo, from

ponnuy
fn iimSa oSr n Sa t u tr et fo fi t &amp;
h e b uS s i nLe s s*,

L t f l o l W o ttC fe i

CITY OP
U U tl MARY, FLORIDA
NOT ICR OP
PUBLIC NEARING
NOTICE IS HERERV OIVEN
by Iha City Cammlaaien of Iha
City al Lake Mary. Florida that
aald CammlaaNn will hold a
Public Hearing an Augual IS.
IWI. at 7:M PAL. or aa Man
l N cm
lion •&lt; an Ordinance antlttad
AN'ORDINANCE OP THE
CITY OP LAKE MARY, FLOR
ID A , A M E N O IN G ORDI
NANCE 141 AS COOIFIIO IN
CHAPTER IS7 OF THE CITY
OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA.
CODE OF ORDINANCES;
CREATING THE OEFINI
TtONS FOR TREES ANO RE­
PLACEMENT STOCK; PRO­
VIDING FOR COOIFICAT ION;
PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS.
SEVERABILITY, ANO EF
FECTIVE DATE.
The Public INaring will ba
held In Na CammlaaNn Cham
b an . Mi Waal Lake Mary Bird .
Lake Mary Tha Public la In
vllgad N attend and ha heard
SaW hearing may ba continued
Iram lima N lima until a
daclalen la made by Iha City
CammlaaNn. CapNa ol Hie Ordl
nanca In hill ara avaiiakN In iha
CUyCNrh'aOlflca.
A TAPBO RECOROOF THIS
MEETING IS MADE SY THE
CITY FOR ITS CONVEN
IENCE. THIS RECORD MAV
NOT CONSITUTE AN ADE­
QUATE RECORD FOR PUR
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MADE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
FOREGOING MATTER ANY
PERSON WISHING TO EN
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
ADVISED TO MAKE THE
N EC ESSA R Y ARRANGE
MENTS AT HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE
CITY OF LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
CAROL A. FOSTER.
CITY CLERK
DATEO: Augual 1 .1*11

Publith Augual 1. I**l
0EI-7S

F Ha Number *VU*-CP
IN RE: (STATE OF
HELEN LIVY

■r^N
MW
af HflLIN LIVY, decaaaad. FIN Number *14fOCP,
N pandtag M Me CircuN Court
County. Florida,
“
af

The admlnlalrafton af Ma
af H I LBN C FALTON,
d e c e a s e d , P ile N u m b er
ft-w aC P. la pandtog to Ma
C ircuit C durt far lamina**
C a u n ty , F la r id a , P r e b a t t
P fufafaw Ma adWaaaaf w hk» la

ALL 1 N T 0 M S T ID PER­
SONS ARINOTIFIIDTHAT:

Smdard. FNriSa N771.
and addroaaaa of Ma
paraanal t a r m s i i i i lye'* aflamoy ara aat Nrth baf*

ismdrad ta R
WITHIN T H R U MONTHS OP
THI FIRST PUBLICATION OP
THIS NOTICI: (I) Ml claim*
agalnaf Ma otfafe and (l) any
ob|actlan by an In fam fad
huta
* rw
M .hm
m
h*^u ala-w
Ity of Ms will. Mo guMItketMn*
af fha paraanal ragraaantatlva,
ar luriadlction of Ma
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
IE FOREVER BARRIO.
Pubtkaftan af Mia Nattca ha*
hafu n a n Ju ty lt. mi.
Paraanal Ragcuaantethw:
PETER LiiVV
P .0 Boa 1401
Jachaan. New Janay ta u t
AHomay far Punonat
Rapraaanlatlva:
StephanH. Caavar
MuKhlaon. Mama la h Caevar
IM North Park Avenue
PO . Drawer l ir*
Sanford. F le rtd a n /n
Takphana: &lt;«/) m r e s i
PuMHh: July I* fc Auguatl l**1
DEH 774

IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
FHaNumhar»l-447-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
PHILIPM. L.GOAO
Oacaawd.
NOTICI OF
ADMINISTRATION
Tha administration af in*
atfata *4 Philip M. L. Goad,
d i c t a t e d . F li t N um ber
*14*7 CP, la pending In Iha
Circuit Court lor Seminole
C ounty, F lo rid a , P re b a l*
Division. Iha addrvtt of which la
Ml North Park Avenue. San
ford. Florid* U77I
Tha name* and W dram i af tha
paraanal rapraaantaflva and Iha
paraanal rapraaanlellvt'a afb rin y am aat farth baiow.
ALL INTERESTED PER
SONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All person* an wham Hiit
naflca I* tarvad whe have ob
facllena dial chalkanga Ma valid
Ity of the will. Iha gualllkatlana
of Iha portenai rapratentative,
venue, or |urladktlgn of Ihi*
Court ara rasuirad to file their
eb le c lle n t with Ihli Ceurt
WITHIN THE LATER OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY OAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
All creditor* el tha decedent
and ether person* having claim*
atiato on wham a copy of Hilt
naflca la tarvad wffNn tome
month* after Hw data af me llrt!
publication at thi* notice must
ilia their claim* with HU* Court
WITHIN THE LATER OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY OAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF *
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All other creditor* of tha
dacadMtf and parson* having
claim* ar damenda again*! Mm
decadent** estate mini Ilia their
claim* with Ihi* ceurt WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THISNOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
Tha dale el the lirtl publico
tlon el Ihi* Notice It July 19.

mi

Personal Representative
EUGENE JAMES GOAD
R R. 1, Bo* 14
Montana. Wisconsin U *n
Attorney tor Parsona!
Representative
JAMES A BARKS
Poll Offke Boi 1*44
1&gt;» West Flrsl Street. Suita B
Sanford. FloridaH771 1S44
Telephone (4071 HI in*
Flarida Bar No : 1*7]**
Publish July I* A August S. I**t
DEH MI

gf m n
Caurf a r t ragutoad to flto Meir
ablaclian* w ith fhla Caurf
W ITHIN T H I L A T IR OF
T H R II MONTHS APTIR THI
DAT! OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OP THIS NOTICI OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THI
O A TI OP S IR VICE OP A
COPY OF THIS NOTICI ON
THEM.
af Ma decadm t
k o y lu almlaee
admr*
a capy al IM*
nim
(lli
rm
la
nwltnln
pTl'vm I*
mri**0B^T IT*Efi^0
manM* after Ma dria af M* flr»t
puMkatton a l Ml* nafka mutt
WITHIN T H I LA TIR OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THI
DATE OP SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE OH
THEM.
All other creditor* af the
claim* ar &lt;
decedent*» atiato mutt Me their
claim* with Nil* caurf WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF TH IS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL IE FOREVER
BARRED.
The data of the fin t public*
flan af BU» Nafka is July If.
Iftl.
HILDREON. PINTON
*47 Orange Avenue
Oviedo. F L 1774!
Attorney tor Persona!
Representative:
MARGARET A. WHARTON
4*4 S. Central Avanua
P.O . Baa 1177
Ovtode. FLXT741
Telephone: 14*7IM S7tf]
Florida Bar No.: Trill I
Publith: July I* A August S, m i
o iH ite
CITY OP
LAKE MARY. FLOSIOA
NOTICI OP
PUBLIC NEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by Iha City Commission of Iha
City af Lika Alary. Florida Iha!
laid Commission will ho*d a
Public Hearing an August IL
m i .. el I M P.AL, or a* toon
i. to can
lien at an Ordinance tntittod:
AN ORDItMNCE OF THE
CITY OF LAKE MANY. FLOR
IO A . A M EN O IN G ORDI
NANCE 141 AS COOIFIED IN
CHAPTER ISS AFPENOIX 8
SECTION 7 (0(11 OF THE
CITY OF LAKE MARY COOE
OF ORDINANCES; REVISING
THE PARKING REQUIRE
MENTS FOR RESTAURANTS.
PROVIDING FOR COOIFICA
TION, PROVIDING FOR CON
FLIC TS. SEVERABILITY.
ANO EFFECTIVE DATE.
Tha Pubik Hearing will ba
held In tie Commission Cham
bars. MBWest Lake Alary Blvd.
Lake Mary Tha Public It In
vltged to attend and ba heard
Said hearing may ba cenlinued
from lima fa lima until a
decision It mad* by Iha City
Commission Capiat ol the Ordl
none* In full are available in the
City Clerk'sOffice
A TAPED RECORD OF THIS
MEETING IS AUDE BY THE
CITY FOR ITS CONVEN
IENCE THIS RECORD MAY
NOT CONSITUTE AN ADE
QUnTE RECORD FOR PUR
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
D E C I S I O N MADE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
FOREGOING MATTER ANY
PERSON WISHING TO EN
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
ADVISED TO MAKE THE
N EC E SSA R Y ARRANGE­
MENTS AT HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE
CITY OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIDA
CAROLA FOSTER.
CITY CLERK
DATED August I. m t
Publith August» INI
DEI 74

�w

1
1 r

6
e

M

• ^
. a

_
.T

Historical Soetoty holts tM
The Lake Mary Historical Society wilt boat a tea to welcome
Japanese exchange students on Thursday. August 8. at the Old
CityHaU.
Museum Items will be available far the students to aed and
touch In a handfron experience of Lake Mary’s past. Included

these days
LAKE MARY - YMCA
C om m unity Program s
Director Keith Caaelman
and Sectional Director
Becky Creamer aald the
Seminole County *Y* la
Lake Mary la a pretty busy

Caaelman. community programa director at the Seminole
C ou n ty YMCA. w elco m ed
county and city firefighters.

C l o s e to 2 0 0 c h i l d r e n
participate In the Y*a summer
day camp fan of planned activi­
ties. One day during heroes
week. Longwood firefighters
streaked Into the parking lot at
Greenwood Lakes Park, with
sirens clanging, to give kids a
tour of the fire truck.
a.m. at the Lake Mary Community Center, formerly the CIA
Building, 260 N. Country Chib Road. Contact Roger Campbell,
president, at 323-1273.

Optimists gsthsr everyweek

fcsta. Casdman said.
"The biggie M anything
cool and wet, like our trlpa
to Rock Springs and Wet
and Wild,” Caaelman

The Medivac helicopter de­
scended and an ambulance with
flashing lights was open for
Sheriffs Departm ent Sgt.
Jonn Hawkins Introduced

Lake Mary Optimist Chib meets every Monday . 7p.m.. at
Shoneys. Contact Kevin Oreene at 322-8787.

Womsn rssums mssting In fsll
Lake Mary Woman's Chib meets the fourth Wednesday of each
month and will resume meetings In September. Contact
Paulette Pedigo at 323-1908.

resident Joey Marcum. 6.
i boy who had previously
Sheriff's Dspsrlmsnt 8gt. Jonn Hawkins and Boomer ths
bloodhound caught thslr man, Joey Marcum, aga 5 of Lake Mary.*

Historical Commission gathers
The Lake Mary Historical Commission meets Mondays at Old
City Hall. Contact Mary Wolff at 321-5006 for more
Information.

“Yeah, the dogs are pretty
cool. Teaching kids about being
protected Is g re a t.” Chuck

The Volunteer Fire Association In Lake Mary meets at 7 p.m.
at the Fire Hall on the second Tuesday of each month. Contact
Bob Stoddard, fire chief, at 323-7029 for more Information.

Also introduced was Deputy
Tim Wedding's Czech German
Shepherd. Eros, who accom­
panies Wedding on patrol work
and In narcotics searches and
arrests. Officers carefully dem­
onstrated how Eros attacks

Another move taken
toward bond issue
Volunteers being Bought

y? A volunteer testing
is about ready to get

provement Association la headIng up th e local program .
through the cooperation of the
Lake Mary City Engineering
department

LAKE MARY — The City Commission made another move
toward requesting a 85 million bond Issue. The money would
be used to finance four major city projects.
During a special called meeting recently, the commissioners
voted 3 to 2 to Instruct the city staff to prepare the wording of
the bond Issue, which Includes spec tiles on how much money
is to be allocated for the four projects.
The projects Include Phase 1 of the Lake Mary Sports
Complex construction, beautification of Lake Mary Boulevard,
undergrounding power lines along Lake Mary Boulevard, and
paving and drainage Improvements.
The bond Issue was discussed during a special meeting Iasi
Thursday, but any further action was withheld until the city
could discuss financing of the beautification project with the
Seminole County Commission. That meeting was held
yesterday afternoon.
According to Mayor Randy Morris, the work now will be to
draw up specific recommendations regarding how much
funding will be earmarked for each of the four projects, which
la required in a bond proposal.
The total amount to be bonded was originally 85.013.000.
but Commissioner Tom Mahoney led a move last week to drop
the amount to an even 85 million. "That amount Is the amount
to be obtained from the bonds." Morris said. "The figure Is a
maximum, that doesn't mean we have to spend every cent of

pie should own or have the use
of a boat, and should either have
waterfront property, or regular
access to the lake."
Volunteers have already been
obtained to check Lake Mary.
Utile Lake Mary and Crystal
Lake. Help la needed however,
on the other lakes. Including
B in g h a m . C om o. D aw son,
Emma, and UtUe Crystal Lake.
Two training sessions, on Aug16 and 17. will be held to
instruct the volunteers In conducting the testa.
The City of Lake Mary has
suggested volunteers contact
Following preparation of the final wording and monltary
City Clerk Carol Edwards, at
distribution planned, the bond proposal will be brought up for
City Hall, for Information on how
final Us final reading and vote at tomorrow night's regularly
to sign up for the project. She
scheduled meeting of the Lake Mary City Commission.
will make arrangem ents for
sign-ups.
“The University of Florida's
Lakewatch program la one of the
best In finding out what our lake r
water la really like.” Loe aald. “II
will help not only Lake Mary but
the entire area.”
Depending on their location to
the various lakes, volunteers will
IFFER EN C E
THE INDEPEl
be accepted on a first call basis.

bad guys.
“That dog could pull your arm
o fir David Donaldson. 0, noted.
"What a great dog!" Tommy
Adrlanaon. 6. said. *'! like how
he attacked but I'm glad I’m not
a bad guy.*'

"It’s as low as 860 for
members but we also have
between 15 and 25 kids on
scholarships. The *Y* gets
United Way money and we
turn around and offer kids
w ith economic need a
sholarshlp. Parents end up
paying about 86.50 a week
fo r th e p r o g r a m. * *
Casebnan said.
Kids at the ‘Y* also eat
about 50 slices of pizza a
day. They are treated to
sto ry tim e , g am es a n d
sports activities. Including
swimming twice a week,
rtflry and archery.
"The oatmeal toss and
Jell-o throw are very popu­
lar. They all love to throw
things at each other, and
th is way nobody g e ts
hurt." Caselman said.

For the
Health of it

E-400
DfyCaps

,*9.93

I dll (III III !11 illl I'llWIT

Ui\iiiiiiin Kciirliiiliilil
When you hove Celular One. yot/l be
reachoble ocroa town, ocroa the Rate
or actoM the nation. With Maximum

182 D AY C .D .
rite 545% yield6.02V
12 M O N TH C .D .
rale6.60% yield 642%'
24 M O N TH C .D .
rate 640% yield 7.03%'
36 M O N TH C .D .
rale 7.00% yield 745%

SWITCH A 5AYE

Ssttch you esaukx isrvtcs to CcAJar On# and SAVE with
tha fotowtng tsotuss

■
■

HWIR VlAKHOUtS per ws«k with offptak weskend rates available
NO INCOMMG 70(1 CHAIGIS land to
mobie throughout Florida McCaw
Q f0 Q g

■ Si 8PCAJC A1VTMI on custom airtime piart

EXPIRES AUGUST 13. 1901

Saturday Hours
9:3 0 - 2:00

§

9^‘'

*

rtmmmm .

�I
.v ia ...* * *

—

ifeSk*

-

..• /«

** **■^ &gt;*4 l~- w. l.^Ur«, *.’ .

... /; ~z,

•«•

•

MONDAY

Sanford Herald

August

5,

1991

SUT*

B

.,,- ;&gt;i. . t ■ :

■ Nopit, Pegs *8
■ClaseMIsd, N m 48
■ ComtefTr i f l i i i

'&lt;«.-•yi i*rt.j|'
i** - r

in fast company

IN B R I E F
r

*rw ^

L/trLiWt*^ •»

Lake Mary’s Lewis earns medal at AAU Junior Olympics

t

BeryshlUi Adams, who
am Boys (lOend-Under)

8#vnlnol# ptiyiloili
SANFORD — Seminote High School « i give
ioo(t»n physicals Monday. August 12 at the
high school. C al 322*4353 far Monnatton.

TALLAHASSEE - Lake Mary's D^J. Lewie waa
the only Seminole County runner to win a medal
In the 1991 AAU (Amateur Athletic Union)

Lak« Mary Physlealt

Lewie, running In the Senior Boys
117*18 year olds), posted a 9 0 6 .1 8 to
sixth-place finish In the 3,000met*r run. It
the best finish by a Florida runner. The top six

LAKE MARY - Lake Mary High 8.
via
give physteals far all fall sports (foot!
country, svlmmtng. voOeyfaaU). and any athlete
who wants to come out far sports this year.
Tuesday and Wednesday. August 13*14 at 6
p.ro. Any athlete who will be In a fall
conditioning program at the school must get a
physical before starting the workouts.
Cost vlH be $10 per person thte year.
For more Information call 323*2110.

The Central Florida Otkfers (made up of

Other Seminole county runners ran well but
In the Bantam Qtris. the Central Florida
OUders team of Dare and Define Wise. Rebecca
Colon and Amber Turner had the ninth-best time
at Btll.67. It took a 8:10 to qualify for a spot In
the final eight.
Afao finishing wtth the ninth-best time in the
lOOmeter dash was Oviedo High School rising
LaTonya Thomas tot the Senior Otn
Tiffany Otboon had the beat high Jump for

4 x 400-meter relay team of Odey

Florida girts In the Bantam Girls Division with a
Jump or 3 feet. 3V4 Inches, which was good
enough for an 11th place finish.
Other Seminole county competitors at the
Olympics were Steve Piatt. Alex Green. Matt
Bowman and Omari Wise.
The finishing positions and times of the
Seminole county athletes:
la atou ad toiit
4 x 4 0 0 matar relay — 9. Central Florida
OUders (Dara Wise, Deflna Wise. Rebecca Colon.
Amber Turner). 5:11.67
U a g J a a p — 15. Tiffany Gibson 9 feet. 2V4
Inches.
□I

*■'y.v

U vw oo p n yu eavi
OVIEDO — Oviedo High School via give
physicals to any student (male or female)
Interested In trying out or playing any sport
during the 1991*1092 school year.
There will be two aesstona. Tuesday. August
13 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday. August
17 from 0a.m . to noon.
The physicals will be given In the Oviedo High
School Training Room and will cost $10 per
athlete. The $10 will be donated by the
attending physician bock to the high school to
benefit the Athletic Training Program.
Each athlete will need to ptek up a Athletic
Physlcal/Screenlng Form pocket In the Athletic
Department Office or from his/her coach and fill
out all Information, including notarising the
Medical Treatment/Consent form, before ob­
taining the physical.
For more information call 365-5671.

. .M

f.4

'jyAyY
—....

•
• YnWirrWfii'r 11 i
: • ~,j
y i ‘■'H1:,
tSMW5taw****i

SOFTBALL
1.

Umpire* clinic
SANFORD — The Sanford Umpires Associa­
tion will hold an American Softball Association
(ASA) certification Clinic Saturday and Sunday.
August 17 and 181**’'
The clinic will start at 8 a.m. both days and
atendees will need to be there both days.
Sanford umpires who will need to be there both
days. Sanford umpires who already have their
ASA licenses are encouraged to attend.
• Cost will be $20.
- To reamer, or. for more Information, contact
Rocky Eltlngsworih. Sanford Recreation De­
partment Superintendent, at 330*5697.

Tournament announced
SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation Depa trment will hold the first Summer Blowout,
double elimination, softball tournament August
23-25 at Chase and Pinehurst parka.
Coat will be $110 and two ASA regulation
soflbftlls*
Deadline for registration is August 22 at 5
p.m. with drawing at City Hall August 22 at 6
p.m.
The tournament will be played under ASA
Class "C" rules. Teams will be limited to league
rosters plus two pick-ups.
Awards will be presented to the sponsors of
the first, second and third place finishers,
individual awards to first ana second place
teams and the Moat Valuable Player of the
tournament.
For additional Information call: the Sanford
Recreation Department at 330*5697.

SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation De­
partment will hold an organizational meeting for
the fall softball leagues Wednesday. August 21
at 6 p.m. at the Downtown Youth Center. 300 N.
Park Avenue. First Floor of Sanford CUy Hall.
For more Information call 330-5697.

]
ORLANDO — Rafael DcLIma hit a two-run
homer to break a flfth-Innlng tie and give
Orlando a 5-3 victory In the nightcap to sweep a
Southern League doubleheader Sunday.
DeLlma also homcrcd In the first game, as
Orlando won 5-3.
The SunRays Improved to 27-14 while the
Chattanooga Lookouts fell to 19-26.

Suna loaa
JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) - Anthony Ward
(4*8) allowed six hits as Knoxville beat
Jacksonville 7-4 Sunday.
Mike MaltauiUan had the first of 15 hits for
Knoxville (18-23).
The losing pitcher was Mark Czarkowskl (4*8)
for Jacksonville (20*24).

FOOTBALL
□8:30 p.m. — NFL Preseason: Tampa Hay
Uuccaneers at Cleveland Browns. (L)

^

Trlng to get a handle
Playing shortstop In tkmpltch softball is difficult
•nough undar tha bast of circumstancas. But as
Sam Inote Mobile Radio’s Tod Frwyconat (loft) m d tha

Oliva Gsrdtn’s Bill Mshonay (right) will attast to.
constant rains this summer hava laft tha Inflalda at
Chasa and Plnahurat parks lass than pradlctsbla.

•a *p M M
I
- - ■» - » « « « » - n tfu o mopont
wmtf
SANFORD - The Sanford Recre­
t’s Spring/Sui
ation Department’s
Spring/Sumtner
Slowpitch
Softball
pitch S
‘ *si)
“ Leagues
supposed to havei completed
compteied n
regular
season ptay this part week. But as
with moat other outdoor activities,
unless you have a dome. Mother
nature had other plans.
Because of the unusual amounts
of rainfall this spring and summer.
Jim Schafer. Recreation Supervisor,
and Lisa Jones, Recreation Program
Specialist, have been really put to
the test to get the season in before
the Fall Leagues start In midSeptember.
If all goes as planned, the men’s
leagues — except for the Monday
Night League — will all end this
week while the the women's league
will end next week.
Here Is a look at (he most recent
schedule of make-up games for this
ither permitting,
week, weather
S c h e d u le d for t o n i g h t a t

S m ith , Pauldo both in
battles for p la yin g time
ByTONYI
Hsraid 8ports Editor

Organizational moating

SunRaya awaap

jm

Leagues
try to wrap
things up

DAYTONA BEACH - In his
15-year career as head coach of the
Florida State football team. Bobby
Bowden has developed a philosophy
of preferring to redshirt freshmen,
giving them a year to get ac­
climated.
This year, with 19 starters among
the 64 returning lettermen off of last
y ear’s 10-2 team that finished
ranked No. 4 In the final Associated
Press poll, there would seem to be
even less of an'opportunity for a
freshman to break In.
But there are always exceptions.
Addressing the Florida Sports
Writers Association and its annual
prescason college football meeting.
Bowden said (hat Lake Howell High
School graduate Marquette Smith
would get an opportunity to work
his way into the Seminole lineup.
“We’ll try to give Marquette the
opportunity In scrimmages to show
if he’s ready." said Bowden. “I don’t
know right now If he'll play or if
he'll redshirt. We’ll have to sec.
“We'll give him the opportunity to
lay and we'll see what happcncs. If
e docs well. I'll play him some-

t

where."
Bowden can afford to hedge his
bets. The Seminotes return Junior
Amp* Lee and sophomore Sean
Jackson and freshman Sam "Tiger"
McMillon at tailback. Lee. the MVP
In FSU's win over Penn State in the
Blockbuster Bowl, rushed for 825
yards and 16 touchdowns while
catching 34 passes for 360 yards
and two touchdowns. Jackson
rushed for 427 yards.
Smith also possesses impressive
credentials. Selected as the nation's
most valuable offensive player by
USA Today and the national player
of the year by Gatorade, Smith
gained over 2.400 yards rushing
and scored 31 touchdowns fast
season alone. For his career. Smith
rushed for 6.733 yards and 88
touchdowns.
••It'll be tough for him." admitted
Bowden. "H e'll be com peting
against the three of the best we
have. But we're going to get him
some reps with the football to show
If he has something special.
"If nobody can tackle him. we'll
have to put him up some."
Smith la not the only Seminole
County product who goes into the

□

W hile ha may hava bean ona of the lop high school playars In tha country
last yaar, Laks Howall graduate Marquette Smith flnda himself back at the
bottom of the pile this fall as a freshman at Florida State University.

What happens when you mix Semlnoles with Rams? j
When Is a rivalry not a rivalry?
As the Church Lady would say.
when It's convenient.
Take. If you will, the Seminole
Colt All-Stars. As you read this, the
Seminole Colts are In Lafayette.
Ind.. preparing for their first game
in the Colt World Series.
Whut makes this teum unique —
other than It's the only Seminole
County summer baseball tram still
playing — is the very balanced
nature of Us roster. Of the 15 young
men on the team, seven are from
Seminole High School and seven are
from Luke Mary.
Representing the Srmlnolrs arc
David Eckstein. Scott Frrgcrson.
Matt Freeman. Jeremy Chunat.
John Lugerlng. Corey Gochcr and
Robby Morgan.
Representing the Rams are Matt
DIetner. Mike Werner. Chad Kessler.
Jay Black. Brian Milner. Mike Carr
and Hunk Tookr.
The man with the deciding vote,
so to speak. Is Rob Bologna, who
attends Lake Howell.
While the rtvalrv between the
U / h x n las n r i i m l r t f n o t n r l u n l r t r O

^

m^

1

aemlnoles and Rams may not be on
the same level as the Hatfields and
McCoys, the Red Sox and Yankees
or the Gators and Semlnoles. It's
close enough for high school
athletics.
In the last year alone, for exam­
ple. the Rams came to Sanford und
ruined the Semlnoles' Homecoming
Game. The two schools banged on
each other In basketball, the Semi­
nole girls sweeping Lake Mary while
the Ram boys took a 2-1 scries win
over the Tribe.
And so on and so on.
By and large. It's a healthy rivalry
that's blossomed In a relatively

x
H n rt
lltrto*
ILake
tllfl* Mary
M lir v H
l l V l t l i f first
llr H t
short
lime.
having
opened Its doors In the fall of 1981.
Before that. Seminole had to look
northeast to Volusia County und
DcLand for Its "arch rival."

Given that competitive nature of
the relationship between Seminole
and Lake Mary high schools. It's
unusual that this summer we would
have u team consisting of equal
parts of 'Nolcs and Rains, especially
considering that many of these 14
players have also playt-d against
each other this summer us mem­
bers of their respective high school
summer teams.
Considering that most high school
baseball coaches are loath to
"share” thetr players with other
organizations during the summer
out of fear of Injury or burnout. It'd
be Interesting to know how Semi­
nole High varsity couch Mike
Powers and Lake Mary head coach
Alan Tuttle feel about this co-op
effort.
This may lx- the first and last lime
such u hybrid tram, born of the
Seminole PONY League, exists As

n n f n i&gt; * (
U a n * a n tl»n
*w&gt;■ (
the CSanford
Recreation
Depart­
ment's youth baseball leagues con­
tinue to grow und Lake Mary begins
to lay the ground work for storting a
program of Its own. there may not
lx* the same opportunity for a
similar team to be put together.
ll««*

In u way. that'll be a shame. Any
time a new school opens. It takes a
long time — longer than 10 years —
for fans to let go of the Idea that
those players ut the new school
(especially the good ones) could still
lx- going lo the old school. And what
u team those players (rom the new
school would make combined with
those players ut the old school.
For a few weeks this summer,
we’ve hud u chance to enjoy the rare
answer to that "What If . . . ? ”
question: What If some of the best
Seminole and l-ikc Mary’ players
were on thr same tram?
Under manager Rod Fergerson
and coaches Jack Dlcmer and Bob
Carr, the Seminole Colts have sur­
prised possibly everyone bu t
themselves with the answer.
And they’re not done yet.

FOR T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F SPORTS IN Y O U R AREA, READ T H E SANFORD HERALD DAILY

£

«l*
t

�IB - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Monday. August 5. 1991

Softball-

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

Atl Time* ID T
AMC RICAN LEAQUI
lo t i 01*1*4*41

Toronto
Detroit

Bolton
Now York
Milwaukee

Baltimore
Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
Oakland
Saattto
Taiat
Kantat Cito
California

W

l

Pet.

55

4*

a t

4

JO
47
44
a]
14
itton
W
*1
5f
5#
*7
sa
»
M

54
54
to
Bt
a*

4*1
405
423
.4BB
MB

♦
1017
15
14to
14't

L
a)
as
as
aa
47
SI
57

Pcf.
5*4
.547
5*7
.543
.515
.505
SOB

OB
—
3
5
Sto
*’*
*to
10

M •

Saturday's&lt;

Milwaukee at Belli more. 7:11 p.m.
Detroit at Toronto. 7:lSp.m.
New York at Chicago. 0:05 p.m.
Boston at Kantat City, 0:15 p.m.
Cleveland at Tax**, 1 )5 p.m.
Seattle at Oakland. IO:QSp.m.
Minnesota at Calltomla. 10:15 pm.

NATIONAL LEAOUE
t a t t Dtvlelon
W L
Pci.
Pittsburgh
5*7
•1 O
SI. Loul*
5* 41 MB
New York
55 41 .5)4
Chicago
SI 51 .4*1
Philadelphia
*• )■ 443
Montreal
41 41 .41)
Wesl Oivtoton
W L
Pet.
Los Angeles
541
51 as
Atlanta
54 «
S3*
Cincinnati
51 li
.500
San FranclKO
50 M 4BS
San Otago
50 54 .4)1
Houston ,
44 5* .417
ti9Mriiv,i Qa h im

OB

—

5W
*
10
isw
llto
OB

—

Ito
•to
(
(fs
14

St. Loultt. Pittsburgh 5.10 Innings
San Francisco 7. Cincinnati ]
San Diego 1 Atlanta 1
Chicago t, Now York 1
Philadelphia 7. Montreal 1
Houston 1, Lot Angelas 1 ,10 Innings
PhiladeiphialM ontraall. 10 Innings
Atlanta f. San Diego f
Pittsburgh 1. St Louis I
Houston 1, Lot Angelos 1 .10 Innings
Chicago I. New York]

AMERICAN LEAOUE
O AB R N Pet.
Palmeiro Tax
ICO 410 7* 141 .14*
Boggs Bvi
•4 M
to 117 M*
Franco Tax
*7 1*1 D 1)1 135
Tartabull KC
(5 315 J* ioa Ml
PucfeattMin
MO
t o 415 4] 117
CRipken Bit
1(D 411 70 IM 171
Molltor Mil
100 473 77 1)4 177
BainasOafe
*4 Ml 5* IM 170
Thomas Chi
KM 3D
7) 1IB .317
EMarfinoi See
H MB 41 IM 114
Mts
Palmeiro. Taxat. Id : Puckett. Minnesota.
117: Molltor. Milwaukee. IM. CRipken.
Baltimore. IM; Franco, Texas. Ill; Sierra.
Texas. 117: RAlomar, Toronto. 114.
Palmeiro, Taxes. 9 : RAIomar, Toronto.
II: Boggs. Boston. 3); Carter. Toronto. It;
While. Toronto. H: CRipken. Baltimore. II;
Grittoy Jr, Seattle. M; Canseco. Oakland. 1*
Molltor. Milwaukee, t; RAIomar. Toronto.
7; Polenta. California. 7; White. Toronto. 7;
McRae. K antat City. t; Puckett. Minnesota.
•; Raines. Otfcage, I.
Heme Runs
Fielder. Detroit, i t ; Canseco. Oakland. It.
CDavis. Minnesota. 15; Carter, Toronto. 24;
Thomas. Chicago, 77; Tartabull. Kansas City.
33; CRipken. Baltimore. 33; DHenderton.
Oakland.»
Rent Batted I*
Fielder. Oetroil, to Canseco. Oakland, 15;
Thomet. Chicago. 7*. Carter, Toronto. 75;
Sierra. Texas, 7a; CDavIs. Minnesota. 71;
Goniaiei, Taxes. 71.
Rwrs
Palmeiro. Taxat. 7t; Can taco. Oakland, ft;
Molltor. Milwaukee, 77; Thomet. Chicago.
71; White. Toronto, fl; Franco. Texas. 71;
DHenderton. Oak lend. 71.
Retook, CMcage. M; RHenderson . Oakland.
IS; R A Iom ar. T o ro n to . 11; Polenle,
California. II; Cuyler. Detroit, 25; White.
Toronto. 14; Franca. Tax**. a .
Pttdttog ( it Decisions)
Erlcfceon. Minnesota. 151. BM; Henneman.
Detroit. *-1. Ill; Krueger. Seattle. F l .750.
Finley. Californio, la S. .714; Langston.
California. 145 .737; Kllnfc. Oakland. 11.
.717; Stottlemyre, Toroito. 10-4. .714.
RJehnton. Seattle. ISO; Clemons. Boston,
1S1; Ryan. Texas. 145; Langston. California.
117; Swindell. Cleveland. IM; McDowell,
Chicago. IIS; Finley.Californio. IM
A guilera. M innesota. I I ; Eckertley.
O akland. I I ; H arvey. California. 15;
Reardon. Botton. 15; Olton. Baltimore. 14;
Ttogpen, CMcage, 34; Henke. Toronto, 23
NATIONAL LBAOUI
O AB ■ H Pel.
104 411 5* 141 .337
*4 M* 43 112 .330
*7 Ml *2 *0 32*
*1 11* 44 101 323
** ID 4* 11) 30*
M 147 SI 107 .300
Ml 3*2 70 117 .304
** 14* 5* 111 304
♦5 345 53 110 .301
77 2B3 55 15 MO
HHl
TGwynn, $*n Diego. 141; Bulltr. Los
Angelos. 11*; Samuel. Los Angeles. III.
Sendberg. Chicago. 117; Jose. SI. Louis, 111;
Pendleton. Atlanta. Ill; Calderon, Montreal.
TGwynn 50
Pendleton All
Nixon Alt
MorrleCIn
JosoStL
BiggloHou
SandborgChl
Calderon Mon
WCIark SF
LarkinCln

Ill

Cincinnati4. San Francisco S
u

Los Angelos (Martinet 14 51 at Cincinnati
(RI[o7 3),7 3)p m
San Francisco (Robi,-ton S-7) at Atlanta
(Smelts*-ID, 7:40 p.m.
Chicago (Castillo 1-3) a t New York
(Schourok M ), 7:40 p. m.
San Olage (H a rris M l a t Houston
(Harnisch*-;i.l U p m .
Only games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Los Angeles at Cincinnati. 7:lSp.m.
Chicago at Philadelphia. 7:1$ p.m.
San Francisco al Atlanta. 7:40 p.m.
Pittsburgh at New York. 7:40 p.m.
San Diego at Houston, (:35 p.m.
Montreal at St. Louis. 0:15p.m.
FIGfMl H it*
Second Holt
(attorn Dfvtttoa
W
L
St Lucie (Met*)
14 11
W P Bch (Expos)
17 10
x Vera Beach (Dodgers) 11 17
70 n
Miami (Ind.l
For! Lauderdale (Yankil 1* 73
Central Division
x Lakeland (Tigtrsl
13 IB
Basaball City 1Royals! M 11
Osceola (Allros)
1* 11
Winter Haven (RedSox) l) 24
Western Division
X Clearwater (Phillies)
IS 14
Sarasota (Whit* Sox)
17
»
Dunadin (Blue Jays)
11 11
17 73
Char toff* (Rangers)
SI Pet* (Cardinals)
1) IS
x won first hell title
Seturdey's Gemet
St Petersburg 1. Charlotte I
Clearwater 5. Lakeland t
Sarasota 4. Baseball City 0
Winter Haven f. Dunedin 4
West Pel in Beach 4. Miami 4
St Lucie4.Osceola]
Veto Beach 4. Fort Lauderdale 1
Sunday's Games
Charlotte f, SI Petersburg I
Clearwater I. Lakeland 1
Sarasota 10. Baseball City 1
Winter Haven 1, Dunedin 1
Miami 1, West Palm Beech I
Osceola 1. SI Lucie 0
Veto Beech*. Fori Lauderdale S
Monday's Games
St Petersburg at Charlotte
Winter Haven at Dunedin
Baseball City at Sarasota

Knoxville a t JattMNnrHto
Carolina at Birmingham
Hunftvllto at Croonyllto
Chartofto at MampMt

JM -

Botton 4. Toronto I
Mimotetae. Oakland*
Baitlmoro *. Chicago 1
Cleveland]. Kantat City I
Ootrolt 7. Now York •
Ttvat 14. Mllwawkoo 5
Seattle ». California]
l u f a r ' i Gama*
Toronto], Botton t
Kantat City I. Cleveland 0
Detroit A New York 7.10 Inning*
Chicago 1. Baltimore 0
Milwaukee 3. Toiat 2
Seattle 5. California 2. 1] Innlngt
Minnetera «. Oak land ]
M tHgjy'l Q i n n
Milwaukee (Augutt 0-5) at Baltimore
IR.SmlthS]), 7:55pm.
New York iSandtreon 10-7) at Detroit
(Terrtll 7 *). 7:35p m
Boston I Morton ] ]) at Kantat City lAguino
511.l:)Sp.m.
Cleveland IKIng 4 4) at Texas (Brown 71),
• 15p.m.
Seattle (Krueger » j) at Oakland (Darling
GO), 10 05 p.m.
Minnesota (Tapani ( 7 ) at California
(Grahe M l. 10:15p m.
Only garnet tchoduled

M o n d a y 's Q i i b

Chotlottoat Maenaftlt
Tootaov't

Pel.
447
Ilf
.17)
.474
457
-Sdl
4BB
.47)
Ml

QB
—

3
1
7
a
—

i
Ito
*

.410 —
)44 7
500 4to
47) 7to
.117 17

Clearwater al Lakeland
West Palm Beach at Miami
Osceola al SI. Lucia
Fort Lauderdale al Vero Beech
Tuesday’s Games
SI Petersburg at Charlotte
Winter Haven at Dunedin
Baseball City at Sarasota
Clearwater at Lakeland
Osceola at St Lucie
Fort Lauderdale at Vero Beech
Miami at West Palm Beach
Southern League
Second Kali
Eastern Division
W
L Pet OB
Orlande (Twins)
17 14 .41* —
)7) ito
Char lotit (Cubsl
2) 17
54) 4to
&gt; Greenville IBrvs)
24 10
47*
*
Jacfesanyille (Mrnrsl
IS 1)
344 ti
Carolina 1Pretest
I) 74
Western Division
Knoxville I Blue Jays)
27 17 414 —
AAemphis (Royals)
2) 71
500 5
x Birmingham (WSoxi
70 24
455 7
47* 1
Huntsville (Athltcsl
1) 24
427 •to
Chattanooga (Beds!
'»
24
x won lirsl halt title
Saturday's Games
Orlande 7. Chattanooga 1
Knoxville*. Jacksonvillet
Carolina 1. Birmingham0
Huntsville 4. Greenville 7
Charlotte ). Memphis 4
Sunday's Games
Orlande 1. Chattanooga 1.1st tamo
Orlando 1. Chattanooga 1. 2nd game
Knoxville 7, Jacksonville 4
Carolina 5. Birmingham 7
Greenville 4. Huntsville 1
Charlotte*. Memphis*. II innings
Monday’s Games
Chattanooga at Ortondo
Kneivtile al Jacksonville
Carolina at Birmingham
H nfsvilleat Groonvilto

Jose. SI. Louis. 10; Me Reynolds. New York,
21; Bonilla, Pittsburgh. M; Morris. Cincin­
nati. 15; Gent. Atlanta, 14. Zell*. St. Louis.
23. Pendleton. Allenle, 73
Triplet
TGwynn. Sen Diego, f; Lank lord. St. Louis.
I; Finley. Houston. 1; LGonielet. Houston, t;
Kruk. Philadelphia, a. Cendeele. Houston, t;
Felder. San FranclK a *; Van Slyka. Pit
tsburgh, a.
Mg I9I6 Run*

Johnson. Now York. 21; Gant. Atlanta. 7i.
MaWllllams. San Francisco, 21; Mltchall. San
Francisco. 21; WCIark. San FranclKO. 21.
McGrltf. San Dtogo. 20; GBell. Chicago. 20
Ren* Belted In
WCIark, San Francisco. 00; Bonds. Pit
tsburgh. 7t; Johnson. New York, 71. Dawson.
Chicago, at; GBell. Chicago. 44 Bonilla.
Pittsburgh. *5; Kruk. Philadelphia. *4. Me
Griff, San Dlago. ft.
Runt
Butler. Los Angeles. 11; Johnson. New
York, 10; Sendberg. Chicago. 10, Gant.
Atlanta. *5; OSmith, St Louis, a). JBtll.
Pittsburgh, *1; Pendleton. Atlanta, tl, Van
Slyka, Pittsburgh, 43

LtANffi

Nixon. Atlanta. 50: Grissom. Monlrtal. 4*.
D* Shields. Montreal. 41; Coleman. New
York. 15; Bonds, Pittsburgh, 32. Lenktord.
St. Louis, 1*; Butler. Los Angeles. 21
Pitching (M Decistont)
RMertlnei. Los Angeles. 14 S. HI. Hurtl.
Sen Diego. 115. 771. Avery. Atlanta. IIS.
104, Otuna, Houston. 71. 100. Cerpenttr. SI.
Louis. 1 1. 700. Glevlne. Allenle. 14 4. 100.
Greene. Philadelphia. 04. 441
Sfrlkeeufs
Cone, New York. 141, Gltvine. Atlanta.
Ill; Gooden. New York. 110. GMaddui.
Chicago. 13*; B ents. Sen Oltgo. 105.
Hernlsch. Houston, m . Hurst. San Diego.
101 .
Saves
LeSmlth. St. Louis. » . Dibble. Cincinnati.
21, Franco. New York. II; MlWilllamt.
Philadelphia. If: Lelterts. San Diego. 14.
Righallf, Sen Francisco. 14; DaSmilh.
Chicago. 14. Berenguer. Atlanta. 14

NFL STANDINGS

Miami if, Lae Angsto* Raiders 17
Phoenix li. Seattle 11
Pittsburgh t*. Washington 7
Buffalo at New Verb Giants. Ip m
Tempo Bay a t Cleveland. •; M pm.
W iden (ay's B a te
Denver at San Francisco. *p m.
Friday's Oeme
Atlanta at Houston. • p m.

In s l
Raiders Delpklni. Stats

a a 7 it - it
i

FirstOwarter

i

a is -

i*

Ml* — FG Baumann 21. *:00
Mia — FG Baumann 4*. 14:14
Third Quarter
LA — Greddy 11 pest from Event (Jaeger
k ick ).t 55
F earth amrtoc

LA — FG Jaeger 15. :1*.
M ia — M illar If p ast from Seculat
I Baumann kick), 1:45
Mia — Junior M Interception return (kick
tailed). 5:51.
LA — Glover ) pass from Btuerlaln
(Jaeger kick). Il l*
A ~ 50.45*

First dawn*
Ruth**-yards
Passing
Rafwrn Yards
Camp-Aft Inf
Pont*
Fumfetos Last
Penalties-Yards
Timeet pMsasston

LA Mia
11
IS
2510) 15 4)
174
773
7*
21
isis-i II IB 1
4)7
440
M
11
1) 115
* ))
M 17 7* 23

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING - LA Raldar*. Craig f i t .
Evans I N, GBell S-t*. Lloyd 4-10, N Boll 1-7.
Mueller la . Schrodar 14. Me Callum 1-1.
Holland I t Mioml. Craver f i t . Secules i l l .
Smith f 10, Higgs5* Mitchell 15. Palgal 5.
PASSING — LA Raiders. Evens 1 100-112.
Beuerleln * 1 )1 * 1 . Schroedtr 4-110-4*.
Miami. Marino 51011. Secules 110**.
Mitchell 17-1-27.
RRCIIVINO - LA Raiders. Alexander
St*. Glover } to. Greddy 2 41. Femendcx
2 24. T.Brown 1 It. N.Bell 1 30. Lloyd 1-1*,
Harrell 110 . Holland 1-10 Miami. Miller 1 *0.
M artin 131. Baty 2 1*. Craver 1 14. Duper
114. Clayton 11*.
MISSBO FIILD G O A LS- None

Belck Opm Scares
GRAND RLANC. Midi. - Final scores end
earnings Sunday toffe*11 million Bvkfe Open,
played an me T.IOfyord. per 71 Warwick
Hilli Oall And Country Club cams* (adenotes wan on* feoto ptoyoH):
a B rad Faxon. I1H.000
4*4*71 **-271
Chip Beck. UM.000
*1414* **-211
John Cook, 151,000
4*73*4 43-373
Steve Pate. 151.000
*14*4* **-273
Scott Hoch. 557.000
*3 70 17 41-177
Gene Sauers. 137.315
47 41 4* **—273
Hal Sutton. S37.J1S
4* 4*M **-773
Howard Twltty. 537.37)
71 4* *4 10-273
Nick Faldo, 137.375
4*4**511-713
Wayne Grady. 133.000
MM II **-214
Tim Simpson. 173.000
77 M *4 70-714
Greg Norman. 173.000
4! 4311 11-714
Bill Brlfton, 173.000
*****5 71-374
Marco Dawson. 173.000
4*104474-714
Jay Don Blaka, 111.000
14 47 4) 44-175
Duffy W aldorf.|l 1.000
4*MM 10-715
L e e Jo n itn .tl 1,000
I I 45 M 11-715
Ed Flori, 114.500
4*1010 41-114
LannyWadk Ins. 114.500
4* 4* 41 11-11*
Je Anderson, 111,450
70 tf 70 44-277
□avid Edwards. II l,4»
MM II 10-717
Jay Delslng 111.450
M4*4*M-211
Brad Bryant, 111,450
13MM 71-711
Ktnny Knox, U.575
*4 4* 77 71-771
Dicky Thompson, U ,575
TOTOM 70-771
Barry Jaeckal. U.525
47 4* 71 11-771
Gil Morgan. U.515
4* M 71 77-771
Kan Green, U.450
77 4711 4*-71*
Mark McCumber, 14.450
7071 4*44-77*
Bobby Clampetf. 14.450
70 70 M 71-77*
Mika Sullivan. U.450
10 TOM 71-27*
Billy Andrade. U.450
77 U 4* 72-27*
Bryan Norton. U.450
70 70 45 74—27*
Jim Thorpe. IS. 140
4*71 73 47-710
Don Pooley. 15.140
4*77 70 4*-710
Sieve Lowery,u. 140
M45 73 7O-7I0
Brett Upper. U. 140
77 M 70 TO-710
Andrew Magee. U. 140
*♦ U 77 73-710
Jim Berwpe. 13.700
44 71 74 47- 211
Scott Gump. 13.700
TOM 75 **-211
Fulton Allem. 13.700
47 74 70 70- 711
David Canlpo, 13.700
7011 70 70-711
Ben Crenshaw, 11,700
MM 74 11-711
Tommy Moor.. 13.700
41 70 73 11-711
Mike Smith. 13.100
4*1110 11-711
Dave Sutherland. 13.100
41 11 It 11-711
Brian Walts. 13,700
7047 71 11-211
John Mahetley, 11,5*0
11**1111-711
John Inmen. 17 510
10M 17 71-717
MlkeStandly.t7.5M
M 10 II 73-717
Dan Pohl, 17.5*0
1J 45 4* 73 -712
Mike Donald. 17.3*0
10 4*14 10-713
Clark Burroughs. 17.340
4* 17 71 11-713
Tom Byrum. 17.340
71 M 17 17-213
Brian Claar, 17.750
II 10 13 10-214
Mark Hayas. 12.250
17 M il 11-214
Brian K*mm. 17.2)0
44 12 17 II -214
Richard Zokol. 12.2)0
10 101)11-714
Bill Sender. 12.250
41 II 11 14-214
Billy Maytalr 47 710
4* 70 71 14—714
Bobby Wedk ins. 12.150
12 M l) 10-715
Charles Bowles. 12.150
DM 1)11-21)
Mike Springer. 12.150
TOM 14 13-715
Jim H ellet. 17.150
70114* 15-215
Mark Lye. 42.090
101114 1I-7U
Greg Twiggs. 57.0*0
47 72 74 73- 2U
Bred Febal. 12.050
*4 70 7) 74- 217
Sam Randolph. 13.050
M 71 71 17-217
O A W t.o rln g .ll.n o
70 70 75 73-2M
j4 flM ag g ert.tl.n o
70 71 7* 71-3*4
Greg Bruckner. 41,990
71 M 75 14—711
P erry A rth u r.tl.n o
73 M l) 1 4 -7U
Robert Game; 11.*40
10114*1*-71*
Leonard Thompson. 11.430
70 *1 15 1*-7*1

teuton Long Island Scares
JERICHO. N.Y. — Final scsets and money
winnings Sunday *f the UM.M4 PGA Seniors
Lang Island Classic an the 4.455yard, par-77
Meadow Brook Coll Club course:
W L T Pet PF PA
George Archer. (47 100
U 47 44-704
Butt*lo
1 0 0 1000 17 1)
Jim Colbert, *35.750
47 71 M - 704
Miami
1 1 4 544 It n
*7 41 71-70*
Indianapolis
0 1 0 000 3 10 Larry Laorotti. 535.750
44 D 44-707
Bob
Charles.
577.000
New England
0 1 0 000 7 74
4* 7} *7-70S
Bob
Bruo.5ie.750
N Y Jets
0 t 0 000 IB 74
Jim Dent. 514.7)0
44 70 70-70S
Central
73 *4 47-70*
Pittsburgh
1 0 0 1000 It 7 John Brodi*. 514.27)
U 77 *4-709
Cleveland
0 0 0 000 0 0 Gary Player. 514.77)
*9 *9 71-20*
Cincinnati
0 1 0 ooo 70 74 J C Snead. 514.271
Lee Trevino. 510.31*
714**4-710
Houston
0 1 0 000 7* 31
Rocky Thompson. ItOJI*
72 *7 71-710
West
70 44 71-710
San Diogo
1 0 0 1 ooo 71 7* Charles Coody, 410.31*
70 4* D-710
Denver
1 1 0
500 1) 17 Dick Hendrickson. 510.31*
a 77 70-111
KansasCity
0 1 0 ooo it 24 Mike Joyce. 47.1)1
Gene
LilMOT,
47.1)1
71 70 70- 211
Seallte
0 1 0 ooo 1) 31
45 71 D — 211
L A Raiders
0 3 0 ooo it 43 Miller Barber. 17151
Jim
O
Hern,
47.111
70 70 71-211
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Jack Kieter. u too
72 70 70- 212
East
Chi Chi Rodrigue;, la uO
70 71 71-217
W L T Pet PF PA
4* 70 73- 211
Oallas
1 0 0 t ooo 24 14 Gary Cowan, ia.440
Butch Baird. 4 ).5»
74 70 «»-113
Phoenix
1 0 0 t ooo 31 13
Dale Douglass. 41.5(5
4* D 72-213
Philadelphia
1 1 0
500 17 17
75 71 44-21*
N Y Giants
0 0 0 ooo 0 0 . Dan Morgan. 54 71)
73 71 70— 214
Washington
0 1 0 ooo 7 14 Oave Hill. 5a 71)
Babe Hiskey 44 /5)
71 D 71 -214
Central
Deray Simon. 54.715
TO 73 71-214
Detroit
3 0 0 1ooo M 23
77 71 71-2 14
Paul Moran. 54.755
Green Bay
1 0 • 1ooo 74 7
70 77 44 - 715
Al Kelley. 13.54*
Chicago
1 I B
too l) 71
John
Paul
Cam.
43
5*9
7)
D 70 -215
Tampa Bay
4 « • 404 0 4
Jo* Jimenez V) 549
73 72 70-215
Minnesota
0 1 0 ooo 3 II
Dewitt Weaver. 53 5*9
72 D 71-215
West
*7 74 72-215
ttomero Blancas 53.5*9
San FranclKO
7 0 0 I ooo 4) 74
Dick Rhyan V) 5*9
71 71 D - 715
Atlanta
1 0 0 1ooo 14 17
Billy Casper. 51 5*9
71 71 73-215
New Orleans
1 0 0 1ooo • )
71 77 4* 214
Charlie Sittord. 17 770
L A Rams
0 1 0 ooo 17 34
71 7j 77-11*
Don Massengale 57 730
Friday’s Games
71 70 75- 21*
Larry Z-egler 17 770
Oetrptt 74. Cincinnati 10
74 74*4-217
Bert Yancey. 51 77*
Denver 10, Indianapolis 3
77
7* 71-2)7
Fred Hawkins. 52 379
Saturda r i Garnet
71
D 73-217
D
u
d&gt;
,
Wysong
17
379
San FranclKO 21 Chicago 7
70 7) 74 - 717
Ken Still. 52 379
Green Bay 7* New England 7
7* D44-71B
Tom Joyce 4t.979
New Orleans II Minnesota 3
77 71 70-2H
Agim B.i.dhj 41 9J9
AtJeWfj Ji, Lot Ar&gt;q«iar%
1/
7* 70 72— 21*
Jimmy Powell. 41,979
Philadelphia I jl Neat York Jett 10
7) 7| 72— 21*
Jerry Barb*- »i *79
Oallas7a KansasCity 14
70 74 74 211
Jim Albvt 4&lt; *79
San D-ego 31. MouttO" 7*

Presea saw Glance
Ail Times COT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East

With S a n f o r d Police
Benevolent Association dropping
P in c h u r s t IM onday N ight out of the Wednesday Night
League) are: T)ni Raines Con­ Men's League at Chase Park,
nection vs. Orlando Softball Club that league's final make-ups will
at 6:30 p.m.; Boomtown Hoys vs. be played this Wednesday. Flor­
Orlando Softball Club at 7:30 ida Manor will play Smltty's
p.m.: and Boomtown Bovs vs. Plumbing In a doubleheader at
6:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. At 8:30
Calico Jacksat 8:30 p.m.
Because there are five more p.m.. DCC will take on Hall's
games that will sttll need to In* Stucco.
The Wednesday Night Men’s
made up after tonight, the
Monday league will need to play League at Pinchurst will also
at least two more nights. Those play their Its final night of
make-ups will be announced this make-ups with match-ups and
times to be announced.
week.
Thursday night at Pinchurst
At Chase Park tonight will be a
m a k e -u p gam es fro m th e Park the regular Thursday Night
T h u rsd ay Night League at Men's Pinchurst League will be
Pinchurst. Gator's Dockside will played. At 6:30 p.m., AAA Tree
play Seminole Mobile Radio at S erv ice will fa c e G a to r ’s
6:30 p.m.. First Baptist Church Dockside. S em inole Mobile
will challenge Gator's Dockside R a d i o wi l l t h e n p l a y a
at 7:30 p.m. and. at 8:30 p.m.. doublehcadcr against Lee's Cab­
First Baptist Church will face inets at 7:30 p.m. and AAA Tree
Service at 8:30 p.m.
Seminole Mobile Radio.
The Tuesday Night Men’s
Tuesday night’s schedule will
Involve the regular Tuesday League will play Its last make­
men’s league and the women’s ups on Thursday at Chase Park.
At 6:30 p.m. the Regulators at
league.
In men's play at Chase Park. 6:30 p.m.. State Market Restau­
Bccr:30 will play a doubleheader rant lakes on Klnco at 7:30 p.m.
against Klnco al 6:30 p.m. and and the Kokomo Recyclers faces
Monroe Harbour Marina at 7:30 State Market Restaurant at 8:30
p.m. Monroe Harbour Marina p.m.
If things go as planned, the
will also play a second game
against State Market Restaurant women's league will play Us last
games on Tuesday. Aug. 13 at
at 8:30 p.m.
In women's play at Pinchurst Pinehurst Park. At 6:30 p.m.
Park. Fred's Lawn Service will Bikini Beach will play In­
take on Bikini Beach at 6:30 te r g a la c tlc . a t 7 :3 0 p .m .
p.m.. Intergalactlc will play Grcenleaf Landscaping takes on
Grcenleaf Landscaping at 7:30 Harcar and at 8:30 p.m. Bcer:30
p.m . and Harcar will face will challenge Fred's Lawn Serv­
ice.
Bccr:30 at 8:30 p.m.

Continued from IB
JacfeFtoch.li.fi*
Simon ttobday. 51,510
Bob Erickson. 11.510
Tom Shaw, 11,410
Orville Moody. 11.410
Jesus Rodrtguoi. 144*
Bob Goaiby. 14*0
RlvesMcbee.144*
Tommy Aaron. 1444
Lloyd Moody. 1*4*
Goy Brewer, 1500
Bob Bet ley. 1500
Bon Smith. 1)00
Frank Beard. 1500
Bob Rawlins. 1)00
Snail Lancaster. 1500
Bobby Nichols. iSOC
R kherd Crawford. 1500
Billy Maxwell, 1500
Harold Henning. 1500
Weller Zembrlshl. 5500
Dick Howell. 1500
Jim Ferree.1500
Bruce Cramp ton, D00
Chuck Workman. UOO
Bill Collins. 1500
Miko Fatchick. UOO
Howl* Johnson. U00
Bob Varwey, 1500
Doug Ford. 1500
Larry Mowry
Charles Owens

747014—211
111171-11*
7] 7] 73-11*
73 75 71-120
71*4 74—370
717073—771
75-73 7S—711
7f 72 73—Dl
71 7* 7*—221
77 4* 75-M I
77 15 TO—7M
74 1573- 7M
77-71 77—7M
M II 74-722
73 73 1 4 - 773
77 71 **—M4
77 1517-714
1* 75 73—M*
77 14 77-M5
131517-Ml
75 77 71-735
7511 7 4 - 77*
71 75 7 3 - M*
14 1*74-77*
737*75-37*
74 7( 75—717
11 73 7 5 - 77*
74 11 7 4 - 231
II I f 15-M2
7140 74-734
1073 WD
77 7* WD

PftorMar LPGA Scares
VIENNA. OMe - Final scares and maney
winnings Sunday *f aw LPGA Pher M ar to
V a a n g ita w a gall ta e rn a m a n t an th*
4.141 yard, par-77 S«w*w Creak Country Club
c arm Ix-wen an the first fento if suddendeath piayeft):
x Deb Richard. ID 000
TO*4 44-707
Jan* Geddes 144 250
** 70**— 707
Tammle Green. 133.750
71M **-300
Dottle Mochrie. 173.750
4* 7* 70-70*
Danieli* Ammaccapane. 1717)0 U 72 71— 704
Juli Inkster, 117.500
70*5 75— 710
VkhfFargon.lt). 144
4* 74 **—211
Shirley Furlong. It). 144
M 754*— i l l
Cindy Figg Currier. 113. IM
4*7171-111
Pamela Wright. t*.l)0
*7 7* * * -112
Kathy Paitlewalt, 14.7)0
D M 71— 717
Dawn Co*. **.7)0
717071-211
Pat Bradley, tf.2)0
* »t» 7a— 717
Beth Dantol, 44.7)0
D-7J47— 213
Rosie Jones, u . 7)0
D 70-70-713
E lain* Crosby. U.7J0
D 7071— 213
Martha Neuu. U.730
D M 72— 213
Colleen Walker. U.7J0
71 70 73-113
Gall Grahem. U.750
70 71 D — 213
Elite Gibson. 14.*1*
74 D *0— 714
Michelle EsIHI.U tl*
73 73 **— 314
Kim Shipman. 14.»1*
7*7070-214
Nina Foust. 14.*!*
71-71-79— 714
MertaFigutra4Dotfl.14.il*
4)74 72— 714
Alice Millar. M.*l*
7170 73— 214
MiMl*McG*org*.|4.*t*
71**74— 7)4
P4ggyKlrKh.14.fi*
47 D 74-114
Dal* Eggaling. 14.11*
71M 75-114
Amy Bant. 13,Ml
72 D TO— 21)
Deed** Lasker, tl.M I
77 71 72-115
Patty Sheehan. 531*1
Tt-D 72— 11)
Sherri Stolnh4uer.53.M1
71 70 74-71)
Carolyn Hill, 57,431
D 74 7 0 - 714
Susan Sanders. 12.*) I
72 D 71-214
Maggl* Will. 12,*31
70 7*71— 714
Sue Thomas. I7.ni
73 71 79— 31*
NancyWhito.53.nl
7)7173-11*
MegMallon, 12.ni
717)77-114
Tanl Tatum. *3.ni
70 7a 73— 214
Amy Alcolt, 57.ni
70 74 73 - 21*
KatlaP4ttrton.Sl.nl
4*7)73-31*
Mall4uMcNamara.l2.ni
D 70 74-11*
Sally Lilli*. I7.ni
72 4474-314
Donna Whit*. 11.4)0
74 77 71-717
Hollis Stacy. *1.4)0
D 7171-317

TV/9MDIO
BASEBALL
7 30 p.m — WGN, Chicago Cubt at New
York Matt. IL)
7:3) p m. — TBS. San Francisco Giants jf
Atlanta Braves, (LI
BOXING
* pm . — SC, IBF '’Print*'' Charles
Williams vs. Vincent Boulwir*
F O O T -A L L
■ p m - WFTV f. NFL exhibition. Buffalo
Bills al New York Giants. (LI
I 30 p m — WCPX 4. 44. NFL exhibition.
Tampa Bav Bucs at Cleveland Browns
GOLF
3 30 am — ESPN. Seniors Long Island
Classic, final round
PAN AMERICAN GAMES
• p m — TN T. Track and field, basketball,
men’s gymnastics, baseball, weightlifting.
(L )
Radio
BASEBALL
7 0S pm — WHOO Am (tool. Southern
League. Chattanooga Lookouts at Orlando
SunRays
FOOTBALL
7 SO p m - WOBO AM 1540). NFL exhib
lllon. Tampa Bay Buct al Cleveland Browns

Me i da Ttrmn Results
CARLSBAD, Calil. - Results Sunday ol the
122),040 Matda Classic women’s Iannis
tournament at the La Cette Resort and Spa
(seedmgs in parentheses).
Singles
Champienship
Jennifer Capriati (4). Saddlehrook del.
Monica Seles (II. Yugoslavia. 4 4. 4 1, 7 4
(7 1).
Doubles
Championship
Jill Helherington. Canada, and Kathy
Rinaldi. Amelia Island, O f. det Gig&lt;
Fernand*; Aspen. Col . and Nathalie
Tauiial, France III, 44.4 ].4 7

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
AmencanLtague
BOSTON RED SOX - Placed Daryl Irvin*
pitcher, on Ihe 1)day disabled list, retroac
five to August I Recalled Jett Plymplon
pitcher, from Pawtucket ol the International
League
OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Optioned Bruce
Walton and Joe Slusarski, pitchers, to
Tecome ot the Pacific Coast League
Activated Ron Darling, pitcher, and Scott
Brosius. Infielder
Njfisiul Liiaue
CINCINNATI REDS - Placed Eric Da.it.
outfielder, on the 15 day disabled list, retro
active to July )t Recalled Chris Jones,
outtielder. from Nashville ol the American
Association Called up Mo Sentord. pitcher.
Irom Nashville Optioned Jack Armstrong
pitcher, to Nashville
H O USTO N ASTROS - Pieced Scott
Serveis. catcher, on the 15 day d.sabted list
Called up Tony Eutebio. catcher, from
Jackson of the Texas League
NEW YORK METS - Waived Tom Herr
second baseman lor the purpose ot giving
him his unconditional release Called up
Anthony Young pitcher from Tidewater ot
the International League
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - Assigned
Mike Klngery. outtielder to Phoenix ol the
Pacific Coast League Recalled Greg Litton
intielder. from Phoenix
FOOTBALL
National Football Leaguo
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Signed Stanley
Richard, safety
SEA TTLE SEAHAWKS - Signed Derrck
Fenner running back to a one year contract
Canadian Football Leaguo
OTTAW A ROUGH RIDERS - Fired Ste.e
Goldman, head coach and director ot football
operations
•
HOCKEY
American Hockey League
NEW HAVEN NIGHTHAWKS - Named
Doug Carpenter d.rector ol hockey opera
lions
HORSE RACING
SPORTSMAN S PARK - Name Warren C
Groce racing secretary
SOCCER
National Professional Soccer League

TULSA —
player coach

Nemed Victor Moreland

COLLEGE
CAMPBELL — Named Derrick Lee son
men s soccer coach

Hereto Flto Photo

Lake Mary High School's D.J. Lewis (left) was the only Seminole
County athlete to earn a medal at the AAU Junior Olympic track
meet, finishing sixth in the 3.000-meter run with a time of 9:06.18.

Junior OlympicsContinued from IB
High jump — 11. Tiffany
Gibson, 3 feet, 3La inches.
1500-meter race-walk — 12.
Tiffany Gibson, 10:50.72.
lBOO-meter run — H Daru
Wise*. 5:46.96: 12. Defina Wise
5:50.03.
Bantam Boy ■:
SOO-mcter run — 6th in heat.
Kamal Wise. 3:13.6
4 x 400-meter relay — 4.
Central Florida Gliders (Odcy
Wise.' Kamal Wise. Brian Sams.
Heryshllh Adams). 4 17.08
Midget Boys (age* 11-12):
3 .0 0 0 -m e tc r r u n — 13.
Omari Wise-. 11 15.00

Smith
Continued from IB
lall drills needing to work his
way up the Seminole depth
chan In tin- FSU media guide.
Oviedo High School graduate
Willie I’auldo, a third-year soph­
omore. is third in (he depth
chart at weakside linebacker.
‘ lie s not in there yet with
Kirk Carrulhers. Marvin Jones
and Ken Alexander, our starting
inside linebackers, but he's dostto second team." said Bowden.
"Hul lie should play lor us quite
a fnt Hits year Me just plays a
position where we're at our
strongest.”
Bowden said iliat I’auldo
would compete with Kd Clark
,md D.iwd Stallworth tor playing
iline as (lie Seinlnoles' lop
Im i k up at Inside linebacker

Senior GlrU:
lOO-mcter d a sh — 4. (in heal
race) Latonya Thomas. 12. HH
(Dili best time overall)
200-meter d ash — 4 . 1In heat
rare) Latonya Thomas. 26.45 111
overall)
Senior Boys:
3.000-meter ru n — 6. D.J.
Lewis. 9:06.18: 20. Steve 1’latt.
10:30.87
Pole Vault — 7. Alex Green.
13 feet. 5*4 inches: 13. Mail
Bowman. 11 feet. 114* Inches.

S e m
in o le ,
GREYHOUND PARK

4

Central Florida's C e nter
For

Wagering Action
SPECIAL
FAN APPRECIATION
PERFORMANCE TUESDAY
(Tuesday Evening)

Post Time

-

7:45 pm

F R E E A D M IS S IO N
Grandstand &amp; Clubhouse
Reservations and Information

(407 ) 6 9 9 -4 5 1 0

I

�Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Mondav August 5. 1991 - 31

People
Lone armadillo may cause damage

IN B R I E F

Eventually, an armadillo wilt
wander Into your Inndsenpc even
If you do not live nesir a woods or
field. Armadillos are interesting
animals that have an incredible
ability to survive and flourish
despite lheir loss of habitat by
the rapid urbanization of Crntral
Florida.
If armadillos are a problem for
you. there are a few things about
their lifecycle that you should
know. Surprisingly, all that
damage that you are seeing Is
probably eaused by only one
armadillo. They are solitary
animals and their home and
range seldom overlap with other
arm adillos. Therefore, your
control measure will be directed
towards the one and probably
only armadillo that Is causing
the problem.
The damage will likely con­
tinue at a fairly constant rate
until the armadillo problem Is
effectively addressed. Armadillos
generally do not leave their
home range unless they are
forced to do so. The only ef­
fective technique to resolve your
armadillo problem Is to trap the

excavate them selves. There
aren’t any poison balls to use.
Armadillos are insect eaters so
they will not feed on poison balls
designed for grain-eating rodents
like rats and mice.
Another Ineffective method
often suggested is to spray Ihc
lawn to reduce the insects, their
food source. Since armadllos do
eat Insects, this would appear to
be good advi ce. However,
critter and relocate it. As with arm adillos will continue to
other urban wildlife problems, search a treated lawn for food. In
there aren't any "miracle" solu­ fact, their digging can Increase
tions.
because it Is harder to find food
Some controls that arc re­ when some or the Insects have
commended really don’t work so been eliminated.
steer clear of them. Scent re­
Arc you discouraged yet?
pellents. like mothballs general­ What docs work to control
ly will cause the armadillo to armadillos is to Imp them live.
move a few feel away and dig a Armadillos are more difficult lo
new hole. Scare devices or ul­ trap than other animals like
trasonics arc totally ineffective. raccoons or opossum. In fact,
Fences and screens don’t work you will probably trap a raccoon
either. Armadillos can dig under or opossum before you catch the
such a structure If they choose armadillo. Live imps ure avail­
to.
able from county animal control,
You wi l l n o t c a u s e an local farm and feed or hardware
armadillo to leave by filling the stores, mall order or you can
hole or burrow with water or make one yourself.
soli. They will slm piy reBall the trap with overripe soft

McMullen
Airman H I Class McMullan
Air Force Alnnan 1st Class
Ti mo t h y A. McMullan. an
apprentice avionics test station
and component specialist, has
arrived for duty at Etelson Air
Force Base. Alaska.
McMullan is the soil of Charles
L. ami Grace McMullan ol 2849

Sanford Avc., Sanford.
The airman Isa 1986 graduate
of Seminole High School, San­
ford.
Capt. Emaat Waaka
Air Force Capt. Ernest G.
Weeks has returned to his home
station from Desert Storm.
Weeks, a navigator deployed
to Saudi Arabia. Is homebased at
McConnell Air Force Base.
Wichita. Kan.
His wife. Atr Force Capt.
Zulma M. Weeks. Is the daughter
of rrtired Air Force Chief Master
Sgt. Ramon G. and Angela L.
Vega of 29 Redwing Court,
Casselberry.
Spac. Jaffray Lavallaa
Spec. JcITrcy P. Lavallec has
been decorated with the Army
Achievement Medal which Is
a w a r d e d t c s o l d i e r s for
m eritorious service, acts of
courage, or other outstanding
accomplishments.
The soldier Is a military police
specialist at Pioneer Knscrne,
I ianau. Germany.
Luvallcc Is the sou of Paul and
Etal.ic Lavallec of 1057 Weaver
Drive. Oviedo.

Enter writing contest
The Summer Short Story Writing Contest, sponsored by
Authors In the Park, will bic accepting manuscripts of up to
3,000 words on any subject until September 30. Fee Is $5 per
story. For Information, call David or Jennifer Foley at
6584520.

Craft show announced
The first Hunter’s Creek Craft Show and Sale was a rousing
success. Now It's time to reserve your space for the second and
third craft shows on October 26 and December 7. For more
Information, call Varso at 856-0706.

Two plays scheduled
After several weeks of Intensive training, the Geneva Players
Young People’s Summer Theater Workshop culminates with
the presentation of "The Lions’ Den Was Never Like This" and
"A Midsummer Night’s Dream." Friday. August 16. 7 p.m. and
Saturday, August 17. at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. at Geneva
Elementary School. First Street. Geneva. Tickets are B5 adults.
S3 children under 12. Tickets may be purchased at the door.
Cull 349-1207 for more Information.

CAUNDAR
Oversaters to have stop study

fruit and veg etab les. Thi s
creates a "mulch’’ that will
attract insects. Armadillos will
come in search of the Insects.
Set the trap in an area that
already receives a lot of digging
by the armadillo. Cover the
wlre-mcsh bottom of the front of
the trap with leaves or mulch.
Armadillos are shy about walk­
ing directly on the wire bottom
of a trap.
Once the animal is trapped,
animal control mny remove and
relocate it for you. If you plan on
relocating it yourself, check first
with the properly owner or park
personnel before releasing any
wild animal. Relocate armadillos
In an undeveloped area at least
10 miles away. Relocating them
by a shorter distance may result
In having the armadillo return
wiser now and more difficult to
tmp a second time.
For more Information about
armadillos, call or drop by the
Agriculture Center for a free fact
sheet.
C eleste White Is Seminole
County Urban H orticulturist.
Call 333-3B 00. eat. BBSS.

A step study of Overcaters Anonymous Is ’conducted on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. at West Lake Hospital. Slate Road 434.
Longwood. For more Information, call Charlie at 323-8070.

Narcotics Anonymous to mast
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill. 317 Oak Avc.. Sanford.

Clogging groups to have classes
Dixieland doggers hold classes 7-8 p.m. each Monday at the
old Lake Mary fire station. First Street and Wilbur Avenue.
Lake Mary. Cost Is 925 per lO-weck session. For more
information, call 321-5267. The club meeting is held from 8-9
p.m.. at the fire station.
The Old Hickory Stampers hold classes 7-8 p.m. euch
Monday at the Knights of Columbus Hall on S. Park Avenue.
Sanford. Cost Is $2.50 per class. For more Information, call
349-9529.

Help for gamblers offered
Gamblers Anonymous and Gam-Anon for family and friends,
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-smokers) at 7:30
p.m.. Church of the Good Shepherd, 331 Lake Ave.. Maitland.
For more Information, call 236-9206.

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

Sanford Lions to gather
Sanford Lions Club meets at noon each Tuesday al the
Holiday Inn. Interstate 4 and State Road 46 In Sanford.

Eat your vegetables
Longwood residont Mia Halkls, who shares a garden with
neighbors Herb and Mary Wilson, displays the vegetables ol her
labor, including a iour-andone-hall pound eggplant.

Honeymoon hideaway was the wrong place at right time
the street. Finally. Rick climbcA
the balcony umi entered the
condo through the sliding glass
door: then he opened the front
door for me. We had brought
along,groceries and even logs for
the fireplace, so wc made a
delicious dinner ami hull I a
romantic fire in Ihc fireplace. It
was a perfect wedding night.
The next morning. I decided lo
go outside and try to find the
key. When I looked on the wall
above the potted plant. I saw a
ceramic plaque with the condo's
full address — a completely
different street name than the
condo wc had reserved! I don't
think I have ever washed dishes
faster than I did that morning!
We made the lied, cleaned up
the place and ran out the door as
last as we could — scared to

DEAR ABBT: Your readers are
sending In their crazy wedding
ulghl stories, so here's ours:
When Rlek and I married. Dec.
14. 1985. wc had only a
weekend lo honeymoon, so we
took my aunt's advice and re­
nted a condo on the beach In
Kusnrlto, Mexico. Aflcr the
wedding, we made Ihc two-hour
drive, arriving al the gated
entrance aflcr dark. Wc asked
the Spanish-speaking guard to
point us In the right direction to
our rented unit, showing him
the street address.
Upon rinding our condo, we
could lint Imagine why the key
wasn't In the potted plant by the
door where the owner promised
ll would be. Also, my aunl had
lold us that the unit was right on
the beach — this one was across

ADVICK

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

d ea th , hui laughing hysterically.
We drove as Iasi a s we could lo
th e right condo — just a few
blocks down the street.
We never did Hml o u t who
ow ned that llrsi condo, hu t II llit
ow ners happen lo see (Ills In
p rin t. I hank you. an d we are
sorrv!"
KRISTA AND RICK
TOBERIO. SAN CLEMENTE.

MONDAY’S PRIME TIME
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the groom or his family.
I have Just loiim l out that the
DEAR ABBY: T o th e
DEAR ABBY: W hen I w as I I . gro o m ’s fam ily will not he in C a u c a s ia n c o u p le w ith i lie*
m y p a re n ts divorced an d my vllcd lo llte reh earsal dinner, adopted Korean child: I. U m i .
im ilhcr m oved to a n o th e r state even th o u g h we a re all Irom out
have been confronted bv m any
and took m e w lih her. I saw my of tow n. (T here will lie only six u n th in k in g stran g e rs with ru d e
father only th ree tim es milII I nr eight of u s .)
co m m en ts. My m ost m em orable
was 15. I've talked to him over
We are very h u rl to think that
o ccurred while grocery shopping
Ihc lelcp h o n e a few tim es. II we will he Iclt alone 111 a lintel In will) m y hlom i-haired. blur-eyed
called him — he h as n ev er called u stran g e city alte r all ol the
biological son a n d m y darkme. not even on m y birthday.) effort an d ex p en se we will go l i a l r e d . d a r k - c o m p l e x l o t te d
lie Is now rem arried a n d living a th rough to a tte n d th is w edding.
adopted d au g h ter.
cnm lnrlnhlc lift- w ith Ills second
D on't tell iis it Is o n r choice lo*
A w om an ap p ro ach ed m e a n d
wife am i Iwo step ch ild ren .
go or mil. We know th.it. hut his a s k e d . “ A r e t h e s e y o u r
How cun a la th e r ignore Ills wife w ould never forgive us It we c h ild re n ?”
own blood child? I have tried d id u ’l conic, a n d tiesldes. wc
"Y es." I answ ered.
over am i over to hulld som e kind really w aul lo lie Ihere m s e c l his
"D llferrn t fath ers?" sh e asked.
ol relationship w ith him . hut It nephew m arried.
"Yes. a n d different m others,
hasn't tak en hold. I ad m it. I’ve
Please irv lo explain why my too." I replied
had som e p ro b lem s grow ing up. bro th er a n d Ills wile are cxclm i
"O h ." sh e said, looking eonI dropped m il ol high school, ami lug u s Irom th e reh earsal d in n er
fused. "W illi people sleeping
every lim e I e a lle d him he ll c a n ’t he th e cost — they can aro u n d so m uch th ese days. I
m entioned It. sav in g I d id n 't live well alloril a few m ore dinners.
|iisi Ihuught — ” I d id n ’t let her
up tu Ills cx|R 'clutlons so I finally What do th e e tiq u e tte hooks llnlsh. I |o si walked aw ay and
quit calling him ,
say?
Iclt her wilh h er big m outh
I hav en 't ealled him In two
HURT IN NEW YORK h anging open.
years. I am 21 now. Should I
DEAR HURT: I d o n ’t know
C.M. IN APPLE VALLEY.
give u p n r k e e p tr y in g ? ll why y o u r b ro th er a n d Ills wile MINN.
probably sh o u ld n 't Ixilher me are e x c lu d in g y ou from the
after 10 years, bill In- Is still my reh earsal d in n er ll — a s you say
(Problems? Write to Dear Abby.
dad. Well, m ay Im* ll tie reads — they can well alto id it.
Fo r a perso n a l, u n p u blish ed
vour colum n he will recognize
Tile e tiq u e tte hooks say iliat reply, send a sell-addressed,
me. Sign m e...
all out-of-low ii g u ests should lie stamped envelope to Deer Abby,
"O R H P A N E D " IN IDAHO invited to ilia- reh earsal dinner, P.0. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
P S I am en g ag ed lo he m arried. w hich is tradlllouallv busied by Calif. 90069.
Should I ask him lo pay lor my
wedding?

CALIF. eluding th e gilt.

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F o r 2 4 -h o u r T V listings* see L E IS U R E m a g a z in e of Frida y A u g u s t 2.

litc h fie ld

DEAR “ O R P H A N E D " :

W

A pparently y o u r fa th e r Isn't as
eager lo Inilld a re latio n sh ip with
von as you are lo hulld one with
him. flow sad. Let him know
that yon a re en g a g ed lo lic
m arrlcd. an d II he o ilers to help
pay lor your w edding, line — tun
don't ask him II von expect
nothing, you w on't lx- dtsap|Niluled (again).
You d eserve som e h ap p in ess
in vour life. I ho|n- you have H
&lt; ongr.n id a tio n s a n d alt good
wishes.
DEAR ABBY: My h ro ilier's
son is g etting m arried soon in
( Im ago I hc iiiiiii Imt ol tam llv
oil die g ro o m 's side will lie
lim ited, as none ol u s live In
Chicago We will h ave lo 11v In
•he uiglii Iiclore in o rd er to
nlleud the w edding, w hich is
scheduled loi 2 p I I I We M ill not
I** ahl&lt; in leave tor h om e the day
i»t tie w edding becau se th ere are
tu n M iiing ilighis
So
alter the airfare, hotel lor
u rn n ig h ts m eals car u n ia t,
eti — tin* w edding will cost each
ot us w&lt;il over $7(10 not m

C in * m * » . J 1 4 O I I 6

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ADJACENT TO SEMINOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE

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LITCHFIELD THEATRES AND UCOONALDS* PRESENT OUR SUMMER XI0 SHOWS EACH
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY MORNING AT 10 00 AM COME AND SEE YOUR FAVORITE
MC0ONALDLAN0 CHARACTERS’* EACH WEDNESDAY MORNING A TS 00 AM

8/6 &amp; 8/7

CA R E BEARS

�*• - Sanfoid Harald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, August 5, 1991

Ltpal Notlc—

Lpgat WoWcpp

L«gal Notlcft

I T A T I OF FLORIDA
M M R TM tR TO F

9 F T U B R M S f lB S T II

IN T N E C M C V tt COURT
OP T H E I M H T I I R T N

R R B U tM —
NOTICE OF IRTCHT T O
ISSUE P I EM IT
The Oipwliwurt at Cmrtrenmonlil AeguHtkn |I*m noftco
of itatntarttolMueepomrttlu
R u Vtoy*r Yacht*. Incorpwrated. 1470 Dalpar Place. Part
at Santord. laniard. Florida
33771. la centtrvd a Fikarglm*
Boot Flarrt aMdi It a source at
air amMan*. This taarca la
located al Ida Dalamr Plata.
Port ot Santord. laniard. Sanrtnola Caurty, Fkrida. Tha dopartmant haa ax lfnad FI la

IfllM KRLEI

PLPiii

CIVIL ACTION NO.:
IN R t : TbtC I I T A T I OF
HOW ARD*. RAIL.

Tha admtoliltalton at tha
a d d a at HOWARD | RALL.
dacaaaad, F l i t N am bar
M-4BACP. la FdHtoo to Ma
Circuit Court N r SamIno Ia
C a u n ty . Ftarlda. Fra h a ta
Otvtofon. lie MWam at which la
P . Q . Oranar C ianNrdL F L
t r m u t t . Tha

vod wtm a c a y at thto

Bite tefw
^AMW
ta
PpP UteJBPtete ^PP flwi

lha Mar at mraa
■INr Iho dMe at mo Rrat
_______ at Ma M ice ar m
daya attar ma data at Iho
aarvtat ot a o p r at mta naMca
an m ail

y

A L L CLAIMS AMO O G J IC
T KtotS NOT 10 FI L I D W IL L
U F O R B V I R BARBIO.
mtaNancaiaAagMrLtHi.
FaroaM Rapramntotlv
M l LOR I D MURRAY
I N R. Valencia Or.
O a R a ry.FLV n i
BRIAN II. LOR

JMW
_
L a b a M a ry .F L # #
(tW ISOdlM
MAR YANNI440RSI
O ar*. Circuit Caurt
* Y ; FatrlctoThatctwr
DEPUTYCLIRK
S I Ml NOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PuMtah: AugutlS.12. toll
DEI-23

It a petition la Mad. Iho
administrative haartnf pracaaa
la designed to Iwmwtoto aponcy
action. Accerdngty, tha do-

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
FR OR ATI BtVIStON
FRe Number tMM-CF
IN RR: I I T A T I OF
R A N O O LFH T.M cK ILV tV .

dltforont horn toe petittan
by It In tota Nottaa. Po .
..................aato will
etaton ot
o p PVIPPVP P f PHf
_____ ,_____________apord la
thejjppllcaikn lava the right to
*
rtytolha

(racatvad) with* M daya at
publication at tol* natlca In tha
OtMcnat General Camwpl al dm
above 1 an 111 at tha dapartmant. Failura la patittan within
lha al towed tone frame eonitltutoi o wohrar ot any right
tuch par&gt;&gt;n haa to rapn it a
hearing undr Sactlan 134J7,
F.S., and to parttetoato aa a
party to — - ---------tubiapuant intervention will
only ba at Mt aggraw l ot lha
Mad pursuant to Ruto P U P

F IrartMmAjtonUktonfltm
Tha appllcalian la oval I ahla
tor public Impaction during
normal buotom hour*. | :t i
a.m. to S:M p.m
through Friday ernapt tonal
haUdayt. at Dmrtmant of en­
vironmental Regulation, m t
Maguire ReuNverdl SutN 222.
Orlande. Flarlda.
Publlth: AuguctL INI
OCI-M

I N T H I CIRCUIT CO UR T
OF T H I I l h H T I I N T N
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
O F FLORIDA. IN AND FOR
SIM IN O LI COUNTY
CIVIL DIVISION
c a s i n o , tim e! C A ie «
C O V E R N M IN T N A T IO N A L

MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
PtolnMt.
W I L L IA M P A D IL L A and
M A R IS O L F A O IL L A ; and
AVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES
O F FLORIDA. INC. and UN
KNOWN TINAMTS/OWNERS,
N O TIC IO F S A L I
Nolle* li hereby given, pursu­
ant to Final Judgment at Fore­
closure tor Plaintiff entered In
the coueo, In lha Circuit Court ot
Seminole Caunty. Florida. I will
Mil tha property aituatod In
Somlnoie County, Florida de­
scribed m :
L a i 4*. H ID D E N L A K E
PHASE III, UNIT IV. according
to tha plat thereof at recorded In
Plat Boob J*. Pago 1 A &gt;. Public
Record* el Seminole County,
Florida.
And commonly Known aa: 104
W ei Myrtla Drive. Sanford.
Florida B U I ot public eato, to

coeh. al the watt
the Seminole County CourtIn Sanlord. Florida at

ll:90a.m.,enSeptombar3. tf tl .
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ethw Circuit Court
By: JanoE. JaMwk
Deputy Clerk
Publlth Augutl 1.12. let I
DEI 41

R O T K IO F
AOMtNflTRATMR
Tha admlnNtralton at lha
IS T A T V OF RANOOLFH T .
M c K IL V IV . dacaaaad. Fito
N u m h r r maCF, la ponding in
mo Circuit C a rt N r SemtoaN
C a u n ty . Florida. Frahata
“ * ---------------- ~ i at which to
Tha namaa
R a p ra a a n ta tlv o and tha
Ppfppfipi Riprapfitillvi' a atT n t i r i s V i 'd f i r .
SOttSARI N O TIF IID TH A T:

a t tha Will, toe guollfkat tone
ot lha PirooM Roprmontatl va,
venue, ar |wtadkhan at thia
Court are rapilrM to Nla their
ah lactlan a with Hilt C ourt
WITHIN THE LATER OF
THREE MONTHS AFTIR THE
OATR OF THI FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTIR T H I
DAT! OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
AJIcradHare at lha decedent
and afhar pareeoe ha^rln^t clatnea
o r demand! agatoal decedents
aetata an etoam a copy at thto
la ■
aoauad
fwsPi»c« Hi
riV I ^ulbbelm
wlwim

mantha attar the data al Ma I
publication at Ml* nallco muet
Ilia their claim* with thla Court
W ITHIN THE LATER OF
THRRI MONTHS AFTIR THE
DATI OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICK OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
All ather creditor* at tha
having

1mutt Ma thalr
c la im wim ltd* court WITHIN
T H R U MONTHS AFTER THE
DATI OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
F IL ID WILL IE FOREVER
BARRED.
The dote ot the tin t publico
•ton Ot IN* Nottee I* Augutl S.
I«*t.
I Roprotontetli
Franco* W.McKaWay
W. McKalvay
Attorney tor Farmnol
JohnM. Mortyn
DAVE RMANO MART YN.
PA
P ott Ottka Baa 2241
Teguetta. Ftortdo XMW
Telephone (c tm e o p w
Florida Bar Na.;1l«2«t
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk. Circuit Court
BY: Petrkle Thatcher
DEPUTYCLERK
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Publlth: Augu»M. I I Ittl
D ll-22

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cm tmhCeow WM fg rw e we created owe pel meet Or l
V i due A aauWk O
O P V O P L P

P L P U I C I D K N ;

C R D

Z D T T Y P - R M P T
f I F U I C I D R N l

I A O K N

M

P L P U I C I D K N .

A

X
—

R O V T P .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "WtMt th* world nidds Id morp
gmiuapo with humUtty; there are to tow ot us toft." —
Otcar Levant.

7 1 -H &gt; » W »

M

P W V A T f P A R TY R A T tS
IB W IIIR K I M i l l . . . I B B d i »
Port ilnw .^flo H petition.

L O T 10. B LO C K "O * * ,
LVNW OOO REVISION. ACC O R D IN G T O T H I P L A T
TH E R E O F A l RICORDED IN
P L A T BOON to. PAGES N A N O
A OP T H E PUBLIC R IC O R D I
OF S IM IR O L I C O U N TV .
FLORIOA

edge holptol. Apoty hi gmaai
mm ■aMBNagfeaMaARSE,

A G C A R R IR R S . a wall
o tta b llth o d and growing

reteht. F g enh; ter 4
tor tottott retwHt. Copy mutt I

pawyaWwayou^ IJUJti&lt;
O Stun Ott Pay
•UntoadingPoy

T uo*day d e e Friday I I M ea n T h e D a y I

Sunday And Mendey S 30 P.M. Prldey
A M U t T M I N T I A N D C M D I T 9 : Ns Rto

bvbnI

on Augunt ts.
’JR . nr a* n a n
to
h anef a n i
AN ORDINANCE OF T H I
CITY OF LAKE MARY. FLOR­
ID A . A M IN O IN O O R D I­
NANCE Ml AS COOIFIID IN
CHAPTER IM APPfNOIX R,
SECTION a OP THI CITY OP
LAKE AAARY COM OF ORDtN A N C E S ; C R E A T IN G
STANOAROS FOE PARKING
LOT LIOHTINO; FROVIDINO
FOR THE AMENDMENT TO
THE COOE OP ORDINANCES;
PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS,
SBVIRA RILITV AND E F F IC T IV f DATE.
The PwMk Hearing will ba

U
mb
IM
uP
I a
laahr IlMi
fwiiml“
l~~
em
W
mg ^
pt^W
Y^ggeT-ENP^
^w
ei fti wn

b a n . Ml WUtt Lab*Mar/Bhrd.,
Lena Mary. The FuMk la Inu Mm M 4a aitoad — J - 1^
vTfM iv m n v mtw wu n u—■*--*
n.
Said haartog may ba continued
(rum time to time until a
dactoton I* made by the City
Cammlaaien. Caplei at Me Ordi­
nance In ton ar* e iailabia In the
CHy Clerk** Ottto*.
A TAPED RECORD OP THIS
MEETING IS MAM BY THE
CITY FOR ITS C O N V E N ­
IEN C E. THIS RECORD MAY
NOT CONSITUTI AH ADE­
QUATE RECORD FOR PUR­
POSES OP APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MAO! SY THE
CITY WITH RISPICT TO THE
FOREGOING MATTER. ANY
P IR IO N WISHING TO EN­
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OP THI PROCEED­
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
ADVISED TO MAKE THE
N EC ESSA R Y ARRANGEMINTS AT HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE.
CITY OP LAKE MARY.
FLORIDA
CJLROLA. FOSTIR,
CITY CLERK
DATED: AuguatL INI
Publlth: Augutl 5,1*11
DEI-2*
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF THIIlTN
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASB NQ-tt-llMCA I4K
AM ERICAN SAVINGS OF
FLORIDA. FSB
l/K /A AMERICAN SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
FLORIDA.
FlalntlH.
ROBERT WHITAKER, at u*.,
atal-.
Dettndenl(t).
NOTICE OP ACTION

uni*

TO: WILLIAM T. KENDRICK,
If alive, and/er dMd h it un­
known h ekt. dtvltte*. legato**
or grantoet and all perton* or
partto* claiming by. through,
undoror agetmlNm.
RotMtnc* unknown.
Unknown director* and ol
fleer* el DVNATRON HONDO
CORPORATION. * Florida Cor
p a r a lla n an d DVNATRON
RONDO CORPORATION, a
Ftortdo Corporation. It* heir*,
dtvltaot. togatoat ar grantee*
and ail portent or parti**
claiming by. through, under or
---------1 ------a .aa----------

■KPMWeUWF WlNigir

YOU ARC NOTIFIED that an
Action tor tarodotur* a t a
mortgage the tokening property
In SEMINOLE Cawity. Florida:
Let 21. Block II HEFTLER
HOM ES, HOWELL PA RK .
SECTION ONE. according to
the plat thoroot a* recorded in
Plat Book 1 1 Paget 41. 44. 42
and 4B. Public Record* el Semi
note Caunty, Florida,
ha* bean Iliad again*! you and
you are required to tarv* a copy
el your written datarm *. It any.
to It an SPEAR AND HOFF
I* 2M South Dili* Highway,
Coral Gabk*. Flarlda 2214*. on
or above 23rd day ot Augutl.
tf tl. and to III* tha original with
tha Ctork ot toll Court either
before tervke on SFEAR AND
HOFFMAN, attorney* or 1mm*
diatoly thereafter: ohwrwite a
default will be entered egelntl
you tor the reiki demanded in
th* Complaint or Petition
WITNESS my hand and teal
of th it Court on thia lien day ol
July. ieei
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
At C krk ot th* Court
By Heather Brunner
A t Deputy Clerk
Publlth. July IS. 22, 2tA Augutl
1 left
OEH 142

[

-

L A R G I 1 bdrm.

188VII8169^
paw drug tout. durrent Fto.
in
.H W ilR

eder M O T ^ W I B
RfCB L A R G I SI----------------------corpot AC. S llf m o. 1
CO UR TYARD 1 Bdrm.. 1Bam.
A C M O . MM mo.; N IC ! I
Bdrm.. 1 kofh. AC. large walk
In ckowtoMaamo^

■

8

I I -

u tl W ill tra in the rl|h »
I t ----------Q-rQ.»mBR«GD,
T O G B T RW
tovH kdweroy todaltl

w a n t weakly +
(W Httrom )M PtM N.

ling*private

aXPBRIRNCIB TR A C TO R
T R A IL IR RRIVRR wonted.
Meat peat phyeicH and drug
onom. Short haute wHhln PtorWO CHI t24-43M

m m m m

time. CHI 2241 tot
O D D W O R R IES HRRDRDft
D A ILY WORK DAILY FAT

m w n 11

CHI awyhma.44M1G

lead a
■ toon? No
Gown poymant loan* ar-|

Fu ll time. 3 Ihlfta. Soma
heavy lifting. Storting pay SI
hr. Apply afi to* Power a

j^ n g A E jm jjrtrtU ^ M m
Juty
&gt;: u tg y Brewa, Jr., n

71— H

27— N u r s tr y A

Imr*M N W NVnll iWW^Nwev^Nlg

tor your child. Roto*. S344S a

b Ib

W

G ueet related, aervlce ar-

b n IbR

(Mtofd*)#

lank and todakrt. 3342234

Near Lang* tod I km. Intent*
we kernel 24 hr. 2 deya. Root.
rate*, reference*. D4-71U
DAY CAR I AYAILAILf In my
Hidden Lk. horn*. Loti ol
TLC. L kJtJC aa....... MI-4149
SHARON’S Adtrabk
E mc. reTtl CFR frtlnod. Hot
moola. TLC I Coll 2221114

SMALL DAYCARE. TLC tor
iRl

LyLtL*#* iJdNl awuluhJm

'IPNW^rw 'B
B
1KiW
IW
r^wYBi* e^pe FT^WWIRk’

40.......... M f l i
SMALL QUALITY HOMI-LIKE
D a y c a re A P r a tc io o l.
O ftR liftl M88lfp IWfRiRf

program I Ftoygrauodl Felly
H c'dlU ctaM S _____ 221-2414

T A M M Y 'S T O D O L B R S I
Daycare In my ham*. Exp.
Mammy I LekotTLC lM-liaa
J l — P r iv a t E
In s tr u c t io n s

RXFIRT PIANO toatructiPL In
your hem* or my thjdU. t l 4 l f
wbty. tottton. Ratull oriented
Intlrucllen. For all age*,
level 1 A ityka. Summer A
Fall dot*** now available.
Cad Ran Fakao* 1241444

eooV O L T ooo
TIM P O R A R V SIR V IC IS
CoHMFMW_______
ADO T O YOUR INCOMR
AVON I S I L L SKIN-SO-SOFT
C A lL W M M * r»b * »»

Tu o a .-Th u ra .ll-l ROE
♦ W M IIO S W W
Fwiltlm*. M -F. 4 1 Will train.
Cop AtoffyMnM—
M A TU R E A D U LT to babytlt In
my home. Reference* a mual I
t » 4 B » attar *PM
M EDICAL

CI T Y OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIOA
CAROL A FOSTER.
CI T Y CLERK
D A TED Auguill. Ittl
P-ibltth: Augutl S. Ittl
D E I 72

M W PAT SCALES AT HHC
Accepting application* for
CorfIfkd Nursing Aaaittanto.
Thaao wim oipertonce given
priority I Apply:
t t t Melknvllk Ay* Sonlord.

A fM TM C R T

Eiperlencod, tmell cempkx
Light mokrtewanco. 222 ma*
w A F f lT R O N )*
Eamuplattl/hr.
We Train I
For work In local area:
CHI 1-4144442111
APPLY HOW I Driver*, eacurlty
guard*. |anItort, warohouw
help and ortka help- (Will
train) 81S Phene Fee.

-L 0 .L / H

322-SSM ~

* 0 0 T R R I TRIMMING

91— A g a r t m o N t a /

_________ 222-1142____________
W IN T R R SP RIN G S • Pra­
t e tumkhad roam. 170/wk

IW dM R R S P tC IA if Sr.
d lic a e a fit Cloaa room*.
TV .O TA M 0 0 d u p .S M H M
HISTO R ICA L BABLBS
H O TEL. 401 Magnolia Am.
Pum. ottc. Color TV, micro,
rotrtg., util, included. MaM
aarvlca. Quiet canvlonlont
UsAtonwbte rwtet_________ Cod Ml-lie*
LARBR FURN.
w/bolh. No petal MS
a weak, util. tacl.Hi i n i
LONRWOOK ROOM In private
homo to non-tmokar. 140 par
.........CHI 114-21*0
ROOM IN FOOL Im hm . toll
bout* prlvladgae, In Hunt
Club area. *400 mwrth, pay*
Hill............................. 224*117

viremiof
POSTAL H
ai2.2S/hr. Now opon. For
aaom and application call
___________331 3114_________
Q u ill

crr M

••CONSTRUCTION JOBS**
..ToMVHR
\- m - m aawTaiini RoddanFw

Hlabmoo Circle, laatord,
Florid*. 11721.

A P T . IN C O U N TR Y I On a
aero*. 1 Bdrm., kit., living.
dhilng. Prlvutol Mt-NM

WWNAMMW**
R O B I C L IF F APARTMRHTS

1 ^ ei
* ^^WDEWWer* nmarimanl*
F^w^w
IHIRES I ID*

lor Ml* W/D cannactlon*.
•crooned potto* and aatr*
i t i r i g i ctoaot. 11*2 ag. ft.
Lacotodan Lk. Mary Blvd.
CM M HW
Ig u H Homing Opportunity I
CLEAN, qukt, uoclout 2 bdrm.
Scroanad porch, town mHntononco. CHI 2142211_________
H I D D I N L A K 1 , 2/3.
Woahar/dryer, poH. h
447S mo. MM dap- 2241421

JUST UREA HOKE
Single floor with privot*
■ntranco. Studio*. 1 A 3
bedroom*, many extra* In­
c lu d in g atora go apace.
Qukt,eery community. Nice
tondacaplng OH S IT t MANA d lR S W H O C A R III

IteMteCOteT..ITMlil

LA N S JB N N IB APTS. Undar
II CHI u*
move In tpactol*
from Mt* I Broker. i a a724
LAK E M ARY • Single ttory 1
bodraam wtm carport. Unboitovabto atoragat You mutt
*oo to appreciate I
Call Carman, Ml ieil
LA K E MARY STUDIO, private.
MMIncludaeutlHWe*. 222-22*2
M ARINER’S VILLAGE
Lake Ade 1bdr............. SSNmo.
2bdrm....S3Mmo4up.—044420

Nan Id SpacWSltS

*7— A p a r t m o n t s
F u m t s liB d / F o n t

fAMSIDf PUCi

, 41Vwk piua deposit. *37
Raeollo Dr. laniard after SPM
TR U CK*
SP ICIA L. Prlv.
entrance. I big roam, bam
and piece to park rlgl.-32i-#2*l

rs

RgcanMf

I m p a c t a v a r i e t y , ol
•toctonk/mochanlcH park to
military tpec*. Full Hma..
bonoflto. Sand Return* to:)

7 J-.iz-C1ytwMl ^ Li'-i® u I

Santord. largo I bdrm. Central
H / A . pool, laundry.
Sato/Qutot.224»e*2_________
NEW 2 PDRM.. 3 BATH.
Townhauao. Near downtown
Santord. Wathor/dryer hook­
up*, outoida utility rm., mini
blind*. 1*21 mo,......... &gt;241*42
HICK TW O BEDROOM APT.,
Santord. Vary roa. CHI Ml M2*
N ICC I BDRM. garage apt.
Santord. 4200 par month plu*
M M damage dapo*lt. Ml 2*42
O S T E IN - 1 bdrm aptv. SfO per
amok Include* ullllltot. No
pot*. CHI 2240211___________

Won tod, wlfh toikwlng. 140

A R I Y O U RELIABLE AND
HARDWORKIN02 You'll like
M ERRY MAIDS. Weakly pay.
M on-Frl., day houre. Car
................... 221-SNI

4ANPOdD” Tb drrn. cotlege.
ctoao to dnentown, c m y ltit
privacy. D M par weak piua
rrlty’ Include* util Itk*.
c *r :

IM IT M U n
2 bdrm. 1 bom townhouee
apartment*. Qukt and tecure.
4KN per monm, 4304 tecurlty-

LET A

SPECIALIST

C ITTO F
LAKE MART. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC NIARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY G IV EN
by the City Commlukn of the
City of Lake Mary, Florida that
•aid Commlukn will hold o
Rubik Homing on Auguet IS,
t*01. ot 2:M P M , or a* toon
thereafter •» potilbk, to con-

EX PEN SE

eW

Appfy m |
1-4A MM Hand Blvd.

No anpartona nacataary, paid
training. Ran ' patfedgo.
42.22 hour to ttort. ApHyM:
1, US Nary
12-yi A 22m M. SANPORO.
Teat. - Sot. IPW 4PM SOI
M /F
___________ _

Lwqil Notlcw

Hon ot on Ordinance entitled:
AN ORDINANCE OF T H E
C IT Y OF LAKE MARY, FLOR
IDA. AMENDING O R D I ­
NANCE 3M AS CO O IFIID IN
CHAPTER 111 AFFENDIX I
O F T H E C I T Y OF L A K E
M A R Y C O D E OF O R O I
NANCES; AMENDING T H E
D E F IN IT IO N OF GROUND
SIG N ; CREATING DESIGN
STANDARDS FOR GROUND
SI GNS; PROVIDING FO R
AM ENDM ENT TO THE COOE
O F ORDINANCES; PROVID­
ING FOR CONFLICT, SEVER
A B IL IT Y . AND EFFE CTIV E
D A TE
The Pubik Hearing will bo
hold In ate Commlukn Cham
bore. 100Weil Lake Mary Blvd .
Lake Mary. The Pubik !• In
vltged to attend and ba heard
Said hearing may be continued
from time to time until a
Ok Ilion la mad* by the City
Commluion. Copiei ol the Ordi
nance in toll are availabk In the
City Clerk’*Ortka.
A TAPED RECORD OF TH IS
M E E TIN G IS MADE BY TH E
C I T Y FOR ITS CO N V E N
IEN C E. THIS RECORD M AY
NOT CONSITUTE AN AOE
Q U A TE RECORD FOR PUR
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MADE BY T H E
C I T Y W ITH RESPECT TO T H E
FOREGOING MATTER AN Y
PERSON WISHING TO EN*
SURE TH AT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
A P P ELLA TE PURPOSES IS
A D V I S E D TO MAKE T H E
N EC ESSA RY ARRANGE
M IN T S A T HIS OR HER OWN

M

a

C H IL D CARR, my Sanford
C H ILD CARR In my homo,
la d d la r* t* 4 y rt. H R S
cactitkd. 221-N13
C H ILD C A R B . Id my

b

SHA R E hauaa, t roam*, both.
FOR 4KTBA-BM Bettor
Or. lantord
U tU M g -B ra h a r

Far PHWN:' H I042K2S4
^ k U H U iirjJ

A-t CNILOCARB. On IdyllwtW*

W

M A IM

I . RorthaM e Dr., B attle
Creep, 44f Nt12____________

CMMCirt

(P lo x lB la ) Pay by camTo apofy: Stop By
1, I-4FM . atk tor

K^t B

your are*, h a n b to V t m
piua banoflta. Far Itot *1 cur­
rent |ebf and appikerkn to
a p p ly fro m hem e. C a ll
t-a w M A H M RsLAtJI______

99 AMrtimiii

The laniard Herald bee dbeet

d O V R R R M IH T JOBS NOW
H IR IN BfH BHh tklltod Hid

to mm. Camar
l2-P2andtimSI,Santord.

Support B mtdk al
C*H Atty 1 1
B NotoH*
I FL Bor
A N Y C R IB ItO R S at Leroy
Brawn. Sr., ptooae twbmitt
dolma ot thia Hme.dk are net

14-llVEMSOIOr
EMRoittlNORET

W R N IID Y O U m
■urrtaor your ttma, lor Iho
Nancy Duin* Banaht. Call
Jam* MM2T2, P H N V tn y ar

SAHPORD, O R B BEDROOM
UHlHtoa paid. aiM par etk.
■ Ptua Bwa*it. M IO T2 ■
1 1 Bdrm.
d porch, comploto
D M par waak plu*
M BiM CUIIll.CaBOTM M
1 BORAL O N LY 422S/MONTM
ptua SOT aocurtty. Santord
Utllltk*
Daya. 222-3M4; attar
4PM.OT-2MS

Muet Ihm In ■
•towced OHLYI ,
t e l : WWW, tot St. B

AR A LtoaoemTciidradar, Gen

F ra t
totlan.

-1 B 11
Pwn/unfuml (MB A Up 1

to

W E IR I

A B N bcbN b n

I

Rto'ro onan and making M to

If you hove 2 yoara out at itoto

RRSTAW RANT/FIIXIRIA tor
CITY OP

CHI 2.
S E C M R IT Y G P P IC IR S

a

IS — S N B d B lN B t k t B

L A R I MARY, FLORIDA
NBTKIOF
PUBLIC NEARING
NOTICE IS MIRCBY GIVEN
by Ma City CammMan a t th*
City o t Labe Mary. Flarlda that

1/(-

IRBBRL living room, kltchan and kofh. stM par weak.
wHHttaa Included, piuttopuel’
MI-AIM dr MPSRP
I F F K I I N C V A P T •All iitlllttoe
InctodW. M per waak pfu* SM
Pm m ItLakoMarv.MPtMP
L A R R M A R T tb*m.S4M por

• SatotyBanM
• Igw ooR M ngP
• A:

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leeeobeveroRertell.WcoWPOtuuntlerprempigiymwit.

f driving record.

O E Ilt

_

MS

N ra lfe y N

at u .-M arctochA ALanm niN i
day ot Saptomnar. m t. at ma
West trant dmr at lha Seminal*
County Caurmauta. laniard.

97— A w e r f m e M i

"

JO B

p u n u an l la lha Final Jvdtomerrt
at Fwactoawtp a d Sato entared
Circuit Court "n m S ItO H TCBNTH Jsd k ttl O ra d t, In
and ta r SIMINOLI Caunty.

rM

Wlvlv rW^fl#*We iBIMu ^WMi

vviviiHnfi*
N o n a OP SALE
ttOTICS I* hereby ptoen that

(C O U R T M A L I
MAR Y A N N I APORSI
CLR R KO PTH R
CIR CU IT COURT
By: JanaR.

action.

A | V B U

H O U ftS
U L - I N U

bh

u m ataL

FtorldA C N R ....................

number at aodi paMlanar, lha
appikanri nama and addrm .
mo Payartmaat Farmit File
Number and lha caiarty In oMch
tha arajact to prapOMd; &lt;h) A
ilatomanl at haa and nhan each
patltlanar receded notice ot lha
drpartmanfi action arpranaaed
action; (c) A dalsmant at haar
aach peottanar't wbatontlai Intoreato art affected by lha
itapm Imanra jetton ar prnpaaad
action; Id) A dalimanl of lha
matarlal lada dapatod hy PaNllontr, H any; la) A ttaOamarrt
of (acta which patltlanar canttndt warrant rayaraal or
modification at tha departmonfi action or prapaaod ac­
tion; If) A dohmant ot whkh
rule* ar ttolvlm patltlanar contanda reguirt rtveraal ar
modification it tha dapartmonfi action ar prapoaad ac­
tion; and (p) A itawmant at tag
raiial taught by pattttonor.
atatlnf prectttty tha action
pVTinWr Wfflii P’S H p w l'
mant to toba wtth riapact to too
dapartmanTi adton ar prapaaod

C R D

Orlando •Winter Pork

CLASSIFIEDOfFT.__
• M

W

I tor o r^idty grewnlng
rom piny. f ipertowc* protorred but win tram. Pttlltoht
ovallahlo on all S ihlfta.
Applicant* cottaMorad tor
pooittone will bo dreg touted.
A g g y : MbO^Saad PtoM ML

3 3 2 - 2 6 1 1 _____________________8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

b taoB C A iao •
Clark will tail
.
.
In laid County, de-

....... ......... j (hatrlna)
to Sactlan IJ4.I7, F.S.
Tha pahtian mall contain lha
to) towing li»tormotion: (a l lha

I Q I J f V C

PtaMtHt,

Simlnoli

q»

R E TA IL

CLASSIFIED A D S

M IC H A EL P. H O M IM O N . at

intamta^aro aftoctad Ay Ida
dapartmanfi arapaaad permit­
ting deckin'may pafittan tar an
administrative pracoodlng
(hearing) M attardaneo trim
Saction IM P . Florida Statute*
IF.S.I. Ida patman mual canlain mo Marmatlan tot torn*
baton and muH ba Mad (racalved) In mo Oftlca at Oonorat
Counsel ot Mo M&gt;arMiint at
2*44 B la ir lia n a R o a d .
Taitahaiwa. Ftotoa n t t l d B ,
within togrlaan (Ml dayo at
puMkatkfi al M* nallca. Palla capv at tha
1 to fto ma&lt;leant at tha
1 in jiu fii r t iv t i t tin
lima ot flltof. Falhira to Ilia a
pat1Han----------------------------------iw tM n M *
ahail canatitwto a wahor ot any
ri«ht such panan may hawa to

JL V T

m e ., ate..
va.

N u m b w lM d H I ^ p r a jo e L ^

' C E P

BARRON FIMANCIAL GROUP,

7 1 -H

.

r

'

I

'

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i

V

,S

DO IT!

i

iHvtjni

%’
9?'

e

C A R P R H T R V . 44ASONARY
painting and ttto werk. Free
Ltoc’d-.CaRI

mam ts

Air Conditioning
A H B B t iw
DC I A/C - Fait tame day
tervke. Ail make*. FreatalT.
424iei4.24keura.2dev*

HOMAPfl)MCE_J22-3lt3
VCR REPAIR, tree pkkup A
delivery. 444 tS II we can’t Ilk
It. I tC h a rm L jjjj™ ^
A lftN R M tiV B
D E T A IL F IV E R . Let yeur car
•parkto tar wmmerl Comp.
datail torvkat........... M442M
N EA D LIN IR SI Moat cart 444
Wagon* 42L Vinyl top* M4 ip.
C a rp jt m o ^ r« * a U 4 l* ^ _

BuildingContractors
a ADDITION*. All remodeling
I

C7 &amp; T
L EIT
T US S
WEA
i A TS
TU V I
SW
Dependable Protowknal

NCW/WtDAffUMCIS

(VL.Iigu

CAR PENT I t All klnm H heme
repair*, pointing A ceramic
Hie. RkkordOcem....Jg lj* T f

TM ukluhaa*4

Rakrencai Mel a a 174441*
NEW. R IM O O E L REPAIR
HOMES. OFFICES. STORES
All type* cemlrvtltaa. Ret/Cem
22440M... SB. Balk*. CBOIfN*

C A TH Y ’S CLEANN4G SERV­
ICE - Reference*, re tunable
rate* Llceneedl CHI 2227474
SUAMAIR 2 NOT 1 CLSAN2
IBM A i m CHI Jay I

CowcrttQ
CA PTA IN C O H C R ITI. Wayne
Beel. 3 Man Quality Opera
"

'•

m

4AAS1IR E LE C T RICAN. I k T
In*. Rewiring, oddltkn*. 34
hr*, eve. ceil*..... ........1342174

S H A R P F I N C H Itl Rale
work Low M l Fro# *tl Wood,
chelnl ink A repair*. M444H

T c a ro
O N E CALL DOES IT ALLI
Painting, matonry. welding,
mowing.etc.II PH. 2242774

e
I i l l ’t ’id'll
*■&gt; /

carpentry I Homo
kitchen. b*4hl

BoT
ottlco,

a e J B B C Y P R U S * o.M u kh
or pin* bark 114 yd. picked up.
Can dellvar. Cnreta lumbar
A Fence m atariH cut to ardart 4 m lkt waet of Waklva
RIvorHwy 44 4*4244M44

A A H EX TER
R PAINTING
[RIO
KM
PA
A protture cloon. SAVE MM
Lie./tree tell 14043)44
DICK PINO LA'S FA IN TIM
Quality workl Int/Eit.. L it
A Inturad Free till 224S723
• X P E R T PAINTING A Pr*t*.|
Watkiog. Repair*. Int/axt
Froawt. 11 yr*. 742 4*13
HO U SC P A IN TIN G , Intarl
ar/exterior, pretauro clean
ing, tree etiima toil 227*0)7

Post CofitroT
• BISHOP P IS T CONTROL •
Senior Cltlton Dkcounto I
^4jgOM m uerkncaM 34a73^

L e w is S o r v ic t

Plumbing

COM PLETE OeaWy Lawn A
Landtcaping. Tra* Sarvko A
Irrigation, competitive rake.
tree oatlmoto*Sunwy*«222 742*
LAWN M AIN TEN AN CE

NomaspuMiiM

Ratoet CaMTou
RAHO V’S Q U A LITY LAWN.
Cam pkk car*, ckan up*.
Since lit). Free ert.l 121-471*

Masonry
TWP MASONRY. Brick, block,
ttoccs, cencreto. Ranovatkn*.
U c k ^ n * n y * M {g 4 a i* ^

Moving 4 Hauling
B A R HAULING. Yard troth,
appl.. tom. Cheep 'on tlmol
SIVup Calf Ray 247-7M7_____
a a a H A U LIN G .yard tre*h.
appliance*, furniture, trarti ol
any kind! Rkttord.----- 1747741

All your plumbing noedsl 34
hour* I 4RF04S2770222 2*M
SPEEDY PLUMAINGI Abto
lutoly tree *»t. No trip*/*vc
charge. Lk./la*. Bl-asa*

Prtsturt Clddnlng
P C M - H o uto w a t h and painting
" Q u o t a * b y p h o n a " . C a li

J o ja r jO T m t o ja A M iP M

I Stcrttariil 4 1
Typing Sdrvicts
CU STO M

T y p in g / b u tk u p lm t

O J Enkrprlta*. 44IB E 23th
St . Santord . 324 0*71/272 74*2

TrM SorvicQ
■UNYANS T R E E SERVICE
Tree work, light hauling Fro*
ottimato*. Inturad 1)1 1431

‘ ) nil I l!(l S/ / / / NN / ( ’&lt;’/ ) i h l \ I n i l h l o i r
» l*r r Mo n th ( a l l ( h t w i f i m l . -IJJ - t i l l

Is

I

�Sanford MersM, Sanford, Florida - Monday, August 5. 1M1

L•I h Im i

^ |h || u I
WHIIW

htmiture. Mint

DO W N TO W N 4a NFORD
N tA R COURTHOUSE.
CALL2211W4

Vthiclw/Centpert

Triplex/Rent

m to
4.000 sq. ft. Some turniUwd. 2
Mock* to City Hall. Call
2240540.........CROWN SQUARE
SANFORD 72*. 1.401.
and 1,420 tquare feel.
m is t io i o f f ic ii

ComeHome To
Country S tyle Living!

h a r d T iaaa
m m H too

Recently renovated. Good ran
tal neighborhood! Potential
grott Incoma ISO. 701 per year I

aaweg gww? Far
1 wW W yatr

I11MW

HIDOtN L A K H 2 bdrm. I
batti. U00 par month. 1200
aacurlty dapaalt. 222 0524

1t»—Ppt» A Supplies

STENSTROM

Parnate. gray

kmonaXlIl

REALTY, INC.
We list and sail
more property than
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/lahe Mary area.

1 STONY OUPLSKI 1 Mrm.
upttalrt. 2 dawn I On Hwy 40.
Zanad commar elai I.....SSLNO

/

a *1/1 FAR K ON FA IR a a
S2tS Mo. CALL Al Chlodl
Cawtary 11 CMadt Raatty

122-1111

O S T IIN • EXTRA NIC! 2/2
On 10 acre*. clocked flthpond.
accaa* to river, Nona* ok.
In law apt................... »117.000

5 apartments
TARS 1T40IL MNPQM
TTIOOF AMU.

limited lime Offer

QOV'T KOMI5 . Almotl nothing
down, almotl no doting coiti
No g lm m lck t! Call Mika
Ptawti, v.l.P. nt-waa

1UNLAND VI Starter/Rettree
Oaan, fancad. an (? acra on
qulat cut da u c Wall kept,
new roof, paint. Shed . ISO,TOO

MOO AND VA f OOCCIOSUK S

PRISTIOIOUS MAYFAIR 4/2

WITHttaa DOWN
AND SATIf FACTORY CRIDIT
2 and 4 badroom homat avail
abla until Invan tory'i told I
Poaalbla bond menay alto
avallabla with tow Iliad ratat.
Call Jana! Manthald
Q tyt, 117-1124 fvoi. I l l 72M
AA Carnet, lac.

(1st Month Only)

Disposal
Pool

[B [R fN I
t ! B

Clubhouse

t |T u l

2450 Hartwell Av«„ Sai
M O N .-S A T .9 -6 • Sun. V.

324-4TO4

12 MONTH LEASE ONLY

Eff.,1, 2, ft 3 &amp;
Townhouses Available

car garagaa from UI0.
fatal monthly paymantt.
Uefvoraal Raatty, «UI2&gt;

Geo

IMMACULATI LK. MARY 1/2
With pool. Tatto fully daco
ralad. Opan A bright. Loadod

3217800 or 678 9779

HISTORICAL SANFORD VI
F lroplaca. form al dining,
CHA. lancad backyard. E itra
nlca nalghborhood..... U4.000

Marc I/O S3JW.

r

DODGE
SHADOW

The Prudential ( A
Florida Realty

21f—Wanted to Bey

RANT TO SELL YOU* HOME?
I am looking tor nlca homat to
match with buyart.

209463

Air, Powar Steering, P. B
Air Bag. AJWFM Stereo

raens

Call MCrtflsfi, RIALTO*
(407) 1244400 Of 1221700

Step Up Into
Great Apartment!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

Zonad county A I. Already
tplll into 2 building titet
Clota to town R IT T IR
HURRVI Priced to Mil at

222.100

OLOSMOBILE
CUTLASS CIERA
m

Co-Op/Sale
O O I C T I O N A R V lor youth.
Treatury of Learning 10 vet
ume llluttratad Ml. Sactlent
tram atomic energy to Water
mamma It Eacellenl conch
tlon tM CT1 4110

OFROPANI

2 bur ner

Cruise. PB. PS. PL.
Air. AMffM Stereo

TOYOTA
CAMRY DX

7S2231

Automate, PS. PB.
Cruise, Power Locks

DODGE GRANI
CARAVAN
FuSy Loaded. Stereo
All Tha Powor

camptlove/tent lap 321 1142

15500 BUYS!

Managed byangola Oardan Picpany Uanaganora

217711

4 To Choose

Come by tuul aee your new
home at Geneva Gardena,
You 'll be glad you did!

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:30 •5:30 • Sal. 10 - 5

CHEVROLET
CAVAUERS
4 DR.

FRANR A LORI'S Now A Uaadt
2I«2 S. Franch Ava TWIN
Mara. Clip wilt ad ter tt% ONI

paymantt? Call Crag. 2214714

RENTS STARTING FROM

1505 W. 25th SL, Sanford • 322-2090

“

STUNNINOLN. MARY V I
On naarly ona lakalront acra.
Thlt it ona ol a kind. All tha

2 0 3 Bedroom
A partm ents
• Ohle TV
• Washcr/Drycn in Select Units
• Self Clean Oven
• Icemaker
• Dishwasher
• Garbage

On 2/4 acra. Clota up vlaw ol
Lk. AAonroa Pool A cabana
Ranovatad. Suparl I Iff. W0

UtX) l AM MAM Y UL VI)

AM I t t

SANFOMD • i.’l OSb-J

2 b d r m , 2 bat h A C .
nather/dryer. part lurmthed.
tcreen rm . carport A utility
«lwd In nice park •

J.R . Lewis
Doug McCord

Steve Williams
Charles Smith

5575 S. H w y. 17-92, Catsalbarry, Florida
H o u rs Mon.-Sat. 9 - 4 •Sun. 12 - 5

�l
- IJ
I

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H M I I I I I

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SR - tanford HsraM, Sanford, Florida - Monday. August 8, 1M1
w a o c f i

-3i

Blood disorder calls for
follow-up treatment
DBAS DR. OOTTi I’m a your
67-year-old diagnosed with
As I un­
It, there M a
production of
Can you giro me any
“ oft my co “ ■"
i curable?

hove

the teats that
(a bone

leukemia, certain types o f one*
mla. aBerglc drag reactions, Uver
disease, chronic alcohol tnuea*
tlon . autoimmune d iso refers
(such as lupus). Iddney failure,
severe Infections end cancer. Aa
you can see, these varied causes
encom pass a wide range of

1 C J ^ T T C£U£VC T H A T
W ITH ML l U \ j t B E G U
W X &gt; G H lU T H 5 A D D ftM
HUSSEUU...

I

(0 1 9 9 1 NEWSPAPER BN-

. J U U l ! U|
[ J L 1 U I 11.)
. I I I •J H S U
Sl l /J .1 111
11 J . ' J M . J 1 .'J .1 h i I U
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,-JUM
jiitjtj:-ju
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i n j i i :n j
L l t . l t IfJL J id
id 1! II l( 1
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The conditloo results
of platelet produc* rate of * *
deatructlon or accelerated use of

Howia ScMcMtf

PETER
GOTT.M.D.

to *««wiih&gt; the ceils *M*
manufacture p latelets), and
w h a t t h e r a p y w o u l d be
appropriate In your case. Don’t
delay.

Throm bocytopenia Is a dell*
of platelets, th

1 I K 4 M I1 K

MROICINt

In order to cure the throm­
bocytopenia., a doctor muot first M Fan s is
Identify the underlying
und * * affliction
and treat It. To complicate mat- H l j f
patlenU ex
exte n Amber,, some patients
hlbtt low platelet counts without
an Identifiable reason, called
Idiopathic thrombocytopenic
purpura.
Regardless of cause, throm­
bocytopenia leads to easy bruis­
ing, binding from the Intestinal
tract or respiratory tree and — In
severe cases —bleeding into the
brain.
M any typ es of t h r o m ­
bocytopenia are curable. For
Instance. If a person la In the
throes of an allergic reaction to a
drug. Immediate discontinuation
of the offending medicine will
permit the platelet count to rtae.
Obviously, causes su ch as
leukemia and cancer are more
difficult to control.
Therefore, my answer to your
question about cure muat be a
qualified “maybe.’’ I encourage
you to meet with your doctor to
review the poadble causes of

" W i" " m
M Opera reta
• I b C jistNs
«"Sa

□ □ □
□ □

&lt;kM

by bob Thavos

FRANK AND KRNEST
TO
* rs
o F F ic r
l a w v

/O Ari I T &gt;|*-£ 4//*, I T

/ M y / ”o ^ t t ° l u n c h :

_ W v fr

by Jim Davit

GARFIELD

VOOUVE M voon
OWN LITTLE WONLR
PONT VOO. OARFlCLP?

M THC MTIMST OF NATIONAL
StCJJNTM I'MAFNAP FM tirOIMtr
Z TO HAVf TO COWflOCATf

50 Fondas Nos
51 Wst« oNchw

SS A ctress

fl

T0MB6TIN&amp; PR. JAN£

c c c c m i, m a x n m m o &amp; si

There la something thrilling
about making a deceptive play
— bamboozling the declarer (or
the defenders), persuading him
(or them) to mlsguesa the play.
Cast your eyes over today’s
diagram. Most pairs would reach
four heaita. and every West
would lead the diamond king.
Faced with five possible losers
(one heart, one diamond and
three dubs), you have to hope
for some friendly breaks. After
winning the first trick with your
diamond ace and unblocking the
A-K of spades, you have two
logical continuations. You could
cash the heart king and croea to
the heart ace. If the heart queen
d ro p s doubleton. the spade
queen needs to stand up. If the
heart queen doesn't appear, the
spade Jack muat drop under the
queen.
Alternatively, you could play a

heart to dummy's ace immedi­
ately and follow with the spade
queen. If that card lives, you will
take the heart finesse in an effort
to avoid a trump loser.
At the table, the declarer went
for the second line, which was
destined to succeed. He played
off the top spades, crossed to the
heart ace and cashed the spade
queen, discarding his diamond
loser. When he did that. East
dropped the spade Jack. Now
declarer thought he saw a win­
ning play: he called for the spade
10 — and East produced the
nine. South discarded a club
loaer. but West ruffed, the de­
fenders cashed two club tricks,
and East still had the heart
queen to come for one down.
A brilliant coup by East?
Certainly, except that East said:
“I'm very sorry, partner. I had
the spade nine stuck behind
another card. I didn't realize I
had it.” At least he'was honest.

YOUR BIRTHDAY
A a g .ft.IM l
Several social contacts could
play very Important roles in your
life in the year ahead. One may
be of big help to you In the
business realm, the others will
help enhance your popularity.
LRO (July 23-Aug. 22) If
you're trying to save money at
this time, don't get Involved
socially with a good friend who
always gives the credit cards a
workout. You can't handle the
pace. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find it. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker In­
stantly reveals which signs arc
romantically perfect for you.
Mali 92 plus a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, do this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Your greatest gratification will
be gained today from situations
where you use your mental
agility to meet and overcome
challenges and obstacles.
LIRRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Under most conditions, it isn't
wise to offer unsolicited advice to

others. Today, however, could
be an exception. If you have
suggestions that could help a
confused friend, speak up.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Joint ventures should work out
S uite well for yo\i at this time —
each of the parties Involved is
making an equal contribution. If
they aren't, speedy adjustments
are imperative.
8A0ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You may be required to
decide an Issue w here the
alternatives appear to be of equal
worth today. Lean toward the
altematlvqwhlch was previously
successful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You may have an opportuni­
ty today to put down someone
who hasn't treated you too
kindly of late. The temptation
will be great, but if you don't,
you'll ram the respect of others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
A recreational break today, even
though It Is early In the week,
will help prevent tensions from
building up. The looser you are.
the belter you will be able to
perform in all areas.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Two matters you've benw a n

m

A S * ACM O'
AreoiSOUPrr

BB&amp;N TOm iVZZ WHBTH&amp;SHt

e«TTM E AT THE A/Prt*?T
M L I HAVE 7DAWW6EMYOIW

CARP IttCtlPTd
H * t a n IN /

TRtoStoRTAT/OH OR...

TKYWf flUA...

*

NRMb

.

1

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■I

._________. • •IT .

NORTH
S-S-SI
0 Q 10• 4
PA#
♦ 1074
♦ J53 3
WEST
EAST
0741
OJlil
914
PQS2
0993
♦ KQJ 63
OKI#
♦ AQ4
SOUTH
OAK
P K J 10713
0 AS
♦ 10 9 7
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer South
SmU
IP
JO

Writ
Pass
Pass

Nsrth
10
4P

Em!
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: ft K

Ing to wrap up can be finalized
to your satisfaction today. After
you do what needs doing, you
muy wonder why It took you so
long to get around to them.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
There isn't much that is likely to
escape your notice today. You're
both curious and observant, and
you'll be eager to share what you
learn for yourself with compa­
nions.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Keep your wits about you in
financial or commercial dealings
today. You're a quick thinker,
and you should be able to
improvise som ething advan­
tageous and profitable.
OEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You're endowed with a talent
that enables you to Juggle sever­
al projects simultaneously. What
will baffle observers today Is
your ability to do an equally
good Job with each one.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
order to fulfill an ambitious
objective to d ay , secrecy Is
essential. Keep a low profile and
don't talk about your intentions
tounyone.
( 0 1 9 9 1 ; NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.
by Leonard Starr

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... *i

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la iifird , Lakt Mary « M M w liwl i County
84th Ysar, No. 3 - Sanford, Florida

Hot school issues

NEWS DIGEST
[
Chang** almtd at tha futura

By VICKI I

SANFORD — Greg Register will coach Semi­
nole High School’s freshman football team this
year while Bill Berry will replace Register as the
defensive coordinator for the Tribe varsity.
• n P i m IB

Herald Staff Writer

Good Samaritan Home residents were treated
to some C hristm as cheer from the local
atlonal Church.
Congregate
SsaPlMU
,

Halp '8.T.O.P.* criminal*
SANFORD — State Attorney Norm Wolflnger
and Sheriff Don Esllnger want citizens to help
"S.T.O.P." early releases of criminals which
they say account for many more crimes.
"Thousands of Inmates are being released
every month.” Wolflnger said Monday. "They’re
coating citizens very, very much In the hidden
tax that losses cost us.”
“The best method to accomplish anything Is
to get the people Involved.” Esllnger said.
An organizational meeting of the Seminole
County chapter will be held Sept. 18 at 7 p.m. at
the Wolflnger’s Sanford office on First Street at
Park Avenue.
Wolflnger and Esllnger will form Seminole
and Brevard County chapters of S.T.O.P —Stop
Turning Out Prisoners — to allow a grassroots
effort to develop for their cause. Wolflnger said
the statewide group, patterned after Mothers
Against D runk Driving, was founded by
Manatee County Sheriff Charlie Wells In April.
Chapters are forming statewide. Wolflnger said.
Esllnger said he is also committed to doing
more locally to discourage repeat oflcndcrs.
Including vocation training and other re­
habilitation programs.
wras

By VICKI I
Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD - The Buslnesa Adviso­
ry Board appointed by the Seminole
County school board has recom­
mended that the district Investigate
the use of lease revenue bonds aa a
means of financing the construction
of schools and other district facilities.
Lease revenue bonds are issued
through a contracted third party as a
means to allow the district to have
funds available immediately to build
the facilities.
In effect the district enters Into a
lease-wlth-the-optlon-to-buy agree­
ment with the bond holders. The
district would pay rent each year
equllalent to the principal and Inter­
est due on the bond.
At the end of the lease term, the
district will own the facilities.
Unlike the bond Issue which was
vored down by the voters last year,
the lease revenue bonds will not cst
tax payers more money as the
financing will come from revenue
already collected for building pur­
poses. The school district will also
□ I t s Bonds. Pag* BA

□ Paopla
Chrlatmaa In tha aummar

f»- ------ "

Grades protest
expected from
parents tonight

‘Build schools
using bonds’

Crossing guards In various slylss art out In fores again now that schools
resumed classes this week. Marlon Wilson, of Sanford, begins her fifth
year at Lake Mary Boulevard end Country Club Drive.

—

NEW YORK —SAT scores sank
to new lows this year, but along
with the depressing figures came
a kernel of good news.
Averages on the verbal part ol
the Scholastic Aptitude Test
slum ped two points ln « lh c
1900-91 school year to an all­
time low of 422. the College
Board said Monday. Verbal scores
have fallen steadily since 1065.

when they stood at 431.
Math averages dipped for the
first time In 11 years, a two-point
drop to 474. The perfect score for
each section la 800.
"The simple fact la that even
our best students generally don't
know enough «and c an 't do
enough to assure success In
tomorrow's world." said U.S.
E d u catio n Secretary Lamar

1

Pro
Newspaper Enterprise Association

Taxpayers spend 8230 billion a
year on education, yet American
schools are falling our children.
Does your local school measure
up? How can you tell?
Our nation needs a reliable
measure of what klas are learn­
ing. state by state, school by
school and student by student.
Do teen agers In Nevada know
about the law of gravity? Can
kids In Florida write a coherent
paragraph? And can children In
Maine compute?
Nothing we have now Is com­
prehensive enough to tell us. The
Scholastic Aptitude Test, often
used to take the nation's educa­
tional pulse, onl) tests collegebound students, is required by
only some colleges, and only
tests two- subjects, math and

NEW YORK — ABC will begin next week
scrambling the program signals II sends via
satellite to affiliates to stop unauthorized
reception by homes and bars, the network said
Monday.
The scrambling will garble signals that
previously could be received clearly on about 3
million satellite dishes linked to homes, and. In
some cases, saloons In the United States.
ABC said the decision was made at the
request of Its affiliates, who have special devices
to unscramble ABC’s program transmissions.

'
English. The National Assess­
ment of Educational Progress is a
random test with a different fault:
There is no Incentive for students
taking that teat to do well.
We need a required national
exam that gauges what each
high-school senior has learned In
math. English, science, history
and geography, lt should be
designed by teachers and experts
In each subject area and ad­
m inistered locally. Individual
scores should be kept confiden­
tial but could be made available
to prospective employers and
colleges. Composite scores for
schools and slates should be
publicly reported.
A national exam Is our best
hope or knowing how states and
schools stack up against national
education goals, so we can move
from general tcclh-gnashlng to
agitating for specific changes. It
can help employers see what
applicants have to show for their
□Baa Pro, Paga BA

■*"

1

Rain chance diminishes
B ecom ing m ostly
cloudy with a 40
percent chance ul
a f te r n o o n t h u n ­
derstorms. High in
the lower 90s. Wind
east at lOmph.

For m ors wvoothor, soo F ofo 1A

on the verl
math.)

----------- —— —

Con
Nawapapar Enterprise Association

The operative word Is “until.”
Alone It is a simple preposition.
But stated four times It makes a
cogent case against President
Bush’s proposai for a voluntary
national examination for four h-.
eighth-and 12th-grade students.
The Campaign for Genuine
Accountability In Education, a
coalition of 27 national organiza­
tions. Is not flatly opposing the
tests for students. Rather. CGAE
— which Is led by the Cambridge.
Mass.-bascd FoIrTcst (of which I
am a member) — Is urging
Congress to hold up Bush's
request for 912.4 million to
develop a national exam:
Until other elements necessary
for a high-quality education, such
os staff development and curricu­
lum reform, arc In place.

IUntil
YmiII a» widespreadWM
aa^rm
grass-roots
participation of the historically
excluded can help develop stan­
dards for the new curriculum.
U n til p e rfo rm a n c e -b a s e d
exams are developed.
Until students can be evaluated
by a combination of examina­
tio n s and o th er assessm ent
methods that will more accu­
rately and fairly determine their
future.
Beyond President Bush's pro­
posal and CGAE's opposition,
there are three facts that crop up
every time national tests arc
discussed:
(I.) Dozens of national or
norm-referenced tests already tell
us all we need to know about how
well some schools are functioning
and how poorly others are.
(2.) These exams — from IQ
tests to SATs — correlate highly
with race, median family Income
und geography.
(3.) A grade point average
U Baa Con, Pag* BA

_____ i _______________________________
c a n Ik -___
r e p l__i..
l e n i s h e d b y ■i»titf-ill
r a i n f a l l.

1

....... a a m u . ............
D eaths...............
Dr. Oott.....sssss#i....... SB Baerta............
ItfltAflil...........
FlarMa............. ....... 9A W sathsr.........
....... SB W orld.............

Alexander.
.
(David Winger, coordinator of
the Seminole County school dis­
trict’s testing department said
that the most recent county
scores have not yet arrived at the
district. He said he expects the
results "any day now." In 1900. the scores for the
district as a whole were slightly
higher than the national average.

County to study drinking wator needs

CwapBaB from staff and tries rspsets.

........

Third of a series

information from
according to Information
the testing office. Students scored
an average of 430 on the verbal
section and 487 on the math
section In Seminole County. The
national figures on the verbal and
math tests were 424 and 478
respectively.
The 1900 scores were down
from those In 1909 where Semi-

Should pupils take national test?

ABC to scramble signal

M sviss......

1

[Educating America

AP Nows Analysis_________

S A N F O R D — Additional charges have been
filed against a Sanford man and an Orange City
woman, who police say robbed several men
Sunday.
Stephen Michael Pickens. 18. 1407 Valencia
Court. Sanford, and Mary Ellen Dallas. 35. 938
Saxon Blvd.. Orange City, were charged with
the attempted robbery of a man. A girl was also
Implicated, but no age or disposition was
available this morning.
According to Sanford police reports, the trio
picked up Warren Drummond at 1:15 a.m.
Sunday morning, bought beer and went to a
graveyard on 25th Street. Once there. Pickens
struck the man with a beer bottle and
demanded his money, reports stale. The two
men struggled and the man lied, reports state.
The incident occured 15 minutes before police
say the trio robbed another man they picked up
on South Orlando Drive. Charges have already
been filed in that incident.
Dallas was charged with being a a principle to
attempted robbery. Pickens was charged with
armed robbery and battery. Charges arc pend­
ing In other tncldcns. said Sanford Lt. Mike
Rotundo.

ru M ifla d s
., 4 I , | |
C im lii........... I.

*}

S A T scores’ drop not all bad

Additional chargaa Iliad

1I N D B X

SANFORD - The Seminole County
school board la expected to face a
large group of parents who plan to
speak out against the district’s pro­
posed pupil progression plan at this
evening’s 7 o’clock meeting.
Parents of third graders from
across the district have planned to be
on hand to voice their disapproval of
the proposed pupil progression plan
which will be voted on by the board
tonight.
The parents, led by Debbie Halle of
Winter Springs, are opposed to the
district Instructional division’s pro­
posal that third graders' work be
graded as "S" or “N" ("Satisfactory"
or "Not Satisfactory").
Students In Kindergarten through
second grade are already graded on
that system.
The parents, arguing that the "S"
and "N" system does not provide
students with enough feedback re­
garding the quality of their work, vow
□ S ss G rades, Pago BA

By J. MARK BARPIBLO
H e ra ld S ta ll W riter

SANFORD - Seminole County will form a
multi-county and multi-city task force to study Its
future drinking water needs, threatened by
overuse and the encroachment of salt water.
"The patient has problems." said county water
consultant David Wright. "The patient Is sick."
Faced with a greater demand for water than
ran be naturally replaced. Wright and other
officials with Camp Dresser A McKee Inc.
suggested examining the county's water supply
regionally. Instead of locally.
"This Is not the kind of Issue that can lx- dealt
with, at least to an optimum, on a parochial
basis." said Charlie Voss of COM.
County planners will review the make up ol the
task force, which would Include ollictals from
Orange County. Winter Park and other Orange
County cities which affect water supplies for
Seminole County residents. Represenlitlvcs from
Seminole County and each of the seven cities In
the county will also serve on the committee.
Seminole County commissioners will make
appointments to the task force In September or
October.
The task force will review the five-year study
tfj.

IB J
, a *i-'

harry Rm-sner of CDM said the loss to the
stored underground aequller Is equal to a
reduction of aboul two inches of rainfall annually.
The consultants recommended the county takeseveral measures. Including a return to two or
three day per week Irrigation restrictions und
By J. MARK BARPIBLO
other
conservation measures to save up to 20
H erald S ta ll W riter
_____________ ,
mgd out of the current 55 mgd that's being used.
II current trends aren't curbed. H5.4 mgd will be
SANFORD — Seminole County commis­
needed, the study found.
a
sioners will decide In NovcuiIht whether to
Because a portion of Seminole County s
charge residents and businesses a fee to pay
drinking waler comes under Orange County from
for maintenance and Improvements to
the Green Swamp In I’olk County. CDM officials
major drainage systems.
recommended the county consider forming a
The fee would be based on the average
regional water authority to regulate the location
amount ol ground covered by a home and
of public supply wells and the amount of water
concrete sidewalk and driveway, about
pumped from the ground.
2.100 square feet. County stormwater
Seminole County relies on the equivalent of
consultants. Camp Dresser and McKee Inc.
about three Inches ol rainfall annually Rowing
obtained the Information Iroin property
underground from Orange County. Roesner said
appraiser's records.
Wright said Lake Mary is located In a "high
Each resident throughout the county
recharge" area that replenishes the acquifer. lie
[ See Drainage. Page 5A
suggested water supplies lines Ik- connected so
more water could Ik - drawn from the Lake Mary
published this month by CDM. The study showed area to supply the more-populous areas of
the county, the cities and the private water Longwood. Pumping In Longwoml Is helping to
companies In Seminole County are using between draw sally water further Into the county, he said.
15 to 27 million gallons per day (mgd) more than

Commission to rule
on drainage charge

'm

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■*r&lt;C&gt;i ■

* •

- S a n fo rd H m M , t e n fo ld , F lo r id a - T u a B d a y . A u g u s t 27, l « t l

N E W S FROM T H E R E G I O N A N D ' A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Recession impairing charities

tiki * V'V•r* &gt;25*
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Man arrested fhrttlmts this ytar
TAMPA — A young man who served seven months for
shooting and paralysing a 1-year-old during a IBM drug deal
with the baby's sitter la back In Jail today after being arrested
on a drug charge.
It was the fifth time Sedrtck "Sid" McKinney has been
arrested since he was released In January.
McKinney. 19, was taken Into custody Saturday after a police
officer saw him drop a plastic bag tn a truck that had been
stopped for a traffic violation. The bag contained 3 grams of
crack cocaine.
McKinney was charged with possession of crack cocaine and
waa being heId In lleu of BA.0 0 0 bond.
In May 1989. McKinney was convicted of attempted
manslaughter In the shooting of Sebastian Ptacker during a
bungled drug deal six months earlier. Sebastian was strapped
In a child seat while his baby-sitter stopped tn a Tampa
housing project to buy crack.

Boy ran om twle#, kilted
CLEARWATER - A little boy was killed In front of Ida home
when he was run over twice by a car whoae driver was fleeing a
botched drug deal, police said.
Terry Wayne Oiks. 30. was charged with second-degree
murder tn the death of 3-year-old Lamar Ptord.
The Largo man waa trying to buy some crack cocaine but
sped away during the sale, according to police spokesman
Wayne She lor.
"He had tried to rip off the drag dealers," Shelor said
Monday. "Something went awry."
Shelor said that as Giles drove down a dead-end street his
car was pelted by rocks, bricks and bottles thrown by
bystanders. He began to quickly bock down the street and his
vehicle Jumped the curb. Lamar was In front of his home
although not tn the roadway.
The car hit a street sign and then Lamar before slamming
Intoatree.
Despite yells from bystanders trying to warn Giles about the
child pinned under the car. he put the car tn f
away.

Ro m m im tuts National Enquirer
SANTA MONICA — Roaeanne and Tom Arnold are suing the
National Enquirer and the owner of a mansion rented by the
couple, saying they conspired to concoct a phony pigsty story.
The Superior Court suit filed Monday seeks unspecified
damages from the Lantana. Fla.-baaed supermarket tabloid
and homeowner Spencer Proffer for emotional distress.
Invasion of privacy, fraud and conspiracy.
"We claim they sent some people In to trash the house to
write a preconceived pigsty story. The story was a complete
fantasy." said attorney Delos Drown , who represents the
Arnolds.
"That's absolute rubbish. We wouldn't do something like
that." said National Enquirer editor Iain Calder after learning
of the suit.

Marin# Patrol officora Invaatigatad
TAMPA — State investigators are questioning whether
Florida Marine Patrol officers in the Miami area were getting
paid by taxpayers while moonlighting for a private security
company, a newspaper reported.
Investigators with state Comptroller Gerald Lewis' office
have been reviewing records of Shelton Security Services Inc.
of Miami, which has a federal contract to protect a warehouse
where authorities store seized marijuana.
"We have received some Information that questioned
whether all the rules and regulations are being met." Barry
Gladden, director of financial Investigations for the state
comptroller's office, told The Tampa Tribune for a story In
today's editions. "We've made no findings yet."

Us#d cart mutt past Inapactiona
TALLAHASSEE — Used cars sold by dealers In the six
counties where emissions tests are required must paaa
Inspections starting In October, a state agency said.
Dealers received a temporary exemption from the Motor
Vehicle Inspection Program since It began In April because
testing equipment wasn't available commercially for them to
Inspect their used Inventory before retail sale.
But beginning Oct. 1. dealers must either be licensed as
self-inspectors or take their used cars to centralized Inspection
stations.
"Lifting this exemption Is the last major hurdle to
Implementing emissions Inspections." said Leonard Mellon,
executive director of the Department of Highway Safety and
Motor Vehicles, on Monday.
There are 3,780 car dealers In the six counties: Dade.
Broward. Palm Beach. Hillsborough. Pinellas and Duval.
From AMOClotod Proto roports

LOTTERY
MIAMI - Hera are Ihe winning
lumbers selected Monday In Ihe
Florida Lottery: Cath 3:7-1-8
Winning numbare In lha Florida
Lottary Play 4 wor* 8- i-7-1

( u s p s m it m )
Tuesday. August 27, 1991
Vol 84. N o 3
wished Drily and Sunday, eica;
Saturday Sv The Santera HaraM.
Inc. 300 M. French Are, Sanlord.
Fie 33771
Second Cteaa Poet age Paid ri Senior d,
Florida end eddMtenri mailing
POSTM A STIR : Send addroee changea
to THE SANFORD HERALD, P CX
Boa 1SA7. San lord, FL 33772-1007.
uhocrietten Ralea
Daily A Sunday)
me Delivery I Mail
3 Mentha.
•OtOSO
S Mord he-------sis oo
1 Year_______
i n oo
Florida Raaidama must pay Ik. aelee
tea In adddlan la rriaa shore
Rhone (407) 321-2011.

NEW PORT RICHEY — G overnment
budget-cutting and the recession have hit
hard at the Human Development Center,
where rooms that housed Pasco County's
only long-term residential drug-treatment
now store dusty furniture.
Youth and Family Alternatives, another
Paoco County agency that coun sels run­
aways. troubled children and their families,
loat 675.000 In state hinds this year and had
to cut three of seven drug-abuse prevention
Charity funds are early targets as the
federal government tries to rein In Its deficit.

the state tries to fund growing needs as the
recession shrinks sales tax revenue, and
local governments are asked to shoulder
more of the burden with less revenue­
sharing from above.
As budget-cutting pinches off government
grants and recession dries up private
donations, charities are cutting corners.
The Human D evelopm ent C e n te r's
budget, of which governm ent money pro­
vides 70 percent, shrank from 87.2 million
In 1990-91 to 86.5 million for 1991-92. But
service requests keep growing at 15 percent
a year. Director Antoni Sullkowskl said.
Non-profit service organizations, said state
Rep. John Long. D-Land O’ Lakes, "may be

the first to be chopped in budget crunches."
"Some agencies will have tough times,'
said Wayne R. Davis, resident of the United
Way of Greater Tampa. The state, hoping
the economic recession will end. Is shaving
rear twith
agencies’ grants early In the Racal year
the intent of paying It all back at the end.
said Michael Becker. Pasco-PlneRas ad­
ministrator. for the Department of Health
and Rehabilitative Services (HRSJ.
At the same time, government continues
to call on non-profit agencies to bear more of
the load, said Cynthia Woodaide. the United
Way’s national director of state and local
government relations, ’’to provide the
‘safety net* features."

Teacher
sentenced
to prison
COVINGTON. La. - A former
Fla..
• nd football coach at a
fenced Monday to two years In
prison for engaging In sexual
m isconduct with female stu­
dents.
T errill Kevin Steiner. 32.
pleaded guilty last month to
t h r e e c o u n t s of In d e c e n t
behavior with a Juvenile and one
count of contributing to .the
delinquency of a minor. The
sentence was the maximum
allowed under a pies agreement
reached with prosecutors.
Prosecutors had assembled
witnesses and were prepared to
s h o w a p a tte rn of sex u al
misconduct with young girls
d a tin g back a decade, but
Steiner decided to plead guilty,
said Assistant District Attorney
ifedwyF-Wfod
Dtftoy stare
Harrv Pastussek.
While a t Northshore High
Sanford Soap Box Darby division champions, Sanford Mayor Bettye Smith, center, presented
School In Slidell, by his own
Will Parry and Jessica Twaddell, ware honored Ip* derby winners with plaques for their
admission. Steiner was Involved
last night at the city commission meeting. successful participation.
In sexual misconduct with at
least four of his female students.
About the time that allegations
surfaced, he was offered a Job as
a football coach at a high school
in Hattiesburg. Miss.
to "balance growth and the commerce, transportation, labor,
According to prosecutors, a B y rn e i
quality of life In Florida.” Chiles environmental regulation and
15-year-old girl claims that Associated Press Writer
announced In a speech to the community affairs meet weekly
Steiner sexually assaulted her
G o v e rn o r's Conference on to dlscusa policy and direction.
LAKE
BUENA
VISTA
Gov.
while he was a music minister at Lawton Chiles said town meet­ Tourism.
"Incredlb.y, that's never been
a Pensacola. Fla., church In ings were scheduled throughout
Chiles said the town meetings done before/' he sald-t "De­
1962. Steiner left a Mississippi Florida as state officials take a were prompted by discussions cisions by. these. agencies..were
liar look at how to deal with the a m o n g five of the s ta te 's made In a vacuum ... we've got
te a c h in g Job amid slm ll
allegations and took a Job at rapidly growing population In "growth agencies" about growth Ip have healthy debate because
Northshore in 1967.........
the future Is Important."
the state.
management of Florida.
He was named head football
Before
he
took
office
last
Jan­
The meetings are planned In
The governor said Monday
coach In 1988.
uary. "growth management pol­ Gainesville, West Padm Beach.
'
that
officials
also
have
formed
a
On March 1. the parents of a
icy was all a matter of which Miami. Tampa and Orlando.
15-year-old girl at Northshore tourism commission, which Is agency you talked to." Chiles
working
with
members
of
the
The governor told the confer­
filed a complaint with Slidell
told some 500 tourism leaders.
ence delegates that the Industry
police accusing Steiner of kiss­ tourism Industry, to form a plan
Now. under Lt. Gov. Buddy was "of tremendous Importance
ing and hugging the girl and to promote Florida.
McKay. Chiles said, the manag­ to this state" but that It was at a
The
aim
of
the
town
meetings
touching her buttocks at the
will be to develop Ideas on how ers of the state agencies of crossroads.
school on Feb. 27.

To w n m eetings on growth planned

Alleged prostitution clients fight for anonymity
FORT LAUDERDALE - A
Judge ruled that a list containing
the names of clients of an alleged
prostitute should remain con­
fidential —at least for now.
Broward Circuit Judge John
Fruaclante rejected arguments
by lawyers for the media that the
names and other data seized
from Kathy Willett and her
husband. Jeffrey Wlllets. should
be made public Immediately.
But Fruaclante hinted that

could change soon. The Issue, he
said. Is "not If the press should
receive this Information, but
when the press should receive
thla Information."

clients between 850 and 8150 to
have sex with her. Then she
transferred about 82.000 a week
In prostitution proceeds (o her
husband, police say.

July 23.
The media, suspecting sevi
local officials are on the I
wants to see the names, whlli
least 11 men going by the na
John Doc have hired attorn
Kathy Wlllets. 33. has been
Rubin has said Mrs. Wlllets to block their release.
charged with prostitution and needs to have sex with many
taping at least one phone con­ men because she Is a nym­
Sources close to the Investiga­
versation with an alleged client. phomaniac and Jeffrey Wlllets. tion told the Sun-Sentinel In Fort
Her husband, a Broward sheriff*s 41. suffers from spells of Im­ Lauderdale that former Fort
deputy. Is charged with living off potence.
Lauderdale Vice Mayor Doug
the proceeds of prostitution and
Danzlgcr is on the list. Danzlger
wiretapping. Both are free on
The sh eriffs office placed resigned from office, citing
ball.
Wlllets on leave without pay personal reasons and has denied
Police say Mrs. Wlllets charged following the couple's arrest knowing Mrs. Wlllets.

THE W EATHER
-■ ___- ___
■ W V R M M m i M U T t R R R Lv .

Today: Partly cloudy In the
m o rn in g becom ing m oatly
cloudy with a chance of after­
noon thunderstorms. High In the
lower 90s. Wind east 10 mph.
MONDAY
Rain chance 40 percent.
M tly c ld y 90-73
Tonight: A 20 percent chance
of evening thunderstorms: Then
becoming mostly clear. Low In
the low to mid 70s. Light east
wind.
W ednesday: Partly cloudy
with a chance of afternoon
thunderstorm s. High in the
lower 90s. Wind southeast 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.

cifr
Apalachicola
Daytona Baech
FI Laud Beach
Fori Myers
Gainesville
Home*toed
Jacksonville
K iy W n l
Miami
Pantec ola
Sarasota
Tallahassee
Tampa
Varo Beach
W Palm Beach

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LAST '
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TUESDAY
F t ly d d y 9 3 - 7 4

WEDNESDAY
F t ly d d y 93-74

THURSDAY
F t ly d d y 9 3 - 7 4

----------

O
PULL

A s |. 17

A s|. 25

FRIDAY
F t ly d d y 93-74

STA TIS TIC S
SOLUNAJI TABLE: Min. 7:55
a.m.. 8:25 p.m.: MaJ. 1:45 a.m..
2:10 p.m. TIDES: D aytona
Boack: highs. 9:31 a.m.. 9:42
p.m.: lows. 3:11 a.m.. 3:37 p.m.:
N ow S m y r n a Boack: highs.
9:36 a.m.. 9:47 p.m.: lows. 3:16
a.m.. 3:42 p.m.: Cocoa Boack:
highs. 9:51 a.m.. 10:02 p.m.:
lows. 3:31 p.m.. 3:57 jj.ih.

NEW
A s|. 10

©

V

][

D ayton a Boack: Waves are

1-2 feet and semi glassy. Current
is slightly to Ihe south will: a
water temperature of 82 degrees.
N ow Sm yrna Boack: Waves arc
2
feet and choppy. Current Is to
the south, with a water tempera­
ture of 83 degrees.

8 t. A ugustine to JnpUcr Inlet
Tonight: Wind easl lo south­
east 10 knots. Seas 2 fret or less.
Hay and Inland waters smooth.
Iso la te d sh o w ers or th u n ­
derstorms.
Wednesday: Wind southeast
10 knots. Seas 2 feet or less. Bay
and Inland waters a light chop
by afternoon. Isolated showers
and thunderstorms.

The high temperature In
Sanford Monday was 92 degrees
and the overnight low was.73
73 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
period, ending at 9 a.m. Tues­
day. totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature at 10 a.m.
today was 85 degrees and
Tuesday's overnight low was
75. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other WrathcT Service data:
L M onday’s high................. 92
B arom etric pressure.30.15
[ R elative Humidlty....75 pet
n w ia d a ................. East 7 mph
□ R ain fall........................ 0 In.
□ T o d a y 's su n se t.... 7:53 p.m.
□ T om orrow 's sunrise....7:01

Temperature* Indicate previous day s
high and overnight low to 1 p.m. E DT.
cifr
Hi la Prc o m
Anchortg#
41 a 04 clr
Atlanta
04 n os cdy
Atlantic City
cdy
If 41
Baltimore
n 44
dr
Billing*
M 44 01 cdy
Birmingham
cdy
fl IS
Bitmarck
cdy
n 4S
Bolta
dr
f0 SS
Boston
it St
clr
Burlington.VI
•i 44
cdy
Cher lectori. S C
n
it
cdy
Charleston. WVa
cdy
ft 44
Char lotto. N C
IS n oi cdy
Cheyenne
it SI
cdy
Chicago
dr
n
41
Cleveland
M 41
clr
Columbia.} C
If n oi cdy
Concord. N H
dr
II SI
Dallas Ft Worth
fl 70
cdy
Denver
ft 41
cdy
De* Moines
fl 40
cdy
Detroit
cdy
M 40
Honolulu
dr
M 71
Houston
f l 71
cdy
Indianapolis
m 40
dr
Jackson.Miss
77
n
cdy
Kansas City
H H
cdy
Las Vega*
ff 7} 04 clr
Little Rock
M 414 11 cdy
Los Angeles
clr
If 41
Memphis
M 77 01 cdy
Milwaukee
14 71
dr
Mpl* St Paul
cdy
11 71
Nashville
n
71 40 cdy
New Orleans
it 71
cdy
New York City
dr
ii
41
Oklahoma City
n
70
cdy
Omaha
u
71
clr
Philadelphia
V
41
cdy
Phoenu
104 17
clr
Pittsburgh
M 41
cdy
Portland.Meine
11 10
dr
SI Louis
81 71
cdy
Salt Leko City
m
41 04 cdy
Seattle
44 41
cdy
Washington,0 C
U 47
dr

�ffi.Vi -

V

K

-

V

Sanford H a ra ld , S a n fo rd . Flo rid a - T u M d d y . A u g u s t

It, 1001 * 1 *

Goard fears confusion at polls
•fj.
HeraW Staff Writer

RMtaurant robbtd
A Chinese restaurant at 1001 W. 8.R. 434 in Longwood.
broken into aometlme Saturday night or eany Sunday
The owner. Wang Bheng Hur. reported It was the
second time In the peat four months that the restaurant had

SANFORD — Many Sanford voters could
be In for confusing times next March when
they try to find new polling places in new
precincts. said Seminole County Supervisor
of Eiectiona Sandra Ooard.

Seminole County Sheriff's deputies investigating the case
report entry was apparently made by breaking the glaas in the
front door. Among Items taken. Wang listed a
telephone, two bottlesi of liquor, and possibly as much as 0390
in currency.

"My main concern la. people won’t read
the new voter I.D. canto telling them where
their new polling places are when we mall
them out,*' Goard said. When election time
comes around, they'll use their old cards
and go to their old polling place."

Broken taMNghts toad to drug arm !

Population growth has led Goard to
expand the number of voting precints in the
county from 09 to 101. There will be new
precincta In west central and east central
Seminole County as well as several new
precincts In the Oviedo-Winter Springs
i of the county.
But nine precincts, many of them In and
near Sanford, win be merged with one or
two neighboring precincts because they
have too few voters to.continue operating
effedently. Goard said. She said the best
number of registered voters to have in each
precinct to 1.700., because
beci
that many people

A Seminole County Sheriff's deputy conducted a traffic stop
Saturday night, when he noticed a 1078 Toyota with both tail
lights broken. The vehicle was stopped near the intersection of
Southwest Road and Old Lake Mary Road.
The driver of the vehicle. Identified as Cynthia Smith Hfliery.
31. 1811 Harding Ave., Sanford, waa found to have no valid
drivers license. A computer check indicated her license had
been suapended on six separate occasions between Aug. 31.
1080and Nov. 36.1000.
When the deputy conducted a search of Htilery’s vehicle, he
reported uncovering a number of plastic baggies, some empty,
but others containing marijuana. Some drug related equipment
was also found in the vehicle. The officer estimated the total
amount seized st 49 separate bags containing marijuana.
Htilery waa charged with possession of marijuana with intent
to sell, and possession of drug paraphernalia, and taken to the
John B. Polk Correctional Facility.

still can vote quickly during a 13-hour
election day with a high turnout.
Goard said she will try to use the polling
place that is most centrally located In the
new precinct or has the beat access. The old
precinct num bers will be "re cy c le d "
elsewhere In the county. Ooard said.
County commissioners must concur with
the changes. No hearing date has been set.
The eight precincts that encompass the
central areas of Sanford will be merged Into
four precincts. Goard said they had small
numbers of registered voters and because
they are substantially built out. they have
little likelihood of growing in number.

Tanker truck
jackknifes,
driver killed

■MM H i ••

GENEVA - The driver of a
diesel tanker truck p a s killed
Monday when his rig overturned
and the fuel caught fire, closing
both lanes of State Rood 46 for
more than eight hours, the
Florida Highway Patrol sold.
The accident happened about
30 miles northwest of Orlando at
about 1:15 p.m.. when William
Wright, of Seffner. lost control of
th e tru ck c a rry in g 7 4 ,0 0 0
gallons of diesel fuel, the FHP

Tr— p— — r found to Km wanted man
When Seminole County Sheriff's deputies responded to a call
regarding a reported doten trespassers at Rivcrbend Park near
Longwood shortly after 1 a.m. Sunday, they found one man
was wanted on a warrant. Steven Douglas Daniels, 34. 109
Vista Oak Dr.. Lake Mary, was wanted In Orange County for
violating his parole following a conviction on possession of
cocaine charges.
Daniel Is being held without bond at the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility, awaiting transferal to Orange County.

T h e rig J a c k k n if e d a n d
umed. fblocking both lanes.
Wright. 34. waa thrown from the
truck and killed, according to
FHP CpI. Philip Wright.
According to a spokesperson
for the FHP. there will be no
charges filed in the case as the
only person Involved In the
accident was a fatality.
The FHP had no Information
regarding the speed of the truck
at the time of the accident. The
Investigation has not yet re­
vealed how the accident oc­
curred.
Sparks from the wreck ignited
the leaking fuel and moat of It
burned, but an undetermined
amount trickled Into the St.
Johns River, the FHP said.
The road between Geneva and
Mims was closed until about
0:30 p.m. as hazardous materi­
als teams and officers of the
Florida Game and Fresh Water
Kish Commission worked to
clear the area, the FHPaald.

13th StfMt b11116600 dtotrieL w«0t of 17-03.

Dealer says distributor
flooded it by ‘dum ping’
LONGWOOD - "Dumping"
hundreds of cars on Longwood
Toyota is one of many reasons
why the dealership failed, the
company says in a 030 million
la w s u it a g a in s t S o u th e a st
Toyota Distributors Inc.
The other reasons, according
to the federal court lawsuit, are
forgery, bribery, car theft and
conspiracy.
Southeast, one of two in­
dependent Toyota distributors In
the nation, alleges, however,
that Longwood Toyota suffered
crippling financial problems
through mismanagement.
- The dealership action filed last
week in U.8. District Court in
Orlando is one of at least nine
lawsuits pending against South­
east in Florida and other parts of
the country.
Also nam ed were Toyota
Motor Sales U.S.A., Barnett
Bank and others.
The distributorship, owned by
the Moran family of Deerfield
Beach, controls the supply of
Toyotas to Florida. Georgia.
North Carolina. South Carolina
and Alabama. The business is
headed by Jam es Moran and
operates under the name JM
Family Enterprises Inc.
"They’ve been putting dealers
out of business for years." said
Mark L. Omsteln, a lawyer who
represents Longwood Toyota
and its former owners, Darrell
Wiseman and Max H. Pearson.
Southeast has countersued
Longwood Toyota, seeking
0650.000 it says is owed to Its
financing company and 070.000
owed to the distributor. Long­
wood Toyota said it does not owe
Southeast any money.

"What this is all about, really.
Is the fact that the dealer failed
and went out of business." BUI
Donahoe. vice president of legal
and governmental affairs for JM
Longwood Toyota opened In
March 1060 and was sold In
October 1000.
Wiseman said he believed he
was buying a dealership with
100 to 190 cars, to be financed
by World Omni Financial Corp..
another JM company.
Wiseman believed he would
et new cars based on how many
e sold and how many he had in
Inventory, a system widely used
by car companies, he said. But
JM "dumped" another 150 cars
on the dealership Just before it
was sold to Wiseman and deliv­
ered 635 c a rs w ith in two
months, according to the suit.
As a result, financing costs
rose from the original budget of
03 million to 03 million and then
to 06 million. Omsteln said.
Moran wrote Southeast dealers
last month that JM had become
known as "an easy mark" for
lawsuits since settling a dispute
in 1087 rather than taking It to
court.
JM officials said last week
Wiseman could have turned
down the cars.
Wiseman did not have to buy
the dealership If he was unhappy
with the Inventory, and he did
not have to accept future ship­
ments. said Larry Rich, execu­
tive vice president at JM.
A Barnett spokesman said he
could not comment. Toyota
Mo|or sales also would not
comment.
T h e n ew o w n e r o f th e
d e a le rsh ip h as renam ed It
Toyotaland and Is not Involved
In the dispute.

S

Renaming of 13th Street stirs
mixed reactions of commission
Harald 8taffWrltar
SANFORD — A proposal to
change the name of 13th
Street to Martin Luther King
Boulevard met with mixed
reaction last night. Sanford
City C om m issioners were
divided on their opinions.
Although It was not listed
on th e o ffic ia l m e e tin g
agenda, the proposal was
brought up by Commissioner
Bob Thomas near the con­
clusion of the meeting.
Thomas has suggested the
entire length of 13th Street be
renamed as Martin Luther
King Boulevard, from Sanford
Avenue, westerly to Dixie
Way. near Crooms School of
Choice.
In making his presentation.
Thomas read part of a memo
he had subm itted to the

commissioners lost Thursday.
"I think It is most fitting and
proper to rename the street In
his honor." He explained that
most major cities in the na­
tion have already dedicated a
street In Dr. King's name. "It
is my prayer that you will
approve the same, and Join In
the celebration of this most
worthy gesture."
Commission discussion was
mixed. Commissioner Lon
Howell said. “While I don’t
have any problem with the
proposed nam e change. I
would like to know how much
It will cost us to change the
signs." Howell suggested the
matter be postponed until it
could be d iscu ssed at a
commission work session. With a note from City
Public Works Director Jerry
Herman. City Manager Bill
Simmons later explained. "At
an estimated cost of 045 to

replace each corner street
sign. It will probably total
approximately 0600.
Mayor Bettye Smith said
s h e h a d a l r e a d y B een
approached by one individual
saying he was against chang­
ing the street name. Thomas
asked If the man was a 13th
S tre e t m e rc h a n t. M ayor
Smith responded that he was
not.
At the conclusion of the
d is c u s s io n . M cC lan ah an
moved, and Howell seconded
the motion, that a decision on
the matter be withheld until a
later meeting. With Mayor
Smith voting in favor, the
postponement was approved
by a 3 to 2 vote.
No decision hus been made
at the present time, to udd the
matter to the official agenda
for the next scheduled San­
ford City Commission meet­
ing. on Sept. 0.

r P u M c s c h a e l m w to :
Wednesday, August 26, 1001
Hamburger Pie
Buttered Green Beans
Juice Bar
Fresh Baked Roll
Milk

Board opposes o n -th e -sp o t fines
■ fd .

Herald Stall Writer

SANFORD — Seminole County
C ode E n fo rc e m e n t B oard
members continue to oppose
county plans to allow code
Inspectors to Issue on-the-spot
(500 fines for violations.
“It's Just getting to be too
much government.” said code
board member Jean Metis.
Metis and other code board
members say the ordinance Is
too broad and allows for lmpersonal enforcement.
"W e have a process
established that allows people to
come In and uppeal to people
who are not bureauenits." said
member Alnsley Fry. "We try to
help orlng people Into compli­
ance.”
Board member Hugh Harllng
said he Is concerned about the
the plastic lumber together to lim ited, eight-hour training
build a boardwalk from which course citation writers will re­
under the proposal. IlarlCASSELBERRY - Recycled people will be able to blrdwatch ceive
lng
said
police receive u large
and
fish.
plastic used to construct a 500amount
of
training In handling
"It drills like wood. It saws like
foot boardwalk through an envi­
the
public
In
u confrontation. He
wood.
It’s
Just
heavier
and
more
ronmentally sensitive swamp in
he Is concerned cltutlon
Red Bug Park will be more dense." said Bernlc Bcckcy. one said
writers may not receive the
durable although It is twice as of the boardwalk's builders.
Newkirk said that as Florida same amount of training.
expensive as wood, officials said.
" T h e c o d e b o u r d wus
But the fact that plastic won’t tries to comply with stricter stale
established
to avoid confronta­
recycling
laws,
one
of
the
biggest
rot was enough reason for the
tions."
Hurling
said. "I don't
state to pay for the product, said c h a lle n g e s will be finding
think
you
want
a
stuff person In
markets
for
recycled
goods.
S h e rry N ew kirk. Sem inole
"The law says we have to a confrontational situation."
County's recycling director.
Tuesday morning, commis­
re d u c e by 30 p ercen t the
"We also like plastic lumber amount of trash we put In sioners will review the stutus of u
proposal to allow county code
because It doesn’t pollute.” she landfills." Newkirk said.
Inspectors to Issue citations to
said. And trees don't have to be
In a six-month field test, the Individuals violating county or­
cut down to give people a chance
to look at other parts of nature state Department of Transporta­ dinances. If they ugree to pursue
tion Is using recycled plastic the powers, county uttomeys say
close up. she said.
fence posts Instead of treated more research will be needed
Recycling haulers had collec­ wooden posts. Besides Better Into stuffing und Inter-agency
ted more than five weeks’ worth Than Wood, firms from Florida. coordination, computer tracking
of Junk discarded by people in Georgia. North Carolina and of warnings und codr enforce­
Pembroke Pines. A new firm Pennsylvania are supplying ment officer training.
called Better Than Wood then fence posts for the project.
County agencies say the cita­
c o n v e rte d it Into " p la s tic
tions
are needed because the
Last N ovem ber. Browurd CEB process
lumber."
Is often Ineffective.
County begun testing plastic
Many
violations
continue until
In a process called extrusion, lumber to replace rotting sec­
shredders and grinders reduced tions of boardwalk at county the day before the bourd mrets
to Impose fines. The rode board
the plastic Junk Into chips, beaches and parks.
must meet twice before flnrs arc
blending tanks heated It to a
Industry analysts said that so Imposed, ullowlng violations to
p u tty -llk e consistency and
molders shaped It Into beams far. plastic lumber usage has continue.
been limited mostly to fence
In the past, county agencies
and boards.
have
hern unhappy with CEB
posts,
picnic
tables,
decks,
Now. maintenance technicians
for the county parks department walkways, park benches and car treatment of violations. Even
when the bourd Imposes a fine. It
are sawing, bolting and nailing parking stops.

is often reduced or even dropped county biologist and natural
when the Individual compiles. resources officer, animal control
CEB members say compliance, officers, meter readers and the
not punishment, is their role. chief building Inspector.
But agency officials say there
can't be compliance unless vio­
lators risk 0500 per day fines
HARVEY
that will be collected.
Under the proposal, the code
board will be used for repeat
violations and where violators
need more time to comply under
IN V ES T IG A T IO N S .
the proposal.
A total of 21 Job classifications
would be able to Issue cltutlons
for their area of expertise. Those
Individuals Include the occupa­
tional license manager In the
628 1500
Tax C ollector's Office, the

M O R SE

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Editorials/ Opinions
WILLIAM A. R U S H E R
(V in mm)
300 N. riUBNCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-3611 or 831-0003

o. oni&gt;.

W. NMto t

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:

TJBOT"*

EDITORIALS

H uge tracto r tra ile r rig s th a t haul goods all
over th e nation a re a boon to th e U.S.
econom y an d consum ers, b u t letting tracto rs
w ble 48-foot
h au l ghuit triple 28-foot an d dou
tra ile r com btnatlana Is going too far.
T hese behem oths a re Eke
Eke freight train s
rum bling over th e highw ays they sh are w ith
c a n th a t carry only people and
m onsters are equal In length to a
10-story or 12-story building an d w eigh up to
135.000pounds.
E xisting law lim its tru c k s to 80,000 pounds
gross w eight w ith an axle lim it of 20.000
pounds for single ax les an d 34.000 pounds for
tandem axles.
B ut a s a resu lt o f “ g randfather clauses" In
various law s. 17 s ta te s , m ostly in th e W est,
allow the longer com binations.
Som e truckers w ant perm ission to pull th e
heavier, long-com bination vehicles (LCVs) on
lr te rs ta te H ighw ay System and
th e federal' In
o th er lim ited-access roods.
A grow ing ch o ru s of organisations opposes
t h e m o v e , I n c lu d in g t h e A m e ric a n
A utom obile A ssociation. A m erican Insurance
A ssociation. C onsum er Federal of A m erica
a n d N ational T axpayer Union. The railroad
Industry is also fighting J ie move, w hich it
sa y s “ poses a n u n p re c ed e n te d highw ay
safety hazard."
T he fight has Its econom ic side. W illiam
D em psey, head of th e A ssociation of A m eri­
c an Railroads, say s its stu d ies show "If
tw ln-48s com e in to g en eral use o n th e
In terstate Highw ay S ystem , th e railroads will
lose 40 percent o f n e t operating revenues.
A nd th a t Is a prescription for d isaster.’
T he U.S. S enate h a s voted to freeze tru ck
len g th s an d w eights a s p a rt of th e highw ay
funding bill. A com panion bill introduced in
th e House w ould ban LCVs w here th ey are
n o t In operation.
N inety p e rc e n t o f tru c k in g co m p an ies
"d o n ’t w ant LCVs. d o n ’t use them o r cannot
em ploy th em .” sa y s T hom as J . D onahue,
president of th e A m erican T ruckers A ssocia­
tion.
T h at m ay be tru e. B ut it is an overw helm ­
ing probability th a t th e great m ajority of U.S.
m otorists do not w ant to sh are the alreadycrow ded highw ays w ith additional lines of
r. frel
m o n ste r,
fre ig h t tra ln -lik e . m u lti-tra ile r
trucks. If so, th ey should let th e ir U.S.
sen ato rs an d rep resen tativ es know they favor
legislation blocking general use of LCVs on
th e n atio n 's highw ay system .
Any m otorist w ho h a s ever been trapped
behind long strin g s of these highw ay train s
on w inding m ountain roads will get the Idea.

L E T T E R S TO ED ITO R
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must
be signed. Include the address of the writer and a
daytime telephone number. Letters should he on a
single subject and be as brief us possible.. Letters
akr subject to editing.

Berry's World
... AMP We WE*£ JOST
IM0I4PEKU46 IF YOU
WOULP COMS\PER
OOR. ffc£S\P E wT i a l

c a n d id a t e

MR. YELTSIN ?
\

v

I

Road trains

!

F r a n k l i n D.
R oosevelt. In his
h eyday R oosevelt
Inspired In m any
sine articles and
people so m eth in g
are attempting to trash the whole decade of the dose to Idolatry: tt is
1900s ana Reagan as Its creator and symbol. To only recently that the
hear the liberate talk, the ’80s were an era of assessments of some
gilts, tlewre « a i materialistic setf-tndulgence. of hte shrewder con­
presided over by a half-senile ex-actor with a te m p o ra rie s hav e
knack far teffing the white middle ctaaa whet it b e c o m e w i d e l y
wanted to hear.
known. Keynes, for
Luckily the Reagan record wiH, in the long run, example, after a talk
easily survive these mud-ynnners. Ronald wiifi Kooocvcit, prt*
Reagan's main achievements — breaking the vately dismissed him
back of America's worst Inflation, forcing aa "an economic illit­
lL B J :a
through a divided Congress the first major erate." Oliver Wen­
character that
tax-rate reduction In modem times, rebuilding ded Holmes Jr. was
the nation’s defenses, launching the longest kinder, describing
onlyamothtr
economic boom In this century and compeffing him as having "a
could lova. J
the Soviet Union to recognise that tt simply second-rate mind but
could not compete with its American rival — a first-rate charac­
together constitute the legacy of a truly great ter."
It seem s likely that history will finally conclude
that Roosevelt was a clever politician with no
*. I suggest that the liberate pause Arm principles but a cheerful willingness to try
and look over their shoulder. The reputations of anything th at seemed likely to work. He
three of the most Important Democratic petal-' nevertheless failed utterly to end the Depresalon ,
dents of modem times are disintegrating like but the war (which did) saved hte reputation, by
sand castles In a rising tide.
•flowing him to preside over the successful
The one who la likeliest to hang onto a few Allied war effort.
shreds of his vastly exaggerated reputation Is
For Lyndon Johnson, not even the liberate
palled by the Job the liberal media are trying to
do on the record of Ronald Reagan. In

3 M onths....................................... 919.80
6 M onths....................................... $30.00
1 Yssr ........................................... $78.00

;•

Shattering the myths of presidents

^

have much good to say these days, although his
Orest Society was (even more than Roosevelt’s
New Deal) the seed-bed of most modem liberal
pollcfes. The ftrat volume of Robert Caro’s
biography of Johnson has already
limned a character that only a mother could love.
But tt te John F. Kennedy who. among
pypihfrnto since Roosevelt, has been worshiped
m ost blindly by th e liberal m edia, and
trw &amp; _ tt I. Kennrty who t . tocUy
In public esteem. The latest
to evaluate him — Thomas C. Reeves’ "A
Question of Character: A Life of John F.
Kennedy” - te simply devastating.
It wasn’t Just the pathological womanizing.
Reeves■■P
(a former admirer of Kennedy,
_ .by_jibe,
the
way) demonstrates that Kennedy was a chronic
Uar about everything from hte serious health

actually deserved
d
a court-martial rather than the
medal hte
Reviewing Reeves* book for The American
Spectator, the noted British author Paul Johnson
sums up John Kennedy aa follows:
‘"1116 truth te. President Kennedy had no moral
character, no real convictions, and noi purpose
it of power and (Measure.
other than thei'pursuit
What he stood for was an invention, and when
he fell to an assass in 's bullet, nothing of
significance fell with him."

JACK ANDERSON

‘Billing agents’
bilking Medicare

HODDING C A R T E R

Gorbachev legacy: democracy
ISLESBORO. Maine - The night of the
apparatchiks in Moscow coincided altogether
too neatly with our sham hurricane In Maine,
so that many of us who might otherwise have
given undivided attention to the Soviet coup
kept an anxious eye out to windward Instead.
As it turned out. Hurricane Bob was s distinct
bust by the time It hit the Maine coast, but you
couldn't tell It by the weather reports right up
to the moment It slammed ashore and
dissipated. In more ways than one. that was
and te analogous to the drama unfolding In the
Soviet Union.
There, the future la aa unpredictable as the
recent past, a point that cannot be emphasized
enough In the traumatic wake of the Old
Guard's attempted counter-revolution. Old
assumptions and new conclusions have been
proved wrong so repeatedly that only a fool
would rush In with confident prophecy. That
said, these extraordinary days of August 1991
seem to Indicate that things have changed
Irrevocably In the Soviet Union. Whatever the
future may hold there, It will not be the same
as the status quo ante Mikhail Gorbachev.
To put Gorbachev and the new Soviet Union
In context, consider the situation when he took
power In 1985. Then, ’’glaanost** and
"perestroika" were simply Russian words, like
"openness" and "restructuring" In English,
rather than engines of revolutionary Internal
change. The Cold War was In one of Its
deep-freeze stages. Soviet troops occupied
Afghanistan. Eastern Europe was still firmly
within the Iron Curtain.
Suddenly. Gorbachev became someone with
whom the West could "do business." as the
former British Prime Minister Margaret That­
cher put It. Slowly but surely, cooperation
replaced confrontation at the treaty table and
In proxy wars. The Cold War evaporated,
seemingly overnight. Gorbachev occasionally
seemed to be going two steps sideways for
every step forward, but a retrospective survey
of his line of march Indicated stunning
movement.
There was also a downside, which affected
the man In the street as adversely as
democratization affected the Communist
Party. The old system was as corrupt as It was
undemocratic, but Its problems were either
familiar or masked. Suddenly, under the new
order, free speech vied with food shortages.
Collapse abroad seemed to be mirrored by
collapse at home.
Gorbachev himself was the quintessential
politician, which meant that he angered Just
about everyone at one time or another while

trying to hold on to power. He was also a man
of his time and place, which meant he was
never so much the revolutionary democrat as
he was the communist reformer. For some
Americans, moreover, past Soviet behavior
was adequate Justification for mistrusting the
man and all his works, up to the point of
denying hts accomplishments.
Wrong about so much, they were right about
one thing. The fate of Gorbachev, the man. was
of far less Import that the fate of the
democratic reforms that were initiated under
his rule. Was there now adequate public
support for those reforms, and the leader they
threw up to thwart
the hardliners? Was
th e c o u n t e r ­
revolution like Hurri­
cane Boh. spending
Its force before doing
much lasting dam­
age? Or will It be
something more cat­
aclysmic. a reflection
not of temporary re­
action but of a more
enduring Russian af­
finity for the boot
and knout?
The latter was the
easy call. The na­
C Cooperation
tion's history,
replaced
whether under
confrontation
communists or czars,
at the treaty
is not reassuring. All
table. £
people prefer
s t a b i l i t y , the
R ussians deify It.
D c m o c r a c y I s n o t a n
Institution native or familiar to the land.
The easy call was. Is and. I think, will be
wrong. Gorbachev Is not a unique force of
nature but a reflection of basic change beneath
the surface. The best and brightest of Soviet
society know that communist orthodoxy con­
signs the nation to wallow In Third World
backwardness, and they aren't buying It. Many
of the republics have bitten too deeply Into the
apple of Independence to be cosily coaxed or
coerced back Into the empire's prison garden.
Younger Soviet citizens lack ideological com­
mitment to the Icons of the communist
revolution: what they want Is a better life.
Even the leaders of the appartchlks' coup
included men fatally Infected with an un­
derstanding of the old order's daws. They were
not willing to countenance mass murder and
restore It.

WASHINGTON — All It takes Is an 800
number and a mail drop to cheat Medicare
out of money. M edicare's own archaic
reimbursement policy for medical supplies Is
an Invitation to fraud.
A cottage Industry has sprung up in small
companies that operate aa middlemen, ar­
ranging for the sale of supplies to nursing
homes and other health-care agencies, an Cl
then biffing Medicare
The Health Care
Finance Administra­
tion that oversees
M e d ic a re a llo w s
states to set regional
prices for medical
su p p lie s th a t a re
covered by Medicare.
Take a wheelchair
pad that coats $8 to
make. In Tennessee.
Medicare will reim­
burse $42 for It. In
Pennsylvania, the
price la $248.
It doesn't take a
rocket scientist to
figure out th a t
C It's the
laundering the
hottest scam
Medicare paperwork
around.
t h r o u g h
Pennsylvania will net
more money, even If
the tale was made In
Tennesaee. And that’s exactly what a number
of front companies are doing.
Companies calling themselves billing
agents use a complex scheme of billing and
delivery to ship medical supplies to elderly
people across the country. The supplies arc
then billed to Medicare through the states
that pay the highest reimbursement, no
matter where the buyer and the seller arc.
Some companies put actual offices In the
states with the highest payback. Others
simply use an 800 number or a mall drop to
make It appear aa though they are doing
business in that state.
To make the system work, the billing
agents have to And an Insurance carrier who
Is lax in screening unreasonable claims. The
HCFA contracts with carriers to review and
process Medicare claims, and those carriers
are supposed to weed out the bogus claims.
This has led to a widespread practice known
as "carrier shopping" among some billing
agents. Once they find an Insurance carrier
who doesn't do a very good Job of spotting
unreasonable claims, they funnel all their
bills through that carrier. "It's the hottest
scam around." a former medical supply
salesman told us. "Medicare has no laws,
only guidelines, so It's easy to rip off the
system.”
Our associate Melinda Maas has obtained u
draft copy of an Internal report by the Health
and Human Services inspector general. It
estimates that In 1989, carrier shopping
resulted In at least $26 million In excess
Medicare payments.
One doesn't have to shop very far to find a
carrier who doesn't pay attention to o b v io u s
padding of Medicare bills. A private govern­
ment watchdog group. Citizens Against
Government Waste, reports that In one case a
Medicare carrier in Southern California
allowed suppliers to bill Medicare $14.17 fora
urinary drainage bag. while a carrier In
Oklahoma was only allowing $6.02 for the
same bag. And the bag could b e bought In a
drugstore for $2.59.
There Is more than one way to skin
Medicare. Some companies engage In "un­
bundling." or breaking up a piece of
equipment such as a wheelchair and billing
Medicare piece by piece so the total price is
more than three times the value of the
assembled wheelchair.
We learned of one billing agent In Texas
who was sending nursing homes "free"
samples of urinary catheters and then billing
Medicare for them. Another in Georgia billed
Medicare for supplies sold to dead people.

I

�[

S a n fo rd B a ra k). San ford, F lo rid a - T u a a d s y , A u g u s t 2 7 , 1901 - 0 A

Poll: Choose school to attend
■ t TMMIIAI

AP Education Writar

WASHINGTON - Americana
support the Bush administra­
tion’s Idea ol letting children
allend public schools of their
choice, but most balk at using
public money for private educa­
tion. according to the most
recent poll.
The annual Gallup-Phl Delta
Kappa Poll of the Public At­
titu d e s Toward th e Public
Schools also found that fourfifths of those Interviewed favor
national achievement standards
and goals for local schools. More
Hum three-fourths say standard­
ized national tests should be
used to measure achievement.
Secretary of Education Lamar
Alexander hailed the results of
the poll, saying It showed the
public was behind th e a d ­
ministration’s drive to Improve
the nation’s education system by
the turn of the century.
"The poll clearly shows that
the American people support the
use of national standards and
n ational te sts of academ ic

a ch iev em en t, th e rig h t of
parents and students to choose
the public school that children
will attend and tests in the core
subjects of math, science, histo­
ry. geography and English."
Alexander said in a statement.
The public favored by a
margin of 62 percent to 33
percent allowing students end
parents to choose which public
schools In their community the
students attend. However, few
parents whose children attend
p u b lic s c h o o l s a i d t h e i r
y o u n g s te rs w o u ld c h a n g e
schools Ifgiven the choice.
President Bush has broadened
the concept of public school
choice to Include private and
parochial schools. He wants
money targeted for groups of
d isad v a n ta g ed c h ild re n In
schools to follow Individual
students to schools of their
choice In the form of vouchers.
The poll asked respondents If
they favored a voucher system
In which the government would
allot a certain amount of money
per student and then allow
parents to send the child to any
public, parochial or private

TH E NUMBERS C R U N C H
I ADVANCED
r ALGEBRA
1 1 ftteM Eina
| 2. Japan
| 9. Finland
4. taftandfVMM
| 9. FMmMn Ritphsw
| 9. Israsi
1 7. Owsdsn
| 9. Ontario
I 9 Mgw
110. French Boipure
111. 9eodsnd
112. British CotumMo
113. Hungary
114. UnMsdStalM
119. Thailand

FUNCTIONS/
CALCULUS
1.
2.
9.
4.
9.
a.
7.
8.
t.
10.
11.
12.
19.
14.
IE

GEOMETRY

1. Hang Kang
2. Japan
i 9. imtindNfoln
4 0WS0M
0 Plafond
4 Nswlsafond
7. FHmIi Niriplmii
FM dU riten
4 0ssttsnd
Osforfo
Israsi
0 Ontario
10. Frensh Batata*
French BalRum
11. Israsi
Bcottsnd
UnMsdBMss
10 tlMNdforin
10 Hungary
Thailand
14. British Colurehia
Hungary
British CshimMs 10 Thailand
Hang Kong
Japan
0H0lin Pterin
Finland
BwaPsn
RswlMfond

According to The Atlantic Monthly, this International comparison of math
students Included U.8. high-school seniors with at least two years of alge­
bra and one year of geometry. It was carried out in the early 1900s.

ScoresC ontlaasd from Pago 1A
Some some experts say there
Is good news In the 60-polnt
drop In SAT scores since records
w ere kept In 1969: More
minorities arc striving for col­
lege.
Researchers Inside and outside
Ihe College Board, sponsor of the
test taken each year by 1 million
high school Juniors and seniors
applying for college, question
whether SAT declines mean
nearly a decade of school reform
has failed.
To use the SAT to Judge public
education, us some politicians
and others do. Is a dubious
proposition.
For sturlers. the exum Is taken
each year by roughly one-fortyfifth of the student population:
lesl-lakers arc a self-selected,
hence unrepresentative group.
Educational Testing Service
research concludes that half the
eight-point decline In verbal
scores between 1987 and 1990
was due lo Ihe Increasing pro|H&gt;rtton of minority und bilingual
test-takers who u generation ago
never dreamed of college, said
Robert G. Cameron, senior re­
search associate at the College
Hoard.

Bonds------------

Continued from Page 1A

not
In- u n d e r c o n t i n u i n g o b l i g a t i o n
to p a y lo r t h e b o n d s s h o u l d I h e
h ti d g e l n o t a llo w f o r it In I In ­
fill u r c .

The liuslni-ss Advisory Hoard
voted unanimously to recom­
mend that the district consider
the use of such bonds, acordlng
to .John llowel. the hoard's
chairman.
H o w e ll s a i d th a t t h e b ig g e s t
a d v a n t a g e lo tin- iK in d s Is t h a l
t h e r e n t d u e o n th e b u n d s Is p a id
o n l y fr o m a v a ila b le r e v e n u e s .

The board Is under no obliga­
tion lucuiiltUiif lo allocate funds

Grades

Continued from Page 1A
they will lei I h c
Ixiard know thal they want lelter
grades to In - maintained in third
grade and beyond.
Halle rites dropping standard­
ized test scores al the second
grade level where the new
grading system was used last
year.
"We want to I n - Involved in
our childrens' education." Halle
sad, "but ihls makes it very
dilficult to gel a clear picture of

I

ETS. the Princeton. N.J.-based
organization that administers
the SAT. Is lo release the
research Ihls fall.
Minority students make up 28
percent of students taking the
SAT. compared with 11 percent
In 1973. An additional 16 per­
cent are from bilingual back­
grounds.
In an earlier paper titled "Let's
Have Another SAT Score De­
c lin e ," H arvard e d u c a tio n
lecturer Harold Howe II argued
that declines stretching back to
the 1960s stemmed mainly from
the growing presence of lowscoring minority students who
for Ihc first lime Joined white
students In seeing selective col­
leges as realistic options.
Thus. Howe wrote, the SAT
slump Is not evidence of falling
schools but of the far more
welcome news that minority
students are striving for college.
A record 100.209 black stu­
dents took the SAT In 1990-91.
Blacks averaged 385 on verbal.
351 on math — 160 points below
the combined national average
of896.
M exican-Americans scored
377 on verbal. 427 math: Puerto
Rtruu students averaged 361

for future payments for the full
term of Ihc bonds.
The Business Advisory Hoard
has advised Ihc school board
that they have $9 million annu­
ally. half of the sum collected
from (he Iwo mills of eapltal
outlay mlllage. available lo use
us collateral for the purchase of
lease revenue bonds.
According lo the Business Ad­
visory Hoard recommended In­
vest igallng the use of Ihc bonds
In order that the district might
have Immediate money uvullublc
lii build new schools without
having lo put additional tax
burdens on Seminole Countv

what our children are really
doing In school."
Haile und her daughter were
ulonr when they picketed out­
side Winter Springs Elcmentury
School last week lo draw atten­
tion lo their cause, but Halle
promlv-d a better turnout for
lilts evening's meeting.
" T h e r e w ill In - a lo t o f ( K ir e u ls
t h e r e to te ll t h e h o a r d w h a t w c
t h l n k ol t h e i d e a . ” s h e s a i d .

Ilallr said thal the district has
"failed-to do their job In letting

school. Fifty percent favored
such a proposal, while 39 per­
cent were opposed. Support rose
by 6 percentage points over
1B67.
However. OS percent o f those
Interviewed said they opposed
"allowing students and parents
to choose a private school to
attend at public expense." while
26 percent favored the Idea.
The voucher plan found Its
s tro n g e s t s u p p o rt am o n g
minorities and urban residents,
57 percent In each group. Fif­
ty-eight percent of those with
children under 18 supported the
Idea, and 06 percent of nonpublic school parents backed It.
Among parents with children
In public schools. 20 percent
said lack of proper financial
support was the biggest problem
public schools face. Eighteen
percent cited lack of discipline
and 17 percent use of drugs
Officials said the OaUup-Phl
Delta Kappa poll Is the most
comprehensive survey of Ameri­
can attitudes on educational
Issues since the series began In
1969. ‘Hils year. Oalhip Inter­
viewers asked a selected sample

of 1.500 American adults a total
of 00 questions, twice the usual
number.
The m argin of error was 3
percentage points.
A m ericans approved, by a
margin of 01 percent to 12
percent, requiring local public
schools to conform to national
goals and national standards of
a c h ie v e m e n t. T h e y a ls o
approved 60 percent to 24 per­
cent requiring public schools In
their com m unities to use a
standardised national curricu­
lum. and they favored 77 per­
cent to 17 percent the use of
standardised national tests to
measure academic achievement.
E arlier th is y ear congress
form ed a 32-m em ber com ­
mission to make recommendstlons by Dec. 31 on how to
develop national educational
standards and tests.

DOWN TO A SCIENCE
Scisnca test scorns for 10-and
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■

Swadan
Poland
Norway «i
Australia
England
Italy
UnHad Statas
Singapore
Hong Kong

"Support for national stan­
dards cuts across political lines,
regional lines and racial lines."
■aid Francte Alexander, execu­
tive director of the commission,
the National Council on Educa­
tional Standards and Testing.

5
10
number correct

Con-

than thatr 10-and H yaar oteU.8.

the highest numbers of low
achievers.
If President Bush were sincere
■bout his desire to Improve
American education, he would
have Included In his proposal
.The only value In President funds for longitudinal studies
Bush's voluntary national exam­ that would attempt to assess the
ination la that It will confirm reasons for the differentials In
what we already know about standardized test scores. Can
standardised tests: Whites score these differentials be narrowed
higher than blacks. Males score by curriculum changes, by new
higher than females. Rich kids Instructional options or by a
score higher than poor kids. combination of both?
Suburban kids score higher than
Ever since psychologist Arthur
urban kids. Northern kids score J e n s e n h y p o th e s iz e d th a t
higher than Southern kids.
g e n e tic d iff e r e n c e s m ight
Show me any two sets of explain the persistent standard
sharply divergent test scores deviation between white, and
from any two places In America, black teat scores on IQ tests, we
and I can easily tell which falls have been arguing about nature
In any of the above five sets of vs. nurture In education.
variables.
But one characteristic of stan­
In ev ery A m e ric an c ity , dardized teats Is that they will
p a re n ts a lre a d y know the always relegate poor and minori­
schools where students have the ty students to the bottom of the
highest standardized test scores selection barrel. The reason for
and the schools that graduate this was wittily stated by Henry
the highest percentage of col­ 9. Dyer, a former vice president
lege-bound seniors. ,
of the Educational Testing Serv­
The most critical problem In ice. who helped develop (he
American education Is to devel­ SAT.
op Instructional strategies to
"An IQ." declared Dyer. "Is a
raise the cognitive levels of d u b io u s n o r m a tiv e sco re
students In the schools that have wrapped up In a ratio that Is
based u p b n .p n Im possible
a s s u m p t i o n a b o u t the
equivalence of human experi­
verbal. 406 math.
and the opportunity to
Asian-Am erlcana averaged ence
learn."
Memorize that.
better on m ath than any ethnic
until educational reforms
group, 530. but were 11 points areAnd
put In place, one more
below the national average In national exam Isn't going to tell
verbal skills at 411.
While students averaged 441 us a darned thing — except how
much money we wasted lo find
verbal. 489 In math for a com­ out
what we already know.
bined 930 — 34 points above the
national average.
Parents and schools could do
more lo Improve the scores. The
SAT's verbal section tests vo­
cabulary an d reading com ­ Cm Us s M f r e a Pago 1A
prehension. Students who watch
would be charged the
endless TV at home and never same fee.
Businesses would be
visit a library are at a disadvan­ assessed Ihc same fee for each
tage.
2.100 square feet covered by
"There is firm evidence that their buildings and other Im­
parental Influence Is very Im­ permeable surfaces. The fee has
p o r t a n t . " s a id C a m e ro n . nol been established.
"Things like outside reading and
Seminole County faces a 014
being read to at home really
million
prlcclag for dralnugc
contribute."
Improvements during Ihe next
Schools bear considerable re­ five years, or nearly $3 million
sponsibility when they don't per ycur. During the next 20
require rigorous courses, assign years, the total cost will balloon
enough homework or encourage to $ 1 1 3 mi l l i o n . Count y
outside reading.
Engineer Jerry McCollum said
Only 65 percent of students
luklnp the SAT took at least four
years of high school muth. 55
percent look trigonometry and
44 percent studied physics.
iA
predicta a student's future aca­
demic performance more accu­
rately than a standardised test

Pro
Pago 1A
time In the
classroom. What's more. It can
make students understand that
school really does matter — all
12yearaoflt.

d o n 't fe a r the d a n g e rs of
"teaching to the test." because If
the tests are designed well, that
will mean teaching what stu­
dents should know as citizens
and workers.

Employers rarely ask a highschool graduate for anything
besides a diploma, and they
consider It little more than proof
of attendance. But what If Jenny
knew that Jack’s Sports Shop
would be looking at how much
m ath she has learned or that
Securities Insurance Co. would
be Interested In how well she can
construct a paragraph? An exam
t h a t c o u ld a ffect Job o p ­
portunities would deliver the
message that hard work and
tough courses are the path to
success.

I am disturbed by Ihe argu­
m ent that a national exam
would be unfair to children In
bad schools. What’s unfair Is to
graduate kids without teaching
them to write a persuasive letter
or balance a checkbook. What's
unfair Is to let a poor school hide
Us Inadequacies from the public
and warehouse another 400
students the following year.

Publishing detailed results of
how students In specific states
and schools perform can make
schools accountable not only In
the abstract but In specific areas.
K ansas schools might teach
English well but geography
poorly: voters would know and
could demand change. The same
would be true on Ihc local level.
Some of Ihe concerns lhal I've
heard about Ihls proposal arc
well-taken. Wc must avoid bias
In the exam's design, use Ihc
most advanced testing methods
and allow wide latitude in how
schools prepare students. But 1

Some argue that we could take
the money we would spend on
Ihc exam (estimates range from
090 million to 0100 millionn per
year) and spend It on some other
worthy educational project. Of
course we could. We should
spend as much as we can on
education. But (list wc have lo
spend something on a real
m e asu re m e n t of w here wc
stand..po.w e don't throw, that
money down a drain.
And before wc complain about
the price, wc should compurr ll
with overall spending. Even
a ssu m in g that the h ig h est
estimate Is correct, the exam
would cost only about 8 cents for
every 9100 spent on education
in America. It's lime for that
8-ccnt solution.

Drainage

Ihc ngures represent Ihe costs lo
improve and maintain only ihe
major drainage systems, nol
neighborhood dilchcs.
CDM consultants said Ihc cost
to maintain Ihc systems, which
pass through cities, can Ik - borne
cither by luxes or Ihc fee. If
property taxes urc used, the cost
burden to residents would be
higher thun Ihe fee.
About 60 percent of the pro­
perties are residential. Ihc con­
sultants found, hut would pay
about 66 percent of Ihc luxes
needed for Ihe program. About
22 percent of the properties are

cither commercial or Industrial
In nature, but would pay about
20 percent of the taxes needed.
Another 12 percent of the pro­
perties urc vacant or rural, but
would puy eight percent of Ihe
taxes needed.
Among the topics commis­
sioners will consider will be
whether to charge a fee for
vacunl land. County Munuger
Ron Ra b u n re c o m m en d e d
aguinst the fee for vacunl lunds.
saving those lands, by being
vacant, help recharge Ihe un­
derground water supply In Sem­
inole County.

D S A TH S

ISAAC BOWERS
Isaac B ow ers. 90. 64 S.
Division St.. Oviedo, died Friday
homeowners.
at his residence. Born Muy 5,
Issuing bonds docs not require 1901. In Allcndulc. S C., he
voter approval, under these moved to Oviedo from Pulatku In
circumstances.
1922. He was a retired truck
The Business Advisory Board driver und u member of Ihe
will recommend that the district Antioch M issionary Bupllsl
lei an Independent body, such as Church.
themselves, oversee each step of
Survivors Include wife. Surah:
the lease purchase options.
sons. Alfred. St. I'elersbug.
The Business Advisory Board Charles and Isaac Jr., both of
will ask Ihc school board al Ihls Oviedo; d a u g h te rs. M rrlrsr
evening's meeting lo vole lo Bradley. Nina Goodwin. Rumllta
allow Ihr district slaff to In­ Stewart. Barbara Stallworth, all
vestigate using Ihr bonds.
of Ovlrdo. Marlah Vinson. Or­
The school board will mrrl at lando. Monlez. Atlanta. Con­
7 p.m. In Ihc district boardroom. stance Cox. Raleigh. N.C.: 35
1211 Mellonvlllr Avr. in San­ g r u n d c h l l d r r n : 57 greatgr u n d c h IId r c n : nine
ford.
great-great-grandchildren.
Mitchell's Funeral Home. Or­
lando. In charge of arrange­
ments.
the public know about the pro­
posed changes."
FRANK M. HATHAWAY
She said that she and oilier
Frank M. Hathaway. 63. 210
parents have bren doing their Alpicn Dr.. Maitland, died Sun­
Ix-sl lo get the word out lo the day ul Ids residence. Born Dec.
parent* of all third graders.
20. 1927. in Chclago. he moved
"The Information that goes lo Maitland from Sanford In
home with kids on Ihe first day 1957. He was owner und opera­
of school may he the first some tor lor Hathaway Healing and
p a r e n t s h e a r a b o u t l h e Air Conditioning and a Penchanges." she said.
Ircoslul.
The school board uu-els In Iht
Survivors Include mother.
di st r i ct b o a rd ro o m . 1211 Mary Pendleton. Goodman. Mo.:
Mellonvllle Ave. In Sanford.
wife. Ruth P.: son. Bert A..

1
Sanford: sisters. Mary Porter.
L a s V e g a s. Ncv.. Audr ey
Shudwlck. Goodman. Durham
Francisco. Neosho. Mo.. Inu
Giles. Diamond. Mo.. Carolyn
DePrlest. Miami. Oklu.; two
grandchildren.
C u r r y Ha n d C o x -P o rk er
Funeral Home. Wilder Park. In
charge of arrangements.
DOROTHY E. OLIVER
Dorothy E. Oliver. 79. IHO
Landover Place. I.nugwtxxl. died
Sunday al Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Horn Dec. 7. 1911. In
Chicago, she moved lo Longw in k ! from Jacksonville In 1977.
She was un Insurance Ixxtkkcepcr.
Survivors Include daughter.
Elizabeth Lester. Maitland: sous.
George W. Oliver. Fort Worth.
Texas: sisters. Margaret lloshell.
O r l a n d o . Gr a c e J o h n s o n .
Chicago: four grandc hildren, five
geulgrandchlldrcn.
Halil win-Fairchild Funeral
Home. Orlando. In charge ol
arrangements.
FRANCA PUCHAL8R1
F ranca I'uehulskl. 66. 22
Jackson Court. Casselberry, died
Sunday at Orlando Regional
Medical Center. Bom June IH.
1925. In Rome, she moved lo
C a s s e llN - r r y from Passaic. N.J..
In I9H3 She was a retired

assem bler for Air Wlek In­
dustries and u Jehovah’s Wit­
ness.
Survivors Include son. Louis.
Lake Mury: brother. Gariele
Cerlzzl, Rome.
Beacon Cremation Service.
Winter I'urk. In charge of a r­
rangements.

HATHAWAY. MS. ESASK M
F u n trtl t ir v n t t lor Mr Frank M
Hathaway. M. of Maitland. *ai bo conducted
ol 10 a m Thursday In tho Caroy Hand
C o i Parkor Funoral Homo. 1110 W
Fairbankt Ava . Winter Park, with Pattor
Jim Edward*. Orlando Chrithan Cantor
officiating Informant will follow at Palm
Camatery Tha Iamity will rocteva tnandt
Irom 11 p m Wadnatday avanmg in tha
lunar al homa
Arrangamantt by Carty Hand Coa Parkar
Funaral Homa and Camatery. Winter Park.
441 1042

PR O FESSIO N A L
P R O P E R T Y TAX
ASSESSMENT
REVIEW

C u ll:321-5065
Ir ir c h b o f f
•■fcgpsoclates

100 W. Commsrclal
Suits 204 Sanford

iI |I I
/
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4,

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&gt;7. INI

Murder plot
plot trial
In t for mother
high school girl

:

HOUSTON — A woman accused of trying to
hire a hitm an to m urder the mother of her
daughter's cheerleading rival spoke of having the
woman killed or sold Into slavery, a prosecutor
said Monday. The defense called it a set-up.
As the trial began, both sides promised to show
how tangled family relationships and a bitter
divorce resulted in the solicitation of capital
murder and kidnapping charges against Wanda
Holloway.
Defense lawyers called Mrs. Holloway the
victim of brothers scheming to take her children
away from her.
But prosecutors said Mrs. Holloway contacted
Terry Lynn Harper, her ex-husband's brother,
after her 13-year-old daughter. Shanna. lost a
spot on the chcerteading squad again to Amber
Heath.
Harper testified Monday that Mrs. Holloway
told him she hated Heath and her m other and
wanted to do away with them.
"She asked me what I would do. I said you
Could get one of these Colombian drug lords and
have her taken to Colombia and have her sold
into white slavery." Harper said.
Amber's m other. Vema Heath, testified that
she was startled to hear about the plot, but said
Mrs. Holloway'sJealously didn’t surprise her.
"When they told me her name. I said. 'Does this
have anything to do with chcerteading?* because
It all kind of fell into place." Mrs. Heath said.
At first, prosectors said. Mrs. Holloway wanted
Amber and her mother killed or kidnapped, but
then settled on only Vema because she could not
afford to pay for both murders.
Mrs. Holloway, a homemaker from suburban
Channelvlew. was arrested Jan. 30 and has been
free on bond. If convicted, she could be sentenced
to life in prison.
Authorities say Mrs. Holloway hoped Amber
would be so upset about her mother's death she
would drop out of the next cheerleading competi­
tion. thereby improving Shanna's chances of
winning.
Prosecutors said Harper was on probation for
drunken driving when he was contacted by Mrs.
Holloway, and In turn contacted police because
he didn't want to tangle with the law again.
While Harper wore a hidden tape recorder, he
and Mrs. Holloway met to discuss the plan,
prosecutor Mike Anderson told the Jury in his
opening argument.
"On the tape she will talk about death and
suggest that Vema be kidnapped and sold Into
slavery." Anderson said. "You will hear her say.
‘I don't care what you do with her. I Just don't
want to see her In Channelvlew again."
Authorities also allege that Mrs. Holloway
offered an undercover officer — posing as a
hitman and referred by Harper — a pair of
diamond earrings worth 92.200 as collateral for
the killing, which would have cost 92.500.
"She was very concerned with the cost."
Anderson said.
But defense lawyer Troy McKinney said her
thrift was evidence she wasn't serious about the
crime. He said she and her husband are worth 92
million and routinely keep up to 97,000 In cash In
their house.
"Money would not have stood In her way." he
said.
McKinney said Harper, having learned of Mrs.
Holloway's disappointment about S h an n a's
cheerleading defeat, contacted her and said: *"l
can take care of that for you.' But Wanda said,
'That's crazy."'
Several times In the taped
conversation. Wanda demurred on the murder
plot, at one point saying. "Blow It ofll I don't want
to do It." McKinney said.
"Why would Terry Harper do this? Because he
was the black sheep In the family. His way to get
back in the good graces of his brother was to call
und say. 'I’ve got a way for you to get your
children back."
Tony Harper lost custody of his children In a
I960 divorce from Mrs. Holloway.
McKinney said a star witness would be Terry
Harper’s sixth wife, who would testify that the
two brothers were setting up Mrs. Holloway. She
also will testify that Harper told her he was
contacted by Mrs. Holloway but told her. '"No one
thought she was serious.'" McKinney said.

Legal Notice
Nonce or * m .iu rio a
roaraxocso
NOTICE It M i t t l f
GIVEN
A*r-« C v &gt; m
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toltowuig cart f tu r u &lt;« v«(
U 4 catt.fnatoH; air a Cm tmmt
&gt;o b* nwaC iiaraar
o »r-r.
c*ia
ara raw i»j tr
itwanca.
v *a
prepart;. an* *t» nam* a ) n
whxti li mm aaaaiaae a m n

Mtowt
CarMicat No II?
Vaarol liwanc* iff*
Datcnptlon o» Propart, LEG
LOT X BLK C BUNGALOW
c i t v p b ; p g «j
Namai in which naatta*
Jama* S Wright. Jama Wright
All ot ult proparty baing In
tha County ot Saminola. S'ata ol
Florida
Unit** tuch ctrtlllcAltl*)
shall ba radaomad according to
low. tha proparty dttcribod In
tuch ctrtilkoloU) will bo told
to tha htghttl biddar at tha watt
Iron! door. Saminola County
CourthouM. Sanlord. Florida, on
tha 10thday ot Saplambar |*»|
at II AM
Approalmatoly *115 00 cath
tor laat it rtpulrad to bo paid by
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Full poymant ol on amount
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laiat and recording too* It duo
within 24 hour* alter the

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Maryann*Marta
Cwra a?*• Circuit Court
Samama Ceiatty. Florida
• y TataM Taylor
DeputyCtor*
Pubtith A«ov»t V ASeptember
1.10.1?, tftl
DEI n?
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME S TA TU TE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice it hereby given that tha
underlined purtuant to the
“ Flclllievt Name Statute",
Chapter MS Of. will reglttor with
the S e c re ta ry o l S la la .
Tallahauaa. Florida, upon re
calpt ol proel ol publication el
mi* notke. Ihe lictiiieut name,
towll: J H CUSTOM DESIGNS
under which tha undertigned
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The portlet Intoratted In told
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Jamai K Heckett
Datod Ihlt 2ltt day of Augutt.
INI.
Publlth Augutt V. Iff I
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Clarence Scott, M.D. recently opened his new
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"Gone Fish'n" To Cress Run Fish'n

I

What doyoudow tth your watenrcM Held when
the watercreaa won't grow there anymore? Don
Weaver and Jerry Farley found a unique solution to
thetoprobfem. The farrows in the fields were deepened and widened, flooded and eventually filled
with 18.000 channel catfish.
That waa the beginning of Cress Run Fish'n
earlier this year. Flaney and Weaver own and operate the private catfish ponds, located off DeLeon
Street. Just north of State Road 434. In Oviedo.
Weaver la also the owner of Hippy's 1’nlch, n "UPick" strawberry patch, near the property where

catch has been a whopping 3 pounder. There to no
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swear the Ash are clean “when they come out of the
wsterT Once the flah are caught they can not be
released. In order to maintain the dtoease-fiee
status of the pond.
Weaver anticipates opening a "U-Plck* pumpkin
patch in mid-October and possibly aTJ-Plck” navel
oranges In November. The strawberry season, at
Pappy's Patch, should begin In early January.
loppy's Pitch and Wheeler Farms, also located
In Oviedo, are llte only active vegetable farms In

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“The second wave of summer releases turned
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"Doc Hollywood," a Michael J. Fox comedy,
was No. 2 over the weekend with 84.2 million.
Third was "Terminator 2: Judgment Day" with
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Hollywood summer.
The flyboy spoof was No. 1 for the fourth
straight week with 84.7 million, the lowest
weekend gross for a leading film all summer.
Exhibitor Relations Co. said Monday.
“The business does seem In a slump, but then
It has always been a rollercoaster ride." said
Exhibitor Relation’s John Krlcr. "I started as a
theater usher In 1024 and even then people were
saying. ‘We can’t go on with these dinky
pictures."’
Despite three summer films that have topped
8300 million ("Terminator 2: Judgment Day."
"R obin Hood. Prince of T hieves." "City
Slickers"), the year’s total theater take is down
from last year. Art Murphy of Dally Vurlety
calculated 83.01 billion for the first seven

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MOSCOW - President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
today dtocuaacd the future of the national
governm ent with the new m asters of the
once-mlghty Soviet empire, republic leaden
whose power to aurging with the collapse of
central authority.
Aa the presidents met In private, the national
Supreme Soviet legislature spent a second day
examining last week’s foiled hard-Une Commu­
nist coup. One lawmaker warned that hard-liners
In the military and KGB remain a threat.
Key posts remain vacant in the national
government, the Supreme Soviet has stripped Its
chairman of his post and the Increasingly
assertive republics arc paying scant attention to
Gorbachev's proposals for keeping them together.
Gorbachev met with Presidents Boris Yeltsin of
Russia. Askar Akayev of Kirghizia and Nursultan
Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan.
Akayev said the talks focused on at redefining
economic ties among all IS Soviet republics while
eliminating centra) control. He said other republic
leaden were not in Moscow today ana that
Gorbachev would probably speak to them by
telephone.
The talks were also expected to produce over
the next month a new draft of Gorbachev's
proposed Union Treaty, said Akayev, who since
last week’s coup has emerged as a spokesman for
the republics of Soviet Central Asia.
It seemed unlikely that all 15 republics would
accept the treaty, which aims to preserve the
union by shifting control of resources and
administration from the central government but
appears In serious Jeopardy.
Six republics already nave declared indepen­
dence and the legislature of a seventh. Moldavia,
convening today to pass an Independence
declaration.
An estimated 200,000 people gathered In the
Moldavian capital of Ktohlnlev to demonstrate In
favor of independence.
In the Supreme Soviet, a reformist army colonel
warned that "danger still exists” from hard-line
communists in the military and KOB.
Col. Vilen Martirosian claimed the KGB
chairmen of all the republics but Byelorussia had
supported the coup plotters.
“ People are afraid because they don't know
who defends them,” said Martirosian, a lawmaker
and infantry colonel who refused to Join the coup.
At M onday’s S u p rem e Soviet session.
Nazarbayev declared: "The moment of truth has
come today.” He proposed that “independence be
granted at once” to the Baltics and other
republics seeking to secede.
Reformist legislators demanded Monday the
dissolution of the Supreme Soviet, which was
silent last week during the three days of
uncertainty before the coup collapoed. The
legislature voted to convene Its parent Congress
of Peoples Deputies next Monday, with the
participation the republic presidents.
■After lawmakers1voted Monday to examine how
various government officials and agencies
behaved in' the face of the coup attempt.
Gorbachev tried to seize the initiative.
He offered early presidential elections and said
negotiations could begin Immediately on In­
dependence for any republics that refuse to sign
the treaty on preserving the union that he hus
long been pushing.
Gorbachev, who on Saturday resigned as
Communist Party chief and nationalized Its
assets, also proposed strong civilian control of the
military and the KGB and pledged to accelerate
economic reform.
The Soviet president, long criticized by re­
formers Tor delaying meaningful reform, told
legislators Monday that he is a changed man In a
changed land.
He said there would be no more hesitation In
Implementing reform.
But republic leaders told him he was too late.
"The Supreme Soviet has failed to understand
that the whole of the center has completely
outlived Itself. It Is dead. It committed suicide."
Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrostan told the
national legislature.
Western nations began forging diplomatic lies
with the Baltic republics of Lithuania. Latvia and
Estonia, which were forcibly annexed In 1940.
In the Latvian capital of Riga, residents
gathered up the few Danish (lags they could find
and mobbed the arriving Danish envoy. Olio
Borch. the first ambassador to the Baltics In a
half-century.
President Bush, speaking In Maine, said
Washington was close to recognizing Baltic
Independence. He said the upheaval In the Soviet
Union — capped by Gorbachev's resignation
Saturday us Communist Puny chief — hus
sounded the "death knell fur the Communist
movement around the world."
Ukraine and Byelorussia, which with Russia
comprise the country's Slavic heartlund. pro­
claimed independence over the weekend. Georgia
and the Baltics had previously declared In­
dependence and have for months moved deliber­
ately toward secession.
Uzbekistan's president. Islam Kurimov. on
Monday ordered the draft lug of a declaration of
independence and decreed that Soviet Interior
Ministry troops and the KGB in the republic be
trunsferred to ills control.
Armenia is to vole on independence on Sept.
21.

Even Gorbachev shifted sharply toward letting
the Baltic republics go free. "Immediately after
the Union Treaty Is signed, negotiations must fie
started with (host- who wish to leave Ihc union."
Gorbachev said.
It was the first lime he had publicly discussed
tlu- fate of those republics that refuse to sign the
treaty — and the first time he failed to demand
that they follow a Soviet law that mukrs secession
virtually Impossible.
Gorbachev was virtually alone tn the central
government's executive branch. The leading
figures of wfial had been bis administration are
under urrest or dead following (fie roup.
Tlu- Russian prime minister. Ivan Silayev. was
nominated Saturday to head a task force to
nominate a new Cabinet.
Among the first people on his fist was Andrei
Zveryev. from fils own economics staff In the
Russian parliament, to head the State Bank.
Gorbachev's old ullles were not necessarily
looking for work in the new government.

�■ M P W iw iii
t

•*

- S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S an fo rd, F lo rid a - T u e s d a y , A u g u it 27, 1991

Sanford to promote bond issue
Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD — Tuesday, October 8. 1991
naa been officially set for the S3.3 million
"porta complex bond referendum. The City
Is now organizing a campaign to get It
approved.
The proposal to be decided on by the
voters of Sanford will be approval for the

city to Issue general revenue bonds In the
amount of $3.3 million, to pay for a large
scale recreation facility project.
After the election date was established
during Monday night's Sanford City Com­
mission meeting. City Manager Bill Sim­
mons said. "Our next step Is to set up a
speakers bureau, with people who will go
out and meet with various clubs and groups
to discuss the overall plan." Simmons
suggested such speakers would Include

Parks Director Jim Jem tgan. Recreation
Director tylke Kirby, several additional city
staff members, and If possible, members of
the Commission.
If the referendum Is approved, the City
would be able to undertake a massive
program that would benefit Seminole High
School as well as area citizens. The most
expensive part of the proposal Is construc­
tion of a 26.580 square Toot community
center at Plnehurst Memorial Park.

Airport Chairman: finances ‘couldn’t be worse’
Harald Staff Writer

SANFORD — Members of the
Sanford Airport Authority told
city com m issioners Monday
night that the authority Is in
poor shape financially.
While the Airport's current
and 1991-92 budget were both
under discussion, no decisions
were made.
The primary subject of a work
session meeting earlier in the
evening centered on the present
1990-91 fiscal year. The Airport
was scheduled to pay the city
$60,000 for police and fire serv­
ices rendered. The money how­
ever, has not been paid. The
Joint meeting was scheduled to
determine how best to handle
the matter.
Airport Authority member BUI
Bush commented that the Au­
thority had agreed to pay money
for services In lieu of taxes. He
added however that "County
Tax Appraiser Bill Suber has
now sent tax bills to approxi­
m ately half the businesses
operating on airport property” .
The total amount reported was
said to be over $90,000. of which
the city Is expected to receive

$32,000.
Authority members explained
that the taxes were levied for
buildings in which the busi­
nesses operated, not for the land,
which Is the city property leased
through the Airport.
Airport Director Steve Cooke
explained that the money the
Authority has is needed for
matching funds. In order to
obtain various grants, especially
from the Federal Aviation Au­
thority. "In this coming year, we
are hoping for more Airport
Improvement Funds from the
FAA." he said, "an estimated
$1.2 million."
Chairman of the Authority.
Kay Shoemaker, explained,
"The problem we have now Is
that we couldn’t be In worse
shape financially. We are mak­
ing attempts to borrow more
money needed to construct new
buildings. In order to promote
the overall use of the airport."
He added he is concerned about
the amount of reserves being
dawn. “We are not trying to
avoid paying the m o n e y ."
Shoemaker said. "We Just don't
have the money. We need all the
help we can get to help promote
the Sanford Airport.

Mayor Bettye Smith suggested
finding out the exact amount of
money to be received from the
tax revenues from the airport
buildings. "Maybe we could look
on what the airport has agreed to
pay, and make the figure minus
what we will get from the ad
valorem taxes."
Commenting on the city 's
budget needs however. Commis­
sioner Whttey Eckstein said.
"We need that $60,000."
Shoemaker summed up the
feellns of the Authority. "We get
our revenues through only two
ways. We depend on the rent
from buildings, and the money
we make selling aviation fuel."
He suggested that with more
money available, the Authority

would be better able to obtain
grants which required matching
funds. "If we want to make this
airport go. we have to spend
money on marketing. Getting It
going Is the only way we can
bring In additional money from
these sources,” he added.
D uring th e re g u la r City
Commission meeting later In the
evening, no decision was made
on either a solution to the
$60,000 payment for the present
year, or the fiscal year 1991-92
budget. For this coming year,
the Airport has proposed reduc­
ing the amount In Its budget
from $60,000 to $10,000. The
airport plans to establish Its own
fire and police protection rather
than pay for City services.

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PEOPLE ITEMS
Items accompanied by pictures about the accom ­
plishments of children and adult residents of Seminole
County are eligible for publication. Submit typewritten or
neatly written items to People Editor, Sanford Herald,
300 N. French Ava., Sanford, F la 32771. Include name
and daytime phone number ol person w ho may answer
questions.

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ical area of downtown San­
ford.
He said. "! expect at least
several hundred residents will
be at the meeting to discuss
this serious problem." Howell
pointed out that he had al­
ready heard complaints from
residents who have received
C o u n t y t a x b ills w i t h
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The meeting will be held In
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SANFORD — More and
m ore re s id e n ts are com ­
plaining about high tax In­
creases. City Commissioner
Lon Howell has called a meet­
ing this Wednesday evening
to dtacuaa the the county
assessment If property.
H o w ell d is c u s s e d th e
planned meeting briefly dur­
ing the City Commission
meeting Monday night. He
said. "This Is not a com­
mission meeting. I’m doing It
on my own, a s the commis­
sioner representing the citi­
zens In district I.” Howell's
district Is basically the histor­

NEW KINDERGARTEN PROGRAM

t ie c r ilE r a
■

How ell calls meeting
on tax assessm ents

1a

Items about religious services or social activities
sponsored by achurch or synagogusin Seminole County
are eligible lor publication on the Religion Page each
Friday. Submit items nc later than noon W ednesday
prior to the day of publication to Religion Editor. Indude
the nam e and daytime telephone number of a person
who m ay answer questions.

RETURN PHO TO POLICY

How Do I Report A Nows Tip?
tt you sea something newsworthy, let us know. Call
the Herald and ask lor the news editor as soon as
i
possible.

Other Items Off Interest:
B U S I N E S S B R IE F S
Announcements ol 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 Bnets column.
Submit typewritten items to the Business Editor along
with a picture il appropriate and include the nama and
daytime telephone number ol a person who may be
contacted to answer questions. Th e deadline is noon
Wednesday prior to the Sunday of publication.
E N T E R T A IN M E N T
Organized events ol an entertainment, recreational or
leisure nature in Seminole County are publicized in the
Weekend Planner each Friday Th e deadline is noon
Tuesday prior to the Friday ol publication. Submit type­
written contributions to Weekend Planner.
C L U B , O R G A N IZ A T IO N N E W S
N ew s 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 il that is requested. A n 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 ol
publication il a request to save the picture has also been
submitted.

H ow Do I Announce A
W edding O r Engagement?
People wishing to have their engagement or wedding
announcement published in the Sanlord herald must
submit the appropriate form to the Sanlord Herald people
editor. Completed engagement forms m ust be submit­
ted at least 20 days prior to the wedding. W edding forms
should be submined as soon alter the wedding as
possible.
T h e 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 W eddings).
It desired, the completed forms may be accompanied
by a photograph (professional preferred) of any size to
be published in black and white with the announcement.
Th e newspaper reserves the right to reject any photo­
graph that it cannot reproduce.
Photographs may be picked up after publication or
can be returned by mail if accompanied with an S A S E .
Engagem ents and weddings are published in the
Sanford Herald Sunday edition of the People section.

If There A nything I Should
Knew About Writing Letters
To The Editor?
Letters to the editor are welcome. All lettara should b e
typewritten or written legibly, signed and include a
mailing address and a daytime telephone number. T h e
letters should be o n a single subject and should be aa
brief as possible. Lettara era subject to editing.

How Do I PI
Closdfiod Ad?
Simply call 322-2611 between the hours of 8:00 am to
5 3 0 pm Monday through Friday and one of our Classi­
fied Advisors will be happy to help you.

Con I Buy A Bock Issue Off
The Newspaper?
Back issues are available for up to one year prior to
currant 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 ew Can I Receive Home
Delivery?
Cell our Circulation Department at 322-2611 to find
out subscription rates. Also call this number if you
would lire your subscription service Interrupted (or
vacations.

To Place an ad in any other section of this newspaper,
call 322-2611 and ask for a Retail Advertising Represen­
tative. w holl help you in design, layout and wording of
any size ad you wish.

I Would Like 1b Earn Seme
Extra M oney As A
New spaper Carrier.
Our newspaper carriers are made up of all types ot
people of all ages, who anjoy being outdoors, meeting
friendly people and making extra cash. Stop in our off ice
at 300 N. French A va ., Sanford to fils your application.
W all notify you w han a home delivery route becomes
available in your a re a

t L.

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SanfordHerald
300 N. French Ave., Sanford, F L 32771
Phone (407) 322-2611

i #

�t
B M P H

TUESDAY

S a n f o r d H e r a Id

■ P bopIb, Pag* 3B

1 ClBBBiftodTPBQB 4B
■Comics, Pago 6B

Making minor adjustments
Moves should
help ’Noles
finals at Hgatltrow in long run
— The Olive Garden Sprint

.w n in n u ilf
Triathlon has been scheduled for Saturday.
Aug. 31, at Heathrow. The race will atari at 7:30
a.m. at the Heathrow Racquet Club.
Participants will compete In a 1/3-mlle swim,
a 12-mile bike ride and a three-mile run.
Awmrda for the winners In 14 different age
groups from 14-to-18 to SO-and-Over will be
presented Immediately following the event.
Individual registration for the event Is *30
through Friday, Aug. 30, and 135 on the day of
the race. Team entries of three people, each
competing In a single phase!of
&lt; the race, are B45
and 560. respectively. Early’ientries can be made
In person or by mall to Track Shack. 1332 N.
Mills Avenue. Orlando.
For more Information call 896-1160.

Valencia achadulas fund-raisor
ORLANDO — The Valencia Community Col­
lege Athletk Department Is sponsoring the
second annual "M atador 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 tee off at 2 p.m.
The entry fee ts 565 per person.
For more Information, contact VCC Athletic
Director Don Rutledge at 299-5000, ext. 1408.

SunRays spilt with Bravss
ORLANDO — Alfred Lopez and Jose Olmcda
each drove In a run to lead the Greenville Braves
to A 6-2 win Monday over the Orlando SunRays
In the nightcap of a doubleheader.
Orlando won the first game 15-3.
In the second game. Greenville's Scott Taylor
(3-3) recorded the win after six Innings, whtlc
Alan Newman (4-4) waa the loser.
In the opener. Orlando's Jay Kvafnlcka was
2-for-3 with a three-run homer and four RBI.
Teammate Derek Park was 2-for-4 with a double
and four RBI.
Orlando's Rusty Richards (7-5) worked five
I innings for the win.

Htrald 8ports Editor

SANFORD — Just because some­
thing Isn't broken doesn't mean It
doesn't need fixing.
The last two years, the Seminole
High School football program has
been very successful, winning two
district championships (falling an
extra point short of doing It three
years in a row) and twice finishing a
close second In the Sem inole
Athletic Conference race.
But this summer, head coach
Emory Blake knew he had a pro­
blem that. If not addressed, would
eventually spell the end of that run
of success.
The problem had two parts. Blake
needed someone to coach the
freshman team, someone who was
on staff full-time at Seminole. But
he was unable to bring In anyone
new because of a lack of teaching
positions available at Seminole.
As It turned out. the answer waa
much simpler than the problem.
Greg Register. Blake's defensive
coordinator on the varsity team the
last two years, will coach the
freshmen this year while BUI Berry
will take over the Tribe varsity
defensive unit.
"When I had to make those
adjustments to the staff, I waa
fortunate to have people like Coach
Register and Coach Berry who have
a lot of experience In those areas,"
said Blake. "Coach Register was the
head coach of the freshman team
before he w as the d efen siv e
coordinator and Coach Berry waa a
h e a d c o a c h a t C le a r w a te r □I

*

Qiug Register an d Bill Barry ham hatpad Sam inola build a reputation a s a solid dafanshra taam.

Preseason over
for g ym nasts

' Suns, Chicks split tf deuca
-•■JACKSONVILLE — John Toak hit a sacrifice
fly In the seventh Inning to lift Memphis to a 5-4
win Monday as the Chicks split a doublcheader
with the Jacksonville Suns.
Jacksonville won the opener 3-1.
In the first game, Jacksonville's Kerry
Woodson (4-5) carried a no-hlttcr until a double
by George Wright In the sixth Inning.
In the nightcap. Memphis led 4-0 after two
Innings but Jacksonville rallied to tic the score
on a three-run homer by Frank Bollck and an
RBI single by MarkCzarkowskl.

COLLBQB FOOTBALL
Spurrier Gators unimpratsiva
GAINESVILLE — Florida Gators quarterback
Shane Matthews nursed a sore shoulder during
Monday’s practice, and coach Steve Spurrier
continued to be disappointed with his team's
offensive performance.
Matthews, last year’s Southeastern Confer­
ence player of the year, was hurt In a scrimmage
Saturday and saw limited action Monday.
Spurrier continued to be unimpressed with
the offense, especially the second team.
"It was nothing exciting.” Spurrier said. “It
wasn't encouraging on the offensive side. The
second team could barely execute the centerquarterback exchange."

AUTO RACING
Rudd gaining on Earnhardt
DAYTONA BEACH — Ricky Rudd has moved
to within 60 points of Winston Cup points leader
Dale Earnhardt as the circuit moves to the site
of Rudd's last victory.
With nine races remaining In the season.
Rudd now trails Earnhardt. 2.905 points to
2.935. The difference could be as few as 13
finishing positions In a single race.
"And now we're heading (o a speedway where
we ran really well and won back in April, and a
speedway where Earnhardt has run rcully well
In the past." said Rudd, who ts looking for Ills
first national championship. "It ought to Ik*
Interesting."
Darlington (S.C.) Raceway hosts Sunday's
Southern 500. NASCAR's oldest superspeedway
race and one Earnhardt has won three of the last
four years. Darlington's last Winston Cup race.
April's TranSouth 500. was won by Kudd.

B U T BETS ON TV
BASEBALL
L 10:30 p.m. — ESPN, Boston Knl Sox at
Oakland Athletics. (L)
Comp le te llsttnp on F a p e SB

WINTER PARK — Every sport has Its own form
of preseason. Baseball has spring training, high
school football has Jamborees and youth gym­
nastics has the Judges Cup.
Hosted by the National Association of Women's
Gymnastic Judges at the Brown's Gymnastics
facility In Winter Park this weekend, the Judges
Cup Is to help break In new Judges under the
guidance of experienced Judges to Insure uniform
Judging standards during the season.
While Brown's Central of Altamonte Springs all
but swept its portion of the meet, the basic goal
of the meet for the competitors was to work out
some of the kinks. Towurds that end, each
gymnast was given u critique of her Individual
performance to let them know what they need to
work on.
The season begins In two weeks with a local
uuliflcr on Sept. 7 and K at Suntwlsters in
rlando. At that meet and those that follow,
young gymnasts will be trying to qualify for a
tK'rih In (he state championship meet, which Is
scheduled for Nov. 23-24.
Between now and then. Brown's Central and
other teams will participate In u meet almost
every weekend. One of the highlights of the
season Is the Orlando Invitational at Lake
Brantley High School on Oct. 12-13. which will
Ik* attended by (cams from all over Florida as
well as from Ohio. Michigan and Georgia.
At the Judges Cup tills weekend, the level V
and VI girls from Brown's Central competed
against Central Florida teams TNT Gymnastics
and Park Avenue Gymnastics as well as Eagle
Gymnastics from Coral Springs In four events:
the vault, uneven bars, balance beam and floor
exercise.
For this meet, first through third pluces were
awarded In each Indlvldal event hut there were
rS e « O ym aastlca. Page 2B

a

Are you getting reedy?
If y o u 're g o in g to play In any of the Sanford
R e cre a tio n D e p a rtm e n t's fall a d u lt softball
le a g u e s , y o u 'd be w e ll a d v is e d to sta rt
p reparing now . W ith play sch e d u le d to begin

the w e e k of Sept. 9, you have le ss th a n two
w eeks before yo u 'll be throwing y o u r body
a round like J im N u lty of Regency M a zd a (left)
and th e W re c k in g C re w 's Stacy Bilz (s lid in g ).

Miami signs Galbreath,
waives Krauss, 11 others
BySTBVBMWINB
A P S p o rts W riter______________________

MIAMI — The Miami Dolphins
settled a contract dispute with
guard Harry Galbreath and released
12 other players Monday, Including
veteran Inside linebacker Barry
Krauss.
The addition of Galbreath left the
Dolphins with six unsigned players,
all starters last year. Galbreath has
starred all but five games In his
three-year career. Terms of his deal
were undisclosed.
Mure roster moves will be made
before the season opener Sunday at
Buffalo. Monday’s cuts lo meet Ihc
NFL limit of 47 players left Miami
with Just seven offensive linemen
and one light end. free agent
Charles Henry.
Beginning Tuesday. NFL players
placed on Injured reserve can return
in lour weeks Instead of being

required to miss the rest of the
season. If the Dolphins make such
moves, some of the players they
released Monday might be re­
signed.
Miami also might sign players
released by other teams, coach Don
Shulasald.
"The final decisions are going lo
be made Tuesday." Shula said.
Veterans released along with
Krauss Included corner back Paul
Lankford, tight ends Greg Daty and
Eric Slcvers. receiver Andre Brown,
defensive end Donnie Gardner and
offensive linemen Dave Zawutson
and Jack Linn.
Rookies released were tackle
Ernie Rogers, renter Darren Handy,
defensive end Joe Brunson and
linebacker Murk Sander
Krauss. ul 34 Ihr oldest Dolphin,
was trying to come back from a
knee Injury that forced him to miss
See Dolphins. Page 2 B

Peebles among 11 cuts
made by Tampa Bay
By FRED QOOOALL
AP S p o rts W rite r

TAMPA — Wide receiver
Danny Peebles, a 1989 secondround draft pick who never
played up to expectations, and 10
others were waived Monday as
the Tam pa Buy Buccaneers
trimmed lire active roster to tire
o|K*nliigday limit of 47 players.
Fourteen newcomers survived
the linal cutdown. Including
eight dralt picks anti five rookie
free agents, and couch Richard
Williamson said he's comfortable
wllb tin- squad that will begin the
season against the New York .Jets
on Sunday.
"1 don't think you ever get to
this point with the -17 players you
want to have because injuries are
always going to In- a factor.” the

coach said.
"And sometimes you start July
with some guys you think will be
there hut don't have a good
cam p." he added "And some
guys will have a belter eatnp
than you expect.”
The decision to release Peebles,
a former truck star at North
Carolina Stare who caught 17
p a s s e s in two Injury-filled
seasons, was lhe most inter­
esting. It left the Burs with only
lour wide receivers and means
running back Gary Anderson will
Ik- used In situations where a fifth
wide receiver Is needed.
"It got down lo a numbers
game and Anderson's availability
lo Ire a tilth wide receiver." said
W illiamson. "O ur llfth man
hasn't been used a whole lot.
See Buccaneers, Page 2B

FOR THE BEST COVERAGE OF SPORTS IN YOUR AREA, READ THE SANFORD HERALD DAILY

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T A T S &amp; STANDINGS
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freshmen, Greg wee the only one
w ith e s p e rle n c e c o a c h in g
freshmen. And M L w ho wan a
head coach at Countryside, has
worked with Oreg coaching the

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freshmen team B tatn n lcd y with
what wffl be an extrem ely buoy
year far him.
" I e n jo y c o a c h in g th e
freshmen.1’ said Register, who
alao happens to coach th e gtrla'
varsity softball team In th e
spring. "This Is going to work
out Just fine. I’m also teaching
trigonometry and algebra this
year and I’ll be getting married
In January. It’ll work out real

no all-around award*.
In the competition at Level V,
Brown’s Central team members
grabbed 11 of the top 12 posi­
tions In the four event*.
Leading the Brown’s Central
Level V squad waa Brandy
Oglesby of Atlamonte Springs,
who won the balance beam with
a score of 8.80 (on a 10-point
■calc) and finished second In
both the vault (8.2) and floor
exercise (8.89).
Stephanie Hood and Hope
Hollkamp of Longwood and
Winter Springs’ Aaryn Munson
each scored in two events. Hood
won the vsult (8.3) and tied for
second with Beth-Ann Crow of
Euatia In the uneven bars (9.10).
Hollkamp was second In the
balance beam (8.8) and third on
the uneven bars (8.05) while
Munson waa second in the floor
exert *c (8.65) and third on the
balance beam (8.4).
Sanford’s Lisa Whitlow won
the uneven bars (9.25) while

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Tarante*. BoHWworot
Korns* City 7. Chicago!
Bitten l Oakland 9

Detroit LCailtemial
SaaHla s. Mitwouko* a. u te n * *
Taasa (C

MUiSym.

Taranta (Gutman 4 1) at Saltlmara
(SkadMM). 7:33 p.m.
Mlnnaaata (Marrlt 1S-9) at Ctoveland
(Swindell M l), 7:33pm.
Chicago (Alvorot 1-1) at Kanaaa City
(AautnaSa). 9:33 p.m.
laaten (Oardlnar &gt;«) at Oakland IWateit
US&gt;.
Datrait (Corvttl 3 4) a* California (Fintey
197). MTSpm
Mltetaukaa (Augutl M ) at Saattte ID*
Lucia IM ). M:3Sp.m.
&gt;(M.Vaunt 34) at Oakland (Stewart
91),1:11a.m.
Datrait (Oullkkaan 194) at Calllarnla
(Akkatt IS!). 4:03 p.m.
Taiaa IBahanan &gt;01 at Maw York (Taylor
4-7).7:»p.m.
Toronto (Carteloti I 1911) at Baltlmora
(McDonald 37). 7:11 a-**.
Mlnnaaata (Andaraan 4 !) at Cleveland
(King 3-7). 7:33pm.
Chicago IHISbord 91!) ot Konaaa City
(Aaater 19*1, •:&gt;! am .
Mllwaukto (Navarro 11*1 at Soaltlo
(Holman 1911), 10:93 p.m.
NATIONAL LIASUI
Ea*l Otvteten
« L Pet. •a
Pltteburgh
73 SI 70S —
SI. Lout*
4# ss U3 4
Chicago
43 43 .NO low
Now York
41 43 .4*3 nw
Philadelphia
40 44 .404 IIW
Montroal
39 73 .497 »
WottDIvMon
W L Pet.
OB
Lo* Angola*
49 SS S34 —
Atlanta
49 S4 -549 1
Cincinnati
41 43 .4*1 9
SanOtego
41 44 .499 •W
San Francteco
40 44 .494 *
Houttan
SI 73 .411 19
Monday's Gamas
Cincinnati L Philadelphia 4
San Ditto 7. Plttoburgh 3. M Inning*
Atlanta 14. Mantraal *
Lao Angatet A Chicago 1
SI. Louis 7. San Francltco *
Now York A Houttan A 10 Inning*
Tvotdoy't Oomot
Lao Angates (Mart In*i 1511 al Chicago
(Cecillia 4-3). 3:30 p.m.
San Dingo (Bonos 11) ol Pittsburgh (Smith
I l-*l. 3:09 p.m.
Philadstphla IRuttin &gt;4) al Cincinnati
(Scuddar44).7:lSpm
M antraal (Nabholi 7 4) al Atlanta
(Latbrandt n i l ) . 7:4Sp m.
Now York (Whitehurst I f ) at MomIon
(Kite 9 !), 1:11 pm.
San Pranclico (turkatt p*| al Si Lout*
(Towkabury9*).!:lSpm
ay's Gama*
Mantraal (OoMartln*&lt; 171 ) at Cincinnati
(Browning 19!). 733 pm.
Houston (towon &gt;1) ol Philadelphia
(Mulholland li lt). 7:33pm.
Now York (Viola 11-11) ol Atlanta (Giavina
191). 7:40 p m

San Otago (Hurst 14!) at St. Lout* (Dalton
99l.91lp.in.
Chicago (Btelockl 119) Pt San Francisco
(McCtoilanX). MOSp.m.
Pittsburgh (Drabak 1911) at Las Angola*
(OfedeM). I!: 15p m.

J H a y 1 — Natan Syan. Toaaa v*. Taranta.

BASIBALL

M p y a —Tammy Oroana. Phllatelphla v*.

CALIFORNI a" ANM LS*

July 11 - Sob Milackl. Mika
M ark W llllamM n and G r a f t Olaan,
Sattbnaray».0skHndl&gt;t.
July U — a Mark Oardnar. Mantraal n .
Laa Angola*. 99.
July m - y Derail* MarMnot. Mantraal « t
Laa Antateo.39.
Aug. It — Wilton Alvorot. Chkofa vs.
Baltt«nora.7-ti
Aut- M - Srot takarkapw. Kama* City
vs. Chlcap. 7-9
i Oardnar altewod two hits In Nia Itlh
Inninf and woo lha letlng pitcher In tho
»'1-0 victory,
yportect aama.

M M O tlS O PADRIS -

Find

Placad Larry

l ~14-*---M
^ »« -*---i Wav R W l * S W y
r.w
Dank LHk
Llllapuiot.
Vogaa ot Rio Pacific
ISctCant
BASKIT BALL
flltin W

C H ICAGO BUL L ! - S igned B ill
Carhorlght, canter, ta alhrowyoar contract.
FOOTBALL

ATLANTA FALCONS - Waived Scan
C a m p b e ll a n d O llb a r t R o n f r o a ,
quarterback*; Rich KarllA ptecaklckar;
Mika Prlngte. running back! Randy Austin
and Rich Bartlawtkl. light andu Oscar OitoA
d ato n slv a linem an; Ooargo Koonco.
Mott rscant no-hitters by team with pitcher Ilnahacker; Kart Millar and Mika William*,
wide rscalvan; Brian Mltchall. carnarboch;
or pitetters, aggonont, acars and d ill:
Jay Pannlaan. ottenalva linaman; and J «
AflWHCMIIdMflM
Sima datenolva tackle.
Battlmara - Sab Milackl (* Intents).
CNICAGO B IA S ! - Walvad Olon
0 ). Mark Wllllamaan It)
G raft Olaan (I) vs. Oakland. 9 9 July 13. I**1 Kostewskl and Jamas Cotey. tight snds; Paul
u stin , g u artsrb ach i Mlckoy P ru itt.
“* Days Morshaad. vaiCte
Ctevolan9 JIlnabochor;
Tam Bockn and Mika Hutar,
1-9 Sagt. IA l«SI
attanslvo
linaman; Krlc Wright, Tam Waddto
Calltomla — Mark Langs ten (7 Innings)
* Mika Witt (1 ). vs Saattte. 19 April 11. and Nlgte Cadrlngten. wide raceIvor*; Jamas
Latt and John Hardy, carnsrbachA
CINCINNATI BENGAL* - Waived Stan
CMcagp — Wilton Alvaros, va Baltlmora.
79. Aug. 11.1*91
Clavoland —a Lan ta rta r, va Taranta. 9 9
Craig
May 111*11
Detroit — Jack Marrte, at O lu g a. 4 9
April 7.1*94
Kansas City — Brat Sabarhagan. va detent!v* and; Richard Fain, comorhoch;
Rick Trumbull, ottemlv* tackle; and Joo
ChicagA 79, August 34. t**1
and Famandu* Vinson, tatetias.
Ml Iwauka* — Juan MtevaA va Saltlmaro. King
CLIVILAMO BROWNS - Waived Derrick
79. April 191*97
and Archie Herring, running bock*;
Mlnnaaata — Doan Chanco. at Clavoland. Gainer
Tom Glbaon and Grog Mark. dttenUvo and*;
7-1. Aug. H l*S7
Thornton, dotemlv* tackle; David
Now York — Andy Hewklm. at Chicago. Jim
Crayton and Eddl* Johntan. Ilnobackar*;
9 A July I.IHO
Bon Jottertan. Kevin Rabbin* and Gragg
Oakland — Oavo Stewart, at Taranto. 9 9 Rakaciy, ottenaiv* linaman; Voraan Join**
Junol*. lfW
Tyrone Shaven, arid* rocoivor*; and
Soaltte-Randy Johnson. Datrait. 19. Juno and
Robert Lyons, lately. Placad Brian Groon1.1*9!
Toaao — Nolan Ryan, va Toronto. 3 9 May lietd. punter; Mark Harper, camarback; and
Ray Irvin. datensJv* keck, an injured re­
t.1f*1
Toronto — Oavo St1*0, at Clavoland. &gt;9 serve. Placed Thane Gaah. lately, and John
Talley
and Lawyer Tillman, tight andA an lha
Sapt. 1.1*19
r**ervo-phy«ically unabte to perform 11*1.
OALI At COWBOY* - Waived Clift Stoudt
Atlanta - Phil Ntokro. va San Diego. * 9
and Bill Mu*gravo. quarterback*; Vinca
Aug. A 1*71
Cincinnati — ■ Tom Browning, va Los AlbrlHon and Sian Smagaia. totetto*; Jama*
Olaan and Derrick Shepard, arid* rocoivor*;
AngtteA 19. Sopl. IA 1*99
Reginald Warmtley. fullback; Odto HarrlA
Chicago - Mill PappOA va San Dtoga. 9 9 datentlvo
back; FrodNa Chlldrou and Mika
Sapt. 1.1*71
Houston — Mika Scott, va San Francisco. SuUlvan. attentive linaman; Craig Hudaon.
light and; and Jam** RkhardA altemlv*
1 9 S ap t.il, I(04
guard. Placad Doan Hamel. d»tentlv* tackle,
Lot Angates — Famands Vatoniuala. va on
Injured roiervo.
St. LouIa 4 9 Junal*. l**0
DBNVER BRONCOS - Waived Kevin
Mantraal — a Donnls Martinas, at Las Clark,
camarback; Marcu* Hapkln* and Kip
AngateA 19. July 19 1**1
Carrington, dttansivo backs; Scott Curtl* and
Now York —Nona.
Murray. Ilnabackart; David Galloway.
Phlladalphla — Tammy Croatia, vs. Mark
Andr* Townland. Jim Srymantkl and Don
Montroal. 9 9 May 33. l**l
dttansivo linaman; Keith Jennings,
Pittsburgh - John Candtearla. va Las Glbaon.
light and; Barry Johntan. wide receiver.
AngtteA 19. Aug. *. 1*74
Shawn Moore, quorterbock; and Iron!
St. Louis — Bob Fonch. va Montroal. 9 9
Parklnton. attentive linaman
Seat.34.tia
DETROIT LION* - Waived Jam** Wilder
San Dtoga—Nana.
San Francltco — John Mentetutco. at and Don Overton, running bock*; Rick
Andrew*, placakickor; Mark Brawn,
Atlanta. * 9 Sogl. 1*. 1*7*
linebacker; Mark Duckans. datentlvo and;
* ported gam*
Eddie Grant, canter; Gary Hadd. datentlvo
tackle; Herb Welch and Chris Oldham,
d*tonalvo bock*; Caesar Rentto. ottentivo
tackle; Darak Tannall. tight and; and Derrotl
Wallace. Frank Pillow and Robert Claiborne.
97.MwlRlosU.9l
NEW YORK (API - Result* Monday ot lha wide receivers
GREEN BAY PACKER* - Agreed to
17.1J million U S. Open at Rio National Tennis
terms with Chris Jack*, ptecaklckar. Waived
Canter (aooteng* In poranR&gt;o*o»&gt;:
Anthony Dllwag. quarterback; Bill Ard.
ottentivo guard; and Mark La*. Tiger Green*
and Vantton Donation. Retentive backs.
First
HOUSTON OILER* - Waived Terry
Michael Chong. Placentia, Colli.. Set. Mark
Woodford*. Australia. 9 9 4 9 97; Jakob Klnerd and John Hagy. taNtte*. Gerald
McNeil,
kick returner; Rtggi* Slack,
Hlasak. Swlttorlond. dot. Roberto Ator.
Argentina. 9 9 7 9 43; Oarrkk Rostagno. quarterback; Eric Norgerd. canter; and
ScoH Thome* and Joey Banov ottentivo
Pacific Pallied**. Calif , d tf Patrick Beur.
Germany. 4 9 4 9 4 9
Jonas Svtntaen. Saradan. dal Andrei
Cherkasov (III. Soviet Union. 74 (79). 4 9
41; Rodoiph* Gltbort. Franco, dal Jared
Palmar. SeMtobroak. 41. 4 9 47. 19 74
1741; Aaron Krickkteln. Groat* Point*.
Mich . dal Andre Agassi (I). Lea Vagal. 7 9
74(7 71.41.
MaiiVai Washington. Swerti Croak. Mich .
dal. Jaima One ini. Brasil. 4 9 4 9 41; Todd
Wltikan. Carmel. Ind. dot. Vail Palohalmo.
Finland. * 9 &gt;7.44. 41; Lula Matter, train,
dat. Rick laach. Laguna Beach. Calif . * 9

14.70(17 101.47
Jaima Yiege. Paru. dal. Tim Mayotte.
Bradaoteo. 7 9 7 9 7 9 John McEnroe (M l.
Haw York. dat. Glenn Layandackar. Beaton.
4 4. 4 3. 4-1; Goran Ivanltovlc 111).
Yueotlavla. dat Henrik Holm. Saradan. *7

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS - Signed Bubba
Parte, ottentivo lockl*. Waived Jam**
Brodtey and Darvoll Huffman, wide r*
calvort; Howard Grltfllk and Brian Lai
timor*. running back*; Cedric Figaro. Frank
GianoHi and Walter Johnion. linebacker*;
Rob Luadaka. canter; Chrlt Conlin. Pat
Cunningham. Phil Potdarac and Oarln
Shouldart. ollontlv* lineman; Georg*
Straotar. d t tenlive back; and Robert Tyler.
tight and
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - Waived Mlko
Elkin*, quarter back; Mika Ball, datentlvo
and. Bobby Oilv* and Willi* Davit, wide
receiver*. Oarrall Melon*, cornorback;
Ricky Shaw, linebacker; Patrick Swoop**,
not* tackle; and Danla Whllakar. light and.
plut live unidentified player*

Blake. "If yoif can do that and
win at the Junior varsity and
freshman level a t the sam e time,
that's great. But the ultimate
gba) la to build the program ."

Gymnasticswall

IC arV tk te
JCaarlJwdS*

lose players come up the bne.
’ll be a lot easier on the vanity
Mches.”
That’s exactly w hat Blake had
t mind when he made the
mydf
"The ultim ate goal la to build

Heather Wolken of Longwood
and Lake Mary’s Megan Roth
finished In a tie for third in the
vault (8.15).
The Steinberg twins. Shanna
and Mlkara. of Winter Park led
the Brown’s Central aquad in the
Level VI competition.
Mlkara placed In three events,
finishing In a tie for first with
Jessies Sm ith of Atlamonte
Springs in the uneven bsra
(8.30) and placing second in
both the vault (9.06) and floor
exercise (8.70). Shanna won the
vault (9.25) and waa second on
the uneven bars (8.95).
Smith and Maitland’s Lan I
Higgins algo placed In two
event* apiece. Smith finishing
second In the floor exercise
(9.10) to go with her share of
first In the uneven bars while
Higgins won the balance bekm
(8.80) and finished third In the
floor exercise (8.60).
Llnnea S p e a rs of W inter
Springs came In second In the
balance beam (8.50).

.^igMsSrzsw#aC5r Buccsnoors*

w nrS tr

C9M tia«s4frss* I B

Jo* Johnton and Walter Stanley. wide
receiver*; Darryl Grant and Tracy Rocker,
attentive tack tea; Kan Whteonhunt, Oannla
Ranaom and Jama* Jankln*. tight and*;
Sidney Johntan and Jimmy Spencer, dotonalv* back*; Clartnc* Vaughn, tatety; and
Mark AdkkeA ottemlv* guar9

MOCXIY
HARTFORD WHALERS - Acquired Paul
Fonten. toft wing, tram Ike Calgary Flam**
ter future canilMraflan*.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF* - Signed
Peter Zaiti. canar; Daniel Maroiv right
wing, and Tad! Gill, dttenaoman.
iM f C*Mt Micfcty U m m
BOANOKE VALLEY REBEL* - Signed a
working agreement wlte lha Calgary F lama*.
SOCCER
Mto*&gt;r Soccer ipggg*

BALTIMORE BLAST - Signed Doug
Nooly. detenoaman. to a one year contract.
DALLAS SIDEKICKS - Nomad l*k Matey
goneral manager.

BASEBALL

7:JB pm — M. Ttaa* Ranger* at Now
York Yankee*. (L)
7:30 pm — ESPN. Toronto Blue Jay* at
Baltimore Ortote*. ID
7:35 pm — TBS. Monteal Eipo* at Atlanta
Bravo*. (LI
• 3S p m - WGN. Chicago White So* at
K.C. Royal*. IL)
9 30 p m - WOR. New York Mat* at
Houttan Astro*. (LI
to J l p m — ESPN. Batten Rad Sea at
Oakland A'*. (LI
OLYMPIC SHOWCASE
17:30 a m. —WESH l IAAF World Track 4
Field Champlonihtpi
TENNIS
7 03 p.m. — USA. U S. Open. (L). *l*o at I

am.

13:01a m. —WCPX4 US Open Highlight*

BASEBALL

7 0S pm - WHOOAM (HOI. Southern
league. Graonvllte Bravo* al Orlando Sun
Ray*
MISCELLANEOUS
4 lOp m - WWN2 AM (740). SporteTalk

When we get to the
fifth guy. we think Gary can do
that.”
Others released Included run­
ning backs John Harvey. Bruce
Perkins and Jam ie Lawton,
quarterback Pat O’Hara, wide
receive™ Chris Ford and Terry
Anthony, linebacker Maurice
Oliver, defensive linemen Al
Chamblec and Robb White, and
offensive lineman Carl Bax.
Defensive bocks Daryl Reed
(knee) and Eric Everett (hand)
were placed on Injured reserve.
Newcomers include Plan B free
a g e n t a c q u is itio n W illiam
Frizzell, who’s expected to start
at free aafety against the Jets,
an d rookie fullback C huck
Weatherapoon. a ninth-round
draft pick who was signed last
week after he waa released by
the Eagles.
Eight Tampa Bay draft choices
m aade the team — offensive
tackle Charles McRae (first
round), fullback Robert Wilson

(third), wide receiver Lawrence
Dawsey (third), safety Tony
Covington (fourth), offensive
lineman Tim Ryan (fifth), de­
fensive lineman Rhett Hall (six­
th), linebacker Calvin Tlggle
(seventh) and safety Marty
Carter (eighth).
Rookie free agents stUI with
the club are Weathcrmpoon. de­
fensive bocks Glenn Rogers and
Dole Joseph, running back Rob­
ert Hardy and Maurice Crum, a
first-team All American at Miami
who was not drafted because of
his size.
The Bucs arc still In the
market for help on the defensive
line. Preseason efforts to acquire
Lee Williams from the Chargers
and Dexter Manley from the
C ardinals fell th ro u g h , but
Williamson had his eyes on the
waiver wires Monday.
"I don’t know If you can ever
say this is the final 47.” he said.
"Obviously we’re going to be
looking to upgrade wherever we
can."

Dolphins------C o g tla s M tn m IB

last season.
He was beaten out by two other
veterans. Mike Relchenbach and
CUfl Odom.
" I'he toughest decisions 1 have
to make are always with veter­
ans that have contributed to the
success we’ve had in the past."
Shula said. "Barry Krauaa and
Paul Lankford are two people
like that."
K rauss. who grew u p In
nearby Pompano Beach, said
he’ll likely retire and move back
to Indianapolis, where he played
for five seasons.
"To come back here and play
for Coach Shula and the team I
Idolized as a kid has been a
dream come true.” he said.
Baty was not so u p b e at,
perhaps because he had been
working with the first team and
still was cut for the ninth time In
his five-year career.
"I Just don't want to talk.” he
told reporters.
Injured safety Llflort Hobley
was placed on the reserve physi­
cally unable to perform list,
which means he's eligible to be
activated after the sixth week of
the regular season.

Among those surviving the
cuts were six 1901 draft picks.
Including ninth-round choice
Scott Miller, a receiver-punt re­
turner from UCLA. Miller edged
out Brown, who caught five
touchdown passes as a rookie In
1989.
"Now I've Just got to gel
prepared for the real world."
Brown said.
The player beating the longest
odds to make the team was
rookie free a g e n t Mike laquanlcllo. a free safety who
Intercepted a pass and forced a
fumble In Saturday’s final preseason game against New Or­
leans.
“There seems to be one every
year." Shula said of laquaniello's
longshot success. "At this time,
he's right In the thick of things."
Making the team for an U th
season was u tlllty m an Jim
Jensen, whose future had been
In doubt when training camp
started. Jensen. 32. said he
hadn't been nervous about his
fate.
"Maybe next year 1 will be."
he said.

&lt;

�tr\

t o t f o i d H e ra ld . S a n fo rd , Flo rid a * T u e s d a y , A u g u s t 27, i t t l -

. . .

m

E?

Dead wife’s memory haunts romance
la falling
print It

It heredity or environment?

Sanford Khwoli to hovo luno9i
Sanford Klwanis Club meets at noon Wednesday at the
Sanford Civic Center for hmcbeon and program.

9MiTora upnmtsts vo m wi
Sanford Optimist Chib meets at noon each Wednesday at
Shoneys. Sanford. Anyone Interested la Invited to attend or call
Bud Tobin at 322-7800.

9

Jaycoos moot
The Sanford Jaycees meet the second and fourth Tuesday of
each month. Anyone Interested In attending can call Brent
Adamson or David T. RuaslJr. a t 322-3083.

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

Ovoraatars to Qithar
A regular meeting of Overeaten Anonymous is conducted on
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Florida Power and Light. 301 Myrtle
Ave., Sanford. For more information, call Carol at 3224)667.

' T O M chapters to moot about eating
Take Off Pounds Sensibly Chapter FL 79 will meet Tuesday
at 6:15 p.m. at Howell Place. 200W. Airport Bhrd.. Sanford.

Nar-Anon to offer help
Nar-Anon. a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, wtll meet Tuesday a t 8 p.m. at Orlando General
Hospital. For more Information, call869-6364.

OBAB TRTDKk That battle
has been going on for a long
time, but I m Inclined to be on
the side of environment.
BBAB PATRICIA! This prayer
AU kids need d iscip lin e.
("Discipline" does not mean has been around since the In­
p u n i s h m e n t ! t t m e a n s vention of the three-way mirror,
"teaching.") Kids need to know and here It Is:
bow far they can go. And they CALORIE COUNTER'S PRAYER
The Lord la my shepherd I
don't really want everything
shall not want.
they ask for.
her "think It over," but our son
He maketh me lie down and do
Reward them when they’re
Is trying to talk her Into going good, and deprive them of some­ push-ups.
through with the wedding on the thing they enjoy when they
He glveth me sodium-free
scheduled date.
bread.
misbehave.
He restoreth my waistline.
Her parents are no help at all
1 don't believe In hitting a
He leadeth me past the refrig­
and are pushing for the wedding child. A Uttle slap on the wrist
as planned because they would (Just enough, to hurt his dignity) erator for mine own sake.
like to get this spoiled, flighty Is all right. However, hitting a • He maketh me to partake of
girl married and out of the child hard enough to hurt him green beans instead of potatoes.
house. Also, they are very fond physically may rid you of your
He leadeth me past the pizze­
of our son.
hostilities, but it will only teach ria.
What should we do?
Yea. though I walk through
the child that violence Is the
the bakery.
answer to all conflicts.
I shall not falter, for thou art
_______________11agree with
Don’t ever tell a child he's
your minister. I would give the "bad." U he misbehaves, tell with me:
bride all the time she needs to him you do not like what he did;
Thy diet colas they comfort
think it over. There are worse don't tell him you don't like him.
me.
things than a late wedding. And
Thou prepares! a diet for me In
Olve a child lots of love, and
one of them Is an early divorce.
when he comes to you with a the pretence of mine enemies.
Thou anolntest my lettuce
confession, don't be too hard on
with low-cal oU.
DBAR ABBYi 1 know the him.
My cup will not overflow.
libraries are full of books on the
Surely Ry Krlsp and D-Zerta
subject, but you seem able to put
ft Five or six years
so much Into a few words. What ago. you had a prayer for dieters shall follow me all the days of
makes some kids good and some In your column written in the my life.
bad? In other words, is there a style of the 23rd Psalm. I cut It
And I will live with pains of
formula for raising good kids? Is out of the Rocky Mountain Newa hunger forever. Amen.

If he has
of humor, tell him that
since Mildred la In the cemetery,
you don’t want to take her place.
But If he wants a new life and a
new wife, you'll consider It —
providing he quits talking about
D B A S ABBT: Our 24-year-old
son la engaged to a beautiful but
spoiled 2 Lyear-old girl. She has
broken two engagements (one
after the wedding invitations
were mailed), and now she has
asked our son for more time to
“think things over." Meanwhile,
the invitations are supposed to
go out next Monday.
We have counseled with our
mlniatcr.and he is all for letting

SHAR formed for cancer patients
Support. Hope. And Recovery (SHAR), a self-support group
for cancer patients, meets every Wednesday at 5:00 p.m.. at
1621 W. First St.. Sanford. For Information, call Mary Lynne
Gray, 323-9374 Or322-7785.

WAC, WAAC to gather

Learn something new
during leisure hours

The Woman's Army Corps and Woman's Army Auxiliary
Corps. Chapter 73. meet every fourth Wednesday of the month
at 11 a.m. at the Navy Base Officers' Club In Orlando. The
meetings are open to any WAC or WAAC member. For more
Information, call M. Colburn al 3274)617.

Leisure Programs at Seminole
Community College announces
that the following classes will
begin during the week of Sep­
tember 2:

Rotations to rise for mooting

9am-11:30am. Designed to teach
the fundamentals of gardening
and landscaping. The student
will learn how to property plan
and evaluate home landscaping.

how to select the proper plant
materials, and how to efficiently
manage water and fertilizers,
mulching and winter protection,
pruning and peal control. Cost:
825/per person.

-H ^ u n T fy T ^ n ^ o n a u

Sanford Breakfast Rotary Club meets at 7:30 a.m. every
Wednesday at Christo's Restaurant In Sanford.

O il and A crylic R otating —

Thursdays. 9/5-9/26.
ll:15am-2:15pm. and Mondays.
9/9-10/14. 7pm-9pm. Basic to
advanced te ch n iq u es, w ith
emphasis on use of color, com­
position and perspective as
applied to portrait, figure, still
life, and landscape painting.
Coal: 035/per person.
\
B n c r c ls s fo r S c a l a r s —

Mondays/Wednesdays.
9/4-10/23, 9am -10am . T his
course will provide opportunities
for "Seniors" (those over 50
years of age to ucqulrc knowl­
edge of and engage In activities
appropriate to their physical
condition and age. Cost: 025/pcr
person.
■ a r a to I — Saturdays,
9/7-10/26. I2:30pm-2pm. The
Shotokan system of karate for
beginning and advanced stu­
dents is used to assist the
students In the devlopment of
basic skills through the study of
body movement and reflex con­
ditioning. Cost: 035/per person.
Other classes starting Include:
Conditioning Aerobic-.* I. Yoga.
Dog Obedience Training. Slim 'N
Trim, Tennis I and II.

B g jE g g

iWHIL-dEWI
■i

i

Qw

ki

jg g jjg S fg ^ g *

_IH ■

The following births have been William Geltz. Oviedo, girl.
Aug. 13 — Jupiter J . Weaver
recorded at HCA Central Florida
and Brian L. Hutchinson. San­
Regional Hospital:
ford. girl; Janet A. Butcher and
Aug. 6 — Cheryl L. Bratcher. Robert A. Beron, Sanford, boy;
Altamonte Springs, gtrl.
Shantee Y. Hall and Marques C.
Aug. 7 — Diane Hanlon and Howard. Sanford, girl.
John D. Poison, Sanford, boy.
Aug. 14 — Elizabeth R. Jones
Aug. 9 — G loria L. and A Bryan R. Craft. Sanford, girl;
Michael T. West. Longwood. Debra D. Shrock. Sanford, boy.
boy: Kelly S. RothKegel and
Aug. 15 — Rut h E. and
Robert L. Johnson II. Sanford, Timothy R. Downer. Sanford,
boy.
boy; R. Barbara Pooley and
Aug. 10 — Shelia A. Powell, Jeffrey C. Russell. Sanford, girt;
Oviedo, boy; Sandra A. and Tonette D. Kilgore. Sanford, girl;
Joseph M. McKclvey. Sanford, Angela M. and Jeffery S. Froth.
girl.
Sanford, girl: Amy M. Phillips.
Aug. 12 — Ya-Ling L. and Casselberry, boy.
Hong K. Chou. Casselberry, boy;
Aug. 16 — Tammle S. and
Vyclorea L. Webb and Darrell L. Marcos Lopez. Sanford, twin
Coflic, Sanford, girl; Ute and girls.

Es

W LOOKS COULD KUX ?

�rJkete. . *. L. .

Legal Notices
_

^SpSKSSf

Ltflil Notlc—

CLASSIFIED

LERALNOTtCR
INVITATION T O M B
PIOOIOA O RP AO TM RN T

— T y t E Pd

k ic t it id u b m h r r

ttHteP If Mteky DNan B H M
• w fyy
te bw dw w p t n m

■M FLOYM CNT S E C U R ITY
Rm.
Hartman BMW.. M tf Capital
Circte. S I, Tatlahaaaat, FL
n t t l M L until tf:M a m . Oe
I, tan. N r aaprass. M R
fl. at anfating afttaa tpaca In

piviiifviv w ™i rdiniffi
W i M s T»W H : Mtftan

ciasmfkd d ip t .

N i-n
t ig .W f .g t . Th e p ro|act. It

"iter****
U.
a tm
DR 1-1

y % * r in.s f,rr,T.
af O R A F IR I COMMUNICA­
and Mat l nmnd M

M T N R CIR CUIT COURT

Florida, m
pravlslana at tea Ftatttlaea
Hama I totela. Ta-Wtt: l a(Haw
teftaa, Ftartta Statutes Mr.
Oabarah WHftg
Futelte: ftupvNP. &gt;W1
D d lv a

IN R R : R fT A T R O F
AMtadP.UCreta

N dTtC d O F APFUCATIdW P M TM M fl
NO T IC I It H ER EB Y
O lV IN . teat
MahaMarattea
Ifkatots)
alaU) tarn tea dMdtate

The odm In Istraiten at tea
•state at Athad P. LaCratx.
d a c a a s a d . P it a N u m b e r
fi-a tt-C P , la ponding in tea
C ircuit Court tar Samlnate
C o u n ty , F lo rid a , praba.a
Otvteten. tea gddrgaa at whkh te
M l N . Part Avanex Santerd.

I and M t w at
teacrtpHNi at tea
manematO towl
aaadia/artaalaNa

Tbanpwwaanladdraanaat tea
p a r e n t repriMtagNta and tea
parwnnf upratantofivo' i atA l L * IN T 1*5l l V l D ’ PER
SONS A N I N O T I F I I O TH A T:
All

Yaaraf____________
DtacrlpNan at Praparty: L IO
l o t s 7 a * m t7 + h ftLK a
D IX IIT C R R A C f F D IP O M
Nanwa In wMcft aaaaaaad:

at tea will, tea guaftficaltens
Steotter
af f w i
or lurtsdtetten at this
Court are rsgulrsd te hte Ihalr
objections with this Court
W IT H IN T N I L A T IR OF
T H R l t MONTHS A F T IR TH E
D A TE O P TH E FIR ST PUBLI­
CA TIO N OP TH IS NOTICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A F TE R T H E
D A T ! OF IIR V IC I OF A
COPY O F THIS NOTICE ON
TH EM
at tea dacadant
i ft&amp; u b ia e la lia ia
I n u m LHPirrg

All at said property bates te
the County of lominolt . Mala at
Unlata such certificated)
shall ba u d a im il accordtea te
tew. tea pi aparty daatrNad In
sudi carttfketefs) MR ba aald
te lha hlgtwot btddtr al tea woat
front door, l omlnalo County
Courteauaa, laniard. Fterldo. an
tea JPte day af loptembor. tffl,
at 11A M .
'
Approalnwtety SUMS caah
tor teat Is required tote paid by
tha tuccassfui teddar at lha sate.
Full paymant at an
te tea
'

at tela
at tela ne&lt;lcs must
file Mate claims write this Court
W IT H IN T H I L A T I R O F
T H R U MONTHS A F T I R T H I
O ATS OP T H I PIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF TH IS NOTICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A F TE R T H I
D A T E O F S R R V IC I O F A
COPY O F THIS NOTICE ON
TH EM .
A ll other creditors at the

i and racardlnf teat la
w ithin &gt;4 hours attar tha
adiartlaad time at tea salt. AH
paymonta atwtl ba caMar guaranteod Inalvuniant. mads pay*
abte te tea Cterb at tea Circuit
Court.
Doted this t*m day af August.
m i.
1SIALI
Mary anna Morsa
Cterb at Mo Circuit Court
laminate County. Florida
By: Tina M. Taylor
Deputy Cterb
Publish: August V ft t aptembir
x ta. it. m i
o e u m ____________________
N O TIC IO F
FICTITIOUS NAMi
Nat lea Is haraby given teat I
am angagad In buafnaaa at 1J1
Highland Or.. Fern Fort. Ft.
m s . l aminate County. Ftertda.
undar m » Ftotttteua Mama at
SION TE C H X and teat I intend
te raglater aald nama with tea
Secretary at State, Tallahassee,
Florida. In accordance with tea
provisions at tea Fictitious
Name Statute, TaWlt: Section
•05.00. F terIdo Stelvtes tf*7.
FotrkloMSIono
Pub) teh: August ff.lOtl
DEI-171
__________

llte Ihalr
claims with tela court WITHIN
TH R E E MONTHS A F T IR TH E
D ATE O F TH E FIR ST PUBLI­
CA TIO N OF THIS NOTICE.
A L L CLAIM S. OEMANOS
AND O B JE C TIO N S NOT SO
F IL E D W ILL B l FOREVER
B A R R IO .
The date al tea first public*
•ten at this Notice is August 17,
ten.
Personal Rspraaantetlva:
Margaret N. Turcatto
Ranald O. LeCraix
311Callage Street.
Chicopee. MA 01030
1177 Prospect Street
Chicopee, MAOISM
Attorney ter Portonei
Salvatore C. Icuderl
WON. Calltor flvd.
p.O. Baa tef
Marco Island. FLU0J7
T Stephana: 1111) Ma-1144
Fterlda Bar Na.: OISSIM
Publish: August 17 ft September
x ia n
OEI-17S

NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN
Mot by vlrtuo Of Mot
t of Elocution Issued out ol
and undor teo wot of teo Circuit
Court ol Orange County. Flori­
da. Ceao ICIS7/IM1 upon • tbwl
ludgmont rondortd In the
oterosald Court an tea Und day
el June A.D. l t d mmal certain
co m entitled: Ctenoid R. Alton.
Plaintiff vs. Land and Homos
Root Estate Iniaatmant Com­
pany. Inc.. Cadi Idwln Beater,
Jr. and Ventura Corporation at
Sarasota. Inc., ttetandtet whkh
•terasald Writ at laacutten was
dstlvarad te ma as ShariIt of
Samlnate County. Florida and I
have levted upon all tea right,
title and Mares! ot Ms atten­
dant. Cecil Edwin beater, Jr. In
------* 4 _
t - n ------■-—
tea^H r^P SvlUr

located In Samlnate County,
F torIdo mare particularly daUnll a-A. SAUSALITO. a Com
dominium. Photo I. occordbw te
•hot certain declaration ot Con­
dominium ot Souoolho o Con­
dom inium . Phase I, doled
August 10. I47X recorded In O.R.
Booh n . Pago six Public Roc
ords of Seminole County, Fieri
do. together with an undivided
i/XHti interest In and to tea
common •laments af told Can
dominium
and lha undersigned os Sheriff
ol Samlnate County. Florida,
will ol 11:00 AJKL on Iho 11th
day ol September AD . Itel.
otter tor sate and toll to teo
highest Wddor. FOR CASH IN
HAND AND SUBJECT TO ANY
ANO A LL EXISTING LIENS, ol
the Front (Vtesl) Door, ol teo
siege, ot teo Samlnate County
Courthouee In Senlord. Florid*.
Iho above deter Ibod property
That sold tote It being mode
to satisfy Iho terms st this Writ
ol Elocution.
Donald F. Eiilngor, Sheriff
Samlnate County. Florida
Published August K . 17. Sep­
tember x 10. with itw tote on
September II, IfOl
D EM I*

m fm pBfVMI Ki

et Sheriffs tote
N O TIC E IS HR REBY O lV IN
teal by vlrtuo ot Mat certain
Writ at Elocution Issued out ot
wid undar teo seal at teo Circuit
Court at Marten County, Flori­
da. Ceao m m m CA C Upon a
ludgmont randarod In tea
Caurt an tea late day
at Saptambir A.O. NSP. In teal
cortoln cose antitled : Sun fonb
at Ocala, Plaintiff vs. John L.
fe rre t tint, Ootondont which
oterwsaid Writ ot Eaacutlon was
delivered to me as ShorIN ot
Samlnate County. Fterlda and I
hove levied upon all teo right.
dint, John L. fo r reItIni, In and
t e

raw T e n

4_ |

it i t e o e r l l w s t

a^wwMs_

erty. said property being located
In Samlnate County, Fterlda
more particularly described ot
tel touts:
One Ufa Itutu ddeor Vln
tJA R R T a n e in m being stored
ot Altamonte Towing,
and tea undersigned at Sheriff
ol Samlnolo County. Florida,
will at lt:W A.M. on Iho lOlh
day at September A.D. lWl.
otter tar solo end Mil to the
highest Wddor. FOR CASH IN
HAND ANO SUBJECT TO ANY
AND A L L EXISTING LIEN X ot
Iho Front (West) Door, ot teo
steps, ot Iho Seminole County
Courthouse In Sonterdi Florida,
the above described property.
That sold solo Is being made
to satisfy tea terms at this Writ
ot Execution.
Donate F. Esllngor. Sheriff
Samlnate County, Fterlda
Published: August 77, Sep­
tember X IS. 17. with the sate on
September IX 10*1
DEI-111

I M | » N P F U R N IIH B D
M M l i wtte teener and AC.
S7lawN.pleadtaaUt.MMIW

Nt T N I CIRCUIT COUNT
OF TM f WTN JU D ICIA L
CIRCUIT Ht ANO PON
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLOOIOA
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE N O i« SOM CA-14-R
C O L O N IA L M O R T O A O I
COMPANY.

x m s jts jm —
n m

PARTIES claim as
hairs, devisees, grantees,
assignaas. lienors, creditors,
fruoteos or other c iMments.
RESIDENCES UNRNOWN
YOU ARE H E R E B Y N O T I­
FIED teat on action te tencteoa
a martgogo an Itw
dwcrlbsd gr^orty In Samir
County. F terIda:
L o t 0. C L U S T E R V .
WILDWOOO, a planned unit
retail
R^w
*xwj
« uir^ In
19 O
nw
Flat ftwroaf, aa racardtd In Plat
•ash IX Pagaa 7. ft » and I f at
tea PuMIc Racarda at Samlnate
County, Fterlda,
has bean filed against you
you are ragulcad to serve a c
at your written datenses. If any,
te it an Blechwatl ft Waflwr.
F .A ., Flalntllt'a attarnaya,
w h a sa a d d r e s s Is l a g s
A m a rlFlrst B u ild in g , Onu
Sauteaast Third Avanua. Miami.
Fiarlda M ill, an or bafara
September ft m i . and tile Ma
original with tea Cterb at this
Caurt aftesr bafara sarvlca an
Ptointiffs attarnaya or Immadin tti a r

a 1—

erae/U. W U rr...,..... J B g g

Equal HouUnjOeiortwwItvt

A

win i
you Mr It
Itw Complaint.
This notice shall bo published
wtlve weeks In the Sanford
WITNESS my hand end Iho
WOl ot mis Court on the Md day
ol August, m i.
(SEAL)
MARYANNI MORSE
At Clark of Iho Court
By: Rum King
O CFUTYCLER K
Publish: August X IX 10. 17.
IttI
DEI-M

NOTICE OF APPLICATIO N
FOR TAX D IE D
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN. Ihot Wayne E. or Grace
B. Childers, the holder ot Iho
following carllllcate(s) has Iliad
sate carllllcate(s) tor a taa dead
to bo Issued thereon. The cert III
cote number(s) and yoor(s) ol
Issuance, the description ot iho
property, end Iho nomo(s) In
whkh II woe assor ted Is/are as
Certificate No. lie
Year ol Issuance: 1S04
Description of Property: LEO
LOT M BLK C BUNGALOW
CITY PB 7 PGM
Nemos in which assessed:
Ambrllla Rufus, etal
All ot told property being In
Iho County at Samlnolo. State ol
Fterlda.
Unless such co rllllca lo U )
shall bo ridsomid according to
low, lha property described In
such cartlfkatels) will ba sold
to Itw highest bidder at Itw west
front door. Samlnolo County
Courthouse, Sanford. Fterlda, on
the JOth day ol September, m i ,
el 11A.M.
Approilmately SI15.M cosh
ter tom Is required to bo paid by
the successful bidder et Iho sate.
Full payment of an amount
equal to me highest bid plus
applicable documentary stomp
loam and recording toes Is duo
within I t hours e lla r Iho
advertised lima ol Iho sate. All
payments shall bo cosh or guar
anteod Instrument, mode pay
•bio to Itw lark of the Circuit
Court.
Doted mis 17th day ol August,
m i.
(SEAL)
Maryanno Morso
Clark ol Iho Circuit Court
Samlnolo County. Florida
By: TlnaM. Taylor
Deputy Clerk
Publish: August 77 ft September
X I X 17, m i
D E IM t

Ltflal Notlca
N O TIC IO F SHERIFF'S U L E
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
teal by virtue of that certain
Writ of Eaocutten Issued out ot
and under Hw seal of the County
Court ot Orange County, Flori­
da. Cow ICO v ir m Upon a
final judgmonl rands rod In the
oterosald Caurt on Iho 17m day
of Juno A.O. m i . m that cortaln
casa entitled: George E. Akol
and Sandra J. Akol, Plaintiff vs.
Jacqueline N. Oobow and
AI Ionto Eggleston. Defendant
which sloresald Writ ol Elocu­
tion was delivered to mo as
Sher III ol Seminole County,
Florida and I hove levied upon
all Iho right. Illlo and Interest ol
Iho dotondonl, Alfonio E g ­
gleston. m and to Iho following
described property. SOM proper­
ly being located In Seminole
County. F lor Mo more particu­
larly deterIbod ••tallows:
One IfTI Ford Statlonwogon.
V IN f«ft74HlMMt being stored
ot Altamonte Towing
and Iho undersigned ot Shorltf
ot Samlnolo County. Fterlda,
will at 11;W AJW. on Iho em day
ot SspNmbor A.D. m i . otter ter
sate and toll te Iho highest
bidder. FOR CASH IN HAND
A N D SUBJECT TO ANY AND
A L L CXISTINO LIENX ot Iho
Front (West) Door, ol Itw steps,
ot Iho Samlnolo County Court
house in Santerd, Florida, the
above described property.
Thai said sole Is being mode
to satisfy the terms ot this Writ
ot Execution
Donald F. EtJIngtr, Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
Published: August IX M. 17.
Sopt. X with Hw solo on Sap
temborX m i.
D IM M

■ J P O L K J P

CMII

K J

OLIO
MlJJIO

IKOOIM
I

LSONZP

COLUMBUS

I O OC R R

JACKPOT

—

* H

dd

Hus

tervka. AH makes. Fret esfs.
47X14I X 14 hours, 7dsvs

HOMEAffllAHCE~S22-3St3

M

RCRMVSCALESftTNNC

TK
88ISS VXBTIK Jhlru
tl.H e a .F rM p k k u p f td H .il

Accepting applications tor
Cortttted Nursing Assistants.
Those with ooporknco given
prterltyl Appty:
tM Moltonvll la Avo lonterd.

otee. Phene eny1tmo...J13-PSe
W IL L DO lawn mowing al

S M

M47414
WORK NEBBIBU
daaateg lady, n a par day.
Duality work I N ondriver.
»m x

B U T F R IC III Quality work.
A n y t h i n g / E v e r y t h in g .
Homas/Offka. Total repairs.
ImprovemenIs. I da it alll
Free 1st. Anytime. M a n n
C A R P E N TR Y . M A 5 D N A R Y
pointing and lllo work. Froo
estimates. Llu'd. CaH m a iM
CARPENTRY, Homo regain,
remodel. O ockx Shads ft
Garages. Q U A L ITY i n i t e t a

Cftrppt/FtePf*
A D I F T CAR FR Y CLIA M IN d.
Circular dry team lys dry In 1
hr. l»wmordtecowW .a&gt;»«n5

Carpal Ctegninq
CARPfT/UFLteOLSTIRV

I

ZROOZM

N LM IH EO .1

Wanted

MEDICAL

Buy/M l a Racond/Guaranteed

3 ★ s250 Jackpots

I J I

M ATURE ladteMual. w/cor, tor
•sc. Incomo opportunity l Will
train 11*7-17X7411 art, in s

REW/USCOAffUAMCES

Sunday 1 PM
Tuppday tPM

I

For busy srHwpodk office.
Canted Sharon............. 707-505

People call you to order. Will
Train. I-MO-7----------

^^T55nSn35^^

O L M

UITM

MATTECH

by S-M. fa it otter IP * Wte

TTTTCTTC^r

Secret lake Fate, I

COURR

^BwtwII^RteDr ■ffl^Wea
m a n s waofcly + ■
(Will train) t-HI-M IX
•WELDERa
Company needs steady roll
. . . .
^
1 ^ 1 , U u l
EEVHw
gg^uiR
ygpgiWiii-P
Psrmanont work hero! Hurry I
AAA B M P tO Y M IN T
m W .llte&lt;f,)0-»17e

MIGHTS
OF

M N

KC

H d n i d Im p r o u D iw D H t
concept

U n f it floor with private
tn lra n c t. Studios. t ft 1
bedrooms, many extras In­
c lu d in g ile r a g t space.
Qulet.cwy community Nka
landscaping ONSITE
MANASIRSW HO CA R Ilt
sar to r o c o w r i n - m i

LAROR S BDRM. Upslolrs.
Newly decoreted. oil appli­
ances. CHA. Water turn..
cable, wosh/dryer hook upe.
saw............................ J i i l i H
LG . I bdrm . C/H/A,
washer/dryer, covered perk­
ing. MM/mo. 575/wfc Includes
water. Refs raqutrod m-1471
MAR IN I
V IL LA S I
LokoAdalbdr.............. USSmo.
Ibdrm .— IM Im oAup.— M X4I0
MOORRN 1 BDRM.. duplex In
city, appliances, mini Minds,
CHA. IP S me.............H H 1 1 I
NEAT-1 BORRL Apt. W. lnd I t .
CHA. corpdod. kH. equip. M7S
mo. Indudte water. M aiiki
ONE BDRM.. t bam. K m .
balcony. I p k . CHA. carpet,
convlonlont to downtown. H7S
mo. 123-1441-

TW F MA50MRV. Brick, bteck
estucco,
v^w w w y n
M wfftte
O te v o n -

m g
-TScgiSnrK

■9 Ti B I n IVm

T T W W m S T f m t trash.

■Op)., him. Cbsep/sn Hmel
Sli/up. Cap Roy M7-7M7
o • * H A ULIN G .yard trash,
appliances, furniture, trash ol
any kind I Rkterd.___OT-77U

Pftlntioq

5 S -T X T E Z

csrpentryl Homo, olllco,
kikhon. bom I asaM7
H r n id

Rapairt

fui wwiWvar

DICK FINOLA'S FAINT I MB,
Quality work! Inl/Eal., Ik 'd
ft Insured. Free esf 1133-1733
IN TKRIOR /KXTER IO R
HOUSE FAINTING. II yrs.
^ jM ^ F ra # esl. no as*l

home rvpeirsi Folnl/Termlte
damage, lie / tax
MX M il

HOfVWSPUMMRS

^ ^i vl ar iBnr ^g^^ga*^gaa^wa
i u R l f t l l a l ^ai^ae
lM
ar W

D E T A IL F IV E R , Let your tor
sparkle tor summer 1 Comp
datai i service i
naans

7days I Call Tim . e e iH Il

Buildioo Contradon

CATHY'S C L E A N MM H 5 7
I C I • Roteroncox reasonable
rates. Licensed I Cal I m - 74/4

oADDITIONS. All
kl Trsublasted I
Reterences Mel e eiTBOSIt
NEW. REMODEL. REPAIR
H O M IX O F F IC C L IT O R E I
AH typos coMlructten. Ret/Cem
L X Bellnt. CBOIN M

ClDDldWi IPfVlCD

Cawcrpte
CAPTAIN C O S K R r r i. Wayro
Beal 1 Man Quality Opore
tlenll

Cprptt2ry

Hawwv AApii

C A R F f NTERAJIBD
repairs, painting ft ceramk
tile. RkterdOroox— m-tt71

O N I CALL DOES IT A LL!
Painting, moeonry. amldlng.
mewing, etc. 11 PtL M4-171B

All your plumbing noodsl 14
hoursllRFMtt7743MMM
C O M P L ITI Oualdy Lawn X
Landscaping. Tree Service ft
Irrigation, campotlllvo rates.
frve estimatesSunny*s O l 7k3V
■RUCK'S Lawn Mabdoteote
Call Bruce M l 711*.
tS OWlor now cuatemersl
LAWN CA R II U ft UPt Free
estimates. Senior discounts.
Trash removal............ 111-1711
LAWN M A IN T K N A N C E
I U N Tom..
RAHOY’t D U A U T V LAWN.
Complete care, clean ups.
tinea HB3 Free aaM ni-ana

P r t iu r g q a a n tm
FKISSUR E CLEANING MAN •
House wash/painting t o and
XI* 4440. SAM S fM
ue Ri
IS ftc rD tR rU I 4 I

Typing SorvicDS

irsnSsnsaassssr

T U T T S M Iy
OJ Enterprise 40IB E. um
St . Santerd. Haas/l/Hl 70*1
T rE D S D ry ic D ’

RICH’S T R I E RIMOVAL - 14

hr. tervka. free esllmetes.
bestprkwtin* MSS

XOLJ
All H e y u l u i ( i . i m u s I ’uy SbU

OVCTKJ.
PNEVKXI8 SOLUTION: "H te wiaa to apply tha od of
m l m fcnsnism of vnvnom y}.

—

im a M tm

N 0 T K I OP ACTION
TO: COLLEEN DANNA, If aha
ba living, and A LL UNKNOWN
P A R T I E S , c la im in g b y ,
through, undar or against
COLLEEN DANNA. It N w ba

FtMAV NMNT 7 P A
U S U ftllN
(2| USD IACRPDTS

1t l M O l

i

COLLEEN DAMNAs at. at.

Of CASHLKMV

OIJ

WWCRA* *

IX 1401 at f t : * a-m.
at M il Capital Circle. BE,
Tallahaotaa. FL.
Tha
t FJHT IMPiw|PteT imfjr
and ta maba tea as
te be in Ma boat Interest at tea
State at Fterlda.
PUBLISH: Auguat 17 ft
tombarXlfH.

N1WANIS C LU B

l i o n

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Spacin cottons may bo ra
auatted tram Barbara Bass
lift) s » 7*7. The pro bid can

« t Iflt

T IO N

Orlando

3 2 2 2 6 1 1 _____________________

C a w t y 7 7 i e r W . undar tea
P itt

M M

3«minol«

SONS O F ITALY 2441
1170 D 0 Y IE R O M ), D ELTO N A

» 74-1i a

i

�it

.xxwrm

1*.-

- /

T T T ^

S a n fo rd H e ra ld . Se nfo rd, Florida - T u e s d a y ; A u g u s t 27. 1991 - M

ft—AMrtfl

KIT *N* CARLYLE® by Urry Wright

114-WawbEMU
f/l

OSTIIN • 1bermeat*.. MS per
week Include* utllltto*. No
eeH-CaHMMin
MOV! M SPf ClALl &gt;bdrm.
H

i*acuritT.M»*a*&gt;
'•

[ M

"ESS

11 Berm.

I

&lt; M M :O n i i Wi i &gt;III&lt;»
LAKE MARY MM*M

LIN I

tpmllrn
W/W carpot. A/C, Only

meansums

to eawntawn tram Park Aval
SaS/wb. or tlW/mo. » I W

IANMRB, If- 1 berm. Its/wh
Ftua SIN security ar nts/mo.
I berm. SOS/me ar 1110/wh
Neat, lewnery, A/C. IPSSM
SANFORD 1 BORM. Walk te
team. MS a a*, aim Sbadle
ApM7*awk.M»l7T7_______

SANFORD NIC! ARIA Hum I
berm. Incharming Sale* Cat
In kitchen, eacteeeOunroom,
lets at a means, vary ipoclal.
tlSS/me plus SISO securltv............ ............ ete sen
&gt;I berm. 1 baRk Central
H/A, private fancae ye.
S3*S/ma, UN Security
Results Reetty...........m i« e
BANFORO/WINTIR SFRINOS
Available newI 1 bdrm. 1
both, all appliance*. 100/mo.
small esposlt. Fats, kids OK.
Breker/Aeant, tnNIS
SMALL BHTRA CLIAN. 1
1..1 both, quiet area. S1IS
......MISSIS
V I UFSTAIRS. 1 blocks ott
Fork. SM* and sac. Serb M F,
F A ............................. m-MSS

191—Houses
Furnished / Rent
U N F O R O •Large I bdrm. with
front porch. I block from now
hospital. Site per week plus
Sift security. Call m a t t ■

Itt-H o w s
wniWmtSNRO / NRfli
N R ID A 1 B O R M . or JSdrm. In
O IL TO N A ? Lera* selection!
PRIMARY R CALTY....t t H T it
F IR M FARR 1/11*CHA New
paint, carpet UIO mo.
Scheren Realty O i l Ml.
L A R I MARV/MNFORO. Two
3 bdrm. homos. MM and
MOO/mo. 177 7301___________
L O C N ARBOR. Wheelchair
modified. 1 bdrm.. 1 bath.
CHA. lanced yd., pets ok. ISIS
mo. m o m ________________
•SANFORD. 1 bdrm M*5 mo.
C o u n try liv in g , have a
pardon I No pets......... Ml S in

UNFORO-MAYFAIR
1bath, C/H/A.
U 71 H a « M

UNFORD. «S1 I. 1MR M. 1
b*m. I both. Nn» plumbing
ane yalnt. Irs/aut. central H/A.
carpot. stave, refrig. plus heak
ups. Trees! Avail, newI lost
noseOR.sets/mo,......JO 5154
Wl NIID Seminole County
Hemes SorantI Far tree mala
lien • NORIA1TY, SaMMS
irw a IK, Small cottage.
ar sfwgtil
SINmonth..
I BORM. I BATN spacious
country hemal Lskofront an t
acraa.Al.SNS/mo3NHP
MM MVRYLI AVI. SAN­
FORD 1 bdrm. 1 both. Fla.
rm/3re berm. Central H/A
celling (ana. carport, kltch
appliances. rseacoroNe J/ft.
Owlet noMhborhaoA tasa/mo.
F&lt;usSJOSdep.sai-113-lNS

r

flreplan , tsncse yard. SMI
Fowl ane RethOsbama
Venture I Properties. M1 47*4
lit boRL central H/A
|||......................

'ohn* Realty! 4P7M7 4133
1 BORM. 11s BATH, central
H/A etch, lenced. Sanlord
UMpormenth. til MW
3 BORM. 3 both. CHA lenced.
family rm. w/lpk.. If utility
btep., nowcarpot 4 point. IS»
NS-INI.

185— DuplexTriplox/Bft
ATTRACTIVI. 1 bdrm. Flo.
rm., garage w/laundry. No
pets sns plus dtp HI saw
CLIAN. ONI BORM. STS/wh.
t- sac. 1 yr. tease, carpet.
tUtsA Park Avo. 3P3111.
UNFORO OUFLIR • I bdrm..
. quiet. S310/mo plus
t.ives. collect SISfin
1 BORM. central H/A lawn
malntanance. Sanford.
SlSt/mo Includes util. Ml-Sin
I BORM. 1 BATH, central A/C.
all appl. dltposal/dlshwasher.
near high school. MI-S3N
1 BORM. OUFLIR. carport,
security system, twll kitchen,
MI-wa.dlacountod.S3W
3 BORM 3 BATH. Senferd.
Appliances. No pats. mvmo.
plus security. SSF4S41attar t
1 BORMUS BATA Sanford. All
a p p l i a n c e s . A/ C.
washer/dryer hook-ups. no
INSalter 4
pets. SNS/me SNIP

107— Mobil#

___Hunt/Wont

DOWNTOWN BRICK
WARINOUSR SFACC -JM H

IS,SSI SR ft. Deck NT.
ilered Call M4ASN
CROWNSqUARB

/LK. M A R T area.
1.S0FI.3M sq. It. with or
without A/C offices. Starting
SMS. Mclntaah Faint. M F U N

STAIRSPROFUTT

INSsis ft. tramSIM/ma.

m tm r m /m m n

SANFORD I.33A U R INI
square feat aval labia.
1 bdrm. 1 bath. lg. master, lg.
l i v i n g and d i n i n g ere*
w/flreplies. Wood dock, lg.
frees. Privacy end security.
Eatra room tor office, hobby
or post. Ird bdrm. Tennis and
peel prlvllsges. Sft.MO
Days, m o t i f
Is

117— O m iw rclal
U N F O R O - 1BXN building ptut
ottkes w/tg. security tart
let, lined C l. Cel I M3 71*7

111-Offko

fl down tor Vats • A little
mer« tor others. Brand new 1
bedroom l both hemes wttb 1
enr garages from H f .
total monthly payments.
Universal NseWy. b u m

FR ISTIO R O F F I C I I • MB la
4 M sq. fl. Same furnished. 1
Meeks leClty Hell. Cell
M4SS4S........ CROWN IQ U A R I
SANFORO !3». IAW.
and 1AM square Net.

Cell Ml-flS * ___

Rent*is
PIKRUttCUW
1 bdrm. 2 bath, washer/c
SMS/me. S.I.C.M . Inc.. Uc

STENSTROM

JRaalJslaJjBreMrjUTjlS^

123—Wanted to Rent

REALTY, I NC .

N IS O L A M A R Y ar vicinity
Episcopal priest 4 wit# wish
te lease homo. Far I year ar
mere starting, a/lf/fl Need
ever MSS sq. ft. References
available. S3FSSS1 ar OSS-Sill
133— F t

Sonford/Uke Mery area.

L rr to

LOCN ARBOR 3/1

Grsst nslgbhborhood. Oak
shaded arto. Immaculals
wood floors. Super buyl
ON N IA R L T 1A C R IS
Super Osteen in. Secludsd yet
close In. Seller Is motivated
Act. Now I.................. R L M .

127—OWico Rentols
CORNIR 11/W and an. Office
bldg. Great tor all types of
businsts. m-sssi/msss-sasa

ACADCMY MANOR S/1V&gt;
Largo homo tor big family.
Needs seme work Instds and
paint. See It nowl.........*71.0*0.

141— Homes for $sie

F IN I LSVRLS/1
Being sold "os is." On double
lot. Noods T IC . Creative tr
nonclng posilble........ SS4.N0.

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Rssl I state Broker
M N Sanford Ave.

323-5774

S n is R IO S T IIN A C R IS
Isautltul nsw spilt tacsd
amasonry. Lskstront. Fplc..
loft, horses ok. Now....SIS*.NO

II \ I I K l \ l \ \
COUNTRY A T M O S F N IR II 3
bdrm. 1 bath an almost l/l
scre I Family ream and ratted
patio. Huge oak treeil S U M
INVESTOR'S S F IC IA L I
Duplex, 1 bdrm. w/cantral
H/A. and I bdrm.. fenced.
SUO/rno. Income. UI.SMI I

LK. M A R T I STORY i n
On holt acre. Now carpot 4
appllancas. owner retocotling.
Pretty Place.............. ftt.OOO.

IME MART, LESSTHAN
$3,144 BOND

•1/1 - renevslsd. new carpet,
paint, appllancts. lancad
yard............................. SSLWO
•3/1 - renovated, new carpel,
paint appliances, lenced
yard..............................*40.000
— SIAM down, assume mo quali­
fy on this two story 1/Hs wllh
appliances, end fireplace.
Fenced yard with pool I US.SOO
PLUS
O W N IR FIN AN CIN G •
Pi merest, l/l, living, dining,
family rm.. security system,
fenced yard .. .Ml. NO
O IL TO N A •1/1 on I acre. scr.
perch, carport, SSI.NO

hrSaklyOMM

321-

Please lei me help

Cj UBat Cttfory, REALTOR
(«7)tis4seaer m u s s

322- 2420
MSS Park Dr., laniard
S4IW. Lake Mary M., Lk. Mary

•InOur 35thYtar*
O IL TO N A FOOL MOMK. cor
nor lot. now carpat/painf,
close Discovery school. US.000
Call Charlotto/I nu rsew Realty
__________ I1S-VSM

Step Up Into A
Great
Apar

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath
ONLY

*435

\ l ( I • ( I KAN • AI I O K I ) / \ m 1

MO.

7 and 12 Month Lease
Available

2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms*

$ 1 0 0 O ff

FIR ST M O N T H S R E N T
f l i H ' i v i i W
hii

('ill

liih

ill

,’()(•() I AK t M A H r III V 1)
S A W ( lilt)
I . 1I

LOCH ARBOR -1 story 1 bdrm
111 bath. Sunken living rm.,
fireplace, eat In kitchen, pool,
scr. porch. 4 yrs old. Double
garage. P ITI UN/mo t i l .000
down to assume. M l 17M

2720

Floride Realty
LOOKINCFORAHOME?

rat SMUT ONMI

Assumable to qualified buyer.
1 bdrm. |is bath, living room,
family room or 4th bdrm..
largo kitchen. Nice comer lot.
In ground pool. M1.000 M l S4S1

CAUANYTIME

The Prudential®

It

FSBO. V I Is. Concrete blk.
double tot. U1.000 Owner II
nance, min 17.000 down. ISM
mo. P ITI. Move In SON days
Zoned R 1....................Ml SOM
LONOWOOD 1/1 ipm. M IS sq

II., largo rooms, cathedral
ceilings. 1 cor garage, mint
condition I 14. MO down, now
loan required, seller pays all
closing costs 1171.M01 M US4

MAYFAIRMIMORS
3 b d rm .. 1 bath. Large
screened rm. 107 Meadow
Bird S7S.N0 no *700________

NO QUALIFYIRC!
M.MO down CHA. lenced yd .
appliances, remodeled Move
In Today I .................. M4SM0
N O N Q U A L I F Y I N G Atumma
bis. Santord. 1/1. family rm ,
fplc.. remodtlsd. Ig. lot. trees.
S10.000down..............7SOSSS4
O WN A H O M S W I T H NO
MONEY DOWN? Yes. Jim
Weller homes will build s
home on your lol with no
money down end no toes 4. 1
or 1 bodroom. your dream
homa Is a reality with quality
Jim Wallar Construction
Nothing manufactured or
pro lab 10% Iliad rala mort
gagas make your payments
easy lo handle. Ask about our
program which lets you do
some of the building and save
money For datells. call Mr
Morion at I too S7V 47a and
find out how you can OWN A
HOMS W IT H N O T H I N G

Q um n
A IM
j

It . t

R e &lt; i l| y I n c

321-3663
RCRTTOONRORASSUME

Come Home To
Country S tyle Living!

Limited Time Offer

11, 2 &amp; 3 Bodroom
■

TOTAL
aWOVE-IN
POOL, TENNIS COURT,
VOLLEYBALL COURT
EACH APARTMENT INCLUDES

• NowCarposng • NowAppllancoa mckjdng Ro'nger«sx.Range. Oihwathor. Ga/
bag# Disposal •Washer 4 Oryors metaled
n vests lor sn atetonal monthly toe • 24
Iwur emergency mantenanco serve#

330-5204
(f a ir t t n t y
apartmenls
T U I 11-01II AIRPORT S I VO. TURN M S I
1TM OF A H IE. SIGN ON IBGHT

Jt

I« y -9pprt1d t0n&lt;«
•DIRE. Olrts. it" Pink 4 Aqua
ewtor, Groat CeMdHtonf Asking
S3*........................ ...........
* E X E RCI S E I I K I . Scars.
Irgsmetar. lac. CandHtonll
SM 2M1S4S
POLICE ACADEMY, Cattoctor.
venturer. Call FBBA tor same
ot the bast prices around I '
—

(1st Month Only)

2 ft* 3 Bedroom
Apartm ents
• Cable TV
• Washcr/Drycrs in Select Units
• Self Clean Oven
• Ic o m a k e r
• Dishwasher
• Garbage
Disposal

•Pool
•Clubhouse

rP. n u i v t i

2450 llarlwtll Aie., Sanford
M O N .-S A T. 9 •b • Stm. 12 •5

324-4334

CAUIART RCALTY
322-7491
S U F I R S IN G L E F a m ily
homesIM In very desirable
Deltona. High. dry. IILMO.
Stontfrewi Realty m -m o
III ACRES *11 or pert, custom
pends, fence. Will finance,

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/ S d Id
W A TE R F R O N T C O N O O I 1
BORM. 1 BATH. I7LM0I
Motivated seller I Call Drande
Ownby Real Estate N4 417-7IS1
W I N T E R S F R I N O S . The
Highlands. 1 bdrm. Iv./dlning
rm. M X II It.. Ig. scm. porch,
fully equip, kit. Tenets, peel
all amrntttas. Owner will II
nance t l l .tOO ......... US 4711

No (feebly! Low down. Total
cost U70/mo Sanford. 1 1
bdrms All now wiring, root,
c a r p e l , p a in t , m in is ,
washer/dryer Lg lenced yd.
shed, playhouse 444 71/1
ROCK BOTTOM AT S ll.llll 1
bdrm 1 bath spill plan Feml
ly room and screened porch to
spread out Ini 1 car garage
w/opener Nice lot. lanced
E merse « Realty Croup lac.
tos-m -se u/e su istu i
SANFORD. V I Assumable
mortgage pool. M l.000
TWO BEDROOM, large lot.
_______ 1M.000 130 11*7_______
S P A C IO U S POOL HOMEI 4
bdrm 1 balh split plan wilt,
family room I minute Irom
Lake Mary Bl A great
value at
172 000
U.000 DOWN AND ASSUMCI 1
bdrm 2 bain in Brynha.en
Split plan with cathedral ceil
mg! ] car garage w-opener
Below market at
M t.m
Call Janet Manslwld
Days. I ll 1114 Eves. M l t i l l
AA Carnes. Inc.

OOUBLEWIDE
Needs work
Quiet neighborhood. Partially
lurnlshad. has wather/dryer.
14.000OBO................ * g mos
I . ORLANDO 1/1 moblto. 1 car
garage and guest apt. 14V.500
W. Malictawskl. Realtor
__________ 1M-7SM___________

MIDSUMMER SPCCIALS
SANFORD AREA MORILE
HOME COMMUNITY
24X40
1/1. all e la c lrlc .
axcallanl location, many
a ilra i.......................... l i t 000
24X41 ]/} spilt Nice family
homa............................ tlt.000
I4XM
l/l. gas and elaclrlc
homa.............................. tf.MO
14X11 l/l spm. two all electric
homa............................111.MO
Broker. Ml I1H/UI 1701
SAVE IMI NEW IN I HOMESI
WHY FAY R ETAIL? 14X70.
W.000.14X70, Ilf ,000141170S
11X11 1 bdrm. double roofovar,
Ig Kraened rm and shad
Adult park 15 000171 SIT7
II SKYLINE MORILE homa. 14
^ tO. 1 bdrm 7 balh OSTEEN
arte must be mavadl 117.070
I MO 7410

140— Business
For Sole
QUALITY LAWN Maintenance
Acceunts. 171.000 plus per
y e a r) S a c rific e 11000'
Equipmenta«tra Ml 001*
R E A D Y M IX C O N C R E T E
COMPANY
Buiineis. UK.
rani land Call 177 1711

145—DupItx fo rS A lt
Rk m Ui Rtnovatod.
Good rental history 147.100
^ M o h n | ^ » a lljr ^ 0 ^ 7 ^ l7 1 ^

111—Appiiancos
/ Furniture___
AC UNIT, alrlemp 11.000 BTU. 1
yr* old. w&gt;new compressor
E»t condllionl lliO 171 IN4
AIR condlllaaar
Fodders.
II.MO BTU. II* volt Llko now.
low hours New. was U71.
tacrllm. U71774 57M
OCAMPER REFRIGERATOR •
Good condition. US 17* i m
COUCH. LOVESEAT, CHAIR.
Sill lor the sal 171 M14.
________eves. MO S7*l________
COUCH 4 CHAIR flowered
Round Call** Table solid
maple. Hlrby Vacuum with all
accessories
1710111
O IN E TTE SET wllh leaf. 4
swivel chairs A I Condition’
HOP Call alter 7 111 4144
• D IS H W A S H E R . M aytag
brown, under cabinet, bull! in
Works eicellenl 140 OBO
177 41*4
__________
DRYER/WASHER Color con
sole TV. It In remote color
JTV 171 ISO »V» 1177
• LAROE T A IL S LAMP 40"
tall, complete wllh nice shade
111_______
MUON
LARRY ! MART 11S S.mlurd
A.e New Used turn 4 eppl
Buy/Sell/Trade
177 4117
•MOOULAROESK US
____ 110*173
REFRIGERATOR. CE lg ca
pacify. Iroslless glass
shalves Beige 1 yrs old 14M
OBO 13* 4*0* alter SPM
OROCKING CHAIR lo"d oae
with country style charm 1100
_______ l/l Mia
SLEEPER SOFA. Queen, beg*
* blue stripe

177)

new condition

177 OSIS

No money down f
• 1*0 Plymouth Reliant MOO
MO me. X 11months.
Ne money ( m u needed.
• H U Cadillac D*Villa 4 Dr.
UOO me. X M months
Me money dawn nssdid
d ISOS 14 Ft. Bayllner

ISHP 1*00Nissanangina

• E L E C T R I C T y p e w rite r?
Smith Corona. Priced to Swill
U P ............................ JESS4IS

*1700
UOO me. X 40 month*
Ne money down needed

Cars may be seen at:
W R O U D N T I R O N
FURNITURE. Table, chairs.
set*. Like new. MI 4»47
S N F SHAFFER TILLER. Like
3411 Myrtle A m .

BLACK u b/getRsp retrtorer
m il pups SJO Set **FM #t

1 Large building tots on Route
40 near Lake Homey. Total 1.0
acres toned A -l. Includes
water meter. New priced at
S14.N0 with owner terms
evenable I

BUSTStill

• M? MarcuryCougarSMO
US mo. X11months.

( s|n a J1 a w

111 S. SANFORD AVI Office
buUding. Appro* l.ppp sq. ft.
Covered parking. Oppesife
Chamber ef Commerce bldg,
•y owner, fN (M 407 *411400
or I OHM) 1400

OCALA R A T 'L F O R I S T .
Wooded Ms I u.*M each, no
money down I *71.41 monthly.
IIOPfW Ml*

I. M f i models
Ouaranfted approval. No
dawn payment 1 SM 111 ITS*
SI hr*.

W I K I IV p p M V t

II as_W
iBt■ a e---- ««-I * ~ rWTB B BDPPWDB

Lots/Sal#

231-Cars

SSBUB—

H M M M rd ii
Prpf r t v / » a t o

157—Mobil#
Hom ts/ Soto

LK. MARY CORHIR LOT 1/1
Being renovated. Hardwood
doors. All now appliances.
And hoar this. Only
set.000.

ANY CONOITIONI
Nsad repairs? Bshlnd on
payment,7 Call Grog, 1M 4714

M mm

S I A M BONN
•1/1 • lireplacs. new point end
carpet, fenced yard..... US,NO
d im s . 1.70# sq. ft. with hot tub.
appliances, fireplace SSI.WO
q y tts spilt plan, appllancts.
garage, fencsd yard. S4S.N0
#1/1 - renovated! Nsw carpet,
point, reef, carport, fenced
yard..............................S4f.N0
•1/1 - on 1/1 scre I New point,
fplc. family, living and dining
rooms. Privacy Wnco. S14.SOO

HISTORICAL • COUNTRY
Ca m p l a t a l y renovat ed,
charming 1/7 Everything like
new. Now’s the timet. ..***.**»

^ ^ I BUT HOUSES ^ ^

™

i 4 Assume
No Qualify Homes M Jsml
nols/Orengs/Velutls/Lsks
Counties.

SMfMMUlISSINM

1 b fa t«d N l

• HISTORIC 1 BIDR O OM e
OnFARRanFARR
SMS month.
Cautery II CMaet Beatty

^

/r “

MWPATRUT?

/

113— Parking Span
For Rant

Carpal 4 Vinyl, Calling Fan, Vartlcals 4
Minis, Pod, Tennlo Court, Clubhouaa 4
Laundry Room

■ TV, i l N I T N itkTco torw tW
•land. SIM ar bast attor
M7 4*40

neighborhood. V e ry feed
condition! Fenced ter security
and pets. tS4.N0. M3 *1(7 -

4 bdrm.. 1 bath POOL I
Assumable non qualifying
mortgage. Monthly payments
s m P iT L M s o n o __________
Oev't Names With Ns OHnmkk*
Call Mlh* Ptoutf. VIP
Call N1-17S-SSM____

* 1,

U N F O R O Concrete block. 1
bdrm. 1 bath. Control H/A.
Walk to school. Needs a little
TLC. SX tM t 0 9 f O SWb
S I T T L I I I T A T I Ib d rm . Us
Lg comfortable scm.

MANAtIMINT 4 RIALTY

3214739...........321-2237

DOWNTOWN SANFORD.
NEAR COURTHOUSE.
.
CALLM1 7004

lit—Applit nets

tU&gt;. MsryMMsir*

OINIVA 1 bdrm. CHA No
Petti SMS mo. plus deposit.
M-m* Ironings_______
ONI ROOM., turn , BAROAIN
rsnt, quiet neighborhood.
ParkAve. Msblls Ft. SM-MSI
1BORM.. unfumlahadt3fS/mo.
MULLIT LARI FR.
_______*04-117 1317______
1/1 FURN. AC. wator/gerbeg*
Ftnca/covarad patio. No peisl
VIM . IWOuc m 1717

141-HomtsForSRit

U04 Rudder Circle. Santord.
(Ne*t toSanfordAirport)

F R I I BASSETT NDUN M 1 yr.
old. spayed all shotsI Needs a
heme wllh tots at specs end
totsof level m ills
F R I I TO ROOD HOME - |

cole kittens. 4 me. eld. I blech
andwhlto.l grey. M1I0W

PLEASE N IL F t 2 tomato pup
ptos toft In my frsnt yard need
Will be smell to medium site.
M4 Utt. tv. m q , or work

i31MWjShtoMUIhjerRe^
201— H dtsds

ewNAV FOR U L llse U 71
hate, MSroR. FENCE Mdg. 4
~
IM*Ml I eves

215—Boats and
Accossoftps
H A OVERTURE IS ft Ponlocn
Party beet, sun deck, fully
enctoeed. heed, gettsy, sleeps
1. *0 H F Me r c . S*.»00.

21T— Oarapa Saks
FRANK S LORI'S Nsw 4 Used!
1101 S. French A m . Thrift
Stare. Clip this ad tor tp% ONt

iM iM K lA v Illilt l
ISMS. Hwy 17*1

CASH FOR YOUR CAR! Quail
ty Motorcar*. Inc.. 3400 N
Hwv. I7-01.......------- ..J tn 71*3
HONDA PR ELUDE. ISO* Rad.
3 dew. A/C. sunroof, auto.
AM/PNL eac. condition I Only
*1A30 mile*. U t t ) M l 1100
e FURLIC A U TO AUCTION a
• V IR Y TUBS. 4 FRI. 7: M FM
OAYTOOM A U TO AUCTION
Nwy. ft, Daytona Beech
_________ O U M M IIt

TMt UPPATMCNTS
NO M O N EY OOWN
•iceat las. tag. title, ate
tta* HYUNDAI 4 doer. auto,
elr. store#, power steering,
lew mltost ONLY 111* 00 par
month (40 months a 17 7%
A F R I...............Call Mr. Payne
Ceurtoiy Used Cars. M l 1171
IN ? VOLKSW AOON BUO
Good shape. Green, ne rust.
___________ 133-401*__________
torn VW RekbW. 14 engine Fuel
Injectod. runs, good work carl
S4MOBO.....................Ml S17I
170* TEM PO •good rubber, new
battery, no rust, runs good.
*3.00*.......................... M7 0074
•11 CA D ILLA C SEDAN 01
V IL L I - 4 door. IT*) or bast
otter........................... Ml **14
•* BUICK Skyhawb. *7.000 ml.
A C . pwr brakas/slaarlng.
auto. Must sail 12*00 OBO
173 llM a tto rl_____________
M MA1DA BMM.
) tpead.
AM /FM Stereo. AC. Goad
Condition! U a W S H O IIS

233-Auto Parts
/ AcetSBOfiRS

GIANTT4I0 SKI
Wednesday. Thursday. Satur
day. 7MS W. SI. Rd. 4S. 4 miles
west of 1-4. I mile beyond
&lt;BJ/e u jh n N u rs e rjj^^B^ ^ ^

219— WawtodlpBuy
1SS Aluminum Cans..
Now-Formes Metait..
KOKOMO................

..nan**

222—Musical
MtrchandiM

• C A M F IR CAP. 77X 77, lor
long bad pick up. In good
shape, with lock and kay
White. I T ) *34-7111 or M l 47*7.
aw*______________________
OOOD USED T IRES - All slits
from U and up Mounting also
avallabla Men Frl. I ) . Ills
Calory A w . Santord_________
• TRUCK R I O LINER for 17*1
to I7t7 Ford Ranger. U0

235-Tru cks/
Bust* / Vans

BUNDY C U R IN IT . plus 64)
mouthpiece 4 carrying cate.
Perfect tor school band. 1700
i n oin

B E’

Sintord Motor Co

2 23— M iS C R ila PRODS
• ■ A R T P L A Y TAR O. 1*"
w/peddtd rails. Easy to move
while Ml up and easy told to
carry Comas wllh folding
itrollar Both for US M7 471*
• C H IN A , NOR IT A K I .
"Tahoe" pattern s pc Com
plater Ml 1)0 Never used I
177 1)47___________________
• OAS LAWN EDQER. 1 HP
Briggs * Stratton, rebuilt
e n g in e N e w tone u p .
Goodwheelt E*c. shape 1100
Firm 10) Catalina Dr. San
ford 17104)4_______________
• OLASS COLLECTION Imfla
lion milk and carnival glass,
assorted colors SIM fakes all
__________ Ml SOM__________
• LAD IES BRIDAL Sat. .04
carat round diamond. I4K
yollow gold St S’ a 1100
Ml H U ___________________
• SEWING MACHINE
Kan
more. In case Vary good
condition 1)017111)4________
• STAMP COLLECTION, begun
In If77 Foreign* US IN For
and appointment phone
i n seie__________
TWO IIX SA 'C portable offices
and l lor klift Best offers
_____Call 177 4774 for Into_____
• N GALLON hot water healer
Scotty’s brand Works. 770
required U ) M l *)0)

M R lW w mwER* WW*

l t « SU IU K I SAMURAI JX •
4X4. green w/whita lop Vary
tow mltosl 11.773 Call 171 *M1
S I L L OR TRADE! 77 FORD
PICKUP, ttenderd. 71* salt
17)00 or trade lor automatic
van or truck.............. 177 7111
tta* FORD DUALLY Awtoma
dually. SXS. all wheel drive,
a * 170 HP. diesel Baautltul
condition, lie *41*__________
'74 FORD FIM
Runs good,
looks good St*1or bast offer
___________Ml 4414__________
7* CHEVY 1/4 ton. 1)0 cu In
angina. 4 barrel carb Good
Work truck! 1700 IX) 471*.
call attar a PM._____________
•SI CHEVY l/l ton Pick Up.
Good condition * cylinder.
custom wheels U.000110 747I
S) DODGE RAM heavy duty
1/4 ton. A/C. * sp. AM/FM.
10.000 original miles Like
newt Trade for smaller pick
up or U . MO
771 7017
239— V t h i d R S

Wanted
AA AUTO SALVAGE
of DeBery
WE WE IOH AND PAY!
Top 11 lor (unk.
Carl 4 Truck!
^ * W | l in iW lir j w j s ^

231-Cars
• • Gene Burke Auto Sales a a
low as 1177 down I Low pay
menlsl e « » * « « « T K M47

TMI UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY OOWN
aacapf fa*, tag. title.ale
IM7 CHEVY SPECTRUM 4
door. auto. air. power steer
Ing. stereo! Only 1I1SN per
month I (41 months u 17 7%
APR i
Call Mr Payne
Ceurtesy Used Cars. Ml 1121

239—Motorcycles
and Bikes
O M O TO R C Y C LK TR A ILER .
Excellent condition! Colts
UOO Selling *100 Cash only!
M*«0M

241-R ecreational
V ehicles/ Campers
RV REN TA L tots, t u ) mo ind
water, sewer * garbage
Park Ave. Mabile Pk » ! m i

BUY a SELL • TRADE l

Quality Motor Cars
BUY HERE • PAY HERE
S o m e (.\its A s l ittlt* A s

$700

DOWN
W A C.

1982 DATSUN 210

S1979/S299
Dn./$40 P«r Wk.
42 Wooks &amp; 0% intoratL Total paymonts $1680
I960 AMC CONCORD

S1979/S399
Dn./S33 Par Wk.
48 Wooks 9 0% intorott. Total paymonts $1680
1978 CHEVY MONTE CARLO
Hour*
3400 N. Hwy. 17-92 UF»
ft.
Sal 9 5
LONGWOOD

322-7585

�Tim e for medical
terms for laymen

PETER
GOTT'M.D

It's tim e again. folks; lime for of a bend of hoodlums,
th a t la te sum m er trad itio n
H irsute — clothing
known as Dr. O ott's annual list female executive,
o f M ed ical T erm a for th e
Hygiene—a greettiq
Layman. This la the fourth year
u u u
' " "
that I have Indulged In this
m m m
41 Ki

allllneaa. and I am pateful to the
many readers who aent me

SOMEPENCILS. SOMEMPER
A LOOSE-LEAF BINDER...

u ja

Remember that although this n t
exercise la corny and fltnky. it la
j
habit-forming. Remember, too.
that If enough of you send me 1§,
near d e fin itio n s o f m edical
term a. I’ll have ample material Mj
for next year and I’ll publish
your beat definitions. 1 promise.
Affliction - something truth Is to
stronger than.
«•
Alcohol prep - bartenders "
school.
,
n
Antigen — Uncle Jim ’s wife.
Autoimmune — a car that will «
never he In an accident.
3
Bacillus - where the Pope g
Uvea.
M
Benign - w hat all 8-year-olds *7
will be next year.
•tumped? Oat answers to class by calling ,,D|ai-a-Word
Capillary — Larry’s hat.
C ataract — a type of luxury i l | pop t i t H 1B and entering access code number ooo,
automobile.
woeJ5L minwiY, v v w v .Tans or rotary phones
C en tig rad e — m ailed teat

X WUfT

VES.SR..I NEED SOME
s. SCHOOL SUPPLIES... &gt;

limaNjdofg.
aiipaealar

Cirrhosis — an English knight.
Coccyx —an III rooster.
Colicky - slurped by Lassie.
Coma - something for fixing
hair.
C rutch — part of a Japanese
car not equipped with automatic
transm ission.
Cranium — a sanctuary for
cranes.
weeping after
Cryosurgery
an operation.
Cystogram — a message aent
to your sister.
Dyspepsia — a popular aoft
drink.
Erection — Japanese voting
process.
Erogenous — Inaccurate.
Fallopian tube — a component
In advanced TV seta.
Forceps —a pair of bleeps.
Gangrene — the favorite color

..AND SOME ANSWERS.. I
NEEDA LOT OF ANSWERS.

T H t V JU S T O C U &amp; JtD Mb' V /

6 L £ P -K A » D

MCAtm I k &amp; M H X E J K

;c

1

PREMIUMS A B A IIL )^— ^

------ u------------ - CCALLY?
In chess, the number of possi­
ble moves Increases dramat­
ically as the game unfolds. In
brldfle. though, the number of
pom U bfe^ay- decreases with
each trick. Also the requirement
to follow suit further reduces
your options. However, the more
options you consider, the more
likely you are to come up with
the winning play.
Your partner. Weal, leada the
h eart four against three no­
trum p. Without peeking at the
West and South hands, decide
on your defense.
North’s bid of three no-trump
w as conect. He hoped that the
long diamond suit would provide
enough tricks for game. Also It is
easier to win nine tricks than 11.
especially with no side-suit
shortage.
East’s natural Instinct Is to
win the first trick with the heart

WHY DOUTT YOO&amp;O
V OUTW* AMItfT

ace and return a heart, trying to
ru n p a rtn e r’s suit. Yet the
point-count suggests that West’s
suit is unlikely to be very good.
Besides, that diamond suit In the
dummy la threatening. Unless
S o u th h a s all four missing
diamonds, you can cut declarer's
communications In the suit by
holding up the ace. But there is
an entry In the dummy, so you
m ust remove that spade ace.
The only correct play la to win
the first trick with the heart ace
and then switch to the spade
king.
After this defense, the best
declarer can do Is win two tricks
In each suit, finishing one down.
This defensive play, leading an
unsupported honor to remove an
opponent’s entry card. Is called
the Mcrrimac Coup. It Is named
after an American coal-carrying
ship that was sunk In Santiago
Harbor In 1898 In an effort to lie
up the Spanish fleet.

YOUR BIRTHDAY
A ag. 2S . 1S 9I

%'MI A SBLF

y fo u

Don't give up the bird in hand
to pursue a hopeful ’’maybe.’’
Your best opportunities reside
along familiar lines where you
finish what you start.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Unruly whims and desires must
be held In check today, or else
you could do something silly
that you’ll later regret. Trade on
your strengths, not your weak­
nesses. Virgo, treat yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for Virgo’s
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead by mailing SI.25
p lu s a long, self-addressed,
■tam ped envelope to AstroGraph. d o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 91 4 2 8 . Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.
LIR R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
When seeking advice today, you
may talk to people who’ll tell
you what you want to hear
rather than the truth. But It's
useless to select counselors who
won’t level with you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't flatter anyone who isn’t

iv f lr f

M AP* M *N ,
&gt;fOU
~&gt;n f t N O W - r

B -1 7
.T tA A ^ev

W ELCOM E TO
C A TS W ATCHING

WHAT CHOtCS VO
STILL &amp;0lN‘ WE HAVE, EZRA?
THROUGH •ITT* MAY HAVE
SO-YOUTlfl

CLICK

cue*
CLICK

CLICK
CLICK
click

click
click

CLICK
CLICK
CLICK
CLICK
. CLICK
CLICK
CLICK
CLUCK
CLICK

k

VMfD Yd) RWSE [ 1
O N W r^
GOT

Docum entary

I

A

U M T NORWEGIAN VCiUAp

TOWELS?

V T*.

WITHIT. „ CONTAN/NATgO
MAR&amp;XK6?

EVERYAUA IT

— \700CHgP...

truly deserving today. Inslncertty will lessen the respect
others have for you and cause
them to doubt the nice things
you've said about them.
y SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Put your blinders on when
shooDlnd today, especially If you
browse around stores that carry
merchandise you can’t afford,
Your sale resistance la extremely
low
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) If self-doubts dominate your
thinking today, you could find
vour progress severely Impeded.
Have confidence In yourself and.
If necessary, bluff your way
^A Q U AR IU S Man. 20-Fcb. 19)

Complications are likely to be
authored by you today. If you
find yourself In a tight squeeze,
U’s probably due to cither a sin
of omission or commission.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If
doing business with a stranger
today even though this person
might have been recommended
by a friend, be on guard. It’s best
that you take Ume to Judge the
character of this individual.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19)
Your Image Is a trifle fragile

AN0 5ANPY WILL HAVE TO
UNDERGO EXTENSIVE
K s*
r e a r s ..- anp thats the ™
------- y C T T F 1 e A S Y PART/

S O U TH

♦ Q7 63

V K Q 10
♦ J8 3
♦ AK J

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
Swftlb
1 NT

W«»t
Paw

North
3 NT

Eatl
All pau

Opening lead: V 4

today, and adversaries win oe
looking for flaws in your character. Be careful how you behave
around people who might be
envious.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
There's a possibility that your
attitude could hr self-defeating
today, lessening your chances
for success. Don I look lor
goblins behind every closed
door*
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It
could prove wise to look gift
horses In the mouth today,
Something tantalizing might be
offered to you that Is actually far
less than it appears to be.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
order to appease another today,
you may agree to something that
does not serve your best Intercsts. Unfortunately, the other
party Involved might hold you to
your word
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Use
your common sense regarding
health habits today. Don’t cal or
drink anything that you know
from past experience doesn’t
agree with you.
1^11991. NEWSPAPER ENTERPR1SE ASSN.

W-WITHAl'.TH’ EXCITEMENT, 7/T*
HA5NT £47»V LATELY, ASP/ fTT
M-MAYPE IT'S HUNGRY.

SHALL SEE

CHILP.

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/ -i»

I “
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W4 #(

I

S«nrln« lanfortf, Laki Mary and Samlnala County alnea 1M I
83rd Year, No. 274 - Sanford, Florida

1-cent road tax O K ’d
B fA B A M U R F m O
Herald Staff Writer

□ Sports
Unbsafsn tsam tastas dsfsat
S A N FO R D - Th e Regulators pulled off a 7-6
extra-inning upset to hand State Market Restau­
rant its first losaofthe season Tue sd ay night.

■as Page I I

□ Paopla
All tho nowa that’s fit to sat

or

Cook
the Week Dottle W etherhold has
published recipes In two cookbooks. Colum nist
Midge Mycoff simplifies soaking and cooking
dried beans using her microwave.

■■Unifl■ ■

Local cops join torch run
S A N FO R D — Runners Involved In the third
annual Alam o To rch Run cam e through the
Sanford area this morning. Heading south on U.S.
H ighw ay 17-92. they were about one hour
behind.
A num ber of local runners Joined the regulars
during (heir travels through the Sanford area.
Including members of Ihe Sanford Police Depart­
ment. Th e local runners were L t. Bill Hasson. Lt.
Ralph Rusaell andSgt. Ray Bronson.
T n e run started m Miami last Friday, with a
route that took It north to Daytona Beach, and Is
now taking It southwestely to Bradenton. At that
point, the torch carried by the runners will light
the (lames dedicating the start of the 1991
Sunshine Slate Games. T h e ru n . baaed on
ancient Roman tradition, went from the site of
last year's games, to this year's location at
Manatee High School's Haw kins Stadium . T h e
total trip for the runners was estimated at 480
miles.

Snaky amazes zoo viaitors
S A N D IE G O — Thelm a and Louise arc being
held at the San Diego Zoo.
But they're being well cared for; they get four
m ic e a month — and plenty of visitors.
Thelm a and Louise are the names given to a
rare two-headed female com snake at the zoo's
Klaubcr-Shaw Reptile House. T h e 3 Vii-foot-long
snake Is connected Just behind the heads to only
one body.
T h e heads have Identical m arkings. T h e right
head Is the one with the appetite. It seems to be
the only one to eat the twice-m onthly meals of
two full-grown mice.
"W e have not seen the left head eat. but the
fellow we got II from says it also eats on
occasion." zoo spokeswoman Gcorgeanne Irvine
said Monday.
T h e 4 W y ear-old non-polsonous snake was
acquired in late March from a breeder on the
East Coast, where corn snakes are native. Irvine
said. It Is rare to find snakes w ith two heads,
however, and It Is doubtful Th e lm a and Louise
could survive In the wild.

Escaped ape invades home
LA R G O . Fla. — An escaped ape got Into a
neighbor's house, terrorized the homeowners,
ran after their dogs and left the place a mess.
T h e 3-foot Cclabrse ape nam ed Roscoc
escaped Sunday from its cage a few streets away
and entered Shirley and Norton C raig's home.
"It Just blew by m e." said Craig. "H e was a
mean-looking thing. He looked like K ing Kong In
m iniature."
B y the time police arrived. Roscoe was racing
from Ihe mantle to chalrtops to behind the T V
and to any other place that seemed safe.
Wildlife Rescue director Vernon Yales cor­
ralled (he ape behind an aquarium.
" I Just walked aver, grubbed him by Ihe arm
and walked him out of the house." Yates said.
" T h e n I said. 'OK. guy. you're under arrest."
Owner Rosemarie Dlnardl. w ho has a license
for Ihe ape. said he's never gotten away before.
"H e's such a nice little g u y ." she said, "lie 's
not vlrlousat all."

From staff and wira reports

Classifieds........8B.7B Movies
Cemlcs................... Malian.
Crossword.............

Seminole County officleoe were elated that Ihe
sales tax won votsrs approval. Commissioners
Jsnnlfer Kslley and Fred Streetman, county

Lone bandit
strikes bank
in Longwood

Hot, showers likely
Partly cloudy with
the high in the low
90s and a southwest­
erly w ind at lO iuph.

Partly
Cloudy
For more weather, see Fags 2A

T H E NEW S C H O O L IN G :

Youngsters learn vocational skills In summer classes as well as during
regular school year at Seminole High School in Sanford.

S A N F O R D — Th e re wus a day
w hen the guys In the vocational
classes were hidden In the track or
the school In d irty clothes, re­
c o n s t r u c t i n g a n o ld c a r and
everyone everyone was surprised If
they graduated.
Today, not only arc they able to
rebuild an engine, they're wellversed In com puter technology and
they can w rite English papers us
well.
A n d . m any of them go on to study
at post-secondary Institutions.
"Vocational students arc wellr o u n d e d ." said J o e W llllu m s .
chairman of the Seminole County
s ch o o l b o a rd a n d a hom e
fumlahlnga/reupholatery Instructor
at Seminole C o m m u n ity College.
" S t a r t in g in th e elem entary
schools, youngsters who want to
peraue a vocational career are going
to be prepared for their careers with
classes In their Job area und In
academics."
Williams said that the blueprint
for Career Education, developed by
Betty Castor, commissioner of edu­
cation and a committee of voca­
tional experts. Is being Implemented
on o pilot basis In several Florida
counties. Including Seminole and at
some Junior colleges statewide. In­
cluding SCC.
Students at Altum ontr Elementa­
ry School. Mllwcc Middle Sehool
and Lym an High School In Alta­
monte Springs who are Interested In
a vocational career arc encouraged
lo persue a course of study that
Integrates both the career path lltel

C Bee Locally. Fogs 7A

USce Bandit. Page 9 A

L o n g w o o d b u d g e t: F e w c h a n g e s
By NICK FFIIFAUF
Herald Staff Writer

LONGWOOD — Long wood's lirsi
work session on next y e a r's budget
ended with very little changes from
th e p re se n t year. T h e s e c o n d
session is set lor tomorrow night.
The main budget a reas brought
up lor discussion am ong Longwood
City Commissioners and the various
departm ent heads Monday night
were presentations by the fire d e ­
partm ent. police departm ent, elly
adm inistrator and city clerk. Also
added at Ihe last m inute was the
suggested budgetary requirem ents
for the City Com m issioners Ac­
cording to City Clerk Gerl Zatnbrl.
"The only area where som e r u ts
were matte in the budget Involved
ihe actual commissioners b u d g et."
She said one of these Involved the

;|

i

Bv vtOKI I
Hsraid Staff Writer

According to u report from bank
branch manager Debra Carpenter,
the robber was described as a white
male, wearing black pants, a green
raincoat, and while tennis shoes. He
was said to be wearing a tan ski
mask which covered his face.

Next work session
will be tomorrow

;jj

Voc-ed earns respect here

LON GW OO D - T h e First F .A .
Bank. 2491 S.R. 434 In the Springs
Plaza of Longwood was robbed
yesterday. A lone bandit struck the
bank during daylight hours and got
a w a y w ith an u n d e t e r m in e d
amount of money.

Zed Layson. Director of Security
for the First F.A. said, according to
what he has determined. " T h e m an
came Into the bank from the rear
door, on the north. He Jum ped over
the counter and told the teller to
give him the money." Layson said
Ihe man did not appear angry, and
was relatively calm d u rin g the
robbery.
Layson was not in Ihe bank
building during Ihe actuul robbery.
He said however that as far as he
knew, there were no oilier custom ­
ers In Ihe bank at the time of the
Incident.
Carpenter tukl officers Ihe m an
was ca rrying a se m i-au tom atic
handgun during Ihe entire robbery.
Layson continued. "H e didn't ask
to be given Ihe money, he look II
himself. Just demanding (hat the
teller drawers be opened." He said.
"H e look money from Ihrec places,
two tellers and the drivc-ln teller
area."
After obtaining die money. Ihe
man reportedly Jumped back over

*Ji
:
t-rl|

A S a n f o r d H e r a l d Ex t r a

By NICK FFIIFAUF
Hsrsld Staff Writer

O s a r A b ly ssssssssssssos4S

Deaths.................... 8A Sports sssssosssssssssIB*
■dltorlal
Florida.................... SA Tolovlolon
Moroooopo oooosssssssso SB Weather

manager Ron Rabun, and commissioner Bob
Sturm express their sentiment during the vote
count Iasi night.

SAN FOR D — Th e widening of Sanford Avenue.
County Road 46-A. Rinehart Road and other
county roads can begin on time during the next
live years w ith the nearly 830. million per year
generated by a seventh cent added to Seminole
County's sales tax by voters Tuesday.
Seminole C ounty officials were pleased with the
resounding support voters gave tne 10-year sales
tax Increase, w hich will begin O ct. 1. W ith all 95
precincts reporting. 12.436 people voted for the tax
and 8,280 people voted against It. for a 60. l| o 39.9
percent w inning edge.
Th e margin neld fairly close to a 60-40 split
throughout the evening after polls closed at 7 p.m.
and ballots began arriving at the county elections
office In Sanford, suggesting all areas of the county
supported the tax by a 2 0 percent margin.
County commission chairm an Fred Streetman. a
tax supporter, said voters reponded both to the
need for road Improvements and the knowledge
the county had few options except the tax or
property taxes.
"A n y Intelligent person would have to recognize
that we have an enormous transportation problem
In Seminole C o u n ty." Streetman said. "A n d those
persons would also have to recognize the tremen­
dous cost to accomplish the Improvements needed
to solve those problem s and that we have
exhausted all other available revenues except
property taxes."
Commissioner Larry Furlong, who opposed Ihe
tax. agreed with Streetman.
"T h e voters obviously believed there would lx* n
property tax Increase If they didn't vote for II."
Furlong said. "W hen people vote under duress.
□Bes T a x , Fags BA

it

it

a m o u n t nl m oney paid to t lit*
co m m issio n ers for travel costs,
which w ill Ih- reduced.
The proposed budget lor fiscal
year 1991/92 for Ihe general fund is
$ 6 ,9 7 2 ,7 1 4 The proposed E n ­
terprise Fund budget Is $2,148,931
for a total proposal ol over $9.1
million. The total in Ihe present
fiscal year was §H 07 million.
Last year, a ellv audit determined
that ihe Waler/Sewer Enterprise
F und had an actu al deficit ol
$965.(MX), and the General Fund
was required to loan this am ount in
the Enterprise Fund As a result, a
ten |M-rcent budget reduction was
directed in Dec 1990. on all vacant
positions They remained unlllled
lor six m onths
At m idterm ot the present fiscal
year, a n o th e r reduction in the
hudgci becam e uccessarv Onlv
absolutely essential expenditures
were then permitted The Church
Avenue paving project was delayed
until this coming year
To help nllsct these problems, o

plan in reduce and correct the
liuaneiul deficits of the water and
sewer lunds were developed. Many
nl these have already been enacted.
Among other plans, they Include,
com bining the water, sewer anti
garlsige hilling Into one Enterprise
Fund. Increasing the water rates,
and imposing u 15 percent sur­
charge on all non-city water users.
The surcharge ordinance is pres­
ently awaiting its second reading
and public hearing, expected at the
u|N oinlng City Commission meet­
ing on Ju ly 15.
With the first budget work session
com pleted. Ihe second session will
lie held this T hursday evening
iM-gtnnlug at 6 p m A third meeting
is set for Ju ly 22. and il a (mirth
m eeting is required, it will lie held
on Ju ly 25.
Zatnbrl said. "We hope to have
otir budget dualized by tile end ol
Augiisi Then we will hold public
hearings, possibly on September 9
and 2 3 .” The 1991 92 liscal year
begins October 1

Charter flight
to Paradise
interrupted
By NICK FFIIFAUF
Herald Stall Writer

SANFORD - T he highly
touted Hying trips (rum Sanford
to I'a r u d ls e Isla n d In the
llaham as have s lo p e d There
are hopes however that pro­
blems which caused tin* can ­
c e l l a l i o n w i l l s o o n lie
overeom e.
The hold-up on the lliglds
reportedly is caused by a lack
ol a sufficient rule ol return lo
persons Imam mg the operation
&lt;d the aircraft.
Airport Director Steve Cooke
said today: "It costs approxi­
m ately $ 6 ,0 0 0 per (lav lo
o p e r a te th a t p a r tic u la r 4
engined aircraft." Cooke said
See P a ra d ise . Page 5 A

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y.-^r&gt;g&amp;«6^j -j,

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- Sanford H r old, Sanford, Florida - Wtodweeds». July 10. 1— 1

N EW S F R O M T H E REGION A N D A C R O S S

AT

Voluntary garbage pickup:
’ rates

Mental HaaMhCtnlarlo— contncta
JA C K S O N V IL L E - Th e Mental H ea hh Center, w hich has
provided state-funded services since 1958. la losing Mate
contracts In three Northeast Florida counties due to charges of
poor performance.
T h e center Is also under Investigation b y federal and states
agencies for possible civil rights violations and possible
Medicaid fraud.
T h e slate Department of Health and Rehabilitative aervtcea
will not renew its contracts w ith the center for a s e r -m m l and
referral of patients In northweM D u va l. Baker and Nassau
counties; mental health and d ru g rehabilitative services In
Nassau County; and mental health se rvices in Baker County,
an H R S official said.

— .» j
f— T— o

TRASH COMPACTED

a*
,«| taiuiimn
m i ?n m w T

S ANFORD — T h e director of
the Seminole C ounty E n viro n ­
m ental Services D e pa rtm e n t
m id It may not be
have

What makes up o u r U M ^ ^ H
I 1% GLASS •inciuctos beverage I
ootSM. food contem n s ™
, cosmetic® jars.
6 % M ETA L - Indud— iron.
Muntnum and eteel earn for
— ■ B in d beverages B

Villagt says no s§xy signs
N O R T H PALM B EACH - Th e village o4 North Palm Beach
doesn't cotton m uch to shops with sexy signs.
W hen shop owner Patty-Wheat applied tw o m onths ago for a
sign permit for her shop, Patty's Place: O n ly Se xy Things, the
village Planning Commission rejected the laet three words 4*1.
When It voted again last month, the vote t
"It seemed to be advertising a product, and It's the type of
product that's offensive." Planning Com m issioner Robert Rowe
said.
“ We have shops all over Florida, a n d we have never had a
problem ." Wheat responds.
T h e shop sella women's lingerie, panties and garter belts and
m en’s bikini underwear. In a back room . It offers
accessories, gag gifts, skin magazines. condoms. aduM
massage oil and leather bed room w e a r.

E n v ir o n m e n t a l S e r v ic e s
of

on route
participation a n d other coot
metom, Chafer— Id.
" I wouldn’t be surprise d tf
people living actons from cncfe
o th e r p a y d iffe re n t r a t e s ."
C i n d e r s a id . " T h a t c o u l d

Car magnate wants loan
M IAM I — Car magnate and Philadelphia Eagles
Norm an Bram an wants a 15 million. io w -tn tm a t loan from the
city of Miami's federal funds intended to bring Jobs and
housing to poor neighborhoods.
T h e money would be used to b u ild new showrooms and
service facilities at his Rolls-Royce. B M W and Cadillac
dealerships In a struggling neighborhood along Miami's
Biscay ne Boulevard.
Miami city administrators have endorsed the requeM. saying
without the toan. Braman might relocate his business —
costing Jobs In a neighborhood that badly needs them.

Man chamsd. scconrolics
layvouna
I ■YpwWNwP^P &gt;w
wlMw'V^p son
B

■ T IW I w i l l l l l l v l i y

W E S T PALM B EACH — Joseph B ro w n to teaching hto son
early that the future lies not In plastics but alum inum : scrap
alum inum stolen from Junk yards, police say.
Police charged Brown with stealing a lum in u m for the fourth
lime in less than a year on Friday. Hto accomplice, police say,
was hto 8-year- .Id son.
"Y o u and I go to Winn Dixie to go shopping. T h e y go to
Liberty Scrap Metal," said police spokesman Ralph O rp h a n . " I
guess the family that robs together, stays together."
Police said they found Brown. 9 3 . picking through a
Dumpster In front or Liberty Scrap Metal Inc. w ith hto son
about 6:30 p.m. Brown warn carrying • bucket filled w ith scrap
metal he said he took from the Dum pster, police said.

Nton in motion IstMt frond
MIAMI — Neon In motion along S o u th Florida highways to
the newest trend.
"Everybody looks." said Gustavo Lopes, 21. who mounted
four bars of green neon underneath hto Jeep Wrangler. "M y car
kind of looks like It's hovering.'!
T h e heat-resistant plastic Ughta com e In hot pink, purple,
aqua, green and yellow and cost $369. About ISO of the neon
sets have been sold tn South Florida.
F ro m A ssocia ted Freaa reports

formal approval to a system of
two "w et' gwboge pickups each
week, but each pickup w ill be
limited to two cans per house­
hold. A n y additional cans o r
bags will be charged a container
fee.
Commissioners decided to re­

Treatment could save hair
Associated Press Wrltar
MIAMI — U n ive rsity of Miami actenttots hope a
protein created b y bioengineering will be the key
to preventing h a ir loss in cancer pattcnls
undergoing chem otherapy
Interleukin-1. IL-1 for short, has been shown to
protect against hair loss in laboratory rats. If
successfully produced, the protein could be added
to the treatm ent regim en of chemotherapy
patients, as anti-nausea drugs are sometimes
added.

B u ild in g up on that research. Yunls and
Jim enez found that IL-1. a protein occurring
naturally In the body, was also effective in
preventing hair loss from chemotherapy, which
attacks h a ir celts as well as cancerous cells.
Bioengineering allows the protein lo be created In
large quantities.
The protein IL-1 to similar to other proteins
already In use, such as human growth factor for
building u p bone m arrow and compounds that
augment red blood cells prior to transfusion.
Yunto hopes the protein will be able to alleviate
"one Gf the most devastating side affects of
chemotherapy.

"W e are ve ry encouraged b y this." said Dr.
"One la dy told her doctor U was.like losing a ,
Adel Yunto. though he added the protein has only
part of herself." Yunls said; "W hen a patient Is
shown success in laboratory animals. But he said
there is a "good poaalbUlty" hum an testing will ' emotionally disturbed, 'ft' docs 'Affect ‘the pro­
gnosis. ... It’s a wall-known foci that the patient
begin within a year.
&lt;&gt;'
Yunto and h is research collaborator. Dr.' ‘ 1 has to hdve'th* coUragc and wilt to! tva "
Joann Schcllcnbach. a spokeswoman for (he
Joaquin Jtm encx. were w orking with rata with
American Cancer Society, said she was familiar
leukemia w h e n they found that ImuVert. an
w ith the research on IL-1 and said II could be u
experimental d ru g for brain tumors, prevented
significant step In cancer treatment.
hair loss when combined w ith other drags.

Lawmakers study possibility of
televised death row executions

Nightmare attack
Alligator kills family dog in park outing
P L A N T C IT Y A fishing
outing at a public park turned
Into a nightmare for Johnny
Stephens J r . when a 9-fool
alligator lunged from the water,
grabbed his 40-pound golden
retriever In Its Jaws and swam
away.
"H e resurfaced about 10 feet
from shore a few seconds later
with the puppy In his m outh."
Stephens said of the Sunday
attack at Pleasant Grove Reser­

LO TTE R Y
MIAMI Here are the winning
numbers selected Tuesday In
the Florida Lottery:

"Bit

(LISPS 411 IMI
Wednesday. July 10. 1991
Vol S3. No 274
Published
d IDaily and Sunday, eicepl
•y by Tho Sanford Harald,
Saturday
3 N French A m . Sanford.
Inc. 3001
Fla. 32771
Saccnd Claaa Pgalena Paid ai Sanford,
Florida and additional mailing
POSTMASTER: Sand I
■•THE SANTORO HERALD, P A
Boa 1007, Santera PL 13773-1007
Su bee Hpt km Ralas
IDaily A Sunday!
Home Delivery A Hall
3 Months------------------- I I M &lt;
I Months___________J3S00
I Year.— ................
.47100
Florida Raaldonls must pay I S aalaa
laa In addition In raiee above
Phono (407) 333-3111.

voir in HlUabotough County's
Ed w a rd Medard Park.
" H e waa shaking him , but I
th in k the puppy waa already
dead."
Stephens, 29. of the Knights
co m m u n ity north of Plant City,
said Tuesday he wants county
officials to post signs warning
people about the alligators w
that other pets won’t meet ihc
s a m e fa te a s " N a p o l e o n
B ra n d y ."
C o u n ty parks and recreation
officials didn't post any warning

strict the number of cans to
discourage "piggybacking." or
neighbors sharing the cost of
garbage collection by having
their cans picked up at one
household.
A single recycling pickup will
continue and commissioners will
add a by-request yard waste
collection service at a per bag
charge. T h e stale has required

TALLAH ASSEE F lo r id a
lawmakers want to know w ho
would like to watch death-row
Inmatea executed on television.

signs In the reservoir at the park,
located southwest of Plant City,
but they do try to enforce a
county leash la w near the water,
park manager Wendell Golden
said.
"Alligators d o like dogs, and
I’m afraid to guess how m any
a llig a to rs th e re a re h e r e ."
Golden said.
Stephens said he and hto wife.
Edcl. and another couple were
preparing to fish at the edge of
the reservoir Sunday afternoon
when (he alligator appeared.

"W e're going to assume that If
the Interest groups and the
Individuals on death row feel
strongly that It should be done,
then It'a representative of the
general public." aald state Rep.
Willie Logan, a Democrat from
Opa Locka who chairs the House
Corrections Committee. " I f It's a
strong feeling, then we'll proba­
bly consider some legislation."

Logan's committee has asked
several groups for their opinions
on that issue following a court
battle in California, where a
public television station unsuc­
cessfully fought to gel cameras
Into the execution chamber.
Sheriffs, prosecutors, public
defenders. Journalists and a
random selection of the 316
death-row Inmates are among
those being surveyed. T h e
T a m p a Trib u n e reported for
Tuesday editions.
Logan predicted death-row
Inmates would want televised
executions.

counties and cities to atop m ix­
ing la w n clippings and other
yard waste w ith regular garbage
beginning In January.
T o separate the yard waste,
haulers w ill have to make a
separate trip down each street,
bringing the total to four trips
per route. Instead of two before
r e c y c l i n g a n d o t h e r sta te
garbage reduction requirements.

DUI convict
free 1 year
after tragedy
T A V A R E S — A year ago
la s t w e e k , 2 -y e a r -o l d
Christopher Goodwin was
killed b y a drunken driver.
T o d a y, the m an convicted
of k illin g him to spending
his first full day outside
prison.
Lance Triplett, 20. was
re le a s e d T u e s d a y after
com pleting the boot camp
for youthful offenders at
S u m t e r Correctional In*--";
stltute In Bushnell. A ll told.
T r i p l e t IfcrYed a to m ttVtrtl
m o n th s of a seven-year
prison term that waa part
of a plea agreement made
when Triple tt pleaded no
contest to charges of DUI
manslaughter.
" T o have someone get
out so soon, at first glance
... Is a shock to everybody,"
a ck n o w le d ge d Assistant
S la te A t t o r n e y J o h n
O ld h a m , w ho originally
prosecuted Triplett.
Because he went through
the rig o ro u s boot-cam p
p r o g r a m . T r i p l e t t ca n
co n ve rt the rest of his
prison term to probation.
T h e original plea agree­
m ent Included an eightye ar probation term, so
Trip le tt will net nearly 14
years of probation.
Earlier this year. Circuit
Ju d g e Mark H ill made sure
Trip le tt didn't walk free
and clear.

TH E WEATHER
.

T o d a y ...P a r tly clo u d y with
thundershowers likely. Chance
of rain 60 percent. High In the
low 90s. W in d southwest 10
m p h.
Tonigh t...P artly cloudy with a
lo w In the m id 70s. W ind
southwest 5 to 10 m ph. Chance
of rain 40 perccnL
Thursd a y...P a rtly cloudy with
a 5 0 percent chance of afternoon
and evening thundershowers.
H ig h In the low 90s. Wind
southwest 10 to 15 mph.
E x te n d e d fo re ca s t...P a rtly
cloudy Friday through Sunday
w ith a chance of afternoon and
evening thundershowers.

City

M U M

Apalachicola
Daytona (teach
Ft Laud Baach
Fort M in t
Cainoavlllo
Homostoad
Jacksonville
Kty Steal
Lakeland
Miami
Poniacola
Sarasota
TaiiahaaMO
Tampa
Varo Baach
W Palm Baach

43 14 J »

1 -

i i ■*

_____

▼ \J* L
P U y C ld y 8 1 -7 2

TU ES D A Y
P U y C l d y 9 1 -7 2

m

3

LAST
July 4

PUyCldy &gt;1-72

TH UR SD AY
i U l y C l d y S I -7 2

i

S O LU M A S T A B L E : Min. 5:15
1 1 a.m.. 5:40 p.m .; MaJ. 11:30 a .m ..
- p . m . T ID E S : D a y ta a a B a a c h :
highs. 7:52 a jn ., 8:28 p .m .:
lows. 2:01 a.m .. 1:56 p .m .; N a w
B m y ru a B a a ch : highs. 7:57
PULL
a.m .. 8:33 p.m.: lows. 2:06 a.m ..
2:01 p.m.; Cacaa Baach: highs.
8:12 a.m.. 8:48 p m .; lows. 2:21
a.m.. 2:16p.m .

a n a

ti rs n

43 U fra
44 14 Ira

n n n
4* n w

14 7J 00
44 n 04

M U M
s n «

43 (4 Ira

D aytona B aa ch : Waves arc
foot and semi-glussy. Current Is
lo the n o rth w ith a w a te r
temperature of 83 degrees. N a w
S m y rn a B a a c h ; Waves are flat.
Current is to the north, with a
water temperature of 82 degrees.

FRIDAY
M s ly C ld y 9 1 -7 2

STATISTICS

n &gt;4 .14

44 77 «
m n in
44 n ii

rSV

S t. A agastlaa la J u p it e r la lc t
Today; Wind south to south­
west 15 knots. Seas 3 to 5 feet.
Bay and Inland waters a m oder­
ate chop. Wind and seas higher
near scattered to n u m e ro u s
showers and th u n d e rs to rm s
mainly north portion. To n ig h t:
Wind southwest 15 knots. Seas 3
to 5 feel. Bay and Inland waters
a moderate chop.

T h e h igh tempera lu re In
Sanford Tuesday was 92 de­
grees and the overnight low was
72 as reported by Ihr 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. 18 Inches.
T h e Icmpcrulorc at 9 a.m.
today was 79 degrees and
Tuesday's overnight low was
76. as recorded by the National
Weuthcr Service ut the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

□Tuesday's high................91
B a ro m e tric pressure.3 0 .0 4

□ Relative Humidity....91 pet
□ W la d s ..... Southwest 9 m p h
. .R el u fell...................... 13 in.

□Today's sunset•••a*8:26 p.m.
□Tomorrow's sunrise....6:35

Tompofoturot Indicate previous day's
high and overnight low
City
M4 U I
Atlanta
•s n
cdy
Boston
a 4»
Chicago
■1 41
edy
C lowland
n 4i
cdy
Dalla* Ft Worth
ft 13
cdy
Donvor
13 34
c&lt;»Y
Do* Moines
74 43 33 m
Ootroit
dr
oo 4i
Honolulu
•4 73
dr
Indianapolis
40 43
&lt;*»
Jackson.Mi**
44
dr

Junoou

Kansas City
Las Vagas
Los Angela*
Loutivtlte
Lubbock
Milwoukao
Mpl* SI Paul
Nashviila
N*w O r I r a n i

Naw York City
Norlolk.Va.
North Platte
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
P h o rn i ,

Richmond
Sacramento
St Louis
Salt Lako City
San Dirgo
San Francisco
San Juan.P.R.
Santa Fa
St Sto Maria
Saattte
S h r e v e p o rt

S&gt;oua Fall*
Spokana
Syracusa
Topaka
Tucson

It

37 44
41 47 .04
100 73
71 41
Of 41 01
MM
M 71
74 ti
to u oo
40 40 .33
43 73 Of
ft 4*
17 70
&lt;7 If
43 74
a 41 3.71
07 73
103 M
43 73
44 34
17 «4 4
04 47 .31
73 43
40 33
41 (4
14 U
70 41
47 33
41 71
74 U
04 34
74 41
43 to
i« n

rn
cdy
dr
dr
cdy
cdy
c#r
dr
edy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
m
cdy
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
cdy
cdy

�Sanford Hsrstd, Sanford, Florida - Wadnaaday, July to, 1991
u' is j

Up, up and away
spacta and aummar winds to gat their kite*
airborne recently Count*lor Evelyn Bennett, at
back, makes aura the kite* get up.

Youngster* In the City of Sanford Rscrsation
Department's Summer Playground program at

• Jo A n n e Marie Boyles. 22. 1036 Shady Law * Longwood,
w as arrested by Longsrood police Monday on an ouatandmg
warrant for failure to appear at a hearing to consider charges or
driving w ith a suspended license and th a t.
•W alter Jam es Nunley. 32, BOO S. Oak A ve.. Sanford, was
extradited from South Carolina and arrested at the Seminole
County jail Monday. Nunley was wanted far violation of
probation for an aggravated battery conviction and burglary to
a structure conviction.

that because the land was natu­
r a lly tow , It w o u ld not be
suitable for any construction.
“ W e m ight put some nature
trails up, or use It In some other
w ay,“ he said.
J in kins Circle Park, adjacent
to the Kirk property, contains a
tennis court, basketball court
and childrens swings. “ We con­
sider It a neighborhood .park,'*
Je m lg a n said.

W hile we may not be able to
observe the total eclipse of the
sun tomorrow afternoon here In
Seminole County, there are at
.least a few people w h o will be
m aking preparations to aee as
m uch of it as possible.
Youngsters who are involved
•In sum m er classes at the E n vi­
ro n m e n ta l S tu d y C e n te r in
Longwood w ill be converting
shoe boxes Into prlmative ob­
servation devices.
“ W e w on’t be In session dur­
ing the time of the eclipse." said
Pat Burkette. a coordinator at
the center, “ but we want to
make sure the students have a
safe w ay of looking at the sun.”
T h e edlpee is expected to
begin at about 2:40 p .m . and will
end b y 4:51 p.m .
In Seminole County, there will
be only about 43 percent cover­
age of the sun by the moon.
“ It to still a pretty rare sight.”
Burkette said, noting that the
youngsters w ill learn about the
astronomical phenomenon dur­
ing their m orning classes tomorNone of the branches of the
Sem inole C o u n ty library are
p la n n in g observation parties,
according to spokesmen for the
branches, but they have set
aside reading material about the
eclipse for patrons to learn about
it before they set out on their
celestial observations.
T h e libraries are unable to
provide the materials needed to
construct safe viewing devices
for the eclipse and they suggest
that potential viewers construct
a pinhole projector before at­
tempting to look toward the sun.

While no formal presentations
arc being planned at Seminole
C o m m u n i t y C o l l e g e 's r e ­
cently-opened planetarium dur­
ing the eclipse, the facility has
talked about the phenomenon in
recent Lighthearted Astronomer
presentations.
T h e Lighthearted Astronomer
Is a guide to the constellations
that la presented each Tuesday
at 7 p.m. In the planetarium.

First deadly case of
encephalitis reported
A T L A N T IC B EA C H A
70-year-old Atlantic Beach man
w h o died of m osquito-borne
equine encephalitis was one of
only two people In the state
know n to be Infected by the
disease In Florida this year.
T h e man. whose name was not
released, is the first human to
d ie of E a s te r n e q u in e e n ­
cephalitis since last summer
when a Massachusetts m an died,
said Duane Gubler of the Centers
for Disease Control In Atlanta.
T h e disease usually affects
horses. It has been diagnosed In
about 100 horses In Florida and
Georgia this year and is usually
fatal In horses.
T h e disease is unrelated to St.
L o u is e n c e p h a litis , a m o s­
quito-carried disease that killed
11 people In Florida last year.
T h e man was diagnosed with
the disease between Ju n e 18 and
J u n e 20 and died Tue sd ay
afternoon, said Delores Unslcker.
a spokeswoman for the Duval
County Health Unit.

(

She said officials don't know If
the man contracted the disease
in Atlantic Beach or elsewhere.
Confidentiality rules, she said,
prevented her from releasing the
m an’s name or where he was
hospitalized.
“ People should be concerned
about mosquitoes no m atter
where they are,” she said.
Health officials issued a medi­
cal alert in Duval County last
week after learning a 70-year-old
Bradford County man had the
disease. T h a t man la recovering.
S y m p t o m s In c lu d e a c u te
headaches, stiff neck, high fever
and drowsiness. A ll age groups
are vulnerable. Gubler said.
"W hen hum ans get Infected,
they become seriously 111. and
fatalities are not uncom m on."
Gubler said.
Health officials have suggested
people wear protective clothing
and Insect repellent to keep
m osquitoes aw ay. T h e m os­
quitoes are most active at dawn
and dusk around wooded and
swampy areas.

For formal Instruction on how
to safely view the eclipse and for
discussions on the phenomenon
w ith astronom ers. Sem inole
Counlv residents will have to
travel Into Orange County to the
Jo h n Young Planetarium In the
Loch Haven complex In Orlando.
“ 1 thin a lot of people Just have
always gone over there for this
sort of thing.” Burkett noted.
“ It's not that far.'*

taco stand
nets suspect

MORSE
TIG A TIO N S

R IC H M O N D . V a. An
allegedly phony 920 bill passed
at a taco stand In a Florida mall
le d to th e a r r e s t o f a
Richmond-area man on coun­
terfeiting charges, federal of­
ficials said.
Federal agents Tuesday ar­
rested Robert C . “ Chris" Beahr.
2 5 , o f M c c h a n lc a v lllc , and
charged him w ith the transfer of
counterfeit currency.
A ccording to authorities, a
teen-age clerk at a Jacksonville
m all became suspicious of a 920
bill used by a customer to pay
for her food Friday. T h e clerk
alerted police who arrested the

628

1500

DON’T T A L K !

W he n police looked Inside
Pamela Bosher's purse. they
found 91.000 In allegedly coun­
terfeit bills. Ms. Boahcr said she
had gotten the money from her
b r o t h e r . J e f f r y B o s h e r of
Jacksonville.
Secret Service agents raided
Bosher's apartment where they
found 9 1 6 5.00 0 In allegedly
bogus bills. Bosher then led
agents to where he had burled
another 9350.000 to 9400.000 of
the bills. Another 975.000 was
recovered from a public storage
facility.
Bosher told agents that all the
money came from Beahr. his
cousin.
According to federal officials.
Beahr printed the bogus bills at
his parents' Henrico County
printing shop. Fidelity Printing
Inc., without his parents’ knowl­
edge. Agents said In court doc­
uments that Beahr was assisted
by his brother, Ed.
According to court documents,
Robert Beahr brought ubout
9650.000 In bills to Florida In
Ja n u a ry where he gave them to
Bosher to distribute. Bosher told
the agents that he agreed to split
the profits 50-50 with Robert
Beahr.
Robert Beahr was released on
his ow n recognizance Tuesday.
If convicted, he faces a max­
im um of 10 years In prison and a
95.000 fine.

Since

1982

I St.
Ph. 322-5792
William H. “ Bill" Wight C.P.C.U.
President
Serving Centre/ Florida Since 1946

[SAVE *3.00]
PORTRAITS |
WITH THIS COUPON

I

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THURS. THRU MON. JULY 11-15
DAILY 10:00 AM -7:00 PM
SUNDAY 12:00 - 5:30 PM
SEMINOLE CENTRE •SANFORD
I AGrA g

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WAL-MART

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. July 10. itai

BEN W A T T E N B E R G

Arnold flexes American muscle
ro m

A rn o ld

B c h w n ric n e g g e r and

EDITORIALS

Education reform
rrralitr nl Iftih 'a
|» g r
tepid reception on Capitol HuL where

Secretary
Ida deputy. David
Kearns, have spoken eloquently about the
virtues of this and other administrationBut the Job of guiding the
the mate of
la in the
niiKM oi urtnocrauc ciuumicn wno oon i

protecting the boy. 3 billion people w ill be saved
from nuclear w ar In 1907.
‘Te rm in a to r 2 ." already fining theaters here,
will soon roll out worldwide. Expect hollo foreign
box office: American movies are
dominant In most foreign places. In
American films provide SO j
receipts.
W hy are Am erican movies so popular?
European produ cers say they can't compete
economically because the Am erican dom e stic
audience Is so large It allows producers to cam

r

it&gt;

t e

m

M any French producers admit that French
m ovies are. uh. boring. (It takes an ho u r, they
say. for a French peasant to explain the anguish
In Ids soul.) French movies, they say. typically
tell about something Frenrh.

th e

big investm ents In
th e ir a m a ll h o m e
markets.
M oreover. A m e ri­
cans r u n the d is­
trib u tio n o rga nisa ­
t io n s . d o g lo b a l
p u b lic ity beat, are
technical virtuosos
(the special effccU In
‘T e rm in a to r 2 " are
In c re d ib le ) a n d .
p e rh a p s m o st lm -

T h a t ' s n o t t h e A m e r ic a n w a y . T a k e
’T erm inator 2 ." W ithout pushing It all too Ear. It
la universal (even galactic). If the c y t m r p cam e
to France, the movie could be about cyborgs
eating eacargot. but It couldn't be about saving
the whole dam world. T h e place to save the

producers
can't racoup

A ll true; but there
Is more. European
----------------------------------------------producers say. " A h . Americans know how to tell
a story!" (H uh? Shakespeare couldn't tell a
story? Dickens? Dum as? Verdi couldn't d o

B s IS tW lU l
IlDerMaJ.

I

tm ip w w m i

THIS TKaNW.DWG
BLPWSOVkfr-

Hollywood also sometimes feeds global foar of
Am erican power. Only America threatens the
w orld, according to kxmlefoftlevlslon. T h u s . In
‘T e rm in a to r 2. a Star Ware-type system called
"S k yn e t" goes berserk and starts a nuclear w ar.
(Unlikely: S O I only Intercepts If the United States
la attacked.)

1

*

D W Y lL N O W r

j~

F lH P M *
r

h* m

.

r

COMM

of the National Education Association. And
the nation's **■*#■■* tuarhfrt
la ada­
mantly oppoaedto parental choice and
national testa for students. Both of these
reforms are central to Mr. Bush's plan;
The administration's plan also contains
other
Ideas that rankle the education
lobby.

—

T*■ ■ ■

-■

_________
— — * ' *'t

• -m U
'&gt;-29

For Instance, the plan would provide seed
money to ■*»**""*■
me especially In­
novative in chalenglng their students. It
would further reward schools that show
dramatic progress in raising student test
scores, particularly In math and science. It
would encourage greater flexibility In the
and local funds to
Mr. Bush also would earmark federal funds
for the development of alternative certifica­
tion programs in the states. This would
encourage talented people In non-educatlonal
professions to become teachers or principals.
The cornerstone of the Bush program Is
parental choice. Wealthy and many middleincome parents already have the option of
sending their children to good public or
private schools. Making financial Incentives

This kind of structural reform Is essential to
producing better schools. Lawmakers will be
doing the nation a disservice if they fall to
give Mr. Bush’s pten a fair hearing.

LE TTE R S T O EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must
be signed. Include the address of the writer and a
daytime telephone num ber. Letters should be on a
single subject and be as brief as possible.. Letters
orr subject to editing.

Berry's World

• VSSVbp MIA. tax

ELLEN GOODM AN

A g u id e to s u m m e r re a d in g
B O S TO N — A s a bona fide member of the
reading public, or what m ight be called the
Prr-postllterate generation, the news from the
book world Is not encouraging. Libraries are
getting the budget sx. T h e paperback best­
seller list Is replete w ith novels written from
movie scripts. A n d the publishers' talk at the
recent booksellers* convention wasn't about
censorship but about survival.
In response to this dire forecast for reading. I
have come up w ith a proposal. What we need
Is more summer.
My entirely unscientific survey shows that
more people read lying In hammocks, sitting
on lounge chairs, rocking on porches and
sp a cin g out o n beachea tha n they do
throughout the rest of the year. Books are our
sum m er furniture, sort of like wicker, and our
s u m m e r n o u ris h m e n t like blueflsh and
raspberries. Th e y taste better In season.
In this spirit. I now offer goodies to extend
the sumer m ind If tot the calendar. For your
eyes, here Is m y annual, quirky, entirely
personal and Idiosyncratic collection of books
that 1 read, enjoy and happily pass on to the
next vacationer.
First of all. this was a good year for memoirs.
T h e most Impressive was cthiclst Slssela Bok’s
book about her own mother, the writer,
ambassador, wife, and Nobel Prize winner of
the title. "A lva M yrdal." A ll through her life.
Myrdal asked "H o w do 1 become myself?" Her
daughter's great gift — clear-eyed and kind,
knowing and faml'lary. ripe wtth knowledge
abut the conflicts In wom en's lives — Is to
describe how her mother did become ‘herself."
T h is theme of Identity inevitably Infuses
Lorrnc C a ry’s memoirs of her lfe as the second
black girl at Ihe elite prep school. Si. Paul's.
Cary Is a member of the generation that was
Invited to walk through doors previously
locked. In "B lack Ice" she writes Intimately
and thoughtfully about what It's like to be
female In ntnale world, black In a white world,
and to be whole In a world that subdivides her
by race and gender.
Such subjects are also tackled In a wholly
dllTerrnt wuy by Shelby Steele, whose book
" T h e Content of O u r Character" has become
pari of the national debate about racial
policies. Steele's beliefs In the destructive
power of a dlm iatlvr action on minorities are
restricted b / his life In academia, but Ihe
u r g u in e n l Is far m o re la y e r e d , m o re
psychologically complex than It appears In
political debate. It's worth reudlng Ihe uncxpurguled version.The n lurn to E .J . Dionne’s treatise on "W h y
Americans llate Politics." Dionne has done u
line Job describing Ihe frustrations of Ihe
public and the paralysis of government, til
wltal he culls Ihe "pollutes of false choices.”
Th is Is Ihe lust lime we'll have Harry
Angstrom lo kick around anymore. John

Updike's famous Rabbit, who peaked as a high
school basketball player and prematurely aged
as a Toyota salesmen meets his dealh-wlsh In
"Rabbit A t Rest." Nobody writes as well as
Updike, or w ith as sorry an Insider's knowl­
edge. about his generation of American men.
their marriages, and their father-son rela­
tionships.
From another coast
and sensibility comes
A lice A d a m s ' new
n o ve l. " C a r o lin e 's
D a u g h t e r s . " I t 's
about one m othe r
and her five "grow n
but not yet found
themselves" daugh­
te rs fro m th re e
husbands who form
an Interlocking direc­
torate of N orthern
C a lif o rn ia a n g s ts .
There Is something
real In this Caroline
6 Books are our
w ho describes her
summer
d a u g h te rs In one
furniture and
b lis te rin g ly hones
our summer
m o m e n t
as
nourishment. ■
"b e a u tifu l, selfish,
spoiled and greedy
girls. San Francisco
girls, perfect pro­
ducts of (hut spalled and lovely city."
T h e families In Jan e Sm iley's novellas
entitled "O rd ina ry Love and Good W ill." are
stripped of West Coast gloss. The y stand
pristine and said. Inone story.the effects of one
mother's split for freedom are seenln her five
children twenty years later. In the other, u
father's perfectionism and his back-to-lhcearth attempts at control cun’l prevent his
family from com ing apart ai the scams.
First novels are not something publishers are
eager to produce these days, but two of iheni
made this list. " T h e Music Room" by Dennis
McFarland Is u strong and gracefully written
entry about ihe Journey of u man trying lo
understand hts brother's suicide uiut his ow n
Irublcd life.
T h e other Is only technical)' a "first." " A
Pale View of H ills" Is the paperback reissue of
Ihe first novel by Kazuo Ishlguro. who wrote
Ihe remarkable "Rem ains of the Day." T h is
elegiac tale lakes place In postwar Japan.
There is u surreal quality lo the lulc of two
women caught between cultures, east and
west, traditional and modern.
Filially, us part ol an unnuul summci travel
through books I should have but didn't read —
despite having grown up ul Ihe height of the
"core cu rricu lum " — I bought a used version
of the complete works of George Eliot. I'm
hall way Into "M iddlem an'll" and can't think ol
a belter place to spend Ju ly .

Th e re are lessons. Another European wtth the
initials " A .S ." explained some of H. A d a m S m ith
said nations do beat when exporting goods they
can produce at a "comparative advantajp."
Am erica has remarkable advantages. Size is
one: "the economy of scale" is still relevant. It
helps movie-makers and other manufacturers
w ith new products.

JACK

ANDERSON

EPA is an expert at
pondering pollution
W A S H IN G T O N - It has been 14 years
since Congress ordered the Environm ental
Protection A#ency to update sir pollution
standards at least once every five years. T h e
E P A is still thinking about It.
Th e standards for three of the worst a ir
pollutants — lead, sulfur dioxide a n d ozone,
com m only called smog — have never been
reviewed as mandated by Congress In 1077.
T h a t year. Congress passed amendments to
the Clean A ir Act, which said that every five
years, starting In 1900. Ihe EPA w ould review
the health effects of sir pollution a n d decide
w hether or not to revise the regulations
governing the worst of the pollutants.
E P A re s e a rc h e r
Eric G lnsburg
explained that the
E P A considered the
five-year deadline as
" th e target d a te ."
A n d he said, "Som atimes, there Is. as we
say. slippage."
T h e o n ly " s l i p ­
page" we could find
mentioned In the law
Is a c la u s e th a t
allows the E P A to
e valu ate the stan­
d a rd s m o re often
than every five years.
What the E P A calls
{ The major
"slippage," some en­
cause of
vironm entalists are
smog is auto
calling negligence.
emissions. £
Th e scientific data
on the health effects
of what could be the
most dangerous of the three, ozone, has not
been reviewed rincc 1970. The m ajor cause
of smog Is auto emissions. Heavy smog can
cause painful breathing, coughing and de­
creased lung function. Ozone levels va ry from
year to year depending on the weather.
Experts predict that 1993 will be as bad a
year am 1988. when about 130 m illion people
lived in areas that did not meet the national
standards for ozone. Th e number would be
even higher if the federal standard was m ore
strict — at leant as strict as neighboring
Canada or even California, w hich has a
tougher state standard. If Ihe EPA got serious
about reviewing those standards based on the
latest medical data about lung disease, the
logical decision might indeed be to make the
standards more strict.
A nd the problem Is no! limited to cities.
Fifty years ago. visitors (o Ihe Shenandoah
National Park in Virginia would boast that on
a clear day they could sec the W ashington
Monument 89 miles away. Now. tourists In
the park consider It a treat if they can see the
next range of the Blue Ridge Mountains 20
miles away.
If the EPA was doing its Job. then some
Industries might have to spend a lot m ore
money controlling their emissions. But after
nearly 11 years of pro-business presidents,
the political appointees In the E P A can't be
counted on to do their Job. even If the
rank-and-file environmentalists In the agency
are sincere. So others without political tics to
bind them try to force the EPA to act.
In 1988. the Environmental Defense Fu n d
sued the E P A for failure lo publish formal
decisions on whether the pollution standards
would be revised. Not only was the E P A not
re v is in g Ih e standards, but It w a s n 't
publishing In the federal register the fact thul
It had reviewed Ihe standard and decided II
didn't need to be revised. An appeals court
ruled that the E P A had to publish Its
decisions. But even when Ihe EPA docs that,
the only way to challenge their decision Is for
a private group lo sue them. T h a i puts
private clll/cns In the role of enforcers of a
law handed dawn by Congress.
It isn't that the E P A has been sitting on Its
hands for 14 years. A spokesman told us that
reviewing air quality standards is a " c o m ­
plex" and "ongoing" process.
E P A spokesman Dave Ryan gave our
reporter Nick Iludnick some Insight us to w h y
Ihe E P A feels It cun drug Us feet without
repercussions. "If you violate a court order,
you go lo jail II you violate a congressional
deadline. It's not as serious."

m m m

�AjUfcAdUuA

OVrTvfQ nvfWOi MnfOiUf r KJrKNI

and a 2 .5 acre site on Snow HOI
Road n e a r Oeneva.
" T h e Sanford Middle School
propcny n sonca com mere uu in
the front part and reafcfcnttal in
the bac h . " W e lts explained.
"Some parties have shown some
interest, but so for the d t y has

Richard Wells, director
of facMUes sold thia m orning
"Bfow ty. but surety."
Rem ainin g foe sale are an
11.05 acre site serosa the street
fro m Banford Middle School on
•bench Avenue, a 7.22 acre site

was proposed as a site for the
Winn Dixie Marketplace P la n
which w as eventually built on
the arcs* side of the street.
C o m m u n ity protests over de­
s t r o y in g th e n e ig h b o rh o o d
"green sp ot" convinced d t y ofAdels to not change the toning,
forcing the W in n Dixie develop­
ers to look elsewhere for their
land.

&gt;rd. a pair of lots In
Estates subdivision

"W e can not have the toning
changed, they tell us, until they
know w hat w ill be going In

there.*' Weds said. "S o it will
at § 05 0.00 0. less th a n Ik e
remain half and ha lf."
T h e p ro p e rty la c u rre n tly • 1 .0 2 0 ,0 0 0 p rie e t h a t w a s
sssrssrn at •015,000. the aame placed on It ha t year.
price that was placed o n It In
A d e p re sa e d c o m m e r c ia l
1908.
market in that area waa ollotl for
T h e Lake M a ry B o u le va rd the has of value on the prope rty.
property and the taro lota In
" It ’s been on the m arket for a
aunland lie a c m e the street couple of years." W cB s said.
from one another.
"The re 's been some interest m
When the coun ty took half a
15 acre site to extend Lake Mary
Boulevard several y e a n ago,
WeQa explained, these properties
remained. In exchange for the
property the county took, they been sold recently, but the hM
gave the district an elementary i* assessed currently at M M M
school site In the Yankee Lake or •10,000 per acre,
area of the county.
Wells said there haa been lib
The tw o residential lots in interest In that land.
Sunland have been aaaeaaed at
Th e school district la contfo
•10.000apiece.
In* to try to art) the propertlaa
The larger property, located order to (inane* bulM tng pi
behind the McDonalds on the jects for new school* to hu m .
comer of U.S. 17-02 and Lake the district.

Future bright for biotech graduatee

Stm inolt County Commissioner Larry Furlong, who opposed the
sate tax increase, is caught changing expressions by earners.

what does It
mean? But people obviously also
have a belief there la a need for
m o r e r o a d s In S e m i n o l e
County."
T h e widening of 1.1 m iles of
Sanford Avenue from two to four
lanes between Airport Boulevard
and Lake Mary Boulevard la
scheduled to begin during the
county fiscal year beginning Oct.
1. 1992. Work w ill continue
through the following year, ac­
cording to county schedules.
T h e total project Is expected to
coat *6 million.
Th e widening of 2.8 m iles of
Orange Avenue Is expected to
begin In the 1995-1996 fiscal
year. The lota) project w ill cost
about 012.8 million.
Other local projects In the
county project list include a new
road. Grantllnc Road, to be built
west of Interstate 4 and the
extension of Rinehart Road east
of 1-4. Both projects are sched­
uled to begin b y Septem ber
1992.
Th e tax will raise about 0300
million during the next 10 years
and will provide the foundation
of a 0450 million road-building
program. Th e remainder of the
money will come from gas taxes,
bonds and developer fees. Some
of the expenses will be refunded
from future development fees
and will In turn be used for road
Improvements after the year
2001 .
Commissioner Jennifer Kelley
attributed the referendum’s suc­
cess to the efforts of C o u n ty
Manager Ron Rabun and his
staff.
"H e did a good Job. a super
Job." a Jubilant Kelley said when
returns showed the tax had been
approved.
Rabun said the county didn't
try to "sell" the tax Increase, but
relied on a straightforward in-

Daniel H . Boston. 81. 809
Palm Valley Drive. Oviedo, died
Tu e sd a y at Florida HospitalAltamonte. Bom Ju ly 26. 1909,
he moved to Oviedo from New
Jersey in 1987. He was a retired
assistant vice president in the
banking Industry and a m em ber
of the Oviedo Methodist C hu rch.
Survivors arc wife. Miriam L.;
daughter. Gayle Crowe. W inter
Springs; four grandchildren; two
great-grandchildren. B a ld w in Fairchild Funeral Home. Goldenrod. In charge of arrange­
ments.
VI Etherton. 51. 221 Tollgalc
Tra il. Longwood. died Monday at
Florida Hospltai-Orlando. Born
Dec. 2. 1939 in Center Point.
Iowa, she moved to Longwood
from San Diego In 1977. She waa
a legal consultant for Florida
Hospital and a member of San­
ford M eadows Seventh D a y
Adventist Church. She was ex­
ecutive coordinator for the Flo ri­
da Conference Pathfinders and
co-chairman of the Youth Sec­
tion of the Florida Stomp C o l­
lectors. Survivors are husband.
Lewis; brothers. Warren Evens.
O m a h a , N e b ., Dean E v e n s .
Bethpage. Tenn., Dennis Evens.
Loveland. Colo.: sisters, Phyllis
McMIllen. Lincoln, Neb.. Norm a
Jean Gregory. Brookfield. III.
Carey Hand Garden Chapel for
Funerals, Orlando. In charge of
arrangements.

the counter and left the
building through the front door.
Th e total amount of m oney
taken In the robbery was not
revealed. Bank officials say it
will take several days to de­
termine the total amount.
When last seen by witnesses,
the robber was le avin g the
Springs Plaza area on foot.
Th e Seminole County Sheriffs
department Is conducting the
Investigation of Ute robbery. Th e
Federal Bureau of Investigation
lias been notified of the Incident
but will not become Involved In
the case until a lead lias been
fully developed os a result of the
local Investigation.

.1 .

11 11,

I

TONY RUSS1 INSURANCE
P h .
2 5 7 5

Sheldon Schuster, the center's
director.
Biotechnology lets scientists
insert genes In some plants to
make them resistant to Insects.
Biotech researchers also are
working to Identify hum an genes
responsible for certain diseases,
such as cystic fibrosis, which
eventually m ay lead to preven­
tion of some Illnesses.
DNA Identification is already
being used to held solve crimes
ranging from rape to m urder.
"W e're Just beginning to u n ­
derstand the technology." said
Debopam Chakrabsrtl, one of
U P 's s u m m e r w o rk s h o p In ­
structors. “ W hat we are seeing
now is the Up of the Iceberg."

sumtng the trips.
T h e first week of regular
flights from Sanford to the Island
consisted of travel agents, being
frown to the Island to familiar!re
them w ith the entire operation.
The package d ad . sold b y the
tra v e l a g e n ts In c lu d e d the
roundtrtp air flight from and
back to Sanford, tw o days and
one n ig h t In one of the plush
hotels o n Paradise Island, sever­
al m eals, bevrnvjr.v. nn&lt;\ casino
gam bling facilities.
*
?■ T h e flights were to start car­
ry Ing- .passengers on J u ly 3.
Cooke said he was notified that
the frights, w ould be cancelled on
Ju ly 2 . Prior to that time. Duffy

had reported w e r e ! hundred
passengers had already booked
reservations th ro u g h various
travel agencies around Central
Florida. A ll of the advance reser­
vation money huwever, haa re­
portedly been returned to per­
sons w h o tried to book the
(lights In advance.
Prior to leaving for his meet­
ings In South Florida. Duffy met
with the Central Florida Re­
gional Airport A uthority yester­
day. and discussed the overall
situation, including his plans to
redevelop the regular flights. , , .
Cooke said the problems are
not wfrb lire wholesalers of the
frights, they are with the m ain
investors. " T h e Airport A uthori­
ty hasn't been hurt by this."
Cooke said. " W e already had our
agreement worked out w ith the

U T T E R . QRAMKOW

D O R O TH Y L. M A U TE
Dorothy L. Mautr. 70. Concert

S , F r c u h

A v c ., S a a fs n l

%s4uto- Owners Insurance
4
I ilr . Iliim r i j r H u « i n n « . O

ik im o i*

*a*% it

II

Community college Instructors
who take the UP course o u t
teach biotechnology to th e ir
stu d e n ts a n d to s e c o n d a ry
school teachers.
"It's a wonderful opportuni­
ty ," said Walter Trlbley. a Sem i­
nole Com m unity College biology
Instructor. "It’s great to foam
and b rin g It back to y o u r
students.”

m aintain the aircraft. E v e ry ­
thing la fine In that aspect and
the airport h a sn 't loot a n y
m oney." He adtfod, " T h e return
of the regular (limits Is no w u p to
the persons who are financing
operation of the plane."
Duffy told Authority officials
yesterday, that until he came
Into a complete agreement with
the financial backers, he could
not aay when he m ight be able to
announce the resumption of the
regular dally frights out of San-

JAMESE.SCHUfTIMAN
LF.D.

WHERE SHOULD YOU GO
TO PREPLAN YOUR FUNERAL?
You should choose a firm that offers you the
option to pay for your preplanned funeral at
today's prices.
At GRAMKOW FUNERAL HOME, we have a plan
that guarantees no cost Increase, ever.
Ifyou would like more information on our prepay­
ment plan, please call, come by or clip and mall
this coupon today.
Caring people is one of the things that makes
Brisson Funeral Home special. This is William
E. "BUI" Welbom. BUI is a licensed funeral
director with over 17 years experience in the
funeral business. Caring people is what you
expect and what you get at
3 2 2 -2 1 3 1

3 2 2 * 0 2 8 5

S h e r r a r d Is c o n d u c t i n g
bioethics seminars htlcndad In
r e s p o n s ib ly In t r o d u c e
biotechnology so people u n ­
derstand the possible bsnaBla
and consequences of this rapidly
growing field.

tow n. N .Y . In 1958. He was a Road, Deltona, died Monday at
retired general surgeon and a home. B o m Oct. 27. 1920 In
m e m b e r of the Oviedo C o n ­ Buffalo, she moved to Deltona
g re ga tio n of Je h o va h 's W it­ from O rch id Park. N .Y. In Aug.
nesses. He was a veteran. S u r­ 1979. She w as a public school
vivors are son, Dr. George R.. teacher from 1966 to 1979. She
V ir g in Islands; three grand­ was a clerk at DcLand Library
c h i l d r e n ; s e v e n g r e a t ­ and taught at the Florida Meth­
grandchildren. Pfne Castle Me­ odist C h ild re n 's Home. She was
m orial Chapel Funeral Home. a m em ber of O ur Lady of the
Orlando. In charge of arrange­ Lake Catholic Church. Deltona.
She w a s a member of Deltona
ments.
W om en's C lu b , recording secre­
tary for Sportsm an's Club. De­
Rufus Lee Hall. 42. 2830 Gale ltona. and a member or the
Place, Sanford, died Tuesday In Teacher's Association. She was
Sanford. B om Oct. 5, 1948 in an active ballrucxn dancer. Sur­
Georgia, he moved to Sanford vivo rs are h u sb a n d . Joseph
from W inter Park In 1990. He "Joe;** daughters. Margo L.
w as a receiving clerk and a (Patrick) T a lly . Ham burg. N.Y..
m em ber of United Church of Mary J o . Billings. Mont., Paula
G od by Faith. Survivors are wife. J .. Boston. Jane M .. Arlington.
Hattie; sons. Rufus J r .. Bartow. Texas; son. Joseph G .. Orchid
Jam e s Flint. Longwood. John Park; sister. Genevieve Steffen.
Gatewood. Jason Hardy, both of East A u ro ra . N.Y.; three grand­
S a n fo rd ; d au gh te r. T a ro ly n . children. Stephen R. Baldauff
H a r lo w : b ro th e rs . W illia m . Funeral Hom e of Deltona In
Joseph, both of Eatonvlilc: sis­ charge of arrangements.
ters. Martha McCall, Eatonvlilc.
F ra n c is Fa up . Alabam a.
B rinson's F u n rra l Home. O r­
lando. In charge of arrange­
ments.

Dr. Ernest G. Glllm orr. 99.
510 Buck Lake Lane. Geneva,
died Tuesday at Palm Garden
Nursing Home. Orlando. Born
April 19. 1892 In England, he
moved lu Geneva from Jo h n s

Mo;i! I i i s m i i i u t V
I &gt; I 11 11. 1 1111

the 90*s." said Sherrard. who
added that biotechnology la the
90‘» version of I he computer
revolution.
UP officials see their program
for educators as a first step In
m e e t i n g t h e d e m a n d fo r
biotechnologisU and lab assis­
tants In num erous research set­
tings. from tabs to study human
and a n im a l health to plant
sciences. Blotcchnologiau also
are needed In m any Industries
Including agriculture, chemicals,
pharm aceuticals, waste m a n ­
agement and energy.
T h e p o te n tia l m atketa for
b io te c h n o lo g y p ro d u c ts and
processes are In the hundreds of
billions of dollars a year, said

BRISSON FUNERAL HOME
905 LAUREL AVE.. SANFORD
Sponsuts of the MEMORIAL GUARDIAN PLAN
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{

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I name

_ _ _ _ _ _

___________________ I

1 ADDRESS
1 CITY
1 ZIP

STATE
PHONE

1
1
1

�r , j ^ i } .,. , --L..'. -:ii
'V)ii»itw*M*eeasaatKti4rtS^au--t-v^-:v.4.ittreK

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r i
M

- Sanford Hprtod. S a nford, Florida - Wadnaadar, Ju ly 10, 1 9 1
0 —

F o rm e r C I A o fficia l h a s a tale
to tell a b o u t Ira n -C o n tra affair
I

Mows Analysis
W A S H IN G TO N It look 4V4 year*, but
someone uom the C IA la finally pulling the lid off
the |r:m-Contra scandal.
The job la being done by A lan Pier*. ex-Msrlne.
former tackle for football coach W oody Hayes at
Ohio Slate, now retired from the C IA .
The diversion of Iran arm s aale money to the
Nicaraguan rebels? T h a t big secret that Oliver
North — the author of the scheme — says almost
no one knew about?
Flora says anyone w h o was anybody at the CIA
knew about It — and knew about It months before
It was publicly exposed.
Flora didn't say that Robert Oates knew. But
people above Oates kn e w , and ao did at leaat four
people beside him and below h im , according to
Flore. That should m ake for some Intereating
questions next week at Oates' confirmation
hearing! on Capitol HUI to become C IA director.
Ira n -C o n tra p r o s e c u to r s p e r m itte d the
52-year-old Fieri to plead gu ilty to a pair of
misdemeanors Tu e sd a y In exchange for his
testimony about C IA hlgper-ups and others.
1People arc bouncing off the w alls over there.''
a former CIA employee said after Iran-Contra
prosecutors disclosed Piers' allegations during his
appearance In U.S. D istrict Court.
He admitted w ithholding information from
Congress about the diversion and about North's
secret network to ru n guns to the Contras. He
faces up to a year In JaU and a 9100,000 fine on
each of two charges.
Already at least one retired C IA official could be
facing possible perjury problem s because of P irn '
assertions, which were outlined In an 11-page
statement of facts released b y Iran-Contra
prosecutors.
Clair George, former C IA deputy director for
operations, oversaw all of the agency's overseas
spy networks and left the agency untainted by

the Iran-Contra scandal. H e now has a better­
paying jo b In the bustnesa world.
“ W he n did yo u first know about the diversion
of funds from the a rm s sale to the Contras?*' Sen.
Sam N u n n . D -G o .. asked George tn 1987.
" O n o r about “ Nov. 2 9 .1 9 0 6 ; replied Oeorgc.
Not ao, says Piers.
N orth toM Piers about the diversion In
spring of I B M and again tn hue summer of II
Piers soy* he in formed tw o chiefs of the C IA 's
Latin A m erican Dhrlsloo. one of whom referred
him u p the hoe to Ocorge In late summer.
Piers reported the nears, but he says tt came as
no surprise to the boas.
“ N o w you (Tie rs) are one of a handftd of people
Piers relayed N o rth 's eecret.
If Piers ashed Oeoree how he knew, orosecutors
didn't reveal It: perhaps more details will emerge
later. B u t the C IA has a serious problem on Its

W A S H IN G T O N — O n e o f
W a s h in g to n 's m o s t d is t in ­
guished but obscure m useum s
— home of oddities such as a
Union general's amputated leg
and parts of dead presidents — Is
shedding Its Image as a medical
freak show of p ic k le d d e ­
formities.
Even If they knew about it.
tourists would have a hard time
finding the National Muacum of
Health and Medicine. It occupies
the bland concrete annex of a
1950s bomb shelter at Walter
Reed A rm y Medical Center, far
from the historic m onum ents of
downtown Washington.
O nce Inside, v is it o r s a re
greeted by a Jumble of exhibits
that reflect the old and newly
emerging missions of the na­
tion's pre-eminent m edical re­
pository, which w as founded
during the Civil W a r as the

UJHlSIflH

L tg a l

N o t lc t s

IN T H I CIRCUIT COUaT
O S T N I II S N T I I N T H
j u d i c i a l c ia c u rr,
in a n o r o t
SIM I NOLICOUN TY,
FLOSIDA
C A lIN O u fl-U I-C A -M -S
INORFRNOIMCI
MORTGAGE CORPORATION
OF AMERICA, a Florid*
corporation.
Plaintiff.

1-

PATRICIA L. KANE, LILLIAN
M. PICCIANO. SEAORAVES.
INC., A/b/a BROWNIE SEPTIC
TANK CONTRACTORS. GALE
INSULATION OF ORLA N O a
UNITED STATESOF
AMERICA. DENNIS J. LEWIS
ASSOCIATES. INC.. RAINBOW
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
OF CENTRAL FLORIDA. INC..
CARLOS CASILLAS and
JAMES GOEER. d/b/a THE
CARPET WHOLESALER.
»u-titn
« ----»---*owd
NOTICE OP SALE
Nolle* li hereby given mot
purwant to Its FMOl Summary
Judgment of Forocloouro on
t*r*d In mil como ponding In
th# Circuit Court In and tor
Seminole County. Florida, being
Civil Action No- *1 MI CA 1*0.
th# und*rilgn*d Clerk *&gt;111 Mil
tho proparty tltuatod In Seminola County, Florida, at 11:00
am . on AugMt 4, 1771. da
tcribadat
Lot M. FOXSPUR SUBOIVI
SION PHASE II. according to
tho Plat thereof at recorded In
Plat Booh X. page* 71 - 7X
Public Record* el Samlnoto
County. Florid*.
at public Ml*, lo the highett and
bait bidder lor cath at m* Watt
Front Door, Saminot* County
Courthout*. In Sanlord. Florida.
DATED mit 1th day ot July.
1WI
(SEALI
MARVANNEMORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
By Janet Jetewlc
Pubiim July io. if. m i d e h jj
T

n t h e c ir c u it c o u r t

INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
CASE Nfti 71-411 CP
IN RE ESTATE OF
PETER C DEMPSTER.
DacaaMd
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The adminltlralion ot th*
attata ot PETER C OEMP
STER. deceettd. Fit* Number
f I all CP. I* pending In m*
Circuit Court lor Seminole
County. Florida. Probata
Otvltlen. in* addratt ot which it
Samlnol* County Courthouse.
Sanford. FLJffft
Th* name* and addraiMi ot
lha par tonal r*pr*Mntatlv* and
th* parunal rrpr*Mnl*tlve't
attorney era Ml tortn below
All mleretled partont are
required to III* with this court.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE III all claims
against th* astat* and ID any

N o tlc —

oblacllan by on In torts tad
-^— mini
a|. mvicn1
a*.— w —
wnvm
m

M

ity at m# sain, mo t
ot tho
vonuo, or lurledktton at tho
A LL CLAIMS ANO OBJEC­
TIONS NO T SO P I L ID WILL
lE F O a iV IB B A S B E O .
Publication at mis Nottco boa
lonJutyX H ft.
batty Anno I
ISM Mon theater Circle
Winter Part, FI a m
P AN ICO b BAUM
By: James P. Panic*. lib .
IIIS . Maitland Av*.
Maitland. PL 3J7S1
(407) oaf no*
Attorney for Personal
Rap.
MARVANNE MORSE.
Ctorh. Circuit Court
RV: PatricioThotchor
D EP U TY C LE R K
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Publish: July J, 10. m i
DC H O
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H E I I S N T I I N T H
JUO ICIAL CIRCUIT
OP FLORIDA
IN ANO FOR
S IM IN O L I COUNTY
O IN IR A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO. 110041CA ISO
RYLAND MORTGAGE
COMPANY.

PtolntlH,

vs.
PATRICK H. WRIGHT, at u&gt; .
at *1..
N O TICE OF ACT MW
TO: PATRICK H. WRIGHT
X U North Mornlngtida Court
Ovlado. FloridaUfhl
YOU ARE N O TIFIED that an
action tor FaroctoMrro ot Mart
gag* on th* tallowing described
property:
L o t 73. S T I L L W A T E R .
PHASE I. according to th* Plat
tharaot. at recorded In Plat
Booh JL Paget 4S through M.
Public Records ot Samlnol*
Cobnty. Florid*,
hat been tiled against you and
you or* required to Mrv* * copy
ot your written datenses. It any.
lo it. on Marc Ben lira , At­
torney tor Plolnllll, whoso
address it Sulla 100. ISIS
Madruga Avenue. Coral Gabto*.
Florida. 1114* on or botor* July
71. ltd . and III* th* original
with th* Ctarh ot this Court
either before service on Plaintilt's attorney or Immediately
thereafter, otherwise 0 default
will ba entered against you tor
the relief demanded In the
complaint
WITNESS my hand and *h*
Mat ol this Court mis I fm day of
June, ltd
(SEALI
Maryann* Mors*
As Clef hot the Court
By Patricia F Heath
As Deputy Clerk
Publish June If. » 4 July J. 10.
mi
d e g to;

STAYS DP I _______
iD b iW -M tC A M R

T
Lot M FLAM OP
• HAMMOCK. S i t »
M ptot BMb X f W M i

OoNdatbd Ju tv b WP1. in
N*. M -M d A C A -tA -R Of
ladHtelfoi
eeHalH
S 'L I
SANK, o
aw H t o
VICTOR
Y O U A S ! N O TIFIE D that on
often tg Nrectow g

N o t l c o

N O TIC a O P
FICTITIO U S NAME
lo haroby given a
m bwoMaot at
as. W . Longweod. PL
3077. I am In*to County. F lorIdo.
undw *w Plcttttowo Norn* of
•ROCKBANK SERVICES, and
that I Intend to rogtttor laid
homo with tho Socrotory ol
Stoto. TallebaMM. Florida, in
at it* Pkttttau*
TeWtt
Statvto* 1M7.
Publish: J u ly )«, Ifft
OIH-74
IN TMR C IR CU IT COURT
O P TN R I I O N T ia N T H
JU O ICIA L CIR CU IT,
IN ANO FOR
SEJhUHOLE CO UN TY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO.: fl-M * 3 C A -l3 0
THE B N T IR P R IS I SANK.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION.
Ptamtm.
MICHAEL O. WE I RICH.
WAMOA A. WEI RICH. CORAL
COAST SAVINGS BANK, and
UNITED AM ERICAN BANK
O PCEN TR ALFLO R ID A ,
CORAL COAST SAVINGS
SANK, FSB,
Crooo-Plaintiff,
vs
MICHAE L G. WCI RICH, ot al.
C m * Ootondont*.
N O T IC IO P
FOR I CLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS H E S K B V G IVEN
pursuant to o Final Judpmonl ol
Ferocloturw dated July X m i ,
entered in Civil Cao* Number
t l i W C A It O ol tho Circuit
Court tt th# Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit. In and tor Samlnoto
county. Florida. Hint on tho tot
day *1 August, m i . at ll:0B
a m . at the West Front Door tt
th* Seminole County Court­
house. 101 North Part Avenue.
Sanford. F terIda. X3771. th* un­
dersigned Clerk will altar tor
sale to the hlgheet and beet
r bidder*, tor cash, ot
following described real
Lot S I. S W E E T W A T E S
SFRINGS P.U.D.. according to
the plat mar eat, as recorded m
Plat Booh 34. page* S3. XL 14
and JS. Public Record* ot Semi
not# County. Florida,
together with *11 structure*.
Improvements, future*, appli­
ances and appurtenances on
said land or used In conjunction
DATED this Srtd day ot July.
INI.
MARVANNE MORSE
CLER KO F THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: JonoE. Jesewk
A* Deputy Clerk
Publish: July IS. If. m i
DEH Ml

L tq a l

N

o

U

c o t

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
IN ANO FOR

m n -o n s c A M K
CARTERET SAVINGS BANK,
case

P JL
Plaintiff.

NANCY VELEZ, of at.

Ootondont i n .
NO TICIOP SALE
L
a
rafltw la rwtwp p u n A
nfoli
pursuant to too Order or Final
bHbTcbxuH Court ot Samlnoto
County. Florid*, I will Mil the
property situated In Samlnoto
County. Florida. dMcrNodot:
Lot 7b PHASE IV. ALAFAVA
WOOOS. occordtog to St* gist
nforvH 9 raCVfBiB mi r i p 1999
SX Pogm ft through m otltw
Public Records ot Somlrsolg
County, Florid*.
at publta sale, to Nw Mghost and
boat Mdtor, tor cash, at Nw
Wool Front Dear ot lh* Samlnoto
County Courtbouw In Santard,
Florida, at tl:SS A.M .. on
A u g w tx m t.
MARVANNE MORSE
Clark ot Mo Circuit Court
By: Jane I . Jatowlc
Deputy Clark
Publish: July lb 17. m i
DEH7*

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT.
■M M TIBNTM JUOICIAL
CIRCUIT. M ANO FOB
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO.f1-tt*7-CA-14S
K U LA K NATIONAL BANK.
Plaintiff.
Vb
DAVID L. SOLOMON, tt a)..
NOTICE OP SALE
Nolle* to hereby given that,
pursuant to a FInel Judgment ol
Foreclotur* entered herein. I
will wll toe property situated In
l emkteto Caunty, F torIda. de­
ter Ibod ao:
Unit No. ttUL SPRINGWOOO
V IL L A G E CO NDOM INIUM ,
and on undUMM Interest In Nw
land, common elements and
common si
to sold unit all in
with an
provision* ot
that certain Declaration at Con­
dominium ot SPRINGWOOO
VILLAGE, a Condominium a*
recorded In Official Records
Book 1UI. Pag* MW. Public
Records ot Seminole County,
Florid*.
at public tale, to m* highest and
boot bidder tor cosh, at Hto west
front entrance *t the Seminole
County Courthouse In Santard.
Florida, at 11 go A M . on the
13th day of August, m i.
WITNESS my hand and Ol
flclal Seal ot said Court this 1*1
day ot July. 1711
(Seal)
MARVANNE MORSE
CLERK. CIRCUIT COURT
By. JanoE Jetewlc
Deputy Ctorh
PublUh: July W. If. IWI
O FH *3

SOI to. M S PLAN OP!

M O T

fowM

BCB Rt V J J j S L J d
Ftortte
to too 9
R. RICH N UR D and

CATMIRINR N. RtOtt URO.

Mta Lot M Ron W M n m
dM . s r t r w M HS ows WMf
tow a M o t s of HSJS tost,
d m s m s sa s s wmr w a
dtatoMO Of H1J4 tost, Run
n 4« dra i n r w a
• Of 141JS « M , D M
N m EM « r * t
s at m » tost is i n
N v to to w g f lo t *
n N M S B --------

ktoedto. ora towst RW Osttoe■ I will wN to too btgwgt

ssHsr-r*

Ptgt » M M f « ■ retordsd
H O T i M to
f oPMf
af
X M N d ls t a w

D A TE D an Mto ITth day *4
M ARYANNS MORSE
CLER KO P TH E
CIR CU IT COURT
B Y : PotokidP. Heath
Deputy Ctort
Publtoh: June H . M S JutyX Nk

mi

O fO -M I

I N T N I CIRCUIT CONST
OP T U B IM M IT IIR T H
JUDtCtAk CIRCUIT

a a a iS A L JURISDICTION

C A M MX SMtTBCA-M’R
CITY SAVINGS. FSB,
PtolntlH,
v*.
CHRISTOPHER L I E BROWN.
etu&gt;..etal.,

N O TICE IS H IR IB V O IV IN
purtuont to a Pinal Judsm m l ot
Faroetoeure detod June 17. m i.
and entered In C o io No.
737173CA 14K. tt the Circuit
Court ol the EIG H TE E N TH
Judktot Circuit In end tor SEM­
INOLE County. Florid* whore In
C ITY SAVINGS. FSB to PtoinftH
and C H R I S T O P H L E E
BROWN ot ua.. ot ol. or*
I will wll to tho
ot Nw Wbot Front Door at the
S IM IN O L I County Courthaua*.
in Santard, Plortdb at 11:M
Vetoes A M. on the Mfi day ot
Auguat. m i. Nw following dopT^PeTTjr Ee H i PBsTT* In
leldFInol Judgment, to wit:
L O T 17. C R YS TA L LAKE
E S T A T E S . ACCOROINO TO
T H E P LA T TH B R IO P AS RE­
CORDED IN PLA T BOOK M.
P A G IS t and X PUBLIC R ICO S D S OP S IM IN O L I
CO UN TY. FLORIDA.
D A TE D Nil* M day of July,
m i.
MARVANNE MORSE
Ao Ctort ot gold Court
By: JonoE. Jnewlc
Ao Deputy Ctort
Pubileh: July Ml 17. IWI
DEH SI

County Court
CooelSOM/JIlf
American Plenee
Inc..
PtointIN
v*
L. W. Metiger d/b/a Nil* Sign
Coonty Court

Orange Cowdy. Ptortdo
CSM l 10*1/71
Randy'* Party Store. Inc..
PlalntlH
v*
L e w i* W. M e tig e r d/b/a
NltoNgn Promotion*.
N O TIC E OP SNIRIPP*S SALE
N O TICE IS HER EB Y O IV IN
Ihet by virtu* at too** certain
Writs ot Elocution, a* ttytod
obovd. and more particularly
that certain Writ ot Elocution
toiuod out ot and under too tool
ot Nw County Court at Orange
County. Florida, upon a 'tool
judgement rendered In th*
otorooold court on toe 3rd doy ot
April A D m i . In toot certain
c o m entitled Randy's Party
Store. Inc. Ptolntiif vs Lewis W.
btotigw d/Va tiltoetgn From*
lio n s O s f o n d o n t. w h ich
■toriMld Writ ot leocution wo*
delivered to me a* SharlH ot
5emInote County. Florid*, and I
hove levied upon too tottowing
dneribod property owned by
Lewi* W. Metiger. laid property
being located In Samlnol*
County. F lorIdo, more pertleu
torly deter Med ao toltow*
On# |*77 Oldsmoblle I dr
automablle VIN tlllfR/RniWS)
baton ttarod ot Alternant* Towtog Mrvlc*. Altamonte Spring*.
FtorM*.
and too undersigned os Sheriff
ot Samlnoto County, Florida,
will at tt:S0 A M on to* Ifto
doy Ot July A.D. IWI. otter tor
tai* end »*fl to the htghetl
bidder. FOR CASH, tubject to
any and oil eiltttng Ilent, at to*
West Door, ot to* ttopt. at to*
Samlnoto County CourthovM In
Sanford. Florid*, to* above d*
scribed pertonol property.
That told tato It being mad*
to satisfy to* term* ol Mid Writ*
ol Elocution
Donald F. Etllnger.
SharlH
Somtnoi*County. Florida
Publish June 3*. July X 10. 17.
with to* tato on July It. IWI
OEGUS

Hi 17, HW

r js is s r
I t b m m s
JU L V M H W

a copy ot your
SMBm h . Maty. SsRMi
J O S I P H M . P A N IIL L O .
■ t o u i a i . PtaMttfr*

the re Hat S i mended m" I

Ot .-Am M L M ^ H

ndbagto at*

and a lt g tb g r portott* In
' at, ............

■i Othorwlw s default

L t q i l

_____ totoo loot W tlw totto

S T A T IO N FLORIDA
T O : C IC IL B O M tt, N bring,
and SYLVIA B. OOM IZ, No

A nd what about North?
Plera* statem ent contradicts what North
allegedly told the n -A tto m ey General Ed w in
Meese III on Nov. 23. I B M .

ach.
T h e museum's 350,000 histor­
ical objects. 20,000 specimens
and 2.2 million documents and
photographs also Include one of
the w orld's finest collections of
e a rly m icroscopes, p rim itive
h e aring aids and dental In ­
struments. a Peruvian m u m m y,
w a x m o d e ls o f b a ttle fie ld
w ounds and two live leeches
used for medicinal bloodletting.
O n d is p la y are a lock o f
Abraham Lincoln's hair, shirt
cuffs stained wtth his blood and
seven Uny skull fragments re­
m oved (hiring the autopsy after
L in c o ln w as assassinated at
F o rd 's Theater on A pril 14.
1869. Nearby to a section of
P re s id e n t Ja m e s G a rfie ld ’ s
spinal colum n bored through b y
hto assassin's bullet.
F o r 80 years, the museum was
housed In a large, red-brick
building on the National Mall
next to the Smithsonian Institu­
tion,

E5EHS5H

L IB E R TY N A TIO N AL BANK,
VICTOR a .
CATH I R MM
NbERNf P i m T f l l M I H
OP F L O R ID A , a hdtlonol
banblng p ts e c lg tle n : and
LUM BER C E N TE R OP
C E N TR A L F L O R ID A f/b/S
W ILKIRSON LUM BER. IN C ,

C IA spokesman Mark Mansfield refused to
comment on the status of the two ex-Latin
American Dtvtaton chiefs, o r any aspect of Piers'

A rm y Medici) Museum.
A few steps away from a
m odem AIDS exhibit Is one of
the museum's oldest displays, a
glass case containing the bones
of the amputated right leg of
Union Gen. Daniel E. Sickles,
w ho was struck on horseback by
a 12-pound cannon ball at the
Battle of Gettysburg In J u ly
1863.
After his shattered leg was
sawed off. the eccentric Sickles
sent the leg and cannon ball to
the museum In a coffin-shaped
box w ith a card Inscribed “ w ith
Compliments of Major General
D .E .S ." For many years. Sickles
vtolled the museum o n every
Gettysburg anniversary to view
his "remains.”
Also on display In a “ cabinet
of curiosities" are m um m ified
Siam ese tw in s, a d is se cte d
h u m a n ear. a g a n g r e n o u s
hum an foot and a well-chewed
pair of cotton aborts and a turtle
bone found In a shark's stom­

L t g a l

it a N N 0 s 7 c w S r r v ,

M l N. FranbHn Street, SuHs
V M , Tempo. PtorMoMME
an or bowrt the M
doy of
July, m i , and IU* the original
wtm aw Ctort at M s Cwrt

M u s e u m s h e d s 'H o r r o r ’ im a ge
Assoclatsd Pis— Writor__________

N T M C S D C N tT C O M

T h e tw o La tin Am erican Dtvfckm chiefs alleged
by Piers to have kn ow n of the diversion are still
srtth the agenc y . One now la a C IA station chief in
a European capital. T h e y didn't testify to
Congress In lB 0 7 ,b t it they have been grilled b y
It fo n t k n o w n w hat they said, but W dham
Hundley, the law yer for one of them, disputes
Piers* c h a ra c te ris a tio n th a t he In fo rm e d
Hundley's client of the diversion. He declined to
com m e nt w hen asked whether his client m ight
have kn ow n o f the diversion from a source other
than Pier*.

&gt; M jilliia a

TOW M OM ITM AVCONCaSN:

■ HOT3CE It HEREaVOtVEWTHAT tool
9 * 9

». 9 9 MK. - IM I-NN - R-IAI
wool b
H U S toot to too
Wt
• Wbot Una of
I33.il loot to tho Point of
Beginning. (D R - Reek SITE,
PM* ME*- Public Records i f
▼BEgfomM1PtoWtu
ftmnrl |T■r VfoeeHHp

Deled tots Ito dey *f Juty.

mi.

MARVANNE MORSE
Ctort of flw OrcuH Court
•y: Jane B. Jowwlc
As Osputy Ctort
PuMItb: Juty Hi 17, m i
OEtMS
IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT
O P TN R IW N T E B N T N

P LOR I DA
CA M N O ktM M bCA -M -R
NCND N ATIONAL DANK
OP FLORIDA,
LANIER ANO FRASER
PARTNERSHIP, JA CK
OOUOLAS LANIER. M A X Y JO
LANIER. DONALD J . P R A M R
and TH E LUMBER C E N TE R
OP C EN TR A L FLORIDA. INC.,
d/b/sW ILKIR SO N LUM BER,
INC.
N O TICE OP SALE
NOTICE IS HBBSBV O IV IN
that on to# I3to doy of August.
IN I. ot 11:N AAA at Nw Wist
trsnt Hops Ot th* Seminole
County CourtoSUM. 3S1 North
Part Avenue, l aniar d. F lor Me
31771. too undtrslgnod Ctort will
on Exhibit " A " otwith oil
Bo*
Mal.Metlaa
COrl|Un%191 IftefewlfH.
E X N IE IT "A~
P A R CEL)
Lot* S A X Spring Hammock
the Plot thereat recerded in Plot
book tt. ot Pago EX ot the
Public Record* t t Seminole
County, P torIdo.
PAR CEL&gt;
COMMENCE A T T H E NE
CORNER OF LOT IS. PLAN OF
SPRING HAMMOCK AS R E ­
CORDED IN P L A T BOOK X
PAGES 3 — I OF T H E PUBLIC
RBCOMDS O F S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. FLORIDA; TH EN C E
RUN l P * V W W. ALONG
T H I NORTH LIN E OP SAID
LOT t t A DISTANCE OP S77AS
P I E T T O T H E W EST LIN E OP
THE EA ST 777JS F E E T OP
SAID LOT M AND T H E POINT
OP B E G IN N IN G ; T H E N C E
CONTINUE S. W* O f sr* w .
ALONG T H E NORTH LIN E OP
LOT M A 0 1STANCE OP 4B4-SS
FEET TO THE BAST
R IG H T-O F -W A Y O P TIM O CUAN WAV (OR *31. PO. SMI;
THENCE RUN U r V C I
*I7 t7 P I E T ; TH E N C E RUN S.
44* S3’ 37" 144.IS F E E T ;
THENCE BUN N. SW I f 44" E.
Hi t ! F E E T TO T H E W EST
LINK OP TH E EA S T 477JS
F E E T OP AFORESAID LOT «■;
THENCE RUN S.
W IS" I .
MASS P U T TO T H I SOUTH
L IN E O P S A IO L O T JS ;
THENCE RUNS. If* S T O P 'I .
M M F E E T TO T H E W EST
LINK OP T H E EA S T 477JS
F E E T O P S A IO L O T SS;
THENCE RUN X 14* 4T 4T* E.
H I.H F E E T TO T H E SOUTH­
WEST CORNER OF T H E EAST
If CHAINS (Ott F T .) O F LOT 07
OF SAID PLAN OF SPRING
HAMMOCK; TH EN CE RUN N.
re ir o r e . along said
WEST LIN E X34JS F E E T T O
TH E SO UTHEAST CORNER
O F A F O R E S A ID L O T
THENCE RUN H t f V W W.
ALONG T H E SOUTH LIN E OP
SAID LOT M A DISTANCE OP
777JO F E E T TO T H E W IS T
LINE OP TH E EA S T 277*0
F E E T O F S A IO L O T 4S;
THENCE NUN N. I T 3 T li" W.
ALONG SAIO W E S T L IN E
437*0 F E E T TO T H E POINT
OF RESINNING.
Parcel 3 I* atao described a*
Parcel* A and ■ a* M lew*:
PA A CELA
BEGIN A T A POINT ON TH E
NORTH LIN E OF A N D 477/0
F E E T S W itog **‘SP* W OF
THE NORTHEAST CORNER
OF LOT 4A. PLAN OP SPRING
HAMMOCK ACCORDING T O
TH E P L A T T H E R E O F AS
RECIRDEO IN P L A T BOOK 1
PAGES 3. X 4 and I OP T H E
PUBLIC RECOROS OP SEMI
N O LI CO U N TY . P LO R IO A :
THENCE RUN S 0* dog JT07 '
E 47* to F E E T ; TH EN C E RUN
SWdog i T i r w H0.0S F E E T ;
THENCE RUN N n dag. 37-01"
W 100« F E E T ; TH E N C E RUN
i W deg 77'11' W I0IJ4 Net;
THENCE RUN N 44 dag OS’e T ’
W 14433 F E E T ; TH EN C E RUN
N M dag M i r 477 07 F E E T :
THENCE RUN N t* deg 44*J*"
E 404 W F E E T TO T H E POINT
OF BEGINNING
P4rc*l A I* 4l*o d*ten bed e*
toltow*

:SVS

iBbto foW. b E R . t o l l
m . p o at, P b a a a , ts e s w I m n d saM oof
________ tbtoD sf N if o M t E Dsfo obS M b i IM 1 st CE-40.
(D fE Tt)
X EHLL1ASIP. LSBXia — DAP1 7 WV - - S-1AA DootdstoWt Iona
- Daw MTS totonk MrtNHS M an » IX M m D. as lo t 4 Dtotb D.
W L o t o A I A X I n i i t D&gt;in k P E X P g t1 .&gt; o c h w » H -ri7 iS
K
Pstm Ortoo. MBB. S t to HoBdoy A m b u s . NSW. «to S o tm y
BSSNI OWN M I mtto I to M M X (04STS1
X V K T O S a LTStoE E B U T E M - DAPI-M fV - PMm w S UkN
- SMs | « « H M o rt V B rtom Pgm H « . M X IB .
■s sMoad to o rrw « Lot Ml WbkNo Huto Club
I. P E Hi P i 7M X SecttM M V B i St (Ms to
Court. MSB. N a f EotoWbktvaTrtoL H m a o lt o H u t o
_______ yard and 114 m StNof Sind Ltow Pood IQ tS TH
X C N A E L IS B. t lL V B B S U H SA71-7-S1V R-IAAA
DotodwiBto 2ww — Proto yard Htbacfc vartonco Warn to ft. to 11.77
B. tor 0 rewn adSBon on Lot X Dtort 0 , Sprtoa Lobe Hllto Sodton X
PD Mv P i 4X Section fo-ivift W tods to Lads Oatotoy Trtot. a s It. S
to Spring Lotto Hllto Ortvo end kb mtto W to Petm Sgrtogo Rood.
(D IET 4)
X HELEN V. PAPP - SA717G4V - B -IA D iild w B il Zone Soar yard toWoch uortoBCS hrswi SB tt, to M II. tor I porch eddHton
Lot 14 Htfotowd Ptoo*. U totJ. PE 14 P b TX SoctlOB » I 1 -to; S
1to WbwrN Drive. MB It. I of Oetord
rd Rood
i
and H mile I to
SB-431 (OIST 4)
S. SMITH - B A E t-M tt - D-1AAI
Hem H B. to I H ft. wto N d i yard
i IB R. to I H . tor a goto tc to m oBdnure on too
W 44 B. ot Lot II and 1B* E to R . to Lot IX Dlotfc I, BngHrt Ettotox
Unit Two, PE IX Pg B4 S IX Sodton »ST-3fe N *M* of Poknouth
Rood 14mtto lo t O dkrdSM d and IVk mile Sol SB-4S1 (01S T 4)
x ouury a m a m p p e ip p e d - b atvi -m v - b ia bhisixkii
Zone — Side yard ootoach variance Bent N l l . b t R . b r i ream
odfttton m Lot 11. Btocfc C TongtowooG Sodton J Dgptot. PD Hi Pg
37 S * Sodton » H - » ; N Mde to Willow Lone. MB tt. W to Labo
Howell Boodandth milt ld M -4 M . ID iS T l)
■. MOSILB H O M E/A -1 A M K IILTW D I SOME
I. B O E IR T B. M EEKS - B A tl T H T B — To glace o mobile homo
on Tan Portal M . Sodton 3117-31; B lid i of Oocaoie Bead end I mile
N d St. John* Avenue. (D I I T I I
X C IC IL a M lL V E T T A CKBWS - EA71-7 SITE - To ploca a
'■ hwno on Lot 41, (Ton PartH SCI, Mullet Lobe Ddrooto.
4 » M ; I and d MuUot Lob* S d n t o Road and l mlto I to
Rend (GISTS)
X MARSHALL WRIOMT - BAf1-7-S3TB - T * piece » &lt;
homo on bw W toot Lot X E O ro w o lit Addition to SiockHom
PS X Pg 7X Sodton IS-to-lliSHdo d i n topix ton to Avenue, to mile
W otWkhito Street andtomitoNot Howard Avonuo.(OISTi)
4 M K H A E L S JACKIE m LD ER BR AN D - BA71-7-HTI - To
place a mabMt kom* an Lot IX (TonPorcef 11). Cbcoofi blutf South.
Sodton I IS33; N tldo ot Wotcoooo T/NI. S ot Oicooli Rood oM to
mlto Wot Bow Log* Troll. (D ISTS)
R IS U L A S ABE BOA
A. B E O U IS T POO A SIX MOtfTH E X T IM IO f l
I. SABLAMOO U TIL ITIE S CORF. — SA71I134SE - R-1AA
Bn ldwfhol Zona — Baguoat o ala montti extortion tt • Special
Exception granted Oocomber 17,17W. to allow wall camtrudlen an
Lot S lying ■ SS-4M too* Bw S S H J f B.Bwrod and too* Bw N 47 B.
tor adSttonal R/W. Oo* Pltwr Acre*. PS t x Pg SX Section 3131H;
SW corner ot Longwaad Markham Road and Pewilipi Drive and on
R tM ia tl-d lD IS T t)
X DAVID H. Plttto. JR . - BA7S-I3-38SB - A l AgrtcuHure Zww Rogwoot a tlx month extortion d o Ipeclal Exceptton granted on
Oo comber 17, HtX to permit e privet* g*H practice dub on the S
H X I1B. at the I lto B. of L d X the S MS 71 tt. of Let 4 ofI at Let Y.
and L d to tow the N MS tt. of Bw E 13X71 tt. d Nw W 1 M .7 1 to t*
road rifot-el-wey. PB IX Pg SX Sodton » » l f ; 4M tt. S at 1 .1 .
Williamton Road W and odjocent to Intorgtoto 4 and I ot R/B
right d wop. (DISTS)
B. V A IU U K E S
I. CHAR LISTON CUSTOM H O B M S -B A 7 I7 J4 V - Ptomwd Unit
Oovetopmonf Zeno - tldo yard oetbock variance from M B. to 7 ft.
on Lot If. BrlOgewotor. PB H . Pg • A 7. Sodton IS-lt-iS; E ildt of
Bm lewd Lore ** mlto E ot Howell Branch Mood and to mile N ot
SIMM. (OIST I)
X M O B IIIO N BOMBS - BA71-7J7V - B IA Booldonffol Zone Roar yard tofbocb variance from 3BB. f* 34 ft. wi Lot 13. Lokooot
Atom*. Photo II. PB 41, Pb 77-174 Sodton 31-31-11; ■ tide ot
Soytoumo Place. 40# ft. S #f iolmonf Terraco. 47* ft. w of Legacy
Lone end 4MB. lo t SR-414. (D IST 7)
X MILKS C MCDONNELL. JS . - BA7I-7J7V - B l Betidmflol
Zone — Sid# dreef tofbock variance tram IS B. to • B. and Might
variance hem 4.1 ft. to 7 ft. tor a wooden fence on Lot* I I A I X Black
7, In# Ito K N I I ., Ttmpio Terraco Aiwwx, PS X Pg 41. Section
3311-37; NE corner of Lokimmf Avenue and Corrigan Avenue end
t » B. S tt Howel! Branch Road ( 0 1ST 1)
C. SPECIAL EXCEPTM M S/OTNIB
1. PLORIOA POWER A LIG H T - BA71 7 37SE - A I AgrtcuHure
Zone - Reguoot a Speclet Exception to permit an electrical
dtotrlbuftan tubttofton on Nw N 47BJ7 B. ot Bw W 4707* ft. at toot
part o f l h e N I t o d lh e S I t o o f Section 313137; tying S wtd E at

&amp; w a5 ^ h l o ^

M *-^ “ '** “ ,’* 04

3. TH E M O V ! C O U M IL IN O CEN TER . U K . - EA71 7 17SC R-l Boddwtfla) Zona — Requeot a Special Excoption to permit *
group heme with Incidental ua* ao outpeftant caunoaflng cantor tor
tubefenca abueor* on Lott t.lo n d lh e N ik o fL a fX Hamevllto. F i t .
Pg IX Section 7-1111; E (Id* ot Santard Aveng*. IJO* tt. s ot
Magnollo S tm t and i.OMB. Not CR #17. (O IS T 4)
X FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION - BAtt 7-37SE M l Induttrlol len t - Boquotf ■ Special Excoption to permit * 240
B. i*i7 tuppartlng ttool tower, equipment thattor. and miicellwwouo
tlto wart In owoclolton wtth a cammunicoiiont facility wi Tax
Parcel XL Section 33-3313; S tide of CB-4CT and to! ft. E ot Highway
17 71. (DIST1I
^ ^
4. TH E LA AMISTAO FOUNDATION - SA7I 7HSE - A I
AgricuHurg Zen* - Roquttt to reulw Nw Matter Plan and t* intend
an exiting SpeciolEKapttan tor ereddentlol teaming centv torlh*
mentally bondkoggod to Increoeo fho iwnbor ot rotldwtto hem 32 to
43 toicrlbidoo: baton ot too SEly Comoro! Lot X Lobe otftw Wood*
Subdlvtolen. Pb 7. Pg IX trtneo run N 37 dogma I T to" 1 44X43 B
N J7 degree* IT tor*W ito B. more or loot to the ooat lino ot told L d
X fhonce S to P.GB. along with Tax Parcel 11 A 14 ot Section
lSlt-to; E tMt ot Highway 17-fl and to mlto S of Lobe ot th* Wbode
Bautoubrd (OIST 4)
X RICNARO SAdlNSKI - SA71 7 37SE - C l Comm*rcld Zone
- Requrtt o Spoclol Except ton tor * mechanical garage In
conjunction with Ih* toto of pert*, reiteration and Inttellotton at
cudom and portormonco Itom* on that port ot Lot* 4. X 1 A 7. gtork •
A. HI Alto Little Acre* lying W ot U S. 441. P I 4. Ptog U . Section
1311 H ; S I comordU.S. *41 andOberlln Drive&lt;W t id e g tU .X « ll.
* BOY b. LATHAM - BA7I 7 toSE - C l Commorclol Zone Regu**t * Special Excoption to re m it the tale ot alcoholic
beverage* In conjunction with a mtaurant. lounge « u packoe*
Hare on Tax Parcel 32b. Section 7 It 37; SE comer *1 SB 4M and
Balmy Beach Drive. (OIST 1)
D. APPROVAL OP MINUTES
1. Juno 34 H71 - Regular Mooting
TM* public flooring will be hold In Room W in ol the Samlnoto
County Sorvko* Sul Wing- IMI Cool Flr»t Stm t. Swttord Fiona*.
on July I X 1771. at l li p m . ar a* M*n Ihoreettor at poMioto
Written comment* tiled with Bw Land Monogomont Director will
be can*ldtrad H u r t apgeerlng at the public hewing will he
heerd. Further dHoih avoitobto by colling xi i- u j a eat. ;**7
Portent or* advitad mat If they decide to ipgool m y dociaton
mad* tt mi* hawing, they will nood a record ol m* procaoding*. and
ter *uch purpoea. they may need to Imur* that a verbatim record at
the proceeding* It made, which record Include* the teWtmeny and
r t o r i r t S t X m r l&lt;h ^

****' ’* *° N

m S* ,l°" m 8,#*'

SEMINOLE COUNTY bOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
BY BEN TUCKER. CHAIRMAN
PuMtth July H. 1771
DEM ^

�ret£r:

*j *iirtV
o&amp; a

f^n&gt;^4 n

irar;.

Ssnnrd ruraio, sanford, Florida - Wednesday, July 10, 1901 - W

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Law aims
at voc-ed
schools

■

w csHone education hat moved
tar hewed auto shoe, the bwt
•choota prepare atudents for
MfMaeh eareere - and eoltaga
* hut daepeaeted heaps probtama remain. TMa story dsutf*
the ehaeptap law of weed, and

■

face, lingering stigma of voc-ed

”

—

— —— *- *- i ^ .

»w^p(f*®e WswRO bB® K it

cheeps that takas effect thts

.At 18. Robert HUb dreams bp
toward rcaUUng them In hla
South B u m rlaaamnm.
He dreams of coUepe. and of
taw school. He's studying court
stenography, and after just a
year hla fingers can fly over hla
small black keyboard at 100
words a minute — a skill that
easily could earn him $45,000 a
year if hla law plana get derailed.
The twtat? Hma attends not an
academic high school catering to
the coUege bound, but a voca­
tional school — the oort that
once meant Just auto ahop for
boys, coimetolofjr for fbfe.
The bigger surprise: threefourths of hla classmates at New
York's Grace Dodge Vocational
High School also will go on to
college.
“ A t this school, you get the
best of both worlds: the academ­
ics, and the Job skills.” Hills
■aid.
Hill*, and hla school, personify
a c e n t u r y - o l d a d a g e th a t
“ vokles" still Uke to quote:
“ Hall to the skillful, cunning
hand!
“ Hall to the cultured mind!
“ Contending for the world's
com m and.
“ Here let them be combined."
About 3.8 million atudenta —
or more than one In four of the
nation’s 14.3 m illion high school
students — are enrolled In voca­
tional-technical program s In ­
stead of traditional academic
high schools, according to the
U.S. Education Deportment.
"W h e n people soy vocational
education, they still think 'shop.'
T h e y still talk 'auto body.' But
that’s far less prevalent now ."
said Betsy Brand. Assistant U.S,
Secretary of Education In

PPB7 m illion C a rl D.
Perkins Vocational and
Applied Technology Act
Amendments of 1900.
which took effect July I.
• Bigger federal manta
Ml

Ic w c f

K f iO O v t ,

;

K lllf l

minimum federal voca­
tional grants front 98,000
to 915,000 for secondary
schools, and 9BO.OOO for
higher education.
• More money to the
poorest schools. Boosts the
share of money for schools
with large numbers of
handicapped, poor, and
atudenta with lim ited
English. Seventy-five per­
cent of the federal grants
win go to nich schools, up
from 57 percent In the
original lOMPerkmaAct.
• New accountability.
Requires states to Imple­
ment new performance
atandarda In basic and
o r r is k lo s in g fe d e ra l
grants. Requires states to
■assess e x is tin g v o -te c h
programs to ensure that
they Include solid academ­
ics along w ith vocational
tra in in g . E a rm a rk s 8 6 4
m illio n to fu n d “ T e c h
Prep" programs aimed at
preparing vo-tech atudenta
w ith enough liberal arts
and basic academ ics to
enable them to succeed In
either college or the Job
market.
basic academic and occupational
Perhaps most notably, the law
earmarks 864 m illion to en­
courage further development of
"te ch-prep " collaborative pro­
grams — already under way In
some 4 0 states — aimed at
encouraging vocational schools
to Improve the academic pre­
paration of pupils and develop

p
m

m
w

L o c a lly
have
chosen and practical applica­
tions of academic penults.
“ Some vocational atudenta
don't see the point In analyzing
Shakespeare. Sylvester Chang,
owner of Sanford Mobile and an
ardent supporter of the Blueprint
concept. "T h e y have to learn to
write well, though. T h e y can
learn how they m ust use w riting
even In a vocational career.”
Ellis King, an auto mechanics
Instructor at Lym an, said that
his students have evolved over
(he years.

difaiSSr

„____ r ___ ^ _________ com puter ■oft ware instead of
A d ult Education.
— i H ^nW esism -C ivilization,” too"often-•■.wrenches,' he, said .TTCeplIy,,,
S t u d e n t s at S o u t h e r n
there Is a separation between w ith a laugh.
California Regional Occupational how you use your m ind and
A u to m echanics m ust u n ­
Center In Torrance. Calif., learn your body. ‘Perkins' could go a derstand computer technology
medical and dental technology.
long way toward m aking these to repair the complicated com ­
W a lk I n t o N i c k C u r d ' s
schools meaningful, by showing puterized engines of tod ay’s
classroom for disabled children how what you learn can be
cars.
at Bergen C o u n ty Vocational useful." said Jo h n W irt, a former
T h e B lu e p rin t e nco u ra ge s
High School in Teterboro. N .J.. d i r e c t o r o f t h e N a t i o n a l
students to not only finish high
and. but for a telltale
Assessment of Vocational E d u ­ school, but to go on to post­
blackboard, you'd swear you cation. w ho now works for the
secondary studies at the com­
were In a supermarket complete U.S. Deportment of Labor.
m unity college or trade school
w ith food shelves and cash
V o c a t i o n a l e n r o l l m e n t s level.
registers — all set up to train dropped In 31 states from 1982
kids for food industry careers.
to 1 9 8 9 , a c c o rd in g to un*
A t Floyd S. Kay Vocational
ubliahed new data from the
Technical Center In rural Lex­
altonal Center for Research In
ington. V a.. even the classic Vocational Education, a research
vo-tech world of woodworking is arm of the U .S. Education De­
changing w ith the Introduction partment.
of computerized lathes: "From
More s ig n ific a n tly , e n ro ll­
sawdust to static electricity," ments In 19 of those states have
said principal Scott Hannah.
dropped faster than high school
A n d at George Westlnghouae enrollments as a whole.
School, a vocational school In
Central to the decline Is a ByJBARVBBBN
Brooklyn. N .Y.. where 99 per­ d e b ilita tin g Im age prob lem , Associated Press
cent of students are minorities, vocational educators themselves
students can choose from among admit.
E A S T C H A T H A M . N.Y 13 v o c a tio n a l m a jo rs from
In the decade-long voc-ed School Is never out for Ben
e l e c t r o n i c s to o p t i c s . T h e
enrollment slide. It's hard to say Rockmutlcr and Em ily Houk.
school’s dropout rale Is Just 3.1 which state fared worst because
"T h e y keep right on going.
percent, said Principal Lewis of differences In the way stales Learning Is a way of life for
Kappa port.
keep data. But Pennsylvania them ," says Katharine Houk. the
Houk and
Such heartening examples —
c e rta in ly w as am ong them , children’s mother.
and there are m any more — are p lu n g in g 3 7 .8 percent from her husband. Seth Rockm ullrr.
the good news.
arc among a small but fast1984-89.
B u t critics In and out of
W h a t ' s h a p p e n e d I n growing group of parents who
government believe that much
P e n n s y l v a n i a m i r r o r s the have decided to teach their
of the n a t i o n ' s $10 billion
challenges facing vocational children at home rather than
system of public vocational edu­ s c h o o l s e v e r y w h e r e , s a i d send them to public or private
cation Isn't doing what America
Ferman Moody, director of the schools.
desperately needs It to do: pre­ state's bureau of vocational,
" I don't think it's a major
trend In society." Kockmullcr
pare students for the workplace
technical and adult education.
or further education, and help
T h e h a lf-d a y a rra n g e m e n t says. "But there are a lot of
U.S. businesses compete with
forces voc-ed students to ultend people who just really like their
nations Uke Germ any that have
academic high schools, where kids and want to spend time
world class, ccnturlesotd voca­
they feel stigmatized. Moody w ith them. Th e y feel they know
tional systems.
what's best for them ."
said.
A n d students themselves seem
" A lot of guidance counselors
B y s o m e e s t i m a t e s , t he
to agree: Enrollments in many
still see voc schools os schools number of children being taught
districts have been slumping for
for ’dum m ies.’ or for kids who by their parents at home has
nearly a decade.
are somehow handicapped. Fif­ Increased as m uch as fivefold In
T h is m onth, a federal law
ty-four percent of students in our the past five years. It's a 'trend
takes effect that some say offers
87 s c h o o l s are c o n s i de r e d that home schoolers welcome,
the best hope In years of en­
‘special needs.’ w it h cither saying they're gaining credibility
couraging the spread of desper­
mental, physical impairment, or and expanding their support
ately needed reforms In voc-ed.
economically or educationally network.
T h e &lt; 9 5 6 m illio n C a rl D.
disadvantaged, or reudlng below
But groups representing
Perkins Vocational and Applied
grade level." Moody said.
schools and teachers say It's a
Technology Act Amendments
"B u t 91 percent of our gradu­
dangerous trend for the children
give states two years to devise
ates either get Jobs, go to college
Involved and for society In gen­
performance measures of voor enter the military service. Th e
eral.
tech schools In areas Including
public never really understood
About 46 million students are
graduation rates and mastery of
that." he said.
enrolled In the nation's public
schools, but there arc varying
estimates of how m any are
educated at home. Catholic U n i­
versity Professor Patricia Lines,
in research for the U.S. Depart­
ment of Education, estimated
that roughly 250.000 to 360.000
children were home-schooled In
the 1090-91 school year. That
compares to about 10.000 to
'5 .0 0 0 In the late 1970s and

B

C America may have the worst
school-to-work transition system
of any advanced Industrial
country. 9

(These students must be prepared for the
real world. And that includes more than just
learning auto mechanics. 9

students. “ A n d that Includes
more than Just learning auto
mechanics."
W illiam s has been a strong

-Instructor Mark Davis proponent of Orator's Blueprint
" A high school diploma la not
enough any m ore," W illiam s
Seminole Com m unity College,
long a leader In the vocational
training area of education, has
recently undergone a
transformation In Its vocational
programs recently.
T h e positions of three voca

tjonkl, tn s tn K tw s . ■Who^ AeW*

school administration felt
were In less demand, w ere elim ­
inated.
W illiam s will dose the uphol­
stery shop at the end of J u ly .
Mattie Morablto's food service
classes w ill stop cooking at that
time and Robert Reko will stop
teaching welding.
"Those classes Just weren't
sh ow in g the n u m b e rs," J im
Sawyer, vice ■president of stu­
dent services, said at the time

S c h o o lin g at h o m e :
a c o n tro v e rs ia l
tre n d g a in s fa vo r
about 122.000 to 244.000 In
1985. she says.
Home-schooling advocacy
groups put the num ber closer to
500,000 for the past school year.
Thom as A. Shannon, execu­
tive director of the National
School Boards Association, calls
th e t r e n d , “ a g i a n t s t e p
backward Into the 17th centu­
ry ."
"W e are very concerned that
m any parents who think they
arc qualified to teach their
youngsters, sim ply are not."
Shannon says. “ Th e youngsters
are getting shortchanged. ...
Society ultimately has to pay for
any mistakes, not to mention the
loss of u child who m ig ht
otherwise have made a m ax­
im um contribution."
But home schoolers say the
quality of education they provide
Is often better than that available
from schools. Th e y list benefits
s u c h as I n s t r u c t i o n st yl es
tailored to the child's needs: a
strong fam ily bond: lack of
negative peer Influences und
avoidance of the " b u r n o u t"
often seen In later elementary
grades.
As for academic achievement,
they point to high test scores
and home schoolers who have
gone on to college, such as the
sons of David und Mlckl Colfax.
T h e C o l f a x ' s , a u t h o r s of
' ' tl o in e s c h o o I I n g f o r
E x c e l l e n c e . " taught their
c h i l d r e n at t heir N o r t h e r n
California ranch. T lic lr three
oldest sons went on to Harvard
University, and one Is now In
Harvard Medicul School.
Stale affiliates of the National
School Boards Association and
the National Education Associa­
tion. a teachers' group, have
lobbied for laws to restrict home
schooling.

the decision was made to elim i­
nate the courses. "T h a t certainly
does not mean that we are
abandoning our vocational pro­
gram s."
Indeed, vocational programs in
auto and boat mechanics, crim i­
nal sciences and firefighting
techniques remain staples of the
i school's curriculum .
T h e auto.mechantcs progiam .
sponsored by the Fdrd Motor
Com pany." provides students
w ith training on factory-new
vehicles and helps place them In
Jobs at local auto dealerships for
on-the-job training while they
are still In school.
T h e aspiring mechanics are
required to take courses In
w ritten com m unication, com niters and mathematics In order
o complete their associates de­
gree.

f

“ Th e s e students m ust be
prepared for the real w orld.”
Instructor Mark Davis said of hla

since Its Inception two years ago
and has encouraged all Seminole
C ounty schools, not Just those
Involved in the pilot programs to
encourage the basic skills of
r e a d i n g and w r i t i n g and
mathematics for all their voca­
tional students.
" I think we need to do this In
our schools." he noted.
T h e face or vocational studies
Is changing In another respect;
m ore and more females arc
chosln g careers form erly re­
served for males.
“ I'd say that In traditionally
m a le c a re e rs like auto
mechanics only about 10 per­
cent of the students are girls, but
that la a big change." said Betty
Hogle. director of vocational ed­
ucation for the school district
noted.
T h e vocational classes arc
chunglng In Seminole County
and m any agree It is for the best.
" I like what Is happening."
Chang said. " I t ’sgoing well."

Sanford Herald
a p ro u d m e m b e r o f th e “ W e lc o m e
W a g o n ” F a m ily In S a m ln o la C o u n ty

/«

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

Lot 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 — 321-5660
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

�Sanford Htrald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday. July 10, 1901

Zoo to host
Black Tie on
the Wild Side

Gift of llfo
Thu Qruatur Sanford Chamber of Commerce
kicked off Rs Blood Donor Drive yesterday with
chamber Vice President Bob Oouglae, left, and
chamber Executive Director Dave Farr, right,

Southern Bell
wants to keep
overpayment
TALLAHASSEE Gov.
Lawton Chiles and the Cabinet
agreed Tuesday that Attorney
General Bob Butterworth should
intervene In a case before state
utility regulators Involving an
•80 m illion overpaym ent to
Southern Bell.
I ii the case before the Public
Service Commission. Southern
Bell wants to use the 9 80 m illion
ovci payment to Improve Its fiber
optic network, the attorney gen­
eral said.
Butterworth said the m oney
should be returned to customers.
Failing that, its fate should be
decided by the L e g is la tu re ,
which is the branch of government that appropriates money
he said,
" T h is Is n o t ... Southern Bell's
m o n e y ; It's not th e P S C 'i
money, Butterworth said. "It's
the ratepayers' money
Spero Canton, a M iam i
spokesman for Southern Bell,
agreed that the m oney did not
belong to the telephone c o m ­
pany. which has some 3.7 m il­
lion customers along Florida's
Atlantic coast, in parts of Centra)
Florida and the Panhandle.
C a n t o n , how ever, said he
thought Bullerworth's opposi­
tion was premature since the
utility has yet to propose specific
programs it wants to spend the
money on.

volunteering to show how It's done by being the
first donor* under the cere of Diene Lopsnxo.
LP.N. donor aervico specialist at tha Cantral
Florida Blood Bank, 1302 E. 2nd 81.. Sanford.

ABC P R O M O T E S

Miami-bused FPL elim inated
the slots after a review of about
half of Its positions beginning In
O c t o b e r 19 0 0 . c o m p a n y
spokesm an Hill Sw ank said. A
review of the rem ainder or the
co m p an y 's workforce will he
com pleted by early 1992.
T he coin puny h a d 19.1100
workers when Hie review began.
Sw ank said the red u ctio n s
a f fee le d th e c o m p a n y ' s
workforce throughout the 35
counties It serves, prim arily In
South Florida.
The company said (lie job
reductions were not th e prim ary
o b j e c t iv e In Its c o r p o r a t e
reorganization.
"We are taking these actions
to iK 'lte r enable us to anticipate
arid sa tis fy our c u s to m e r s '
n e rd s." company chief executive
J a m e s llrnadheud said In a new s
release.

Pop/Rock

39%

Country

Free bus outings scheduled
for srss disadvantaged youth
SA N FO R D — Disadvantaged
y o u t h fro m G o ld s b o ro a n d
Midway may have an exiting
summer thanks to Tri-C o u n ty
Transit.
Beginning J u ly 13. Tri-C o u n ty
Transit w ill begin "S u p e r Satur­
d a y" every weekend throughout
the summer. Each Saturday. 30
kids from M i d w a y and
Goldsboro, a lo ng w it h 30
children from W lnwood. will be
taken, without charge, to area

attractions.
Th is week, the kids will be
taken to Discovery Island at Walt
Disney W orld, said Seminole
County Com m issioner Jennifer
K e lle y, the c o u n t y ' s re p re ­
sentative on the T ri-C o u n ty gov­
erning board. T h e students,
selected from the Boys and Girls
Club of Seminole County, will
al so r e ce i v e free l u n c h e s ,
courtesy of B urge r King. Kelley
said.
Kelley said future Super Sat­
urday trips w ill Include the
Central Florida Zoological Park
and Loch Haven Park.

R E S P O N S I B L E " C O N S U M P T I O N OF AL COHOL I C B E V E R A G E S . . . P L E A S E E N J O Y IN M O D E R A T I O N

LIQUOR

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ABE LIQUORS IS EMPLOYEE OWNED i OPERATED
210 A B C ’* m FLORIDA

■

G O O D T H R U T U E S D A Y , J U L Y 16

BOURBONS &amp; BLENDS

SCOTCH SALE
WINDSOR

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CANADIAN

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SCOTCH

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E D 1 7 S 19T? •-r

C s n a lU m

16”

'White Label'

FPL scraps
eight percent
of workforce
MIAMI - Florida Power &amp;
Light Co. said T uesday It has
elim inated 1,500 positions, or
about H percent of its workforce,
a s part of a sweeping corporate
restructuring.
FPL. the state's largest electric
utility. Is offering em ployees
;&gt;l lee ted by the cutbacks a sever­
ance package that Includes u p to
o n e - y e a r 's pay a n d c a r e e r
c o u n selin g . Some e m p lo y e es
have been offered other Jobs
wiililii the company.
About 1.400 w o rk ers have
received voluntary sev eran ce
jrarkages.
" T h e total n u m b e r of
em ployees leaving th e com pany
will not I k - known until the
internal Job placement Is com ­
pleted." FPL President Stephen
Frank said in a statem ent.

SAM FORD - Officials from the
Central Florida Zoological Soci­
ety In Sanford, w ill be having a
ball this Saturday. It's the sec­
ond annual Black T ic on the
W ild Side affair, at W alt Disney
World's Dolphin Hotel.
Special guest of the event for
the second consecutive year. Is
Ja ck Hanna, a b n g tim e friend
a nd form er d ire c to r of th e
Central Florida Zoo. Hanna, w ho
has made guest appearances on
m any nationally televised talk
shows. Is presently director of
th e C o l u m b u s Z o o l o g i c a l
Gardena in Ohio.
E n te rta in m e n t d u rin g thi s
second annual fundraising event
will Include cocktails, a silent
auction, dinner and dancing.
Dress for the occasion Is
fo rm a l, but guests are e n ­
couraged to accentuate their
formal attire with safari and
animal related themes.
T h e coat for the Black Tie on
the Wild Side event Is §100 per
person. C o rp o ra te table
sponsorships are available for
•1500. For Infonnation. contact
the Central Florida Zoological
Park. 323-4450.

"

-

- -

SPARKLING WINE SALE

IMPORTED WINE SALE

BEEFEATER
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GASTON LA G U N G E

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no 11*99 mi*

APPLETON
JAMAICAN

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CLAN
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4.49

.

A B C
H A S
L O W E R
P R I C E S
SH OP

&amp;

C O M P A R E

�WEDNESDAY

anford Herald

July

10,

1991

INSIDE:
■Ptopto, Pag«4B
■Clstslftod, Pag* 6B
■Comics, Pago IB

Naas, Child help Altamonte Springs Nationals hang around

BRIEF

M O U N T D O R A - Kevin Naas and S h a u n Child
helped the Altamonte Springs Nationals slay
alive In the Area IT! bracket of the District 14
Little League All-Star tournament, leading the
learn to a 4-1 w in over Mount Dora Tuesday.

A in tficin i win s^flii
T O R O N T O — In (he year of the streak, (he
Am erican League kept Its going because of the
m a n chasing the ultimate streak.
Cal Ripken played home ru n derby Tor the
second straight day as the Am ericana won 4*2
Tuesday night for their fourth straight victory.
For the third consecutive year, manager To n y
L a Ruasa relied on his short relievers. Not since
Jo e DIMagglo and Ted W illiam s starred from
1946-49 had the Americana done so.
Those two Had of Famers were honored at the
SkyDom e before the game by President Bush
and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.
b u t Ripken's three-run hom er In the third
inning was the hit of the night and made him
the game's MVP.
Th e Nationals, held to two hits In a 2-0 loss
last year, at least did better. A ndre Dawson hit
their first All-Star homer since Dale M urphy In
1964. Ryne Sandberg doubled for their first
extra-base hit In four years. T h e y also got 10
hits, their most since 1979.
T h a t, though, wasn't enough to stop the
Am ericans from closing their gap to 37-24-1.
Ripken, aiming at Lou O ehrlg’s record of
2.130 consecutive games, homered off former
teammate Dennis Martinez for a 3-1 lead.
.

n s

••
-

Special camp achadulad
S A N F O R D - Wes Rlnker's Florida Baseball
Schools has scheduled a special one-week camp
open only to Sanford youth ages 7 to 17.
T h e camp, which will ru n J u ly 22-25. will cosl
635 for the entire week. Dally sessions, stressing
baseball fundamentals w ith an emphasis on
correct throw ing will be conducted between 8
a .m . and noon at Sanford Memorial Stadium .
Interested parties can register via mail by
sending a check to the Florida Baseball Schools.
540 Lake Bingham Road. Lake M ary. 32746.
For more Information, contact Charlie Lylle at
322-6607.

Playing at the Mount Dora Little League
complex. Naaa threw an eight-inning complete
game for the Altamonte Springs Nationals,
striking out eight while walking one and allowing
only one hit. Mount Dora's run was earned.
Naaa also scored the game w inning ru n when
he led off the eighth Inning w ith a walk and

eventually scored on a sacrifice fly lo deep center
Held by Child.
The Altamonte Springs Nationals will continue
Ihelr battle back through the losers' bracket of
the double-elimination tournament tonight when
they play the w inner of Tuesday's contest
between Casselberry and the Dr. Phillips Na­
tionals. Tonight's game, scheduled to begin al 7
p.m.. will be played al Eustls.
Naas helped Altamonte Springs lake an early
1-0 lead when he led off the game with a triple
and scored on a pass ball. Naas made the slim
lead stand up. taking a no-hitter Into the sixth
Inning. But facing elimination. Mount Dora used
a single, a stolen base, a sacrifice bunt and a wild

S A N F O R D — T h e upset bug bit State Market
Restaurant at Chase Park Tuesday night lo
throw the Sanford Recreation Department Men's
T u e s d a y N ig h t S p rlng /S um m e r S lo w p ltc h
Softball League up for grabs.
T h e Regulators pulled ofT the 7-6 extra-inning
upset, handing State Market Restaurant Its first
loss of the season and allowed Beer:30 to dose to
within one game with an 8-3 victory over the
Kokomo Recyclers.
In the other game. Klnco bested Monroe
Harbour Marina 9-4.
State Market Restaurant stands atop the league
with a 9-1 record followed by Beer:30 (8-2). the
Regulators (6-4). Monroe Harbour Marina and
Klnco (both 3-7) and the Kokomo Recyclers (1-9).
Next week. Monroe Harbour Marina plays the
□ B a a M a s , Pag* S B
moiling,
Nine*

M m
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Kekeme Reeyclert
SeeriN

•ii i n
M •i«

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a — s ii

H e k Marker S i t t e r ant

m

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•- 4 •
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14

- 1

Lead-oil hitter Stave Gray contributed a pair of
single* and two runs scored to help second-place
Be*n30 knock off the Kokomo Recyclers 8-3 and

VOLLEYBALL
SCC to holt youth camp
S A N F O R D — Seminole C o m m u n ity College
W om en's Athletics Coach llcana Gallagher will
hold a Volleyball Camp for Middle School thru
High School students Ju ly 29 to August 1.
T im e of the camp will be from 9:30 a.m . to 4
p.m . each day with a one-hour break for lunch.
Cost Is 670 without meals and 680 with
meals.
For more Information, contact the College at
(407) 323-1450. extensions 2 lO o r 380.

SOFTBALL
MDA benefit

ORLANDO - The Orlando Recreation Bureau
will hold sign ups for the S u m m er Youth
Football League at the C om m unity Recreation
C enters o r at the Youth Sports Office on July
8-19 from H a.m . to 7 p.m. T he season will begin
w ith a Jam boree on Saturday. Sept. 14. For
m ore Information, contact Patty Becker at
246-2646.

Q

BIST BETS ON TV

BA8BBALL

[ 8 p.m. — SUN. Minor League: AAA Alltance
All Star Game, (L)

pick up a game on league-loading State Market
Restaurant, which was upset by the Regulators
7-6 in eight innings at Chase Park Tuesday night.

W ith thre e w eeks left,
fo u r te a m s still in h u n t

S A N F O R D — Openings are still available for
. the third week of the 1991 p ill Paync/Semlnolc
C o m m un ity College Basketball Cam p.
« T h e camp, for both boys a n d girls ages 7-14.
w ill take place Ju ly 22-25 in the air-conditioned
S C C Health and Physical Education Center from
2 to 5 p .m . dally.
Cost is 645 and includes Insurance, instruc­
tion. cam p T-shirt and awards.
Fo r more information, call (407) 323-1450.
extension 210. Monday through Friday.

Summer Youth Football

Naas then pitched a perfect eighth Inning to
nail down the win.

Regulators rally
past State Market

SCC co*Bd camp

FOOTBALL

Michael Fclkcr followed w ith a bunt lhat went
foul, then rolled fair. He beat the throw to first
base for a single as Parker scored. After going to
third on a pass ball and a w ild throw by the
Mount Dora catcher: Felker scored on a balk.

Undefeated no longer

■ A tW T iir g "

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - The 8th Annual
Ja m ie Harris National Association of Letter
C arriers (NALC) versus the United S lates Postal
Service (USPS) Softball G am e to benefit the
M uscular Dystrophy Association will be held
S aturday. July 13. at 6 p.m . a tb Merrill Park.
T he Park is located off 434 a n d Jam estow n
Boulevard.
T he gam e is named for Ja m ie Harris, a 17
c a r old from Apopka, who was nam ed MDA's
Sitale and Local Poster Child from 1987-89.
T ickets to the game a re 62 and can be
obtained by cal flng 298-1091 or 876-1705.

pilch to create a run and force extra Innings.
After a scoreless seventh. Altamonte Springs
scored (he deciding runs In the top of the eighth.
Naas led off with a walk and advanced to third on
Billy Parker's single. C h ild then delivered his
sacrifice fly. Parker going to second on the throw
to the plate and advancing to th ird on an error.

Intsrgalactic got two hits and three runs from Bobble Mosley (right), but still
dropped a 12-6 decision to Harcar in a battle for a share of first place.
Fred's Lawn Service, Greenleaf Landscalng and Harcar are tied for first.

rups In the top of th e first Inning
but Greenleaf Landscaping scored
SANFORD - The old song "T he one in the first, two In the second
Tighten Up" would Ik- a perfect and four In the th ird to go up 7-2.
Fred's Lawn Service tried to pull
them e song for the Sanford Recre­
out the win In th e fifth Inning by
ation Department W om en's
Sprlng/Sum mer Slow pltch Softball scoring three ru n s and had the
buses folded with two out but could
League at Plnehursl Park.
not push any m ore ru n s across.
W ith three w eeks left In the
P r o v i d i n g t h e o f f e n s e for
season, three team s are still tied for
Greenleaf Lundscuplng were Shelly
the league lead with a fourth team
Harley (triple, two singles. RBI).
only u game buck.
Pam Brown (two singles, two RBI1.
On this Tuesday. It w as u good
night to be the hom e team as all Christina Hall (two singles, run
scored}. Dana C arr (double, run
three home teams won.
scored. RBI). Michelle Cooke (single,
Greenleaf L andscaping handed
ru n scored, tw o RBI). A nnette
F red 's Lawn Service Its second
Brown and Jill Kovaclk (one single
straight loss. 7-5. while lieer:30
and two ru n s scored each) unil Sue
ham m ered Bikini Beach. 22-2. and
H arcar doubled the score on In- Maugham and Lannic Monhollon
(one single each).
terguluctlc. 12-6.
Pacing the Fred's Lawn Service
G reenleaf L andscaping. F red 's
Lawn Service and H arcar ure all tied olfense were Anicla W heeler (three
singles, two ru n s scored. RBI). Rosa
for the top spot with 8-4 records.
Intrrgalaetlc Is Just a gam e hack al
CiSae W om an. Pag* 3 B
7-5. Beer:30 (3-U) a n d Bikini Beach
(2-10) round out the league.
f r»A l L*«rfi
1M Mt - &gt; 14
Next week. Fred's Lawn Service Offiflfeat Lanetcaetnf
IH M l -- 7 II
plays Bikini Beach at 6:30 p.m ..
6*4(8
m J- 1 7
Intergulaetlc challenges Greenleaf SStkml
m t iM
471 • - n M
L andscaping ut 7 :30 p.m . and
lAl*rfi
lactic
Ml
IH • - - * t*
I lun ar faces Beer:30 ut 8 :30 p.m.
Harcar
40*
a - II II
Fred's Lawn Service scored two

P olice say C o llin s accident
w a s failed s u icid e attem pt
A ssociated Prase

ORLANDO — Former New England
Patriots ru n n in g back Tony Collins of
S a n f o r d , w h o s e NFL e a re e r w a s
shortened by drug use. drove his cur
into u lake early Tuesday In what police
said was a suicide attem pt.
Collins, 32. was treated at a hospital
and released about an hour later, police
said.
Police spokesw om an Jonl Gauntlet!
sa id th e c a s e w a s tre a te d us an
a tte m p te d su icid e because of " th e
things he said al Ihc lime (of the
accident)."
The car hopped u curb al 4:45 a.m ..
went Into the shallow end of the lake
and w as half submerged when
param edics arrived. No charges were
tiled.
The police officer on ihc scene.
Patrick Schneider, treated (he Incident
as an attem p ted suicide and Invoked Ihc
Baker Act. under which someone can be
hrld for exam ination if officials believe
he could I k - a danger lo lumscll or
others.
Collins, a starling wlngback for the
Orlando Predators of the Arena Football
League, couldn't be reached for com ­
ment.

He did make at least one telephone
call after the accident, to Predators
coach Perry Moss. Indicating a desire to
I k * released. His status with the Pre­
dators rem ains uncertain.
Moss said he doesn't expect Collins to
play Friday against Albany at Orlando
Arena and that he is not certain when
Collins will rejoin the leant.
"H e's a very likable guy." Moss said.
"W e're still In the dark about the whole
thing, hut we stand behind Tony. II one
of our players needs help. Ihen we give
it to him. We are deeply concerned for
T ony's safely."
Collins' father-in-law. Jo sep h Starling,
said he wus speaking lor the family
w hen he declined lo com m ent on
w hether Collins ullcmpted suicide.
"W e are walling until we understand
m ore uhoui the situation." Starling sold
Leon Bright. Collins' cousin and
recent business associate in an u n su c­
cessful football cam p venture, told
WESH-TV In Orlando that lie didn't
b elieve th e c h a rg e s of u tle m p lc d
suicide.
"I don't buy that al all." he said. "I'm
sure he would have come lo m e anti said
som ething — lhat he was depressed or
som ething was wrong."
r See

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C o llin s , P a g e 3 B

FOR TH E BEST COVERAGE O F SPORTS IN YOUR AREA, READ TH E SANFORD HERALD DAILY

�—•—~.....' ' r &gt;'

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

C k l c i f l IHough 1-1) at Milwaukee
I Wbgman *-1), |:Mg.m.
M h (Harm 17) a* Mbwooen (Tagani
* SaSmaSra' liaOtown M l at Oak land
(M aareM ), 18:80 gm.
CtovoMsd tMofy ♦*&gt; at loomo IHotown
7*1, M H a m .
Maar York (Kamianiokl 11) at CalHBnMa
IMtCaakJh 7- w , *-**P* t

KamaaO ty at Daaatt.7:»im.
Taaaaal T arawa 7:»a.ia.

euerm nail i i m f n , i. w p k ™
H P J t l ; ia. Cocktail Tam, oiOAtn.

PltHOurgh I I . Smith 14) at Cincinnati
(H e m a w e M ), M Ip jR .
Laa Angola* &lt;0)aaa 71) at Mawtraa)
(OaJMarttaaa H I ) , 7:Np.m.
Ia n Framiecs (WWam a t) at PMladoipMa
(MwtosMand 7-ai, ):N y m .
M. Uata 1DeLeon 17) at Atlanta (Avery
M ),7 i« im .
San Diana (Hurat I I ) at Maw Yarh
(0 a a * n M T 7 :« » .m .
Maattan (Doahatot 1 7 ) at Chicago
(MadOua 44), 4:80 a. m.
F itA n e a a w
Houston at Chicago. ):a g m .

Hamed Chriily

7. Bruno Candttot. Francs. Z. to
I Raul Alcala. Mamies. R O W .)
I Mkhel Verme**, •aWum. BMO. 1:11.
IS. Rett Jaarmawiv fwl Iter land . Wainmam. 1:18.
)l. Thierry Marla. Franca. C talar ama.
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11. Rail Cali. Germany, Ariostos. 1:17.
I I Luc lehiene. Franca. Caatarama. 1:10.
14 Frederic Vihat. Franca. Caatarama.

LOWEST PRICE

1:1*.
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SO. B i«h s p .l:» behind.
Ilia) Rahart Millar, Reg Mar. Cats. 1 :» .

Erlckten. Mlnnetola. I l l .MO. 1 11.'
Langtlon. Celltarnle. I l l J80. 104 Slot
tiemyre. Taranto. 1 1 .718. 1.83: Finlay.
Calltornla. 114 .718. 418; Sandman. Haw
York. 11.710. l.*l; Culllckasn. Detroll, II 4
.711 4.00; McDowell. Chic090. 184 .714110:
Kay, Taranto, 184 .7141.0.
Clement, leaten, til; RJohntan. Seattle,
lit : Ryan, Texet. IM: Finlay, Calltornla.
lOt; McDowell. Chicago. 108: Swlndtil. Ctovu
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E c k a rtla y . O a kla n d . 11: H a rve y
Calltornla, H : Aguilera. Mlnnatota. 71.
Reardon. Beaton. I I ; TMgoaw. Chicage. 10:
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Miami 1 Ctoarwetor I
SI LuctolSaraadal
Vara Beach 7, St. Pttoriburg 1
Watt Palm Beach 4 Charlotte 118 Innlngt
Otceeieet BatetoUCIty
Lakeland al Winter Haven
Dunedin at Farl Laudardato, 1
Clearwater al Miami
SeretotaetSI Lucto
SI Petorthurt al Vara Beach
Cher lotto at Weil Palm Beach
Winter Haven at Lakeland
BeaabeJI City at Otcaale
Dunedin al Fart Laudtrdal*
Ctoarwetor at Miami
SaratataalSt Lucia
SI Petortbgrg at Vara Beach
Charlotte at Wed Palm Beach

AMERICAN 4 NATI044AL1
N ational
A m e ric a s
a brb8 I
a brbb I
Gwymcf 4 1 1 0
RHdtnll
1110
Bullard 1 8 0 0
Carter It
1110
Sndbrglh 10 1 8
Boggtto
1110
Samuel 18 1 0 I 0
Moil tor to 0 0 0 0
Clark lb 10 10
Ripken u
1111
Murray lb 1 0 0 8
Gulttontt 8 8 0 0
Bonilla dh 4 8 1 1
Ftoldar lb 1 0 8 0
Dawtan rl 1 I I I
Palmar lb 0 0 0 0
Jdtarl
18 18
Trtblldh
1880
Caldarnll 10 18
DHdanrt 1 0 8 8
044*11111 1 8 8 8
Storrart 18 0 0
Saba to
1080
G rty jrc t 1 8 1 0
Jahnton to 1 0 0 0
Puckett ct 1 8 8 0
Santiago c 18 8 0
SAtomer c 1 0 8 0
Blgotoc
10 0 0
Flake
1 8 10
OSm ilhu 1 0 8 0

Come to the Track and register
to wfn a Valenti 170 with 115 hp
Mercury Engine and trailer from
MARINE PRODUCTS
ON SATURD AY N IG H T
JU L Y 19th

PO N TI VCDRA - Manay leader* an lha
tffl FCA Tour through lha WatMrn Oyan.
which ended July 7:
Tra
Maaay
1. Carry Pavln
la
1718.***
M anny Wadhint
17 I W M
1 Slava Fata
17 U4M87
4 FrodCoueto*
14 S487.7S
1 Races Mediate
14 0404.181

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7. Davit Lava III

8. Tam Furttar
f . Billy Andrade
10 Paul Ai lower
It. Jay Dan Blake
II. Hal* Irwin
II. Nolan Hank*
14. Mika Hulbart
II. Jolt Sigmon
14. Stow Elklngton
17. Ruw Cochran
10. John Cash
I*. Mark Broaht
70. Craig Stedlor
1). Andrew Magaa
n Furry Zaaltor
n Nkk Prlea
14. Payne Stewart
11. Ian Baker Finch

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LOW. LOW PRICES ON ALL OTHER 8i2ES. TOO)

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�Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, July 10, 1101 - M

Anderson withstands challenge by Faolk to claim Late Model win
m a n
N E W SMYRNA REACH — D rivin g I hi* Cement
Pre*Cast/Cash Register Auto Insurance Pnm latv
.Dick Anderson held off a lalc-race charge by Lee
Faulk to w in the 100-tap M id-Sum m er FA S C AR
la te Model Championship on Saturday night at
New Sm yrn a Speedway.
T h e victory, worth *1,500 plus *100 for last
time, made Anderson the wlnntngeat Late Model
driver on the high banked half-mile this season,
w ith five feature wins. Including the "R ed E ye "
100 In Ja n u a ry and a 50-lap E n d of the Month
Cham pionship In April.
Faulk, a lough veteran well-conditioned physi.rally and mentally to run long distance events,
•ran a smart race for the Bob C la rk team and
finished a strong second. Just ahead of Rob
Underwood. Bruce Lawrence. E d Mertdlth and
early leader Stan Eads. All of these drivers

, ________ Js b fc tw T

FAICM Law Jrtrtta M ere IMS list) - t. Otch
WlWasW; I. las FsvW. Cressvtlla. T*i.; J. Sat U)
PIWMft; 4. Bruts L s s n nts. DsLssS; L UMarMM*. le m n fe
M M Marts W W i It* Myat - t- B v rtr Inter sell, TltuwM*; I.
Cmwat Orsntsr, Mwt Oran**; &amp; Jim TreverNM*.
Bm c S; 4 TaS V mM us. M M t; L B S ir

--------

IUMrtl-1.1
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finished In the lead lap over a full field of cars.
Alter a hot five-car bottle. Marc Klnley took over
first place on lap 10 and went on to srtn the
Limited Late Model final. Klnley, w h o was
narrowly defeated the previous week, still Bays
that-he w on and has a photo that appears to
support hla claim .
Mike Fitch spun during the early laps of the
Florida Modified final, but when the checkers
were waived. Fitch had won one more time with

CollinsIB
- C o llin s has been bothered by a
k n e e I n j u r y b u t a tte n d e d
p ra c tic e M o n d a y. P redators
assistant coach Lea Moss said

C o llin s showed no sign s of
stress. After Monday's practice,
m o st team m em bers a n d
coaches gathered at a restaurant
In Altamonte Springs to watch

the Tam p a Bay-Dctrott
football game. Collins was not
a m o n g th e m , and his
whereabouts were unknow n u n ­
til the accident.

WomenIB
;
W illia m s (trip le ,
single, ru n scored, RBI), Patrice
B row n (two singles. RBI). Edith
Chester (two singles), Teressa
Dees (triple, run scored). Lisa
Th o m p so n (single, run scored.
RBI). T a m m y Bailey (single. RBI)
and T in a Roberts and Marie
Bryant (one single each).
B ecr:30 had no trouble at all
w ith Bikini Beach, taking a 14-0
lead before Bikini Beach could
get on the board. Bccr:30 ended
the game by the 20 run rule w ith
eight runs In the bottom of the
fourth Inning.
Marie and Denise Byrd led the
26-hlt Beer:30 offense by com ­
bin ing for eight hits, six runs
scored and 14 RBI. Marie hit for
the cycle (home run, triple,
double, single), scored four runs
and drove In eight while Denise
ripped a home run, two doubles,
scored two runs and drove In six.

4 M S M n ^ M a rrm M M

I. Nick M s . Orlanrt.

Srttt M rtM s . Oertene; J.
J. Bsntoy M eat Tlhmilta.
iWsWrstlH l*rt) - 1. Mats Matey,
J. Chuck Stentey. Orlanrt:

14

I t it kSWS) - I. Tad Heed. Pins Hills; t. D am n
a; 4 ta rta rs Plsrcs. Orlanrt; 4 Billy times*. Pahn
Bay; I. Gary Prsah. kWWaums.
Fan PsrSilpsMa Oust Draaa— I. Oarryii WJlsen. Sumall.

Scott Me Dade. Gene Barlowc, Ricky Wood and
Bentley Mead rounding out the top five.
For the second week In a row. thta tim e with
Danny Bancroft at the wheel, the River Breeze
Restaurant entry was driven down victory lane at
the conclusion of the Sportsman feature.
Buddy Ingeraotl took the Mint Stock final, w h lk
Ted Head made several gutsy moves in order to
defeat a large field of Bombers.
Several special events are planned for both

H a rra r broke away from a 4-3
lead w ith a six-run fourth inning
a n d went on to best Intergalactic
In a battle lo He for first place.

Doing the damage for Harcar
were Teresa W alburger (four
singles, two runs scored, two
RBI), Renee L a n a (three tingles,
tw o ru n s scored, tw o R B I).
Michelle Widener (two singles,
two runs scored, tw o RB I) and
Dawn McCall (two singles, two
runs scored).
Also hitting were T e rri Mann
(triple, run scored, two RBI).
Jackie Suggs (single, ru n scored,
RBI). Debbie Leigh (single, two
RBI). Ja n Sanialow (single, two
runs scored) and A p ril Lawrence
(RBI).
Leading the Intergalactic of­
fense were Faye Kennedy (three
singles, run scored, RBI). Bobble
Mosley (two singles, three runs
scored). Mary Beth McCollough
(two singles, two runs scored).
Sue McRae (double, three RBI),
Sally Davidson (single, RBI).
Renee Carter (single) and Denise
Burton (RBI).

Saturday. J u ly 20. at New Sm yrna will feature
a 300-Up. *5.000 to win Super Eight Late Model
race.

Marlins’ Barger hopes to repeat
Pittsburgh miracle for Florida
8port» Writer

A lso contributing were J i l l
G a tlin (double, three singles,
four runs scored RBI), Rose F ry
(four singles, four runs scored,
two RBI). Mildred Bailey (two
singles, run scored, two RBI).
Patsy Harding and Marie Brow n
(tw o singles, one run scored and
one RBI each) and Nellie Gross
(two singles, run scored).
Also In the hit column were
Sh elly Jackson (single, three
run s scored) and Lynn Anderson
(single, ru n scored. RBI).
Doing the hitting for Bikini
B e a c h wer e A m y M u l l i g a n
(double, single. RBI). Carol Dick
(triple, run scored). T a m m y
Pettis (single. RBI). April Flow ­
ers. Lori Poe and Cris Stapp (one
single each) and Lynn Moore
(ru n scored).

Orlando SpeedWorld and New Sm yrna Speedway
to go along w ith the regular program the rest of
the m onth of J u ly .
T h is Friday night at Orlando SpeedWorld .the
featured events w ill be Three-Quarter Midgets
and a 30-lap Sportsman Special paying *138 to
win.
Saturday night at New Sm yrna, the special
features will be a Demolition Derby, a 30-lap
Bomber Special and kids rides In stock cars
before the races start. T h e Demoll lion Derby will
be sponsored b y Park Avenue Salvage of
Edgewater and w ill pay 8 50 0. to w in, *300 for
second and * 100 for third.
On Friday. J u ly 19. SpeedWorld w ill feature a
20-lap Florida Modified Special and kJds rides In
slock c a n .

M IAM I — Florida Martins president Carl
Barger aays he'll bring to the National League
expansion team the plan that transformed the
Pittsburgh Pirates from sorry shape Into
division champions.
" T h e same thing will have to be done In
Florida." Barger said Tuesday.
A m id speculation that the Pirates would
leave Pittsburgh because of poor attendance.
Barger orchestrated the sale of the franchise in
1985. H e became the team's president In 1987.
and since then the Pirates have set singleseason attendance records twice and last year
won I heir first division title In 11 seasons.
" F o r all practical purposes, the Pittsburgh
team has been built from scratch like an
expansion franchise over the oast six years,"
Marlins owner H. Wayne Huizenga said.
Building from scratch Is the challenge that
lured Barger away from his beloved Pirates.
T h e 58-year-old lawyer and Pennsylvania
native, w ho was named the Marlins' president
Monday, is eager to put his Ideas to use In
Miami.
"Y o u 've got to make a baseball game an

event." Barger said from Toronto, where he
was attending the All-Star game. "Y o u 've got
to be customer-oriented. You have to market
your product. You have to develop a regional
appeal — certainly It's our Intention to reach
out to all of Florida.
"A n d obviously we have to get a quality
team on the field. T h a t w o n 't happen
overnight, but you want an exciting team, a
team the fans will relate to."
On average, the eight expansion clubs since
1982 have taken nine years to resch .500 for
the first time. Barger expecta a winner sooner
than that.
"In the system that's out there today. I don't
think It should take that long." he said, “ t
expect to ace ua competing m uch faster than
eight or nine years."
Th e Marlins will debut In 1993. Th e y'll be
built prim arily through player development.
Barger said, w ith an emphasis on scqutlng and
algplng young prospects and then polishing
them In the m inor leagues.
" I'm not a believer In plunging in helterskelter In the free-agent market." he said.
“Once we get the nucleus of a team. I don't
discount filling some spots with free agents."

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T o m Gracay (hitting) walked and scored a run in the top ol the
seventh inning lo give State Market Restaurant a 6-5 lead in its game
with the Regulators at Chase Park Tuesday night. But the Regulators

rallied to He (he score in the bottom of the seventh and won the
game in the bottom of the eighth lo hand Stale Market Restaurant
its first loss of the season.

w s e y |aEa i «
EXHAUST
w *

*

......

ALIGNMENT
C o n tin u e d fro m I B

J
Kokomo Ket v c l e r s a t 6:30 p.m .. S ta te
M a rk e t R estau ran t takes on
iKlnco at 7:30 p.m. ami the
R eg u lato rs lace Bccr:30 at H:30
p .m .
• T he Regulators fought back
Trom an early deficit to build a
6-3 advantage entering the sev ­
e n th Inning. Slate Market Res­
ta u r a n t rose to the occasion and
scored three runs lo take the
lead. But the Regulators rallied
back w ith a run In the bottom of
th e seventh to He the score and
s e n d th e g am e Into e x t r a ­
innings.
After State Market R estaurant
w ent in order in the lop of th e
e ig h th toning, the Regulators
scored the winning run with the
help of a huge Slate Market
error.
Hob Keefer led off with a
single, hut was sltll there after
th e next two batters made o uts.
Urtan C urtis then reached on the
fielding error that sent Keefer lo
second. David Goldsliek singled
to loud the baM-s before Scott
M urphy singled in Keefer with
th e w inning run.
D oing the damage for th e
R egulators were Murphy (two
doubles, single, two runs scored,
tw o RBI|. Goldsliek (two triples,
single, two runs stored), itr.ul
K ruger an d Kandy Middleton
(one triple, one single ami one

ru n scored each). Jeff Kruger
(two singles. Kill). Jeff Futrcll
(single, two Rill). Dob Keefer
(single, run srored) a n d Cary
Keefer anti Frank Randolph (one
KUI each).
Pacing (lie State Market Res­
t a u r a n t o ffen se w e re Ma r k
Dowell (triple, two singles, run
scored, two Rill). W.L. G racey
(two singles, two RHI), Don
A n d e rso n (two s in g le s, ru n
sc o re d ), Chris Davis (two
singles). Tolly Frank (double,
r u n s c o re d ). Mike L a u b c r t
(single. Rill). Hilly Gracey and
Tom Gracey ( o ik - single a n d one
run scored each). Mic West (KHI|
and Nick Brady (run scored).
Ik-er:30 also liad lo score la ir
to win its game. The w inners
scored three runs In the bottom
nl th e first Inning, b ut the
Kokomo Recycle™ fought buck
to tic the game going Into the
tilth Inning. lieer:30 scored the
w inning run on a Chuck Rice
double In the boUom of the filth,
then scored (our Insurance ru n s
in the sixth Inning.
C o n t r i b u t i n g lo a 15- hl t
H c e r :3 0 o ffe n s e w e r e J i m
llculington llh rrr singles. KHII.
Steve Gray (two singles, two
ru n s scored). Will Bland llwo
singles, run scored. RUB. Eric
Tor bin (two singles, run scored).
Dave Cruft It wo singles). Rice
(double, three RHI). Je ff Joyce
(double, two runs scored, two
RHI). Chris Wire (single, two
r u n s scored. Rill I a n d Tom

Hlcdsoe (single).
Leading Inc Kokomo Kccyclers
w e re J u l i o G a l a r z a ( t h r e e
sin g le s). G re g H e n sle y u n d
Milton Sm ith (one double, one
single and one RBI each). Dave
G raham (two singles). Aaron
J o h n s (single. K ill). Ar t h u r
Barnes and J a m e s Hell (one
single and one run scored each).
Jerry Herman (single) and Nate
Murphy (run scored).
Mo n r o e H a r b o u r M a r i n a
scored three runs In the lop of
Hu- third Inning lo lake a 3-2
lead, but Klnco teored four runs
In the bottom of (he third to lake
a lead II would nol relinquish.
Monroe Harbour scored a run
In Ihe fourth lo cu t the lead lo
6-4 hut Ihe winners tacked on
three Insurance ru n s In the sixth
Inning.
Providing Ihe offense for Klnco
were Craig T&lt;*»sl (two triples,
run scored, four RHI), Keith
De n t o n ( t r i pl e, s i n g l e , r u n
scored, two RBI). Bobby Hanson
llwo singles, three ru n s scored.
RBB and J im- Drhiela (double.
RBI).
Also contributing were Ken
Meeks (single, two ru n s scored.
RBI). Kevin Denton (single, run
scored). Kelly D enton. Keith
Red wine and Troy Tur ner (one
single each) and C hris Wargo
(run scored).
Doing Ihe hitting for Monroe
Harho-ir Marina were Je ll Terrell
(triple*, single, run scored). Wall
Gtlfrddci (double, single, m u

scored, two RBI). Tom Nave
(single. RBI). Jo h n Luccarellt
amt Brian Volk (one single and
one run scored cuch) and Ron
Fava (single).

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352-8660

240-7673

Lake Mary Centro
3649 Lake Emma Rd.
M A Lake Mary Bivd.
(Next to K-Mari)

333-9664

TITLEIST •PING •PALM SPRINGS •PRO KENNEX • TAYLOR MADE

�American Legion. Post 83. will hear report* (tarn the local
students who w en t selected to attend the legion** Bop* State
tht* summer, im m ediately prior to the reg ula r membership
meeting on Th ursd a y. J u ly 1 1. AD UghM iabesare w e k o a e .
Unit 53. of the Am erican Legion Auxiliary, w ill hold Ms Ural
meeting of the n e w business year at 8 p .m .. T h u rs d a y . J u ly I I .
Th e agenda Includes the calendar and budget far the year
ahead. Call 324-1898 for more tnfarmhtton.

Her recipes
included in
cookbooks

MMV c n im o ii m w m m i
Lake Mary C ham ber of Com m erce wlll hoat tuBuehtesa After
Hours on July I I . 8:3 0 to 7 :3 0 p.m. at the S u n Bank Budding.
Lake Mary. The m eeting wtObecatered b y C hicke n and RJbe.

Peace of Mind, an A L A n o n group far M e n d s and Sanity of
substance abusers, w ill meet each Wednesday, S O p .m . at the
Good Shepherd L u th e ra n Church. 2917 O rla n d o A ve.. Sanford,
beteween J.C. Penney * and Bryan Honda o n 17*92. C a ll Sue at
321-7424 for move Information.
SUM— ,.ill

M M I m v IW

V

The Central Flo rida Astronomical Society. 810 E . Rollins St..
Orlando, meets the second Wednesday o f the m onth at the
John Young Science Center. 7:30 p.m. P ublic la welcome. Call
896-7151 for details.

OIOfTlfTSrs TO fKMOCVUD m#vuVvQ
The OM H ick o ry Stompcr* clogging group holds d u b
meetings every W ednesday from 6-9 p .m . at the Knights of
Columbus H a ll 250 4 8 . Oak Ave.. Sanford. F o r more
information, call A rt o r Brandt Blaklsey at 349-9629.
r: * - *

Chemical dependence talks free ■

the driveway.
“ M y children are grown and
one of them lives at home but
w ith all of the grandUds* things
around, people must think that I
have a lot of young ones," she
said.
A m o n g the cookbooka the
children m ust not touch are tw o
hooka to w hich Wetherhold con­
tributed several recipes over 2 0
years ago through a volunteer

was hard boiled eggs and I still
make that mistake sometimes. I
turn on the stove and forget
them. W hen the eggs explode we
have to scrape them off the
celling. I have not done that
la t e ly th o u g h .* * s h e s a id
"M y son-in-law. David, baked
m y Tupperw arc and plastic con­
tainers one day. A ll he had to do
srss turn on the oven for me. I
have two ovens. One Is over the
stove where I store m y plastic
containers, the other one Is built
Into the stove. 1 had placed two
trays of chicken In the stove
oven, one tray on each rack. I
had to leave so t asked David to
turn on the oven for me. He
thought there was chicken In
each oven upper and tower and
didn't realize his mistake until
something smelled funny. Every
container In the oven melted out
of shape. David doesn't bake
chicken anym ore."

Quest Counseling Centre/Young Recovery sponsors chemical
dependence lectures free to the public each Wednesday from
7-6:30 p.m. at 711 Ballard St., Suite 200, Altam onte S p rtn p .
For more Information, call 331-7199.

Toaatmaetere to meet for bfeekfeet
Day breakers Toastm asters Club meet* the second and fourth
Thursdays of the m onth. 7 a.m.. at Christos Restaurant.
Downtown Sanford.

Obituary including cause of
death adds to family’s grief

newspaper editor in another
state refused to p rin t an obituary
unless "cause o f death" was
disclosed.
Abby. why w ould this Infor■nation be Im portant to the
general public? T h e friends and
relatives of the deceased know
the cause of d e a th w ith o u t
having It in p rin t for all the
world to see.
_____
N H l.O .D IW H B B L n iO
D R A R N J . O . I T h e cause of
death la not the business of the
public, but som e new spaper
editors feel that n o obituary is
complete unless It la Included.
When the cause of death is a
suicide, some obituaries disclose
the details: "suicide b y hangtng." "suffocation." "overdoae."
"shotgun to the he ad ." "slashed
wrists." etc.
Bless those sensitive editors
who show compassion and report deaths without disclosing
facts that may be painful to the
survivors. The good Lord knows
they have a lre a d y suffered
enough.
D B A S A B E T : We recently
learned an Important lesson in
ch ild safety th a t should be
common knowledge. D u rin g a
stay at the beach, m y 11-yearold son and h is 10-ycar-old
cousin dug a sm all c a vr in the
sand where (here is a small
incline. While m y son was Inside
the small cave. It collapsed on
him . Ills cousin Immediately
started digging a n d called others
nearby for help. Someone called
911. and when w e dug my son
out of the sand, thank God he
was still breathing — but uncoilscious. He spent the night In the
hospital and Is fine now.
Th e ambulance crew said It
was the third "c a v e -in " Incident
this summer — the other two
children did not survive!
Abby, Just as children are
taught never to p lay In the ocean
without an adult, they should be

and on far four years, and yes, I
got pregnant. I had also been
seeing a guy I'll call Stan for
about three months, and J im m y
knew It.
I told both guys 1 was preg­
nant. and Stan said: “ I wlU
m a rry you, but after the baby
comes, we are taking blood testa,
and If the baby ladn't mine, you
JQ
are going to have to give me a
liiiiifw
unrwoi **
divorce.
J
im
m y said: " I love you and 1
D E A R W I S E R : Because you
want
to m a rry you. I don't need
took the time and made the
effort to w arn others about this a blood test because 1 don't care
possible death trap, you may w h o the baby's father la. 1 w ill
prevent a potential tragedy, raise the baby as m y own. either
w a y ."
Bless you for writing,
W ell. J im m y and I were m ar­
D E A R A B E T : T h is la for the ried the week after graduation,
brid e w h o w a s a ggra vate d and o u r son Is 2 years old now.
because the hotel did not hold J im m y knows now that the baby
the bridal suite that had been Isn't his because he looks Just
reserved, so the newlyweds like the other guy. but that
spent thetr wedding night In a doesn't stop him from loving
tiny room w ith a fold-out bed him .
I'm not recommending sex In
that broke down, and they both
high
school. It's a big mistake,
ended u p o n the floor!
I assure you. In the years to but I happen to be one of the
come she will have more fun lucky ones.
L U C K Y Of T E X A S
telling about her crazy wedding
night than anything she could
have described had she occupied
D B A S A B B T l T h e
the bridal suite,
heartw arm ing letters you have
F B E D E B I C E F .C O B H
ublisned about people doing
D IC H 1 C A O O
In d deeds Im p u ls iv e ly for
strangers prompts m y first Dear
D E A R A B E T : Maybe you can
A b b y letter.
help me w ith thta. I called the
Eve ry Saturday night, no m a t­
Immigration and Naturalization
ter w hat m y husband and I did.
office and couldn't get an answer
we w ould always wind up at
lo m y question,
Boakln-Robblna for Ice-cream
I am a w hite American female,
cones. T h e same young g irl
My husband Is Chinese, bom in
always waited on Bob while I sat
Vietnam. He has a permanent
in the car — a '66 T-Blrd.
resident visa,
One night, with no w arning
My question: W hat nationality
whatsoever, m y husband died of
docs that make our children? a heart attack. Although we had
Someone told me (hat they are been m arried for 45 years. I was
white A m erican, but to me that devastated.
means that they are Ignoring
A bout two months after m y
their Oriental heritage,
husband's death. I stopped by
My d a u g h te r says she Is Baakln-Robblns for an ice-cream
half-Chlncsc and half-American, cone. T h e young girl rem em ­
Please straighten this out. as we bered m e because of the car. and
never know how to fill out the said. "I'v e missed you. Where Is
forms w hen this question Is yo u r nice husband?"
asked.
I told her that he had died
F U Z E L E P D t F L O R ID A suddenly. "O h . I'm very so rry."
D E A R T U S S L E D ! Y o u r sh e s a id . " P le a s e , w a it a
daughter's nationality Is Ameri- m in u te ." Th e n she hurriedly
eon because she Is a natural- packed a quart of our favorite
born citizen of the United States flavor and handed It to me.
of Am erica. A s for the racial
"N o charge." she said softly.
Issue: She is half-Oriental and “ Yo u r husband was such a fine
gentlem an."
1was so touched. I cried.
V IR G IN IA D A R E L U D W K L
TU9T1M , C A L I F .

Wetherhold Is a self-taught
cook w ho learned by necessity.
Her m om and stepdad had eight
children. As the parents worked
full time Wetherhold did all of
the cooking.
" I learned by experim enting a
lot but I also made a lot of
mistakes. We ate It anyw ay,
mistakes and all. M y biggest flop

2 frozen pie shells
2 cans whole kernel com
1 can cream style com
* litHtll
2 hard boiled eggs (sliced)
Salt and pepper to taste
Place one p lr shell in pan.
Layer whole co m and cream
com to top of first shell. Cover
mixture w ith sliced eggs. Invert
second shell over top of pie.
Pinch edges together to sea).

Prick top crust with fork for
steam vent. Bake at 380* until
crust Is golden brown.
C H OC O L A T E C A E S
3 cups flour
2 cups sugar
V» cup oil
O Tb sp . cocoa
2 Ttasp. vinegar
2 tap. baking soda
2 cups water
Mix all Ingredients
until smooth. Pour into
Inch baking pan. Bake
for 30 to 4 0 m inutes
tested finished.

together
a 13 x 9
at 350*
or until

1 box pistachio pudding
1 large can cruahed pineapple
(do not drain)
1 D oz. tub Cool W hip
Vi cu p m ini marshmallows
14 cu p crushed walnuts (op­
tional)
Mix all Ingredients together
and chill. Allow to set at least
one hour before serving. ■
J* * *

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is

eserre-

O W ELL ^
PLACE

E B B is m a nra

E

Wb now accapt MasterCard and Visa

(Problems? Writ* lo Dear Abby.
For o personal, unpublished
reply, eentf e soil-addressed,
lesson to use to w a rn others.
W I S E R 01 O R E G O N

f '*

I have a similar story to tell.
" J im m y " and I were seniors In
high school. We went steady off

I
gHOPBaSPR

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�Versatile
of protein,

3 cupsc
schopped
2 cloves
es garlic, minced
i
1 bay leaf
U C . ground red pepper
2 m edium tomatoes, diced, or
I (14 os.) can tomatoes, drained
and chopped
l Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
V4 tap. Tabasco sauce, o r to
3 cups cooked red kidney
beans
Water. If needed
Salt to taste
3 cups hot cooked rice
3 Tb sp . chopped cilantro
Chopped red onion
Othreoti

Scree the beano on a bed of
rice . O a rn is h w ith chopped
c ila n t r o . A s m a ll b o w l o f
chopped onion and cruets of
oUvc oil and red pepper
m ay be passed to be added to
taste. If desired.
Steaming bowls of bean soup
are welcome anytime. T h e kind
of beans you use. I suppose,
depends on your ethnic back*
ground or the region from w hich
you came. My m other made
wonderful bean soup using large
llmaaand ham.
Use dried, reconstituted beans
or the canned ones for this bean
soup.

U cup bottled Key Lime Juice
3 Tbsp. olive oil
3 Tbsp. chopped parsley
I tap. dried thym e
1 tap. salt
14 tap. cmahed red pepper
In ■ m edium m ixing bowl,
com bine all the Ingredients,
attrrtng well to blend. Cover and
refrigerate for at leant 3 hours.
Stir again before serving. Adjust
Red kidney beans o r white
beans cat; also be used or a
mixture of the beans.

a l-p o u n d ca n s ga rb a n xo
beans (chick peas), drained
lVkqts. water

\

Barbecued ribs made for sum m er
NEA Food Editor
W hat Is one of America's favorite summer
meals? You guessed It. barbecued ribs.
In fact, nearly 70 percent of all ribs prepared
d urin g the sum m er m onths are barbecued,
according to the Barbecue Industry Association.
It's a toss-up between pork or beef ribs, but either
selection provides a crispy, crusty treat when
grilled over the coals. .
..........
Beef ribs m ay be marinated J 5 minutes to two
hours before grilling, but this Is not really
necessary. Th e marinade Is also succulent when
it Is brushed on the meaty ribs during cooking.
If the sauce has a high sugar content (with use
of honey or brown sugar) or contains other
ht b u m
Ingredients that might
gauce on only during the last 30 minutes of
grilling. A nd. for safer eating, always reheat
leftover sauce to boiling before serving.
•

; Ribs m ay be partially cooked inside heavy
alum inum foil packets on the grill (to render out
fat) and then finished directly over the coals.
I Since the cools remain hot lot some time, a
good w ay to save money la to grill other meats
and chicken, bake potatoes and roost ears of com
(to be refrigerated or frozen and reheated or
microwaved for future meals).
(
' B A R B E C U E D B E EP B A C K RIBS
7 pounds beef back ribs
I large onion, minced
1 clove garlic, minced
• 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
3/4 cup ketchup
1/4 cup each brown sugar, chili sauce, vinegar
and water
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 1/3 teaspoons paprika

^

S i T , n

r**

1 teaspoon salt
1/3*
sauce
T o cook beef bock rti In a covered grill using
indirect heat, arrange coals on either side of |_
Place a drip pan between the coals. When cools
are ash gray (after about 30 m inutes), place ribs,
meat side up. on grid above the d rip pan. Cover
cooker. Cook ribs 45 to 60 minutes or until
tender.
Meanwhile, cook onion and garlic In oil In
m edium saucepan 3 to 4 minutes. A d d ketchup,
b ro w n su ga r, ch ill sauce, vin e g a r, w ater,
Worcestershire sauce, paprika, salt and hot
pepper sauce. Bring to a boll; reduce heat.
Sim m er, uncovered. 30 to 40 minutes or until
thickened, stirring occasionally. Brush meat side
of ribs generously with sauce the last 30 minutes
of cooking time, and continue cooking ribs for 10
minutes, covered. Reheat sauce to boiling and
serve w ith ribs. T h is kitchen-tested recipe makes
8 to 10 servings.
Direct Heat Method; Place each slab of ribs,
meat aide down. In center of a double-thick
rectangle of heavy-duty alum inum foil.' Sprinkle 3
tablespoons water over each slab. T o form
packets, bring two opposite sides of foil together
over top of ribs. Fold edges over 3 to 4 times,
pressing crease in tightly each time. (Allow some
air space.) Flatten foil at one end. crease to form
triangle and fold edge over several times toward
package, pressing tightly to seal. Repeal pro­
cedure on other end. Place packets on grid
directly over low to medium coals..
Place cover on cooker o r cook on open grill
I 1/2 hours, turning packets every 1/2 hour.
Remove ribs from foil packets. Place on grid over
low to m edium coals. Broil 30 minutes, turning
occasionally. Brush sauce over riba generously
and continue broiling 10 to 13 minutes, turning
several times and using all of the sauce.

im

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SANFOftO
M OOLI
SCHOOL

2 IT H S T .

1514 S. FRENCH AVE.

PHARMACIST JERRY LI6U0RI
PHONE; 407-321-6626

ate-licensed and registered
iarmacist8
invenience: have your prescription
led while you shop
e accept PCS, PAID, BC-BS
cn n u oT
M Eim PAin

For 244iour TV listing*, sts LEISURE magazlns ot Friday July 5.

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.

�M

O - - a

a

• N m w Vw n P M m i

CLASSIFIED
ADS
Orlando - Winter Pork

N T M t i s t a it

Somlnolo
322-2611

C M IR S R M H L l

SAR H S T T DAWKS TRUST
1
COMPANY, NJL, as Tm

iNtMteCAWS

831*9993

OASSIFICO DCPT.

RESOLUTION TRUST
■ ■ TtotLaa

r ter IMPERIAL

DAVID M. WILL; DONNA M
WILL.

■ VU
C VNZ
VRV
• N i l

Kaatnamma

W V

N O TK E O R SA LB
N O T IC IIS H ER EB Y GIVEN
July,
m i , at l l : « a.m. at M W M
Front Oaar at Mia Seminole
County Courthouoo. Sanlara,
Ftortda. IMa undorrtgnod Clark
will alter ter tala tea fattening
datcrlhedreelpraworfy:
Lat a FOXWOOO PHASE
I I I . acctraing ta I ha plat
tearaat. rocardad In Plat Saak
S . Paga H . PuMk Racer* at
Sammate County, Florida.
The ateraaaW ante m il ka
made pursuant ta a Summary
Pinal J nagmant anteraa In Caaa
tea. SM JtlCA-iaK nan panaing
In tea Circuit Caurt at I N
llghteanate Jgaktel Circuit. In
*dh8i^p
Wr liHiliiBta te
fP
iaW
mV
mti
i'
BvVa

S •V

A If P W P
I S P I
P

FID * SAL SAVINOS
ASSOCIATION

NH

AT P T N
W M

A PR M VU .

CHILD CAD I I t e y i a naakl
Pun, enriching actlvlltetl
HRSjWFgO.

323*5176

piartaa.

DATED tela 2nd day at July,

HR

m i.

MARYANNS M ORIS
Clark at tec Circuit Caurt
SEMINOLE County, Florida
BVr Janal.Jasanlc
Clark
J u t y t A U .m i
O EH M

-

RV I

K

Graveyard shift O tt.m -sw a

DAY CAMP
FOR CHILDREN

R K V T lJC S iM C t M B S *
Hiring non I Up to lil/ V .
Company EapanRng. Daalar
po&gt;lI Iont up to 145/hr.For
Immediate Interview:
Can t-a tta a a m i

If-T rs M n f
S Education

AOCSsSTOISVCARI

M

M O M l to

FREEBIE ADS

SMIcfUraUwFn Nm«t WUTkkli
HAPPY ACRES DAYCARX
LC.

Takeadvantageofthisspecialoiler
Ads will bt scheduled to run for 10 days.
Price of Item must bo statod In tho od and bo 1100 or loss.
Only 1 Item par od and 1 od par household par weak.
You should call and cincsl aa toon aa Itam sails.
Available to individuals (non Commercial) only. Does not
apply to rantala or garago 6 yard salts.
6. Tho od must bo on tho form shown bolow and althar bo
mol lad In or prosontod In parson fully prsparad to tha
Sanford Htrald Classified Department.

SPECIALIST

\ 1T

A
r r V A \'

D O IT !

A -

a

ci•¥! PfwWWIB^Bf -1
________l l O k i All ramodtl
Ing. QaalRy work I CGC0M827
2Syr»oap. Mata a a 470-841*
CO N CER T Owe Eater. Can.
carpentry I Hama, ofttc*.
kitchen, katel *7401*7

7 Aa&lt; ufi|| atari an ROOn RR DOIllblR.

8. Claaalflad Managements decision on copy acceptability will
bo final.

Ci— nitig Sr t v Ic r

Ntw/imonmumas
Bgy/MI PAacead/Ogaraateed

BUY IT.
SELL IT.
FIND IT.

saiuMO
lfa n ld
^

**

*

• ONLY O N I (TIM

ttnttf Y ftw trr TTTitti
Automotlva
D ETA IL F I V I R . let y«ur car
■parkla tor tummer! Comp
detail aarvlea I........... H M W
HEADLINERS! Mmt can HO.
Wagon* V S Vinyl top* WO up.
Carpet IM up. 2MEM*

L buUrmi tookka.
accounting, tea and computer
tarylca*- On/Otf *lto. 124 *0H

MAIL TO: SanlertfHaraM
P.O. Baa 1SB7
Sanford, PL 31772-1M7
• MUST WCLUSS PWCS

• I t SO OA LESS

PRINT AS HSSCl

im m v e u v k w

LET A

This it r great opportunity for you to anjoy the tamo graat raaulta aa
our rogular claaalflad ouatomora at no coat to you. Just follow thaao
Instructions.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

B -IK B Ill

■w i T i g i

CATH Y’S CLEANIMO SERVICE Rataranca*. reasonable
rate*. L learned I Call 2717470

UVI MONITt CALLUS!
_________t t e lt o H N _________
tPRINO CLEANIMO BLUES?
Rate* tram US B * . Call Jay)

BOBBY ADAMS COSKBETE
Quality and daanllna** i*
guaranteed 18 yr* r**td*n!l*l
aipartenca 7*7 M t / m Mir
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Baal. 2 Man Quality Opera
tlont Jie-2321/1*8-m2

Bultdino Contractors

Ftnct

NSW. REMODEL. REPAIR
H O M It.O FFIC E S , STORES
Ail type* canalrwcttea. Ba*/C*m
7124*13. L E Batted. C B O IN M

S H A B F P B N C E I tat Rata
mirk Law H I Free a*t Wood,
cheinllnk A repair* 111 kill

C ir o t w lr y

G d fx ra l Services

CAB FB H TB R All kind* ol home
repair*, painting A ceramic

T T o U T T E R S CLEANED* a.
Commercial Residential.
C * U T * m ^ _ ^ ^ ^ ^ lM m

Jlte llg m JO rm ^ jj^ m m n

o a o N A U L IN G .y a rd trash,
appliance*, turn Ilure, troth at
any kind I Rickard...... 27*77*1
B B R MAULING. Yard Irate,
appt. turn. C h a c o n
Ray]1P-72P
tll/up. COMI Ray

tTml

HomRREpairs
RON C O L L I i r * Ramadillagi
Carpentry, roofing, painting.
"No latetea * m * lir f f i j f l
T H E H O USE OOCTORI All
home repair* I Pateit/Tarmlte

mmi
Land Claaring
lANOCLIABmS^MlTrr
backhaa. loader work, hauling
and dean up. CountryWI*

C o n e re t*

nyEyiiy^nCiiYn?
u
:r.vl MB iH U II j''y/

&lt;JJav*jogom*nt^OM2y21^^

La w n k fvict
CO M PLETE 'o »a 5 r* L im n * T
Landscaping. Tree Sarvka S
Irrigation, compatltlva rate*.
traa«*tlmate*&gt;unny'022&gt;tl»
LAW H M A IN T E N A N C E
Camawrclal/BasMeattaL Law
Rate*I Call Ta m ....
RANDY’ S Q U A L IT Y LAWN.
Complete care, clean up*
Since m 2 Fraoart.l a tw i*
R E L IA B L E LAWN MAINTE
NANCE! U aN tor 1st tea*
221*712
IT . AUG USTIN E GRASS plug*
Inttaiied. II* *q It. Free
Estimate*! Suntat Lawn Re
novation*. Inc. 407 MO 0*01

Cltaning Service

Handy Man

M a s o n ry

B A B CLEANING SERVICB.
Ottka/homa Lie B In* Fra
tewtenai coupte..........atm **

C A R P E N T R Y , M ASONARY
painting and til# work Free
ailimate* Lite d Call 11J4J7*

TWP MASONRY, Brick. Mock,
stucco, concrete Renovation*
L k ’d A In* 2222444/0)441V

a

a h e x t b U S T V aintimo

A pra**ure cteon. SAVE MM
L k /fraaattt1 m i 1*4
DICK PtNOLA’ S FAINTING.
Qtallty work! Int/Eat., He'd
AJm yrertFrea art! 2221721

Past control
a EISM OPFEST CONTROL ~
Senior Cltiten Dtecawnh!

&lt;JSjaaM*mgartenea^aim
”

■PtumHfjnj
HOfllBS PUMBiaC
All your plumbing need*) 14
hour*! IHFQOS1770222 2*18 .

Bprw sw qtanlHal
DRIVEWAYS. Root*. House*.
ale. Low ralatl Cammar
clal/Ratldantlal 273 0404
PCM ■Houte wete and painting
"Quota* by phono" Call
Roger, r 4 4*40. *AM IPM

S R c rtta rla l S
T y p jn Q S y y ic t s
CUSTOM TypSag/EMkhaagtegl
OJ Enterprltov 40IB E. Hth
SI., Sanlord 224 0471/222 U n

SUNTANS T R E E SERVICE
Troo work. IIghl hauling Fret
animate*. Imured 22! t*]|

PHONI
Td T W

I »••(

i Rd

\ i l r r i i i s r ) mil flu sinrss I r c r \ P&lt;i\ I nr \' \/i ni '
s / ) Per Month. ( nil i I n w i / i r i l . I J J J(i 11

It

s

1

�**t 10. not - rm
n

K I T ’ N’ C A IL Y L E A fry Larry W rit*

A f r U m wt i
#| m |

«*£*»**»
o W .... ~ M U -------- to a S T
d r l t o m a ?m

i l Mm — it

PWlMiBf H M T T w it M m

W jW e M M * e jm * 4
S A N F O R D , i f i M l n ' i ri

MgaHytti
m g Jg jjA jJljA W IT #

s c H S t e a s y s t i!*

m3 S85BE
privacy. UM/ma ptua
incur Ity. 33773**

aecurlty.

OWVmo.
A TTR A C TIV E I and 2 bdrm.
W/W carpel, aula* araal
SW/wk plu*t30»&lt;Ne 33l**47
ROSECLIFF APARTM INTB
Now 1 badroom apartment*,
lor BS10. W/D connactlon*.
•craanad patio* and aatrn
itorege cloaat. H*7 »q. It.
Located an Lk. Mary Blvd.
Call m - H U
Equal Hooting Opportunity I

HEM TW QWT!!
Single alary iturilo. I A 3
Bdrm. Apia. Many aitraa Incl.
*tor ago ipacal Ovlat, coiy
community I Nice landacap
Ing. On tit* manager* who
CARE 11 Starting at HI*/mo

SANFORDCOURT 323-3301
bath. Kitchen, big Living,
dining, appliance*. Fenced.
Good neighbor*, t ill mo. 1X0
dap......................... l *171*03
LAK E JENNIE APTS. Under
new managemanl I Call u»
about our movie In tpeclala
from MW I Broker. 333 *734
O ARABE AFT. Hlttorlc Ola
trio. iOO tq II.. a room*. A/C.
*300 par month plua dapoait.
Call iaa t7tl or M 077*

U N t M O . CLEAN. quiet 1
bdrm. aparfmart, upttpln.

M7l/mo................ m m a

SANFORD. 1 BDRM.. 7 bath.
Scraanad patio, refrigerator,
dlthwathar. CHA. P A H
waahar/dryar. WOO month,
plua dapoait. Oayt IIS J4 II or
E v t t t K I W ____________
SANFORD, modam J badroom .
duplee. CHA appHancaa. mini
Minda. nice araal U l l month.

plua deaoelt. Na pete.
H I103. Wove man a—

a BORM Ih BATH. Ovolde.
Huge Florida ra m . 1 car
garage Sprinkler lyitvm . *
calling Ian*. 1 A ir condlItonera. late/me W i n

I t ] — L a w n A Qardaft

10S-DuptoxTrlptox/Rawt

Iff— Putt * Suppltot

Sanlord Hitterk D istrict
S27l/moplutU00&lt;hpoalt.
1730 U I__________

Broker/Agenl t n n o S

★ $300SPECIAL#
Mow# In lor 1300'I Single itory
tiudia*. Many eilra* incl.
Quiet! Nice landacaplng.
O n -i l t e manager* w h o
C A R tll

SANFORDCOURT...323-3301

1, 2. ft 3 BEDROOMS
RENTS S TA R TIN G FROM

carpal, no pal*. *3*0 plua
aoturlty, 33H8N___________
S A N FO R D Large 1 bdrm .
Clean, appliance*, hook up*.
s o t . Dart, Vaatvro i na-paoo
SANFORD, i bdrm.. I bath,
kitchen equip. Goad area, *uo
plua aac-MHNOlv. mag.
&gt; BORM. 1 BATH. Sanlord.
Appliance*. No pal*. BiOO/mo
plua tacurlty. N f 4S47altar a

ANY CONDITION!
Need repair*? Behind on
payment*? Call Oreo. 313 4714

I I U F O B O B A L A X V 100.
Claaalc, antique appriaaal
t 2 m 44.MB original mile*.
AektngHNO.mpaiO________

Com e H om e To
C ountry S ty le L iving!
■ ■■ *
•A, ^

bugaaMatlmrar

t i n FOBO LTD. Power Steer
Ing, Air Conditioning, new
paint *7300 OBO......... 333 *3*0
U NISSAN Wagon, auto. AC.

*

?
:■

Sglpct unto with wothw/ftyw
hookups

Convonlont to schools ft shopping
cantors.
I ub stop iocatod m o t rontal offleo

233-Auto Parts
/ Accttsorto

21/2 ACRES
lot Only *ja K0 331 0*1

330-5204

Zoned county A t. Already
apllt Into I building alto*.
Clot* ta town. B B T T B B
HURRVI Priced to tall at

appriaaelprica.

217—Oaragt Silw

Q u i n n Re. i l l y I n c

153—Condominiums
C o -O p /S a to

apartments

B I0 N 0 0 M S IT , atactrlc ttova.
Ilka new; houtahold Item* A J,
Thurtday NO E 3Sltt St,

TAM IMON.AMPDNTN.Va TURN WEST
Trig OF A tM f. M N ON NOHT

Limited Time Offer

231—Trucks/
Busts/Vans

Step Up Into
Great Apartm ent!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

AR R IAB I CO V i. 14X70. 3
bdrm 1 bath, tncleaad porch.
70X10 utility room Central
heal and A/C. all new Interior.
New re lrlg . and ito v e .
Waihar/dryar. Financing
avaiiabi*. Call 111 * l »

Itta J E E P C H E R O K E E
LAREDO
4 door. 4 wheel
drive, lull power, A/C. 7,000
mile* Oerk blue) Priced' to
tall..... ................ Call 333 4303

Q u i n n Red 11, I n c

REST MIT 100AY!

SANFORD. 3 bdrm 1 bath
with family room, tcreened
pool, large treed yard!

Cable T V
Washcr/Drycrs in Select Units
Self Clean Oven

SANF0R04/lt*llt
Hendymantpacialt 143.100
Ickerie Realty &gt;111147.

Icemakcr
Dishwasher
G a rb a g e

Disposal
Pool

&gt;i

Clubhouse

&lt;
JlX J 1 A n t

I.IA U r

') At IF O H L )

ti l v l J
•

At' 1

J . 1 1 UMr t l

1 BDRM I BATH FOR O N LY
tia.atatl Ranch ttyle home
ha* lencad yard w/ilareg*
building All kitchen eppli
once* Garage Move right in!
■marten Realty Group Inc.

4O7-574-9555/904-77S-0Q3S

otOeBary
WE WEI0H AND PAVI
Top U lor |unk.
Cart A Truck*
Call teaeaaa or ovate.

l i t —WantBd to Buy

V th id B S / Catopars

14S—P u p ltx to r Bale
Q u i n n Real t y I nr

BEST RUT TOOATI

2450 lla rtw tll A
M O N S A T . 9 •6

AAAUTOSALVAGE
NEW TNRIFT S TO R II Frank
A Lorl'tl HOI S French Ava

SANFORD. 1 itory charming
duplei with 7 bdrm apt up

32 I -36Q3

241— R te r Rational
AVAILABLE SELF STORAGE!
Outtlda tloraga tor R V ’tl
Inquire. **■ M F . 371*4)1
1*7? CONCORO 31 ft Clot* C.
Motorhom* * new redial
tire*, new brake*, tuna up.
Cab air A root air 3400 KW
au&lt; generator, other eatratt
Excellent condition! *7100
without Generator *7700
111 *131 ar 771 47*0

�White cell count
PETER
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It w as an
enchanted evening

HOW WASSCUJOWTE-IOnH

THfc sever gKEieflftXKy
OFFICIAL?

_____ _______ /

(T S T A R T ED

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Off
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7
v

Tw o strangers in a
c ro w d e d ro o m .B u t
th e y never m eet.

Infection la brought under con*
trol. the leukocyte count b i b to
normal.
DBAS DR. OOTTt I’m 53 and
haven’t experienced a menstrual
c y c le In about a year. I ’m
plagued w ith hot flashes, some
vo rae than others. Wlfl they Cade
In tim e, o r should I go for the
treatment that 1 can’t afford so I
can function better during this
Inconvenient time?
DBAS r t n r — »• You seem to
be experiencin g menopause. Hot
flashes (due to vascular Instabili­
ty) m a y be only part of yo u r
sym ptom s, which can also In ­
c lu d e m oodiness, e m otional
sw ings, vaginal dryness and
other physical changes.
Th e re la no hard and fast rule
about how long the symptom* of
m e n o p a u s e w ill last. S o m e
wom en are troubled for a few
weeks (If at all), while other
w o m e n suffer d is a b lin g
sym ptom s for years.
W h e th e r you should see a
doctor for you r hot flashes — or
wait them out — depends on

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too crowded

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ftugvt
YHCM I T ill MM 6U6AR
hs w o t

w * D T 6 w T t W TW .'

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In addition to card sense, an
altflbulfc that acts an expert
apart from leaser mortals la
visualisation. In hia m ind's eye.
an expert can see where the
other canto must lie. For exam ­
ple. he can make things difficult
for a declarer In an apparently
easy contract.
Mask the East-West cards in
today’s diagram , and decide how
you would play In four spades
against the lead of the club king.
T h e re are two obvious losers: a
d u b and a diamond. T h e only
p ro b le m , therefore, revolves
around the trum p suit. You can
afford one loser, but not two.
C le a rly . If the spades are
dividing 3-2. you will have no
trouble. You can bash out the
ace. king and another spade, and
claim . B ut what If the trum ps
are 4- 1? Th e n some care to
required. If West has four. In-

TOURM RTRDAY
Ju lj 11.1991
S e ve ra l new acquaintances
w ill help expand your range of
Interests In the year ahead.
Consequently, there are Indica­
tions you m ay get Involved In
exciting areas where you never
previously ventured.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Som eone w ith whom yo u 're
closely Involved might be very
difficult to motivate today. It's
best you proceed alone rather
than w all for this individual to
get Into gear. Tiytn g to patch up
a broken romance? T h e AstroG ra p h Matchmaker can help you
understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mall $2
p lu s a lo n g , self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Matchmak­
er. c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. O H 44101­
3428.

C A T 6 LIKE T O &lt;JO
feUAVfcV THCm \ *

J

|

LEO (J u ly 23-Aug. 22) Your
chances for achieving your ob­
jectives look good today. But the
desired results could be late In
com ing, thanks to the round­
about w ay you'll do things.
VIROO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22)
Someone who doesn't (It In w ith
the rest of your friends m ay be

1 FINDTHIS PEW0WCAL"CO6MO*
HIGHLY ILLOGICAL THERE ARE
in n u m e r a b l e p a g e s a l l o c a t e d ,

■ ^ 7 0 'THINNER THIGHS

w .

(UrtW TH£5AM£

WOOO/

TfcWUTOAV

w w

I DO NOT UNDERSTAND T H IS
OBSESSION R lT H THIN TH IG H S . O N
TH E CONTRARY, TH IG H S C AN B 6 A
highly efficient region id s i t e
•1 FA T, a VITAL N U T R IEN T j -------^

S IC M A K ES A
6 C 0 P AR6UM GNT.

P O N TK K ftO U S .

P R JV tt. YOU WW£
OPlTE R Jd H TTO

TAKE

AN Nlf

F H 6 T d e cw trrr. r

*

- ^ T i it
|S S « r

o

eluding the queen and lack, you
w ill taae two trum p tricks and go
dow n — unless you have peeked
at his cards (which I hope you
w ouldn’t even think of doing)
and can see It is possible to
m aneuver an endplay.
W h a t happens if East has
O -J -x -x In spades? If you use
y o u r nine- and 10-spots cor­
rectly, you wlU be safe.
T h e right play la to cash the
spade ace (or king) and continue
w ith a low spade from hand —
even If East drops an honor
under the ace.
If everybody follows o r If West
plays low and d u m m y ’s nine
w ins, you are home. If West
discards, you put up d u m m y's
nine, later flnesring your 10 to
pick up East's remaining spades.
H ow are your powers of vtsuallzaUon?
(01 9 9 1 . NEW SPAPER EN ­
T E R P R IS E ASSN.

on the list for an activity you've
planned today. It m ay be best for
all concerned not to Include this
individual.
L I B R A (Sept. 2 3 -O c t. 23)
Am bition Is likely to permeate
you r being today, and you m ay
reach out for something you
previously fell was beyond your
grasp. It Isn't — If you're bold
enough to try.

9CORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Even though you'll be able to
handle weighty matters with
relative easy today, your com ­
panions m ay not. Don't make
them feel uneasy: allow them
time to sort things out.
RAOITTARIUt (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You m ay have an opportuni­
ty to profit through another
today — If you don't get cold feet
just because the endeavor to
more complex than what you’re
accustomed to.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2 2 -Ja n .
19) In order to make a sound
decision today, you must have
adequate time to carefully weigh
and b a la n ce all y o u r
alternatives. If you move loo
hastily, you could be sorry.
A Q U A R IU * (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Y o u m ay have to deal with

WEST
9*
WRITS

tint

♦ K QJ •

NORTE
WN
9M 3
WAQ4
♦ QlOt
97*43
EAST
9QJ3T
9 J •3
* All
9 10S3
SOUTH
OAK 1042
WEIS
♦KJ 3
9A3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South

19
«♦

Wnt
Pan
Pan

North
39
Pan

East
Pan
Pan

Opening lead: 9 K

someone today w ho you feel has
treated you a hit shabbily in the
past. Operate In accordance with
your standards, not this Individ­
ual’s.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You're reasonably safe today In
taking chances on things that
have been carefully thought out.
However, shot-ln-the-dark
gambles should be avoided at all
cost.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Do
what you believe Is right today,
and don’t be overly sensitive
regarding what another m ay
think about your actions. It's
only Important that you know
your motives are pure.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You'll receive the type of cooper­
ation necessary to execute your
plans today, provided you pres­
ent (hem In a straightforward,
e a a y-to -u n d e rs ta n d m a n n e r.
Don't embellish facta.
O IM Iin (May 2 1 -Ju n c 20) If
you’re prepared to earn what
you get. you should be able to
find ways to add to your re­
sources today. Don't waste time
th in k in g about dividends to
which you're not entitled.
(01991. NEWSPAPER EN­
TER P R IS E ASSN.

�</text>
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Sanford Herald
Sw ing Sanford, Lako Mary and Samlnola County alneo 1S08
83rd Year, No 273 - Sanford, Florida

Sanford asks pool tax

N E W S D IG E S T

By M CK FFB1FAUF
Herald Staff Writer ______________________________

□ •porta
Local teams win
SANFORD — Sanford Post 53. the Lake Mary
Mudcata and the Lake Howell Btackhawks all
won In summer baseball action Monday.
I m P l| « I B
a

P o o p io

Officers elected

SANFORD — The City Commission agreed by
unanimous vote last night, to enter Into a Joint
venture with the Seminole County School Board
to build a swimming pool. In order to finance It
however, a public referendum will be needed.
The pool project is only one o f three recre­
ational plans being developed by the city. The
other two. to be totally city funded Include a
recreation center and an outdoor athletic com ­
plex. Only the pool however, would be Involved in
a Joint agreement.
In order to pay for the entire package, the city

Cwhile we all know the city is
lacking in these recreational
needs, the entire project is so
expensive, we have to take it to
the people.)
-M ayor Bstty* Smith
will be seeking to obtain approval of the voters In
Sanford to borrow money. Mayor Bettye Smith
said. "W hile we all know the city Is lacking In
these recreational needs, the entire project Is so
expensive, we have to take It to the people."

' '

Just passing through
SANFORD — Th e Alam o Torch Run Is
expected to be coming through the Sanford area
Wednesday morning. This third annual event
will kick ofT the 1991 Sunshine State Games In
Brandenton.
The run started July 5 at Miami’s Baysldc
Market Place, and Is planning to end at Hawkins
Stadium. Manatee High School, this Friday
evening. In true style o f the ancient Olympic
games, the torch, to be carded by former
Olympic participants as well as Florida resi­
dents. will remain lit throughout the running of
the entire 480 mile course. The overall run has
come up the eastern Florida coast from Miami to
Daytona Beach, and will be coming southwest­
erly toward Bradenton as It passes through
Sanford.
The runners carrying the torch were expected,
weather permitting, to travel south on U.S.
highway 17-92 from DcLand. going over the
Lake Monroe bridge area from 7:50 to 8:40 a.m..
and through the Sanford area near 9:30 a.m.tomorrow.

Faison considered for N.C. job
SANFORD — Former Sanford City Manager
Frank Faison Is being considered for a position
as administrator o f Wake Forest. N.C.
T llr

Tow n

C m n m lM lo n

la

o c lir d u ln J

lo

consider offering Faison a Job tonight, said Wake
Forest Muyor Jim Ray.
He said the lormer town administrator was
forced out o f office after falling from favor with
the commission. A total of six candidates were
Interviewed out of 156 applications. Ray said.
Wake Forest, which has a population o f about
6,000, Is a suburb o f Raleigh. Ray said.
Faison served as Sanford's chief executive
from May 1985 until January this year. He
resigned without explanation In December, later
saying the “ fit” wasn't the same with current
commissioners ns it was with the board that
hired him.

Strange contestants sought
OCEAN CITY. Md. — William Pearce would
normally be considered a threat to law and order
for putting a knife to his throat and threatening
to slice hlsjugular.
But In tryouts this weekend for ABC-TV's
"Am erica's Funniest People." his behavior was
hardly out of the ordinary.
Pearce. 22. a pool water tunsultanl from
Gloucester. N.J.. was one of a hundred amateur
hams competing for a television appearance and
a shot at the show's weekly $10,000 grand
prize.
He held nothing back — ranting, raving, even
foaming at the mouth for the camera.
"W a s there enough slobber In there?" he
asked.
Not to be outdone, three Pennsylvania cous­
ins. Shelby Smith. 7. Troy Myers. 9. and
Heather Myers. 11. got the crowd giggling with
their rendition o f a song called "G od Bless My
Underwear."
Youngsters and adults lined up to show off for
cameraman Gregg Canes and segment producer
Ditto Vince. The pair not only Juggled the
technical aspects of taping but also coaxed,
cajoled and comforted potential contestants.
Fro m s ta ll and wire reports

C la ssifie s.........4B.SB M «v l«s ....................
Comics....................... SB Nation.....................
Dear Abby.................. 3B M o y le ....................
Deaths........................ SA police.....................
■dltorlal....................4A Sports..................11
Florida........................2A Television............. .
Horoscope................. 61 Weather.....................2

Cloudy and hot

W
Partly
Cloudy

Partly cloudy with
the high In the mid
90s and a southwest
wind at lOinph.

Fo r m ore w eath er, see P a »o 2A

□ 8 « e Pool. Page 5 A

Utilities
rate hike
in Sanford?

OfTlcrrs are now In place for the South
Seminole Lioness Club.

;

The swimming pool, to be built on property at
Seminole High School, owned by the School
Board, would not only serve the school but the
general public as well. Overall funding for Its
construction would lie through n 50-50 agree­
ment with the Seminole County School Board.
Speaking ubout the total three-part project. City
Mnnager Bill Simmons. "T h e referendum would
ask for approval o f the city to borrow an amount
of money not to exceed $2,500,000." Barring any
changes In the meantime, the referendum would
appear on a city-wide ballot In October of this
year.
Should It be accepted by the people o f Sanford,

By NICK PPBIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer

HvraM Photo by Nick Ptotfoul

Sanford firemen had the first opportun ity to use the aerial truck In fighting a fire M onday.

Fire causes $100,000 damage
to autom otive-repair building
By J . MARK BARFIBLD
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — A gasoline tire apparently
started by a workllghl caused an estimated
$100.(MX) in damage in Jim's Automotive
Service on Maple Avenue.
There were no Injuries.
One ear and possibly a second were destroyed
In the tire, which sent dense black smoke from
burning tires billowing Into the clear sky. The
smoke could be seen from Lake Mary. At least
six other ears In the building at 201 Maple Ave.
were not damaged, said owner Jim Dunn.
Dunn said he would be able to resume work
today with portable equipment, despite damage
to the repair shop's pneumatic air tool system.
After the scene was secured, only a coating of
black soot In the open ceiling of the two-story
building and a few drilling ashes remained of

the lire.
The burned-out shell ol a Flat sjxirlsear, with
Its seats and steering wheel reduced to metal
frames, was the mala victim of the fire. Next to
it.. ilie Flherglas body of a Cnmaro was cracked
mil blistered. The passenger side window had
shattered.
The lire was first reported at 2:09 p.m..
according to Sanford Fire Department records.
Three lire engines, one aerial truck and 19
firefighters began arriving one minute later.
The lire was extinguished 33 minutes later, the
reports state.
The aerial truck was used lo cool the roof ol
the steel building which was coated with foam
Insulatatlon. Large ashes of burnt foam and
paint d rifted throughout the Industrial
nclghlrorliood.
Dunn said the main damage to the building
See Fire, Page 5A

SANFORD — Utility bllLs for Sanford residents
inay be Increasing soon. The matter may be
brought to the City Commission for a vote within a
month.
During Monday night’s City Commission meet­
ing. the City Attorney was granted authority to
draft an ordinance that will generally result In a 20
percent Increase. The ordinance could possibly be
brought up for Its first reading at the next
commission meeting. July 22. and for a public
hearing and llnul vote during the August 12
meeting.
The overall Increase that was suggested us u
result of the consulting engineer's feasibility report
calls for a higher customer charge for various
meter sizes, as well as Increasing both the water
and sewer rates.
Sanford Utility Director Paul Moore explained.
"T h e average Sanford customer with a single
family home, uses approximately 10,000 gallons ol
water per month." The average Imme has a 3/4
Inch meter. The current charges in the total bill,
for water, sewer, and taxes Is $30.91. Under the
( See U tility . Page 5 A

A d viso ry board
requests staff
By VICKI DaSORMIKR
Herald Stall Wrltor_________________________________
SANFORD — The Business Advisory Board of
the Seminole County School Ikiard wants district
officials to acquire a planning stall with education
and experience In urban am) regional planning to
help advise It In comprehensive planning and
growth management.
John Howell. Business Advisory Board chair­
man. will discuss the pru|&gt;osal with the school
□ See A d v iso ry , Page 5A

Would this road by any
other name be as safe?
By J. MARK BARFIBLD
Herald Stall Writer________________
LAK E MONROE — S em inole
Comity officials say Old Monroe
Road should he ehi.ngctl to avoid
confusion — and possibly save lives
— with nearby Monroe Hoad.
Ihil several residents of the area
Immediately west ol Sanford say.
"W hy Irolhcr?"
"It seems kind ol silly," says
Sylvia Howe, a lour year resident ol
the narrow country road. "It's a lot
of bother and lor what? We have a
lot of problems that are here Instead
ol ones that could he."
Today, county
euinmlssiom-is
were lo decide whether to change
the decades-old name ol the road to
While Cedar Hoad It is a name that
received nine voles Iroiu street
residents. Residents rejected "Day
l.illv lh&gt;.id ” and "P e p p e rw o o d
Knurl."
Margaret Fountain, the coim lx's
addressing supervisor, said the tilt
ttailvc to change the names ot troth
Monroe Koad and Old Monroe Road
dates track tit 19HH before lormer
comity commissioner Bill Kirchhcill
leti the hoard. Fountain said
Kireldioll asked the county lo re­
solve any contusion caused hv
similar names
Fountain said an ellort to change
the name ot County Road 15 north
of State Road -hi Iron* ' Moiikm
Road" lo "fp sa la Road.” us name
south ol SR -hi. caused such a
controversy the effort was dropped
Since the lirsi ol the year. Fountain

said she has tried lo gain accep­
tance |nr three other names for old
Monroe Road, hut they were rejeeled lit Match
I he rejected names were those of
Lake Monroe pioneers and old
timers. They were "S w aggcrly
R o a d .” “ O g le s b y R o a d ” and
"McKinney Knurl."
I'Yiiiutaiti said the name should Ire
i hanged before a hie safety problem
arises.
"A ll ll lakes Is one flretuau dial's
'tticbody
new ehi an engine and
"T h e n
dies.* * F ou n tain sal
every! x idv conies In ye
illiln i you do soinielli lug?' Well
i bat's wliul we're (III! ng W ere
doing some I long aim it it now
before something like that hap
|M||S '
Cotnumuliy spokesman and his
lorlart Betty Mann said ( hanging tin
name ol ( &gt;ld Monroe Road Is allot bet
attempt t&gt;\ die county to eliminate
tin i hat.n tcrol tltelr &lt;oinnnmiiy
"It's a crying shame the conmiii
nits can't retain the names dial
were origin.dlv given in them."
Mann said. "T h ey could leave os
with a little dignity "
Maun said the road, which once
served as the in.tin route to First
Street and Sanford. has been "Old
Mo iik m
Road. ' lor at least live
generations She said Monroe Road
was once known as "Lake Monroe
Road."
I realize Saulnrd s growing but 1
see no reason why ilu-y have lo
man h nut here and try to change
tilings.''

H#rBkl Photo by Tommy Vhkbo I

‘That’s not Richard Petty, that’s my sister.’
Crystal Multop. 2. (behind posh watches her lather David Mullop and
sister Jessica Twadoll. 10 Jessica, a derby entry from Tilu3ville.
helped lest the city's new stalling ramp with her kit Car Monday
night The ramp will be used to launch the competing cars in the Soap
Bo* Derby Day even! this Saturday morning in Sanford

�• A - S an fo rd H aro ld, S an fo rd, Florida - T u a a d a y , Ju ly 9 , 1991

N E W S FROM T H E R EO IO N AN D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Study: Parents share custody
Ill-fated freighter tank

( w e found little tendency
either for guardians in a
state program to recom ­
mend children live with their
mothers or for the courts to
award custody to mothers
over fathers. |

GAINESVILLE — In most child-custody
disputes. Florida judges are likely to award
shared custody to parents, a university
study shows.
"Past studies suggest that Judges prefer to
give the mother custody, particularly if the
children are under 12." said Erik Sorensen,
who did the research for his University o f
Florida doctoral dissertation In clinical
psychology.
"But our study found little tendency
either for guardians In a state program to
recommend children live with their mothers
or for the courts to award custody to
mothers over fathers," he said.
Judges awarded shared custody with the
mother as primary custodian In 43 percent
o f the cases and shared custody with the
father as primary custodian in 33 percent of
the cases, the study showed.
In 5 percent of the cases, parents spilt
responsibilities as primary custodian, the
study showed.

MIAMI — The Alec Owen Maitland, an Ill-fated freighter that
ran aground In the Florida Keys in 1969, sank while carrying
175 tons o f bundled lumber and 30,000 gallons o f fuel about
400 miles southwest o f Miami, the Coast Guard said!
The crew o f six was rescued safely by the Coast Guard, the
fuel tanks appeared secure, and the bands on the bundles were
cut to reduce their danger to other ships. Petty Officer Veronica
Cady said Monday.
The 160-foot Maitland was towing a 240-foot barge from
Mobile, Ala., to Jamaica when It began to list heavily to port
Friday, the Coast Guard said.
The crew radioed to say the ship was flooding and In danger
of sinking 35 miles northeast of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula.
A passing ship and the Coast Guard cutter Decisive were
unable to keep the freighter afloat, officials said. Th e crew
abandoned ship and was taken aboard the cutter, which
reached Key West Monday morning.

Iteniwdy acquaintances subpoenaed
WEST PALM BEACH — Prosecutors have subpoenaed two
female acquaintances o f William Kennedy Smith to travel from
New York and testify about his actions the night o f an alleged
rape.
The subpoenas name Kerry Allison and Martha Dolan as two
friends who were with Smith the night o f March 29. Both gave
Upper East Side addresses in New York City, but neither could
be reached for comment Monday.
Smith Is charged with second-degree sexual battery and
misdemeanor battery for allegedly raping a 29-year-old woman
at the Kennedy seaside estate In Palm Beach. Smith, the
nephew of Sen. Edward Kennedy. D-Mass., has pleaded
Innocent.

-E rik S o ra n u n
Sorensen and UF psychologist Jacquelin
Goldman studied Judicial decisions In cases
Involving 60 families referred to Florida's
Guardian Ad Litem program in the past two
years. The cases had been referred because
o f contested custody disputes.
State guidelines call for shared custody
except In those situations where It Is shown
to hurt the child’s best interest. Sorensen
said.
"Generally. Judges appeared to approach

"Conversely, fathers got custody more
frequently If there was only one child,
making It appear that Judges don't think
men can care for more than one child as
well as mothers can.” Sorensen said.

The statue was removed In
1987 for courthouse construc­
tion and later put back In place.
Commissioners say they can't
see spending 420.000 to move
the statue again.

FORT WALTON BEACH - Federal agents arrested a Hot
Springs. Ark., Investment broker who disappeared three years
ago after Investors were allegedly bilked out o f millions of
dollars, the FBI said.
FBI agents nabbed Nils Eugene Flanncs without Incident
Monday at a small motel complex he managed In Fort Walton
Beach, said Don Pettus. FBI special agent In charge In
Arkansas.

Marion County Commissioner
Don Greene calls the statue
"s im p ly a part o f history."
Com m ission Chairman Ulcn
Florello says the majority of his
constituents don't find the stat­
ue offensive, and commissioner
Parnell Townley says taking the
statue down would be a slap In
the face of all veterans.

From Associated Press reports

HenMPkeMbyTi

Freedom's wave
Scan Myers, 7, and his brother Kiffy. 4, Lake
Mary, wavs kld-slzed American tlaga while

Budget cuts force closing of center popular as 4-H camp
about 20 miles south o f Palatka
and more than an hour's drive
from Gainesville.
"T h is is the only center In the
state that hus this kind of
facilities. My concern Is If you
arc going to cut, get out of the
office and look around." said UF
Associate Professor Ed Johnson.
J o h n s o n is an e x te n s io n
specialist who oversees 4-H ac­
tivities In Florida. Although
partly supported by private do­
nations. 4-H also receives state
money and is operated under the
state university system.
The center costs the university
system ubout 9200,000 a year.
The five employees will be
offered positions in similar facili­
ties. such as the one at Hustings.
Pouchcrsaid.

Joining In the festivities Fourth of July at Ft.
Mellon Park. Sanford.

Political contributions may
be banned in bond industry

Pulling up stakes

Center supporters say the fa­
cility provides valuable services
even though It Is remote, located

Women with high occupational statuses
were more successful In getting custody,
possibly because they are less dependent on
their husbands, he said.

" I don't have a problem with
the statue or what It stands for."
said probation officer Neal Faulk
o f the Johnny Reb statue. "1
have a problem with the location
— In front o f a courthouse. This
Is not an example of what a
community should stand for."

Investment broker arrested

The move Is designed to save
money and Is part of the state
mandate to eliminate 115 jobs.

Judges also favored the mother If she had
more time than the father to care for the
children, he said.

OCALA — Some blacks here
say they are offended by the
return o f a statue o f a Con­
federate private to a position o f
honor in front o f the Marion
County courthouse.

MIAMI — About 155 Haitian refugees were sent back to their
homeland, while the two Cuban rafters they rescued are
awaiting political asylum hearings in Miami.
The U.S. Coast Guard came upon a leaky, 45-foot sailboat
Ailed with 161 Haitians en route to Miami at 2 a m. Sunday.
Also on board were two Cuban men they had picked up along
the way.
The Cubans were taken to shore. But most of the Haitians —
except for six who were airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital
for treatment o f exposure and dehydration — were sent back to
Haiti.
"Th at tells the story. The Cubans are brought to shore and
welcomed, and the Haitians are treated as outcasts." said
Cheryl Little, an attorney for the Haitian Refugee Center in
Miami.

"T h e decision was made that,
that facility was not as high a
priority as some others." said
Don Pouchcr. spokesman for
UF's Institute of Food and Agri­
cultural Sciences, which runs
the center.

Mothers were more likely to get custody In
cases where children expressed a desire to
live with their mothers or had lived with
them after the parents separated. Sorensen
said.

Statue of
Johnny Reb
divides city

Haitian rafugaaa aant back

WELAKA. Fla. - State budget
cuts are forcing the closing this
fall of a 2.300-acre University of
Florida education and research
center that also serves as a 4-H
camp.

these cases with the presumption they
would award shared custody." he said.
Only 8 percent o f the mothrrs received
sole custody and Just 7 percent o f the
fathers received sole custody, the study
found.

In the past two years, there
have not been any major re­
search projects at the center,
used In the past In long-term
research projects. Including
som e In b o ta n y , fish eries,
z o o l o g y , e n t o m o lo g y an d
ecology.
Forestry and other classes also
have used the facility.
Although Its research use Is
slim, 4-H clubs from about 30
counties will have used the
center by summer's end.
In the past 10 years. 4-H has
built three horse barns, four
a ren a s, a b re a k in g co rra l,
s to ra g e area s, a covered
auditorium for demonstrations
and an apartment.
Most o f the Improvements.

■y JA CK IB HALLIPAX

e s t i m a t e d to c o s t a b o u t
S I 00,000. were paid for by
donations from 4-H clubs and
not with state money.
"T o me It's a critical compo­
nent o f the 4-H p ro g ra m ."
Johnson said.
Slate Rep. Kelley Smith Jr..
D-Palakta. said he wants lo see If
there Is a way lo keep the facility
from being closed.
He b elieves the property,
which,was donated to the uni­
versity by the U.S, Department
o f the interior In 1954. may
revert to the federal government
If It Is not used.
Smith said he Is checking wilh
other stale agencies, such as the
St. Johns River Water Manage­
ment District, to see If they could
pick up the deed.

Associated Press Writer
TALLAHASSEE - A proposal
to ban political contributions
from people who work on state
contracts for bond sales appar­
ently goes further than any other
regulations In the country, of­
ficials said.
"It does seem to be really at
the cutting edge." Danny Fuchs,
a Cabinet aide lo Gov. Lawton
Chiles, who proposed the rule,
said Monday.
" I don't think anyone’s eonu*
out with a blanket prohibition."
Bill Sweeney, executive director
of (he Division o f Bond Finance,
said Monday.
A proposal on today's agenda
for Chiles and the Cabinet would
ban political contributions from
bond underwriters and their
attorneys and flnanrial advisers

in election campaigns for the
governorship and Cabinet posts.
In the lust 12 months, the
state sold nearly 92 billion In
bonds to buy land or lo build
schools and roads. All bond sales
must be approved by the gover­
nor and Cabinet at several dif­
ferent stages.
The draft rule also forbids
unofficial communications be­
tween those In the bond busi­
ness and stale officials during
solicitation periods.
Under a policy adopted several
months ago. (he state now In­
cludes In each contract a pro­
vision that there Is to be no
unofficial communication be­
tween the parties of a pending
bond Issue.
Another provision o f the rule
would require the state to hire
an Independent financial adviser
to evaluate negotiated contracts

vf

l

MIAMI Hare are the winning
numbers selected Monday in
the Florida Lottery:
Cash 3

1-2-0

P la y 4

6-1-14

F an tasy 5

26-1-927-17

TH E W EA TH ER
Today...Partly cloudy with a
40 percent chance o f afternoon
and evening thundershowers.
-----------High In (he mid 90s. Winds
southwest lOmph.
Tonight...Partly cloudy with a MONDAY
low In the low to mid 70s. Light F tly C ld y 91-72
wind.
Tuesday...Partly cloudy with a
50 percent chance o f scattered
afternoon thundershowers. High
In the mid 90s. Wind southwest
LAST
lOmph.
July 4
E xten d ed fo re c a s t...P a rtly
cloudy Thursday through Sat­
urday with a chance o f afternoon
showers. Lows In the mid 70s
and highs In (he low to mid 90s

9

(LISPS 401 3001

Tuesday, July 9, 1991

C ™ ”- 0

Vol 63. No 273
Published Dell* end Sundry. eicepl
Saturday by The Seniors Herald.
Inc. 300 N. Trench Aye. Sentord,
Fie. 31771
Second CUee Poelege P«ld el Sentord,
Florida and iddittonei milling
otftcee.
POSTMASTER Send eddress chsnget
lo THE SANFORD HERALD. P O
Boi te»7. Sentord, FL 33773-1M7
Subscription Relee
(Dally A Swndey)
Home Delivery A Weil
3 Months.___________ t i t 90
t Months.................... t3t00

i Veer... .................. 17*00

Flortde Residents must pey lie eelee
lee In eddilion to relee ibove
Phone (407) 323 2*11

FLORIDA T U N
Cifv
Apelerhicole
Da* tone Beech
F I Laud Beech
Fort M **f»
Geinekville
Homeiteed
Jeckw rtville
Key W e ll
le kelend
.
M iem i
Penvecole
t r re u le
Teilenettee
Tem pe
Vero Beech
W Pelm Beech

HI

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71

00

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M M 17
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40 44 tre
44 7} 00
43 74 43

47 77 17

p

------------ 1

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

Ptly C ldy 91-72

P tly C ldy 91-72

M aly C ldy 91-72

M aly C ldy 91-72

NEW

T IM S

STATISTICS

W EDNESDAY:
S O L U N A R T A B L E : Min. 4:20

T h e high tem peratu re In
Sanford Monday was 94 degrees
and the overnight low was 74 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center, Celery
Avenue.
R ecorded rainfall for the
period, ending at 9 a.m. Tues­
day. totalled .00 Inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 82 degrees and
Monday's overnight low wits 77.
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other WeatherServIce data:

J u ly 11 a.ni.. 4:35 p.m.: MaJ. 10:25 a.m..

11.05 p.m. T ID E S: D ayton a
Beach: highs. 6:54 a.m.. 7:34

PULL
Ju ly 26

Pci

*0 74 Ire
«

NATIONAL TSMPS

BXTINOBO OUTLOOK

LOCAL POOBCAAT

SSACH CONDITIONS
D aytona Beach: Waves are I
fool and glassy. Current is lo the
north wtlh a water temperature
of 84 degrees. N ew Sm yrna
Beach: Waves are I tool and
glassy. Current Is to (he south,
with a water temperature of 82
degrees.

p.m.: lows. 105 a.m.. 12:59
p.in.; N e w S m y r n a B e a c h :
highs. 6:59 a.in.. 7:39 p.m.;
lows. 1:10 a.m.. 1:04 p.m.;
Cocoa Beach: highs. 7:14 a.m..
7:54 p.m.: lows. 1:25 a.m.. 1:19
p.m. ________________________

BOATING
St. A u gu stin e to J u p ite r In let

Today: Wind southwest 10
knots except for an onshore
wind near the coast during thr
aftcruoon Seas 1 to 2 feet. Hay
and inland waters a light chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms Tonight: Wind south
to southwest 10 knots. Seas I to
2 feet Hoy attd Inland waters a
light chop.

[ M on d ay’s h igh ................. 95
B arom etric preaaure.30.05
['R e la t iv e H um idity....82 pet
C'W ln d e ..... Southw est 7 mph
L R a in fa ll.........................0 In.
1 T o d a y 's su n set
8:2 6 p.m.
[ T o m o rro w 's su n rise....6:34

high end ever night low
City
Atlanta
Oocton
Chicago
Cleveland
C olum bia.! C
D e lis t F I Worth
Denver
Doe Maine*
Detroit
Hertford
Helene
Honolulu
Indienepoiii
Je O u o n .M iu
Juneau
K a m e l City
L e i Vegei
L o i Angetei
Louiiville
Mem ph ii
Milwaukee
M p li St Peul
NjLhvilte
New Orieeni
New York City
Nor to ll. Ve
North Plette
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
Phoemr
For ftend Maine
Porltend Or*
St Louii
Sell Lake City
Sen Diego
Sen Frencnco
Sen Juen P R
Sente Fe
St Ste Mer r
Seettie
Shreveport
Sio u i F e ll!
Spokene
Topeka

hi Lo Prc Otlh
S4 71 IS cdy
n
44
dr
71 47
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44 71 73
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dr
47 74
44 71
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17 47
cdy
13 64
cdy
13 69 30 cdy
94 47
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43 49
tdy
14 74
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14 71 01 cdy
41 73
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3S 49
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•9 71
cdy
71 04 cdy
n
71 6J
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47 77 03
96 73
cdy
71 47
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71 34
dr
43 77
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14 77 1 74 cdy
47 77
cdy
44 77
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*o 37
cdy
14 73
clr
40 40 04 cdy
10 77
cdy
106 11
dr
43 61 I I cdy
43 Si
cdy
91 79
cdy
i;
74
cdy
74 66
dr
43 U
cdy
49 76
cdy
47 47
cdy
4S 14 00 cdy
43 33
cdy
43 74 17 cdy
74 SI
cdy
14 SI
Cdy.
*4 73
cdy

�S an fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , Flo rid a - T u e s d a y , Ju ly

Retail thaR chargad
Helen Palatinua Wright. 54. o f 0000 Via Bonita Drive. In
Sanford, was arrested on Friday morning. She was charged
with retail theft.
According to the arrest report, an employee o f the Winn Dixie
Supermarket on Airport Boulevard In Sanford, allegedly
observed Wright put several Items in her purse. She allegedly
paid for items In her basket, but allegedly did not make an
attempt to pay for the Items In her purse.
W righ t was detained b y store em ployees and then
transported by Sanford Police to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility where she was held on 0100 bond.

Church burglary chargad
Dclton Kenneth Shervlnton. 34. who gave police no local
address, was arrested Saturday night by Sanford Police.
Shervlnton was found near the east door o f the Centra]
Baptist Church. 3101 W. 1st Street In Sanford. He was charged
with burglary and taken to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility.

Warrant arraata
The following persons were apprehended on outstanding
warrants:
• Marty Horton. 28. of Daytona Beach, was arrested Friday
on an outstanding warrang charging him with violation of
parole on a grand theft conviction.
•Charlie Albte. Jr.. 51. o f Orlando, was arrested by Seminole
County Sheriff deputies Friday on a wannant charging him
with failure to appear to answer a charge of petit theft. He was
placed in the John E. Polk Correctional Facility.

DUI arrests
The following persons were charged with Driving under the
Influence o f an alcoholic beverage:
• Larry Carmen Esposito, 34. 100 Neal Drive, Deltona, was
charged with DUI early Saturday morning when his vehicle
was stopped by Seminole County Sheriffs deputies on U.S.
17-92. Esposito was also charged with having no headlights on
his vehicle plus three other traffic-related charges.
•G eorge Louis Benner. 47. of 2000 Lake Mary Boulevard,
was apprehended Sunday, near the South Seminole Communi­
ty Hospital in Longwood. In addition to the DUI charge,
Seminole County Sheriff deputies reported that his driver's
license had been revoked for a 10-year period, following a
previous DUI conviction.
• Donald L. Meredith, 42. 311 Wickham Court. Longwood.
was charged with DUI by Seminole County sheriff deputies
after his vehicle was stopped on Bear Lake Road Sunday
morning.

DUI cases drop but
speeding increases
■y NICK F F IIF A U F
Herald Staff Writer
Law enforcement officers are
pleased with the low number of
DUI cases in Central Florida over
th is past J u ly 4th h oliday
weekend. The writing o f speed­
ing tickets however, was higher
than normal.
The biggest attempt at stop­
ping motorists under the Influ­
ence of alcohol was undertaken
by the Florida Highway patrol.
All troopers were called (o duty
over the weekend, with vacation
times and other days off pro­
hibited for the troopers. The
actual cases involving persons
driving under the Influence of
alcohol was described as unbcllevnbly low. "It was one of the
lowesl numbers we've had dur­
ing a holiday weekend In a long
tim e ." said FHP Li. Chuck
Williams. He added. "T h at's
apparent when you look at the
statistics. W e estim ated 36
latalilies across the state for the
4 day weekend, and only 26
were killed." He said "the only
two In Central Florida were in an
accident in DcLand."
"T h e two areas where arrests
were higher Ilian normal in our
district.” Williams said, "w ere
speeding and lack o f scat belts."
He said the FHP handed out
1.100 tickets for speeding and
200 for improper use of seatbelts
during the 4 day weekend.
Williams is spokesman for the
FHP in Seminole. Orange. Os­
ceola. Volusia. Flagler. Ilrevard

and Lake Counties.
Local law enforcement officials
were also pleased with the tack
o f DUI problems. Mike Rotundo
with the Sanford Police Depart­
ment said. "W e had no DUI
arrests at all over the weekend."
Capt. Sam Belflorc with the Lake
Mary Poller Department said the
same thing. "Lake Mary drivers
really cooperated. W e didn't
have any DUI problems."
None were reported by Longwood Police Chief Greg Manning
who commented. " I think people
have finally begun to realize that
If they drink and drive, they’re
eventually going to get Into
trouble. I'm very proud of of (he
fact that we had no DUI arrests
over the holiday."
The Seminole County Sheriffs
Department paid particular at­
tention to the problem. "W e had
only a few additional troops
o u t." said Sem inole County
Sheriffs department spokesman
George Prochel, "but those who
worked did concentrate on DUI
eases." He added. "Cracking
down on drunk driving was the
primary weekend goal o f our
Tactical Response Team ."
FHP Lt. Williams cautioned
that a good July 4th weekend
docs not mean safer times
ahead. "This seven county area
has one of the highest potentials
for highway accidents caused by
DUI," he said. "W e have to
continue exercising Just as much
caution during normal days as
w e do fo r fu tu re h o lid a y
weekends that lie ahead."

Sanford,
Lake Mary
chim e in
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD - The Sanford City
Commission has agreed to sup­
port the Lake Mary City Com­
mission. in calling for a reduc­
tion In phone charges to Or­
lando. The vote in favor o f the
project was unanimous.
Lake Mary has already peti­
tioned the Public Service Commission, asking for a review o f
the local service calling area.
Th e request Is for extended area
service from Southern Bell T ele­
phone Company and United
Telephone Company. It would
classify telephone calls between
Sanford and Lake Mary to Or­
lando and Apopka locations as
local.
In Its petition, passed and
adopted on June 6 o f this year.
Lake Mary had told the PSC (hat
the present situation is a dis­
advantage to local business and
residential telephone customers.
They wrote, "T h e present tele­
phone base rate disparity inhib­
its the growth o f business and
Industry and quality o f life In the
Sanford/Lakc Mary Southern
Bell Telephone service area o f
Seminole County."
T h e v o le during the com ­
m ission m eeting was unani­
mous. Earlier In a workshop,
concern was expressed by San­
ford Mayor Bettyc Smith. "W hile
this appears to be a good move,
we won't want to lost our local
calling privilege to the northern
areas." Sanford presently can
place local phone calls to many
areas o f Volusia County such as
DcBary. Deltona, ana Orange
City.
Earlier. J. Craig Spearman.
Chairman o f Lake Mary's Busi­
ness Avdlvory Board had stated
that It would be several months
before Ihe Public Service Com­
mission would begin to discuss
the matter. He said there were nt
least 20 other com m unities
seeking changes in phone call
charges In other parts o f Ihe
state.

Vottr turnout light
Despite a prediction by •lections supervisor
Sandra Goord of a 23 percent turnout in today's
county sales tax referendum, the precinct
captains at Sanford Civic Center (above) and

• y JAMES ItOWLKY

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Senate Ma­
jority Leader George Mitrhrll is
d isp u tin g P resid en t B ush's
assertion that race played no
role in his selection of Clarence
Thomas to lx- the nation's sec­
ond b la ck S u p re m e C ou rt
Justice.
By nom inating Thomas to
succeed Thurgood Marshall, the
first black to sit on the high
c o u rt. Bush sh ow ed he is
"against quotas for every posi­
tion except the Supreme Court."
Mitchell. DM.nnc. said Monday.
"I do not accept the presi­
dent's explanation that race was
not a factor at all In this
nomination." Mitchell told rejiorters after he met briefly with
t he conservative Thomas.
Bush, a Ircqucnt critic of racial
hiring quotas, lias dented that
Thomas’ race figured In his
decision.
Mitchell made his comments
as Thomas, accompanied by
Sen John Danforth. K-Mo.. met
with key senators who will be
votlng on Ins confirmation when
the nomination is considered,
probably in September.

Thomas was making more
courtesy rails today, including a
m e e t in g w ith S en . S trom
Thurmond of South Carolina.
Ihe ranking Republican on the
Senate Judiciary Committee.
Senate Minority Leader Bob
Dole. K-Kan.. rejected as "totally
w ro n g " M itchell's view that
Bush was fulfilling a racial quota
by selecting Thomas.
If Bush had "sent up liberal
activists ... you wouldn't hear
Senator Mitchell or Democrats
saying anything about quotas."
Dole said after meeting with
Thomas.
Dote acknowledged that the
43-year-old nominee's youth and
relative Judicial inexperience
could be issues In tbe confirma­
tion hearings.
"Certainly they arr going to go
after e x p e rie n c e ." he satd.
"Th at's an appropriate place for
Inquiry.”
But Dole said Thomas had
compiled an impressive career
as an assistant state attorney
general in Missouri, a Senate
aide to Danforth. as chairman of
tile Equal Employment Oppor­
tunity Commission and as a
federal appellate judge

elsewhere report a slow turnout this morning.
Voters have until 7 p.m. to decide whether to
raise the sales tax by one cent for the next 10
years to pay for S300 million in road work.

Citizens ask for borrow pit appeal
their own engineers to see If
their concerns could be answered.

commissioners today to sched­
ule an nppeal hearing In Sep­
tember to give Geneva Citizens a
GENEVA — The Geneva Citi­ chance to hire an engineer to
zens Association today will review Jammal's data.
pursue an appeal of a 2 million
Froellch said a delay wilt be
cubic yard borrow pit they say unacceptable.
threatens their Isolated drinking
" I don’t want any m ore."
Froclich said. "T h ey've got to
water supply.
A ssociation president Lee have new evidence and they
Voorhccs said a meeting last don’t have anything. I have gobs
week with mining businessman of people supporting me. They
J a m e s F r o e h lic h and h is don’t represent any but a very
en gin eer from Jammat and few ."
Associates fatted to resolve con­
Froellch has proposed to dig
cerns residents have about the the large 40-acre pit on 116
"Geneva Bubble." the communi­ acres south o f State Road 46 and
ty's sole source of drinking wntcr a half mile north o f the Cochran
that is completely surrounded Road Intersection.
and underlain with undrinkable
G eneva residents are con ­
saltwater.
cerned that the pit will be dug to
"It was a fruitless meeting." u depth too rinse to the Bubble
Voorhces said. "W e did not have which tics in a luyer of limestone
anybody that could be consid­ ut varying depths underground.
ered an expert on geology on Froelleh's engineer said his pit
will come within 10 feet of the
hydrology."
Vonrhees said he will ask linu-stonc layer containing the
Bubble.
Last month. Voorhces agreed
to commissioner's request that
he and other Geneva repre­
sent It Ives meet with Froellch
and his engineers along with

By j . m a u k

b a r f ik l o

Herald Staff Writer______________

Voorhces said he received
three days notice of the meeting
from the county after It was
scheduled and after contacting
four engineering firms, found
none that could review the
Jammal data in less than two
months.
Pat Frost, manager o f the
Orlando office o f the St. Johns
River Water Management Dis­
trict, said environmental re­
gulators may not complete their
review of the propotsal before
September. Frost said Froellch
needs a district stormwuter
management permit to dug the
pit and may need permits from
the Florida Department of Envi­
ronmental Regulation.
Frost said the district Is con­
cerned about protection of the
Bubble and has requested more
details o f the pit and its Impact
from Froclich. He said the plnn
su b m itted by Froellch was
"fairly sketchy" and lacked ade­
quate Information for district
review.

U.S. slumbering giant,
other nations to grow
■ y MARTIN C R U T S IN O in

AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON — Americans'
standard o f living declined in
1990 for the first time since the
last recession as U.S. standing
among Industrial countries con­
tinued to .lag. a commission
reported today.
The study by the Council on
C o m p etitiv en e ss tracks
A m erica's performance since
1972 when compared with six
other Industrialized countries —
Japan. G e rm a n y . Britain.
France. Indy artd Canada. Those
nations along with the United

States participate In u major
economic summit every year.
The report also found that for
the third year in a row. the
United States invested less in
new factories and equipment as
a share of its total economy than
any o f its major competitors.
"W h ile other Industrial na­
tions are laying the foundalion
for strong economic growth, the
United Slates continues lo he a
slumbering giant." said count'll
Chairman George Fisher. Ihe
head o f Motorola. Inc. "T h e
American dream may not he
what most Americans expect if
current trends continue."

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IH IM ■ ■ ■ — —

—

—V i.-----—

--------_________

to take health care stand
w cofigrwiiofMU w p u o n m m oott t w in t the
sue to go to the Democrats b y default.
So they’re putting together their own plan to
rerhuul health care, rather than waiting far the
h lte House.
Sen. Alan Sim pson of Wyoming, the deputy

EDITORIALS

Campaign reform
In his SUte of the Union message. President
Bush challenged lawmakers to clean up the
process by which they finance their reelection campalfia. But the prospects of a
cleansing are no more encouraging In the
102nd Congress than they have been in
previous araalona.
Recently. 86 senators approved and sent to
the House a faW that would restrict special*

arlth no announced deadhne. President Bush has
p ro p o s e d le g is la t io n to c o n tro l m e d ica l
malpractice coats, but no broader reform.
A n d the subject keeps coming up when
members of C on fress talk with constituents.
"In m y town meetings, it’s been the issue of
coat, premium coat." said Simpson. " ! don't
know how volatile It ts."
The political volatility of the health care issue
may be headed upward. The visibility certainly

to guarantee health Insurance to all Americans,
through their em ployers or through the govern­
ment.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller. D-W.Va.. b trying to
build a presidential campaign around It. He said
h e ll decide later this sum m er whether to seek

the Democratic presidential nomination.
When the nation's
■
governors hold their
annual conference In
S e attle b e g in n in g
Aug. 17, health care
reform will top the

get U»dr own term# onto the table lor debate, for
bargaining — and to show the voters that they're
trylna to fashion answer*, too.
SfcX John H. Chafce of Rhode bland is taking
the Republican lead on health care as sponsor of
the coming Senate OOP proposal. But he said It
la widely recognised that nothing win happen on
hrahh rs rr Ir g lt H * " " * - * — *** * *
If then.

T h e A m e ric a n
tw in *.
Medical Association
tlo n
heard a Republican
!!27.!!Si J !!? f
warning that unless
# !!? »!doctors act to make
L * " f • *"
health care more af{* • • *
' •
fordable and avail*
« a®
able, they will face
£ “ f l h* e a r s
public demand that
25811 ifit S S i
the government take
m
it over.
tr&gt; a a o a n d a .B
For all of th at,
there b no real like­
lih o o d that b a s ic
changes in the health
care and insurance
system will be
|-■
■ ■ ■
enacted Ihb year or next. The cure Is a matter of
dispute, the government b divided and the
president Isn't pushing.
In those circumstances. Republicans need to

It la f 4ng to take artful balancing to get any
health care overhaul past the powerful and
competing interests Involved — the doctors and
hospitals who provide cate, the businesses and
em ployes w ho pay for It. and the health
Insurance Industry though which much of It Is
financed.

assume

preven t g re e d y law m a k e rs from g r u b b in g for
d ollars. B u t several th in g s could b e d on e to
footer a grea te r d egree of com petition In
political contests.
T o b e g in w ith, b an a ll P A C contributions
fro m corporations, la b o r unions a n d trade
a s s o c i a t i o n s . T h e s e fu n d s , w h ic h flo w
p rim a rily to Incum bents, are d esign ed to
In fluence legislation. L a s t year, for exam p le,
P A C a -c o n trib u ted n e a rly $80 m illio n to
In c u m b e n ts a n d a m ere $5 million to their
op p o n e n ts. F orm er S e n . W illiam Proxm lre,
D W b . . h a d It righ t w h e n he sa id such
c o n trib u tio n s am ount to bribes.
Secon d, re q u ire that candidates raise virtu*
a lly a ll o f th eir cam p aign funeb from w ithin
th eir h o m e states. T h is w ould h elp ensure
th at politicians solicit fu n d s from the people
th ey are su p p o se d to serve.
T h ird , b a n the carry o v e r of cam p aign funds
from on e election to another. In cum ben ts
routinely u s e this advan tage to a m aa a h uge
w a r chests, thereby discou ragin g potential
c h allen gers.
Fourth, e n d the soft m oney a b u s e s that
u n d erm in e current contribution limita. Soft
m on ey constats o f fu n d s provided to can*
dldates Indirectly b y a n independent organi­
zation. In 1966, for ex am p le, Calif. S en . A lan
C r a n s t o n 's re-election cam p a ign received
$85 ,0 00 th at w a s ostensibly earm arked for a
D em ocratic get-out-the-vote drive.
Finally, prohibit law m a k e rs from a b u sin g
the fra n k in g privilege to flood their districts
a n d s t a te s w ith c a m p a ig n lite ra tu re at
election tim e. L a w m a k e rs sh ou ld not be
p e rm itte d free p o s t a g e u n le s s th ey a re

Berry's World

INTERACTIVE TV

There are 34 million to 37 million Americans
without health Insurance, and 00 million others
w ith coverage Inadequate to protect them
" W e 'r e going to have to do som ething
complete, more complete than we've ever done."
Sen. Simpson said.
And there's no federal money available for the
purpose. The government health Insurance
envisioned under the Democratic plan would
cost t o billion: the sponsors said they'd decide
later how to raise the money.

JACK ANDERSON

Gorbachev wants
to retain Baltics
G U L F O F RIGA, Latvia — One thing comes
Into focus on a beach overlooking (h b vast
body of Ice-fcee Baltic water. The primary
reason Mikhail Gorbachev doesn’t want to
part with the three Baltic republics is military
strategy. He needs these warm waters south
of Leningrad aa ports for the ships and
submarines of h b Baltic fleet.
On principle, Gorbachev doesn't want to
lose any of three Baltic states because It
would encourajp other Soviet republics to
break away. too.
-------------- -— -----------But we have
learned from sources
^
In the Baltics and
' I f A
U . S . I n t e llig e n c e
s o u rc e s , that
i J

sibtlity that the three
s t a t e s , a n d th eir

HODDING CARTER

A m idget to fill giant’s shoes
It l* a minor but bitter Irony that Thurgood
Marshall, the giant, made the Supreme Court
safe for Clarence Thomas, the midget. But that
Is not all that the president's appointment of
Thomas, the faithful Rcaganlte loyalist. Il­
lustrates. As Marshall exits the high court and
Thom as awaits his almost certain Senate
confirmation, the contrast between the two
men underlines the contrast that history will
draw between the two quite different, but
equally activist, courts their appointments
reflected and fulfilled.
It la the latter point that deserves the most
attention. The new Ntxon-Reagan-Buah court
Is not particularly Interested In Judicial re­
straint. U has an openly political agenda and Is
far more contemptuously dismissive of prece­
dent and congressional Intent than any
majority ever put together within Us liberal
predecessor.
Chief Justice William Rehnqulst apparently
believes that stare decisis, the doctrine that
rules laid down tn previous decisions should be
followed unless they contravene the ordinary
principles of Justice. Is for wimps. Real men
stare It In the face, kick hard If they don't like
It. and keep moving, or so he all but said in two
decisions In June that overturned previous
high court rulings rendered as recently as last
year.
Only a hypocrite would contend that political
agendas on the bench are something new.
Unlike the $3 trillion national debt, creative
court decisions that fashion legal doctrine out
of thin air. Ideological smoke and philosophical
mirrors are not a legacy solely of the 1980s. In
1954. C h ief Justice Earl W arren led a
unanimous court to rule that racial segregation
under the theory of separate but equal was not
constitutionally acceptable, despite 60 years of
precedent which said Just that. An earlier,
quite conservative court passed Its magic
Interpretive wand over the 14th Amendment
to the Constitution and decreed that a
corporation w as a "p erson " os described
w ithin the am endm ent. That the 14th
Amendment w as passed by Congress and
ratified by the states primarily to bestow upon
the former slaves the full rights of American
citizenship w as blithely Ignored.

Nor can liberals cry overlong because the
court is no longer receptive to their causes.
What cannot be won Iit presidential elections
will not be long sustained by the third branch
o f govern m en t, a fact o f life Am erican
conservatives had ample opportunity to pon­
der for most o f the preceding half century.
People ’ o f m y general outlook had a long,
happy succession of legal victories to cheer ami
now we don't, primarily because we lost five of
the lust six presidential elections. The moans
will change to cheers again only when the
White House is returned to prolonged control
by progressives, a day as Inevitable as It is

uncertain.
But we can continue to Insist that the new
court, like the presidents it reflects, has a
constipated view o f the proper balance be­
tween assertion o f the majority’s Interests and
protection of the m inority's rights. More
concerned with asserting the royalist pre­
rogatives of the state than the individual's
central place in a free
society, this court
will -never cut new
ground or expand
Am erican freedom
b e c a u s e It q u i t e
f r a n k l y does n o t
believe either is nec­
essary. The old court
majority proudly
asserted both as its
mandate and respon­
sibility. It Is literally
Inconceivable that
the Kchnqulst Court,
transposed in time
b u t n ot In t e m ­
T h e new court
perament. could ever
has a c o n ­
have found In favor
stip a te d vie w
o f equal Justice and
of the proper
against segregation
balance. ■
40 years ago.
Which brings us
back to Thurgood
Marshall and Clarence Thomas. Marshall, the
first and only black man on the court, was
architect of the 1954 decision as the NAACP's
lawyer, lie Is a great man. a towering figure tn
the law and on the court. Thanks to him. black
Americans are far closer to full equality before
the taw than they were before he led the charge
against state-imposed segregation. Because of
him. It Is no longer Inconceivable that black
Americans might serve on the Supreme Court
or In any other office the nation offers. Thanks
to his trailblazlng. the undistinguished
Clarence Thomas, black hitman for the
cumpalgn against affirmative action, now has a
chance to follo w other, equ a lly undist­
inguished white political hucks to the nation's
highest court.
Of course. It Is possible that. If and when
confirmed. Judge Thomas will find a more
creative role to play. It is possible that the
Kchnqulst Court will reverse course and decide
It Is better to comfort the afflicted than
autoinallcallv ratify the pronouncements of
power.

L E T T E R S T O E D IT O R
Letters to the editor are welcome. Ali letters
must ts- Signed. I lie hide the address ol the
writer ami a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be oil u single subject and he
as brief as possible.. Lein rs .ire subjeet lo
editing

to his control.
Top military sur­
v e y o rs h ave been
m a k in g p la n s to
buttress port facili­
ties at Kaliningrad, a
sm a ll R u ssian
L i t h u a n i a is
enclave on the Baltic
w illing to n e ­
S ea b e t w e e n
gotiate safe
L it h u a n ia and
transit for S o ­
P o l a n d .
If
viet troops. 0
G orbachev's troops
based In the Baltics
have to retreat tothe
port at KaUnlnpad, there Is only one w ay to
do U — through Lithuania. Our sources tell us
that while making public demands for a total
withdrawal of Soviet troops. Lithuania Is
willing to negotiate safe transit for them, and
maybe even willing to allow some of them to
stay.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister A lg ird a s
Saudargss hinted as much to us when he said
It might be "necessary" to keep some Soviet
troops In Lithuania as part o f the Soviets'
defense needs. " I regard this as a realistic
compromise.” he said. "A n y presence o f
Soviet troops an Lithuanian territory Is a
compromise."
The Latvians are less accommodating.
They will not abide any Soviet troops In a
future Independent Latvian nation. "W c do
not see any reason why they should slay in
Latvia." Vice President DainIs Ivans told us.
He said Soviet generals stationed there now
have been asked why they need such a large
contingent. The answer Is. that the soldiers
need to defend Latvia agilnst American
Imperialism.
But among Latvians, there Is no demand
for that protection. Ivans mid, "O ur main
goal is to destroy the communist system here
and cover It with DDT so It can never grow
again."
The Latvians have more reason to he
sensitive about the issue than Estonia or
Lithuania. The Soviet Union has enforced a
"Russification" program In Latvia since
World War II that has Included replacing
huge chunks of the native Latvian population
with Russians and others. Joseph Stalin
started the program by massive deportations
and executions of Latvians. Meanwhile.
Russians came in droves to settle In (he
warmer Baltic climate. Latvia became a
haven for retired Soviet military officers —
the Soviet equivalent of Sun City.
Latvian leaders told us they aren't worried
about those Russians who would remain
behind when Latvia won independence. In a
March 3 advisory voir on the issue of
independence, the result was overwhelmingly
In favor of breaking away from the Soviet
Union, even among voters In cities where the
population Is no longer predominantly native
Latvian. The Immigrants want to stay, and
they apparently want to their Independence
from Moscow, loo.
But some Latvians arc afraid that time ts
running out for true natives, and that the
Immigrants will forever change their country,
even tf it wins independence. Romualdas
Razultas. the leader o f the Latvian Popular
Front, pointed to the number of Soviet troops
being pulled out of Eastern Europe who may
end up In the Baltics.

\

�-

Sanford Hsraki, Sanford, Ptortds - Tussdsr. July S, t » 1 - M

Advisory

Here comes the school bus
m e." SupE. Bob Hughes w M
" T h e O pt 1mlit d o n a tio n is v

2 2 T -2 J 5 5 S J 1 S * ,bn' R adio re ce ive r to
T h e tom k xm Adruocy Board RjSft. Special kidS

The O pU m M C lub aril) pay the
coal of the transmitters and the

the program
be accepted on a trial basis for
the 1001-92 school year,

me contract prupoora u j w e

Previously, the Seminole

, d i i i for the agree*
ment to renew automatically
each year unless either party
gives written notice o f termina­
tion at least 90 days prior to the
end of the one year term.
T h e O p tim is ts w lllb e re ­
fer all promotional
associated with the

w ould Iknd all three protects.
Should the referendum b e d e fcoted. the city plane to have a
clause In the resolution which
w * show it to opt out o f the Joint
a g re e m e n t w ith the School

v ii

m y

White House reviews abortion stsnd
W ASHINGTON - The White
House, faced with heavy con*
gresstonal opposition to rules
that forbid abortion counseling
at federally funded dinks. Is
reviewing the regulations. Presi­
dent Bush 's spokesman said
today.
P r e s s s e c r e t a r y M a r lin
FlUrwater said the White House
wants to be able to work with
Congress as It considers the
Issue, but there are no present
plana to change the administra­
tion's position backing the regu­
lations.
"There are no plans to do that.
... What we do down the road I
don’t know." Fltswater told re­
porters this morning. "But at
this point we're standing by the

B u s h 's d o m e s t i c p o l i c y
adviser. Roger Porter, la con­
ducting the review of the refutetlons th a t s u f f e r e d an
overwhelming defeat In a House
vote June 36.
"Roger Porter's office la just
reviewing the history o f It ao we
have a full understanding o f it as
the Congress considers this mat­
ter." Fltswater said.
Bush has threatened to veto
any legislation that overturns
the regulations blocking abor­
tion coun seling at federally
funded clinks. White House of-

Logoi Nolle**
N o n a IS NIM BY OIVIN
hy Hrtuo af Mat carfaM
i at iMcvfNN MtuaR aut af

The Senate has not yet voted
on allowing the clinks to con­
tinue abortion counseling.

M t taaf af Nw Orcuft
Caurt af VaNaia CawRy. FNrtRa. ugan g flnaf luRgamonf
rin Rarai In Nw aMraaaw (durt
an Ma SMh RW af March A O .

T h e regu lations were laid
down during the Reagan ad­
ministration. but Implementa­
tion w a s held up by cou
challenges.
The Supreme Court In May
upheld the regulations, and
C o n g r e s s b e g a n e ffo rts to
overturn them.

"t^ k

p Ta lS n iT- -m k - Sgac'alVy

(L m IN ^

.

f

Leonore J. Connell. 83. 1520
S. Grant St.. Longwood. dkd
Monday at Longwood Health
Care Center. Bom Dec. 12. 1907
In New York Cky. she moved to
Longwood from Clearwater In
1991. She w as Catholic. She was
a homemaker.
Survivors are son. Gerald.
Longwood: daughter. Leonore
B ro w n . O a k R idge. N.J.: 8
gran dch ildren: 2 great­
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
A N N IE M A Y D A V IS
Annie May Davis.

89. 206

Avenue B. Oviedo, died Saturday
at Winter Park Care Center. She
i bom May 2. 1902 In Oviedo.
Was a maid.
Survivors are sister, Fkwetta
M. Washington. Oviedo: brother.
William H. Mller. N ew York
City.
Golden’s Funeral Home. Inc.,
Winter Park, in charge of ar­
rangements.

From there In 1960. He waa
Catholic. He waa a driver for
Brink's Security.
■ n r v la aaa
w ife. A n n a:
d a u g h t e r . A rle n e S ln co skt.
Longwood: three grandchildren:
7 great-grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary. In charge of ar­
rangements.

B E U L A H W A SH IN G T O N
Amos Hardy. Jr.. 65. 141
Woodcord St.. Hartford Conn.,
d k d Saturday at S. G eorgia
Medical Center. Valdosta. Bom
Oct. 1. 1925 In Dade City, he
moved to Hartford from Sanford
In 1949. He waa Methodist. He
was a Marine Corps veteran of
WW2.
Survivors are mother. M ark
Hardy. S a n fo rd : so n K e v in
Hardy. Hartford: daughters Har­
riett A. Hardy. Glorida Hardy.
Irene Hardy. Ro m Mary Hardy
all of Rochester. N.Y.. Tony
Moran B r o w n . Z e l l w o o d ;
brothers. William Hardy. San­
ford: s i s t e r s . A n n i e M ae
Williams. Sarah Hardy Taylor.
S a n fo rd : n u m e r o u s g r a n d children and g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
W llso n -E ic h e lb c rg e r
Morturary. In c. In charge of
arrangements.

Raymond T. Hargraves. 83, 5
Oldpost Road.. Longwood. died
Sunday at his residence. Bom
April 23. 1906 In Fall River.
Mass., he moved to Longwood

Beulah Washington Jones. 83.
942 E. Broadway. Ovkdo. died
Sunday at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Boro May I. 1906 In
Bain bridge. Georgia, she moved
to Oviedo from Cheater. Penn..
In I960. She waa Methodist. She
w as a Sergeant In the U.S. Army
during W W 2.
Survivors are sisters. Jewell
Williams, Oviedo, Pauline W ash­
ington. Chester.
WUaon-I
-Ekhelberger Mortuary.
Inc.. In charge of arrangements.

M aggie Kim ball. 63. 1632
C lek k C irc le. G en ev a , died
Sunday at her residence. Bom
April 5. 1928 In Rowdy. Ky.. she
moved to Geneva from Lex­
ington. Ky.. In 1978. She was
Baptist. She waa a homemaker.
S h e w a s a m em ber of the
W om en's Auxiliary of the Amer­
ican Legion. Lexington.
Survivors are husband. Otho;
daughter. Edna Faye Smith.
Geneva: slaters. Mahals DufT.
Rowdy. Rachel Byrd. Chuiuota:
nine grandchildren.
G r a m k o w F u n e ra l H om e.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

HENRIETTA B. LBICHTENHenrietta B. Lekhtenberg. 82.
1101 Meadow Lake Way. winter
Springs, d k d Sunday at North
F lo rid a Hospital. Altam onte
Springs. Bom Sept. 15. 1906 in
Chicago, she moved to Winter
Springs from New Orleans In
1967. She was a member of Use
First United Methodist Church.
She was a homemaker.
Survivors are sons. Thomas J..
W inter Springs. David Kent.
Houston; sister. Elcnor Selfcrth.
H am p sh ire. III.: five g ra n d ­
children.
B a ld w in Fairchild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

F U tm U L S
KIMBALL. MAGGIE
Fwwral aarvkut tar Maggw Kimball. 41. at
Geneva. who RWR SwWay. will ho hold *t to
a m .. Thwn Ray. July II. IMI at Gramkew
Fwwral Hama Chapel Ttw Sav William E
Bamwtt. afflcleting Itoormont will Mlaw al
O tH tst Mamartel Ort RmW VlkitafWn will b*
tram a W a p m SMRNaaRay. Gramkaw
Fwwral Hama. SonWrd. In charge at ar

V

pp Hip jilpNppI

.Mffjact
N any and aN aataftae IWn*. at
Nw Ftanf (What) Daar at Nw
aNga R M t to
CawRy
CaurNwuMinSa
FlartRa.
Mr tha w Rm c
grMarty.
tW m w m n i*
Writ
af EiacWWn.
0 0 N A L 0 F . IS L IN 0 1 R .

F n m Iu

• n o r in ve fp m n g ig vmpu y &gt;

Logoi Notlcaa

L ig il Nolle—

IN TNC CIRCUIT COURT
0 F T N IU S M T IIR T H

N O TIC l OR APPLICATION
N O N TA X M I R
N O T IC I IS H I R I I V
O IV IN . Mat LyeH ar Haity
Hint:, Nw haMar af M t NNewtng
cartNtaaMa) Iwa ANR aaM cartMcaW(a) N r a tea RaaR N ha

CSW HS.VI-W XA-M’K
HOUSEHOLD R IA L T V
CORPORATION.

Solom on Browdy. 76, 419
N ursery Street. Oviedo, died
Friday at n orida HoapHsl. .Or.
lando. Bom May 15. 1915 In
Mandevtlle, Florida, he moved to
Oviedo from there In 1933. He
w a s a member of Fountainhead
M.B. Church. He w as a con­
tractor.
Survivors are son. Solomon
Browdy. II. Dade City; daughters
Elisabeth Browdy. Dade City.
C lare th a Boatm an. Orlando.
Kathy Denard and Terri Browdy.
both of Oviedo; brothers, the
Rev. James H. Browdy. Freddie
Lewis Browdy. both of Oviedo;
slaters. Viola Mathis. Lillie May
S tu d iu m . both o f Hartford.
Conn.. Martha Oliver. Winter
P a rk : 23 gran dch ildren: 22
great-grandchildren.
Golden's Funeral Home, Inc.,
Winter Park. In charge of ar­
rangements.

•HCWTTy r Ifgf “ f|Hrfei

af SamlnaN CawRy. FN rW s
w a at l t : » A M . am Nw M R
Ray af July A G m i . attar tar

ARCHILL! SCIALOtA MR
T I S I M t C IA lO U . MawtN:

TIMANTIS),

FWrWo. lim liw N CawRy. FWrWa al ll:M afetatk AJU. tN July
XL m i Nw NMawteg RaacrWaR
properly at tal NrN&gt; In Nw m IR
Final Judgment, to wit:
Lai IV , TUSKAWILLA. U N IT
l«A. according la llw Rial
ttmraatat racarRaR M Plat Baafe
XL Pagha XI Mrouah M PvMk
Itftfd s

n|

t^a.l|&gt;A^

FWrWa.
. O A T IO at SamlnaN CawRy.
FWrWa MM MR Ray of July,
m i.
IdrcuHCaurllaall
CNrhalNwClrcuHCaun
SEMINOLE CawRy FWrWa
•y: JanoB.Jaaowk
Dtguty Clark
PuMMt: JWy&gt;. M. m i

MH-XI

MOTICI OF APPLICATION
NO NTAX M I O
M O T I C I IS H I R I I V
O IV IN . Mai HkherR S. ar
LatNarR CaaaaWarry. Nw IwtRar
al Ma N Hewing carttflceW(t)
Mat ItlaR aaM certtflcaWU) N r a
Th* cocttfkoN number!*) anR
yaarli) af iH uanca. Nw RatcrtgtMn af Nw pwgarty. anR
Ma nama(t) In which II waa
awaaaaR la/ara at W Uw i:
CarflncsfaHa.ua
VaaraflMuanca: IW4
DaterlgfIan af Pragarly: L I G
F A IT OF LOT S I OF OITCH
STENOIFORDS A 0 0 P I I PG

IN

Mamat In whkh aaaaaaaR:
Call* M Clair*
AM af m W gragarty bamg In
Ma CawRy af t tmliwN. Slate af
FWrWa.
Uniat* tuch carllflcalals)
ffiW W f N N ff iN K C I f l M *H
Ww. Ma gragarty RaacrWaR In
tuch carflflcafalt) will ha aaM
M Ma Mgflaal MRRw af Ma watt
Irani Soar. SamlnaN CawRy
CawMauaa. Sanford. FWr Id*. an
Ma XfM Ray af July- m i. al II
AML
ApproilmeMly I I U M coth
Mr Wm M rogulroR M M peW by
Ma tuccaaaful MRRar at Ma taW
Full paymant af an amount
•gual la Nw higfwat bis glut
ippilitel* documentary tlamg
•aw* anR racarRlng Mo* la Rua
wllhln 14 Naura attar Iha
af Ma tala. All
antaaR Inalrunwnt. maRa gay
ahW M llw Clark af Clrcull
Court
DaNd Mia I2M day of Jww.
IMI.
(SEAL)
Maryann* Morta
Clark of Nw Clrcull Cowl
l amlnaH County, FWrWa
•y: TlnaM. Taylor
OagutyCWrk
gcMIaN: Juno IS XX A July X. V.
INI.
0101X4

O nr Iff* CoRllloc 4-1
A u t a m a b lla . V IN

l i t i l k I aL l Y m u t
A 0 0 T O W A S H IN O T O N
HEIGHTS PiXPOXX
In
AN af aaM
Nw CauNty al

INN at

Unlata suefl ca rtlfksla lt)
f t ) wttt ho aaM
•at Mo wool
l am Inala County
__________tenterR; F&gt;
Mo llNt Ray af Auguaf.
IIA JR .
. H U M caafl
Ma euccaow3hkSe?Z,| j^ o l7
FuM gaymont af tN

w llhln ia Naura a lta r Iha
lima af Nw aaM. AM
abM M Nw Clam af Mg ClrcuH
Court.
DofaS NRa lot Ray af Jufy.

mi.

(SEAL)
Clark af Mo Clrcull Court
Samlnala CawRy. FlarWa
Ny: TlnaM. Taylor
OagutyCWrk
•uhllafl: JJuly *. It. XL It. IWI
Publttll:
01 IM F
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T N I I I O H T I I N T H
JU04CIAL CIRCUIT
IN A N O FO a
SIM U N O LI COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIV IL ACTION
C A SI N a t l SM S CA
DIVISIONS
CTX MOSTOAOC COMPANY.

I/Va

PLAVCO MOM T GAGE
COMPANY. INC..
Ptainttmt).

va.

DONALD A. SMITH, at at.
OatanRanl(a).
M O TIC I OF

FOSICLOlUaitALI
MOTICI IS N I N I I V O IV IN
gunuanl fa a Final JuRgmant af
MracWtura RofaR Jww XI. Iftl.
anR oniaraR In Caaa Na.
f l aaM CA af Ma Circuit Court af
Iha I I O H T I I N T H JuRIclal
Circuit In anR tar SIMINOLE
CawRy. FlarWa wharaln CTX
MORTGAGE COMPANY, l/k/o
PLAVCO M ORTGAGE COM
PANV. INC. la Ma Plaintiff anR
OOttALO A. SMITH. MARY A.
SMITH. COMMERCIAL CRED­
I T L O A N S . I N C . . K IM
O O N A N O I . anR I U T C N
GOUOE ara Nw DoWndont*. I
will Mil Id Nw Mgfldtl and MM
bWRtr far coth at Ma antranca
al Iha S I M I N O L I County
CourttwuM at l l t t o m . an Ma
XOth Ray at July. Iftl. ttw
following RatcrMoR gragarty at
wtWrth In m W Final
L O T X t. R E F L A T O F
GROVE VIEW VILLAGE FIRST
ADOITION. ACCORDING TO
THE PLA T THER EO F AS RE­
CORDED IN PLAT SOOK Xt.
PAGES A J. ANO i. OF THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
WITNESS M Y HAND anR Nw
tool of m u Cowt on Jww XX.

mi

HONORABLE MARYANNE
MORSE
Clark of Itw Circuit Court
Sy: JonoE Jotowlc
Dkguty CWrk
PuMtth July X.f. IWI

oSHia

«

M yCf r
V IN f LRHWXX
LR

US
anR
at StmUwN County. FNrWs.
wM af ll:M AML an Ma S4M
Ray at Jufy A O IWI, afNr N r

'tele ‘m # nN *

VwrR
lo ts

NOTICE OF SALE
MOTICI I I H IR IK V O IV IN
aurMlAl Is a Final JuRgmOnt « t
FaracMaura RateR June S IN I.
entereR In C iv il C s m N n .
*117&gt;CA-M-K at Nw Circuit
C s u rt s t ■ I O H T I I N T H
Judklei Circuit In anR U r I l k
I N O L I C o u n ty , F la rIR * .
■fwrvM h o u s e h o l d r i a l t v CORPORATION. Is Ptebtttff. MR A R C H ILL ! SCIALOtA
an* T I R I I A SCIALOtA. Me
vrtNi M U IT IR I CONSTRUC­
TIO N C O .. IN C .: SNR U N ­
KNOWN T IN A N T IS I. It
Rant, I will taN N Mo Mghaat
anR fetal MRRar tar cate at Me
at Nw
NtW County CavrUauta. M l

DENI

County. FI
g w t lc v la r ly RatcrlhoR a t

TUN CNFTIVtCHtB

N u m W rlil nnR yaar(a) al
IIavW&lt;v«i JTmMKTipi^RI M 1^0
sraparty. tNR Nw namal*) In
which II w m aaasaaaR la/ara at

July L *. W. XL
an July 14. Iftl.

hy MHWaR 0.

hMRar, far caRt In hondi auhtacf
fa any anR an aalaNng Uano. at
Mo Ftanr (W M ) Otar at Nw
ttaga at Ma SamMata CawRy
in StnftrR. FlarWa.
That taW taN I* haWg
Nw
NW ^W told
MW
at laacuflan.
D O N A LD F.ISLIN G ER .
^™

i CawRy. FlarWa
PuhIMR: July t 9. 14 XL
NwaaWM JviyM . IWI.
O CHA
M O TIC I OR APPLICATION
FOR TAX O C ID
N O T I C I IS N I R I B V
O IV IN . mat LyaU Hint: ar
at Ma
cartMlcataU) Iwa MaR
ila) N r a Wa RaaR
•raan. Tha cartlfltata numhar(t) anR yaarlt) af
Ma RatcHgfWn af Ma
anR Nw namaU) In
M/ara at
CortlflcaMNa. was
Vaarafltauanca: m t
Ooocrlgttan af Pragarly: L IO
LOTS I I ♦ a BLK F TRACT Ft
SANLANOO SPRINGS P » f
PG 4
Homo* In which knottod:
Agnot E fiction
Ail of MW gragarty baing In
Ma CawRy at t amlnaW. Slow at
Untaw tuch carlllkataltl
accarding la
tuch cartlfkofKi) will M taW
N Nw M R ad hWRar af Ma wa*t
Irani Roar, SamlnaN CawRy
Ma SMi Ray af Auguai. mi. al li
Aggr*»lmotaty SIM M cath
N r Nat If raguhaR W ha gaW hy
Ma auccattfui hWRar at Ma taN.
Full gaymont at an amount
tguai N Ma Mgfw*l hW glut
aggMcahN documonlory Uomg
loaok and foeordWf Not I* duo
w llhln i f hourt altar Iho
oRvorlMM tlmo at Mo u k All
ahN N Mo Clark at Nw Clrcull
Court.
OaNR Mil XJN* Roy of Juno,

mt.

IS IA L )
CWrk of Mo ClrcuM Court
SomlnoN County. FWrWo
By: TlnaM. Toy Mr
rrioufj cwrk
PuMIth July X. f. M. XL INI

OIH-1]

N O TIC I OF S N IR IF F ’t SALK
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
Mol hy rlrtuo of Mol cortoln
Writ af Elocution U luod out of
and wWw Nw Wdl of Nw Circuit
Court at Orange County. FWrl
. wgon a llnol ludgomonl
Warod In Mo oNratoid cowl
on Nw hW day of Otcomhor
A.O. IN S In Mol cortoln com
ontlttod. Flr*l Union Natlone!
Ranh ol Florida, gielnlltl.
— v v - William 0 Saogrovo*
and Carol Ann Soogravot Do
WnRtnl. which oWrotoW Writ of
Elocution wot dallvoroR W mo
M Sheriff af SemlnoM County,
Florida, and I hove levied ugen
Nw WlWwlng daicrlhod gragarty
owned by William O. Saogrovo*.
toW prgporty being WcoWd In
SomfnoM County. FWrWo. more
p a rtic u la rly dotcrlbod a*
follow*:
On* If 14 M trcury 4 door
A u t o m o h ll* . V IN f
I M E I P f lM E U lW I
being *Wr*d at Altomonw Tow
IngSorv'c*

N O T K I OP APPLICATION
FOR TA X D U O
N O T I C I IS H I R I I V
O IV IN . Mot Lyofl ar Hally
NhR*. Nw haMar at Nw MNwlng
carttflcaNIa) Iwa HWRm W cart
IflcaN(t) N r a tea Rm R te b*
WauaR Maroon. Ttw carflfkate
nw m hor(t) and y a a rltl ol
" w RaacflgWan of Nw
nR Me named) In
H w m aaaaaaaR ta/ara at
va w
•crlgfWn of Progarty: L I G
S IC M TWP IIS R G I H I S W
OF W W OF N l W S OF CANAL
( L I S S I * 0 4 F T to W *1XJ F T )
A S n F T OF W W OF N l W OF
NW te A N l W OF S I W OF N l
W OF NW W N OF N IW NO A
N IW R O
Name* In which auotwd:
Jack P. OaRR
All af aaW gragarty being in
Nw CawRy af EamlnaW. State of
Unteta tuch carllllcololtl
I roRtomod according la
low. Me gragarty dncrlbod in
*uch carttflcate(t) will ha laid
N Ma hlghakt htRdar at Ma wo*l
front Rear. SamlnaN CawRy
CawMauw. SanNrR. FWrWa. an
Ma IXM Ray af Augutl. Iff I. al

IIAJM.

AggroilmaWly SIX) 01 cath
N r Nat I* rogufrod la ha gaW by
Ma tucc***ful bidder at Nw tate
Full gaymont af an amount
oguai N Nw Mglw*i bW giu*
•ppllcabM dacwiwntary tlamg
Ioio* and racarRlng Na* It duo
•Ithlr
ill*
aRvorflwR time af Nw taW. All
gaymanf* than bo coth or guar
anMod Irwfrumont, maRa gay
ahW N Nw CWrh of Nw Circuit

Caurt.
DoMd Ml* t»l Ray of July.

INI.

ISCAL)
CWrh of Nw Circuit Court
SomlnoN County. FWrWo
■y: TlnaM. Toy Mr
OagutyCWrk
Pubflth July*, 14. XL W. Iftl
0EH-4E
N O TIC I OF APPLICATION
F O S TA X 0 1 1 0
N O T I C I IS H I N E B Y
GIVEN. Nwl Lyoll ar Holly
Mint:. Nw fwWor of Nw WlWwing
cartllkoWUI ho* llWd told cart
IlkaWIt) Mr a »*i R**d W b*
iMuod Nwraan. Th* cartllkoW
n u m ba rltl and year)*) ol
liluonco. Nw dncrlgllon ol th*
property, and Nw nomo(t) In
which It w m M«***od I*/or* *t
follows
CartllkoW No. XWI
Voarol Ittuenco: IN*
Doterlption ol Property LEG
LOTS X * ♦ * BLK t ALLENS
1ST ADO TO WASHINGTON
HEIGHTS P I XPGXJ
Nome* in whkh •»totted Iro
TottW. heir*
Ail at Mid property being In
Nw County of SomlnoN. Slat* of
FWrWo
Unlott tuch certificate!*!
thell ho r*dmm*d according to
low. Nw property dotcrlbod in
tuch cortlfkoWitl will b* told
W Nw higfwtf blddtr al Nw wott
Irani door. SomlnoN County
CourNwut*. Sanford. Florldo. on
Nw IXM day Of Augutl Itfl. ol
II AM .
JteproiimeMly IIJJOO coth
Mr Wo* I* rogutrod to b* paid br
Nw tuccottful tuddir *1 th* t*W
Full payment ol on *mount
•guei to Nw higfwtf bid plot
appncobW documonlory tump
tow* and rocordlng toot it duo
w llhln X4 hourt after lh*
odvorflMd llm* ol Nw m W All
poymonti tholl bo coth or guar
ontood intfrumonl. mod* pay
obW to ttw CWrk of th* Circuit
Court
Detod Nil* Itl day of July.
Itfl
(SEAL!
Maryann* Morte
CWrk of Nw Circuit Court
SominowCounty. Florldo
By TlnaM. Taylor

ngniifry Cl#&lt;k

Puhilth July*. I4.2LX0. Iffl
0IM4X

'
&lt;

�M

- S an fo rd H e ra ld, S an fo rd . Florid a - T u e s d a y , J u ly 9

19 9 ’

.....

SEAY'S
CINSniKIWI CUUNDNS

fr .

•

B u s in e s s R e v ie w

3 4 B -2 3 6 S

fin

Special Packages Available

.tisJl

•Rough Cltan
•Final Claan
Phis Window Packages

»

f fhe $^igiilg)ag D$94* a i gig

Sanford Herald

LG

llU *

&amp;U 322*26117 M

S id

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE
■nepwn n ■fseanHsiw

Page S u m m e r P un C am p
★ Age# 2 thin Undo 6 *

r/ / / "/ / / / / / /

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NO CREDITCHECK

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324*5035
*

L A K E M A R Y F L O R IS T
120 e.

l a k e m a . iv b o u le v a r d

s u it e
La k e

ioo

i\

-

W h a ta Y r

W fc ltln P e r

Co o c 407

ar ea

saa-Mto

Ma r y , FL 32740

B r i n g T h e W h o la
F e r m iy i n .

A f t e r H o u r s 333-1O M

ri '

A

1

vm sm

Friday S Saturday July 12th S 13th
S N A P P il, CheeseOr**orFrench
Frias, cm rnm,
teaarTaa.
ho Tam own Ph a m
111

( o m r In I o r

I t.r m t D m l!

IB5 RENAULT • IP O , STEREO, * 2 1 9 5 I
1
81 PONT. T1000 *8TS(RARE)
«oTSluRED,
c"' *13 9 5
I
74 FORD RANCHERO
•1395
.
$ 9 4 0 3 1
184PONT FIERO AIR, STEREO
|
recxautol

79FORDT-BIRD AM^TEMEO

John and Barbara Carroll (owners), Elys* Isom, Sharon Hunt, Kathy Myers (In front), Glenda Morgan
(net pictured).

MSTAURAMT

2700 S. Sanford Avo.
Sanford 321-8761

"Roses Are Red" And Many Other Colors
At Lake Mary Florist.

Cl J O H N C A R R O L L

R e

The Cattle Ranch
Steakhouse

'

*2 19 5

WE FINANCE • LOW DOWN PAYMENTS

There is almost nothing that can brighten a
persons day like flowers. Births, birthdays, wed­
dings and anniversaries, o f course, are all special
occasions to be celebrated with flowers. But any
day can be a special day when lhat special person
receives an attractive arrangement or green plant
from you. lor no reason ot all. There are such a wide
variety o f arrangements available, and Lake Mary
Florist has something to lit cveiy situation.
John and Barbara Carrol], owners o f lake Mary
Florist, a n very proud o f Ihclr staff and And them
lo b e the most Innovative and creative designers in
Central Florida. They really enjoy a challenge and
a n very qualified In all phases of floral designing.
The stall has more than sLxty years combined
experience In Central Florida- Of course, you can
always order a dozen red roses. Or how about
yellow, or pink, or purple? Also very popular a n
balloon bouquets alone, or with a plant or flower
arrangement. Lake Mary Florist nlso offers gour­
met fruit baskets.
Lake Mary Florist can custom design silk and
dried arrangements for your home and will be glad
to send one o f their designers to your home to

H , &amp;.. #R..rr|AUTO
SALES
A
.* 1 I
t. J ' 1

HOT?

m i l k m il s m U t

IS YOUR ENGINE
OVERHEATING?

3 Room Special | Q Q 8 3

(ndudsE Free Hal)

( H I

Sofa or 2 ChaIra $ 0 0 0 3
moit fabrics
*899
Whole House
$ ^ Q 0 3

Get Ready For Hot Weather Driving
Do-/*-Yourself AJC Parts Available At

._

Low Prices
711 French Av#., Sanford •322*0235

V A C E A U T O R A D IA T O R ,

•Teflon*

Aries Carpel ClnalBg
4 0 7 -3 3 0 -1 0 0 2

recommend Just what you need.
Lake Mary Florist has been a pari o f the Lake
Mary community since 1983. Their lovely shop Is
conveniently located on Lake Mary Boulevard at the
com er o f Country Club Road • across from Lake
Mary City H alt The showroom Is usually decorated
according to the season or upcoming holidays.
Currently, the center o f the shop Is accented by a
waterfall surrounded by plant baskets and ar­
rangements available lor purchase (see photo above).
There arc also well-stocked shelves with dry ar­
rangements and wall-hangings.
If you are at work or cannot And the time to come
In and browse, feel free to call 322-3310. Even Ifyou
don't have on account with them, they'll gladly put
your order on your major credit card.
Lake Mary Florist belongs to four major wire
services and can easily handle those out o f town
and over seas orders for you
Lake Mary Florist's hours are Monday through
Saturday 9:00 AM until 5:30 PM.
We do have an after-hours number you can
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TUESDAY

Sanford Herald

orts
Back on the winning track

IN B R I E F
A L L -S T A R S

Local* win
FOREST CITY — The Seminole Central
Broncos (representing Seminole Pony Baseball)
used a 14-run second Inning to crush the
Volusia Broncos 25-1 In the opening game of the
Bronco District Baseball Tournament at the
West Seminole Baseball Complex.
In the other contest, the two host teams. West
Seminole Maroon and West Seminole Gold, met
with the Maroon trouncing the Gold 12-0.
Today at 5:30 p.m. the other Seminole Pony
entry, the Seminole Nationals, play the West
Seminole Maroon. The loser of the 5:30 p.m.
contest must come right bock to play Volusia at
8 p.m.
The winner of the tournament will advance to
the Bronco State Tournament In Lake Worth
starting next Monday. The Bronco Division Is for
boys ages 1 1 - 12 .

Nationals fall
D ELTONA — Deltona came back from a 4-3
deficit with a five run fifth Inning to defeat the
Altamonte Nationals 8-4 in a Little League Area
III Tournament game Monday night.
The loss drops the Nationals Into a losers
bracket game with Mount Dora tonight at Mount
Dora starting at 7 p.m.
Kevin Naas bad given the Nationals the 4-1
lead with a thiee-run homerun in the fourth
inning but II didn't last. Naas was the lone
bright spot for Altamonte going 2-4 with the 3
run home run.
Deltona w as led b y C . Williams (3-3. homerun,
2 RBI) and Adam Williams (2-2. homerun. 2
RBI).
AHwnMtoNaHwwIt

Ml M — •

I

M H i-t

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Haian, Child IS) and Ftikar. Thompson Om i (4) and M cCrW .
WP - Om i . LP - Child. &gt;6 - mm. SB - non*. MX - AHamanto
Nat tonal*. N u t ; 0* Ilona. A. William*. C. Wiliam*.
* m' ■* VMH

liS S K iO i

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eyR oaw e w o a i
WraldCofT— poodtnt_________

Herald Correspondent

R M

« m — t s .» a a

tt* aw Mt -

□
OAMKOMK
O IL TOMA
*M M — * * 1
SANFORD POST *J
M li - I I I I
Migto*. Me O r * (I) and Smith Morgan and
FrMman. WP — Morgan 1*11. LP — Maple,
(S I). OP — Non*. 18 — Non* )B — Non*. HR —

- II I )

*•* aw a -

ORLANDO — Aaron latorola drove in four
runs as the Altamonte Dodgers hammered the
Orlando Tigers 10-2 in a Central Florida League
game at the Jones High Baseball Complex.
The win raised the Dodgers record to 4-1 in
the second half. They will be in action again
Wednesday night at 7 p.m. at the Jones
Complex.
---- --...------- ---------------------

DELTONA — Some games only
feed the standings. Others test a
team's mettle.
For Sanford Post 53 (Seminole
High School's summer baseball
team), drubbing Deltona 10-0 was
the easy part. Sanford then reached
deep within Ha bench and heart to
defeat Deltona 9-8 after trailing 5-0
to complete a sweep of the twin-bill
held M onday at Deltona High
School.
The game was originally slated for
Seminole Field, but was moved to
Deltona because Seminole Field was
soaked by the previous night's rain.
"W e played really well In the first
g a m e ," said S anford m anager
Kennc Brown. "T h eir pitchers got
Into trouble with walks and wc took
advantage by getting hits when we
had to."
Brown credited his bench, good
execution, and key hits from Matt
Freeman for the victory In the
second game.

-.-iri^

Dodgers romp

OrlaaS»Tlf*n

R yB M LK B R M

LO NOW OOD The Lake
M ary M u d ca ts's lineup
featured 10 batten.
B u llet coach es Dave
Campbell and Bob McCullough
sat on the bench, talking and
laughing, while their pitchers
struggled to find the strike
zone.
And the Mudcats had one
hitter who batted in two spots,
missing with three swings to
end the sixth Inning and ftytng
to center to lead off the
seventh.
It was summer baseball in
the truest sense of the term.
A lth o u g h the J u ly heat
makes the action sizzle on the
blg-league diamonds where
teams make their early pen­
nant runs, hlgh-achool squads
take to the field for fun. not
necessarily concerned with
wins or losses, but merely how
well and relaxed they perform.
Lake Mary used three btg
Innings ami held off a late
Bullets charge and recorded a
12-8 victory in a National
American Baseball Federation
game that served as a learning
experience for all Involved.
The Mudcats found out that
□I
W

m
... —

Te a m work
keys Post
53 sw eep

Lake Mary,
Blackhawka
pocket wins

1

*

1

Richburg. Fair IJ). Knutoon IS) and Fanclk. Raich IS).
SaMonga. Warner (S) andTaddar.
WP - Krtuttan LP Sototango I I — Adamant* Spring*. Iataro)a; Orlande. Merton. IB
— Ailament* Spring*. Merri*. HR — none. Racords — Alta
Spring* Dadgtrsa-1.

M A JO R LR A O U S S

Miami him* Barger
MIAMI — Attention Davey Johnson. Whltey
Herzog and others looking for a baseball job:
Send those applications to the Florida Marlins,
care o f the Pittsburgh Pirates.
If the Marlins' new president. Carl Barger,
isn’t Impressed by the resume, maybe he'll pass
it along to the Pirates' president — Carl Barger.
The respected baseball executive was named
Monday to head the front office o f Miami's
National League expansion team, which will
begin play in 1993. Barger plans to remain with
the Pirates until a successor is chosen.

Lineups set
TORONTO — Jack Morris o f Minnesota has
been selected to start for the American League
in tonight's All-Star game and Tom Glavine of
Atlanta will start for the National League.
Morris is 11-6 with a 3.65 earned run average.
Glavine is 12-4 with a 1.98 ERA.
The AL starters and batting order announced
by manager Tony La Ruasa: Rickey Henderson,
Oakland, left field; Wade Boggs. Boston, third
base: Cal Ripken. Baltimore, shortstop: Cecil
Fielder, Detroit, first base; Danny Tartabull.
Kansas City, designated hitter: Dave Henderson.
Oakland, right field: Ken Griffey Jr., Seattle,
center field; Sandy Alomar Jr.. Cleveland,
catcher, and Roberto Alomar. Toronto, second
base.
The NL starters and batting order announced
by manager Lou Plnlella: Tony Gwynn. San
Diego, center field: Ryne Sandberg. Chicago,
second base; Will Clark. San Francisco, first
base; Bobby Bonilla. Pittsburgh, designated
hitter: Andre Dawson. Chicago, right field; Ivan
Calderon. Montreal, left field: Chris Sabo.
Cincinnati, third base; Benito Santiago. San
Diego, catcher; and Ozzte Smith. St. Louis*
shortstop.

1

n a

Mustek and Sul tack. Scott. Kotatof (II.
Scott (1). Young («). and Boland. WP Hudkfc. I F — Scott, t* — Sultat*.!
Scott. IS — Mudcoto. Dtamor. HR — I
Rocord*— Mudcat* l» r , Buttot* 1ST.

Robbie Morgan ot Sanford Post 53 Improvod his summer record to 6-1 with
live shutout innings In a 10-0 victory over Deltona Monday. Morgan allowed
five hits, struck out five and walked only one In pitching the shutout.

Sunshine and fun greet
runners at Track Series
880 yard run (2:51.7).
Rather sprints or long distance
running Is your thing, there Is a
little something for the entire family
to enjoy. All o f the events ran are
broken down here according to age
groups. The 2 mile run the 220 yard
dash were not run this Monday due
to heavy lightning.
j - u l - D s f i r Boys:
Willie Calloway.Jr. finished well
winning both the 100 yard dash
(2 4 .5 ) and th e 440 -yard-d ash
(1:48.3). Freddie Howard won the
50 (9.8) and placed second in the
100 (24.9). Michael G!baon.Jr. ran
2:01.5 In the 440. Josh Sattcrthwait
won the long Jump (5-1114).

Herald Correspondent

LAKE MARY — The first summer
track meet for the year held at Lake
Mary High School was drowned by
the rain last week, but Monday’s
meet was greeted with plenty of sun
and fun. That is until the lightning
forced the meet to end.
Competitors ranging from age 5 to
40 and over took the old running
shoes out o f the closet and hit the
track with style and grace.
Standing out among the crowd
was the Fleming family- Brook.
Drew, and Gary. In the 6-10 Olrta
group. Brook Fleming soared 10-10
6-10 Girls:
in the long jumpand ran a tremen­
Rebckah Colon displayed her
dous mile In 7:34.8.!n the 11-14 age
group. Drew Fleming leaped 13-3 In running talent by winning three
the long Jump, sweeping the com­ events in her age group. She won
petition ofT it's feet. Taking care of the 50 (7.9) and the 100 In the 6-8
business on the track was 14-year age group (16.9) and the 400 (79.9).
old Gary Fleming. Gary won first Jennie Byrd covered the distance
place In the mile (5:45.3) and the □ B e

S A M I TWO
0 IL T 0 N A
III Ml * - I II 1
SANFORD POST M
M* MS I - * II 7
lopal and Flaherty Chunat. Freeman 14). Tllll*
(*). Fergerton (7) and Holland, Gochae (51. WP Fargar ion II I). LP — Lopot 111). DP — Non*
SB — Deltona. Tllll*. Hoitrrmen, Flaherty.
Arroyo; Sanford, Fergenon. Freeman. ]B Non*. HR — Deltona. Maple*; Sanford. Freeman
Recerd* — Deltona I ) a. Sanford IT*.

Hom e-course advantage
helps Grassing win J G A
By ROBBIE STOCK
Herald Correspondent
WINTER SPRINGS - Florida
International University sopho­
more Keith Grassing hus been
one of top competitors In the
J u n i o r G o l f A s s oc i a t i on o f
Central Florida this summer. On
Monday, he used the homecourse advantage to put him
above the field.
Grassing, u Longwood resident
who plays and practices every
day at Winter Springs Country
Club, posted uu Im pressive
even-pur 71 on his home track to
cupturc the championship flight
title by four shols over Chris
Boylan. Grassing entered the
final hole at two under par but
suffered a double bogey.
H is o u t s t a n d i n g p l a y
highlighted thr summer tour's

fourth event, where 220-plus
golfers challenged the tough,
hazard-laced layout with all they
hud. Once again, three gross unit
four net trophies were given
uway In first through sixth llighls
while the two girl's divisions ami
the Pec Wees competed with Just
gross scores. All ties were de­
cided by chlp-offs.
Jeremy Anderson took third In
the championship ftlght with a
77. He shot a one-under par 34
on the back nine. Paul Irvin won
the net division with a 68. lit- was
followed by Mickey Rudd (third.
69). Scott Boone (fourth. 721. unit
Kevin Aeh (fourth. 74).
Brian Lumpkc. who ripped
through third lllght Iasi week,
might be on his way to champi­
onship flight uftcr a 74. which
won first flight by three shot*
□ S « e O o lf, Page 2B

Calico Jacks
tightens grip
on first place
Proas S ta ff Rapa d s ________________
S A N F O R D — C a lic o Jacks
tightened Its hold on first place,
Lambert Erectors moved into a lie
for second and the Tim Ralnt-s
Connection continued to have Its
problems In Sanford Recreation
Department Monday Night Men's
Sprlng/Summcr Slowpltrh Softball
League action at PliK-hurst Park
Calico Jacks scored 11 runs In the
first Inning and went ou to defeat
Lambert Erectors 12-8. l^imhcrl
Erectors held TRC scoreless after
the first Inning in a 6-2 victory and
the Boumtown Boys outlasted the
Orlando Softball Club 10-7
With Its win Calico Jacks Im­
proved to 11-1 and took a lull lour
gurnc lead with six games to play.
TRC and Lumber! are lied lor
second at 9-5 while the Boumtown
Boys ure 2-10 and Ihc Orlando
Softball Club 0 12.
Next week TRC takes oil (InOrlando Softball Club at &lt;rJO p in

Replacement players
TORONTO — Rafael Palmeiro of the Texas
Rangers and Mike Morgan of the Los Angeles
Dodgers were named as All-Star game replace­
ments for injured players.

■■ST m s ON TV

( See S o ftb a ll. Page 2B
Or Ian** Saltball Club
••amlawn Bay*

BASEBALL

□ 8 p.m. Game. (L)

WCPX 6, Major League All-Star
^4R0REPl^u^R^ErBfgr I

mi

Billy Griffith of the Tim Rai
two-run homerun I M b a first
the runs the defending Monday

nection crushed a
but II would be all
Champions would

VRSarRRs

score as they dropped a 6-2 decision to Lambert
Erectors In Sanford Recreation Department Men's
Slowpitch Softball League action at Pinehursl Park.

Lambarl Ertcton
Tim flrinat Cannrilwn
Calk* Jack*
laaibtfl Eructorft

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

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S TA TS &amp; STANDINGS

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scored),

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tingles, three runt scored)

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Sanford
the o p e n in g gam e.

J e re m y

The first timing outburst wot
tU the offence pitcher Hobby

H Q fp n necora. u

ne ftuowea

Just five hits end struck out five
through five innings In *rhtnH*Tg

In the filth Inning w hen Corey
Oochee tingled home Freemen
end Morgen. The gem e ended
after five tnntngi by the ten-run
slaughter rule.
In the second gam e Deltona
jum ped on top with three runs tn
the top o f the first Inning.
Ex-Sanford Little M ejor en d

with e single, double, and a
homenin. Freemen credited a
tough teem spirit In the letter
innings for the come-back win.

S h ew n Tlllla d o u b le d an d
scored on Joe Arroyo's single In
the second inning. Maples made
the score S O in the third with a

" W e came together and fought
bomerun.
for the w in ." said Freeman. "W e
Sanford launched Its come
played hard In the last couple of bock In their third with four
Innings and proved that w e
runs. Freeman singled In tyro
wanted It tn the seventh.”
r u n s . D a v id E c k s t e in a n d
Hanford scored eight runs tn * pergeraon also singled in the
the bottom of the first inning of inning, while three Sanford hit*

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MudcatsIB
you can never let up until the
lust ball Is caught and that you
don't need hits to score runs.
Meanwhile, the Bullets (com­
prised or Lyman High School
players) gained Insight on what
It takes to come from behind.
"They've (the kids) have got to
go to court and team to work
their way through their pro­
blem s." said Bullel bead coach
Bob McCullough, whose team
fell to 13-7 overall. "W e were
using some pitchers that had
shaky starts (tonight)."
Indred, Bullet hurler Kevin
Scott began the contest by
Issuing three consecutive walks
before being relieved. Hla re­
placement. Dave Kessler, also
threw four balls to three separate
batter in the Mudcats's four-run
first Inning. Scott later returned
to pilch the third, fourth, and
fifth innings.
Lake Mary's David Hudlck
went llie distance to pick up the
w i n . striking out five a n d
overcoming fatlquc to squelch a
last-inning rally by the Bullets.
After their explosion In the
first Inning, the Mudcats came
back with three runs In the
third. Hudick led off with a
single, und fullnwlg a walk by
Malt Green, scored on Matt
D inn er's triple. Dinner came in
u single by Marcus Bullock.
Three Innings later. Lake Mary
struck again, this time with five
seem ingly meaningless runs.
But If weren’t for that last surge.

they might have lost 8-7. Dan
Anson was hit by a pitch to
begin the inning and Jason
Raamuaaen and Chris Barfield
each followed with a walk. T. J.
Hamilton and Scott Johnston
each slashed singles, driving In a
total of three runs. Hudlck and
Green knocked home (hose two
with Infield grounders.
" I hope w e keep com in g
around." Mudcat coach Alan
Tuttle commented. " W e played
good until the taw Inning."
In that final at-bat for the
Bullets, they ripped the ball hard
to all fields, and with the help of
some sloppy defense, put a scare
Into Lake Mary.
Donnie Bailed led off with a
s i n g l e . S h a n e O d o m then
knocked a line drive to left field
which w as mishandled. A walk
to Chad Beland loaded up the
bases. Doug Porter followed with
a sharp grounder which glanced
off Hudtck's glove and rolled lo
i he shortstop. Odom crossed the
piste after the throw to get
Porter skidded wide of the bag.
Willie Ramirez continued his hot
hilling with a long drive to left
field, knocking In John Young,
who pinch ran for Beland. A
double by Scotl. a single by
pinch hitter Brian Dangle, and a
fielder’s choice by Jeff Boufey
got the Bullets their eighth run.
but the rally slop there.
W i t h ( he win. the R a m s
extended their winning streak lo
three games and Increased their
record lo 10-7.
The Bullets return lo action
tonight, hosting the Lake Howell

Blackhawks before traveling lo
West Orange for s Wednesday
doubichesder.

Caaaelberry — Chris Phillips,
Paul Oiambalvo and Mark Deaabrals combined on a threehitter a s the L a k e H o w e ll
BlackHawka clobbered Bishop
Moore 13-5 in an NABF baseball
game Monday aiiemoon.
The game was much closer
than the score Indicated as
Bishop Moore fought back from a
4-1 deficit with a four run fifth
Inning to take a 5-4 lead.
But the BlackHawka countered
with two runs In the bottom of
the fifth and blew the game open
with a seven run sixth.
Mike Hernandez led the Lake
Howell offense with a 2-4 after­
noon that included a double.
A lso contributing were Paul
Thompson and Paul Davis (one
double each) and Brian Gomes.
Fox and Mike Johnson (one
single each).
The BlackHawka. who Im­
proved to 5-5 on the season, will
be In action again today when
they travel to Longwood lo take
on the Bullets starting at 7 p.m.
at Lyman Field.

over Jason Bure hell. Mike Rice
posted a 78 for third. In the net
division. John Haddock nabbed
first place with a 74. Geoff
Voorheia took second after win­
ning a chlp-off over Rob
Crawford. They each had a net
78. David Bailey prevailed in
chlp-off over Blaise Menta for
fourth place. They each shot a
net 77.
Michael Burden grabbed the
third flight title, defeating Eric
Som m ers In a chip-off after
outstanding rounds or 86 . David
Robinson finished third (89).
Seth S w a n so n w on the net
division with an 83. Jonathan
Kaplan placed second (86). Alan
Ragnut of Longwood third ( 86).
and Thom as Fetter fourth (87).
Jeff Miller scurried off with the
fourth flight championship fol­
lowing a round of 84. six ahead
of Steve Robinson. Allen King
finished third with a 98. Mark
Thteaen won the net division.
Hla 87 w as ten shots better than
Kevin Hirachy and Longwood’s
Ben Katterfteld. who each shot
97. Hirachy won the chip-off by
le s s th a n tw o In ch es. Ben
Lopman of Longwood finished

MS l « -

I

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ii

s •

Rkhsrt. OtClIW Ut. Abrtsu 141 and Avory
Phillip*. GiamMvo ID. Ou m St *I» («) and
Driabrait. Pa*par (4). WP — GlanSalvo LP
— Otclll* Sava - Davabralt IB — Lata
Howail. l*af rvandai. Than,paan. Davit IS —
non* HH - non* lafca Hoamil 1 1

Matthew Bollard continued hla
strong play with a 44 on the
front side, edging out Longwood's Brian Craver in a chip-off
for the fifth (light title. Matthew
Groningen also of Longwood.
took third. Just one shot behind
the leaders. Buddy D avis snared
the net division title with a 38.
one In front of a trio at 39. J. B.
WUt won the three-way chlp-off
for second place while Bobby
Hazel finished third and Longwood's Tony Zara fourth.
Mike Torrey. who played In
fifth flight last week but suffered
through a disastrous round, re­
bounded with a strong 55 on the
front nine lo capture the sixth
flight title. Walter Basso came In
second (57) whlk Todd Wheeies
look third (62). Nathan Johnson
won the net division after post­
ing a 52. two ahead of Longw ood's Craig Craver. T aylor
Lccroy finished third white Chris
Delsry look fourth (60).

Deltona took an 841 advantage
in the sixth when Dana Flaherty
doubled and scared on an error.
Fergeroon walked to set up
Freeman’s homerun In the sixth
as Sanford evened the contest at

8-8.
“I w a s looking for m y pitch.”
e x p la in e d F re e m a n on h is
homerun. “W hen I hit It. It felt
good. 1knew It was gone.”
Demmy Beamon walked and
advanced to second on Tony
Duncan's sacrifice bunt to start
Sanford's seventh Inning. Ecks­
tein w a lk e d and Fcrgerson
reached on an error to load the
bases. Freeman drew a walk to
force In Beamon.
" W e did everything right in
hut Inning." said Brown. "W c
loaded the bases, an d that
makes It hard on the pMctwr."
S a n f o r d ptaya at hurt Orange &lt;
Wednesday at 6 p.m.

her money, though. Rhein, who
played her best round this year,
led after a front nine of 42 before
finish ing third with an 88 .
Girard narrowly missed Carr,
shooting an 83. Adrienne Bailey
took fourth (90), Jennifer Close
(93). Kelly Donovan sixth (103).
an d L isa Som m ers seventh
(107).
Julie Komurke made 11 three
first-place finishes this summer
with a 53 Monday, seven In front
of Bronwyn Kohn, who recorded
her third straigt second-place
finish. Anne Scholz grabbed
third (63). Katie Donovan fourth
(68), Tara Traeder fifth (85).
Angela Katterfteld sixth (92!
and Longwood'a Sarah Brad doc
(96).

i

. Lyman graduate Becky Canshot an 82 to win her second
consecutive tournament In the
13-and-over girl's division. Both
Anne Girard and Robin Rhein of
Longwood gave Carr a run for

Chase Freeman collared the
Pee W ee championship with a
score of 10 on the 17th and 18th
h oles from 150 y a rd s out.
narrowly getting past Bill Duke*,
who shot an 11. Andy McCon­
nell prevailed in a chlp-off over
Joel Royclk for third place. Zack
G re ln k e finish ed fifth (13).
Carter Burk sixth (14). and
Daniel Riley and Merrick Anite
Park of Longwood lied for sev­
enth (15).

Drew Fleming won the long
Jump (1 3-3) a n d H o p k in s
hlhgllghted his day with a 4-foot
high Jump.

the high jum p, defeating Willie
C a llo w a y .S r. who com peted
against Davis, althogh he Is In
the 30-39 age group.

Trackturn finishing first
In the mite (6:44.8) and the 880
(3:08.1). For the 9-10 girls.
Kristine Dedelow won the 100
(16.6). Brook Fleming won the
l o n g Jum p (1 0-10). T iffa n y
Gibson and Beverly Dedelow tied
for first In the high Jump with 3
feet.
.

6 -lO B o y s i

Steven Smith finished first in
the 50 (7.9) and waa followed
closely by Michael Senior. In the
6-8 100 yard dash, Vln Ambrico
won In 17.7 seconds. James
Sternberg won the mile (6:39.6)
and Robert Stachow came across
the 880 mark In 3:24.9. Dunmel
Vcllon won the 440 (76.1). Luis
Escapa Jumped 8414 to win (he
long Jump while in the high
Jump stachow leaped 3-3.

11-14 Boys:
SliksgMssrs

fourth ( 10 1 ).

I In
Tom Garrett and Arroyo as
Deltona Incteaaed Its lead to 7-4
with two rune in the fourth.
Freeman countered by doubting
hi Eckstein and Feiffcraon In
Sanford’s fourth as Sanford cut
the margin to one run.

Billy Hopkins defeated the
competlton In the 50 (7-2) and
Craig King won the 100 (15.6).
Chris Ambrico slid by Hopkins
in the 440 to take the win (78.5).
Gary Fleming won both the mile
(5:45.3) and the 880 (2:51.7).

11-14 Girls:

19-29 Mast

Aertn Mawhtnncy won the 50
(7.3) and Kristin Satterthwait
won the 100 (18.7). complemen­
ting her second place In the 50.
Mawhlnney also finished first In
the 440 (85.0) while Allison
Satterthwait easily won the 880
(2:52.1).

Robert Pendte sprinted the 50
In 6 seconds Oat white Mark
Blythe won the 100 (13.9). Matt
Jewell won the mite (5:03.1) and
Chris Danzer beat out Blythe In
the 440 (62.9).

18-ltOirla:
Shannon Cook w a s the only
competitor for this age group.
Cook, an outstanding shot putter
for Lake Mary, tried her hand in
the 440. She finished In 73.2
seconds.

18-18 Boya:
David King wan the 50 In 6.4
seconds and came In second In
the 440 behind Jim Davis (57.7).
Van Smith burned the field the
100 (11:06). DJ Lewis went well
under five minutes In the mite
with 4:42.1. In the 880. Mike
Rivera won with a time of
2:13.7. Davis cleared 6 -feet in

Bob Stachow was the lone
ranger In his age group but still
competed well. He won the mite
(4:53.7) and the 440. which he
ran with hla daughter Anna. Ip
60.1 seconds.
Meet c oord in ato r Michael
Gibson won Ihe 50 (7.0) by the
skin of his teeth over Robert
McLcgauet (7.1). McLegauct did
manage lo win Ihe 440 (66.5)
and Roberto Vcllon won Ihe 880
(3:00.3).

50-aad-0vcr Mss:
The only competitor In his age
group. Lionel Banck. also a meet
coordinator, won Ihe 440 In 66.9
seconds.

�I

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, July 9, 1981 - *6

s

—i

IN

B R IE F

Hoet m i ix o h m p i itudm t
Reach out for peace and make a dlh iem c In a
peraon’a Me, b y ho
student. The Youth b e f i a n f e Sendee la a i
tlon that urgently i
State* to boot a j

ireIn Autorat far the 1891/82 high school year,
with cultural visas, are IS to lSydtfsoM.au
A, bring their aura packet money and are frilly
Mh
with or vtthout children win
benefit p u l l y front the
and undem anding aa the

of I
•

. -~

*° L

Officers In charge

Lions Cfub and the Lyman
M M lB m
viyip. S■orrino
In 1261-VI f '* , toft to it M *
Lola WfWkman, peseldsnk Da*
bbto T a y to ^ lifv jo a prsaMant;
M l n l l S flfe k lfll I a n
nipn a c n w loo

U iM ic u K I U i IO I

af

“ -------

on their taxes.
For farther Information, call toll free 34 hours a day: (800)
848-3131.

Community College (S C O Toastmasters Club
*6581 have assumed a summer schedule and trill meet the
fast and third Tuesday, at 7:90 p.m. at Seminote Community
College.
Contact Resells Bonham at 333*8284 for more

J iy c f ii meat
The Sanford Jaycees meet the second and fourth Tuesday of
each month. Anyone Interested In attending can call Brent
Adamson or David T. Rusal Jr. at 322*9663.

Obeelty aufgevy group to meet
The Seminole Chapter of SOS (Support Obesity Surgery)
Support Group, for those who have had bariatric surgery or
their loved ones, meets the second Tuesday o f each month In
Classroom *103 of the Physicians P la n Building. 531 W . S.R.
434. Longsrood.. at 7 p.m. Call 392*6500 for more information.

Panic Attack group to mMt
Agoraphobia/Pantc Attack Support Oroup meets each
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at West Lake Hospital. 589 W . State Road
434. Longwood. The support group is for those who are afraid
to go out of their house and be active In public.

Overeaten to gather
A regular meeting of Overeaten Anonymous Is conducted on
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Florida Power and Light. 301 Myrtle
Ave.. Sanford. For more Information, call Carol at 322-0657.

TOPS chaptara to matt about aating
Take Off Pounds Sensibly Chapter FL 79 will meet Tuesday
at 6:15 p.m. at Howell Place. 200W. Airport Blvd.. Sanford.

Sanford Kiwania to have lunch
Sanfbrd Klwanis Chib meets at noon Wednesday at the
Sanford Civic Center for luncheon and program.

SHAR formed for cancar patients
Support. Hope. And Recovery (SHAR), a self-support group
for cancer patients, meets every Wednesday at 5:00 p.m.. at
1621 W . First St.. Sanford. For Information, call Mary Lynne
Gray. 3239374 0r322*778S.

Geneva Homemakers to matt
The Oeneva Extension Homemakers hold a luncheon
meeting at 10 a.m. on the second Wednesday of each month at
the Geneva Community Hall on First Street. A business
meeting and crafts follow. The public Is invited. For more
Information, call Virginia Greer at 349-5772.

Sanford Optimists to moot
Sanford Optimist Club meets at noon each Wednesday at
Shoneys, Sanford. Anyone interested Is Invited to attend or call
Bud Tobin at 322-7886.

Rotariana to rise for maatlngs
Casselberry Rotary Club meets at 7:30 a.m. on Wednesday at
the Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
Casaelbeny.
Sanford Breakfast Rotary Club meets at 7:30 a.m. every
Wednesday at Christo's Restaurant In Sanford.

noQtovvy

Man’s bast friend oats
the worst rids of hTs life
D B A S ASBY t " L i t in
California" expressed her concent mat pets tn inowr vr rucies
should be secured (buckled up)
similar to amaO children. Weil,
h ere's another one for your
“ N ow I've Heard Everything"
(Ue:
A s I w as driving along a Twin
Cities freeway. I passed a man
on a motorcycle doing no less
than 00 miles an hour. Abby. he
had a full-grown Mack Labrador
dog perched behind him on the
passenger seat of the motorcy­
cle! The poor animal looked
paralysed with fear.
W hen I called the Minnesota
Highway Patrol to report the
cycle license number. I was told
they could do nothing bee
the guy wasn't breaking any
taws.
Abby. how about cruelty to
anim als? T h at terrified d og
could Jump or foil from the
motorcycle and shatter all four
legs on the concrete! Or, startled
motorists could swerve out of
eoutml or be rear-ended slam­
ming on their brakes, with a dog
that size rolling down the pave­
ment.
T o me. It's Just another In­
dication that there is no shortage
of Idiots on the road in Mini W hy pick on
Minnesota? There’s no shortage
of Idiots on the road In any other
state that has no law to protect
m an's best friend from this kind
of brutality.
Aa a concerned citizen and
animal lover, why don't you
write a letter to the editor of your
newspaper and cite this blatant
cruelty? It might spur a state
legislator to action.

It I fully agree
w it h yo ur response to the
woman of good character in
Anchorage. Alaska, who had
bought a secondhand car and
found 842 In the glove com­
partment. Her husband said that
I n a s m u c h aa th e y h a d
purchased the car “as is." she
should keep the 842. You told

^ p ? '

Sr
it .■

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V - . ’.

u
j &amp;Li
JS-lt.U r . .

The following books have been received In the Seminole
County Library system:

Hffka

Tfes p u rsu it o f kapplusaa, by Anne Rolphe. Summit Books,

1991.

ABIGAIL
VANBUREN

her to return It.
Your advice was similar to the
story told by Rabbi Simeon,
whose students bought a donkey
from a merchant to assist their
teacher In his livelihood of sell­
ing flax. His students found a
costly peart attached to the neck
of the donkey.and they said.
“ Rabbi,you will not Kave lo
labor any more — w e found this
precious gem on the donkey t"
R a b b i S im eon respon ded,
"D oes the seller know of this
peart?" They answered. "N o ."
The aage then said. "1 bought
a donkey, not a pearl." The Jewel
w as returned.
A a a rabbi concerned that
p e o p l e d o n ’ t s i m p l y t el l
themselves. "Business Is busi­
ness." I am pleased you chose to
print that wom an's letter.
T h e great writer Macaulay
wrote: "T h e measure of a man's
real character la what he would
do If he knew he would never be
found out.”

WILMETTE. ILL.

r&lt;

I got a chuckle
out o f some of the messages left
on t e le p h o n e a n s w e r i n g
machines by people who had
obviously mlsdtaled. Add this
one:
A f e m a l e voi ce left this
m e ssa g e on my machine:
"Honey. I Just came back from
the doctor's office, and he says
I’m pregnant."
Abby, I am a single man.
living alone. I'm also...

I sh ud d er a t y o u r tsuak , edited by Michele Slung, a ROC
Book. 1991.
• e s r s t e f P urls, by Luanne Rice. Viking. 1991.
W attflaw sr. by William Bayer. Vlllard Books. 1991.
S e a u a i ralrrur. by Jeanne Larsen. Henry Holt and Company.
1991.
B a lsa ! th s Vink L a d y a f th a Soviet U aieu. by Urda
Jurgens. Summit Books. 1991.W a y uiauayi ray b r ie f b u t bctlMaat e a rs a r e u W a ll S trsst.
by Laura Pedersen. Crown Publishers. Inc., 1991.
■ H a st auupt th a re m o v a l a f th e VraaM au t. by Lcn Colodny.
St. Martin's Press, 1991.
B a se b a ll to *41. by Robert W . Creamer. Viking. 1991.
W o m a n s ! th irty eem athlagt p a r a d e a ts a f attalum aut. by
U.S. Depl. of Education. Government Printing Office. 1991.

•if'

-v ■ v ■

Pvt Karl Wright

Airman Larry Payton Jr.

Army Pvt. Karl Wright, an
operating room specialist, has
arrived for duty at Fort Sill.
Okta.
Wright Is the son of Verda O.
Wright of 840 Lincoln Parkway.
Oviedo.
Hls wife. Holly. Is the daughter
of Ralph and Kathy Webster of
2278 N. Powers Drive. Orlando.
He Is a 1988 graduate of
Oviedo High School.

Air Force Airman Larry L.
Payton Jr., an apprentice fire
protection specialist, has arrived
for duty at Elmendorf Air Force
Base. Anchorage. Alaska.
Payton ts the son of Lori Drake
of 133 Penelopr Ave.. Long-

■

He graduated In 1989 from
Lake Mary High School.

S g t Afocla W ilia m *
A ir Force Sgt. A l e c l a C.
Williams, a munitions systems
specialist, has arrived for duty at
Langley Air Force Base. Va.
She Is the daughter of Barbara
R. Stevens of 1208 North St..
Altamonte Springs, and Bernard
T. Maxwell of 108 Ford Ave..
Longwood.
The sergeant Is a 1985 gradu­
ate of Lyman High School.
Longwood.

O

l

7/3 A 7/10

THE W IZAR D

For your convenience, now you can

It's an easy way to pay for your Classified ads and it
gives you an extra month to pay.
Simply call our Classified Department at

322-2611
and one of our salespeople will help you place your ad.
Please be prepared to give us your account number
and expiration date. Billing will appear on your next
charge card statement.

Sanford Herald
For 24-hour TV listings, sta LEISURE magazine of Friday July 5.
#

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Legal Notice*

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m- Tim dw. July ». 1W1

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ytdbd pursuant to the term* of
Security Agreements, and alt

circuit in

tho toes of er dim eg* to la) the
PROPERTY described herein.
(b&gt;
IfPlfl* 9f 8^0(0001
in
franchise*, cencesslen*.
i er an any part ef Me
PROPERTY. |kwwe ^

P IM M
C M IM lf M iV -C A H K
CORAL G A B LE S FE D E R A L
SAVINGS ANO LOAM
ASSOCIATION.
T DWIGHT RARRON. H al..

tiwnH cr

described root property
Lot* 17, is and Rial part at Lot
If. West of laN raN N A I H d 0.
SANLANOO SPRINGS TRACT
NO. it, m a i m to m* piet
thereof at recorded In Plat Bask
A Fata 17. PuAMc Racardi at
Semlnoto County, FtorMe.
ALSO:
Tho North I I toot at
l right at way at Pino
View Sfroot tying immodtotsty
South ot and abutting Ma South
lino ot tho

materials used er
to be used by DEB TO R In

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C^BN^foAt 1^^

er Rto apereften. man­
or use ef. er utilities
N r. Me PROPERTY er any part
thereef, w hether new er
I trademark*, tra

and contracN re­
lated
N Me PROPERTY
er any
---------«
___ a ___ *
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ef any at Me
TNe tote Is made pursuant N
a Summary Final Judgment In
Ferodeter* entered in Civil
Actton Ne. VI-EN7-CAI4K new
pending in the Circuit Court in
and Nr SemlneM County,
DATED MHI7M day of June.
19*1.
MARYANNS MORSE
CLERKOPTMS
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Jane E. Jeeowtc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: July 1.9.1*91
D EH M

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIG H TEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOPOfl
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL DIVISION
Case Net fl-atil-CAMK
GLENDALE FED ERAL BANK.
FSBI/k/a
G LENDALE FE D E R A L
SAVI NOS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.
JACK C. BROWN, and
JACQUELYN C. BROWN.

NOTICEOPMLR

Nolle* It hereby given that,
pursuant to a Final Judgment of
Foreclosure entered In the
above styled cause. In the
Circuit Court ol Seminole
County, Florida. I will tell the
property situated In Seminole
County. Florida, and being more
fully described at follows:
Let JO. ALAQUA. PHASE I.
according to tho Plat thereof a*
recorded In Plat Book 03. Page*
07 through 71, Inclusive. Public
Records ef Seminole County.
Florida
at public Ml*, to the highest and
best bidder, lor cosh, at the
West front step* ol the Seminole
County Court House, at Sanford.
Florida, at 11:00 A.M. on August
1*. INI.
WITNESS my hand and tho
seal of this Court on Juno 17.
IN I.
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ot Circuit Court
By Jane E . Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: July I.* , IN I
DEH34
IN TNE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE IETH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
FLORIDA
Case f N &gt;471-CA-1S-K
RESOLUTION TR U S T COR
PORATION at Conservator tor
Florida Federal Saving*. F.S.B.,
Plaintiff,
vs
LLOYD A STORY, et us., et at.
Defendant*
NOTICE OF SALS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that pursuant to the Final
Judgment entered In this cause
on July 1. IN I. I will sell the
property situated In Seminole
County. Florida described as:
LOT t. LESS TH E WEST M
FEET. OF APPLE VALLEY
UNIT A ACCORDING TO THE
P L A T T H E R E O F AS R E ­
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK ZJ.
PAGE If. PUBLIC RECORDS
OF S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA.
T O G E TH E R W ITH .
WITHOUT LIM ITATION. THE
F O L L O W IN G S P E C I F I C
ITEMS OF PERSONAL PROP
E R T Y . T O G E T H E R W ITH
ANY ANO ALL AODITIONS
T H E R E T O OR R E P L A C E
MENTS THEREOF: REFRIG
E R A TO R . R A N G E / O V E N .
DISPOSAL. DISHW ASHER.
FAN/HOOD. CENTRAL AIR.
al public Mia to the highest and
best bidder lor cash al 11.00
o'clock a m. on August I. letl to
tha highest bidder tor cash,
eacept a* sat forth herein, at the
west Irent door ot the Seminole
County Courthouse. 101 N Park
Avenue. Sanford. FL 12771. In
accordance with Section 45 ail.
Florida Statutes I ISOt)
WITNESS, my hand and the
Mat of this Court on tha 2nd day
ot July. INI
(SEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
Clef k ol me Circuit Court
By: JaneE. Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish July*, to. IN I
OEH7*

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322-3611

Certificate No. IM
Yearaf tseuei
P — n lpHen M Piapeits: i
L O T E ELK &gt; LOCKHAI
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v&lt;a/nptoi ol tho fidelity ol doge than ol friends." —
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A O J U t T M I N T t A M O C R i M T I t I e tos

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17— N w r t t r y A

Mia taffi day M June,
CHILDCARE. In m y
Iqme. Intents weScumo. Coll
3»**I7 JoAnn
DAYCARE AVAILAGi&gt;■ In my
Hidden Lk. heme. Lot* of
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Prat

N O TICE OP S H E R IF F ? SALE
NOTICE IB H E R E B Y O IV IN
that by virtue M that certain
Writ at Elocution Issued eut ef
and un N r the aeel of the Ceunty
Caurt M Semi net* County. Ftor
Ma. upan a final ludpsmant
rendered In Me efureeald caurt
on Me *M day M leptomber
A.D. INK In Mat certain caw
entitled. Slate Wide Ceilectten
Corporation, n/k/a Barnett Ne
covery Carpwatlen. Plaintiff,
— vs— Fay* Pwhln* and Aik*
Perkins Defendant, which
aforesaid Writ M Elocution we*
delivered N me as Sheriff ef
Seminole County, Florida, and I
have levied upon Me toHnelng
described property owned by
Alice E. Perkin*, said property
being located In Seminal*
County. Florida, mere particu­
lar ly described as lei lews:
On* 1*0 Pontiac Bonneville.
VIN «1G2AIU*H0OB33SHJ being
stored at Butch's Chevron.
Sanford. Ftor Ida.
and Ma undersigned a* Sheriff
ef SemlneM County. Florida,
will at ! I:N A.M. an Ma MM
day ef July A.D. IN I, offer tor
eel* and Mil T. Me highest
bidder, tor cash in hand, subfeet
to any and all ealsflng liana, at
the Front (West) Dew of Me
stops of Mo Semlnoto County
Courthouse In Sanford. Florid*.
That sold solo I* being
to satisfy tha terms o( said Wrll
ot Elocution.
DONALD F.ESLIN O ER ,
Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
Publish: July 1. *. 14. a . wIM
tho salt on July la. IN ).
O EHS

NOTICE OP APPLICATION
FOE TA X D IE D
N O T I C E IS H E E E B Y
G IV E N , that Lyell Hints or
Holly Hints. Ma holder et Me
following certmcatols) hat filed
said certmcatols) tor a tai dead
to bo Issued Moreen. Tho cerflfl
cote numbor(s) and yoar(s) oI
Issuance. Mo description of Mo
property, and Mo named) in
which It we* assessed Is/are at
follows:
Certificate No. 1*07
Yearol Issuance: ISM
Description of Property: LEG
SEC I0TWP21S RGE H E BEG
330 F T W OF SE COR OF E to
OF N to OF SE to OF NE to
RUN E 310 F T N 770 M FT N M
D EG 1* MIN JO SEC W TO SLY
R/W LAKE CHARM CIRCLE
SWLY ALONG SLY R/W TO A
P T N O F BEGS T O BEG
Names In which esiessed:
Robert M. Robinson. Nancy A.
Robinson
All et sold property being In
the County ot Somlnoto. Slat* ol
Florid*
Units* such certmcatols)
shall ba redeemed according to
lew. the property described lr
such cartlficatolt) will be sold
to the highest bidder at the west
front door. Seminole Ceunty
Courthouse. Sentord. Florida, on
tho &gt;M day ot August. IN I. et II
AM.
Approalmetoly t il t 00 cosh
for tee* Is required to be paid by
the successful bidder et the sal*
Full payment ol an amount
equal to the highest bid plus
applicable documentary stamp
taies and recording toes I* due
w ithin 24 hours after the
advertised time ot Me sale All
payments shall be cash ar guar
anteed instrument, mad* pay
able to the Clerk et the Circuit
Court.
Dated Mi* is m day ol June.
IN I
(SEAL)
Maryann* Morse
Clerk el the Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florid*
By: TlneM. Taylor
Deputy Clerk
Publish. July!.*. 14.13 INI
OEH 14

C bBW HW B
B E E B E , BD G KB, BLEB.
W Ltoyd
Bans
kHI

BN M ilW S W AM TEBf
Easy work, eico
land BsH Addraaaa

anuatopt 4 S1JB to:
FL.
______________
N G M E B B I I E I B far

vlan Htob tchaof

41J7,

IN I.
I BEAL)
CMrh at Ma Circuit Caurt
BernMale County. Florida
By: TtnaM. TeyMr.
Deputy Ctorh
Publish: June t t A July 1.9. M,
IN I.
O ia iN

aRfy ntoaMtotobtoryoul
44R B EW LB Y EM N T
TM W .W bbS.toUtFa

1

Court.

PABCSLII
The Iasi M l Net of Tract f .
B la ck 4 pf L A K E W O O D
OAKDENB PLAT NO. t. accerdtog N Me PMt Mereef, m
recorded M P M Beak Mi Pag*
J4. Pubtk Record* pf Palm
DATED M N N M B e y of June.
INt.
(CO UETB IAL)
MAR YANNE MORSE
Clerk *1OrcuM Caurt
SembwN Ceunty, FlartBi
By: Jenel.Jeaowk
Deputy Cterh
Pubtteh: Ju tyt* . IN I
DBMJ7______________________
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FLORIBA
CASE NDi ft-WSPCA-14-K
PATRICIA H. OANUNO.
PMntIN.
HESTER E ASSOCIATES. INC..
etal..
NOTICE OP B A L I
NOTICE I* given MW pursu­
ant N it* Partial ~
Final Judgment anterad an June
77. IN I. In Civil Action Nb.
fig n tC A I4K W Me Circuit
Court W Mo ElghNenM JudSclai
Circuit, bs
County. Florida, In which
H I I T B I 4 ASSOCIATES. INC..
PATRICIA H. OANUNO N Me
Plaintiff, I will tell to the
N r caah at
ef the Semlnoto
Ceunty CeurMeua* as Senlord.
Flerlda. Batman Ms hours W
11-.M a.m. and t : N p.m. an July
n. IN L Mo Mtowtng N s trNad
----»
IM G |w
lEW p n p N l f EBB rasw* Nv m q
Summary Ftool Judgment:
4 JN shores ef Me common
Slock W DARYL OANUNO 4
ASSOCIATES. INC., o Ftor Mo
Carperetlen
DATED Ml* 17M day ot June.
IN I.
MABYANNE MORSE
Clerk W Me Circuit Court
By JaneE. Jesewk
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: Ju tyt* . IN I
DENIS
NOTICE OP APPLICATION
POBTAX M I D
N O T I C E IS H I K I O Y
GIVEN, that Lyell or Holly
Hlnti. Me holdar of Me following
certmcatols) he* tiled sold cert
mcotols) N r a lea deed N bo
Issued thereon. The certificate
number(a) and y o a rls ) ot
Issuance. Me description of Me
property, and Me namels) in
which II sees assessad Is/are a*
Nitons:
Certificate No. 1147
Year ef Issuance: INS
Description tt Property: L E G
•EG SW COR LOT 4 RUN E L Y
MO F T NLY IN F T WLV 13S P T
SLY 71 F T WLV IIS F T SLY IS
F T TO BEG EN TZM IN G BR
FAEMS ADO NO. I PE S PG •
Nome* In which messed: Jo
Ann Tom pkins. C a rro l E .
Tompfclrtt
All et sold property being in
Iti* Ceunty at Semlnoto. Slot* W
Florid*.
Unless such csrtlllca te U )
shell be rsdeemsd according N
tow. Mo prepsrty described In
such csrtlfketolsl will bo sold
to Me highest bidder W Mo west
front deer. Semlnoto Ceunty
Courthouse. Sentord. Florida, on
the 2*M day of July. IN t. at II
AM .
Approilmetoly SI2S.0B cash
tor toe* It required to ba paid by
Me successful bidder W Me sale.
Full payment et an amount
•quel to Me highest bid plus
applicable documentary stomp
taaet end recording toes Is due
within 14 hour* otter the
advertised time ef Me tel*. All
payment* shall be cash or guar­
anteed Instrument, mode pay
able to Me Clerk el Circuit
Court
Dated mis IIM day ot June.
INI
(SEAL)
Manama Mors*
Clerk et Ih* Circuit Court
Semlnoto Ceunty. Ftor Ida
By: Tin* M. Toy tor
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June is. M 4 July 2. t.
INI.
DEG IT]

NOTICE
SEMINOLE COUNTY EXPRESSWAY AUTHORITY
MEETING
The Seminole County Eiprestway Authority announces a public
meeting, to which ell parson* ar* invited
OATE Wednesday. July 14. INI
TIME 1 10 P M
LOCATION Seminole County Services Building
Commission Chambers (W illi
not East First Street
Vanford Florida 13771
G EN ER AL SUBJECT M ATTER TO BE DISCUSSED The
porposed ••pressway in Semlnoto County
Additional information may bo obtained by contacting
Gerald N Brlntcn. E aecutiv* Director
Seminole County E iprestwey Authority
Phono 1407) M l 1110. estension 7774
PERSONS ARE ADVISED THAT IF THEY DECIOE TO A PP EA L
ANY DECISIONS MAOE AT THESE MEETINGS/HEARINGS.
TH E Y WILL N E E D A RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS ANO
FOR SUCH PURPOSE THEY MAY NEED TO ENSURE T H A T A
VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE WHICH
INCLUOES TH E TESTIMONY ANO EVIDENCE UPON WHICH
T H E APPEAL IS TO BE bASEO. PER SECTION 2M0IOS.
FLORIDA STATUTES
Publish July*. IN I
•
DEH to

i

M yr* ar aSdar wHR I years
vor If labia seat Ike rood

I

NOTICE IS.HEREBY G IV E N

me NrHLrl

Louise Scan
AM ef said prapert )

•rat epeninga to r sm all
pasAaga Nttvory. Earn ra to

831-9993

N Me CMrh at OrcuM

ar

C E L E B R IT Y CIPHER

.'. “3

CLASSIFIED ADS

M T N C C M C IH T C flV ET.

RESOLUTION TRUST

7 1 -H B iR W lW U

T i-m n w m iT

N i t ) and yow ls) M
Me dbscrMftow ef
PNjWFjhh
and tho wamaU) bsi

P

DE •TOR'S MNresN therein.
All pel(dee ef Insurance and
proceeds ef any unearned pre­
mium* ef any Insurance policies
covering Me PROPERTY/
Ail proceeds of any
claim Mr damage*,
consequential In
any condemnation er taking In
.lieu ef condemnation ef the
P R O P E R T Y , er any p art

K

All of DEBTOR'* Interest as
lessor in and to all leases or
rental arrangement* or the
P R O P E R T Y , or any pari
thereof heretofore made and
entered Into, and In and to ill
lease* or rental arrangement
herealler made and entered Into
by DEBTOR during the llte ot
the Security Agreement* or any
eitenslon or renewal thereof,
together with all rents and
payments In lieu ot rents,
together with any and all guar
an tees ot such leases or rental
arrangment* and Including all
present and future security do
posit* and advance rentals
Any and all awards or pay
ment*. Including Interest there
on, and the right to receive the
same, a* a result of lal the
eaerdte ot the right ot eminent
domain, lb) the alteration ot the
grade ol any street, or (c) any
other ln|ury to. taking ol. or
decrease in the value ol the
PROPERTY described in this
Eihibit
All ot the right, title, and
Interest of the DEBTOR In and
to all unearned premiums ec
crued. accruing, or to accrue
under any and all insurance

n iffiO t

NOTICE OP APPLICATION
PON VAN N E E D N O T IC E I I H B E E E V
GIVEN . MM
hclOw M Me
atoll) has tltod
atolt) Nr alas dead to be I

NW v^BwrTy N ^mrfw^^Ni B^^N ™

and mention
opera
of the
PROPER

ing or aftsrecgulfed buildings.
Improvement*. rlfhts-efwey,
easements. atraota. allaya.
paaaagoa. w a ta ra . w atar
tour m s . riparian rights, righto,
r i v l l a g a a , t o n a m o n la .
orodltamonta and appwrte
nances. ronsalndara.
tlituraa
contratta and pratlta thoraot.
All praaant and aftoracquifsd
oqulpmont, tlitu ra a . gaada
whkh aro N Sam oa tlituraa.
ronN and Naao aocwrlty
IN.
and proceeds at all at tho
•ongoing typo* at catlataral.
Without limitation at tho ganorallty ot tho lira going. DE
B l O R ’a a o cu rlty Intaroal
granted N Socurod Party evldanced hereby alao Includta the
collateral specified below.
All machinery, apparatua.
equipment, tlttlnga, fliturea,
whether a c tu a lly or con­
structively attached to the prop
erty described an Eehlblt B
("P R O P !R T V ") and Including
all trade, damostlc. and or­
namental tlituraa and article*
of personal property at every
hind and nature whatsoever new
or her*after located In. upan. or
under the P R O P IR TV ot any
part thereof and uood or usable
in connection with any present
or future Operation at the
P R O P E R T Y A N D NOW
O W N ED OR H E R E A F T E R
ACQUIRED BY DEBTOR. In­
cluding. but without limiting the
generality ot the foregoing, all
heating, air conditioning, heel­
ing, lighting, laundry, In­
cinerating. and power equip
ment; engine*; pipe*, pumps:
tanks; m otors; conduits;
switchboards; plumbing; lifting,
cleaning, tire prevention, lire
eatlngulshlng. refrigerating,
ventilating and communication*
apparatus; boilers, ranges.
oil burners or unit*
thereof, appliances; air cooling
and air conditioning apparatus,
vacuum cleaning systems; ele­
vators. escalators; shades,
awn'ngs; screens, storm doors
and windows; stoves; wall beds;
refrigerators; attached cabi­
nets; partitions; duct* end
compressors; rug* and carpets;
d ra p e rie s; lu rn ltu re and
furnishings; together with all
building materials and equip
ment now or hereafter delivered
to the PROPERTY and Intended
to be Installed therein. Includ
log. but not limited to. lumber,
plaster, cement, shingles, root
ing. plumbing, fliture*. pipelath. weiiboerd, cabinet*, nails,
sink*, toilet*, furnace*, heater*
brick, tile, water heaters,
screens, window frame*, glass
doors, flooring, paint, lighting
f lit u r e a a nd unattached
equipment; together with all
addition* and accessions thereto
and replacement* thereof.
All of the water, sanitary, and
storm sewer systems now or
hereatNr owned by the OE
B T O R w h ic h a re now or
hereafter located by. over, and
upon the PR O PER TY or any
part and parcel thereof, and
which water system Includes all
water main*, service laterals,
hydrant*, valves and appurte
nance*, and which sewer system
include* all santlary sewer
lines. Including mains, laterals,
manholes and appurtenances.
All paving tor street*, roads,
walkway*, or entrance ways
now or hereafter owned by
DEBTOR and which are now or
herealler located on the PROP
E R TY or any part or parcel

■; *

fey M y
authority or

NOTICE OP SALE
NOTICC IS H C R IB Y O IV IN
that an M* MM day of August,
m i . a« JI N *.m. at toaWtot
Front Oaar at too Seminole
County f aurthouee. Santortf.
Florida. No gndaralgrad CMm
will ofNr N r aaN N

Pf?&lt;XBTMIR W ITH IN Oiltt-

w n f f ^ T iliIB W W W I

Legal Notice*

Log*! Nolle—

FawHy rutoaef
DenTFeetl DenT Trust!
Don't TaRH

f ro m a t h a r E u r o p e a n
countries; Japan 4 SeuM

BEAL ESTATE ABENTB
GBNfTNRBBBd
UsanaaB/Ms
ItoanaaWWHtosnaad
Oof Mo t o t o W a a q n * Ma
topprabrntonatol

, Graveyard MHt OK. MT-SbF*
IAAALL DAY CAKE. T L C tar

■

N'toivtol ILw

to

M

t n ty ly r.d f d t
In your homo. Man. Prt. 7 4
Start Bato Aug. )4 Retorancaa

m m

I M A IL GN A1 I T T NOBBB-LIRB
D a y c a re G P r e a c b a e l.
Fwr
H
- F b f N l t o w ANpgfgXao
peed. Goad wort truck. ItJ
O G O m tm a f to rllB P M
P

EZSXmVSlim**.

- N u rw r y l

A-l CHILDCARE. Oh tdyltwtlda
Dr, SoN 4 Savtngonvtran^iant
' tor your child. Eehso. tN 4Sa
wk. Por OtEBcara Bad to sofy
SN N P toa N U R ,,,,.... Wf7W7

” BANKRWPTCY a
— D fV O B C B h H
W

A S ^ ^

m

am om a

CHILD CASE •I Cbys a weekI
Fun, enriching octivlllesl
HEB itT P IN ...............H74

44-114 Hr. 4 benefits. (Will
train) I - W E K - .

T IE B D W I
g

Thanksfor
sticking
withus.

In Lake Mary.
la: — * ~
Herald. PO
111771-1447

anBM a N tosfi

y

m

up N 4 months to obtain
certification. E ic . working
condltlona 4 benefits Immedtoto openings an 714311
sifts. Part time eiso aval table I
DEBABY MAMOB
*SSL Hwy. 1741
Dsbery. M-F, SAM-4PM..... BOB

it. I 7 «
BantorB. CaH PauiMMBlI

A PUN WAY T O BA N K . S1B1S
daltors por hr. Presenting
Cameo L in g e rie fashion
Proa sample bit projg -y t .
LOtol toW TTfl, I T t . m
Will pay ta% Intoraat. Secured
t o is o a iM f o k
R T T y g lg tH i
IT H iy iL
■ng dtoklbutors. selling Hotwrai Products. Will train. Ceil

_____________________

d a y -P r ld a y . Com pany
benefit*. Apply In persan:
Paris Ofy. N l • Cornwall Rd.
1 FI......... ............ BOB
* DE PA ETM X N T*
a EECEP TK W IST*
B u s y b a ts nooda y a u l
JLAA e m p l o y m e n t
W4W.MNtBLMMITS

BBSTAURANT/PIZZBRIA tor

14 toady to apon. Comer
17-NandMM St. Sanford.
Cell anytime. 3*0» 4 l
VENDING B O U TE ; Por Sol*.
AWacBebto cash bualnea*.

If?

4 1 -M B w y t w L n d
ACTION M tor M and » d
mortgages. Feredoaure Into.
Lk'd Erefcor, M l
Nana bad bankrupt? Need a
car. beat ar homo toon? No
down payment loans orflRRlfe- ItRfeRTlt IM i *** *-

I Riw/inaSm i58sl
Buy/BeN b ...............................

wnwfirriwrr mini
D E TA IL FBVBfl. U t n w u r
sparkle tor summer I Camp.
^
............
H B A O LIN EB II Most cars 144
Wegwts |7S. Vinyl top* MB upCarpet ttoupm aaea

services On/OH Uto l24 4*44
i l » i C B W tfB d B fB
HEW . B BM O OEL B IFA IR
N004E4 O FFIC E 4 STORES
AM typos cansirusNnt. Res/Cans
B H D ) . . . 4 4 . Eetod, CBOtSSW
• a A D O ITK M 4 All romaBsl
Ing GueNfy worbl CGC«H«7
Myrseap.
i t u yMate
i i U iai a4740411
W

CATHY'S CLEANMtG BBRVICE Batorancoq reaaonabii
ratot. Llcaoaedl Coll 3137470
H O M I/O FFIC E C LEA N IN G ,
ta p ., reasonable, quality
i tv. on
S M K N O R C Y ia U I I S I
SPRING CLEA N IN G BLUEST
Rate* trees SM A agi CaH Jay I

coaecRETE
Quality and cloanllness I*
guaranteed. It yr*. restoenttol
fiance 747 J*B*/33aiai;
CAPTAIN CO N CR ETE. Weyn*
Beal. I Man Quality Opera
tiantr'...................
F tftf
SHARP P E N C E ) 1st Rat*
work Law Ml Fra* ett Wood.
h a in U nA^reoelrs
rjja jrs ^111*411
chetollnk

Ro S T c o T u e T T tooMBHhql
Carpentry, reefI
"Stotobteosnsearai-een
T N E HOUSE DOCTOR I All
il Pelnt/Termlto

I CaRTaos ■
RAN D Y'S O U A U T Y LAWN.
Cemplet* car*, dean up*.
Since ISM Fro*eB-im-OTto
RELIAB LE LAWN MAINTE
NANCE I M att tor 1st to e
customers I H i *70_________
ST. AUGUSTINE GRASS plugs
Installed, lie sq tt. Fro*
Estimates! Sunset Lawn Re
valient. tn
In cn r

seaseat

“ T JC

CARPEN TER All UnBs el home
repairs, pointing 4 ceramic
tile Ekhard Ereas..... Ml N H

C A R P E N T R Y . 4AASONARY
painting and til* work. Free
esllmato* Llsc'd..CaUU34na

T T a H IB L U n T y e rT T re X
appliances, turmtur*. bash at
any kind! Rickard___.273774!

/ *’11 n / 7 //' n n / i f I )
( illI

ninf

o 4|'v

I w 'a Y4 Rods.
T
etc. Lew retest Com mar
del/Residential 313 0404
PCM - House wash mtd pointing
"Quotes by phone". Cell

.3244440. SAMSPM

■ Sscrstarlal A ■
Ty»&lt;nt SorvicEs
CUSTOM Typtog/tosikkuplegl
DJ Enterprise*. it lB E. 11th
S t . Sentord.. . 314 0471/ m 7*tl

Sowing

iHaulUi

ClGGnlrtt Sfvlct

Wniil/i.

"

All your plumbing needs! 74
jw*l_»RFao&gt;a77g3g JSM
F te s s u te O gg

TWP S4ASOMRV. Brkk. btock.
stucco, cancreto. Renovations
Lk'd 4 Ins 111 24S4/M44U7
L29^&amp;aS!iw

s / » I'ri

I

CO M PLETE Oueidy Lawn 4
Lends caging. Tree Service 4
Irrigation, competitive reset.
tree esItmotosSmmy'sia 7MS
LAWN M AINTENANCE

O B W B ra tS G rv ic t s

) nil I

mU

PM USOPPEST COOITROL*- *
Senior Cit lien Discounts!
H years esperlencel 314*71*

* a GUTTERS C L E A N E D * * .
Commercial Residential.

I ///' #' / 7/M '

F esT ^

L A N D C L E A R IN G till dirt,
beckhae. toadsr work, hauling
and clean up. Countrywide
D a g t a p e n w n L iO n n C J ^

C A r B E wtr y

I I I CLEANING SERVICE.
Ot tic*/home Lie 4 Ins Pro
lesstonal couple.........3H4SM

LINTINO
4 pressure dean. SAVE MM
Llc./lreeestl) *0311*4
DICK PINOLA’Sv PAIN TIN G.
Quality wsrkl Int/Eet.. Lk'd
4 Insured Freeesll 1»S713

/A/»

( liissi/lril.

I nl

f B r m r n U w in g n W s r .))
type* Phone Lite Graham
1447) rn-4774. Saidord_______

Trgo Sorvice
RUNYANS T R E E SERVICE
Tree work, light hauling Fra*
estimate*. Insured. 311-1430

tv/f/l/'

l - 'J - d l l

l&gt;

�id

Sanford HrteM, Sanford, Florida - Tuaaday, July #, 19U9 - ••
fl

1

’'

M IT *N * C A 1 L Y L K V *

-/

M A T T IM

Larry W r % *
k r

• A H F O R D , S le e p in g rm .
FrhraH anr. WVRs’D » w . BR.

TWjBBnp
** ^ 1*1y

In i m i note/Or pAgo/Vatwale/Lake

M AI
» 1

C O N N E C T I O N ! Seaterd
Owtey
-MS4R2
e B j 5 l p i £ j ^ pH*
WaagsdiH d l M i m y

in -i

poto-CoRteHm

aapatn.Can»iatc7
c m • cleani i

R S S S T c M I , MKTS.”
2 bam. ancHMd parch.
utility ream. Central
id A/C. aH new WHrtar.
Naw r e f r l p . and slays.
Washar/dryor. Financing
C a iim s iH
8 . DNLAMDO •l/ l mabIH. 3 car

o s r r 'aii' i/ i acral Nave
Ip4c. family. IhHng a ndi

T.4B coral Salllalra. Vary
# FOR B A L I, lie

u

A T T S A C T IV I 1

iS M B F -

\ma

4* wlflk ta la . Y a « mava.
INS SB................. ...... 2S34TS2

(LlmHad tlmal SaA r t larga I,
t and S bdrm. Omfrai H/A.

ft—

_______

w n I b l I n a i R.
I SCSI lent csndllIBNl SIM
FVm............. ..............322-I3H
OBDTS B M I • Soars Frto
a^saia Mkata
apiriT v iiA i VKtngnT CMP'
fl*n. Nrar.tlTS. MswantySSS

tramtWRrahar,»2T?S
i l k * -------------f bdrm... MSSmoBup.

a REJkL ESTATE PAL e
FaNasflc apperNMfy la

ub

a d v l t

CaR
P ltc a a n lti Claan reams.

________

PRDT WATER N t A T IR .
•Hctrk. SB goRsn. Scatty's
Thsnna FHw. Wsrt s l

f it s

M R V ILD N M . Factory
waad A dUngl i NEW
■ H S E M O a O t W ML
D DR-

w.
at! iMltal

a 2/1 • rwnavaHd. new carpet,
paint, appliances, lanced
yard.--------------------------- M N I
a l/l • ranavaHdL new carpal,
paint appliances, fsncsd
yard.............................sas.SM

i iif
y
t a r f ttm e j ^ p ie y m o w t.
rflfNW
ft

M_____

AamAmt e M M t

(A t

■

■ ■

Fwrn/thHwrnl C M A Up aHt

im iw

BOR/M/H/H/V
Fulltime. Men'* a ffa ra l,
•Tack A M alay, la p . ra• wdrad-...................... J » t m
M L I I M H I I • Hara't a
•mail ad with a tfrana
*** " you like to
time? I'll tfia*

w
-tE
Z
't
a

.-ag
r tleal.a IgADAM..
, I
SMB ID
H I A lad.
ADA
M k turn, m
H I A latl.
im n w / n H im v iim

roam, ail
MM, ttn/im. phA l
rtty........................... N t W I
SANFORD • C L IA H . gutot I

IV lf 9 Q P
Sinter#. If. I
M r m . ctvtrftl M/A« p w l.

tm/rna
SANFORD • 12
Apt. hauM. t bdrm. USS/ma.

WRITY 0
•I I C M
OPFICIAt •
r pay, M JI* a r hagr la
hr caMpany In OtBary. Ml
M pN m B FN . drivers Meant#.

Alateaw m A akU M

patt * v p Hal. Currant Fla.
In
..M n -i m

fy an IMs S/2 tea slsry trim
appliances, and flraplaca.
rvncvi jm I wlm p ip 11

LARSRMRV

IA H F O A D • Hwpa a harm

m I
y r n i r m w i /i B
r w t

________ CaR SB Mi l _________
SAHFORD
C L IA H . RwHI 1
arrvme..

i and a h im .
W /w carpal. pwHl araal
ataryw p iw ttM M M a n-iN T

l i D C D I FRIB D B ON Mary.
42T. 1.2 A 1 kadroNna. STS-M o
SSB par man Hi plat SIM

LARNE N O O M 4/X STB me.
plus sac. dap. SUB. Can ba
saan a* satTstMHte Aaa. CaM
a IH ryFM ..............-U S P H n

m u*

ancH aad parch, l l / m a
Bi-gsap, ask H r Papuan

* * M M IV * A
ROBBCL IF F APARTMENTS

^■■raad n ak
paragiMrary g h t e j

Far Wlntar Perk/Senferd
. Ceil 4S&gt;;4» 0*40
t i !*!'
n mat
.ITiffTH’ -K

a
wart At

nun-

H r U ia . W/0 connection*!
screened parties and ailra
i H r ape &lt;Ha#t. IMF sq. ft
Located an Lh. Mary Hvd.
CaR MS-SMS
Epuoi MauainaOaaarhmityi
A A A A A A A FT. HH H rH OH
trlet. a a tp ft., araarna. A/C.
s m p par menm plus dspaoit.
C o n taow tiaratpant

M-3B2411I
CaA
e WAREHOUSE MANAGER a
Yawr knack H r hendimp paa
pH aril land IMt Important
tpal. Kaap Inventory and
schedule Palhrary an tlmal
AAA EM PLOYM INT

I

part ing. t Mtrma. lis t teewrt
♦y IncludM ulllllHt. m m

W S X O S P E C U iL w
i In H r BMIISIngH story
studios. Many aslras Inci.
O ulall Nlca landscaping.
O a - t l l a m p a a g t r t who
CARD I
SANFOtDCOUtT
123-3111
iwswe
w eeewinr«»ee*eeea

m m .tm m .M h i t s

CaN 321*0514

91-Apsrtmtfrti/
H ggajijfcart

103— H o u s r s

L A R I M A R T , furnished 4
. harm, nta/ma Includes will.
itootoedufrenlv 3134511
SANFOAO •Heuta H share»
-. matwra adult. Reoseneble.
■■ Call 2M43M Hr mMrmatton

*MVCINSffOAi*
*KNTriOIIS43S-S4S5*
A UMfTEOPUK OMIT A
SPACIOUS2M M 2IATMS
I4 U SO. F T I
IM M ID IA T IO C C U F A H C Y II

o H N «N n . r i i . H .

SAT. 10-S. SUNDAY I I
ACROSS FROM PHe Wert*, lull
hauaaprlv. ar/paal. US «Ht or
MM ma. MIAMI HAAUFM
F U R M ItN IO roam, kllchan
privilege*. utllllHl Included
ttl/ark t t t t t c u r l l y .
.......Call m u a i
F U R N IIN ID ROOM. kll. A
laundry prlvtodpa* Util. In
dudad. US ark. phra US dap.
kPRaaaAaOrAIHrS.
HISTORICAL RakHl MaHI. 401
• MeantHa Ave. TV. micro.
! rafrtf. UlllltHa Included. Rat
tonaOto weekly ratoti MHIS*
MOOSI TO SHARI ar/imakar.
1 roam* and be4h H r rani.
thtra tnchan. MSAmotn 3147
SANFORD, klkhen and laundry
prlvllepes. clean, cable hook
: up. SSl/wfc.tAJdep 333 7*44

NCMIWQINCnf
SlnpH »H ry ttudlo. 1 A 3
Bdrm. ApH. Many aitraa Inet
i torape space I Oulat. cety
community I Nlca landscap­
ing. On site managers who
C A R ! 11 Starting at Ult/me

SAMOtO COWT—.MI-1311
HISTORIC OOWNTOWN San
lord. Vary clean 2 bdrm.. I
bath. Kllchan. big Living,
dining, appliances. Fenced.
Good neighbors. SJ7S me. 1 X 0
dap..................... -..H S 7 3W)

LMEMMT
CARPORT
With 2 bedroom ground level
par month plus
t!JO deposit. (Sun
(Summer Rales)
Call Carman. Ml t ill

DOWNTOWN ORICK
WARE NOUS* SDACI - M M
H M J M sg ft. Deck H T.
SprlnkHred. Call 334 *S4*.

SAHFORD V lt 11

117— C u mierclel

SA N FO R D . BaadMea. o r e
T E A R Heart ImmaculsH. I
bdrm., 2 bath. Lg. yard. Only
tTB m a. Musi seal..... MI IHS
B A N F O R D / S A N O R A . 3/1.
Larga ReubH garage.

TW O M M SR H wMa. can ba
mad HgHhar. one unit. M t
s e ll.
CaWBFHW
i t a. CrysHI Labe Aaa. Labe
i-M O R W -kuHdHRSCM
nanm. flrtf and laH akM
dsaasH. C a ll » t 4 M

r o I t Her t u n
SAHFORD 3 bdrm. I bam l «

ISM S O W FOOT

U n Tvr n l l l W 9 W n T
H I I O A ttO R M -a r 2 Rdrm .H
DlLTONATLaraasaHclHnl
PRIMARY R IA L T V .... STM ns

RTTIRTNM HNCSTMS
CALL US FIRST H r Hp Sami
noH County single family and
dupiei ranlal prapartlas I
MO R IA L TV . HAMM

arro
CTllnrressCTc
araa. Napalv 11Wear weak
________ Call X I W ________
COUNTRY CLUB Araa. 2/1
w/dsn. AC. claan and no pats.
tOJ. DscounHd. BI-STM
DILTONA. 2 bdrm.. t bath
Neal A Clean. U H mo. NOT
Including ullllllas. last S2S
discount Hr prompt payl No
pals I Available Now.
__________ w»iaat__________
M O OIRN in . double garageCHA. W/W carpal. Ilraplaca.
lam. room. STtS rant. JM
Plumose Or. Seated 222-PIT
HICB J S0RNL. IH bath. CHA.
Ig. fom. rm., walk H Seminole
HNhltHOmo ♦ o k - X I 3Ua
OSTEEN • 2 bdrm. I bath.
400/mo plus security.
Call l i t Oil I_________

CallBM
S A N F O t a TWO i l l
CHA. SMS a manPr plus aacwr
rtty. Coll..... ............. 222-2TB.
I aORM. I RATH. Ndal Sonlord
Ih I ^ w Ih N - w i i t P n/B«
M
amla
I h
leaiJaAad
soteS in
te
wri
leuiRteWt BOM
rww pewn
and out. Carpal. Hncad yard.
l«HpltNda|MJf. H i pals.
i BDRM.. 2 bam.
sac. 2SIT Marsha* SI. 222 a m
o rm it B * _________________
4 BDRM l b BATH. Owide
Hwpa Florida ra m . 3 car
•arapa. SprlnkHr system, t
calling Ians. 1 Air cendiIHnara SOB/rna DS21U

IIS— DuplexTriplex/Meet
LAKE M A R V ^ / iT N it t a r a T
W/W carpal. CH A applloners.
Hncodyord................ M l STB
ttI LOMBWOOOo o a
Ouplas IM.TM.
3II24T.
NICK NIIBMRORMOODt
Large 3 bdrm.. glow parch,
carpal, no pels U N plus
security. 3 )» lost___________
S A N F O R D Larga 3 bdrm.
Cleon, oppliancaa. hook ups.
MTS. Dart, Ventura I i n n r
SANFORD. 3 bdrm.. I bam.
kllchan aguH Goad area. U H
s o c .lN JNaiv. msp.

2

nmarclal space H r
^ -- A-I •
rtneCl m T flP lifn H l. » XMU
s «a ry ,f H C »il.
B)7&gt;M

lit — Office
Spece/Pent

Step Up into A
Great Apartment!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath
ONLY

i l l — CewlemMvm
O N I BEDROORL waah/Wyar.
tcratnad parch. Wtragt. MTS
alua security. BRW M tat. W

iSonHrdAyg.
1 2 1 4 7 V .......... — ..3 3 M I5 7
E XCHAMBE OB SELL your

Hh m N f SflftiL t t J H
inter*. ISIhSt K M U r D
L— Dtehman, te Tte M iP

*

ANVCOM Om ONt
Need ropalrtT Behind on
aoymonHT Coil Gmg, W 4 TI4

Ih e P r u d a n t ia l m

flortda I M I y
L00RM96RMAN0ME7
Ffaaaa HI mo help.

U I M 6«spr% HALIM
(N T m o A tit e rm n a a

rm m u c m ti
3 bdrm. 3 balh. washer /aryar.
UTS/me S.E.C.M. Inc.. L k
Real EstaH Rrakar, UTUS4
S A N D L E W O O D V I L L A S. I
bdrm. I bam S32S par rnonm
plus d^asH. Cal U M M I*
141— H o m e * f o r S a le

Larfi LagMmbe, 21/4 Atm
Hwy. 4*and 14 are*......SI4S.NI
LOOK W N A T S4S.4M W ILL
BUVI Baautllully molnlolnod
3 bdrm. I bom w/screened
porch, opplloncas. window
treatments. Landscaped HI.
Immaculalol
Imarsan RaaNy Braap lac.
H 7 -&gt; 7 4 M M / lt 4 7 7 M M 3

HOVK TOYUM LOfl
m

m

STENSTROM

REALTY, INC.
p ro p e rty Ilia n
anyone in th e G re a te r

Frame apprea. N M SR II. 1
bdrm .. 3 bath. H a rd w u d
IHars. S a nH rdsrsR -M V M It
N E E D E D , gaad credit and
steady income I NamadHad I
bdrm. 1 bam an large corner
lot Only S1S.SM M1-SS43

Quinn
HIGHLAND FARK S/2b
Baautllully renovalsd and
aspandad. charming spill
plan And all H r..........SSt.000
LAKE MART S/2 P POOL/SFA
Adult community, clubhouse.
Florida rm. home warranty.
Naer everything..........US.000

7 M o n th L r r e r O n ly
r BALL COURT
IA C H A P A R TN tN T RICIUORR

•Near CarpaOnp •Maw Applancoa Hdud&gt;lng Refrigerator, Range. Pehwaahoc.

Sownao FwmDahany

Garbage Owpoaai •AHahar A Dryaia In*
siatadn unda lor an addlanR monttly Ha
•24 hour amargancy mwntananeo service

ASSUME P NOQUALIFVINO
Only S U M dawn. Lovely 3/1
w/braaklatl bar. pantry,
skylights, mare. Only SU.000

( ty u H tn tf
a p a rtm e n ts

DELTONA LAN IS S/2
Large graafroom. big country
kll w/boy window Land
scaped 4 knead....... U4.SOO

TAXI 1744 N AMPQHT DVD TURN WEST
7«W OF A M U . HON ON MONT

^rrwncc/ia/c (%ca^amcy

Limited Time Offer

RENTS S T A R T IN G F R O M

’ Soloct unite wNhwaBhor/dryor
hookups
’ Convenient to tchooia S shopping
a Bus slop located near rental office

(1st M o n th O n ly )

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom

Apartments

W a sh cr/D ry c rs in Select U n i u
• S e lf C le a n O v e n
Ice m aker
D ish w a sh e r
G a rba ge

1505 W. 25th S t, Senford • 322-2090
H ours: M o n .-Fri. 8 :3 0 - 5 3 0
MiaiaMhyAnpMs Qardan Ptepany Mar ^emen

322-2420
321-2720

* wSAM OtO**
Great tlartar/lnvatier home.
)/2 with lanced yard and
screened porch IH.SM
C A U 1 A IT K A L T Y
322-74H
SANF0R04/1V|III
Handyman specIall *43. JM
ScJmran Realty Ml-IS4T.
SCENIC OaBary Drive I 3 bdrm
cemant black home on IOSX I10
lot Central H/A. FHA SS3.J0S
TamgNn Realty lac.. S3Q44H
STAIRS P M P t H Y
MANAGEMENT A REALT Y
4ST-22S-TI22/3D-MTS
N N YP A YH R T7
SI dawn lor Veit
A little
more lor oltwrt Brand new I
bedroom T bath homes with 2
car garagas Irom u 10.
total monthly payments
Universal Realty. SM13S4
12170 MOVES YOU 111
Rani with option lo buyl
Unique properly, pork your
b o o l on I JO I I . c o n a l
waterfront! Closed commum
ly. Fenced mobile homo,
needs work. G a r a g a A
wo r ks h op Cal l collect
I SSOSOT 2)43
3 ARO 4 BEDROOM HOMES
AsatiaBH lYttk BsRd Manay 1
AT I i \ FIXED'

Cell Janet MansMotd
Days. 331 1134 Eves. 33)73 M
AA Carats, lac.

ii \ 1 1

iu

\ i

n

323-5774

2450 Hartwell Ase., Sanford

3 2 1 -3 6 6 3

"III Our 35th Y t a r *

324-4334

a T T T n m rrs

KSTMV10MVI
A L T A M O N T E . S F N IN O
OAKS •4 bdrm. 3 bam heme,
bar In kllchan. spill plan, huge
yard, perfect conditleni

Also Available Government
Repos And Bank Foreclosures

M ON SA T. 9 - 6 • S&lt;ai. 12 •5

C lubhouse

M r . d t , Inc

ISAS Fork Or.. Seaterd
Ml W. Lake Mary Rl.. U . Mary

INVESTOR'S SFECIALI
Duple a. 2 bdrm w/cenlral
H'A. and I bdrm . fenced
UJO/mo income UI.HO'I
3 STORV W/INOROUNO FOOL
4 bdrm . 3 bath, family room,
country kllchan. sern porch,
k covered patio Over &gt; 000 sg
II Sailer motivated . lee.eoo

D isposal
Pool

Q e ije v a Q a r d e q s

■IB 1/1WITH WOOO FLOORS
Includes l/i garage apt Fplc .
tread lot Super investment
properly Now .
. SM.I00
C t t l ANYTIME

1 , 2 , ft 3 B E D R O O M S

MO.

OH FIVE ACRES
Wall kept 3/1W mobile heme
near Oslaan. Craallva owner
llnonclnp............ Just S4S.SOO
SANFOAO/LK. MARY 1/1
Spacious. Family rm., w/fpk
N ow p l u m b i n g , lonco.
Sprinkler sys. wall
ITS.too

3 3 0 -5 2 0 4

3/1. Wall kept home. AC.
Larga corner toll *44.OM
■ssrlsssl arka...........121X43

Sanford/lake M a r y area.

IN D C U B N TF U L D IL TO N A
Spill 1/2. Super floor plon.
Family rm., lance Near I 4 A
all schools.................. ISf.fOO.

B li

B R IEN M K M IT

VUt Kst a n d stN

C ountry S ty le L iv in g !

.

A LL A R IA S - Leaking far yaw
dream heme? Call a pro-

** * I BUY HOUSES

F R IS T IRE OFFICES • 2M H
4JM SR n. Same furnished. 3
bHcksHCHy Halt
Call BMSM. tea* mattagp

n o te

Come H om e T o

H I

If.
1

aw nw w n

w

Auto, air.

cruise. MHI ONLY

SSM BM M M FCM TM HrC

siss.fl ear msnm (4
D tBTSWAFR)

111— AppMancM

an
w rn f • nrss
bad wim haadbard. matching

ICWBil
CNBVY MOSTTE CARLO - WS.

chasf, Srassar. camfartar.
ruffle and pMHwdwma twa
__________ BF4B S__________
PCHAIR. Living ream type.
P C O F F I I T A B L I , inlaid

-9 * 9 ™ .
.asrsand
•acurlty. M W. ISM. Rate
M - F , » A - m...........

MOP) I E NORM •M

P T T F R W R I T B RR. C p n tTTn

M M X M fB____________
114—V

. t

i bam.

a t t r a c t iv e

M X * t
«3V4i
ma. ttt A last rtgulrad na

FLUE
OWNER FIN A N C IN D •
Ftnacrast. in . IlylnR dbdnp.
family rm.. sacurHy
Hncad yard. . .SM.1M
ST. JOINTS AMD LH
•SacratoloHI 4/1. IMS *r It.,
custom bum. sry.sM
A LTA M 0 B T8 SFDNSDS • V I
maMar-misur

SAVE SMI NEW HW HOMES!
WHY FAY R E TA IL ! MXte

O nlu^,
153— A c r e a g e Lots/Salt
A TT RACT I VE HEW HOMES
Vie Ideal lor single temily
home City water *10 000
Slenttrem Really IT) 14)4

shait. M l 220 42U
a COLOB TV . It " . EscalNnt
c a n d H H n .S M M »H M
LARRY'S M ART. I l l SenNrd
Ava. New/Used turn, k appl.
BNy/SaB/TTada.-------- B M 1 B .
P l i X Y ROY ROCKER RE
C L IM 8 - Tan. nka candUknl

mg. slaraal Only IISF.IE par
msnRil (42 manrns • t*.y%
APR)
Used Cars, l t » I1M
m r . A rare
si.ssBCaH42paau
Law aa s in dswnl Law*par
slaaaaaaaMS-M*

A • 2 fl.
2BM4W2EH2B
T W I N EI SB W A T B R R E D .
anly4monmooldl|7S3H4iS4

\U

1

•COM FUTBN
Ta n a ta n u
hand held wim m kra prlnHr
and carry Ing caao. SIM ar bast
j jj S i S s llS iS J L w * _
,

U a a .la g .IH H .sk
bla ckl A u t a m a l lc . A / c !
slsrsa, pawar steering Only
R N S mIHsI Only S IN D par
manM (41 manWw m n . t %
A P R ).............. CaR M r. Payne

117— S f o r H u g 0 b b 4 b

K, Hlta.ak

A a o v i SROUNO FOOL—
Die T warn around . TX a '
Deck. Pump. Illlar A aceateries. You disassemble.
0 BOY'S BIRB. 3
excellent cand. SM 222-S421
altar 4 FM._________________
HARO TIM E m NH b tens? For
small Ha I will sail your
weapon w/ln M days ar Ha
and gun returned I deal
buyers tram all ewer US.
CaR F ERA 402-12*44*4
&gt;* oe.
Magnum. Inlarchangaabla
chskst. used ence. s i t s .

in

Offkt »uppte»

P F L O F F V DISK 0 R I V I
atlgnmsnl sal up Includst in
structlana. di skafret. A prole

191— BtflMHiil
M atfiais
A L L ST EEL RUILOINBS el
dealer Invoke. 3.SSS H W.000
sqfr Ceil 4*7 -m *3S) cailacl

193— Lawn 4 Oanten
PFRBB MULCH, you haul
____________ 22I I S 2S____________
TRO Y BU ILT R O TO T ILLE R
Horse Flow Included Good
condition. S400 323 S IP

195— AAachihBry/Tools
FORK LIFT. U N LB. Needs
work M akt oiler n ) N t l
^ a fr a n jljm o ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

199— Fd9» 4 SofflitB
CAPTAIN COOT Ike MACAW. 4
yrs old Tolks a loll Blue A
gold) Plus baaulllul decorator
cage t &gt;000 33S-2S II ar 323-77SS
otktor EoQby________________
EXP
DOO T R A I N I N O .
Behavior speclalltl
Prlvato A group classes
Call The Kannal
n m *S
O F R I I TO GOOD NOM E.
V a r y a lla c llo n a la b la c k
tomato cal. approa 5 months
old ....................
Ml ST4S
N E E D IN P O la r M e a lb ly
Newsletter! Paw PrlatNoses
____________ 340 HT*____________
a l/ l SIAMESE. II you ptoasal
Kittens. Adorable little Orton
•alt 1 mala. 3 tomato U each
to LOVINO HOME ONLY I U
buytalotol love I
m -U S 4

loo— Rtglsfortd Pots
OROOMINO AT ITS FINEST
over 2) yrs protesnonal amp
Val recommended NS 14/4

201— Horsts
e eH A Y FOR S A L I I e e U l l
bale. S2S rail. FENCS bide A
Bepaw I m T ill evrt

213- Auctions
I SSI TOYOTA Tercel, bright
green, auto Ire n s . runs wall
S * O O f r r f r ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ )4MM

217— Garaga Salts
NSW THRIFT S T O B II Frank
A Lorl’sl 1IM S French Ava
^ a m e llM a ^ to ^ E v a rja a a l^ ^ ^

219— Wanttd to Buy
SU Aluminum Cent. Newspaper
Nan Farraus M etals......... Class
KOKOMO...................... 323 11*0
SOLO SMALL UCLT BOAT
Under 140 II II Itoats. I will
bur ill Flea ta rin g
13) ISIS

222— Musical
Mtrchandisa
P IA N O TUNINO. at tow a t
132 Mt Lie M yrs arp Re
pairteatra Charlie 111 See*

VALIEN CS Auto. A/C, AM /FM storsa.
FS. F t . Only S1SE.4B par
month. (24 manthe • iBf%
A PR )............ ..CaR M r. Fsyna
C ia rH n UiadCars. m m 2
a PUBLIC A U TO AUCTIO N a
E V E N T TUBS. A F N L liM F M
DAYTON A A U TO A D CTM N
Mary, f t , I
Y R t t U 9 9RYRPM TI
tacapl laa. lap. Ittto. ak
tW T CH EV Y CELEBRI TY •

Aula. A/C. AM/PM stereo,
lilt, cruise. PS. PR Only
1140.3* par month I (2* months
0 1*.*% APR).CaR Mr. Myna
CaarHsy Used Cara, 2SS-H23
T M ( Iff FAY1KRTS
NOM ONEY OOWN
aacapl lax. lap. Illto, ale
1*17 C H I V Y C A P N I C E
CLASSIC - Auto. A/C. stereo
Only SI4S.fr par month I
(40monthsp If f% APR)
CaR Mr. Payno.
CaarSasy Used Cars. 22S-II22
IMS C H I V Y Impale, needs
Irans.. *300 or bast oiler. Body
neat ton! Runs I....... T343SS3
IH I PONO LTD. Power Steer
Ing. Air Conditioning, naw
pain! S3J00OBQ .......222 *344
IfSS L I N C O L N T ownc ar .
Signature Sartos. 47.0*0 Orlg
ml . leather Inter w/ phone.
Many ailrasl ST.JOS 3)1 IWf
SI NISSAN Wagon, auto. AC.
naw liras, bat A brakes.
Great cond. ISIOM 3314474
D RENAULT L I Car Sunrool
Runs good, given TLCI STSO.
3 » 1440alter 4PM__________
S3 MERCURY CAPRI R L S
speed. 10 w/ SI.0M ml. AC.

233— Auto Parts
/ AccBLSortes
O F OU R T I R E S , blackwall
I to 13 Good condition i l l
__________ 233 W10__________
0 LUCCA0 1 RACN. from II
Toyolg Corolla 37" X 42"
135 00............... ........ 2301010
MAJESTIC IM wall bridgoabto
amp Perfect condition Bast
Otter Alter 4PM. 31) S30S
B TOYOTA toll front door wim
^ lM M d o r b N le lle r )ill| ^

235- Trucks /
Uusbs / Vans
5RR^9f ^ ttu^Rf CO
IM S J E E P C N E R O K I I
LAREDO
4 door. 4 wheel
drlvo. lull power. A/C. 7.000
miles Dark bluet Priced to
sell . _________Call 322 4382
S3 NISSAN pick up truck, needs
work Make oiler » ) M t l

237— Tractors and
______Traitort
IN FORD TRACTOR wilhbuth
hog mower Runs eaceltonl
n.joo
m 347s

238— VthiclRL
W intxt
AA AUTO SALVAGE
Ol OeBar,
WE WEIOH AND PAVI
Too SI lor |unh.
Cart A Trucks
Call!
241— R t c r t a t i o n a l
V th ic te s / C a m p a r i
AVAILABLE SELF STORAOEI
Outside storage lor RV'sl
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NEW SPAPER

EN

G iardiasis In humans may
cause diarrhea, flatulence, ab- N
domlnal cramps, nausea and &amp;
weight loss: symptoms are often
minimal or absent In mlM Infcc- i t
ttons.
G iardiasis Is diagnosed b y * *
s t o o l a n a l y s i s . P l a g y l 34
(m etronldaxole) is the usual M
treatment.
■
Giardia parasites are not found
In fish or ahellfbh because the
m ic ro o rg an ism s require a
warm-blooded host. They are ■
killed by heating, cooking or
processing. Therefore, the usual
|
method o f transmission Is by
drinking untreated fresh water.
"
Giardiasis exists worldwide. In
this country, beavers are a major
1
source of the Infection, hence the
|
sobriquet ‘’beaver fever" for the
disease. Domestic pets can also
contract the lijietion.
Pet owners In urban/suburban
■
communities should clean up
g
their animals' excrement. This Is &gt;
more a matter of etiquette and
I
consideration than o f public
_
health. W ild animals constitute a
*
more serious threat to drinking
■
water. In fact. In m y rural 9
community, use of the reservoir H
has been discontinued because !..
g iard ia (from beavers) were P
found In the water and could not L
be eradicated by chlorination.
I

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By Phillip AMar
Every Mothers' Day weekend,
the Cavendish invitational Pairs
Championship takes place in
New York, with the proceeds
g o i n g to c h a ri l y — a bo u t
$ 12,000 this year.
The 1091 victors were Anders
Wlrgren and Johan Bennet of
Sweden. This Is the third time In
four years that the winners have
come from foreign soil. In third
place with 12 boards remaining,
they had an enormous final
session (aided by plus 2300 on
one deal) to leapfrog Into the
winner's circle.
Winning a star-studded event
like this demands sound play
and a little luck. On today's
hand, which was played during
the last stanza, the luck came
when North did too much bid­
ding. and the skill came when
Bennet assessed the defense
accurately.
N orth and South were

YOUR BIRTHDAY
July 10.1B9I

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IF YOU HAVE
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/EXPECTATIONS,
YOU W ill BE SORELY
* DISAPPOINTED.

i

i

In cr e a se d e arnings are a
strong probability for you In the
year ahead. This could be due to
the fact you may have two
Incomes Instead of your custom­
ary one.
CANCSR (June 21-July 22)
You may not have as much
direct control over situations as
you'd like today. However, if you
coordinate your efforts harmoni­
ously with others, benefits are
likely. Cancer, treat yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for Cancer's
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead by mailing $1.25
p l us a lon g, self-addressed,
stam ped envelope to AstroGraph. c/o this newspaper. P.O.
B o x 914 28. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Con­
sideration and charm are two
tools you can use very effectively
today. For best results, put
yourself In the other guy's shoes
and treat him as you'd like to be
treated.
VIKGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) An

r~

N o rth 's w i i h « s r t s p o ttin g a n d

two-diamond rcbld (though with
such a limited hand, surely a
two-spade raise is better than
tw o d ia m o n d s ). A f t e r that.
South's preference to two hearts
Indicated three-card support.
(With four. South would have
raised Immediately.) T w o hearts
would have escaped undoubled,
but then North overbid badly,
continuing w ith two spades.
South, expecting a much better
hand, aggressively bid game.
Knowing his partner had a
singleton heart Bennet (West)
doubled. He led the heart ace
and gave his partner a heart ruff.
W lrgren cashed the club ace.
and W est still hod three trump
tricks to come. The penalty was
500. a good plus score on the
way to the title.

Idea that y o u h a v e been
expressing has won you the
respect of your contemporaries,
This might not be apparent to
you today, but It will become
evident a little later.
I f t B ft (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
are still in a favorable trend
where the fulfillment of hopes
and expectations are concerned,
Be optimistic and positive, then
expect good things to happen.
tCOMPfO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
there is som ething you can
presently do where your career
u concerned tint will give you
an advantage, by all means, do it
now. T h is is the time for action!
BAOITTARIUB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Y ou could be a bit luckier
today in negotiating deals than
you m ay be tomorrow. Try to
keep the pressure on until every‘ hjng »s signed, sealed and
,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
10) Be careful today that you
don't Jump to erroneous conelusions before weighing all the
evidence — especially If you are
working with another In advancing a mutual Interest.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

DSL

Someone who finds you rather
attractive has been wondering
how you feel In return. In fact.
you may have an opportunity to
express your feelings today,
PMCEB (Feb. 20-March 20) It
looks like you may finally be
able to get something you've
been wanting for your home. It
may not be brand new. nevertheless it will be in mint condi*
lion.
ABIE* (March 21-Aprll 10) If
you intend to mix business and
pleasure today, try to do so In
the morning rather than in the
afternoon. Your most pleasant
developments are slated to occur
early in the day.
TAUBU1 (April 20-May 20)
associate, whose motives are
8|ncerCt might offer you a small
consideration today for no app a r e n | reason. Don't be reluctant
to accept; there won’t be strings
altachcd
*
'
GEMINI (M ay 21-June 20)
You may be the recipient of
some pleasant tidings early In
the day. it should put you In a
good frame of mind to deal with
whatever comes up later.

by Lsonsrd Starr
Aw* &gt;0U

VU.ONS ARE COMPLETELY DEVOID
OF EVtfflONS. ONLY ONCE EVERY
7 YEARS ^ ENTER INTO A W lD ,
PASSIONATE MATINS FRENZY...

*

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LETS MAKE
IT DEFINITE

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bidding system, which means
that they bid a four-card suit
before • lon ger suit. Hence

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August

4,

SUNDAY

1991

75 C ents

N E W S DI GEST

Drug treatment center brings community together

pgvr.i*:

Ntxt stop, Lafsystts, Ind.
CARROLLTON. Texas The Seminole Colt
All-Star* earned a berth In the Colt World Series
by beating Baytown. Texas. 9-2 Friday night.

Haven for animals
Lisa Tanner has raised hundreds of babies;
wildlife babies. Now she’s opened a sanctuary
for abused, abandoned or orphaned birds and
•mall exotic animals.

Imago of slain girl eovtvsd
CHULA VISTA. Calif. - A blank billboard that
drew thousands of viewers who believed It
showed the ghostly Image of a slain 9-year-old
girl now bears a photograph of the child.
After consulting with Laura Arroyo's family.
Martin Outdoor Advertising, which owns the
billboard, covered it with a photograph of the
femory —
ny-talled girl and the words: "In Met
ura Arroyo.’
The billboard also asks that anyone with
Information about her murder call the Chula
Vista Police Department.
"T h e mutual feeling among all parties w as
that the special message In Laura's memory
would be a proper conclusion to the ongoing
h e n o m e n o n ." said Frank Sanches, th e
lUboard com pany’s general manager.
Laura was abducted from her home In June.
About 16 hours later her beaten body was found
at a nearby Industrial park. Her killer remains at
large.
Thousands lined up by the billboard over the
past three weeks, saying they could see a murky
image resembling the girt every day Just after
dusk.

C

S

fn9»

Wamlnsl

KNOXVILLE. Tenn. - dak Ridge National
Laboratory officials have Issued a warning that
tiny radioactive frogs are on the loose.
The fugitive amphibians are brownish-green.
IV* to 2 Inches long with skinny legs and
apparently healthy — except that they can set
ofT a Geiger counter with radiation levels w ell
above normal.
The radioactive leopard frogs are safe unless
eaten, but they aren't exactly appetising.
And. said Frank Komegay. the lab’s environ­
mental coordinator, the frogs "aren’t particular­
ly cute, so I don't think anyone Is going to take
Ihem home as pets.”
Workers at the Department of Energy In­
stallation about 35 miles west of Knoxville
reported radioactive tires on their cars and
trucks, apparently from running over the
creatures.
"T h a t 's how we first discovered th e m "
outside the pond. Kom egay said.
He estimated about 100 of the frogs have been
caught and tested In the past month.

Deli installs toils! In front window
COLLINSVILLE. 111. — Owners of a delicates­
sen were ordered to Install a second bathroom to
comply with health codes. So they Installed one
— In their front window.
Ed and Sandy Dawdy. owners of the C om er
Dell, said they put a portable toilet In the
window o f their downtown business to make a
point.
"T h is porta-potty makes about as much sense
sitting In this window as having two restrooms
In a dell that seats 18 people." reads the sign
next to the portable toilet, which Is not equipped
for service.
The city has been trying to get the Dawdys to
bring their business into compliance with state
health codes.

SANFORD - Vowing to take the Midway
community back from the drug dealers, Eddie
Martin announced the opening of the new
Thcraputic Community Enrichment Program
(TCEP) at 2300 Randall St. In Sanford, on
Saturday morning.
’
With the assistance of County Commissioner
Jennifer Kelley and Larry Vlaser, executive
director for TCEP programs at the Grove, the
pink and silver ribbons tied across the threshold
of the building were snipped to announce the
beginning of the community’s drug fighting
partnership with the Grove.
TCEP. a branch of the Grove Counseling
Center of Central Florida, la located In a house In
the midst of a neighborhood tarnished by the
reputation of drug deals and substance abuse.
"This Is your program." Martin, who will direct
the Midway program as well as a similar program
In East Altamonte Springs, said. "The success of
what we are doing here depends on the families
and the community.”
The center includes four beds for In-patient
treatment and five other rooms for community
□ Baa O reve, P ig s SA

County Commissioner Jennifer Kelly cuts the
ribbon on the new Grove Concellng Center-run
community drug treetment center In Midway, with

She snips, he snaps
Barbers clip sign ordinance
LAKE MARY - The traditional
red and white barber poles have
existed for centuries, all over the
world. Yet. until recently, they
a violation o f the sign code In
Mary.
One man's persistent efforts have
changed Lake Mary's original algn
ord in a n ce. P h otograph er D ave
Cordek started his drive to change It
during a city commission meeting
In April.
Cordek shares a phone and has a
photo shop as part o f a dual
business called Snip &amp; Snap. 113
W. Crystal Lake Drive In Lake Mary
The other occupant Is Millie Murray,
.who has Millie's Barber Shop. She
snips, he snaps.
In an address to the commission­
ers on April 18. Cordek not only
gave his opinion on why the city's
ordinance should not Include barber
poles, he presented each Commis­
sioner with an extensive report on
the history of barber poles around
the world, taken from the March
1989 edition o f "A n tiqu es and
Collecting" magazine.
He explained that originally the
poles were red. white and blue, to
symbolize patriotism. Now. almost
all of the poles are Just red and
white. Years ago. when barbers also
handled some medical needs o f the
citizens, the red and white colors
represented the bandages with
which the barber wrapped their
□ B st B arber. Fags 8A

at

at

Millie Murray, left, portraying an old time barber who also did bloodletting,
and Dave Cordek, a professional photographer, operate a shop called "Snip
and Snap" in Lake Mary. Cordek recently saved Murray's barber pole.

HwdSWwts &gt;r Ur, Ba n *

Muridl Sdaton hat Montazuma Hotal up for tala

Partly
Cloudy

F o r m o ro w e a th e r, so d N « s M

□

Oh, well, readers,
nobody is perfect

.• * T «
.1 -1 1

Partly cloudy w ith
th u n d e rs to rm s
likely. High near 90.
Wind south 10-15
mph. Rain chance 40
percent.

We've been able to do thia
tas got
more flexible with us." said Dfck
Hofmann, director of community
relatione for the school district.
In an effort to decentralise the
Department
Education and
give districts more freedom, the
state has allowed districts to
determine the structure
the
achool year as long as students
attend classes a mtnlnmum
900 hours during the course of
the academic year.
According to Hofmann. Semi­
nole County students will meet
that requirement with no pro­
blems.
With the new freedoms ac­
corded the school district, there
i a certain level of account­
ability.
fe have to make cure that
•*V&amp;
the students are learning what
the state mandates,’’ Supt. Bob
Hughes said recently o f the
accountability program. "They
have given us the freedom to
give them results.’’
The reduction In class hours Is
not designed to save the district

at

~

Decreased chance of rain

aymean
SANFORD - Students In Sem­
inole County wlU get out of
c la w s an hour earlier every
Wednesday during the 1901-92
school year to allow teachers and
administrators the opprtunity to
work on school Improvement

Herald Staff Writer

______________

Deer A bby...............TB
Deaths.....................fA
Editorial................... 4A
Education.................. 4 S
Florida.................... SA

School’s out
earlier on
Wednesday
Herald Staff Writer

By M M PFBIFAUF

From wiro reports

—

the assistance ot Johneli Jackson. Larry Vleser
and program director Eddie Martin. Cltizena vow
to take Midway beck from drug dealers.

Hotel holds 4 decades
of memories for owner
By LACYDOtftlM
Herald People Editor
SANFORD - At 40. Muriel
Seaton packed her bags and left
Milwaukee with her husband.
Jimmy, to move to a town In
Florida she had never visited to

run a, hotel she had purchased
but had never seen. It was 1950.
Seaton. In her early HOs. is
moving once again. Jimmy ts
dead and their home, the Mon­
tezuma Hotel in Sanford. Is fur
sale.
□ See Hotel. Page 5A

Tills Is the 40th urtlclc w e've done
for you "old” and “ you n g" timers
abut some of Sanford's history and
Its folks. And would you believe
w e've made a mistake or two.
maybe more. Today, let's make
some correetlons.
For example, it was not Lucille
Boyce, former Eastsldc primary
schoolteacher, who later opened,
owned and operated the well-known
eatery. Mrs. Appleby's Restaurant.
In the old Valdez Hotel building.
Mrs. Appleby, we’re told, was origi­
nally Lucille Proctor.
In our piece about Jcno Paulucct.
we referred to his Chinese lood firm
us "Chun King." It should have
been "Chun King.” By the way. we
got a super note of thanks from
Jcno as well as another copy of his
book — "How It Was 'to Make A
Hundred Million D ollars In A
Hurry." If you've never read Jcno's
hook you've missed a treat. We're
sure the local library has tt.
Recently we referred to a black
druggist who once w orked for
Eckrrds and later Winn-Dixie. We
said hts name was Stapleton. We're
(old now his name was "Stapler.”
W e've also been told bis lather also

was a pharmacist and operated
Evcrly's drugstore for many years
In the 300 block of Sanford Avenue.
Then there was our Item about
the late L.E. Tew Jr., we mentioned
a couple of Sundays ago. We were
correct about Ills having a brother.
James, und an older sister. Thelma.
But we overlooked that L.E. hud a
younger sister. Mary Helen. She ts a
retired schoolteacher living In North
Carolina.
We've been told the Charles F.
Marshall family lived on West Sixth
Street near the old G ram m ar
School. That's true. Hut they also
lived In the 1100 block of Laurel
Avenue at one time. We called the
M a rsh a ll's d a u g h ter. D o ro th y
See Stcnstrom. Page 5 A

�2A - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Sunday, August 4, 1991

N E W S FR O M T H E R E G IO N A N D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

FLO R ID A
B R IEFS

Budget woes hit cities, counties

Teen sentenced to take victim ’s place

Budget woes have trickled down from the
federal and state levels to cities and counties
across Florida — raising the likelihood of
salary freezes, layoffs and service reduc­
tions.
Many local officials writing budgets for the
fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 are considering
such cuts to avoid red Ink.
Some arc contemplating tax and fee
Increases while others arc bowing to a
growing anti-tax sentiment among voters.
"W e read their lips," said Escambia
C ou n ty C om m ission Chairman David
Pavlock In Pensacola, borrowing a phrase
from President Bush.
The national recession has reduced the
flow of money Into city and county coffers
and Increased demands for some services.

PENSACOLA — A Iccn-agcr sentenced tci 12 years In prison
lot the gang-rrlatpcl slaying o f another teen, who had been a
youth-league football coach, w ill take his victim’s place by
working with children.
Circuit Judge Nancy Gilliam ordered prison term and
l.OOO-hour community serv ic e sentence Thursday for
Christopher Harold Alexander. 19. of Pensacola.
He was convicted o f second-degree murder In June for
gunning down 18-year-old Gabriel Mahoney, also o f Pensacola,
at a Thanksgiving Day party last Nov. 22 In the Industrial
suburb of Cantonment.
"Y ou will take Gabe M ahoney’s place." Gilliam told
Alexander as she added the community service requirement to
his prison term. She also ordered him to pay his victim’s
medical and funeral expenses.
Sentencing guidelines called for 12 to 17 years In prison.
Gilliam said she opted for the low’ end o f the range because of
Alexander’s youth and his lack o f a prior criminal record.

Lowery to hear allegations off brutality

TAMPA — A Tampa woman
says she was among hundreds
whose nude photos were passed
around at a party by a former
Eckerd E xpress Photo store
employee.
Wendy Elllngson. 26, said she
destroyed prints and negatives
o f three nude photographs taken
by a boyfriend and thought she
had seen the last of them.
But Elllngson said they sur­
faced again In October 1990. two
years later, when her boyfriend
went to a purty thrown by an
Eckerd Express Photo employee.

MIAMI — Uncertainty about the dependability of breath
analysis machines Is not a reason to throw out thousands of
test results, a panel of Dade traffic Judges decided.
For the first time In Florida, the Judges said the standards
Issue will be decided on a case-by-casc basis at trial. Judges In
four other Florida counties had thrown out thousands of DUI
cases, ruling (he state's Breathalyzer test standards failed lo
uniformly and effectively measure the accuracy of each
machine.
More than 4.000 Dade DUI prosecutions were affected by
Thursday's ruling.
Earlier this year, some public defenders and defense lawyers
discovered attacking Breathalyzer machines, which test a
person’s blood-alcohol level, was a way to derail DUI
prosecutions.

The employee passed around
an album showing hundreds of
nude women, and among the
photos o f naked women on
secluded beaches and lovers In
bubble baths were the pictures
o f Elllngson, she said.
Elllngson filed a civil suit last
week in Hillsborough County
Circuit Court alleging that three
fo r m e r e m p lo y e e s o f Jack
Eckerd Corp. made copies of her
photographs and showed them
at p a rtie s . She asked un­
determined damages exceeding
$10,000.

Sugar producer welcomes investigation
CLEWISTON — The president o f the country’ s oldest sugar
producer said he welcomes a federal Investigation into his
company’r ticatmcnt of foreign sugarcane cutters.
"U.S. Sugar Is proud of Its relationship with our workers and
we have made every effort lo ensure we are complying with all
labor laws." said J. Nelson Fairbanks, president of U.S. Sugar
Corp.
Fairbanks' statement Friday was the company's first formal
response to a House committee rejHirl on allegations of unfair
pay procedures for foreign workers In South Florida.
The House Committee on Education and Labor wants ail
investigation into $11 million in wage deductions taken each
year from the 10.000 sugar cane workers brought to-the United
Stales from Jamaica ami other Caribbean Islands.
In the report released last Monday, the House committee said
the Labor Department bad fatted lo net on a Ilegal ions that
foreign cutlers are being exploited In South Florida.

"M y client has never been so
embarrassed and humiliated In
her life.” Ellingson's attorney.
Matthew Powell, said Friday.
“ There Is no way of knowing
how many times these things
made the rounds at countless

Associated Press
T A L L A H A S S E E - Th ree
teachers who said the stale hurt
their reputations by listing them
on a child-abuse registry have
won an $85,000 settlement from
the Department of Health and
Rehabilitative Services.

PANAMA CITY — The mysterious death of a nurse after she
attended a patient In a hyperbaric chamber has puzzled
medical experts in the held.
A medical examiner has preliminarily attributed the July 22
death o f Joyce Vausc. 52. to the bends, or decompression
sickness, an Illness suffered b y divers who come to the surface
too fast.
Hyperbaric chambers are used to treat the bends, In wltiylt
inert gases bubble out of the victim 's blood and tissues because
ot the sudden drop in atmospheric pressure.

The department didn’t admit
any wrongdoing In listing the
teachers' names, but agreed to
purge any reference to them as
suspected or confirmed child
abusers.
One. Hernando County school­
teacher Marvin Murphy, said he
was pleased with the outcome.

From Associated Press reports

Pla y 4
4 100

Here are the winning numbers
selecled Friday In the Florida
Lottery
Cash 3
537

Pla y 4
Fantaay 5
20 35 14 26 08
6764

Sanford Herald
(U S P S M l 2401

Sunday. August 4, 1991

Vol 83. No 295
Published Daily and Sunday, aicapl
Saturday by Tha Sanlord Htrald.
Inc 100 N Fianth Aye . Sanlord.
Fla 12771
Second Claaa Poslije Paid al Sanlord.
Florida and additional mailing
ollicat
PO STM ASTER Sand address changes
to THE SANFORD HERALD. P 0
Bo i 1667, Sanlord. F I 32772 1667
Subscription Ra:aa
(Daily 4 Sur.day)
Homa Dalnary A Mall
] M o n th *

l i i ' .

6 Month*
t Yaar.

619 00
(74 00

Florida Rasidanla must pay 6*. sa as
la i In addition lo ralaa abo.*
Phona (407} 122 2611

Elllngson is the only plaintiff.
Bill Powell said he’s obtained
two albums containing photos of
about 295 other women taken
between 1987 and 1989. and
may reflle the case as a classaction suit If other women come
forward.
Distributing the photos would
Involve criminal charges only If
the photos them selves were
proven obscene, said a pro­
secutor. Assistant State Attorney
Hank Lavandcra.
Simply a photo o f a woman's
nude body probably wouldn't be.
Lavandcra said. "T h e crux o f It
Is that It's a civil matter.”
Eckerd public affairs director
G en e O rm o n d d e c lin e d to
com ment except to say the
corporation was conducting Its
own Investigation Into allega­
tions that em ployees copied
photos sent to them for pro­
cessing.
Elllngson said she didn't know
uhcad of time that her boyfriend,
whom she didn't identify, was
takin g th e p ictu res, which
showed her taking off her shirt,
lying naked on her stomach
reading a book, and bathing.
"I heard the click and looked
up a.id then I knew." she said.’
Siic said she agreed to have the
film developed, but when the
pictures came back, she de­
stroyed them.

Km M Ftieta toyT&lt;

Up and away
Passengers aboard the Grand Romance In Sanlord Friday watch
the shuttle launch from Monroe Harbor Marina al 11:05 a.m.

Teachers on abuse list win settlement

Nurse’s death puzzles medical experts

Cash 3
0-18

parties. It’s simply Inestimable."
Powell said.

A «M «la «M i F r t u

Standards issue decided case-by-case

MIAMI
More are the winning
numbers selected Saturday in the
Florida Lottery:

Ktordan said federal support also has been
cut over a period of years for affordable
housing, social services and cultural pro­
jects.
In Florida, state law requires local gov­
ernments to share in growth management
and criminal Justice expenses.
Police, prisons, courts and other criminal
Justice expenses will make up 40 percent of
Dade County's budget, up from 38 percent
this year, said Assistant Budget Director
Steve Spratt.
T o help make up the difference, cuts arc
expected In other services Including lowincome housing, health care, mass transit,
beach maintenance, the Metrozoo and
cultural programs.
Cities and counties last year won some
respite from what had been a growing list of
m a n d a t o r y s p e n d in g o r d e r e d by
Tallahassee.

W oman: Eckerd employee
displayed her nude photos

FORT WALTON BEACH — Southern Christian Leadership
Council President Joseph Low ery is scheduled today to visit
this Florida Panhandle city to hear allegations about police
brutality.
Black residents of Sylvania Heights, a community near Fort
Walton Beach, contend Okaloosa County sheriffs deputies
have burst Into their homes on unfounded drug searches and
beat them on the streets without cause.
"Florida Is the flfth-hlghcst slate in crime and for the
criminal Justice system being biased." said the Rev, R.N.
Gooden o f Tallahassee, president o f the SCLC’s Florida
chapter. “ Dr. Lowery certainly wouldn't be coming In If the
evidence was not there to support the fact that the number of
brutality cases Is high In Fort Walton Beach and Okaloosa
County."
Three Sylvania Heights men In June filed a $58 million
lawsuit against Okaloosa Sheriff Larry Gilbert and several
deputies alleging three Instances of brutality dating back to
1976.
Gilbert conlcnds those alleging police brutality arc drug
dealers who are trying to get authorities olT their backs.

LO TTE R Y

officials say. Also, cash-strapped federal and
s t a t e g o v e r n m e n ts arc p a s s in g r e ­
sponsibilities — but not the bucks to pay for
them — to the cities and counties.
"W h at’s basically happening from our
perspective Is a trickle-down cITcct." said
Toni Rfordan. a spokeswoman for (he city of
Tallahassee.
"T h e cities and counties arc being forced
to spend money to correct those problems
that used to be handled at the federal level."
said Ken Small, research director for the
Florida League o f Cities.
Meanwhile, federal and state revenue
sharing have shrunk. Small (minted out that
at one lime the federal government paid 75
percent of the cost of building sewage
treatment plants. That program no longer
exists, but communities still must meet
strict federal and state environm ental
standards.

ly llU R A C IM
Associated Press Writer

but it d id n ’ t w ipe out the
damage done when lie was died
by HRS In an "Indicated" abuse
complaint later determined to be
unfounded.
"T h e damage Is already done.
And you can’ t gel that back.”
Murphy said
He was suspended from his Job
pending an HRS Investigation,
and later allowed to return lo the
classroom.
The agreement settled an April
1990 lawsuit the teachers filed
in U .S . D is t r ic t C o u rt in
Tallahassee, ehallenging the
way HRS processed abuse com­
plaints and compiled the regis­
try.

The Legislatu re has since
made changes lo remedy pro­
blems raised In I lie suit , said
Tallahassee attorney Ron Meyer,
who represented the teachers.
The registry. In a 60-fool long,
$7 million computer, receives
information on every child-abuse
complaint called Into the state’s
toll-free abuse line or reported to
district HRS offices.
C om plaints form erly were
categorized us "c o n firm e d ."
"Indicated." or "unfounded."
and didn't have n&gt; warrant
criminal charges to be recorded.
"T h e Legislature In 1991 elim­
inated the oilending category of
'Indicated.* And In 1990 there

was legislation which required
prior due process" for people
cited In abuse complaints, Meyer
said.
"W c believe the objective of
removing the unconstitutional
portion of the statute has been
achieved." he said.
The Health and Rehabilitative
Services agency didn’ t acknowl­
edge In the agreement with the
teachers that the system hud
been unconstitutional.
But HRS spokeswoman Lynda
Russell said the agency negoti­
ated the settlement based on the
changes In the abuse registry
law.

TH E W EA TH ER
Today: Partly cloudy with a
b ailee o f mainly afternoon
liuiulcrstnrms. High In the low
:■ mid 90s. Wind south 10 mph.
'ham e of rain 40 percent.
Tonight: A slight chance o f
v e ilin g thunderstorms then
mstly clear. Low In the mid
Os. W ind light southwest,
'bailee of rain 20 percent.
Monday: Partly cloudy with a
b ailee o f mainly afternoon
liuiulerstornis. High In the low
» mid 90s. CltaiUT of rain 40
crccnt.
E xten d ed forecast: P artly
loudy wilh a chance of afterihiu and early evening tliuncrstorins each day._________

FLORIDA TEMFS
C it y
A p »it,*c'h ko«A
D .t y t o o .i B e .left
F » L r t u d B e re ft
F o rt M y «r %
G4 ir* e% vU t#

to
94

n
H

to
92

1b

to

n

9S

n

J . h k v tm viH *
key A e \ »
l.ifc4s««n&lt;1
M ia m i
f 'e n v i i o l . i
b .U rl\ O f.l

92

IS

9]

u
73
79
74

T4&gt;lt|ft*IYW*
T a m p .i
V e r o Be,$cft
W P a l m B ea ch

91
91
91

71

92

lb

9S

92

91

y

------- *

SATURDAY
P t ly c ld y 03-73

---------- SUNDAY
P tly c ld y 93-73

MOON FHAtES
NEW
Aug. lO

C

F IR S T

FULL
Aug. 25

A u « ' 17 W

y v j'- v
M ONDAY
P t ly c ld y 03-73

y
TUE8DAY
P tly c ld y 93-73

19

IS
n

OS
00
oo
07
OA
32
03
Ot
II
00
00
04
Oi
39
00
00

BEACH CONDITIONS
D aytona Beach: Waves art 1
tool and semi choppy. Current is
lo the n orth with a water
temperature nl 7ti degrees New
S m yrna Beach: Waves Hat and
glassy. Current Is lo the north,
with a water temperature ol 7t&gt;
degrees.

W ED N ESD AY
P t ly cldy 03-73

TIDES

STATISTICS

SUND AY:
SO LU N A R T A B L E : Min. 12:25
a.m.. 12:45 pan.; Maj. 6:35 a.m..
7:00 p.m . T ID E S : D ayton a
Beach: highs. 1:13 a.m.. 2:12
[Mil.: lows. 7:35 a.m.. 8 42 p.m.:
Cew S m y rn a Beach: highs.
1:18 a.m.. 2:17 p.m.; lows. 7:40
a.tn.. H:47 p.m.: Cocoa Beach:
highs, 1:33 a.m.. 2.32 p.m.:
lows. 7:55 a.m .,9 02 p.m.

The temperature at 5 p.m.
Saturday was 91 degrees and
Saturday's overnight low was
75. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
S atu rd ay’ s h igh .............. 93
Barom etric p ressu re.30.06
R e la tiv e H u m idity....56 pet
W in d s...... Southeast 8 mph
R a in fa ll......................... 0 In.
T o d a y 's su n set.... 8 :1 4 p.m.
T om orrow 's su n rise....6:49

Pet

Lo

Hi

NATIONAL T IM M

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

LOCAL FOM CABT

BOATING
St. A u gu atin e to J u p iter In let
Today: Wind south to south­
west 10 knots. Seas 2 feet. Hay
and inland waters a light chop.
Scattered afternoon showers and
thunderstorms.
Tonight: Wind southwest 10
knots. Seas 2 feet Hay ami
inland w aters a light chop
Widely scattered evening show­
ers and thunderstorms

high and overnlghl low to 6* m E D T
Ctly
HI La Prc
Anchor «g*
60 41 14
Asheville
(7 66 67
Atlanta
90 73
Atlantic City
93 73
Baltimore
97 71
Billings
76 50
Birmingham
93 72
Bismarck
&lt;0 59
Bono
92 63
Boston
91 71
Burling ton.VI
14 57
Charleston.S C
M 77
Charleston W Va
96 66
Charlotte N C
13 72 63
Cheyenne
74 57 06
Chicago
101 69 03
Cleveland
93 74
Columbia,S C
12 74 16
Concord.N H
99 57
Dallas Ft Worth
97 75
Denver
92 61 so
Des Mornes
93 70 01
Detroit
93 69 11
Honolulu
19 76
Houston
9S 74
Indianapolis
96 72
Jackson Miss
99 71
Kansas City
103 74
Las Vegas
94 74
Little Rock
94 71
Los Angeles
7t 62
Louisville
99 75
Memphis
96 76
Milwaukee
93 61 09
Mpls St Paul
73 62 25
Nashville
96 70
New Orleans
94 74
New York City
93 74
Oklahoma City
99 70
Omaha
97 69 01
Philadelphia
9S 74
Phoeniv
109 97
Pittsburgh
95 64
Portland Marne
99 60
Portland. Ore
94 59

Ollk
cdy
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
rn
rn
cdy
rn
cdy
cdy
dr
cdy
cdy
rn
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
dr
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
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Cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
dr
dr
Cdy
Cdy
cdy
rn
Cdy
rn
dr
cdy
rn
dr

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday. August 4, 1991 - 1 4

Com m unity center to open soon
T h rtt arr#st#d for prowling
Anthony Rcgade Neal, 18. o f 2311 Dolar Way.In Sanford, was
arrested on Thursday along with Floyd Alkens. 19. of 219
French Ave.. and Irvin Torrence. 18. o f 2511 Crawford, both In
Sanford.
The trio was charged with loitering and prowling and
resisting arrest without violence.
Sanford Police report that they responded to a call at Auto
Glass store at 17-92 and French Avenue.
The police reported that the three were removing tires from a
Pontiac that was parked In the lot there. When police arrived,
they said, the three ran from the scene but were apprehended a
short distance later.
They were transported to the John E. Polk Correctional
facility where they were held on 9500 bond each.

DUI a rm t
Robert William Roland. 53. of 1576 Cameron Ave.. In
Sanford, was arrested on Thursday.
He was charged with driving under the Influence of alcohol.
He was driving erratically on Slate Hoad 46 near Beardall
when he was stopped, police said.
He was transported to the John E. Polk Correctional facility
where he was held In lieu o f 9500 bond.

Woman arraatad for abuaing spoilt#
Nancy Del Shanley. 32. o f 718 W. First Street. In Sanford,
was arrested on Thursday. She was charged with spouse
abuse.
She followed her husband down First Street and began
pushing and kicking him. the police report said. She followed
him down the street and continued to hit him and threaten to
kill him him. police said.
She was transported to the John E. Polk Correctional facility
where she was held wothout bond.

Coupla arrested on warrants
Walter Hendrix III and Laura Ann Hendrix o f 147 S.
Lakevlew Drive. In Longwood. were urrested on Thursday.
They were charged on outstanding warrants from Cayahoga
County. Ohio. The warrants accused the couple of rape.
They were transported to the John E. Po.k Correctional
facility where they were held without bond.

Put O u r List
O n Your List

Insurance donation makes safe
haven a reality in M idway
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — With the help of
the Grove Counseling Center the
Midway Community Center will
finally be able to offer a safe
haven and recreational activities
for the young people of Midway.
The opening of the center has
been delayed for several months
because the Midway Citizens
A g a in st Drugs (MCAD). the
community group which leases
the building from the county
and has renovated It. did not
have the financial resources to
pay for liability Insurance on the
center.

"T h e y need to get that center
ble for
‘
available
the community
with recreation and athletic ac­
tivities." he noted.
Vlsser said that the Grove had
planned to sublet the building
from MCAD so that they could
pay the Insurance, but found the
legal requirements to be too
complicated.
Instead they paid the bill for
the Insurance as a donation to
MCAD.
"T h is Is fantastic." Jackson
said, kissing the binder.
He said that the center will
open very soon now that the
Insurance policy Is paid.

"W e wanted to be able to help
them get the center open." said
Larry Vlaaer. executive director
of the Grove Counseling Center's
T h e r a p u t lc C o m m u n ity
Enrichm ent Programs, after

nffm nw# #y vku i ... ... ..
Johnell Jackson, president of the Midway Community Against Drugs
organization, accepts the Insurance policy for the Midway
Community Center from Larry Vlsser, executive director for the
TCEP programs of the Grove Councellng Center on Saturday.

agreed to pay for the construc­
According to Vlsser. the Semi­ tion o f a basketball court at the
nole County Sheriffs Office has Community Center.

"W e will work closely with
MCAD on this center." Vlsser
said.

Grants to help shore cleanup programs
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — A new state
waterway cleanup program may
help local non-profit groups and
government agencies to host
"Adopt a Shore" programs.
Grants up to 925.000 will be
a w a r d e d b y K eep F lo r id a
Beautiful Inc. to non profit cor­
porations or agencies Interested
In starting up regular river, lake
or ocean-front shorelines. Grant
recipients must agree to stage at
least three cleanups per year for
two years.
Keep Florida Beautiful was
created through the 1988 Solid
Waste Act as a non-profit orga­
nization dedicated to community
volunteer efforts to Improving
the state's environment. The
organization was awarded a
9300.000 grant by the state
Clean Florida Commission to
administer the program.
K e e p F lo r id a B e a u t ifu l

Our Hat can hatp you do tha ottwr things you
have on your list. 8uch as buy a
car.. .sstimata social security.. .start tha
(Hat. .. chack out Investments. ..
Our list Is the Contumar Information
Catalog. It's frst and lists more than 200
free and low-cost government booklets on
employment, health, safety, nutrition,
housing, Federal benefits, and lots of ways
you can save money.
tamammm M enaM tesi Cento* Bapm

p res e n tin g Johnell Jackson,
president o f the group, with a
one-year insurance binder on the
facility.

ly V t e iU M O M

spokesm an Scott McPherson cleanup said such undertakings
said each grant can be used to can be massive cfTorts.
pay for the expenses of staging
"W e found It Is Just too big a
waterfront cleanups. Including Job to do once a year." said Hans
the salary o f a coordinator. K a l r l c s , d e v e l o p m e n t
McPherson said each grant must c o o rd in a to r for the Florida
be matched by the same amount Audubon Society.
In money or services. Organiza­
tions Interested In beginning
The society staged a Weklva
Adopt a Shore applying must
River cleanu p in 1989 that
Under the programs, groups attracted hundreds o f volunteers
can select sections o f waterfronts and was sponsored by dozens of
for the periodic cleanup cam­ businesses.
paigns. McPherson said signs
will be creeled where environ­
m e n t a lly fe a s ib le such as
entrances to parks. Keep Florida
Beautiful will offer guidance for
In setting up programs and
preservation of vegetation and
wildlife during the cleanups.
McPherson said the program is
p a t t e r n e d a fte r “ A d o p t a
H ighw ay" programs where local
groups select roadways for litter
pickups.

Kalrlcs said Audubon hus no
plans to stage another Weklva
c le a n u p . S in c e th e 1 9 8 9
cleanup, the Wcklwu Springs
Slate Park has allowed several
groups to continue litter pickups
of different sections o f the river.

BANKRUPTCY "N

HARVEY

M ORSE
• INVESTIGATIONS •

An organizer of a Weklva River

"T o do It the way we did It
takes a m assive am ount o f
lime." Kalrlcs said. " I f dcflnltlcly
makes better since to do It more
often.”

-13 IT FOR YOU?
FEDERAL LAW MAY HELP •
•WIPE OUT DEBTS •KEEP YOUR PROPERTY
•CONSOL DATE B U S
•STOP COLLECTION THREATS
•STOP FORECLOSURE ANO LAW SUITS

FREELECTURES•NOON, 9ATUR0AVS

M M J M U TC H I A.
ATTORNEY A T LAW

M lM - t n iM M A N .

628

1500

339-2022

AAMKIRN SprtRf |1M Ml* South at SR «3t)
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tha EuWceione ana n p a w a at try (tha)

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the kitchen.

cun be Hue.

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make it the best

vvumi peach.
And the

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extenorl

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Definitely lYtirl

idea! It'll
gray with while
lighten up the
shutters. It'll hiik
entire hallway.
ureal insule and
I h*e the shape.
out Nirwhowtki
And it 'll be easy
input in.
The only real
tjuestion is, htrsv

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ih&gt;I pay for it I

Hardwud fh*&gt;rs
kecessed lighting
Misbe even a stone
fireplace! It 'll be a
great room. Now
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lt\ amazing
how hist they've

ust Ask

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tune to add
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Now how do I

Ask The Loan Source.'" Its the source that can answer your questions about almost any tyi)e of home improvement T L p T
Q m l t Y 'P ”
loan. The source that can offer competitive rates, flexible terms, even preappn &gt;val. The source for loans is NCNB I he L l K ^ L A / n l l ' ^ U U I v C *
Loan Source. Stop by our nearest office during business hours or just call 1-8(X)-ASK-NCNB, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 10 pm.. Saturday N a m to 5 pm.
V M l S ^ t a l l U . r a U U U t * p t lt l

C IM M M U

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No t M, tantofd, Florida - lundoy, August 4, IN I

Nature, nurture and kids’ behavior
you and I do something to precipitate
ilo p m e n ta l
nurture conthe advent^ o f

»

are known world-wide for their
generosity. However, charity begins at home.
Now lo the hour for Americano to address the
within our own borders. How can we

Deramor m more a vuncuon ov

Seattle I
The central Issue is how nature and nurture

am.
Poychotaftot Msalrrw conceptualised a hierarchy of human needs. He postulated that the need
^ food^m d^sh^^^w ere

we ifaore the children in our mJdst? Our
include ao a number one
the needs o f all of our young
care. food, shelter, and a jafc
environment. To ignore the plight of these
to to Jeopardise the
he future of an
concerning daily occurrences in the fores o f
We cannot afford for our greatest
American children are: 27 (He from the effects o f
_______ . our children, to become twelve
poverty: 100.000 are homeless: 2,000 ,00 0 are left nKUVBI
unsupervtoed, 2,909 parents divorce. 1J49 are
***?
^
*
abused
or irogrcvnu
Deflected w
and
three
o f iin
them
dte:
PW»
« ■a
system
are-----more prone to be destructive
niAi
^ ri_ ut
w
um
w
u
i
u
x
i
*—
a
a-------_____*a
. .
.
.
. T7
tdilHrn i f i m n ♦KmmIhrmm jrhn
ft
135.000 bring guns to school and three of them
the system then those t
die: 2.475 trrrmg rrs drop out cf school and 34
H to tho height of foOy to think that we can ever
mfflton^families wtth chfidron have one adult contain^ all antl-soclsl^ peo|&gt;jc. It therefore

baaicneedshadtobefriifUlcdbeforeapm onw ao
free to grow and develop Into a healthy
personality.
Accepting that, there to some validity to the
* by povchotogtots and anlag socteunnftuences upon
it. Shames' pictorial review
should be analysed in tills context.
statistics Shames presented
Some o f

*Todtoy. 12.000.00fTchUdren have been plum- confronting us r f o t f o ^ the needs of poor
meted into the abyss of poverty through no foult chfidw n. A ctvtttsatioa to evaluated In accordance
of their own. They are innocent o f any crime, wtth the care afforded Its most vulnerable
’’Today It la not law but economics that members. W e should ask ourselves do we have
m ndrm ns the children o f the Door to the the rtahLhOmineafthe accident of one's birth, to
Implacable inheritance of a diminished destiny." deny them the promise of thia bountiful land? No
The children cannot extricate themselves without American child should bear the physical, soda),
help from their follow Americans. Twelve mflMon and psychological Indignity o f being poor without
our help.
children1
i will remain outside the American

the c
chief determinant.
or the other being tho
recognise that the
m w h t e h o c h U d lives significantly

'

EDITORIALS

Marshlands
The chief o f the Environm ental Protection
Agency, WflMam Reilly, has begun to beat a
tactical retreat to the ongoing controversy
over wetlands preservation. He announced
t’a dein ltlon o f wetlands In a w ay
remove n m w * *
acres *
a t statutory protections. It’s a
current
t, and — If that’s what RetOy’s at
meats wtO do — It won’t coene a moment too

at

;

Although earlier generations o f Americana
vfofkcd litfd to drain their ho^i ond iw u n p t
as fast a s they could, modem environmental
managers have learned a lot about the vital
role that these natural and som etim es
transitory bodies o f water play In supporting
wildlife. filtering water supplies and regulat­
in g flow s Into groundwater and surface

LUALENE

cultural dlfam ong people have suggested that
y an Individual's growth and developby the society into which be "to

JACK ANDERSON

Nordic nations lend
a hand to Baltics

Protecting'
&gt;

TALLINN. Estonia - W hen mice roar. It
helps to hove some bigger, stronger friends to

« - -»*---

DMCUVC Of

l

________ Bush ran far office in IS M pledging
that there would be no net loss o f wetlands
during his administration. •
All of this w as relatively unco
until the EPA In 1980 pubttahed
that sought lo describe with
CMBUY
Just w h at w etlan d s are
w h at the
government had to do to protect them. Only
after the manual cam e out did the ad­
ministration discover to Its horror that these
new rules had been ao broadly draw n that
they could have the effect critics charged, c f
banning any new construction in threefourthsof Alaska, h alf o f Vermont, 40 percen
o f M aryland's
shore and nearly all o
suburban Houston
That In turn set o ff such a protest in
that the Clean W ater Act itself,
lai u
up
renewal
p far renew
al this year, may
m ay be in
Jeopardy. Num erous b ills that w ould ban
w etianda protections altogether o r severely
cripple their enforcem ent have been m oving
ahead rapidly In both houses with bipartisan

Some environmentalists blame zealots in
th d r ow n ranks and In the U.S. Pish and
WUdUfe Service for this snafu. Others in­
evitably will attack Reilly and Bush for
bow ing to the dem ands o f developers. But the
original definitions, while perhaps scientif­
ically valid, went for beyond any protections
_
___ In m ind in 1962. Taking a
that Congress
had
few steps backward at this point is movement
In the right direction because a little
discretion now m ay prevent something for

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters to the editor ore welcome. All letters must
be signed. Include the Address o f the writer and a
daytime telephone number. Letters should be on s
single subject and be as brief as possible., Letters
ate subject to editing.
*

ELLEN GOODMAN

Private choices, public money
BOSTON - When you make a living telling
people what you think, you expect that people
will write to tell you what they think of what
you think. It's a fair enough exchange except
that you’re often outnumbered. Writer. 1:
Readers. 101. that sort o f thing.
So It happened with a recent column In
which 1 dissented from Judge Jackson Kiser’s
opinion upholding the all-male Virginia Mili­
the state-supported
tary Institute. He
school could legally ban women from Its
hallowed, stonewall Jackson-haunted grounds.
The Judge considered VMI. home of the
brave, true and the rat line, an endangered
species worth saving from the egalitarian
hordes. He said the school marched to the beat
o f a different drummer. I said the drummer
was playing a tune as out-of-sync wtth the law
os Jim Crow.
In any case. If the VMI alumni office want to
check on the whereabouts o f its alumni. I can
be o f great service. The rat line breeds loyalty,
although not always legibility.
My favorite note came on the back o f a
fund-raising letter to s Brother Rat from the
class o f 1946. “ Euphoria Is still high down
here ss the news has finality sunk In that w e
have Indeed defeated the latest Incursion of the
forces o f evil from up north." He went on to
defend VM I. saying “ L o ck "a tc p W arin g
Blender society Is fine for Americans but we In
Virginia are used to something better."
There was Indeed a good deal o f what I
would call Southern chauvinism tn m y
mailbag. Some o f It was rather basic as In the
note from Atlanta. “ I read the attached In the
Atlanta Consitution...and promptly threw up.’ *

41
1.

But others, like the Virginian from L yn ­
chburg. were more understanding. First he
attacked me for helping to “ produce bloated
egos and unisex feminists who attempt io
subvert tile wisdom of our forebears and
mutate a genetic code and disposition...."
Then he held out an olive branch. “ Possibly
your attitude to explained by your perspective.
You are not a Virginian or a Southern­
er....Intellectually not being a Virginian or
Southerner can be stultifying."

Some talked about the girl who sued to be a
Boy Scout. Others talked about M ills College
and Chatham College, which have both opted
to remain single-sex and female.
A s a correspondent from Delhi. N.Y.. wrote.
“ My question Is simple: Why must every
option be open to everyone? W e live In a
country full o f opportunlty...Rathcr than
creating a new option for women...the Institu­
tion of coeducation at VMI would. In (act.
destroy an option for young men.
T h i s Is new
argument that turns
the old argument on
Ita head. It la now
often said that a push
fo r o n e k in d o f
diversity — the In­
clusion o f women,
minorities — Is actu­
ally a push against
a n o t h e r k in d o f
d i v e r s i t y — th e
all-mole school, club,
M t
etc.
I th in k th ere Is
room, or rooms, for
f Tho drummer
separate experiences.
was playing a
T h e girl w ho was
tuna as
bored w ould have
out-of-aync
b e e n b e t t e r o ff
with tho law
livening up the Girl
as Jim Crow. |
Scouts than suing
the Boy Scouts. I'd
rather sec separate
but equally funded college sports than one
"co-ed" team that Included an occasional
extraordinary female and left the other women
on the bench.
But in fact we have a kind of compromise
built Into our system. If Mills and Welkak
Wellesley
and Chatham C olleges want to remain
single-sex. It's their own business. Not because
they are women’s colleges, but because they
are private.
So too for VMI. This Institute gets some 58
million a year — roughly one third o f its budget
— from the great state o f Virginia. (Puleese — 1
love the South.) Despite Judge Kiser's tortured
reasoning, the law reflects our social decision
that our sons and daughters of all races and
religions should have an equal opportunity to
at tend .any school supported by the taxpayers.
W e’ shouldn't have to pay for a school that
categorically bans our daughters.

But not all chauvinism was Southern. A
Pittsburgh man expressed a not-entirelyunique opinion: "Y ou and your feminist
cohorts arc a menace to our society and arc a
very bad Influence on the American public as
well aa our young women.” Nor is .that
sentiment all-male. A woman from Rochester.
N.Y.. wanted to know “ ...Just when women w ill
stop their eternal whining and self-pity.”

“ What's wrong with being different?" asks u
VMI grad, class of '88. from Rome. N. Y.

Among the letters were, as always, a number
o f writers asking serious and subtle questions.
They asked, for example, whether there Isn't
any room for separate In the pursuit of equal.

Dear Grad. If you Want VMI to stay all-male,
then it should go private. Drop a note to the
Commander. I'll even donate my used-stamp
collection.

And that Is what Nordic countries have
become to the three sm all Baltic republics
trying to break sway from the Soviet Union.
Finland has stretched hands across the water
to Eatonto. Sweden has paired off with Latvia.
And Dfcnmark has adopted Lithuania. Iceland
and Norway are also doing their port.
Latvian Vice Presi­
dent D ainls Ivans
u s e d a c a t -a n d mouse analogy when
we met him on our
recent trip through
the Baltics: “In one
room, a cat and a
m ouse have been
locked up together.
A n d . If n o b o d y
and helps to
unlock the door. It Is
h o p e l e s s , f o r the
mouse to try to get
ou t." Ivans says he
d o e s n 't lik e c o m ­
pie Of tho
paring the Baltics to
lie Ilka to
B altic*
o mouse, unless It la
think they
th e m o u se th a t
havo M oscow
roared. The people of
trem bling, j
the Baltics like to
t h in k t h e y h a v e
Moscow trembling,
and they may be right.
The Baltics are able to roar because five
Nordic countries have been buttressing their
Iceland all but established diplomatic
relations with the Baltics In February with a
p a rlia m e n ta ry r e s o lu t io n c o n fir m in g
Iceland's 1922 recognition o f the Baltics aa
Independent nations.
Denmark has signed protocols o f coopera­
tion and promised to recognise the Baltics
a move that brought an official protest frorr
the Soviet Union. D uring a cloaed-dooi
acaston o f the Conference an Security one
Cooperation In Europe In J u n},e . Danish
______
Foreign Minister UfTe Ellemann-Jenacn re
buked the 8ovleta because the Baltics had no
yet received “ the freedom and Independence
which thdr populations have ao d early sale
they desire and which they ao dearly have &lt;
right to." He appealed to Moscow to renounce
violence against the Baltics.
For the past two years, the Nordic Council
an Interparliamentary body for Nordic coop
eration. has Invited Baltic representatives tc
sit aa guests during their annual meetings.
Denmark has opened a “ Baltic Bureau.''
almost an embassy — tn Copenhagen. Am
the Danes have oald particular
___ attention ti
Lithuania, taking It under thdr wlng. Th
Danish government has been funding prt
Jccts In agriculture, education and cnvlror
mental protection In Lithuania, and has bee:
passing along some political advice. On
source told us that Danish military ad vie
was pivotal In the formation o f the smaJ
Lithuanian military and police services las
year.
Sweden surprised Its Nordic neighbors lai
year with Us virtual abandonment o f neutral:
ty on the issue o f the Baltics by advocatln
independence. Since February. Sweden ha
con tribu ted a p rin tin g press fo r pre
Independence newspapers in Latvia and ha
conducted conferences In Latvia headed b
Swedish experts In agriculture, education
and ecology. Swedish businesses are si art In
up Joint ventures with Latvians. Last Apri!
Swedish adoption officials announced plan
to open an office in Latvia to arrange fo
Swedes to adopt nearly 900 Latvian orphans.
Estonia has long been considered the mos
Western o f aU Soviet republics because o f It
ties to Finland. Estonians, even befor
glasnost. watched Finnish television. ha&lt;
ferry service to Helsinki and established ope:
and clandestine contacts wtth Finnish ol
(ldals.
Finnish leaders don't want to open!;
challenge Mikhail Gorbachev on Baltic iri
dependence, but business between Finlam
and Estonia is booming. And Finland ha
lifted Ita rigid immigration policies to allot
for an Influx of Ingrians. Estonians who are c
Finnish origin.

�Sanford Htrtkf. Sanford. Florida - Sunday, August 4, 1801 - M

Ja il nurse resigns over a
relationship w ith Inmate

Wtwrvaml?
in® w on KJvmrvying in f

Mary CMy HaH Mao ba«

nmtifam H
14
pf

H®T®POUBn ffn iir

mat tha building la ________
100 CHy of Laka Mary. (Tha
oonta City Had on tha sign art
oaarad by sfmior
Tha sign,
n, araotad by tha
r, la at tha anti
to tha City Halt parking lot, on
Country Chib Hoad. Tha actual
addtass of tha City Hall

*

“‘la-too *

SANFORD - Erin Gay Mellon
reaigned her poet aa a nurse at
the John E. Folk Correctional
FariMty on Friday after an In­
ternal Investigation showed that
aha was hairing a relationship

W v '/ ft im .

o f murdering hto

1

City

to buy crack

of tha arroc, and «ra hava
to hava tha sign ehangat__
lu t u p o n L a k a M a ry

The km atigrtlon did not de­
termine whether the relationship
had b een n sexual one. aa
prisoner Joey Otoon stated or
atmg ly ^an^ emotional one as

fo^aaal^MM&gt;as6 - -"-11■*—■— *— —- m

I ■ ■a i —
DOUPfiVU WKNHHfKI pCOMCt
19
fta aftsAii i
covnpifivQ in in iv i

ib h a

Stanstrom
1A
C o u rier,
grandm other o f th e present
French Open tennis champion,
Jim Courier. She confirm ed that
the family at one tim e resided on
Laurel and later on W est Sixth.
Relative to our article about
the Incredible comparisons o f
the deaths o f Abraham Lincoln
and John Kennedy. There were
no corrections called to our
attention. However. If there are
any m ore A m erica n H istory
teacher* w h o want copies simply
let us know. W e'll be happy to
provide them.
This la not exactly a correction
but back In May we did an
article about the Vickery family
and especially Lourtne Messen­
ger, one o f the Vickery daugh­
te rs . W e m e n t i o n e d th a t
Lourine’a son, W alter Beal, re­
sided in Odesaa. Texas. W e
didn't report it at the time but
Walter had been stricken with
cancer and was not doing too
well. Perhaps you read In The
Herald several days ago Walter
died. He w s 64. Our sympathies
are w ith Lourtne, a retired

Hotel1A
S e a to n , n ow fr a il and
w h e e lc h a lr-b o u n d . la b u sy
packing u p four decades o f
memories from the 54 rooms she
rented over the years.
" I didn't e ver find
didn't like about m y
was a very, very
flestoareminisced.

anything I
life here. It
nice life."
. .. i.. .....

Bulk In 1883. the Montezuma
‘Is stiB-resplendent with Victori­
an architectural touches: wall
sconces to light the hlgh-cdlinga
in massive rooms and hardwood
doors. A fireplace in the front
parlor to head-high. It has been
rumored that beneath the dining
room floor, one of the first Indoor
swlmming pools Installed in a
hotel In Florida. Ues hidden.

long-time em p loyeee o f T h e
MemJtf and one-time supervisor
o f voter registration.
Not long ago w e w rote that the
Young b roth ers o w n e d and
operated Seminole T V at 3600
South Sanford A venu e for 30
years. Tw o corrections: Semi­
nole TV was owned b y Russell
Young and Don Reagan, but it
raa form
only 29 years and nine
months. We Uke to be accurate.
We got Don Reagan confused
with old rtend Don Young who
for many y e a n was an electri­
cian associated w ith the Sanford
Electric Company, owned by the
E.C. Harpers.
This la not a correction either
but someone sent us a photo­
copy o f a portion o f page one of
The Herald dated Saturday. May
31. 1937. Celery crop statistics
for 1926 were presented. Over
4,000 acres were farmed. 4.632
cars of celery were shipped, each
car carried 336 crates of celery,
freight to New York w as 96 cents
a crate, the cost per acre to grow,
process and ship w as t S 13.
The average price received per
crate was 92.25. T otal receipts
for the season was 95.5 million.

Total costa were 92.86 mlltton. Historical Society — Bonner
leaving a net o f 92.43 million.
Carter. From time to Ume he
On that particular Saturday, If made Information available to ua
you had.tust unfolded your copy
o f The Herald we doubt I f you for us .o wrtteabout In addition
would read the celery statistics to history he loved to dlacuss
first. The banner headline would politics. In a way tt to a shame he
have Immediately caught your did not became, for example, a
attention. It read. "LINDBERGH county commissioner. You may
ARRIVES IN PARIS."
not hare always agreed with
W e'll never forget that day. Bonner hut when he took a
Dad brought home the fam ily's stand he waa always ready to
first radio. If m y memory serves back It up with what he believed
m e righ t th a t e v e n in g w e waa right. We offer our con­
gathered around the act and dolences to hto wife. Ruth, and
listened to Lowell Thomas and other members o f hto family.
the news about Lindbergh over
It wasn't too long ago that
W LW . Cincinnati.
Carter called us to say that he
And U wasn't very long after and a couple other members o f
that we Joined most Americans the Society had located the
e v e r y e v e n in g lis te n in g to remains o f Central Florida's first
another episode o f "A m o s ‘n dairy, founded and operated by
A n d y , " s ta r r in g F r e e m a n our grandfather. Nets Jullua
Qosden and Charles Correll.
Stenstrom. He also located a
As you have guessed, we're . Fred Jones who came to Sanford
through wlih corrections — at at age six when hto mother took
leaat for the present time. So. a Job at Stenstrom'a Dairy. That
permit us a personal word before waa In 1900. Carter aald the
we close out this article.
Society wanted to erect a marker
Week before last we lost a man and wanted ua to provide the
In our community who had a wording. W e'll do It. but It will
great deal to do with the opera­ be too tote for our friend, Bonner
tion o f the Seminole County Carter.

"W ell, It was already covered
over when we bought the place,
but I heard It's there." she said.
Sanford boasted three hotels
before the birth o f the Interstate
motel. There were no Holiday
Inns or Marriott* when Seaton
began dispensing brass room
keys from an ornate wooden
box. In Sanford, traveler* stayed
At the Valdez, which has since
been tom down, tin Floe ids
Hotel, still In existence, and the
Montezulna.
"Oh. we had such Interesting
visitors year after year. One
man. a chemist, used to buy
special c h e m ic a ls In South
America. He alw ays said he
could make 100 aspirin for a
penny.” Seaton remembered.
She to especially fond o f re­
miniscing about the heydey o f

baseball.
"T h e McGraws who owned the
Giants visited here. Mrs. MeGrew shopped In the gift shoo
here. And we had the cardinals
Farm Team. I met a lot o f
blgshol baseball guys," Seaton
aald. "One o f our regular guests
even attended the Nuremburg
Trials.”
Over the yesr*. burst plumb­
ing. violent storms and Seaton's
fallin g health after J im m y 's
death have taken a toll on the
historic old hotel. It to on the
market for 9175,000, with an
estim ated total o f 9500.000
needed to bring the building
back to Its Victorian splendor.

School
1A
money, though it will not cost
money either.
"It's Just an effort to work on
school im provem ent." Hofmann
explained.
The early dismissal will begin
the Drat week o f school, which
returns to session on Aug. 26.
Because they begin classes at
8:10 a.m. Instead o f 8:40 a.m..
students at Heathrow Elementa­
ry S c h o o l, 5 7 1 5 M arkh am
W oods R d . In L a k e M ary:
Idyllwllde Elementary School.
430 Vllhcn Rd. In Sanford; Pine
Crest Elementary School. 405
W. 27th St. in Sanford and
W eklva E le m e n ta ry Sch ool.

Alyce Jean Chapman. 56, 138
W. York Court, Longwood, died
Thursday at her residence. Bom
November 26. 1934 In Alluwe,
Okia., she moved to Longwood
from Columbus. Ohio. In 1980.
She was a real estate broker. She
attended Weklva Presbyterian
Church and was a member of
Memorial M ethodist Church,
Chelsea, Okla.
Survivors Include husband.
R on a ld ; s o n s . R o n a ld J r ..
A lbuquerque. N.M.. D w ight.
Columbus; daughters. Renee
Henson. C olu m bu s. Deanna
Pennington. Sundown. Texas;
b ro th e r, N o rm a n S h aw .
Palmdale. Calif; sisters. Joyce
Dunaee. Clayton. Idaho. Joanne
Townsend. Kansas City. Mo..
Bonnie Llndgren. .College Sta­
tion. Texas; mother. Mabel EUto,
Sun City. Calif.; eight grand­
children.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home. Forest City. In charge of
arrangements.
B U S S E L L A. 'R U S T Y '
McA l l i s t e r
Russell A. ‘Rusty* McAllister.
45, W anrn. Ohio, died Thursday
at Allegheny General Hospital.
Pittsburgh. Bom February 13.
1946 In Warren, he grew up In
Sanford, m oving back to Warren
In 1968. He was a Warren City
Police Officer for 22 years. He

1450 E. Weklva Tr. In Longwood. will be released from
classes at 1:30 p .m . each
Wednesday, while the other el­
ementary schools in the district
will be released at 2 p.m.
All middle school students will
attend classes from 9:20 a.m. to
2:35 p.m. on Wednesdays and
high school students will be In
class from 7:10 a.m. until 1:10
p.m.
Students at the Crooms School
of Choice. 2200 W. 13th St. in
Sanford, will be In class from 7
a.m. until 12:25 p.m.
"W e hope this will give the
schools time to make more
improvements." Hofmann said.

was a U.b. Atr Force veteran,
serving In Vietnam. He was a
member o f FOP Lodge *34.
S u r v iv o r s I n c lu d e w if e ,
Carolyn A.. Warren: son. Mark
A. Warren: sister, Melissa C.
Fryer. Sanford: brother Samuel
D.. Youngstown. Ohio. Sister
Jesse Frances preceded him In
death.
Rob't H. Roberts Memorial
Home. Inc.. Warren. Ohio, In
charge of arrangements.
mo
Katherine Brunner Rlmling.
81. 969 Orienta Avc.. Altamonte
Springs, died Thursday pt Flori­
da Hospital. Altamonte . prlngr.
Born O ctober 12. 1910. in
Russia, she moved to Altamonte
Springs from M ilw a u k ee In
1963. She was a homemaker.
She was a Protestant.
Survivors In clude brother.
David Brunner. Las Vegas. Ncv.;
sister. Clara Olsen. Las Vegas.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld Funeral
Home. Goldenrod. In charge of
arrangements.

Grove
C aw tla aa d frou iP ags 1A
out-patient services. Including
r e c r e a t io n a l t h e r a p y a n d
counseling.
While the center, In a house
le a s e d to the p ro g ra m by
Midway pioneer Ernest Blocker,
has been undergoing renova­
tions for several months. It will
be a Tew more weeks before all
the bureaucratic paperwork to In
order and the center can open
for business.
"W e have been working on
this center for a long tim e,"
noted Brenda Gllllam -Jones.
assistant executive director o f
the Grove. "Same of you have
seen us working here. This to the
tree. The Grove has borne Its
first fruit today.”
More than 60 percent o f the
staff at the new Midway center
lives Li the Midway community.
According to Vlsscr. It to a
unique situation to h ave a

realtor Barbara Machnlk said.
"B u t It's a very workable
situation. The goal to a bed and
breakfast and tt could be won­
derful." Machnlk said.
S ea to n may m o v e to
Wisconsin to be near her tost
livin g relative, a cousin. Like
Scarlett O'Hara's dilemna. leav­
ing Tara, Seaton aald she prefer*
to think about It another day.
•‘ ‘ W ell. I really don't know
what I'm going to do. But 1
would never come back. If I
leave. I'll settle In somewhere
else, and I couldn't come back.
She'll have 40 yean o f memo­
ries to sustain her.

treatment center In the commu­
nity where those who are being
treated live.
Vernon McQueen, recreational
therapist with the Midway pro­
gram. said that the idea o f the
progam to to Involve the whole
community In the healing pro"W e will work with all the
high risk people In this commu­
n ity," he said, "not Just those
who are chemically dependent"
Martin added that the com ­
munity has to be Involved In the
h ealin g process In order to
transform the neighborhood.
"W e have to all tell the drug
dealers to hit the road...you're
not welcome here any longer."
he aald.
With a pledge to empower the
community to do what they have
to do to help Midway develop a
healthier, drug-free en viron ­
ment. the center opened the
door to the TCEP centre

" T h e I n v e s t i g a t i o n la
flntohed,” arid George Proeschel.
public tniormauon on veer «or tnc
Seminole County sheriffs office.
"T h ey had an emotional rela­
tionship and we are not pursu­
ing it beyond that."
Otoon. 30. who pleaded guilty
last y e a r to tw o counts o f
first-degree murder, to scheduled
to be sentenced by Circuit Judge
Vernon M ite on Aug. 15.
A c c o r d in g to s h e riffs In ­
vestigators. he has recently
found religion and It waa that
conversion that led him to bring
the affair to light.
According to Proeschel, Mellon
has worked aa a medical nurse
at the prison on the midnight
shift since 19S9.
Proachel aald that he could
o n ly specu late on how the
allejpd sexual encounters may
have taken place.

Proeschel aald that Olson, who
waa shot by Altamonte Springs
Police at the time o f hto arrest,
may have either faked the need
for o r required real medical
attention. Mellon could have
then remove him from the genera! population and taken him to
either a medical Isolation cell or
to the medical office where they
could have had sex. Proeschel
According to Proeschel. Olson
told Investigators that he and
Mellon had nad aexual encoun­
ters more than 50 times In a
three month period.
Proeschel aald that Mellon was
often on duty stone at nlgKt so
an affkfr could have gone un­
detected.
He said that Mellon confirmed
to department investigators that
she had told Otoon that she loved
him. that she had visited him
while he spent time In a Volusia
County Jail and that she had
rented a post office box under an
assumed name so that he could
•end her letters without her
husband finding out.
She denied having a sexual
relationship with OlaQn.
Mellon to now separated from
her husband, a Casselberry
notice officer.
According to Proeschel, Mellon
was confronted with Olaon'a
allegations at about 3 a.m. on
Friday morning and resigned
two hours later.
According to Proeschel. there
will be no charges filed against
either party In this case as no
tows were violated.

Sanford Senior Center will
offer mature driving class
Bp
Harold Staff Writer
SANFORD - Another Ameri­
can Association o f Retired Per­
sons course for drivers has been
set for next week at the Sanford
Senior Center. It not only Im­
proves the driving o f older Amer­
icans. but helps them reduce the
coat o f Uietr auto Insurance.
Called "5 5 Allve/Mature Driv­
ing". the classroom course will
be offered Tuesday and Wednes­
day. August 6 and 7. from 12:30
until 4:30 p.m. It was specifical­
ly developed by AARP to help
older persons Improve their
driving skills.
Elizabeth Derr, manager at the
Senior Center, said. "There Is
actual proof that the number or
accidents caused by seniors who
have taken this class has de­
creased." She said that even
though m any senior drivers
believe they know the rules of
the road. "T h is class teaches
distance measuring, the distance
a car will travel at a given
speed." She added. "This gets
many people to really think, and
change their driving habits."

I &gt; I I M I It s s
( &gt;|h

Th e cost o f the 8-hour course
to 98 payable to A A R P on the
first day o f the class. No actual
vehicle driving to Involved. All
all classes are held In the center.
The money to used to pay for
classroom materials aa well as
other AA R P projects. The course
materials cover the effects of
aging and medications uu driv­
ing. basic driving rules, license
renewal, local traffic hazards,
ad ven e road conditions, energy
saving, and accident prevention
measures.
De r r e x p l a i n e d that
automobile insurance savings
could amount to as high os 10
percent for a 3 year period. In
households wh&lt;
peraoins over
55 have comp ed the course
and submitted their certificates
to their Insurance companies.
"Th at doesn't sound like much,
but w hen y o u 're on a low
Incom e." she said. "II could
mean a lot In saving money."
As the class will be limited to
no more than 25 persona. Derr
recommended that advance reg­
is tra tio n be m ade. Contact
Elizabeth Derr, at the Sanford
Senior Center. 330-5699.

e

I l|s|| | ,|||t t

II l IIH

|V

I I In

I

TONY RUS8I INSURANCE
3S7S S. Freach Ave., Hmmlmrd
x A u to -O w n e rs in s u ra n c e
I ifr. Htimr. t ur.

On* nasi*

tl all.

BarberC o atlaa ad fram Page 1A
patient
after blood letting. The bondages
would then be hung over a pole
outside the shop to dry.
One legend about the colors o f
the pole suggests the color blue
was eliminated because some
people, possibly back In the 13lh
or 14th centuries, believed it
stood for the only people In town
who could affoid to partake o f
such services, the"blucbloods."
The change in the sign ordi­
nance was approved by a unan­
imous vote on both the first and

second readings during the May
Lake Mary City Commission
meetings. The amendment that
protects Lake Mary’s present
and future historical barber
poles says, "Flashing signs:
Signs o f a flashing, animated or
r o t a t in g n a tu re , e x c e p t
tlm e/tem pcralure signs and
tr a d itio n a l n on -lllu m ln ated
barber poles not exceeding three
feet In length, nor eighteen
Inches In width, are prohibited If
visible from outside the build­
in g."

Giyielle's
ta lly Kitchen
PROUDLY PRESENTS
UVE0NKEY90AR0

Singing Your Favorttt Songs

"Craig Dierlam"

ROGER'S ROOFING
•Emtrgtncy LoakRtpalr
•Rt Roofs
•Rtplact Grtvol with
SingloPty
c

S IN G -A -L O N Q i TALENT N IG H T
O N TH UR S.

C O M P E T IT IV E PR ICES
F R E E ESTIM ATES

BUR 4 WINK

Labor guarantM d for 5 Year*
Stats Can iflad •Insurad

• North Carolina Cooking • Combrsad
• Fresh Vogotabtoa • Country Ham
• Catfish Filial on Friday Nlghta

DAYS INN at H &amp; SR 46, Sanford •322-4845

•CC042S64

323-6451

�O E - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Auguet 4, 1SS1

L o g o i N o tle o o
^ C w ^ . FtorNto CMh
■ M IN T S

CIRCUIT M E N D FOR
CASI NO.H-int-CAt4G
JOHN A. KEGEL.
W A L T S * W H S S L IR . JR ..
SHIRLSV S. W H I I L I R */h/a
S H IR L IV IL IZ A B IT H
■ A LD R B B . TH O M A I
B I L L IN O I and ANN
BILLINOlMswIto.
N O TK S R F ACTION
OP CONSTRUCTS IIS R V K S
If alive, and if aMiar araaaf
unknown
visa**. gn
all eWar claimant By. torauM.
w against W ALTS*
W H S S LIR . JR.. SHIR LIY I .
W H S S L IR a/k/a SHIR LIY
E L IZ A S !T M S A L D R II.
THOMAS BILLINGS
B lL L IN O l Ma wtto. ar iW ar af
navvis ar
riant, line
claiming *» Nave any right,
' llR

A P F U R T IN A N T
t h e r e t o IN ACCORDANCE
w m f A N O SUBJECT TO THE
W ^ N A N T t , CONDITIONS.
»«»t«»C T IO N E . IA S IM IN T S . T E R MS AN O O THER
PROVISIONS OP THR DEC
LAR A TIO N OP CONOOMINI
UM OP N O R TM kA K R
p

equipment therein contained
a/va 1337
Lyttwaad Avamw,
PierM a ,W II
tiled against yaw and
•wf'ww WW
and yew are ragulrad fa aarve a
copy si yeur written WlanaaL If
any. le It an ma Attemey far
Plaintiff I t ) : HOWARD A.
S P- m
E IO
E L . E SaQ
an
----«
w-U-»IR-I. f,SMS

fWOUlMMLNlNf rSTRWVyi sono
3ta. Maitland. Plarlds JT Jt
(40;ilTS-aa4l. an ar Refers
Augutt 33. M l. and hie ttw
original with the Clerk af IN*
Court either haters service an
Plaintiff** Attorney ar Immedtfafy thereafter; emarwtaaa
default will Ra entered against
you tar the relief demanded In
ttw Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and wal
of this Caurt an July 17, M l.
(SEAL)
CLERK OP THE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY Heather Brunner
Deputy Oerh
PuRHah: July ft, M A Auguet A
II. m i
d c h in

IN TNR CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I t«m JU O K IA L
CIRCUIT IN ANOPOR
SEMINOLECOUNTY,
P LOR IDA
c a s b m x tt-eeen-CAHR
JO E JACOBS ( « « ) and
AUDREY OOLONER (N%&gt;
DANIEL J . M&lt;DOWELL and
s t e l l a m . Mc Do w e l l , ms
wile. MARK PRINK. HEIOE
P R I N K . L A U R A P U O II.
A D V E N T IS T H E A L TH
S Y S T E M / S U N B E L T . INC.,
d/b/a P LOR IDA HOSPITAL,
a n d S T A C IR T H O M A S .
OAKLANO VILLAO f HOME­
OWNERS ASSOCIATION.
NOTICE OP ACTION
OP CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
It alive, and II either ar ail af
unhnewn speuM. hair*, devl****. grant***. credlNr* and
all other claimant* By, through,
under or egalm t DANIEL J.
M C D O W E L L and M A R K
PRINK, ar aiRwr af mam; and
all peril** having ar claiming te
have any right, title ar Interact
In the properly herein de­
ter Wed.
Residence* of all Mid Dotondentt unhnewn.
y o u A R I NOTlPlEOthafan
action to lorocioM a Mortgage
on ttw following proporty In
Semlnolo County, Ptorwa:
Lot 3f. LAKE H ARR IET
ESTATES, according lalh*plat
thereof ae recorded In Plat Reek
17. Paget IS end IS of the PuRttc
Records of Semlnolo County,
Florida; together with lh* Im­
provement* thereon and the
Nature* and equipment therein
contained and whkh proml***
a/k/a ITS Lake Harriot Drlvo.
Altamonte Spring*. Florid*.
37/14
ho* been tiled egeintt you ond
the above named Detendontv
and you ore required la wry* a
copy ot your written detente*. If
any. to It on the Attorney tor
P lo In lllK * ); HOWARD A.
S P E IO E L . ESQUIRE. 13M
Maitland Center Parkway, Sulla
314. Maitland. Florida 377SI
MODUS 0041, on or bolero
Augutt 33. m i, and file the
original with the Clerk of mi*
Court either bolero torvlce on
Plolntltr* Attorney or Im
meditely thereafter; ottwrwlM a
default will be entered again*!
you tor the relict dimandod In
the Complaint
WITNESS my hand and tael
ot mi* Court on July 17. Iff!.
(SEAL)
CLER KO FTH E
CIRCUIT COURT
RY Heather Brunner
Deputy Clerk
Publish: July 71. M A Augutt V
ii. m i
DEH 1*7____________________
IN T M I CIRCUIT COURT
O P TH E IIG N T IIN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OP FLORIDA.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
OENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO. II 1IICA14-K
U N IV E R S A L A M E R IC A N
MORTGAGE COMPANY.
PlalntlH.
v»
MARTHAB HOOCE.
Defendant*
NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
purtuant to a Final Judgment ot
Forectoture doted July 71. m i.
and entered in Co m No tl 713
CA 14 K. at the Circuit Court of
the E IG H T E E N T H Judicial
Circuit In and lor SEMINOLE
County. Florida whortln UNI
VERSAL AMERICAN MORT
CAGE COMPANY I* Plamtitt
and MARTHA ■ HOOCE ora
Defendant*. I will Mil to the
hlghetl and bett bidder tor cath
at the Watt Trent dear *1 ttw
SEMINOLE County Courthowie
In Sanford. Florida, at l l : N
o'clock A M an lh* 3rd day af
September. Iffl. the following
described property a* **t farm
in told Final Judgment, to wit:
UN IT 7SIII. IN gUILOINOIS.
NORTHLAKE VILLAGE CON
D O M IN IUM V III. ANO AN
UN D IV ID ED INTEREST OR

to

tM R « C O R M O * !N ,o r

fe@ldwtaMd. { R R H H I
I N C — RAd fG IITV
C H IM IC A L
COMPAN Y ,

M O R TO A D I
H a im .

SHAW N RL ROYLR. « f ML. N
CL US IV I, OP TNR PUBLIC
R E C O R D S O P E IM IN O L E
C O U N T Y . P L O R lO A , A N O
E U B E R O U IN T A M IN O
M E NTS T H E R E TO .
O A T IO mt* n m day af July.
M A R Y A N N !I
Ao Ctorb af *atd Court
O y J M l.
OR MB

11.1

OP TNR S TA TR RP FLORIDA,

4 II. IB.

OR Ida
.1. mj.e i:w j . - l m m
W T rtl viwwwlT wwRiv
I B P TN R WTN JU D fC IE ! |

RUHOAMRNTAL MOOTOAOR
CORPORATION. l/k/g PUf*
OAM RRICA c o r p o r a t i o n .
f/h/d EO U TH M A R K MORT-

L U L A RL TO N O C a
oily and m Trustee, and RLRNA
OAWN JOHNSON. M ttvtog. and

V!
MARTHA L. LOOP; H IO O RN
VILLAOE
IOC IAT ION. IN C ;

NO TICR OP IA L R
to hereby i
____ _ to* Final J _
a*|aaad M
M tng
- IFRflABitfd VffWrW
•bevsstyled cau*a. Hi lh*
C ircuit Cgurt af Sam Inal*
----------- “ • ’ • I
__________ ____ H . Build
4R. Of HIOORN VILLAGE
IINIUM. accarWng to
March t t. N M to
Official Record* Beak MBA
P*gm 1M1 thru IMF. mchwtva,

IN TN R CIRCUIT COURT
PGR S R Jd iN O il COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PNOOATR DIVISION
PttoMuwMertl-SSaCP
IN R I : ■ STATE OF
ANDREW J.WOOO
NOTICR OP
ADMINISTRATION
The administration of
d e c tT e e a d ^ P lT e N u m b e r
•l 44SCP. to pandtog to
Circuit Court far
County. Pier Ida, PraRat*
Division, ttw iddr*n of which It
Ctorh af the Court. Sammot*
County Courthouse. P. a Draw­
er C, Sanlord. Florida 37773
MS*. The names and
af ma parser*
and th* personal re p re ­
sentative'* attorney ar* sat
forth below.
All Intarastsd person* art
required to til* with ml* court:
(a) All claim* against mo **tato
W IT H IN T H R IR M ONTHS
A F TE R TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE and
(bl any Ohiactton Ry an Interest
ad parson to whom this notice I*
•orrod that challenge* the valid
Ity at ttw will, the qualification*
of the personal representative,
vqnua, or jurisdiction of ttw
Court W ITH IN THR LATER O f
THRRR MONTHS A FTE R T H I
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O TICE OR TH IR TY
OAYS A F TE R THR DATE OF
SIR VICR OF A COPY OP THIS
NOTICE ON THE O BJECTING
PERSON.
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO PILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED.
Publication of mi* Notlea ha*
begun an Jufy tt, m i .
Personal Represent*
W ILLIAM D. WOOO
Jdl] Rowan Or Iv*
Orlande. Florida
JAM RSO. WOOO
171 Tartomod Street
Fern Park. FtorIda
Attorney tor Personal
Hapratentative;
JU LIAN K. DOMINICK
Ftshhack. Dominick. Bormett.
Stoptor 4 Ar daman
I TOE Washington Sir**!
Or lends. Florid* 33*01
Phono No (40/&gt; 47* 77**
Florida Bar No MleSI
Publish. July 7*4 August v tftl
DEH7M
IN TNR CIRCUIT COURT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
Cate Ns. tl tsej CA I4 0
M ERITOR SAVINGS. F A .
Plaintiff
v*
S T E E P L E C R E S T HO M ES.
INC . a Florid* corporation. »t
*1
Dotondants
NOTICE OF ACTION
To STEEPLECR EST HOMES.
INC . a Florida corporation
Principal Place at gusto#**.4770 Atom* Avenue, Suit* 17V
winter Pork. Florida 777**
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIFO that Plaintiff ha* In
ttltutod action against you In ttw
•tow styled Court ond that th*
nature ot Mid action l» to
that certain Mortgage
"O B
Book 71*1.
IJM. Public record* of

CAMK. af Rto O r t d f Caart af
the RIOM TRRNTM Ju d k td
Orcwtt in and N r EIIM M O LI

______ !. af m l . aL ar* OaNntewta, l oM.aaR N Ria Mtotoai
and Roto kMdw N r caah al Rto
warn Ro m daar m ma s e m i
H O LE Caunfy Cwrtkosw, m
l aniard. Florida, at ll:ER
a’ctoch AJE. an R » » d day af
maaMFbtoi Judgment. *ewtt:
L O T 34 H IO O R N L A R I.
" T I L U N IT V IL
la PIM
PagaO l N and M al Rto
Ftorlda
D A TE D mia SNh day M July.
Aa Ctorh af M id Caurt
•y l

tovMi

y Pi m toM ri ddsdJuSy aa!'
tort, and tnitrad to ctvti caaa
iwmhd t l l M CA 14 K. af NW
Clrcdt Caurt af Me NihJuEfcld
Circuit m aad tor lamlneto
County, FtortdB. wherein C IT Y
SAVINGS, F.S.R.. to PtaMNN
•ltd M A R T H A L . L O O P ;
HIDOSN VILLAOE CO N D O ­
MINIUM ASSOCIATION, lac.,
I unknown pursan m
af flw tuRtocf raal
ra Dstowdmfs. l will
taN to ma MMtout and Baal
bldNr tor caah at mawual front
d n r af ma Eamtoato Caunty
CaurtkauM. SantorG Ftortda. al
1I N a’ctoch A M . an ma 3rd
" v
mant.towtt;
Cawdnwtolum UnH t*4 BwttdIng m , af HIDDEN V IL LA O E
CONDOMINIUM, accardmu la
March 33. itaa m
Pans* IN I mrw INF. toclualv*.
and all amendments marafa af
Caunty. Ftorlda.

_____ af me
Wiat Front Door af the Seminal*
County Courthouse, at Sanford.
Florida at n « t A M an Sow
tem per! M l .
O A T IO mt* toth day of July,
ton.
M A R Y A N N ! M ORIS
CLR R KO P • " - •
CIR CU IT COURT
By: Jan* R. Jaoawlc
Deputy Ctorh
PuNtah: August! 11. M l
OR 1-3*

M

g

&amp;

M

camnwn itonwnl* *| said Can
dim Iniurn ae *at term m said
O a c la r a lla n a / k / a a a i
F rami Ingham Ct.. Lake Mary.
PL3374S.
Dated Rw 3Mh day af July,
Mary*
Clerk af Circuit Court
By Jana I . Jaeawk
DeautyCNrh
Puhileh: Auguet v It. m i
O R IS
IN T N I CIRCUIT CO UR T
O P T N IIIG N T IR N T N
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OP T N R
STATR OP FLORIDA.
IN ANO PGR
SRMMOLB COUNTY
CIVIL DIVISION
C A SR N &amp; rt-IN P C A M R
FORD CONSUMER P IN A N C I
COMPANY. INC.,
to PORO CONSUMER
CREDIT COMPANY.
PlalntlH,
GEOROE D. LOCKE A N O
J A N E D O E L O C K E . H IS
WIPE7 T H I UNITED STA TES
OP AMERICA
NOTICR OF M L R
Nance t* haraby given that.
punuaM to a Final Summary
Judgment M Farectowre en­
tered to ma above-styled cauaa.
to me Circuit Caurt af Sami note
Caunfy. Florida. I will M il ma
property situate In Seminole
County, Florida, dsecrlbadaa:
LOT IL T H I W f ST 4P PR RT
OF LOT to. AN O’ THE NO RTH
Vi OF V AC A TID RIDGE WOOO
ST. LYING SOUTH OP ANO
ADJACENT THERETO. SUG
JS C T TO AN EASEMENT FOR
INGRESS ANO EGRESS O VER
T H E S O U T H 31 F R E T
THEREOF; TOGETHER W ITH
A N B A S E M EN T FO R IN ­
CRESS AND EGRESS O VER
T H E N O R T H Ik O F
RIOGBWOOO ST. A D JA C EN T
TO LOTS 13. 13 ANO IV A LL
LYING ANO a ilN G BLOCK 41
SANLANOO TH E S U B U R B
BEAUTIFUL. PALM SPRINGS
SECTION AS RECORORO IN
PLAT BOOK 1 PAGE MVk. OP
THE PUBLIC RECOROS OP
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
•I public sal*, to Rw highest and
bast bidder, tor ceeh. at Iha
WEST FRONT 000R. SEMI
N O LB C O U N T Y C O U R T ­
HOUSE. SANFORD. FLORIDA.
M ll:M A AA, an Rw 3rd day M

n . Pg

f S

t t s

m

i m

m

w

M P G a tte e p M e lM m e w S S S

S

411. IN I
OR MR

Caaato*. rtd*N CJL-H-K
MERITOR SAVING! PA,
S T R I P L R C R I S T HOM RS.
IN C . a Ftorlda corporation, at
M
Ta ; STRIPLRCR RST HOMRL
IWC-. a FtorIda corporation
af Ruamaas:
IMto ISV
Y O U ARE H R R IB Y NOTIP iR O mat Piatiwiw naa maRam «N N d ^ a ^ m^ d ^ hat aw
9$ M M
Is
racaritod *ln*O R^R aak'T| 'I l
af
m Eamtoato Caunfy,

Ftorlda, towM:

Lat 43. BRIGHTON PARK AT
CARILLON. acarEtog to toa
PIM NwraM aa racardad to PIM
•aah 43. pagae N through N
inclusive, gubllc recard* M SamLMmyi r lw W .
and y«u are haraby notified to
tit* yeur Anawer ar athar ptoadIng la PiatMtlTs Camgtatot and
Amendment m CamalalM to ttw
Offtca M Iha Clark M the Circuit
Sum mart to.
p .a

4

Cline.

the t3th day *t Mptomhaft m i,
•r suffer default to ka an
W ITN ISS my twnd and ttw
saM M said Caurt at Santord.
Florida mis 1st day af Auguet,
tort.
(SR AL)
Aa Ctorh Mlfw Caurt
Deputy Clerk
PuMHh: Augutt V II. 14 31
IBB1
o g iv e
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
O F TN R B IO N TIB N TH
JUOICUAL CIRCUIT
S IM M O L 1 COUNTY.
PLORlOA
C A S R H &amp; fM P X A -IA D
T H I R ESO LU TIO N TRU ST
CORPORATION M Canaervator
far A M E R IC A N P IO N E E R
FED ER A L SAINGS BANK.
PlalntlH.
O R IG O R Y L.W. E R R IR T. SR.
and NANCY MARIE E I I I R T ,
and the U N ITE D STATES OF
AMERICA.
NOTICE OP S A L !
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
mat pursuant Ip Pinal Judgment
M Faractoeurp entered to th*
•have styled cause to ttw Circuit
Cewrt In and tor Samlnala
County. Ftorlda I will trtl at
public auction ta the Mgheit
bidder in ceeh at toa West front
door M toa caurthauta to San­
tord. t omlnoto Caunfy. Florida
at U M a m . an lap temper j.
m i . that certain parcel M real
property situated to toa County
M l aminate. State M Florida
more particularly dmertoad at
tallows:
Lat 17. W IK IV A HILLS.
SECTION FIV E, accardtop to
toa Ptat toareaf as recorded In
PIM Beak 11. Page* PS and IV
Public Racards M Samlnala
Caunfy, Florida
WITNESS MV HANO ANO
SEAL M toto Caurt an this Iha
M hdeytoJwty, m i.
(CO UR T M A L I
MARVANMB MORSE
CLERK OP T N I
CIR CU ITCO U R T
RyJanaR. Jaoawlc
Deputy Clark
PuMIsh: August V II. I«*l
OR l i t

1'm aiRYANNE
r VAN
MORSE
CLBEKOF
CIRCUIT COURT
BY Jana E. Jaaaertc
Deputy Clark
Pubilth; July V II. m i
DEI-14
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD OP COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
NOTICR OP PUBLIC HRARING
AUGUST n . i t n
liMPJbL
Ttw Baird at County Commitsianart at Saminoi* County. Ftorlda
will held a public hear mg to consider toa to) towing;
I. ALBERT V. POPE — RASt SSIV - R-IAA Raddwdlai lana Appeal egeintt the Beard at Adjustment In denying a front yard
tatoaefc variance tram IS H. to t H. tor a S H. high
Lat 74 toe* Iha W JB ft and all af Lat 31. Stock 41.
Suburb laautlHl. F I 1 F | U h . Section 13-31 3*; N tide et Baal
Hillerett Streat and to mile E ot Palm Springe Drive. (GIST 4)
3 FLOYD N. gOOOALL FOD T H E L A R I RIOGR PARK
PROPERTY OWNERS - R A II4 74V - R IA Reildentlal Zen* Appeal •gainst ttw Board at Adluetment to approving a tot til*
variance from I M tq ft. to 7A7I sq. ft. tor A/ton* Meak an Lat 4 4
1 Black v Lake Ridga Park. PR ». Pg *f. Section IPII-M ; S tide af
Ptoawaad Court. 7N H. E ot Laka Read. 4SIH Naf Ridge Read and
to ml to Wet Highway 17*3. (OIST 41
TN t public hearing will ba held In Ream W131 M ttw Samlnala
County Service* Building. 11*1 ■•*! First Street. Santord. Ftorlda an
August 77. m i. at 7:M p m. ar a* toon thereafter a* peeiible
Written cemment* Iliad with ttw Land Msnsgemmt Director will
be considered Person* appearing at toa public hearing « m ba
heard. Further Oetatls available by coiling 71I IIT*, oil 7444
P trw it are adviwd toot II Nwy dacld* to «ap*H any decision
mad* at this hearing, they will iwad naad to Insure that a verbatim
record el ttw proceeding* to made, which recard Include* ttw
testimony and evidence upon which the appeal I* ta ba bated, par
Section too oios. Ftorlda Statute*
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
BY: FREO STR EETM AM . JR .CHAIRMAN
ATTEST: MARVANNC MORSE. CLERK
Publish August V IH I
O EI7I

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PR 41. Pg 3 1 3 41 hswlt-ts-si; NR cwwar
IN. EM M -4B4 (O IST 1)
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______ sartanaa Ram » ft. to • It. tor a
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M-ETEIi R s M a M WhlwsrRat Caart. MBN. NMHRtwator
Ortv* aad t* w «e 1 M ID V R 4 (D IE T t»
4 PR TR tO E PADWRR - RArt-43RV - B1AA BiilfaMItt to w
- to m yard tMBath vartowaa Ram » N. to « l W. a to. tor a garth
■Rfto d i m L M 47. ObRN Rw l P E D P S R 4 P . E a rtto n »tM D
SEty earner M Reitwak Caart and WtowWrsl Piece. «M ft. W M
Patmtom«toy«dtomttaEMGahrtoKa Lam. (D IET II
4 M N ER R. D A D P D M — Mdt-GfBV — A -1 .
ram 3B It . t o * H. tor a i
an Lata 4 S B v Dtach l
m Vttta HijMito. PD to. Pg w.
413-31: EsMBMPtoeERa
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M-4BS (O t f T I)
7. DDDRDT R CARDS.
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Rant to ff. te I S ft. tar a gaM
m LM *

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to paNaastoRaf

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'"* By . through
•gemot ttw arid LR ILA M.
TONOCO. Indlytduaity and «
Trust**, or RLRNA OAWN
JO H N S O N / R R N R S T
J O H N S O N Bud H IO D R N
VILLAG E CONDOMINIUM AS­
SOCIATION. INC..

S

NOTICR IS H R R IB Y 04Y IN
I N g PkHf JadBHNHf af

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CASE Rto t f -im C A M S
C ITY SAVINGS. P.S.B..
gp w t m C R IT lR IO N I f IN A H
CIAL CORPORATION.

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jM R jP FMtoRM RWR » N. to t l ff. a to. M LM 71. Btoth A.

t t ! * ! * ? ! i w B M M M MMB « L d w To a a r Ru n U sN HP.
P O t t . P g t t l E t t l N b t A n ^ ltM * d 1 ttN te g M B e w r a rd 4 tt*
R W M p lR IR lllN M M iM N N M M ld M M U R R fc R R (W B T W___

W R .to E R .
Rto IBR dav af SaptowWar. toBI,
ar suitor datouR to id iBUtad
agafndveu.
w im a ts .m y hand orb
aaal af m M Court at f *
Ptortd* mi* taf day at
toff.
(M A L I
Aa Ctorh af toa Caurt

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tort

af all Mid
YOU A R I N O TIF IID tod an
action la laraclaM a Mortgage
on to* tottowtog graparty in
Seminole County, FlarMa:
Let tax LYNWOOO. accard
log la Ma a*al mereel aa re­
cord* m Fiat Baas tt. Pages
Ten. af me Public Recerdt af
Seminal# Caenty, Plarldai
together with the improvements

______ to
PtortdbtowttL rtttO L R N R A O L R U to lTI.
ataardRa to Rto P m Rwraaf aa
recorded to Plot Badk 44 gagaa
IV t&amp; w a a d ir.
oflamtoatoCwnF Ptortd*.

_

iD t M ParaM Laha Ortv* and to mtto •M M M A (O U T I )
R. DDtoALD ERtDDD — R A rtG rtV — R-tAA I
Sida yard M tonb variance Rwn to ft. to 7 R. tor an i
t l Faerhaea Phcda I. PR X . Pg 734 71 Sartton 347131; SitdaM
Darby Piac*. to» H W af Ktmbarwkba Orcta and to itoto N M
Cawwy Utw Band. (O IST n
R. M O D tLl NRMR/A-I AGR ICULTUR E tONR
t. RtCNARD SMfTN G VtVUSN BOYLES - BArt-BOTR 4
R A rtG H V — T* piece a wwBito hama and a tot sto* vartonca Rem
40JM SG N.to 3 U fd *G N. an Tan PartM 1 Sactton 3 H 4 » ; N std*
MMuttof Laha Path Dead and 11s mile NMSR-44 (D IET I )
1 DDRRDto A. EC D TT - RArt-dVETI - T* Mace a tMhlto hama
an LM 33 (Tan ParcM •). Oscsala RtMt lauto. Sactton 1 - M i S sMa
M Waccess* Street. M i l . I d Bew Legs Trail snd M U . I d
Oscoda Read (G IS T si
1 S TIV R R B K A TH R YN M A M IL L O - BArt G M TR - Tyto c* a
an LM a (Tea Pored s i ) , Laka Hanwy
Sactton I* 4 113*33; S I side M Flint T rd 'a n d to milt SafOscmla
Raad-dNSTS)
V VICTORIA RL STOMD - BAS14MTR - Ta ptoc* a ittodto
ham#an Lat 7 (Tea ParcM *P). Laha Hwney Rttotov Sactton W E
II 3 4a; I SMBM Flint TraMand tomR*SMOtcccto Read. (O IS TI)
1 WRSLBY A. M ILLBR - BAC1-4MTR - T* piece a mahito
heme (Rslwd atomcnt) cn LM t. Stock O. Lake Hartwy Acrsttov PR
It. Pa SVScctton 143433; R sidsM Labe Hanwy Hslghts Reed and
Vs mNa NM Laha Hanwy Read. (O IST I )
4 PAUL • PATRICIA D E L I - B A rt-4 IS TI - T* place a mahito
an toe W to M LM 111 Van Arsdato Oshcrwc Brdwragc C*.‘t
to Rlach Hammock, PR I. Pg tl, Sacflan 1 -»t1 i I ttoa af
w Street, to mito to M Ftorlda Avenue and ita mito N M
SR-4at. (OIST 1)
7. MR. E MRS. CARL Di. MCCOMB - RAf1-44lTI - T# gtoca a
( Rene wal af a MaMcal Hard dfto) an Tea ParcM 43 E
43431; N *Ma af Maardt Statton Brad and l.tol H. W af
M O IS TS )
A. CDMTNNfRD fTRJdg PERM JU L Y M. ttrt
1. FLDRIOE POR7RR E LtD N T - BArt-7-SSSR - A-t AgrkuHura
nD R ^ ^ U I aE^^tmt
Iw aM liM te ^^"f-1lT M
w^Pra
E
mi teMte(#El
w^rafTHOf
dtoftMutton saRMMton an Ma N m M tt. M M* W 4SESS ff. M MM
aart M M a t f lt o M I h a S R t o M Sactton tl-ll-M ; t y k R la n d l M
LMw MM* Read aa racardad to PD 4 Pg SE S I earner M Brumtoy
Read and Avenue H. (O IS T ))
RRDUIST POM SIX M ONTH IR TIR SfO ffS
1. SIO VINLRN, JR. E K A T N L IIN M P R IL V - SAfl-I ISC R-t RaildsntlM Zone — Raguaet a tia month oatonston tar a Spaclai
iceptton to permit f tl street parking to an R-3 District tn a pared
land lytog to to* SW to d Sactton ta ii-M being mare pertlcwiarty
scribed a* Mtawt: tram Iha W to earner M said Sactton SV run S
14* 43" R 413 *7 ft., toanc* run S M degree* j r 17” W 7# H.
to toa PD.B.I Ihanca run t «* degrees 3 S 'i r W S1V4I H.i Rtonc* run
S M digram t » tv* I 3743* H.: dwnca run N St dearuM 41*W IS3S
H. tton* too I line pt ttw w to af tha HW to d m # PW to d odd
Sactton IV Ihsnca run N •* draraaa ST 4T* W 3H43 N. to Me P A B .i
Sactton 1431M , S sMa d Red Bug Lake Rand and 4M H. I d Oadf
Read (OIST I)
CVARIAtoCSS
1. CENTER HOMES - BAII 4 II7 V - Planned Unit Dovolopmont
me — Std* street totbeeb variance tram 1* ff. to I M H. an L d B .
- Oravav Unit 4 PR 4V Pg 14 Sactton &gt;1*3*; H I earner at
Cahill Way and Rrlghtvtow Drive. (OISTS)
3. CEN TEX HOMES - BA*14tMV - Planrad Unit Dovolopmont
Zone — Side street safBach vartonca tram 3* H. to 111 H. an L d 4V
Ctusa Oravav Unit 4 PR av Pg M. Smtton &gt; » » NW earner d
Casa Vsrdo hautov ard and Cahill Way and to mile S d CR-4SA itdh
Shad). (OISTS)
1 RICK E KAR EN B C N N C TT - BAS14-V7V - E l Agrlcuttura
Zana - Franf yard itM ack variance ham P H . t o ll H. tor a garage
•ddtton on L d *. Radnwaadv PR » Pg 17 E 34 Sactton l 4 » l t ; N
sids at Cardnd Drive at ttw intoraaettan af Rahtnewad Drive and to
mil* B dMarkham Wsads Read (OIST 4)
V PALMER N O M E ! IN C - 4 M I4 IT V - Ptonrad Unit
Davatopmanl Zana - Side ttrad tafhdCh variance fram M H. to IS H.
tor a • H. high stockade tone* an L d 14 Ldwvtow Village. PR &amp; Pg
14IS. Sactton I7-34M;‘ NR earner d Lakabreata Circle and Sginakar
Way and S I d Oraanwwad Bautovard (OIST 3)
I KELSON BAYS - BA*1-4t*V - R-l Residential Zana - Side
•trad setback vartonca fram 3S H. to S H. tor a a H. high
tone* and fram 3S H. to to H. tor a pad an L d I. Stock 14
Chuiuafv PR 1 Pg S4-J4 Sactton 31-31-33; SW earner d 4fh Avenue
and Avpnua P. 7 » ft. S of Second Street « M Ik mito E ot SR 434.
(OIST II
4 PROFESSIONAL END. C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - BAtlSIOIV Ptonnad Unit Oavetogmant Zana — Rear yard satoach variance fram
IS H. to IS H. tor a tcraan patio on Lot 14 Dear Run. Unit 17S. PB37.
Pg S3. Section 14317*; N side M Weeping Wlltow Circle, to* ft. Wet
Dodd Rood and Vk mil* Net Red «ug Lake Reed (D IS TII
7. PROP ISSIONAL IM G . C O N SU LTA N T! IN C - BAt 14107V Planned Unit Developm ent Zone — doer yard setback variance tram
IS H. to IS H. tor a scraan patio an Lat f*. Daar Run. Unit I1R. PB 37.
Pg B . Section 14-313*; W olds ot Weeping Wlltow Circle, to# H. W ot
Dodd Road and Vy mil* Net Rod iu g Lake Reed IDIST1)
4 PROFESSIONAL ENG. C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - EAtl-AIOV Planned Unit Development Zen* — Roar yard setback vartonca tram
IS H. to IS H. tor a tcraan pall* on Lot 104 Deer Run, Unit 171. PB
17. Pg 03. Section 1411 JO; W oldad Weeping Wlltow Circle. W0 H. W
d Dodd Read and to mito N d Rod Bug Laha Road (OIST 1)
*. PROFESSIONAL ENG. CO N SU LTAN T! IN C - IASI 4W4V Ptonnad Unit Development Zeno — Roar yard setback vartonca from
3S H. to IS H. tor a screen patio an L d Ml. Dear Run. Unit HR. PR
37. Pg O . Sactton 1411-30; W old* et Weeping Wlltow Circle. f » H. W
et Dedd Read and t* mile N d Rad Bug Laka Road (OIST II
10. PROPISSIOMAL END. C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - IASI 4IPSV
— Planned Unit Dovolopmont Zone — Rear yard setback vartonca
tram 3S H. to IS H. tor a tcraan patke an LM MV Dear Run. Unit 11
PB 17. Pf S3. Sactton 1411 » ; I tide d WPaplnp Wlltow Orel*, to* ii.
W et Dodd Road anM to mito N d Rad Rug Laha Raad (OIST 11
11. PROPISSMNAL RNG. C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - BASI4MSV
— Ptonnad Unit Development Zana — Rear yard setback vartonca
tram IS H. to IS H. tor a tcraan pafto an L d M l Daar Run. Unit I7B.
PB 37. Pg A Sactton 14I1JS; S sida d Waaping Wlltow Clrcto. SW H.
Wat Dtdd Raad and Ik m lta N d Rod Bug Laka Rood (OIST 1)
I I PR OPISIIONAL IM G . C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - RA»14107V
— Ptonnad UnH Davalapmanl Zana - Roar yard tatoaefc vartonca
tram IS If. to IS H. tor a scraan pafto an LM M l Daar Run. Unit i l l .
PB 37. Pg Rl. Sactton 1411-tt; Sstdsd Weeping Wlltow Circle. 7M H.
W M Dadd Raad and to mito N M Rad Bug Lake Raad (OIST I)
I I PROPRSSIONAL IM G . C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - BAfISMSV Ptonnad Unit Development Zeno — Roar yard setback vartonca fram
3S H. to IS H. tor a tcraan patio on LM 1*4 Dear Rwn. Unit 111. PB
31 Pg 17. Sactton 1 4 1 1 S sida M Weeping Wlltow Clrcto. I N H W
of Dedd Rood and Ik mito Net Red Bug Laho Rood. IO IS TI)
IV PROFESSIONAL RNG. C O N SU LTA N T! IN C - BASI * I0SV
— Ptonnad Unit Development Zone — Rear yard tatoack vartonca
fram 3S H. ta IS H. far a screen patio on L d MS. Deer Run. Unit HR.
PR 37. P g i l Section 1411 ]*; S sided Weeping Willow Circle, ftt H
W d Dedd Rood and Ik mil* N d Red Rug Lake Reed IOIST II
I I PROFESSIONAL I NO. C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - BASI* I MV
— Planned Unit Development Zana - Rear yard tatoack variance
fram IS H. ta IS H. tor a tcraan pdto an L d IM. Dear Run. Umi I7R.
PB 37. Pg tt. Sactton 143 1 »; S tlda d Waaping Wlltow Clrcto. U* H
W d“(todd
“ “Road and1&lt;*
t* mito N d Rad Bug Laka
L
Raad (OIST II
to. PROPISSIOMAL ENG. C O N SU LTA N T! IN C - BASI * HIV
— Ptonnad Unit Development Zana — Rear yard tatoack variance
fram IS H. to IS H. ter a tcraan patio on L d 111. Deer Run. Unit 11*.
PB 37. Pa tt. Sactton 1411 3a; I sided Waeain* Wlltow Clrcto. MB ft
W d Dadd Raad and to mil* N d Rad Bug Laka Raais (OIST. II
II. PR OPISIIONAL RNG. C O N S U LTA N T! IN C - BAtl * HIV
— Ptonnad Unit Development Zana — Rear yard tatoack vartonca
tram 7S H. to IS H. tor a tcraan patio on L d 111 Deer Run. Unit l]B.
PR 37. Pg tt. Section 14 t l tt; S tide d Weeping Wlltow Clrcto. 4tt H.
W d Dedd Read and 1* mile N d Red Rug Lake Reed. IOIST I)
14 PROPISSIOMAL END. C O N SU LTA N T! IN C - BASI4IIJV
— Planned Unit Development Zone - Rear yard tatoack varlwica
fram IS H. to ISH tar a screen pafto an L d Itv Deer Run. Unit i t !
PB 17. Pg tt. Section 1431 tt; S side d Weeping Wlltow Circle. It* t*
W d Dedd Reed and Ik mile N *r Red iug Laka Reed IOIST I)
15 PROP RSS IONAL RNG. CO N SU LTAN T! IN C - BAH4U4V
— Planned Unit Development Zone - Rear yard setback variance
tram 71H. le IS H. lor a tcraan pafto an L d 111 Deer Run. Unit I1R.
PR 17. Pg tt. Section 14II IS; S side d Weeping Willow Circle.« H.
W d Dedd Road and V* mito N d Red Rug Lake Reed. (OIST I)
» PROPISSIOMAL RNG. C O N SU LTA N T! IN C - BAtl *II1V
— Planned Unit Development Zone - Rear yard tatoack variance
tram IS H to IS ft tor a tcraan patto an L d 111 Deer Run. Unit 111.
PB 17. Pg tt. SecI&gt;on 14 It » . S side d Weeping Wlltow Clrcto. IM H

T A R T ! IN C -

RAFV41MY

lM N .t t W R .M P Ga ecrawi M i m L d 0 4 Oeer Run. M M IM .
t4rt-tt&gt; C t t e d R w l H d « t o s g * w « N N w
•N | t ti r h r
Ld RMd and to mito N d RM Bug Late M M
iM E B lf
B W

B L

W M . m m m .n m . w c - R A a v G aav

PgteEaM M w satM M N dM aM M gEtoM R M N dagR W ttw
m N. W M OaDI Read ate tt im m n M Rad ■*• Ltea N aa!

B E ! RaaRf I4EM M N M i a M M a l toaf RMagttpRWtta
■ R. W at Or de Mead n M m m b * n at Mai N U r N m e

a

. to t t N. M r a m n m mSSL m LM a w s s s s ?
i l t t . EartNd 14»l-tti H tt ta M M a E MMENlEtogRRRli
■ N. W d Oadd Raad and to mds N M Rad M Utta Read.
(D fE T t)
in

a

pafto aa L d ME Osar Run, UM) f l !
iM N .t tt t R .tt r a
PR tt. Pg tt. ttefton i i r v t t i Matte af RN S to d
M#N. W d
■ M to m d a N M R ad
. T I N T ! tNC !

•EPTEttRf

aMle aw LM Ml.
• ra M M N .ttttN .M rd
PR V . F r e e . EactMd 1431-Mi N a fdaM ttaEVbM
Clrcto. 4M
■nd to mtto N M Nad
(O tE T I)
TA N T! M C -

RA4V4tttV

ham M N. t t M N. tor a acraan aMtt a
PR tt. Pg t t. Sactton 1431M, N a M a M M a tts M
Clrcto. 4M N. W M Dadd Naad and Ik fMtoNM ted Bug
(O tE T I)

UMMSN.

t e C -B A r t E M B R -E li

____________

ttMRMrwrt agarttowMagsH

1aw Taw PartM 1 Sasftow t tia ia i and M Atoipm Ortva and 3
mltoa W d Markham tesads Read. (DIET I)
3. WfLLDRf CR EEK PRESBYTERIAN CRUNCH - EA rt-*»ttE
- N -U RaattaMIM Zawa - NamiaM a ttactol RaNgtew le ganMS
church parking en Tea Pared TA. tocteh t4tM M I side M Red
Labe Ortv*end Ik mito WMTuSkawtNa Reed. (OIST I)
1 L R D N A RM NARRRL 1 — BAf f -M M I - A -) 1
OcuamwNM*Lais I E / n ' e NR M S
SR AS and IS mtto I M Rto tt.
(O tE T I)
_ 4 CAPTS I

» 7 1 ; N sfdad

a ttscisl laagtew tt

wffh a
&gt;an Taw Pared
S47VN; SW cantor d
Red Bug Laha Rted end Tuehe
(O tE TI)
B. APPROVAL DP RUNWTEI
I. June 14 T N IlJ u f y B . I P r t -1
Thto putttc hearing «(H te h d i to team W itt M Rto
Caunfy Eerutaa* Ruftdtog. IN I l a d PlrM ttrad.
Ptortd!
an AuguMM, M rt.M S :tta.m .*r a*
Written cemmanto flladwtm flw
M Me
te h r «MMw t ti-11 » ad. 74sv
N May dartds t t aggad any
m a te d thto haarkM. they wtHt
H need a raeardd thepracasd
for such purpae*. they may naad to insure that a verbdlm racard af
the pracaadthgs is ma4
svidmce ugaw whkh the aggad totohal
F lirM i t t i M N .
S IM IN O L I COUNTY BOARD OP ADJUSTM ENT
•V; REN TUCKER. CHAIRMAN
Pubtteh: AuguM Visas
OBIT*
L t g a l

N o lle —

IN V ITA TIO N T O RIO
SEM INOLE COUNTY
RXPORSSRfAY AUTHOR ITY
by th* lo m ln o la County
Kearaeaway Authority. Caunfy
Sarvtcas Building. 1MI la d
Plrat I trad. Santord. Piarlte
17771. unfit 1:tt p.m. (Lacd
Tima) an August a . IN t. tor the
ikpfNW1 N
B ID NDi N 4 rt
SCOPE OP SERVICES: Prav fd a a s b e s to s a b a f t manf/dsmdltton services tar
structuras acqulrad during Bto
right d way aegutsfttan pracasa
a f lh * S e m in a l* C ounty
E-BIO CONPRRRNCR: A
tn lh# Caunfy larvtca* BuiMtog.
not Rad Pirsf ttrad. Santord.
Plerlda 33771. an Auguet tv tort
d t :ls m . A "
d ail Iha parcels will
HOW

TO

APPLY;

P re ­

p a ck a g e (o r th* a boverafrrancad prefect af no cad
fram Iha Authority's represantatlva. Mary Raulersan.
GtaHIng Lapel Karcfwr Angiln.
Inc.. 33 Rad Pina Sired. O r­
lande. Ftorlda S M I. (4*7) S4&gt;
K ft
The Authority rasdvas Iha
right la ralact any d d l btdv
Publish: August V It. IN I
b i t 44______________________
LRRAL A O V IR TItR M R N T
B IO f «a m -«l
N O T IC R I t N B R R B V
GIVEN. H id Iha City d Santord.
Ftorlda will raedve
up to t :t t P M . sn
August IV IN I In Nto
ing Offtca. Ream 141 tor the
toilowing items:
FOR SALE - MOGILR NOME
AN bids a rt ft ba drtlvarad ar
mailed to: Ttw City d Santord.
Purchaaing Offtca. 3tt N. Park
A vqnua. Santord. Ftorlda 13771.
Tito seated M is will ka puMkiy
apanad totor tod same day M
I N P E L to Iha City Cam
mlsaton Chamhars. Ream 117.
SanfardCtfyHdl,
•ra avallahta. d na
u d . to iha Purchasing Offtca.
Rmm 341. tt* N. Park Avenue.
Santord. Ftorlda. 14*7) 33*1*11
Fscstmtto ar totograghi* Mds
will nd ka acragtakla
Tha City d Santord raverves
•ha rlghl to accept ar rafacf any
or d l bids, with ar without
cause, to wdv* tochnlcdlttos or
to accept top Md which to its
lodgement keel serves to* totor
eetditwCify
C ITY OF SANFORD
Welter Shoerin
Purchasing Agent
July tt. IN I
Pubilth July It 4 August V IN I
ORH 3 M _________________
NOTICR OP
FICTITIO U S K A M I
Notice it hereby given that I
am engaged In bwtinot* d PO
Bee li lt . Langwood. Sambwia
County. Florida, under tha
Fictitious Nomad
ARCHIVAL IMAGCS. and that I
Inland to register said nama
••th Iha Secretory d State.
Tallahaeeaa. Ftorlda. In ac­
cordance with toe provision* d
lh* Fklittous Name Statute.
Ta-Wil; Sactton ISSN. Ftorlda
Statute* ISS7.
Katherine Reek*
Pubilth: August v l N t
01147

L tg a l

N o tlc —

IN TNR CIRCUIT COURT
DP T N I RIDNTRBNTN
JU O K IA L CIRCUIT
DP FLORIDA.
IN AROPOD
G IHRR AL JU R IS O K TK M
DIVISION
CASD NDl N ttM CA )4 P
AMERICJUf HOME FUNDI NO.
MICHAEL l . M ICSLLI, *1. ur.
d . af..
NOTICR OP
POOICLOEUOR B A L I
NOTICE IS HERESY 0 4 V IN
lla a Find Judgm add
Jd y 31 TNI ewtorad
to Caaa N v N N N C A -U -P . d
the Circuit Caurt d tha EIGH­
TE E N TH Judkld ClrcuH to and
tor SEMINOLE Caunfy, Ftorlda
wharaln AMERICAN HOMR
FU ND IN O Is Plaintiff and
MICHAEL L. MICELLI. d . ua
d . at. are Defendants. I will sdl
to No Mfhoot 00^ feoot U N B f
tor cash d Iha West bant d n r
at th* SEM IN O LE County
Courtheua*. to Santord. Ftorlda.
d l l : N a'ctoch A M . an lh# 3rd
day d
to idi
mant.towtt:
L d tt. Stock H. OAKLANO
E S T A T E ! 3NO SECTION, ac­
ta Ma pfd tharad ae
to Ptd Beak tv Pagn
N and 4*. Pubik Racards d
Sim Inals Caunfy, Ftorlda, and
thd partton d toa NW to d tha
NW VSd Sactton SV Tawnehlp 71
d Rw
and toa lauto itoaa d said L d
tt.
DATED this Itth day d Jd y.
IN I
MARYANNS MORSE
Aa Ctorb d said Caurt
t y : Jattol.Janwtc
Aa Deputy Clark
PubiNh: August V I I . m i
O S IN

NOTICE TO TH E
|^i,.
(’^luDs
V—
ginr^^/

PUBLIC 1

mma^^

Beard d Adfuetmanl d the City
d Santord will held a regular
meeting an August a. M l . to to*
City Hail Commission Chamber*
d l l : » 4 m. to order to coned
#r a requasi tor vartonca to toa
Zoning Ordtoanca a* H pertain*
to Side E Cerner Yard variance
roqulrawwnl* to an SE-IA dtotrktan:
L d to. Orange Park Subdlvt
tton PR 1 PO 41 ae recorded In
Santord. Saminato County.
Flartdb
being mart specifically de­
scribed a t Is c a ttd : l i t *

u n d the preparty I#

to construct a single tomily
dwelling.
W M . Philip*. Chdirman
•aarddAdfuetmant
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: If
a person dsctaee to aggad a
dKiston mads with respect to
any matter considered d Rw
tbava meeting or hearing,
he/ftw will naad a verbatim
racard d toa pracaadlngi In
eluding toa toettmeny and avldenca. whkh record It n d
provided by toa City d Santord
IFSNSStotl
Publish. Jd y IS 4 August v M l
OEH IT)

s

�M a ie v B V m v a M H M H M B M N i

4, 1S91 - »S

Business
Siemens move completed

IN B R I E F

i l s i a l r i ffilall

LA K E M ARY S iem en s
S tro m berg-C arlson h a t a n ­
nounced completion of Its latest
Lake Mary project. The move
relocated more o f the company's
production to the facility on
Rinehart Road.
During the past six months,
the company has shifted the
production of It's packet swit­
ching products and Its EWSD
c e n t r a l o f f i c e fr o m Its
m a n u fa c tu rin g fa c ilit y in
Hauppauge. NY. to Central Flor-

SANTORO — Dave Farr, executive director of the Greater
SMifard Chamber W Commerce recently attended the 72nd
annual conference of the Florida Chamber o f Commerce
Executives Association.
Tile theme of the 3 day conference In Tarpon Sprint*, van
Florida * Challenge far the 90V*. Key state officials and
buHneaa leader* informed participants on education, tax
reform, growth management, drug*, water management and
the economy In the BO’S.
Two day* were also spent discussing chamber management
laaues and exchanging Information on various types of
■uccemAil programs undertaken fay various chambers.
During the awards banquet. Farr w as recognised for his
service aa a Director of the Florida Chamber of Commerce
Excecuttves Association from 1987 to 1991.
The FCCE Is the statewide professional — delation of
chamber of commerce executives In Florida.

To make the manufacturing of
two distinct switching products
possible, the Lake Mary facility
has undergone extensive re­
ef a muhltnt upgrade.
r h a n a r in the
design and layout of the plant to
o n reip p in In tegra tea, conunu*

Entrtea open for Beat Business Show
LONGWOOD — Registration applications are now available
for any businesses Interested In participating tn the first annual
"Seminole’s Best Business Show/'
The show will be held on Wednesday. Oct. 23 from noon to 8
p m. and Thursday. October 24 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and win
feature over 100 Seminole County businesses. Prices for
tabletop displays start at 9175 and 8 foot by 10 foot booths
■tart at 9375. Call Anne Mendhetm at 834-4404 to receive a
registration application.

The Lake Mary sMe la
responsible for production of
Siem ens Strom berg-Corison's
central office products as weQ aa
packet switching systems. The
packet switching systems are
exported worldwide.
Ronald Wrindruch, senior vice
president of operations said.
"The new system allows for a
rapid, systematic and logical
production flow, from raw mate*

Chamber sets breakfast roundtable
LONGWOOD - At the Aug. 21 Small Business Roundtable
Breakfast sponsored by the Greater Seminole County Chamber
o f Commerce, Nico Dehaan. president o f Performance
Development Institute, will apeak about how small businesses
can lessen the pain of cold calling.
The breakfast will be held at the Holiday Inn OrlandoAltamonte Springs. Networking will begin at 7:20 a.m.. and
breakfast will be served at 7:30 a.m. Coat la 910 for members
and 912 for non-members. Call 834-4404 by Monday, August
19 to make reservations.

I I

LAKE MARY - Harvey
t / s * -------vtee
o f quality

H t f lW O ttn n n t i f

Fairhoneisdatstatew
ideeonfw
enee

• u
* I

Scheingold’s
new mission
In

tkla capacity,

for strsnMlkmtna the cor­
porate quality function
w ithin Siem ens Strom berg-Cartaon and he
t to A n t
to a press
Prior to Ms current post-

Stomons Strombsrg-Carison has doubtsd H rate of output alnet
completion of Its oxpanston movs to tha Laka Mary plant.
tn one door, to finished
product out the oth er." He
added. "The participation of our
most Important asset, dedicated
employees, has enabled Siemens
Stromberg-Carlson to evolve our
Lake Mary facility Into a world
c la s s te le c o m m u n ic a tio n s
manufacturing center."
The recently completed re­
novation Includes the automa­
tion o f stock rooms, advances In
assembly and test procedures as
wen as the addition of a new
anti-static floor.
Welndruch
said, "W e are now operating at
double the rate of output from

only six months earlier. And a s s
result of our investment, we now
have the capacity to double
output again."
Siem ens Stromberg-Carlson
design s, develops and
manufactures a complete line of
digital voice and data products
aa well aa transmission pro­
ducts. Based In Boca Raton. It
has manufacturing and other
functional groups In Phoenix,
Arts., and Albuquerque. N.M.. in
addition to Lake Mary. The
company employ* over 4,000

lio n System s tn H supNY . In thW rote he
responsible for all
Schclngold- joined the
Siem ens Corporation In
1 9 8 0 a s d ir e c t o r o f
In g a n d fa c ilit ie s fo r
S ie m e n s In fo rm a tio n
If
of
for production o f i
pony i n u n w r a
itfforc takStatf fl
w —a-—*-—
iu.qJ' _
ISCKj SI
o f p o sitio n s with

Investment firmopens
LONGWOOD — Washington Investment Corporation o f
Florida. Inc. announces the opening o f their full service
brokerage and Investment company at 111 Longwood Street.
Suite 201.
Washington Investment Corporation o f Florida, Inc. Is a
locally owned affiliate o f a regional brokerage firm baaed In
Washington, D.C. In addition to basic brokerage functions, the
company provides several personalised services for its clients.

S o m e th in g O f In te re s t
F o r E v e ry o n e .

Southeast Bank elds scholarship fund

.

SANFORD — Southeast Bank Sanford Banking Center Vice
PresldentTManagcr Russell F. Judge announced Southeast
Bank's contribution to the Sanford Chamber Scholarship Fund.
Judge p Vi resented a check for over 9400 which represented
the results o f a corporate pledge from Southeast Bank.
The Chamber's Scholarship Fund tn Us eighth year awards
acho! rshlps to graduating seniors from Lake Mary and
olrH Igh Schools for post-secondary education at Florida
Seminole

y

Publix touts proposed now store
OVIEDO — Publix Super Markets, Inc. has announced plana
for construction o f an exciting new prototype store tn Seminole
County at University Palms. Alafaya Trail and McCulloch
Road.
Construction la scheduled to begin Jan. 1, 1992: proposed
completion dale ts.Sept. 1,1992.
The store will be a 54.000 aq. ft. Publix Food ft Pharmacy. In
addition to the traditional dairy, frozen food, grocery, meat and
produce departments, this store will contain the following
full-service departments: on-premisc bakery, dell, floral,
pharmacy, photo processing and fresh seafood. It will also have
featured the PRESTO! electronic payment system at the
checkout, PRESTO! ATM. paper and plastic grocery bag
recycling. Publix Plus Value Club electronic coupon service
and other services.
Developer of University Palms Is Neal Freeman. Watkins
Associated Developers, Atlanta. Ga. 30301.

Tim a cu a n a n n o u n ce s
new est n e ig h b o rh o o d
LAKE MARY - Celebrating
three years of sales, the develop­
e rs o f T im acu a n G o lf and
Country Club announce the
grand opening o f Us newest
luxury custom home
neighborhood: Fairway Hills.
Located at the southern-moat
section o f Timacuan. Fairway
HUIs Is the sixth single-family
home community planned for
this 700-acre setting off Rinehart
Road in Lake Mary.
Phase I of Fairway Hills In­
cludes 57 homcsltes am ong
r o llin g h ills . T r e e - lin e d
homesites start at 960.000, with
the majority of properties under
970.000; Golf view and lake view
properties range from 975.000 to
995.000. according to a press
release.
Rod Clark, general manager
and executive vice president of
The Prudential Florida Realty,
said in the release that sales for
Fairway Hills are expected to be
as strong as they have been for
th e o th e r c o m m u n itie s In

ti n i ■

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n * sure-m uggy

Although the final slate o f
builder* for Fairway Hills has
not been released, plans for
several "sp ec" homes are now
underway, with prices ranging
from 9230.000 to 9450,000.
Participating builders Include
Central Florida's award-winning
custom home builders, which
has become a Timacuan tradi­
tion.
Timacuan is a Joint venture o f
Dr. Hubert Earley and Patricia
"T rtsh " Stenstrom, whose fami­
ly has owned the land since the
1950s. The name, Timacuan.
and the canoe Incorporated into
the logo, pay tribute to the
Indians who inhabited the land
some 500 years ago.
T im a c u a n 's 7 .0 0 0 + • yard
world-class course was designed
by re n o w n e d g o lf cou rse
architect, Ron Garl. and the
community la anchored by a
23.000-square-foot clubhouse,
which Includes a full-service
restaurant and pro shop.

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�M - Sanford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 4, 1WI

Investigator: Dahmer killed
because he feared loneliness
AMoclatad Prats Wrlttr
MILWAUKEE An li|u
ffar of tonellncM that goes back
to hla parents' divorce led Jef­
frey Dahmer to kilt hom a exual
men he lured to hla apar ment
and keep their dismembered
remains, a police Investigator
M id Saturday.
That intense fear of being
alone apparently surfaced each
time one of the men wanted to
leave hla apartment, causing
Dahmer to kit) and dismember
the victim, the Investigator told
The Associated Press.
"H e didn't want anybody else
to leave him ," said the source,
speaking on condition of ano­
nymity. "Hla childhood situation
contributed a lot."
The source, a key Investigator
In th e caae, sa id he' w as
paraphrasing things Dahmer
told him In Interviews.
P o lic e a lle g e D ah m er. a
31-year-old Army veterad and
former chocolate factory
r y wprker.
has admitted kilting 17

over 13 yean. Including one In
Ohio and three at Ida grand­
mother's apartment In suburban
Milwaukee.
Dahmer. who records show
told hla probation agent he fett
guilty about being homosexual,
did not hate the gay men he
killed, aa some people have
suggested, the source said.
“ They were the easiest to get
into hla apartment." the officer
Police are investigating the
possibility Dahmer had killed
more than 17 people, the aouree
said. "It Is possible he Just
doesn't remember any more. We
ore looking at It tn that vein. We
haven't stopped looking for
victims. I wtl) tell you that."
Dahmer has admitted eating
the body part of one victim and
having aex with at least one
victim after death because of
"gratification, reliving the expe­
rience of knowing these people,"
the Investigator said.
Dr. Dave Busby, a Milwaukee
p sy c h ta trla t. s a id th e In ­
vestigator's explanation

Cousin to!Prozac nearing
approval for weight loss
A s a result, they reason, the
door wilt be open far Lilly to
market the drug Lovan to
treat obesity.
" I interpret the FDA's re­
cent action as fairly con­
clusive. I think they'll move
rather qu ickly to approve
Lovan, but it's difficult to say
what 'rather quickly* Is,” said
Mark Mayer o f the Sanford C.
Bernstein Investment firm.

INDIANAPOLIS — A cousin
to the antidepressant Ptozac
may receive federal approval
before the end o f the year for
treatment o f obesity.
Prozac, now In its fourth
y e a r on th e m arket and
approaching S I billion in an
nual sales worldwide. has
been dogged for the past year
by claims U causes violent
behavior, including suicide.
A H arva rd rese a rch e r's
study describing six patients
w h o d e v e lo p e d v io le n tly
s u ic id a l th o u g h t s vyhlle
treated with Prozac gave rise
to more than 50 lawsuits
against the drug's manufac­
turer. Ell Lilly and Co.
It atso helped inspire a
m e d ia c a m p a ig n a g a in st
P rozac by the Church o f
Scientology, which opposes
the practice o f psychiatry.
The Pood and Drug Ad­
m i n i s t r a t i o n 's r e je c t io n
Thursday o f a Scientology
group's btd to have Prozac
pulled from pharmacy shelves
has been Interpreted by' drug
Industry, analysts as a sign
the agency will soon quell any
lingering doubts abouL Pro­
zac's safety.

The last PDA hurdle Lilly
may face before Lovan Is
approved. Mayer said, la a
meeting later this year o f the
a
g e
n
c
y
a
P s y c h o p h a r m a c o lo g lc a l
Drugs Advisory Committee to
consider whether Prozac and
other antidepressant! cause
suicidal thinking. U Prozac is
cleared finally o f that passible
slde-rfTect, Lovan approval
could come quickly. Mayer
said.
“ We predict Lovan wlU be
approved for obesity tn the
latter half of 1991." said Ron
Nordmann o f PalncWebber.
."The use o f the product for
the treatment o f obesity has
not been associated with vio­
lent behavior."

Clergy arrested at
anti-abortion rally
WICHITA. Kan. - Scores of
clergy helped block an abortion
clinic Saturday before being ar­
rested with other anti-abortion
protesters.
More than 100 demonstrators.
Including 81 clergy members,
were arrested on charges of
trespassing during the protest at
Wichita Family Planning Inc.,
police said.
About 500 people took part in
the protest, police said.
Many demonstrators sat in the
driveway alongside the clinic
and others picketed op the
sidewalk and parking lots.
T h e a n ti-a b o r tio n grou p
O p e r a t io n R e s c u e b e g a n
sponsoring protests at three
abortion clinics in Wlchlla an
July 15. Since Ju ly‘ 22. there
have hern more than 1.600
arrests, police said.
Most of the clergy protesting
Saturday were from Homan
C u th o lic o r e v u n g e llc a l
churches, said Jim Bell, execu­
tiv e d irec to r o f Inter-Faith
Ministries, an umbrella group for

r e lig io u s o r g a n iz a t io n s In
Wlchlla.
Bishop Eugene Gerber o f the
Rom an C a th o lic d io cea e o f
Wichita waa among the clergy
who sang hymna and prayed at
the back entrance to Wichita
Family Planning Inc. He was not
arrested.
"W hat I'm trying to make
clear Is that I'm In solidarity
with the Intent o f what they're
doing." Gerber said.
About 80 abortion rlghta sup­
porters held a rally acroM the
street, carrying signs that said
"America Stands for Choice."
Randall T e rry , fou nder o f
Operation Rescue, argued with
the abortion rights supporters,
who shou ted at h im , ‘ ‘G o
home."
Tom Brown, owner o f a bar
near the clinic, said he's been
losing business because o f the
demonstrations. Protesters hand
out anti-abortion literature to hla
customers, he said.
"I tell these people. 'M y cus­
tomers arc here to eat and drink.
They arc not here to have
abortions. 1don't do aborttona,’ ”
Brown said.

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(Hwy. 17-92)
MON ■FBI. I S •SATURDAY 14

NOTICE OP PUBLIC MEETING
Thai
101

he's seen

sense" baaed on

Auflutt 4,1991 •4:00 to 7s00 pjn.

ImtSnamitona Cantor. BuMdtoaGLSrd Floor

"They are very, very Insecure
and dependent and U J u d l m
all to pieces when they are
- a

---------o«rnn.FL32940

“

-a------ A «t a— — . i J

•KM iKionco.

n c M ia .

D r. J o h n L l c c t o n e . •
paychologtat at the Milwaukee
County Mental Health

August it 1991 - 4:00 to 7:00 |Mit.
-

the observation s o f on In ­
v e stig a to r w ith no fo rm al
psychological or psychiatric
Dahmer could be making ev­
ery th in up or saying things tn
to pleooe." Lie*

Thg

the remains of 10 mutilated men
and one boy.

H ton oi | m h n M n i

of ffw pubic moottnag it to N t k Vw broAdsst p o o o U o Input bom th&gt; puW c &lt;
m t W f w L e o * ilu r a c w t o M t o lm p r o w lh o q u g ft y ,§ m c * flc y in d * # v t fy o lh e m m

•fflcuMnyM Ihty rams k&gt;stoncss DourxmnM mxi wtoooiigMmon m&lt; rangy
tetfh and human MrvtoM planning body tor Mch m tv Ics dWrict Baste on
W i Hp IT i ptinntng group ww p r v p w rnonvnvniMiKxw h#in i L f p w w f w ■

Ui

strange part of It ta. It
might be true."
____
Summoned by a man running
down a street with a handcuff on
one hand July 22. police went to

- *

Ortoftdo, FL 32901

Anything ta possible, but It
a
in
I sounds so simplistic and

Uke

-

towwtno:
FWWwUMpfi Of TO DOUfTUMaiMm I

9.
3. clMOOn Of BCM ntM niranuran so w cii pwww^DOC»tffinttrriiponwm w», wno

myou won id m o v m n puooo vnooonOt or novo tpocuMnoooi wen u voorprviwt v o w m ,
ooctact Martont Hlchfnofld of Lywnt Omwtfy M (407) 428-6208, TOO i

Animal rights
activists call
hunt barbaric
C L E W IS T O N . r ia . - T h e
Animal Rights Foundation o f
Florida bar isked the governor
to cancel th is yea r’ s statesanctioned alligator hunt, calling
It "b a rb a ric" and "blatan tly
Inhumane."
This to the first time the hunt
has drawn complaints tn Its
four-year history. Th e group
plana to stage a demonstration
here against the monthlong hunt
when It opens on Sept. 1. “ There's no Justification for
(the hunt).'' said Marian Lentz,
vice president o f the group.
“ W e are going to try to bring
some negative publicity to the
hunt." Lentz said. "T h ey really
are glamorizing tl every year."
The foundation argued In a
letter to Gov. Lawton Chiles that
allowing hunters to kill a on­
ce-endangered apeclca would
“ foster ... disregard for laws
protecting other endangered
species."
Chiles defended the hunt In a
written response to the group,
saying It benefits alligators by
attaching a “ commercial value"
to them.
State wildlife officials give the
sam e Justification: A llo w in g
hunters to profit from a hunt by
■citing alligator meat and hide
gives the state more clout to
preserve the species and its
disappearing wetland homes.
Chiles' letter also said income
from fees charged to hunters
help* pay for state programs that
protect the alligator.

Celebrate the Future

Seminole
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE

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SUNDAY

Sanford H e ra ld

Seminole All-Stars earn
berth in Colt World Series

Dolphins, Rsldsrs qo bislds
TOKYO — After sweating It oul for two day* In

CARROLLTON. Texas - On the
road again. Or to be more precise,
on the rood still.
Facing elimination every day
since losing thetr opener of the
South Zone tournament, the Semin o te PONY League Coh All-Stars
completed a sweep hack through
the losers' bracket by beating
Baytown. Texas. 9-3 Friday night.

The alr-condltloned dome, which fa home to
the Tokyo Ofante baacball team, wee a welcome
reeptte alter muggy midday workouts In 96*
degree weather, some o f T okyo's hottest
weather this summer.
Both teams lost their preseason openers last
week, with Miami suffering Its Brat preseason
shutout In 90 years, losing M to the Chicago
Bears. The Raiders were defeated by the Ban
Francisco 49ers 94* 17.
Dolphins coach Don Shula. as anxious as he
was to get some offense going, said he didn't
plan on using quarterback Dan Marino much
more than the first quarter.
At 14,012 miles far the round trip, this to the
farthest away game the Dolphins have ever
played. It will account far more than one-third of
all their mileage on the rood this year.

Miami invaatlgation eontinuas
MIAMI — Agents have delivered subpoenas
seeking records from students and University of
Miami officials in steps Indicating the federal
probe Into a financial grant scandal could be
headed to a grand jury. a newspaper reported.
A source who requested anonymity told The
Miami Herald late Friday that the university
would turn over Its subpoenaed records next
week, after the school determines how many
students are Involved.
FBI agents are going to start Interviewing
students, most o f them athletes, who are
suspected of filing falsified applications for aid
money they did not deserve.
Paul Miller, a spokesman for the FBI's Miami
office, said agents "have identified Individual
students who have received grants."
The Investigation has focused on Tony
Russell, a Lauderhill resident and former1
financial adviser In the athletic department.
Russell has said he doctored Pell Grant
application forma without the knowledge of
students or university officials. Neither Russell
nor any students have been charged.

io M

t o f c v iM

t w

SANFORD - With the first and
second-place teams Idle, the thirdplace Regulators gained ground
with a -17-4 win over Kinco in a
make-up game of the Sanford Rec­
reation Department Men's Tuesday
Night Softball League played Friday
at Chase Park.
In Friday's other make-up game.
Ihe Kokomo Recyclera dropped
Monroe Harbour Marina 10-3.
With a total of six games left to
play. State Market Restaurant (11*1)
has all but clinched the league title.
Second-place Beer: 30 (0-3) still has
a mathematical chance to pass
State Market while the Regulators
(9-4) could force a tie. Kinco. the
Kokomo Recyclers and Monroe
Harbour Marina are all 3-10.
Both Beer: 30 and Monroe Harbour
Marina will play doubleheaders on
Tuesday night at Chase Park.
Beer:30 will play Kinco at 6:30 p.m.
before taking on Monroe
□ Saa Chats, B ags SB

II • M — 4 4
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Records kttp falling
T A LLA H A S S E E — T w elve-yea r-o ld Ben
Maldonaldo led a parade o f record-setters by
winning his third track gold medal In Saturday’s
championships o f the AAU Junior Olympics.
Maldonaldo, o f Avenal. Calif., took his third
gold medal o f the week-long games with a mark
o f 2:12.16 In the-800-meter run for boys aged
11-12. That broke a record o f 2:13.07 set in
1088 by Jermaine Walker o f Houston. Texas.
Earlier Saturday. Maldonaldo won a gold
medal in the 3.000-meter run and had pre­
viously set a new record In the 1.500-meter run
for his age group.
By midaftemoon Saturday. 12 national Ama­
teur Athletic Union track and fleld records had
fallen during the entire Junior Olympics. Seven
new marks were set In early Saturday competi­
tion, among them:
• Nicole Underwood. 16, o f Youngstown.
Ohio, took Ihe gold with a time o f 4:38.32 In the
girls aged 15-16 1.500-meter run.
• Stacey Schroder. 17. o f Grand Island, N.Y..
won a gold medal In the girls aged 17-18 shot
put with a throw o f 47 feet. 3 H inches.
• Mike Ford. 18. o f Rochester. N.Y.. equaled
his own national record with a time o f 47.03
seconds to win the gold medal in the 400-meter
dash for senior boys. Ford set the mark Friday.
• Char Foster. 11. of Clearwater, broke her
own record In Ihe 80-meter hurdles for girls
aged 11-12 witha time of 12.60 seconds.

?•

A cco rd in g to m an ag er Rod
Fergrrson. the team checked out of
Its motel Saturday afternoon and
was making the drive to Lafayette.
Made up of seven players from
Seminole High School, seven from

p.m. Thursday. 5:30 p.m. and the
North Zone learn at 5:30 p.m. next
Saturday.
On Friday night. Lake Mary High
S ch o o l's Matt Dlem er stepped
forward for the Seminole ^olts,
throwing a four-hit complete game,
striking out three and walking
three. After walking the lead-on
batter and surrendering a two-run
home run to the second batter, he
m m »— » • t
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Out for a Saturday morning run, rido and run
Ovsf 300 paopla (above) turned out Saturday morning
to participate In the final Inatailmant of the Oliva
Garden Dustbaton Series. Beginning at the 8hope of
Meethrow, competitors started with a 3-mile run,
folidwed that with e 15-mlle btka ride and finlshad

it.

with another 3-mlle run. Apopka's Jeff Cuddebeck

(below, toft) won Saturday's event with a time of
1:09.06 to wrap up his Grand Prix series title. Kilty
•Sokotl of New Smyrna Beach (below, right) was the
top female finisher (1:16.08) Saturday.

SANFORD — Lee's Cablncta and
First Baptist Church won tw o
games each Friday night as the
Sanford Recreation Departm ent
Thursday Night Men's Slowpitch
Softball League played a make-up
night at Plnehurst Park.
O f the four games scheduled, only
one was actually played. In that
game, Mike Henley singled in a pair
o f runs to cap a four-run bottom of
Ihe eighth Inning as First Baptist
Church edged Lee's Cabinets 8-7.
First Baptist also picked up a 7-0
forfeit win when The Olive Garden
Restaurant failed to show up.
In ihe other scheduled games.
Lee's Cabinets was awarded an 8-4
win over The Olive Garden Restau­
rant In a suspended game and a 7-0
forfeit win over A A A Tree Service.
A fte r F rid a y n ig h t's a ctio n .
P lM h u n t. B ag* SB
NnlSaWMOtarc*

k a

The victory. Seminole's fifth In
four days and second over Baytown
in 34 hours, vaults Seminole Into'
the Coh World Series beginning
Tuesday. Aug. 6 In Lafayette. Indl-

Lake Mary and one from Lake
llow cll. the Seminole Colts have
been home a total of four days over
the last four weeks.
And it'll be at leant a week before
they're home again.
Fergeraon aakl that the World
Series will begin with the eight
finalists broken Into two four-team
pools. Each team will ptay the other
three In its pool once with the two
teams with the beat records in each
pool advancing to the semifinals
next Monday. The championship
game la set for Tuesday. Aug. 13.
Seminole will play the Host Area
team at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, the
Aata-Pactflc representative at 5:30

Forfeits mar
make-ups

U t 'lC U M l

n

1991

Regulators
gain ground

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Lafayette, here we eome

IN BRI EF

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Marlboro flald small but fast
BROOKLYN, Mich. — The smallest field ever
for a 500-mlle race will take the green (lag for
Sunday's Marlboro 500, although the 21 cars
could easily make up In speed what they lack in
numbers.
Starting with record-setting pole-winner Rick
Mean at 225.169 mph and running all the way
to the slowest qualifier, Canadian John Jones at
200.198. the lineup Is one o f the fastest In auto
racing history.
In the field arc 14 drivers who qualified at
speeds faster than 220 mph. Including Saturday
qualifiers Arlc Luyendyk 222.910 and A.J. Foyt
222.224.
The 21 starters for the 500-mller breaks the
previous record o f 22 set in the 1924 Indianapo­
lis 500 and equaled In 1925.

•4.

Sanford’s Ecksteins have
another reason to celebrate
By M A N NM TH

Herald Sports Writer

BASEBALL
□ 8 p.m. - ESPN. San Francisco Giants at
Cincinnati Reds, (L)
With Seminole High School basaball coach Mike Powers (lell) and Seminole
Community College assistant coach Lefty Renaud (center) looking on. Rick
Eckstein (right) accepted an academic scholarship to attend S C C this fall.

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 ,

SANFORD — It's been one of
those weeks for Ihe Eckstein family.
The week began with Christine
and Kenny receiving new kidneys.
It ended with David and his Semi­
nole Colt teammates earning a berth
In the PONY Baseball Colt League
World Series (see related story).
In between. Ricky, the fourth of
Sanford City Commissioner Whltcy
and Pat Eckstein's five children,
accepted an academic scholarship
to Seminole Community College.
A 1991 graduate of Seminole High
School, Rick Eckstein will use his
scholarship to pursue u business
degree and will playing for Coach
Jack Punlellus' baseball team.
"W e 'rr glad to have him." said
Panlclias. "H e’s strong. Intelligent,
a good student and a really nice
ktd."
Eckstein, who graduated with a
3.1 grade point average, hit .312
und led tile team In RUI as a senior

for Mike Powers' Fighting SemiHoles.
" I 'm happy about getting a
chance to play In front of my
fam ily." said Eckstein, who will try
out for third base with the Raiders.
"It's what I wanted, being close to
home and getting u chance to get
adjusted to college before going on
to u university."
He Joins four other Seminole
county high school players who are
goin g to SCC this fall. Joining
O viedo's Pete Arromone. David
Hlanton and B.J. Calupu and Lake
Mary's Mike Merlhlr. as Pantclias
and assistant Lefty Renaud attempt
to rebuild the Raiders Into the slate
contenders that they used to be.
Panlclias said Eckstein could gel
a lot of playing time In his freshman
year.
" A lot depends on how things
fall." said Panlclias. "W e have 2V»
positions open In the Infield and he
will la- competing with Arcomone
and Cnlauu. so there Is a good
Bee E ckstein. Page SB

T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A IL Y
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13 44
Detroit
Boston
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41 f t
Milwaukee
Baltimore
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New York at Detroit, In)
Texas at Milwaukee, In)
Seattle at Cailfamia, In)
Toronto (Slotttemyro 10-4) at Batten
IGr Harris! 11). 1:01p.m.
Kanut City (Saberhpgtn M l at Cleveland
(Otto *1), 1:31p.m.
New York (Taylor 14) at Detroit (Alfred
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Baltimore IMuuina 44) at Chicago (Hough
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Teiat (Boyd 41) at Mllwaukao I Boole 71),
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Seattle IHanton 41) at California (Me
Catklll 4 111, 4:01p.m.
Mlnnewla (Erlcktan 141) at Oakland
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Monday's Oamet

Milwaukee at Baltimore, 7:11p.m.
New York at Detroit, 7:11p m
Botton at Kantat City. 1:11 p.m.
Cleveland at Texas, 1:11p.m.
Seatlle at Oakland. 10:41p.m.
Mlnnotota at California. 14:11p.m.
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Sen Prencleu at AtlentA 7:44 p.m.
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Tartebull, K a n u t City, 11; CRIpktn,
Baltimore, H ; Deer, Detroit, It.
4/ HHonderton. Oakland,
11; R A Iem ar, Terente, 11; Pelonle,
Cel Item Ia I I ; Cwytor, Detroit. 14. WhIN,
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Henke, Toronto, 77
NATIONAL LEAGUE
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JOT
Biggie Heu
CeidarenMon
33 111 .» 7
104 M l 4i no .JM
Finley Heu
IM
tf 174 .AM: ns
Sandberg Chi
N M4 41 114 JOt
Bonilla Pit
Butler. Lea Angela*. 71; Johnten. New
York. Of; Sandberg. Chicago. 44; OSmltti. St.
Leult. 41. JBell, Fitttburgh, 4); Van Slyke.
Plttiburgh. 41; Gent. AtlentA 01; Pendleton.
AtlentA 41.
R e u Batted lo
WCIark, Sen FrencitCA 74; Bend* Pitttburgh, 74; Johnten. New York, 71; Oewton.
Chicago. 44; GBell. Chicago. 44; Bonilla.
Pltttburgh, *4; Kruk, Philadelphia. *1.
Httt
TGwynn. San DlepA 117; Butler, Loa
Angelet. 117; Samuel, Lo* Angelet. IM; Jo u .
St. L ou Ia 111; Sandberg. Chicago. 11);
Pendleton, Atlanta. Ill; Calderon. Montreal.

111.
Jo u , St. Lou IA 30; Me Reynold*. New York,
17; Merrit. Cincinnati, ! ) ; Bonilla, Pitttburgh, 11; Zell*. St L ouIa 73; Gant,
Atlanta. U ; Pendlaton. Allan!*, n .
Trlgtot
TGwynn. San Dtago. », Lankford. SI. LouIa
g; Finley. Moutton, j; LCon/ale/. Houtton. 4;
Kruk. Philadelphia. 4; Candule. Houtton. 4;
F.lder, San Francltco. 4; Van Styka. Pllttburgh. 4.
HJohnten, New York. V ; MeWllllamt, San
Francltco. 11; Mllcholl, San Francltco, I I ;
Carl. Atlanta. 70 WCIark. San Francltca.
10; GBall. Chicago. 14; MeGrift. San Oiago.

I*.

Niton. Atlanta. 54. Grltiom. Montreal. *4;
DeShield*. Monlraal, 41; Coleman. Now
York. 31; BondA Pltttburgh. 31; Lankford.
St. LouIa N ; Butler, Lot AngeleA 17.

t»S,

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Detroit BA OncMnoMM
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Lot Angela* Rome v i. Atlanta at
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etttmv York JetA In)
Ctty.W )
(nlferfc
at Tcfeya,
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Pheanla at team*, (n)
tp m .

BwtloMat NewVart Otonfe, 4pm.
Tamga Rayat CNuaNad, PN 4J*.

04ANO BLANC, Mich. - Leadut attor
Sefurdey-t third raund at the It million Bukk
Open, played on the 7,144-yard, per 77
Warwick Hill* Dot* And Country Club cewru.
Marco Dowton
44-7*44-341
Nick FeWe
Chip Beck
4747-44—141
bill Britten
Howard T witty
714*44-14)
Orep Herman
474471— M l
Tim llmpeen
714444—H4
Mai Sutton
L u J anion
7I4S4B-H 4
Cen* Sauer*
474440-144
RryenHerton
7*7441-141
Rred Bryant
Lanny Wadhint
Dutty Wotdert
Wayne Orady
44-44-71— M l
BredFaaen
4444-71— M l
Scott Hech
4X7*71-141
Joy Den Bioko
744141-MI
Stove Pot#
Jay Dotting
OilMergan
4*4*71-M*
447344— 107
JehnCeek
Billy Andrade
7*4* 44— 147
Berry Jaeckel
474*71— 147
Andrew M a gu
**4*71-107
Oevldldwardi
4*4*71-147
Kenny Knee
4*4*71— 107
Dicky Thempten
7*T*4*-1M
Bobby Clempatt
7*7*44—NO
Mike Sullivan
7*7*4*—MO
Jc Anderson
Ed Fieri
Mike Sfandly
Dove Sutherland
Brian Watte
Mart McC umber
Robert Gomel
Jim Hal let
Brett Upger
Mike Smith
Ken Green
Sam Randolph
■illy Mayfair
Bill Sander
John Inmen
Stove Lowery
Tommy Moore
Bon Cfinthaw
Don Poole r
Fulton A"em
David Canipo
JohnMahattoy
Tom Byrum
Brad Fabel
Clark Burreught
Mike Springer
Leonard Thempten
Brian Kamm
Richard Zokoi
Jim Thorpe
MerfcHayoe
Greg Twlggt
Mike Donald
Scott Gump
Perry Arthur
Char let Bow let
Brian Claer
Jim Benepa
Greg Bruckner
Mark Lye
O A Welbrlnf
JettMaggert

7*4*74-10*
4*7*7ft-m
1*7*71-10*
47-71-71— 14*
7*47-71— 144
7*71-44— 1H
7*71-4*—IN
7*71-4*-lN
714*7*— 1I4
4*71-7*—114
71-47-71— IN
4*7171-114
4*7*71-114
47 71 71-114
7*4*71-114
4*4*71-114
47-7*71— IN
4*4*74— IN
4*7174— H I
17 7*74-111
7*7I7*-1I1
71-4*71— 111
7 IJ* 71-111
4*7*71-111
4*7171-111
7*4*74-111
7*47 71-111
4*7171-111
7*7*71-111
4*71 71-111
714* 71-111
47-73 74-111
7*4*74-111
7*4*71— 11)
7344 73— li t
714*71-114
717*71-114
4*71 74-114
71 4 »7 1 -]U
7*71-74-11}
714*71—111
7*7*71-111
7*71 7*-H7

JIR IC H O . N.V. — Loodore otter Satur­
day's Mcond round at the S444.4M Northvllle
Lang leland Claulc played an the AASlyerd.
par-73 Meadew Broth Golf Clubcourte
George Archer
4*47-1)1
Larry Laorettl
4744-111
J .C Snood
4*4*— i n
Dick Hendrkkaon
7*4*-IN
Bob Char let
U 70-1)4
Jim Dent
U 7 0 -I N
Jim Colbert
47 71-1)4
Rocky Thomgeon
7147-IN
Cher let Coody
7*4*-lN
Miller Barber
U 7 1 -I N
GoryCowan
4* 7 0 -IN
Jim O'Hern
7*70— 140
Gary Player
4*71-140
LerryZtogtor
71-70-141
GeneUttter
71-70— lei
Chi Chi Rodrigue/
to ; i - u i
Dele Douglu i
* e -7 )-u i
BobBriu
4*73-141
M lka Joyu
4*71—141
John Srodlo
734*-143
Jock Kiefer
7174-143
Billy C u per
71-71-143
Larry Mowry
7073-143
Paul Moran
73 71-141
Dkk Rhyen
71-71-141
BaboHitkey
7173-14)
Doray Simon
7073-143
Kon Still
7073-14)
Hemaro Blancat
47 74-143
L u Trevino
7444-144
Jack Flock
7470-144
Butch Baird
7470-144
Dove Hill
7171— 144
Dewitt Weaver
73 73-144
Dudley W ru n g
73 73-144
Den M u u n g t le
7173-144
JlmAlbuo
7074-144
John Paul Cain
7) 71-141
Ju JIm o n o i
7171-141
Tommy Aaron
71-74-141
O v ll to Moody
7444-144
Lloyd Moody
77 40-144
Jimmy Powell
7*70-144
Dm Morgen
7171-144
Jerry Berber
73 13-144
Bob Raw lint
7173-14*
BobBrlckton
73 73-144
Fred HawkInt
73 74-144
Frank Board
u 70-144
Simon Hobday
7073-147
Waller Zombrltkl
7071-147
At Kelley
7077-147
Rivet Me Bee
7473-I4C
Aglm Bar dive
77 71-144
Bob Goalby
74 71-140
Bert Yancey
74 74-144
Tom Shaw
7)70-144
Harold Henning
7) 71-144
Jetut Rodrigue/
7) 70-144
Charlie SINord
7177-144
Tom Joyce
7*73-14*
BobBetley
7*70-14*
B*n Smith
77 73-110
Charm Owent
73 70-1)0
Richard Craw ford
7*70-111
Chuck Workmen
70 74— 131
Oay Brewer
77 75— ill
Bobby NkhoJt
77 71-11)
Bruce Crompton
7*74-11)
Dkk Howell
7077-151
Bill Collin*
7474-111
Jim Ferree
7*71-111
Billy Maxwell
77 74-113
LPGA Pbor-Mer Clattic
VIENNA, Ohio — Loader* alter Saturdey'i
ttcond round ol the LP G A Phar Mor
tournament, played on the 4,N7 yard, per 73
Squaw Crook Country Club.
Jull Inktler
70 41-111
Pat Bradley
H U -1 N
Danielle Ammaccepan*
4 * 7 i-iN
Dottle Mochrle
4*TO -IN
Deb Richard
7040-IN
JonoGoddet
e*7*-iN
Data Eggellng
H 4 4 -1 N
Tammla Green
714 4 -IN
Mittle Me George
7140-140

Salty Little
Cindy)
I FlggCurrier
Poggy Klrtch
Sherri SNlnheuor
Martha Meuw
Dawn Coe
Alice Miller
Barb Thome*
Colleen Walker
Gall Gr them
Kathy Pottlrwalt
Alice Rlttmen
Karen Devlet
MelltuMcNemare
Merle Flgueret Ooftl
Nina Fowl
Elaine Crotby
BarbMucha
Shirley Furlong

7)4*-140
DBTROIT LtOKS - Slgmd M art Brawn.
4*71-140
linebacker, and Eric Sander*, otttntlve
*7 71-140
71-70— 141
PH ILAD ELP H IA E A B L IS - Signed
73*44-141
Kevin McArthur, linebacker. Waived Chad
Fortune, tight end.
71 70— 141
71*70— 14)
•BATTLE SBAHAWKI - Agreed N term*
7*71-1*1
with Derrick Fenner, running hock, on a
oneyear contract.
7170- 141
7*71— 141
WASHINBTON REDSKINS - Waived
Chrlt Shale, punter.
7144— 141
7171141
71-70— 143
BRITISH COLUMBIA LIONS — Added
73 70-143
Mark Janet end Allen Perkm. linebacker*,
to the rotter.
4*74-143
71 71-143
W IN N IP R O B L U E B O M B B R B Activated Craig Herrleon, fullback, tram the
73-7*— 141
H 7 I-1 4 3
practice rotter, and Leotha Hull, wide
4*71-143
receiver, end Darryl Sampeon.
73-71— 14)
back, from the mervo lit*. TrenOerrod B rk
Caroline Keggl
7171-143
Streeter,' wide receiver, to the reterve Hit.
Ratio Janet
717*— 143
Relowed Rkh Howe, ileibictu and Eddie
Jayne Thebeli
71-73-141
Pamela Wright
*7 74-143
Vicki Fergen
attentive tackle, and Dove Vankoughnett.
4*74-143
Patty Sheehan
71 71-143
■offentlvo guard, to the practice roeler.
Sue T hornet
7171-144
COLLEBE
Katie Petenon
4*71— 1*4
BIO SOUTH CONFERENCE - Named
Ten) Tetum
Keren Clark director of public rotettorw.
7*74-144
Key CockerIII
71731*4 INDIANA STATE - Named Marty Fin*
Jody Amchuti
74 70-14*
atiiifant football coach and Craig Bundy
Hlroml Kobiyethl
volunteer ettitlenf football coach. Homed
74 70— 144
Cindy Scholelield
Paul Schut ettitlenf volleybell coach.
71-71— 144
Kim Shlpmen
74 70-144
MURRAY STATE - Named Scott Edgar
Sandra Palmer
73-71— 144
men'* betketball coach.
Nancy Scranton
74 70— 144
S.C.-SPARTANBURO — Named Bronwyn
Nancy Harvey
4*75— 144
"Bronle” Reynold* woman'* betketball
Betty King
coich.
7)73-144
Meg Mai Ion
71 73-1*4
W E S T V IR Q IN IA W E S L E Y A N Jen* Critter
74 70-1*4
Announced Itw ret Ignat Ion oi Derrick Looton,
Amy Alcott
men'* uccar coach.
70 74— 144
Nancy While
73 71-144
Suten Sender*
H 73-141
Judy Dlcklnton
7)71-141
JoenDelk
7174141
Amy Beni
7173141
AUTO RACING
Deborah MeHattie
7444-141
7:30 p m. — SC. Speedway Sunday
Merc I Bo/erth
7)71— 1*5
17:10 a m - WFTV 4, CART Marlboro 104
Janice Gibton
71741*1
BASEBALL
StephanIt Meynor
7147— 141
1;U p.m. — WTBS. San Diego Padret a
Joan Pltcock
7*75-141
Atlanta Brevet. IL)
Brandle Burton
7170-143
3:30 p.m. - WAYK 14. T o u t Ranger* a
Maggie Will
7*71-141
Milweukm Brewer*. (L&gt;
Kerin Mundinger
7471— 141
3 p m. - WON. WOR. Chicago Cub* at New
York Mott. (L)
"1
I p.m. — ESPN. San Francltco Giant* a
I
Cincinnati Rtdt.IL)
BAIKKTBALL
•ASK BALL
A uarirto lu a t u
4:30 p.m. - SC. WDL. Calgary It* 4
Halifax
Wlnd|*mmtrt
CALIFORNIA ANGELS - Purchated the
FOOTBALL
contract of Mike Mar thall. tint bateman
11:30 e m. - SUN. NFL In Jecktonvlll*
outfielder, Irom Palm Spring* of the
4th
B
Goal
California League. Optioned Floyd Bennliter,
* p.m. — TNT, NFL Preuaton. Wathlngtor
pitcher, to Palm Spring*.
Rtdtklnt at Pltttburgh Sit*tort. (LI
SEATTLE MARINERS - Placed Henry
* pm — SUN. CFL. Saikatchewan Rough
Cotta outfielder, on the lld e y di tabled litt
rider* at Edmonton Etklmot
Recalled Alonzo Powdtl. outfielder, from
OOLF
Calgary ai Itw Pacific Coat! League
1:30 p.m. - ESPN. Senior PGA Lent
TEXAS RANOEBS Recalled Brian
I tlend Claulc. (L)
Bohanon, pitcher, from Oklahoma City of the
1-3* p m - ESPN. LPGA Phar Mot
American Auoclalton. Placed John Barfield,
Clattic, (LI
pitcher, on Ihollday dl tabled II tt.
4 p m - WCPX 4. Bulcfc Open. (L &gt;
Mifltnil L m w
PAN AMERICAN OAMES
ATLANTA BRAVES - Activated Sid
* p.m. — TNT. Track, batketball. woman')
Bream, lirtl bowman, Irom the IS day
diving,
women'!
gymnastic*. (L )
diubled lltt. Sent Jett Parrott, pitcher, to
TENNIS
Rkhmondoitho International League.
I p.m. — SC. U S. Pro Championship. (L )
CHICAGO CUBS - Activated Danny
5pm . — ESPN. Ma/da Clattic. tlnolt
Jackton. pitcher, from the lld e y diubled
7pm - SUN. Volvo ol Lot Angela*. (LI
lltt. Sent Dave Pavla*, pitcher, to Iowa of the
VOLLEYBALL
Amerktn Auoclalton.
)p m. - SUN. 1*11 Miller UtoTour
BASKETBALL
DALLAS MAVERICKS Signed Brad
Davit, guard, to a one-year contract.
NEW YORK KNICKS - Named Dick
Harter. Paul Silas and Jeff Van Gundy
atsittonl coaches.
FOOTBALL
DALLAS COWBOYS chel. running back.

Waived Eric Mit

BASEBALL

1:10p m. - WMJK AM (IDO). Lo* Angel
Dodgers at Houtton Astro*
1 01 pm - WHOG AM (4*0). South*)
League. Chattanooga Lookout* at Or Ian
Sundays, doublehaadtr
I OS p m. - WWNZ AM (7*0). San Fra
dteo Giant* at Cincinnati Rtdt

Waterfowlers need to take note: if it’s not steel (shot), it’s not legal
Florldu w aterfow l hunters
would be wise to hold oiT from
buying shells with lead shot, no
matter how low the sale price.
Sportsmen hunting ducks and
coots this year must use steel
shot throughout (h r United
Stales. A five-year federal plan to
phase out toxic lead shot culmi­
nated this year.
" T h e 1991-92 w a t e r fo w l
season will be the first tim e (hat
steel shut has been required for
all duck and coot hunting." said
Dave Urakhage, a w aterfow l
biologist with the Florida Game
and Fresh Water Fish Com ­
mission.
Lead shot pellets arc some­
times consumed by waterfowl,
causing lead poisoning In them

a n d p o s s ib ly In s p e c ie s w h ic h
p re y u p o n th e m .

Steel shot is the only approved
non-toxic shot available. Steel
shot that has been plated with
nickel or copper as a rust
preventative isulsoacceptable.
P la te d steel shot s h o u ld n o t b e

confused w it h c o p p e r-p la te d le a d
s h o t, w h ic h has b e e n tra d i­
t io n a lly a v a ila b le In s o m e p r e ­
m i u m d u c k loads. If It's n o t
ste e l. It 's no t legal.

Waterfowlers have long re­
sisted using steel shot. Steel is
much harder than lead, and the
steel pellets can score the barrels
o f older shotguns. At the present
time, steel shut loads are less
effectIve than those o f lead
b e c a u s e th e y lu c k th e

v

J IM
SHUPE*

knockdown power and the dis­
tance. A box o f steel shot will
also run from $2 lo $5 more
than a comparable box o f lead
shoi.
Ducks are hard enough to hit.
but steel shot will make It even
more sporting. Hunters can be

proud o f limits taken with the
use o f steel shot.
Duck hunters can also take
solace In the fact that the use of
steel shot will greatly Increase
the num ber o f ducks flying
south each year. This will resuli
In better hunting for everyone.
• H u m

s c o o p

D isap pearin g w etlan ds for
b re e d in g and h a b ita t have
greatly reduced duck popula­
tions. Hopefully, the elimination
o f lead shot will help to cause an
upswing In waterfowl numbers
for future generations.
PI8H1NO FO R EC AST
S ieve Gard at the O steen
B rid ge F ish C am p reports the
usual .bream and catfish action.

Unusually high waters have
made bass fishing real tough
because they arc out In the cow
pastures. Fishing will remain on
the slow s id e u n til c o o le r
weather.
Sebastian In le t has been
great for snook (season closed),
redflsh. flounder Jack crevalle
and tarpon. Live shrimp and
finger mullet continue to be the
top live balls while the oneounce jig rules as the most
favorite artificial.
C a p ta in J a c k a t P o r t
Canaveral r e p o rt s g o o d o ffs h o re
action with dolphin, wahoo and
king mackerel. The best fishing
Is taking place fn 100-170 feet of

w a te r. Uottom fis h in g fo r
grouper and snapper Is also
holding up. but be prepared to
fish in 150-270 feci o f water for
l he bigger fish.
A few scattered trtplctall and
cobla are In the buoy lino while
some nice flounder and mangrovi- snapper are hitting Inside
the Fort on finger mullet. Redfish are rated as good on the
flats of the Banana and
rivers.
Ponca Inlet has prov
steady action with sheeps!
Jack crevalle. small blucflsh
a few reds. Mosquito Lagoon
plenty of school reds and l
for those anglers who like lo
the Hats.

0

�■ M B H H n w jfip M S I

Sanford HsraM, Sanford. Florida - Sunday. August 4, 1991 - M
\
1

------------------ ------------------------------------------- -—

1
t
I
1

Oviedo Juniors, Seniors come up just short

-

•* 9a a
if V ' .
•r?,«Ag i j u i . i
u a v 4jT

Hi V

•

n

Both (he Oviedo U tile League Junior
(13-year-olds) and Senior (14-15) All-SUr
teams feel just short of claiming state

going to go when North Brandon's first
i alter struck out but still managed to reach
first on a poao ball. While King walked the
next two bolters to load the bases. It looked
like he might work his way out of the jam
when the next hitter grounded into a 1-2-3
double play.
But wtth runners on second and third, the
next batter blooped a single over third base
to score two unearned runs.
After spotting North Brandon a 54) lead.
Oviedo had a chance to get back Into the
game in the fourth Inning when Bellhom
walked. Andy Hynes singled and DlTore
eras hit by a pitch to load the bases with one
out.
Mike Duncan then lined a shot off the left
center Held fence that scored Bellhom and
Hynes. But DlTore was thrown out at the
plate on a close play and. when he slammed
his helmet In dkgust. was ejected from (he

,
La
ns

K jk
jI
HB

•‘r W W f

ttothM.
A n d rew T ay lo r, pln ck running for
before a wild pitch
dvaneed Taylor to third.
Mark Metcalf then walked raid stole second
before another wfld pMch oBowed Taylor to
score and Metcalf to go to third. Metcalf
came In when Ted Brown's ground baB waa
(Displayed by the North Brandon third
beat man.
There w aa only a 45-minute break
between the two games aa the first game
ended at 7:30 pro. and the second started at
8:15 p.m. But somewhere In that period.
O viedo lost Its momentum as North
Brandon took advantage of five Oviedo
errors and four walks issued by starting
pitcher Brtoa King to win the finale.
■ O f (he eight runs North Brandon scored in
the nightag&gt;. four were earned. In the
Oviedo actually out-hit North

1
1

1

—

Y

—

Hr

- e»

by Rich DlTore
7

7

^

j

M*ra Dmiean draw In two runs with s basal losdsd doubts Thursday
night lor the Oviedo Little League senior (14 end 1® All-Stars In thslr
stats championship game with North Brandon..Oviedo
Ovl
lost, S-2.

1 8 -S .

Ovtedo got an Idea of how things were

Eckstein

Chase«

l

Ovtedo never challenged after that.
Tim Slavik led Oviedo's etghl-hlt attack In
the night cap wtth a double and four singles
In four at bats. Hynes eras 2-for-3 wtth a run
scored while Dbncan was * for 1 wtth hts
double and two RBI. HemhTx was l-for-4
and Betthom, who had a single in the first
game, scored a run.
For the All-Star season, the Oviedo
Seniors (13-3) had a team earned run
avenge of 2.18 and outacored their oppo­
nents 170-44.
There waa no report on the Ovletkr
Juniors' game wtth Homestead.

l

Marina at
7:30 p.m . Monroe H arbou r
Marina will then play State
Market Restaurant at 6:30 p.m.
W e ath e r p erm ittin g, the
league will wrap up with three
j gam es at Chase Park neat
&lt; Thursday. This time. State
Market Restaurant will have to
; May a doubleheader. After the
J Regulators and Beer 30 play at
• 6:30 p.m.. State Market Restaurant aril) Usee Klnco at 7:30 p.m.
■before f i ni shi ng w i t h the
Kokomo Recyclers at 8:30 p.m.
On Friday night. Brad Krugel
-. launched a grand slam to
.highlight a 10-run third inning
. that carried the Regulators post
Klnco In a game that w as
’ stopped by the 13-run mercy
rule in the bottom of the fifth
v Inning.
John Kelger contributed a
jriple, two singles and a run
• scored. Brian Curtis added two
doubles and two runs scored
while Randy Middleton doubled,
singled and scored two runs.
'Dan Bhiflet atfligM twice and
1scored twice.
• Others chipping in were Cary
Keefe) and Jeff Futrell (each with
. taro singles and a run scored).
Bob Rowe (double, tw o runs
scored). David Goldsttck (single.
..two runs scored) and Frank

IIB
chance for him to play.”

Randolph and Bob Keefe! (each
wtth a run scored).
Providing the offense for Klnco
were Troy Turner and Emroltt
Davis (each wtth a double and a
single). Keith Denton and Randy
Bryant (a single and one run
scored apiece), Joe Dclucia
(single) and Chris Wargo and
Craig Toast (one run scored
each).
In the nightcap, the Kokomo
R e cy cters spotted M onroe
Harbour Marina a 2-0 lead in the
top of the first inning before
striking for five runs In the home
half of the Inning. After adding a
single run in the third, the
Recyclers tacked on two runs In
both the fifth and sixth innings.
Greg Hensley led the 14-hit
attack for the Recyclers, col­
lecting a double, two singles and
two runs scored. Aaron Johns
and James Bell both singled
twice and scored twice while
Erik Luce and Milton Smith each
hit two singles and scored a run.
Keith Acree hit one single and
■cored two runs. Bert Herring
and Jerry Herman each added a
single.
For Monroe Harbour Marina.
Ron Fava singled twice and
scored a run while John Cnuiiua
hit one single and scored a run.
George Denton and R. Lilly each
had a single.

P a n te lla s a lso sa id that
because Eckstein's attitude and
work ethic, he could be a good
player for the Raiders.
"H e's a throwback to the old
days,"
" said Pantellas. “He’s very
polite, unassuming iand a real
hard worker. He also1has
I
leader­
ship qualities. He's the type of
kid who's going to stay wtth II.

ColtsU -* j
r H

Pinehurst
Cswtla a s d fr a w lB
G a to r's Dockside lea d s the
league with a 10-2 record. It is
followed In the standings by
Seminole Mobile Radio (8-3),
Lee's Cabinets (6-6), First Bap­
tist Church (7-6). The Olive
Garden Restaurant (8-10) and
A A A Tree Service (1*12).
The league will play two more
make-up nights this week.
Monday night at Chase Park.
G a to r'a Dockside, S em in o le
Mobile Radio and First Baptist
C h u r c h w ill e a c h p la y a
doubleheader. A t 6:30 p.m.
Gator's Dockside will play Semi­
nole Mobile Radio, at 7:30 p.m.
F ir s t B a p tis t C h u rc h w ill
challenge Gator’s Dockside and
at 8:30 p.m. First Baptist Church
will face Seminole Mobile Radio.
Thursday night at Pinehurst
Park. AAA Tree Service will take
on Gator's Dockside at 6:30 p.m.
before Seminole Mobile Radio
plays another doubleheader, at
7:30 p.m. against Lee's Cabinets
and at 8:30 p.m. against AAA
Tree Service.
Lee's Cabinets led First Baptist
Church. In a game originally
scheduled for June 27. 4-2 going
Into the bottom o f the seventh
inning but Billy and Tom Gracey
had back-to-back, two out RBI
singles to send the game to extra
Innings.
The Split brothers. Shannon
and Craig, came back to drive In
runs In the top of the eighth
Inning as Lee's Cabinets went
back ahead 7-4. Baptist didn't
quit, however, and answered
wtth the four runs, capped by
Henley's two out hit.
Contributing to a 14*hlt First
Baptist Church were Henley
(three singles, run. three RBI).

Robert Jones (three singles, two
runs. RBI). Bobby Barbour (three
singles, run). Jordan Beckner
(tw o singles, two runs. RBI).
Billy Gracey (two singles. RBI),
Tom Gracey (single. RBI) and
Steve Laurence and Andy Blake
(one run each).
Doing the damage for Lee's
Cabinets were Tony Davis (three
singles, three runs). Craig Appel
(triple, single). Duane Lee (dou­
ble. single. RBI). Ricky Kidd
(d o u b l e , ru n , R B I), M ark
Schneider and Shannon Split
(one single, one run and one RBI
each). Craig Spilt and Greg
Hensley (one single and one RBI
each). Bubba Split (single, run)
and Russell Holloman (single).

and If you stay with It. you are
going to make It."
Rkk played gttf at Seminole
High School his first two years
for hts father before going out for
the baseball team. While he said
he had no regrets about giving
up golf, the sport might still be
in his future.
*'l would like to go to a major
college or university and play
golf after I leave SCC." said
Eckstein.

It's been a memorable weak for tha Eckstaln siblings. Not only did
Christine and Kenny received new kidneys, Rick (foreground)
accepted an academic scholarship to attend Somlnole Community
College white David (background) and his Seminole Colt All-Star
teammates earned a berth in the PONY Baseball Colt World Series.

k ic k e d b y th e B a y to w n
shortstop.
After Baytown cut the lead tn
half with Its two runs tn the
bottom o f the first. Seminole got
a run back In the top o f trie
second aa Eckstein walked, stoic
second and came In on a single
bv Freeman.
The lead grew back to four
David Eckstein (Seminole) led
when
Seminole scored a run In
off the game with a walk and
Scott Fergerson (Sem in ole) the fourth. Brian Milner (Lake
tingled. After they both moved Mary) led o ff with a walk but was
on a pass hall. Diemer singled thrown out trying to go to third
them both tn. He tiien stole on a single by Eclutdn. An out
second, went to third on a pass later. D iem er doubled home
ball and scored an a ground ball Eckstein.
Diemer gave h im self some
by Matt Freeman (Seminole).
more breathing room when he
Seminole added another run s in g le d h o m e M orga n and
that Inning when a fly ball hit Eckstein In the sixth Inning.
Robert Bologna (Lake Howell) Seminole's final run scored (n
waa mlsplayed by the Baytown the seventh inning when Jeremy
centerflelder for a two-base er­ Chunat (Seminole) walked and
ror. Bologna when a ball hit by came around on a triple by Mike
Robby Morgan (Seminole) was Werner (Lake Mary).

dominated Baytown the test of
the way.
He also helped dom inate
Baytown offensively, playing a
key roll In Seminole's four-run
rally in the top of the first
Inning.

la a proud mombor o f tho “ Wolcomo
Wagon*9Family In Samlnola County

If You Are:
Moving Into O r
Around T h e Area
Getting Married
Having A Baby

The Lee's Cabinets win
The Olive Garden Restaurant
was a game that was started on
June 20. but was suspended
after four Innings by rain. Lee's
claimed the automatic win when
The Olive Garden did not show.
Pacing the Lee's Cabinets of­
fense were Bubba Split (home
run. single, two runs, three RBI).
Schneider (two singles. RBI).
Davis (triple, run). Appel (dou­
ble. two runs), Duane Lee (dou­
ble. run). Craig Split (single, iwo
RBI), Danny Lee (RBI) and
Shannon Spill and Kidd (one run
each).

Let your Welcome Wagon representative
answer your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.
If You Live In O ne O f Th ese 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

Providing the offense for The
Olive Garden Restaurant were
John Love (two singles. RBI).
Brian Spoon (two singles, run).
Scolt Edwards (two singles).
Rick Thomas (single, two RBI).
Mark Butler (single, RBI). Larry
Edwards and Biake Mylon (one
single and one run each). Steve
Wall and Chris Wicks (one single
each) and Joe Flglcr (run).

Or Anytime Day Or Night

Call 646-9644

A/C RECHARGE

LIVE RACINC ACTION
WIN BIG MONEY ON 7W E GREYHOUNDS

EXHAUST

Cafette Conwwr

ACTION TODAY
Matin*#- 1:00pm
Rain-or-Shine
GREYHOUND PARK

HORSES
FROM
CALDER

Sanford Herald

S P E C IA L

* 3 9 :9 3

Today -12:30 PM
C e n tra l F lo rid a 's L A R G E S T Action Attraction

*34.95 *44.88 *84,85

C irc u la tio n R e p re s e n ta tiv e s W ill H e lp
Y o u S ta rt Y o u r H o m e D e liv e r y T o d a y !
C a ll 322-2611

»

�- Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 4, 1901
■

i
if *

Education
Students take competition

IN BRIEF

•fVMRII

Herald Staff Writer

Davte on Dm m List at West Virginia
Manda Denier Davla. o f 001 Fox Valley Drive In Longwood,
was named to the Deans List at West Virginia University for the
moat recently completed semester.
T o be named to the WVU Deans List, a student must
maintain a grade point average o f 3.4 or better In at least 12
credit hours o f work.

Lakt Mary looking for band campara
LAK E MARY - The Lake Mary High School band camp will
be held Aug. 12 through Aug. 16 at Don T. Reynold’s stadium.
Band members should return their cam p registration forms
and medical forms along with the S25 registration fee to the
school by the beginning o f the week.
Incoming band members should call the school at 323-2110
to get the appropriate forms.
The camp la open to all band members, all flag corps
members and all Marionettes.
It Is being coordinated by the school’s band boosters.

SCC/UCF offorJoint scholarship
SANFORD — The Two-Plus-Two academic scholarship la
being offered Jointly by Seminole Community College in
Sanford and the University o f Central Florida In Orlando.
It Is being offered to a Seminole County High School senior
who plans to complete an associates degree at SCC then
continue his or her education at UCF and earn a bachelors
degree.
Full registration fees will be awarded at SCC and UCF to the
winner as long as they maintain a grade point average o f 3.0 or
higher and attend classes full time.
Applicants must have a high school grade point average o f
3.5 or better and a combined SAT score o f 1100 or better or an
AC T score o f 25.
Applications are available from Narbara Hunnlcutt In room
F-106 at SCC.

SANFORD — Three Sem inole Community
College students attended a competition In
Anaheim. Calif., recently in which their business
talents were tested against top people in their
fields.
'Th ese three placed in the top three in the
Florida contest.” explained Sherry Jenkins, the
sponsor o f the Phi Beta Lam bdagrou p o f which
these students are members. ’ ’T h ey are among
the best.”
Gerald McElreath. Judy Johnson and Criag
Lynd traveled to the national contest with money
provided by chapter fundraisers and with the
help o f generous con tribu tion s by Mamie
Ragsdale, the chairman o f SCC’ s information
processing deportment, and Ken Sylvester, an
accounting Instructor at the school.
* PBL la designed to help students sharpen their
leadership skills while learning about the Am eri­

can enterprise sv
system.” said Jenkins,
placed seventh In the national
McElreath pi
business principles contest.
Jenkins said that Johnson and Lynd competed
strongly, but failed to place among the top 10
nationwide.

SANFORD - The West
Sanford Boys and Olrts
Club Is sponsoring a ‘ free
haskrlhall cam p — eh Sat­
urday through Aug. 16
from 10 a.m. until noon at
their clubhouse located at
B19 8. Persimmon Ave. in

Johnson was declared the number one typist at
the state level contest held In June. McElreath
placed second In the state In his category. Lynd
placed fourth In the state economics contest.
McElreath had competed last year at the
national level and placed sixth In the economics
contest In Washington. D.C.

T h o s e I n t e r e s t e d lb
participating In the canto
must become a mem ber o f
the to v s and girts d u b far a
fee o f SI per year.

The Phi Beta Lambda chapter at Seminole
Community College has been Inactive for several
years, according to Jenkins, but they hope to
continue building membership and to continue to
enter contests at the state and national level.
Phi Beta Lambda la a post-secondary branch of
the Future Business Leaders Association which
operates at the high school level.

Help for foreign students
SANFORD — The Seminole
County school district maintains
a f o r e i g n s tu d e n t s V E S O L
(English for Speakers o f Other
Languages) office through which
all foreign students must pass.
All foreign students, whether
or not they speak English, must
register with that office, which Is
located at Altamonte Elementary
School. 525 Plnevlew St. In
Altamonte Springs.
Appointments should be made
before going to the office by
calling 260-3006.
E n g lis h - s p e a k in g P u e r to
Ricans do not have to go through

Basketball
camp set at
kids club

the ESOL office.
When parents and students
arrive at the office, they should
have the following things with
them:
birth certificate
Immigration papers, passport or
resident alien card
health exam record
Florida certificate o f Immuniza­
tion
copy o f school transcripts
proof of Seminole County re­
sidency
Students Involved in the ESOL
program will be assessed by the
s t a f f a n d a s s ig n e d to th e

For m ore Information,
call coach Gary Matthews
at 330- 2456.

IVhirfl H n y

appropriate classes.
The services provided by the
ESOL program include Instruc­
tion. resource materials, volun­
teer training and special training
for school personnel.
Last year. 43 schools were
served by ESOL programs.
Students enrolled in the ESOL
programs In Seminole County
rep resen t 03 countries and
speak 47 different languages.
Last year 1.000 students were
re g is te re d In the S em in ole
C ou n ty ESOL program s. O f
those. 012 were enrolled In
classes In the public schools.

-

jr w u i

m
E f _ „

r T H M M iU N H

324-1957

Health/Fitness
H O U S E C A LL

•y JAM8S K. QUINN, M.D.

S ta y fit fo r a lo n g, h a p p y life
Many patients ask how they
can Increase their chances of
s ta y in g h e a lth y and liv in g
longer. In an earlier column the
benefits o f quitting smoking was
discussed. Avoidance of Illicit
drugs and excessive alcohol Is
also strongly advised, a positive
approach to good health is a
regular aerobic exercise pro­
gram. 1 hate the word exercise
because to many people It con­
notates a boring painful activity
that la best avoided. By physical
activity I mean any sustained
aerobic activity on a regular
Men and women for centuries
have been physically active
tolling In agriculture, labor and
hunting activities. Only very
r e c e n t ly h a v e p e o p le and
sedentary Jobs that require so
little physical exertion. In other
words we were built for physical
activity and that Is when our
body Is healthiest.
W h at are th e b en efits o f
exercise? People who exercise
regularly have been shown to
live longer and healthier lives
than th e ir sed en tary cou n ­
terparts. According to Dr. Ken­
neth Cooper 12*15 miles o f
Jogging or an equivalent activity
a week raises the HDL (good
c h o le s t e r o l), a s ig n ific a n t
amount. This in turn translates
Into lower risk o f heart disease,
th e n u m b e r o n e k ille r In
America. Other studies Indicate
that people that exercise regu­
larly have a greater sense of well
being, less anxiety or depression

f W e were built for
physical activity and
t ha t is w h e n o u r
body is healthiest, j
-Jams* E. Quinn, M.D.

and a higher energy level. People
who exercise arc also able to cat
more and still maintain a satis­
factory weight. Exercise is a far
healthier way to control a per­
sons weight than dieting.
What exercises arc good? Any
aerobic activity that a patient
can maintain on a regular basis
(our to five times n week is good.
Some examples arc swimming,
w alking, bicyclin g, dancing,
aerobics, rowing, singles tennis,
and racquctball. Patients do not
seem to get the same benefit out
of anaerobic activities. The key
Is to find one or more activities
you enjoy and do them regu­
larly. Also activities should not
hurt. Aerobic activities done
right arc fun!
W h a t a b o u t p e o p le th at
exercise heavily? The studies are

LENKALAHMALLAIAHM , FJLC.P.
Is Pleased To Announce
The Association o f

NITIN l IMIKI1 M.D.
In The Practice o f

G A S TR O EN TER O LO G Y
Please Call At:
315 N. Mingoustine Art.
Sanford. Florida 32771
Phone: (407) 321-4570
1565 Saxon Blvd. Suite 203
Deltona, Florida 32725
Phone: (407) 574-6140
(004) 780-5400
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENT A MOST INSURANCE ACCEPTED

m\

mixed as to the ben efit o f
extreme exercise such as long
distance running, marathonlng.
or bicycling. There may be an
Increase In longevity In this
g ro u p o v e r th e m o d e r a te
exercisers but there Is also a
deflnatc Increase In Injuries In
the high level exercisers. If a
person likes the challenge of
marathonlng or other extreme
forms o f endurance activities
there probably is no long term
harm and may actually be an
increase In health benefits.
How can a person safely start
an exercise program? If you are.
not s'lre If you arc healthy
enough to exercise you should
see your physician. If on the
other hand you are under 40.
have no family history o f heart
disease and no other risk factors
for heart disease you probably

could start the mild form of
a erob ic e x e rc ise p revio u sly
mentioned. Several key sugges­
tions to starting successfully are:
• 1. Start slow. Do not exercise
to breathlessness. Your goal Is to
be healthy so do not overdo your
early workouts. There should be
no pain.
• 2 . Get a friend or family
member to start with you. The
com pany will be great and
someone else working out makes
It harder to skip those day you
Just don’t feel like exercising.
•3 . Pick a fun activity you will
enjoy.
•4 . Vary your activity level
and duration. Alternate "hard”
days with "easy” or rest days.
•5 . Give yourself goals to
work toward that will reward
you. Make them realistic, how­
ever. to avoid disappointment.
What If you have a health
problem? Most patients even
with significant health problems
benefit from some physical activ­
ity. Talk to your physician about
what might be appropriate for
you.
Because o f the benefits of
a e ro b ic e x e rc is e , men and
women In their 50s. 60s. 70s
and beyond are doing physical
feats previously thought Im­
possible. Why not begin a pro­
gram yourself and see how
much better you can feel?
Jam s. E. Quinn. M.D.. la a family
practitioner with an ottlca at not Franch
A va. Sanford.
Thlt health column I. provided at a
community tervice by the Seminole County
Medical Society. Inqulrlet may be directed to
the medical toe lety

IN BRIEF
Preform Libor Prevention class s«t
SANFORD — HCA Centra) Florida Regional Hospital, along
with Tokos Medlcnl Corporation, Is offering a free Preterm
Labor Prevention class. The class Is open to the public and will
be held monthly In the hospital's classroom from 7-8 p.m. The
next class w|H be held Wednesday, Aug. 7.
"T h is class will be o f special Interest to all pregnant women
between 20 and 37 weeks o f pregnancy,” said Sue Boso. RN.
who will present the educational program. "T h e focus o f the
class will be recognition of preterm labor symptoms and the
Importance o f early Intervention by the patient and physician.”

Bowling tvsnt to btnofit MDA
FERN PARK — On Saturday. Aug. 10. the Orlando
Professional Fire Fighters will be hosting "Score a Strike For
Jerry's Kids." a bowling event to benefit the Muscular
Dystrophy Association.
The event will be held at the Falrlanes Indian Hills Bowling
Center on SR 436 in Fern Park from noon until 6 p.m. Bowling
Is open to the general public. Each frame bowled Is a 10 cent
donation to MDA and participants can win great prizes.

P e r s o n , i l Injury

CHIROPRACTORS
Dr. R.S. Cunningham

M O S T
LITTLE
S S Tv.

FOR TREATMENT OF
NECKS BACK INJURIES
• AUTO • WORK COMP.
INJURIES
OR

N O

TREATED
COST

TO

W ITH
Y O U

1 9-14
2

L fE . S
S A T.

322-4762

W O O D A L L C H IR O P R A C T IC
1 lot) i I'AMh A . I
. AN» i jH l)

!

CfcNTE H
l

THEUROLOGYCENTER, PA.
Is Pleased T o A n n o u n ce
T h e A ssociation O f

H

••

e r n ia

Gregory M. Lomas, IM.Dl
F o r T h e Practice o f

Adult and Pediatric
Urology
Gonzalo H um an, M.D.
Anthony J. Arclola, M.D.
By Appointment

Medicare Assignment

1403 MEDICAL PLAZA D R . SUITE 101
SANFORD. FLORIDA 32771
(407) 322-0090
1565 SAXON BLVD., SUITE 204
DELTONA. FLORIDA 32775
(904) 789-7711
706 LAKE MARY BLVD.. SUITE 115
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA 32746
(407) 333-9665

Hernia repair used to be
considered major surgerybut, no longer.

Today, it can be as simple
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 red u ces re cu r­
rences.
The Hernia Center

of Central Florida Is oper­
ated by Surgical Assoclatesan e sta b lish e d team of
skilled surgeons who have
practiced in Central Florida
since 1973 and have per­
formed literally thousands
of hernia operations.
Three convenient loca­
tions: Winter Park. Mait­
land and Oviedo. For an
appointment, call us at
(407) 647-2727.

Treatment You Can Trust

(4 0 7 ) 647-2727

�Sanford HaraJd, Sanford, Florida - Sunday Auaust 4, 1991 - M

People
IN BRIEF

Wildlife babies find mom
Sanctuary is a haven
for exotic creatures
l y L M

I M

M

Herald People Editor

T h rM c h «trs !
T h r e e o f th e S e m in o le H ig h S c h o o l
cheeerleadera were aelected far the Universal
Cheerleaders Association Allstar Cheerleading
Squad. They will travel to London to perform.
These outstanding cheerleaders are Demetrta
Petty, Oort Sapp and Heather Youmana.

______

SANFORD — A songbird perches on her
shoulder and warbles in her ear. She un­
derstands the song o f thanks It sings. She saved
Its Ufa.
Lise Tanner has transformed a piece o f land on
which large trees lace boughs to provide heavy
■hade and through which a gurgling creek slices,
Into an animal sanctuary.
‘ T v e been saving animals since 1 was 8 and
have raised 439 o f them. I’ve never lost one." she
proudly says.
The Sanford woman, who lives on the property
with husband. John, and three children. John
John. 3. Stephanie. 7. and Trtcia. 8. decided to
mother abandoned animals since her children
arc now a little older.
" I love being a mom. and the animals really
think o f you as theirs," she says.
Her husband, who suffers with a degenerative
Injury that keeps him bedridden or In a
wheelchair much o f the time, has helped Tanner
by constructing a gaily colored sign for the
animal clubhouse.
"H e's happy because I want to do this. And the
kids are eager to help. They have been raised
with kindness toward animals,” Tanner says.
" I help with the birds. I like It. I Just don't tike
It when the bird stands on my head." John John
adds.
Tanner says domesticated wild animals that
•are abandoned, rarely live.
"W hen people get tired o f a domesticated bird,
raccoon, squirrel or other pet. or If they're
moving and have nowhere else to take It, they
often let them go. The sad part Is they can't
survive like wild animals. They’re chased and
killed or they starve. That's why the clubhouse Is
here; to take them In and let them live happy and
healthy," Tanner says.
Tanner operates under a rehabllltator's permit.
She currently cares for 15 birds and often
mothers other exotic wlldllfa. Including skunks
and lizards. She says her goal is to secure a much
larger piece o f land on which she can care for
larger animals such as bears and deer.

SyUeyO w M

John John Tannar carefully balances an orphanad
parrot on a perch.
*

"T h a t's the goal for the future. 1 also plan to
place some of (he birds as pets with elderly
people and visit nursing homes with them.
Animals arc so capable o f bringing joy to

H o m e le s s anim als ara w elcom ed
clubhouse by Ile a and John John Tanner.

to

the

people.'* Tanner says.
'Lisa's Animal Clubhouse. Aviary and Sanctu­
ary’ Is currently soliciting donations o f needed
□ S a « Clubhouse, Pago 7B

Teen to rollerblade for burn victim s
By RAMA CASM
Herald Correspondent

Huff, Rathwsll, Cokar and Finch

WINTER SPRINGS - All over the
Stales, people are raising
eliminate the financial burdens of
sclerosis, and cancer treatments,
the last time you heard o f a fund-raiser for
victims?
When 16-year-old Tommy DulTy. a Junior at
Oviedo High School, asked himself that question,
he could not come up with an answer. That's
when he decided to do something about It. In an
• effort to raise money for the transportation o f
burn victims. Duffy will rollerblade from Daytona
Beach to Miami — 378 miles In seven daysll
DulTy knows that It Is quite a task but he's
determined and confident.
"T h ey can't go out and do this for themslevcs."
he said. " I f 1 have to get on my hands and knees
and crawl. I'll finish."
He hus never been a burn victim und does not
know o f anyone personally who has been one.
Nevertheless, he Is taking this very, very
personally.
" I came home from football practice one day,
and the Idea Just popped In my head. I don’ t
know where It came from." Duffy said.
Jayne Harlow. Duffy's mother, la supportive of
her son’s endeavor but must of all she Is
Ihunkful.
"W hen I think o f all the other things he could
be doing like drugs. I Just say 'God. thank you
very much.'”
Harlow is the coordinator of the fund-raiser
which is to begin August 12. She has never had
tills type o f responsibility but she refuses to back

Winntrt announced
Oaybreaker Toastmasters announced four
winners at a recent meeting. Glnny H ull was
Toastmaster o f the Day, Lester Rethwell was
honored for Best Table Topic, Teresa Coker was
named Best Speaker and Sharon Finch was
named Best Evaluator.
T h e D a y b r e a k e r s m e e t a t C h r is t o s
Reastaruant, downtown Sanford, every second
and fourth Thursday morning at 7 a.m. Anyone
Interested in better speaking Is cordially Invited
to attend a meeting.

Scholarship awarded

Frwman

La'Tangela Freeman,
fo rm erly o f Sanford,
granddaughter o f Mr.
and Mrs. Calvin Moore
Jr., Sanford, and god­
daughter o f Margaret
Davis and Mr. and Mrs.
Theartls Jones, all from
Sanford, daughter o f
L a v o n and D eborah
Everett, Maryland, and
Henry Freeman.
Rochester. New York,
graduated recently from
Friendly High Shcool.
F o r t W a s h in g to n .
Maryland, with a 3.5
grade point average.
She has received a
•500 scholarship from
B e t h le h e m B a p t is t
Church to attend Bowie
State University, where
she will study Business
Administration.

down,

D ow n

Tommy Duffy is determined not to let any
obstacles get in the way of his 378 mile
rollerblade expedition.

4
1
n

,

"H ow can I think o f myself when Tommy Is
doing this?" she said.
Florida Hospital wus chosen by both Harlow
and Duffy as the recipient of the money raised.
They have a goal o f $ 10,000.
"W e 're real excited about It." said Debbie
Harland. public relations coordinator for Florida
Hospital. "W e don't treat severe bums here and
t S ee R o llerb la d e, P a g* 7B

The benefit Is In support ol burn victims and will
begin August 12. Dully will rollerblade from
Daytona Beach to Miami.

T ip s for te a ch e rs w h o care

Scouting in the woods
Boy Scout Troop 34, sponsored by the First
United Methodist Church of Sanford for over 50
years, attended summer camp recently. Shown
lett to right, Joseph Hoffman, Steven Kyle, Joey
Jackson, Brian Howell, Anthony Ware, Neil

Ww&gt;» tm rtMf l H t n w j i h ln a W f

Santal and Mike Kyle, scoutmaster. James
Kraemer, assistant scoutmaster, watches as son
Donny, senior patrol leader, points out the next
days duties and activities to the scouts Many
merit badges were earned at camp.

D E A B M A R T : N ow that
August Is here. I'm thinking
about going buck to school (I'm
an elementary school teacher).
Since I've been at the same
school for 12 years. I've had the
Joy of watching many of "m y
kills" grow up. I've noticed that
it's the same kids, year after
year, who serin In have most of
the problems. They often come
from disrupted homes, they
usually have academic as well as
behavior problems, and they
don't seem to know how to have
or keep friends. Their lives seem
to he one stressful event after
another, and they often end up
In s|x*clal programs, or dropping
out and getting arrested for
using drugs. Hut when I’ve been
able to get to know these
"problem children" belter. I can
tell they aren't really had kids. I
wish I could reach out to mure of
them Individually, but time just
doesn't permit li. Can you give
me some Ideas that I can use
with the whole group that might
help?

MARY
BALK

A TEACHER W HO CARES
DEAB CARING TEACHER:
Wow, ANY kid who is placed In
your class, regardless o f ilu-lr
academic or social performance.
Is truly blessed! As you have
n o tic e d , m a n y o f t o d a y 's
c h ild r e n a r c e x p o s e d to
numerous stressful life events
simultaneously. When under
stress, children gain security In
a structured, safe, predict able
en v l r o u m r u t . a n d y « u r
classroom m ay be the only
stability they will experience
each day. Research has in ­
dicated 11i.ii children living un­
der stress progress Iaster both

academically ami socially m a
classroom with explicitly defined
rules and consistent discipline
ami expectations lor mature
behavior.
You can also provide o p ­
portunities for your students to
a c c e p t a b ly e x p r e s s t h e ir
thoughts and feeling aobul their
stressful life experlem es by
participating In idling stories,
creating art or drawing pictures,
puppet shows, and role-playing
activities
Som e teachers en co u ra ge
children lo read Imoks Ionising
on the events that arc causing
them pain and discomfort. This
technique, called blbllolherapy.
helps children led less isolated
ami dtllrrcnl.
Providing a nurturing envi­
ronment. as I am sure you do.
a llo w s s tu d e n t s s h o w in g
symptoms u! slress to feel more
side and si.ihlc, thus helping
them to fe e l b e tte r a b o u t
themselves ami school.
I know that you unit your
students will have a good year.

�- Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Sunday. Auaust 4, 1991

E N Q A Q E M E N TS

Herbert SUphtnt Jr. and April Sharp

S h a rp -S te p h e n s
SANFORD — Peggy A. Sharp
o f Sanford and William A. Sharp
of

S e v ille

announce

th e

engagement of their daughter.
April, to Herbert Lee Stephens
Jr., son of Herbert L. and Brenda
K. Stephens o f Lougwood.
Horn in Chicago. III., the
b rid c*clect is the m aternal
granddaughter of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Roy L. Howell Sr.,
formerly of Lake Mary. She Is
the paternal granddaughter of
Thelm a Murray o f Arlington
Heights. III. and the late Mr. Eurl
Sharp.
Ms. Sharp is a 1986 graduate
o f Seminole High School, San­
ford. where she was captain of
the dance team, representative
o f senior ejnss. member of Key
Club. Tribe, and participated in
other activities. She will gradu­
ate this fall from the University
o f C e n tra l F lo rid a w ith a

bachelor’ s degree In elementary
education. She is presently
employed ns a cashier at Publix
Super Markets. Sanford.
Her fiance. iHirn In I’otoma
Park. Md.. is the m aternal
grandson o f Virginia Murphy of
Lougwood and the late Mr.
W illiam Murphy. He is the
paternnl gran dson o f Mary
Stephens of Murtlusburg. W. Va.
and Richard Stephens, also of
Martlnsburg.
Stephens is a 1987 graduate of
Lyman High School. Long wood
where he participated in football
and wrestling. He is currently in
the U.S. Navy SEAL training
program, and has served with
the Navy In Operation Desert
Storm In the Persian Gulf.
The wedding will be an event
of May 2. 1992. 10 a.m.. Leu
Gardens. Orlando.

G a sk e ll-C a rte r
DELAND Mr. and Mrs.
R ob ert G a sk ell o f D eLand.
formerly of Lougwood, are an­
nouncing the engagement of
th e ir daughter. Stcfanlc. to
' Thoillas Mark Ci. “Yi' son ol Dr.
and Mrs. Thomas F. Carter.
Westmoreland. Tcnn.
Born In Cleveland. Ohio, the
bride-elect is a 1982 graduate of
Lyman High School. Lougwood.
Ms. Gaskell is a 1986 graduate
o f Emory University, Atlanta,
Ga. where she received a B.S. In
nursing. In 1988, she received u
master's degree In nursing from
Emory. She is presently a nurse
practitioner at Emory Clinic In
Atlanta.
Her fiance, born in Nashville.
Tcnn.. is the maternal grandson
o f Clara Cobb o f Gallatin. Tcnn.
Carter Is a 1977 graduute of
W estm orelan d High School.
Westmoreland. He is presently a
medical student and will be
graduating from Medical College
o f Georgia. School of Medicine in

Stefanie Gaskell
June. 1992.
The wedding will bo an event
of December 14. 1991. 7:30
p.m.. at All Saints Episcopal
Church. Atlanta.

Future law yer says go o d b ye
Three years or so. on down the
road, those in need o f legal
counsel may want to consider
Gentry Byrnes. Attorney at Law.
At that time. Gentry will have
completed the School o f Law at
S t e t s o n U n iv e r s it y . S t.
Petersburg. And she is likely to
set up shop in the Sanford
community.
Gentry and her husband Chris
moved from I heir Sanford home
this week to St. Petersburg
where she was accepted at
Stetson. She is excited and feels
"privileged" over her plight but
will miss all the "kids.”
L e a v in g behind a lot o f
tcary-cyed youth. •Gentry has
mixed emotions over letting go
o f the young folks. For over two
years now. she has been director
o f Youth Ministries at the First
United Methodist Church. The
youth arc her family. "It Is really
hard leaving." she said. "I um
going to miss them (youth) so
much."
And Gentry Is not alone in the
missing department. The kids
have mixed feelings. Angela
Bass. 13. said about Gentry's
leaving. "I'm nol very happy
about It. 1 was close to Gentry.
Everybody udnrcd Gentry."
Angela went on to say that
"th e other kids arc not very
happy cither." After a moment
of serious philosophizing. Angela
added. "I'm happy for her. but
I'm not happy she’s leaving."
Pretty and personable. Gentry
has endeared herself to all who
know her. She will leave her
mark in the community she
served so diligently.
W hy w ou ld she w a n t to
become a lawyer'?
"M y father is a prosecutor."
she said. "Ever since 1 was in

iF

t

'v
SANFORD

r * .
w
jp w

D O R IS
D IE T R IC H

Junior high school. 1 have been
fascinated by the legal system."
Last Sunday night. Gentry
was honored at a reception In
the church Fellowship Hall. Ac­
cording to Nellie Coleman. "E v­
erything went off very smoothly.
It was real nice."
Not only did the youth prepare
homemade ice cream, but they
presented Gentry with a large
photo taken In front of the
church and an album of random
prints shot during the past two
years.
"Everything was wonderful."
Gentry said. "I cried a little bit."
But Gentry, an undergraduate
o f Stetson, promises she will
come back periodically. "Unless
I’m locked In u library." she
laughed.

Historian*, taka not*
The Sanford Historic Trust, an
organization of about 80 mem­
bers. opens Its membership to
unyonc interested in preserving
local history. And according to
Sue Ollngcr, "You don't have to
live In the historic district."
Sue, chairman o f the Andres
Dunny Project Committee. Is
excited that Duany Is coming to
Sanford to "give us a plan for
future growth and development
and to keep the historic district
Intact."

Andres Duany o f Miami. Is a Membership Coffee set
p o p u la r a rc h ite c t and c ity
Mary Tillls has been busy this
planner, as is his wife. Elizabeth summer addressing and stuffing
Platewr-Zybcrk.
envelopes. As second vice presi­
Sanford will roll out the red dent of the Woman's Club of
carpet to Dunny on Friday and Sanford Inc.. Mary Is hostess to
Saturday. Oct. I I and 12. Fol­ the annual W o m a n 's C lu b
lowing u tour of the Sanford area Membership Coffee which will be
and a luncheon Friday, there h eld In S e p te m b e r ut the
will be a town-hall type meeting clubhouse on Oak Avenue.
from 2 to 5 p.m. that afternoon
Members are asked to contact
when citizens can sound off.
Another meeting will be held, Mary If they would like to invite
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. on a prospective member to Join the
club.
Saturday.
Sue said the Input from the
According to Marty Colcgrove.
citizenry is very Important. She
added that Duany will present a who is serving as president for
master plan to the Sanford ihe second term, big things 'unHistoric Trust about two weeks la the planning for the club year.
after his visit and evolution.
Jean Mctts. second vice presi­
More on this later.
dent In charge o f fund-raising,
has Just returned from Col
Pilots most in Atlanta
umbla. S.C. where she attended
Several members o f the San­ a nurses* reunion and Is raring
ford Pilot Club attended the Pilot to go. Jean plans a Taste ni
International Convention this * Sanford event as w ell ns a
week In Atlanta. Attending the Holiday Ball. Ilniiim i. Sounds
annual event were Shirley Pat­ good.
terson. who will lie installed
presiden t later this month.
Rulh Gaines. Community Im
Mcrlle Tenlck. Ruth Gaines. provement Project chulrmnn. is
Doris Stein and Marian Rcthwlll. working on the annual. May Day
along with her co-pilot. Lester. .
Brunch with all proceeds from
One o f the Pilol Club's annual this event geared toward the
projects Is the Easter Egg sale community.
when members decorate colorful
eggs for display. The profits help
DoLores Lash, chairman o f the
with scholarships and communi­ Education Committee, and her
co-chairmen are already at work
ty services.
The club also sponsors mon­ on the Fashions for Education
thly birthday parties at Good show next spring. Proceeds from
Samaritan ilom e when they the event will go toward a
provide birthday cakes, other scholarship for a d eservin g
refreshments and gifts.
woman lo rctun to the school ol
M arie Roche, m em bership her choice.
chairman, plans a membership
Assisting DeLores are Mary
drive to attract new members to
the club. Those Interested may Anne Cleveland. Jean Clout/,
und Fran Hammerli.
call any Pilot Club member.

Fraternal family honors member
LONGWOOD — Lougwood res­
ident Herbert A. Wilson has been
active In the Independent Order
of Foresters for as long as the
Court Gator Chapter has been
active in the Orlando urea, over
20 years. Recently he was
honored by *463 In a pres­
entation by Chief Larry G. Dries,
who said the award was In
appreciation for Herb's outstand­
ing ucliieventcnls.
Larry said Herb lias served
Court Galor In many capacities.
He has h eci]_ editor o f the
newsletter foi mer 1st)'years. He
organized the Holiday Coffee
Breaks. Anti (lie MS Bike Tour
for Ihe past three years found
Herb and Mary at the first rest
stop. They awakened and trav­
eled to the spot especially early
lo set up for the bikers' break.
"A s senior and Junior pro­
moter he provided the court with
s e v e r a l years of a c t iv it ie s
planned and carried out for our
fun and pleasure. Without he
aml bis wife Mary tilings would
not have ran us smoothly as they
did." Larry said.
"Herb und Mary have been
available to help with anything
requested or needed for the
court. Court Gator *463 needs
members like Herb and Mary
Wilson lo carry out the many
fraternal activities tlit- court

LO NG W O O D

LACY
DOMEN
provides und performs for the
other members and the commu­
nity." Larry said.
Presently, Herb Is representing
the court as a sessional officer on
the High Standing Committee.
Afler a brief resl from court
activities. Herb and Mary are
gearing up to once again enjoy
evenis with their fraternal fami­
ly"I think It's a great thing. I
think I'm the only one who's
been awarded an award like
that." Herb said.

Servicemen excel
Some Lougwood servicemen
are climbing up the ranks In the
Arm y and Air Force. Larry
Payton Jr., son of Lori Drake.
Penelope Avenue. Lougwood.
has been promoted to airman in
the Air Force.
The new airman Is an appren­
tice fire protection specialist at

H*f*MPhoto by Tommy Vioconi

Herb Wilson was honored for oustandlng service to Foresters
Elmcndorf Air Force Hase, An­
chorage. Alaska.
lie graduated from Lake Mary
High School in 1989.
Pvt. Mlchat-I M. Padgett, son of
Carolyn Greenwood. Shadow

Trail. Lougwood. and Michael
Padgett. Palm Coast, has com
pleted basic training at Fort
Jackson. S.C.
lie's a 1986 graduate ol L.ik&lt;
Mary High School.

B e n tle y h o n o re d for c o n trib u tio n s to b la ck c o m m u n ity
'flic City ol Orlando has been
bursting at the seams with
thousands of Kappas from all
over the United States and the
Bahamas.
The 70ih Grand Chapter meet*
l u g o f K a p p a A lp h a P s i
Fraternity. Inc. met recently ai
tlu- M arriott Orlando W orld
Center.
The Monday evening awards
program was an evening of
grand achievement through ed ­
ucation. Attorney Mark SentI.
poll-march o f South Central
province, was master ol ceremo­
nies. Special music selections
and presen tation s were In
troduerd by Patricia Hutrhman.
founder and director ol TaJIrt
Arts tnternatlon.it. A dance ren­
dition was presented, excerpted
from the Irook "Georgetown."
written by Altatnease Smith
Hcntlcy. about the history ol the
I) l a c k c o lit in u n i t y a n d
n e ig h b o rh o o d s m S .m lord
Aurelia M yles and Deinetn.i
Petty, local TaJIrt Arts dancers.
IH-rforiucd the fiance trout the
music written lor the p lu s.
"Georgetown Jubilee."
Highlighting tire awards pro­
gram was the Distinguished Cit­
izen a w ards that were presented
to outstanding clllzcns ol Florida
and their local communities For
bis work in the state ot Florida —
the I loti Leuudrr Shaw. Chlel
Justice. Florida Supreme Court
file awards were presented by
tin- lion Emerson Thompson.
C h ie f J u d g e . 9th J u d ic ia l
C ircu it; Edward Davis, busi­
n essm an an d c iv il r i g h t s
advocate All award was pres
ciilcd lo tils widow. Mrs Edward

D a v i s . b y E d w a til L .
lilai-k sh carc. lo c a l ge n era l
chairman o f the convention.
Alt.uncase Smith Hcntlcy. re­
ined educator mid historian, was
honored lor her contribution to
education, rnuuimiiity service,
church work, and as a noted
historian ol the (list South Flori­
da Missionary liaptisi Associulimi anti th&lt;- Georgetown com­
munity ol S.mlord Her award
was presented by Bruce Scott,
v ice
p o ll-m a rch . O rla n d o
Alumni Chapter.
Amite Mitchell Felder, lor al
educator ol Orlando anil Florida,
was honored. Her award was
presented by Calvin Lang, board
ot directors Orlando Alumni
Chapter.
These Distinguished Ctli/cns
awards were presented to the
r e c ip ie n t s hv Dr U lv s s e s
M&lt; Bride. Grand Polemareh ot
KapjM Alpha Psi Fraternity. Inc.
Our lo c a l lin n o r c c . Mrs.
Hcntlcy. said sin- was most
surprised at being selected lor
this award Site said she has
always been appreciative ol the
local chapter ol Kappas tor their
work done in this cnuummiiy
She said tin program, although
very simple was indeed ail
evening ot elegance Main lellou
Kappas of S.mlord were In at
tendance at ibis national confer
cnee Seen were San for* I eitv
coiunussmiici Robert I'lioiuas as
well as Charles Robert, and
main others

Church observes ‘ Music Day'
The Music Ocparlmciit ol St
Joh n M e tro p o lita n B aptist

SANFORD

*

M ARVA
H A W K IN S

Church will be observing a "Day
ot Music" Sunday. August 11. at
II a.m. The Rev. George T.
Duncan Jr. of Orlando will be
tIn- sjH-aker.
At 4 p in., the Friendship Mass
Choir ol Daytona Bench, will lxIhe guest choir. During this
lime. Mary Whitehurst. Emma
Elliott, and G.M. Woodall will be
honored lor llteir contributions
In music to the Sanford columnnlty.

Everyone Is Invited to conic
out and |oin them during one nr
botli ol these services
Voices return
Pizzazz announces the return
ot The Voices of Pizzazz. The
gos|H-l ensemble will be in con­
cert on Sunday Aug I I . at 7
p m Hu- event will be al Zion
Hope Missionary Baptist Church.
7 10 Orange Avc.
Tin- Voices ot Pizzazz vocalists
are sopranos — Rachel Adams.
Carolyn Barnes Marsha Green.
Wanda Clark Wilson: altos —
Andrea Hayes. Vincent Smith
Ju a n ita S ta fford . C o p p cliu
W illiam s, lenors — Lueious
Brown. Kevin Campbell Sam
King. U rrlpllhla L o n g: amt
Kiimiamtei Luster as musical

director.
Participating In this concert
rendering a selection is re­
cording artist Vernon "Poppa"
Jones. Jimmie Blake will serve
as master o f ceremonies.
Tills function will be In behalf
of the Rescue Outreach Mission.
1701 W. 13th Street.
For more Information, contact
Pizzazz at 330-7044.

Saying thanks
The Job Service ol Florida
located at 2460 S. Park Ave..
Sanford, wishes to congratulate
the follow ing Job Corps re­
turnees on Hu- completion of
tlu-lr residential training pro­
gram at various centers in Flori­
da. G eorgia, and Kentucky:
Jesse I). Lewis, electrician:
Cam ille McGill, clerk-typist:
Cathy Stanley, clerk-typist: Ar­
thur Raines, electrician: and
Shawn Cornwall, nurse assis
turn.
For additional Information on
this vocational training program
paid lor In Ihe federal govern­
ment. please cunt act tile Job
Service oil ice aI 330-6700.
Reunion planned
The Class of 1966 ol Cronins
High School wilt hold llu-ir
reunion planning Hireling al 3
p m at Trinity United Church,
titli Si. ami Sanford Ave Please
call Sandra Gaines and Yvonne
Grrv lor hit liter tnlormaltou
Happy birthday
Birtluiav s come once a vear -mi
Happy Birthday to Faye Thorn.in
Harris from Latmta Lura I...
Eduard Matthew ami Latest.!

HtriMPhoto by Mini Hloklnt
Allamease Bentley receives a Distinguished Citizen award from
Grand Polemareh Dr. Ulysses McBride.

Publicity procedure
The .Sanford l lent Id welcomes organizational and personal
news. All items submitted fur publication to the People section
iniisi include the name o f a contact person und daytime phone
number.
The following suggestions are recommended to expedite
publication.
1 T ype releases double spaced in upper and lower ease, ami
write in narrative style (third person).
2. Du not abbreviate.
3. Keep releases simple, but include necessary details—club or
person name, tiale and time ol event (it applicable), place, cost lit
any auvl. etc.
4. Submit organizational releases no later titan two w e e k d a y s
billowing the event.
3 Submit advance notices at least one week prior to the
preferred publication dun und requests tor photographer at
least one week prior lo the event.

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday. Auqust 4. 1991 - 7B

F o o d -s ta m p fraud le a v e s
bad ta s te in w ife ’s m o u th
D EAR ABBY: My husband
and i arr taking a two-month
vacation, so we advertised in our
•church newsletter for n house
siller. Our 18-ycar-old daughter
lives with us. so we wanted a
female. She works full-time and
goes to night classes at our
community college.
A 24-yearold girl I ’ ll call
Wanda answered the ad. She.
her parents and grandparents
arc members of our church. We
told Wanda she could live here
for free and savr the B100 a
month she had been paying her
parents for rent. Wanda said that
she wanted $50 a month from
us. She was the best cholee we
had. so weagrred.
Yesterday. Wanda came over
with her parents, and as they
w e re le a v in g , h er m o th e r
dropped this bomb: "W anda has
applied for food stamps — but
you will have to sign a paper
saying that you are not paying
her anything to live in your
house."
My husband said. "N o pro­
blem — we will sign It."
I do not want to sign that

on those Christian churchgoers
for asking you to sign a. false
statement In order to defraud the
government. And your husband
should be ashamed or himself for
condoning such shenanigans.

A o v ie i
*

r

^

4

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

paper. I don’ t believe in lying —
especially to help a young,
able-bodied woman to defraud
the government.
My husband professes to be a
Christian, and apparently these
people are Christians — as she
chided me for not attending
church and all that good stufT.
Abby. what do you think
about people usklng a fellow
church member to lie so their
daughter can defraud the gov­
ernment? Our plans arc mndc
and confirm ed, and we are
leaving tomorrow; there’s no
time to find an honest nonChristian to live here.
DISGUSTED
DEAR DISGUSTED: Shame

D B A R A B B Y : You have stated
twice In you column that both of
th e W r ig h t b r o th e r s w ere
bachelors.
Wilbur Wright died at the age
o f 45. a bachelor. Orville Wright
lived to Ik * 77 years old and
married late In life. Ills wife was
not as old as he was. bill they
had no children.
You were correct In stating
that the Wright brothers do not
huve nny direct descendants.
HELEN L. THOMAS
D EAR HELEN L. THOMAS
(not to be confused with Helen
Thomas, veteran White House
correspondent for United Press
International): Thank von for
attempting to set the record
StlUlgllt.
T h e N e w E n c y c l o p e d ia
Hrltannlra. Volume 19. Page
1033. states: "Both the brothers
died bachelors."

Clubhouse
"Whatever someone wants to do Is much
appreciated. T h ey’d be helping create a stable,
healthy, clean loving home for an orphaned
wildlife baby or an uhundoned bird." Tanner
explains.
" I ’ll help feed ’em ." .John .John offers.

L Continued from Page SB
Items, including any sized cages and pens,
mulch, plants, one file cabinet, birdseed, material
to roust nut another aviary and an electric
typewriter.

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6:30

E liz a b e th M c K e e m a rrie s
LAKE M A R Y E lizabeth
Nash MrKcc. gowned in white
satin, followed tradition when
she became the bride o f Ensign
Michael Allen W arner on June
22. 1991. at Markham Woods
P resb yterian C h u rch . Lak e
Mary. The Rev. Don Debevols
officiated at the 2 p.m. wedding.
A collection o f summer flowers
decorated the altar and bows
marked the pews.
The bride Is the daughter of
Jim and Mary McKee o f Longwood and gran dd au gh ter o f
Maurle McAlister o f Lake Mary
and Delores Etghcr o f Cincinnati.
The bridegroom Is the son of
Frank and Marian Warner of
M e m p h is . T e n n . a n d th e
grandson of Ruth Warner of
Hamilton. Ohio.
Heralded by a brass quintet
and escorted down the aisle by
her father, the bride wore a
lovely gown, designed with a soft
rounded neckline accented with
fnbrlr petals. |K*arls. and Irides­
cent beads. Th e pointed bodice
was accented with n row of
pearls. Embroidered lace edged
Ihe hem and long train. The
headpiece, a cluster o f satin
pctnls. pearls, and beads held a
boufTunt fingertip veil o f nylon
Illusion. She carried a cascading
bouquet of roses, lilies, fuschlas.
and carnations.
In Ihc bride's veil were bits of
lace from her grandmother's and
mother's w eddin g veils. She
placed a sixpence in her shoe.
The bride was attended bv
Kurcn Castor o f A ltam o n te
Springs, ord sisters Katherine
McKee of Hoca Raton, and
Ginger McKee o f Longwood.
Their street length suits were In
In d ig o c re p e w ith o ff-th c shoulder portrult collars. They
carried clusters o f hot pink
daisies, pink roses, blue de­
lphiniums. white fuschlas. and
blue stutter.
The groom was attended by
E n s ig n H ic k R y a n . C o r a l
Springs, who served as best
man. Tin* guests were ushered
by Euntgn Mike Gordon of Cas­
selberry and Ensign Mark Prlroff

Mr. and Mrs. MkhMl Allen Warner
mid-summer colors cascading
down Ihe sides o f the cake.
Out-of-town guests were from
Pensacola. Gainesville. Satellite
Ueach. St. Petersburg. Lake
W orth. H oliday. Plantation.
Coral Springs. New Smyrna
Hearh and Mluml Beach: and
also from G reen ville. S.C..
Calabash and Durham. N.C.;
Atlanta. Ga.: Memphis. Tenn.:
and Hamilton and Marlemont.
Ohio.
Following a honeymoon to St.
Augustine, the newlyweds will
reside in Newport. Rhode Island.
Until recently Ihe bride has
Im' cii employed as a teacher with
Orange County School Hoard.
She Is a Florida Slate University
and Lake Mury High Sc IuhiI
graduate. The groom Is a gradu­
ate of Raleigh Egypt High School
In Memphis and tlu* U.S. Naval
Academy. Anna|M&gt;lis. Md.

o f Orlando. Ring bearer. Austin
Magrr. son of Gary and Rene
Magee of Longwood. proudly
eurrlcd the ceremonial rings.
Immediately following llu* cer­
emony. the bride and grinim
walked under the arch o f swords
fo r m e d by s w o r d b e a r e r s :
Ensigns Mark Christenson. Jerry
Jnllrt. Dave McKinley. Scott
Roza. Dave Springer, and Erie
Zerpby.
At the reception, held at
Sweetwater Country Club. Ihe
bride received gu ests In a
blush-colored evening suit with
mulching accessories and a
corsage of while roses. Also al
hand was the groom's mother.
Marian Warner, dressed in a
blue silk dress wllh matching
accessories and corsage.
A spiral-tiered wedding cake,
featured at the reception, was
decorated with edible flowers In

Rollerblade
Continued fro m F i f e SB
the patlentH have
to lx- tra n sp o rted to Shands
Hospital or somewhere else that
does." she said. " I ’ m glad that
llicy chose us.”

The average cost lor transpor­
tation by Jel alone is $4,500
according lo local air medical
evacuation centers.
"I want to help those who
don’ t have medical Insurance or
can't alTord It." Duffy said.
The average hospitalization
treatment lor 15 days could run
up to as high as $47,000 aceo ri l i ng t o J o e D r o w n ,
spokesperson lor Orlando Re­
gional Medical Center.
Why rollcrblacllng?
"I can skate all day long. I
want lo lake something I can do
well and use ll lor something
productive." Dully, who lias
been skating for six years, said.
For training, lie skates 10 to
20 miles every morning and
again at night. He also does
other activities to Increase Ills
cardiovascular endurance.
On day one. lie will skate 112
miles, the distance trom Daytona
to Cocoa. From then on. he will
do 40 lo Ik) m iles each day until
he has completed the entire 37H
miles.
Thus tar. the three |M*ople who
were originally scheduled to lake
mi llu- challenge have drop|H-d
mil tor various reasons. Hut.
Dully is hoping others will join
In with him.
"It's (or whom ever wants in
go. The more the merrier!" he
chuckled.
Unify is hoping that tills trip
will open die doors lor nianv
more. Ills linal challenge is lo
conquer the entire east coast,
skating trom Maine lo Miami

are iicing covered by sponsors
Even with such a positive goal.
Dull?"says that htr 'is"h a tin g
pihioeii'^u^lLMasiipiMin
' Heemisc it’s the Urs’ ^ g ^ —
people are hesitant. I'll Just have
to show lliciii."
Dully Is still looking for by th« mile
abou t $ 1 ,2 0 0 a c c o r d in g lo
Harlow. Skallug equipment, gas. corporate, and equipment .portcore T .Inrli
are also being sold In support ol the ellort lor
hotels. ftMid and oilier cx|M*nscM 110each Call JJ7fJaOfor more information

Harlow added. "W e waul lo
show I hem that lie Is dead
serious. Anytime you d if some­
thing good in life. &gt;.»»&gt;
through some tilings, tml
u»g.',
payoff."
The cost of Ihe trip will Im-

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[ R « R NWY. I m

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LARI MARY 1

ADJACENT T O SEM INOLE COMMUNITY COLLEGE

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1:15 3:15

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SALE

507$off Soltctod
15-50%off Framod
F r o n t s in Stock

andUnFramodArt
fra m e fa cto ry!
a

g a llo r y

641 W. Laka Mary Blvd.
(Lake Mary Village - Publix)

322-1012
K W .1 ,1

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Tuci 10* • SAT IOI

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During H w m onth
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"P e o p le It iin k I m m i ls b ill U s

h ou rs:

p L A Z A T W P lj^

"Catered Living For Seniors'’
AC'LK Apartments
Independent A Assisted Living
1200 W. Airport Blvd., Sun ford
.i2 2 .7 7 n n
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okay." he said.

|1_ ,

O Floyd Theatrt*

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HENRY
kThey took over.
7 xs 1000 y l H
AHISON1010
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u m m m i r j w i nns ;sr-‘- “J
MUSTERS

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UTCHHt IL) I MEMints *r*u uuuwnaiua- rn u m i wwn

TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY MORNING AT 10 00 AU COME AND SEE YOUR FAVORITE
UCOONAIOLAND CHARACTERS"*EACH WEDNESDAY MORNING AT • 00 AU

8/6 &amp; 8/7

CARE BEARS

�t

11
H

A situation you had trouble
bringing Into focus last year
coula fan neatly Into place In the
year ahead. Do not give up on
thia endeavor; K could turn out
to be significant.
LSO (July 23-Aug. 23) You
may have to d e a l w ith an
bygones and set a good example
by rulfllling your commitment.
m o o (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Even though others m ay consid­
er this a day that should be
devoted to leisurely pursuits,
you're not Hkety to feel gratified
unless you're doing something
productive and positive.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You're a good shxlent today, and
what you learn you w ill retain to
constructively use at a later
date. Circumstances and a wise
companion will be your teach­
ers.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Continuously heep in mind the
end results for which you're
aiming today. This w ill help you
overcome any obstacles that
may temporarily impede your

Pa£oimaroi in o v . 23-Dec.
21) If you restate your case
today, someone whose coopera­
tion you’ve been seeking but
I hate elevator music m o

THUMB ANP
BLANKET.
MUSIC!

TELEPHONE MU5C BUT TOV KNOW
WHAT l HATE THE M 05T ? _ &gt;

V

CMOV.WSG D ..TH 5 fc

you hope to receive. Your com ­
pensation will be proportionate
to the quality o f you r perfor­
mance.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
Y ou h a v e go o d le a d e r s h ip
qualities today, but they are
likely to remain dorm ant —
unless you are challenged. If this
o cc u rs, yo u r p e e r s wi l l
automatically look to you for
direction.
m e n IFeb. 20-March 20)
An opportunity that m ay appear
to be o f a limited nature might
come your way today through
the good auspices o f a friend.
Don't treat It Indifferently; It

could turn out b ig
A B B S (March 21-Aprll 19) If
your hopes and expectations at
this tim e are rea listic and
practical, they'll have excellent
chances o f being fulfilled. Let the
unproductive do the wishful
thinking.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
your, commercial dealings today,
strive to be both fair and firm. If
you feel you're entitled to certain
terms or concessions, don't set­
tle for anything less.

O BM nn (May 21-June 20) .
You have greater fortitude and»tenacity today than you may;?
r e a liz e . H o w e ve r, th is w IlL l
become evident to you only If*
you are motivated to go after *
something you really want.
CANCM (June 21-July 22)
Something beneficial might de- J
velop for you today by being In
the right place at the right tim e.-’ 1
But even though chance will be
a key factor, you'll still have to
cam your reward. ‘
*

Asg. B, 1M1
Material opportunities could
develop for you In the year
ahead from several unrelated
sources. Each wilt have good
possibilities' and be worthy o f
individual attention.
LEO (J u ly 2 3 - A u g . 2 2 )
Fulfillment o f your expectations
Is a strong probability today, but
your success might coat you a
trifle more than you had antici­
pated. If you can't pay the bill,
don't try to climb the hill.
VnOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Associates might be marching to
the tune o f a different drummer
today, so don’t rely too heavily
on their assistance. For best
results, function Independently
of others.

SHVW

LIM A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Your
logical assessment o f situations
will be quite accurate today, yet
you inay employ tactics that arc
contrary to your findings. Think
and act In harmony.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
T h in g s s h o u ld g o r a t h e r

CALL IT M Tf o/e

t» L IP A

'

O

By Phillip A ider
Control and Kaos had stopped
sp yin g, tu rn in g In stea d to
WKATf-WfyP,
bridge.
"HI. Max!"
"Oh. hi, 991" M ax's wife and
fellow agent had Just entered the
room.
"H o w ’ s the m a tc h go in g.
Max?"
"W ell, both sides are vulnera­
ble,
but the Chief Just went down
C H IN A !
in a three no-trump he should
have made. 99."
"And you went down In a
by Jim DSViS three no-trump you should have
i ■
- p made. Max."
POOR LITTLE J
The cards were dealt for the
I next hand of the match between
x
the spy organizations Control
y*
and Kaos.
1. y ( j )
Cover the East-West cards and
t
'm*
decide how you would play the
j J
four-spade contract. Siegfried
I
V
(West) leading out his two top
. ff ( j B )
hearts.
f
The Chief. N orth, had an
P rf f
| ~ a w k w a rd rebld a v e r th re e
lO &gt;
diamonds. He didn't want to bid

fU T HOW WOOL*

J 'too L i f t jo S f[
-&gt; / ]

T

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HeWALL.

of

YOU'LL

IOKAV?

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m u )N

□□□a

T f VoUGOSIRMSHT'
TO THIS SECTION,
PEOPLE WILL THINK

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Poor Judgment on your behalf
might temporarily Impede your
progress today. However, you'll
have the wherewithal to get back,
on track toward a happy ending. (0 1 9 9 1 . NEW SPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.
;

4 -2 .
" I think I see the answer. 99."
said Max. After rolling the heart
ace, he led the spade five from
his hand.
Shtarker. East, won with the
10. but he had no winning
defense. If he led another heart.
Max would rolT in the dummy,
return to hand with a club to the
ace. draw trumps and run the
dubs. Instead Shtarker tried to
cash two diamond tricks, leading
the ace and another. The result
was the same: Max made his
contract.
"Brilliant, M ax!" exclaim ed
99. "You have won the first
robber.”
"It was nothing. 99."
"Oh. Max."

l l U A A A A A P f) I )0 f U # t '

PHILOW Hi

O E m M (May 21-June 20)
Endeavors you personally con­
trol should work out favorably
today. Your biggest problems
could come from expecting too
much from others.

three no-lrump without a heart
stopper, so he tried three spades,
hoping for the best. Here it
worked well.
Max could see 10 tricks In four
spades and six clubs, but there
was the problem of keeping
trump control If the spades were

/D ID w e

WELL VRAM—A CHAUfftRtP \

1
UMO 6 AMCP l/PTh£
SAU..
DTMgg (MY WITH A
REDHEADED KID IN r ITHAT
1HCSAOC.-{—— I C K X T
50 WND

choose will inevitably be the
wrong one.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) If you have to contend with
some unexpected pressures to­
day. keep a cool head. Even
though things might not be all
that rosy, they should still turn
out far better than they first
appeared.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
There are occasions when the
best way to treat a problem la to
walk away from It and turn your
attention elsewhere. Once your
outlook is refreshed, you can
resolve it later.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Someone might try to deny you
something today to which you

favor you tiil*fcy, you may still be
inclined to makes waves with1
co-workers. Keep your emotions
In check so that you don't dc'
anything counterproductive.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
For beat results in your financial
affairs today, strive to operate
along prudent, traditional tines.
Poor speculative risks could take
a bite out o f your profit.

SOOTH
♦AKQ54
f t

♦K in

♦ AQ»

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

Opening lead: V K

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l O O U f t A MMAL

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J O L W E SHALLOW -

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C LA SSIFIED A D S

Switlnoto

Orlando •Wlntor Pork

323-2611

831-9993

ju o w iM iir r t

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matat

A-1 C N IU K A R B . On Myltwitoe

M t v k lB R H M M |

■ r S B S ir o
^ ^ e t c lV p W O T W

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CARPENTRY. M AM M ARY
p i M t o p 8 8 ^ M i W8f8a rP8 8
i8 H m ik i. L t e c ' i d i 8 N M

1 It a m i,

c a rp e n try

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L lM U H iM

C O M PLETE G eeM y L a «a A
L m t o t w lF R . T r e e la rvta a A
IrrtBbRWL la m p to ttlv i ratoa,
k e e i e W n e t o s l i d i i i ’lN I-T W *
U k W H C A R E . b &gt;a totSmatok S4
'8lMl i f L i t f l l i f j U f t W l l
T r a to rem o v a l,

mnn

LAW N M A IN TR N A N C B
C aa w aa rd ei/ A eiM w d to L L a w

CbMTm i.... m^Mf

J5—Tralnlnf

AEtfucattofi

Bid It t ) — Fumlih and Install
T m (I) Veuttod M m O rw M
Fort Oil StaTSfe/Supply Tank
t y ili m . S U B M IT T A L
T l M f 'T J A T f r 7 : 00 P
I nC*l TIM F _TMUR&lt;r*.*V,
A U G U ST I I , III* . M A N ­
DATORY PRC-BID CONFERKNCB WILL BC H IL D ON
W ID N IS O A Y . AUG UST 14.

R A N O rS

O U A L IT Y J k A W N .

- T W P k U H O M i y .- W k r b t o c f c .
L t o 'A A b w W l M M M H W I

■Lot II + E. IS* of Lot S3
Magnolia Haights PB S PG 74
SamlnaN Caunty. Florida.
. Bolng mars spoclllcolly da
Ocrlbad as Ncatod: MS E. 30th

he/ihe will noad a vsrbatim
rscord at tha arocoodlngs In
eluding tha tostlmony and avl
donca, which racord Is not
provided by tha City ot Santord
IFStBktlOSI
Publish: July IS A August 4. l»tl
D IM 171

IF D IL IV IR IN G BIO IN
PERSON, DELIVER TO:
Semkieto County Purchasing
lemlnato County Service!
Building.
Third Fleer, Haem U N
IN I laat III lln e t
Santord, Florida 33771
BIDS MUST B I R K C iIV K D
IN T H I PURCHASING DCPARTMCNT, 1101 CAST 1ST
S T R I C T . T H IR D FL O O R ,
ROOM S M , SANFORD. FLOR
IDA, NO LATCH THAN DAY
OF BID O P IN IN G AS IND IC A TID ABOVC. BIDS RCC II V ID AFTCR TH A T TIM C
WILL NOT B I A C C IP T ID . NO
E X C E P T IO N S W IL L B I

borna by tha County.
David P. Galnor
Pure haling Dirac tor
County Sarvlcas Building
HOI East lit Stria!
Santord, Florida33771
Publish: Augusta. l*tl
DEI *S

U L C I R V .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Alfred Hitchcock couldn ! havp
bttn A racer tadow. I whittled coming to work on Ns
fllma" — Cary Grant

v88nW
a i l l N O P P lt T C O N T N O L a
ia a t o r C m iM D N c a u n t o l
t o r t a n a aa arN w ra l 3 N « t o

m nom nam m

A ll yau r a to m b b o naadsl 14
haun t I N r u m 111 b b
S P E E D Y P L IIM B N M I A b to
tutoty f r e e att. N a N to a/ w c

Ptmamto OAAnfAt
PC M - H au te wash and pointing.
"Q u a to a b y phana” . Call

Socrotarfalft
OJ In S o rp rlta *. J0 IB E . 3Slft
SI.. Santord...
74*7

mwum

B4M TANB T R E E S B N V IC I
T re e w o r k , light hauling Free
n tlm a to a . Imurad. 3311 A N

OpurtunW—

Linford. Funds 37777 110*

City Hall Cammlulon Chambers
at 11:M Am . in orWr to carntdar a request tor varlanca In tha
Zoning ordkianca aa It partalna
to Slda Yard varlanca ragulramanti in an SR-1A district

II

NON
P A I N T I N G , In te rler/ e sto rler. pressure etoantaA h a a aahm atost 3 3 t « t 7

i i lteGe w
Mi w
p yF
ilw

P O Ban 1)0*

NO FACSIM ILI OR T E L E GRAPHIC BID PROPOSAL
SUBMISSIONS W ILL BC AC
C C F TID .
FOR F U R TH IR INFORMA
T IO N C O N T A C T : G A R Y
OMLOR. BUYCR, (4071 321 I13P
I X T ! NS ION 7113. FOR BID
IA / R -1 * I A N D R A N D Y
VOGINSCN, BUYCR. (4071
3]I-1110, IN T E N S IO N 7113.
FOR BID m3. BID PACKAGES
ARC AVAILABLE IN TH E
PURCHASING DEPAR TM EN T
ATNOCHARGE.
NOTE: ALL PROSPECTIVE
OFFERORS ARE H E R E B Y
CAUTIONED NOT TO CON­
TACT ANY MEMBER OF TH E
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD
OF COUNTY COMMISSION­
ERS R E G A R D IN G TH E S E
PROJECTS. SUCH CONTACT
SHALL BE CAUSE FOR D l l
QUALIFICATION. ALL CON­
T A C T S M U ST BE C H A N
N IL E D THROUGH TH E PUR
CHASING DEPARTMENT.
Tha County rtservei tha right
lo r»|act any or all often. with
or without cauta. to waive
technicalities. or to eccapt tha
oMar which In It* bait |udgt
mant bait larval tha Intoratt of
tha County. Coot at submittal of

O K R P I N O L A ’t P A IN T IN G .
QaaNty w a r k l In t/ la t., L k '4
A tosered . F r a e a d t 3S3-S7T3

i t o c a t m F rp a M L I m -a n a *

appt., tom . O M p t o i ttm al
11S/vp.CaB A i y WF7M7

na guarantee ar warranty aa M
the cand IHan at tka bady,
angina. trwwmlteton. lira* ar
any part at Ika vahteto. Vehicle
may ba Inapattad at Ika cantrai
atflca at the Haualnp Authority
at *4 Cat Ha Brewer Court.
Santord. Ftortds.
Saalad bids will ba accepted
until I ta P M an August »,
IW1. Saalad bMt theuW ba
mallad la Santard Homing Aa-

a N IX T B B t O B P A IN T H tB
A p rs ta u ra c l a m M V t M W
L K /Irew aatt l- g w it o a

to

1MRA Kma|4m
DBTAIL rave*.

A

■ X P E R T P A IN T M A A F it t s
W a tR to g . N a n jr a . I n l/ t it .
Fraaaa*. t l v n . 7 * 7 - f* »

a a i A 1 C v M in * il I U
a r pine bark I U yd. p td w d a p .
Ch n m m h M | tr
A F g a w esetorto* c e l
erB art 4 m l toe waat s i W bklva
R lver-H w y 4A W M N I

Cm

a a a N A U U N B .y a r d t r i l l .
8 | f* lilK M p fM9tiRW8» ff8 &lt; f1 81'

17-MindlMh St. Santord.
Call anytime, M M Ml

Know If You Don't Buy Your Noxt Cor From
Chryslor / Plymouth Wo Both Loso Monoy
unknown ipouta at WILLIE
REED. Itmarrladatlhatlmaof
hltdaath. JEROME MILLER.
Tonant, JANE DOE. Tanant. C
A S FAM ILY CREDIT. INC.,
f/h/a FAM ILY CREOIT
SERVICES, INC.. f/h/aCAS
FINANCIAL SERVICES.
AMERICAN GENERAL HOME
EQ U ITY, INC . t/h/a
C R E D ITH R IFTO F AMERICA.
INC .CEN TR A L FLORIDA
REGIONAL HOSPITAL. IN C .
f/k/a SEMINOLE M fMORIAL
HOSPITAL, and any unknown
heirs. devisees. frantoat.
creditors. andothor unknown
par soot or unknown ipoutat
Claiming by, through, and undrr
any at tha abeva named
Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION
T O ; JO H N D O E. unknown
spousa ot VIRGINIA REED
a/k/a VIRGINIA COKE AND
AMY taifcnown hairs, dtvisaas.
grantees, creditors. and any
unknown parsons or unknown
spousal claiming by. through.
RESIDENCES UNKNOWN.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIE D that an action to tortekwa
Mortgage cavarlng tha loltowing
raal and partonal proparty In
Samlnoto County. Florida, to
wit:
Lot *. Block A. HARMONY
HOMES, according to the plat
thereof as recorded in Plat Book
13. Page 33. Public Records ot
Samlnoto Comfy. Florida
has bean filed against you and
you art required to serve a copy
of your written dstensat. It any.
to It on Robert H. Hotch. Jr ,
1314 E Robinton Street. Or
lands. Florida 33101. and tlto tha
original with tha Clark el tha
above styled Court on or before
tha 33rd day ot August. 11*1.
otherwise a Judgment may ba
entered against you tor tha
relief demanded In tha
Complaint
WITNESS my hand and teal
ot saW Court on the itth day ot
July. 11*1
(COURT SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
B y: Heather Brunner
Deputy Clark
Publish July 3t. 11 A Aufluit a,
II. I**l
OEM 1*3

WtlPly— UCslt

1991PhmOl Laser

GUARANTEED Lowast Price
On Any Voyagar or Will

*8786
SELECT USED CAR SALE THIS WEEK ONLY
19M1/2TOYOTA BUPfU IM t DOOOE RAM VAN 1BG6 FORD LTD I WON 1999CAM ARORS
1980 MAZDA MX8
va.sspo
J
$9790
*1300*
25 10” *8690
ZVX2 *5450*
1989 MITSUBISHI P/U
*6925* ‘I M t BONNEVILLE 1990 LEBARON CONV. 1BB0CHRYS.
FIFTH AYE
iNnnA
^TI
E
Mlf406*
*5490 1999CHRY3. N.Y
a,
JtTU 10MCHRVB. SALON
19M VOLKSWAGEN FOX $%r*9590
££ *14,327*
SUBURBAN
*6490 ItMOLDGv CUTLASS rIBM“CHEV.
^r^lO.150° ‘9990 1M0
1M0 PLY. SUNDANCE a^E *5390.
PLY. VOYAGER LE IN S CUTLASS O E M
IBM
CUTLASS
CALAIS
1990 VW RABBIT
fAAAA
'MTS' a
M”
4tU '£SX° ‘7490 BB. ‘13,927* £&amp;° *1200*
■LUE.A1R

S 3PO , AIR LEATHER
BET. STEREO.

LOADED, LKE

WHITE. ALL

PARKSSICNE
BROUGHAM

TOPPER

boo M.

ES

AIR. AUTO.
PS. STEREO
CHOOSE

14K ML. LOADED

2 OR. 1 OWN

4 O R . 1METE
?K OfltQ

C H RY SLER • PLYMOUTH
il *th i n ill

M-F 8:30-9
SAT. 9 6
SUN. 12-5
SERVICE
7 A M -6 P M M -F

�ID S - Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Sii.d a y. August 4, 1991

71—

71-Help Wanted

ADO TO TOUR INCOME
AVONt SELL SKIN-SO&gt;SOFT
U U n M M tfM N W

COOK

GOOD WORKERS N E E D E Dll
d a il y w o r k d a il y p a y

CaK Bob
MAIDS

Pari lima, float poilllon.
Nursing homo axpotHnc* 4a
sirad Longweod Health Car*
33f WOO............................ gQg

* Laundry Attendant a

F U L L T IM E
CaW Tidy Matd. WQ-1tat

W * MAIDS* *
Full lima. M F. M . Will train.
Call Matty Maid............. W j j g
M ATURE A D U LT to babysit In
my horn*. Rtfartneas a must I
H P SOD altar SPM
MEDICAL

MW M l SULKS AT MMC
captlnt applications for
Cart
I had Nursing Assistants.
rtlftad
Thoaa with experience given
priority I Apply:
VMMallenvlll* Avo SanSard.

HMKSUtTt INCOMC

_____________ XOX/H
NWI

1 NO-(33 **71
LABORERS

Wanted, with following. 140

n rkcessmy

* PEST CONTROL TE C H *
Start o new career today I
Company will train! I
AAA EM PLO YM EN T

iro ancouragad to
apply- Chaufftour's Means*
rogulrod. Call 3H-MM EOC
Full tint*. 1 Shuts,
haavy lilting. Starting pay U
hr. Apply at: IS* Pawar Cl.

In s p a c t a v a r ie t y . of
•Iretonic/mathankal parts to
military spact. Full tlma.
bonatlts. Sand Rasuma to:

Ual^M *--—
-I itai lu A|(

f R In W W I A h K W V w l l w . i M l

Apply In parsan:
I 44 Maitland Blvd
Tut*. - Thurs. IPX EOE

E x n n c K t o s tu p iu if i
All around dry cWaning, full
lima. C a lin M lM __________

th r u

»i-sss*

Cuast ralatad. sarvlc* or
Iantad parsons, naadad.-

II

Tim restoration. Elm up to
SIAM a waak as a subcontrac­
tor. Oocvmantad proof. No

POSTAL end gtiirawai
113.33/hr. Now open. For
tiam and application call

li

Must bo naat. clean. last and
tsparlancaJ! Saafood knowl
adga htlplul. Apply M parson:
M l Bast Wet* toe* **. M F ,

can M a n s
BARN tU P -flM WEEK! H»H
levstopai at homo. No caatl
SEND M SB N : OatdM OH
IrMolars. PO Bos irtiN -C
Cargo OHMS, tm w a n n a
E X P E R IE N C E D TRACTOR
TR A ILER DRIVER wants*
Mutt pass physical and drug
exam. Short hauls within FlorIda. Can&gt;7»4MS___________

w n i t attar 1pm

U T *N* C A R L Y L E * by Larry Wrfcta

71-Help Wanted

mw.smtst.anw

PO STAL JO BS • 111.41 to
H4.t0/hr. For oiom end
application Information call
11* 74**44* a it . F L U*,
•am Opm, 7 days

Come Home To
Country Style Living!

Hickman Cirri*. Sanford,
RETAIL

STOMMMMM

APT. IN COUNTRYt On 4
aero*. I bdrm., hit., living.
dining Prize tel Mt-MM

LONGWOOO. ROOM In private
homo to nan smoker. s*0 par
............... Call KM wao
ROOM IN POOL IM M . lull
house prlvladga*. In Muni
Club area. S4M month, pays
*111............................. M M It7
ROOM with both, kltctwn privi­
leges. tss/wh plus dapoott. U7
Roaalla Dr. Santord attar SPM
TRUCKER'S SPECIAL. Prlv.
entrance, I big roam, both
and place to park r t g l.D lo m

H I D D E N L A R E , 1/1.
Washer/dryer. pool. No pot*.
1475 mo t730 (top 3D 107)

SANFORO. B tC l AREA, lard
est t bdrm. around! Large
living room, in cloood sun
room, oil appliance*. Central
H/A. t3SS/mo. plus SUN aacu
rlty............................MAM71
SANFORO larga I bdrm. walk
to downtown from Park Aval
OOS/wk. or OWS/mo. MPSOM
SA N FO R D , qulat 1 bdrm.
garage apt. SMS/me. pkn daposit. Call 381-147)___________

■ppvivimpviii. p W rtrf DVTwfin

r I n l T i p n N t BWVv

IQAMfPM________________
aSALES REP*

SANFORD - 1 bdrm. cottage"
cloaa to downtown, complete
privacy. SWR par woak plus
U00 security Includs* utilities.

ciTeoiivwsi compony nw oi

your sal**oMllty now!
AAA EMPLOYMENT
M W .M M W .im i7 *

catim-na*

SICWHTYOfflCKRS
" 0 " A ”0 ” L leans* rogulrod
tor work in groator Orlando
■ Call..............M4-UXM7S
S E C U R IT Y O P P IC IR S •
waakly pay. U R par hour to
start with regular ralaas plus
benefit*. Per prastlglou* utili­
ty company m DaBary. HS
diploma. Pie. driver* Means*,
good credit history and obto to
paw drug tost. Currant Fla
guard Iksnse or eartmeato
iw|wivw. m w v NCVriTy in
Orlando...................1-Wt-paa

71— Help Wanted
Senior* area. Call ft
W AN T TO B E T RtCMT Multi
tovoiklhawoy taPaltl
________ Babby m a m
T* MM par
I MP MX 0414

i and making n s In
our Sanford Office. Cam* |oin
usl W ill train the right
personalities! CoR Usa tor
intofytow*:NI* I :N SM-SW)

Wsnknw/Wtws
tUPTlS weakly 4- benefit*.
(Will train) l-W i-l

MOVHNSNQN.
I I MONTH H A M ONLY

Eff.,1, 2, ft 3 ft
Townhousos A va ila b le

rBOtyoral

' In undo Nr Rn RddWonM monUty No •24
hour emergency fnotntanonco service.

Q eq ev a g a r d e n s

apartments

1305 W. 23th S t , Sanford • 322*2000

TA M IT-M N 4
TTWOFAMLS.I

Hours: Mon.-Frl 0:30 - 5:30 •SM. 10 - 5

StepUp Into

Kitchen and peel privilege*.
1/3 u tilitie s. S4S/wk or
t«0/mo. Closo to SCC P I 1*7*

- - I - » . . . . 1 aHMi a t o i

You'U be glad you did!

(y M K &amp; l f r

77— Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent

77— Aportmoflts

RE BROOM living room, hitch
on and both. SIM par weak.
utilities Included, plus deposit
3314114 Of 34* W37
EFFIC IEN C Y A P T •Alt utllltlo*
Included, tao par weak plus WO
dapealt Lake Mary. MA HO*
LANE AAARV - 1 bdrm, S400 par
7 1 -note W illed
month plus *300 security In­
clude* atoctrk/wotar. 373-130*
LA E O E 1
In Sanford Aroat
partially furnished 1300 de
ONLVI Apply In
posit firm, S7S/wh.. Include*
M W W .Iattt.________
water. 3174333 Of 174 3*47
a WRECKER DR IYER *
NICE
LARBB t Bdrm.. t bath,
Espanancodl Good pay and
c a r p a l A C . S31S m o .;
avartlmal Local I
COURTYARD I bdrm.. 1bath.
AAA EM PLOYM ENT
AC. BBQ. S30S mo.; NICE 1
TMW. H N til, m -H7e
bdrm.. I both. AC. large walk
In cloaats. 1300 mo.
lU .B N j.____
N C C D A JO B T
SANFORD. I bdrm., adults. No
The Santor* Moral* ha* direct
Pets I 1300 mo. plus 1300 dtp.
door to door M in positions
Alt# rafWf#.
...... 131-MI*
aval labto today I
SANFORD - I A 1 Bdrm. ApHI
Fum/Unfuml 1300 A Up plus
1300 sec dap. m -IW l/H t-W U
Wednesday, 44PM
SANFORD. ONE BEDROOM
la) Pay by comUtllltlo* paid. 1100 par wk.
mlsalon. To apply: Stop by
Plus dapoill. 311-0343________
washdays. 1-4FM. ash tor
SANFORO • large ] bdrm. with
Day*. Tb* laniard Harold, M*
screened porch, complete
R- Franck Av*. Santord. BOB
a
privacy. 1100 par woak plus
1300 security. Call 333 334*
73— Employment
t BDRM. ONLY 1371/MONTH
plus 1XO security. Santord
Wonted
arveCall 323 33*4___________
* a a TR E E T R I M M I N O a T ^
I BDRM. furnished, close to
I
downtown Santord. Utilities
ta-w f
included. Day*. M3 SOW: attar
4PM. 574 73*3

14- I I

YEARS 0107

EARN EXTRA HONEY

«

71— Apartments/
House to Share

330-3204

77-Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

For woman's apporol. axperl
tnc* nocosaary. Call Anna tor

RENTS STARTING FROM

wa-

73— Rooms lor Rent

Limited Time Offer

Great Apartment!
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

SHARE house, 1 rooms, bath,
smoking. ttSO/mo.
_________ 111 1147
W IN TE R 1PRINOS
Pro
tosstorwl or senior lady wol
coma, furnished room. 170/wk
Information. 377 3347

73— Rooms lor Went
SUMMER SPECIAL! Sr. dtUan
dlscaanltl Claan reams,
TV. 171/wb and ap. D*-4«D
H IS T O R IC A L O A E L E S
HOTEL. 401 Magnolia Av*.
Fum. wife. Color TV, micro,
ratrlg.. util. Included. Maid
M r v l c * . Qulat convenient
location. Raatonabla ratal.
________ Call Wt-ilta________
LARGE FUNN. Raam, Prlv.
tntranc* w/bath. No pats I SU
a waak. util. In cl.n t-lU t

77— Apartments
Unfurnished/Bent
**MAND NCW**
ROSE C LIFF APARTMENTS
Haw 3 bedroom apartments,
for 13)0. W/D connections,
screened patios and extra
storage closet. 1147 sq. tt.
Located on Lk. Mary Blvd.
Call 3331*11
Equal Housing Opportunity I
CLEAN, quiet, spacious 3 bdrm.
Screened porch, lawn mainte­
nance Call 330 3113

JUST LIKE A HOME
Single floor with private
entrance. Studios. 1 L I
bedrooms, m a n y extras In­
clu d in g storage space.
Qulet.coiy community. Nice
landscaping ON SITE MAN
AGERS WHO CAREII

UNFMD COURT..323-3301

LARE JENNIE APTS,
new management! Call us
about our move In specials
from Sl**l Broker. 3111714
LARE MARY Single story 1
bedroom wllh carport. Un­
believable storage I You must
seo to appreciate!
Coll Carman, 331-1*11
LAKE MART S TU O ta private.
RIPvTBC* Up* iw*IvWwI -NO ^BTS*

S3** Includes utilities. 1 0 33*7
M ARINERS VILLAGE
LakaAdatbdr.............. StWmo.
3bdrm....t3WmoAup....tt3-M70

Man laSpEctf S1IS

M eal
I bdrwt. 1
CHA. privet*

SECOND FLOOR. »* * Myrtle
Avo.. If. livlnt rm. I bdrm., 1
both. Wan to wall carpet.
CHA. waahor/dryor. Avail,
attar Aug. let. SITS mo.
M -B H p H O R W

Santord. large I bdrm. Central
H / A , p o o l, l a u n d r y .
Sato/Qulat. 33XMS3_________
NEW

I

BD R M .. 1 E A T N ,

Washer/dryer haeh
ups. eutsidt utility m v. mini
bllndi.t4Mmo........... .3331443
NICE TWO BEDROOM APT..

only S43S. IMS mo/robatoi
SANFORO • Nlca l bdrm.
garage apt. Garaga aval labto.
Mow in tor MW I IMS/rvbato
t ANOIEORNLapt*.at
In Sanfard. Clean, Rufat.
grtcad right! 313 30*

H U OH

tpnabto. Call 331(01*
NICR 1 ROAM, garage apt.
Santord. t3*0 per month plus
damage Mpaalt. M in o r
O STEEN - I bdrm apt*., WO per
week Includes utilities. No
pets. Call 330031)___________

Starting Sapt. 1st
Spacious I and 3 badroams

PMXSJOt PLUCK

l/i UPSTAIRS. 1 blacks at
tPark, 133* and aac. Barb
M-F, P A .................... R M H I

tfU T H IR n
1 bdrm. I bath townheute
apartments. Quiet and secure.
1400par month. MOO security.
131-4447

DORCHt STf H ARTS
Single Story. 1-1 Bdrm.
Ask about our.....
"Laos* Special.....
J|L ij^W
'IwuLwi,
AUdtJFdMMBti
•RE
vWRPF E
WPEWe^^^IRWEe'f*1

M -F 4-3:Open Weekends
LAKE MARY 304*13

101— Hawses
Furnished/Rut
S O W N OEAARV .N IC E I 1
bdrm., Qulat rattroa area ta s
1 RORM. I bath cattaga.
furnished. SWS/mo. SIM de
poalt. Call M4-7S3*. evoe.
1 RORM. Ibeib. Wash/dry.
Fenced yd. Near Ieketrawl 1
*430 mo + dap............. 331434*

ABSOLUTE A U C TIO N

5CCURO PARTY AUCTOfMAJOR LSOMQ MTTTUT10N

Rt: MID STATE POWER TOOLS. INC.
SAT., A U Q 10
AT 11 AM

010 HICKMAN ORCLE
SANFORO, FLORIDA

MTOSWTItCNRT.^TO^yjtB^NTOI

W00DW0RHNG PUNT

m B u v n irmm b e lt i m m r h d b m h i a m
K M * r * U M X N C P IP T.tlH F,tW H L W -W R FIA W .il H F .U a M R .
EOEEHOUETjfcMOH FM OUDCTOLUEft 4 EELTA EAtS b 4AM?HE
WAFERS o fEEBERftOELTAUMEAWEWETEXS ACE DUET COUJCTCRA
OCITA O RU FREES FREUD TAB U CBQE EANDDUOMRATORE T O lJ
KVASNFNH a S * I M DRYER A TAMLEHOPn B e MOB CWtMFMEft
FOUY OWNDER.RIQM1B WTXE EA R ftl NOR TABU EAWt

A M M A O U M T NAAft EO UIR BUPFORTft t
pow er a T ort, to o u l m a e u w n g to u a
BUEEA D N U E m T S u m
aUFTEM M TOOL CAEWEY, GLUE FOYE,
F0 Q 0 P U »,IH 0V fl4IU afelU M TR U C X I,TB W C l0C X B A
OFWCt WNH A EQUIP OUVttTI COFtCR. IPETH DATA ETETEMB COO
FWrtB W/FRMTEft DOXX, CHAMft R U M CAM, CSliULM FHOHft

JACUEO,MDIV

TEMM: CASH OR CAW M RBCX-tfA BUYER F fE U M . EWFECT E MEB
FtBORTO AUCTION
”

STAMPLER AUCTIONS

7*71 HW77AVE-, MAM, FL 331 •* 1-0001X0-'
__________ LITAMPLER A ll M, AUlsaAUOAX, A I »

ONLY

*435

7 and 12 Month t

Available

(1st Month Only)

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartments
• Cable TV
• Washcr/Dryen in Select Units
• Self Clean Oven
• IffinalrfT

• Dishwasher

• Garbage

FREEBIE ADS

Disposal

• Pool

• Clubhouse

rW s TMn.i i

2450 Hartwell Avc* Sanford

Takeadvantageolthisspecialotter

MON.-SAT.9-6 * Sun. 12-5

324-4334

This is a great opportunity for you to enjoy the same great results as
our regular classified customers at no cost to you. Just follow these
Instructions.
1. Ads will be scheduled to run for 10 days.
2. Price of Item must be stated In the ad and be $100 or less.
3. Only 1 item per ad and 1 ad per household per week.
4. You should call and cancel'as soon as item sells.
5. Available to individuals (non Commercial) only. Does not
apply to rentals or garage &amp; yard sales.
6. The ad must be on the form shown below and either be
mailed in or presented In person fully prepared to the
Sanford Herald Classified Department.
7. Ad will start as soon as possible.
8. Classified Managements decision on copy acceptability will
be final.

SanJord
H erald

BUY

IT.

S E L L IT.
FIN D IT.
CLASSIFIED

fREEUEAOS

MAIL T°:

Sanford, FL 32772-1657
• ONLY ONE ITEM

.SMS: Or

• MUST INCLUDE PAJCE

• S100 OR LESS

PRINT AO HERE:.

5

�/

Sanford Heraid, Sanford. Florida - Sunday, August 4. 1991 - I I I

UnfwmHtm/Htnt

IW -H s u m

114— Warehouse

Urrfwmhhpd/Kwit

Space/Rent

M IE D A 1 B O O M ax]Bdrm “
D l LTONA7 Large Mlecttong
W IIM IT M A LTY
374*73*
C L IA N ) bdrm, i bath, central
H/A. screened porch and
dock. Nlco neighborhood
tm / tm ......................313 41*3

2/1, COST N O M I In home

LONGWOOO/LK. MARY area.
1.000 1,300 sq tl. with or
without A/C office?. Starting
S333. McIntosh Point, 33* 774*
SANPORD
1.230. 1,333, 3.100
square Net available.
_________Call 321 7004________
SANFORD
1,230. 1.313. 3.100
square Nat available

by eppalntment only. No Pets!
Avail Aug. I st. 222 2111
2 BDRM. lie RATH, rant, 3473
deposit 3173. Sanford. Attar
3PM. 331IIIS______________
1 BDRM. 1 both, appliances.
11replace, fenced yard 3300
Paul and Beth Osborne
Venture I Properties, 321 4734
1 RDRM. 2 BATH. Sanford
Formal llvlng/dlnlng rooms,
front end roar porch. WOO/mo.
321«**. ash lor Steve

KITOM (ItCUTtVE TYfE
3 bdrm.. 1 both: CHA. all
ftoctrk. Ovor 30 ff. FI. rm., lg
laundry rm. A tool shad
Cantor lot. 1 carports. No
Arts I MW mo.

574-INI
. M A N PARK 1/1't CHA Now
print, carpet 3350mo.
tdwww Needy gn-iiay.
, H ID D fN LAKAB. Immaculafa
. vacant I bdrm. 2 bath, central
A/C. on eery private cut da
sac. Lf. yard. WM/mo plus I
mo. security. No pets please.
2124247, leave mao._________
IA K A M O NNOt. 1 bdrm . i
bath. Lf. oaks. AC. Fplc.. 1373
m e plus deposit m 11*3
L A R I MARY - I I I 1st 31, Clean
3 bdrm. 1 bath, central H/A,
hoekups. freshly painted, t i l l
Bart, Venture I. neseee
.L A K E PICK I T T CT m on nice
dean lake. Fishing, sklng,
swimming. 3 bdrm. 1 bath.
Split plan, alarm sys.. CHA,
carpeted 2 car garage, shed on
1 plus acre, lots of privacy.
t i n mo...................... A H H t
LOWW O O D . Hwy «n . 3 bdrm
1 bam, newly refurbished.
Utl/moplus security. 3301SOP

117-Commercial
______ Rentals
O P P iciS ba w r— m WarettooaT
Airport Rlvd. Iron teg*.
CeN BsPMtKeo 3231110
TW O 1,000 sq. n units, can be
used together. One unit, 300
sq ft
Call 33012*7

IRS— DvptexTriptox / R u t
L A K t MARY. 2 Bdrm, CHA.
good condition I No Pets!
__________ ***-2372__________
L A R I MARY, 2/1 Nice areal
Waltwall carpet. CHA. applt
ancet. Fenced yd....... All 0710
SANFORD-TWO RIOROOM .
Carport. Security system, lull
hit., dlsceunted 3233.2H-0222
SANFORD 2 bdrm. 2 bath, all
appl, fenced, garage, scr.
perch. 3530plus dtp *344*37
SANFORD, good area. Clean 2
bdrm. private yard, kldi/pets
OK. 3341plus dep S4f 0044
SANFORD. 2 bdrm.. AC. carpet.
Dishwasher, laundry rm.,
carport. 1410mo........ *3*701*
TWO BIDROOM. 2 Bam. CHA.
wash/dryar hookups. Wall to
wall carpal................321 7347
1/2 MILS from 1717 and Lk.
Mary Bl. 2 bdrm. I bath,
fenced yard, celling lens. A/C,
UU/me. plus deposit Includes
sewer end water. 327-3117
2 BDRM 2 BATH. Sanford.
Appliances. No pats. *400/mo.
plus security, ise-4347 attar s
2 BDRM 1 BATH, ptot 2 bdrm.
2 bam. Near 23th St. Income
1*00 143.000 IS* 4347 offer *

k.&gt;

Rent Ta Own)
3 bdrm.. A/C. 11.300 down.
•: *430 par month, see TUT
M N F O R O I AIDROOM. 11s

bach, garage A carport. AC.
* fenced bach yard. WOO each
1st. lest A security. Available
Aug, urn.
_______
SANFORD • 3 bdrm. 1 bath.
wood floors, built Ins. tans.
' yard, tm /rno 314 7171, Agent
SANFORD, near downtown, 2
bdrm., 1 both, lies a month
‘ ptuedspoelt. 222-2230________
SANFORD. 3 bdrm.. 2 bath.
* CHA, family roam., fenced
! back yard. IU 0 month, plus
■ UWdep. Ivaalagennasi.

111— Office

&gt;/Rent
PR ISTIO R O PP ICIS 700 to
4.000 sq. tl. Soma furnished. 2
blocks to City Halt. Celt
224 0344........ CROWN SQUARE
SAN FOR D -72*. I,4Y2,
and 1.SJOsquere Nat.
Call 221-7004

121— Condominium
______ Rentals
H IO O iN L A R IS . 2 bdrm. 1
bath. 1300 par month. 3300
security deposit. 3770334

PMCRINCON!

2 bdrm. 2 bam. washar/dryer.
3323/me S.E.C.M. Inc.. Lie
Waal EstaN Broker, S37 3304
PtN IR ID O E
2 bdrm. 2 bath
condo, all appliances, includ
Ing wesher/dryer. 1500/mo
plus security. 111-1*12 or
314 3*14
SANFORD, Saadelweed Villa*.
I bdrm. wash/dryar, scm. rm.

ties + sac, gsa-imeit. 137

G EN EV A 2 bdrm. CHA. No
Petsl SltS mo. plus itopotlt.
334-4737 fvonlngs___________
O N I BDRM. turn., BAROAIN
rent, quiet neighborhood.
Perk Avo. Mobile Pb. 7713041

Fenced, beautiful, three
bdrm.. I bath w/garage. Nice
resId area. WaO per month.

Homo, m - m i m . w -ia n
SARPORD ■ Newer 2 bdrm. 2
bam townhousa. Avail, now I
Move In for 1100. May
lease/purchosa with low
down. 3410 mo/rebate
Invastars Realty. *3Mf**
MAONOLIA AND 13th ST ■Lg. 3
i bdrm. I bath Central A/C,
Move In for ASPSf less
* m o / r e b e t e . May
* laaea/purchasa with I bdrm. I
. bath garage apt. and flexible
low dawn terms.

3232321

127-Offlce Rentals

113-Parking Spaco
For Ran*

CORNER Mm and &lt;27. Office

D O W N TO W N S A N F O R D ,
NEARCOURTHOUSE.
CALL 321 7004

141— Homester Sole

bldg. Greet lor ell types at
business. 377 3437/313 444 3434

4 Aperfmenti PLU* houseI
Recently renovated Good rantel neighborhood! Potentlel
gross Income 370.700per year I
S110.000
W. Gernetl White Pee Iter
I H. Hedges 331-013*

114— Warehouse
Space/Rent
DOW NTOW N BRICK
WARCHOUSI SPACE 700 to
30,000 sq II. Dock H T .
Sprink lered. Call 374 0544
CROWN SQUARE

The P ru d e n tia l®
F lo rid a R ealty

LOOKING FORA HOME?
Please let mahelp.

Coil Bob Grtfom, REALTOR
1401)13* eseaer 2233200

LEASE OR SALE

Lot Owners: No $$$ Down, or
We'll Pay Off Your Loti
M A «y M lIV E M

70S Serlte St. 4 bdrm l belli.
CHA. fence, family rm. ce
remit floor, eppl. 1*00 mo 1st
end lest. S700 eec. *04 131 0*31

M m 4 IO W O % te m (l^% o H e

SAVE

f c

A

A

A

up to

? 3

yO

O

O

I f a*mao

APRI•

MW

______ Today 1 PM -4 PM

I h/jii ib U g ii
i -— r

tWr/

- \ v./-

i ut

205 Florida Ave.. Geneva
Tracsl Trees! Trees! shade this extra nice 6 year old 3
vaev ton
bedroom. 2 bath home on comer privacy
Ioncod lilot! Open
great room plan, vaulted ceilings l plant shelves, oak
cabinets, staaied woodwork, large Hone fireplace, 21x13
screened porch, inside laundty room, oversized lido entry
2 car garage. Stop! Look! Buy I $81,500
R t 44 to HL 424, (Geneva) N . on 1*1 Street, left on
Florida A ve .

SAffMMLL LESSTHAN
•1/1 •fireplace, new paint and
carpet, fenced yard..... 33*.too
•1/lVh 1.700 sq ft. with hot tub.
appllancet, fireplace 333.S00
ax/iv, spin plan. appliances.
garage, fenced yard. 343.*00
# 1/1 - renovated1 New carpet,

LMIMAIT, LESS IWM
•1/1 - renovated, new carpet,
paint, appliancao. fenced
yard............................ til. too
a 1/1 - renovated, new carpel,
paint appliances, fenced
yard............................ ta*.*00
***S7,a**dewn, ateeqsaaaRMBfy on this two story 2/2'? with
appliance*, end fireplace.
Fenced yard with pool I tae.300
FLUS
OWNER F IN A N C IN G •
Plnecretl. 3/2. living, dining,
family rm.. security tytfem,
fenced yard....1*3.*0*
ST. JOHN’S AND LN MOMROE
- 3 acre estate 14/2.3300 sq ft .
custom built. 377*.*00
ALTAMONTE SPRINGE
3/1
with detached mother-In law
hornet Peel, privacy tone*
yard and kennets. It 7*.*00

2*40 Seetord Ave
a bdrm. IV? bath block home.
Family rm, fireplace, security
bars, fenced back, tool shod.
Owner relocating, priced
rightitatJH

.

H '7

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
Vfe Rt! And m M
more property Hun
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/lake Mary area.
ORANGE CITY 1/1
Springhollow. Big lot. quiet
area. New weter heater and
fridge. New only........ 34*.*00
SANFORD PLACE 1/1
Extra large fenced yard,
screened patle, overtired
garage. w/ep*n*rs. Now

LONOWOOD CUSTOM 3/1
Beeutltull Relax In hot tub or
hooted poet. This ha* It all A
tor lust...................... lia*.«00.

J11-R7SR............ ML-1257

IMMACULATE*/] a FOOL
Show* Ilka a model. In oak
forest. Owners motivated! Lot
Of itrail Just.............3II*.*00.
IH IO H T/O FEN 1/2
Split plan. Cathedral ceilings.
Near schools shopping, medi­
cal. New only..............334.700

i i \i i

1/1 COUNTRY MOBILE
S acres. Bring your horse*. In
A-1 condition ) acres cleared
Good well.................... 347.(00

\i n

hi

COUNTRY A TM O S P M IN II 1
bdrm. 2 baft) on almost 1/3
acral Family room and raised
patio. Hug*oak trees! 33.300
INVESTOR'S SPEC IALI
Duplex. 7 bdrm. w/central
H/A, and I bdrm., fenced
ISSO/mo Income SSl.MriM

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720

323-5774
* » KW ICM ttlY * »
LAKE MARY near Maylalr
golfing! Spacious 3 bdrm 3
bath with fam ily room,
fireplace, big country kitchen,
double gerage on 103X170 lot
»in.000 ..................... 373-3*7*

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/Solo
W IN TER SPRINOS-Baytree 3 7
bdrm.. living dining rm. 10 X
13 Ft., lg screen perch, fully
equip, kit., all amenities
Owner will finance. 333.300.
tif-*7ti leaser aiaaen Pays.
YOUR NEW SMYRNA CONDO
C O N N E C T I O N ! Sonferd
native. Drenda. Ownby Reel
Estate.................. *04*77 7**1

1S7— MoMte
H o m o s/ S o k
E. ORLANDO 1/1 mobile. 1 car
garage end guest apt. 349,300
IV Ml(i(lRWSkif Hn)f|f

MIDSUMMERSfECIAU

to * SANFORO* to
Great startor/lnvettor home.
1/1 with fenced yerd end
screened porch. 343AN.

CAU1ART REALTY
32274—
LEASE/PURCNASC

CARDINAL OAKS COVE
1
bdrih. 2 bath home on almost 1
aero, many custom features
Lush landscaping, screened
porch. Call Roborta/Elslo
233 1300/134 027J/7M 3*03 RS4*

Magnolia and 12th. ] bdrm. I
bath housa with I bdrm. I bath
apt. over 2 car garage.
Central A/C. Low down, low
monthly payment, flexible
term*. No credit, no problem I
Investor* Realty. 411-****

O R A N O I C IT Y AREA. 2 bdrm.
3 'i bath pool homo with 3.000
sq ft. barn, suitable tor multi
purposes. This Ii truly unique
property 31*3.000 McKennas.
13* 0373/131 3700.............R073

STAIRS fROfERTY
MANAGEMENT A REALTY
**7 2137333/311M7*

WntoSsRfEteCwEfMl!

SANFORD 2 bdrm. 1 bath,
lovely older home, hardwood
floert, fplc. central H/A. sit­
ting room oft master. Close to
schoolt/downlownt 111.***
Wes Louwsma. 321 I N I ... RD It

II nk* listings treat 34*.N*
Some with loans that need no
qualifying! Call today lor
local ions and term*III
HD REALTY,

SANFORD A R IA MOBILE
HOME COMMUNITY
74X 40 - i/ i. .ell electric,

excellent location, many
extras.......................... 313.000
34X43 • 3/1 split. Nice family
............................ 31*000
14X3* - 2/1. gat and electric
..........................Sf.300
14X32 •3/1 split. 1*N all electric
........................111.300
_________ ■m*1SO/t7177*3
SAVE 30*I NEW IN I MOMESI
WNV PAY RETAIL? 14X 7*.
WJM. 74X 7*. 31M** 3*3 t m

YOU MOV El NtoMto Heme.
1*70. 3 bdrm . 12 X 4*
FURNISHED. 313W. MO *W».
1 BDRM. mobile hem*, you
move, loll Sanford Ave.I
Needs tom* TLC. *71* 777 1*0*

15544 BUYS!

WHY f AY RENT?

SANFORO
Lovely 3 bdrm 2
bath, only 3 year? old. Fans,
por c host Open ki tchen
w/breaklasl bar I Close int
Great lor retirees! 357.(00 Wes
Lowsma. 333 2N*........... RB34

tl down tor Vet* - A little
more lor others. Brand new 1
bedroom 2 bath homes wllh 2
car geragat from 3310.
total monthly payment*.
Universal Realty. 4*2-W*

S TY LE , value, quality) Lk.
M ary schools, shopping.
YM CA. library naarby. 1
bdrm. 21? bath w/fplc, volume
celling*! 3N.S00 Joan. 121
3300/574073*.................... RC47

1)00
DOW
N
0&lt;rW W
fffi
Many to Choose From I
New bank loan program lor
hardworking paopla willi low
to modarat* Incomes I
__lnvrstors_R#altjr&gt;74***^_

LONOWOOD. no qualifying Lg
2 bdrm 2 bath, double garege.
country kitchen, comm. pool.
Low cash to assume. Asking
300.N0 Elsie Spivey, 323 3200;
eves. 333 13M................... RTi*

149— Commorctel
P ro prty / S ilt
55575!
Nice building for offices lor
Vel. Dr. CPA. etc. Financing
is already In plactl 2 block* to
naw Laka Mary City Hall.
Call David tcaff
RE-MAX Preperttes. 1313*0*
1 BDRM 1 BATH on 1/a acre otf
Sanford Ave. 3 car garage,
workshop, great tor small
business! 1*1.000 377 0071

H IN T W/OPTION/assume. no
qualifying! Spacious 3 bdrm. 2
bath w/tamily and dining
room. Ilropiace. lg. wooded
corner loft Make otferl E
Spivey, eve*. 337 *3N RC J*
LA K t FR O N T and screw pool!
Lg. lot. Lovely 1 bdrm. 7 bath,
open living are* overlooking
pool and lake. Askln« 3133.000
Elsie Spivey. 123 3700. eves,
337 43*#.......................... RC4*

153— AcroagoLols/Solo
CANAL FROHT HOMESITE,
ideal tor your dream home on
Lak* Slyven. Only 334.000.
__ Stomtrom Really 212-1*30

P IN ECR EST reduced! Bring
the family! Lg 4 bdrm. 7
bath, IS'XIS* family rm , brick
Mrtplkc* 1,131 sq III 33f.N0
Wes Louwsma, 373 7N* eves;
beeper. *43 3110............ RJtt

* * FORCEDSALE! * *
10 agricultural acres in Os
lew Reduced 110.000! 34,NO
A lake t t « r mtg.l Now
179,700 UnGENT!
Wyman Realty *44U4)
OCALA N A T ' L F O R E S T .
Wooded 3ot?t 11.9W each, no
money down) 371.41 monlhly
________ 1000 »*7 »J* ________
111 ACRES all or pari, custom
ponds, fence Will finance,
near Deland
141171*

323-3200

. uat Park Dr., leatord
aai W. Lake Mary Bl.. Lk. Mary

•In Our 35th Yrif*

x fc ®

3 b d r m . , 2 bat h. A C.
wesher/dryer, part furnished,
screen rm., carport A utility
shed In nice park I
lA Peril 777 7*37

111— Appl tonets
/ FumHuro
BEOSI Twin, canopy with mat
Irett't A accessories Twin
weed mate's bed. drawers A
mattress. Exc. Condi *30
each. Call to tee I 72477*7
C O M P LE TE A PA R TM EN TI
Living, dining A bedroom

furniture. Mint condition!
SIHOLy.KS?q2* » 2W«
e COUCH, Grey A mauve In
color 373.00. Cell alter 3PM
M F . Anytime on Set. 273 170*
* ENTERTAINM ENT Confer,
wall unit. Walnut. 7 com
pertmentt. n r X 4T*.
_______ M3 W 33»a 7H_______
• K ITCH EN TABLE. Glass top.
wllh 4 chair*. 330 Or best
Otter 334 0013_____________
LARRY'S M ART. 313 Santord
Ave. New/Uted turn. A appl
Buy/Srit/Trede..-.... 222-4172.
eM APLE END TAB LE w/one
drawer Lika new *33.222 3237
eOVER

TH E

BED TABLE,

adlustable wllh mirror 323 00
Callanyf \ ............. 323 1041
O R EFR IG EA .TOR. OB 14 cu.
11. While, worki SUPER.
Large freeterl Frost (reel
3100 371 227*______________
SOFA SLEEPER, recltner
LIVe new*
Call 13b 37M lv msq.
WASHER/DRYER. Maytag
gas. axe. cond 1300 OBO.
TV-VCR. Curtis Mathis. 3300.
FREEZER, Admiral 17 cu. It
upright. II 730B0 371 3004

CHARMINO POOL AREA sur
rounded by privacy fence and
patio goes with this Immacu
lale 3 bdrm 7 bath home This
lovely home wllh well land
scaped and wooded lol hat had
TLC and II shows What else
could you ask lor? 1*1.900
ASSUMABLE • NO QUALt
FYING Super deal on 4 yr old
1 bdrm 7 bath contemporary
home G re a lro o m with
fireplace, screened porch,
fans, window treatments
Beautiful wooded corner lof
Close to hoqh school Must see
at only *71.700
Call Charlotte. 374 *333
1013 S Volusia Ave
Orange Cily. FI

904-775-0035

j
*
J

YOU CAN!!

With Volkswagen's new flexible 1 st time buyers program.

Mo College?- No €rodlt. Mo Hassles*

"YOU ARE UNIQUE AND WE ARE, TOOr
DIRECTIONS: From U.S. Hwy. 17-1W, Co Kant on
25th Street to Bay Avenue. (One Block before
Mellonville Ave.) Left on Hay Avenua lo .Modal
Home on Riehl! FOLLOW S IG N S ! SEE YOU THERE!

$7 0 , 9 0 0

STENSTRO M

S TU M P

COSSTMUCTIOSI b lV llO r m .S T C osrO K A TIOS
Over 20 Years Experience

2559 P a rk Dr., S a n fo rd • 321-0140

AND DISCUSS IMIS
WITH ONE OF OUR
0NSULTANTS...MOST CREDIT
PROBLEMS CAN BE
OVERCOME.

'

•

■-

\

r
0U£ ;

**A. , « r

OVER 100 UNITS TO
CHOOSE FROM: FOX, GOLF,
JETTA, GTI, CORRADO, GLI, PASSAT,
VANAGON, PLUS A
OF USED CABS1
89 NISSAN
240 SX

88 MAZDA
MX-6 LX

89 TOYOTA
COROLLA DX

90 GEO
STORM GS1

89 VW
CABRIOLET

5 Spd. A/C, Power
Windows, Sunroot

5 Spd, A/C, Power
Window*. Sunroof

Automatic. A/C,
AUFM Cast

5 Speed. A/C.
Aqua Blue

Convertible. Auto .
A/C. AM/FM Cast

*

Thia ia your opportunity Ui ace what n ’ Custom Builder* will do For YO U ! Visit
our three Bedroom Two Beth Model Home and sec how you can exp re»
yourxelf with • Custom-built Home designed especially For YOU? Your
dreams, wants and needs arc diFFerenl From anyone else!

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

• 86 AUDI
4000
Auto. A/C, Power
Windows. AUFM Cass

86 AUDI
5000

86 VW
JE TTA GL

88 VW
JETTA GLI

89 VW
JE TTA GL

Automate, A/C,
Power Windows

5 Spd . 4 Door. A/C.
AUFM Cast

5 Spd . AC. Aloy
Wheels. Sonroot

Automath: AC, 4
Door. AM/FM Cast

*6400 *6600 *5995 *9500 *8995

A R IS T ® C R A T
is i

v

Picture yourself driving a brand new Volkswagen

; m UU
*4

2427 B a y A v e ., S a n f o r d
' S e e in g is B e l i e v i n g "

-K ®

FIRST TIME BUYER?

E X T R E M E L Y M O TIV A TED
SELLER! 1 bdrm I bath *11
brick home w/patio Is waiting
lor ■ new family Good condl
lion, all appliances In
esla-bflthed neighborhood Lo
cated on wooded lot w/ftnci
Location Plus' 347.300
Call Ed. 774 33*1

•j

V iCfCtBZBt

\

1 bdrm.. 2 bath home Me*
Rtc reamI Complete privacy
fence, wall to wall carpet A
CHA. 341.000 ** e 222-1112
t wN W
l^w a l
H
W V4i PVV1 •M imRR/
) bdrm. 2 bam on almost 1/1
acre greenbelt Lots ol space,
greet place tor kids. Walking
distance to Lk. Monro*. Fan
tattle quiet neighborhood. 2
car garage, screened porch, in
ground pool. Greet steel at
317,040. Call Foreclosure
Home Specialists Inc.
Steve, I 221 MOO

O f LAND A R IA
3 bdrm 2
bait) w/1 car gerage, skylit*?,
screen porch, bay window, eat
In hitch, fenced yd. Former
model. 373.(00 McKenna.
12*0275/132-3100..............RH*a

ASSUME NO QUALIFY 2/3
Townhome In Lak* Mary’s
Heron Cove/Crottlngs. Up
scaled area Security. ..M*.300

BATEMAN REALTY

Centrsl Florid*'* Largatt
Independent Rialtor

OPEN TODAY 1 4 PM

W*

Doy*. m -ttM Eve*. 2X37771
AA Came*, tor

MOVE IN R IF O R E SCHOOL!
a bdrm. 2 bath pool homo In
Lk Mary. Corporal* owned,
priced at SI7a.N0 Ready for a
new family nowt Call Sharon.
1311300/MO 323*..............RB33

C

* * * REALNICE* O *

Rssl Estate0m /R«t«s
COUNTRY R E TR E A T nestled
In tree*. River access goes
wllh deed I13MQ0 tor a 1
bdrm . 2 bath w/garden
matter bath. Call Sharon.
m 2200: eve*. 3*0*13* RD34

Centum

GOV’T HOMES Almost nothing
down, almost no closing costs.
No gimmicks! Call Mike
Ptoeff, V.t.P. 774*0*

A N Y COWDITtOW!
Need repairs? Behind on
payment?? Call Greg. 337 47u

RRYNNAVEN • Only 34.000
down I Almost now 2 bdrm. 2
bath with 1 car parage Show*
Ilk* model I Assume bond loan
with tow rates. Save an dosing
costs, enly to*.***

ODOUNO FLOOR 2/2 END
toerthleke Villa unit. Owners
highly motivated. That* why
price If en(y................330.(00

Emtnofl Rutty Group Inc.

896-2201. E v e r 628-0931._________

1

**** IIUY HOUSES *■» x*

yerd........... ................ 3**.*b0
a 3/1 - on t/i acral New pelnt.
fplc. family, living and dining
roomv Privacy fence. 374.300

321-3663

BOB ELLIS, INC. 'REALTOR*
______

MUDAM M FORECLOSURES
tomtit** DOWN

141— Homos tor Salt

Quinn Realty Inc

z z z s z 'z s s s z

OPEN HOUSE

7 :p-

141— Homo* ter Sate

MteoilftOfFioounonMNd

ORLANDO 869 4 4 4 4

1

Government Repot A Assume
No Quality Hornet In Semi
nol*/Oranga/Volu?la/Lake
Counties

* GOOD INVESTMENT! *

Investors Realty. eiMtos

LdMfl lU TE fn

M M M K V .F N M M

123— For Lease
* • 3/1 PARK ON PARK*#
SlfSMo. CALL AlChlodt
Century ;) Chtodl Realty

141— H a e m tor Sak

AN D SATISFACTORY CR EDIT
3 and 4 bedroom homes avail
able until Inventory's soldi
Possible bond money also
available with low fixed rate*.

W INTER SPRINOS condo. 2
bdrm. 2 bam. poet, tennis.
ItlCElSjiTS^m oC alliJM lO ^

107— Mobile
Homes / Rent

SMOM SOUTH

141-

V O L K S W A G E N , IN C .
4175 S. Otlando Drlva (Hwy. 17-92) Sanford, FL 32773

Sanford 3212277 or O rlando 365 3 3 0 0

m IB
toriUffONO
♦ III IKMARV
Iff aivo

tf w e*
m
'l l

4M
fO ORI JLNOO

'MUST U £ t f W h-UUU ACQuM LUCNtS

*&lt;,t &gt; o%
fill1

�t I

111 - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, August 4, 1991

111— Appliances
• WASHER. K tnm ort. very
good cond 1 spaed. Mevtng
Me*f Sell! tlto. 373-777»
•WASHER. OE. gold color
Very Good condition I! 1100.
377 3 1 3 4 _______________
IMS* »T U air cendHtoner. S100
or best offer. Works good, just
checked out!............... 17/ 3*1?

231-Cars

FRANK A LORI'S New A Used I
7101 S. French Av«. Thrift
Store, Clip this ad tor l*% Cfff

a PUBLIC A U TO AUCTION •

NEED SALE ITEMS
★ FON BENEFIT ★
Call Ralph tor Pick up I
371-4/13

21f— Wanted to Buy

113-Television/
Radio / Stereo

(** Atemlnem Cane.Newspaper
Nen-Ferrees Metals..........Olass
KOKOMO..............- ..... m i n e

vci

Fisher, excellent condition No
e.s/s..................374 4404
• ZENITH COLOR T V I I*"
cable ready. A I condition I
(notremote). *100. 377 *3U

BaMwiaOrfa-Stok Orpa

117— Sporting Poods

Looks great, needs tuning
Ideal tor beginner. *300
377 0544

• QIRLS BIKE 74" single speed
New tires. *75.00 373-*&gt;30
HARO TIM E selHng gem? For
small fee I will sell your
weapon within 40 days or fee
and gun returned. I deal with
buyers from all over US.
Call F E IA 447-S7*-to*4

1&gt;5— Machinory/Tools
• MISC. hand tools.

Nothing

m — Pets A Supplies
CATS. CATS. Ktttenet I yr. old
Female, gray faboy A cute
kittens. M E E I I 333-4*77
• COME O ET A C A TII A
months to 7 yrs. FR
Abandoned near my home
Please give them a GOOD
•I......................... 374 7*57
N E E D I NFO U r Monthly
Newsletter I Paw Print News.
__________ 34*-H IT ___________
OUAKER PARROT A Large
cage. I months old. 57500
OHO............................ 3715*04
• RABBITS A cage* CHEAP.
Cheap, cheapI *5 00 each to
good home................... 371 «/43

IS.?

222-Musical
Merchandise

223— Miscellaneous
• AQUARIUM - 30 gal with
hood and accessories, tin
__________ 331 *050__________
HARRIS CAR. 1 yr. old Cor
vette. With battery charger,
like newt M3 00.......... 3300110
CHILDS
battery powered w/charger.
eecellent shape, *100377 13*5
• COKE MA CHI N E . (Beer
Cooler) 4 ft. + upright, side
door. *50080 373 M/l
• D I C T I O N A R Y for youth.
Treasury of Learning. 30 vd
ume Illustrated set Sections
from atomic energy to Water
mammals. E reel lent condl
tlon. *30 373 413*____________
• FUEL TANK II* Oal. Skid
mounted, heavy duty. t/S
OBO. 373 3044______________
• P R O P A N E 3 burner
campslove/tank 140111 *145
• SEOA OENSIS Cartridge 14
bit Super Thunder Blade. *35
never used/ 330 0*44_________
• WESTERN SADOLE • IS"
seat, not fancy but good for
every day. A bargain tor *10
Call eves/week ends. 340-1110

200— Registered Pets
TOY POODLES. AKC - 7 months
old wllti health certificate and

^ lrU U »*c***4 77 ^^^^_

201— Horses

238— Vehicles

235- T r u c k s /
Busts/Vans

217— Oarage Sales

1*10 M E R C U R Y T R A C E R
STATION WAOON Auto. PS.
PB. A/C. exc. cond *3430OBO
Cell 377 *34l4fter4:X
weekday*, anytime weekends.

E V E R T TUBS. A FNI. 7:3* PM
DAYTONA A U TO AUCTION
Hwy. *3, Daytona Beach
_________t o A m n n _________

TMI UP PAYMENT*

MO
MONK
rw wW
ii
"w m
Mtl K Ye iMm
except tax. tag. title, etc
t*B7 C H I V Y C K LEB R ITY
A/C. eutomatlc. stereo, till,
cruise. Only *141.30 per month
(34months« l**%APR|
Call Mr. Payne
Courtesy Used Cars, 373 3133
• a • a t eas L I N C O L N
Towncar. Loaded! Excellent
Cond I **3*5. 373 0104________
l**S M ECURV MAROUI5. 4
door, loaded excellent condl
Non. 3V.M0 mile* *4400
________ Call 373 **#4_________
'to CAMARO . Auto, new liras
and trans. A/C. tint windows.

ol DeBery
W E W EIOH AND PAYI
Teg (Star |unk.
Cars A Trucks.

AVAILABLE SELF STORAOEt
Outside storage tor RV'sl
litotore.b3.M-F. 337-5413

7ICNWYC-10 STEP VAN
3 speed, runs good. (1.300 or
best otter...................371 7313
'7* PLYMOUTH VAR. Auto.
170K, runs great, cleag. good
e.Ocvl. *1.1*5. JJ34WS

CHEVROLET
CAVALIERS
4 DR.

IT . WANTED!!
IJ r — M O T O rC y C rtl

and Bikts
1/ SUZUKI I4W INTRUDER
0.100 mile*, runs gr*all S3.400
rtosinilJN

Will trade 5 acres woode site.
Lk. George area Call 371 /ill
RV RENTAL let*. 1145 mo. Incl
water, sewer A garbage.
Perk Aee. Mettle Fb. 373-7*41

90
90
90
91

D M M M U t fe '

PONTIAC
MANS
X 48 Mos.
;% A P R

9740010

233— Auto Parts
/ A ccw sorif
• S A O I N A W l o u r spaad
transmission with cast iron
bell housing. Asking *100 obo
330 4017, Iv mso____________
4 MICHELIM fire*. PJJ5 * and
chroma modular wheels lor
Bronco II. *100 33b 1/74

235— Trucks/
Busts / Vans

m
88 CH
CAVALII

Sanford Motor Co.
1**0 J E E P C H E R O K E E
LARBOO
4 wheel drive. 4
door, power locks and win
bows, dark blue) Very very
low miles, priced to selll
________ Cell 377 &lt;3M________
1*74 CHEVY Pkk MW 4 cylinder,
3 speed. Good work truck. *400
OBO............................334 7*75
l*to FORD FIM - 300 4 cylinder,
auto. A/C. longbed with step
bumper. 43.000 miles. *4.300
Vangerd Grace hot water
pressure washer. 110 volt.
M » ............................. 373 5i*4

DODGE
SHADOW

209463

Air, Power Steering. P. B ,
Air Beg. AM/FM Stereo

PONTIAC
SUNBIRD 4 DR.
Fuly Loaded, 8 Cyl.

OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS CIERA

222236

225843

Tih. Cruise, PB. PS. PL,
Air, AM/FM Stereo

TOYOTA
CAMRY DX
Automatic. PS, PB,
Cmi— , Powtr Locks

DODGE GRAN
CARAVAN

FO R D
P IC K U P

94800 to Fin 1 42
8119% APB

5999*
*6399*
*6399*
*

4 To Choose

Robin Hood Hits The Mark
DfSMIMJT
89 CHE
CAM

217711

Fuly Loaded, Stereo
AN Tha Power

Wheel, Auto., A ir,

?«(**!(/ I /* flit • I hi ll ( t r i l i t • Nil / /•&lt;/// • litlltlx I Ilf* \ • \|» /'/ tJt h m

MINCER MOTORS
forest
.......
2993

' 321

J.R. Lewis
Doug McCord

Steve Williams
Charles Smith

5579 8, Hwy. 17*92, Caaaafberry, Florida
Hour* Moo.-SbL 9 •6 •Sun. 12 - 5

321 1450

331-3837

e eOeno Burke Auto Sales# e
Low as *1/7 downI Low pay
mentsl h o m o #37414*/

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
except tax. tag. title, etc
3 ItM HYUNDAI* • Power
steering and brakes. A/C.
Economical! Only *17**3 per
month (4* months O I*»%
APR) .............. Call Mr. Payne
Courtesy Used Cars, 373 7133

1991 A C C O R D 4 DR.

1991 C I V I C 4 DR.

TAKE UP PAYMENTS

211— Antiques/
Collectibles

NO MONEY DOWN
except tax, tag. title, elc
1**/ CHEVY SPECTRUM 4
door, auto, air, power steer
Ing. stereo! Only *I3*.*0 per
month I (43 month* « l*.*\
APR) .............. Call Mr. Payne
Courtesy Used Car*. 333-3133

JO'S COLLECTORS I T EM
Grundlg stereo and radio in

&gt;JoUdte4kiC*blnet; 377 J75^^

215— Boots and
Accessories

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
except lax. tag, title, elc
I * •/ O L D S M O B I L E
Automatic. A/C. stereo. Only
*14* M per month (4* months
it 1* *% APR) Call Mr Payne
Courtesy Used Cars. 173 3133

lf*l BAVLINER. model 1P50
Eagle II. offshore • It beam,
low hours, custom trailer. 4/0
Merc I/Otl.MO.......... 377 //II
4* HP EVINRUDE outboard
motor 51SOOr Best Offer I,

314tan

D O N ’T B E 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 )

•2.2 ktor. 123 horsepower. SOHC 10-verve engine with Multi-po.ni Programmed Fuel Injection
• S-speed automatic kansmiaaion with dud mod# saiector and lockup lorqua converter
(available) •Double wishbone from and rear suspension •From staMuer bar .Variable-ass.si
power rack-end ptnon steering &gt; power-assisted, vendated front disrVrew drum brakes •
Remolo-oper aled left side mirror .Full wheel covers *T mledglass *c u4doth upholstery«2-potnt
motorued from seat bell syswm with manual lap bait *Adjustable steering column &gt;Tachometer
•Quart! drgitto dock • Paesenger-asstsi handiae * Raar seat hawd restrarms • Electric rev
wihdMr defroater with (met* Rear teat heeler ducts *ftomote trunk reieaea with lock *Remote
fuel Mer door release with lock * 1SV70 R1487S eras *Multi-re hector halogen twadkghts

Per

AUTO - HOME - BUSINESS
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•5-Speed overdrive manual transmsson •4-speed automatic transmission with electronically
controlled lockup torque convener (avelabie) * Double ertshbone Iron suspensxxt * Front
siabiliier bar * Mulu Control double wishbone rear suspension •Gas pressurized rear shock
absorbers * Rack-and-pnon steering (powir-sssisled when ordered with avelabte automatic
fransmitsion) « Power-assisted, venlated from dtschesr drum brakes . Ulire-skm halogen
- . - - i . TTinted
I r * glace
‘
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- manual
------------ • Cloth
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* “2-potnt
motorized front teat baft* with
lap baits
uphofstory * Rear winouw defroster •Remote fuel filler door reieaee * Remote trunk release *
Child safety-seat anchors *Child-proof roar door locks •Fold-down rear soatbrek wuh lock.

**

TONY RVSSI INSURANCE AttNCV

/ .

241— R tc n a t io n a l
V e h ic le s/ C e m p e n

231— Cars

eeHAY FOR S A L C I a e 11.75
bale. *75 roll. FEN C E bldg. A
Repair I 377-3711 e v s ________
HORSE BOARDINO - lots of
trails. Personal attention at a
reasonable price. New barn.
Alio horses for sale. 34* 11*4

%

AA AUTO SALVAGE

_____ YTintrt_____

1991 PRELUDE S.I.
BA412

^ 1991 CIVIC 3 DR.
^
ED634

1991 ACCORD 4 DR.
CB754

TU C K ER &amp; BRANHAM , INC.
211 W. 1st St., Sanford. FL 32771

&lt;407) 322-4451
"Serving Cent nil Floruit"
Since 1925

*1 4 ,9 4 9

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AS A Pd

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AS
LOW
AS
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LOCAL OWNER

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• AM/FM
Cassette
&gt;Lots More

•5 Speed
1Air Conditioning
12.0 Liter 16 Valve
&gt;4 Wheel Disc
Brahes

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Air Conditioning
1.5 Liter 16 Valve
Double Wishbone
Suspension

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LOW MILES.
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Gfc T TO KNOW

Hwy 17-92 • Sanford
|12miit Ntxtri ol LAA9 Udiy

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FULLY LOADED.
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91 NISSAN SPORT P/U
FULLY LOADED.
6NLY5K MILES. .

*9495

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

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89 MITSUBISHI
GALANT

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N E W S D IG E S T

I

49,000 start school today
Wilson shares
with Heathrow
until November
j&amp;sySttHwSjf11*"_____

Plan lor fall gardm
It's almost lime to plant your fall vegetable

□ Local

Turn tha pagoa to Laka Mary
For c lu b news and stories about people you
know In Lake Mary:

7A

-■ a —

hfs

Nbw Smyrna Baaeti ticktt wins
TALLA H ASSEE - A SI ticket bought In New
Smyrna Beach for laat week's Florida Lotto
game h as given Its owner sole claim to an
estimated 96 million Jackpot. Lottery Secretary
Marcia Mann said Sunday.
The ticket was the only one sold that had the
six winning numbers drawn late Saturday. The
numbers were 4-15-18-23-24*32.
More than 330.000 other tickets won cash
prises: 333 are worth 93.442 each for having
five of the six numbers: 13.064 are worth
986.50 each for having four of the numbers, and
226.028 are worth 94.50 for having half the
winning numbers.
This week's Lotto game will have a Jackpot
also estimated at 96 million. If paid to a single
winner over a 20-year period.

Mothor on trial in allagad plot
•mm

HOUST ON — A w w » ^ ^ c h a rM »^ lth ^ ry m am
high school cheerleading squad was set up by
her former brother-in-law. her lawyer says.
Opening arguments were scheduled for today
In the trial of W anda W ebb HoDoway. described
by police as the "ultimate stage mother" to her
13-year-old daughter. Shanna Harper.
Prosecutors allege Mrs. Holloway tried to hire
a hitman to kidnap or kill Verna Heath. 38. the
mother o f her daughter's chief rival for a spot on
the cheerleading squad.
Authorities said Mrs. Holloway hoped Amber
Heath would be so distraught over her mother's
death that she would drop out of the competi­
tion.
Defense attorney Troy McKinney has said the
plot w a s thought up by Mrs. Holloway's former
brother-in-law, Terry Lynn Harper. McKinney
said Harper was trying to help his brother gain
custody of Shanna and the girl's brother.

Would'!* robbors foiled
ST. PAUL. Minn. — A would-be robber's
attempt to Intimidate a family by Jumping on
their station wagon was foiled when the family
sped to the nearest police station with the
suspect dinging to the car roof.
Pang Xiong. 30. was practicing her driving
about 9:30 p.m. Saturday when two men
suddenly stood In front of the car. blocked It and
demanded money, police said. She was accom­
panied by her sister. Vang Xiong. 29. and
brother-in-law. Yer Song Moua. 28.
Although terrified, the family refused, rolling
up their car windows and locking their doors,
police said. The men then Jumped on top of the
car and began pounding on the roof.
Police said Moua took the wheel from his
frightened sister-in-law and drove to a police
precinct headquarters at breakneck speed. One
of the men Jumped off the car Immediately, but
a second suspect clung to the top of the car all
the w ay to the police station.
i

i

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INDUE

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Florida...................

Cloudy conditions linger
Mostly cloudy with a
60 percent chance of
thunderstorms likely
m ainly during the
afternoon. High In
lo w e r 90s. L ig h t
wind.

Far

Page 9A

SANFORD More than 49.000
atdents rushed through the doors of
c la s s r o o m s a r o u n d S e m in o le
County thia morning.
For some It was their first experi­
ence away from the safe confines of
home, for others It w as the first day
of their last year In school.
Emotions ran high at Wilson
Elementary School this morning
where students from Heathrow El­
ementary will attend classes until
their school Is completed In Novem­
ber.
"They'll get two first days of
school this year." said Terry Rabun.
W ilson's principal, who will be
sharing his facilities with Mike
Townsley and his staff until the
Lake Mary school Is ready. "They'll
be able to start all over again In
their new school later In the fall.”
Portable classrooms are crammed
Into every nook and cranny on the
WUson campus. They are next to
buildings and between buildings.
"It's crowded at school." said
Jeanne Sorensen, a fourth grader at
Heathrow.
John Gallows, who started the
fourth grade this morning as a
Heatrhow student at Wilson, said
that he thought having two schools
In one w as "radical" and noted that
with twice as many students there'd
be twice as much fun.

Wearing neon pink and green
shorts an d a black and white
T-shirt. Gallows w as the height of
elementary school fashion, but he
c o m p l a i n e d t h a t th e d e n im
backpack his mother had selected
w as not up to snufT. He said that
wasn't s s upsetting as the opening

Cora Snoad, curriculum apoclallat at Haathrow, diraeta

B u s h : W e m u s t le a d w a y
in e d u c a t io n a l m o t iv a t io n
Nswspapsr Entsrprlas Aaan.

o f U » new school S i November will
be.

□ iM ls s t k m r .P a g t 5A

Schools plan
for district
authority
By VICKI I
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County schools have
been preparing for the transfer of
authority In some areas from the
state level to the district.
While other districts struggle to
develop the support of the commu­
nity to help organize, finance and
Implement programs to enhance
education. Seminole County schools
have been developing such com□ Sea D istrict. F a g s 5 A

schools
Associated Prats
TALLA H ASSEE - The moat
hotly-debated education topic of
the 1991 legislative session w as
accountability, a reform package
supporters hailed a s a fu n ­
damental shift In h ow schools
operate.
The proposal passed. But the
talk continues.
W o r k s h o p s a n d p u b lic
hearings will be held across
Florida this foil as state officials
work to better acquaint the rest
of the state with a subject that
w a s w i d e l y d e b a t e d In
Tallahassee this spring.
The basic theory underlying

accountability sounds simple:
Schools and districts are given
more flexibility from the state to
operate and are then held ac‘
or the results they
Since accountability Is so radi­
cal. however. Implementing It
will be a complicated affair.
C h a n g e s w ill not be m ade
overnight
U n d e r accountability, the
p a r e n ts , te a c b e ra a n d a d mtnJatratora at each school have
two years to develop a plan to
Improve thetr school.
"Every Individual school will
build a road map." Education
Commlssiooer Betty Castor said.

By M€K FPIIPAUP
Harald Staff Writer

SANFORD — The Florida Public Utilities Company Is
requesting the city to help pay for a contamination
assessment on Its property. The land, near 830 W. 6th.
Street, was the site o f the Sanford Gasification Plant
many years ago.
According to previous tests, the property Is suspected
o f being polluted, although no human health risk has
been determined. The FPUC now wants more testing,
and is requesting the city to help pay for the costs.
Assistant City Attorney Donna L. McIntosh has
prepared a status report on the problem, which will be
presented during tonight's meeting of the Sanford City
Commission.
A year ago. the Florida Department of Environmental
Regulation completed a preliminary assessment of the
site to determine If It had been Impacted by pollutants
from the former manufactured gas operation. Their
testing was done by Ecology &amp; Environment. Inc..
(E&amp;E) In March of this year..
Florida Public Utilities Company, the current owner
o f the site, undertook a similar test, hiring Environmen­
tal Consulting Technology. Inc.. (ECT). At that time, the
City of Sanford helped pay for the Investigation, at a
cost of approximately 93,000.
The results of the DEK's Investigation was completed
In June o f this year. After reviewing the report In July,
the DER Issued a Warning Notice to Florida Public
Utilities directing them to conduct additional con­
tamination assessments.
Mglntosh has reviewed both results of the KAE and

President Bush Is going back
to school and he Is bringing the
rest o f America along with him.
"D id I do It wrong?" the
president asked an II-year-old
student last May In a classroom
In St. Paul. Minn. The youngster
was trying to help Mr. Bush with
a computer. In the first - public
test o f the president's efforts to
become computer literate.
Despite his two-flnger style. It
was clear that the "education
president" was making good on
a promise made only one month
before.
Speaking at the White House
on April 18. the president had
told a gathering of the nation's
senior educators, business exec­
utives and government officials:
" I f we want America to remain a
leader, a force for good In lh&lt;
world, we must lead the way In

□ Baa Future. Fags 5A

C it y to d is c u s s fin a n c in g
s tu d y of g a s c o n ta m in a tio n

■

to elaaaoa.

ECT reports and believes they are similar. "Basically."
she writes, "th e soil and groundwater were Impacted
with coal tar at the site of a former tar well and
groundwater concentrations of cadmium, lead, chromi­
um. and benzene exceed primary drinking water
criteria." She said the horizontal and vertical extent of
the Impacted soil and groundwater Is not known.
'
The Florida Public Utilities Company has determined
that additional assessment work. Including soli borings,
test trench excavations and monitor wells will be
necessary In order to completely delineate the extent of
coal tar impacts at the site. The cost Is estimated at
approximately 945.000. The company is requesting all
potentially responsible parties to share In the cost of the
contamination assessment.
The attorney is recommending that the city agree to
participate, with an amount not to exceed 97.500.
although she has Informed the city. "Our participation
In the funding o f this report is not an admission of
responblllty for remediation.^'
There Is a possibility the city may be able to claim an
exemption on the liability for the assessment and
cleanup costs. McIntosh said she Is working on the case.
Although specific research is still underway, the city
of Sanford Is believed to have owned the site between
1924 and 1928. Yet there Is an Indication the
manufacturlng of gas for home fuels may havr
continued Into the early 1950s. before It was no longer
needed due to the development of propane and other
natural gas.
The status report will be presented during the
Sanford City Commission meeting, tonight, beginning
at 7 p.m.. In the Sanford City Hall.

Schapker
named SHS
principal
Herald Staff Writer

S A N F O R D — G rc tc h c n
Schapker has been named the
p rin cip a l at Sem inole High
School to replace Wayne Epps
who transfered to Oviedo High
School to take over the top spot
there.
She Is the first woman to be
named a high school principal In
the Seminole district.
Schapker. who has been with
the Sem inole County school
district since 1978. lias spent
her entire career at Lyman High
School In Longwood.
She must be approved by the
school board at tomorrow even­
ing's board meeting, but It is
unlikely that there will be any
opposition to herappointment.
She was selected from a field
o f nine candidates. Including
Bobby Lundqulst who is pres­
ently an assistant principal at
Seminole. A group of 85 Semi­
nole High employees had signed
a petition to show their support
for Lundqulst.
The list of candidates was
narrowed to five by a committee
com prised o f administrators,
teachers and parents.
The final decision was made
See Principal. Page 8 A

�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

n«w

aeiay possiwe in
Kennedy's rape trial
.

WEST PALM BBACH &gt;of the lead

The

- of the judge are
fo r n o w o v e r s h a dlo w !in g a
i ’s claim that WUttam
Meanwhile, a new.
le n g th y , d e la y la p o s s ib le
because o f a conflict Smith's
lead attorney has In
r. set for trial Jan. 6. The
IS.

Moira Lasch have the
lawyers
lowing t
scratching their
" I 'v e

BrMkfast mofwy hard lo find
TALLAHASSEE — The Mate has ordered all elementary
schools to serve breakfasts to needy children, but financially
pinched local districts complain lawm akers provided only
enough money to cover half the cost.
And school officials are being told they won't even get
that until next spring.
"W e're not sure whether that will be enough to cover the
entire thing.” acknowledged Joe Worden, administrator of food
and nutrition management for the state Department of
"Some (districts) are probably irritated/'

•am

FromAn solH i

&gt;»
-a -

been try in g to unthe state's strategy,"
said Mary Coombs, a University
of Miami law pmfcaaor. " I don't
understand what she’s doing."
T h e Palm B each R ev ie w ,
which covers area legal affairs,
headlined an Aug. 33 article:
‘‘William Kennedy Smith s Pro­
secutor Is Blowing Her C ase."
Ms. Leech hae rarely referred
to Smith in her argum ents,
instead repeatedly talking about
“ Kennedy family influence" and
the "vast publicity network" of
Smith's uncle. Sen. Edward M.
r.D-l
She refused to
usually automatic adm issions of
out-of-state counsel for Smith.

S o m b e r a n n iv e rs a ry

in c

brought to court a book
rtmg about the role one of

-

a n o m e jn ,

*■
*
r K iw

n

44jfa c kL«»

Associated Press Writer
GAINESVILLE - A year after
the terror started, families and
students prepared to mourn the
five college students massacrecl
In their apartments and pro­
secutors were closer to finally
charging someone in the stu­
dents' murder.
Bella will chime in this college
town Monday, the first anniver­
sary of the discovery of the first
two victims.
Flags on public buildings in
Gainesville will be flown at
half-staff. White ribbons will be
displayed on police car antennas
and on trees near the University
of Florida library. A wreath will

- Here art (ns winning
numbers saisetsd Sunday In tha
Florida Lottery: Cash 3: M - T
Winning numbars aeiected In the
Florida Lottery Ptey 4 were: S-I-7-1
Numbers chosen Saturday In
Lotto were: 4-1S-10-SS-S4-SS.

tu rn mi m i
Monday. August 28, 1991
Vol. 64. No. 2

r x ^ r i . '^ V i s V u r
Im . M k rtm c k Aw, I w M .

be placed on the wall on South­
west 34th St., where the names
of the Qve victims were painted
on the graffiti-covered snail last
August.
A n d amid the signs of con­
tinued grief, prosecutors say
they are finally closer to making
formal charges In a case that has
had plenty of finger-pointing but
no Indictments.
Prosecutors announced Friday
that a grand Jury will be em­
paneled Nov. 4 to hear evidence
in the Gainesville slayings.
State Attorney Len Register
will seek indictments on both
im e suspect
Danny Harold
prim
■
Rolling. 37. of Shreveport. La..
L ew is

Hum phrey.

IB. of In-

Last week. Ms. Leech turned
her sights on Palm Beach Circuit
Judge Mary Lupo, saying the
Judge should remove herself
because she Is biased, gives her
harsh looks, and has lacked
The Judge received the state
for |Kf disqualification
the day after she got notice from
Sm ith's attorney. Roy Black,
that he h as a federal trial
Sm ith's attorneys last month
gained a delay of his trial,
originally set for’ Aug. 5. by
arguing they needed more time
to prepare and to allow pre­
judicial publicity to cool off.
Black suggested a trial date of
Nov. 4. Ms. Lasch argued for an
October date.
Instead, the Judge set trial for
Jan. 13. saying she wanted to
avoid holiday conflicts. But
Black informed her he has a
fe d e ra l trial date, set four
months ago. He asked that a
federal-state Judicial coordinator
try to work things out.

Today: Mostly cloudy with a
60 percent of scattered afternoon
thunderstorms. H ighs In the
lower 90s. Light wind.
Tonight: Partly cloudy with a
c h a n c e o f m a in ly e v e n in g
thunderstorms. Low In the mid
70a. L igh t east w in d . Rain
chance 30 percent.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy In the
m o r n in g b e c o m in g m o a tly
cloudy with a chance o f after­
noon thunderstorms. High in the
lower 90s. Wind east 10 mph.
Rain chance 40 percent.
E x te n d e d forecast: Partly
cloudy each day with a chance of
afternoon and evening thun­
derstorms.

Inonwi impT

I COCOA1^ " F e d e r a l ‘ officials
• have confirmed that four de­
cades ago the military dumped
Pedro, a Hialeah businessman.
, waste on land that is now the
site o f an unexplained outbreak
o fa rare cancer.
Investigators with the U.S.
Army Corps o f Engineers said
ound a "h ig h probability"
they found

a Hants*.----------- ttt ao
e Mates*--------------m oo

Ft. Lm 4 Saach
Fort Myara
Galnatvllla
Jackaamrillo

(Cry Writ

Panaacaia

l Veer...................174.00

I must pay IK aalaa
iteratea abate.
1(407) 122-M11.

that dumping occurred about 40
years ago in the area Just south
of Patrick Air Force Base.
R esidents o f the 10-block
neighborhood now called South
Patrick Shores have reported at
least a dozen cases of Hodgkin's
disease since 1967 and speculate
that leaking landfills on Patrick
or military waste buried In the
neighborhood have contributed
to the cancers.

Investigators for the federal
E n v ir o n m e n t a l P r o t e c t io n
Agency already have begun a
preliminary investigation o f tox­
ic waste In the neighborhood
that should be finished by Janu­
ary. federal officials say.
" I have put the EPA on alert."
Said U.S. Rep. Jim Bacchus, of
Orlando. D-FIa.. who asked the
EPA to step In quickly if the
corps bows out. "T h ey assured

Vara Bench
W Palm Botch

MONDAY
Mttycldy 90-78

TUESDAY
PUyeldy B3-74

ai

ai
ai
ai
aa
n
at
aa
aa

ai

WEDNESDAY
PUyeldy B8-74

THURSDAY
PUyeldy $3-74

M B i

. ntiv

75
LAST
Aag.3

TABLE: Min. 7:10
a.m.. 7:35 p.m.: MaJ. 12:55 a.m..
1:20 p.m. T ID S B i D a y te a a
Beach: highs. 8:52 a.m.. 9:06
p.m.: lows. 2:37 a.m.. 2:56 p.m.:
N e w S m yrn a Beach: highs.
8:57 a.m.. 9:11 pm.: lows, 2:42
a.m.. 3:01 p.m.: Cscsa Beach:
highs. 9:12 a.m.. 9:26 p.m.:
lows. 2:57 p.m.. 3:16 p.qi-

A w g .1 0

© O

FULL
Aag. 25

■itJaWfi ikkLv X U —
n
as
at

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---------- *

A a g . 17

Daytona 6*ach

P O C TM A STIB Sa ndi
te T N « SANFOSO HKfUiO , F A
Baa 1SS7. Better* F I v m \ U 7 .

2351

pointed to lead the agency
earlier this year b y G ov.
Lawton Chiles.
Many of those positions,
however, were vacant, ac­
cording to a story pul
Sunday In The Palm
Poet, w hen Mrs. Paul left the
department on Jan. 7. It had
As of Aug. 15.lt
! 732. a
w ofor
[only four.
The gram payroll for De­
cember. Paul's last full month
as s e c r e t a r y , w a s
$1,361,289.94.
July's payroll waa
•1.422.107.12. an Increase o f
$00,837.18.
Mann said Sunday it wasn't
fair to compare a payroll
figure from December to July.

Military says it dumped
waste near cancer area

Black Is representing Robert
Errs In the trial, which involves

be by far the ultimate of any
punishment he could suffer.”
the families of Sonja Larson.
Christa Hoyt. Tracey Paules and
Manny Taboada said in a state­
m ent released through the
Gainesville Police Department.
Christina Powell's family re­
leased a separate statement,
w hich said. "T h e family ...
thanks the people of Gainesville
for all the lovely things you are
d o in g In r e m e m b r a n c e o f
Christina as well as the other
victims."
Rolling, who has been iden­
tified by authorities as the prime
suspect, has been in Jail since
last September after pleading
guilty to holding up an Ocala
supermarket.

own annual salary la 080.000
$14,000 leas than Mrs.
Paul's.
The lottery's n um ber o f
a p p ro v e d p o s itio n s h a s
from S IS to 77S

me that they will proceed with
dispatch. What I want to avoid Is
“a delay In this investigation."
.■ 'm ats''(M slUi U R d a ls « ■ in­
vestigating medical records for
those people stricken with the
cancer that attacks the lymph
nodes, plus dozens of other cases
around Satellite Beach, which is
further south.
In a corps memo to Bacchus,
investigators aay seven residents
reported finding military debris
on their properties In the past.
One d e v e l o p e r of the
neighborhood said he removed
military debris, including drum s
and batteries.
"The evidence is that there
was military debris out there,
but the question Is how much
was there and w ho put It there."
said Mann Davis, assistant chief
of the corps' planning division In
Jacksonville.
Through the p erson al a c ­
counts and old aerial photo­
graphs, corps investigators are
n e lith e milltrying to determine

tary ever dumped surplus or
toxic material on the property.
The aerial photographs, which
show a large, cleared section o f
land in the area, are being
analyzed in Maryland.

TH E WEATHER

CMy
ApUMhkolt

n s u m

dlalanlic. said John Joyce, a
spokesman for the task force
Investigating the killings.
“ Hopefully, ere will secure an
Indictment on both o f them."
Joyce said.
Register estimates it will take
about two weeks for the panel to
h e a r the c a s e a n d d e c id e
whether to issue Indictments.
The families of the five stu­
dents mourn their foes a year
after the killings.
"O ur children were wonderful,
loving, beautiful. Intelligent, and
d eligh tfu l. ... T h r o u g h the
random, senseless act of murder,
we all lost so very much. If the
murderer could somehow come
to the realisation of the precious
lives he took from us. that would

TALLAHASSEE The
monthly payroll at the Florida
Lottery grew by more than
•00.000 even as Jobs were
cut. but the new secretary
d e f e n d e d th e e ffic ie n c y
m e a s u r e s a h e h a s Im ­
plemented.
Much of the Increase In the
payroll can be traced to the 3
percent raise for all state
w o r k e r s o r d e r e d b y the
L e g is la tu re , a c c o rd in g to
L o t t e r y s p o k e s m a n Ed
George.
But some o f It also comes
from four top managers added
by Lottery Secretary Marcia
Mann. The department now
has nine employees with an­
nual salaries o f $72,000 or
more, com pared with five
under M ann'a predecessor.
Rebecca Paul.
Mann said Sunday that her
managers would earn every
penny of their salaries. Her

Miller, played In the probe of the
1B0B Chappaquiddick drowning
o f a Kennedy aide after an

A year later. Slayings of five students still unsolved
IfM N V IM

Lottery monthly payroll up
$60,000 after ‘rightsizing’

J l

Waves are
1-2 feet and semi glassy. Current
Is to the south with a water
temperature of 81 degrees. N ew
Sm yrna Beach: W aves are 2 feet
and glassy. Current is to the
north, with a water temperature
of 81 degrees.

*1

Bt. A a g a s lln c Is J a p lte r la ls t
Tonight: Wind cast 5 to 10
knots. Seas 1 to 2 feet. Bay and
Inland waters a light chop.
Widely scattered showers and
thunderstorms.
Tuesday: Wind east 10 tq 15
knots. Seas 2 lo 4 feet. Bay and
inland waters a moderate chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms.

m

11 \

i

P U y e l d j 93-74

ii

T h e high tem peratu re In
Sanford Sunday was 91 degrees
and the overnight low was 7 1 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
R ecorded rain fall for the
weekend, ending at 9 a.m.
Monday, totalled 2.31 inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 83 degrees und
Monday's overnight low was 73.
as recorded by (he National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
' S u n d ay's high..................91
Cl 1 s t — a trie pressure. 30.16
□ R e la t iv e H u m idity....74 p et
□ W in d s ......S ou th w est 9 mph

□Rainfall.

1.88 la.

[ T o d a y 's annast.....7 :5 4I1p.m.
□ T o m o rr o w 's
.7.-01

Temearatwrw ktd
NO day *
Mas die
lewIs • am. IOT.
ca*
M La P»c om
Anchoras*
SI 44 J4 clr
Atlanta
to 71 to cdy
Atlantic City
n 44
cry
m 71
Baltlmara
clr
•mine*
m
*i 41
Birmingham
to 71 Z1 cdy
■Unercfc
cdy
t« 14
Bate
m
« 0
beaten
07 IS
clr
Burlingten.Vt.
to a
cdy
amtMtMI.SC.
ea 74
cdy
Charlettan.W Ve.
m 41
cdy
Charlotte NC
« 7i i n cdy
Chayeno*
to »
cdy
Chicago
M as
clr
rismlmuf
to 41
cdy
CMumb!«.SC
SI 71 •to cdy
CnncarS.lt H.
7* n
dr
DallaaFt Warth
cdy
n 44
n 41
Denver
cdy
at 44
dr
OatrMt
V 41
dr
Monotulw
dr
e» 74
Houalon
n to
cdy
InManaeaila
cdy
0
JacfcienAMaa.
« to .N cdy
Kama* City
cdy
•a 44
MO to
LMV*SM
cdy
Llttta Sack
to 71 .to cdy
7a
cdy
*4
Im AneatM
Memphia
u 71 to cdy
Milwaukee
dr
to 0
Mph SI Pawl
to to .14 cdy
Kwhville
cdy
■ aa
NewOrInane
cdy
to 74
New Vert City
7* 44
cdy
Oklahoma City
dr
n to
Omaha
m 44
dr
Phiiaeatehia
cdy
n m
Pheenia
104 0
dr
Pittsburgh
cdy
to 4*
Portland.Molno
47 11
dr
Sllaut*
to n
cdy
Sail laka City
to as .0
m
Seattle
77 n
cdy

I

�4ifr

W aste linked to
lead p o iso n in g
contaminants threaten an ele­
mentary srhoot aero— the street.
Testa show the waste has not
seeped into drinking water, and
the site is fenced so children
cannot get in. McCarthy aatd.

United Enroament
Providing Individual Attention
W ith A C M t t k m

T ou ch

E arlier thla week. O range
County health officials said
seven children who played In a
gravel driveway at a nearby
house are suffering from lead

Tha

He is being held in the John E. Polk Correctional Facility on
1 100.000bond.

Mm charged with l#wd set
Elisha Benjamin Smith. 54. o f 112 Baisuma Drive. In
Sanford, was arrested Friday evening at Big Tree Park In
Longwood.
He was charged with committing a lewd act.
He was taken to the John E. Pout Correctional Facility where
he was held on 5100 bond.

to lu en e,

a

colorless,

MORSE

McCarthy said.
But DCB officials "don't feel
there to a threat to drinking
water. They (nearby homes) are
tied to the city's wells about a
mile aw ay ." McCarthy said.
DER Mao doesn’t believe the

Man anaaiau ror inning m iiii
Reginald E. Bellamy. 21. oi 1015 Holly Ave.. In Sanford was
arrested Friday and charged with throwing a deadly missile
and two counts of aggravated battery.
. The arrest report stated that Bellamy threw a brick through
the back window of car. striking the driver In the bead, causing
her to black out and drive off the rood.
A two-year-old In the car w as slightly injured In the accident.
The victim had seen the assailant and w as able to pick him
out from photos at the police station, the report said.
Bellamy w as transported to the John E. Folk Correctional
Facility and held on 54.000bond.

AutottMftetiarg«l
Charles Christopher Daniels. 20. of 4 Higgins Terrace was
arrested Saturday morning in the wooded area near the 500
block of Magnolia Avenue In Sanford.
He was charged with grand theft auto and resisting arrest
without violence.
The owner of a stolen vehicle saw his car parked behind
Sunnyp Fool Hall on 5th Street. Police later found It the
parking lot of the apartment building directly behind the pool
hail.
They said that Daniels was standing next to the car. As
police tried to arrest him. they reported that he broke away and
ran into the woods. He w as found by the K-9 unit.
Daniels was transported to the John E. Folk Correctional
Facility where he was held on 51.000 bond.

Now more than
nono* inirctT i»

You could be sitting on a
fortune. Because the Instant
Cash, Q4d CWt and Ppublc
Dough instant games officially
end on August 26, 1991. Thai
means all winning tickets from

Joseph .Brian Perrone,..30, .of 104-D Sprtngwood Drive, in
Ux&gt;C»OQd.
ev^nlps in
Trss .fork.
Longwood. He was charged with battery and resisting arrest
without violence.
*
According to police, an undercover agent targeting com­
plaints of lewd and lascivious behavior In the park, struck up a
conversation with Perrone.
The agent asked Perrone what he was looking for and he told
him "probably the same thing you are", the report said.
The two started for the woods, but Perrone suggested that
they go to his car instead, police reported. Perrone grabbed the
agent’s groin, the report said, and waa told he waa under
arrest. He immediately ran from the car.
Perrone was stopped by other agents and transported to the
John E. Polk Correctional Facility where he waa held in lieu of
4500 bond.

October 25, 1991. Sol
you can take your time
if you want, or you can
take your money.
1

Every ticket is a uinnerfex education

Stabbing-Suicide
Man stabs ex-girlfriend, shoots self
L U T Z . F la. (A P I A
Gainesville businessman broke
Into his ex-girlfriend's apartment
and stabbed her repeatedly be­
fore shooting himself to death,
according to a police.
Neighbor Tim Bell said he
entered the apartment Saturday
night after hearing screams and
found Ashley Ann King. 29.
stabbed In the abdomen, chest
and hand. The Tampa Tribune
reported today.
Ms. King's former boyfriend.
Douglas Bonebrake. 44. put a
small-caliber handgun under his
chin and shot himself when
Hillsborough County sheriff's
deputies confronted him outside
a nearby convenience store
shortly afterward, said Lt. Ted
Gibson of the Sheriff's Office.
Ms. King was in fair condition
at Tam pa General Hospital,
while Bonebrake died at 12:30
Sunday afternoon, the Tribune
reported.
Bell said he saw Ms. King
bleeding heavily and hovering
over her 3-month-old son when
he en tered the apartm en t.
Across the room stood a man
with a nylon slocking over his
head.
"H e bent down and pulled this
silver revolver out of his sock
and pointed it at me and said,
OK. back ofT." Bell said Sun­
day.
Ms. King then grabbed her
buby and lied from the apart­
ment. Bell said. Paramedics ar-

rived after her other son. a
7-year-old. escaped from the
house and called 911 from a
neighbor's apartment.
Bone brake, who entered the
a p a r tm e n t b y s m a s h in g a
window and opening the front
door, (led the through another
door. Bell said.
Doran Otter of Gainesville, a
friend of Bonebrake's for about
15 years, said the Incident came
as a total shock.
"I'v e known him for many
years and I never noticed any
behavior that was like this. It's
unbelievable." Otter said.
Bonebrake was a founding
member o f the cooperative that
•tarted the Mother Earth Market
In the 1960s. After his wife, also
a member o f the cooperative,
died several years ago from
cancer. Bonebrake add Mother
Earth Market. He waa currently
employed with a local medical
software company.
Bonebrake had recently re­
married In the last three or four
months, according to friends.
After the incident. Bell said he
thought Ms. King would die
before paramedics arrived.
"S h e was bleeding all over our
couch and ... she was giving us
orders about taking care of the
baby." Bell said. " I f we hadn't
been home he probably would
have finished her off."
King and Bonebrake have had
a running dispute since breaking
u p . B e ll s a i d . A l t h o u g h
Bonebrake lived In Gainesville,
she urged neighbors to watch
out for his car.

M u ir t v ffh r id u

ybur U /d iu d JW/y

-1

FARMERS FURNITURE

FARMERS FURNITURE

■gaWWWWl --

�4A - Sanford HoraM, Sanford, Florida - Monday, Au«uti M, lis t

SARAH
(U S M M M H I
3 0 0 N. PRSNCH AVS.. 8AMF0IID. FLA. 33771
Area Code 407-333-9311 or 831-0009

SUB0C1UPTON R A T *
3 Months............................
9I9.BO
• Month*................................. fy o o fl

iy «w

........................m o o
swat pay 9% sMoa Mo In

i M fa m a

EDITORIALS

Murderous
p

■

‘.*5

V iolence an d mayhi
m ayhem are endem ic to
A m erican society. T he latest evidence la a
Senate Judiciary Com m ittee report projecting
a record 23.700 hom icides this year. A t the
presen t rate, o f one hom icide e v e ry 23
m inutes, A m ericans are twice a s likely to b e
m urdered today a s they w ere three decades
ago.
N o other IndustrtaUaed nation com es d o se
to the U nited States In hom icides. In feet the
U .S . m u rder toil In 1901 alone w ill exceed the
h o m icid e to ta ls o f G reat B rita in . W est
G erm an y an d Japan com bined d u rin g the
last 10 years.

OVERSTREET

P e a c e -lo v in g re s e rv is ts n o t d u p e s
O i Aug. 9. at an Arm y base 80 miles from me.
a kind Kansas physician waa sentenced to 30
m onths In prison. From all accounts. Or.
Yolanda Huet-Vaughan wns cut from the doth o f
the old-time family doctors we talk about fondly
and lament that there are Ear too few of these
days. As her case progressed, her patients and
co-worfrem wrote to local newqm peia o f her
wllllngneao to take Medicaid patients when they
could find no other physicians to treat them, o f
her special ktndneas to patients with A l t * That
riw ^ a ^ jo o d jm w on mid extremely valuable to
The
la a heartbreaker. Her three young
__II be motherfcas for a time If she
doesn't win her oppeal. and who will treat the
Indigent patients who found th d r way to her
when others shut their ofllec doort? Y d I are at n
loaa to explain the behavior that earned
Huet-Vaughan this sentence. I Ibid It more
re— on sble that the Army reacted — It did. than
that Huet-Vaughan did wnat she did.
W hat she did. very simply, w — desert. A
physician tat the Army Reserves, she refused to
go to the Persian Gulf when ordered. Then she
‘ stray from the U A hose where she
Her defense w as that ahe believed the United
States could have done more to avoid war with
Iraq, and she could not In good conscience
support the military action. When she w as found

guilty she told re­
porters. “ I’ve learned
from this experience.
You can't trust gov­
ernment to do the
honorable thing."
O f th e m a n y
s t a t e m e n t s H u etVaughan made to the
press tn the months
leadin g up to her
trial. I found this one
the most stunning.
Given the history of
government military
actions, what could
she have expected?
Did she think the
military underwent a
complete personality.
— well — personnel,
c h a n g e since
V ie tn a m ? W h at
►she
reading during Grenada and Panama? Did she
not have access to a television?
I c an 't speculate about H u et-V augh an 's
motives, but It's not speculative to point out that
she Joined the Army Reserves during a time
expected to remain relatively peaceful, in an era
when reserve duty paid well for part-time work.
Lota o f Americans gambled that they could get

that pay srlthout ever having to pay the piper.
A reservist colleague of mine used to play
recruiter with me on long rood trips we had to
take together, extolling the virtues of his “ easy"
reserve duties and the great pay. Time after time
I told htm that If we ever got Into a conflict where
I thought I should serve, r d enlist If they'd have
me o r do related civilian work If I could. But I
also realised that If I signed up — a reservist. I
w as promising the Army any duty for any reason
at an y time. I wasn't going to make promises I
after time m y colleague would tell me.
“Oh. this country's not going to war anytime
soon." and then recite his knowledge of current
world affairs, gleaned from reading magazines he
subscribed to. It turns out he waa wrong. There
la no way a military can operate If each service
member can decide whether or not to obey each
order. Huet-Vaughan's was not a case where a
soldier waa conscripted for duty that might end
up going against his or her ethical beliefs. It’s a
case where the soldier knew full well the Army
might sometime oak her to do something that
violated those beliefs. She was gambling It would
not.
A true set o f conscience would have been to
level with herself before she signed up and
started collecting her pay, and acknowledge that
there were things the military might do that she
could not support, and that there wss precedent
to expect the military might do them.

T h ere are m ultiple explanations for pre­
valence o f violence in Am erican society.

JACK ANDERSON

T h ey Include the ready availability o f guns,
th e in c re ase I n , teen-age g a n g activ ity ,
w idespread d ru g abgse, and possibly the
pern iciou s Influence o f violent television
program s an d films. But another m ajor factor
is the steady decline of Am erica’s crim inal
Justice system .

KiS

Th e signs pointed
to a Soviet coup
WASHINGTON - The blip* on the radar
showed danger ahead even during Mikhail
Gorbachev’snoneym oon days o f perestroika.
When Kremllnoloflsts sift through the debris
o f the Oorbachev era. they will see why last
week's coup in the Soviet Union was a given.
The Bush administration always knew that
It waa taking a river-boat gam ble on
Gorbachev, a man who was as mistrusted tn
hla own land as he was deified In the West.
But Gorbachev and perestroika were the only
bets worth making.
There la strong reason to believe that the
last hand has not been played, that the Soviet

Consider that, o f 100 felony com plaints
filed b y private citizens, only 30 result in
arrests. O f the 30 arrests, only 20 are
prosecuted. O f the 20 prosecuted, only 15 are
convicted. O f the 15 convicted, only five are
sentenced to prison time o f more than one
year. A n d o f the five, not even one ultim ately
serves a full sentence.
Crim inals are aw are that the scales o f
Justice are tilted in their favor. T h e prospect
o f long and hard Jail time is hardly a deterrent
, because It Is so rem ote In most cases.
E v en the death, penalty .Is n o t m uch of a .
deterrent. O n ly 4 6 m urderers w ere executed
in 1969. w hile .m are than 21.000 m urders,
w ere com m itted. That m eans a m urderer’s
ch an ce o f bein g put to death is less than
one-tenth o f 1 percent.
T h is statistic w ould be leas trou bling if the
p u b lic k n ew that m urderers a n d o th er
dangerous crim inals were being put aw ay in
prison for good. But that is not the case.
Because o f a chronic nationwide shortage o f
prisons an d Jails, violent and deadly crim inals
are routinely set free prem aturely.
W ith the revolving door system o f Justice
that has developed during the last 3 0 years it
is little w onder that Am erica has becom e an
increasingly violent society.
A patchwork approach to reducing violent
crim e — m odifying law s, throwing a few m ore
dollars at enforcem ent, lim ited d ru g treat­
m ent program s — has not w orked. A ny
serious effort to stem violent crim e m ust not
only address its causes but also include a
com plete overhaul o f this nation's broken
crim inal Justice system.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Lctlcrs to the editor arc welcome. All letters must
be signed. Include the address or the writer und a
daytime telephone number. Letters should be on a
single subject and be us brief as possible.. Letters
are subject to editing.

Berry's World
NED. I NEVER SEE
YOU ANYMORE!

AW. CIAON.
MOIA! YOU SAW
ME 26 YEARS
ASO.

« iMit.mii

k

M A R T I N

S C H R A M

Bush plays well— on the road
Twice In one August. President Bush had to
interrupt his Kennebunkport vacation to deal
with emergencies. And his handling o f these
back-to-back crises tells us all we need to know
about his presidency.
Bush handled the Internationa] emergency
— the Soviet coup — swiftly: He telephoned
world leaders, coordinated measured re­
sponses. even flew to Washington to swear-in
hia new ambassador and dram atize hla
concern.

But Bush handled his domestic emergency
— the plight o f the Jobless middle-class victims
o f the Rcagan-Bush recession — even faster:
H e sim ply declared that there waa no
emergency.
Pausing between golfing and yachting. Bush
rejected Congress' bill to extend unemploy­
ment benefits to the formerly hard-working
people who once lived the American dream but
have now lost all but their hope. Can't bust the
budget for that. Bush explained, as hla
free-flying chief o f staff. Air Sununu, nodded
app rovin gly. And an yw ay, hla ow n Dr.
F e e l g o o d . Dr. M ic h a e l B o a k ln .
cheerleadcr-ln-chief o f Bush’s Council o f Eco­
nomic Advisers, assures us that the recession
Is over and recovery la at hand — so please
disregard the latest headlines about new
layoffs In your hometown.
Meanwhile, back In Washington. Bush's top
Interior Department officials took the lead In
the race to cut government spending. Er, well
actually It didn’t happen In Washington. It
happened at a luxurious hotel overlooking the
majestic Grand Canyon. That's where Interior
Secretary Manuel Lujan decided to convene an
emergency meeting o f hla own lop budgettrimmers. He flew seven o f hla brightest brass
out from Washington, apparently secure In hla
b elief that the El Tovar Hotel, being a
three-star resort, presented Just the right
ambiance for officials to figure out how to cut 5
percent from their own department budget, us
the Office o f Management and Budget has
ordered. Surely It'a better than asking our
officials to try to think In their own offices In
Washington: that, as we've seen, clearly
doesn't work.
Those Bush officials who remained In
Washington because they didn't merit a
free-loading, budget-cutting Jamboree were the
firs) to get the word o f yet another emergency:
Our federal delicti tun again exploded without
warning, the Congressional Budget Office

announced. Our deficit will be 9280 billion this
year. 8362 billion next.

s

Two-thirds o f it Is due to debt service on the
whopping deficits of the Reagan-Bush years o f
“ cut-our-taxes-now, you-pay-laler." One-third
Is due to the bailout o f the only Have-Nots
Bush doesn't mind balling out. those savinga-and-loan Institutions whose hard times
were caused by their own gluttony, and whose
officers made out like bandits In the ‘80s while
our deregulators demurely averted their eyes.
So it goes In the presidency o f George
Herbert Walker Bush: Those middle-class
Americans who worked hard all their lives may
lose their Jobs, lose their pensions and be at
risk because they have no health Insur­
ance. Those HaveN ots who once
thought they were
living the American
dream get little In
sympathy and less In
substance from Bush
a n d h la f e l l o w
Have-Gots (who live
g r a n d l y at our
e x p e n s e ). T h e s e
m id d le -A m e ric a n a
h a v e no g o ld e n
parachutes to break
their fall. They would
get more aid from
Bush If they were
( He simply
middle-class Kurds
declared that
or Kuwaitis.
there w as no
.That la because the
emergency. ^
man who variously
p r o m i s e d us h e
would be our Educa­
tion President, our
Environmental President, our War-on-Crimc
President and our Prosperity President has
turned out to be none o f the above.
Just I I year* ago this summer, a rather
desperate presidential nom inee. Ronald
Reagan, was afraid he could never be elected
on his own — and so he was ready to create a
co-presidency, where he would divide the
presidential duties right dawn the middle with
a new vice president who would be his old
adversary and our old president. Gerald Ford.
At the last second, hotter heads prevailed.
Today we’ re closer than we ever were to a
co-presidency. George Bush Is our Interna' t Iona I President. We arc still looking for our
Domestic President.

The Soviet mood
waa described as one
o f “ hope, frustration,
and foreboding" In a
report prepared by
Richard Fairbanks,
fo r m e r S ta te D e ­
p artm en t Ambaasador-at-large and
a noted foreign-policy
scholar. Fairbanks
wrote the report after
an exten sive fa ct­
finding tour o f the
S o v i e t U n io n In
1990. President Bush
requested a copy and
gave It high marks.
Fairbanks correctly
fo r e s h a d o w e d the
coup when he wrote.
" T h e fe e lin g o f
coming apart around
the edges with a
weak center Is pervasive."

The feeling of
com ing apart
around the
edges with a
weak center is
pervasive, j

The report contained a warning about the
restive military, and hinted that power, perks
and privilege could be the embers of an
overthrow. "There Is also widespread fear
about the military situation, particularly with
the regard to the hordes o f both officers und
e n lis te d men retu rn in g from E astern
E urope," Fairbanks said. "T h ere Is no
housing available for them, and no obvious
Jobs or other career paths for the officer corps
at middle levels who have been living by
communist standards 'high off the hog' in
Eastern Europe."
These military men were the casualties of
Gorbachev-engineered reforms. They were
relum ing In droves to temporary tent cities
around Moscow. Their families and children
had tasted a better life, attended better
schools, enjoyed better food and were belter
clad.
The Soviets were warily eying the various
experiments of Eastern Europe for clues to
their own future. Fairbanks wrote. "Th ey
(Soviet leadera) are fearful that there is not a
political consensus to support the pain of any
transition period." Fairbanks was struck try
the lack o f political leaders who could rally
public support to make the dramatic changes
everyone conceded were essential.
The old communist religion was variously
referred to with scorn and cynical humor, but
the reform ers got little respect cither.
"Gorbachev and the other top leadership are
clearly very unpopular, both w ith the
m a n -ln -th e-street and am on g le a d in g
cadres." the report reads. "There Is some
understanding, however, at least among the
top officials and more Informed Intellectuals,
o f the magnitude of the problems facing
them."
One o f the hallmarks of the Soviet's
embryonic democracy was growing freedom
o f religion. Far Gorbachev, religion provided a
central authority for the masses, a glue for
glasnost and perestroika. Fairbanks noted the
wide belief that the "younger generation has
no moral authority or moral precepts upon
which to fail back, und religion is seen us
filling part of that void.”

�Sanford HsrsM. Sanford. Florida - Monday. August 26, 19R1 - BA

Heathrow
1A
i l 'o

going to be a major
i we have to go out

admitted that he's
been by the new school's con­
struction site on summer bicycle
treks and he thinks the new
facflMy la “ pretty cool.”
More than 2.000 students en­
tered the Sem inole County
school system this year.
"T h a t's a tr emendous number
o f stu d e n ts.*' Supt. R obert
Hughes said. •'Seminole County
la one of the fastest growing
Jenny Cate Hodkil. about to
niftrcn tfiio Kmarrganen ior inc
&gt;ooed for photos for
the school.
■ in oeniwcvy cxciicot huc
Even though she expressed
some reservations about the fact
that the aehool area “huger”
than she w as used to at her day
c a re fa c ility , s h r said sh e

Future
__________________ _ 1A

Th# framswofk is in p ir n tor tho
otdtw lko at Hsathraw Etamantary School, 571S Markham Woods
Hoad In Lada Mary, loft photo,
but tho aehool won't bo ready for
atudonta until Novombor. In tho
moantlmo, atudanta who art
auppoaad to go thtra will share
classroom tpaco with atudonts
at Wilton Elomontary In Sanford.
In above photo, tho covered
walkways around Heathrow Ele­
mentay School are etaning to
taka ehape but, for now, tho
aehool it atlll a hard hat
SfSmrF.viao

educational motivation. The
days o f the status quo are aver."
With that as his cause. Presi­
dent Bush launched "America
2000," a crusade to re-invent
American education — to make
the schools we have all they
should be; to design New Ameri­
can Schools for the year 2000
and beyond; and to make our
country a nation of students,
living in communities where
education Is a way of life. The six
n a tio n a l e d u c a tio n a l g o a ls
established by the president ana
(he nation's governors are that
by the year 2000c
(1.) All children In America
will start school ready to learn.
(2.) The hlgh-school gradua­
tion rate will increase to at least
00 percent.
(3.1 American students will
leave grades four, eight and 12
h a v in g d em o n stra te d c o m ­
petency In challenging subject
m a tte r. In c lu d in g E n g lish ,
mathematics, science, history
and geography; and every school
In America will Insure that all

couldn't wait for classes lo start.
Katie Stewart, a second grade
teacher at Wilson, arrived early
on cam pus to check last minute
details In her classroom. Her son
M a tth e w , a fifth g ra d e r at
Wilson, dragged a little behind.
"I'm ready for classes,'' she
said. "It's going to be fun."

Heathrow Elementary to the
district.
While most of the students
c r o w d in g o n to th e W ils o n
cam p u s th is m o rn in g w e re
excited about being back In
school, some had Ideas of what
they thought might be better use
of their time.

Matthew was less sure.
“ I'm ready to start summer
again ," he said.
W h ile the majority of the
growth In the school district Is
taking place at the elementary
school level, only two new ele­
mentary schools will open this
year. Heathrow and Partin Ele­
mentary School In Oviedo.
Five schools would have been
needed to alleviate the current
overcrowding situation, but fi­
nancing was not available to
bulk! more facilities.
The land on which each of the
new schools Is built was donated
try local developers. The Arvlda
Corporation gave the land for

" I think I'd rather be back In
b e d ." said Shelly Mercer, a
second grader on her way to
classes at Heathrow. “ I'm too
llred."

mathematics achievement.
(5.) Every adult American will
be literate and will possess the
knowledge and skills necess ary
to compete In a global economy
an d exetclae the rights and
responsibilities of citizenship.
(6.) Every school In America
will be free of drugs and violence
and will offer a disciplined envi­
ronment conducive to learning.
"A m erica 2000" la a prelude
to a renaissance not only in our
sch ools, but in o u r homes,
neighborhoods and places of
wore. It comes from knowing
that when we are challenged as
Individuals — and when we have
a choice of paths to take — we
succeed. It comes from knowing

1 M

IS Y O U R E N G IN E
tTING?
EngineCool
K

sturlfnts learn to use their mlnrine.
w ell:
(4.) U.S. students will be first
In the world In science and

IDistrict
-

i t 111111 ) *.«l T i i v ' l O i t f t f n *‘. ' h
i J h rv u ft*
* v rfT

,
I

i

Trv
IV'wr*-*'
fU f M * *

-r
*

1A
i, many years, i f ‘ '"M i
J r
.munJ-...., Last year a,Business Adviwry
ty support for many years. Board was formed to give the
Groups such as the PTA. the school board professional .advice
Local School Advisory Commit­ on the business aspects of run­
tee (LSAC) and the Foundation ning the school district.

for the Advancement o f the
Community Through Schools
(FACTS) have been taking on the
task o f school assistance for

P reviou sly, many business
decisions were made at the state
level and the district staff was

*I

V
■ " fv ,
'
&lt;
eqti
not equipped
to:handle some of

th e J le c s lo n a w i t h o u t . p r o :
fessional advice.
The Business Advisory Board,
as well as FACTS. LSAC and
PTA. are composed o f volunteers
working to Improve the schools.
Parental Involvement In the
schools has always been an
Important element In how Semi­

nole County schools develop
programs and curricula.
Seminole was the only county
In the state to have all o f Its high
schools recleve grants from the
state last year based on the
improvements made In areas,
such as drop out prevention and
test score Improvement.

$

Hazel O. Almuny. 62, 117 Club
Road. Sanford, died Saturday at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal. Sanford. Born Nov. 8, 1928,
In Abingdon, Va.. she moved to
Sanford from Bristol, Tenn., In
1980. She was a kitchen aid In
the nursing industry and a
Baptist.
Survivors include husband.
Stewart W.: son. Steven D..
Sanford: daughters. Brenda J.
B llch feldt. Las Vegas. Dlan
J o n e s . G a ith e rs b u rg . M d..
Sandra K. McNabb. Apopka:
sisters. Mablc Powers. Cincin­
nati. Dorothy Wright. Bristol:
brothers. Bert Dillard. Cincin­
nati. Sam Dillard. Abingdon: one
grandson.
B a ld w ln -F alrch lld Funeral
Horne. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary, In charge o f ar­
rangements.
J A M E S BR OOKS

James Brooks. 72, of Apt. 70
Redding Garden. Sanford, died
Wednesday at his residence.
B o r n A p r i l 18. 1919. in
Falmouth, he moved to Sanford
60 years ago from there. He
retired from Atlantic Coastline
and Celery City Printing and was
a Baptist.
Survivors Include daughter.
Sharon Riggins. Sanford: step­
daughter. Beatrice Thompson.
Sanford: sisters. Eldora. Sanford.
Elizabeth Brown. Hampton: 10
gra n d c h ild re n : numerous
great-grandchildren.
Sunrise Funeral Home, Sunford. in charge of arrangements.
R U B Y S. H A L L

Ruby S. Hall. 85. 1301 W. 7th

St., Sanlord, died Friday at
H am ilton M em orial Hospital.
Jasper. Born Sept. 8. 1905. In
Jasper, she moved to Sanford In
1930 from there. She was a
homemaker and a member of
Allen Chapel A.M.E. Church
where she was a member o f the
Usher Board *1. Lily W hile
L od ge *1 4 4 and Pallbearers
Lodge *5.
S urvivors Include brothers.
E d d i e L e e R o b i n s o n . St.
P e t e r s b u r g : sisters. Zona
Turner, Sanford, Eunice Carter.
Dester Daniels, both of Jasper.
Vera Byrd. St. Petersburg.
Wllson-Elchclbcrger Mortuary
Inc.. Sanford. In charge of ar­
rangements.

HABAN1 JAMES
Hasanl James. 4. 3606 Blscayne Drive, Winter Springs,
died Saturday in Longwood.
Bom Dec. 17. 1966. in Rockville
Center, N.Y., he moved to Winter
Springs from New York In 1968.
He was a Baptist.
S u rvivors Include parents.
W a y n e a n d J a n ic e Jam es.
W in te r S p rin g s; brother.
K w am e, w in t e r Springs:
paternal grandmother. Veronica.
N ew York: m aternal gran d­
mother. Ena Bennett. New York.
Bal dwl n -F al rc hl l d Funeral
Home. Goldcnrod. In charge of
arrangements.

In 1955. She was the executive
secretary for AC T o f DcLand and
former secretary for K am 's In­
surance Agnecy o f Sanford for
25 years. She was a member of
All Saints Episcopal Church, or
Enterprise. A ltar G u ild and
Flower Committee o f All Saints
Church.
Survivors Include one cousin.
Robert Slrasawtmmcr o f Long
Island. N.Y.
Altman Funeral Home. Dc­
Bary. In charge o f arrangements.

GEBTRUDE PHILLIPS
Gertrude Phillips, 91. 160
Islander Court. Longwood. died
Friday at South Seminole Com­
munity Hospital. Longw ood.
Born July 14. 1900. In New
York, she moved to Longwood
from there in 1956. She was a
homemaker and a member of
the Temple of Liberal Judaism.
Survivors Include husband.

C h a r l e s E.; son . G o r d o n .
Birmingham, Ala.; two grandc h ild r e n : six g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
C o x - P a r k e r Carey Hand
Funeral Home. Winter Park, In
charge of arrangements.

Available only at BeRone Canters

!8 e &amp; H tt'

QUALITY at SUPER SAVINGS

FREE In-Homa TatSra A Service on

_____

M IM

m

IU

k Wi

BUXETTE M A E IE ra O T H E T

Suzetle Marie Prophet. 26.456
Longwood Circle. Longwood.
died Saturday at South Seminole
Co mmu ni ty Hospital. L o n g ­
wood. Bom Nov. 2. 1964. In
Panama City, she moved to
Longwood from Birmingham,
Ala., In 1971. She was a licensed
ball bondsman and a Baptist.
Survivors Include maternal
gran dm oth er. C ath erine
Bradley. Mobile, Ala.: paternal
grandmother. Mary. Annapolis.
Md.
Carey Hand Garden Chapel
Home for Funerals. Longwood.
In charge o f arrangements.

2200 B. FRENCH A V I.
B u ^ O n e P a g ^ O a tO fw F R E E

,rWhen Caring,

Vola M. Lambert son. 75. De­
lia ry Drive. DcBary. died Friday
at h er r e s i d e n c e . Born In
Brooklyn. N.Y.. she moved to
DcBary from Long Island. N.Y..

^ 0 ^ 323-4112

I f l rc h h o tf

•*Qjj 0p so c ia te s
106 W. Commercial
Suits 204 Sanford

(4 0 7 ) 3 2 3 -1 4 0 0

Brksin Funeral Hame

VOLA M. LAMBEBTSON

C a lL 3 2 1 -5 0 6 5
CALL ABOUT
ADDITIONAL
DISCOUNTS

‘

M THE EAR
*389 ALLCUSTOM

'Personal

a re

Service
ZReaUy
cMaUers/'

PROFESSIONAL
P R O P E R T Y TAX
ASSESSMENT
REVIEW

ry

c /Z o j u

HEARING AID

DEATHS
HAZEL D. ALMANT

The frenetic activity of un­
loading students from buses and
cars at Wilson continued for
quite a while this morning. A s
soon as the Heathrow students
were settled In their classrooms,
the students enrolled at Wilson
began to arrive.
"It's going to be crazy In the
mornings around here," said
Sandy L en d rln a w h o se son
James w as about to enter the
third grade as a Wilson student.

322-2131

F u n eral Home
500 E . A irp o rt B lvd.
S a n fo rd , F L 32773
3 2 2 ‘3 2 1 3

9th St. and Laurel Avc.,
Sanford
Spujwfi of Ulf
.Shorty Sm ith

MEMORIAL «;i,'ARDIAN PLAN
I l i K t r u n F m M P r a r r M | t il

BUI Wrlborn aad Hubert Brkwsi

l »M n l Ftuf rm )

�M

- Sanford Htrald, Sanford. Florida - Monday. August 26, 1991

I Back to the future

Ltqal Notices

Legal Notices

ltqal Noilctt

Legal Notice*

c it y op

IN TNK CIRCUIT COURT
IN AND POM
SEAMWOLE COMMTY.
FLORIDA'
c a b r fgo.n-tggi'CA-ttG
HARVEY KMRIN.
Plaintiff,
v*.
STANLEY KERNAR00 and
ARLENE C. BERNAROA Mo

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC NEARING
TO CONSIDER
A CONDITIONAL USI

structure.)
All parttot In Interest and
cltlfon* than have an opportune
ty tab* hoard ot told hoar mg.
By e * r ot Mm Planning A
Zoning Commlttton ¥ the City
af SewfWdL Florida. thtatoN dey
of Augwf. Iffl.
JaaDannlaan, Chairman ■

u n i MAST, FUMIDA

NOTICK IS HEREBY GIVEN
hy the Planning and Inning
GearG al B » CNy af Lake Mary,

«w ka feaM an SagNaNar *
fan. at r-.m pm, ar at taan
fkartaWw aa paaaJMa. la cm
aidar a manga af tankii
A-t fa r -i Aa ragaatf
PART T.ATKRS anna
TBa nardf S S tX a f af Me
« M m m laaf in mam) *f
na m m m m naf m mami
af Omanmanf Laf 1 McHan A
»
in n

Tin
'

m u m

m Mary. I

mNBdfa
Humla Men*
N O T ! i PERSONS A i l
A O V IU O THAT A TAM O
R■ CORO OP THIS MUTING
IS MAOC KV THK CITY FOR
ITS C O N V IN IIN C t. THIS
R IC O RD MAT NOT CONSTITUTK AN AM OUATI RE
CORO FOR THK FURFOSKS
OF APPEAL FROM A OK
CISION M A M KV THK CITY.
ANY PfR tO N WISHING TO
KNSURR THAT AN ADE­
QUATE RKCORD OF THK
PROCKROINGS IS MAINTAINKD FOR AFMLLATK
FURFOSKS IS AOVIUO TO
MARK THK NKCKSSARY AR
RANOKMKNTS AT HIS M
HR R OWN EXPENSE.
CITY OF
LAKK MARY, FLORIDA
Anri* K. Nawfen,

plated in November.

Oafad: August *3. W1
FaMWi: AugutfM. I«tt

M in g

IH THK CIRCUIT COURT
IN AMP FOR
SRMINOiK COUNTY,

CASK NO. n-liaaCA-14-G

S w i ms u i t s arc bone dry.
Neighborhoods are quiet. The
tinkle or ihe Ice cream man’s
bell won’t be heard until after
3 p.m. Beginning this morning
all over the county, alarm
clocks are ringing early. Kids
are back In school today.

ASSOCIATRS NATIONAL
MORTOAGK CORPORATION,
&lt;
Plaintiff.
HOWARD A. TREGEArf,
RUSULL H. CULLS MLJR,
GKM G IA R, CULLEN, M*
wfto, MOLLIS T. DUNN,
SUNGANK NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION, and any
unAnmm hair*, drrlseet.
granfaaa, creditors, and aitmr
unknown persons or unknown
ogaaooo claiming by, through,
end under any el Ih*
above-named Detandonts,
NOTICK OF ACTION
TO: RUSSCLL H. CULLEN,
JR.. GEORGIA g. CULLEN,
and HOLLIS T. DUNN, and any
unknown heirs. devisees, gron*
known person* or unknown
_f. through
mM
oluiuo
Ql ilm
TrW
wtI *
Ifdocaaaad.

RROIOI NCRaUNKNOWN.

Hamilton Elementary School
students on their first day.

Principal Cerem Gager

YOU ARE HERESY NOTI­
FIED lhal an action to lorocloM
Morlgaga covering the tallowing
roal and person*! property In
Seminole County. Florida, to
wit:
Lai 7. Black C. SECOND
RAVENNA PARK SECTION
OF LOCH ARBOR, according to
the Flat thr eat ao recarded In
Flat Reek 11, Fagot It, JOend It
o» the Public Record* ¥ Semi­
nole County. Florida,
ha* boon 11tod again*) you and
you ar* required to torvo a copy
of your written d*tontat. If any,
to it on Robort H. Hooch. Jr.,
I lt f E. Robinson Street. Or­
lando. Florid* 3JM1. and III* the
original with tha Ctork el lha
abovo-itytod Court on or bttort
Mm !7th day of Sagtombar. Iffl.
•Mmrwlta a Judgment may b*
reltof damandad In tha ComWITNESS my hand and mel
al said Court on Mm 2»d day of
August, 1*01.
(COURTSEAL)
MARVANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
Ry: Ruth King
Deputy Ctork
Pubtloh: Augwtt 20 A September
].» . lA lf tl

M I-M I

PortatolG classroom s hoot# Hsathrow studonto at W ilton.

Ltqal Notices

Ltqal Notices

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC U L E
Available Sell Storage pur to
ent to "Florid* Laws tin .
Chapter 7* aft*. Section 1,”
hereby give* nolle* ol sal*
unitor teld act. to wit:
On Septomber 7. till *1 10 00
am at 7105 S Orlando Or .
Santord. FL 33773. will conduct
e public seta to Ih* h&gt;gh**t
bidder tor cash of Ih* content* ol
th* toltowIng spec* numbers
0 B S, K e n n e t h R e e d .
Furniture.
iB 17. Richard Waavar.
Furniture;
• O II. Jama* A. Rouse.
Furniture,
ID &gt;4, D o n a l d T e a l ,
Furniture:
lO 3ft. Nancy Orlscoll.
Furniture;
ID 43. Harold Stinnett.
Clothes.
lO 14. Steven Robertson.
Furniture;
*D 111. James W Leslie.
Furniture.
&lt;OS 17. Maribem F Doyle.
Travel Traitor
Tenant has th* right to re
derm contents anytime prior to
sale This sal* I* being mad* to
satisfy a statutory lessor s lien
Th* public is invilrd to attend
Publish August It l September

IN TH E CIR CUIT COURT.
IN ANO FOR
1EM IN O LEC O U N TY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. 11*37 CA Ift-Q
ROBERT W DAVIS. JR .
Plaintilt.
vs
KENNETH GOODWIN and
D I V I S I O N OF M O T O R
VEHICLES. DEPARTMENT
OF HIGHWAY SAFETY AND
MOTOR VEHICLES. STATE
OF FLORIDA.
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO KENNETHGOOOWIN
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action to quiet title to a t ill
Kawasaki m otorcycle. ID
number JKAEXMFlfKAOIISIJ.
he* been tiled against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ot your written defenses, it any.
to It on Ptainlltl. whose address
is 03 South Longview Place.
I cinqwood. Florida 33771 on or
before September 13. 1111. end
file Ihe original with the clerk ot
this tour* either before service
on Ptainlltl or Immediately
thereafter, otherwise, a default
will be entered against you lor
lha rellal demanded in Ih*
Complaint
Oated this Sth day ot August,
mi
(Seal)
Maryenne Mors*
As Clerk of th* Court
By Heather Brunner
As Deputy Clerk
Publish August 12. II 2* and
September J, lttl
OEI 131

7. mi

DEI IS*

Jackie Becker, Chapter t teacher, helps Curtis
Dickerson, second grader, locate his classroom

(

to fll9

fRfU ||

aid In dm CaTcnetoliHat

Heathrow Elementary School students arrive
Wilson Elementary School, where they will study

NOTICE IS HKRBRV GIVEN
that tom Ctork of «m Circuit
Court, bt and far Seminal*
County, F torIda. under and bp
virtu* m m Fbmt Judgment af
Foreciaaure Irnuad aqf af Mm
abava anllllad Caurt, In tha
abaea-ofyfadcawodafadNmfttot
day af Awgwat, Iffl, wHl mil at

IN THK CIRCUIT COURT.
IN AMO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NOltl-417-CA-14-0
LOMAS MORTGAGE USA.
INC..
Plalntifl,
vt
DUANE A. BARTLE or JUNE
G. BARTLE. married. JOHN
ADAIR, and any unknown hair*,
dovitae*, grantee*, creditor*,
and othek unknown pertont or
unknown ipouttt claiming by.
through, and under any ot the
above* named Defendant*.
Dttond*nIt
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE U L E
NOTICE I* hereby given that
lha und*r*lgned Clark ¥ lha
Circuit Court of Seminole
County. Florid*, will on Itw Ttth
day ot September. Iffl, al II:##
o'clock AM. oi the Watt Front
door ¥ Mm Seminole County
Courthouse In Sanlord. Florida,
oltor tor tala and tall al public
outcry to lha highat! and bat!
bidder tar cash. Mm tolloalng
datcrlbad proparty situate In
SamInoi* Cocniy, Florid*:
L o t 7. C L U S T E R E.
WILDWOOD. A PLANNED
UNIT DEVELOPMENT. *c
cording to the Plot Itwrtot, a*
recorded In Plal Book It. Page*
7. A * and ift. el lha Public
Record* ol Seminole County,
Florida.
Including spacltlcally but not
by way ol llmltellon lha toltow
ing named Item* Range,Oven.
Refrigerator. Wether and
Dryer
pur want to lha Final Judgment
entered in a caw pending in said
Court. Ih* tty to ol which I*
indicated above
WITNESS my hand and ol
licial wal ol said Court this urn
day ot August, m i
(C O U R T SEAL!
MAR Y ANNE MORSE
C L E R K OF THE
C IR C U IT COURT
By J a n A Jasewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish August I*. It. m i
D E I TOO

County, Ffsrtda. to-wtt:
Lot IX ALAFAYA WOODS.
PH A M VI. ucardlng to Mm
wear dad In Flat
rm,pi f*i rBPH _H li
•mkmto Caunty, Fieriao
a* NW property of STANLEY
BKRNAROOond ARLENE C.
BERMARDO, Mw mil*, on Mm
I7IH day af Saptombor. m i. at
1I.-SB •'clack AM., af Ik* Woof
Freni Osar, I imInala Caunty
M771. Sam Inala County, FtorIda.
Said onto will ka I* Mm Highest
bidlsrfBr cash In hand.
D ATED this llth day ol
Auyuat. Tffi.
(U A L )
M ARYAN N ! MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
Ry: JanaK. Jaaamlc

-SK!’,0'*

Fubllah: August It, M. m i
OKissy

CITY OF
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
NOTICK OF
PUBLIC NKARING
N O TIC E IS H E R E S Y GIVEN
by lha Planning and Zoning
Board af Mm City of Lake Mary,
Florida, that a Public Hearing
will bn hold on laplambtr w.
IN I, at 7:gg pm ., ar at taan
there*It*.- aa paaalbN. tor first
m /Vdlatnan
SwwiIWIEV ilHIlNu.d
AN ORDINANCE OF THK
CITY OF LAKK MANY. FLOR­
IDA, PROVIOIMO FOR THK
VACATING OF A PORTION OF
DRAINAGE EASEMENT OF
THK FLAT OF CARDINAL
OAKS SUBDIVISION LOCAT­
ED IN THE CITY OF LAKE
MARY. FLORIDA. AND MORE
PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED
HERRIN; PROVIDING FOR
SEVRRASILITY. CONFLICTS
AND EFFECTIVE OATK.
Vacating Mm1*1towing pariIon al
Dralrvaga Eammant:
Tha East IS Feat at Ih* Watt
20 teat of Let 10. according to tha
Plal of Cardinal Oak*. Plat Book
22. Pago* 70 and 71. Public
Records ¥ Somlnol* Caunty,
Florida.
Tha Public Hearing will ba
haId In Mm City Commission
Chamber*. IN Watt Lake Mary
Boulevard. Lake Mary. Florida.
Tha public I* Invited to attend
and b * heard Said hearing may
ba continued tram time to lima
until a Uriel recammri Welien I*
mad* by the Board.
N O T E : PERSO NS ARE
ADVISED THAT A TAPED
RECORD OF THIS MEETING
IS MADE BY THE CITY FOR
ITS CONVENIENCE. THIS
RECORD MAY NOT CON
STITUTE AN AOEQUATE RE
CORO FOR THE PURPOSES
OF APPEAL FROM A DE
CISION MAOE BY THE CITY.
ANY PERSON WISHING TO
ENSURE THAT AN ADE
QUATE RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS IS M AIN­
TAINED FOR APPELLATE
PURPOSES IS ADVISED TO
MAKE THE NECESSARY AR­
RANGEMENTS AT HIS OR
HER OWN EXPENSE.
C ITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
Anita K. Newton,
Community Development
Secretary
Dated: Augwtt23. I f f l
Publish: AugustM. I f f l
d e is m

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OFTHEtgTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SKMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. fl-im-CA-140
THE FIRST SAVINGS BANK.
FSB. formerly known as First
Federal Savings and Loan Asso
elation ol South Carolina.
Plaintiff.
vt.
PATRICIAL. KANE, ETAL..
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: PATRICIA L. KANE
RESIDENCE: UNKNOWN
LAST KNOWN
MAILING ADORE SS.
P.O. Bax lS2f
Maitland FL337SI
ANO TO: All parsons claiming
an Interest by. through, under or
against the aforesaid Defendant,
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIED THAT an action to fora
clot* a mortgage on the tallow­
ing datcrlbad proparty located
In Seminole County, Florida:
Lot 3 and the East on* half ot
Lot 4. Block G. SANLANDO
SPRINGS TRACT NO 11. ec
cording to the Plat thereof a*
recorded In Plat Book L Pag*
m. Public Records ot Seminole
County. Florida.
TOGETHER with all to* im
provemenIs now or hereafter
erected on to* property, and all
aatamants. right*, appurt*
nances, rant*, royalties, miner
at. oil and a*s right* and profits,
water, water right* and water
stock, and all fixture* now or
hereafter a part ot the property.
Including replacements and ad
ditlon* thereto
ha* been tiled against you, and
you ar* required to serve a copy
ot your written defenses. It any,
to this action, on ROGER D.
BEAR at ANDERSON A RUSH.
Attorneys tor Plaintilt. whose
address Is OT East Central
Boulevard. Orlando. Florida
33001. and III* the original with
the Clerk ol the above styled
Court on or belure the Itth day
ot September, I f f l : otherwise a
ludgment may be entered
against you tor tha reltof d*
manded in to* Amended com
plaint
WITNESS MY HAND AND
SEAL OF SAID COURT on th.s
ISth day ol August. IVtl
(SEAL)
AAARYANNE MORSE
as Clerk of said Court
By Ruth King
as Deputy Clerk
Publish August If. I* A Sap
tern bar J. *. Iff I
DEI 30a

rejiici is nancy

*?■■?•

Public NMring will IM h*W by
Mm Planting A Zonk* Cam
mlsttan bt Mm City Commitston
Chamban, City Hall. Sontord.
Florida, at 7:gg pm. an There
My, Saptombor s, iffl, to can
stow a reRuttl tor a Conditional
Um in an AO. Agricultural
I onlog District.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION: SEC
M TWP MS RGE ME, BEG
7N.lt FT N *3 DEO » MIN S7
SEC W OF INTE LI SEC R SLY
LI SANFORD GRANT RUN N
113.217 FT W ITS FT N 41S FT W
M FT N MB FT N N OKO IS
MIN n SEC W 417.3* FT S 1IM
FTS7* OKO M MIN M S E C !
411J* FT S M M FT SWLY ON
CURVE » J I FT S AS OKO 4B
MIN • SEC W IBM FT SWLY
ON CURVE M I T FT S 12 OKO
M M IN aB K C W fTA I FT SLY
ON CURVE MASS FT S IAIN
FT SLY ON CURVE MEN FT S
4ft OKO » MIN S7SEC W 2B.4S
FT S 42.M FT IM1.7SFTSSJ7
FT S Al DKG M MIN S7 SEC I
BAST FT N I t DEO f MIN 1 SEC
C IN FT N ft! DIO M MIN *7
StCEftAJTFTNMDEOfMIN
1 SEC 8 IN FT N «1 OEG M
MIN 17 SIC W 111.71 FT N M *
FT I *3 DEO N MIN J7 SICE
STft.22 FT TO KEG at record*
In Mm Public Records ¥ Sami
noto Caunty, Florida.
Conditional Um Rammtod:
Residential Unit tor Security
Guard. IAccessory residential

ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: II
a parson docfdto to appaal a
decision mad* wtlh respect to
any matter tentldared at the
above moating or hearing,
he/sha may need a verbatim
record af Mm pracaadbtg* Includtog Mm tooHmowy and avtdanco, which record It not
prevtdtd by Mm City af Santord.
(FSNABWS)
Publish: August SAtffl

01123*
N O TIC E O F
FIC TITIO U S MURK
)•
Ore
era engaged In bualnaaa al 4SS
Diana C r., Casselberry, p|.
23707, Samkmto County, F torIda.
under Mm F k f t N M Name at
KM CO C E M E N T CO N ­
TRACTORS, and Mm! *m Intend
'Itob i m I * ^ mjmkM

SEma

Secretary af Slate. Teitalwuaaa.
Florida, M accardance with Mm
provltl
ilslan* at Mm Fictitious
NiffH Statute. To-Wit: Sectton
BftAN. F torIda Slahitoa IfST.
Edward Trubanbach
Marvin Wllean
Publish: AuguetM. IN I
OK 1177

--------------------------- LKBALNgfin
NOTICE OF S IM IN O L I CO U N TY
CGM FM N IN SfYK FLAN U F O A T I
PUBLIC NIARMfGTO KK H E LD S IF T E M E E R 9, IN I
Notice la hereby given Hurt Mm Beard af Caunty Camn'
(BCC) ¥ Seminal* Canty will conduct a PuM k Mooring I
mr f, INI
al 4:00 p,m„ or at scan a* possible, on Monday, f
which public hearing may bo continued from
time to-lima. Tha Public Hearing will ba held al Mm Sam loom Caunty
Service* Building. 1101East Flrtf Street. Santord. FL. Roam W IN .
Tha purpose ol Mm hearing la to cant ldar public Input, to canatdar
Mm Obtacttan*. Recommendations and Comment* Report of Mm
Florida Department ¥ Community Affair* and to canatdar Mm Input
of aitmr governmental antitto* a* to Mm IN I Sammala County
Comprehensive Plan (Plan). The toltowIng Plan element* will ba
considered: Future Land Um ; Capitol Improvements; Canaorve
lion; Design: Oralnaga; Housing; Implementation; In­
tergovernmental Coordination; Library Service*; Mae* Transit;
Pert*. Aviation and Related Facilities; Potable Water; Public
Safety; RacreaMan/Ogan Space; Sanitary Sowar; Solid Watte; and
Traffic Circulation. The Board of County Commltalanare will
cantldar tha enactment ol an
ntoadim ti
i Mm Plan Mm title of
AN OROINANCI REPEALING ORDINANCE NUM BER EM A
WHICH IS TH E CURRENT SEMINOLE C O U N TY COMPREHEN­
SIVE PLAN. AS AMENDED EV NUM EROUS ORDINANCES;
ENACTING T N I tfft S IM IN O L I CO UN TY COftftPREHlNAIVE
PLAN AS W IL L AS THE ASSOCIATED F U T U R E IA N O USE M A F
ANO O THER MAFS ANO MAF SERIES ASSOCIATED W ITH T N I
FLAN PURSUANT TO CHAPTER US. FLOR ID A STATU TES. ANO
RULE f id , FLORIDA ADM INISTRATIVE COOK. ANO A L L
OTHER APPLICABLE LAWS ANO K U L IS i PROVIDING FOR
FINDINGS; PROVIDING FOG AN EXPRESSION OF FU R FO S I
ANO IN T E N T ; FR O V ID IN G F O R - T H E A D O P TIO N O F
NUMEROUS REQUIRED AND O PTION AL E L E M E N TS OF T N I
COMPREHENSIVE FLAN R ELATIN G T O PLAN IM PLEM EN­
TATION. FUTURE LARD U S I, C A P ITA L IMPROVEMENTS.
CO N SER VATION , DESIGN, D R A IN A G E , H O U SIN G , IN ­
TERGOVERNMENTAL COORDINATION, LIRR ARY SERVICES,
PORTS, AVIATION ANO R E LA TE D F A C IL ITIE S , POTABLE
WATER, PUBLIC SAFETY, RECR EATIO N A N O OPEN SPACE,
U N IT A R Y SEWER, SOLID W A S TI. T R A F F IC CIRCULATION.
M A U TRANSIT A N O A S S O C IA TID M A T TIN l; PROVIDING FOR
TH E ADOPTION OP GOALS. O G JIC TIV S S ANO POLICIES;
PROVIDING FOR FR O CIO U R IS T O ENCOURAGE ANO FACILIT AT I F U ILIC PARTICIPATION AND FO R A M I NOl NO TH E
F U N ; FROVIDING FOR A CONCURRENCY M AN AG EM EN T
SYSTEM WHICH MAY IMPACT ON PR EC LU D E TN G A B IL ITY

OP PROPERTY OWNER* TO DEVELOP PROPERTIES DUE TO
D EFICIEN T PUBLIC FACILITIES; PROVIDING POE CON­
SISTENCY BETWEEN T H E COMPREHENSIVE PLAN ANO
COUNTY DEVELOPMENT ORDERS A N D LAND D E V E L O P
M IN T E IO U LAY IONS; PROVIDING FOR T H E R E FER EN C E TO
SUPPORT DOCUMENTATION; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILI­
TY; PROVIDING A UVIH O S CLAUSE; PROVIDING FOR
EXCLUSION FROM THE SEMINOLE CO UN TY COOC ANO
INCLUSION. AS A SEPARATE VOLUM E, IN T H E LAND
DEVELOPMENT CODE OF SEMINOLE CO U N TY; ANO PRO­
VIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
The Plan will meal new statutory requirement* and will I ) Identify
significant growth related Issue* lacing the County and establish
policies to deal with Ihet* issues; 2) adopt a capital Improvements
element tatting lavel ol service standards fm roads, mat* transit,
sewer, potable water, solid waste, perks, and cbalnaga; and 3) adopt
concurrency management policies. The land vt* designation
assigned to any parcel ol property located In Seminole County may
be amended during tha court* ot the Public Hearing a* a result ol
BCC octton. The Plan's provision* will Impact the development ol
real property within Seminole County. •
PUBLIC PAETICIPATION IS N I E D I O - A comprehensive plan
express** the policy direel Ion ot the County a* to new development,
public services, managing natural resources and related matters
and Issue*. The process of developing the Plan dealt with broad
countywide goals. ob|*ctlve* and policies as well at specific issue*
affecting particular areas within the County. Thus, public
participation at this Public Hearing It encouraged. All public
comment will be submitted to the Board ot County Commissioners,
reviewed tor possible action, and Incorporated In the Plan's support
documentation Any member ol the public I* Invited to til* written,
prepared statements or provide oral comments at the Public
Hearing, or may mall comments to tha address listed below.
PREVIOUS REVIEW — Each Plan * lament ho* been reviewed by
Ih* Local Planning Agency and by al toast on* cltlien advisory
committee.Tha primary committee used In this update I* the
program Review Committee which Is composed of eleven County
resident* appointed by Ih* BCC from various orgenliaUon*. Interests
and professions, such a* tha League at Woman Voters, homeowners,
business, home builders, agriculture, transportation, engineering,
planning, environmental and landscape architecture.
Other committees have reviewed specific aspects ot the Plan
elements. These committees Include Ih* tallowing: M id Waste Task
Fore*. Al lordebit Housing Task Fore*. Parks Advisory Board,
Library Advisory Board. Historic Commission, Stormwater Task
Fore*. Concurrency Management Advisory Committee, end the
Water/Sewer Utility Sleering Committee.
On March 5. Itil, tie BCC transmuted Itw Plan to the Florida
Department ol Community Allairs tor review by that Department
and other agencies and anti lie*. On July tl. 1111. the County received
the Objections. Recommendation* and Comments review report on
the Plan This report contains specific requirements which the
County must address when the Plan Is finally adopted. The report
suggests changes as small as adding a date to a map and as larga as
revising an entire element. A copy ot the lull report It available for
review at each ol the County's public libraries (along with tha
transmitted Plan at transmitted) and el the County's Planning otllca
who*# address and hours are provided below. Objections identified
by Ih* Department Ihet rettoct major local Issues end which may
require a policy decision from the BCC are tienmerlted below; but
the listing Is not Intended to act as a limitation to the Board's ability
to taka action with regard to any provisions ¥ lha Plan or to add new
provisions to the Plan.
* The lest lor Concurrency as described In the Implementation
Element ol lha Plan only applies to final development orders and not
to preliminary development orders ( I * , reronings and plan

• The Plan provIxN* no protection tor wetlands less than live
acres and allows for 10%disruption ol lha wetland areas
• General Rural and Suburban Estates densities ol I du/acr* are
not compatible with agricultural uses, natural resource use*, and
encourage urban sprawl
• Thera Is no Agriculture Future Land Use Category
• Objectives regarding housing produetton capacity and pro
visions ot sites tor low and moderate housng are not specific or
measurable
• Mobil* Homes art required to meet special standards that do
not apply to Other types ot housing
• The Level ol Service Standard " E " on SR 43a between
Montgomery Road and Maitland Avenue Is not supported by
EflflfODflik d iti and analvsli
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION - II you wish addilional inform*
lion on the Plan elements and Plan adoption process, or would like to
submit written comments, pleas* contact the Seminole County
Planning Office. 1131 East First Street. Santord. FI 33771. or call
MOM 331 1130. Extension 73M COPIES OF ALL COMPREHENSIVE
PLAN DOCUMENTS ANO ANALYSIS ARE AVAILABLE FOR
PUBLIC REVIEW AT THE SEMINOLE COUNTY PLANNINO
DEPARTMENT FROM
AM. TO S:M P.M. MONDAY
THROUOH FRIOAY EXCEPT FOR LEGAL HOLIDAYS. ADOI
TIONALLV. PLAN INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE FOR REVIEW
AT COUNTY FUELIC LIBRARIES. THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK
OF CIRCUIT COURT WILL ALSO HAVE A COPY O f THE
PROPOSED PLAN ADOPTION ORDINANCE ON FILE ALL
DOCUMENTS ARE PUBLIC RECOROS AND COPIES MAY EE
OBTAINED AT COST EV INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS.
Person* art advised that if they wish to appeal any decision* mad*
at these hearings, they will need e record ot the proceedings and lor
such purpose, they may need to insure that a verbatim record ol th*
proceedings is made which includes the testimony and evidence upon
which the appeal is based Section 3S4 OIQV Fieri da Statutes
BOARDOF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
SEMINOLE COUNTV. FLORIDA
BY ANTHONY VANOERWORP. PLANNING DIRECTOR
Publish A ihJusI H I September 1. IV*I
OEI 731

I

�B IM p v H IS H H iiR

jP

W H H

Sanford MaraW, Sanford. Ftertda - Monday. August 2S. tSSI - » *

Lake Mary

p H

LAKE M ARY - The Rev. Bill Wilbur, pastor of Gamboa
Union Church. In Panama, will apeak al a special meeting of
Abundant Life Christian Fellowship, 232 Semtnote Ave.. a
newly formed Evangelical Presbyterian Church.
BUI W ilbur, brother of the Rev. Bab Wilbur, pastor of
Abundant Life, la pastor of G am boo Union Church, located on
the Panama Canal between Panama City and Colon, where he
has served 15 years.
During that time he has shared the Christian faith at the
highest levels of government, laborers of the dredging division,
American military, prison Inmates (Including close staff of
toppled dictator Manuel Noriega) and also with Indians In the
Jungle.
“ He has witnessed G od 's work In remarkable w ays."
according to his brother Bob. “ He lived through the Invasion o f
Panama and Its aftermath and saw God working even during
those difficult days."
The meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Aug. 26 al the Lake Mary
Dance Academy. 549 Lake Mary Blvd.
Fellowship and refreshments will follow.
The public Is Invited to attend.

LAKE M ARY - Robin Muzeka
has a busy night planned Sept.
1•
The Lake Mary resident and
businesswom an has been named
coordinator for the Muscular
Dystrophy Association Pledge
Center, serving Lake Mary and
Sanford. For the 24-hour period
the Jerry Lew is Telethon la
broadcast, Muzeka will be man­
n in g phon es with about 50
volunteers.
‘T h ey'D flash our number on
the screen so people can call us
with pledge*. But anyone who
wants to drop a donation by our

Officer m anager for Daniel A
Wohlwender ER A otT Lake Mary,
Muzeka said all the agents (n the
office have donated lime to this
cause.
“They deserve all the credit.
I 'm J u s t c o o r d i n a t i n g
everybody's efforts,” M useka
modestly explained.
But David Steinaek. president
of the M DA Central Florida
Chapter, praised Muzeka for her
Involvement.
"W e 're proud to have caring
p e o p le lik e R o b in M u z e k a

&gt;
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—

Panamanian pastor to spoak locally

working cloaely with MDA and
Its supporters.” Steinaek said.
"O u r telethon team la dedicated
to making this year's show an
all-time record-breaker.”
Muzeka said more volunteers
are needed locally, and the
volunteer staff will get hungry
throughout the 24-hour period.
"W e 'd love to have area res­
taurants donate food to the
cause for our hungry volun­
teers.” she said.
Stressing the Importance o f
c o m m u n it y I n v o l v e m e n t .
Muzeka Is excited about the
upcoming event.
" M D A scientists are n o w
closer to developing treatments
and cures for these diseases.”

office can be assured the money
will stay In the local area. By
calling the number, the money
goes into a big pot.” Muzeka

f:{j|
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Optometrist offers free eye screening
LAKE M AR Y — Poor vision can affect more than a child'a
school performance. If left untreated, some common eye
disorders in children can lead to serious and Irreversible vision

J

Martin Kanaol. O.D.. la offertng free eye screenings for area
elementary school children on Aug. 26 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
at 641W . Lake Mary Blvd.
“Children have a biological timeclock that may affect the
success o f treatment for certain eye problems such aa
strabismus (misalignment of the eyea) and amblyopia (lazy
eye)." according to Dr. Kanaol. “A thorough eye exam should
be an essential part o f a child's bock-to-school routine.”
Dr. Kanaol said about SO percent of all blindness can be
prevented If treated early. The best form of prevention Is an
annual eye examination by a trained professional. Childen
should have a thorough eye exam before the age of nine
because the visual system la usually fully developed by then.
The free screening will determine 20/20 vision (the ability to
see characters of a certain height from 20 feet away), eye
muscle imbalances such aa taxy eye, general eye health and
whether the child needs corrective lenses. Dr. Kanaol said.
For an appointment, call 321-6434.

I

lO uSE Zryu^-r

!

Tarry Pattlshall, director of Lake Mary High School Band, slzaa
up wsak spots during a recant prectica.

Flag laam mambara, Ranaa Glady, 16, Dina Court son, 15.
Kail) Woodall, 16, ting along during lip synch at high school.

LAKE M AR Y - The Lake Mary Seniors meet every Tuesday
for activities at the old city hall. North Country Club Road.
The program begins at 9:30 a.m. with watcrcolor class and
drawing. Lap quilting. 10-12 noon and bridge from noon to 3
p.m.

Details, call 323*4938.

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Club takes the lead
L.E.A.D.6 to Success, a newly formed club to share business
connections, will meet 7:30 a.m. Wednesday Ma s Kitchen.
3817 Lake Mary Blvd. One of the focal points of the meeting Is
to exchange business cards. Only one member of a particular
type of business or profession is allowed tojoin.
For more information, call 323-5399.

Rotary meats early
Rotary Club o f Lake Mary meets Thursday mornings. 8 to 9
a.m. at the Lake Mary Community Center, formerly the CIA
Building. 260 N. Country Club Road. Contact Roger Campbell,
president, at 323-1273.

Alter a short summer at tha
YM CA summer camp at
Greenwood Lakes Park, the
children hslped Jennifer
Clinard, day camp counsel­
or, hasp America beautiful
by picking up papar, cans
and whatever else they
could find.

SyTammyVMM*

Optimists gather every week
Lake Mary Optimist Club meets every Monday . 7p.m., at
Shoneys. Contact Kevin Greene at 322-8787.

Women resume meeting In fell
Lake Mary Woman's Club meets the fourth Wednesday of
each month and will resume meetings in September. Contact
Paulette Pedigo at 323-1969.

Historical Commission gathers
The Lake Mary Historical Commission meets Mondays at Old
City Hall. Contact Mary W olff at 321-5666 for more
Information.

Be a volunteer firefighter
The Volunteer Fire Association in Lake Mary meets al 7 p.m.
at the Fire Hall on the second Tuesday of each month. Contact
Bob Stoddard. (Ire chief, al 323-7029 for more information.

Clogging group to have classes
Dixieland Cloggcrs hold classes from 7-8 p.m. each Monday
at the old Lake Mary (Ire station. First Street and Wilbur
Avenue.

Weight Watchers meet on Thursdays
A local chapter o f Weight Watchers meets at the Lake Mary
Community Building every Thursday from 4:45 to 6:45 p.m.

Youth Center open on Friday nights
Every Friday night. Ihc Lake Mary Community Building Is
transformed in a Youth Center from 7-11 p.m. Area youth are
welcome to participate in the fun.

.afriend whenyoureadyneedone.

a,

ffering the Finest in service and facilities with pre-plan­
ning through The Simplicity Plan™. Your only "hometown"
cemetery and funeral home combination.

C ity spreads the w o rd
w ith quarterly report
LAKE MARY - The City of coming city events, parks and
Lake Mary Is ready to spread Ihc recreation programs, m ailers
word again. The quarterly Re­ pertaining lo rode enforcement
port io the Citizens is now being such as l awn m o w i n g und
mailed to the city’s residents.
Junked cars regulations, finan­
Coordinator for the publica­ cial rales, and the mandatory
tion. Matt West. said. “ We mall utility hookups.
these out to about 2,500 proper­
ty owners throughout the city,
The publication eontulns three
every three months."
pages or Information, with an
C o n t a i n e d In the c i t y ’ s additional page for address
quarterly are reports about up­ labeling.

La! us know what’s going on
The Sanford Herald welcomes announcements ulMiut social
activities and club news for publication In the Lake Mary pages
each Monday. There Is no charge.
1. AH Items should be typed or written legibly and Include
the name of a person who cun he contacted and a daytime
phone number.
2. The deadline is 11a.m. Thursday before publication.

SNIP-N-SNAP
BACK TO SCHOOL

BALDWIN - FAIRCHILD

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HAIRCUTS

* 5.50

PERMS

*30

Cemetery and Funeral Home

SR 46A at R h in eh art R d .
L a k e M a ry
322-4263

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Seniors to most for sctlvltlss

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M u ze k a p la n s te le th o n a c tiv itie s

IN B R I E F

O ted y &amp; d M id ie “M a k e [M a r y

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- Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florid* - Monday. August 26. 1991

Three arrested after Plans
parties are robberies

Once the plans are In place,
schools will be measured against
them and the state will provide
assistance to those that don’ t do
well. Baseline data will be ready
by next year. Castor said.
Meanwhile, a 23-member A c­
countability Commission ap ­
pointed this summer to oversee
the new Initiative, has Its work
cut out. The panel o f teachers,
parents and community leaders
Is charged with setting state
goals and deciding how to best
measure schools’ performance,
something that could be tricky.

ty. Legislators this spring agreed
to suspend many o f the laws
they’ve put on the books over
the last several years, dictating
how schools operate.
The statutes put on hold range
from the major programs for
primary and middle education to
transportation funding to money
for textbooks and other supplies.
Several laws remain in effect.
They range from the opening
and closing dates o f the school
year, grade progression, atten­
dance requirements, the 180day requirement for a school
year and teacher certification
requirements.

Castor said she expected the
commission would turn first to
goals for graduation rates and
school readiness and then math
and science, language arts,
writing, history and geography
and safe schools.
In the Interim, schools already
will be enjoying greater flexibili­

Over the summer, the com­
mission has held two hearings
and Castor's department has
held two five-day seminars, each
attended by more than 400
ad m in is tra tors ., teachers,
parents and community leaders
from throughout the state.
Those sessions, tn Naples and

C c a tla ttifrM iP a f* 1A

Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — The arrest o f
Stephen Michael Pickens. 18. of
1407 Valencia Court. Sanford,
m ay have solved two or more
separate cases o f robbery during
this past weekend. According to
several police reports, a man and
tw o women spent Sunday night
l uring unsuspecting men to
what was supposed to be a
party, only to end up with a
robbery.
Charles Duncan was picked up
by the three persons, as he
exited Shuckles Lounge. 2690 S.
Orlando Drive Sunday night. He
was reportedly driven by the
three, to a wooded area near
Lock Lowe School. While they
were reportedly sharing some
beer. Duncan was threatened
with a metal object, and his
wallet was taken.
In a s e p a r a t e I n c i d e n t .
R a y m o n d B. W atrou s, 206
Laurel Avenue. Sanford, was
walking near highway 17-92 and
13th Street Sunday night, when
he was also picked up by a man
and two women. Watrous was
taken to a wooded area near
Oregon Avenue where he was
robbed o f his wallet.

also arrested. They were' iden­
tified as Mary Ellen Dallas. 25. o f
Orange City, and Lisa Adams,
whose address was not Immedi­
ately available. Connected with
the Duncan case. Pickens has
been charged with armed rob­
bery. battery and theft. Other
charges of simitar nature may be
made In connection with the
Watrous ease, and possibly a
third incident If more Informa­
tion Is obtained.
The two women, so far. have
apprently been charged only In
connection with the Duncan
case. All throe have been taken
to the John E. Polk Correctional
F a c i l i t y . M e a n w h i l e , an
extensive Investigation Is con­
tinuing Into the situation.

spokesman Ron Sachs said.
"It holds a hammer over the
heads o f parents, teachers, stu­
dents and schools." he said.
The union also fears the shift
In pow er may be m ore an
illusion than a reality.
"When you shift responsibility
without shifting resources, you
are building in a great level of
frustration.” Sachs said, adding
that he didn’t think the reality
had set In yet.
" I don’t believe the average
parent or teacher knows much
about It." he said. "T h e only
cheerleaders are the people who
proposed It."
Castor agreed that "a moment
o f tru th " will arrive If the
Legislature doesn’t find more
money for education when It
convenes In January.
When lawmakers do return for
the 1992 session they will be
greeted with an assessment from
every school In Florida on Its
true financial needs.

Jacksonville, were held to train
trams that will return to the
districts and explain account­
ability in greater detail to the
people who will be held account­
able.
"Everyone seems to be highly
motivated." Castor said.
The next thing on the agenda
Is for 30 one-day workshops that
will be held around the state to
help districts and schools pre­
pare for the new system. Those
should be held over the next
couple of months.
"Things are m oving along on
schedule." Castor said.
As work continues, the Florida
Education Asaoclatlon/Unlted Is
still on guard. The union was
vocal In raising concerns about
the state’s accountability plan
this spring.
A basic flaw o f Florida’s ac­
cou n tab ility plan Is that It
t h r e a t e n s r a t h e r than e n ­
courages, FEA/Unlted

-

-* •—

• «t M*-4i - is t

. • r

According to Sanford police
reports. Pickens reportedly con­
fessed to the Duncan robbery,
telling officers there were two
other similar incidents for which
he would be charged.
Pickens' two companions were

Principal
C ssU sstd tram Page 1A
by Supt. Robert Hughes, who
said that his main criteria In
making the selection would be to
choose someone who met the
needs o f the school.
"E a c h school has Its own
special needs." he said last
week. "W e Just have to find the
best person for the Job."
S c h a p k e r . wh o has a
bachelor's degrees In English
and Journalism from Florida
A t l a n t i c U n i v e r s i t y and a
master's degree In administra­
tion and supervison from Barry
C o l l e g e t a u g h t E n g l i s h in
B r o w a r d C o u n t y a n d In
Michigan for seven years before
being hired at Lyman In 1978.
She taught English there for a
year before being promoted to
the position o f dean where she
served for a year.
She has been an assistant
principal at Lyman for 11 years.
Because the principal's salary
Is based on a formula which
Includes the principal's experi­
ence and the number o f certifi­
cated teachers at the school.
Schapker's salary has not yet
been calculated.
It is expected that. If approved.
Schapker will take over the reins
at S e m i n o l e on W e d n e d a y
morning. Epps has said that he
will be available for as long as
necessary tn make the transition
easier.

•

F u ll/Q u e e n H e a d b o a r d

D resser

•

M i r r o r • N ig n f s t a n a

AI SUPtR LABOR DAY SAVINGS!

Correction
An article in Sunday's Sanford
Herald stated u group of west
Sanford residents will meet with
Seminole County Commissioner
Jennifer Kelley In her office
Thursday at 11 p.m. The group
will meet with the commissioner
at 11 a.m.

EVERYTHING ON
THIS PAGE IS...
SAVE

OVER

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2 OFF

:| S A V E

OVER

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2 OFF 1 SAVE

MASSiGtASS
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COCXnt Off END W if i

Public school menu

OVER

1

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ttw n
■ .JXSL

1

W h
NO DOWN P A YM EN T &amp; EASY M O N THLY TERMS
T u e s d a y , A u g . 27
Spaghetti
Tossed Salad
Spiced Applesauce
Garlic Roll
Milk

2-PIEC E SOFA A LO VESEAT

M A N Y O T H E R ITEM S T H R O U G H O U T F A R M E R S A T 1 / 2 S A V I N G S !

F A R M E R S F U R N IT U R E
A P P l I A N C E S .1/11/ E L E C T R O N I C S

2440 S. French Ave., Sanford
Mwv-FrLtAM• • PM

S*t.9AM-5PM

Ph. 323-2132
Sun.Noon • SPM

�J
0

MONDAY

Sanford Herald

Sports
[RUNNING

i

!

■ C ls s s lft o d , P s g s 4B
■ C o m ic s , P a g s SB

Herald Sports Writer
SANFORD — When talking about recreational
activities. Ihc focus tends to fall on team sports, If
for no other reason than those leagues can have a
greater com bined Im pact than Individual
athletics.
But team sports don't appeal to everybody. T o
meet the recreational needs o f those individuals,
the Sanford Recreation Department has several
different continuing classes available to help men
and women as well as boys and girls cither get
Involved In a new sport or become more
proficient at an old one.
The Recreation Department offers afternoon
and evening Professional Tennis Instruction at
Grovcvlew Park every Monday through Satur­
day. All levels and ages welcome.
Group lesson fee Is $5 per class and is paid at
each class.
The Instructor Is Peter Kaczmarzyk. Partici­
pants are reminded lo please wear tennis shoes.

Sumnrwrtlme Jamboree sot
LAKE MARY — T his year's Lake Mary
Summertime Cross Country Jamboree has been
scheduled for Saturday. Sept. 7. at Lake Mary
High School.
Competition will be offered In seven different
age classes — from 8-and-Under to 50-and-Over
— as well as girls' and boys' club team races for
athletes between the ages o f 13and 18.
Four different races have been scheduled,
starting with a one-mile event for 12-and-Undcr
boys and girls at 8 a.m. The age groups In that
race will be 8-and-Undcr. 9-10 and 11-12.
Then, at 8:30 a.m.. the girls' 13-to-18 club
teams will run a two-mile race. That will be
followed by a three-mile race for the boys'
13-to-18 club teams at 9 a.m.
Finally, men and women 19-and-Ovcr will
compete In a three-mile race scheduled lo start
at 9:30 a.m. Age groups for lhat event will be
19-to-29.30-10-39.40-to-49 and 50-and-Ovcr.

AM I

A continuing aerobic class Is offered by the

Recreation Department at a cost o f $2 per class.
Non-Sanford residents will have to pay an annual
•10 non-resident's fee.
The class la given at the Downtown Youth
Center on Monday, Wednesday. Friday and
Saturday mornings from 0 to 10 a.m. Classes are
also conducted on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Excerclae mats will be furnished for each
participant.
. BASK ETBALL
The Recreation Department offers not.-.earn
basketball at the Crooms High School gymnasi­
um Monday through Friday.
The gym Is open to teenagers from to 9 p.m.
and to adults from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. There Is no
charge to use the court.
Karate classes are available at the Downtown
Youth Center for ages 8 to adult.
Clasaea meet on Tuesday and Thursday
evenings from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Registration fee la &gt;30 per month. Currently,
there Is a special registration offer o f paying for
two months and getting a third month free.

The class is taught by Larry Jackson, a Sho
Don black belt.
C H S M L B A O D fO
A cheerleading class meets at the Downtown
Youth Center every Wednesday from 9 to 6 p.m.
New classes will be starting Wednesday. Oct. 3.
There are classes offered for children ages 6-13
and 13-and-Up.
The first month's fee Is $20, which Includes
pompons and T-shirt. Thereafter, the cost will be
•12 per month.
BATO N
A baton class will be offered starting Monday.
Oct. 7 at the Downtown Youth Center.
Classes will meet every Monday from 9 p.m. to
6 p.m.
The fee Is 610 per month and the instructor
will be Joy Clore.
For inform ation on these or any other
programs offered by the Sanford Recreation
Department, either come by the Downtown
Youth Center located on the first floor o f Sanford
City Hall. 300 N. Park Avenue) or call 330-9607
between the hours o f 8:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Monday through Friday.

DOUBLE TA K SS
Qstting ready

An awards ceremony will follow at 10 a.m. In
the 12-and-Undcr and 19-and-Ovcr events, the
top male and female In each age group will be
awarded a medal with the top five In each age
group receiving a ribbon.
•
In the club team races, a championship and
runner-up team trophy will be awarded In both
the girls' and boys' divisions. The top 15
individuals In each race will receive medals with
the 16th through 50th finishers getting ribbons.

With thy start of the high school
football sssson only 18 short
days away (if you don't think
thal’a a abort pariod of time, just
aak any high school football
coach), tvary available minute ol
practice ia squeezed out by
coaches to get their teams ready,,
both mentally and physically.
Laka Mary dafanaiva coordinator
Boyd Rasmussen (tail) works on
the mental aspect with some ol
the Rems while Seminole High
8chool players Jeff England
(below left), Carlo White (center)
and Sam Becker (right) con­
centrate on the physical. Alter
playing In praaaaaon jamborees
on Friday, Sept. 6, all six
Seminole County schools will
open the regular season on
Friday, Sept. 13.

'r

Registration Is S3 for those who pre-register
v J^ tatsndsyt flt[H f2 . or Ofton rsre dsyv
For information, call Mike Gibson. 333-2370.

I CO LLID E FOOTBALL~1
Fortay leaving Miami
CORAL GABLES — Quarterback Bryan Fortay
says he has decided to leave the University of
Miami because his football career is at stake.
Fortay. who last week lost his battle with Gino
Torrctta for the starting Job. quit the team
Sunday and said he'll transfer to another school.
"I left here because I need un opportunity lo
play,” Fortay said. "I felt they didn't want me to
be at the controls here."
Coach Dennis Erickson announced last
Thursday that Torretta would start the opener
Saturday at Arkansas. Fortay said he's not
bitter, but he suggested the coach may have
decided on his quarterback before spring
practice began.
"I Just don't know if I had the chance to win.
and that's the part that hurts me the most."
Fortay said.
In (wo fall scrimmages, Fortay completed 28
of 47 passes for 417 yards, with two touchdowns
and three Interceptions. Torretta completed 18
of 44 for 185 yurds. wllh one touchdown and
four Interceptions.

I
j

SOUTHERN LEAGUE
triaf nt

Memphis sweeps Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE - Darryl Robinson paced a
12-hit attack going 3-for-4 with a double home
run. two runs scored and two RBIs to lead
Memphis to a 10-5 win in the first game of a
Southern League doubleheuder Sunday night.
Memphis then scored three unearned runs in
the eighth Inning of the second game lo
complete the sweep with a 5-2 win.
The Chicks Jumped out to a quick lead in the
first game, sending nine players to the plate In
the lop of the first fora 3-0 lead.
In the second game, Memphis tied the game in
the third on a solo home run by George Wright.
The Suns strung together three consecutive
base hits to take u 2-1 lead In the filth. Singles
by Bobby Holley and Jim Campanis were
followed with a RBI single from Kucbcn
Gonzalez for the go-ahead run.
Complied from w ire and staff reports.

□ 8 p.m. — WGN. Los Angeles Dodgers at
Chicago Cubs. 11.1
TENNIS
□7:30 p.m. — USA. U S . Open. first-round
matches. |L|

Complete listing on Rage 2B

B »l

Herald Correspondent

ORLANDO - When Cliff Kresge
crushed hts tcc shot down the
fairway at the par-4 16th hole at
Dubsdrcad Country Club, the ques­
tion was not whether he would win
hts second Orlando City Amateur
C ham pionship but whether he
would beat the rain In doing so.
Although Kresge had to wall out a
90-mlnute rnln delay before he
could hit hts second shot on the
16th. he wasn't affected, cruising In
with three consecutive pars for the
1991 title.
He won Ihc 1989 Orlando City
Amateur, which was also played at
Dunsdread. Thar year, the final
round was cancelled because of
rain.
Kresge. who grew up across the
street from and teamed the game at
D u b s d r c a d . d i d n ' t ma ke any
mistakes, using a solid putter lo
record a final round o f 68 and a
nlne-under-par 204 total, two better
than the runner-up. Oviedo High
School graduate Mike Doane.
" I played real solid." said Kresge.
who will turn professional this
week. "I was never In any trouble."
Kresge birdted the par-4 second
and 10th holes us well as Ihc par-5
fifth hole to go along with hla 15
pars. He iced the victory with 4-fool
par putts on the last two holes.
Doane. who works at Winter Park
Pines Country Club, pressured
Kresge with a birdie on the 16th to
pull within two shots, but fell bark
uftera bogey on the 4 15-yard 17th.
Despite not winning tourney.
Doane was pleased with his finish.
Ills best ever in an amateur event.
“ I played w e l l . " commented
Doane. " I got up und down almost
every time. 1 Just knew I was going
to be missing greens and the putter
was working well.
"I did about whatever I had to do
(to pressure Kresge). hut he did
what he had to do. He kept making
putts."

Photo days a necessary but frustrating tradition
Like most other sports, tradition
has Its place within the coniines of
football. And of all the traditions
that surround fool bid I and other
sports — pep rallies, halftime shows
and the like — possibly the bluest
pain In Ihc track o f your front Is
picture day.

SPORTS

TONY
DeSORMIER

I say this only because we (and I'll
Ket to )ust who " w e " Is. or are. In
Just a few lines) have gotten through
four photo days and still have two
loomlni! ahead like Icebergs.

pictures that almost everybody goes
through every year, many parents
want copies of tiiose photos taken of
their son In Ills football uniform.

|

BA8EBALL

Kresge
cruises in
Amateur

C:Se« A m a te u r, Page 2B

What are photo days? At the risk
ol being overly simplistic. It's a day
when photos arc taken of a team.
Including all coaches and players.

•

1□

B

■ P to p to , P a g o 3B

By OBAN SMITH

ORLANDO — The Muscular Dystrophy Asso­
ciation. In conjunction with WESH-TV. the
Buena Vista Palace. Culllgan Water. Track
Shack and Mix 109.1 FM, have teamed up to
sponsor the 4lh annual Prediction Run for
Jerry’s Kids.
The Prediction Run has been scheduled for
Monday, Sept. 2. at the Buena Vista Palace al
Walt Disney World Village. Individuals and
teams that come the closest to predicting thetr
finishing times will be the winners.
Prizes, which Include two round-trip tickets to
London, accommodations at the PGA National
Resort In Palm Beach Gardens and at The Lodge
at Ponte Vedra Beach, will be awarded for
fund-raising efforts as well as for accurate
prediction o f finishing time.
For more information, call the MDA at
677-6665.

BEST BETS O N TV

1991

Rec Department offers classes in individual activities

I

i MDA fund-rslssr plannsd

\

26,

Softball’s not for evoryono

IN BRI EF

I
|

August

Several of ihc studios capitalize on
lhat by olferlng those big pholo
buttons you see adorning parents
and/or girl friends.

Trust me when I say It's a hassle.
Depending on the circumstances,
there can 1m- as many us three
different organizations trying to get
pictures for four or five different
publications. Besides the two local
dally newspapers, each school has
contracted with a professional photo
studio to produce the art necessary
fo r th e ga m e p r o g r a m s and
yearbooks.

As a result, orders have to lxtaken and processed.
During a photo day. It's not
uncommon to see players scurrying
around the field from station lo
station, making sure his photo has
been taken by every laxly who needs
or has to take It. There's also the

And Just like ilit standard school

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

__________________ __________ _________________________________________________ ' __________

I

Inevitable scramble tor extra order
forms, pens to fill out said order
forms and money to pay lor said
orders.

day Is u full-blown event scheduled
for a Saturday afternoon with faint­
ly. Ians and friends Invited lo attend
and even participate.

You're starting to get an idea of
just how Involved u process this can
be. At it's best (which It rarely Is).
It's like u large and cumbersome but
effective dance routine: Step 1. —
Walk through this line: Step 2. —
Stand In place: Step 3. — Gel your
photo taken: Step. 4 — Go lo this
line: Ke|M-at until finished.

At Seminole. Lake Mary Lyman.
Oviedo and Lake Bran I ley. the
sessions are generally scheduled for
early In the m orning or mldafternoon during the week. The Idea
Is for the session to In- cut and dried,
quick and functional.

Mure often than not. It d e ­
generates Into chaos punctuated by
yells of "Has everybody had all their
pictures taken?"
The coaches deal with these
sessions wllh a large dose ol good
humor. While it does cut Into
available practice lime — and wllh
the season 1H days away unit
counting, every minute Is precious
— all the coaches know It's a
necessary evil.
In Seminole County, there are two
basic ways lhat photo days un­
executed At Lake Howell, the pi into

For us at the Herald, the photo
days yield those facial shots used In
the weekly Player of the Week
selection story and the annual
All-S em in ole County team an ­
nounced on Thanksgiving. And
despite the best efforts to get
pictures of everyone, there have
been several "photos not available"
in the List two All-County teams
Luckily, we re two-thirds o f the
way there. Lake Howell. Oviedo.
Lake llranllcy and Oviedo are done
with only Lake Mary (tills Thurs­
day! and Seminole (Saturday) re­
maining
Then we can gel buck to con­
cent rating nil rfit- games.

A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A IL Y

�A

S T A TS &amp; STANDINGS

?

Iflo rtiW rttif

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young and going out and trying
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how. you never forget You Just

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••• hut with the progress
he’s making he will be able to
help us In September."
Jackson win continue his rehabtlttaUon with the Clasa AA
Birmingham Bamna on Monday.
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Shula hopes the worst
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to take?"
Jackson’s third-Inning sacri­
fice fly tied the first game 2*2
and be started the winning rally
In the eighth when he beat out a
grounder to third. Although his
speed has been affected by the
hip Injury sustained during last
season's NFL playoffs, he was
stUI able to accelerate and reach
base before Jose Oliva's throw.
" I thought It w as going to be a
foul ball. I've run twice as fast
during m y rehabilitation." said
J a c k a o n , w h o w o b b le d ,
playfully, as he walked back to
the bag where he waa replaced
by pinch runner John Hairston.
" I was Just kidding." he said.
"Som e of my buddies were In
the stands, yelling at me. They
thought I waa winded."
T h e crow d o f 4.4BB gave
Jackaon a standing ovation.

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MIAMI — Poison Ivy Is about
the only summer camp setback
that h a s n 't b e fa lle n M iam i
Dolphins coach Don Shula.
Seven of last year's starters
are unsigned, three others have
been hurt, and quarterback Dan
Marino la In a slump.
The good news la that camp is
over. The bad la that the season
opener Sunday matches Miami
a g a in st the d efen d in g AFC
champion Bills In Buffalo.
" W e haven't been able to
accomplish our goal In training
cam p." Shula said Sunday.
The goal waa to establish a
course to the Super Bowl. Com­
ing off last year's 13-5 record. It
seemed a reasonable mission
when cam p opened In early
July.
" A lot of people had the feeling
at the end of last year that we
had a pretty fine team." Shula
aald. "O u r whole thought w as to
Improve on that product.
"T h e frustration is that I
haven't been able to bring It
together In this camp."
The Dolphins beat New Or­
leans 28-24 Saturday night to
conclude their preseason with a
3-2 record, the team's best since
1984. But as always, the pre­
season record Is deceiving.
Sim la's primary concern Is his
offense. When led by Marino,
who signed a five-year contract
e x t e n s io n T u e s d a y fo r an
e stim ated 825 m illion, the
D o lp h in s failed to score a
touchdown In seven quarter* of
preaeason play.
"It’s obvious we're not any­
where close to where we were at
our peak last year." Shula said.
In the past two games. Marino
completed Just 14 of 45 passes
for 129 yards. He threw an
Interception on each of the first
three series Saturday night.
"I'v e been struggling all camp
with the first offense." Marino
said. "T h e chemistry doesn't
seem right."

D oane blrdicd the fourth,
eighth, and two of (he final three
holes en route lo a final round
score of 68 and a 206 total.

ball coach, Jerry Mayer* M ilitan t bataball
coach, and Saan Lynch aoman'* a iv ila n l
votteybati coach
SOUTNIBN - Named Chiton Norrl*
dtten*)vo lino coach

For Kresge. he polished off hfs
solid amateur career In style.
“ It feels great to win and I had
a good time." said Kresge. who
works at Sabal Point Country

Contract disputes and Injuries
c o m b in e d to set ba ck the
Dolphins In their weakest area —
the running game. Center Jeff
U h le n h a k e . g u a r d H a rry
Oalbreath and tough-blocking
tight end Ferrell Edmunds are
u n sig n e d ; tack le Richm ond
W ebb, who made the Pro Bowl
last y e a r aa a rookie, and
running back Sammie Smith
were hurt In preaeason games.
W e b b will return to practice
t h is w e e k . R e c e iv e r M ark
Clayton, sidelined with a neck
Injury, could also be back. Smith
might mlas another month.
The Dolphins have more un­
signed players than any other
N FL team. The others absent ore
kicker Pete Stoyanovlch. cornerback J.B. Brown, defensive
lin e m a n B r ia n S o c h la and
llnebpcker Hugh Orcen.
S h u la h a s gen erally been
pleased with his defense, which
came up with 14 turnovers and
12 sacks In the preaeason.
N e w 's t a r t i n g corn erback s
Vestee Jackson and Michael
McGruder each made an In­
terception Saturday, and Mc­
Gruder returned his 72 yards for
a touchdown.
Nose tackle Alfred Oglesby and
end T.J. Turner swapped posi­
tions. won starting Jobs and have
shown signs of giving Pro Bowl
end Jeff Cross help with the pass
rush.
“ W e're putting some pressure
on the quarterback." Shula said.
All-Pro John Offerdahl con­
tinues to anchor the line backing
corps, which has received an
unexpected boost from fifthround draft pick Bryan Cox of
Western Illinois. C ox's blocked
p u n t le d to th e w in n i n g
touchdown against the Saints.
Longshot newcomers with a
chance to survive Monday's cuts
to a 47-man roster include free
agent rookie safety Mike laquanlello and receiver?punt re­
turner Scott Miller, a ninthround draft pick.

Club In Luugwood. "it ’s a big
bonus to go oul with a win."
Other Seminole Country fin­
ishers Included: Lake Mary’s J.
W. Howard I75-77-75-227) and
Ray L an dry (73-81-80): and
L o n g w o o d ' s Jack Davis
(7 2*76-76-226) and Scoll
Davidson (82-86-78-246). Davis
tied for 26th In the overall
standings.

i

�- &lt;— .... • •

•» •• -&lt; «s-

• &lt; '-s ,

v v

Sanford HsraM. Sanford. Florida - Monday, August M , 1SS1 - 8 8

IN BRIEF
Dog obgcMgne# oIgbs plBiMtBd
for all

b r m b o f dogs beginning September 5 aft 7 p.m. at (he
Recreation Department In Caaselbeny. This Is located at Secret
Lake Park off Ivey Road. Price for the daaaeo la 160 for eight

Alao scheduled for September 3. 7 to 8 p.m.. la a claaa for
pupptea. From 8 to 9 p.m.. a conformation ctaaa la fcrn
atartlng September 3.
Advanced obedience claaeea are offered by the d u b at the
same location on Thursday evenings
Por more Information, call Doforea Vanek at 838*1550.
flm u M

m

R
7
n &amp; S i/LV

a /•• J

VFW, Auxiliary to gather
Veterana o f Foreign Warn and the Ladleo Auxiliary o f Sanford
Peat 10108 meet the fourth Monday at 7:30 p.m. at their poet
home (the log cabin on Seminole Boulevard). For more
Information, contact Nina Crouae at 333*7671 during evening
hours.

O v ir w t t n to h iv i step study
A atep atudy o f Overeaten Anonymoua la conducted on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. at West Lake Hospital. State Rood 434.
Longwood. For more Information, call Marlbeth at 360*7033.

mrconci Anonymous to most
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
of Goodwin. 317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Clogging group to hav* e in in
The Old Hickory Stompers
_____ _______hold
g m
7*8 p.m. each
Monday at the Knights of Columbus Hall on S. Park Avenue.
Sanford. Coat is 83.50 per class. For more Information, call
340-0539.

Holp for gamblors offtrtd
Gam blers Anonymous and Gam-Anon for family and friends,
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-amokera) at 7:30
p.m.. Church of the Good Shepherd. 331 Lake Ave.. Maitland.
For more Information, call 236-9206.

Get ready for fall planting
Planting time for a fafl vegeta­
ble garden la only a few weeks
away. Sven though summer la
atm with us. now la a good time
to
■l
first consideration in
planning your garden la where
the best location will be. A
garden should be convenient to
the houee ao It wM be handy to
work in. Also, It should be near a

If your soil la a d d or
o r In other words.

to I
Ume. To take a soil sample, uae a

r

problem. The garden should be
located where It can get at least
6 hours o f aunttght a day. In
moat backyards, you will proba­
bly have to choose betarecn
rooming and afternoon sun. Full
sun. especially In Florida, la
better In the morning for grow ­
ing vegetables. If your i
not get much full sun aD day,
plant crops like tomatoes, corn,
potatoes, cucumbers, melon and
moot root crops In the best area
of aun you have. Leafy crops like
lettuce can tolerate more shade.
Oood soil la an important
factor too, but most of us nave to
do the best we can with the soil
w e have. Oettlng the soil ready
to plant will probably be the
moot physical part of the whole
r i n V n ln * n m U r t .

Don't give Into the temptation
to cut comers with this phase of
garden preparation. If you are
planning a large garden, you
may wnat to rent a rototiller. but
moat backyard gardens can be
prepared with a spade and
shovel. If your area has a lot of
weeds or grass, you may have to
wait a few weeks for the material
to decompose once you turn it
under. You could also remove it
and atari a compost pile.
T o prepare the soil, dig down
six to eight Inches and turn each
shovel full completely over. After

•-----S11FV. I s

the sod Is turned. brcrJi afl d od s
up and level the area with a
rake. The more you pulverise
your soil, the easier It win be to
plant and the greater your suc­
cess
vegetables
be. in growing ve^iam
ea win
Once your soil Is prepared. It's
a good Idea to have your sod
tested if It hasn’t been
recently. A pH test, done at the
Agriculture Center for 81.50 win

I I ---------n
CUI C a

- — --------IS
(ji
B a lH

fo«-H forte In the gw den. Mix
these sa m p les togeher In a
bucket and remove one ptdt o f
sod and bring It to the Agricul­
ture Center. (W e are located off
17-03 south o f Sanford). W e also
do a soluble salt teat to de­
termine the need for fertiliser.
But If the i
*
or you have had It an a
of fertilisation
you can
part of sod preparation,
you receive your results horn
thtmi n i . m mifco recommendsHons on adding Ume or fertiliser
so you can amend your sod.

’. They can save your
ncase tell your readers that
an y w om an c a n get breast
cancer whether it’a in her family
or not: 80 percent o f the women
who get breast cancer do not
have it in their family.

(l a u n r s navti assv a « s
uaaartaw. N SwHwg a s aauttim •&gt; h m at
D E A R ABBY: A Montana wife
asked you why her husband
suddenly started to wear a tir.y
gold earring in his left ear. (She
asked him and he refused to tell
her.) You said you didn't know,
but If she ever found out. to let
you know.
I’m surprised that you didn’t
know. Abby. It means that he
has become a member of the gsy
community.

DEAR ABBY: That Montana
husband probably wears a gold
earring in his left ear for the
same reason I have a gold tooth
in front with d htby in it. I like itt
i. A person’s right to be
you.
lmself is one of our cherished
himi
freedom s, so w h y should a
person have to “ explain’’ his
reason for It? It's his ear and his
business, and as for as I know,
wearing an earring is neither
immoral nor Illegal. But there
seems to be a variety of opinions.
Read on: _____
.
DEAR ABBY: I’m a man who
had his ears pierced four years
ago,and you wouldn't believe the
static I’ve had from people
because of one little speck of
gold the else of a pinhead?
I’ve been accused of being a
h o m o s e x u a l , a latent
transvestite and Just plain weird.
I assure you I am as average as
most men.
I attend college and see more
and more macho guys wearing
earrings on campus. I don't
know if there is any significance
to wearing only one earring in
the left ear. I wear mine there
because I am right-handed and
It’s easier to put on. My buddy
w e a rs one in his right ear
because it's not seen by the
police if he’s stopped for a traffic
violation. Sign me...

PIERCED AND PROUD
DEAR ABBYt A sailor who has
sailed three years on the coast of
China wears a gold ring in his
left ear to prove that he has been
there.

RETIRED CAPTAIN. AGE 80
ft Men have worn

D JX U IIIIID JM IIII 11DJXMIIIIII

1 All KbuCan Eat Chicken

HR.

"

per
person

Tuesday &amp; Wednesday
4:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Sanford Store Only
Eat-in Only
Skin Free &amp; All White Meat Extra

IIIIIUKFC. IIIIIM KFC 11IIIU K F C

"

"

A B IG A IL
VAN BUREN
«

earrlnga lor centuries —
Shakespeare. Rembrandt and
King Jam es n. to name a few of
the mare prominent of thetn.
Ancient Greeks and Romans
borrowed the custom from the
Persian and Indian men. Our
own American Indian braves
alao wore earrings. And how
about the early African warriors?
And the pirates?
Men wore earrings long before
women did. so why all the
ruckus?

U V R A R D LE T U V R
DEAR ARBY: According to an
ancient C h in e se

belief,

the

prevent a recurrence, an earring
is worn. It la supposedly protection against bodIIluck.
D E A R A B B T t A man w ears'a
gold earring in his left ear to let
the world know that he
crossed the equator.
' l l a m a man who
wears a little gold earring in my
left ear because of my religion.
I am a Buddist. and all Buddists wear one gold earring —
and always in the left ear.
I am surprised you didn’t
know that. Abby.
And if you
are really a Buddhist. I am
surprised that you don’t know
how to spell “ Buddhist.’’

DEAR READERB: The letter
from the woman who felt a lump
In her breast but w as afraid to go
to the doctor prompted a deluge
of mall. Some typical letters:
DEAR ARBY: I lost my mother
and three sisters to cancer, ao I
can sympathise with "Scared to
Death.” w ho felt a lump In her
breast and was afraid to get a
mammogram.
1Join you. Abby. In urging all
women — even those without
lumps — to get mammograms

A mamm ogram can detect
breast cancer two years before a
woman or her doctor can feel a
lump. All women should have
regular mammograms beginn­
ing at age 40 — particularly
women of color because they are
more likely to die because they
didn't catch it early enough.
I urge all my staters, black or
white, to educate themselves
about this scary but treatable
disease. For more information,
your readers can dial 1-800-4CANCER.

PATTI LABBLLB
ri Like “Scared to
Death." I felt a lump In my
breast. Unlike her. 1 Immediately
saw my doctor. Even though it
waa cancer. I w as one of the
lucky ones because 1 sought
.early diagnosis an d treatment
and I am alive today to talk
about It.
"Scared to Death" is afraid of
how her husband would feel
about her f o l l o w in g a
mastectomy. I had the same
fears, but throughout my ordeal,
my husband w as my biggest
supporter and my best friend. If
anything, the situation brought
us closer together. He says he
loves me for me. not for m y body
parts.
1 am thankful to have made It
and I would love to tell the world
that I am extremely proud of my
supportive husband. If you uae
my letter, feel free to use my real
name.

JARNICMOLB,
CARLBTOE. MICH.

DM A Assy
fe r n y * (

M )

E — * B ------

M l PUVINBJ

i w ui
r f Ssnttzs bsSvoomc and maSs
_

g j

aNns.
Maks yot* Mng room a )oy to

Spotfasaly dean nighvnar*

MOVIE l A N D DMIVI IN
^ lio S ft H O O O

W LOOKS

ri

I—
Kg]

to attendI a fkO
fell vegetable garden
at the Sem inole County
Agriculture Center Auditorium
on Wednesday. August 38th at 2
p.m. Topics covered will include
soil preparation, starting the
gard en w ith se e d s and
transplants and general garden
care. The program is free and
open to the public. For more
information
the Extension
Service a t333-3400. Ext. 5558.
All Seminole County Coopera­
tive Extension Services pro­
grams are open to aft regardless
of race, color, sex or national

Men with earrings feel their
ears burn for several reasons

AN INDIVIDUAL
DEAR momaOALt I’m with

For 24-hour TV listings, sso LEISURE msgazins of Friday August 23.

you are ready to plant!
For more Information on the

C O U L D KILL

S lip lM fc l

||

�' * •» M

4 0 - Santonl Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday,

LtQil NotlCff

August

26, 1661

L«gal Notices

71- H i m » i l » t e F

CLASSIFIED ADS

B T.JBWNBB W WATER
MANAOCMBNT DISTRICT

S c m in o l*

Am m Jm XSSSZm ***
Tat tt M a t Rtaar Water
Mn aiMMU owner (Dwrtctt
give* nefke if He

41ovtufl*

surface water pump* mutt
meeeure Rip gMwfffy pi water
by taotaflinq ftow meters «r

Chapters MC I and MC I.
F torMe Administrative Cite,
tF.A._C.)and the AppOcanr*
Water i 'aT h T

have been

O r la n d o - W in te r P a rk

322-26] !

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DIPT.
M iT v
HOURS
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
RP
l
IIH •
nM
ifM
M*I ?!!2225l£2',,S
i* w w y i w m i !£
i w

d c w a t e r in o

I :

netad ae Critical
(net i

. . . . at
at Rw
quantity el water ueed mutt
cqmmonce wtthtn tlx monlht at

IV
MMMY

! MaMwSae!!

dertake tM p rra y M e ib riM i
The tamperery 4W(§llfl^§
•atartna rata
rcqulftt fM Nit ■ppllcwtf pr»
ui
^
a
i
M
fl
i
leal
▼HOT P f n i l M n i a iO T I T O T lin ^
OT
Dlttrlcf nett ta datormina
whether the a c tiv ity Is
■general permit
It dtawld be hilly

mdtvtduef CUF applicants
muet submit a water conserve
tton plan ta Rw Dttirtct at Rw
time pi permit application er
retn eel. Specific etgmonti el
RU# ptan very with imp cleoelfl
caftan.

consumptive vaa permitting
A W .....................
Hen ot the eattca at Intent In the
objection*, It any,
ta the DHtrlet

Dttfrtcre
(chapter MC-tt. F A C ) ,
a water shortage It i
Rw Dtatrkt'l l

tar MC I. F A C . la

%
I ?
i »

WAT I t CBNICOVATION
Veer-reund, District wide

1
t
■ »

61 7

‘It

II

I

I
I
I

by the St. Jehne
River Water Manapemeet Ota
trtet. The rvtas amend chapter*
MC I and MC I. F A C . and the
Applicant'! Handbeeh: Can
tumpflve Uses sf Wafer. (A H ),
.................." : » F A C
Only
certain
^ 111(1 m indleldiwM Con­
sumptive Use Permit ICUF)
tram the District. Oenerelly
stated. Rasa thraahalda are: 1)
us* at water tram a a" wall er
greater! I) withdrawal at
Too.OW gaiiene per day ar mere;
or it the capacity ta withdraw
i,aaaJMpaiiene par day.
The new ruts aatabliahaa two
new permitting pragremi ; t) a
General Consumptive Ute
by mta; and
I) a General Permit
nit leaned by
Oitfrkt Matt. The first pragram
•itabiitfwt permanent watering
hours and ether water use re­
quirements. This permit Is
automatically granted ta all
person! within the District It
they tellew the water wee rules
(see belowI; no too it roquirod.
Tho second pormlttlng pregram
i! dttigntd ler ueee which da net
or cannot meet the permanent
watering hours and other water
use requirements set out in the
general permit by rule pre­
visions. yet do net exceed the
individual CUP torethofd*. The
general permit by staff must be
applied lor and ho# a tee at MO
lor processing. Also, tho permit
Ire Ior ln|ectlen wells wae
changed tromII .000ta SLOW.

^

The new rule limits all types
ol irrigation daily ta the period
between 4:M pm. and I0:M
a m deity In order ta minimise
avepotransplratlon rates. This
restriction applies ta lendscepe,
golf course, recreetlenel area,
nursery and agricultural Irriga­
tion Due to variations in irriga­
tion systems end In specific
Irrigation raquirtments tor In­
dividual crops. II exemptions
have been adopted to minimise
potential hardship ta users.
Other Water Us*

A general permit Is granted
ter aquaeultural consumptive
uses el water without any hour
restrictions, provided there ta no
oftsite discharge. An eeretor
must be used ta add oxygen ta
tholeclllty, Ifnecaaeary.
Ornsmenlal and aerating
fountains are granted a general
permit without any hour restric­
tions provided the water Is
recirculated and there Is no
oil sit* discharge. Existing
non recirculating fountains
must be retrofitted ta meet
general permit requirements
within two years from the ef­
fective dateot the rule.
Aesthetic ponds ere granted a
general permit as tong as they
are not augmented at any lime
from any ground er surface
water source.
Persons who cannot tallow tho
Irrigation hour rules or tho other
water use requirements must
apply tor a general permit by
stall lie., "variance") prior to
Implementing their use.
Use ol Reclaimed Water and
Lowest Acceptable Quality
Wittf
All Individual CUP applicants
must use reclaimed water when
It Is readily available, unless the
applicant demonstrates that the
use ol reclaimed water Is not
economically, anvlronmonlally
or technologically feasible
Applicants must also use tho
lowest acceptable quality water.
A higher quality water source
may be permitted for non
potable uses only It an applicant
demonstrates that the use ol
lower quality water Is not eco
nomicelly. environmentally or
technologically feasible
Mender ing and Reporting
Requirements
Persons applying tor a new
Individual CUP must install flow
maters on all withdrawal points
prior to beginning the permitted
use Total withdrawal quantity
must be recorded monthly and
reported to the Oistrkt every

Chapter 45C -44. F.A .C .,
' 1pursuant ta chapter srx
Statute# (F.S.I, rapiacet
IT A F A C . (ronum
w dwptare IT-4M and
IT-4TL F A C ) , enacted purtuant ta chapter ML F .L . ter the
reputation at aprkwtturel tur
face w ater managamant
system*. Certain revttiena to
chaptara MC I, MC-4, and
MC M. F A C ., wore alto meet•ary ta Imptamant lha time rule.
This
rule re­
quire* that certain agricultural
aperatlene ^i^sa^il^s a
ment and Her ape of Surface
Water* (MSSW) permit tar Rw
malntanence and operation of
existing agricultural surface
water management syttomt end
conttructlen of new agricultural
surface water management
tyttamt which erg belew the
permit required thresholds de­
scribed In section 40C-4.441,
F.A.C. The ruto ettabllthet
criteria which ware previously
....
m IflTM
nr O TTwwjn CrVMprtrt
m
pOIITfTSM
IT A F.A.C., but which were net
specified In Rw rvW. The rule It
net txptcWd ta result In an
Increase In the number at agri­
culture aperatlene currently
regulated. Rather, ealttlng
tyttamt currently regulated
pursuant to chapter IT A F A C .
(renumbered ae chapters 17440
and IT-470. F A C .) will new bo
regulated pursuant to thlt rule.
The amendments ta chapter
4001. F A C ., revise the permit
required end the tea tchadule
provision# tar agricultural sur­
face w ater managamant
tyttamt pursuant ta chapter
._
_ ------------0 J i* ,
F A C . Thlt will
the District ta Issue a general or
Individual permit Sir tho opera­
tion and maintenance of existing
tyttamt and construction of now
tyttamt. The amendments are
necessary ta Imgtenwnt and
coordinate with new chapter
40C-4A F A C ., and ta modify Rw
toe tetwduto ta reduce Rw coat*
of Rw permit application tar
agriculture.
The amendment* to chapter
40C-A F.A.C., ere ta provide tar
regulation ot agricultural sur­
face water mnagement system*
pursuant to chapter 3TL FA.
Amendment* to chapter 40C-A
F A C ., are necessary to Im­
plement chapter 40C-4A F.A.C.
A MSSW permit Is required tor
the operation end malntanence
ot certain existing agricultural
surtace water management
tyttamt and construction of new
agricultural surface water
management systems which
exceed the permit thresholds In
chapter 40C-4A F.A.C.
Sections 4SC-4I .011 and
40C M .UI. F.A.C., are emended
to remove references So egrlcul
lure In order tor this chapter ta
be consistent with chapters
40C 4 end 40C 4A F.A.C.
S p e cific rule sections
emended or adoptod ere: tec
lions 40C I 402. 40C -I.401;
40C 4.UI, 40C A04I. 40C 4.051;
40C 43.031. 40C 41.031; 40C
44 011, 40C 44.n i, 40C-44.n i,
40C 44.041, 40C 44.n i, 40C 44.041,
40C 44 0*5. 40C 44 044. 40C 44071,
40C 44 041. 40C 44.I0I, 40C 44.101.
4X 44.301. 40C 44.371. 40C 44 341.
4QC 44.100. F A C .
This rule became eftactlve on
August II, INI.
This notico Is only a summery
ol tho foregoing rules; a copy ot
the complete text ot these rules
may be obtained by writing:
N o rm a M a t t e r , Rule*
Coordinator. St. Johns River
Water Management District.
P O Box 143*. Palalka. Florida
33I7C I43S
Publish August 34. IStl
o e i is;

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

C«us»«&gt; Cipher uypMersfnsarecreeledSon, quolahon* byl—oux
pooou paxl andprxsaM lach Uner n me other Handsto,
another 7odxvaOS* Cequwx44
*V J

Tuesday thru Friday 11 Naan The Pay Refers FubUcehon
Sunday And Monday 530 PM. Friday
A D J U S T M I M T S A N D C R I D f T t i hi U N m o t af

V D

■ V V 8 M

J Z

F V D O
J X O

1 V I

1 1

g

N O R V K O I
Y 2 8 V J O K O D D
C O F X I K V D C
R N V O K I D X V V . '

J Z

J X O

Z R
—

F Z 6 O J J O .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Franco la a country whore
money lalla apart and you can't taar the tonal paper." —
Billy WBdar.

Sl-Prtv&gt;t6

SFICIAL tut I T ! lady 47. peed
health, ne smafelng ar draw­
ing. Would like ta moot gars
tlemon who It secure honest
end gentle. Marriage mlndM
onlyl **-75.Float# write: Bee
74C73L Orange City, FI 3374]

EXP6 RT PtANO Iw R lfRU. In
^ ^ ^ ^ O T my shMWWBM
= Result
Instruction. Far
N»flg A MfYOTOa OTlWTOT •
Fall claaaaa mm available.
toft New PetawtaMbtaN

tk Ito citiM

jS U e s ftz iA S JB i»_
In kitchen,
toftef
53S5/IM ptue

. Mud ha II yrs. af
M vt r L d rlw fl HC.

51571

iM R .H R

rMY m y

iM K iio

Nta* 1 bdnw I brtfe. Central
H/A. private fenced yd.
UM/me, SMS Security
..............JSt-IMS

Putt tlm*. 11-7M ft

ITSlU
a variety of
tervkoe ueuaffy efSsred In the
• setting, ^lagartenca
i but wM Patn. Cam-

SMALL i x t R A

acelteot wort mg environlacotto

in

AO C A R R I IR B , a wall
aitabllahad and grawlng

I-W U H
ai

fuTiSTiepteii|j

27— Nursory A
OiiMCore

nUCHCRM LlR*
Train
wfttt paN— a Tr
k parson la heap ra
biardwliHurry.Mrt— upw I

TrW B I

IM FLO YM R R T

• Lata

W IN

CRWL6R/TRAF P K
ROUTBR. at
Nr It yr.. aid Neat
Should bo familiar with
ol FL .

•i

tB7
t

Mea-Thur., 55 Frl.
401W. U N M. I

I i l Sn Im I k L
Wanted m

rehebs

all i

N C I* A t I
OCLTONAT Large*
PRIMARY RBALT
■ALTY
FERN PARK ant* CHA N*w

ALTAMONTE BFQR5B5 •Mug»
1 b*m. I h*4h. w f O T B O T H

stmt

STTUST
WHh tame 1*1tearing, com
mtselenarrenteltM l SNI •

wen call M7 NM

ARC SMALL DAYCARE, TLC
meals. Bac. Rare........3350110
CHILD CAR I In my heme,
toddlers ta 4 yrs. HRS
certified. 3211913
CHILD CARR, family tatting,
all Witts. Nag. rata*. Fenced
yard, hot meal*. 331*474
DAYCARB AVAILABLE In my
Hidden Lk. heme. Let* of
TLC. LtcJOTCaa.........531-4101
BXPBRIBHCBD CHILOCARB.
core!I ► Frm vaeM
MOTHBR of I wilt babysit
eftsmean* and eves, my Sentard home. 331-1400_________
HIWBORH C A R I. a i l month*.
L.F.N.- bobytovor cert. ICC
area/Lk. Mery............ 333 71*0
lac. refsl CFR trained. Hot
moots. TLC I Call M5 B1S4
SMALL QUALITY M O M I-LIKI
D a yca re a F ra tc b a a l.
LUX 4503...

4 Fatty
...331-7*3*

Ltgal Noticfi
STA T I OF WISCONBIH
CIRCUIT COURT
FAMILY COURT BRANCH
M ILW A U K II COUNTY
tote No. N F A 4MT73
In re the marriage of:
ROaBINBRIWER.
Petitioner.
DAVIDM BREWER.
73* N. 4fh Avenue
Deltona. FL 33735
(407) 144-340*
Responder,it.
ORDER FOR AFFEARANCE
It having been made to appear
ta this Court that the above
named petitioner. Rabbin
Brewer, claims to be entitled to.
and at the ta m e tim e
hereinafter stated will apply tor,
■ default ludgment tar a legal
separation herein, and ttw Court
being of the opinion, end now
finding, that ttw personal at­
tendance of tho respondent.
David M Brewer, should bo
required upon tho hearing; now,
upon thou urt's own motion.
IT IS ORDERED that, ttw
respond**! above named bo end
he hereby It required end
commended, laying aside ell
end singular hi* business and
excuses, ta bo and appear In
person before BranchiN a II ol
ttw Circuit Court. Room No. 7U
ol the C ir c u it C ourt ol
Milwaukee County. Honorable
Dominic S. Amato prosldina. at
ttw courtroom ol said branch ot
this Court. In the Courthouse.
W1 North Ninth Street. In the
City ot Milwaukee. In said
County, on September 10. INI at
f 00 o'clock A M. then end there
to attend the heeling and to give
evidence therein It required so
todo by the Court.
Let a copy ol thlt Order bo
served upon sold David M.
Brewer, respondent, not lest
then on* week beIor# told
hearing.
Deled this tth day ol July.
I«fl.
BY THE COURT:
Dominic S Amato
Circuit Court Judge
PubliW: August If. 3* A Sep
timber 3. It*t
OEI 70S
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
i engaged In business at 4M
RlB0
Sge8 DiiTsentord.
___ __
.FL_ __
33773.
Seminole County. Florlde. under
the F ic titio u s Nemo el
ALTER N ATIV E SERVICES,
end (hat I Intend to register said
name with the Secretary ot
State. Tallahassee. Florida. In
accordance with the provisions
ol the Fictitious Nam* Statute.
ToWII Section MS 09. Florida
Statute* 1457.
Berber* Beckhorn
Publish August 34. IStl
OEI 171

In dHng Military,
Federal ar State centred*.
Cell........................... -334-7057

CAIN FOR MTQL-BM
Mb Lark weed Dr. Santerd
M BM N.Udd.M N. I

DAILY WOOR DAILY FAY
CaR B N -.....T-M B IW IO T
OOV6 R N M IH T JOBS ROW
HIRINOtll Beth tMINd and
unahINad wertwrs needed in
yeur are*. (M A N la S73AM
plua benefits. Far list af cur­
rent few# and appttcattan ta
apply tram hama. Call
ltN N B Ita a Eat. A 131
M E A T MONEY Distributing
nutrition preduett.
■■■■BN5H I
H A IR S T Y Ls iIS. Ta 1• __H_e. air topg
A
HNrfirg. . rNEON nVdl Ad#fttWer after S3a «753

T IM P M A R Y iS S v V lS
CMfMBNN
A DO TO YOUR INCOME
AVONI S IL L SKINS*SOFT
CALL 50-4331*rW -4*at

Am»aToi sve jots
Eamuptalll.TOhr.
We Train I
Hiring new tar local area:
Celt 1-415M 4 7111__
APPLY NOW I Drivers, security
guards, lanltort. warehouse
help and office help- (Will
I I I Phene Fee.
train) SUI
1
Ftoelbta hr*. Markham Rd.
area. Raterences. MI 0*47

Logal Nolle#
CITY OF
LAKE MARY. F LOR IOA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HIARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by the Planning end Zoning
Board of the City el Lake Mary.
Florida, that a Public Hearing
will be held on September 10.
INI. at 7;M pm., er at toon
thereafter as possible, ta con
tldtr a variance to Chapter
I54.IKA) el ih# City of Lake
Mary Cod* of Ordinance* to
allow a nonresident to bo
employed in ehom* occupation
requested by J. Lauren William*
on the following described prop
Lof* M. 33 end 14. Block 54;
and Loft 14. 15. 14. 17 and 1A
Block 43. CRYSTAL LAKE
WINTER HOMES SUBDIVI­
SION. . cording ta tho plot
thereof *. ecordtd In Rial Book
3, Paget I . L 115 and II*. Public
Records ot Semlnoto County,
Florida Alio; The north onohelt ot abandoned alley abutting
the South side of said lots In said
Block 41. ANl; All of Lot* G, H
and I end tho kest 3 toot of Lof
4. Block 45. AMENCED PLAT
OF CRYSTAL LAKE SHORES,
according to the plat thereof a*
recorded In Plaf Book 4. Pag#
II. Public Records ot Seminole
County, Florida. AIm : Tho
South Ono halt ol abandoned
alley abutting the North side ul
said tots In said Block 41
Tho Public Hearing will be
held In the City Commission
Chambers. 100 West Lake Mery
Boulevard. Lake Mary. Florida
The public Is Invltad to attend
end be heard Said hearing may
be continued trom lime to time
until e final recommendation it
mad* by Ihe Board
N O T E : PERSONS ARE
ADVISED THAT A TAPED
RECORD OF THIS MEETING
IS MADE BY THE CITY FOR
ITS CONVENIENCE. THIS
RECORD MAY NOT CON
STITUTE AN ADEQUATE RE
CORO FOR THE PURPOSES
OF APPEAL FROM A OE
CISION MADE BY THE CITY
ANY PERSON WISHING TO
ENSURE TH A T AN A D E­
QUATE RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS IS MAIN
TAINED FOR APPELLATE
PURPOSES IS /DVISEO TO
MAKE THE NECESSARY AR
RANGEMENTS AT HIS OR
HEROWNEXPENSE
CITY OF
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
Anita K Newton.

Community Development
Secretary
Dated August M. INI
Publish August 74. INI OEI 77*

WvtfctMi/Drivifs
M M 715 weekly + kenoflts.
(Will train It-M I-M W -

MAT TECH
Per kuey arthepedk efttaa.
Contact Sharon..... - ......7*7-1

fl

m i n e ts
• LBASINQ ARC NT •

i call you ta order. Will
Train. tOMTIMIW Eat. S4S
7S— C m p t e y m o n t

Wanted
I RON IN d W A N TED . Shirt*
SI M e*. Free pkfc up A deL tt
ptae. Phene anytime.-AO-OS*
W ILL DO lawn mowing at

greet clients. Cal I now I

-m m -.

M R .M M IL N It ll
U K i
To help divorced mother with
one child. Ream end board +
t » wk. muet drive. 33BWM
LIVE IN To cere tar elderly
woman. Sept. 31-Oct. U. 5335
wk. 30-0*4* njgMs A wkenda.
MATURE leNvIduil. w/ear. tor
exc. Income opportunity I Will
train 11-407 7777431 axt. 1735
MEDICAL

MWMVSCMfSJffHHC
.

kPPl'«‘
Certified Nursing Assistants.
Those with exper ience given
prlorltyl Apply:
tSOMellonvIlto Ave Sentard.

..LOlL/M
322JSU.
MIITKCH
Experienced. Lake Mary
area. Ml f ltl after 7pm 5*5
fyjA » g g jgg| MaRe**

ROBE CLIFF AFARTMINTB
New &gt; i
ter MW. W/O
11*7 t f tt.
Ian Lk. 55ary Btvd.
IMB55M
EquelttauelngOaaerfunttyt
CLOAN I BONRL. 1 bath, ne
5M5d »g .M »tm

JUSTLIREANOME
Single ttagr with gflvsta
entrance. Studies, t B 2
bedrooms, many extra* In­
cluding ttgrage ipace.
Qulet.cpry community. Nice
tandKaptafONSITI
MANAMRSWNO CARED

SMVMCOHtr J2M36I

ta prevl
housekeeping, meals and
childcare. In PretestlaneI
couple'* home.

nowl People person needed
71— H t » W i l t e d

In aur Santerd
andpay avMlebla. It you
iraNiilmH and havo a
&gt;we ll train you la
M p h a p a r woafel
CaR Ltoo NAM to 4PM ter

» 1— Apartmontf/
Hovsa to Share
WILL SHARI 1 bdrm. 2 bath
patio homo, with malt or
tomato. Weaher. dryer, pool
Cell 33* 4153. leave msa

L A N ! JBHNI6 APTS. Undw
new management I Call us
about eur move In specials
from *3N I Broker, 3774734
MARINI R’lV IL L A B I
Lake Ada tbdr..............U N mo.
lbdrm *3N m * 4 u a .M 5MJ»
MOOCRN I BORM. duplex In
city, appliance*, mini Minds.
CHJL 5375m*............ -4*4*114
NBAT-1 BORM Apt. W. fed St..
CHA.
kit. equip. 1175
wM-H»staNsw4er.N»*&gt;ri
7*»5&gt;t
O N I BORM.. I bath. sern.
balcony, tpk. CHA. carpet,
cenvlenlent ta duxeito'em. 1175
m*. i n - 14*3.______________
O S T IIN •I bdrm apt*. *N per
week Include* utilities. Ne
pete C oil3 3 * «n___________

92— Rooms ter Rant
SUMMER SP6 CIAU Sr. i
dlicoeetil Clean reams,
TV ,57|/wk»— M » « M
FURNISHED ROOM In Longweed, M5/wk pius$M deposit.
_______ Fhen»534-MM_______
LON O W O OD F U R N IS H O D
ROOM, with shower and AC.
Mlewk.alu* deposit. MI-5345

kitchen privilege*,
-r/dr Inker.
Quiet nan smeker/drlm
mature adult. 575/wh 37*7533
PRIVATE heme w/prlvltoget.
Excellent location. 231441
1*15 or
day*. N 4775MSI

LAR I MAAV/SANPOND, Twe
1 bdrm. '
IARFOBO M AYFAIR •1 bdrm.

t bem. cnt/A. (

CaR after 4FM .......... MB5W5

54. Ready ta open. Comer
UHandlSthSt.Santard.
Call anytime, &gt;405147

-

.................

-BANRRWFTCV RWMINT*

RISTAUR AM T/FiniRIA tar

Serb M F ,
..JM 4MB

er*.

■I A L .
eref/BuUder/RsiWentlaf. CaR

I AMERICAN AIRLMC 1 way
tktwts Dram Orlande. FI. to
Syracuw. NY. Mutt be ui
by M L Best afterl 354*10*

UPSTAIRS. 1

W

WORKERS M R O R D tf

Support ft medical
■Id. to ll attysi

1

M R -H oytT/N

Far Infant. 4dmft In my hama.
LOST It Blech a tan mala
puppy. Vicinity af laniard
Peat Office, Sunday morning.
---------25— S f C i B l M ottCDS

Cl IA N .

bdrm., I betts. qutat tree. 5115

44

Hyauhpvalyuarsaufaf state
Free medical car*, tri
teflon, ceuntellng. private
doctor plus living expenses,
bar F337315 Caff Aftanwy M M

ptae U N Ncurtfy er |
MS/me
er tltOMO
l bbdrm.
*
--------

FaH hme and 1 M l lima. &gt;11

g

1 1 -P tf O O f lO iS

n

w

Park Av*. Fvm. 5 UMvm. SN

Far

parry aftars you
• Send Annual Fay I
• Stop OH Fay
•UMMRngFpy
a Vacaftan Fay
alafUfytww*

- a -*----| A ----------

UrI— nS —H / 06—
Rod

W n tw S O TO TO Tw

IB
_
i prhr. 57Bhkk pta*
ictade* vflf. Mato
_ e i t e $ A S ! i 4tS

£
‘ 2£1

i reflect a SI .30 coah dkceunt far prompt payment. SthoAIbig may Include HereM Advertiser as the ceef elan addManat^. Cancel
when yew get results. Toy only tar days yeur ad nme el rata earned,
description ter toeleal results. Copy must leftew acceptable

of awwrM ar bMNMuat CUT*.
Tp a c lflc PHla aactlant
MC-IMb; 4BC-MBI. M C-Utl.
4*0 *0 . MC-LMI, MC-LMI,
MC-LMI, MC-tWfc 45C M .il t,
M C -M Jtl MC-MAM. MCM.11L
4SC-M.M1, MC-MM1. MC-MM1,
MC-M.MI. M CM .NL F A C i
and aactlana I L L M . L 1A.
m
m
m
u m
u
5* 1. * 5.1. AT, A M . AT.t.t,
A L I A A L I A A L L A A L IA
A L I A A M T , W A WA 114.1.
H A L L IIA I. U A L U A L I,
I ! A L L tl.T, tt.LT. ILLT.1.
tt.T.T.I. U.T.T.A IL L IL L I.
U A l.t , U A t A 11.5, ITA ILA
IT A IT A IL L IL L ILLI. ITA
AH.
TMt ruto became eftactlve on
July M. IN I.
REOULATfONOF
AMtCWLTURAL
OttCHARQI
Chapters MC-t, MC-a MC-M.
and MC-dA F A C ., have been

meapTwre. are** benefit! |
AAA IM FLO YM iR T
JM L
POSTAL
Far
llt.SS/br.

Part ttww. Oaf Friday neededl
15 ♦ hr*, week. N B 1M4 aeb

»«

• p a d lic r a la aactlena
amended er adapted art: sec
tlana M C l J M i t K - t . M t .
MC I. tat, MC I.taa, F A C . j and
section 2X1, A.H.
tkla
ai^ i &gt;1 a m
b eUe
1
wT^^ll^a
ml
Ju ty ll.ttn .

a CALC. MECHANIC •
L a c a l ebap. Use y a « r
a e p a rtlia h a ra l O raat
benetltal Hurry , hurry,
Rw tatsr W| 0 tahfrg w s I
4 * 4 IM P LU IH M H I
NtN.M NBLM BBW b

m ih i

VwVf M f If rVRIs

far a gentrst pamatt bar

FULLER*

IW e to ^ h w a lw a fw llf e iX

The . .
revised chapter MC I, F A C ., la
provide a thertar arose**

obtainlog autherliatton la un­

I t| |

M OV! IN SFCCIALI1 bdrm.
curlty.
U U H L Ml 'i 11 H A P I S
Single Story. 1-2 Bdrm.
Ask about our..
r
M -F4 l :0pan Weekends
LAR I MARY N544U
R IM O O f L ID I BDRM. large
eat In kitchen, appliance*.
W/W carpet. A/C Only U N
par mental Call 134-ISM

5AMFORD, 1 bdrm. B4N me.
Ceunlrv liv in g , figvg a
IlNegehu-.. aMHa
WB M I D iemlneta Cewnty
hemes ta rent I Fmtoeeguef*ttan-NORBALTY,M M N»
I BORM. I OATH epacleue
country hemel Lekefrent en 5
■A-l. 570k/me 3307157
14*4 M YR TLR A V I , BANFORD 1 bdrm. 1 bath. Fta.
rm/lrd bdrm. Centre! H/A,
celling ten*, corpert, kltch.
e— llmcN; reds cerated 3/41.
Quiet nelghberheed. *44*/me.

157774

1
flreelee#, fenced yerd. IMS
Paul an
~
'
and Beth
Oebeme
Venture I Preesrtles. MI-474*
1 DOOM. I OATH. Santerd.
Fenced. UM/me. Cell 5343477

ja m

3 IO R M IV*

, central H/A.
...5455/me
St. Jehn'e Realty. 4P H 54IM
1 BORM. IVs BATH, central
H/A. dtch. tancec
5510per month. 44054W
1 BORM. 1 bath. CHA. lanced,
family rm. w/fplc, lg- utility
bid*, new carpet A paint. U »
“
................. .5551443.

IIS— Dvptex*
Triptex/H—if

a t t aa c t iv *. 1 bdrm. Fla
• rm., parage w/launpry. MW
pet*. 5335plus dtp. 3&gt;1*445
CLIAN. O N I BORM.. «7Vwh.
+ sec. I yr. lees*, carpet.
PIltsA Fork Ave. 30-3717.
SANFORD DUPLEX ■ I
lovely, qutat. 551*/mo plus
deppslt. Eves, col Net MO &gt;313
I BDRM. central H/A. lawn
m aintenance. Sanford.
*300/mo Includes util. 3M-57U

17-41/L A K I 55ARV area. 1
bdrm. 1 bath, camptataly
rsmedtiedl 53b5/ma. 3PM17

I BORM. 1 BATH, central A/C.
all appl. dUpeset/dUfiwaohar.
near high sbhaal. MI-IMO
1 BDRM. DUPLEX, carport,
security system, full kitchen.
M143a.dtscountad.5MS
1 BORM. I BATH. Sanford.

plus security. 5*0 4547otter*
I BORM m BATH. Sentard. All
appliance*. A/C.
waaher/dryer hook-up*, ne
............
. * tatter*
pets. 5455/me
51074M
4

LET A

SPECIALIST
y

*

*

)

4

JA
/

D O IT!

a

Moving 4 Hiuhng
CONCEPT ( C T S T C r
entry I
•Dice.
5344547

hinting

lit

rCDMlflonnifl'
U Hgptii—
DC I A/C - Feet tame day
service. All make*. Free etfs.
*741st*. 14h our^^d e j^^

Nnv/us(o«mjMCU
HOME Jlf ftlAH CI~.322-36t 3

XSSSSR w
o4f a .L flivlA.
sparkle tar summer! Comp
dotA l l service1...........550073*

Building CofitraclOfB
* ADDITIONS. All remodsling
kt Trxxkliikeetl
Retergnces Met e e *700*1*

NEW. R IM O O IL. REPAIR
HOMES. O F F IC II. STO RIt
All type* ceesSructlee. Ret/Cam
7754477 . SO. Bsltaf. CBC4lt*M
C A R F IN Ttk AII kind* ot home
repairs, painting A ceramic
tile Rkkerd Press..... 57I S477
CARPENTRY. Ham* repairs,
remodel. Decks. Shed* A
Garages. QUALITVI. ..MI-MN

If/f v / ' / / %f
S /

A D IFT c ib P IT CLIANINQ.
Circular dry teem tys. dry in I
hr. Semewdte«eeel..a*4472!

THE HOUSE%OOCTORI All

home repairs I Pelnt/Ttrmlta
damage Lk./lee....... M5MII

Lawn Sorvicg
Cleaning, repair*. Installation
tdaysl Call Tim. 4*0 MIS
,7 r

'

C re lc t

CATHY'S CLIAN IN O

SIR V-

ICB References, reetoneble
rata* Lkensedl Cell 333 74W
( t o n c r t lt
CAPTAIN CON CklTI. Weyn*
Beal. 1 Men Quality Opera
tlonl U 0 U7*/5407S*7

T jj g n g j
O N I CALL 0015 IT A LL!
Pointing, masonry, wolding.
mowing, atc l I PH. 554377*

B U T PRICESI Quality work.
Anyt hl ng/Evor yl hl ng.
Homev Office Total repelrs.
Improvements I do It ell I
Free Ett. Anytime, 3347141
CARPINTR V, MASONARV
painting and til* work. Free
estimates Lik'd Call 33545M

C O M P L lf l OeeHty l

LAWN C A R II U A UPI Free
estimates Senior discounts

Troth removal.......... 3331711

/',-/

1lull I l i

MAINTINANCI

225433*
Rates! Cell Tens
RANDY'S QUALITY LAWN.
Complete cere, clean ups
Since INI Free est. 1131-471*

Masonry
TWP m ans s
o nsrirs
y !* Brick,
fe block,
ttucc*. concrete. Renovations.
Ik 'd . A ins MI-34M/MMIS7

Moving iH iulIn g
h a u lLINO. Yard trash,
appl . turn Cheep'on
115/up Cell Ray 757 73*7

a a ■

) o t t r l i u s i n i ’ ss I m

\ Ihi \ I m

! i l 11 { /1/ s &gt;/ / /f f/

OICK PINOLA'5

~

FAINTINO.

Qualify work! Int/Ext.. Llc'd
A Insured Free att! 373 5773
INTIRIOR/EXTERIOR
HOUSE FAINTINO. 11 yr*.
exp. Free est. IN **«l

~

Landscaping. Tree Sarvic* A
irrigation, competitive rates.
tree estlmetasSunny’*173 7*34
BRUCE'S Loam I
Call Bruce 331 7M4
*5Oft for new customers!

LAWN

* # # NAULINQ.yard trash.
appliances, furniture, troth ot
any kind) Richard...... 775 7745

Plumbing'
HOflIRS PUJHIIM
All your plumbing needs I 34
hours! «BFOOS377Q177

P r t s s u r g C te o n in g ~
PRESSURE CLIANINO aA T
Hows* wesh/painllng *45 and
up Reger. 174 44*0. (AM IPM

Socrefariol A
Typing Sorvicos
CUSTOM Typtwg/B«*kkis*legt
DJ Enterprises. 40IB E 25th
St . Sentard ..174 0471/133 7403

" ^ r e o S tr v Ic ^ B
BUNYAN5 T R IE t lt V IC E
Tree work, light hauling Free
estimate*. Insured. 11) 14M
RICH’S TREE REMOVAL - 34
hr. service, free estimates,
best prices! 774 4*45

\\ I iu r

iJJ
’ 'JHII

Is

�Sanford Harald. Sanford, Florida - Monday, August 26, 1991 - SB
141-H am as ter la te

K IT W C ARLYLE® fey Larry Wrlffet

2 1 7 -O a rfa taks

■ LOWD guild acoustic guitar
mod* 017 with herd iha
ceM. Asking tv s m u s o

t v . it s h s -o o h iti

roa LAaai family
I peclou* 4/rn. F m h paint.
C/M/A. (amity rm, tanca. I .MS
tq ft IntMa utility.84MM

LK.M AaTiaOM AlM TM
A t thaptl

daman tub In
M iUICK Ibytewb. 47.000 ml.
AC, par brakat/tteerlng.
auto. Mutt M i l UMO 060.
V i l l a attar 1.

HIATNBOW
Praitiglout 4/11» with 1175 tq
ft. Bit tcraan tnctataK pool.
Quality laaturat Itiraufttaut.

SVS MOwkMh Pete, »P7740

tnt.M

DaytSS
9000 USID T H IS - All tiiat
from U and up. Mounting alto
avallakta Mon-Frt. SI. n i*
CalaryAva. Sanlard_________

M t * «* d C S C * 77777*7
LAKIM ABV
Handyman * tpaclall 1400 tq.

ft. on weeded m x ito lot with
late aetata. 1 /tVy, only XTMO
TWO RU8 I N AMMI Chairs,
■than Allan. Oh. chorry,
mawvo stripe w/SJua 4 pink
tlowart. m SMI Attar t:X

FB ITTVO LD IR V I
Refurbished! Parquet ttoara.
tancad. TV dlth. 1 thadt. Nice,
pulataraa.SU.OSS

CROWNSQUARE

235— Trucks /
Busts/Vans

G?TTtVlfK

ONLY US,ISO
1/1 condo with many atrao and
groat location I This It a

hath. SOS par month plus sioo
tacurlty Mopaalt. P B M

tfSl J I I F
H A N D
W A O O N IIR - 4 whaol drlvo.
V I. lull powor and air. Locally
owned. I ownar. Vary vary
cloan. Sarvlca racerdt avail
abla. S4.W ......... Call 177 o n

S I___________
L I C T B I C Typowrltor,
Smith Corona. Prlcad to Swill
S70......................... 1U-1415

SILL OB TBA OS I 77 FOND
PICKUP, itandard. M l M i l

SUS/mo. l.E.C.M. Inc., L

^ jj^ tijta ^ k W jW U te

NISO LK. MAKY or vicinity
Iplicapal priatt 4 wlfa with
to ItOM homo. For t yaar or
mart Marling. f/15/11 Need
ovar 7700 tq. tt. Btfaroncat
available. »l4-5»*7 or 400-107]

'It CHIVY 1/1 ton Pick Up
Good condition. 0 cylinder,
cutfom what It. Sl.flOOMO tttl

MUST SIUI

125— For Ln s o

199— Pots ft Supplies

HISTORIC 1 4SDROOM

**SMF090# +
Great *tartar/lnva*lor home.
1/1 with fenced yard and
screened porch. 141,000.

•LACK Io4/itdoa ratrlavar
mix pup* S30 Saa 41PM at
1104 Buddir Circle. Sanford.
I Noat to Sanford Airport!

Fsr Ms fey0*Rif
4 bdrm., 7 bath POOL home.
Astumabla non qualifying
mortgage. Monthly payment*
U*7p IT 1.7740070

a IM7 Mercury Cougar ttOO
171 mo. X IImonths.
No monoy down needed.
a IMl Plymouth Reliant 1400
SM mo. X 11month*
No money dawn noodid.

AA AUTO SALVAGE
of Da 0ary
W l WIIOH ANDPAYI
Top SStor |unk.
Cart 4 Truck*.

a 1M) Cadillac OaVlllo 4 Or.

SIPSmo. X M months.
No money down noodid.
I I I , t ill

239— Motorcydts
and Blkas

a IMS 14 Ft. Bay liner
to HP IMS Nltton angina

1 BEDROOM
MOVE IN
SPECIAL

SJ700

• 100mo. X 40month!
No money down needed.

O M O T O R C V C ll

TB A ILC B .

Cicellent condition! Coil*
1100. Selling 1100 Caih only)

Cart may be taan at:
Sundance Auto Salat
ttro s. Mwy 17-n

1*4 4054

241— RscrsBtk&gt;ml
V th k its/C am p ars

kMOVCM SPEOALa
FOP MMUSTi *MOFF M Mb

S IT T L I ISTATK 1 bdrm. IVy
both. Lg. comfortabla tern,
porch, Ironl and rtar, nlca
neighborhood. Very good
condition I Fenced tor tecurlty
and pet*. 154.100 ro w

ONLY 41,100

323-5)74

Step Up Into
G rea t Apartm ent!

Sslsd Cars From M v D w n
ZHurry «T7i» JJor ZBest Selection!

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath

S ' 1901 ACCLAIMS A

* 1, 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms*

/ iW I DODGE SPIRITS'X

1891 DYNASTYS

$100 O ff

FIRST M O N T H S R E N T
Carpal A Vinyl, CalUng Fan, Vertical* A
Minis, Pool, Tsnnis Court, Clubhouas A
Laundry Room

C H E C K O U T T HESE L O W PAYMENT C A R S

u u m m

^ ^ H E V R O L E T C A V A L IE R S 4 D R . 20e445
14X41

V I apllt. Nice family

Com e H om e To
Country Style Living!

2 P 3 Bedroom
Apartments
• Cable TV
• Washcr/Drycrs in Select Units
•Self Clean Oven
• Iccmakcr
• Dishwasher
• Garbage

.g s r1

Ip p

•Clubhouse
,
I' m l ^ n
2450 Hartwell Ave., Sanford

S2S0 Dn APR 12.73% 0 l '40 Nb i SOmo* plut Ui. tag. DM S fee*

9 0 DODGE SH AD O W

nr. r,«,r iwerrg r i m n,g m f ii in, m
224755
1250 On. APR 12.75% 91142 Us a SOmot plus Ui. tag. tidal lee*

St.tM. M X 70, SIMM145I7**
11XSI 1 bdrm. double rootover.
ig tcreened rm and t/wd
Adult park 05.000 177 51*7
St S K Y U N I M O I I L I home. 74
V 00.1 bdrm 7 bath O S T I I N

(1st Month Only)

POOL. TENNIS COURT,
VOLLEYBALL COURT
EACH APARTMENT MCLUOES
•New Corpatng •Nme Appkonoes indudrtg Refrigerator. Rang*, Dtthwathor.OorPage [&gt;tpouf ♦Wether S Dryer* InMated
n in to tor an adteonai monthly lao •24
hour amargancy maintenance service

0 1122 kb ■ SOmo* Dte b*. lao. ufl* S lee*
!£K25!!*£.SUNB,RD4DH222406

T A U 17 « N AMMONT SLfta TURN W U T
7710 OF A M H . WON ON fbCHT

Good rental hitiory S41.500
St John * Realty 407 777*171

too* 511A

O w Y T
a,
|l
"M

9 0 O L D S M O B IL E C U T L A S S C IE R A
T*. Crvau k*. k*. K. A», AUf MIM o Cm
208366
1250 On. APH12 75% 4 f l i t I b i l O mo* plut be. bg.tdoklsu*

,
,

9 1 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A DX
Aww.fU, kS. kP. A4AFM i t n ,
(250 On. APH 12.75% 9 1187 Ub i 00 mo* (Hu* bi. bg. DU* fee*

4

A V IS

4Itet

R

N

V M

9 9 ‘* * 1 4 2

b a

1699**170
•8199V181
1899**197

J

a *

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I]

.

1

752263 a . . i A A ,
911 J O O *

M r a n .k i.n .C n w r a w L M i
1250 On. APR 12.75% 9 S2S0 Ski a 60 mos plus bi. tag. to*

Its— Puplai for Sala

*•.

a.

ll/ ^ T T

i . . *
F7 M 1 _
ST 4 W
MS

C a r Sales O utlet

Th e S m art Place To B u y.

3 3 0 -5 2 0 4
j a p a rtm e n ts

5599***122

BO P O N T IA C G R A N O A M L E
fU.rSkk.Ta *mrvig Fa— Wuaww
202439
1250 On. APR 12 75% # 1170 ktoi 00 mot plus ui. lag. UI* 11*4*

91 T O Y O T A C A M R Y DX

Q U A L IT Y LAWN Maintenanca
Accaunt*. 115.000 pig* per
y e a r l S a c r i f i c e 51000'
Equipment *«tra P I 001*

|

I 2S0 Of APR 12 7S%

J.H. Lswis
Doug McCord
AVIS

AVIS

Slavs Williams
Charles Smith

AVIS

AVIS

AVI S

557S S. Hwy. 17-82, CosMitopery, Florida
Houra Mon-Sat. S - • . Sun. 12 - S

AVIS

AVIb

AVI S

AVI S

AVI S

AVIS

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J
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»

•• - Sanford

Consult dermatologist
about fatty growths

BLONDIC

dbab

l

I

on.

ootti

w hat

causes fatty tumors and what
can be done about them? My son
haa developed several, and we're
not sure how to proceed.
D B A * B B A D S I t Patty
tum ors, called lipom as, are
benign, harmless (nut cosmet­
ically annoying) growths artsing
from the sdlpose tissue beneath
the skin. They are painless.
Their cause la unknown.
When lipomas appear in areas
of pressure — such as belt lines
or beneath bra straps - they can
be Irritated and become tender.
Then, patients should consider
surgery to remove them. But my
standard advice la: Leave them
alone, u n l e s s t h e y h u r t or
enlarge.
Lipomas often become more
noticeable when overweight pa­
tients shed pounds, because the
g r o w t h s do n o t s h r in k .
T h e r e f o r e . In a s s e s s i n g a
l i p o m a ' s e n l a r g e m e n t . It’ s
helpful to keep in mind the
possibility that the tissue around
them Is shrinking, giving the
Illusion o f growth.
D B A S D B . O O T T t Please
provide information on macular
degeneration and labyrinthitis.
Is there a connection?
D B A S B B A D B B i T o my
knowledge, the conditions are
unrelated.
Macular degeneration is the
spotty shrinkage o f a part of the
retina, the film at the back of the
eye which enables us to see.
Patients with this condition
often complain of dark spots In
the visual field and loss of vision
— particularly, an Inability to
focus on objects. The condition
is unbeatable, except In select
cases that may be helped by
l a s e r s u r g e r y .
An
ophthalmologist can make that
determination. T h e cause Is
unknown.
On the other hand, l aby­
rinthitis is a malfunction of the
balance portion o f the inner car.
leading to vertigo and loss of
equilibrium. The cause Is un­
known. but the affliction may be

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YOU LOOK
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__ •Oat ssswers to class by csINsg "Dial-s-Wocd"
at
and entering sccess code number 000;
aac ear minute: Touch-Tone or rotary Phones

In rubber bridge, your primary
aim as declarer should be to
make your contract. If there is a
chance for an overtrick or two
without risking the contract, fair
enough — go far It. But if the
contract is put In Jeopardy,
forget those overtricks. The
value o f a game is worth more
than a lot of oveitricks.
It is true that sometimes you
will be a heavy favorite to collect
an overtrick. but once in a while
the cards will kill you. defeating
rou when you had the contract
ocked up. It is hard to explain
that sort of thing to partner, who
sees his wealth decreasing In­
stead o f increasing.
W i t h o u t g l a n c i n g at the
East-West cards, decide how you
would play In three no-trump.
West leading a low club.
The careless declarer wins the
first trick with the club Jack and

!

By Jim m y Johnson

'K S

M O M S*

By Phillip Alder

ARLO AMD JANIS

/PETER
GOTT.M.O.

associated with virus Infections
or tumors of the ear. Treatment
usually consists of drugs (such
as Antivert) or. In rare instances,
surgery to remove the growths.

•1 Actor •partis

immediately takes a diamond
finesse. It loses, and back comes
a club, won with dummy's king.
Now suppose declarer cashes
dum m y's diamond ace. When
West discards. South has that
sinking feeling. He tries a heart,
but both honors are offside, and
West is able to establish and
cash his club suit
T h e m ore careful declarer
starts by counting his top tricks.
Here, given the club lead, there
arc eigh t: four spades, one
diamond and three clubs. Only
one more trick is needed, and It
Is guaranteed if hearts are at­
tacked. Just win trick one and
Immediately lead a low heart
from hand.
Even If West wins with the
queen and plays another club,
you Just lead a second heart,
establishing your ninth trick
while you have all suits under
control.

NORTH
ta n
# K 10(3
# 10( 3
# A Q 10 7
♦ X4
EAST
# S4
#07(3
♦ K J 92
#10 0 3

WEST
#•7(3
#AQ2
• 4
# Q0 7 3 1

SOUTH
#AQJ
# KJ4
#1033
♦ AJ•
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South

S*«th
1NT
2#

Wnt
Pa**
Pasa

North
2♦
3 NT

Em I
Pass
All pan

Opening lead: A S

—
*

:v.-

YOUB BIRTHDAY
Aug. 27* 1991
Be on Ihe lookout in the year
ahead for ventures you can
transform from outmoded to
new and useful. You m ight
uncover two or more.
__
V IR O O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22
T h e r e are som e a d di t i on al
benefits in work you perform
well today. However, you won't
be In a position to appreciate the
rewards unless you put forth the
effort. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find It. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker in ­
stantly reveals which signs arc
romantically perfect for you.
Mall $2 plus a l o ng, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, d o this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct. 23) You
have a lot In common that you
can share with someone you
know only casually. You may
have an opportunity to gel to
know this Individual better to­
day. Capitalize on li.
„
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Conditions In general appear
quite promising for you today.

by Jim Maddick

ROBOTMAN*
VWYOOVOJCONSTAMTIY
CHANGE CHANNELS
INSTEAD Of WATCHING
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rf WAS am ACOPfNT
ITS * Y FAVIT,
EZRA.
WARBUCKS.'

6 itN -ITT' Wf

primarily because of your tenaci­
ty In overcoming difficulties.
You can accomplish everything
you desire.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) Individuals for whom you're
responsible should be managed
with a firm hand today. In­
stinctively. you'll know how to
ussert yourself without being
cold or unkind.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Your fundamental business
sense could put you In the profit
column today — if you adhere to
it in commercial dealings. You
shouldn't have trouble with ei­
ther the pennies or the dollars.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Associates will find you un
admirable Individual to be In­
volved with today because o f the
way you handle responsibilities.
Your attitude will help elevate
their capabilities as well.
PISC E S (Feb. 20-March 20) Be
charitable und compassionate
today with those less fortunate
than you. However, hr realistic
as to what extent you are able to
help them. Don't get In over
your head.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
You’ re the dependable one that

*
&gt;

;,v

-

•.

.

** '

friends can lean on today when
they feel they have problems
with which they can't cope.
You'll be remarkably adroit at
com ing up with solutions.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You have a slight edge over
others in competitive develop­
ments today. Keep this In the
back of your mind In case a
"h a rd n ose" starts throwing
some weight around.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Take time today to communicate
in some manner with an old
friend who now resides far from
you. This relationship is worth
proper maintenance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The probabilities for achieving
your objectives look promising
today, but you may not score
your victories on your Initial
uttempt. If you arc stymied,
regroup and try again.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Some­
one who admires and respects
you might moke a suggestion
today that will be a tough pill to
swallow. It's best you bite the
bullet and heed the advice.
(0 1 9 9 1 . NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

by Leonard Starr

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